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THE SCRAP-BOOK COLUMN

... Tvcls~in the Air, gives the folio accoupt of an adventure, which' happened to him 'ard DMr.:CoxwveU' during their asoent fr~om Wolverlamrp ton in 1862.~ The' balloon' had reached, a helghtes. oeedinig 29,000 feet:- S3hortly atter I.laidnimyersn .upon ...

THE READER

... cist they offer little more than might be gathered, as it is, from Blue Books and returns. To the general reader-slenderly acquainted faith matters Indian-they present a pile of materials from which the points most worthy notice are not always to be disengaged ...

Published: Saturday 05 October 1878
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1368 | Page: 28 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERATURE

... un- derfed, to shadows of men an~d women. In senarch of wor that will ,ield plenty, he will iourney far quotes some lines from Camp- bell th~ aiyep~sthe gisfelnwbh as im e race to aprend over vest oolonies in 'ver quatter of the worfd The pride to rear ...

THE KEMBLES

... and curious matter in MIr. Fitzgerald's book. It is a compilation and not a very adroit one; rather a scrap-book, indeed, well supplied with cuttings from such authors as Scott, Lamb, Hazlitt, Leigh Hunt, &c. In order to help fill his pages the author has ...

LITERATURE

... that he shall attend, or abstaln from attending, any Sunday school orany place of religious worship, or that he shall attend soy religious observance or any instruction In religious subjects in the school or elsewhere, from which observance or instruction ...

LITERATURE

... magazines, as are the i Frenchmonthly slevnus. Inits pages vwef6nd a learned paper on 1 The Holy Gospels, from the pen of Sainte Beuve-who has passed from among us but recently; .a olever article on Jeffersoun' Rip Van Winkle, in l -whih many of our readers ...

LITERATURE

... subject from a neutral standpoint, there will, in our literature at least, be no justification and no room. Mr. Sully's investigation of pessimism is undertaken from the side most favourable to it, that is, the hedo- nistic point of view, from which the ...

LITERARY

... men, as a rule, are better than their books. If it were not so the world would be very different from what it is. We may suppose it to be a feeling natural to a man first set free from fettets to look on those fetters as the supreme ?evil. And herein lies ...

LITERATURE

... merely starting due north from Cape Joseph Henry and making a dash for the Pole. Of course he is not so absurd as to say that the breakdown of the northern division from scurvy was not due to the stupid withholding of lime juice from the men-that is a contention ...

LITERATURE

... the fact that the economist is, from the nature of his investigations, entirely unable to bring his inductions to the test of direct experiment, combine to render the attempt to reason upwards, by a pure induction from the facts of wealth to the laws ...