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Aberdeenshire, Scotland

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332

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332

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SIR WILLIAM STIRLING-MAXWELL ON ART

... :) ill tlc Nortb -of S l I cotland, about 1730, to wvrite or Of t * --.noil:,s hc zst-nbc about scenery-to apologise for speaking tho -]OLt ttiMouttaints as a disagreeable subject, b te clearer Lo -t bit d tsttrc harsh and offensive to bite sight ...

LITERATURE

... lauding a man who shroulk ablmost to excess from tisat all mere human applanase, or else thainlcing it aaeedfssl to had be-speak the reader's favourable regard for laim,-for on 1 ov wvho-o ''lotters of cemosendation ar snrIhnsfiinl ice found in the fully ...

LITERATURE

... thle deco cc, trinalt errors, and dsimgerous socicil and political dogmas and i tendeic1cics, of Riecaniomo. His biographer speakes of these writinigs of liis isa teris of the highest praise. In ceminec- oh tion weitli this subject lice relates an incideict ...

LITERATURE

... etnEd it is not a state or states Of oour(i~scieeess ; it it be a state or states of eonsciousness, it is not extended. To speak of it as at once extended, arci a state or states of consciousness, is as good a specirmsen as could be desired of the perfect ...

LITERATURE

... only error in this respect occurs toward the commencement, in the descrip- tion of Christ stilling the storm, where, not to speak of the terrible phrase breathless winds, there is an entire mis- conception of the poetic aspect of the scene. But it is ...

LITERATURE

... itut suscl Atumld its tite wauy. jLitt it apthcitre thact sucht lis the tttfC!I-ii of the vusilett mother, that ''indeed to speak of beiag separated from her children would ha regarded by liar as sacrilege. We must, therefore, spare them her care. As a ...

LITERATURE

... suggested by tire writer's habit of judging everything relatively to thle cor- nit responding circumstances at hiome. W He speaks ft-cn at greater familiiarity with the pepe n sno their wax's titan thle ordinary toicrist, who thinks a4 firing he lie visit ...

LITERATURE

... that a little care would have enabled the e autbor to avoid them, iEc is particularly inaccurate in o naues eacd titles. He speaks of a Duke of Argyll and a i M-izqiis of Huntly, whilo the liesuds of the great houses of r C siispbell culd Coridon wers omily ...

LITERATURE

... filled wi few cicosen voices, and gently accompanied, are very beau- remalie vv tiful, aced dwell lovingly in the memory. But speaking soundsI from at Scotch congregational poiiit of view, generally youssgs li they are a qiiarter of a century, ait least, before ...

LITERATURE

... original or in the admirable C translations of thre late Mr Conington or Mr Theedore ITlitn. 'he latter ill his preofoce, Speaking of Horace, thl Says:I- 150 Il t aS lieen a, manu11al seithi urea thle iost di versa inl tirrir Li naturesn, culture,( and ...

BIRMINGHAM CATTLE AND POULTRY SHOW

... year agoai The second prize iil tuis cleec went to Mr Drysdale, iKilrie, Alt Fife, This is a yotssg brooder, conipaeatively speaking, but Asi his soccess lies boeti very tiarked. Lost year be carried off of! the Ps-srer chlalengo sep at Edinburgh Obriettuact ...

LITERATURE

... Honsasasa sionalu Lto dissov PLiOn th Wmouth.T Dunkeld, and plic wspae troublred with fllloar for andtfor-sbout ao monthresl speak ver lseittleha util lbrs eth day,~ I tredadbox of yur Wafe eers, and was releed groud inthe oern- neol a rapidjcurs, wtofuatha ...