Refine Search

Countries

Scotland

Place

Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

Access Type

867

Type

867

Public Tags

THE MAGAZINES

... Dean Stanley, expresses the direction in which, amidst *ihatever stumbles and failures, his own face was steadily set':- Speak thou the truth. Let others fence, ; And trim theirworids'for pay: In pleasant sunshine of pretence Let others bask their day ...

MR M'CLURE'S WATER-COLOUR EXHIBITION

... paramountl with him. In The Raw Material' (36), one 6sees it directly. elare we see little fellow,t f with nothing on to speak of, looking out into space, and apparently enjoying it. Nothing ca I be more tender and delicate than the apposition of blue ...

LITERATURE

... But-we must now turn to the principal-feature I c of these publications, without which they could i Iot, exiat. Pk course wre speak ot the 'tories, which ocoupy the greater part of the space, all 3, Mdelbengaimply 'padding'and of o ?? cs compared iwith the ...

PRINCE OF WALES THEA

... likes best to~g s hand in hand with the Prussi an. e ut Even the privates are, to, him comrades. for life c he and death; he speaks to them,-not condescend- N or ihgly and graoiously, ?? so genuine an expression off personal sympathy aid with such a of afund ...

LITERATURE

... v seeks, because he will never escape from the shadow of his own mind. On the other hand, the naturalist will some- 'times speak scorniully of those moral and Religious problems, which do actually exist as .proIeums to be aolved, and cannot be put aside ...

LITERATURE

... of St Andrew Square- From mere infaucy he showed a marked .6tention to everything he suw, aid this before t1 ke coul(I speak. Afterwards, to everything he h '&eard, and he had a memory the most retentive. il 2ie spoke distinctly several words when ...

THEATRE-ROYAL—ITALIAN OPERA

... when Mdlle Titiens, Madame Trebelli-Bettini, and Signori Bettini and FoRi are to fill the principal parts., These attractions speak for themselves. TnE WAxEBit DivoRcnE CAsl -The evidence for the defender in this case was resumed yester- d&y in the Court ...

SPIRIT OF ENGLAND, THOU WERT NOT SLEEPING

... twin bluest-wingdd birds That sleep on whitatrefoam at sea l Iea rose-lips strive to fashion words; When, mousle, will yoe speak tome? His tiny feet are-oh I so small- I hold both In my little hand I So small, I wonder wfil he stand Or ever ltaru to walk ...

LITERATURE

... the expense both of the distinguished divine and of his unconscious imitator when in the volume before us we find X. H, speaking of a sucking child as by its desire for milk being brought very often into personal dealing with its mother. When we hawe ...

GLASGOW INSTITUTE OF FINE ARTS

... of his gipsy parishioners in learning, Mr Baird 0e could speak thus :- Most of the tribe are able g to read, though very indifferently. They seem alive to the advantages of educationi, and speak of 5,it as the -only legacy which a poor man can r- leaie ...

MR BROWNING'S NEW POEM

... nuicker -still,' t Here'e the Engilsh can an d will I' Then si3id lDamfeevlUe, My triend, 'I musa speak ouf at the end, Though I cnd the speaking aard: 'Praise Is deeper than the lips: .You have saved the King his ships.; YeU must name your own ...

THE MAGAZINES

... ] 1!9,000, even if they stood in the flesh instead of 1 on papev, would not, when added to our present force, enable us to speak with our enemies in the gate without confusion. In short, the country, if it approves these army estimates, will have been ...