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Glasgow Herald

FINE ART EXHIBITION IN LONDON

... Prussian army over all others, we are insensibly led by 31. -de Neuville to feel that they were able to take as much pleasure in their bloody work as the soldiers of less educated nations. Close by this picture is a chariming figure of an old woman saying ...

THE ZULU WAR

... move the army, and the army can only protect its own movements, there can then be no doubt as to the successful result. Natal is said to be the “‘garden of Africa” and the most fertile country im the world, and one is led to imagine that an army might be ...

LITERATURE

... the philogynist, or woman lover, who ventures under the fancied protection of that coaxing Greek word to promulgate these alarming views. When he has relieved hixself of them, he turns round lfercely on the misogynists, or woman haters, and asks ? ...

THE ROYAL ACADEMY

... stands a lady dressed in the costume of Charles the Second's time, and who is old enough to know better. but who, IC being a woman, had no doubt already 'd gratified her curiosity, as the laughter beaming in her face shows. His Ba'bees, by Mr E. Nicol ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... district. venant farmers connected with the land, or even Mr LOWTHER said he believed it was the case in these meetings that the persons who took tatives of the district. me AN. —Or of the land? not of the land. Mr LOWTHER—Certainly THE BRITISH CLAIMS Mr ...

LITERATURE

... to'the Crpwn.and-to the army.. r It is written, however, without much sym- pathy, and the vague analogy'between Prussia and Sparta, closing with the still vaguer conjec tural likeness between the land laws of Lace- dwrmon and the land reforms of Baron Stein ...

THE MAGAZINES

... Liberal porty in 1862 refused him. the means of increasing the army; because they believed that for the performance of vassal ser- vice to Austria, such as he recommended in 1848, ;the smallest army in' Prussia was large enough. After the conclusion of the ...

LITERATURE

... treats It as such; but aI theire seems, on his owu showing, to be more ci reason to regard It as Boulder Clay, the product h of land-ice, the surface soil being merel) k disintegrated Boulder Clay, Mir Lucy adds-- a lWith the object of tracing the gravel ...

LITERATURE

... be heard of the overbearing and dominating Gaul, so far as they wore concerned. No sooner had the Crown Prince scattered the army of MacMahon, and paralysed with two well-directed blows the whole military power of Franco, than the uppermost idei in the ...

THE [ill]

... First Duet The Strange Adventures of a a Crown and Sceptre, and oung ~Woman at cc- Sixteen and Boy a^t Tw~enty-one. of In the Aftanfic MOthly, The Unseen at. World, Old Woman's Gossip,' and Private he Thetricals, are continued; and among the ...

LITERATURE

... dathey were; did not escape Mr Malreward, and he asked with' a leer- 'And who is the honest woman, pray?-or is it that you are g6ing to niake her an honest woman ? I did not quite'catch your meauing you see. 'If you say-that again, I vill kill you.' replied ...

LITERATURE

... TUBE i . ?? Elolra .M0N~ oT DUTYS. DIUry o£ a. Young oficer in Chanzy's Army. From the French of ficer do M. With a Preface by, a. J. Vu ghao, D.D. London: Strahan & Co. Tz 4p1 1 Tins little book, which, according to Dr k VaughiwsS gra~cfully written ...