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Glasgow Herald

THE MAGAZINES

... of is altog~ether born. in folly, an~d foll is. his best pe friend from-fthe cradletothe grave. Before Folly : has done- speaking the~food for 'nerriment sh ef . offers has turned tot wormwod but the wl greater, part of the production is in the be lightestnd ...

LITERATURE

... esteemed tue best of: his origisal1 poems RBut Me Morris has not troubled the reader with .preface, prologue, or note. The work speaks ca for itself. ie has selected the old fourteen-. et syllable line as the best for the translation of ti the hexameter vorses ...

LITERATURE

... cases. b ; The tales and traditions which Dr Rink has ol collected, and of which we have left ourselves but little space to speak, are 150 in number. ol The natives divide them into two kinds-the ancient ones, which are the property of the ox oreater part ...

LITERATURE

... ecclesiastical matters was a desire for r toleration for herself and her friends. Mr Shelton, it is to be observed, is here speak- c ing of the earlier days of Mary's reign; he allows that at a later period of her life her e -devotion to the Church became ...

LITERATURE

... to s Mr Bugby ti written a leader on a suicide an caasA th rtmotely and immediately by inter In PjrsOce, and Kr-Jenkins speaks of it-in the terms to we have quoted either because the writer had -TI before sittiug down to it indulged in punch,-or W because ...

LITERATURE

... questions, Why' en should I open my hand? Why should I open my de heart? Why should I speak to my brother? will never be asked agaiu. Is it not far better to speak de than to walk threegh life silet, unknown unknow- th ing? Has any one of us ever spoken ...

THE THEATRES

... finest periormance of the Colloen Bawn we have seen in Glasgow, the representation of last evening is by no weans the worst. Speaking first of the ladies, we do not know that Mrs Margaret Eburne's 21rs Cregan, or Miss Clara Rose's SIheelah., has been surpassed ...

THE EDINBURGH REVIEW—No. 291

... adopted in not calling Parlia- scent togethier at the earliest period to explain ani asic sanction for the whole business, and speaks of it as ai course -in ie highest degree nuconstitttiouat andinapropesr. lia objects to Govurnmeots or States ralking a ...

LITERATURE

... detestble tricks by which controver- t sialists so often eudeavour to secure fictitious i victories over one another. We cannot speak! 3 too highly of the thorough hdnesty and Christian ll manliness that are apparent in this vonlume, and' we taink we see, all ...

LITERATURE

... lead mining in preference sane other, and thae indisputable logic of facts Iva saaaly supported him. So far back as g he ?? speaking, lead 'oi are the cheapest to work. and quickest to to returns, and, generally, whenever he has occas.on to write about mines ...

GEORGE ELIOT'S NEW NOVEL.*

... own language:- us own ?? tWhen he got to the house, everybody was ad there bet Gvendolen. The four girls, hearing him ex speak in the hall, rushed out of the library, which to was their school-room, and hung round him with compassionate inquiries about ...

GLASGOW INSTITUTE OF THE FINE ARTS

... he intended to pay himself a as forjit, but he trusted he would come down hand- 7 a- somely, for the likeness was really a Speaking one ae-so much an, that one can hardly resst being B- tempted to ask it to favour them with a story. ; Then there were portraits ...