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Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

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72

Type

72

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THE INSTITUTE OF THE FINE ARTS

... close of the lecture the trep; r report of the receipts and Stpeni;.;1 iti4i with the coaste, showtog a donc4. £3 This fact speaks for bfelf, ari) O1t k of appreciation of the Society'send ; O ?I . videa rotcl course of iecture,. Y public. A vote of ...

THE THEATRES

... not s ~en any of his Shakespearian pro- g ducts, although we have heard good things of 'e them; and we , u at present only speak briefly s about Sardanap. dlus, which, more than any work of the grew ter dramatist's plays, must have tried Mr Cask ert's ...

GLASGOW SCIENCE ASSOCIATION LECTURES

... Author of the Creation to carry out His work ias an architect carries out His wvork, with a plan before him-that He had, so to speak, restricted Himself in the work of creation by definite limits-i i that He had, like a musician, taken a given theme, and worked ...

THE LIFT OF NORMAN MACLEOD.*

... happy. Chris- hi i tianity was a thing taken for granted, not forced la with scowl and frown. I never heard my father cc t speak of Calvinism, Arminianism, Presbyterianismi w ror Episcopacy, or exaggerate doctrinal differences hi rin my life. I had to ...

LITERATURE

... propriety of doing himself the very thing he 'i r condemns in others. lndeed, one-of the charms I r of the Professor's writing&a4 speaking consists I in the power they display of. kicking up a dust; and. should that power ever fail him, and' hbe allows himself ...

THE [ill]

... n of Hun- n gary,' he henceforth had marks of esteem and ' respect showered upon him from all sides. The tj people, when speaking of him, used quaint names of t! endearment; and all kinds of tales about his daily t doings cropped up. To the Queen-Empress ...

MR TREVELYAN'S LIFE OF LORD MACAULAY,*

... staring at one another and marched off to his room, little knowing that before many years %vere out he would baveoccasion to speak mauch -more repectfully 5of the Leeds bagmenr. He did not seriously look to the bar as a pro fession, and after a year or ...

SATURDAY EVENING CONCERTS

... conductedbyhfrW. M.3lfler. They w were not all delivered with equal precision and of ,r, correctness, buct the music, generally speaking, D' being boldly energetic, was vwell suited to their w t. powres. The popular chorus, Crown with e feiitlpomptheday,'! ...

THE ATTIC ORATORS FROM ANTIPHON TO ISÆUS.*

... of treating appropriatelyevery ease entrusted.' to him, and of making each client speak as an in.' telligent person, without professional aid, might be. expected to speak in ceraii circimistanceea which chiefly determined the style of Lysias . ?? , The ...

THE PROPOSED IRISH NATIONAL MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND ART

... t for whose benefit, in the belief that their father n was dead, a concert was recently given there, a ?? over M40. They speak highly of Mrs o Wordsworth's spirit under her privations. She t was saved with only a night dregs and a pettiy coat, and this ...

THE SHADOW OF DEATH

... Scott spoke to them, and 1 asked wbat pledge would' have to be left for his'( - friend. On the constable turning round to t speak to Scott, he struck the officer on the brow i i with a knife. For this cowardly action Scott I S was fined £oi, with the a ...

LITERATURE

... from the f asroewhat evil eminence enjoyed by Renfrew- shire in the annals of witches and warlocks. Ilecent, historically speaking, though most of I ;he documents are, some of them almlost touch the I irme when clerg and judges sentpor creatures ;o the ...