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Place

Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

Access Type

72

Type

72

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POETRY AND VERSE

... tales of certain 8btsw eorne of them of divine lineage. v !icghsea~g ty is perfectly human; and 'a p. e~rachpc~lStY I ?? that speak, while professedly sound- a sarons many centuries, really sem to belong ¢the ephere on onjr ovin experietce, coming ,thenexststreet ...

MR TENNYSON'S NEW PLAY

... indeed, he has not acted as his own 5fpt5C. On his own head, therefore, rests the Ze or blame, if there be either; and, speaking athefirs hsty impressn, we are inc]ined to i that he will be credited with less of the -ibrrer thant of the latter.' We shall ...

LITERATURE

... newly-born children, so that gl they shall not hear a word spoken, to diseover vi whether, in the course of time, they would tn speak the natural and original tongue of mane cc kind. Such experiments were made by James fl IV. of Scotland, and by the potentates ...

FINE ART EXHIBITIONS IN LONDON

... somewhat with the subdued tints of e the pictures by which it is surrounded. Baron at a Leys, though long since dead, yet speaks to 1 artists and anpateura by such pictures as The i r Inn Yard' (88), which renders .adihirably the as I life and movement ...

CATTLE SHOWS

... Scottish Agricultural Engineers' Association The un yard was well flled with implements, and theicol sta ectiOnS, generally speaking, had the recommends sa tion of being more bona fide agricultural exhibits the than is ten frequently the case in shows of ...

LITERATURE

... she thinks of goingon the stag, let eras singer or actor, or both; but on con- ar salting KlesJer on the subject, the man speaks tran, d the woman seas that escapo from a life of dependence does not that way lie. What not sse, sto do? Her uncle, the rector ...

DE EADIE'S HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH BIBLE

... - best meet the bslis of our readers tb by--giving thembi-tome acoitint of the contents .ft of the book -and so lettinj4it speak for itself. In the introduotion,-which occapies the lhst fli thirfy-fonr-pagds, -we have a brief but very K interesting accouat'-of ...

LITERATURE

... t~ she all say in our own time whether Mr ha, Mr Alied Ten~sO0or Mlr H olmall Hunt is the ?? bator artist; hether tihe o01 speaking to boo [oglhlflti n th laguage of Englishmen, or H eh; ct p the abiiigto al the wornl In a npu- Pr! vord the other ^o ccupies ...

THE CENTENNIAL EXHIBITION

... they make front it are quite equal in point of finish to anything to be seen in the British stands. Of their glass I cannot speak in the same high terms. There is a large display, but the material seems to lack the. clearness of the best English crystal ...

LITERATURE

... Mr Moody, who. persistently tries at keep sell out of sight. At the same time,i is only fair to say that American critics speak of Mr Finney as a modest, but energetic and de- votedjnua, Mr Finney's views on several theo- logical points-such as on original ...

POETRY AND VERSE

... flowing, When something stood behind- A hand was on my shoulder, I knew its touch was kind: It drew me nearer-nearer- We did not speak one word, a For the beating of our own hearts n Was all the sound we heard. in Lays from Latin Iyres, by F. H. , Hummels ...

THE THEATRES

... overhears and sees, unseen, the romantic loves of the sundial and the fountain. In replyto the tender wish that the sundial should speak, he replies from his invisibility, ,and declares that the love of Vavirwill to-morrow disenthrallhim from the stone in which ...