Refine Search

Countries

Scotland

Place

Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

Access Type

83

Type

83

Public Tags

LITERATURE

... ce ;thaet, re we frineli- admlt, in the w:ine ruge ahich hebe It traverSes, is heyeond our reach, bht we can afford tE to speak, withofeut quahtlication, of his popular j as ILntrtions which are always level to the most ' as nLilary- calpacity, without ...

LITERATURE

... has already on his book-shelf. Another objec- a tionable feature of the biography are the num- P ber of testimoni~ls, so to speak, to Mr Kingsley t that are appended.. His devoted., truly 8 admirable wife seems to have writte 'to every 3 one she could bethink ...

LITERATURE

... the Scottish Hymnal being 200, leaving say 60 hymns in the latter not in the collection new before us. The 60 omitted are, speaking generally, all good hymns, so that the divergencge may be~ regarded as an indication of difference between the two Churches ...

LITERATURE

... affctio forth follow- ing three years, when MVrs Grant's death occurredh Mr Grant's own health was now gvng way, and his public speaking aggravated th`e bronchial affection to which he was subject.' In 18(31 lie was at Torquay, and wad ordered thence to Lisbon ...

EDINBURGH PHOTOGRAPHIC EXHIBITION

... studies of rustic subjects, and that a special medal be avrarded to MrJ. Gauz, of Brussels, for his transparencies. They also speak of many of the pictures that were marked -not for competi- tion as being of the highest excellence, and allude to the effects ...

EARL GRANVILLE ON ART AND ART SCHOOLS

... - au original sneech. He remembered the Marquis q r of Dalhousie giving advice to one of the greatest h sncakters never to speak upon a sibiject about I wI hich he knows nothing. Although Major Scott p DI and his audience expected him to sav a few words ...

TROUT CULTURE.*

... as the brook trout is concerned, its artificial culture can never become a matter of any great importance, as, generally speaking, such trout are of no food - value, but, being a good angler's fish, ,they afford sport to the disciples of , old Isaak Walton ...

MUSICAL ANTICIPATIONS

... sa and in the title role of Zainpa. This attrac- we-r tive scheme does not stand in nerde of O acc word of Praise. It speaks eloquiently for itself trn-n and wje trust that Mr Roisa and thle manage-ment btat of the Theatre-Royal will reap the haunsone ...

ASTRONOMICAL MYTHS.*

... nearly the same apparent track in the heavens as the sun, they are visible on both sidies of the equator; and as, roughly spe~aking, they 'rise wi aend set ?? the sun one half of the yeasr, while thl during the other half they are visible by night, they ...

LITERATURE

... MNaintenon, wrho asked him. once tb to tell her what hie ?? to be her chief m fauiltz, are full of the plaine_,st et plaiss speaking,, be and he was always eqlually candid to others. of An early letter of F'Suclou's, written in 167.5 to in the Due de Be ...

LITERATURE

... these last remarks, I ventured to suggest that priests eought to euonmise in view of future contingencies. Iit is easy to speak, replied Bathuska. A story is soon told, as the proverb has it, but a thin- is not soon done. How are we to economise ...

LITERATURE

... to see a e pen competent 0n record his pereeutioc~ ,t course we shall have more about theru; n the Challenger, but we c'-n speak of tin1L d tending volume as a fair andi fttVOraiA ea 0 of good things to come. L8 (31 EZ(in Parish Rcord,. L Px'ct, informing ...