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Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

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1,175

Type

1,175

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LITERATURE

... v. 2, and if this be a misprint for v. 21, where we read, And God created great whales, 8r., it is obviously a mistake to speak of it as the introduction of life, in view of the formation of pllants in v. li-plant-life beiig as truly a fosra of life as ...

THE MAGAZINES

... Professor Euxley wrould probably call its cock- sureness, an~d here and there it is unpleaatly smart, Tise remark, Carpenter sp~eaks of 'the physical chne being translated into the psychlical,' but add 'we know nothing about at.' If he knows nohig about it ...

[ill]

... to remember e that there are two distinct classes of facts with I which we are dealing, there will be no great ' harm in speaking of them together, and by the s aid of the same words. This is the mistake I which vitiates the reasoning of the whole. No ...

MUSIC AND THE DRAMA

... tattoowaseffectod, but the marks were immediately removed. CONSERVATIVE DEMONSTBETION IN LA'N- A6HIRE,, Mr Hardeastle, LEP., speaking at the annual mneeting of the Middletoa Conservative Club on Satiuday, . said he could, not understand the vindictiveness ...

THE MAGAZINES

... Summa ot St Thomas Aquinas, and Mr T. W. Rhys-Davids a brief sketch of The ancient Buddhist belief concern- ing God. In speaking of Nirvana, however, as an earthly state of intellectual and moral per- fection resulting from self-culture and self-con- ...

CHORAL UNION

... many had to be content wvith standing | roomn. - The concert was vitiolt doubt the most successful of the season. This result speaks well for the musical taste of Glasgow, as it was one of the most severely classical pro- gramnmes ever presented in this, ...

LITERATURE

... as goats, and v they come down from the mountains to pillage y the Greek towns. Benjamin visited Constan. B tinople, and speaks of its opulence; and at n Paris he found numbers of learned men. Next C century we find the Venetiana merchants, Nicolo I ...

THE MARQUIS OF BUTE ON ART

... in it all something to which I am not impertinent enough to apply the slang word solidarity, but a moral unity, if I may so speak, a common soul, an uni- versal aspiration, which seems to have more or less perfectly developed itself in all the highest artists ...

THE THEATRES

... Buckstone deserves a special word of commendation for his impersonation of Fa. This young actor has an easy bearing, and speaks his lines with admirable clearness and point. These old English comedies, it should be added, are put on the stage in the ...

LITERATURE

... devotes to Christianity in Madagascar, and theI present condition of the island industrially, a socially, and religiously, Hie speaks hopefullyr of its future and of the prospects of the spread of Christianity ansong the natives. There is no doubt that mission ...

THE GLASGOW ART INSTITUTE

... water-colour painters. Cf that drawing we have expressed great admiration; of the artist's con- tributions to the Institute we can speak in only less measured terms. The principal picture ex- hibited by Mr Alan is 136, ;Salmon Fishers. The purpose of the artist ...

MUSIC AND THE DRAMA

... thle' evifing; T'Helialth I of' Mr Irving, aid the -Ltceuin'lTheatib. Lord Hofightob delivered a panegyrip of ML irving, speaking id .16elicitous teims Y of that gentleman's edlorts ?? -cause of art, and of his kindness anad cousideration to eall his ...