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LITERATURE

... -This is an essay on 'the part of an earniest d and accomplished writer-whether male or Ocr female it is hard to say-' Ito speak for tho faith Ed -of Christ in this age of cultured doubt.' As a IArn ,devout believer in the incarnation of the Son of i wat ...

BIRD SHOW AT ELGIN

... painted past is to 'put a stop to it before. it -happens,!' t iw one The landlady was surely a relative of here who, e, bowing speaking of 'a lodger mat daceaied, 'said-Poor judge's manu be Wasso seneitive ' luckily he did not' see James himself die, or 'it ...

NEW-YEAR'S DAY CHORAL UNION WONCERTS

... not,however,at all points per. tb fectly sure of his part. Of Mr A. Black's ren- th ?? of the bass solo music we can only speak TI in unqualified praise. Mr Black shows himself pa the thoroughly earnest artist who spares neither ra pains nor study ia ...

AGRICULTURAL REVIEW

... far as their work i hs mcucosned, It is not often, indeed. that they are so -eppi far forward at this particular sea400. Speaking land generally, the past year baal been a good one for the duci crops, which have been fairly abundant, and of godbrou 0uaixty ...

A THRILLING TALE OF THE SEA

... Lo0D Hoarom.-A short Th preliminary notice of Mr Wormyas Raid's fortb- fre coming Life of Lord Heughton appears in the wa Speake- of, Saturday. 'rho work will he A pubished in the spring. It will 'h=r4ly sal be so Mniol a regular biography as sa a record ...

LITERATURE

... hardly seems w possible that the tranasparently-constructed tale bu before us is the work of a practised pen. Pro- th perly speaking, the story has no plot. To a a reader of experience the seed is visible within a m score of pages of the opening. A boycotted ...

AGRICULTURAL REVIEW

... mtist prevent much embarrassment in the choice which one has to make. ed on ns Of potatoes, for example, there are, roughly speak- Re he ing, about 200 varietios-al number sufficient to ap)- as pal the most enthusiastic amnateur. Out of this chaose X.a ...

HEATHER IN LITERATURE

... excelled in the ballad, the romance, and the sonnet, and many of his shorter pieces elljoy a great popularity among the Uerrnan-speaking races. The Hungarian heath, stretching for miles with its herds of wild horses, is unknorwn in our ! literature, and as far ...

LITERATURE

... 's objects of the new periodical are set forth at is great-perhaps unnecessary-length, in an 5, address To all English-speaking Fiolk, and in sf other papers. It is a good idea to present the e cream of each month'e oeriodical literature, and a sort ...

SCOTTISH SOCIETY OF LITERATURE AND ART

... customers two Australians were worth 33 subjects [as- of the United States, The figures proved that ory trade followed the flag. Speaking of what he called ion the disintegrating influences at work in the )MA calonies. Professor Stro~e observed that in eact, ...

LITERATURE

... commonplace Eliglish | 3. domestsc order, some types of the eccentric i n classes with which large cities abound; and it | t speaks well for the author's goodness of heart, | a if not for his artistic taste, that even the most | y otur6 reaches at last the ...