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Yorkshire and the Humber, England

Counties

Yorkshire, England

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572

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572

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LITERATURE

... ornginal appointment, sanctity, universal obligation, and continuance of the Sabbath. Sabbath legialaton is dealt with. When speaking of the Puritans, Mr. Spiers talls us how they, at the cost of ma& suffer- ing, wrasted from the grasp of tyrants the politcl ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... great northern bend of the Congo. At the point where the Congo begins to bear to the south-west this blank space is (so to speak) split into a western and an eastern section by the lower course of the Ubanji, a9 river which was first ascended by Mr. Greenfell ...

LITERATURE

... account of the household which is mentioned as coming with every man. Speaking to those who teach others, he says, I Perhaps we should have better success if we took care to speak of Gudin this world, making life a noble struggle, charging wlth new ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... uniting this country more closely with the nations of the East. Dr. Ainsworth has travelled widely in Persia, and in this book speaks with authority as to the prospects of trade in that rich but hitherto little-known region of the globe. He points out that ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... a Western tru temvn -- 2 Ar:: tr ~(sacz, hearing tib' cunrious title. t1u:i-er :- -nl expression said to be DI,L rc-u speak 7egmua - ?? mas asthe lernin takes scholarly - :. -- ?? in this cbun try in its original term - ti c-i-ice--gnat's. ?? openinig ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... North led him to ' change his plans, and to set sail for Chile instead of Cairo. Here, perhaps, we had better leave him to speak for himself. Crippled by the results of a crush I tnder my horse in my last campaign in the Transvaal, unable to ride, obliged ...

COPLEY FLOWER SHOW

... suply t re resolution advocated the limitation of the hours l of labsur to a muaximumn of forty-eight per ?? BEt; 'Triae=, in speaking to the ruslution, reterred in satisfied termas to thu sette-ment of the Souh Walies rail- wav strike. and daeised the report ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... ? ad N eij*-reabt results. An old man, now holding a ve-y high position ill our national Church. once remarked to me, in speaking. of his eldest brother, wvho nas for many years been dead, ?? I cannot tell you what I owe to him. ?? it not been for him ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEW

... 'wout, but it is not easy to a a e appears to do, that America has got to I ot its tether with Protection. A homily .a as 'speaks thus on 1iEzacis oF DEPr.Essios. i ' 2 times When the busiest mind grows Lit' ?? torpid but irritable. ito meatry iis .le ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... faithful e soul . . . a kinswoman to be proud of (or, Isilently to be thankful to Heaven for). His dmother, he tells us, would speak to her children , about ' this good grandmother . . . Wita a e tone of gentle humour, pathos, and hearts love, d which we ...

THE TRUE FUNCTIONS OF PICTORIAL ART

... so you will turn the attention of those before whom you place it from the true character of its excellunce-you will, so to speak, misfocus their s emotiona sensibility. It is only by concen- trating his attention on esseutially artistic atiibutes that ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... that is commonplace, and neither Nick Dormer nor Peter Sherringham can be regarded as typical English- men; and both of them speak and act in a fashion which lacks vigour and individuality. The scene of the story is laid in England and France, and with the ...