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England

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Yorkshire and the Humber, England

Counties

Yorkshire, England

Access Type

465

Type

465

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LITERATURE

... ndsuggestive too of the Amateur Casual. Yet in Mr. Mlurray's hands it appears to be a word of |high antiquity, for Chancer speaks of a i'casual happe,| |and tells how ?? casually the schippes bottom rent. Ine other cases explanations of words eA, given ...

MAGAZNES FOR JANUARY

... by Dissenters to the| he Church in the Prdincipality; buit it canh hardl1y improve the| in position of the Chulrch there to speak of some of its he opponents as Calvinistic fa~natics. On one point, hd owever, the Judge will find himself in agreement ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... events of strikting importance, but for emphatic testi- o mnony to the fact that the business classes of this fc countr are, speaking broadly, in the enjoyment of aD period of great prosperity. Year by year this in- n vsaluable manual, w~hich is nowa in its ...

THE TUDOR EXHIBITION

... Boger Astham, her tutor, she con- teased that bar love of learnin was due to the sever~ity of. her, parents, who, whether I speak, keep silence, sit, stad, or go, eat, drink, be merry or sad, be sewing, play-. rng, dancin~g, or doing an~ythinlg else, I ...

LITERATURE

... native in sevenl is a Romnan Cath'hlc, o ro.^om al} appearance we do act think their number ;ik !ieW to greatly increase.' Speak-me of the boat- ha.loing sk~ill of these Satnoan 3lalayans, Mr. Phillips sari. I have been in one sixty feet long, wihich ...

LITERATURE

... century, the O-. * ae _Nrtr anld the society of the South have ::l: *r-. hat more to gain in the union that i.cenes closer. In speaking of the West, ?? - tou. ap the cudgels ou beosif of Chicago- ?? u:w his Cp inPr, has sudered not a little at the . .: s.- ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... opinions; sometimes, indeed, he is a little too much inclined to poke fun at the 'vulgar herd; or, in other words, is apt to speak unadvisedly of those who are not prepared to accept his ideas of art with becaming reverence. We hope, bowever, he wMI in time ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... A-SCxroESs OF mES CnGEIG-a somewh~at dreary com- pilation of more thanL twice-told tales. The stories are given without, so to speak, chapter er verse, and many of them possess a double disadvantage, for they are both pointless and stale. The book is described ...

LITERATURE

... extremely eloquent preacher, and linked to this attractive gift was an wmnisal power of orgsaisation, which made him, so to speak, a captain of industry mn the Christian Church. ;Ee was still in the prime of manhood when death cut short a career which was ...

THE SHIRE HORSE SHOW

... always inI a favourable light. With such a larze number of entrios, however, there was room for difference of opinion, end, speaking generally, the awards met with public appro- bation. The annual meetirg of the members of the society was 1 held in the forenoon ...

LEEDS SUBSCRIPTION CONCERTS

... appreciate the I difference of their styles. True, in each case our analytical guides-whose names or initials proclaim that they speak with authority-refer us to certain themes or subjects, the rworking out or development of which con- stitutes the movement ...

LITERATURE

... that equilibrium of character which should be one of the best results of civilisation. The exercise of spts creates, so to speak, the lymph which is othe n rtr c arive of the evil ge-ns eageadered by the sedenta^ry inencee of a coapies and crowded society ...