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Date

1900 - 1949
46 1900-1909

Countries

Regions

Grampian, Scotland

Access Type

46

Type

46

Public Tags

POETS' CORNER

... POETS' CORNER, M I S I C. What is music? This we know:f When it speaks we answer all, And our hearts responsive glow, Be our fortunes great or small. E'en the monarch on his throne Yields, a captive to its spell, To each note, he needs must owxi Vibrates ...

THE LAIRD'S WIFE

... rose to his feet whenever the service was ended. Come, Jack, he said, 'let us hurry; if we wait, rn never get away wihout speaking to l eveyone, and, without waiting to see if his friend was following, he slipped into the aisle, immediately behind 'Miss ...

LITERATURE

... modestly says the poems are the outcome Of I the few spare moments I had after a hard i day's work in a stuffy workshop. He be speaks a lenient judgment on his work, his thris appeal is scarcely reqtuired, as thered is nothing in the collection that does not ...

THE LAIRD'S WIFE

... hesr eyes openea Slhe looked round: vacantly i9cs-.bher'lips were parted in a smile. Adelakde, he called imploringly. ; Speak to me. your 'husband. and lie raised her hand and pressed it to his lips. Har-old, she murmured faintly, and the life o.ilour ...

LITERATURE

... assur-i c ance. Countrv ministers should be allowed o eto speak of their own troubles and diffi- el o-rlties, and mini.s-ters of cities and towun,, ti and villages sholiuld not be encouraged to In speak on subjects of uihich they know co1- I fi paratively ...

FOR THE QUEEN'S SAKE

... heard me speak unto the Queen's Majesty, you shave thought me rude and cruel of nature, and not mindful of what is due unto's' 'woman andd a sovereign. But He who knoweth the secrets of 4allhearts, knoweth that it is of my love and duty that I speak. For ...

LITERATURE

... counsel every business man, be higS bank account small or large, to make himself master of the contents of this little volume. SPEAKING. By Wilam Mair I. A.. D.D., minigter of the parish of Earlston. (Ediaburgh and London:. William Eakwood and Sonas) This is ...

THE LAIRD'S WIFE

... he-leheard, on-her re- ituin. that thme police had' given up 'all ihope of arrestisig the burglars. Once she had attempted' to speak to 'Harold.on, the subject,. but her heart failed hee-, and she- looked so visibly disturbed' when she, saird H&t youi never ...

SCOTTISH DIVCRCE CASES

... his children by his first. wife: She said he was mean. In August, 1894, they went into town to see her mother. They did not speak to each other till they were near her mothers house. Then she said that he need not look for her coming back, but to look for ...

BURNS'S POETRY IN THE TRANSVAAL TONGUE

... 'Teal nad a closer connection with lowland Scots than with env European language, except the Dutch. Dr Colyille went on to speak of ex-Secretary Reitz's. attempts to create Boer literature. Raitz had an English education, and when he returned to his; home ...

THE LAIRD'S WIFE

... they are ready loaded to your hand. Ja;ck had no longer any doubt of Harold's in- ,snity. ,ou wish to fight me, he said, speaking coolly though his heart was throbbing heavily, and, bending dowci, he hastily seized both pistols and whirledf them into ...

CHILDRENS CORNER

... fancied he could see the faces of loved ones and hear them speak, :y as in the old days. And so he sat down and I put his thought's into those words which we all keknow and all- love. I speak to the boys and ir girls to-day, and if they forget all else ...