WESTERN LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC [ill]

... minerals of Persia, It had, he said, but one gemi-the turquoise. Of its vegetable pro- ductions he observed, that it contained all proper to a tro- pical, as well as to a moderate climate. Few countries con- ttined iuiorte animals tluan did Persia, but the ...

BONNY DUNDEE

... sndrdangerous sentimuent. Coestosnce bkeiself is exquisitely draw ?? -1Literosy Garzette.. . . ?? ]Iorier this author of ' Hajji Babs, hias just prepared ?? Edition of his nets production, lZoli- rob tbe Iloatige which is announced to appear imome- diately ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... to ito. virtue. Mr. Bentley is also the publisher of, Ayeaha, oyS by the author of 1 Haj ii Babs. In this new work Mr. lot: Motter has quitted Persia. but still laid the scene of it in the the East. This woo judicious, on account of the author's ...

ODDS AND ENDS

... ctire years 1830 and 1844, the cnrorcnus sum of:1OS,000 sterling in advertising his nostraln. Tire CIOLERA. - Letters frees Persia statc that this dreadful diisesc is making friglitfel iivaoges itl thie interior of A-ia. This corege sekich lhas travelled ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... several of them fell fainting in the streets after their arrival.-A new religions sect has arisen in Persia, in consequence of the preachings of a man named Bab, who has written a new book to take the place of the Koran; he is said to have already made several ...

PRIZE LISTS OF THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... Good Hopte, tanning back. Thierme-Widtwrkerker and Pusehol, Saxony, sponges. Re Thaor, A. k.. Zollveroin, woes. n Thompson Persia, silks. LI! Terdeux, P'rance, charcial, prepared. m Trent. E. W.. Seax. Set Tyrrell, dO! ow Zealand, Slax. Terasson do Mdontleau ...

DEATH OF THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON

... _ _ _ _ _ _the *ts- Fau1situs HiritirrICS AND EXRcirOaritosrs.-The and ui- late mittiiaipt to iissassin ate thle Shah iof Persia was cres t nrirle by two Piersons who belonimped to the religious huol ?? cul~od liatis. Th~s was thle uonly confession havi ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... northern shores of the Caspian and Black Seas, as far as Moldavia; and, on the south, the desert tracts which cross Klorisdn and Persia, extending from KhwArazm to Kirmain, are Possessed by the Ilimits or tribes of migratory Tiirks, as indeed they have been ...

LITERATURE

... on a higher level in of Ciro and Dimascus then either in Paris or in London. Science and art were cultivated in Syria and Persia with at least as much succegr as in Europe. In the former as well as in the latter, Aristotle was studied, jurisprudence e ...

LITERATURE

... upon to mourn wit% re, We are -not sirprised that the friends who watcedlk with interest the result of her bold experiment at Bab-el-Bahar, should desire to know more about its results, for it was an experiment well calculated to arouse the curiosity of ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... hints for understanding other Oriental lands and peoples; for Egypt, Syria, Mesopotamiia, nay even Anatolia, Curdistan, and Persia, have been deeply modified in many respects by Arab influence, partly, too, by Arab intermixture and colonization. Historical ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... the Court of Persia. Smith, Elder, and Co. Aiming especially to write a continuation of Sir John, Malcolm's 'History of Persia,' Mr Watson has wisely given up about a hundred pages of his book to a careful survey of the history of Persia during the eighteenth ...