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Newcastle Courant

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Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Northumberland, England

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Newcastle Courant

NORTHERN ACADEMY OF FINE ARTS,

... 01 cui - tivation; leaving another as bleak and barren as he found it.- An air of peculiargrandeor pervades thewhole, and speaks hig). lv for the correctness of Mlr Rtichardson's eye. Newcastle, ~hA t,_1829. . ?? S. ...

AN IMPORTANT BOOK IN EDUCATION

... too, as t4ate l by Dr Wamrren, tf 13ston, hu) was oflicially amppointed to I report on them, that he has -never Ienrl themi speak to eahc other, thouigh they are verv ftond of talking with a young Siamese, who hats been bromnht with them n s a ompanioln ...

NORTHERN ACADEMY

... -wisheld to gather in the fruit,' press the grapes, and force nut the wine for himself. His words are instructive ; he is speaking of his own aspilations after faine;-aiid-the unsatisfactory mode of study commonly re- commended to students. So much, then ...

NEWCASTLE EXHIBITION OF PICTURES BY MODERN ARTISTS

... splentlid and elaborate pro dlictions alreadv mentioned in the course oftthese remarks. Of his battle-piece (248) we could not speak otherwise than at great length, and therefore prefer leaving it to individual appre- ciation ; for, of couirse, as ant ideal ...

LITERATURE

... an imaginative point of view', and of' its great utility in ilustrat the an- ials oi' Eluropean nations, it is needless to speak; -rhile us regaids the latter is is rather extraordinarv that until now the public havie not been generallv iln- formed as ...

LITERATURE

... libra- ries. (See advertisement in our paper of this day.) Of the volumes already published we have already taken occasion to speak: Galt's Life of Byron is now considered to he the most impartial biography of the noble bard that has ever ap- peared, while ...

LITERATURE

... true resource of a free people; they are the .,.$e4.hiejtruent in which the public voice is sounded, when it - jyquaresto speak mi its loudest tones; the means by which the C 1MV r l the cahmities of the remoter parts of the empire mt4 ?? inown at its ...

LITERATURE

... cimnultantepusly withdrewni frost their se-pet-t Itoles, wahen sucs a step was hoard ;-a ammenit's hutletc i-ri io quiry veho was speaking, andthlen, Chose whotri thme ariviul ,Pr ticaLarly, concerned r-enaijied quietly chatting or sthe balsa beach ; and tome ...

LITERATURE

... Newspaper Rep orting. The -whnle paper discloses, in an interesting nnanner that comphlated mental and mnanual mechanrsui, so to 'speak, by means' of which tile inhabi. tants of tbis kingdoui ure daily infbrmned. not only about wxhat is done, but of wiat is said ...

GENTLEMEN'S FASHIONS FOR APRIL

... ing of' Don Pedro, thousanls of' persons of all ranks were arvestwl, and throwin jito the beastly prisons of this city ftr speaking their minids too fieelv; these people still rc- naitn in confinemient, andl are solely indebted to chariity f(r their daily ...

LITERATURE

... a vigoroius sliare in titose perpieteual debates. and he made con- tinistal proe~ress itt Ito pttblir adlmi rationt. HIis speaking was a style totally newy to tite house ;illi the nationt. But two (tmri- ?? orators hail afl~ltared Ii ptrfiatnene for a ...