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Place

Leeds, Yorkshire, England

Access Type

133
354

Type

487

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Poetry

... tdeath, thy Nation'saIlight to gain, And, wrest from tyrant-rule thy Father-land. Arise ! .to a~rms ! was Kossu lb's loud appeal! Arise! to armis 1resounded through the land; Then Hlungary'd sons rushed forth with burning zeal, To crush the accursed ...

THE AMERICAN EXHIBITION

... durinu last mnthe tti o ital iio of the fish landed on the English atil M'eish Corn s r la £307,711, as compared with £297,612 in the coae no last year. For the three months ei-l,,u 'lic tiai vhai5 of fish landed was S872,672, as Comprared with '.7in1 in ...

Reviews

... fleet and army; and the practical p'ositionon which Sir Francis Head insists is, :a short and sum- mary one. H3[e says:.-ii l; Gliven' thsohigh state .of preparation on thepart of France, and the low state of preparation on the part of Eng- land, I maintain ...

Reviews

... and. rotection of An isnvadingfledt and-army ;--and the!pr~aetioal position.on which Sir ?? insists,is,,a short; and, sum- .,ofptpaatonHetl tho part of France; andl. the tofpreparation on the ?pvAr1of ang- land, I maintain, that: within ?? veik ! of -tbb ...

Reviews

... he obtained the appointment of Physician to the Army in Ire- land, which he retained for about seven years. A hundred pounds which he was allowed for outfit made himw worth about £500 when he landed atWa- terford, in September 1652; he had a salary ...

Reviews

... invading feet and army; and the praoticalpiositiononwhich . Sir Francis Hlead insists is, a short. and suip- mary one. Hie s _ay Given the high state of preparation on the part of France, and the °. state of preparation on the part of Eng- land, I maintain ...

THE FEBRUARY REVIEWS

... Irish Land and British Legislators, r. W, E. Bear advocates the acquisition of Vihe land by the State in Ireland, Ho would give in exchange to the present ownera a moderate aun in terminablo annuitisa, and thou redisteibute and let the land at qedliciutly ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... oats are; and I on the recdaimed lands, and those lands overflowed by the freshets on sorne of the rivers, the vield is from one ! hundrd and twenty-five to one hundred and fiftv bushels to the seae. Some of these low lands have been raising oats steadily ...

THE DECEMBER REVIEWS

... conscription for home service, has a wholly separate army for Nether- lance-India. France moreover has been obliged to com- mience, aud-will probably'carry further, the creation of a Lseparate army for Tonquin and Annam ; and other nations are contemplating ...

Literary Extracts

... sad and disconsolate. At last he said, So, poor woman, you find she is gone! Yes, Sir, I merely called upon you to condole with you upon the melancholy occasion. Ay, she is gone I a very good woman ; a great loss to me, cer- tainly, Sir. But I'll ...

Reviews

... that he communicated to those by whom he was ompanied the nature of the enterprise iii which' w ere ehiedv The-ndventurers landed at the of Joan, and their reception was by no means a ncouragiug description, as far as the peasants con erned. In fact, ...

Reviews

... he obtained d the appointment of Physician to the Army in Ire- t land, which he retained for about seven years. A hundred pounds which he was allowed for outfit made him worth about £500 when he landed at Wa- terford, in September 1652; he had a salary ...