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Página 30
... Caused in Dundee a deil o ' a mornin ' . Geordie Mill was at length suspended for some unexplained reason - probably because of the popularity of the ballad— and was succeeded by a " Tattie - monger Loon , " which gave M'Nab another ...
... Caused in Dundee a deil o ' a mornin ' . Geordie Mill was at length suspended for some unexplained reason - probably because of the popularity of the ballad— and was succeeded by a " Tattie - monger Loon , " which gave M'Nab another ...
Página 39
... caused a more durable figure to be put on the tomb in its place . During a severe storm in August , 1895 , the canopy was blown down , but it was rebuilt , and stands as the memorial of a heroic deed , the story of which thrilled the ...
... caused a more durable figure to be put on the tomb in its place . During a severe storm in August , 1895 , the canopy was blown down , but it was rebuilt , and stands as the memorial of a heroic deed , the story of which thrilled the ...
Página 40
... caused throughout the Kingdom by the Reform Bills of 1831 and 1832. Previous to that time the Tory Party had presented a solid phalanx to resist political reform of any kind . In the early years of William Pitt's career that statesman ...
... caused throughout the Kingdom by the Reform Bills of 1831 and 1832. Previous to that time the Tory Party had presented a solid phalanx to resist political reform of any kind . In the early years of William Pitt's career that statesman ...
Página 42
... caused thereby . Up till about eleven o'clock nothing but the greatest harmony and jollity were visible . The crowd then began to disperse , and by half - past eleven there were scarcely 200 people in the High Street . About this time a ...
... caused thereby . Up till about eleven o'clock nothing but the greatest harmony and jollity were visible . The crowd then began to disperse , and by half - past eleven there were scarcely 200 people in the High Street . About this time a ...
Página 47
... Causes of the Wealth of Nations " ; Professor William Cullen of Edinburgh ; Professor John Millar of Glasgow ; and many other of the leading literary and scientific men of his day . He was in correspondence with Thomas Paine , and he ...
... Causes of the Wealth of Nations " ; Professor William Cullen of Edinburgh ; Professor John Millar of Glasgow ; and many other of the leading literary and scientific men of his day . He was in correspondence with Thomas Paine , and he ...
Términos y frases comunes
accused afterwards arsenic Arthur Wood asked Bailie Balfour became Bellman boat body bridge Bristed brother brought Broughty Ferry building burgh Bury called century cholera Church Claypotts Claypotts Castle Court crime crowd daughter declared Dempster Denside died door Drew Wood Drummond Castle Dudhope Castle Dundee Advertiser Dundonians Edinburgh erected evidence execution Fanny Wright father Ferry fire Forfarshire Friday George George Spalding Glasgow Grace Darling Greenmarket Grissel Jaffray guilty hangman High Street Howff James Jean Norrie Jenkins John Morgan John Peirson John Strachan jury King Lamb London Lord M'Cormick Magistrates mansion Margaret Warden Monday morning murder Murraygate night o'clock Overgate person Perth pinnaces Police present prisoner Provost rats Reform returned scene Scobbie Scotland Scottish Seagate sentence Smith Spalding story taken Tolbooth took place Town Council Town Drummer Town House Trades Lane trial visited Dundee Warden's death wife William witnesses Wood
Pasajes populares
Página 236 - Two sudden blows with a ragged stick, And one with a heavy stone, One hurried gash with a hasty knife, — And then the deed was done; There was nothing lying at my foot But lifeless flesh and bone!
Página 56 - Refined in her manner and language, she was a radical alike in politics, morals, and religion. She had a strong, logical mind, a courageous independence of thought, and a zealous wish to benefit her fellowcreatures ; but the mind had not been submitted to early discipline, the courage was not tempered with prudence, the philanthropy had little of commonsense to give it practical form and efficiency.
Página 58 - In the educational department we had considerable talent, mixed with a good deal of eccentricity. We had a Frenchman, patronized by Mr Maclure, a M. Phiquepal d'Arusmont, who became afterwards the husband of Frances Wright ; a man well informed on many points, full of original ideas, some of practical value, but, withal, a wrong-headed genius, whose extravagance and wilfulness and inordinate self-conceit destroyed his usefulness.
Página 106 - ... St. Crispin was a shoemaker, and consequently was chosen by the craft as their Patron Saint. The Rev. Alban Butler, in his " Lives of the Saints," says, " St. Crispin, and St. Crispinian, two glorious martyrs, came from Rome to preach at Soissons, in France, towards the middle of the third century, and, in imitation of St. Paul, worked with their hands in the night, making shoes, though they were said to be nobly born, and brothers.
Página 157 - Lybellandum, Within ane moneth, I gat ad Opponendum In half ane yeir I gat Interloquendum, And syne, I gat, how call ye it? ad Replicandum. Bot, I could never ane word yit understand him ; And than...
Página 57 - The victims of this odious experiment on human credulity and nervous weakness were invariably women. Helpless age was made a public spectacle, youth driven to raving insanity, mothers and daughters carried lifeless from the presence of the ghostly expounders of damnation...
Página 157 - The Feind ane plack was left for to defend him. Thus thay postponit me twa yeir with thair traine Syne, Hodie ad octo, bad me cum againe; And than, thir ruiks, thay roupit wonder fast, For sentence silver thay cryit at the last.
Página 57 - I8/3-] were independent in their circumstances, and were devotedly attached to each other. She had various personal advantages, — a tall, commanding figure, somewhat slender and graceful, though the shoulders were a little bit too high ; a face the outline of which in profile, though delicately chiselled, was masculine rather than feminine, like that of an Antinous, or perhaps more nearly typifying a Mercury ; the forehead broad, but not high ; the short, chestnut hair curling naturally all over...
Página 106 - The emperor, perhaps as much to gratify their accusers as to indulge his own superstition and give way to his savage cruelty, gave order that they should be convened before Rictius Varus, the most implacable enemy of the Christian name, whom he had first made governor of that part of Gaul, and had then advanced to the dignity of prefect of the prffitorium.
Página 11 - flying terms" with bands of gold, All these hath Oxford: all are dear, But dearer far the little town, The drifting surf, the wintry year, The college of the scarlet gown, St. Andrews by the Northern sea, That is a haunted town to me!