Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 83William Blackwood, 1858 - England |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 100
Page 81
... nature of the Scottish Universities ; and instead of leaving them as heretofore essentially popu- lar institutions , would confine their benefits to a limited class of the community . The elevation or im- provement of certain schools is ...
... nature of the Scottish Universities ; and instead of leaving them as heretofore essentially popu- lar institutions , would confine their benefits to a limited class of the community . The elevation or im- provement of certain schools is ...
Page 82
... nature that we cannot pass it over . In a letter addressed to the Lord Advocate on the subject of University Reform , Dr Leonhard Schmitz , Rector of the High School of Edinburgh , while advert- ing generally to the burgh schools in ...
... nature that we cannot pass it over . In a letter addressed to the Lord Advocate on the subject of University Reform , Dr Leonhard Schmitz , Rector of the High School of Edinburgh , while advert- ing generally to the burgh schools in ...
Page 92
... nature , never can prove attractive , and which yet are indispensable to a university . Such , for example , are the Chairs of Hebrew and Civil Law , from both of which regular instruction is given , but which are not , and never can be ...
... nature , never can prove attractive , and which yet are indispensable to a university . Such , for example , are the Chairs of Hebrew and Civil Law , from both of which regular instruction is given , but which are not , and never can be ...
Page 102
... nature by which this strange phenomenon managed to get itself developed the particular cir- cumstances favourable ... natural history , its anatomi- cal construction -- those features of peculiar individuality which distin- guished it ...
... nature by which this strange phenomenon managed to get itself developed the particular cir- cumstances favourable ... natural history , its anatomi- cal construction -- those features of peculiar individuality which distin- guished it ...
Page 104
... nature of those songs which spring up , no one knows how , natural productions of the country , like its flowers and its rivers - stray verses , of which no one can tell the author . Yet it differs also from those poetical aborigines ...
... nature of those songs which spring up , no one knows how , natural productions of the country , like its flowers and its rivers - stray verses , of which no one can tell the author . Yet it differs also from those poetical aborigines ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
albumen animal Arab beauty Beranger better blood body Brahmins British CALIFORN called character Christian Church civilisation classes Colonel Morley course Crane Darrell death Delhi Dr Livingstone eyes face favour feel fibrine fire George Morley give Government guns hand Haughton head heart honour House of Vipont human India Jasper Losely jemadar John Kertch kind labour Lady Montfort Lahore land less Lionel live look Lord Lord Palmerston means ment mind Minister Mombas native nature ness never night nitrogen officers once Pangany party passed perhaps person Peshawur Phillour poet present prison Punjab question race racter regiment round seems seen Sepoys Sophy substances tell thing Thorndale thought tion truth turn Umballa village Waife Whig whole woman words young Zanzibar