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been impossible tojelect a man £° gJ ? S teJ ^ mme of A ^ oljD , Tie Kssrtsg ;« S 3 nrarr . sis SSH ^ SfSsSiS SS S g ^ SSSSSSs ^ a CreXed signat service to the cause of education , not onl , _ by ta own M Wle zSTia the conduct of the college , but by the »«<«* -fe ^ S ^ st ; s : q S * Son of our readers to Mr . Temule ' s adjmrablc scheme of ZMeiL Education , . hich , if other p , oof . ere < « £ ;* . - ... odd suffice StSf ^^
S £ xTtL third BaUiol scholar iu succession to the Head-Mastership ^ Ww Mr . Temple ' s caadidatesbip ^ as sustained by ^ overpowenng tesUxS £ b , but it is oxdy just to say that his appointment has been decided by ' merit alone . ¦ " . ¦ . ¦ . '¦ ¦ of editor
The North British Eeview still shows plainly enough the want an ^ m ^ m ^ SiSSSSSS-psssS ^ tmd whose efforts have resulted in a most voluminous but utter failure ino SSkSSI ^? ¦ l
on which all sucn aucmpis prowc««—— - — - - Jrminccritv while opposition between religion and -- ^^ i ^ i ^ X iS ^ au-^^ ^ asssskshd ^ i ^^ s of the gn $ a , t chemist , and the last , 1 ravels in ^ ruu nnd very readable . I
I "We are glad to notice that Messrs . Macmiliah announce for early publication the first volume of The Life of Ml ton , by Professor Masson . All who are familiar with Professor Masson ' s writings , and in particular with , his I article on Milton in the volume of his Essays on the English Poets , recently published , will know that the work could not have fallen into better hands . Strange to say , too , the subject is a new one , as fresh and full of interest as it of the the ~ w » or- * tAaA t . n nniiop . that , Messrs . Mactsoli ^ -n announce for early
nubli-£ is important . "We ' have no life of Mimon at all worthy poet , politician and the period : and Professor Masson is the very man to supply tins defect in our national literature . His power of clear and vivid narration and picturesque description , will enable him to reproduce the individuality of Mixtok , and ' the very form and pressure of the times' in which he lived ; his earnest sympathy no less than his practised critical insight , and the natural bias of . his mind towards what is elevated and sublime in character and thought , will cn-I sure aiust and profound appreciation of Mii / rou ' s poetical nature ; while' his decided political convictions and liberal sympathies will fit him to interpret trnly the part he took in pubUc affairs . Under the last head Professor Massoh ' s work will be peculiarly welcome . We have no decently laitliful and minute representation of Milton as a politician , and we maybe sure that in the new Life full justice will be done to his character and efforts as a statesoi in that most stormy and critical period of our national £ **
Asconma ^ nected with this department of the poet ' s labours , we may be sure ; ^ essoi Masson will give due prominence to that , noble moiety of Ins works hitherto | and ^ e ^ ltings . The Z ^ of Milton , as conceived by Professor Hassoj too will be a history of English literature during one of its most important eSi ^ at bounded oy the two Qaeens , tl . transition periodfrom E ^ abexh to Anne Next to Cahlyle avc know of no-one so well fitted to ^ iite the Uf ^ of MiUon as Professor Masson , and even Cabi ^ le could not do equa JS ^ v Se : Hterary aspects of the subject , which are quite as important as the public and political ones . of Debit
^ Mr Bentley writes to assure S us that Mrs . Malcolm ' s translation aJt ^ i ^ only unabridged version . We had already noticed the evident ^ p ^ f ^ etions . in this res pect , of the other version . mmmm ^ baartermas cr oi ^' L ^^ ' of the confiW betweeu the British aud who to ^ . ^ " ^^ hop-x ™ do » -s eo ^ ist generally of picture , fchT ™^ fc ^ ts = ^^ ^ -5 i ^ f t cd V > U who S ' for clearness and ' authenticit y > publications ° t tlus kmd .
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| X X ^ adows , or hidden ^ beyond ^^^ Cers , the wilderness eae rehnlight and beauty-the nlam ^^ X " great rivers fertilising the soil and a . country full of park-hkc valleys , 6 "" industrious natives , eager offering abundant . means of ca mge , ^ P ^ indigenous riches and to be visited » fi «» fl g ™ dg ^ Ts an Aladdin wandering throug h Ins new varieties of nature . The traveller « •* , h treasury ; he is a Marco palace , with its infinite series of «* ombe « 3 , eacn jr ^ ^ &olo recounting the i"WJ ^ 0 [" Jg ^ "' a Delia Valle irTthe romance of ^ & re ; ^ reS SJ 5 ^^^ gt rsss . ^ SaS-rssuwsf ^ pg hitherto mysterious , and " ^'" XSnpt to illustrate the ch aracter of its l ^ ^^^^ ^^^ o ^ ^ the classic narratives of travel . J ^ STtudent-l fcJ . U- ^ W Sl ^ feO ^^ r ^ ort back m P ^ a barbarou ^ barDarmw on ^
¦ ' ¦ - ... _^ m *^ r ^ «^^ fc ft ^ T T ^^ tf ^^ ^ W & . ^ nrerioV The central P ^™ rt ^^^^ 7 ^ M in l . nd «« ie DR LIVINGSTONE'S TRAVELS . ^ years' JUndence ^ the f tfwior . By ^ 7 i ^ trAtion 3 . Murray . Portraits , -Blaps by Arrowsmtth , «« »»™^ perspective in the African Dr . Livikgstone has opened up an imniense perspee ^^ forest r ' r * :. _ n ^« nan'tral Dlateaus of the soutn , " "•' . •' . ^ ini 1 fiq o . nne
ne « , prodigious rides ox- c " ^ n ^ ep isodes of s __ . '_ £ _ ° < v . « oUUr ^ imrl hikes and streams , su « . »_ , » - i ^ r ,,, ; m hna sts . nets , prodigious rides on ox-u ,, V """* stran « e episodes of | voya es on freshly-found lakes a « d Btwain ^ Jt \ of ^ bc t 3 ) life , pictures of the dcaorts and 7 ? r a J ^ " ^ gng and relieving a narrative form only the arabesque embroidery ^ ornnm ^» V ° icftl importance , nearly every page of which has a scientific or " «• f s l th AJWca , and a detailed tracing of ^ o author ' s routo from t P ^ Q ; mJvn c ordinary lines of trave to Lo flnd j . ? J one lft . enlircly opCn on the other . Thus the ^ J ^^ f tho equator . Livin K « tono found for the first time to ^ ? t n h 1 J ° 5 j £ ' 3 W tional geog raphy , far across the himself , for ^^^^^ Zr ^ ^ eA invaruubfy northwards , and ru ntf ^ t ^ en ^ ¦ IsiSSJS ^ fttt * ; but tui 9 pcr "
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THE LEAD 1 B ,. . _ lg o . 399 , November 14 , 1857 , " 1 096 ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ' ¦ ' ' ¦ - — —¦———^—^——— -ul——————r ^ = ^ = ^ == ^ = ^^_^—¦—¦——1 ^^_ . ¦
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Leader (1850-1860), Nov. 14, 1857, page 1096, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2217/page/16/
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