| Robert Burns, Allan Cunningham - 1855 - 616 sider
...infancy and youth — to awaken many pleasing, many tender recollections. Literary men, residing at Edinburgh or Aberdeen, cannot judge on this point for one hundred and lifty thousand of their expatriated countrymen. (150) To the use of the Scottish dialect in one species... | |
| Henry Mackenzie - 1900 - 332 sider
...of infancy and youth—to awaken many pleasing, many tender recollections. Literary men residing at Edinburgh or Aberdeen cannot judge on this point for...and fifty thousand of their expatriated countrymen.* * These observations are excited by some remarks of respectable correspondents of the description alluded... | |
| Donald A. Low - 1974 - 474 sider
...infancy and youth — to awaken many pleasing, many tender recollections. Literary men, residing at Edinburgh or Aberdeen, cannot judge on this point...and fifty thousand of their expatriated countrymen.* To the use of the Scottish dialect in one species of poetry, the composition of songs, the taste of... | |
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