The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 13, No. 377, June 27, 1829
The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction, Vol. 13, Issue 377, June 27, 1829, by Various
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The Engraving represents Loch Goil Head, a small village in Argyleshire, as it name imports, at the end of Loch Goil. It is an exquisite vignette, of Alpine sublimity, and is rendered extremely interesting as the residence of Thomas Campbell, Esq. author of the Pleasures of Hope, &c. and one of the most celebrated of British poets. His château , or retreat, is represented on the left of the Engraving, and its romantic position has probably inspired many of the soul-stirring compositions of the illustrious resident.
In this parish are the remains of Carrick Castle, which is said to have been built by the Danes. It stands on a rock, and was formerly surrounded
The steam-boat on the lake is an attractive object in such a district as Loch Goil—by associating one of the boasted triumphs of art with the stupendous grandeur of the sublime.
The town of Hillah lies in latitude 32 deg. 31 min. 18 sec.; in longitude 12 min. 36 sec. west of Bagdad, and according to Turkish authorities, was built in the fifth century of the Hegira, in the district of the Euphrates, which the Arabs call El-Ared-Babel. Lying on a part of the site of Babylon, nothing was more likely than that it should be built out of a few of the fragments of that great city. The town is pleasantly situated amidst gardens and groves of date trees; and spreads itself on both sides of the river, where it is connected by a miserable wooden bridge, the timbers of which are so rotten, that they tremble under the foot of the passenger. The portion of the town, or as it is usually called, the suburb, on the eastern bank, consists of one principal street or bazaar, reaching from the small defenceless gate by which it is entered from Bagdad, down to the edge of the water; this is deemed the least considerable part of Hillah. On the other side, the inhabitants, Jews, Turks, and Arabs, are much thicker, and the streets and bazaars more numerous.
Various
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Loch Goil Head
AND RESIDENCE OF CAMPBELL, THE POET.
HILLAH ON THE EUPHRATES.
CURIOUS EXTRACTS FROM CURIOUS AUTHORS, FOR CURIOUS READERS.
HINTS ON DRINKING.
THE SELECTOR AND LITERARY NOTICES OF NEW WORKS
VIDOCQ
CONSUMPTION OF EUROPEAN MANUFACTURES.
SOUTH AMERICAN MANNERS.
The Labyrinth, at Versailles.
RECENT BALLOON ASCENT.
THE NATURALIST.
BEES.
THE ELM.
CROP OF BIRDS.
HATCHING.
MAN.—A FRAGMENT.
SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS
THE CHOSEN ONE.
TRAVELLING ON THE CONTINENT.
RETROSPECTIVE GLEANINGS
ANCIENT FARRIERY.
CURIOUS SCRAPS.
THE SKETCH-BOOK
SKETCH OF THE BATTLE OF ALGIERS.
THE GATHERER.
THE RANZ DES VACHES.
NAPOLEON.
APOSTLES.
SPECULATION.