... School. I had been promised a residence, and this I found was to be a portion of one of the detached buildings aforesaid, the present east wing. It had been very imperfectly finished... Under British rule, 1760-1914 - Page 323de William Henry Atherton - 1914Affichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| 1902 - 716 pages
...nearly every requisite of civilized life, and in front of it was a bank of rubbish and loose stones, with a swamp below, while the interior was in an indescribable state of dust and disrepair. Still we felt that the Governors had done the best they could under the circumstances, and we took possession... | |
| 1902 - 712 pages
...every requisite of civilized life, and in front of it was a bank of rubbish and loose stones, wit!) a swamp below, while the interior was in an indescribable state of dust and disrepair. Still we felt that the Governors had done the best they could under the circumstances, and we took possession... | |
| McGill University - 1921 - 366 pages
...nearly every requisite of civilised life, and in front of it was a bank of rubbish and loose stones, with a swamp below, while the interior was in an indescribable state of dust and disrepair. Still, we felt that the Governors had done the best they could in the circumstances, and we took possession... | |
| William Henry Atherton - 1914 - 880 pages
...represented by two blocks of unfinished and partly ruined buildings, standing amid a wilderness of excavators and masons' rubbish ; overgrown with weeds...faculties of applied science, which, though instituted in 1870, was regularly organized in 1878, comparative medicine and veterinary science. As far back as... | |
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