By the time I was born, my father's legacy consisted of the manse, which was deeded to the ground, and his blood. |
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Baird, a son of the manse born in 1888, studied electrical engineering at the Royal Technical College in Glasgow and at Glasgow University. |
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Like many sons of the manse, he seems to possess a covenant to govern others. |
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Profligacy, whatever her short-term charms, is not the proper sort of partner for a dour Scottish son of the manse. |
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In a discussion about worship recently in a manse in the Outer Hebrides, all present were asked to say what they wanted. |
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One part of Scotland rather approves of a son of the manse turned prudent again after a spell as a wayward radical. |
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The second-in-command, a tough Scot and son of the manse, also fought to the end. |
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He is a son of the manse, he would have liked him to be a minister rather than a politician. |
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For two years, they lived in the manse and provided regular ministry and leadership of young people's groups before going to Spain. |
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Servers handed out hard hats to the 130 guests as they trekked into the manse, expected to be a showplace once the final paintings are hung. |
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Now the search is on for a property that will serve both as a meeting place and manse for a future pastor. |
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For those seeking not only a rural home but one on an island, Assapol House, a former manse near Bunessan on the Isle of Mull, is for sale. |
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At the disruption they were obliged to move from the manse to a derelict cottage, to enable them to stay in the parish. |
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I was brought up in a manse as a Presbyterian and I find Presbyterianism a comfortable jacket. |
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When the service ended the men sat on in the church and I went back to the manse. |
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Chekhovian memories also abound, adding cobwebs to the old manse in Ballybeg in and outside of which most of the action seethes. |
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In previous years the house has served as a manse for the United Presbyterian Church. |
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The family were given ten days to leave their manse and within a short time they had moved to a flat. |
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Visitors to his Pebble Beach manse find that not only are bathrooms and fridges stocked to the max but so is the supply of athletic equipment. |
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And I had a wonderful conversation and a great visit with her at Friar Park, which is a magnificent Victorian manse that has incredible gardens. |
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Kirkland house, on the edge of the village of Fala in Midlothian, about 15 miles from Edinburgh, was built in the late 1700s as a manse. |
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It's life trapped in a country manse with a matriarch who's perpetually in manic mode. |
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He is innocent by his ignorance, a simple dullard who can return to his yacht or gated manse comforted by the knowledge that he is not a crook. |
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Sure Gaius allowed her the run of the manse and the property that surround it, but the nearby town was forbidden. |
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The merchant prince, rich off trade during the wars, had spared no expense when building his grand manse. |
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The book opens in the stagnant, wet spring of 1950 at Hart House, a lonesome English manse a mile away from the nearest road. |
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Guthrie received him courteously in the manse, but made it clear that he did not submit to the sentence out of respect to the authority of the bishop who had imposed it. |
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In Upper Rawdon, the United Church manse is being used as a medical centre served by one doctor, and there is hope of getting another on a half-time basis. |
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Now a museum, this house was built in 1859 as Presbyterian manse. |
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Growing up in a manse, in a ministerial household, provided me with experiences which I could recognise later in my life for their folkloric significance. |
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Having rectified that, it's now firmly on my list of places I wouldn't mind living if a hitherto unsuspected wealthy great-aunt died and left me her musty manse. |
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Of the larger properties to come to market in recent weeks are Kells House and gardens in Co Kerry, a Victorian fairytale manse on 46 acres at Cahersiveen. |
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As a son of the manse, he was for years treasurer of his church. |
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Cavell was a daughter of the rectory, just as Mr Brown is a son of the manse. |
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Living in vicarage or manse accommodation, they are often not property owners. |
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Like so many of his post-war predecessors, both Labour and Conservative, the man from the Scottish manse has played the part of the prodigal son. |
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It could be interesting to locate the interpretation centre in the church or the manse. |
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The church building and the manse have been refurbished, the manse is ready to be rented, and teams are in place for the coming year. |
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One of the 'new' houses above Victoria, on 48th Avenue, was bought as a second manse. |
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And it all started here, in Gravenhurst, in that little house, in that manse, in Muskoka. |
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Built in 1816, the old manse is an architectural marvel that has remained as authentic as ever. |
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In 1973, the parish decided to tear down the existing manse and provide the resident minister with a housing allowance instead. |
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Mubarak owns a six-floor Georgian manse in the Knightsbridge section of London. |
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A large manse stood proud in front of him, rising from the streets like a majestic oak from the forest floor, proclaiming to all its dominance over smaller beings. |
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In March 2007, the Free Church filed suit to reclaim the church manse at Broadford, Isle of Skye. |
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Subsequently, the old chapel on 51st Avenue was razed, a manse built in its place and the additional two storey halls, kitchen space and other facilities were built to accommodate the large Congregation and its activities. |
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Disastrously, the son of the manse was prudent with his sipping that day but that's water under the bridge. |
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Gordon, the dour son of the manse is, as someone once said or wrote, entire unto himself. |
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In her eyes the manse people were quite fabulously rich, and no doubt those girls had slathers of shoes and stockings. |
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Wood forget-me-not has been cultivated for a long time as an ornamental plant in manor house, industrialists' and manse gardens, long-established dwelling areas, and often graveyards and their surrounding areas. |
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Especially in the marginal south-eastern constituencies that are dearest to his heart, people may listen when the Tories ask, does this son of the Kirkcaldy manse really understand us? |
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This is not, as some have suggested, because he prefers that son of the manse, Mr Brown, to the crypto-Catholic, Mr Blair. Rather, it is because of Mr Blair's place in the DUP's narrative of the last nine years. |
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If you hold in your mind an image of what a poet's home should look like — a rustic farm engirdled by a stone wall, a magnolia-shaded manse, a dim city garret — theirs, like his, will disappoint. |
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It's a lang, laigh, mirk chalmer, perishin' cauld in winter, an' no very dry even in the tap o' the simmer, for the manse stands near the burn. |
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The St. Jacques manse is a former hospice which offered shelter to pilgrims travelling towards Jerusalem and Santiago de Compostela and also served as a hospital. |
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Two days later I took it to the former manse, a solid grey stately Victorian building with a tall monkey puzzle tree on the lawn. |
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Her fourteen dollhouses range in sophistication from a child-made primitive to an electrified manse set on a low table and peekable from all sides. |
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