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THE SNOB'S PROGRESS

... mellow and subdued gleam over the gasping floun- ders, consumptive radishes, sleepy pears, and lucifers, song-books. straps, salads, andperriwinkles,thattheir baskets displayed. Snipey knew the keepers of all these wandering establishments, and exchanged ...

Published: Sunday 14 June 1846
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2023 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

REVIEW FOR BOOKS

... side-hadJ been filed with gin-punch)t and stead to cool outside of the window. Mr. Skeflinglon himself bad msdsthe lobster-salad; and his domestic, or chsr-womnan, had eat the sandwiches; but of these latteri~r. Skeffiesgon himself did no I~ntend to partake ...

LITERATURE

... one Dn unconscious inlstafiee, ind'icating that thc authlor's ce associations withl thle mornilng nmeal partake more of 'ce salad, .bicre, and Bordeauix, than with tea and y, coffcee and butteredl rolls. In the height of the ry SeSSiOnl of Parliamient, ...

FINE ARTS

... ice ef It. Dusilliol ,,a Fretwh archlitect, anil Professor Donaldson. The fronts are Illiolly faced vvitlI Cacii stonie, SAlad have pillels, of decorative iniar- bles in the piers betvweln thle Nindows. Tile latter alre novelt iii the 1)rraiigemnent ...

THEATRES ETC

... live as well as,' play, and more than twenty five thousand buttered biscuits (2d. each), with two tons of salad (say 2d. a lb. for salad), were washed down by twenty thousand pint bottles of porter (prime Dublin and London, 4d. per bottle), and t ...

Published: Sunday 10 June 1849
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4956 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... throughout. She has a' happy style of acting while she's talking, and talking while she's acting, as where she rescues the salad and lectures Dubois. Her lively doggrel was good, too, as she sang it to the disguised minister:- Hey! hey! Monsieur t'Abb6 ...

THE WISHING-CAP

... to the many Rabelais would delight to 0se' Gargantua no longer considered as everyhody. The two pilgri0n41 whom he eat in a salad, would in these times have at least made coe- siderable objections. It would appear, from novels, that the Park enjoyed some ...

LITERARY NOTICE

... good, it is well to accompany it by a sausage, or some hith-tasted meat . then come the entremets, then the r6ti with its salad: after which, said he, I tout naturellement on fait monter le poisson.' Nothing could appear to me more unilatural than fish ...

THE THEATRES

... halls. Such, as the novel- ists have it, was our mental ejaculation upon reading the bill of the play for Wednesday. In our salad days we had seen Jones as Puff, Liston as Don Whiskerandos and little podgy Mrs. Liston as Tilbsurina. But wherefore suffer ...

Published: Sunday 15 November 1840
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2890 | Page: 2 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE MAGAZINES for NOVEMBER

... dainties washed a are down by iced cbampalne, ,coprnp&I lyeormanaing, -Wi [Ir be humblo brecthre;to the booe o IisSand the salads of miss, Nebuchadnezzar; and Fashion, in furs and velvet, com- rtous fo,-tably bekolding her esqualied esstere shivering in ...

LITERATURE

... fried trouts; then beel steaks, arid fried potatoes; an omelette, which he had nearly to himself; now artichokes, served up en salade, with oil and vinegar; exquisite fruit, bad etheese; 'ine, and ean de.vie, eanclud- lag with cafe au laits Everything was ...

LITERATURE

... and tomahawks of she red-sknins, that, ill the Rtorky Mounltaino ir that vast, lovely, and fertile valley, rolled tire Bayou salade, in tire exquisite Old Park, stream by thouoands; but hundreds also escape, nird, runcusilugiho produce of the rase it ...