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Examiner, The

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Place

London, London, England

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13

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13

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The Examiner

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... forward and sing I've been roaming. What would any one of those boisterous hogs say to a customer who, having purchased a salad, should be forced by him to give A bunch of greens into the bargain? ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... by no other person than the grace- ful Titivate, alias Jonquil Jasmin-formerly a hair-dresser, now a pretended dresser of salads and geraniums. This pseudo-gardener cultivates the passion-flower of love-and under its influence, meta-, morphoses himself ...

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 LITERARY EXAMINER

... in opinion as to its real and intrinsic merits or detects as atsocial city, the conclusion has swallowing oysters, lobster salad, and North Wiltshire, with place to live in in our days, than it could possibly have been even during the glorious days of ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... with butter; and two or three soup-plates of garden-stuff, that looked as if ladled out of a weedy ditch. Then wafers,-then salad,-then leveret, that must have for- gotten the date of its own killing;-then cheese, that must have forgotten the date of its ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... in motion, she will soon serve you up something appg- tio.saetftiom lierpotaujeu, or acotelette di mainateefinsn. gathered salade, des pommies de terrefrites, and the never- fullia- omelette: but it is notso in i he large towns; there they think it necessary ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... from first to last. Sent for tile house-steward. Remonstrated with him concerning everY article, from soups at the top to salads at the bottom. No redress. ToId me I had better write to the committee- will do so. Ordered my dinner (a mackerel boiled, ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... yourself and querulous at every trifle. Dinner is generally on the table at two or three o'clock, and consists of vegetables and salads giown upon the farm, and meat reared and fattened upon the pastures surrounding. It is accompanied by tea, which makes its ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... the bars us the fear of soiling it would permit; while at the well-spread table stood Araminta, assiduously sixing lobster salad in a soup plate, havlng selected tis whole of the animal's tail, and the savoury surroundings, amnidst which ' tcie lady' hold ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... displaying an attractive variety of articles-geraniums in pots, flowering out tier above tier-crisp broccoli-turnips-beet-root- salad cabbages; nor is lie satisfied with the ponderous weight lie balances so dexterously on his back, but he must needs increase ...