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THS OHEISTIZAS. PANT

... from which the plot is taken, is a German one, and is the story of the love of a merrmaidon for a prinre, whom she has 8 avhd from droosnieg. In order to appear in human shape, and be in com- posty of her lover, she makes ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... thie stage, lus attention to. what ri goiig fr owaidr a o t-a' maiiner. whichl tiooth deci~sssuiy seen aiqdictathe of a reisable ntidershindilb f it is pierrfedy' Qhnuoius o sE e 'linl ?? irs a I partly writter -bj himself, ...

THEATRICALS

... not to know him. At this juncture, he saves the a life of the queen, whose horse hab run away with her, and a as a reward is presented by her with a commission, and a ,1 ring, upess receipt of which, she ...

THEATRES, ETC

... Brighton. Mary Ann Ivers was born, we believe, about 1790. She appeared on the stage before she could walk, as the child in King Henry the EigUkh. In 1793, she performed, at Newbury, the girl in The Chifdren of the Wood. After having been ...

Published: Sunday 21 October 1849
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4098 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

COVENT-GARDEN THEATRE

... the period a n- terior to that deluge of the dramatic world, the words, in- deed, of SHA KSrPEaA were recited, but the paucity of stage resources could not allow his conceptions to be ex- hibited. The performance was only a suggestion, not a representation ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... and the latter wearing a plain blue coat,.'vith a red collar-the undress of Genslemettof his Ma- Jesty's suitp. The play was a humorous burlesque on the rage ?? in favour 6f Mladame Catalani, who is personated on the stage by a stout lusty ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... gallant 42d Regiment in t the Battle of Waterloo. D A Miss H_ lately eloped from a ball at Bou- logne, and is now on her way to Scotland with a Co- a lonel S.- T. The lady is young and beautiful. She ...

COVENT-GARDEN THEATRE

... Leivson, whom she feared dead, the! inoststrikingthling of the kind we ever witnessed; it seenl:d a compound of transport at beholding him, and of terror, as if it were a supernatnial appearance. We caunint attempt to describe it. After she. .fids toa ge ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... for the report of a third royal marrkige. The D tke of DEVO;SHIRE entertained the- fashion- able world on Tuesdqy mght, with a Concert of V6cil and lnstrnmental Music ; a Grand Banoaet. ollowted. This was only the c6dnnjencement of a series -of enter-- ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... of a chapel in Warwick- e_ street, until she and other poor persons were driven away. k, She had such a dread of the workhouse that she would w. not apply for relief. The jury returned a verdict of Died from ...

VELLUTI TO HIS REVILERS

... shisehcanssliekt a 3 *l-'1ai*I ?? segond hap, aisnb;~ d Ur ~ O fate! what was. then? A rosy- bo - Trustigii in ell itiitg-s, racian at a toy,,. .What ant 1 now K A dotewi'th: lrn eyes;, A toy nqself; to lswtand ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... t~rive'S E t, a away, and s- ayed witS mad misrule; ha icat And wild monstrosity was dll the rage w a Against these rudec Invadlers now we make gre. en. A firm, docisive, stand fuo' liritaiu's ak~> ~ 5 rd io- aTAIt'S salts-for esial the land that ?? ...