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1800 - 1849
23 1830-1839

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Chartist, The

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23

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23

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The Chartist

THE DRAMA

... THE DRAMAS Dn*:a'r-LANE.-A new serio-comic opera, entitled Farinelli, was I presented hare, for the first time, on Friday night, with but limited sue- Thie cess; and yet, we fear, with all the success it merited, although it ische from the pen of Mr. Barnsett, to whom we are indebted for more than niotic one good thing. The house-which was very full, was a very good- thosi natured one, and ...

THE DRAMA

... , ?Ag IMOK;'. CoYENT.GAflDzN.-Aeidtnt. itlrw usr h a of again witness. iog Macready's per Mmn~ ?? and certainly amore feeble' representation of the chargtter wro nevir in all our theatrical exper riende bheld. We rememaber the timeb wh'ts 'we ?? Ma6~a4y good-but never a great Actor,; 'when we could rise stp ~saisf ?? c hiseffortg particularly after lila perforinance Of Vir~iqi6u, VUeasdiia ...

LITERATURE

... LITERATU RE. _.Thc Naturaliet.'8 ,Liraf5/.- -Conductedb l i -Batt., ~~(Lizars.) lit 'This, the eighth volume -on the class.3Mammnalia, is devoted prin- H cipilly to the amphibious datnivorn, of iihich it daffords due details, I P .. . . ~w written in the plaits, praiseworthy style which has characterited this w4ork from ifs comInmencement, inure' or' less. Ia' addition to a history; Al of the ...

THE DRAMA

... COVErer GARDtN.-A. most effective play, entitled Richelieu, or the Conspiracy, by Sir E. L. Bulwer, has been produced here with I almost unalloyed success. Plaudits, almost continuous, hailed it from the first scene to the last. The merits of a thing so readily and generally appreciated lie, as might be supposed, not very f far beneath the surface. Richelieu, or the Conspiracy, is, in fact, an ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... By a letter froma Dresden of the 10th January, we learn that Mad.- Schrmder.Devrient, whose Iasi Of voice would, it was said, occauloll her retirement from the stage, had again appeared in the part of Ag/athia in the opera of Robdin deg Blois. Her appearance was bailed by the audience with loud and well-cleserved applause. She appeared to have entirely recovered from her illness, an ...

LITERATURE

... LI TER ATURE. The Hstoryef~aplen ~ t by R. H. Horne, Esq. (Tyas.) tbe, The two first parts of this'- new, and we have reason to believe true, itupes history of the man *ho, has exerted such' a mightty influence over the. silibiel destnie ?? and the world, promise'to' Aupply wa oghs l3eii desirdd and hieefed among us, Sir Walter Sicott's nine'viiluiiai5 .ni6ti, t mi~g, not to nmngntiotf thbge4 ...

THE DRAMA

... -If- her Majesty was, on her state visit to.. the theatres- to- command the 'enactment of prodoctionB' of! the highest order of dramatic merit, instead of those of a secondary and aluiost unmeaning character, we should have little reason to find fault with her taste, and less with her judgment; but when we see, on the one hand, a compliment paid to Mr. salfe, merely on the score of corn- ...

PEEL and STANLEY at MERCHANT TAILORS' HALL

... PBBL aud STANLRYaL MERCHANT TAHlORS' HAL-L. Hous akhi ase in cx Tlh mars presci vas f nbow tbe St seent' Hen dissul Thi the cc brow, below wads Al comp ahat was crM it wa Thin expre lacl exie and itr-i hmos Ilaes I a e was si1n0 satil May He tligI walls tll t; saved adnh was half Th pouri crow art! was Bi9 'well ~and revci of from Whol its p excei on I I spe ballI pers weir with day plao Univ ...

THE DRAMA

... ?? Drir' sy LANE.-The successful novelty for Easter at this house is entitled Thre King of f/se Mist-a person with rather an unpleasant tc rsame-(there is a great deal iln a name !-a damper. could hardly be Y imagined well for a holiday display even in Scotland. Whether it was this 1 Mist'' that kept people at home we will not pretend to say ; It but, Certain, very few persons found their way ...

THE DRAMA

... . ?? I ]Piruar ?? Majesty's visit in state drew an overflowing dadience n Si~ueddy ?? house was packed hIT every' part, not I asingle place.w'as unoccupied, rind hundreds want away'woculntti fidror Tie ~loors wefe besieged as eaily as wo o'clock, and, not- HiA siithatnidig tht idclemency7 of the weather, maulitude,,eand rm tl that hour in the st~reet, Mdr tile rdcm of gaining admission In th4e ...

LITERATURE

... l THE MAGAZINES.ofg There is so little of commanding talent this month, even among the publi chiefs of the class,. that we do not know which is worthy of foremostthd notice. The articles of highest excellence are but mediocre things, mark those inferior are flat indeed. Even mote FRASER, who generally contrives to dress stale and unprofitable, by tb not to say unwholesome, dishes spicily, so ...

THE DRAMA

... ITHE DRAMAS I Mi 4ECOX7SNT GARD£>t.N7yrOq Mlonlday evening Bon's tragedy of the lVP .{scleri ?? this theatre,,Xr. Mgqreaily enacting the ...