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OH! THE [ill]

... his Royal Highness, as vall appear from the copy of it, was most flatterinz to the Borcugh, and -will without any comment speak most eloquently for it- self. It was read with- a degree of spirit, and with a3 grace and affability peculiarly chara6eristic ...

FRAGMENTS ON ART

... got over, and fhe language as it were acquired, they I rose by clusters and in constellations, never to rise again. ' In speaking thus of Claude, we yield rather td common opinion than to our own. However inferior the style of his best landscapes may ...

ANECDOTES OF GENERAL MOREAU

... that enterprize, equally bar- . harous and senseless, had sacrificed the flowei 6f the I French warriors. He often said, speaking of Bona- rpa rte, that m2n heaps shame and opprobrium on the tFiench name. He lays up in store for' my unhappy e country ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... present fiom the Empress LOUISA. Mr. BETTY (once tile young Roscites) has been per- i forming at Newcastle. The 'Iyne fercury, speaking of his perforimance and that of Mr. Wam. M'CREADY, observes, that it would not be paying the latter gentle- f man any great ...

FINE ARTS

... 23. Christ in the Temple, afid No. 30. Magaret of An jou, by R. Westall, R.A. P Of this aitist's works we atwvays wish to speak well u from our respe: to the public taste, and are only sorry that we tahnot, consistently With any regard to our owvn. No ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... so much playfulness in her aaing, that we fotlret her a ge, . and overlook her size, in the dei4light which her talent of speaking gives to tile ear. Her voice reuuils all Its beauty and all its volume. Every sylhlile she utters I comncs to tile edtr with ...

THE STAGE

... c list thus his simnie truth miust be abused W~ith silken, sly, itosittuating Jacks ? Gracy. Tn whom in all retis precence speaks your Grace ? Glo. jIo thee, that hast nor honesty, nor- grace ;Un, Whets have I injotred thee ? When done titee wvrong ?Sui ...

Poetry

... deed, excese, icspd- El His brother conies, by fondnessinov'd, a To look a brother's last farewell ! n And I! to meet his speaking eye, fi That silent eye's reveal'd to light, II And hallow'd by his burstiing sigha b The earth that hid it from the sight ...

THEATRE ROYAL, DRURY-LANE

... Knight. A new Comedy, fiom the popular pen of Mr. KEN- I ;cY, is in preparation at Covent.Garden Theatre. \ Green Room report speaks in high ternis of its merits. O DRA.tsATIC.-In the present improved state of the Ik stlae, it is singular that neither painter ...

FINE ARTS

... alliance. Let(hnbtMr. Lvx-j thiuk q-ltzether-or birnsef', take'his ?? and.;expree sions frolp his oawn-coureptions-, or, thi speak more acou-. |rately) from.his owmntteittive studyoef Nature, aud--inyvi gurate his 40iiuWd; b!vpenliiltiu it to breathe~ the ...

MR. KEAN'S HAMLET

... of this extraor- n dinary afor. We cannot speak too highlly of 'Mr. R.,AYVoND'S representation of the Chost. It glided across tIle Stge 1 I) with the preternatural grandeur of a spirit. His man- e ner of speaking the part was not equally excellent. A e ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... best ac- tors endenvouring to out-do themselves, instend of others. Of Mr. CoNWI.y's Richmond it woold be painful for us to speak as we think. MrS. FAUCIT'S Ladiy Inle we thought an admirable piece of afting. 'T'BiEARIt, KU'iAT., Il), U .Y-I.ANE. This 1 ...