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THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... and we shall renember ite rogues's partiality for it. Mis STEP'IES, if ?? reroilct ridhtlv, (for we happen to be obliged to speak of our own criticism from memory) we supposed to be acting during tde week in question, anl not abseiit. But onr otbiector ...

DRURY-LANE THEATRE

... thy nanse, With tears pronounced, and stamped with deathless fame; Rivals contend with Friendsj and now, too late, Glory to speak the truth, and mourn thy fate. LADIES PETS. Beauties and Goddesses, as I can prove, Have had their pretty ppts for many a day; ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... safe and speedy remedy, a de- coctiols If baked 2safer wper and new milk, sweetened with refined sugar, OW its efect I can speak wvith that bsolute certainty as to pronounce it a specific in all caies of diarrhkca, when taken in season, whatever be the ...

FINE ARTS

... ry Assistant to the Mutses, to ilie Doyictiiiary and the Rural Deities. The wvork comrenees by an introduction, where in Speaking of the *; enthtusiism wbicht hias frequently exceeded the limits Which wvisdom pre uribed and taste allowed to the pas- sioltate ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... for substance, devoted to form, In feelings quite cold, but it! etiqwetae Wyarm, lie held it an act of indelible sheame, To speak to a person unless bylhis name. Qse night at a Tavern? sitting much at his ease, As a-uch as with form easy comfort agrees ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... Little people, says Mr. Spence, mistook the excess of his genius for madness. His sister, Mrs. Racket, said You know, to speak the truth, mny brother has- a mddish way with him : end Rag Sinith (Smith the author of Phedra and Hippolytus;-see Johnson's ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... genius, in which It is unquestionably more necessary than It was in the present. Of Mr. KsAN's Caius Marcibs It is diffiiult to speak correctly in a few words. There was go much to praise and so much to blame in It, that a mere general statement can scarcely ...

LITERARY NOTIICES

... of a hero, would, vwith a contrary reiult, get him recorded for a mad- man. Posterity, says Mr. Fleury (or Bonaparte), speaking gwith evident bitterness of some circurnstanices at Waterloo,- posterity will not forn true opinsions.' We dct- not complain ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... next years. SCENIC REPRESENTATION.-Ill a work, entitled, a Essai Sur I'Art drarnatique, printed at Amst. 1775, the Author speaks of a Ballet produced in Lon- don in 1709, oifiguroient le pouvoir Mlonarchique et I'EtatReprublicain. Of the representation ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... only recommendation he has is his purse- ^ a contemptible recommendation for a Representative. He can neither reason, nor speak, nor write-and, it, is certainly a dis- grace to tiis City, that she cannot select a man of even ordinary capacity to represent ...

COURT AND FASHIONABLES

... person who witnessed one of the exhibitions in a foilrtl-rate borough towzn bits proposed that tlhe town-c Iier slhould speak tihe ines.' ~-Duaudee Adverltser. FUNERAL OF THE LATE DUKE OF KENT., (L~rTHJrl PARTIC~tLllB.) The proces'ion marched slowlv ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... thro further light on the msat. ter, his Lordship, in his Essay on Follwers nies Friends, is pleased to make this remark- To speak the truth, in base times, active men (meaning not those whose turn is Srcetd, but who have a tarn to seme) are of more use ...