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The Examiner

THEATRIAL EXAMINER

... ~tHEAT --Rid-L EXAINEIt.. .. I..II , -l~ ?? 6 4 S 4 : ' : ' . -: No. ?? jTAING C'reerredl ?? for the expected, hrrd grala- tion of vrtnesving the tordi;4 Tlier -tr ?? IrA. B ?? I hurdiv - ?? the atteni obn .ifuS li'ke~lyo e~rf'i Pe W@todk th ?? oF a ee~r'ain ,5Jnrtin ci -uii spa~ce fror fflring,~and in Gno teoijee aOiTve, ,evlt (oo p 0rpicivtnt;y ?? attee~ori-tb ttedt~.rper- lornwianees of ild ...

FINE ARTS

... EXHIBITION AT THE BRITISH INSTITUTION. Ce hsve more than once alluded to the benefits conferred on Artby this Itutioe, more especially from its annual exhibitions of choice works by rq6d . asters, the repeated contemplation of which has not only raised increased the public taste, but at the same time has stimulated our eg artists to increased exertions, in order to produce works not ?? of ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... I Aw Oratrio (since it appears we are still thus to style a Salmagundi of grave and gay, solemn and frivolous, sacred and-we will not say pro- ante, but-Isecular) has been performed at each House this week. That at Covent-Garden, wherein parts from The Creation of HAYDN, and MoZART's Requiemu, his last and perhaps finest production, formed the legitimateingredidnts of theentertainimeat, was by ...

FINE ARTS

... ROYAL ACADEMY EXHIBITION. ?? his knowledge of the general composition of colour, Sir THOMAS LAitWaNcy has latterly superadded the beauty of pure tint in particu- lars. The Graces alwvays wait upon his pencil. POaTRAITS.-For a picture of juvenile charms, we cannot conceive any genius short of a CoRaEnoOr's capable of surpassing his Children ]y B.B. Calmnady, Esq. It immediately recalled to our ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... GRAFENSTEIN, AND MR JERDAN'S CRITICISM. TO THE ED1TOR OF THE EXAMINER. SIR,-In consequence of having read in one of Your late numbers a critique on tile newly published poem of Grnfenlstein, I was led by curl- osity to see what the Editor of' the Literary Gazette, whom you ?? honoured with your notice, had wriiten upon the sane subject. Thoncth I should pause before I gave my suffrage to Mr ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... Servian Popnlor Poetryr. TreanslhCd 17/ JOHN BowseNo. ALTHOIosII, inl the first instance, the poetry of a population so corn- paratively obscure as that of Servia mighut be presumed to promise little of a nature to interest the cultivated reader of more fortunately situated countries, a little farther consideration of circumstances, will tend to show that much which is characteristic may ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... KINOG'S TirEaTux@. Tai Festtale of SPONTINX was duly consigned to her burial-place a fortnight ago, and has not since returned; so that we conclude her career has closed, and we cannot say we wish for a resuscitation. ler absence has been supplied by something much more pleasing in .La Schiava in Bagdad, which we translate The Slave in Bagdad, and not, as one of the newspapers did, The ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... THE TRiCALEXAMTN ERW. ;I DRUIEY LAt^f. ?? T9iesdty g~egiiga new-comic opera -was peoddetii ?? th~atre, Aitider the title of the Two IOtneso'f Gr6 iwz , whichl aenoinatiod iediately carie~d back our imagination to the Moofish.fainiiies of Ae Zegii and the Abencerrages, whose enmiity and contests afforded D inuch scope to Moorish romazice and chivalry. Nothing in the vorfA could be wider froin ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... - KING'S THEATRE. WE feel indebted to the present management for endeavouring to revive thttaste for the beauties of MOZART, who has too long suffered neglect from those who have controlled the mysteries of this Temple of Apollo and the Muses-; the offerings to whom have been of late the sop-maigre of PACINI and MERCADANTEj the fritters of RossINI, and the hors d't-aeres and ealremeti of so ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... ' TUEATRICAL EXAMINER. No. ?? VnA. XNDEntIOTSi, of whom report had opoken higthly, has appeared at this theatre in Lear and ill SirGiles Over- reach. In the one,' he haq neadyl~ driven tile other out of -our vnnds. In the iast, he discovered himself to be a tell sirot1fe-atified, deep-voiced, able-bodied perrormer; in ithe fir t, he was a -ieakk, tretnulous, decrepid old man. Lealr is not a ...

COURT AND FASHIONABLES

... COURT AND FASHIMiONHLBES. THE KING M HANOVER. For Princes afe ie elass, the schoolh (he booL, , W'bere suLjects' eyes do learn, do read, do toi. On the evenin, of thec day tho King publicly erttred the City of Hanover, there was a generotd ?? thie transparencies. it seems, were abtondant-.Te a- * ItC(lnSlst(d ot a psubol%, ith aceo, Pre ltie at Bu epat y pope P)u SVI. on 1h6 peae' in. yhma ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... LITE RAIRY NOTICES. I_ . ,- - ~- - No. 51. :. ,Joeroal of a Voyoige for the Dhscoidery of a North W5st Passegefroni the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. Per- formed in tde Near t819-20, in his MAljestib's shilpS Hlecla and Griper, under tdie orders of Wrn. Ed. Parry , R.N. F.R.S. Published by t1ie Authority of the A mr alty. Ti'H long expected and eageriv wished for Journal of Captain Parry ...