Refine Search

Countries

Counties

Dublin, Republic of Ireland

Access Type

62

Type

62

Public Tags

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... represents a curtaifs, which discovers a profile of Kean, well executed ' insrelief, upon a medalion, and underneath is the ?? d brief inscription :- Edmund Keai, died May, 1833, aged 48. A memorial erected by his son, Charles John > lRan, 1839. is ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... Head, was bred a carpenter, kd but latterly followed the business of a glass -blower, and, probably a. with more constatncy, that of a resurrection maq. About eight [d weeks ago he married a sister of Bishop's, and went to live with ...

THE ATRIUCAL CHIT-CHAT

... inmate. Then came a blow-up, Mr. M. insisting that he had a right to do as he pleased in arepub- lican government, and the boarders swearing that they would not sit at the table with the servants of Madame . Though the rooms were engaged for a month, Mr. . ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... feather from the wing of a bird of Paradise-a rose-leaf floating on the wind'a butterfly upon a carna- tion-a swallow skimming over the surface of a lake-are all emblems of lightness'and beauty ;'but Taglionii ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... CHIT-CHAT. A.I - , .. ?? .. Abdallab, the most expert and active of the troop of Bedouin Arabs (by whom the Surrey Theatre profited greatly), who, among other extraordinary jumps, juinped into the capacious bosom and matrimonial conforts of a fair widowed ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... of their p ofession in the histrionic art. It was a very bold, but at the same time a very judicious step, ifi the lessee of Drury-late, to engage C. Kean upon his own terms, viz., 501. a night, besides a benefit, and the nights to extend to the numbetbf ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... want of a c place of worship, in consequence of having sold the estate of tl the family there, a circumstance which called forth the bishop's sincere regret. After this explanation, the con- cluding ceremony was performed, and a long sermon in ex- a planation ...

TIHEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... jewvel- lery, consisting of a necklace and cross, shaded wvfth emeralds and diamonds, to the value of at least 300 dollars: the taste of the donor was well shown in his selection of a nosegay, in preference to the hackneyed wreath, as a ve- hicle for the conveyance ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... timneemployed in their comletion. 'A line of rail-roads is nlow in a course of projection (and of completion, indeed,'in part), whic~twill conuect Avvery State in the land, from Maine to the Miseids sippi, and epable a mam to rurh from ioston to New OIleans ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... aoother-4%ying been ruln over by a cab in the Ha*ymarket, by whirh accides.t his arm was broken. Buockstone, the ir'defatigable and successful author, has a ne w Operetta nearly ready for tbie.Haynarket; and Mr. Lutn has a farce of musb comulc humour, ready ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... THFATRICAL CHIT-CHAT. | I r__ - t ?? ?? ?? __ _ _ I.a Mr. Manders, fro- the citY Theatre, is engaged at the tand 'eatre, and makes his first appearance to-night in a ?? called Str'g, in a piece, christened Captain Stevens; on Wednrday. he will appear ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... their Ibenevolent secretary, Mr. Richard Peake, instituted a sub. scription of a few shillings per annum for the purpose of establishing a fund to be applied in cases of exigence, lie F wis, after a few months, obliged to give up the design, from the utter ...