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 ...

[ill] CHIT-CHAT

... 7r, iuderittNlrd, lexi h.Itlti 1dm a vry caur rS rna- nuscript diary, vwhich! Ci ictc a nitait t 1Wory ut xiii, Fbilih Ciut, Ai) a-ddte, o: Ih th i-tili/. i ;, g .ether ii*elr ;'P, , , Stlt FPlOceg,' al tAir t:.1:. a mettia-,. Inc ud!lg iAwwisev1 the bill ...

LITERATURE AND NEWSPAPER CHAT

... LlTr1ZATURIL AND NEWSPAPER CHAT. I _ ~ _ REMINISCENCES 01 THE REV. R. HALL, A M. (By john Grecne.) HIesaid, 'Now, sir, if you plemtse, I should like to call on Mr. -, a dissenting minister, sifter dinner, tind save a pipe. He is a vely ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... have induced a few Individuals connected with the Metro- politan Theatres to consider the possibility of instituting a a General Theatrical Fund, to which every person attached to the profession throughout the United Kingdom might become a sub- scriber ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... boue will still give pain, in the same manner that a common splinter would Irritate the surrounding parts. Mr. Chiunock men- tioned a case, in which a noted advertising dentist took out a tooth from a lady, and having produced great ...

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. . ...

LITERATURE AND NEWSPAPER CHAT

... ThoughI ance I liked a social gill, A friendly crack w croei.' I like my svjife better still,- Our Jennys an' our Johnnies. There's soniething by my ain fireside, A saRf a baly-sw;eetness; I see wi' mair than Iingly pride, My hearth a heaven ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT. Mr. Pierce Butler, the gentlemen to whom Miss Fanny Kemble Is to be, or has been, united, is reported to be at fine young man, with a fortune of 4,0001. a year. Miss Smnithson has been lately married la Parls to a celebrated musical ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... lutely thrown a-V n te puichase of a slave in such a temper as this. F a s ., corunme twice as nucb as he earns. It is [ot utl- _t 4r, a .rlse o omaij slavetG sell hlnself. To bring a hligh, price in the ...

DRAMATIC CHIT-CHAT

... became his father's deputy as licenser, vice Lowndei, retired. of Hooper has a very peculiar original two-act drama in preparation at i, a- the St. James's. t Leman Rede has a new farce on the tapis for T. D. Rice. C r- Macready seems rather remiss with ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... pounds a night to perform six nights only, &he then quits London for ever. A new Comedy, written by Morton, will be pro- duced immediately, and a new Opera and a new Farce; and a Comedy by Kenny likewise. Mathews is drawing his Comic Annual ...