LITERATURE AND NEWSPAPER CHAT

... plainly discovered, by a peculiar mianner, how ivell aware lie was that lie was deal ing With future msasters. I shld I always think it a good sigis of a chi. d to be fond of the gardener, if at least lie be sach as ouros ias. A FATHER' S EELINtS ON 0 ...

LITERATURE AND NEWSPAPER CHAT

... lbour without a murimr Here it isll Orncer, there a sailor, a cottOlI SPilnileri a weaver, a i Sith. Io.r a miller; indeed, it performs tile wri of each and all Iof them; and, though R snaill creature, it ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... denmand of a Dukedom and a nsstioual grint iess caused a schisrm betowaen the Noble Lord and his Rojyal father. Tho shortest answer ta this statement happens also to he the most appropriate-it is fals-n ! L-ord rMunster isa5 not even as.ks]t for a Dukedom ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... Edindurgh Observer advises the Manager to shut up shop ;-tells a story of a brother Manager, who, on a late occasion, opened his house to five persons in pit and galleries. The Ma^ager went into a great passion, scolding those who came, not those who ataid ...

LITEHATURE AND NEWSPAPER CHAT

... of worh. 7.d'!ftnrrltin` ~'vithi a bill like a pichaxe and clawvs of greist elostly,- holds fast by his feet, and digs a holeiin a sand-bank w'ith bis beak, tihe tailor-bird, having a bill like a needle. s cWs ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... Wednesday afternoon a fighl, For ten pounds a aide. took place In Holdernes, between Johhn Brown, a butcher, In the ensploy of Mr. Lovitt, of this towL, aid 9 fishman named Hackney. Brown, a man of about 36, has long been notorious as a ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... mnade known, expressed some dissatisfactiors, ard there was fi-r a time a slight teudency to Ill burmour ; but Mr. Bartley having explained that Malbras, up to the latest moment, indulged a hope of btirg able to discharge her duty to the public, aud that ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... notoriety. lie formed the idea of making a pot et dimems- sions which should astonish ra)l who beheld it. After labour- ing for three months, he produced a colossal vessel capable of containing 4,000 measures of liquiid, or a quantity of soup sufficient for an ...

LITERATURE AND NEWSPAPER CHAT

... obey implicitly, aI show~ a -kind of jger~s he males exertion of his hands. At the samle othe (Iidld Soon finds, that, however fond be 'May,.bc, a eaoc aprice Or curiosity, lenos frgoi ~ r~eyeonyeld hnt agno hoaesoires anI rasb a~ t los hisfeeing of power ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... Preacher, who states In his recent Auto-Biography that he left his father's house with only three halfpence, should have a collected a library surpassing that of any of our Bishops. It it yrich In every department of Theology, and abound4 In curious e articles ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... finish tis piece fwr tint purpoe inimedlately. He was aware that hi. Easter Spectacle as quite as fit for a tl agecly, or a coniedy, as fuo a grand opera whicht tact be stated. He concludes suomebody did reniodtel and re-write the piece ; not being in ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... CHIT CHAT. Some few years since, previous to Mr. Theodore Hook's eam barkation for the Mauritius, his wit and general literary telal procured for him the entree to the Green Room of the Hfaymasok Theatre ; and a literary friend, la writing to a favourite ...