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

... 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 ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... successfully through a very heavy season, actually lost two ppounds by his benelit ! Poor George Smith, the powerful bass singer, used facetiously to call such a benefit a meeting-of creditors ; and on one occasion, when asked by a friend how lie got on ...

LITERATURE AND NEWSPAPER CHAT

... picture-` Oce or tie cehiltiren will namne a cottage, atiother a mutsios, others a rock, a brook, a lill, an orccar l, a shepierd, a sliep I htriless, ...

LITERATURE AND NEWSPAPER CHAT

... than the other, a com- a parison or their joints shows how superior the nminusmof Is n Inust have bsaen in strength and bull. Fron a part of the skil which has been preserved, it appears that the aniaial was furnished with loug hair, a fict ahfording strongr ...

THEATRICAL CHIT CHAT

... THEATRICAL ClI-T CHAT. GARraICr CL3s3.-A Dinner was given to Lord Mulgrave on Satuiday, by the Garrick Club, which was very numerously at- tended. The object of it was to give a social tribute to his Lord- slilp before his departure fur Jamaica, and it ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... the ground, she was tiatken to Epsom in her carriage. Her Ladyship complains much of a pain in her back. ?? burning of a body for the purpose of concealing a murder is a case so very rare, that the annals of crime in this country give us but one instance ...

THEATRICAL CHIT-CHAT

... venom'd snake A rattle, which his motions mark, Whence all things warning take: So In Sir Henry we perceive A quality preservative, Which makes him loud defiance breathe 'Mongst men or peace conservative. Sir Henry Is a perfect rnodelof a soldier-all buttoned ...

LITERATURE AND NEWSPAPER CHAT

... tearing A of theesurplices, no robbere of the a-lms.bors She buil: V a seiate-house likewisr, glorious in its kind; and nov it cousts her a welliigit mtortlsl effort to sveep it clewr A, of vesinin, anti get the soofttade rain-tight. ...

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

... 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 ...

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 ...