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THEATRICALS, &c

... T.RFEATRICALS, &c. D- HAYMARKET,-A now comedy, in five acts, is, at all times, a subject of interest; but the production of a cosoedy which will last, is a matter of astonishment and public congratulation. The want of dramatic ability, in a tangible shape, is sometimes said to be the fault of themanagers, who refnsc to encouragethe legitimate drama, preferring rather to please the eye than to ...

PARIS, Not. 4. The Paris papers have spread reports with more or less of truth them on the causes which

... hare determined the king to continue, without any modification,, the Cabinet of the 29th of October. It hat been asserted that M. Guizot s not obtaining the Presidency of the Council arose from a species of veto exerciscd by the British government. The paper which stated this, the Constitutionnel, I believe, only knew half the truth. It comes to this that if the English Cabinet thought it ...

MUSIC AND THE DRAMA

... I (EXCLUSIVE.) FOREIGNx LYRICAL AND DRAMATIC.-Three weeks' confinement to a sick chamber will, I am sure, be received as a sufficient apology for my three weeks silence. The malady having at last received its congde, I shall, I trust, be enabled to send you my usual budget of continental chit chat about plays and players, lyrics and librettos,ballets and ballerines, managers and melodramas, ...

Published: Sunday 01 November 1846
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 6368 | Page: Page 9, 10, 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE COURT AND FASHION

... i The Royal family have talken their usual exercise during the week, when the state of the weather per. mitted their so doing. The Royal dinner parties have been attended by her Royal Highness the Duchess of Kent,her Royal Highness the Duchess of Gloucester, the lady in waiting of the Duchess of Ken', the lady in wait. ing of the Duchess of Gloucester, the Baroness de Speth, Viscount ...

Published: Sunday 01 November 1846
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1263 | Page: Page 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

POETRY AND REALITY

... Goldsmlith used to regret tha^t the age in whichl he lived wasI tOO ?? for poetry. Mluchl depends on the idea we aittachl *o poetry. |HIomer seems to l ive been intiesstely acquahited witl4 every occulpationI Of h;8 day. The anatotmist is ?? at the minute kcnowvledge he possessed of the humanl frarne; anid a butchler and cook could not describe better than lhe lito a the rustle of killinig ...

BRAZILS

... tt I* . , , i-IUIOIjTH, NoVBMBSa 9 Her Majesty packet Seagull, Lieut. arrived from Kio de Janeiro, September » . it' v 17 ; Peraambueo, '29. PassengersMcmm' ' Field and wife, Ferrar, Cumberland, and Captain Key, R.N., and M«. steerage passengers: and freight, in -old jL monds, 43,000/., more or less. 0 d dla Nothing of importance from Kio Janeiro or the nothern provinces. Her Majesty's ship ...

MUSICAL INTELLIGENCE

... i1IUSIC?A L IN'J'EL Li U f?NCL. TIhis giginitie in',it 0 lion, solichl POld~ luonet'r 1110't;IIFS Ibr nonly m1101thd in the year, wllil-.t dim ii r teeti t'als only ?? i, our provinces, iii~ eve-li in GermanY, : - nhlilli, useseihbled last nlight ,l E xeter-hlla for the fern- In ii~lli sea1SOn. It is gond for on itld artists that tbeO society is firmly establtesiled withl pleselrt'ri ice ...

MUSICAL REVIEW

... MUSICAL ilL' VJJ?IV. |Asrt/re'rre! cldl Se+vcets for' C'lWT/ rcahcloivr. Nos. 1 to 7. s [Burns. A wise and artistic selection of genunile choir music for the ordinary roeutine of ecclesbistical occasions has~ been ilong wanted. The collections of Boyce and Arnold, pub- l iobedi unider the pseudlo title of'' Cathedral Mlusic, do nrot bear the sligirteat reference to the exigenlcies ef ehorrh ...

THE MAGAZINES FOR NOVEMBER

... THgE MfAGAZifNERS FOR NO0VEMlBER'.t Blaclirood's Magazzine.-ln the present number of .Blgckwsode there are several practical papers of more than ordinary value, and one or two essaiys ou learned subjects, wvhich wvill be highly aecceptable to thle man of letters ; but there i3 a deficiency of wvhat to the g eneral reader is moth1 mtore attractive,g~oo verse andjpleastitt narrative. The ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... THE LITE RARY EXAAIINE R. I Rod J'iesfoiy of ]4l1/l)ft]i j l ?? est, ?? I'zmes tilt tie (jo~tyitt~e tg i/wc nrtbs, i1.D. 640. By Samuel Sharpe. A new Edition. Moxon inn1umerable have becn the travels in Egypt with which we have of late been inundated. The remains in that C0-ralotdinary country are so striking; the ?? with which they are associated, in all minds educated under the influence of ...

ADELPHI THEATRE

... A DELPHII THEATRE. +4 Gisefle, after having been served up nt all tbe theatres, metropolitan and provincial, in almcst every imaginable faoshioi, after havinlg been allowed to grow cold, and having been halshed and stewed, and wnrmed and hnshed again, was, last night, produced at thle Adeiphi in an entirelv new dressi-that of a semi-burlesque faiiry spectacle, with the title of Tlce P/inteanto ...

MUSICAL INTELLIGENCE

... MUSICAL I.N7'L'LL1 G~IATCL. VIEBNt; , OCTs. 8. -[Private CorrepondienctT-.B 'IfC, the English comp~oser, hnsa beenl here, ant ins directed his opera of the B~oliioiial Guir at thc Faluboneg Theatre Aio des' Winsl four linles, ouce his ?? Sons I ymsi, and twice his Siege q RoJ lsle/le ; the latter be ing representred the iirst tints last Saturdsy. Tlhe 1Bolseeiais Girl hald, under Ballc' s ...