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Morning Chronicle

HOLIDAY AMUSEMENTS

... fault it altilite or thle actor) wecertainly 'auO is s au isisiividual snuore decrepid than, b li isijl maore stupid. For, to Speak frankly, * it ?? is very dull olitrsoter, although pl~aycl hy 1there is conly sne feature of the oldi k iglit is'oislir has ...

STORIES THAT MIGHT BE TRUE, WITH OTHER POEMS

... perusal of the works of a much admired author has, unknown to the writer herself, produced the similarity of style of which we speak. The following passage iln the first poem, Mary, cannot fail to recall to our readers TenDnysol's Dora:- Then I felt ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... and the growing bro- 11 therhood of nations, which alone haive permitted them to be qu prepared and collected I I will not speak more definitely fat of those liallowing feelings, which should spiritualize, as far 91 as possible, the most intensely ?? effort ...

FRENCH PLAYS

... out of sejtimenit, throughi a veil of rustic yaucherie, by Mlle, ScIiVAcutK and M. IlYACINTIIN . The l;alais Itoyal-or, to speak aifter the new fashiior, ite Montansier-vaudeville of VAttol(P ?? ?Ciiqle#ttC is principally chalacterised by a droll epieodo ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... state. To which we weill also add that bthis, bthe .Kensington ersd, wast far more liglitsorme and pleasant, should say, speaking of an edifice almost all windows, more latertil opeotitigs to the ligltt-the effect of which was to admit the enlivening ...

HER MAJESTY'S THEATRE

... situa- tions, wiich afforded excellent opportunities for the musi- cian. The stern mass of stalwart and dark visaged soldiers, speaking with one voice, and professing itself the watch- ful but humane papa of the saucy child who had grown uip under its ...

HAYMARKET THEATRE

... C was good and new, but it was unsuccessful both I in the working out and the acting. Mrs. FITZWSILLIAM I was not made to speak like a boy actually smitten with a t boyish passion, but like a boy imitating, with a vast deal of impudent bluster, the heartsore ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... ceutre of the nave-amor.g the beau- tiful Belgian sculpture, rivalling that of Italy, anid of which M it is here impossible to speak, even iit a cursory manner, PI fortnilig, as it does, a splendid exhibition in itself, like et the fitrtiiture of Austria, ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... seen, but such as those of Tuscany .h ari not freqiently to be met with. d Perhaps the reader will be suirprised tbat, in speaking of I Tuscany, its Maniufactures should hlave engaged our attention e before its artistic lrodletiolls The reasoi is obvious ...

THE BISHOP OF BOMBAY'S LATE VISIT TO MADEIRA

... painfull to you ; but you have courted the expression of my opinion, and firthfulness to the Church requires that I should speak the plain truth. If ' Iy oil, asl' teosc ho cosam C m'lilicatre mot/i yeo, are not in schisl, I do ?? kiioir ?? schisla is ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... square inch, Or 4,fili0 t tol tho rrice Ibritss, ii tii ?? meshes to the squnare inch, or L ito thie Onice. Here agaiti (speaking, still of the rnrln lie-!rt'le~ asac ho scot t tiuost Liorndless disuplay of hr5 i u bsuhlarces tmost various (stoise, glass ...