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MUSIC

... dAndorre, was produced last night with oomplete suceess. Of the merits of the original version of the .9pera we hbd ocesasod to speak on its performance at the St. Jasdes'a Theawtre on the openiug xsight of the present seaon; snd, though in' the English version ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... million feet is on all streets and thoroughfares, the sound of its bewildered thousandfold voices is in all writin.;s and speakings, in all thinkings and modes and activities of men : the soul that does not now, with hope or terror, discern it, is not the ...

THEATRES, ETC

... complete a representation of this beautiful tragedy. Of Mr. Anderson's interpretation of the much abused Moor, we are enabled to speak in very high terms. Impressive without exaggeration, the conception was correct and the execution vigorous. His free, gallant ...

Published: Sunday 03 February 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4130 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Until after the middle of the sixteenth century, it is difficult to find ballads written by kinown authors; so that, wvhen we speak of the Old Spanish Ballads, we do not refer to the few whose period can be settled with some accuracy, but to the great mass ...

THEATRES, ETC

... all and each beautifully expressed in the text, which we think Miss Addison somewhat, if we may so express ourselves, over- speaks. She enunciates every word separately, and with almost painful particularity. She is too deliberately intense, and delivers ...

Published: Sunday 10 February 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 4128 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERATURE

... turupike money for a walking-slick. Never mind. We must muster odds and ends; and, it the worst comes to lbe worat, we'll speak to that ould Jew, Ptter Rtafferty, and get the money upon geoseecitre.* I wish I dare veihture to trya charity secrnon; butthey'ce ...

LITERATURE

... what was fact and what fiction. But the author has sacrificed still more. His btrongground is the ground of fact. When he speaks of aceunts of planting operations, of bursts of feeling and inci- derits which he has witnessed, he is graphic, nay pow- erful ...

ST. MARTIN'S HALL

... regard it simply as -. divine art. It must be admitted that the most elaberate passe- gyric of Air. HULLAR'S scheme could not speak snore power-. fully in its favour than the selectionthus made fortheopenii- night, We do not purpose giving a detailed notice ...

MUSIC

... the notes that Chollet, when singing, was as lively and humorous, and gave as much clearness and piint to the woids, as when speak- ing. In this attention to musical elocution the French comic composers greatly excel ours, who are generally so deficient ...

THE MAGAZINES

... as tholighl to lleet his star, ?? :; lI ,, toU, I OMce to thee, Jaffill' i. I at Fir-t--i it is colItillued, nild we call speak as ch irnl y (,f thi- as of ite predecessor ; and The Mar- ia the Dak VilN afford some ?? to those )lelle it. Thi lilost ...

LITERATURE

... the impossibility of doing justice to it within 'he narrow limits issigned to us, will be sufficiently obvious. Generally speaking, a work printed for private circulation, if worth noticing at all, calls he the fullest and most minute examination that ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... incidents, in which there is much fairly disputable matter of which we do not desire to speak. The extract we shall take relates to the more mature, and, so to speak, public passages in Lady Blessington's life, which, up to the period of its sudden and ...