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Dublin, Republic of Ireland

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803

Type

803

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LITERATURE

... must pardon us for suggesting that it can serve no good purpose, and, on the contrary, evincesbad taste, tbrake L up this old story, apparently for no other object than to re- L peat the oft-refuted calumny that the Irish church had con- nived at the overthrow ...

THEATRE ROYAL—MR. MACREADY'S FAREWELL BENEFIT

... efforts, but for these, his kind and Id! friends and patrons, he now looked round in vain. Like 0 the eastern pilgrim in the story, he retsrned to the his early and 'happy days, and he asked where wert t friends of his youth, and echo answrered-whete (cheS' ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... , after having ecajoyed ne or two iliiralsle stories mnd songs, recountcil and sung, alid playci il the inimitaile etyle which is Lover's own, was one of re- gret that many whio re linniv love a good story and a racy Irish soeg, were not present to p ...

THEATRE ROYAL—THE ITALIAN OPERA

... looting upwards, tier over tier, and u- pretiein; te i lea (as wvs really the ca-e) of ani imn'etse multitude if people; in short, such a houtse, in point of uitin- or bels, Nye have never seen equalle, ts'a on one or two occa- v, ious, in the llawklois' ...

LITERATURE

... render less tolerable the present state of things, even ill the item of our periodic literature. With the exception of one short paper on a comparatively dull and not over-interesting subject, there is not a sontence to be found in the entire of this month's ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... Calcraft was at horne in the rather arduous part of Ludorico. This character-that of a wily traitor and arch villain-one, in short of the lago species- is that next in importance and interest to that of the heroine. Mr. Cakraft gave it admirable effect, ...

LITERATURE

... character of Hutchinson, Provost, who is popularly known c as a notorious place-hunter. We need not remind the reader v of the story of the slei of Man and the cabbage garden. p Hutchinson was one of the most able and successful men is this country ever produced ...

LITERATURE

... wleo divided the power and the empire of France with her Sovereigns in the course of the 16th century. The admirable story, or rather stories of the war in Spain, entitled, My Peninsular Medal, will be found progressing in this number, rich as ever in ...

LITERATURE

... sketches of the strange scenes which were of daily occurrence during that strangest of all modern revolutions.- Eschylus is a short and clever article, illustrating with great clearness the peculiar character impressed on the Greek drama by the great tragic ...

LITERATURE

... critical disquisi- i- dion and of political dissertation ; anti ill none of those parer- !d calars does this month's number fall short of the high cha- )d racter awarded by the univeral consent of the literary world nm to Mlackwood's Magazine the facile princes ...

LITERATURE

... wich sparkling anecdote and clever description. The short yarn by the Green Hand winds up in this number. The termination is abrupt and hardly worthy of the interest excited by the rest of the story. The writer seems to despise the old conventional fe- ...