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Morning Chronicle

TH ART-UNION OF LONDON

... Boaird of Trade and the society ats to the choice of prizes were now set at rest [hoar, heal. llebelieved that, generally speaking, the pritnitarl given satisfaction to the subscribers ; land the suabscriptions for the current year wore grecater than tisey ...

EXHIBITION OF 1851

... ant immense assemblage [hrear-, hoax', and cheers]. ButI these ivere merely local rind temporary interests. lI-I would now speak of the effect of thle exhibition on the London manufacturing and !F trading interests. London was at groat manaunfacturing ...

HER MAJESTY'S THEATRE

... evening pas- sages of exquisite tenderness wvere alternated with bursts of passioiate expression-not the customary and, so to speak, physical forms of stage passion, but genuine and impressive outpoeurings f manly feeling. As asctor, too, Signor BAU- O.tuIoE ...

HER MAJESTY'S THEATRE

... nosy inl this country. This lady's Piceroto had proved liar anl artist, but had scarcely predicated so power- ful, and, so to speak, niasterly an i Illpersoisation as this of Orteitl. Its the acthig it is througheout informed by a hiich ,intclligenor~, lani ...

SPANISH LITERATURE

... s e note to this part of the work, Mr. Ticknor bears a E graceful testimony to the genius of Southey, of it whose name he speaks as one that must always he lI mentioned with peculiar respect by scholars in- n terested in Spanish literature, and whose ...

THE MAGAZINES

... of Shrclspearrc ii tire Jtlfrv'Inrrt Of V Ib,reiee, of tire liret part. of wvhichlivwe lotrd occasion b :last ronorthr to speak wvith comrrsrnedrrtiorn, and ccr'tairsly curen arvardl praise ats great to tire latter as to tire fornier pcrtiorr Thre Traits ...

HER MAJESTY'S THEATRE

... Whens a little tithe hlas past Hle will thes iso longer speak. Pros. (to liur.) All the anger that I feel 'Thou hast calm'd, my child, at last Wiess a little timee has past Thus he will not dare to speak. The music of this trio is forcibly expressive. The ...

GREEK ART

... things of which he treated than Johann Winckelmann. In suite of t the odd German phlegm with which he handled every subject--speaking of Beauty in all its lines, 3 and proportion and points, as if he spoke of isos I celes triaugles and sharp- cut rhomboids-no ...

THE EXHIBITION OF 1851—THE PLANS FOR THE BUILDING

... even in admitting that many of the most striking designs ale 'lot adequate to the vast requirements of the 11ildertaking, speak in very warm terms of the taste aud learning of malay of the plans, more especially those furnished by Continental contributors ...

ST. JAMES'S THEATRE

... tacitly giver. place to the other. Among the ;nany great tragic I ?? %which RACHEL, has resto. red to the stage (if we cau speak of restoration whore there is no record of any former living type), her Plcdrc stards forth as in its entirety the most perfect ...

ROYAL ITALIAN OPERA

... come fully apparent. In singing French and Ger- man music he frequently appears distrustful of his powers-his organ is, so to speak, more or less muffled. But in the flowing melodic phrases of ROSSINI, the Roman tenor comes out in the full flash of his vocal ...

THE MAGAZINES

... illustraled with maps. Tliis part cootj,,, - lent mapll]) of the orld oil MreatoI , ,. the merits of the wvork it wouild be vi speak. This cheap edition, revised and Mii 'at , ri. 't is calelatird tO pla;c 1 ?? Vtl eahic alitlir V xx, . reach of all. We therefore ...