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THE FINE ARTS

... clumsiness of costume is dignified by excellent treatment. We liked MIr Theed's bas-reliefs ; but if we go on to speak of more works we must speak of' many more, therefore we pause abruptly, much against our will. ...

ALLEGRO VIVACE

... by the sword. No more Netes: Try it by the throats Of the cannon that will roar till the earth and air be shaken, For they speak what they mean, and they cannot be mis- taken. No more doubt: Come -- fight it out, No child's play I Waste not a day: Serve ...

THE ROYAL ITALIAN OPERA AT Drury-lane

... single fact that he could not speak English, and that Mr. Slomas could speak nothing but English, was sufficient to show that no conversation 'of the kind'could ever have passed between theni. Madame Caradori could only speak the English languagevry imperfectly ...

Published: Sunday 03 September 1854
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3520 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE FINE ARTS

... THE FINE ARTS. ROYAL ACADEAIY. Of our first glance round the walls of the Royal Academy we can, as usual, only speak very hurriedly, and must be content merely to name a few of the most important works. We 1 enter an appearance for them, with intention ...

EXHIBITION OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY

... EXHIBITION OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY. - . ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ -- .- I . . THE PRIVATE YIEW. It is Not easy to hit the right tone in whiehi. o speak of wqrks of art. There now, for example, are no led than 1,631 pieces of Eletlpture and painting exposed fo public gaze and ...

DRAMA

... comma, says, Besides this, Duncan Rath borne his faculties so meekly. This seems right; it is not likely that Macbeth would speak of his sovereign as this Duncan. The scene in the second act, between the guilty pair perpetrating the midnight murder, ...

IMIPERIAL SOFT SAWDER AND YANKEE GULLIBILITY

... Czar has acquired the confidence of the citizens of the United States is thus described by the ' New York Herald Dr Cottrnan speaks in the highest terms of all the members of the Imperial Family, and eapresses the greatest adminatioc, not ottly for the talel ...

THE THEATRICAL AND MUSICAL EXAMINER

... THE THEATRICAL AND MUSICAL EXAMINER. ROYAL ITALIAN OPERA. For the present we speak only as dry historians when we record the fact that the Opera last Saturday was opened for the season. It opened worthily with Rossini's William Tell, a work always most ...

FINE ARTS

... (or contrasting) the two national schools in their respect've peculiari- ties will be a most instructive exercise. We do not speak of comparing them for the petty and invidious purpose of arguing that this or the other school is the better. To settle that ...

THE FINE ARTS

... mill pools, our own harvest fields. They are Mr Redgrave's Old English Homestead, and two pictures that we did not name when speaking of the works of MrWitherington-Harvesting near Dernent Water, and a Water Mill. The fifth pic- ture of this group is a true ...

THE FINE ARTS

... new branch of art, though it may perhaps gratify the curiosity of mren more fully than their taste, the portrait of which we speak challenges the highest praise. This masterpiece among works of its class also proceeds from the establish- ment of Mr Vincent ...