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HER MAJESTY'S OPERA

... has possessed for some past not, indeed, the exclusive right, but certainly the exclusive power of representing. We were speaking just now of the decline of the tenor considered as a thoroughly popular and sympathy-enlisting artist. Quite as note- worthy ...

REMINISCENCES OF FEN AND MERE.*

... considerable assistance from his pen. A Cheap Jack, though he may have retired several years from the profession, is not likely to speak of his maiden literary work, or of giving his system free scope for development, or of owning a soft impeachment. Neither ...

PUBLICANS, BEWARE OF THE BAIT!

... age of fifteen years. But it is not of these we 'write, it is of the -waifs and Stenue. As a leading journal recently said, speak- ing of the walit of sailors anid the fact of certain ltsaes of juvemiiles being comnitted to prison for otnluaiativelv trivial ...

LITERATURE

... misery drag thee down. Avaunt, pale phantom.! 'Tis the victor King Waves off thy shadowy dart and guards thy prey.' Speak, MIarie! speak to me! But what so highly gifted a dramatist would have achieved in the domain of pure art uninfluenced by the literary ...

PRINCE'S THEATRE

... y truthful bye-play which is necessary 3 to comprehend the force and scope of his conceptiou of . the character is, so to speak, compelled by a gentle rpersuasive power which renders one unconscious of this strain. Miss Robertba&skine discoveredunexpectede ...

Cripps the Carrier

... Not a word will I speak again until I have your leave. I calls it onhandsome of your Worship to say that; being so contrary of my best karaksteristicks. Your Worship maneth all things for the best, I am pursuaded ; but speaking thus you drives me ...

Published: Saturday 03 June 1876
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 6338 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

DOUBLE ACROSTIC.—NO. 8

... coloupd ost pattern muslins, out of favour so long, will make thesrse, oat appearance; but of these it is let too early to speak wilh decision. Self-coloured silk grenadines will also be,m qk he worn, not only for trimmings for silk dresses of the ame ...

MUSIC

... his too exclusively musical organisation. From detailed criticism of the present work we purposely refrain, being able to speak only from the impression of a single hearing. The first movement opens with a short leuto leading to an allegro moderato, in ...

Our Illustrations

... mean respectively, Blue Spotted, Hickory Wood Split, and Great Arm. The captain, it seems, is the only English- speaking Indian in the lot. As the La Crosse players are about to make a tour of the principal towns in great Britain and Ireland ...

Published: Saturday 03 June 1876
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3533 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

MAGAZINES, &c

... LrdFsolsvd sSecrct-a pleasant story. The other con- tents include 'on leexceileut reading, but we must leave the titio's to speak froe themiselves-viz., A Greek Hymn, Walking Tours t ' Wathers Von, der Vogeiweide, an~d Thoughts Suggs 'sted by the ...

LITERATURE

... shiple youth, in the first Bush of selihooe Snol eills to poiets, easily picked up on my sen- siidies, and traveolig, so to speak on my shape I And Where alllI 0owv? °iheo aniswvers vherem' and passes for s eatheel yo Peter, I leave you to-night, wretched ...

MISS GENEVIEVE WARD IN DUBLIN

... accompanied ii such a way 'hat the wvords are melodious beyond the power of expression. The whole of Miss Ward's acting aud speaking was superb, and at her exit the audience were not deterred by the singing of the chorus from according loud and prolonged ...

Published: Sunday 04 June 1876
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1173 | Page: 7 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture