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GWEN WYNN:

... galloping out of the gate? Having seen the one, and heard the ?? Ryeeroft 1 has misinterpreted both. No wonder his reluctance to speak words of love. And Bo for a time they are silent, the dread of misconeop- tion, with consequent fear of commita), holding their ...

THEATRICAL NOTES IN THE UNITED STATES

... the acting in general, llicbi, taken as a whole, we should judge to be less stiff and fornial than in England. We are not speaking, be it under- stzoo, of the 'stars, but of the host of minor characters whose e iciency is so important in attaining a ...

Published: Saturday 08 July 1876
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1140 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERARY NOTICES

... sad which I need to come to an understanding-that is Fngland. for V France no longer counts. Remember, when I speak for thc a aRussia, I speak also for Austria. Take Egypt and Candia: stii these places will suit you: no one will object. Three tas years ...

GERAMIC PAINTING

... tious demands for display with something like'reflnement V and fine taste. As far as it pretends, the exhibition before t us speaks well for the6 school of art-pottery which has C been developed at the Lambeth School' of Art, practically 1 aided by the wvorks ...

LITERATURE

... [not Holy- well Street] as nearly as possible on the site of what is now Deane's Mews. It stood in the fields; Stock- wood speaks of it as the gorgeous playing-place erected in the fields, and Gerard, the botanist, men- tions having picked up a rare ...

REMARKABLE LITERARY LIBEL

... should notbe taken up for the purpose of writing a sensational essay upon it, but, if it were possible, the critic should so speak that he should be able to place his heel upon the writings and drive it into them, without its being necessary to take them ...

MR. THOROLD ROGERS'S SATIRES.*

... a work of danger. In the concluding lines of his imitation of Juvenal's first satire, Mr. Rogers must be understood to be speaking wholly as a paraphrast, and his resolve to deal only with those who lie within the walls Of Peter's crowded abbey and St ...

THE VOLUNTEER REVIEW

... were succeeded by the Auxiliary Yeomanry and the Cavalry and field guns I of the Hon. Artillery Couipany; and, generally speaking, l the volunteers of the metropolis and the provinces made I up the rest of the brigade formation. The general command l ...

THEATRICAL LITIGATION

... to take them. The piece was to be pltyed oti the 25tll ad 27tb. The cast liad probably gone up ta week previously. I can't speak to the exact date. I first became aware of her refusal to play in the burlesque ol the Monday before it was to be played. I ...

Published: Sunday 09 July 1876
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2063 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE LONDON MUSIC HALLS

... power on the day named fell into hands which have hleld them with eminent success in former years, and very proerllY1 in speaking to his patrons of the future, does the ?? whohas returned to his early love, refer with pride and confidence to the past ...

Published: Sunday 09 July 1876
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3361 | Page: 5 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

PROVINCIAL THEATRICALS

... when Mr Tom Taylor's powerful drama Pfst acid Passeion forimed the prcipal featre of lce eveiing. It is almost impossible to speak too elogristcally of itce manner t which it was performed Perhaps io such exaiple of artistic aiedng has been sewi in Liverpool ...

Published: Sunday 09 July 1876
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 12586 | Page: 7 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture