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THE OLD LOVE AND THE NEW

... 'hat care I for heollrur end duty ? cries the irusband. Duty I honour ! who spoke of duty or of honiour? I spoke and speak of love-of that love which ill a wife is the sole invtlnerable rienrotir of it husband's honour-uf ?? love without which honour ...

Published: Sunday 22 February 1880
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2032 | Page: 15 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

ANOTHER OVERGROWN RADICAL PAMPHLET

... required for the position he holds. Of the Afghan war, the war at the Cape, and the Irish University Bill it is unnecessary to speak. Ar. Clayden takes the accepted Radical view of them all. Nothinilg which the Ministry does can by any possibility be right ...

PRINCE OF WALES'S THEATRE

... funda- mental defects, foremost among which must be placed certain flaws in the character of the heroine herself. We are not speaking of moral flaws nor of character in the sense of reputation. Violetta ia La Traviatais decidedly immoral. But her absolute ...

BAGEHOT'S ECONOMIC STUDIES

... that they are dealing only with a convenient assumption they constantly forget it as they go on. They insensibly come to speak and write as though the laws they enunciate were of universal application, and were as true of all communities in all stages ...

POLITICS ON THE STAGE

... as a picture of life; and because, whatever dispute there may be as to their intended application, the postulates, so to speak, of the comedy raise no controversial or debatable questions. Politics only enter into the matter in so far as they supply ...

THEATRES

... the excellent elocutionary qualities of M~r. Hermann Vezin's performance of the melancholy Jacques there is now no need to speak. It is familiar to all playgoers. In Mr. Kyrle Bellew, for whose benefit Mr. Robertson has designed soune very picturesquely ...

Published: Saturday 28 February 1880
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1363 | Page: 9 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... are as popular among the Chinese as the Arabian Nights among English-speaking peoples. Why he thus confines the popularity of the Eastern treasury of fiction to Eng- lish-speaking peoples, we are at a loss to guess, and we are compelled to presume that ...

THE READER

... nearly got a pension. Throughout his political chapters be clearly shows his own feelings. We can go along with him when he speaks of the terrible St. Bartholomew's Day of 1662, and the wrench to English society for generations to come caused by ejecting ...

Published: Saturday 28 February 1880
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3634 | Page: 28 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

PARK THEATRE

... expression and with the accent and emphasis calcilated to do justice to the exquisite ideas of the poet. Altogether, we must speak of Miss (;ertrufle Norman's debuit as asi event doiig her credit asd wivinacing respect for her intelligence, but at the same ...

Published: Sunday 29 February 1880
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1345 | Page: 5 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

AMUSEMENTS ON THE CONTINENT

... the immoral novel. There are those who would read immoral French and English novels, knowing them to be such, who would yet speak with harsh severity of the worldliness of those who go to the Theatre, and enjoy pure, healthy plays. Of the two evils the ...

Published: Sunday 29 February 1880
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1533 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

STAGE PLAYS IN MUSIC HALLS

... about, and then called upon his master (Nelly Power). Something was prepared for a picnic, after which she san a song, as if speaking to him, The Warrior then aros, seized as a prisoner. There wa, h er v. expostulation in hllxguage V et10 She was taken ...

ALLEGED STAGE PLAYS IN MUSIC HALLS

... cription was nearly correct. He wrote Pantomimes. In real Pantomime, of course, there should be no speaking. As a fact, however, iln all Pantomimes there was speaking now. Mr Chance said no doubt a Pantomime should be a dumb show. The witness said it was not ...

Published: Sunday 29 February 1880
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1753 | Page: 4 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture