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Republic of Ireland, Republic of Ireland

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Dublin, Republic of Ireland

Access Type

69

Type

69

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THE DRAMA IN LONDON

... entertainer, and your own name appears in letters not unlike those 'which stand' below a Roman bust. With such -6 pllaque so to speak, I was bidden some diays ago to come to a recep- tion given by Xr. Woolcome an American, to Mr. Winch, another child of the ...

THE MUSICAL SEASON

... gifts. -, There is to -be another lady violinist, MdUe Anna Lang, from Stockholm. M Hoilman, violonceflist, will, if report speaks truly,, vindicate his own powers and the cipabilities o'of -his instrument with: the highest efficiency An eminent Dublin ...

ROYAL DUBLIN SOCIETY'S SHOW

... was read over, from a which it appearesl that nlsile speaking to a gentle- I roan in Patrick-street the prisoner came up. He c 'had heard o1n reliable authority that Hannan had a been publicly speaking of his being improperly 3 e concerned in the taking ...

OPERA AT THE GAIETY

... was quite ?? in its perfectin 3he looked the part tkwraughly. Her conception of it was quite up to the mark, dramatically speaking, while her' siagiag wa- a brnliast displaT in which she never forgot the canons of good *Ae. Rer singirg of tI& -'Jewel ...

CONCERT AT THE RETUNDO

... the night. A Dublin audience, how- to ever familiar with the phrase, is not frequently nce entertained by the reality of a speaking flute, and -last evening the audience in the.Rotundo showed very demonstratively how thoroughly. a - they appreciated the ...

LETERATURE

... leaves us under the impression that the authoress probably possesses some true gifts and powers, and we are really rehictant to speak discouragingly of any lady's t-esm y in the world of ltsters. We must in candour say that the novel seems to us to have been ...

THE QUEEN'S DRAWING-ROOMS

... yv,. B L, andIr. T PM Bourne, B L. The cha Will he 2 taken at ?? o'cklel by John Adair Pbllip, I Eaq, Members desirous of speak;ing cc_ the-above i subjeap'r are xequested -Ia communiate Witb the i senretary, King's Iunn Library. All mdettings F oven ...

THE DRAMA IN LONDON

... critics, alnd, -,v!at is more to the point, by the Londoxn onbhec. I har.e tnot seen ae single notice of the picce that does not speak of it as the vittist ?? brilliant jday that has beven produced for a ronlslisra'O!5 period on the- London stage. I am glad ...

IRISH FINE ART SOCIETY

... .present collection a few works by persons who are. professional artists in the fullest sense of the term, but generally speaking the, exhibitors are not profes- sionals. The performances of amateur artists, like those of amateur actors, disarm criticism ...

THE HORSE SHOW

... by ?? peO s Pfo( glm, the SIow of 1884 WM_ far surps ?? of it pedofzroS, Thia- to a..who, wish well ftor t Munt7. get to speak ,oX lf. lews- the 3_s.s, is a matter for oopgt7latiWv, ad we -s nty say that Xt thousad of isid who wml sde 'tha etwpoius for ...

LITERATURE

... is t: in two parts, English-Latin and ILtin-English; t] and it gives in both laaguages the names applied t among English-speaking people to cultivated eand wild, native and foreign, plants, tiees, and g shrubs. Its object is to popularise the T terminology ...

[ill] EXHIBITION IN DUBLIN

... believe it would be done uuder . £10,000. It would not be safe to undertake it unless that sum was subscribed orguaranteed. Speaking of the Irish manufacture movement, .1r. Winstanley said he believed it had the best 0 wishes and support of the Nitional ...