Refine Search

Date

1900 - 1949
79 1900-1909

Countries

England

Counties

Yorkshire, England

Access Type

79

Type

78
1

Public Tags

LEEDS THEATRES

... LEEDS TIEARES. TMTHE ROSE OF PERSIA. Theatrically speaking, these are the dog days, and a good many provincial houses follow the example, doubtless a wise one. of many of the West End houses, and close their doors until a more convenient season shall ...

LEEDS THEATRES

... Romance, or anything else so long ae in 3L Van Bieneis company there is a good speaking part for his 'cello. And if TIL Van Biene cnnot make his instrument speak, who can? The reappearance of this popular musician at the Grand Theatre last evening ...

LEEDS BOHEMIAN CHAMBER CONCERTS

... Quartet in G, with its charaoteristic rhythms and contrapuntal finale; and there was Grieg's Quartet in G minor, which, so to speak, revealed the old wine in new bottles, and under a northern brand. Mozart readily carried oif the honours. The exemntants were ...

GRAND THEATRE, LEEDS

... and does, become imperfect. And it is only when, in some seuh scene where passion or emotion becomes strongest, that Irving speaks, not as a mere reciter and polished elocutionist, but as an actor who understands art, and believes that here, at all events ...

LEEDS MUSICAL EVENINGS

... so-called Sonata Appassionata, which she treated with characte'ristio refinement and grace of phrasing. The tonal extremes, so to speak, were not very far apart, but between them was, happily, discoverable many degrees of gradation. In Liszt's adaptation of the ...

LITERATURE

... lism stirred the dry bones of the religion of their country. It was inborn in Ebenezer and Ralph Ersline that they should speak our and suffer for conscience sake. A minister on the Englishi side of the Tweed, their father wae one of the famous two thousand ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... doubt wh)atever on the point. Minister aft' r Minister adopts and. continues the same policy: the writers and journalists speak with perfect confidence of the new engine, and the popular judgment appears to be unnnimoses and enthslsistie in its falvouT ...

LEEDS THEATRES

... They go through a variety of evolutions with a precision an d srap - to use an Americanism-that is highly stimulating, and speaks volumes for their stamina and training. They advance, retire, wheel, and double with a discipline that admits of no hesitation ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... the people were ground down by taxation and terrified by judicial murders and the tortures of heretics. One fact out of many speaks for itself. Henry VIL left in his treasury about thirty millions sterling, bat his son ran through the moneys, and bequeathed ...

THE STORY OF CRANMER

... it is not associated with any one figure of heroic proportions. There is a sense in -which the historian may legitimatesly speak of a person as having created a movement; but he many not say if, of Crannier. And further on he rays- The scholar was drawn ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... inlducted omteredi in thse registry at Lichfield, and the intruiler. Hollincs- head. wsas relr'gated to his obscurity vI t speaks wrell for the charity of Mr. Daft that. thoughl thlere is mulch of pathos in his recita^l of his own sorrows and of the rui;ns ...

LEEDS QUEEN'S THEATRE

... some of her colleagues. Fran Schratt stood high in favour of the Empress Elisabeth, who often visited her- and, generally speaking, she is a favourite of the Vienna Court. It im no secret that the Emperor WIho is partial to Witty conversation, likes to ...