STAGE POLITICS
... living at this honut; .England hath need of thee.' Tf politisi nre to come on to tho stage, we bog that historical truth may be preserved, aiid the mighty deald may n ot be vilified. ...
... living at this honut; .England hath need of thee.' Tf politisi nre to come on to tho stage, we bog that historical truth may be preserved, aiid the mighty deald may n ot be vilified. ...
... STAGE MORALITY. Another great outcry against stage v indecency has been raised in London within t] the last few days. Mr. Boucicault, who rl has created for the play-going public so c many sensations has now produced one 0 for the critics. le has ventured ...
... favourite actor, murdered the monarch. A con- jurer accidentally shot a maron on a Dublin stage in 1814, and six years later a Madame Liasky was killed through: a stage soldier forge'tting to t take the cartridge out of his musket.' At Milan a.n actor in ...
... St. George’s Hall, and the Prince’s Landing-stage. each of these spots there was an immense concourse of spectators ; but several circumstances conspired render the Prince’s Landing-stage the most attractive. Here the Prince and Princess, with the distinguished ...
... these experimen- 00 ni) talists may be right, some may be wrong; some fe the may extend the range of artistic feeling, and ho some may not; but there the efforts are, there in' the workers are, at work in possibly new domains ur et of thought, emotion, ...
... ART NOTES. I ENGRAVING IN METAL PLATES. Just as the world knows nothing of its grea~tet men, it may be remarked in degree 3 that the world at large knows nothing of the 3 chaleographic treasures in the British Museum I . print room. A few evenings ago ...
... ART NOTES. of ins )ur )W, [on ate ns try of )ck cry er- ble Yas :nd ks, iad in- toD )ut 50, :60 of 30 ant le, 3- ,ve- Students of art and arch, ology, separately or in combination, together with a large portion of the public, will be glad to see that ...
... FThere is, moreover, a strong but growing minority who not only keep the flame of noble art alive, but are doing all they can to encon-B S rage it, and by promotmg art training and the use of art galleries they are enabling people to as -use ...
... A- TH S ART;IhV THE STREITS. n - No. III. JEWELRY AND FURNITURIE. Although no :man can expect to pick up ns: jewels, like Sitidl ad the Sailor, in the streets ud. and thoronghfanes, yet no law prevents his ,. looking through I )late-glass windows, andopenly ...
... this respect ize contents of the chapels on the Sacro !sonte are, as works of art, almost unique. Wi.at is more, the artists employed upon them re!a to have been keenly alive to the excep- tsrnil character of tlse work upon which they sere engaged. The ...
... to ?? art, and, it may be.hoped, have put things air in train for a well-selected exh~ition be of pictures annually. Let Mr. Picton and th, o his: committee thus popularise art, and, in (w r a few years, their cherished project for bu ay an art gallery ...
... THE ART OF WRECKING. (A CHAT WITH AN OLD WRECKER.) The gentle art of wv ng -is not what it once vas, *Nny an5dowin the coat willtelilyou that, I but it is still carried on in a, modified form, oftni under the very Loses of the coasiguards who are sttioned ...