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LONDON THEATRES

... tle g atification of thle public, lie may C ,im ihie merit of having opened a new field in prose, as well as in verse. His poetry has long delig iied the lovers ,f tbe muse ; hns nr;vels andi tal s, possessitg all till: hiaracuerisciss of petry, exept ...

THE POETS OF THE REIGNS OF ELIZABETH AND JAMES 1

... period between about 1560 awd 1631,, has bern ca4ieti, whether truly or not, is anotbeor question, the Go!Jen A go of English Poetry. and a vwork has bben just publish 4, which ctnbtios a great deal of curious a-id iateresting ijoor. niatlon retarding Spencel ...

THEATRE

... any deduction fiotln the praise so liberaily due to Miss Greene asia singer, it is on the score of her enunciati m of the S poetry it was by no means sufficientlv articul ate or clear. This is. a serious defect ; but it is, at tlic san1e tinme, one 'vbiclh ...

THE THEATRE

... gave promiseof, itsi owing 10 the frequent aim at effect on hlis patt,. and io the rate opportunities which that species of Poetry Jforda of *aking points with successful effect. To read it awell, it must b.e read; simply, neither making the rhymes inglein ...

POETRY

... POETRY i TO MY ZNIGHT-CAE. Yes, my watrm friend, the myrtle braid May twine around frail plksures head. And laugh it viuandi me; : e While affuento trimns her wsxent light, And vranton frohli wastes her tiights n mp.rirth no~d fest~ive-glee, Yesi let ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... anatomrical movements of thp Glottis, &c. than tbe unilorm propriety of regu- Iarly adherin- to it. The pronunciation of thne Poetry, aind the proper emphasis to be laid on par. tit ulnr *voi ds and sentences, are of no less conse~ quence. Much of the fame ...

THE NEW THEATRE ROYAL

... as ever issued faton the pen of a bad poet, It is what Junius, in his elegance of expression, wvould call the madness of poetry, without the in- sp~iation, and what we, in humbler prose, would term a ribaid slang, too low for even the Galleries of Drury ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... `Wednesday evening. 'I'c piesnure of Part'iametntary matter festricis as tO merely nolic. iog its eminent' merit and sticcess. The poetry is t'ranseernd' anly beautiftol; spoiled by tto atffetation. bearing the starap of no school. redutdant with tenderness, and ...

LITERATURE

... produced by the sister kingdom, and we feel a high satisfaction in recommending it to our readers as a work of real merit. The Poetry of THE DUBLIN INQUISITOR is not unworthy of the land of Moore, We subjoin the following extract from a poem inserted in the ...

LITERATURE

... the Setoih C, 3 gieast measure be trneed. But we are dijrost~;' i7 broken tbe ice, James 1-I0gg wert on to write Otinorpit poetry, an~nong which he osenttisuas tile first 1re Ily ILp;, an address to the Duke ofi Buccleulgh. in lielietf ?? Li,07 ither ...

THE FASHIONABLE WORLD

... conclu4ed with a neW grand tr.umphal Ol;E in hono or of his M ajesiy's arces sian to the throne. The mu-ic by Bishop, the poetry by Sou. they and Collard. On the ?? ultimo, sentence of divorce wss olbtaioedh in the Consiszorial Court, against Lady Doyle ...