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OPERA AND BALLET

... ; not because it was ever held by a composer that a/al/t was a necessary ingredient in that curious musical and dramatic salad called opera, but because the French happened to be ridicuicusly fond of dancing, and because one of the clauses in the patent ...

THE QUEEN AND MR. PUNCH.*

... in those days in a fashion which to ripened veneration of these later times would be distasteful. He claimed in those his salad days the freedom of the allowed Jester ; but it is all in a good tempered way-as for exauple in the cartoont of Prince Albert ...

THE ERA

... Prince, on discovering the crime, stabs Anne to death, and then commits suicide, and the King is led away babbling of green-salads. Plot, obviously, is not M. MAETERLINOK'S strong point; nor is he great at character draw- ing. But he has the gift, possessed ...

Published: Saturday 24 October 1891
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1139 | Page: 15 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

A GREAT FLOWER SHOW

... front Mrltir, grapes fronD Guerasey, onions n fron EAypt, gooseberries from Cornwail, grapes from or lgium, aid a ?? showv of salads arid vegetables bi t froni Frarce. The entries for tila show casILT ins so f to rapidly that no prize list cou3l bh prepared ...

DINNERS AND DISHES.*

... description of how to cook risotto, a delightful dish too rarely seen in England, an excellent chanter on the different kinds of salads, which should be care- fully studied by those many hostesses whose imaginations never pass beyond lettuce and beetroot, and ...

The Theatres

... some little place in Normandy, whose only merit is that it provides her with opportunities of grumbling at the bathing, the salads, the game of petits chevaux, and the seaside diversions of our neigh- bours azross the Channel. The entertainment concludes ...

Published: Saturday 25 November 1893
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1265 | Page: 16 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THEATRICAL GOSSIP

... Signorina Musiani was prevented by fatigue from being present. The supper was held at Pagani's Restaurant, and the menu comprised salade r la Dove, the invention of the host, and a bombi et la Cavalleria Rusticana. ON Saturday last, at St. George's, Bloomsbury ...

Published: Saturday 24 October 1891
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 5420 | Page: 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

JOKES OF THE DAY

... high a vallue on his iits. T11E IDXalJ-The Vegetarian: What kind of' a dinner did my wife put up ?- Finie! We had greens and salad, and, in tact, a dinner tit for a cow-I mean for a king. 1From Judge.J A- USUAL FantLING.-Dentist: I have pulled the tooth ...

THE LATEST THING IN DRAMATISTS

... discovering the crime, stabs Anne to wi death, and then commits suicide, and the King is sce re led away babbling of green-salads. tei Plot, obviously, is Pot M. MATERILINCK'S Ch strong point ; nor is he great at character draw- an 1. ing. But lie has ...

Published: Saturday 24 October 1891
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1252 | Page: 15 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

New Novels

... more decided success than in Sir Gibbie. Jack Allyn's Friends, by G. W. Appleton (S. Tinsley).-Just as every Spanish salad' is dependent on garlic for its flavour, so is the ordinary three-volumed novel dependent on horrors for its relish. Mr. Appleton ...

Published: Saturday 12 June 1880
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1355 | Page: 18 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE READER

... Fitzgerald gisve some interesting infor- mation. Salads and Sandwiches, by T. Herbert (Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, and Rivington), will be useful to housewives, for it tells how to make some thousands of salads, and some hundreds of sandwiches. However, ...

Published: Saturday 13 September 1890
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3008 | Page: 18 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

SCORPION-EATERS ON SHOW

... stuck through the jaws and into the arms, legs, and chest of the fanatic. Thick prickly pears and cactus were eaten up like salad, hotcoals held in the naked hand, and, strangest, perhaps, of all, men standing barefooted on the edge of a long knife held ...