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Examiner, The

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The Examiner

DESTRUTION OF COVENTGARDEN THEATRE

... ehininies fell ojan the engine, and buried all those that were ahboutsit He did not .now the ?? ef 41i who suhreds bitt csnisod speak jositiv'ely 10Savers. Other w iesse identified tt' persons of Mr Flerrt ad the private ef the Adard the Ooronlr then shortly ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... countenance, but it possesses no poower of expression for the supernatural and ever-shifting genius of in- &mity ;.her tones in speaking are for the most part of a melodious depth and yeminded every body of Miss BOa ?? she has by no means the feriinine d.ica:cy ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... ludicrous ex- pressiod of i serious feeling, at a time. Then a ?? Ilver would have felt too great an. awe pd hUmrili.- Lion to speak so familiarly, was another tomch of tihe epigramrsatic bathos, and the flash was followed by an instantancous roar. The serious ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... to th bre~tjfrent*, wom-?t ey thet with -h eonstai4 and j1 l-kt amost daisooti onatc: sev . ?o it is 4dicuDP7 I allow, to speak one's ujiid of old t- :quaintatqg ai uwder -certain circumstances we gmay ha'W up gifernative hut to 'e sient, ?? been-tte ...

AN ATTEMPT TO SHEW THE FOLLY AND DANGER OF METHODISM

... toe 4,ti -whosea-rti and judnge olthings'fI themselves were ix ade eas~'- on thiese, oints, 'ad .allowned ,to ,t o ll andt ,speak olF irho poipnar &ectriws of t'he churnh, what thleyr finsd ie~eat .to fact aud the tesfmniqomrkof the . seuli~es it Wn be ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... lt vyoice'! *ts flevmently) ye-0 rhinde~dh Mr s. BusA jwr' midle. to nes, which are cer-: iit~ml tot he esy- I isntrmltet speak of ladie~s' wigs; *4 a:i~ g; ravre hag critic ha, nio, bnsizness jwthro- ;ac and a :good Ace!l with iherhc outsid. , an~d- ...

FINE ARTS

... h'c- to rse li!ke him the royal inmperative pro- xis do not very well understaod it, tltough tte have rried haLrsi W''e speaking of his own works, you ?? told t - if, 1 leer blhas suggested, with singtilar felicity, the solid c~i eal!e'-'sou~rd light ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... order as those of religion. Our farci-corrtdies, however similar in iytvle to the eloquence of Dr. COLLYER and Mr. HILL, never speak disrespectfully of the 5noral virtues; and a modern dramatist, - however incapable of good works, cer- tainly damnns nobody ...

FINE ARTS

... a Gentlerman who iC alivays pre. pared, and wifo always consilts eind encreases his professioliaf charaeter whlenevcr he speaks ap! wriles on his scieave-i science to which he afds the refiniiteirkt of the krt of Design. ...

THE OPERA

... professes, that is, ac- cordinu to the dramatic acceptation, of -the word sentimen. tal; Thus at the English Theatre, when we speak of a sentimental comedy, we mean an exces.ively dull jpiece by an excessively dull author,, such for instance as 'The Set- ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... performance of his cast of characters;-a slight genteel person; a face good-huinoured, and dashed with eager gaiety; a tone of speaking, -short, pithy, and seif-sufficient;9 and a conception that seaeght overy new. le vity of fashion, every tura and flutter- ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... QUIcK's style of acting, Nhich seems the effect both of indolence and of enfeebled powers his voice evidelitly fails bint in speak-ing as well as singing, and his Jew does not display enough of that impportanit briskness of action which islthe character- ...