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THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... came fully up to the-fancy d of the t! o -- lnd sluxae t Refulgent from The strdie §f'Clsar's fate. t 'Of MIr.Yoiufse must speak' with a iuth mote gttai'd- ed caution, not that weddo riot respe&f and admire his ta- a kleis5 but because we think that b'e ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... people say, vho us'd to hate here 'She *as beheaded as-a traitor, And there's some ground for the feport, Fer she has dar'd speak' truth at Court. ~Some say. an Ingrate Soih's unkindness, She'd nurs'd with all a MIother's blindness, - - 'hom she'd from ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... audience, the piece before us took sirn, hold of their attention. Nor was it destitute eyea ofl ginal charac ter, comparatively speaking ;-the ?? hireling of an Officer, who goads l's inferior to dijtra i by continual and malicious exactions upon his patierce ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... XEKilc from tbe throne which his grave cant ba.4 usurped, and place in it a proper being of flesh and blood, who feels and speaks like a susceptible creature. The next perfurmauce in tuerit is certainly that of An- ton by Mr. CaAaRLEs XEIaLr , Who in ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... and dies ittny opinions.i How little MoIzx, GREY, a-kin to!- jOsIRA and GREY:will break nosvhicsdoivi! . ?? About GERAMR Ii speak to MAC, For we must have the Baron back.' Oa no slight ground his claim depends, ' . e nsot amsng my eqrly friends- s ?? At; ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... raodinary step- ping Ladder, will soon be given' to the Public. Of one copy wlhich was purchased in 8o9, tve can' ven- ture to speak freely, because we letrn that it wvas pur- chased at a very moderate price. (considering the enor- mous sumas which have been ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... tributed to the pen of Mrs. LEFANU, a sister of Mi. SIIERIDAN, and allied to him by talents as well as con- sanguirnity. Report speaks highly in' favour of this 9o- medy, particularly' as to the terseness, point and spirit of the dialogue. SIlt JOsnUA REYNOLDS ...

FINE ARTS

... might Itave been wished,, nor was it gracious it hin perhaps to enter upon. Mr. BRim's imerits at all, thoulgh :ht ddid it in speaking of silme. atlempts, real or imaginaryi whlich he thouglt tlhd Academicians had made against lhis.friend Mr. WILKIr.- But ...

THEATRE ROYAL, HAYMARKET

... of the American provinces. Senor GARCIA HsZtsaios (European) observed, that he was surprised to hear the American deputies speak so strongly in favour of the bandittis of New Spain, and that they should forget those who remtained there faithful to the ...

THE NEW EPIC

... stripes could cure. She describes his Lordship's eclipses and 1 observations in a strain of splendid poetry, and ?? him, while speaking, to one of those cormets, that, afte, appearing for a tinme, launch out into the regions of hide- finite space, where it ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... darknesi groan Nor find in Albion, freedom's temp'rate zone ed ?? still her fruits by Patriots planted, spring, ks The King a speaking law! the Law a silent King! ks _ ...