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HAYMAKET THEATRE

... been seen beibre ? The introduction of Mad.le. CELESTE'S dumb characters into dramas where all the rest of the personages speak is unfavourable to a full impreesion of the truth, grace, and beauty of hergesti- culation. The common associations of spoken ...

MR. KIRWAN'S RECITAL

... both in prose and poetry entirely from memory. Nature has done much for Mr Kirwan in endowing him with a fine, resonant speaking voice and a manly physique, though this latter is not of so much importance on the platform. He scarcely did justice to the ...

Published: Saturday 20 November 1886
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 488 | Page: 8 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

FEMALE FASHIONS FOR MAY

... the benefit of the usual tour of inspection. The pardessus occupies considerable attention at the present moment. We must speak of several, the productions of one of our first houses, varying from the most sumptuous, trimmed with many yards of handsome ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... pointed out an error of the press, the corrcdtion of which makes it perfeqly intelligible. Cowpisn, in his re Winter Evening, speaking of his early fondness for the ?? country, and for the description of rural scenes, says, nd Then MiL'.ON had indeed a poet's ...

FEMALE FASHIONS

... they are black satin, vwth a little narrowwreath of coloured fiovers at the edge. There are'but few black satin bonnets, ?? speaking, but black velvet ones are in great request. -The -most elegant are :to6stetrimifed with a bird-of-paradise 'dyed black, ...

SOUTH LONDON MUSIC HALL

... freely circulate. Columns, supporting arches, divide these corridors from the Grand HallI so that the effect, architecturally speaking, is exceedingly grateful to the eye. The Grand Hall is embellished with great taste, Cerulean blue, white and gold, prevail ...

Published: Sunday 30 December 1860
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 448 | Page: 15 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE

... would have been Iiade - Weare sorry to hear NMr..Jeierssn spoken of, so irre- vercntly alb lie ?? an anthor, wbfo does not speak lightly of other persons. Mr. Jeiferson deserves more respect. When be w rote his Notes on Virginia, II was a young ioan-a ...

LONDON COLLEGE OF MUSIC

... the great difficulty he felt was how to justify himself on a musical platform. He felt like the Statesman who was asked to speak about shipping, and felt satisfied when he remembered he had a sixty-fifth share in a canal boat. He (sir Albert) now remembered ...

Published: Saturday 27 October 1900
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 493 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

FOREIGN BOOKS

... reprinted a rare pamphlet, first pub- lished in 1605, entitled I La Chemise sanglante de Henry le Grand,' in which the dead king speaks to Louis XIII like the ghost in Hamlet, and reproaches his son for not having avenged his death. He, too, points his words ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... ting study of the Roman dramatist to see when he is speaking fr( m his own mouth. Professor Sellar makes out, to the satisfaction, wve c(nture to thinlk, of his readers, that he does often so speak, though he often givcs the impression of being a servile ...

MAGAZINES

... of course, is therefore ?? who care to watch the slaying of the slain can read Lord Brabourne on Mr. Gladstone's Plain Speaking. The opening article in the Coienleporary is entitled The Papacy: A Revelation and a Pronhecy. It treats largely of the ...

Published: Saturday 10 August 1889
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 935 | Page: 28 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LORD BROUGHAM'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY

... when he speaks of the virtues of the clans of Struan and Kinloch- Moidart, whose Celtic fire and genius saved him from the disgrace of being nothing better than a sluggish, torpid, prosperous English squire. Of hismaternalgrandmother he speaks with en ...

Published: Saturday 25 March 1871
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1900 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture