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The Examiner

THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... know. If ghosts can speak we don't see why they are all to speak like bassi profonde. We occasionally have read stage directions in plays, laughs like a fiend ; according to present practice there should be a stage direction, speaks like a ghost. Heaven ...

POETRY

... word He spoke, who speaks no more, And sacred be that sleep the nightingales sing o'er! True teacher, friend, and brother, Farewell, beloved heart ! Where shall we find another? Yet wherefore? Here thou art, From thy fresh grave to speak, who hast but died ...

THE FINE ARTS

... clumsiness of costume is dignified by excellent treatment. We liked MIr Theed's bas-reliefs ; but if we go on to speak of more works we must speak of' many more, therefore we pause abruptly, much against our will. ...

MUSIC

... premised our remarks on Verdi's Requiem in this generalising manner because we feel under considerable difficulty how to speak about it with fair appr~ecia tion without descending from the base of high cr1tical demand on which our remarks in these colunns ...

ORIGINAL POETRY

... to an identity, So much I think, asid feel, and see with him.) There's one in which I can't agree with him, 'Tis where he speaks of the debates, As coming with their misty weighits, Like thick November rains and vapours, And taking lip the daily papers ...

Published: Sunday 12 December 1819
Newspaper: The Examiner
County: London, England
Type: Arts & Popular Culture | Words: 321 | Page: 13 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

Theatrical Gossip

... Gloucester festival, La Drance Afusicale gives us a curious example of French inability to spell English names. O r contemporary speaks of Sines Reeves, Lewis Thomer, Santluy, and Dr Wesley. The opening spectacle at the Th6atre Lyrique will, it is expected, ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... farther use of its services and its sufferings. Of the startling way in which this is aecom- plished we shall have to speak when we speak of the poem, which is not our intention at present. We will only say on that point that the tragedy it displays would ...

AN IMAGINARY CONVERSATION

... the English aredecorous. Nesseltode. At dinner; and even after; excepting that they speak to ladies, I am told, in the same, language and in the same tone as they speak to jockies; The lords, for the most parti even the young and the newly-made, are better ...

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 ...

MUSIC

... supplied by his exact counterpart on a Liliputian scale. Everything about Signor Carrion, the second experimental tenor we are speaking of, is pretty, except his name. His voice is small, but sweet and well managed, and the agility of his diminutive gestures ...

THE THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... between two mortal harangues; one of fifty-two lines to which she listens, and one of fifty-six which she speaks. But whether she speaks or speaks not, this wonder- ful actress 'says the greatest things.' Nothing is wanting to the charm of impassioned ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... dwelling on the vulgarity of the lower orders. Delightful it is to hear the Frenclbwormen speaking of the vulgar Englishwomen in a lump, as these same Englishwomen speak of all the rest of their country- women! In France, to laugh and weep (at least with ...