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Updated: June 2, 2025


At the end of the green critique occurred the following sentence: "It is only fair to state, nevertheless, that the play was favourably received by an apparently enthusiastic audience." "Nevertheless!" ... "Apparently!" Edward Henry turned the page to the theatrical advertisements. Miss ROSE EUCLID. Every evening at 8.30. Matinées every Wednesday and Saturday at 2.30. Box-office open 10 to 10.

But men read "The Golden Bowl" and "The Wings of the Dove" because they were skilful rather than because they were interesting. They were novelists' novels, like the professional matinees that "stars" give on Tuesday afternoons for the benefit of rivals and imitators in art. But to stop here would be to misunderstand totally the greatest craftsman that has come out of America.

Never in the park, never after the matinees, never in all wide London, had he seen two such lovely types: Titian and Greuse. "No!" said the Greuse. "Stupid mistake at the booking-office," replied the Titian. "Come up on deck. They are putting off." "Just a moment. Put the small luggage, Mr. . . ." "Webb." "Mr. Webb. Put the small luggage on the lounge. Never mind the straps. That is all."

We can do nothing better than recall a few typical public performances given in New York during the season of 1912-13. In a splendid series of matinées extending over two months, Professor William P. Jones danced the whole of Gibbon's "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire." The first two volumes were danced in slow time, to the accompaniment of two flutes and a lyre.

Bunker's opera box when it was given on off nights or matinées to the chief editor's wife, and in turn she was inclined to patronize Mrs. Bragdon by sending her tickets to improving lectures and concerts. Hazel Fredericks, in her quiet and self-effacing manner, had aspirations, Milly suspected. She could not compete either with Mrs. Howard Bunker or Mrs.

It is August, and there is rejoicing in Leith. There is no doubt now that the campaign of the people progresses; no need any more for the true accounts of the meetings, in large print, although these are still continued. The reform rallies resemble matinees no longer, and two real reporters accompany Mr. Crewe on his tours.

As if, when poverty is once eliminated and labor has become less exhausting for the popular classes, the comfort and economic security, which would result from this, would not be sure to develop in them also the taste for æsthetic pleasure, which they feel and satisfy now, so far as that is possible for them, in the various forms of popular art, or as may be seen to-day it Paris and Vienna by the "Théâtre socialiste" and at Brussells by the free musical matinées, instituted by the socialists and frequented by a constantly growing number of workingmen.

On the whole, this "up-to-date grandmother" proved a most charming possession; a grandmother who took long walks with one, who played croquet with one, who planned delightful trips in town to shops and even to matinees.

This is reason FIRST; poor Voltaire mutely asking us, Not to load him with more sins than his own. The DEMON NEWSWRITER, with his "IDEA" of Friedrich, and the "MATINEES DU ROI DE PRUSSE:" readers recollect both those Productions; both enigmatic as to authorship; but both now become riddles which can more or less be read.

They invited her to go shopping, to matinées. But they stopped so often for cocktails, they told so many intimate stories of their relations with their husbands, that Una was timid before them, and edged away from their invitations except when she was desperately lonely.

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