Word: tanqueray
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Dates: during 1893-1893
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...editorials, the most interesting is the first, in which the defense of "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray," attempted in a previous number, is, so to speak, officially undertaken. The writer, far from condemning the new play, thinks that "the production of Mr. Pinero's work by Mrs. Kendal is the reassuring promise of a hopeful future...
Lecture. New Books and New Plays: the Letters of Lowell, Mr. Henry James's "Essays in London"; the latest works of Mr. Stevenson, Mr. Kipling, and Miss Jewett; "L'Enfant Prodigue;" and "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray." Mr. Copeland. Sever...
Lecture. New Books and New Plays: the Letters of Lowell, Mr. Henry James's "Essays in London"; the latest works of Mr. Stevenson, Mr. Kipling, and Miss Jewett; "L'Enfant Prodigue;" and "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray." Mr. Copeland. Sever...
...prose articles fulfil the promise of the last number, and are all good. "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray" is in more serious vein than is usual with the Advocate, and the "College Kodaks" are omitted; but with these exceptions there is no departure from the customary character of the work. "Grinder" as a Harvard type, is more interesting than his predecessors and is very well described by H. B. Eddy. His article, however, is hardly better than several of the others, and it is safe to say that all are above the standard in interest. "The Suspicions of Mrs. Buck...