DON GIOVANNI AND KEAN’S EUSTACE DE ST. PIERRE
With this notice compare Hazlitt’s article on Don Juan in A View of the English Stage, vol. VIII. pp. 362–366.
[307]. Spenser’s description of Belphebe. In his former notice Hazlitt had compared Madame Fodor with Spenser’s Belphebe. See vol. VIII. p. 364 and note. [308]. The Surrender of Calais. By George Colman, Junior, originally produced at the Haymarket in 1791, and described by Genest as ‘a jumble of Tragedy, Comedy, and Opera.’ ‘A clout upon that head,’ etc. Hamlet, Act. II. Sc. 2. ‘Though we have seen this,’ etc. Ibid. ‘Thunder, nothing but thunder.’ Measure for Measure, Act II. Sc. 2. A new character, etc. Achmet in Barbarossa. See vol. VIII. p. 372.