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Pizzaro a new play or the Drury-Lane masquerade

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Pub.d June 11th 1799 by SW Fores 50 Piccadilly\n\n[...] to attend the performance of Pizarro (or the Spaniards in Peru [...]/ bey^B4zuwohen. Sheridan, (by the caricaturist) as Pizarro kl[...]/ to the august guests, an old attention of the London [...]/ directors against the court, and whose omission before [...] [years]/ ago (where Sheridan transferred that office to Deputy Manager Kemble]/ so upset Majesty that he did not]/ re-enter the theatre at Drury [Lane as until the extraordinary loy^B4ality of the [...]/ at Pizarro prepared a general Mey^B4nung, H. [Sheridan]/ had converted[t]/ to the all-island faith of the treasury what is said in the cabals needs no comprehension./ The supponirte fallacy of one of the princesses, who had never seen the [..../ has never seen the general at court, refers to Sheridan's [admission]/ which of course he was not allowed to take to St. James [...]/ About Sheridan's politeness towards his monarch [have]/ appeared up to five caricatures, because it was taken for an/ abjuration of his opposition principles. But Sheridan, buried in debt and hounded by duns [...]/ neither in his change of Pizarro nor in the courtesy of loyalty [presented]/ here: money, money - a full [...]/ - something of the yellow abundance of the ministers/ he wanted: and perhaps also secret fear of time was in play./ The two people who wave their hats in the parterre are [...]/ Tooke: so also they are kicked over and crowd [there]/ so that one sees them and considers them loyal^B4al.\n\nIn Braino's Breton's Tree of Liberty it says of the king/ I sing the tree of Liberty, Believe me 'tis no joke, sir/ The best e'er found on English ground, I mean the tree called Oak, sir.
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Title: Pizzaro a new play or the Drury-Lane masquerade
Description:
Pub.
d June 11th 1799 by SW Fores 50 Piccadilly\n\n[.
] to attend the performance of Pizarro (or the Spaniards in Peru [.
]/ bey^B4zuwohen.
Sheridan, (by the caricaturist) as Pizarro kl[.
]/ to the august guests, an old attention of the London [.
]/ directors against the court, and whose omission before [.
] [years]/ ago (where Sheridan transferred that office to Deputy Manager Kemble]/ so upset Majesty that he did not]/ re-enter the theatre at Drury [Lane as until the extraordinary loy^B4ality of the [.
]/ at Pizarro prepared a general Mey^B4nung, H.
[Sheridan]/ had converted[t]/ to the all-island faith of the treasury what is said in the cabals needs no comprehension.
/ The supponirte fallacy of one of the princesses, who had never seen the [.
/ has never seen the general at court, refers to Sheridan's [admission]/ which of course he was not allowed to take to St.
James [.
]/ About Sheridan's politeness towards his monarch [have]/ appeared up to five caricatures, because it was taken for an/ abjuration of his opposition principles.
But Sheridan, buried in debt and hounded by duns [.
]/ neither in his change of Pizarro nor in the courtesy of loyalty [presented]/ here: money, money - a full [.
]/ - something of the yellow abundance of the ministers/ he wanted: and perhaps also secret fear of time was in play.
/ The two people who wave their hats in the parterre are [.
]/ Tooke: so also they are kicked over and crowd [there]/ so that one sees them and considers them loyal^B4al.
\n\nIn Braino's Breton's Tree of Liberty it says of the king/ I sing the tree of Liberty, Believe me 'tis no joke, sir/ The best e'er found on English ground, I mean the tree called Oak, sir.

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