Related article: husband has played in the matter.
So at the end of a long act which
contains some powerful situations,
Mrs. Digby sets off Order Loratadine to return to
the paternal roof renouncing all
claim to her unworthy husband.
Forgiveness in the Third Act and
the departure of the mother and
child to Devonshire under the
tearful Order Loratadine Online blessing of a rich aunt of
Mrs. Purchase Loratadine Online Digby bring the play to an
end. Loratadine Online
We cannot regard " The Wed-
ding Guest *' as a masterpiece,
but it is well worthy a visit, and
is very well played by the strong
company collected by Generic Loratadine Mr. Arthur
Bourchier. To Miss Violet Van-
brugh must be accorded high
praise for her impersonation of
** the other woman," a creature of
the strangest moods and subject
to recurring attacks of dementia;
it may not be Buy Loratadine Online a great part, but
Miss Vanbrugh plays it Purchase Loratadine like a
great actress, and her perform-
ance alone must spell success for
the production. We sincerely
congratulate her upon such a
triumphant return to work after
her illness. Mr. H. B. Irving has
a thankless task in playing the
unfortunate, Paul Digby, who
has enjoyed the love of two
women and earned the contempt
of all. it never pleases us to
dabble in the ethics of the pig-
tub, but there is something to
be said for this particular Digby,
since it was he who was de-
serted by the lady in the -old
days, for she wrote him a letter
professing to be tired of him, and
urging him to take no steps ever
to see her again, whilst as to
the least possibility of there being
any offspring of their association,
there was never a word breathed
to the unfortunate Paul until the
middle of the Second Act. His
main offence appears to have been
a breach of promise of celibacy
for which he is certainly punished,
since his misery must be great
in the position in which he finds
himself and none may sympathise
with him.
Mr. Irving plays the part ad-
mirably, and the same may be
said of Miss Dorothea Baird in
her charming rendering of the
part of the bride with the baby-
mind who suffers so cruelly on
her wedding-day. Mr. H. Vibart
makes a decided hit as the Scotch
minister, and Mr. Brandon
Thomas as the easy going Mr.
Fairbairn gives us another of his
clever character studies. The
versatile Mr. James Erskine is
rather short of work as the best
man, and quite one of the hits of
the evening is made by Miss Joan
38o
BAILY S MAGAZINE.
[NOVEMBU
Burnett, as the Scotch lassie who
looks after the baby Buy Loratadine in the Second
Act.
'