The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 17, No. 494, June 18, 1831 by Various
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page 1 of 51 (01%)
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THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.
No. 494.] SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1831. [Price 2d. [Illustration.] EXETER HALL, STRAND. We rejoice to see the site of Burleigh House partly occupied by the above Building. Its object is to afford accommodation for the meetings of Philanthropic Societies--so that whatever may be the olden celebrity of the spot, it is reasonable to expect that its present appropriation will be associated with the most grateful recollections. This building is, perhaps, the most perfect erection of its kind in England. The approach from the Strand is remarkably modest: it is by a very narrow, though very chaste, door-way, situated between two Corinthian columns and pilasters. Within the door is a hall, with two flights of steps, which afterwards unite, and lead up to the entrance of the great hall itself; the hall below leads into a broad passage, which extends to the farther extremity of the building, opening right and left into various offices. On entering the door of the great hall, a vast and splendid room is presented to view, with scarcely a single interruption to the eye throughout its whole extent, capable of |
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