25 NOVEMBER 1848, Page 12

In chatacters of rattling vivacity, where the animal spirits seem

to flow on nnimpeded, there is no actress—if we set aside Mrs. Nisbett—who can excel Mrs. Stirling. Cousin Cherry, a little piece from the French, pro- duced at the Olympic, has not much-to recommend it in point of plot, but the principal character is that of a rural chatterbox, in which the aforesaid vivacity of Mrs. Stirling is displayed to the utmost; and therefore, being moreover neatly written, it succeeds.