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  <node>
    <title>Boyd121</title>
    <Collections>Boyd Letters</Collections>
    <Contributor>Boyd Estate</Contributor>
    <Coverage>19 Jan</Coverage>
    <Creator>Linen Hall Library</Creator>
    <Date>Wednesday, March 16, 2016</Date>
    <Format>TIFF</Format>
    <Identifier>Boyd121</Identifier>
    <ItemDescription>Letter</ItemDescription>
    <Keywords>Lyric</Keywords>
    <Language>English</Language>
    <Path>https://www.niliteraryarchive.com/content/boyd121</Path>
    <Publisher>Linen Hall Library</Publisher>
    <Relation>Linen Hall Library</Relation>
    <Rights>Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike CC BY-NC-SA</Rights>
    <Scannedimage>https://www.niliteraryarchive.com/sites/default/files/Boyd121_1.jpg</Scannedimage>
    <Source>LHL Archive</Source>
    <Transcript>﻿4

few theatres are so lucky. The
Lyric x must be one of the luckiest theatres
in Europe.xxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx 
xxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx  I wonder why I
xxx xxx xxxxxx thought of &#039;luck&#039;
just now. Well, the Lyric has survived
seven years on its present site and
I think its survival is something of a
miracle. It has been bombed (but
luckily the blast went the wrong
way) ;xxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx  it has
been picketed by Paisleyites (
luckily their protest was of no
avail); and it has often been threatened ...
But no more of this! The
Lyric not only endures,
it flourishes - the only professional
theatre in the north. Tonight
I am going to the opening
</Transcript>
    <Type>Text</Type>
  </node>
</>
