PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... PUBLIC ANMUSMBN7S. BRITISH INSTITUTION, PaHemtl ,-Thte & LERY fo the EXIBIdISALE of the WORKS of G)ALLERtY for the lt~H~lRITlOjN freii T tl iO mieuorning entil B IuTISH ARTISTS Is OP1EN dail frnin CintIl Fire in the evening.-AdmisiIOnl. tu - Keeper. THE SIXT ANULtII~ N of nowe NEW SOCIETY bf AINTESIN AE CLU stilnow OPEN, at their Gallery. 6d ?? ?? rt~ nttu Cion, from Nine o'clock tin Cd ...

THE ITALIAN OPERA

... THE ITALIAN OPBRA. Last night a scene of a very novel nature occurred at lher Majesty's Theatre. The performances announced tar tbc evening were I Puritanii, -.,d a ballet in which the new danseuge Maddle, CHRITO was to appear for theflrst timn In thi country. During the performance of the opera there was nO appearanceC odisturbauce. It was received through- eut with grcat applause, and ...

Original

... I -i ?? I 0?ftillial. From the nountalns of Wales, lo i there issues a voice, Asid words of glad tidlngs -ye people rejoice; it Prepare ye tihe way, makea the rough places plain,- = in A fresh prophot approaches commencing his reign I A Zackltoih garment enirelele his loins, , ry Ona r.ic aend Welsh rabbit he usually diles; of Bob Owen shines out in tlis age a nerv lIght, o Ye aire n7.1 in ...

Poetry

... Portts TO THE NIGHT WIND. O night-wind! lonely night-wind! on what mystic mission bent' Are the fitful breathings of thy voice through the dark, deep stillness sent; Why, when all bright and joyous things to their hallowed rest are gone, Dost thou cleave the skyey solitudes, like the desert bird alone? Thou comest not to waft the sweets from the summer flowers away, For the frail things, ...

MAY-DAY IN NEW ENGLAND

... I MAY-DAY IN NEW EiR0TLAND. BY Mrs. 0800D0, AN~ AMRRICAN LAD?. CAN this be May I Can this be May? We have not found a flower to-day! 'We roamed the wood-ve ellmbed the iH- We rested by the rdshing ill- And lest they had forgot the day, We told therm it wag May, dear May I We called the sweet wild blooms by nams- We shouted, and no answer came ! From smiling field, or solemn hill- From rugged ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... AS4HION AND VAR tJItES. le The Queen and the Efereditary Prince of Saxe Coburg Gotha rode in the Parks on Tuesday afternoon, in a pony phaeton. Her Majesty and his seri highness visited the Duchess of Kent, at Ingestre Hcous 2elgrave-square.: His Royal Highness Prince Albert, attended by the Hon* Ir Charles A. Murray and Colonel Bouverie, rode on horse. is back in the Parks on Tuesday. His ...

POLYTECHNIC EXHIBITION

... No. 1. Saint John and the Lamb-NORTHCOTE. This artist was happy in seizing the sweet and amiable expression of children. The head of St. John is singularly gentle, and its keeping well sustained by his innocent associate. The boy has a great look of nature, and the design is altogether distinguished for grace and simpli- City. No. 26. Head of an Old Woman-REnaAscrsr. Ods! wrinkles! Sir ...

Poetry

... IPJm . CHARTISMI FROM SHARSPEARE. No. 2. We are accounted poor citizens; the patricians, poohd. What authority surfeits. on, would relieve us. If they would yield us but the superfluity, while it vere wholesome, we might guess, theyrelievedus humanely; but they think we are too dear; the leanness that afflicts us, the object of our misery, is as an inventory to par- ticularize their abundance ...

THE ODD FELLOW'S RECITER

... THE ODD FELLOWIS RECIJTR. ?? We are dosirouxof aeaMiaU8 tid an 94tsivp 4000coft of the halet Ciruic 5,1*41 i'rase R tatiots i ?? Engli h language, we invite sur friends to tranamit asill as t ey rnay deem wortthy of inentia3.] SCOTCH PARSON'S SERMON ON DRINKING. Good, honest, parson John Mac Knock, Had long observ'd% with grief, his flock Were getting fond, from day to day, Of mixing whiskey ...

having delineated from scripture and ecclesiastical history the traits of wolfish cruelly and wolfish rapacity, ..

... every age, improved his subject, and pressed home upon his audience the injunction to Beware of such, for the five following reasons: * First, Beware of false prophets, and have no connection with them, for they secularize religion. Such men change and prevent the very nature of the sublime, the heavenly, the benign, and disinterested religion of Jesus. They reduce the glorious gospel of the ...

squalid lonstor iwer lopes of afening isatiou r, com- :S before .nity, to t of deled, and •age, iself, no

... nourish ,h invin- site suf, such heaven feet. lonly lechanic re often id great • of Na- es great oquence and we without ,n which edit a ted to such debased enlargepoint , Bacon, names. iuld not it state, ship- On the Fifty annual a-year; lumittee ias been to cost IKG, ty ...

FASHIONS FOR MAY

... ?? .&,SHZO; s FOR MX a., II -, . a ., % , I The glories of a Parisian i Lengelanips have passed away' but have left behind them their usual influence upon out-door-costume. With what anxietyjdo our ~'xench neigh- bours look forts ard to these gay promenades! to prepare for whichihe iiudi~ss modite racks his invention and his taste, and tie-busy milliner assiduouslygives to hisconceptioas a ...