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Odd Fellow, The

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The Odd Fellow

THE STAGE

... HER MAJESTY'S THEATRE. Thi appearance of Rubini in the opera of I Son. namibtla' attracted a very brilliant audience to this theatre; and the prinma tenore was loudly ap- plauded in everything he did. Ilideed, it is seldoll we have explrienced so great enthusiasTn. but such may be accounted fbr from the fact of its being the singer's izitention to make a series of last aplpear- r nees in t;he ...

THE SHAKSPERIAN GALLERY

... SECOND SERIES.-PICTURE iTURTY-EIGIITH. CATHERINE AND) PETRITCHIO. The entertainment of the comedy bearing the title (if Thle Taming of the Shrew,' tias often, and not without cause, been lamented by the true lovers of Shakepere, and, indeed, all who have any affection for the propric- ties of the drama. For many years what the Bard of Avon had left as a five act comedy, breatbing the magic of ...

FROST'S FAREWELL; OR, THE EXILE OF CAMBRIA

... Farewell, my dear hl'ary! my children adieu, n While I weep for my country, my heart bleeds for you, tr May some gentle spirit descend from above, t To watch o'er my children and guard my sweet love! ox For the waves will soon bear me to some distant shore, P: To behold my loved friends and my Mary no more, q With the name of a traitor ?-no, that I repel, 9s My crime's that of loving my ...

THE STAGE

... HER MAJESTY'S THEATRE. Rossini's ' Barbiere di Seviglio,' after having been announced for Madame Persiani's benefit, was performed here on Tuesday evening last, to, we may well say, the entire satisfaction of a bril- liairt auditory. It is one of the great merits of the opera in ques- tion, that, repeat it as often as you like, it never tirps. This freshness is, indeed, the attribute of all ...

A CHINESE ENTERTAINMENT

... I| In company with several gentlemen of the factory, we dined with Honqua, an eminent Hong merchant, at his house on the other side of the water. He lives in Chinese magnificence, and the entertainment was of the most sump- tuous kind. The whole house and premises were brilliantly illuminated with lamps. Tbe decorations of the rooms, and the style of the furniture, were splendid and curious, ...

SONG OF THE SEEDY

... I passed along a narrow street, Upon my ear a deep voice fell- I looked on all-I longed to meet A man that wanted me to seil. A hundred hands toward me stretch- They grasp me almost by the throat: They think thea I'm the seedy wretch That really wants-to sell a coat. And must it be? must I submit The early friend of other days- E The unexceptionable itt That all who envied still would praise. ...

RENCE O'SHAUGHNESSY'S FIRST ATTEMPT TO GET MARRIED

... IU2KCE'S1{AL G'HNESSY'S FiRST ATTEMPT '1'0 GET MARRIED. 1 ir AtIlilOA : Cl s'015IFS OF WA'IrtLOO. | (Concludedfrozs sur' /t05.) 3:dhlv was not at breakrast ; the confounded cold still tfned ler to her apartment; but she hoped to meet at linner, arnd I must endure her absence until then IJeC.t coild. Iliaving engaged to return at dive, I Iked out to visit my formner acquaintances. From all ...

THE THREE MESSENGERS

... in LiY 'S. D. DAKIN. is th qe 'Religion and Science shall lead JFreedom through the e, world, and neither shall lack worshippers.'-Lord Bacon. se is There'a glow in the west o'er the mountain's crest, On the folds of the rosy clouds ? es And afar 'mid the sheen of the sky's apple-green, i. Like the stars its soft lustre enshrouds, ,t. wo figures of light are growing more bright ly To the ...

THE SHAKSPERIAN GALLERY

... TIHE SLLAKSPERIAN GALLERY. SUZOIND SERIES.-PICTURE I ORTIETIT. ANGELO.* T'1his is one of the most impressively drawn cha- neters of our whole dramatic mnse, showing Ius a man who ean Inost readily bring the utterance of sot al ophorisams to his aid, whii.e he is at the very eore of hlis lieart a villain. The passages wve nlow I i'atrertibe ril p'rove how speciously he can deliver bimself at a ...

THE VILLAGE STREAM

... Flow, crystal fountain, from thy rocky cell, 1 love to see thy wavelets dashing Their mimic rage alongthe quiet dell, Like diamonds 'mid the turfted greenswaard flashing. How oft in childhood on thy mossy shore I've watch'd thy waves, each after other stealing, Until I hobard from yonder ivy'd tower 'The curfew bell upon the still air pealing. I wonder'd as I gazed w hence camne the stream ...

THE STAGE

... DRURY.LANE. The last night of the season was appropriated to the benefit of Mr. Anderson, who, as the play bills stated, attempted the panrt of Othello for the first time. AWe can but applaud the gentleman in question for the modesty he displayed in the advertisement of his performance,. inasmuch as, though a very creditable performer, be is not one suited to grasp the magnificent ideality ...

THE SHAKSPERIAN GALLERY

... THIE SHAKSPERIAN GALLERY. SiCOND SER1l:3.-P'tCTURE ItIE FORTY-FIRIST, CLAUDIO. Even this character, like otbers which are comprised in the dramatis persona- of 'Aleasure for Measure,' is put before us as an utterer of truth. There are passages that fall from his month, that cannot be read without arresting the earnest attention-without being remembered long after bhe book in which they are set ...