Poetry

... ?? I SONGS FOR TIIE PEOPLEJ.. NO, xi. [In announcing our recent Feast of the Poets , promised to give a notice of the poems and songs of ROBURT NICOLL, and that promise we had intended to have performed this week: certain cireumstances hasve, howev~er, so occupied our time asb to prevent us fel Ilisig our intentious. The promisied notice okaU ate e* shortly. In the mteantime wve give ...

Literary Notices

... SOUTiliY'S IOCSE AT itESivtoK. 1 T'le garden wits neglected ; it showed that he, and fihe also, the allialihe hostess, who had loved to twiid it, had departed. It was uncropped, and going into the ranik luxuria nce of weeds, and showed at every turn the want of the hand of its former mistress, in tho mnidst of onr st oil, amidst its deserted walks, wve saw a workman wvith a ley in his hand ...

LADIES' FASHIONS FOR JULY

... Morning dresses, made in foulards, poil de chevre, gris de lin, eceru, or poussiere (dust colour) are the most worn ; they are relieved with fancy gymp trimmings of green or blue. Venetian silks are nlso a favourite material ; the frillings ?? which they are trimmed being cut, and gradually separating from the waist to the edge of the skirt. Evening dresses are composed of gauze lisse, pink or ...

POETRY

... ?? P-0 E T R ?? THE PRISONER'S ADDRESS TO HIS MOTHER. During a visit to the Massachusetts State Prison, some time since, the Warden spoke with deep interest of a prisoner, whose talents as a poet had excited much at- tention. The following is from his pen:- I've wandered far from thee, mother, Far from our happy home; I've left the land that gave mne birth, In other chunes to roam ; And time, ...

HER MAJESTY'S THEATRE

... HER IMlJESTY'S TIHEBA TRE. G]usI's ?? Voice wis never perhaps heard to greate ir ad valitage thtan1 lhist itlit it Anna .B7ehna. Iler is drainiatic power, her passionate feeling, her great vocal lls well as histrionic genius, were never more strltingly de- _ veloped. Continued expressions of delight followed her in vO every scene, end she was called for at the close of both ncd acts. She ?? a ...

Literary Notices

... titerargy Notteco. THE ETERNAL: OR, THE ATTR1BUTES OF JEsHOVAII, CONTEMPLATED IN CHRIST AND CREATION. By ROBERT PuuLr.P. THE SUPREMACY or THE ScaRvtrunES, THlE DIVINE RULE OF RELIGION. By the Rev. JAXES DA-VIES. London: Ward and Co., 27, Paternoster Row. We class these works together not merely because they are issued by the same publishers. They are of 1611red Snirit -h;1 whto _ antitheticit ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS FOR THE WEEK

... PUBLIC AMUStMENTS FOR THEWiEM AUXHALL OPEN-EVERYIjNIGHT V EXCEPT SATURDAY. GRAND GALAS EACH EVENING. Admission, 2s. Doors open at Eight o'Clock. GRAND MASQUERADE AT' VAUXHAL~t GARES. O-ORW(Monday, Joiy 13). Therarreorgcset that gove ?? T rai~f,,tio G.Monday, the 29th of Jartfe, to op wsard el Seven Thousand Porasons, will be strictly odhered to, and imoy additions nod l~i~e so s varieate The ...

QUEEN'S THEATRE

... QUIEEN'S THEATiRE. of On Saturday evening tiis long-time extremely dirty rl little theatre was re-opened under highly improved aus- IC pices, by Mr. ABINGTON, late Jessee of tle' Southnnipton Theatre. Determined to spare no expense or trouble to deserve success, the le-see mis put the house through a e. thorough course of elenninlr anid embellishing, the etfect of which, combined wilvI good ...

LITERARY EXAMINER

... THE ILLUsTRATED SIAJSPEsrE. Part XVIIT. This part contains the concluding portion of Henry IV (Part II ), thte whole of Hu-ry V.; land the first htalf of 11cm-y VI. (Part I ) The untllerous wood eugrtvings, by M Kenny Meadows, tire exquisite, and the copperplates which it have bseen added in the present edition are also very good. tl g TatE EWGLISHWOMASN' MAGAZINBH. The continuation of the ...

FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE

... ?? AMO7IONABLl INTZLLIGANCS. The Qusen and Prince Albert, accompatied by th, Prince of Walies, the PrincetS Royal, and the other Mtombelf c the royal fImily, lefithe Ninedmea station of the South Westt, Rallway on Tuesday morntng by a speciat~qlu forGospo.. thence to cross to tile slikoto Wihct. Suei royaltarty let at twenty nifliutes past nine o'clock. The Prince at Leliilge1 accompanied her ...

LITERATURE

... Ip , . I THE OXFORD AND CjAMBRIDGE REVIEW. I This periodical has been about a yesr in existence, stid (tO we think its only fault is, that it does not relieve the weighty 1of with a sprinkling of lighter matter ; in a work of this cha- o recter, a well-written tale very agreeably varies the routine nec( of criticism and review, and every reader will be pleasedl that such should find a place in ...

THE PEPPERY LOVER'S SERENADE

... A FRAGMENT OF MODERN SONG. ScENE.-A romantic garden. A closed lattice in the back ground. . A disconsolate lover in the foreground. Tsims.-About a quarter of an inch after midnisht. Awake! the wind is sighing, love, In whispers soft and low, To tell you I am, dying, love, My future fate to know. The full moon glistens brightly, love, On flower, bloom, and bud; Whilst here I murmur nightly, ...

Published: Sunday 12 July 1846
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 390 | Page: Page 9 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture