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Liverpool, Lancashire, England

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1,574

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1,574

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REVIEWS

... ?? Rurdl Cyclopedia. A. Fullarton and Co., Edin- bac one tburgh London, andI Dablin.T tOV This valuable work, editedby the Rev. 3. M. Wilson, ary 'ere, is now-completed, in four large octavo volumes. TIhe eilj1 P (r author has succeeded in bringing together, in a very tier t r con'ciseotind practical ithape, a 'vast amount of information up d,,d applertaining to farm'rng, gardening, the ...

FASHIONS FOR JANUARY

... FASRIONS FOR JANUARY. (From the Loadyss ewerpaper.) ut GENEIRAL OBSERVATIONS ON FASHION AND DRESS. s f Silk and satin aRc, as usual at the prescnt seasOn, among tho n most favourite slateiials for evening costume. For walking- ddress, HJUDOes of'ilk aro very suitable; but for evening or din- nor cestumo a lighter kind of trimmuring is requisite. Lace l fiounces and bouillonloges of tulle the ...

Selections

... 4-OnIt(tiolvd. tI DIRGE FOR THE YEAR. Orphan hours I the year is dead, t Come and sigh, eome and weep; Merry hours! smile instead, For the year is but asleep. See, it smiles as It is sleeping, Mocking yonr untimely weeping. As an earthquake rocks a rsem In its coffin in the clay, So white Winter, that rough nurse, Rocks the death-cold'year to-day. Solemn hours ! wail aloud For your mother in ...

PHILHARMONIC HALL

... T FT T T T W asT I * vl fw XT n T. T) fice the JTLLIEN'iS CONCERT. and Jule Lde Jullien flint concert took place on Friday evening ley, last, on whic'n occnition the atteuidance was more hnume le- riourt than wre have hitherto obsierved * airrost ail theritalls n e in the body, the boxeti, and riallerien were occupied by a iffs brilliant aneremblage, giving a tout ensemble to this noble out ...

Original

... Orig inal. ?? -F] HYMN FOR THE EARLY SIRVICE, GREAT GEORGESTRERT CHAPEL, NEW YEARS DAY, 1850. ar By T1an REV. DR. RAFFLES. tb tv With songs of thanksgiving and praise, tb Again In thy courts we appear I fr The glad hallelujah to raise, Us And welcome tho dawn of the year. We eave witnessed the last of the old, pI Its days are all numbered and tied, at And now, with its mercies untold, l I ...

REVIEWS

... ITIONR RRORIVRm-The Rnatoh of PfUDLICATIONR RECEIVED.-The English Woman's a! ft- Magezme; the Ragged School Union Magazine; is a Fraser's Magazine; Bentley's Miecellany; Church oft he England Agszine; Bullion on the Management of a a its Country Barik; Life and Epiatlea of St. Paul; the g at Ladies' Companion. h U11- 11 of THE ALARM OF HIGH Tines IN FRANcE.-The 01 ?? alarmist, have not been ...

Selections

... Attertiolid. ?? - ?? THE NIGHT OF THE NATIVITY. (From Fraser's Mlayazine for Januaery .) Nilonce, deep and solemn and unbroken, t Like a death hush, fallen from the sky; As of some dread mystery the token, Seemed that silence, breathless and unbroken:- Palo and wan the stars looked out an high. 'Twas as though, unseen, some mighty spirit, High dispenser of lleaven's nsiuistringe, Mad come down ...

Literary Extracts

... Kittrary urtvxctd. ye LivERPOOL THEATRICALS-GIBSON AND RIDOSIT. ex -These actors many years ago were proprietors of Ne the Liverpool theatre. They had previously ap- hi peared on the London stage, but without any profes- SC sional distinction ;yet they rose to such a high of reputation on the Liverpool boards, that they were OF deemed in Liverpool above all competition. The es th good people ...

THE THEATRE-ROYAL

... THE PANT'OMIME. ES considerable a period of timehran elapsed since the Pr olmttion of a panltomnime in Liverpool, really djerclvin,, th~otifertion and support of the histrionic portion ot our co~nrmonitv' that it is probable the pub:ic will only be rri-1- waware ot Ik ecllne of rthe ole n ow pirrforming ~,ji-'oy at the Theatre-Royal, by the rumoursi aud enc-11,111 Of thle more cunst-nt ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... _ - - - - THE PANTOMIME. re ip As the enfunciatioa of many of the comic, verses in~ ge the introductory part of this pantomime is often rendered c indistinct and inaudible, on account of the intervention 10 d of the masks worn by the characters, it may not be con. di o sdered superfluous to afford some extracts of passages H 0. which appear to us most worthy of citation, in corjunc- ef lion ...

Literary Extracts

... Rittrary 'Ertrutd. TuE STAGE AND ITS PROSPECTS.-A notion exists in the green-room that the decadence of the stage may be traced, in a great measure, to a falling off in the literature of the drama. We protest against this judgment. There is abundant evidence of dra- matic talent afloat in other forms to prove that it is founded in error. The fact is, that the difficulties of access to the ...

Selections

... ?? Aclectiond. TO J. S., ON THE DEATH OF HIS BROTHER. (BY ALPISSD TEIsrs01.) Gol gives us love. Something to love He lends us; but, when love Is grown To riponess, that on which it throve Falls off, and love is left alone. This is the curs of time. Alas I In grief I am not all unlearned; Once thro, mine own doors death did pass; One wont who never hath roturn'd. He will not smile-nor speak to ...