Refine Search

Newspaper

Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper

Regions

London, England

Counties

London, England

Access Type

11,636

Type

11,636

Public Tags

More details

Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper

[ill] GREAT EXHIBITION OF 1851

... J,~'Z!3~ITION~ OP 1BSL- -- W~~AT. VAI.Affl?. Co s 0p THE CiIYST.AL rkA54&Ia. on the ?? osh Thursday. Sreat ar1p501.sde in every otoeo h ok af yin easrly two thousand men were at in, W'3e 0f the operationsr, whieh we have talc i iPleSOW broken by the clank of hammers srj; ncedl^9didt. It is wonderful to see how nosg 555 sodrcf Bteam. There is the steam. l sr b stear saw0s and drills. There is ...

LITERATURE

... UTEW-UE. I.en ien OLD aL GOLDBMIIYE By Washington Irving. Murray, Alhemoarle5a reMt.-Mr. Washington Irving's pen has produced a remarkably popular life of this once very popular poet, novelist, and historians He has collected his facts with assiduitys and worked them tip into a very readable narrative. The history of the Goldarsith family is taken up at an early period; and then the career of ...

FASHIONS FOR JULY

... (Abridged from Le Follet, Journal do Grand Monde.) We must commence our present month's description of novelties, by noticing the various bareges now so much in vogue. The first that presents itself for our inspection is the barege cristalloide, or double barbge that is to say, two distinct materials united by threads; for example, a white barege is covered with green, or black under groseille ...

PLAY UP, FIDDLERS!

... PrAY UP, FIDDLERS! The reader has heard this cry from the playhouse gallery. The English are not an impatient people; ad it is ten to one that when the shout to the tardy naosiians is uttered, there has been good and suffi- ,ient reason for its utterance. The good.nature, the forbearance of the people assembled has been tried to ts full limit, and at length popular impatience gives tougue ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... pUBLIC cAJUSEMENTS. ROYAL SADLER'S WELLS THEATRE. UNDEIS THE MANAGEM3ENT OF MRL FiEletS. rlOMORROW (Mon1day). KING MENRY V. King Henry, Mr. j Phlps uke f Glo'ster', Miss Mandlebert; Duke of Meetr, M. MllonPisol, Mr. GI. Bennett; Boy, Miss Travers; IsaelMrs lirret;Quiekli, Ilrs., H. Marstois-To conchude wit 'BEMIISHROF FINANCE~-Onl Tuesday and Wed- neoay th t'egdyofHAMLET. Claudiuse, Mr. G. ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... PUB~LCAfOUM-B-N~L- I Igl ?? THE WHIM AT THE LYCEUM.f. Tce Urania of Tie Bachelor of Arts, is a series of romantic whims. The here, having ?? all the pleasues of life, is anaxious to invact a ?? oe. As a whim, he will go as a ft~les in. a private farmily. H~e does go, and throws cat for a father's inspection the most caorisus vattern-book of accomplishfments that a young man 3bout' to enter ...

LITERATURE

... ?? A LADY'S VISIT TO THEi GOLD DIGGINGS. The lady (then a spinster) accompanied her brother m April, 1852-53. She shared with her brother all the vicissitudes of a digger's life ; and narrates them in a free, fresh spirit: there is nothing artificial-nothing. hackneyed in her Paces- She begins by avouching their accuracy of detail. In a lack of the marvellous will consist their principal ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... i UB C AMU1. M,-TS 77. I A ?? , '!TFE ADNENTUlE'R-' Mr.SiSnitihis fejtib in reaources; buti airesiource 103- '8l second best. 'The retirement of ro, alerfro 2.D)UrYAIqr theitre' has ?? an A inroutable iarsbafore t;he reprejention of Mt. . H home's -iiarp5,.which ?? postpored fo jan indefinite -.actrese'! What harrolwing oomment On the present 'state ofth* drama. i Theichild of Mr. HEorne, ...

LITERATURE

... L I T E RAT U R E, THE BADDINGrON P1ERBAGEI* Mr. Sala's novel lais been subjected to severe oriti- eism. The saturday Review gave it to their unsc~a. pulous slasher; the amiable editor of this periodical Lass his list of authors to be abused, Mr. Sala, with Mr. Dickens, is on the black list. Let the popular George Augustus place his name upon a new title ' page, rind all lovers of ill-natured ...

LITERATURE

... LITERATUBE. DR. BARTH IN AFlRiCA.5 Dr. Barth' further experiences it North and Cen- tral Africa are sow before thepublic. We have here most remarkable and most valuable insights into life in Negrolad; pleasantly and intelligently told by a most intrepid and persevering traveller. We catch glimpses. too, of & dawning commerce for nu in these regions, that should tempt capitaliats in the wake of ...

LITERATURE

... LITERATURIL Titan for Norenber includes some pleasant and p1natmetive gossip and word-painting from Munich, from which we sabll extract some pusazes, even at the risk of wasting space to touch upon fthe new, bright number of 1 The Virginias; or the Henry the Eighh of John Gilbert in the November part of Routledges Sballspere. It would seem, indeed, from our Munich pictures, that the ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... CREMORNE, ETO. It is with the deliberate intention of refning an ?? cruelty, tbat, for a few linss, we meaa to sirg the praises of the gardens of Cremorne. Bat, perbaps, the sieging of these praisos may-thsmelody ovtr-lead us into more solemn contemplation. W6, Simpeon will, doubtless- as he takes up our journal at the club-fancy that the end of a season is an inauspicious oecasion to select ...