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Daily News (London)

THE DRAMA

... ?? 4- RE-OPEXING OF THE HAYMAUXET. -- Bright and gay was the aspect of tbo Hay- market Theatre, when last evening it re-opened for the season in all the glory of new gilding and painting, aud general renovation of its rihb decorattons. The crowdedl audience, however, who witnessed the per- formance of Mr. Robert Buchasnan's version of Roger la Houte saw, like the town of Linden on a ...

THE DRAMA

... THBE DRAYA. REOPENING OF THE GLOBE THEATRE. The promised documents which were to clear Miss Wloie Fuller, ?? Amerircn actress, of the charge of laying ftotuous hands upona Capri were duly ou view last night in the vestibule ot the Qlobe , Theatre but we regret to smy that they were pausd for the most part unheeded by visitors, more interested apparently in the question of what kind of ...

MUSIC AND MUSICIANS

... I The opera chosen for the opening perform- life ance of the Carl Rosa Company at Drury Lane 6Pi to-morrow fortnight is M. Gounod's Bomuo by et Juliette, with Mr. Barton MeGuckin and dis Miiss de Lussan in the parts first 'created fan here by Signor Mario and Madame Patti, and dee last year sung in French by M. Jean de Reeszke and Madame Melba. M. Abramwoff will be Friar the Laurence, Mr. ...

MUSIC

... - &ngs of FrantO. - Composed by CIHARLM3 GouroDU zE .The quality of th'ese 'ga, 'nd' ,theiir recoption i iboth in Paris and London, have settled the question started by some of our musical critics as to the young author's 1- e character as' a tobmaposer. The cold reception of 'his' Sappho at thQ Grand Opera, and (in its Italian drqqs) a . at Coveixt-gariednwa4' Lndeniably owiing to tbe, ...

SURREY GARDENS.—FLOWER SHOW OF THE SOUTH LONDON HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY

... SURREY GARDPVS,-FLOWER SHOW OFI THE 8OUTI1 LONDON HORTICULTURAL SO- ICIETY. the The fourth Swver show of this society 'ws e4. ii )W esera at ?? Gardens, and the specimiens: exlhi. S thbited bad '4li the brillia~ncy which might be expected from 'I to the fine weather, and the advanced period of the season. t be The ?? and Carnations were mucha admired, and the the ri wa bnat, and of fine ...

LITERATURE

... LITERA TURE. an Lives of the Queens of Scotland and English Princesses. an By AGNES STRICKLAND. Vol, III. Blackwood and Di Sons. w This laborious and careful compilation has now an reached its third volume, -which commences the his- De tory of 'Mary Stuart, the most celebrated as well as sa the most unfortunate of the Scottish queens. Of ce Miss Strickland's merits as an historian it is now Qi ...

MAN AND HIS BROTHER

... -MAN -AND HIS BROTHE:R. *I ,; , - -, BREAD POr THE TIMES. *Man's inhmauity to Man! -; , - ?? A_ Oideoutle to tell,-. e --What chbek- uablancli'd can calmllsn fo .Thosecharacters of bell? ' ' te What pen, what poet, dares to paint tl The terrors of that strife, nl Wherein so many a martyr'd saint Has moan'd away his life I-- 0 Roman ?? priests, - (t Ye wretched cruel men, More bloody than ...

MR. TENNYSON'S NEW POEM

... 14 8 s: O~ IL in the' forthooming fiumbar of the Xineeei7 (?entury is sa Dramatic Monologue by the Poet Shl Laureate. The title of the poem, which is suc ,Despair, dces not belie the nature of its con- aind tents. What Dr. JQetlled in ted lstl gloom Pewraps, .though it,*does not obscure, gre the rollt dkis might linss 1Ik Tennyson e has never been ledbabus, Seldom more tq 1 spowerulnere mr ...

THE NAVAL EXHIBITION

... TIE NAVAL zMMITION. The pessure of the eighty tonS of water rwoved 9ooma1udb for the glass window of the =dving tank, and it had to be half-emptied yes- terday for alterations. Rater, however, tbam disappoint the public, the mauapement provided da in the shallower water an exhibition of some of A B' the lifesaving articles described in yesterday's Co paper. The capabilities of mattresses, ...

THE THEATRES

... THlE TH1EATRUES. LlN Vili 1i'r,'r II, ill '1 th 1) :I cl llti''' iw U 'I kt 6i a rl rintilttlion o teo b tuli ifll iii',. C~tasr 05 tue, ?? lihrvarl. Au~ign into tile il1os I-LCiouHI 0 nll its coniet CIs ill 11ti s'CY0 CJiAI~ of S~i teliealro ?? wa'ls thle ulni~lkiO IIIt ai': prI tio of thue Iroeshout portrait, in wilt its ozeiigiiisl 1,I cof statsn bofor') it WiS Hinns l1t 1 ly fin inferior ...

THE VOLUNTEERS AND THE LORD MAYOR'S SHOW

... TI lE VOLUNTEERS AND THE LORD I MAYOR'S 8HOW. A large mnooting of oflcers in conmnanc of metropolitau Volunteer Corps, or their reprosentatives, wasa hold on Tuesday at the headquarters of the Queoe's ?? Rifle3, Buchingharn-gats, to onsider a proposition made by thie Lord Mayor Eloct (Mr Aldermnan Witehead) tant the Volunteers of the metropolis should take part in the annual civia proces- sion ...

MUSIC

... ROYAL ITALAN OPERA. The wlanapement of thi3 theatrt has a1t no, time since the arrival of Madame Garcia Viardot in reproducing the 'PrbpheteYt This great' opera was 'peaoredonSx a- turday eveningv with 'all i'ae magniacenee ofprenouw seasons. 3¢adsiuno Viar4ot 'ireeivedwith loudl and lting.continued: ?? fronm every part of the house, er pexfdrmance of~tho part of Fldes-.a partwhiioh she has ...