TRUTH AND ERROR
... Teiri'Jl, AND ER*ROR. - . . , ?? - 0 Ar ?? litx tlrit a ?? w (From thr follth r eitit O of Dr. Cd afoae.':y' U l'oicesfromi tli' Crowd.) BIlessings on the Truth, it prospers still, And Error, though ...
... Teiri'Jl, AND ER*ROR. - . . , ?? - 0 Ar ?? litx tlrit a ?? w (From thr follth r eitit O of Dr. Cd afoae.':y' U l'oicesfromi tli' Crowd.) BIlessings on the Truth, it prospers still, And Error, though ...
... THE BONNY ENGLISH ROBB, The thundering guns are echoing O'er Mlersey's tranqglul sea; The standard of Britannia floata Above the brave and free I The rival Roses* mingling Arise in bright array, Wit ...
... f - - I ?? . Goosd NigMi Ssr' andt Pleas~ant'DessWl s oan oeta ths Englith version of,. M.Jrisar's, s Ioisoir, Man- sieur Panta',on,' produced adiv nights before at the Adel- phti underlĀ±hetitle .of !Good Night ,-Signor. Pantalon.' SaetetiLe, t',bere is not the slightest cbhinge either in tbe'ieie er the ndilsic; even thle nlames of the characters are b'fe sane. MIt it hrr. John Oxenford's ...
... LITEA ETURE. The Bards of tse Bible. By GEORGE GILFILLAN. ain- burgh: James Hogg. The idea of this work is peculiarly infelicitous; the execution is still more so. It is one thing to study the language of Moses, Job, the Prophets, nay, of Christ himself, and compare it with that ot Homer, Dante, or Milton, in order to discover-the-oommon qualities of each, for purposes of critical ...
... THEATRES, &o. DapTyy-LANE.-Tie new comedy, entitled The Old! love and the New, bids fair to brighten the hitherto somewhat gloomy prospects of our national theatre, for a marked improvement has taken place in the houses since its production. This is as it should be; and if Mr. Anderson can but manage to follow up his present success with more novelties of an equally important mature, we may ...
... THE GREAT . EXHIBITION. The cheap trains and :the fine weather are already beginning to show their effect .on the receipts at the Crystal Palace, which have been larger this week than on any previous week of the shilling days. On Monday the number of persons who paid, for admission were 57,099; on Tuesday, 63-822;' oriWednesday,57,947;' aod on Thursdays 59,923-in addition to 7,000 or 8,000 ...
... I THE THEATRE IN AN UPROAR. ' .1 - - On Thursday week the handbill of the performances at e theatre, in Chester, announced that the entertain- merits would commence with a most uproqrious affair, entitled The Theatre in an Uproar, and before they finished, tle joke was more than realized, for the per- formances assumed every appearance of a comic beginning having a tragic termination. The ...
... THE -CRErXIp The ?? rwe attendailceS at 1tue l sLheh.~'i'W4~ ,and Thursday Vpiantgil e 4sge ude to bring down the 'numerof visitors, and ihe censequebt eceipts, to acin erable extent; rid Monday tee w , v rs, of vhhom 616,767 722 paid; on Wed neadml 50,m99 V witlra - w m 45'78 paid; atd orn tbirsday, 45>48 Sparkiespreselqt lhe tinrnber'pflyieig beling 44,721. 0 kFriday' and yesier.: day, tbb 2 ...
... I The Society of British Artists have opened the above Gallery for their twenty-eighth annual exhibition. One would think that, from the vast number of persons who profess a fondness for pictures, the rooms in which new works are displayed would have been literally besieged, more particularly by those who talk much about en- couragement to native talent. This coolness, however, on the part of ...
... AGnICULTURAL DEiZONST.RATIOq I at Drury-lane Theatre. We have declared all alcing that if those living by, and connected with Agriculture only unite for a special purpose, and exercise the power belonging to them, all the rest of the community will not succeed in effectually opposing such a movement Those to whom we allude, the great majority of the population, have never been beaten but ...
... THE GREAT-v;EXHIBITION.. - The numbers visiting the Exhibition have not been ai large during tbe past week. as on previoes! OCeasions1 .yet there have been something like 300,000 isitors during the week, anumber which, a few weekrS since; it would have been considered madness. to predict ,oul~d be ct toget~her, week by week, to admire works. of arts and manufactures, however wonderful. On ...
... MUSIC 'AD WHE DRAMA AT .; v: :, - . ,Ma anchester. (FROM OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT.) ToIATRE ROYAL.-011 Saturday (Oct. 4th), this noble tleatre opened with Italian Opera, the vocalists engaged being Madame Novello, Mliss Rebecca Isscs, Miss Susan Kenneth, Mr. Sims Reeves, Herr Stigelli, Mr. Whit- worth, Si-nor Paltoni. and a good company of chorus singers. In the opera- of La Sonnambula, 2dr. ...