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MUSIC

... Mtr?Af.. .,D .HARMONIC1 &OCII : ' Hfifedel's fsalmsoni wa-perbonimed -aut evedno.g at Vlxefer-hall,O5 theoftrestime uider the dirctanof Adx Costa, whoseddmirable skill and judgment 'ootriasbted! ,gr~tlki'to enhiance the powceftthis noble worke 'amson .e mri written-ismiediately after thse Mcssisii wrhen Hsn- .epitch of sublimity f ineh. lssheverbeen psas4 %he' eeftiof tiek oratorio, ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... 'J GREAT EXtfi4N. ]3erwealris now a bulsy one 'withk tlb officials in th Glass Palace. They ha* but litl ib mW thina two i~torits left for *h rmcepfi~on,,.a ite t ofE al th wo41 .to q.4ipl ?? y scent byi their activityto be quite alive .toi .thoe necessty; foxi full eXertioff. More than a6 thetisid' j~ic'kans hiave been re~ediwd'zdurint the last sir dAyS, 'bf-Whic more 1 Thui' I W a fr~ohip, ...

MUSIC

... MUSiq. MR, HTLLAH'S CONCERTS. b Mr. Hullah's fifth monthly concert took place -at St. Martin's Hall last evening. Like the previous concerts a: of the series it presenited several novelties very 'rntereting l1 to musicians, of which the most remarkable wvas the ,,Credo from Sebastian Bach's Mass in B minor; This m great composer is known in this country only by his instru- mental music. His ...

LITERATURBE

... ' TheIrish Land Question;; with Practical Plans for all , Imlproved Land Tenure, andarnetw Land Slyster. By' VINCENT SCULLY, Esq., Q.C. Dablin: Hodges and Smith. [Second NoTticc.] I Even supposing the general concord between landlord and tenant, combining to come under Mr. I Scully's system, answered his expectations, the ma- t ehincry by which he proposes to work it seems in. the highcst ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... WHE G REAT EXHIBITION. :~ %. : -- 7s -- - .Iauttendance, - yesterday, although many thou- saa4q'.elow the monstfr gatheringof the preceding day, wasyet considerably beyond the nurd ber of previous Wed- nesdsSy`:. 68,000 persons were admitted. on Wednesday fwee, hile yesterday the. numbers' considerably exceeded 61,PQ0. Iler Majesty was, as usunl, one of the earliest visit jdtpa ceeded to ...

MUSIC

... MD;SIC. -PHILMARMQI4I SOCIETY. The programme of the Seventh Concert, whieh took ?? last night, was as follows Sinfnis, No. I (Gread) la 0 .. ?? - 1nh . Bemit., ' Elifin me roilk reuL'. Ait, Daes l'ombre de ld nult:' (Le Chaperon RIupg) . ?? Bolelu Overture, Corlolan ?? . ?? -. Bee scee,' * La calms dans mon asae (Der Freischitz) Madame Chart ?? ?? Weber' Concerto, No. 2, Viol'n, Mr. ...

LITERATURE

... LITERATUBE. Foreign temiinisecnccs. By HENnY RICHARD LORD HOLLAND; Edited by his Son, H. EDWARD LOUD I HOLLAND. Longemtan. 1850. o This is a volume that every one will snatch up aad dive into. The noble author was one of the best informrd-men in Europe-; -had-travelled; -hadt-known- and been able-to form a ,personal judgment of every celebrated radn. And hefe ase those judgments re- cordA -fHi ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... LITERARY ISCEANEA. 'Ise true view of great. men is, that they are only examples and manifestations of 'our common nature; showing-what belongs to all souls, though unfolded as 'yet only in fewt The light which shines from them is, after all, but a faint reveli- n of the power which is treasured up in every human being. They are not prodigies, 'not miracles, but natural de- velopment of the ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... j ilk15Ti~EVIES OP BOOKS. ?? ?? ~ - i. -- ?? --as, , , ' TMnvS MAGAZINm. Simpkiie and Marshall, Los- ?? is nothing of peculiar interest in . ?? number of Tait. It ppehs: wfli'W a long laudatory article on the Exhibition' and 'is originator ; and con- cludes with a more natural and truthful vondemnation of the Whigs as a body. .AnEesay on' Pigs' and Pig: Worship is most abominable ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... 1 v w -:I -00 ,- Mnicocns'F ORn. C-IAL nRS. i.kV. W. XMANjTA. Sutlerlanq4 .a A Nxox, £'di7cs ?? copious me- moirs n4i frejsiof tisiate eminent Apreacher ,are.l written by his son-in-law, and he having free access to the voluminous correspondence of the doctor, has been enabled to lay before the pu~ic'h ;waijtdffrn il'interest and varied informnation. Oc Ch12a m h'v evid'ntly a lover of ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... . 5orThe pluvial influences which can quench 6tneutee an in Paris, and disperse ehartist gatherings in London, make ?r- even the attractions of the Crystal Palace feel their power. th The rain set in early yesterday morning, or rather main- nd tained a continuous dropping from the night before, and the en ite consequence was a falling off of 10,000 in the first hour's of applications for ...

[ill] AMUSEMENTS

... PUBLIO AMUSEMMTS. THEAn-E ROYAL DRURY LANE. La~nesso awd Manager, Mr. James Anderson. LOot nighto of the present season - In coosoquonoa of toe loorenhid attractions of 'tI.ogmar,' it will ho ropetetd on Monday, with the ToNdoreiopteo fODIGAoaoi, .lehofPodga. A ?? Kost. in' F.o loriginal oahuatto of. AGoolro.oggrea; ?? VBlaisrorei, h will appeain boo or igina eheoOofL Ta~nday) willbhe'peoose ...