A NEW SONG

... The Soldiers wremu coi nto Town. rb . W b eho tO town; , . . . -- For what, do you think 7 I'll tell Ye- TO raise the price of breA and beer, AId pinch the poor man's belly VWhet shall we do? -what will you do? What will the poor electors do? Frbos Mackenzie wants a place- The Scot Is no that silly: Hie wishes you to send him back, Cad to the Derby Dilly. What can we do? 7 . Mackenzie's a ...

REVIEWS

... REVTIEWS. T'he NorthE British Rev~iewv. No. XXX+'. vie The inquiry into the causes and probable effects ins of the emigration movement has hitherto by no of party been pursued in a caudid and fearless spirit; ford the opponents of our existing commercial systen and have invariably wrested it to the purposes of their unc faction, by falsely representing it as an unhappy 5OG: result of the ...

OUR MISSION

... OUR MISSION: AN INfERNATIONAL PEACE-OFFERING FOR THE NEW YEAR. t BTritain ! America! mother and child, Heartily, happily reconciled, Look to the world around Stricken by guilt, with frenzy defiled, A storma-toss'd ship on the surges wild, Soon to be wreck'd and drown'd ! s Look! for the nations seethe and boil f With wrath and fear, and peril and toil, t A cauldron bubbling up C Geyserlike, ...

ANTIENT CONCERT ROOMS—PHILHARMONIC SOCIETY'S CONCERTS

... ANTIENT CONCE0fTROOS---PHXL-HARMONIC SOCIETY'S CONCERTS. Tbk -- --I -- ene concert given on last evening by this deservedly popular and distinguished society of musical amateurs, was graced by an attendance more crowded, brilliant, and fashionable than we have seen collected for a long period within the spacious ball of the Antiont Concerts. Not- withstanding the presence of their ...

ANTIENT CONCERTS

... I I ._ L!_ at . - A portion of Beethoven's oratorio, David in ?? 1i 1 neso, and Mendelssohn's glorious music to the eacred d ll of Athalie, a most cla'eical and delicious aslection, foj the eat-rtainuient chesen by this eminent Iriroekal aj daly t for their coocluding concert of the season. Of theaAtbgl, and its magoifixent performance at the Antient Concerts es have more than once s ...

NATIONAL EXHIBITION, CORK

... NATIONA EXHIB ITION- ?? INkATIA J EXHIBITION, CORK. I 1 ae committee mnet, as usual, at their committee-rooms, Museum of Irish Industry, Stephen's-green, Ba st, JO1N DRitw ATIUCI, Esq., in the chair. The minutes of the last day's proceedings having been r, read and adopted, several importaut letters *ere read, and Of Mnuch satisfactiou was expressed at the number of comnnni- Fe cations which ...

LITERATURE

... I LIIKUTA TURE. I TanE Iniat QUAnTEnLY RIE\vx. Dublin: W. B. Kelly.- Anotber number of this excellent periodical is now before us; and, like the former ones, we find it rich in Irish history, unexceptionable in point of literary merit, and evincing l throughout a spirit of nationality which is encouraging to the country, while it really merits the warmest and most subs antial encouragement for ...

LITERATURE

... ,LITFRArTURS. DtUrlr'S FIRESIDE MAGAZINE.-The October number completes the second volume of this interesting periodical. The fate aud fortunes of Castle de Bwrgo, Essy May, and the Adventures of an Irish Giant, are concluded. How-let those who must have felt some interest in the stories, if they have read the former numbers, turn to the volume to discover. Another volume closes with ...

LITERATURE

... L I T E R A T U n E. I THE LONDON CATALO4,GUE OF BooES PUBLISHED IN GREAT BRITAIN, with their Sizes, Prices, and Publishers' Names, from 1816 to 1851. London: Thomas Hodgson, 13, Paternoster row. This work is one of the literary wondersof theage. In addition to its being an undertaking, of intense personal labour and great outlay, it is, without one single excep- tion, one of the most useful ...

Published: Sunday 15 February 1852
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1841 | Page: Page 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

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 ...

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 ...

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. ...