Fashion and Varieties

... Life Guards, uniler the directorship of Mr. Grattan Cook, assetbled onl tlie terrace imninediately below tihe Roval sleeping apar tmeilnts to serenade ]ret' Mlajesty. The bells of St. Georgo'.s and St. John's churches trang mterry peals at intervals throlgh ...

THE DRAWING ROOM

... Todd, Butcher, Black. OCallaghan, Chaplein to his Excellenoy; W H Flemyng, Samuel Simpsou, Heury John- ston, Wm B De Montmorenoy, John Dunne, De Courcy, John H M'Mahou, B Battereby, James Reid, J J Knox, Fletcher, Dobbin. DoCTOcs.-Daly, JRi Corbett, Ternan ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... PRESENTATION OF SIR JOHN BENSON. As her Majesty was about leaving she requested that Sir I If John Benson should he presented to, her in that hall, which I ?? so signal an illustration of the genius of the archi- I atect. Sir John was accordingly presentcd ...

AN IDLER IN THE IRISH METROPOLIS

... roundabout road to visit this spot, and passed on our way the demesue of Tinnehineh, the residence of Mr 'Grattan, where Moore tells us Henry Grattan Delighted to tread 'Mong the trees which a nation bad giveni, and which bowed As if each.brought a new ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... Handcock, -Sir John Kingston James, Sir Edward M'Donnel, Sir Robert a Kane, Mr. Thomas Ball, Professor Barker, Mr. John Barlow, e Mr. John Barton, Lundy E. Foot, Dr. Harrison, Mr.Natha- s niel Hone, Mlr. John DArcy, Mr. William D. Latouche, Mr. i ...

THE GREAT INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION

... sore chiefly of interest from historical associations. There are three by Lawrence; No. 160 is his celebrated portrait of John ?? as Coiolanus ; of which we are told in the catalogue, that when Lawrence saw it, many years alter it was painted, he said ...

LITERATURE

... t of Geoige III. with Lord North. 1Mr. Allen suc- ceedef to LoIo, Holland's task, and Lord John Reussell to ir. Allen's. 'Public affairs nrevented Lord t John fromn dloing all be could havev wished, but what i they permitted him to do he has accomplished ...

THE QUEEN IN IRELAND

... Majesty was about to enter. A general rustling of silks and hum of expectation were perceptible, and her Majesty, leaniing on the arm of Prince Albert, and followed by her children and suite, was seen walking slowly up the great hall. At this moment the whole ...

Caledonian Mercury

... that the ‘Tory to the Admiralty found much hampered in his attempts to purchase votes, by cert: in minutes adopted during Lord John Administration, whieh strictly prohibited the disposal of dockyard on political grounds, and which, in ftet, reudered such ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... the celebrated Sir John De Courcy to this country, where the latter had received - letters patent from Henry the Second, giving him a title to d such lands as be could wrest from the native Irish by the sword. These companions in arms landed at Howth, and ...

Literature

... Clerken-well, and she died in Bride-svele.' 1bh lNo. lxxi. of Our Portrait-Gallery is taken up with a notice of |vh T. C. Grattan, and is followed by a ' Visit to Hobby-laud, by the the clever author of The Falcon Family, who deals out some an rough ...