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THETRE ROYAL.—MR. CHARLES MATHEWS

... THEATRE: ROYAL.MIR. CHARLES I --I , i ~ MATHEWS. , - - I -: Tt by ?? BA S. A]A t_ L ad, It we were lnot almost tired of' that well nigh worn out ter sinile, the oaeis,-noweertainly evergreen no nore-we should ilh feel inclined to assert that the visit of Charles.Mathews was quite an oasis to tlse playgoers in Manchester, and a charming ud relief after the miserable barrenness through which we ...

THE HOMES OF THE DEPARTED

... If yon bright stars which gem the sight Be each a blissful dwelling sphere, Where kindred spirits re-unite Whom death has torn asunder here- How sweet it were at once to die, And leave this blighted orb afar, Mix soul with soul to cleave the sky, And soar away from star to star! But, oh! how dark, how drear, how lone Would seem the brightest world of bliss, If, wandering through each radiant ...

REVIEWS

... Harry N3r f ?? f SotihLf.By the fur~ Author of ~passages in the Life of Mrs. wa Margaret Maitland, lMerklandl Adam Th. Graeme, &c. London: ~~Hurst and Blackett, Ivit publishers, successors to Henry Colburn, 13, Great Marlborough-str~eet ger The new evidence which this romance supplies Of 10f the superior talent of its author appears in a form insl extremely disadvantageous to the general ...

LILERARY EXTRACT'S

... LILERARY EXTRAC'S. =, ?? _ _. ?? I ?? OF WALES AND THE KING'S BIRTHDAY BALL.-For Of scandal I promised, it is of marked importance as to Iterof those whose character must have leading conse- in this Country; and, in fact, It is no scandal, it Is a truth; otherwise tales of this sort are not such as I like lay paper with. In the first place, on the ball given by Club, at the Pantheon, the ...