Refine Search

Newspaper

Reynolds's Newspaper

Countries

Counties

London, England

Access Type

15

Type

15

Public Tags

More details

Reynolds's Newspaper

FASHIONS FOR NOVEMBER

... FAHIO>i FOR PNVĀ£1WBkPl * 0 ~~[FSOm Le FOZ~et.j - A new woollen fabric, with patterns of flowers woven in, or brocheee, will be vary-fsbhionable this winter. Reps antique with black or brown ground, sprigged asl over with sm8all flowers in blue, pink, g een, lihar, &c., are also in great faycur. This material- is vary. thck, and is alse made in etripes. One of the prettiest of these designs is ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... EnVIEW8 Or BOOKS. TrrAN.- Hogg, Fhlet street.- Titan is more than assually uprightly this month. It contains some very pleasant, amussing reading, albeit the opening article on sermons and sermnonising is somewhat ponderous - as becomes, We Presu3Me, such grave and important matters, ,,MIy Early Days is an exciting story, written in that peculiar style so attractive to the million of ...

THE RELIGIOUS ROWS AT SAINT GEORGE'S-IN-THE-EAST

... _HE _ E II O , 'OWS AT SAZN= GEORGE'S!ZN-TZM-MST. On Sunday nightsgah, at theoevening service in this church, there was another of the unseemly exhibitions which for some time past have brought the religions ser- vices there and all concerned in their ministration into public notoriety. For the present, at least, the recent mediation of the Bishop of London has utterly failed, and at length ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... LITERARY MISCELLANEA, - 4 Wrvss four metallic qualifications, a man may be pretty sure of worldly snocess. They are gold in his ?? silver in his tongue, brass in his face, and iron in s heart. THE rose of Florida, the most beautiful of flowers eilft no fragrance; the bird of paradise, the ?? birds, gives no song'; the cypress of Greece, the finest of trees, yields no fruit. INs the decline of ...

DRAMA, MUSIC, &c

... DRAMA; MUSIC, &c. HAvsssienT.-When one author undertakes to supply nearly every theatre in London with pieces, it must of necessity come to pass lie will occasionally meet with a break down. Mr. Tom Taylor, the most prolific and ver- satile of dramatists, has experienced a failure, and heard- for the first time, we believe-unmistakable evidences of disapprobation follow the first appearance of ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... : 3PVTfW qP BOOKS.: j THTE ,:Bog OF THE 'Wn~ns, FROM IT' SE TO ITS FAdd ;iBY a . ke i AL Rail, ,'Pgrfue 'one Co. Pot& bgerrd2sit', lcomplete and ?? and-, book of the river Thames. It is traced from its pure source and progress at Trewstbury Mead to Richmond, thence down its slimy, fiuddyiilthy assageppaet.tlse city. of London, to its ?? at th-e' Tre. The author and authoress of this pleasant ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... `LIWEARY? m MS0LLANU. `LEARIG ?? only, by labour; it cannot be ?? money; if it couldgthe rith would always be TiE WREiR SONG.-A story is current in Ireland, that a sired hoppirng ~o a..drns at an outpost of Iting ~il- ?? atizy aroused adrowsy sentinel, and so saved a surprise ?? James; hence the dislike of the pea- santry to the cause (the innocent wren), a feeling carried down- to'the ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... R.VIEWS OF BOOKS. DiOTAkiS BAY. 'By T. Ltij%. Tegqg, Qucsee.-str'eef, Cheoieie.-hiais am~tamuingvolume, and will doubtless .,obtairf an extensive sale. It contains several taisa of Botaniy Bay l1ife, replete with anecdote and itci- '4 al. frby o& It. would indeed- be a difficult oask to determnine which is likely to become most popular, eoach being such a startling record of. convict life and ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... flTERARY MISCELBh. -. - - =, ;77- WE never yet know a mnan. disposed to Scorn the humble who was not himsself a fair obj eat of Seeor to the humblest TitrsEiD OF ALL Ahsrsnox -To be happy at homue is th ultimate result of all ambition, the ani to Which ever enterprise and labsur totds, and of which every deerry promptathe prosecution It isindeed atoh every deeire man must be known, by those ...

DRAMA, MUSIC, &c

... DRAMAg MUSIC, &e. COVErnT GAnDn FN.-On Tuesday evening, Mdlle. Parepa appeared as a substitute for Miss Pyne in the character of Dinorah, on account of the latter lady's indisposition. Mdlle. Parepa, both vocally and histrionically, sustained the part most, satisfactorily, fully confirming the very favourable opinion we expressed last week of her high, but hitherto hidden, talent. The popular ...

GREAT CONSERVATIVE DEMONSTRATION AT LIVERPOOL

... SGREAT C)OSERVATIVE DEMONSThA. TION AT LIVBEPOOU on Saturday evening, the 29th ult., the Conservatives of Liverpool entertained the carl of Derby and his col- leagues in the late 'Miistry at a dinner in the, Philhar- monic HasU. Covers were laid for about 600 perslons, and every seat was occupied. Mr. JFrancdl Shand, presi dent of the Liverpool Conetitutional Association, oceupied. the chair, ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... :. B!EWS- Oi BOOS., T~n WRIT IleDraS AtND THE SPA15isu Manq. By, A `TnoL~roric Cknpoan andr Hall, Piccadilly, -This is a mnost amusing dtesription of a trip to the West Indies, Cuba, Central Amnetics, &c., by's gentleman hitherto better kvown by his works of fiction than of travel. At JamusoOAe Mr. Troltopie installs himnsell at, an hotel kapt by a sister Of Mrs: Seacole, of Crimean celebrity. ...