DRAMA

... HAYMARKET. Last night, a new arid original comredy, called The Frznzilp Secret, was produced with great applause and all the demonstrations of success. The author is Mr. Falkoner, who is known to the public by his comedy of Exrt-emes; but his recent production is certainly inferior in interest and as a work of art. As delineations of modern society both are preposterous, but the first piece ...

MUSIC

... ROYAL ITALINH OpmA.-La Gama Ladra, one of the best and moot popularof ini's operass-attactive, not only from the exceeding beauty of the music, bet fhom I ?? at Covent1 garden on Saturday evening, to a. crowded andience, and with the greatest success. The character of the humble heroine was sustained with great beauty by Madame PeacD, 1 who gave it effect by her unobtrusive simplicity, quiet ...

ROYAL ITALIAN OPERA, COVENT Garden

... On Tuesday evening Rossini's Barbiere di Sivielia was per- formed for the first time this season with a cast remarkably strong, and the impression produced on the audience was too powerful to be easily forgotten. Signor Mario and Signor Roaconi personated Al- maviva and Figaro, Don Bartolo being played by M. Zelger; Don Basilio, by Signor Taglisfico; Bertha, by Madame Tagliafico; and Rosina, ...

Published: Sunday 13 May 1860
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1640 | Page: Page 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

COURT AND FASHION

... ?? -flO1MT,- 4 A~ flN 2rIie ede Montponier and suiheiaie t ' departire' from SoutbamEptori an theiireturul to CadN.1 I rrotfeseor Owen bag delivered tbe' third ofa seriesof lectures on natural history at Buckingham Palace be- fore the Prince Consort and the royal family,. ,.I rince Alfred ?? is expected5 take, leave of her &Iejesty next week,, and rejoin his 'zip for another ?? .ouraesZ. The ...

POETRY

... THEf PILGRIT. When thou art young and life is ?? and gay, And thine eyS gliotOll, naut thy heart beats high; No fears to shok, no Wellrs to ?? d way8 NO ?? to sadden with a sigh . Strong in thy youth and hioppiness, aware! Vilgrims and sojouners& thy fittthers were. W nin lastroouer.I and all seema bright, AO d the desire of wear yearobtained' When glad Hope mnakes ?? future dance In light, ...

LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART

... I-- - ?,TFRATUREI 81JIEN,(E, AND ' ART. I ocr ?? lterasy news has been interrupted lately by ,,elal notices of important books, and arrears have acrenno. tosuch an extent that meaty worksa of much interest will tsv to beo domlssed with very brief notice, and have to be classed ,rttcr for easier disposal. History and biography have had 0srosl timoirtant addltion since eour last summary ...

Poetry

... ? fatfrg. THEMETU irf..-nr G. p. Pnsso,. Well hut tiatt hleld, O gallant ship andtrue, Thy prosperous course, from shores of farthest Ind, With ?? sails through leagues of waters blue, Still wafted onwards by the western wind. How straugely, ?? do thy white clils gleam; Strauge looD sthy Sreadihs of pastures. jlehis of grain. ia sultry orient noon, some pleasant dreads Would bring suchvisions ...

FINE ARTS

... FINE A Pt TS. EXHIBITION OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY. t (THIlID NOTICE.) I W\hren reviewiug tile picture of thle 'Marriage of t the Prinecess ?? Val i! tur filst notice we oullitted t to mention that there is :tlsto in the present exhibi- f tioll oIC of tllhose Spanish subjects by Mr. Phillip, which are cong enial to his taste, and, well suited to his rich and luscious cdoloitnig It is entitled t ...

POETRY

... ?? SPRING. P A flush of green is on the boughs, A warm breath panteth in the air, And in the earth a heart-pulse there J Throbs underneath her breast of snows: Life is astir among the woods, And by the moor, and by the stream d The year as from a torpid dream C Wakes in the sunshine on the buds; n Wakes up in musit as the song a Of wood-bird wild and loosen'd rill MIore frequent from the windy ...

A STRANGE STORY

... AN extraordinary tale, gravely told by Peuchet in his Mernoir'es tires dles Archives de la Police, has just been made the subject of a drama at one of the Boulevard theatres, under the title of the Syrene de Paris. At the time when M'I. do la Reynie was Lieutenant-General of Police under Louis XIV., a great sensation was caused at Paris by the mysterious disappearance of not fewer than twenty ...

THE FIGHT FOR THE BELT

... ?? A fed -age -- (Abridged fro0n, ELakwdod's Magazine for -Pe.) bhree years against allcomers The Cham a keeps.the Ring, S it againstwhatstijsrie might T universe -as lriug; Free years the .invatigsrdle The Champion'aitrfgtah hath graced, Telides' belt or that which spanned The sinewy loins of ector grand, No braver heart e:nhraoed, And in three years no foeman -Had dared dispiste thegrize; ...

LITERATURE

... L.I TBRAT U RE. ?? ANTI.SLAVERY POLsCY. An., Oration }against Trimmeros and Trimming. By Henry Ward -Tan public character and consistency of Henry Ward Beecher, one of the most eminent irving advocates-cf human i freedom, having been through some mistake impugned in this I city, and the imputation being too apt to gain credence with I those, and those only, who are not acquainted with. his his ...