FASHIONS FOR JULY

... FASHIONS FOR.J.ULy. . ( . FromrbLe F'eisJ. on By dogreesfiobioes appear to be regainhi the pdsition whioh, for a time, they had partial3 lost. F dresses of thin texture they certainly -form the prettiest and most suitable ?? On. barege or tarlatane, pTs86 or bouillon6 may'be used effectively.! , i 5 : For summer toilet, large open- sleeves are generally adopted. We cainot say ha ey show& any ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... The Repressor of Over-much Blaming of the Clergy. By Reginald Pecock, LED., some time Lord Bishop of Chichester. Edited by Churchill Babington, B.D., Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge. Published by the authority of the Lords Commissioners of her Majesty's Treasury, under the direction of the Master of the Rolls. London: Longmans. Among the publications issued under the sanction of the ...

POETRY

... - - - - - - _^ A ^ A TO A SIGH. Ohil givo to sorrow momentary eaqo, Thou gontlo tell-tal of a pansive breost, For thou, wshon ohenting hopes no more onn please, Thou Ounst afford, at least, a transient rest. Oh ! thon nmbiguones,joyless, softly rise While the tear tromblos on the pallid oheook, Severe the virtue that a sigh denies, To save a bursting heart that omot broth. THE PIMPERNEL. The ...

DRAMA, MUSIC, &c

... DRAMA, MUSIC, &e. OLYmPIc.-Mr. Talfourd's extravaganza of Shylock, In which, it will be remembered, Mr. Robson mado his first great hit at the Olympic, when that theatre was under the management of Mr. Alfred Wigan, has been revived on the same beards, and proves highly attractive. There is no character of the many which Mr. Robson has so successfully essayed in which the vigour and ...

POETRY

... THE PAST. Cc tcmps oa le bonheur briile soudain s'effaceo Comeio un sourire ?? HuGo. I bee the well-loved spot once more, The same fair scenes before me lie, The landscape noticed oft before- The same blue sky. And, as of old, the rippling brook Flows ever onward to the sea Unaltered all on which I look- None changed but me. And through the wood calm breezes blow As when in happy times I ...

Original Poetry

... orlp ?? , . , '11- vottql BBERVANT TMAID AND LINTON'S--- LAMMIIES. A NEWt boatS to ah OLnD b 'yis Of a sarvint matid whg ?? dwell, wiio Dll of a eudding took very unw wll; And feeling quite queer from her biead to her feet, '1eoibled dowrn nl at once in a heap on the street. Singing- Chy-htoral Iylooral. lilyooral ielay. (Comic ch'oru3 on behalf of the sick set-ant maid)4- Singing-Cby ...

FASHION

... T II E C O U I T OSnORNE, JULY 5.-Tho Queen. and the Prince Consort, accompanied by the Duke of Saxe.Coburg and the Royal family, arrived at Osborne yesterday evening at'seven, o'clock. lier Majesty was gra- ciously pleased, on Tuesday last, to stand sponsor in person to the infant son of Colonel and the Rlon. Mrs. T. Al. Biddulph, in the private chapel at Buck- inghlam Palace; the Princess ...

PROVINCIAL THEATRICALS

... pRoVINCIAL THEA RICALS I, (FIccoa OUR OWN CORRESPONDENT&.) ABERDBERY. HrnADCVSnIwN's C1rsCUS.-We cunfeos we, led soma mig- ?? to the numbers likely to attend this Piace Of amusement, seeing PjUC ha ie Monday, the 16th instrart, one annual holiday, when first tleyo circsees, arc meet patronised, for the oceraeon of their giving rajleedt,ar in this tows. Bot we were mistaken, for at both por. , ...

Published: Sunday 22 July 1860
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 5633 | Page: Page 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

DUNBOYNE FAIR

... I (IDROM OUR cosrHErVsro The above old-establishel . .fir.) on Monday. The ._ Bad important fair carte, bnumber of buyers was prettv lar. ..e ~h ..cunt 'of stock on the green not so cattle u ad ,nere were, nevertheless, many fair lots at cattle sheep; but, generally spealing, the fair WI, so large as is usually held here on this month . priccs realised showed rather a fall. Priame b'eer0 ...

HAYMARKET THEATRE

... IIAYXARKET THEATRBE. Last evening this theatre was crowdei to the ceil in~g fotr thle benefit oflMr. Buckstons, the worthy and justly popular Y manager. Tihe rationale, of a manamger's benefit, enld the tt' Secret causes of the vaet accutnulation of admiring friends re ordinarily scen on such occasions, were vory good-humiouredly In eaplained in the address, which, according to Customn, the ...

THE ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY'S EXHIBITION

... TBE ROYAL AGRICU'LTURA.4L SOCIETYIS .EXHIIBITI ON. CANTERtBURY. WVEDINESDAY. The show of live stock at the present exhibition, if not quitcou large as on sone fortueroccasiolls, is, upon the whole, an exceedingly good one,, and, to tho general visitor, must have sonxeiiing of a reassuring effect. After the terribly cold Spring, and the wet iuid ungonial summer, which caused tile tasot gloomy ...

LITERARY EXTRACTS

... : || _1 . _ MAOAUILAY'B CRITICAL AND HISTORICAL ESSAYS.- The critical and historical essay may be set dovin as the creation of Macaulay's genius. That which was purely critical had already attained great excellence in the hands of Jeffrey and Smith, and that which was merely historical had been approved of if not admired, by the readers of Southey and 1lam. But that which was eminently both ...