FASHIONS FOR SEPTEMBER

... I (From Le FoUtet.) ba Notwithstanding the dulness of the weather, and hi the want of harmony between it and the data of the al. to mnanac, everyone is occupied with preparations for the sea- in side &eason, and none but light fabrics are thought of. mI For instance, barege is the principal article for demi-toi- a lette, either sprinlled with smal bunches of flowers, or m embroidered peas, of ...

LITERATURE

... I Vieissdtues of Famliesl. &coiid Series. BY Sir BEPNA,1RD ButRKE, Ulster King of Arms. ma& GlU Longman. In richness of aneedotical. matter this book is at least equal to its predecessor, which was generally praised on account of that particular quality. That the success of the first should have induced the fro publication of a scn oueitherefore) so far fa justified ;. bet at the same time a ...

MUSICAL PUBLICATIONS

... 'ps? (4-AL iU N> 8 ~ Lb4r~j of Conrted Ms. UW by ,om l ; ?? Addison ad ( t o. IoWe tqe votbe nature and charanted of 'this work at the timet of .it eommencemez& D!:we m lay remindl our readers that it is a cslleebont of. -4nere vocal musie, aed adslc as, pub-. lished in a serial form, the sacred pieces one neese, and the secular pieces in another. WeOUave xtr before us the fourth, ffi, and ...

POETRY

... THE SAINT AND THE HERO. YiE holy knaves, to whom the crowd It stupid adoration knelt, To see, whilst abject heads they bowcd, The blood of Jaunarius melt: A grcater miracle behold Than that of simulated gore, Which melts when hot, congeals when cold, But which your silly dupes adore. Ye linow how It3ly ha6 bcen, Thank most Yuurselves, for weary years, of slavery a mournful scene- A wretceied ...

FASHION

... FAS HION. T H E CO U RT. BALMOnRAL, SrePT' 2.-Her Majesty, accornpanied by the Prince and Princess of' Leiningen and the Prikicesses Alice, Idleina, and Louise, and Prince 'Arthur, 'drovo to 'Alt-ndw-Guissadh yesterday, 'and rode to the Falls of Glasshalt. The Prince Consort went obt deer..stalkzing. ' Lord Charles L: FitzRoy has succeeded Lieut'-Colonel'tlie ?? 'Ros' in attendance on her ...

POETRY

... PAST AND FUTURE Oh present moment. priceless point of time I Shall ever mortal learn to know thy worth ? In gazing on the pageantry sublime Of future scenes that Fancy shadows forth, Or brooding on the past, how seldom seen The chain of golden moments hung between! Pondering thus, I had a dream On the Old Year's dying day, Methought I arose with the morning beam And wandered by a lonely stream ...

LITERATURE

... FOOTFALLS ON THE ,BOUNDARY at ANOTHER WORLD. By I ROBERT DALE OwEN. Trubner and Co., 60, Paternoster-row. We have been pleasantly disappointed by this work. Its origin in America, the land of wild spiritualism, and the notices which it has received from the press, led us to anticipate strange doctrines, theories that would not hold water, and mere extravagant assump- tlion. The contents, ...

Published: Sunday 23 September 1860
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2224 | Page: Page 5 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

CRAVEN AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY

... | CRAVEN A(,RICULTURAL SOCIETY. MEETING AT SKIPTON, YESTERDAY. The s~ixthl annual Exhibijtioa in connection with the Craven Agricultural SockietY took place yesterday in the show ground, adjoining Skiypton Castle, and the weather being favourable there wae a large attendance from all parts y of the district. The prizes offered by the committee ofamounted to £400, being £50 in excese of last ...

LITERATURE

... Footfalls on the Bouncdary of Another World; ?ith Narfaelrtic lllustrations. BV RIIiiSRT DALU ORNI formerly tetuber of Congress, and American# .1inister to Naplei. Froyll the tenth American edition, with emnendatiuois and additions by the Author. London : Triibler and Co. It wias one of Albert Smuith's favorite sayingi that everybody believed in ghosts, more or less, but that they yore ...

OCTOGENARIAN FESTIVAL

... LOTOGJ>I RII. FES iYA.1 Q: Wednesday, the 12th hqtant; tbe sinilhig and the beautiful rmaidui-Hostality, hold high court at the Ve palace fi'the .Right v. Dr. Shorb, St.'.Asph, in laf ?? bi ?? 70th'birthifay. 'T o thea.4ile-. Til :.,greqtenhalabe invitedslmthoent.restriction of ocse, . ee crlecil r},neltwho riy, h m'rqles 5 4j whieqiv05 p t-wh werg hofoX .! Uhefqrnorvok raid aja-4 '1Wh. thE i ...

PORTFOLIO

... . HOW-TO LIVE. So live ,that whon thy summon comes to joinI The iunnmerablecaravan, that moves u ; : I To the pole realms of shade, wherq each .515l1 take His ohamber intboe'ilent' all'obf Death, . Thoua g'o'notlikote Jioqujarry 'save at night, Sooicrg'd to his dungi-eon;@ but sostain'd nnd sooth'd: By an unfalterin g trdst,:approeah thy grave, Like one who wraps the drapery of his couch: . ...

THEATRE ROYAL.—ITALIAN OPERA

... THEATRE ROYAL.-ITALIAN OPERA, - I 'he toremlinatlon of the London season opening the portals i the great Opera houses, permits the captivating song. ato to wander tar and near with pleasure and profit. Long before the swallows homeward flee, their wanderings com. imenoe, In days gone by Paris and St. Petersburg, Rome and lio, and other distant oapitalns claimed the exclusive ervices of the ...