PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... PUBLIC AMUSEN1 .. ?? :!t o *, h , Li A .N~G'S &FlFIT , : ?? ableprfirgo r 8% the PrInce bf Wales heatre Mr. Ifenry Irving rpe~utcte ?? thereo? for thei g~por apels the ocjno his beitefit, whihtkepac ?? ight.f The bill of fare wl oss foetM~ar, a recital by the bentfiiarie, aud the burlesque P>aria. During his connexion vith the abuvn theatre Air. Irving hs earaed the reputation of an ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS, &c

... pRBlO A Nothimr.' S']he a:;ood for Nothin%' ?? roya Aobitea tre -: jTerookmaka' nElat'. ouoileenBaWnD, gk sheoppard.1 D, e Mme Adelphi Thsire't Te Painthe 30781 oobonae0 t;roo and other ButeAtments. Baud sthe Jlp ?? on reat National concert Ela eord Sa.bPuAl tornon olia ?? Evening. Do s of jlze ill M Foutrsit.-n otbedrt, &ao sbntogerl slattrOO ?? to Paintings BAand r0'ffrldatho 4pen daily. ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS, &c

... PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS, &o. * Now Prinee DI Wales Theatre Lime-strot. - Italian Opera Company: Der Frulisut;2x. 3YwoyaiAsicphitheatre.ir. Barry Sullivan: Hldlot. Rew Adelphl Theatre.- The Watorcrees Girl, and WiU Watch. Royal Colosseum Theatre.-Tbe Tottery Ticket, The break o' Morn, the Chantrell Troupe, O. St. James's HarL- To Oblige BOnson, ixion, and Falnily Jars. The ...

FASHIONS FOR DECEMBER

... FASHIONS FOR DECEMBER, [From Le Bollet.] As winter costumese niake their appearance, short dresses nru seen to be more end more in favonr - in fact, for walk- ilg dress the trained skirts may be said to be quito out of date; they are reserved for in-doorm or carriage wear. Wo Aould be sorry to have to tell of their total disappear. once but, so capricious a mistress is fashion, that it may ...

LITERARY, SCIENTIFIC, AND ART SCRAPS

... I The Rev. Dr. Margoliouth has a work in the press on Abyssinia. The death of Mr. Charles Pitt, the tragic actor and lessee of the Sheffield Theatre, is announced. Madame Parepa is to be the Peri in Schumann's Paradise' at the first Philharmonic Concert. The Crown Prince of Prussia is engaged in writing a history of the electoral Princes of Brandenburg. The Prince of Wales has accepted the ...

PRINCE OF WALES THEATRE

... PRINCE OF WALES THEATRE, Following the Scriptural maxim which enjoins us to try all things, and hold fast that which is good, the manageress of this establishment, after passing in succession through nearly every phase and form of dramatic enter. tainment particularised by the loquacious Polonie2s, appears to have at length found her true vocation in a drama, which, if not strictly good ...

THE SOCIETY OF ARTISTS' EXHIBITION

... THE SOCIETY OF ARTISTS' EX.HIBITION, FIGURE SUBJECTs, No. III. A few notes will dispose of the remaining figure 3subjects in oil: those inlwater colours being reserved for separate notice. The first picture which strikes us in the Front Room West is one that deserves the strongest possible condemnation-Mr. Key's The Lily and the Rose-a preternaturally ugly woman (the rose !) and an over ...

SPRING EXHIBITION OF PAINTINGS, DERBY GALLERIES, SLATER-STREET

... nil ' A small but very high-clas exhibition i now r nlr open at these galleries. It is the first time an for yve attemnpt has been made in Liverpool to open an 6 o ro- exhibition at this period, aid it ought to succeed,' end4 in for 'there. is a great 'deal that is interesting and No, highly amausing. The manager appears to have coa 3e dispeeeid with those pictures usually hung high, da' ras ...

AMUSEMENTS FOR THE WEEK

... I AMUSEMENTS FOR THEE WEEK. year, PRINCE OF WALES THEATRE. e~s; rheburlesque extravaganzacalled Papillonetta,, 1864 or the Prince, the Butterfly, and the Beetle, still draws crowded houses, and the leading performers. in-a who take part in it are nightly applauded in a ,ster, flattering manler, several of the merry songs and- ritan dances being frequently encored. The last morning port ...

THE ANTI-RITUALISTIC MOVEMENT

... TIHE ANTI-RITUALISTIC MOVEM EN'T. MEERTING AT THlE CONCERT HALL. ti nin11- Last evening a meeting of wvorkin~g men, reel. members of the Church of JeNgland, was held at f trees the Concert Hall, Lord Nelson-street, !in reference0 Oi-to the novel and unasitborised ceremonses rathl, recently introdunced into the Church of England. i sits- The body of the hail and the galleries were about ...

THE WRIGHT AND THE ROUGH

... [From Pesnck,] I'm a British Working-Mao, I should say an artisan, For there's working-men that's Lords and wears the darter, And there's others in degree Far inferior to me; t There's the shepherd and the ploughman, and the crter. I desire to exercise The electoral franchise. As to loyalty there's nobody more Bounder And I fancy, with respect To the claims of intellect, rm as good as a small ...

LITERATURE

... 0~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ I A History of the ?? of Rome, is Strwitife and C monumenits, fkrm its Foundation to the End of the i ASiddle Age By TnoxA H. DYED, TIsD. ondon: loongmans t This work must not be mistaken for a Roman history : it is au account of Rome as an aggregation a of human dwellings, with the temples, monuments, i Tblio edifices, and palaces belonging to the city. Re political ...