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THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... T--- l#>L: ?? - X l 'traomo OtnR b 8 cojO~ ?? !1 It'is undbniable that we'are not where'we'might,, f: could, and should have been in this Exhibition; -1 ' 'f took leavemontha sago to set forth the rbasons why fo we had failed, and- 'at the same time'to point' out' h the' importance of ',imurnediately 'disem iatinjg tho:; fi rough art an4.techsical education among our wage E classes. Thefault ...

FASHIONS FOR OCTOBER

... FASEIONSPOR OCTOBER [From LelF6].] - Acecorditg to the great preparations being made in the Paris e hosses, it appears that the coming winter season will abound in novelties. Many new nattera bor ihe make of bodies have been if shown by the modistes. Satisfied as they are that the gored askrts will he still preferred, they think that the bodies might be , rendered a little more varied and ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. OORRESP(',NDENTS.

... PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS, &C. I oyoi AlesndraTh5tM-'Tho School for8caudanl,a the alfilet Mphltophets Dansi the Eamadryadi, PrnCB of Wales Thealre.- Ileopi Diteriohen an s the Enritaque Ht~letL . BoalimBphithOatre.-.~Th Merchant of Veelee. Bapl CooiEE0UE Theistre.-The IrOnl Qafket,'Tremont Minstrels, Tbo Wa~ndering Boys, 0, - langler's Grlad Crqgue-EquestrianEntertAIanurntf. o. New. ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... A s } tiSEMENTB. (!~fnde~lleeO. ?? the PeeB. h11A I turtyozee thloceson),Mr. Ryer the Edmutind Phof Mr. Wm.Bevyrley,M ooannosla~fld ai~dehof-'~O cnclue ?? dramaM TOCE Milib~lt A M HISEN till teby dis PTydeATE. hlo HROuAtLart, an ao ?? dt hidSotnfrd. ande Gattn. AAEMMBCSO AST enek deportmenlott iderose daeind ofasr Win. Iof sErley. SOXPOHLTORLac AND MIANAGER, Ma loexO' str ?? POUt', 05atnd ON.W ...

Literature

... ittrature. 0- - I Old EnqoowZd; its Scnr-Atat People. BY ra 3JAMES Mi. HorrIN, Professor in Yale College. London: Samupson Low, Son, and Marston. L We are alway s glad to read accounts of our coun- try and ourselves written by Americans. The people of the United States Occupy towards us a position peculiarly favourable to thie formation of afair and yet a generous judgment. They are ,qnd are ...

LITERARY, SCIENTIFIC, AND ART SCRAPS

... LITERARY, SCIENTIFIC, AND ART | SCRAPS. 3' Mrs, Alfred Mellon will be the future dircetress at W the Adeliphi Theatre. .S40 Air. Arthiur .v Beckett has resigned the editorship ?? of the ('0'lol eIlNr, to undertake editorial duties on the 4 stall of another journal. vld The verses On Southeae Beach, in the October 13 number of Lon1, on &Bor ty, are by Mr. Edward Legge, sof the I1 'urccqrtc ...

THE PRINCESS'S THEATRE

... THE PRINCESS'S THEA TRE. MR. VIN'ING, advertising the revival of the popular Irish drama of Arral- na-Pogue, records with pardonable pride that it has been represented in Paris and throughout the French provinces, the United States, California, and Australia, carrying with it a measure of delight unequalled by any drama in modern times excepting its twin sister, the 'Colleen Bawn.' ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... LITI3&RX' XXSCdELLANIMA. 'ATInMN Insipid ;blif aend play-clubs as seldom xi possible. In visits of ceremony be sparing. WOMEN are a great mysteryi' j.ccording to Hailer women bear hunger longer than men; according t Plutsroh, they can resist the effects of wine better; ac cording tto Unger, they grow/ oider anud never bald;* ao carding to Pliny, tbey are seldomr attacked by lions (ot the ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... -,PUBLICAMUStEMNS- Mr. D'ion'Bncicault's admrablaeIrishrmelodraama, Ar~rah.na.Pogue,wns reproduced at'this theatre on'! Mdonday evening, with scenery as splendid and deco- rations asbeautiful as when the play wask oiginally brdught ou~t here. in March, 1b. During the twe Cears hat' have' intervened, this drama has Deen played with marked.Iuceeessin AmErrca and AUstr- lia 'wbile its ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Letters of Distinguished Musicias: Gluck, Ha!,day, P. G. Bach, Weber, Mendelssohn. Translated from the German by Lady Wallace. Longmans. Lady Wallace here translates another of the collections made by Ludwig Nohl in illustration of the lives of the musicians. Of four or frve men of mark letters are drawn from books and journals in which they have been scattered, and so brought together, that ...

Published: Saturday 05 October 1867
Newspaper: The Examiner
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 21423 | Page: Page 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

NEW BOOKS

... ?? So many readers are prepared to find pleasure in books like Captain J. T. Newall's Hog-hunting in the East, and other Sports (Tinsley Brothers), t that the author of that work can afford to be told o there are some others to whom the perusal of his 3 volume will afford none but painful emotions. It is the easy and self-satisfied commonplace of the ad- a mirers of what is called sport to ...

LITERARY, SCIENTIFIC, AND ART SCRAPS

... LITERARY, SCIENTIFIC, AID ART S CRAP S. Costa i2 tiaily expected in Paris from Eoulogne. 31adlle, Caclotti I'tti has just visited Dresden. Tibalberg is in Paris, and w ill loavo for Naples in the mliddle of October. idadlle, Arktt has had considerable succoss r Alanabheiin, one of the mlost musical towns of Gor- 5155 n13'. i liesort uejesls highlbly of a forthcoomisg work, ' The Darwinian ...