THE NEW THEATRE ROYAL, PARK-ROW

... TIly :N!E THE'SA.TRE R4OYAL/, PARK-ROW'. Thbe proepectus tfor theohapuenog of itrhislnew, commodious, anedto Iave end m a ie fr th coart anldseoaratiennd ofnthelaudene tpea rforme We mayt noticetha the e Nra.e toro thae boesn stalls, ?? ?? Hoiare aol seaotndon Ilconveien Vland speclious, m rrehtntrtoom hdare ?? tof the evral conen, nillerdn8mand Fan cooplet siud ofthe sae. Thedcoraetidons, ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... I hl. SOTFIMN AS A WILD GOOSE, WVhatever successes Mr. Sothern may achieve, he seems I dotormiued that the credit of them shall be all his own, I and that the dramatist at all events shall have no preteon 3lena to divido the palm with the actor, Of the various i new plays, comedies, and farces, which he has been the means of introducing to the notice of the English i public, scarcely one ...

LITERATURE

... LI T F. IAT IJ RE. MY DREAM. A bb'r dir U.1rre, a g i rilis faece, Ilhie IV'N Itil u-19oldvir hair S'Ac CiM eii' i it, 1111s ! cu auoy smiules, A viio elilingel fitr Oh., -lItte eN I, ohl, el el eyee Wh ' ?? 01l k liiiti ?? So ' Fi'k %Kit l th~e I ?? tUUdern's9 'The love ?? bogII ago. A mnerr i- inchb, a plesisint voice, ?? ebitnei, like silve'r bell ; Swr ee Music0 tnilforeottunrit I A ron id ...

LITERATURE

... Pg K oTsE SCIENCE OF USIVERSAL St y SE'gAlex. Melville Bel~l. FE.I.S.| S eurer o c Elocution in University I I' i fPP ) 1JS. London: Simp- axeintereoted in Professor A. Melville w di=cova5x .! a system of universal alphabetics, gb with anxiety an opportunity of * t, to v thoarem1,,eeof its merits, will be gla d to Thi o ia ithe m rural edition of Visible tin t- shed. aving failed to induce h ...

CUTTINGS FROM THE COMIC JOURNALS

... CUTTINGS FROM THE COMIC JOURNAtS. I ?? P. nc~h.l i o ALL Wanox! IT MAY CocsERN.-IThe Compalae XAi~188? contains WUll directions as to the windingup oi evening parties. ?? a M1olehill of a Mounlata-tbe I Mont Cenia Railway. O ' -.N0NPAN-AIIGlRUI, 81P P- ANG LO Thsere was a bigf Synod of eeventy-two Bishops so bothiered they didn't knowt whst to do; Sc tb do what was wanted they drew to a ...

THE LONDON THEATRES

... jilCIESS'S._I tile warmn appinnee and earnset attention ,Ieore by~ tics ?? tiudiencee gathered within these wavlls on gsedv nift my befound tile surest sign at cthe good policy diet ha dictaedtc reproduction of one of' thle meat popular draas ve brtigctout on thel niodern stage. Tle revival of ~~ and th~le re-engagemient of each admirable urtistces as is, cd Mr. D o u ecitault to ascstain ...

Published: Sunday 06 October 1867
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1697 | Page: Page 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... PUlLIO AMUSEMENT& THE PRtSJOESS'S THEATRE. Mr.Boluional'0sexciting Irish dramsa of '1 Arrab-na- Pogue, which bas b-en performed with extraordinary success both in England and France, was revived on aonday bight at the Princess's, with every prospeot of having entered into another lengthened lease of povn. larity in the metropolis. We look upon this remarlably clever Produotion as perhaps the ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... PA13MOlq AI;D'V.AMW I In ?? or Ww : -At L S rti ew HE it1 Miner, t ?? otn lsg Er. Paget, Who 'ald Just ntSreG lieu ?? at- Wednams an th N'A3 S of WS3, SBWtt the th bhot W el ha ?? *Ughesa WU ?? qdatlsffe, isad am she would reu to VA4laa fully Impalle 1 6 et M . jithc it, anll the Aut 5e 6 Pld piblee 3ts my iwAt? The ?? Impri1 ha paid a seoomd visit to the citael of llelnno.. Ho was taken over ...

THE WATERDALE NEIGHBOURS

... ON reaching the last page of the last volume of The Waterdale Neigh- bours we are still in the dark as to the sex of its author. It is something indeed to be able to say that one has really reached the last page of a three-volume novel, after a bond file reading of the whole, without any extraordinary self-sacrifice in the way of duty to the writer whose work one intends to criticise. ...

A HORRIBLE STORY

... A RORRIBLE STORY. I, We commend to the notice of those *ho are so persistently eloquent on the subject of the pec'liar thirst of the African for blood, as illustrated by the massacre of some twenty individuals during the riots in Jamaica, an accbunt'given in isonday's Times of certain acts recently' perpetrated by the inhabitants-of Ardor, a' small town in Calabrin, about seven miles from ...

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 ...

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 ...