Literature

... N ittricture. il? Ecclesiasdtical History of En1glanl. From the open- De ing of the Long Parliament to the death of th Oliver Cromwell. By JOHN STOUGHTON. Jack- all Son, Walford, and Hodder. an The long parliament met November 3rd, 1640, fat and Cromwell died on the 3rd of September, 1658. wI In the space of these eighteen years almost every ge kind of question, religious as well as civil, ...

Drama

... .1.11 . , ., :1. , -- , ?? ?, . . 1. Cap abilities', ?? I I ! ?? I ARURY.LANZ. WhenlMacbeth wag *epresented at this houel season, ?? -vey )liberally gave Miss Areedg- wick the opportunity of 'ebrforming Lady Msfc1h, last night, when the tragedy was again- revived, the same opportunity was given, with equal liberality, to Mrs. Herman Vezin. Mrs. Vecin has never performedt&tiikl character ...

LITERATURE

... n), London Society (217, Piccadilly) for October contains F the usual engravings and the usual class of reading. Thea of storiesare, perhaps, more numerous than we are accus- og tomed to, but this, in a magazine which only aims at being it, light and amusing, will-no doubt be regarded rather as Ts a' merit than a defect. Beautiful Miss Johnson and- ey Mary Eaglestone's Lover' are ...

FASHIONS FOR OCTOBER

... : FASHIONS FOR OOTOBBRE ?? '(ftc #Pjollk t, VTruSa d,2s ?? Accordisgtothegreatpreparations beibng 6 1n4& Paris houses It appears that the coming winter 's will aboand'14 novelties. ,Many new patternsfor the mOM of bodies have been shown by the rmodistesa Satistfied they are that the gored skirts will be still preferred, the think that the bodiesa might be rendered a little mqn vased and ...

CLOSING OF THE COVENTRY EXHIBITION

... CLoslNG OF THlE COVENTRY EX IIIBITION. ADDEDRSS BY HAUL OL.IUEVDOX. I ',te Cseretls Acts anod Industial Exhibition, which ligs Tbern VV~a ,tiace the 1litis Juno last, wso clsd aterday wih~tigcsreiliottv, In which Lord Leighb, Lord j ct aot of the County, and President of the ExhIbition, ladye Llthpl Earl Clarendon, filG, the Bishop of d1-otl ile Ma~ or of Coventry, e~nd ott,ro ntaibles took ...

A PAINFUL STORY

... ; ~ ?? til qM I , -, A- %rrr . X?94!I - - At ;e- TO Y. --it )ago 1 .: ;; A-B NFg .T . 9 9T ox.e~ THIEh a (AeWI aa Ohrtsoffgnepeajd bu L atrepr._,1 o lowe~E ftleiia ?? humrahlo i1 Sa, . .I ?? o i, end sen. Lauoaet 2~.,0are vWtoA In . aero 1, 0, ?? OU. L'UnI~hO -Aufrda~usiWMueLi IVv, AE. AAnd fidends! ,0 ' piec 5- ?? ~~!a Bro ~ ~ afe fdnd JTMrs1wit ?? 'n00.. . ?? 10 a ~$ ?? o 'he 2,1 .0 do,1r0 ...

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 ...

THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... T'Ed PAR1 EXHIBITo. tEiNJP ?? 'A ANwj FABRICS OV LINE3IN AND HEMP-CLASS 29$ inc JOHN STEVELLY, ESQ., SON OF rIOFESSOR |THEVfLY, eF _PSEFAST. Wn find in the Exhibition of *hi& year the great number of 621 exhibitors in this class, without cotuntitg the Belfast trophy, which does not appear it the dataloue, aDii, dlthongh Seotland, England, and America are unrepresented, wve havd still a show of ...

THEATRE ROYAL

... THIE A T RE 1 0 Y A L. flUS UUA~TKd }X 'flT Lfifl. L.&Sr evening, Maie H~eath gave another illestration of her commanad over the powers that g!c to form a great tragedlienne, and a proof that wals fitted to advance evten her reputation. Owvine to the very untoward state of the weather, she has not received the amount of patronage to wh ich her abilities en- title her, but still the houses, ...

ELIZABETHAN DRAMATISTS, No. VII.—WEBSTER

... ELIZABETHAN DRAMATISTS, No. VII.-WEBSTER.* THE traditions of the frame sanglant which had been inaugurated by Marlowe and Kyd, and had been carried on by Marston, were maintained with the force and concentration of superior genius by Webster. Webster did not write much, but what he wrote is of solid and enduring value. His characters are as definite and real as those of Shakspeare, though it ...

PROGRESS OF THE WORKING CLASSES

... * JUST as we shall soon be inundated with lives of King Theodore and histories and maps of Abyssinia, so this year we have been plentifully supplied with books on the working-classes. Like King Theodore, dlie working classes have recently brought themselves prominently forward, and- are now deemed worthy of serious consideration, and people are an.UOUS to know something about them and their ...

PRINCE OF WALES THEATRE

... PRINCE OF WALES TUBATRE. 1TEME AND TinE. M One of the inevitablo drawbiast Of a great dramatic be success, such an VMr. Bouclooalt's Flying Scud1 han ~ lately achieved here, is the shficunlty of providing a worthy pri succenssr, and guarding -e~aint a fatal attioltusacx whent to the time for withdrawin~g the succesfu pise'. han arrived, W5J AB it would have been bopeloan to look for a new ...