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Daily News (London)

MUSIC

... transmission, That this and the other orchestral pieces were finely played on Saturday it is scarcely necessary to say, as we are speaking of the Crystal Palace band, con- ducted by Mfr. Maone, who were most worthily employed in the performance-excellent throughout-of ...

THE WINTER EXHIBITIONS

... foreign painters of the Continental and, we are glad to add, of the American school. It may be some- what premature, perhaps, to speak of the American artists as a school, since they travel to Europe for their lessonr 'in painting; but as landscapists they can ...

CURRENT LITERATURE

... instead of twelve parts, be taken down. In one particular, the French are now what they were in 1801 ; though they rarely speak any language but their own, I have heard t the remark, ' Ces Anglais sont excessi~vement bites; ils ne savent pas un mot de' ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... outworks at. different i. 'times disclosing ?? of GQueens- ;; and, France, India, aud Belgium. The lfghts .are now, so to speak, turned on uplon, the 'inished work, and ' the audienbe eae 're 3 quested to give their applause' nd patronage. P |artly to ...

THE RECENT METEOR SHOWER

... meteor system which produced the display. Whence, t then, came the meteors a We see that a corre- spondent of a contemporary speaks of the meteor t shower as undoubtedly a new one, and one that will give rise to much speculation. But in these days it is ...

INDIAN VIEWS AT THE SOCIETY OF ARTS

... carv- I togs ; and the fakirs, in all their strange and revolting habits, are represented with the clearness t of reality, and speak of a religious life so intense a and universal, with such a wealth of idealism I And apparently so little of the sublime, that ...

WELSH LITERARY AND MUSICAL MEETING

... presence of such softening pursuits that c. attributed the ,paucty, if not the absence, of violent A brutal cruises on Wales. Speaking of the moaintenancfa spirit of natiouality inthastcoisntrY, he regretted that wbll ?? mmieiters, and writers of leading articles ...

MUSIC

... in 's which MdlIe. Emma Nelly nppeared as'(Gertrude, and y washwvourablyreceived. Ofthe performancsg generally 3 we must speak in detail hereafter, when the arrangements ' are more in working order. I l _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ...

A MASONIC FESTIVAL

... grand officers past and present. The brethren who were privileged to attend the Jerusnaem Lodge . on that occasion always speak of it' as one of the most succeso ful evenings known in the annals of modem Freemasonry- cetnary festival to be referrod to ...

FAGGING AND BULLYING

... education can fail to have a deep interest for all nglish 'people, .[ have ventured, as a publio schoolboy, and one 'wyo caii speak from ah expdies~cO of ,ix years spent in al forms from the lowest to the 'ighest to write these fe lines on the subject of ...

FINE ARTS

... every direction, so that, however Blight and incomplete, everythingismarked bythe mastertouchof knowledge, and every subjeot speaks to us. Wbether it is aninterior, such as The Long Gallery of Haddon Hall (63), Wbarves on the Thames (95), The Opening ...

THE CRYSTAL PALACE POULTRY SHOW

... otacte to the Hamburgs, Spanish, and B~antamn fowls and rabbits. (01 the various specimens I exhibited it would beimpossible to speak too'highly. The' Bramahs have immense stature, splendid shape and won- 1 derful brilliancy and perfection of, colour.. To jndges ...