MISCELLANEOUS

... MISUELtkfximous. The ?? -cdm~xiiion opens o~ueans 3, and closZ Jul Wde o31en onk Thutdar, May, Bear.Admiral W. H. Stewart has accopte the perma-. nent poat of Cemptroiler onf the Navy. A marriage Is, it in reported, on the ?? between Miss Fox, the daughter of Lady Holland, ana Prince Withen- gensteii A Cockney archseologist, who has recently visited Salls. bury Plain, says that Stonehenge is a ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... REVIEWS- OF BOOKS, CIARAOTERIsTiq or EmiIuT ?tx. By J. TIMMs Giffin, Siationers' HEall-court;Dr. Timbs has made.-a judicious selection of niietdotex and incidents connected with the careers of eminent persons of all spheres of life, professions, &G. ?? does not'aspire to much originality, but culls most of his matter from the pages of other authors, honourably acknowledgin g the sourceS -from ...

THE PICTURE GALLERIES

... TH P1an0~B GALI. The Spadiou and well .adapted galleries, which miuge on the opposite sides of Ithe Horticultural oardenor over the arcades, ere not so amply fied ,as ?? were last year. but the visitor will probably find that quite enough has been done for his gratiflostiin) without taxing the powers of ordinray mortals too far, and with- out cloying the appetite for beautiful th4age, The ...

THE STABILITY OF NATIONS

... 'Tim gBTlITY OF !lATEON.I Isearled b the -RrvW'k PW. Cbei JViar -of Christ- . . . ' ,,hurchs 8ri o Td L ondT., ,i iS .herevers ttha .ble widome.or knowledgs l; spoken of ibth: tlohbatio#. it always meoas Divine wlslou snd'he knowlende of ThdIbs can be Malutratdb numnerouis quotat ohs, end A owne by the Porerful elect seol wnjLm' he-had UpOn thuosnbiltyof! ntionr We need stability, efor- look ...

THE BRIGHTON REVIEW

... TTIR B13OIGHTON REVIEW. The Tismes riays that whatever may ba the verdict of pXo- fessicnal criticisul on the details of the Volunteer Revievv, t'ibsi: is nona ?? feature in which it is eminently satis- faetory. Tbe Volunteers have displayed a soldier-like deference to the advice given thorn by the military autho- rnieo, and hnve heartily accepted the new conditionc inyofrsO on them, The ...

Barddoniaeth

... .. 1? ?) IrrOAti, ?flT, ?9- Italian Y TY AR Y GRAIG. dc I-Ien afon marwolaeth sy'n yingyncddeiriogi, Gan Ilchio ci thonau i entrych y nef, I Mae 'n curo 'n ofnadwy yn erbyn 'r adeilad gat Sylfaennwyd yn ddiogel ar graig gadnarn gref; ICC bat Taranau ddyruient-hyrddwyntoedd ?? c, * Achwythent gaun'sgubo pob g *wrtrlderycla o'n bla'n; f yv Ond etto yn ug.hanol y stormydi digofus, a l ...

LITERATURE

... - ?? SaTIIS Bj~orp aae,..d, ,,19Is works have at least-one ~5tie 7 are always eminently readable. lesihbthe story, ormeaiore the miaterial, 'ldei r, t,arcley ?? ether, I .evrjal tointerest. -Much of tthwrtr large Stock of animal .dae to the writ gers . o vbc e1 0 the splendid geniality for Which I is. ed, and vhich seldom fails to attract ;1sdmnrg' ?? eisytears or laughter. 0wl EoViog to this ...

WESTERN EUROPE AND HUNGARY

... lWVESTERN EUROPE AND HUNGAR Y. THE Magyars are often reproached by the other inhabitants of the Austro- Hungarian Empire for the exaggerated notions they entertain of their own. importance. Such notions certainly tend to make them ridiculous in the eyes of unsympathetic observers, but are attended, at any rate, by one good result. A nation which aspires to be the equal of France or England ...

CUTTINGS FROM THE COMIC JOURNALS

... :d.uCUTs T Bof rE COMIaC SOURsAM, .':O60P SEriPT:--Jean rm atrald, *de~ a' l'va ?? ~ ielady, Itlln requre to-leae Iyou-.ady: Why -eames: W{,ell, me lady, I caNDt , 'O wth meter's enokasms ?? poordpealeanted lr'.erger. : - m ilt e M aioM roat Donlsygoo tor.IDioe.- What ls theadifforenc, 'between. ^ eosd. and. tit falr. occc pantbt., boot: tho dlff ecebe~ween ?? Pmd ff uOt.o'-OWI voe 1 *4 LODD ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... , PUBI-J AIUSEMEN - I f A d 7 ?? - i ?? ?? 7' E-ATe o'C0NOIWTS. ?? j %Wiiedneidayevenilng,' at Exetr hal4 Me, Barnby'a oholr~gave, ainexcelleat perforim6e of Rl.jcik.: This 'oratorib is'more 'ratinto in' -chadacter than an o if theother works of a similar' description given by Englhib choral s6oceties, and therefore present5specll at'tractilms, appt fhiom being Mendelasohn's most mas- terly ...

PRINCE NAPOLEON'S RESCUED GEMS OF ART

... PRINCE NAPOLE0u,-Ps RESCUED GEMS OF ART. THn Correspondent of the S'otsman thus describes a visit paid by him to Prince Napoleon's residence at Lancaster Gate, to look at a great collection of articles which had lately arrived there-articles -which had bcen saved, but in a sadly injured con- dition, from the Palais R toyal when it was fired by the Communists last May:- The house at the ...

THE SOCIETY OF BRITISH ARTISTS

... If quantity were a true criterion of the success of an artistic corporation, we should have to congratulate the Society of British Artists on the collection now on view in the Suffolk-street Gallery, forming their forty-ninth annual exhibition, which contains nearly nine hundred oil paintings, water-colour drawings, and pieces of sculpture, contributed by no fewer than five hundred artists. ...