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MACLEAN'S GALLERY

... MA CLEAN'S GALLER Y Tan twelfth annual exhibition of pictures at this gallery, wvhich wvas cpcned to the public on Monday last, contains a hundred and thirty-three examples by British and foreign rain ...

Published: Saturday 01 April 1876
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1136 | Page: Page 16, 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

MUSIC

... -0a CONCERT AT THE ROYAL AQUARIUM. The weekly concerts at the above institution have hitherto afforded little opportunity for critical comment. It istruethat the list of works performed at them comprises many important orchestral compositions, but these were generally mixed up with other works of such doubtful standing as to somewhat lower the artistic character of the concerts themselves. We ...

VARIETIES

... . a GEMS OF THOUGHT. KNsoWLroOn.-Avail yourself of all your knowledge without making a display of it. That machinery works best that is hidden from view. WRoes-DOING.-TOO Reany persons are far less-ashamed of having done wrong than of being found out. HURRY AND CUNNING} are the two apprentices of despatch and skill; but neither of them over learned their master's trade. TnovsLES.-A person is ...

AUSTRALIAN LIFE AND SCENERY.*

... THESE sketches of Australian life and scenery have been taken in the flourishing colony of Victoria. Their chief interest is as reminiscences of its rapid progress in the last quarter of a century, and of the changes that time has wrought in the conditions of colonial society. The anonymous author professes to have had some literary experience, although he has let it rust through a long ...

Poetry

... m cyottru. THE QUEEN OF THE ORKNEY ISLANDS. Oh, the Queen of the Orkney Islands, She's traveling over the sea; She's bringing a cuttle-fish with her, To play with my baby and me. S oh, his head is three miles long, dear; His tall is three miles short; And when he goes out, he wriggles his snout In a way that no cuttlefish ought. S Oh, the Queen of the Orkney Islands, , She rides on a sea green ...

LORD MACAULAY.*

... LORD MACAULAY.' [FIRST NOTICE.] THE two volumes in which Mr. Trevelyan has given us the life of his celebrated uncle possess one great merit: they are an honest attempt at genuine biography. When we consider the boundless field for disquisi- tion, both political and literary, which is offered by the life of such a man, and the strong temptation to expatiate in it which must be felt by the ...

FOREIGN PICTURES AT THE PALL MALL GALLERY

... FOREIGN PICTURES AT THE PALL MALL GALLER Y TAKING a *wide sweep of selection from the Paris Salon, through the studios of Belgium, Holland, and Germany, Mr. Wallis is able to focus in the narrow limit ...

Published: Saturday 01 April 1876
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1145 | Page: Page 14 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THEATRES

... W ~~AT RB-igwh U:SU~~s Mr. Cr.A\EN'S historical drama at the Duiut's Theatre has given place to a new play, in two acts, from the pen of Mr. Robert Rleece, which bears the title, An Old Alan. At the D ...

Published: Saturday 01 April 1876
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1110 | Page: Page 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE BRITANNIA

... I| Mr R. Dodson, whose clever and effective plays Anne Boleyn and Two Hundred Yeats Ago were so well received, has added to his laurels by the production of a vigorously written and exciting play, having the title of The Armourer, which was produced at the Britannia on Monday evening with complete success. The pesiod of Mr Dodson's drama is 1529, when Bluff King Hal sat uponl the throne of ...

Published: Sunday 02 April 1876
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2063 | Page: Page 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

AMATEURS AT THE GERMAN GYMNASIUM

... I On the evening of Tuesday last the Theatre in connection with that marvellous establishment in the St. Pancras-road,the raison ?? of which is the development ofnmuscle, was filled to reple- tion to witness a performance, by the members of the English Dramatic Club which has been organised, of M1r H. T. Craven's admirable comedy-drama entitled Coaes of Fire. Judging by the laughter and ...

Published: Sunday 02 April 1876
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1463 | Page: Page 3 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... L LITERARY _, IELLANEA. Tmass A-ND HEAiH.-May would ifeem it an act of validalism to remoe a woll-urown trdflfrom the'neigh- bourhood of a dwellihg. 'ot, although 'wc love the pleasant green trees as much as any one, observations made from time toilne in various situations sliew that, in respect to health, a large quantity of foliage too close to a house is not desirable. In the fist instance, ...

THE READER

... ii: l?P.!IiL? MIE1MOIR AND CoOR1rSPONDrNCE OF CAROLINE HERSCHEL, by Mrs. John Herschel (John Murray).-The little sister of Thackeray's pathetic sketch rises oddly to our mind on reading these me ...

Published: Saturday 01 April 1876
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1665 | Page: Page 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture