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O>'.h oj? 'car: Hanjjsomkst Bujlihncis in Loudon, saya tho Times Newspaper, is Partridge nnd Cousins' Stationery Warehouse, No. 192, Fleot-stroot, corner of Chimeory-lano. Tho largest nnd ohoapost. housiv
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Untitled Ad
in the kingdom for puper and envelopes . Carriage paid to tho country on orders ovor JiOs . No qliurgo for stamping . Uaoful cream-laid note * , five ( Miiroti i ' or Oil . ; tiupor-tliiok ditto > five quiroB for Is . ; lurgo oominorciul ditto , J 3 h . Oil . per voam ; thiok eronm-laidonvolopos , ( Jd . per 100 j large blue ollloo ditto , A , s . Od . per 1 , 000 , or 5 , 000 for 2 ls . Otl . Wupor / lno blue fooltioap , 10 e . ( jj . pur ream ; straw pupor , 2 m . ( Jd . per ream j good oopy-books ( 10 pages ) , 2 a . per dozon . lllustratod Prioo-Hst post « froo . OoiJy mlUroH . 1—Part ridge mid Co /( ens , luanu /' aqtiiHng BtnMonors , N 6 . 1 , Chnnoery-lani * , imk ! l ! J ^ , Fluol :-street ., K . C . —\ Adverti-wiui'iit . } Daltlnoda uieir ouuho
Untitled Ad
' . i UreyiiOHa , , and other tliBOiiaos of tlio linir , unu rometly , with "iliiUbon llio Jtuir , its euro niid oulturis" by IT . M . Herring , ! 32 , BuBinahull-street , London j post i'voc , Otl . " A vory useful little troutine , that may bo oonaultod with advantage , convoying a considerable amount ; of informal-ion respecting the beneficial ojubota to bo derived from the proper oiira and cultivation of tho h « ir . —Morniny JOhratft ,
Untitled Article
Ualph is charged with having made away with Rathbone , and Us sudden , death in a paroxism of excited feeling places him . beyond-thi reach of all earthly troubles . Mr , Creswick personates the doubli character of Ralph Ghxston and Clement Ttcdhbone , the duplicate here Of the piece , with great spirit , versatility , and graphic power . Th < funny character of the piece is Jem Maggots , ' an idiot ,. ' who follows Halph with hardly the intelligence , though even more than the fidelity of a dog , and who- is represented by Mr . G . Rice with considerable drollery and comic humour . The plot of the second piece , " The Veteran and his Son , " is in this wise : —Colonel Delorine wants his son ' Victor to be married to his niece Blanche , and to settle down as an agriculturist , but the girl , as a matter of course , wants anybody but whom she is wanted to have , and with the deplorable caprice too often exhibited , has her affections trapped by the gaudy livery of a young jackadandy officer . Master Victor , in order to " cut out" his rival , turns soldier himself , and having committed a more than average amount of legitimate murders , obtains a captaincy , and is rewarded with his cousin Ulanche in marriage , she having been left in the lurch by her quondam lover , who has taken up with an Arab sweetheart . The " grand spectacular" portion of the drama belongs fo the part that is laid in Algeria , where in addition to the heroes and heroines already mentioned , who are continuall y engaged in enacting a truly awful account oi" heroism , we stumble over another "funny character " in the shape of a cockney blackguard , who had first seen the light within the sound ofJBow bells , but whom capricious fortune has transported to another quarter of the globe , and transformed into a G-rand Vizier—Bar-Bi-Kan—personated with a degree of mirth-compelling power by Mr . C . Rice , that the audience evidently consider quite irresistible , and in which they are not far out . The part of Victor is excellently surtained by Mr . Shepherd , who endows it with the highest amount of vigour and movement . The dresses , stage effects , scenery , properties , &c , are all first-rate , and both pieces are" produced in a style highly creditable to the management . The audience eonsisted of dense human masses wedged into every atom of space that pit , boxes , and gallery afforded , and wmi-h seemed quite explosive with delight and enthusiasm . . Maetieboxe Theatre . — Mr . Gave , the enterprising lessee of this convenient theatre , having set his house in order in the sense of thoroughly redecorating and renovating it in a style to which the term . " magnificent" is certainly not inapprojHate , opened the season on Monday with a new and telling drama in three acts . Mr . W . Travei-s , well-known as an actor and dramatist , has succeeded in working up the perilous adventures , hair-breadth escapes , and final doom of " Cartouche , the French Housebreaker , " into a most effective play with , a most impressive moral , . shewing that the instinct of selfpreservation operating among men on a large scale almost infallibly causes it to come to pass that " crime receives its punishment , " at the end of even the most successful career of guilt . The leading parts are appropriately and efficiently iilled by Mr . W , Travers himself , who enacts the hero of the piece ( Carlouche ) , Mr . W . Shalders , Pierre Bobilet , a guard Bourgeois ; Mr . Harry Bolton , Oribiehon , the French Blueskin ; Miss E : Barnett , Zouise , Cartouche ' s Iriile ; Miss H . Love , Eugene de G-randliaw ; and Miss Lizzy Marshall , Can-Can . There are no less than twenty dramatis personm , enumerated nomination ( besides the usual concomitants of soldiers , &c , &c ) , including Cartouche ' s gang , in which we find a number of desperate specimens of tho " dangerous classes , " under tho characteristic soubriquets of the Lion , the Wolf , the Tiger , the Bear , the I ^ errer , the Eel , and not the "talking , " but the " sucking" Fish , which we would advise the proprietory of tho deceased " talker" to try and catch without delay . Of the success of the piece , from the crowded audiences it ' is drawing , there can be no question . Tho other piece given wns Mr . Edward Stirling ' s drama of the " White Slavc , " * in which Mr , J . F . Young sustained the character of Bill Bull . iegn and JEliiwre was represented " by Miss IT . Love . The new scenery ( by Mr . W . Shaldors ) , stago properties and effects , are all appropriate and excellent . TCASTmtif OruitA-IIousE .- —It is now a mouth since the opera in its highest and most completo form was inaugurated as a permanency at what , in its primitive state , and beforoits rehabilitation , had boen known as the Theatre Royal Pavilion , and wo nro thcroforo now in a position to judge of its status and prospects . To do this we should take an opera , of average merits and attractions ( not performed for the first time so as to draw in respect of tho circumstance of novelty ) , and with tho usual stock-oasl ; of tho company . In those elements wo have the fair medium data upon which-to form n judgment , and wo find them all concurring last Wednesday evening . Tho opora was tho English version of " Sonnumbula , " it was nob a first performance . The artistes who appeared have boon ploying over sinoo tho house openod , in this and other works . Jt was cast us follows : —Tho Sleep-ica / Aer , Madame Lancia ; tilnlno , Mr . Parkinson j Lisa , Miss Long ; Count Jlorlol /' o , Mr . Rosonthal ; Afessio , Mi . O . Summers . Such are tho promises ; the conclusion a house orowdod from pit to gullory s tho mnss of fueos soon from the proscenium boxos being almost as thiok and quito as delighted und enthusiastic as on tho oponing night ; , which shews tlwt , tho multitudes who then assomblod wove not drawn together merely by the novelty of Mr . Douglass ' s enterprise . Tho opera wus excellently porforniod . Madame Lunch *' a vocal and histrionic powers soom ruther to bo freshonod nnd invigorutod , by inooasjmt work , thun fuUauod or impuirod . Miss Long in this us in tho oilier pipoca in which wo linvo soon her , tloos her port well and shows good tnst and juclmnnont . Mr . Parkinson ' s voice , reminding us in Umbra of the "English iiubini . " Sims Hooves , was haui'd to groat advantage his holding note in " Now w > Gently , " ( . 13 flat ) , corning out ) jmro , rial / wnd sonorous , elicited a stprm of nppluiiBo , mid wan followed by a unanimous and decisive onooro . Mndtuno LunH ' ri ' s ' urin ut the ? Jluato , "Do not Mingle , " wuh wi cqnul ftiiecesa , nnd lior acting throughout as well us hor Binding woro clinrneiuriuod by tlio hi ghest qualitios of an operatic artist . Mr . lioaentlial wrts a gentlemanly ' . Covnt , uncl made tlio most of a pnvt in which there is bo littfo to do j and Mr . Summors > v « n a vory droll untl amusing Al / issio . In i tho private boxes , ninong other visitors of hoto , wo obeovvod Mdllo .
i Parepa , vrlxo seemed much interested in the performances , and accorded 3 them iv degree of attention- to which from the excellence that charac-3 ¦ " terised them , they were certainly entitled . , ¦ ' > . Mr . Q . W . MAinrx's Piuze Gjlees and National Pabt Son&s . — 3 Mr . Cr . ¦ "W . Martin has established a high reputation as a Composer of , i and as Laving obtained prizes for , glees , madrigals , and part songs , r which unquestionably rank among the most perfect specimens of the ; kind ever written . lie is also well-known for his skill and aptitude in i organising choirs on a scale of gigantic magnitude . Indeed , he is i now vigorously prosecuting the formation of a national choir which for its collossal proportions will not have an equal in the world . On Safcur-; day last a performance of Mr . Martin ' s compositions and arrangements took place at the Crystal Palace , when the choir numbered 2 , 000 voices , male and female . The original compositions given were " The Cuckoo , " " The Army and Navy , " " The Hemlock Tree" ( words by Longfellow ) , " Defenc-e not Defiance , " " The Evening Star , " " All hail ! Thou lovely Queen of Night , " " Is she not beautiful , " " Our Saxon fathers , " " The Bille ,- " " The Volunteer ' s choral March . " The adaptations . consisted of'Auld Lang Syne , " "The last Eose of Summer , " "Scots wha ha , " "liule Britannia , " and the " National Anthem , " with which the performances terminated . There was an immense audience , who applauded heartily throughout , and joined in chorus with the last two pieces . The re-demanded pieces were numerous , but not all those encored were repeated , for the performance was continued without the usual interval for rest , and towards the latter half the choir and their indefatigable leader may be supposed to have been somewhat tired . Mr . Martin received an " ovation , " both on taking his place and on retiring , when the choir cheered him heartily , waving hats and handkerchiefs . The effectof the massive volumes of sound issuing from 2 , 000 well exercised throats at once was grand and overpowering . Some of the melodies , the "Hemlock Tree , " and "The Evening Star " in particular , . are beautiful in the extreme . It will be interesting to Volunteers and the public generally , to know that Mr . G-. W . Martin is now organising a choir of several hundred Volunteers , for the purpose of introducing the practice of singing choral marches when on the march . A great meeting of Volunteers on the subject will shortly be held in either the Floral or Exeter . Hall , and subsequently at the Crystal Palace . No Volunteers will be admitted on these occasions unless in uniform ; and . Volunteers interested in this movement , ean . send their names to Mr . Martin , at liis publishers , Cramer and Co ., or Addison and Co ., Regent-street . , . The Xevv Pictuee oj ? the " Presentation isr the Temple . "A new painting , by Mr . Robert Dowling , of the " Presentation in the Temple " is now on view , at Messrs . H . J . Betjemann & Sons , 28 , Oxford-street . Mr . Dowling , we undex-stand , is but young as a man , and still younger as an artist , at least in years ; but to judge from the present work his talents have decidedly attained a very considerable , if a very precocious , maturity . Having passed the greater part of his life in Australia , in pursuits altogether unconnected with the vocation of which ho bids fair to become a distinguished master , he returned to England , and it is only , as we understand , within the last three , years that he has taken to his present profession . Such proficiency as the present works exhibits , aclueved in so short a period , gives token of no ordinary genius , while it evinces indefatigable powers of study and application . The drawing and the colouring are alike excellent . The grouping is dexterously and effectively managed , the contrasts of the faces , the figures , the attitudes are admirable , and the ensemble of the work considered in its totality , as well as the details iu their nn ' i lute particulars , will command no stinted measure of praise . Simeon with the infant JTcsus resting on his left arm , while the right haud and fapo are raised towards heaven , as in the act of prayer , and tho Virgin with clasped hands , und an expression of mingled reverence , joy , and sadness depicted in her countenance , may bo supposed listening to the ominous words " Yea , and a sword shall pierce through thy own soul also ! " The effects producable by a judicious management of light and sho . de uro seen in tho white beard and under robe of Simepn and tho child's dross . Joaoph , with the birds for snerifleo , forms a prominent figuro in the group , as does also Anna the prophetess ; the positions and attitudes of these four figures being nicely adjusted and bulanood . The national characteristics of physiognomy aro well and faithfully preserved , as seen in tho Nubian and the Greek towards tho loft . Self righteousness and self-assertion , not to say solf'oonooit , with a materialistic boldness and a dash of sensuality , and a keen penotruting scepticism , are well blended and contrasted in the Pharisee and SadUuooo , who aro among tho lookors on , and fill up tho spaoe between tho Virgin and tho Prophet ; and disappointed selfcatooiu , vei'ging upon a spiteful envy , set oJi' by tho unoognato sentimont of eagor curiosity , uro poiii'truyed in tlio countenances of the two women on tho right , Wo boliovo Mr . Dowling is engaged on another work , of which considerable expectations may bo formed , for from whuO ho has ulrcudy accomplished , there is reason to infer that he will become a . ruully great painter .
Untitled Article
Sept . " 22 , 1860 J The Saturday Analyst and Leader , 82 $
O≫'.H Oj? 'Car: Hanjjsomkst Bujlihncis In Loudon, Saya Tho Times Newspaper, Is Partridge Nnd Cousins' Stationery Warehouse, No. 192, Fleot-Stroot, Corner Of Chimeory-Lano. Tho Largest Nnd Ohoapost. Housiv
O >' . h oj ? 'car : Hanjjsomkst Bujlihncis in Loudon , saya tho Times Newspaper , is Partridge nnd Cousins' Stationery Warehouse , No . 192 , Fleot-stroot , corner of Chimeory-lano . Tho largest nnd ohoapost . housiv
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Sept. 22, 1860, page 823, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2366/page/15/
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