On this page
-
Text (1)
-
216 PASSING EVENTS.
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Public And Political. The Mortal Remains...
father to Miss , the Kate late Southey Robert , on Southey account , to of Eng the lish important literature services . £ _^ O rendere to Miss d by Julia 'Her
Tilt , in consideration of her literary merit . £ 50 on Mrs . Henfi _^ ey , on account of her husband's ( the late Professor Henfrey ) contributions to anatomical arid physiological botany .
drawings Madame from Bodichon nature , in nee Al Barbara geria , at Lei the g French h . Smith Exhibition , has exhibited . The fort drawings y-four were on view from the 10 th to the 20 th of the month , when the French
Exhibition closed to make room for some pictures belonging to Her Majesty . The drawings appeared to excite a warm interest in crowds of Tisitors . Many of the drawings were sold on the day of the private viewand the
collection elicited the admiration of numerous artists and connoisseurs , . .- . . - ¦ MISCELLANEOUS .
" Glancing down the columns of ' Want Places , ' in the Morning Post of Thursday last , we see reason to believe that the sex have as little notion as the lords of the pantry of throwing themselves away' unless they knows
, the reason why . ' Mrs . J . O . P . wants to be a cook and housekeeper ; in which ambidexter capacity ( nice pickings both ways , no doubt ) she has ' no objection to the country , part of the year ? When all the world goes out of
Another town , what candidat cook , e , indeed for the , or place housekeeper of upper housemaid of fashion , , could has ' no remain objection behin to d a ? but short beyond distance that from radiu town s . ' Possibly , Richmond , or Sydenham , might do ;
, "' Barbarism itself would pity her . ' How we should like to give one of those delicate creatures a winter at Belmullet !"
with if not " Great their tampered stress lot . with I has have been by reason white laid b men to y think the , are Soutli and loyal on believe to the their assertion that masters they that , are and the mistaken satisfied slaves . ,
, smart A lad now y who -a-days is a they slaveown nearl er y all told believed me onl they y to oug -day ht that to be ' their nigger own s' masters were so and that she had caught her ' niggers ' on several occasionswhen her ,
absence was counted on , discussing the prospect of their freedom , . She tells me that numbers of her acquaintance are in agonies of fear at the prospect of being left on their plantations without their husbands for a single
ni 4 ni ght ggers , and ' had they gone have . " always expected in the morning to find that the A Warsaw letter of the 5 th , in the National Gazette of Berlin , says that
Madame at a young Grote ladies , to ' school allow a the requiem pupils to the be other performed day , asked and to their grant superior them , Amazons permission rose to wear in insurrection mourning . . Madame Both requests Grote was were obli refused ged to , and fl the and young it was
necessary to call in some soldiers to restore order . y , Extraordinary Protection-order Application . —A Mrs . Caroline Kawson applied at Worship Street Police-court yesterday for an order to
protect cruelty , had her deserted earnings her against , and was her living husband with , who another , after woman treating . The her mag with isexpressing trate granted her the thanks ord . er as . thoug The h app something licant had troubled scarcely her moved when away she , hastened vaguely
, , p back lease again , sir , , will and you with be an so anxious good as to fac tell e , said me tins to Mr : — . I _Safford am given , the to clerk understand , "Oh , ' should that my die husband , can I be is in obli very ged bad to b health ury him , and ? " Mr what . Safford I want said to he know would is , advise if he
her to do so , and if she reflected" that she would so escape the censorious scandal of her neighbors , perhaps she might think so too . The applicant bury replied him , " , Thank and I will you , do sir so ; ; lam " and v , erv with much a mind obli evidentl ged ; I y think much re lieve better d , she
hastened out of _court .- _~ Ilecord .
216 Passing Events.
216 PASSING EVENTS .
-
-
Citation
-
English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), May 1, 1861, page 216, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01051861/page/72/
-