On this page
- Departments (2)
- Adverts (3)
-
Text (16)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
;..V" " - " --' . /fTiTimttOitrrril ^ fTrrt^tS V&yUUUUlVlllU /CIUUU%I«-
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
ROYAL OLYMPIC THEATRE. Lessee and Manager, Mr. A. WIGAN.
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.
Untitled Ad
monuay ana aurmg poriormancos - - raonco with tho burletta called THE BEULAH SPA . Principal Characters by Messrs . A . Wigari , Emery , F . Robsoa , JI . Cooper ; Misa Marston , Mrs . A . Wigan . Mrs . 1 ? itzallan , and Miss Julia St . Georgo . After which tho coraio drama of THE FIRST NIGHT . Characters by Messrs . A . Wigau , Leslie , Gladstone , H . Cooper , Miss Julia St . Goorgo , and Miss 15 . Ormonde . To conclude with tho mow faroo called A BLIGHTED BEING * . In which Mr , 1 ? . Robson will appoar .
Untitled Ad
MR . ALBERT SMITH hns the honour to announce that his ASCENT of MONT BLANC will RE-OPKN VOll THJO SEASON , at tho EGYPTIAN HALL , ou MONDAY EVENING , JUBOHMBBR « tic , 1854 .
Untitled Ad
THE WIIITTINGTON CLUB , Established 1848 , affords all the advantages of « . Litorary Institution and Club JIouho , inoludlnB Library and News llooma , LooturoH . OlasNeH , and OonccrtH . Weekly Solrdoa ( froo to the . Mombow ) , Dhilng . Supper , ginokinR . "Ml Chens Rooms Subscription , Two Qu noiw a Year . One Guinea Half Year Fourteen Shillings n Quarter . No Entrance Foe . OanlH of MoHiburHhli ) , dating fi'oin the 1 st of December , are now rondy . A full l ' rospoctuu and a Hat of Lceturoa may bo had ou application . LooUiro , Tliiir » dny , Doo . 7 , 0 . Charles , Ksq ., on Burlesque To commence at a o ' clock . Members frao . HENRY Y . BItAOE , Secsrotary . 37 , Aiuudol-stroot , Strand .
Untitled Article
XYCEUM—A COMICAL COUNTESS . The Game , of Speculation is becoming as customary at the opening of a Lyceum season as the " Here we are" of a transpontine clown at the first blush of his transformation . It is received no less rapturously . Elderly gentlemen with whom " affairs are bad in the City" were evidently prepared to take Mr . Charles Mathews into partnership , whilst Miss Oliver doubtless suggested similar thoughts to younger men . The second piece , at the re-opening on Monday night , was new . Mr . Mathews merged from a British speculator into a Parisian nobleman , disguised as a footman . He is the Marquis de Bilbrac , and has accidentally struck a lady a severe blow at the ball on the preceding evening . The Marquis , supposing the lady to be the " lady" of the Regent , vanished , in order to escape the Bastille . In his own livery he gets himself engaged by a widowed tout youthful countess ( Miss Talbot ) , and there conducts himself -with the usual amount of eccentricity . Of course he defeats the love of an elderly baron . It then appears that the blow was given , to the Countess , and not to the lady of the Regent ; and the Countess ( disguised in her turn ) under pretence of asserting her own cause , fights a duel with the Marquis to prove his courage , which had been assailed . His courage is subsequently exemplified on the Baron ( Mr . Baker ) , who is wounded—the position of the wound , and the grimaces of the receiver , being equally Buckstonian . The next discovery is that the Countess is an old name of the Marquis , who has , by marriage , raised herself from the office of cook in the service of the Marquis's aunt . Happiness—for two of the three characters , at least—is the result . The piece is taken , not too forcibly , from the Trench , and is altogether so amusing that we are not inclined to be angry with little inconsistencies which we never observed in the " houses of the great . " B .
Untitled Article
Fam . nf the Price of Brkad . —The bakers generally , throughout the metropolis , have reduced the price of bread a halfpenny in the 41 b . loaf ; the price now is 8 ^ d . and Sd , for seconds , and from 9 d . to lid . for best bread . Central Association . —Widows aot > Orphans . — The obnoxious Rule 14 , respecting unrecognised wives of soldiers has been expunged . Major Pwvys' occupation is gone . Peath of Mukad I . — -In a rebellion of the Servians , Murad found the termination of his glory and of his life ; The Turks gained in 1839 a decisive victory on the Amselfeld in Servia ; but after the end of tb . e battle , Murad fell by the hand of a Servian noble , byname Milosh Kobilowitch , under circtucnstancea which bear a xaost romantic tinge . The Sultan was going over the field of tattle , accompanied by his Vizier , in order to gaze on the multitude of victims who had fallen before Ms prowess . He remarked after a while , " It -would be strange , were my dream of last night to come true . I saw myself murdered by an hostile hand . But , " he added , " dreams are the creation of the fancy ; it cannot be possible . " This was heard by a Servian , who lay among the dead , but had not yet expired , and he concluded that the Sultan stood before him . Collecting his last desparing energies , he rose suddenly and stabbed the Sultan . The Servian was of course cut to pieces , but the Sultan also expired within two hours . Before he died , however , he ordered the execution of Lazarus , the captured Bang of Servia . — Turkey . By Sir George Larpent .
Untitled Article
We mentioned a . fortnight since that M . Legouve had carried Medea into Court ; again , by an attempt to compel "M * Arsene Houssaye , the director of the Theatre Frajjcais , to resume the rehearsals of the tragedy ¦ which M . Houssaye , being d ' accordwith Mademoiselle . jfochel , and protected by the Government , obstinately declined to do , notwithstanding a decision in favour of M . Legouve , as against Mademoiselle Rachel . We regret to observe that M . Legouve was defeated on the second occasion by an administrative quibble : he had not applied for the authorisation of the Minister to commence rehearsals . The result is , that this much-suffering tragic writer has appealed from the caprices of the tragedienne and of the Minister to the reading public—supposing such a public to exist . We should be disposed to consider the public who read tragedies just now oa the somewhat ancient subject of Medea , rather a limited and
peculiar public , although Thebphile Gaiitier declares France to be an " intel * lectual China" in its endurance of tragedies . A review of Mede ' e has appeared in the D £ bats , pointing out with ingenious felicity the beauties of which the theatrical public has been deprived . One scene between Jason and Medea , in which Jason declares that he shall marry Creuta , is written to the very measure of Mademoiselle Rachel ; we can see and hear her as we read . But the situation is by no means original , and we began to think of Pollio and Grisi in the second act of Norma . Indeed , we aTe half inclined to recommend some musical director to set M . Legouve ' s Med . ee to Bellini ' s music . It would be more effective than Norma . M . Legouve has attempted a contrast of the passion of the half-savage woman and the fickleness of the gay and civilised Greek—a contrast , which if not antique , is an adroit concession to the manners of oar century . The last scene is dexterously contrived to elude the canon of Horace ' s Ars Poetica— " Ne coram populo Medea trucidet . " On the English stage the murder of the children would have been a calculated horror . In this respect , perhaps , M . Legouve and Horace are right . Altogether M . Legouve ' Medee deserved a better fate , and a more amiable man than the author does not exist , we believe , in France .
Untitled Article
Madlle . Sophie Cruvelli's return to the stage was a severe trial for the singer , and an event to the fashionable world in Paris . When she was seen coming down the Staircase in the second act of the Huguenots the silence of the theatre was ominous . The first words of the Queen , addressing Valentine , " Dis-moi Qu el est le re * sultat de ton hardi voyage ¦?" were received with a roar of laughter , and from that moment Madlle . Cruvelli vras secure . Still , when between the second and third acts , there was a longer pause than "usual , and at length the curtain was raised and the regisseur alone appeared with his ; three traditional curtseys and all the icy decorum of a theatrical apologiser , a shudd « r of sarcastic indignation ran through the boxes and the stafls as if a tremendous " sell" were coming * Ah / ilnemanquaitque cela ! Elle estrepartie f burst from the " omnibus box . " Stole away again ! as we should say . But it was no such thing . It was only an apology for M . Obin ' s cold ; an announcement that shook the house again with laughter . And so , although Valentine said" . De Nevers a promis de refuser ma main , " it is now pretty certain that M . le Baron Y- ^— has promised to accept the hand of Madlle . Sophie Cruvelli at the end of the season ' 55 .
Untitled Article
Jackson , Lombard-street , City , shipowner and merchant—Jakes Bach , Xrudlow , auctioneer—James Gajctkboge : r , Titus Gaokeogee , and "Wiuiam Slatee , Hebble End Mill , Yorkshire , cotton-spinners— "Wiiliam Iittiejohn Dowie , Manchester , tailor—Chabjdes Parker and Edttcw Paekeb , Northampton , boot . and shoe manufacturers' — James Baideno , King ' s Arms-place , Old Kent-road , hatmanufacturer—John Tatxob . and James Bubtony Stockport , power-loom cloth manufacturers-
Untitled Article
at 75 s ., cost and freight to London or East C « ast . Barley of all descriptions has continued to decline slightly in . value . Oats support Monday ' s prices with tolerable firmness , but there is a slow sale , and for cargoes coming on demurrage Cd . less must be taken . Beans are firm . Peas are Jdrooping . Tba French markets continue to rise .
;..V" " - " --' . /Ftitimttoitrrril ^ Ftrrt^Ts V&Yuuuulvlllu /Ciuuu%I«-
Cummmial % Mx % .
Untitled Article
BRITISH FUNDS TOR THE PAST WEEK . ( Closing Peicks . )
Untitled Article
Sat . ] Mon . Tues . Wed . \ Thur . Frid . Bank Stock ... 209 J 209 209 210 20 &S 209 3 per Cent . Bed 90 | 90 i 894 90 i 90 * 89 f 6 per Cent . Con . An . 921 92 ' 914 91 ? 91 J 91 i Consols tor Account 92 g 92 | 91 f 91 J 91 | 91 S 32 per Cent . An ...... New 21 per Cents ...... ¦ .. Long Ans . I 860 4 5-16 4 $ 45-16 46-16 India StocTt 230 233 j 230 232 233 Ditto Bonds , JE 100 O 7 10 ! 10 Ditto , under £ 1000 7 10 I 7 : 11 Ex . Bills , rflOOO 3 p 3 p 3 6 6 6 Ditto , . £ 500 6 p 6 p 5 6 6 Ditto , Small 6 p 6 p 6 8 6 6
Untitled Article
FOREIGN FUNDS . ( Xasi OFrrcrAt Quotation durino the " Week ending XntTBSDAY EVENIKG . ) Brazilian Bonds 97 Russian Bonds , 5 per BuenosAyrea 6 per Cnts . ... Cents 1822 96 J Chilian 3 per Cents . 73 Russian 44 per Cents .... 87 Danish 5 per Cents Spanish 3 p-Ct . NowDef . 18 | Ecuador Bonds 3 i Spanish Committee Cert . Mexican 3 per Cents . ... 21 of Coup , not fun 5 i Mexican S per Ct . for Venezuela 3 i per Centa . ... Ace . Nov-30 21 J Belgian 4 J per Cents .... ... Portuguese 5 per Cents . 4 . 34 Dutch 24 per Cents 60 } Portuguese 3 p . Cents . ... Dutch 4 per Cent . Certif 90 $
Untitled Article
FROM THE LONDON GAZETTE . Tuesday , December 1 . BANKRUPTCY ANNULLED . —Thomas Houghtojn , Manchester , ironmonger . BANKRUPTS . — Richard Waistex-i ., Noble-street , warehouseman—Henet Maekinbibi , i > Adpey , Old Bondstreet , bookseller—GEOEGB Day , Providencc-hulldlnga , Now Kont-rotid . toulldor—< Wix . wca . mc Phaoook , Mridgo-row , wholesale olothlor—James Scoxx , Trinity-square , Q towor-hill , ship ebftndlor—John Tvwm > ok P-isjibr , Pliastow , Essex , Auctioneer—Jaweb Johnson , Wimbledon , Surrey , builder —^ eobqb pAitiix , ] un ,, willonhall Staffordshire , ironmonger— Joseph Paexbibge , Tipton , corn factor—HMNinr SamublPaekkh , Birmingham , licensed victualler— -Joseph FeentT i Blrkonhead , ) ontlnghouso-kcopor — - Aj-exandssb HxiiLYABD , Liverpool , alo merchant—John IVwkn , . Livor-5 ool , jcrocer—Wbight BHNTiBr , Oldhara , JroiU'oundorohw Entwisi-b . Oarlislo , builder . SCOTCH SEQUESTRATIONS .-O . M . Heihiurt , Ardriehftlg . Argyloahlro , civil qngineor—T . BiaaAn , Paisley , manufacturer—it . Wjiith , Glasgow , provision merchant— Q , Mou ^ -T , StirHng . woolsplnnor—W . Maokay . Abordoon , maohino xnakor—W . Buhton and D . 'Xwombom , GlaHgow , rnoroh&ntt ) . Friday , December 1-BAWKRUPTOY ANNULLED . —Whxiam TaylorWabiien , Matxhhw Wahkisw , and Ouakjlmh Dknhoouk , Cardiff , buildora . HAJNKXtUPTS . —Wii-mam ¥ ms , Cowos , IbIo of Wight , drugglBt—Jamms Thomas Snow , Pollon-Htroot , Hauovorsquaro , Middlesex , butcher—John Ui'bon , Uexloy Hoafch , Kent , boot and shoemaker—lloiuciix A » A « a , Livorpool , morohant—Bdwakd Joniss , OhoHtor , tiinbor-mcrohn . nt — Bisrwr Baiion , Hmnuy WiLiaAM Kmowwsb , and Jamkb HnY \ roB . Tn ; , Bacup , Lanoastor , mamifacturorw— Kobhbt Rouiwbow , MnnohoHtor , nrovlHio » -U <; nlcr—Wjwjam Bajii-THojcomew , Chlohostor , SuaHox , cabiuofc-niaUor— lto » BJiT
Untitled Article
Caledonians , 69 , « 0 ; Eastern Counties , 11 , Hi ; Groat Northern , 87 , 88 ; A stock , 73 , 74 ; B stock , 123 , 125 ; Great Western , C 9 i , C 9 J ; Lancashire and Yorkshire , 70 J , 7 li ; London and Brighton , 104 , 1 «( J ; London and . South-Western , 975 , ? 8 i ; Midlands , 661 , 074 ; Berwlcks , 72 , 74 ; York and North , 50 , 51 ; Oxford , Wolvorhampton , and Worcester , 29 , 31 ; South-Boastorn , B 71 . 58 J ; Antwerp and Rotterdam , 8 , 04 j Eastern of franco , 30 fc , 301 ; Luxembourg , 31 , 4 ; Paris and Lyons , 175 , 184 pm . ; Paris and Orleans , 44 i , 40 j Paris and &ouom , 30 , 88 : Namur and Hego . 0 } , 1 ; Western , of Franco , 4 . B pm . ; Groat Western of Canada , 1 « 4 , 1 7 * i Afiua Prias , 5 , 14 5 Brazil Imperial , 2 J , 3 ; St . John del Roy , 32 , 34 '; Linaroa , 8 J , 0 i ; Pontgibcaud , 154 , 10 $ ; South Aus > trahan . 3 1-16 , 51-10 pm . j Peninsulas , 4 pm .: Wallers , f . ft : Australioaian Bank , 77 , 80 ; Ohartoved Bank of AuHtralla , 22 , 22 * x . all ; Oriental 3 Jnnk , 30 . 38 \ Union Bank of Australia , 07 , 09 ; Australian Agricultural , 35 , 37 ; Crystal Palaco , 2 » , 25 ; General Sorow Stoam , 13 , 14 ( North British Australasian , 4 dls . Scottish AutitraUan Invoatmonb . H , 18 ; South Australian Land 33 , » B .
Untitled Article
CORN MA R K lil T . Mark Lano , Priday Evening , Deo . 1 . TIio supply of English -whoab has hoon moderato , yot prices continue to droop , without , however , kIvIdk way to any quotable extent . A few Baltic cargoes hn , vo arrived , and for the host kinds of old "Wheat there has boon bohio Ilttla aornawa . Tlw quantity now lit grjinary in London in vory « f . R B ? H"i ^ wltn somo demand from Ireland and thu \ VoBt Coast of England , for old Black Sea Wheat , the valuo of this < losprlptlon If M \ y malntainod . For Odessa Ghtrki * Wlioat , which wa » wold lust wook at 74 s . n . a much as 70 s . has boon pala . and other pareoln nro now held at 77 » . and 7 Bs . Stettin Wheat Ollbs . on paH . tago Is oll ' oredat 12 s . Rostock
Untitled Article
MONEY MARKET AND CITY INTELLIGENCE . Friday Evening , December 1 , 1854 . CoNSOiiB , on the whole , during the week , have ruled natter . than was anticipated last Saturday . Parliament having : been called for the probable end of finding moans to carry on the war , the embodiment of the militia , &c . &c , besides the still vexed question of the German Powers , all these ' considerations make the Funds very flat , avid nothing but : the coming dividend would k « ep them up at all . Railways and other shares havo been dealt in sparingly . Turkish Scrip has been drooping . The settling day , yesterday , passed off quietly , although there muse have been some very heavy lose » a on the Bull account in Turkish Scrip . Rumours are about that a now- Turkish , loan to a greater extent than heretofore , and to include the last three millions , with a guarantee from Prance and Englaud for the due payment of the interest , is in courao of agitation . Mining shares are utterly neglected . General Screws wore dull yesterday , people having fancied erroneously that the lost steamer , the JPrtnce , had not been bought by the Government ; but it is plain that the Screw Company has not only * sold the said vessel but also received payment , 105 , 0002 . Tho severe losses ; at sea in tho Euxine , although ' wanting absolute conilrmta . ation , have formed part of tho reasons for the depression of the market . Consols opened this morning at 91 J , 92 , have sine © been done at 91 ft , and close at four o ' clook at 91 ( , 2 for account , 92 for next time . Turkish Bcrlp 6 per cent , Jtussian Pives , 05 , 97 .
Untitled Article
1148 THE LEADER , [ Saturday ,
Royal Olympic Theatre. Lessee And Manager, Mr. A. Wigan.
ROYAL OLYMPIC THEATRE . Lessee and Manager , Mr . A . WIGAN .
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Dec. 2, 1854, page 1148, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2067/page/20/
-