On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (5)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
^ ^ ^ (0^^11111^0 . '^^^ ¦ w»»HrWi ^ i0
-
Untitled Article
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 Article
should say the work would make a suitable Christmas Wffliam . Limonr andother Poems . ( "W . Tweedie . )—FivdWantos of a poem in the Byronic vein , and four smaller pieces , comprise the contents of this small volume . The author , who has a very fair command of rhyme , has apparently studied " ¦ Don Juan" with great affection . "We have read worse verse—and better .
Untitled Article
for damages occasioned by his refusal to ^ imTT regular part of the Duke of Mantua in Riqoletto \ l agreement between the parties was int erpreted hi the artist to the effect that liemight , athis Pk 2 u » reject or throw up any and all parts unless an «« derstanding was previously come to between tlmm He objected to the r 6 le of the Duke , firstly becausp * had been promised , to Graziani , whom ho would no ? deprive of it ; secondly , because , to sing with Madam *
TIIE PALACE OF THE PEOPLE , MUSWELL HILL . This project is , we understand , neither dead nor sleeping . Its promoters will have hard work , of course ^ to counteract the various influences which may possibly be set in motion to establish the Exhibition of 1861 at South Kensington . They may possibly , also , find little favour with the council of the Society of Arts , from whom , as from all venerable bodies , we may apprehend mistrust of schemes not emanating from themselves . But we look upon it , that if they will but nail the educational colour to their mast-head , their way is clear , irrespective of court or corporation favour . A deputation of persons taking an interest in the plan has been warmly
received by Lord Brougham , who , we are pleased to hear , gives his hearty assistance . Among those who waited upon his Lordship were Dr . Booth , Mr . Owen Jones , Mr . H . Masterman , Mr . Chamerovzow , and Sir Charles Fox , who , it will be remembered , acquired so much renown as constructor of the building in Hyde Park . His Lordship , fully coinciding with the views of the deputation as to the value of a central educational institute and museum , expressed himself warmly in favour of a scheme which would comprise these advantages , and of any society which would bind itself , not merely to incorporate them with its prospectus , but to carry them out loyally and honourably . His Lordship terminated a long and cordial interview with a promise to place himself in immediate communication with various eminent persons , whose countenance and co-operation would , he conceived , be of value to the promoters . We hope within a few days to be favoured with a sight of the designs , which we understand Mr . Owen Jones to be hard at work upon , and to the perfecting of which a great deal of valuable experience paid for in Hyde Park and at Sydenham will , of course , be . brought to bear . Little doubt is expressed-in financial circles but that capital will be forthcoming in abundance for % he construction if the subscription list be well headed ; if the undertaking have the appearance of being conducted by persons of character ; and if the shares be of only one pound each . It is so obviously the interest of the railway companies to encourage an enterprise of such a traffic-bringing nature , that the investment must almost force itself upon their shareholders , supposing the capital not to be subscribed by the general public .
ST . JAME 8 8 HALL . A series of '" Popular Concerts" has been given during the last week at this handsome and commodious place of amusement , and have been numerously attended . Appealing , as they do , entirely to the taste of the million , the programmes demand no critical notice ; but we may record that they afforded unlimited satisfaction to the audience on each occasion . At the first concert , on Tuesday , Mr . Sims Rceves's indisposition created a good deal of disappointment ; but visitors on Wednesday had the pleasure of hearing that gentleman to advantage in Balfe ' s elegant ballad , " Come into the garden , ^ Taud . " Miss Dolby sang on botli occasions , and was much admired in
Mendelssohn's very popular duo , " O wert tho , u in the cold , cold blast , " which she sang with Miss do Villars . Miss Arabella Goddard , Miss Stabbacli , Miss Poole—who sang " Whero the beo sucks" delightfully—and Mr . Weiss , were severally as attractive as ever . That admirable corps of part singers , the Swedish Minstrels , who have returned from the provinces , sang several of their native melodies on Tuesday , and highly pleased the country visitors , of whom there were a number present , with their quaint costume . When we add that Mr . Benedict was conductor it will be taken for granted that sound taste in selection , and high-class execution characterised the series , which , we believe , it is the intention of the directors to repeat at intervals .
ST . james ' s theatbk . —fuench comic operas . M . r . Mitchell lias issued the prospectus of a French Comic Opera season , which id to open at this house on the 29 ^ b . of December , under the direction of Monsieur Kemusat , The repertoire ia an extensive one , comprising no loss than one-and-twenty operas by Auber , Herold , Adam , Ambrose Thomas , Halovy , Boieldlou , and Gre ' try . Among the artists named are Madame Ifaure , from the Thtfatro Lyrique Mdlle . Celine Mathieu , M . Kmon , from tho Op 6 ra-Comique , and M . Fougorea , from tho Ceurt Theatre , Amsterdam . It is proposed to carry on tho season to the end of March , and the nights of performance arc to be Mondays , Wednesdays , Fridays , and Saturdays . rooti mabio J
lltisaaid that M . Calzudo , of tho Paris Oporn , has been compelled to bug this interesting tenor , whose salary is stated to be no leas than U , ooo francs a month ,
Frezzohni , it would be necessary for him to raise hfo voice a half tone , which would be inconvenient The court , however , held that the powerof refusal however applicable to new business , could not ex tend to characters which formed part of the singer ' s standing repertory , and accordingly decided that he should appear as the Duke , when called upon by the management , under penalty of 6000 francs for each refusal .
THEATRICAL GOSSIP . The player world being intent upon preparations for Christmas blazes of triumph , we have no dramatic novelties of moment to report or criticise ; hut , as some of our readers may like a glimpse of the Cliristmas bill of fare of the London houses , we venture with all modesty and subject to correction , to furnish tlic best we have been able , through tho kindness of a friend or two , to compile . At l > rury Lane Theatre the pantomime' is , as necessary and usual , bv . Mr E . L- Blanchard , and is entitled Robin " liood . Stitchers , basket-frame builders , artificial furmakers , tailors , spanglers , mivsk-moulilers , artists and artisans
are , as may be imagined , in their wonted frenzy over the preparation of sylvan properties of all sorts . Messrs - Sutherland , Edwards ,. and John Bridgirian have long ago handed over their masque or pantomime of iif . d RiJiwj Hood to the tender mercies of the employes of the Pvne-Harrison management at the Co vent-garden Theatre . The famous W . 11 . Payne , by some termed the King of Pantomime , who has been absent for some years , is to be the Harlequin of this troupe . Mr . liuckstone has made a Christinas piece lor himself , not out of his own head , but out of a German legend . Messrs . Robson and liiuden , at the Olympic , who
are nightly driving away crowds from their doors , have a burlesque on Mazcppn , by Mr . II . I . Byron , the author of the admirable Maid av . d Magpie , which , we are glad to notice , is now drawing as it should some of the best company in town to the Strand Theatre . The fair and amiable lessee of this establishment is preparing a comic Krnilwort / i , by Messrs . Halliday and Lawrence , and will product in a few days a new comedietta by Mr . Francis Talfourd . The works at the Adelphi are making rapid progress under Mr . J . II . Wyatt , the stage being already laid . Gossip says that Mrs . Alfred Mellon will be once more at home on the boards she has so often graced , and that Mr . Wright , who is restored to health , will also appear . It is , however , to bo regretted that Mr . J , L . Toole , one of the most really talented comedians of the day ,, whose debut at this theatre we looked for with pleasure , will thus probably , for a time , be shelved . The performances on the 27 th will open with a dramatic Itevue of Adelphi fortunes past , present , and possible , by Messrs . Yates and Harrington , and will comprise a " Mother Goose" pantomime . Mr . iwbert Brough has written in his best manner a classic burlesque upon the siege of Troy for Mr . Ldmona Falconer , who opens the Lyceum on boxing want ; and Mr . Greenwood , co-lessee of Sadler ' s Wells , has adopted for the title of his pantomime , Old Itnan Wulton and Tom Moore of Fleet-street ; or , Harlequin and the Seven Sisters of Totleti / iam . CRYSTAL TALACE . The half-yearly report of the directors lias a straightforward appearance , and affords mutter oi congratulation to shareholders . Its most ngrceiiwe feature is the carrying over of 12 , 025 / . « n ™ J profit to next year's account after the distribution of 28 . 6 d . per share on the ordinary capital , a half-a-crown dividend on shares purchased at iw market price of the lust year or two is by no ¦ inoniw a despicable one , and its repetition , as Jar at lean » wo can see , may bo looked for if the present acthj and enlightened system of management is l ) Cr | lu . " to continue . A morning contemporary lias w favoured , somewhat prematurely , wo j ^>! , ' tho particulars of an Art Union , which it is pw poaod to establish in connexion with tho 1 » " . " All Prizes and no Blanks , " the dream song m the Marino Bazaar Girls , is , on ( lit , tho bhi / ° " ° this now institution , which must surely thcroioro looked for with intorost and anxiety by «//*¦«" speculators and the general public . *» irt to comprise 10 , 000 subscribers m . guinea each , among whom 7000 / . worth oi j » or in every branch of Hue ami prnnmontiil ^™ will bo distributed as prizes , and thu rest m solutions , " collating of p lu > tograi > l >* , g ^ plastics , ceramic woFks , &o . It if thus . cnlc <>« that , in addition to his superior chance , c c » scrlbor has the minor c ertainty <> i »» »» , | y | , guinea ' s worth of something . As thin eft . »« ' » . > said of tho subscription onijravlnge distrlhuwu » i
Untitled Article
M . » n Lamartino . —A Paris letter says : — I notice with great regret that tho Lamartino Fund Comnaittoo have put forth , within tho last fow days , what they call A final appeal to Franco . It i , » written in very earnest terras , and requests lmmedia ' to aid , as tho only moans of Bftvlng a man who has merited well of his country as a poet and patriot . I fear this means the worst . I have heard , Indeed , lately , that tho subscription Is making no progress , and that not more than ft third of tho total sum required has yet been received . "
Untitled Article
Florence . A Tale . By M . E . Hammond . ( J . Black-¦ w ood . —This Tale must be read with the help of the last u Dictionary of Quotations" and the " Gems of Poesy . " No , the readers may dispense with the latter , for they will find a perfect deluge of poetical quotations from Byron , Moore , Longfellow , Coleridge , Tennyson , Tope , Goethe , Crabbe , Hemans , and many more of the dii majo res et minores of the realms of Parnassus . We hardly know what to say to such patchwork literature . Quotation is laudable when used with judgment ; but when half a work is made up of poetical extracts , then ¦ we cannot help fancying the author must heave had some lower purpose than to present apt illustrations of his or
her opinions and meanings ; and , acting on our fancy , ive are bound to enter our protest against it as unfair to readers , and tiresome exceedingly to critics . " Florence " is a slight story , with not overmuch probability either in plot , moral , or characters . We do not find such super-refined honour or honesty in real life as is exhibited by Mr . Dudley , who beggars himself to pay a relative ' s " speculative liabilities , nor young ladies of such double-distilled notions of 4 e l ' cacy as nis daughter [ Florence , who , when a beggar , rejects the hand of a young , handsome , and rich nobleman because of a bygone liaison with a peasant-girl . Readers of the romantic school will , however , revel in the ornate pages of
" Florence . " The Autocrat of Hie Breakfast Table . By Oliver TVendall Holmes . ( Edinburgh ; ' R . Strahan and Co . London ; Hamilton , Adams , and Co . )—This is a contribution from the American field of literature . We cannot venture to describe it , but we recommend the reader who loves smart writing , quiet humour , sometimes rising to wit , with here and there a bit that will set him a thinking , to buy the book , and read it- —but not in a hurry . Shahmah in Pursuit of Freedom ; or , the Branded Hand . Translated from the original Showiqh , and Edited by an American Citizen . ( Nevr York : Thatcher and Hutchinson : London : Sampson Low and Co . )—The " Persian
Letters , " " Turkish Spy , " and similar productions , have furnished the hint for the form of this tale . Shahmah is the " counterfeit presentiment " of a handsome Kabyl * who has received educational training at the Kabyle College , who beconjes a proficient in arts and sciences , who falls enthusiastically in love with descriptions on paper and verbal of tho Government , the laws , the social institutions , and especially the practical freedom of the United States , and makes a voyage there for the purpose of verifying by actual observation all the pleasant pictures with which his imagination is filled . The humour of the work is to be found in Shahmah ' 3 disappointment and mistakes when he comes
bodily into contact with the realities of American social life . The " domestic institution "—slavery , of coursestartles and staggers him aa the thing inconceivable among a people who had published to the world " their declaration of independence , " and asserted the " perfect equality and brotherhood of mankind , " The author has brought out some strong points in American life , and has with much ability illustrated several phases of the ? ' domestic institution , " placed them in a light that will be not very highly regarded by Southerners . There is a love * story mixed up with the work , very agreeably breaking the monotony which would othorivise attach to a work of this peculiar character .
Noble Deeds of Women . By Elizabeth Starling . Fifth Edition . ( H . G . Bohn . )—Five editions are a sufficient recommendation of tho work . If wo accept all as truth that we find recorded in these well-told pages , farewell to the vaunted ouperiority claimed by the lords of creation . The Boy ' s Own Tot / -maker . ~ - ~ Hy E . Landells . With Numerous Engravings , ( Griffith and Farren , )—A nice little book , full of pleasant amusement for head and fingers . Ihxys of Old . Three Stories of old English History for the Young . ( Cambridge : Mncmillan and Co . )—Old history is here put in a new and a taking dross . Tho youth of the preaewt generation have advantages not dreamt of in our own days of jacket and corduroys . The stories in this pretty book are well selected and well told .
^ ^ ^ (0^^11111^0 . '^^^ ¦ W»»Hrwi ^ I0
€ \) uIub ntti < Ktrterta « im ? nte-
Untitled Article
1350 THE "LEADER . [ No . 455 , December 11 , 1858 - - i ' - ' . ¦¦ ill .,. ! .. — ¦ . ^^ ter ** ' - _ -... * .. J - . ^^ i — ^ wi ^ m ^ M i i ^_^__
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Dec. 11, 1858, page 1350, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2272/page/14/
-