The New York Herald Newspaper, May 20, 1851, Page 3

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0 and events can only say whether the i rtism is yy worn ont to take or after @ brief and hazardous impe: THE GREAT BXHIBITION 1X LOND Part of the Exhibition. American {From the London 2) the ing aren of the The Americans Exhibition eastw: of nts into which tne Crystal zinece See Sees pov teri ~ | ns, least orpammental’ qualities. b ble excitement in t! nity, and throughout the United States. | Sueh ave the peaceful blic, and among the in Boston it has come to hether a man has a the Unjon the col (hut there was no question about the matter at i—that bis dark doom was as unchan ure, or the color of : as it 6 black skin, and was born in vor gid —crimes undoubtedly very great, but not ch as to condemn to a slavery that can only termi- sie with life. Simms affirms that he is free, even +luveholders’ law—that while he was yet an ht him of his master-—and been contradicted. rove that Simms has onth to his master for the of working for a liviog—a bargain of rew Weary, and went for its effect upon eedings in the model -colored men of Penn- | New World instincts, other nations, or | Crystal Palace. have no idea of being jostled b; inched for spaee, even in the hile the industries of other countries have been screwing themselves up tight, and getting into the smallest possible compass, thut emigrationtrom France, | Europe generally. of the United States invit from ourselves, from the rest of It wants expansion, and it has does it hesitate to render its actual condition fest to the world. Other nations rely upon their | proficiency in the arts, or in manufactures, or in machinery, for producin, She is proud of ments, which Garrett, or Ra would reject as worthless; she is proud of her ma- ,, Which would hardly fill one corner of our bition, and upon the merits of which our civil engineers would not pronounce a very fluttering the thinks a great deal of her first efforts marble, by an untaught seulpter ; nor is rounded Indiun” a work unentitlea to praise. collected on the north side of the nave, in the centre of which have been placed Power's Greek statue and a great block of tin from New Jersey. On the south side she has manufac- kinds—carriages of the slimmest construction and most adaptable forms, light sleighs, excellent harness, capable of being played © height of his stati mms, it seems, has a fant, bis father ‘boug! her agricultural imple- * udidavit, we believe, has not is master hag witnesses to en for years worki . over ten dollars & Sinms very natural Keston, in the watever they mi, his family alone. os , might go to the support | These objcets are all American ‘ane American law is now ed to sanction ‘the practice of kidna) loved man as it may suit the conver tify the :evenge of men who dare say that he is cl, as the horse they ride, ughter, ie theirs. Amezisan or bullock the: ww is asked to defy ition, which guarantees that no man M be deprived of life and libert; es, aye, and the eternal welfare, of the Ngee of oe who y tread, as the plague The Fugitive Slave law is a lace to Awmeriza than slavery itself. partial in its operations by four performers at & fine collection of in which all the great men of the States, in science, in literature, in have their lineaments accurately ey have furnished |, in the course of a they have hewn out a vast empire from primey: forests. All these things they are, and may be, tie iakibitton, htly drag compartment o E:xhibition they rightly you off to the extreme south to admire their raw produce. That is the striking and the valuable In the mineral and the vegeta- dom their country is equally rich; and, its bowels or merely scratch be equally discerning and ui ay moran ie ee Cr paced an col ns illustrative of geology of particular neighborhoods; the Americans have one of the whole State of Marylaad. lives and for- | Mute the land ; in some degree to be rticipates. He may fi be his—-but till the Fugitive sey he is the abetter of slaveholders— | part of their show. are to be met with amidst the -urope than what the l'ugitive Slave yet America can offer the Hun- | rian refugee a home, and can refuse it to the fu- ive slave, for whose wrong and agon: zs a fuarful—God grant it may not stooc+ent must be made. \bvlitionists of Boston, of America, be up and ; in England there are sympathisit Of course cotton, to- and Indian corn, figure prominently in this and although these are not it be examined with interest. ‘They also intended to exhibit samples of Yankee hock, believing thut those french jucts manufactured from grapes ti strictly fulfilled the rules of the that wines sent for ex- ym unusual sources.” rt of their s Poreltier, pale wi grown in Uinel ‘al commission requirin, ition should come “ «lee than the roar of your own Niagara, shall be for the slave. Foremost in e+truggle, and readiest to joy in the common vic- y to be won in the name of humanity and religion, Falter not—rest not—talk not of lard Fagland’s ay ee established maxim of law, not been recognized b; and none of the fo be regarded as their reepective them have no gal executive com- lery space over ound-floor allotments. if ry accommodation at all; others have it in part overhead, and in part where it was available elsewhere ; the consequence is, that no given of the dis- lleries (two on each ward from the tran- the allotments been the ease, the unfinished state of the preparations in this department would south side the Swiss it w variety of their lighter manu- » lace, jewelry, ermans, on the the Christian principle gainst the common humanity of and his threats, his bluster and like powerless and vain. English- pn, to you, in his extremity and loneliness, turns isa manand a brother. ~ ovigia is as noble and his destiny as glorious as wu own. The Almighty bre: leuth of life, and the inspiration of the Highest ve him understanding. 1 ust, and he will rise an emanc! Bristol and the Co pucestershire have account can be position of spaces in the four side of the nave) that ran ¢ . Liven, howeve more regularly made t American slave. into him the have rendered a it, then, to say, that on t! a e Hi-Slavery Society has followed’ in their steps; m May is the month of ion, In this great metropolis, in a few hered together the religion, the , of the land. Almost have an advocate. factures, such as silks, em ribands, and straw plaiting. same side also, have constructed a lar; tide, the elgians, the Germans as ‘ isplay. 6 ferent varieties or lace for which ls of buildings | fly perfumery and which last inentioned material, uets of the Queen, Washington, and Cen. Taylor, are exhibited. {From the London Post, May 2.} ppearance of the interior from the east lery, whence the spectator commands the produc- tions of foreign countries, is not equal to that from the west, because the less ornamental products of the United States are the first objects that present themselves below; and in the is much space unoccupied, sn‘ and cases are too conspicuous. the floor on the east end is occupied by an elevated | railway, that has no merit ay a work of decorative art, but beyond this there is much to attract atten- The foreign portion of the nave isindeed more ornamentally displayed than the western side of the pt. There isa larger pro of them of colossa’ an amazon on horseback attacking a foness that has sprung on the flanks of her conspicuous objects; and re works in marble, and ry few works of manufac- | e general effect of the arrangement of the central avenue, as seen from the eastern galle- | ry, is, however, considerably impaired by a ver} high sercen of painted glass, the beauty of whic! cannot be perceived from that point of view, and it excludes the sight of the objects beyond. from the centre to the display of goods on each side, there is a manifest superiorit: must be done. are famous ; the seco: the American slaye, and that no narrator will NM of the life-long misery by whieh he is withered . wat by which the democracy of the West be- ies a by-word, a mockery, and a lie. Europe. . Alexander Lee (formerly Mrs, Waylett) dreceatiy in London, after a painful illness of | en years’ duration, which obliged jish the profession to which she was so ‘he bore her suffe; tion. She was one of ist of Caglish ballad singers. Siv Claudius Stepben Hanter, Bart., died recent}; Mortimer Hill, Berks, in the seventy-sevent! A vacant seat is thus cauved inthe men, of which Sir Claudius was th: | He was elected alderman of the ward o iige Without in 184, a period of nearly half a feries around there unfinished counters ( rtion of statuary, Admiral Sir Edward Codrington ex; | bis yesidence in aton sqaare. 4 horse, is one of the most in of the Babet i At the ever memorabl tain of the Orion. anded on the oeeasion of the Walcheren ex, le was afterwards employed at the nee of Cadiz, and commanded a squadron co-ope- ting with the Spanish patriots on the coast of 5, gar, he was capt in the taste with that on the British side. glass, china, and irrors bewilder the eye with tho repetitions of » tectionist members of Parlinment were perched en and ially gained povseasion of. This is | the riches before them; and one glancing } ‘igh, watching the suspiciouscharacters, the Ames. pray to east of ie transept, 4 at the yet unfilled territory of Russia, he arrives in | ca," Citizens showed no disposition to carry out the =pacious one built, commanding & and tole- the ample where riea puts forth her va- | plan of conspizacy laid down by the New York rably close view of the ceremony. il at once the rious strength in competition wish that of the old | Heala; and world; that tu: the “chapels,” he gases | sible in the Prussian department, the representa- | their stations are ruthlessly turned out, and a! | Upon a series of central wonders, gigantio in somo | tives of th ® S00 I- democratic republic were cngaged | sorte of strange rumors zo about as to the destin; rched upon o: east, played the “as~ eee reo | bee by still more uncertain me though arms of #!l kinds were aceos , ladies and gentlemen who have snugly taken up | ti nd tho most | Afterwards the st i tus lateral auveets of poleer any proceeded, destrians strode oettotra without intermiinden as slong ee Or apparent dimieu- one regard, either in that of size or valuo—amocg | by their pas ticipation in the enthusiasm of the mo- | of the tuboved structure. “It is for the corps 2 | tion, until late in the af | them a huge and noble colossal Crusader, whose | nient, instead the blood-thirsty designs attributed | pomai i “Tt is for th: i depart | | stature seems almost fabulous—a vast window, to them. It wa * Marked that, while tho sovoreigns | It is tater so ficies of partinents where the glowing r riches otoolee in glass are te | of the Continent ee ae es wee bal ta- | 90 cutragecus notion comes into fushion that it has | P : vished in honor in masterly ilu ion of the | lions iz, am! While the slightest oxpression | been kept for the ‘Lord Muyor’s family,” an in- Our transatlantic descendants, following out their | poct of terrors—an organ, whose tones of extraor- | of politicul fecting dy’ repressed by thei conten and | timation which ie my hed tivany < Plbod roll Merge nary power thunder down that loag nave in tre- | cen of a Ngland, with not an armed | dieapprobation, and with ithe mendous waves of melody—end upon the Bolden man in él Hs many epi 3 | nt, walked wiih ber children in her hands | m: within a hand's breadth 0," the mot suspected iaeu | A ith | by no ne flottoring to the dignity of the mansionhouse, is tolerably good humor, and the con- ried oD an ign fe are parti “ulurly facetious. ype, 8 little drummer or fifi cage in which lies imprisoned the dixmoad dia- mond, the mountain of light, the priee of a king- | in Europe, whuse refuge ut exile che great powers dom,—we cay that the reuder whose womory or | have sought to distmb, ima ion can set before him a tenth purt of the | ‘The pealing tones of the gra*t organ were 9 4i- r somethi: way throug! Tostantly, as he ets, the huodredth part ef wuieb wo have not | ting prelude to the National Anghem, in which the even indicated, will not be surprised to hear that, | uniied cboire were offvetively heart. ‘This was the after the first flutter of mere novelty hud subsided, | greater plencure tothose assemble}, a* fears had | pisecs @ ¢ of long. lack-eyed men, the assembly that filled the %roigu nave yesterday [piped es ned that the music won'Y not be well | there rises a “+ Place pour le petit tambour.” morning evinced 9 curious and resthess astonish- | heard under a glass reof. Much more would have 1 6 Dates done ywil est centit, te petit drcle la.” Oh, ment. They were not, avd eould not have been | been required to meot the ¢ f a musica) | men Dien, vert le petit guerriea, avec la trompette.” Progered foe the display which thus broke upon | critic, but, coneidering the building, the lncongruous vet of the goutleie: i hem, and whieh gave forth some new feature of | materials of which the choir was composed, ape the | cit voart dresses, also » Ha continental Ea- | wonder as the eye either turned or fixed itvelf. It | posision of the perfer:nere xt the side of the tean- { rope in general with lively curiosity aud interos wax curious to remark (hut ufter the first hour | sept, the execution was very good. It was notioed | Une magnificent specimen, in an overpoweri there was comparatively little buzz or conversation | by the frequentera of the Opera, that im the “God | Ceched-hat and marvellously tight breoches, cvoked among the thougands in that part of the buildiag. | suve tle Queen,” ae in the “Hallelujeh Chorus,” { &P involuntary exclamation ® party of Pa Silent astonishment was the Very natural result of | the tones of Lablacke’svoiee were easily te be dis- | riviens of * iy tis, of the Crystal Palaco as in the ematler limits of the | the party of au Haymarket theatre. It is likewise worthy of re- | most gevtly. More good temper and seasonal muik, (Let the Cones of the great organ were mw gcnsible a w distance of eighteen hundred feet, or thrice the hength of the longest eathedral. One of the announcements of the Queen’ arrival was the unveiling of her colossal representative, ox- | be allowed hibited by the Veille Mortagne “Zine Company. | aud in whi Anothor Waa tho putting in activity the erystal foun- | stoutly- pus teins, which, during theroya! presence, played with | © the co: cologhs, large supplics of which bad been provided the ‘night before. This odor was the { mote agreeable te some of the company, as a large | &+F movtion must be made of the perfeetly | arty of ladies and gentlemen standing under the gentlemanly sxd Kindly demeanor of an oificer 9 anuer of Tuscany had been suspected of indulging | the engineers, to whom the writer is indebted for jusra, from the strong smeli given | the edcellent pesition which he at lust uttainod. juows productions of Florence im their Incidents of the D, : {From the London News, May 2.) On the admission of the holders of’ season tickets, at 10 o’clock, they found that, however penetital they had been, a large extent of tho building was already oceupied by the favored of the officials, to whom’ were assigned al! the preverable seats. ‘There was fortunately little delay at the doors ia showing the tickets, as the droaded delay of signa- ture was not exacted; andthe visitor, oa entering, passed between an attendant, who glanced at the ticket, and a policeman, who tendered acard. In the hurry to get the expected early dent, very few noticed ihat the official catalogues were on’ sale. | f Notwithstanding the great delay in obtaining the } jp spirituous names of the foreign exhibitors, and the statement | forth by the made two days ago, tho visitors were agreeably acd their blue-coated rulers, ia which ved to admiration why they should nerosch upon the ceremonial space— the lutter, with smiling faces but ng shoulders, demonstrated their view, trevy, that the central square ought to must be kept clear at all hazards. The in command were alo most conu:teous, and | surprited to obtain for their sbilling » copious cata- Be rapa teodlatie swept along amid aimiring Bye mmgeagenisuper~-; -aRtggetonpenieniaaa logue; thoug' ae many noceeenry and acknow- | eyes, and the Queen poobsechs Hi enter fully into the F [from the London News, May 2.) oe inate PO, 5 rhe ebulky oes Was | spi of the scone. The procession was worthily | , arly rises the May-day sun; but he had no auded about with satisfaction, asa good shilling’s | Closed by the ladies of the court in full dress, whose | 192g shone upon London streets yesterday morning, worth, though all the vbjects were not numbered, | on i sone ” ( oe hic! and the expected bulk of advertisements was not | beauty waa semarked, even in the presence of the | etek Lo! Becerra oc, oper Welch pense’ thee m " i many bardscme women of sll lands whom the | (he May-day of 1851 was no ordinary anniversary. ry Meee bor Fe the sapernents enlightened as pia of the day had brought together At am hour when the thoroughfares ‘are generally Ni th poy it 900 auis test Letwean Moses and | On the departuro of the cortge the barriors ware | occupied only by the purveyors of new milk and ivoll for the guines advertisement on the last | thrown down, and the crowd soon dissipated ityelf | bot rolls, # sprinkling of Page, It is te be presumed neither of the com- | in the vast chambers of tho Crystal Palaco; the | cocup: its were disposed to concede the addition é ig 100, scmblage receiving now accessions from the la made up for a day at the ‘World's Fair,” er, ifnot as the place of honor is occupied by a watchmaker. | ‘isice, win inline the, pihetaie te. “id i j i ividu- | The portion of the illustrated catalogue. published | ‘iit we had to initiate the officials in the formas | Ems teal jn going te go ke Jel of examining tiekets and exacting signatures. at ten shillings, was not esteemed such a good bar- On the cast side of the northern transept en- | [he pitiless storm of so many previous forenoons gy as the shilling one, inasmuch as the high ims exacted seem to have deterrod exhibitors from contributing engravings. Neither of tho cata- logues were of much good, however, to the poares- sors, as there was no opportunity of rauking use of and robing rooms for her Majesty, and fluted with | into Vivacious groups, they exchanged meteorologi- blue and white drapery. It thas been fitted up by | ©2! pregnostics, rect chronologies, and com- Meesrs. Jackson and Graham. On tho top of the | pleted arrangomente for the commisvariat. Pre- such a guide exterior is gn eoriehed cornies, silt and over the pi es bel pa beh bes an 7 veo ag the | - sien entrance a bold shield, with branches of laurel sur- | “€parste atoms composing rp itr wc Cite pata exPataton thatthe oa: | cunt by'n crow hoo git ‘ih enact | thith began acearingy s movo off inva wonariy Mee open caine ne: hash pls on ba wg the reception room is hung with portieres of tapes- | direction, and thus, what the author of the “Ves- ponetuality, Dut the more leisurely dandies, who | {13> Bartly worked with gold, and tho entrance to | tiges” would call a “mob-mist” became a well- reakfasted late, and camo just before eleven, got | jined with blue silk. The furniture in the H . ; rt abd i i, re. i two | &geregating into a nucleus around the Crystal in comfortably and could chocas their places a8 | yooms is all covered in blue silk damask of Spital- Pitace. Any London sight-ecer i'n long-suticcay rely as the carlicst comers. | he great bedy of | felis munufusture, one portion being vichly carved | #24 Vigilant animal. Ho gets up betlmer, rand visitors entered on foot nt the oaat entrance, snd by | and gilt, and the other of walnut wood. ‘Tho car- | b*aces his enorgies to the toil of pleasure, knowing pet is of tho richest velvet, tho design groups of | Well how serious a thing apus:ment is, and how reees and convolvulus. The canopy over the | becessary it is half-past nine the row of carriages, extending to Longacre, induced moet of tho occupants to got out and walk through the Park, through whicl " ueen was $2 fect square, with the corners taken | the same persevering, taking-time-by-the-forelock | comfortable passage was kept by the police. In BS und suspended eA ihe Unroas Sah height of | spirit that he would set about a har day’s work. their over-earnestaess, such of the ticket-holders a3 | yo'joct. it ig divided on the under side into 12 | Steadily, therefore, and betimes, did this great body had not carringes, or had not had the prudence to | Compartments, cach & feet square, aad 4 halves, | of Londoners commence its pilgrimage to Hyde engage a cab or fly overnight, had, if they came | giyigod diagonally from poiut to point. Tach Park. The pilgrims, however, moved on leisurely, | from a suburban distriet, to walk for pint, 86 nO | compartment is uted from tho centre with blue | "°t with the rush and scramble they are wont to cab was to be found on the stands, and the Hansom silk, and has # star of Brunswick (gilt) where they exhibit when crowding into some theatre or other drivers occupied themselves in plying between mect; round ths outside of the canopy, is a dra- place of entertainment calculated to bold a limited Charing Cross and Hyde Park corner,.for which pery of blue friuge, with blue and wht ¥ the fate demanded was three shillings at cight | ents and ropa dropping © little at exch angle. | mined to make a day of it, they thought it right to | o’clock, and two shillings at nine. Many of the 's surmounted 3 acornice with gilt mount- | make the day as long as possible ; ‘but, knowing male ng left their carriages and separated nd upon the faciaa bold enrichment of laurel that in the park whither they were bound there was from their parties, leaving the ladies to follow | jeaves (gilt) upon bluo ground, and « plume of blue ample room and verge for them all, they manifested pegs while the elder dowagers deferred their | gnq white ostrich feathers at cach angle. no Violent hurry to get there. | visit till the afternoon in expectation of a crush, ‘The interval, a full hour, that elapsed between Before eight 0” , the vehicles conveying the which, however, did not take place. the inaugurative en route and return of the royal | *¢ason ticket bearers began to accumulate in the ‘The spectators doomed to four hours’ station on | curidge, was fied up by the vast multitude ina | #4in channel of communication, and swell rapidly their feet were obliged to beguile tho time by | variety of ways. It would puzzle arithmetic itself | 9* the hour of opening drew nearer; and ever} watching the arrivalof the vistors and the few | toreckon,or bbage’s calculating machine to cast | branch strect and i! a chance incidents which presented themselves As, | up, or the enunerators of the census itself to ascer- | Moving contents to the great tide. For inc | however, very large sections of the community were | tain, the exact number of the multitude pleasantly | three hours this tide never ebbed. ward it there en masse, or largely represented, few wore with- | perambulating the park and its precincts, aud | Telled in one unbroken vebicular current, stagnat- out friends or companions, and a kind of morning | passing on, liko permutation, from point to point, ing at various narrow gorges, or at embouchures of conversaztone was established. Hore a speoalative | im all the spirit of Englich holiday good humor, | C's strects, into dark marées that resembled the squire, who had oceupied one of the lady's seats on | Thousands were whiling away the tino upon the | “eep block pools in a water-course. Multifarious the chance of holding it throughout the celobra- | greensward or on the borders of the Serpentine, | Wee the component atoms of this vast current. tion, deaf to hints and insinuatiens, and the eac- | which—the appearance of it having a most re- | Stylish carriages kept their panels barely clear o casms of the fair expectants, was, to the consola- | markable effect—was completely encircled for the | the poles of cockney-stuffed omnibuse: tion of the A degen e induced to give way to the | nonce, from bank to bank and bridge to boathouse in were Lmpiegastly blockaded by hac! F eloquence of a policeman. ‘There a cathedral | with uvest bracelet of human beings, while upon | Citizens’ gigs, and economical brougbams. Still, ing the whole body—from tho organist in his doc- | tring crait fired forth ealutes, k ; ae robes, and the vetoran Bie down to tho welch ed voice of twenty guns that “the Palace of side swelled over or beyond the trofforrs, wntil the urchin treble, just entered his novitiate—wandered | Judustry was opened,” and was now a fart accompli. | *reets becamo literally chokefull; the torrent | about without knowing how to got to their places | Amongit tho epivodical incidents that engaged the | Changed into a tideway when nearly at tho flood, of performance. ‘Tbe most interest was, however, | attention of the multitudes without while the grand | #24 the pulsations of stoppages or progress were felt in the wanderings of Lublache,deading # corps | inauguration was going on within, and which came | Tefected back like the “bore” of the Severn from of prime donne and assistants from the regious of | to the rescue to ‘ait up the time, were tho deploying | Hyde Park corner to Somerset House. police for aecess to the transept. it was not till | @ balloon a league up aloft in the sualight; and | “*me over the scenc. The known punctuality of Ther half an hour’s peregrinaton that the object | the aimberne ro thas and boys, rol dex. | royal movements warned Sa gn Be the mi- of bis mission was attained. terity of squirrels, upthe boughs of the stalwart nute fixed in the programme for closing the doors Groups were to be seen of personages of every | trees, thinking that without n * visitor's ticket” | Would be observed as uccurately as the occultation claim to notoriety. There were Turks, Mexicans, | (hey would be able from that altitude to obtain a | of # Jupiter's satelite, and all who had set out with and Parsecs clustered together; close by was a | furtive peep through the transparent roof at what the intention of assisting at the Inauguration of group, of young Englanders under the presidence of | was going ou inthe crystal arcade. Meu and wo- | ‘he, Industrial Fexbibition were either already lr. Sydvey Herbert ; in another knot were Cau* | men, who profes to supply ad within the building, or had given up all thoughts ¢, Ledru Rollin, and, possibly, Louis Blane— | standing room, were busi i Y od invit Hage * ich the space has been fitted up, compared with | ag the slender proportions of the latter geutleman | tion to a profusion of Spooner upon wiihele for so | Pair. ‘These privileged classes being subtracted, the are easily hidden under the bulky forms of his bre- | much « hend, the occupants ‘balanced themselves | *teets were eft altogether to the people aud their He was also captain of the fleet in the ke, and at New Orleans in 1814. 1827, with the combined fleot he destroyed Vurkion fleet in the harbor of Na zetted on five occasions, Isl4, 1815. | For Mediterranean station. leo held other naval appointments. ed Devonport in l'arliament from 1832 to lu polities he was a decided“ liberal.” Sir hiwacd was decorated with the Grand Cross of the rider of St, Louis and St. George of Russia, and ith the sceond class, avd . " candelabra of the Austrian comp: # brilliant appearance, and as well as most of the contrib | "premiera age od eink ag eanboney _ | the panoply of his dignity state cap, with button age i al effect o separate compartments resemble suits of apa sim Neng with ware gett arr ag with | race as yet seen in this country ; very different from draperies; on counters alongsi: e goods are placed, not divided into sections of individeal | glorious Chinese Exhibition. The mandarin is a $ Sey bey the poner pre- portly pervonage, above the middle is effeet is more distinctly h visible when, descending from the gallery, the ks along the main avenue and looks down the vistas of ornamental themselves on each side as ing contrast with the display of ornamental works in the foreign compartments -aljotning, aro the jucts of manufacturia, from the Euro- contributors, but ducts of each nation tho Gold Cross of the ¢ deceaset was well rs oa terme of intimacy «uk an old Gloucestershire family, and was ‘Mr. Codrington, ¥ + Hall, and leaves . uutess of Radnor died recently at Lord pa » Coleshill, Berks. ining health for some time past; never- her demise occurred somewhat unexpectedly. hter of the late Sir Henr; wy, nod married the karl o| beloved; by her ed in mourning, aday, April 3d, at t Montague street, aged 75. an, Heary Bromley, third aving inarvied, has not bad any ented Cambridge ite married, in plain but useful pr try from the United States. i promincat corridors at the eastern ontrance is filled with a great arrayof American India-rubber over- nd shoes, among which iv a Brobdignayian boot, that might have dangled a« an attraction to customers in front of some store in Broadway similar contrast, too, with the Susi interests that distinguish the foreign here cannot fail to be not it of competition that per In very many cases it is evi the cxhibitors regard the opportunity for the dis- play of British manufactures merely as the means establishments, Her ladyship had y noble families are pl wtfort died on Wed ded his father in 178 : of ‘advertising {From the London ¢ In the foreign nave we looked in vain for many Our visitors had, no doubt, been at- tracted to that portion of the building whic gave them a view of the ceremonial of the day events, we saw but few in t Here and there,_a piquant the gentler express lew dark eyebrowe aho filled the office art of the edifice face contrasted come Germans, but they bore small proportion to the number who must have been ‘The only part of this nave where any fo- prominent was at the extreme end, where, under the immediate protec- tion of the stars and the stripes, thero was a toler. | able muster of our American relatives. the ladics here displayed great personal attractions, | inthe younger casca en! having performed ( ot & private theatre, induced to relinquish’ buil . rect certai ones in the dpany at Ashburton by Mg. Hughe » His first ay ane was on the Mth of Oct ik of, wnd crowned with ap- gaged at the Haymar- bof August inthat year his benefit, the warm-weather (ra good success, he | manager of the mance at Drary neod by that singular | erance remarkatle in the Amer somewhat largely are which we have te with our ides of our go-a-head r The unmistakeable “ Yes, sir,” vir,” were hore heard in their gem ritasivemess, and we see no reason for not mentioning the fact that the hat (against which there sceme to be a deter was illustrated by many curious and quaiat varie- that carnworn expression of learned to aveoc ot ween the * dungs” 4 coded ja the » | one reboll carver and gilder, to the watch- rincipal rides in the burlesque were Jowton, Mathews, a» branetseo, Abrahamides, Zachariades, The great success of “'T which Mr. Dowton played King / ),bumorously, stimulated him to this at- principal Shakspearian charac- Sir John Falstaf and Dogber Ilypoerite,” he was boot pre re = Anthony A ith the procee t Her Majesiy’s Theatre, a fow years romity waa purchased, ou whieh he lived a old age,” happy ic the boom of irg® circle of professional and ed crusade this year) Listoa, and Mrs. We have given, and propose to give elsewhere, too many details of the oxntent * of the building to necessary for us to dwell, at prevent, mpon soene which the foreign Although some of furnished, and compartments are not yet although three or four pedestals wait their statues, the nave is now sufficiently filled to dieplay what will he ite abiding elw when the reader who had not the good furtane to be present yesterday morning calls to mind that, im- mediately on enterivg this he stands between the marbles of the Acropolis and the ivorics of Canton; that, as he proceeds, he finds Spanish minerals and Spanish silke on ove hand, and # gliltering divplay of other ; that he passe rtion of thes building, wise horology on the ig the artistic tren array of the in- y of France, whieh fe g a ig aod ~~ i Jn tapestry; that he next fin pm the Trinecty eplendos of the Aust where sevit of gor, ‘The number of persons killed aunoumts to five + aro na follow -— Miss of man to Mevers. Wilson, Little, and Henshaw, street, Manchester; & boy named Newell, maker at Whitley. The Sth. a man an ded owly furnished chambers, in hemselves wn exhibition, shows miracles of cary- nd gikdings, and inlaid @oors, that seem the that he then marches wader the Zollverein, whieh * bomber reriously | probably not far hermldio ensigns of the whol note of oss grieeowily — $ seme to have extant article, Von of gee fod tuxacy, aad wager thren in the provisinal government and in exile. on their lege, at the risk of being overbalanced vehicles, aud greatly the people scem to enjoy , Some Intorest was excited among the expectant | aliogether. ‘ihe grass that afew hours before pre- | themeelves upon the occasion. All tho omuibuses audience, by the solitary Chinese mandarin in all | sented a rich green had now, from the trampling of London ay ‘od to have been pressed into their the multitude, assmed a compleaion pectoctly pou | service for this particular route, and they were all | and peacock’s feather and full ermbroidoted vest- | de soie. Mult and alcoholics being proscribed, the | Mled to overflowing. Cabs debouched in hundreds ments. He is one of the finest specimens of the | mildest thing indulged in was a draught of now | "P02 the line, driven desperately wherover there milk, and the posse comitatus, on the return of the | ¥4* 100m, end stopping impatiently when the caps diplomatiyue avd of the civio authorities, | ‘team came toa deadlock. This came to its oli- | amused themselves and those function: by | max during the ten minutes requisite for the royal | | the slim A-Shing and his colleagie of the once ge, with the raising ironical“ horrubs,”” which in cortege to cross {rom Constitution Hill into Hyde lique, or, as " . 6 effec 4 snine two spirited | Lark, when Piccadilly became blocked with car- Hares, attached tek eaer e a a iage cans | Hinges, marsed together like icebergs during an characteristic Chinese features, the ob! they are vulgularly understood, pi withstanding the recondite evabroie vet and silk, tho lady gazers were str tonishnient at his clumay shoes, beldame's clogs. On the comin ceremonial the mandarin was admitted within (he ae ing nnd kicking, and breaking the carriage polo, | *eolves when the procession had passed by, the hae to alight nnd walk through the perksn Id two dégde commenced. From the Hunk Po Kensington or three other justances the came foolish manifesta. | ‘Wupike, the roadway during the whole day pro- | tion, but which was fortunately sapprewed, thres- | * nted an apt illneteation of the principles of arte- courtly circle, aud much surprise was excited on | teved w like disastrous effect. Albert-gate, in com- | 4 drainage; snd its features might have been his approaching the (Queen, stooping down, «ad | mon with all the other main’ thoronghiares, was | *ttdied, with advo by the commisdoners now kissing her shoe, boing indicative of the homage | besieged and blockaled by the crowd. or lately sitting in Greek street, Soho. , to the Lmperor in China. On the arrange- | All the-ebops in Kensington were closed, rth and south of the great artery, London is meat of the procession the mandarin wax conspicd- | wero very generally displayed, and the * - ‘The silence in Bloomsburiana, and the soli- , walking in front of the forcign ambassadors. | siums” appeared to fill well. in elgravia, are shsolutely painful. Shops i d ‘the Ree arrang hut pretty extensively, the owners wisely fol- i r 8 courtesy and ng where their customers huve gone before— “flowery land” was not precluded by com eat of Captain (iiay, Captain Latelamon 4 ame ew evineing, by & seribbled notice affixed to degradation for contact with the outer barbarians, | 4 Commissioner Mayne, aud Superintendents their shutters that they intended to * re-open at or whether, like his p sors in the regions of | fuyne and Lund, ard the total force under their nt hope that the day would not be liyde Park, he would sink into the quiet dignity of xuperintendence was apwards of 2,000 strong, it busine . But passing on- allong Kong catechist with a European wife, of which appears o have been adequate to the man ito Knighteb the still lees obtrusive es of A-Shing be- | avement of pioutly half a million of peoplo—the | teviated into a frir. hind Dak n’s couater in St, Paul's Churchyasd—4 | estimated auinber vongregated within the park aud | !inerent venders of edibl batho which many of the former visitors of the jt» precinets. supposed Clrivese prince contemplate with aston- | 45 night drew on, a number of devic a P 1 variegated lamps became visibl The presence of several of our military heroes e x- eof the Westend. ‘The frvut of | ited the interest of the foreign visitors aud exhi- ¢ Haymarket was beill yf innocent proper y the north side of sin gas light in various Na : tavern or restaure where the flags of from the firet floor wind ~ | nations,” » lees than of our own country ay 0 ware, . invite the | i to emer and feast, t Charles Napier, the Lion o¢ inally, diepiayed. te the significant ba waceally aided by with the Airican generals w'y the wepiring | pure white | #, each Iotter be ene i * Kes'auraat de | » if not gram spirits of France. ‘The Duke of Wellington and the * {ave “i aus, gad Tels curate, i i hoped Will prove in- Marquis of A # were better kuown and fe. with ruby-colord frul whole “being ter: he parti ed to bowe marked by 4 ‘and the former, with Bl: | miaated by a true lovers knot in ‘blue lamps ustial carly habite, wae soon notice jenous p signed to him, the north of the transept. ‘The duke, who was ae by his daughter-in-law, the Marchioness and the Duke of Devonshire, was rex throughout thy sling no less than his full yitorm. " | hailed with burets of cheers; I the old’ ple | come time, he walked out was another signal for partial x the formation of the royal — sion, with the Marquis of Anglesca, and wae loadty od by all nations as he preceded the Queen. he attendance of the ticket-holders was full, and they generally caute ewrly, aod there w a strong impression that had # larger number been | ¢ allowed to be sold the dey before, @ still greater concourse conld have been assembled. Some o the parties present had only got tickets at the las moment, af er waitin ours; aut, besides eeveral hairbres one ¢4 6 Was WENTION that the crowd assames a miseeilan- «lecided character. Lt has attained such oT on Post, May 2 ! © the chief point of attraction ns te | The see, sem Sotae ae tee orem weal derating influence which had previously incencibly but Wa it steadily westwards, and th individual : + of which i oy egin rate in ey ety Niicace to thelr soversl teridencles. 1 | che unset part Jed Chem, at the ecritieal periods when bit bad ucenstomed them, to be hurrying towards ples opened fur the worship of divinities, And when the fines bus and ta ( fillad even to eed oat + ante w a ale through the pot the The royal standard aleo doated from tl buildin 6 irresistably prevail, and in ten | n deiven ign uly faces work ly to be difven & pared to recover the uminates after. ‘The jumble Femoustranoes between the guthori mitliitude, wae very lvery t eomed to be benton p the wrong wey i get nubody to tell bint which was the w then, pol where is xtwit No China, sir China it you wantt . wed the the gh to get rerved, in the al freses pordent marnet covceivabl Nothing in striking, upon gteat cceavions, like that i i plete Lopey-Lurrying they ary rules Ofswciety wd of eum lb ed, by ao eye wits ; smn li " y dows there just as he after waiting a long time, had ol bia saeney a» Min hint he deviates a widely twelve guineas, to a person befor 4 Whe bitraet latitude and bebarior. out te be a mem of the swell gab, aad diet. Iknow it’ quetio the exeop- joue without loss of peared with (he money, . way!” “Thue the time was whiled wway, ae best |: mi ght f. Anybody will tell you. Some oc. Low be, when, st half past eleten, tie timing of lie tu pave. Alitight. Afove on.” poopie te ment« gave signal of preparation. Oe tie aerial | pci thormory, the cdient be enn | of the Queen, cmthiteinsm reached the highe@ pitch | jcc. commented with the poi % breaches o and one sentcment of respect to the person mad the [boca dosporate! h them fcom g sion wee iaonitevtad, witlwut plo By Tike poet fol ti , in quarre Certainly none who had harbored | specious argument " " , | eee ‘ " aft fketiow’? common: the gonduct of the speet at y OF bh the totals of stone of the morning * evans? ell veligions, amd of all po+ | to sbuede@ of ertilery annoar that the sere- litical factions, waited in the genor#) demonstration } ever, ad Me Qeen he e prorls pose be ot fooling, the best manifestation of brotherhood. Lr shh opeved lmedintciy ix perceptible Lhe greater part of the spectators remaiaed uncoy- | cjoay ' ered during the whole cercmonia?; and though All thie time the reader will ntdersand thet (us rome replaced their hats after the royal authem, it | crowd is rapidly acoumulating +t woiforms and wae {rom igneronce of Ve peligioes Bese os Se say's | cours dresses ace glittering uineag the *roggling piocecdings—no programme cing posted, o distri: | groupe and thet ladies, on grande toilets Dated, aod tho voice of tho archbivbop being i@au- | thore were » few, ere begining to Bove their except towards the olome of what seemed to | fouthors tort ibly rumpled eo gents have boce by Nr btn stance Ne tli. Sri oh cos indis ] this timo nll Glied, except cle platform, which [ten hret s F eyes te a the Hinct topes of Vevgtign pyre a Ber U eltuoue mytecigygly rovsergd, hee ecw bo nm henge y etl uipages, bearing away some foutend who bad Secure ediclanies's fon oy ‘ingled with the throng, and sed at eased, footed it sorts Sees ed aud wearied, it slow), wards. ‘The multitude, who had s content with an exterior look at the show, over- , 0 flowed “up all manner of ait c plcasautly eeasoned with manner of doorways, impatient for food and amuse- And at the same time a new tide, ' the unhappy multitude who had been close day, set in rapidly westwards, stima- lated by the desire of its component atom to ap- wheregthe Crystal Palace was aad e greatest good humor prevailed amongst the c ” ‘ast crowd throughout the cdtize day, acipally trom the | served under the most difficult-circu extended even to the drivers and condactors of the public vehicles, who seemed to have put Mnenners as they had pe } decorations. We the principal exhibitors!” aud at length | ‘on which is received with « shout of popular | at oree per force remained toes hap bee courtesics ox- canibus conductors gevtle-minded cab- nimals’ Friend even between cvidaatys and notieed —who unch of white satin ribbon. urveyors of locomotion for the miltion had since their day’s nish Dieu! qvestece que Cost que cate | their euch a revelation. inguicbed, as easily, indeed, in the vast structuce } espe 2 ommela?” All this time the police and | men— yers and miners did their apiriting | Societ; wero pover displayed under similar circum | these p king arguments were carried ombet ween | every r ‘ood tempered, harvest must have been immense. Feshions Eurepe. AMERICANS PRESENTED TO THE QUEEN OF ENGLAND. The Queen of England held a drawing room (the se. cond this sason), on Tuctday afternoon, the 6th inst. . Jumes's Paluce. Her Majesty and bis Royal Hig ness Prince Albert arrived at two o'clock, from ingham Palawe, attended by the royal suite and escorted rd: Their Royal Highnesses the Prince ead Princess of Prussia and Prince Frederick William of Prussia were present, uttuemded by the Countess A. de Harke, the Countess Louis Oriolla, Count Pikler, Major | Couut Goltz, Colonel Fischer, and Liestenaat vom Jlis Royal Highness Prince Henry of the Netherlands emt at the drawing room, attended by Chevulier van Rappard, Ald-le-Camp, nnd Casembioot, Officier 4’Ordonnance g Fe. | also attended the reception. The Queen wore a train of bul watered 6 w brocaded upon it. ellow riband, and bunches of The petticoat was of wie L.. flowers of white an the pavement, with minds and sostumes | tins capaeeeied ithe x | white satin, with an upper skirt of blonde, trimmed bunches of lilac and tulle, and ornamented with dia- nF with the train, The head drees ows and feathors and a wreath of ‘The Princess of Praxsia wore a train of blue silk bro- with silver and trimmed with bouqueta of flowers, iamond ornaments; the stomacher was alwo deco won glances, | monds to corres trance, x space bas been enclosed for the reception | lying heavily upon their memories, or, clustered | rain. ‘Tho head dress was composed of diamonds aad | feathers with towers. The Diplomatic Clrele was iatvoduced, when the follew- entations to her Majesty the Queen and bis Roged osa the Prince Albert too! Baroness de Brunnow, Mudame Gabriel Kamemsky, dine. By Mrs. Abbot Lawrence, Mrs, Haddock. wife of tha ‘Affaires to Portugal; Miss Kiana Baron de Hunoldstein, Lieu- vlonel in the Bavarian « Russian Minister, Prince Victor Bariatinsky, ein Marine Linperials, icilian Minister, Prince Pignatelli, Gentilaom- .M. de Viebahn, of Finances; 3 ment ot Architecture; Hy the United States’ Minister, Hon. Charies B, Had- to silk orna- | uantity—they eet off carly, because, having deter- | dork, Chargé d’Atfaires of the United States tor Porta wd; Captain Joshua R, Sands, United States frigate 9. , United States frigate Jieutenaut George if. Proble, United States frigate St. Lawrence. By the Spanish Minister, Don Ramon de la norary Attaché to Her Catholic Mi the robing room with richly worked Luce ourtaia: | developed series of currents of humanity rapidly | 1! | United States* Cha: By the Bavarian M set about -holiday-making in , tenant ( 6 do Ie Chambre de 8.M Hy the Pruseian Minis cillor in the Department cillor of Regency for the Mr. George Bunsen, wrence; Lieutenant L. B. Aver 1 fajeety's ‘Legation ab Yaris, and Spani-h Commlsrioner to the Industrial Bahi- By the Sardinian Minister. Le Chevali cial Commissioner from the King of Sardinia to the Ex- By the Turkish Minister, Le Lieutennut General Djoma- Jeddin Pasha, Membre du Conseil d’Amit 1'Amiral Moustapha Pas! Ministere du Commerce; seller d’Ambasendo de Turquie; Zia Bey, Secretaire de Ia Legation do Turquie. Ry Baron Koller, Austrian Charge d’AMaices, the Coumt is Seoretuize de y “feeding” tributary added its | ™ By M. Marescatchi, M. Decazes, autre VAmbaseade & Londres. J is understood that the Queen intends to *tute ball im the month of June mext ; and that, for the nt of (rade, her Majesty hus resolved that i ‘ball. ‘The costume will be the full dress Ring Charies I1., from the Restorati im 1080, to 1664. The choice of dress will not be li ‘to this country, but will include the court costumes of that peried of other European countries, Thursday evening, the Ist i arembled in the saloons of M. Mol th . *, nere contributed their members. It w: the Haymarket, and helpless, applying to the | to and fro of the troops; the sudden apparition ol Shortly after cloven o'clock a marked change sion. The cause of this brilliant assemblage, elegance, high birth and breeding were 50 promit was the ceremony of si rand:daughter of u was celebrated yosterday. wires of M. Molé choir, attended by wardens with wands, and includ | its suiface the model frigate and other reconuoi- | With every miunte, the torrent grew broader and gbalt tee fane proclaiming in a deeper, aud still the streams of strians on each of the court e marringe contrat of ther je de Champlatrenx, with: Mole had two daughters, who married the (two brothers De |i Ferti, The eldee died of cholera in 1802, having. as her only child, the » young lady who will one day be Duchoss of Nonitles. of succeeding in that attempt, and gone home in des- ‘The second, still living, has no children. Mille de la mplatrenx from her grandia- ther, who gave it tothe elder of his son+inlaw, The young Madame de Nosilles will be some day one of the Hehest heiress* of France M. de Talleyrand, first Secretary of the Freuch at St, Peterburg, bes just married the Priness dége de Woron soll, whe belongs to one of the first faai- lice La the country Verti has the name of Loxpos Moxy Marker, Tuesday Brening, Mi ‘The quotation of gold at count (new tariff rat ot Te, 10M d. per ounce a we of 25.10; and the exchange at Ia t " 0 at short being 25.00, it follows that gold is 0.40 per ovat noted Visitors, und who, inconsequence of the plung- | Arctic winter, and taking comparatively as long to are Fore en Se pea mark, which, at the Englich Mint price of Od. per ounce for standard 15.47,: and the « ‘aris iv about 5 per rice of gold is 434 gives an exchange of ot Hamburgh om London at it follows that the gold is 0.18 per cent hen in Hamburgh. Owing to another decline in the Prench funda, ned this morning with some heavi- but subsequentiy recovered to 90% though with less juance = 5 dearer in Fondo English market © price they close: hich left off yesterda, ‘of the rate of exchange with “Paris being 211; Reduced, 96 to 96 stock, 200 to 261; and kixchequer bills, 4¢. to Oe The next account is fixed for last quotation of cousols for that period was ign stock market was quiet to day. and litte The official list comprised the following largains:—Brazilian, 88 102; Granada, 17% to 15; mium the 10th of Jane, ; Peruvian, for account, 3 and und S4. the Deferred, 88% and 90; Portuguese Four pee for the account. +3 and 52),; Russian four and & half per cents, 9% aud Y%; Spanish Passive, 6%, 38, the Deferred, 124; ; and the four pre Dutch two and a ball cent certificates, 58° er, there being more demaad . the rate declined «little Hamburgh, ow the contrary, thedrawcrs having operated ote freely. these was # slight advance from previows The market has Sind are the same as The sales are estimated at about 3.000 Vales, (00 of whieh were taken ow «| for export.) nud include 2.900 4 and Maranbames at Td 0 84; 200 Surat, 44. to Sq nrcot. Coron Manner, M quiet to-day. and prices of vaiation and 4 0, 400 Porasme eve for house here. cngsged Im the cotton trade, has issued the following:—The “tock of cottow held ia this port, on the deelared; the total Ist instant, bas just been official, amount ix stated to be US T20 bales lows than estimated Dee pot, when W. Ind 52,080 --Thete has been « moderate 3,000 bales —1,009 om on and for export—at ptices ‘4. per tb. dearer Friday, and les offering at (he advance Lavenroot Cons Manat, May 6-The supplies of crain and flowr foom Ireland and coastwise continue ¢&- dingly smell, whilst this week's ex fre important, and embrace 2.8 4.206 barrels and } @an corn, wnd 1,740 barrels of Indian meal, bes! demand for cotton to-day. porta to those parts 79% quartors Lm om quarters of wheat, via: from in, 1) quarters; fromm Ni 1000 quarters; from 7 from Alexandrta, from the Ttvtlva States, 1,600 i Phe ensceracd There wna a good at wiors AL oT inerkes Gis mocaing. Most { whend wer: ta trodacately tric tegueret Me vidag alvich ere rather «aver thas (hast Plume wae moving (Pelz te 00> » peel imate th» cok, ne crowded CUNY, Mov iga Wy A ALAR I a aga baie Qo

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