a setting of the 130th Psalm, and various pianoforte pieces. The list extends to nine opus numbers, of which the present is his Op. 8. Though termed a concerto, it would be more properly described as a "concertstück" or "concertino," as it lacks a first movement in regular form. Indeed, the opening is merely a lengthy recitative for piano and orchestra alternately, leading to an andante in a flat. This is a refined and melodious, though extremely unpretentious movement. The finale is more fully developed, and shows Mr. Ames to be a sound musician, though the scoring is somewhat heavy and even vulgar. As a whole the work cannot be said to show much promise The composer has of future greatness. managed to avoid direct reminiscences, but there is not even a germ of original thought in his music. The executant was Mr. Oscar Beringer, by whom, of course, the concerto was placed in the most favourable light. Schubert's great Symphony in c concluded the concert and the season. Sir George Grove persists in calling this work No. 10, though no further evidence has come to light respecting the supposed Gastein symphony. He takes no heed of the fact that when the Vienna Musik-Verein rejected the Symphony in c, Schubert advised them to try the early work in the same key, No. 6. If the Gastein symphony was a distinct work, how is it that nothing was heard of it at such a crisis? It is only necessary to add concerning Saturday's concert that the vocalist was Miss Macintyre, whose selections showed remarkable eclecticism. She sang three songs, widely differing in style and in three different languages. Her success was 80 marked in all of them as to warrant high expectations as to her future career. MR. BARTON MCGUCKIN has been engaged by Mr. A. Harris for his Italian opera season. He will appear in 'Lohengrin,' 'Mefistofele,' and 'Carmen.' MR. CROWEST'Ss article for the National Review on 'The Music of the British Army' will deal with the recruiting, pay, duties, training, prospects, &c., of the British army musician; and he will pay attention to the traditions connected with the music and pieces played by British regimental bands. A HIGHLY creditable performance of Brahms's 'Deutsches Requiem' was given by the Borough of Hackney Choral Association at the Shoreditch Town Hall on Monday evening, under the direction of Mr. E. Prout. The neglect of this magnificent work by choral societies is due to its extreme difficulty, the writing for the voices being almost, if not quite, as arduous as that in Beethoven's Mass in D. A selection from Schu bert's 'Rosamunde' music formed the second part. The principal vocalists were Madame Eleanor Farnol and Mr. W. G. Forington. Ar the Royal Opera in Berlin during last year 203 performances were given, Wagner heading the list with 50, the next being Lortzing 27, Mozart 20, and Nessler 15. During the same year in Munich 165 performances took place, of which 66 were of Wagner's works, 19 of Verdi, and 15 of Weber. In New York the preponderance of Wagner is still more marked. During the German season just concluded the receipts from Wagner's operas were over 22,000l., and those from works by all other composers less than 19,000l. The attempt to revive interest in the older Italian operas proved a fiasco. MADAME MARIE ROZE and her concert party will undertake another tour in the provinces next autumn, under the management of Mr. N. Vert. Our young English composer and pianist Eugène d'Albert is on a tour in Spain. His performances in Madrid are said to have created an extraordinary impression. IT would seem that composers of ability do not care to take part in prize competitions, at any rate in Germany or Italy. In Berlin an offer of three prizes for an orchestral suite did not secure any work of sufficient merit to deserve the first prize; and in Milan a similar result has occurred in a competition for a symphony offered by the Quartet Society. M. NIECKS'S admirable biography of Chopin is being translated into German by F. E. C. Leuckart, and will be published in Leipzig. FRAU MATERNA has gained remarkable success as Brünnhilde in 'Die Walküre' at Brussels, the only artistic drawback to the performance being that she was compelled to sing in German, while the rest of the artists sang in French. The Bayreuth conditions were observed as nearly as possible, the lights being lowered and the orchestra concealed. A YOUNG female violinist named Gabrielle Wietrovetz, a pupil of Herr Joachim, has made a remarkable impression at Stockholm. Her tone and execution in Mendelssohn's Concerto are spoken of in the highest terms. DRAMA Gramatic Gossig. EASTER changes are few and unimportant, those at the West-End theatres including only the revival this evening of 'The Harbour Lights' at the Adelphi, and of 'East Lynne' at the Olympic, and the production on Monday at the Avenue of the new burlesque 'Lancelot the Lovely.' Wednesday, however, will see the opening of the Garrick Theatre, under Mr. Hare, with 'The Profligate' of Mr. Pinero; and the following Saturday the production at the Haymarket of Mr. Jones's new play, now definitely christened 'Wealth.' THE practice of holiday-making has extended to the theatres, no fewer than ten of which have closed voluntarily during the first five days of Passion week. A compulsory closing of the houses would naturally have been resented as a hardship. IT is pleasant to find that the Italian trip of Mr. Toole has resulted in his restoration to health. A narrative of Mr. Toole's adventures at Naples, Pompeii, and the adjacent districts, and "in the Eternal City" would make an amusing supplement to some new edition of his reminiscences. Mr. Toole, who has been playing at Nottingham, will appear on Monday at Toole's Theatre in 'The Don' and 'Ici On Parle Français,' which in remembrance of his late experiences he might rechristen 'Si Parla Italiano.' A VERSION of 'Le Flibustier' of M. Jean Richepin, in which Messrs. Alexander, Fernandez, and F. Terry, Miss Carlotta Leclercq, and Miss Calhoun are to appear, will be given by Mr. Alexander at Terry's Theatre on the afternoon of the 15th of May. 'THE SILVER KING of Messrs. H. A. Jones and Henry Herman was revived on Monday at the Princess's, the scene of its first production. Mr. Wilson Barrett as Wilfred Denver, Miss Eastlake as Mrs. Denver, and Mr. George Barrett as Daniel Jaikes resumed their original parts. In other respects the cast was practically the same allotted the play a year or so ago at the Globe. On Monday week 'Claudian,' by Messrs. W. G. Wills and Henry Herman, will be revived for a fortnight, after which the engagement of Mr. Barrett at the Princess's will close. MR. MAYER'S season at the Royalty has come to a close more brilliant and successful than seemed at one time probable. During the past week the performances have been frequently changed. The chief feature consisted of a pleasing and capable representation of Le Monde où l'on s'ennuie,' with Mlle. du Minil (who has steadily grown in public favour), Mlle. Ludwig, M. Boucher, and M. Truffier in principal parts. DURING the past week the Lyceum has been closed, and Mr. Irving has been in Berlin, whence he returned last night. Afternoon representations of 'Macbeth' are henceforward substituted for evening on Saturdays. 'LITTLE LORD FAUNTLEROY' is now trans ferred to the evening bills at the Opéra Comique, Miss Marion Terry taking for the first time the character of Mrs. Errol. On the first night Miss Terry scarcely remembered the words of the character, but her representation had much tenderness, and assigned the character more weight than has heretofore been accorded it. Other parts were sustained by actors with whom, in their respective parts, the town has long been familiar. A COMEDIETTA by Messrs. F. Broughton and Boyle Lawrence, entitled 'Her Own Rival,' constitutes at the Opéra Comique the opening piece. In this a girl, after a separation of years, meets under a changed name a former lover, who fails to recognize her, and whose conquest she reeffects. Miss Cissy Grahame, Miss Fanny Brough, Mr. J. G. Grahame, and Mr. Nutcombe Gould secured for the novelty a favourable reception. 'Her Own Rival' is smartly written, but is not wholly convincing. 'MY QUEENIE,' a new drama by Mr. H. W. Williamson, produced at an afternoon performance at the Vaudeville, is of domestic interest, and received a competent interpretation from Messrs. Garthorne, Hargreaves, and Caffrey, and Misses S. Vaughan, Mary Brough, Ellissen, Leyshon, Robertson, and Drummond. MR. JOHN VOLLAIRE, whose death is announced, was born December 4th, 1820, in Marylebone, and made his début in London at the Surrey, October 3rd, 1854. He had played previously in the country. He acted old men in a hard, but not ineffective style, and was a fair specimen of the actor of a generation ago, who, in some respects at least, stood widely apart from his fellow of to day. He played among other parts Falstaff and Sir Peter Teazle. His last appearance was at the Haymarket as Colley Cibber in 'Masks and Faces.' ACCORDING to the statistical report of the "Royal Theatres" at Berlin, Hanover, Cassel, and Wiesbaden for the year 1888, Schiller was played on twenty-nine nights, Shakspeare on twenty-two, Lessing nine, Goethe seven, Kleist five, and Calderon on two nights. In opera Wagner distanced all other classical composers, having fifty nights; Mozart had twenty, Beethoven six, and Weber five. Thirteen new pieces were put upon the stage during the year: six comedies, three tragi-comedies, one tragedy, one comic opera, and two musical dramas. modern German dramatists, Wildenbruch was played on thirty-three nights, and Heyse on thirty-two. TO CORRESPONDENTS.-W. G. & Sons.-J. H. F.-T. K. D. -F. Δ. Η. Ε.-G. L. W.-G. R.-R. H. E.-A. C.-S. CH. S. R.-W. E. J.-J. C. & Co.-G. B.-received. No notice can be taken of anonymous communications, PUBLISHED BY J. & A. CHURCHILL. PARKES' MANUAL of PRACTICAL HYGIENE. | COOLEY'S CYCLOPÆDIA of PRACTICAL Edited by F. 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Soreness keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame." - Civil Service Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. JAMES EPPS & CO. HOMEOPATHIC CHEMISTS, LONDON. dryness, tickling and irritation, inducing cough and affecting the voice. For these symptoms use EPPS'S GLYCERINE JUJUBES. In contact with the glands at the moment they are excited by the act of sucking, the glycerine in these agreeable confections becomes actively healing. Bold in tins, 1s. 14d., labelled lled "JAMES EPPS & CO., Homœopathic Chemists, London." CHAPMAN & HALL'S PUBLICATIONS. HALF a CENTURY of MUSIC in ENGLAND, MODERN SCIENCE and MODERN THOUGHT. By 1837-1887. By F. HUEFFER, Author of 'Richard Wagner and the Music of the Future.' Demy 8vo. [Nearly ready. S. LAING. Demy 8vo. 38. 6d. [A New Edition (Sixth Thousand) in the press. "From the first page to the last the book is charmingly written, with temperance and wisdom."-Westminster Review. FROM PEKIN to CALAIS by LAND. 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Bonvalot's book is beautifully and plentifully illustrated, and a good map of the route taken is appended, and it may safely be recommended to all in search of a fascinating work of travel...... M. Bonvalot's route passed through Teheran, Meshed, Bokhara, part of Balkh, Samarcand, Kokand, finally coming down on India through Kashmir; and every stage of his journey is marked by interesting descriptions and vivid illustrations of the men, and cities, and countries through which he passed."-Daily Telegraph. MADAME de STAËL: her Friends, and her Influence GALILEO and his JUDGES. By F. R. Wegg-Prosser. in Politics and Literature. By Lady BLENNERHASSETT. With a Portrait, 3 vols. demy 8vo. 368. The HISTORY of ANCIENT CIVILISATION. A Handbook based upon M. GUSTAVE DUCOUDRAY'S 'Histoire Sommaire de la Civilisation.' Edited by Rev. J. VERSCHOYLE, M.A. With Illustrations. Large crown 8vo. 68. "Mr. Verschoyle's work preserves all the grace and liveliness of style which characterizes M. Ducoudray's summary, but is completely purged from those errors which, in the book on which it is based, mar a really fine effort of generalization." PROFESSOR TYRRELL in the Academy. "We doubt, indeed, if the learner will find so much useful information so compactly brought together in any other book, and we cordially recommend 'The History of Ancient Civilisation' to the attention of all our readers." John Bull. EVOLUTION and its RELATIONS to RELIGIOUS THOUGHT. By J. Le CONTE, Professor of Geology and Natural History in the University of California, Second Edition. Crown 8vo. 68. "Among the numerous books which appear professing to deal with the relations of physical science and religion it is a very rare pleasure to meet with one like the volume before us. We have had 'reconciliations' from men who knew much science and no theology, and from theologians who did not know the outlines of the scientific doctrines they discussed. We have even had contributions from those who might at least claim fairness on the grouud that they had no real knowledge of either natural or theological science......We are able to say, after considerable experience of this kind of literature, that Professor Le Conte's book stands on a different level and is written in a different atmosphere from all, or almost all, the books of the kind which it has been our good or ill fortune to come across...... We have seldom, if ever, found a book, covering so much ground, with which a Christian theologian may, on the whole, find himself so much in agreement, and from which he may derive so much that is helpful, even where he cannot as yet admit the conclusions as true." - Guardian. The LIFE of the Right Hon. W. E. FORSTER. By T. WEMYSS REID. A New Edition, in one vol. with New Portrait, demy 8vo. 108. 6d. "This book is a very admirable piece of work, which will justly gain for Mr. Wemyss Demy 8vo. 58. "This is an interesting and useful study on Galileo. Mr. Wegg-Prosser has given us a book which fills up a vacant place in our English Catholic literature. We have had various excellent essays on it at different times in our leading reviews and magazines; but we still wanted a work which should give us, in a clear, concise form, a statement of the whole case, and present it from a point of view which, whilst enlightened and liberal, should be trustworthy and Catholic. Mr. Wegg-Prosser has given us such a book It is a work quite up to the present state of the controversy, written in a truly Catholic spirit, and decidedly clever. It is a book which the clergy especially would do well to have at hand."-Tablet. LIFE ABOARD a BRITISH PRIVATEER in the TIME of QUEEN ANNE. Being the Journal of Captain WOODES ROGERS, Master Mariner. With Notes and Illustrations by Robert C. Leslie. Large crown 8vo. 98. "For a reproduction of the old sailor's narrative, stripped of the tedious detail with which he thought fit to encumber it, we are indebted to Mr. Robert C. Les'ie, who has selected this quaint old chronicle from the many similar documents that were plentiful during the last quarter of the seventeenth, and the beginning of the eighteenth. century. And we think that in such selection Mr. Leslie has shown much wisdom...... Mr. Leslie has performed his task as editor with great care and much conscientiousness, every remark betraying how congenial the work must have been to such a lover of things nautical. The illustrations are distinctly good, the character of the old frigates, together with their peculiarities of rig, being accurately preserved throughout...... Mr. Leslie is to be congratulated on the production of a volume the contents of which are fully worthy of the artistic exterior which has been bestowed upon it."-Saturday Review. ROUND ABOUT NEW ZEALAND. Being Notes from a Journal of Three Years' Wanderings in the Antipodes. By E. Ww. PAYTON. With 20 Illustrations by the Author. Large crown 8vo. 128. "A wealth of practical information as to the social, commercial, and political life of this most beautiful of our colonies...... Mr. Payton is an accomplished artist, and his pencil has furnished several excellent illustrations of his work." - Morning Post. WITH the CAMEL CORPS UP the NILE. By Count GLEICHEN, Grenadier Guards. With numerous Sketches by the Author. Third Edition. Large crown 8vo. 98. "The whole book is worth reading, for it possesses such intrinsic merit that it can never be stale, and will always be full of interest alike to the civilian and the soldier."-Times. MEMOIRS of a ROYALIST. By Count de Falloux. Translated from the French. 2 vols. demy 8vo. 328. "These volumes are to us the most interesting and instructive that have issued from the press of France for many years. They are the posthumous record of the opinions and conduct of one of the noblest of men who have taken part in modern French history." Edinburgh Review. Reid a still higher reputation than even that which he previously enjoyed for clear insight FITZGERALD the FENIAN. By J. D. Maginn. 2 vols. into character, sound judgment as to the proportions of life, graphic powers of delineation, and a businesslike grasp of political history. Of all mistakes in writing the life of such a statesman as Forster, perhaps the very worst would have been to make the story of it too popular and superficial, too little saturated with that sense of laborious effort which was of its very essence; and the next worst mistake would have been to make it in any sense dull, deficient in the impression of that continuous personal vigour which made Mr. Forster so impressive in dealing with the politics of his day. Mr. Reid has made neither mistake. The biography is full of that sense of substance of which Mr. Forster's life was full, but it is deeply interesting to all who have lived through the political period to which it refers, and, so far as we can judge, will be deeply interesting even to future generations of politicians. Moreover, it delineates the non-political side of Mr. Forster's life with very great ability." Spectator. crown 8vo. ""Fitzgerald the Fenian' is well described by one who knows the Irish character...... The descriptions of the peasants and their ways are clever and amusing...... Altogether the book is a fine book......and will be of interest to many who do not agree with the opinions it upholds."-Saturday Review. "Mr. Maginn has performed a difficult feat. He has written an Irish novel dealing with recent and contemporary history, which will be accepted as a truthful picture by all readers...... The book is as impartial as it is interesting...... A capital novel, so lifelike in character-presentation, so rich in incident, and so brisk in narrative, that it cannot be read without pleasure." - Spectator. London: CHAPMAN & HALL, LIMITED. Editorial Communications should be addressed to "The Editor"-Advertisements and Business Letters to "The Publisher"-at the Office, 22, Took's-court, Cursitor-street, Chancery-lane, E.C. Printed by JOHN C. FRANCIS, Athensæum Press, Took's-court. Cursitor-street, Chancery-lane, E.C.; and Published by the said JOHN C. FRANCIS at 22, Took's-court, Cursitor-street, Chancery-lane, В.С. Agents for SCOTLAND, Messrs. Bell & Bradfute and Mr. John Menzies, Edinburgh.-Saturday, April 20, 1869. |