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y separately published work icon The Empire newspaper issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 1868... no. [5109] 4 April 1868 of The Empire est. 1850 The Empire
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Notes

  • This issue of The Empire repeated the numbering of the previous day (no.5108); number sequencing was corrected in the next issue which appeared as no. 5110.

Contents

* Contents derived from the 1868 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Royal Victoria Theatre : Re-Opening, single work advertisement

William Hoskins, the new manager of the Royal Victoria Theatre, announces its re-opening on 11 April 1868. The theatre is described as a venue for 'the best class of Drama, Comedy, and Burlesque, by a carefully selected Company from the Melbourne and Sydney Theatres'.

(p. 1)
Prince Alfred's Wreath : Poetry, single work advertisement

An advertisement for the soon-to-be published poetry collection The Prince's Wreath.

(p. 1)
Fenian Felonsi"Curst be the felon cause, and Fenian band,", A. , single work poetry (p. 2)
The English Periodicals for January, single work column

The Empire provides a round-up of the content of English journals for January 1868. The report highlights the following, among others:

Matthew Arnold writing on 'Authority and Anarchy' (Cornhill Magazine), articles on satire (Dublin University and Temple Bar), a newly discovered letter by Sir Walter Scott (Macmillan), the replacement of windows at Haworth Parsonage, once occupied by the Bronte sisters (St James's), a New Year poem by Astley Baldwin (London Society), the beginning of a serialised novel by Dinah Maria Mulock Craik together with contributions from Alfred Tennyson, Geroge Macodnald and Charles Knightley (Good Works), and short stories (Chambers's Journal).

(p. 3)
The Flaneur in Sydney, 'The Flaneur in Sydney' , single work prose satire

The 'Flaneur' muses on Sydney's recent political and social occurrences, including the attempted assassination of H. R. H. Prince Alfred, Dr Carr's lectures at the School of Arts on 'brain printing', and John Dunmore Lang's 'insights' into the connection between the British and Chinese empires.

(p. 5)
Phillip M'Carroll, Pitt-Streeti"The beef market now has made such a rise,", single work poetry (p. 7)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 19 Feb 2014 10:58:55
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