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��narrow entrance, required the exertions of the police, to prevent the lock of wheels, and other accidents.

Catlin s large collection of paintings and curiosities of our own red Indians, at Egyptian Hall, excited much attention from the English public. He occasionally ex hibited their customs by moving groups and tableaux vivants, having trained persons painted and dressed in the costume of the different tribes, among whom it was not difficult to detect his own leading form and strong physiognomy. On one of these occasions, the buffalo dance filled an interlude, with the most horrible tramp ing, and contortions of the agile personages enveloped in the skin of that ungainly animal. A bright little girl, who had been greatly interested in a bridal scene by those dark-browed actors, whom she had been in formed were Americans, glancing furtively at me, said, &quot; Why, mamma, look ! Mrs. Sigourney is white.&quot;

At the Coliseum, being enclosed in a small room, we were raised by steam to an elevation of eighty feet, where, standing apparently on a circular roof, stretched beneath us the panorama of the mighty city, with its domes, towers, spires, palaces, winding river, and thread-like bridges. It would seem that the view was taken from the summit of St. Paul s, and the illusion is perfect. For a moment we were reminded of his necromancy who, from a pinnacle of the temple, spread out before Pure Eyes, all the &quot; kingdoms of the world and the glory of them.&quot;

The wonderful exhibition of embroidery by Miss Linwood, in Leicester-Square, is well worthy of atten-

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