23 APRIL 1864, Page 2

Garibaldi has been to all the lions,—the Crystal Palace twice,

where the popular reception on Monday was in part a failure, there being only about 25,000 people present,—to the Guild- hall to receive the freedom of the City,—to Teddington to " imagine" the fall of various tyrants, in the house of M. llerzen, the Russian exile, and editor of the Kolokol,—to the House of Lords, where the Bishop of Oxford was the first to greet him, and poor Lord Chelmsford had to go on speaking for the dignity of the House, as if any one were attending to him,—and to many entertairltents private and public: Mr. Graves has issued an almost perfect photograph of the General, except that the face is a little too yellow. The General's visit has shown us how utterly false were the weak-looking photographs circulated of him up to the present year. His face is strong and calm, but the face of a man accustomed to be strong and calm amid storms at sea rather than amid the storms of human passion. The lines of care have none of the mobility and variety which belong to social or political greatness. It is a face of inspirations, not of wisdom, but above all of love without pity or condescension.