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The meeting of the friends and supporters of the National .
The SpectatorPub-, lie School Association, which assembled this week in the Poultry, can be regarded in no other light than that of an advertise- ment that the Association still exists. The...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorPRECEDENCE is this week due, in our historical summary, to the proceedings in Parliament, not that they have been very important in: themselves,. but because nothing of greater...
might to a certain extent supply the deficiency. When the
The SpectatorWatford Spring Water scheme was first broached, a committee was appointed at a public meeting of the inhabitants of Marylebone, to negotiate with its promoters. A scale of...
A few words of deep import fell from LOrd Lyttelton
The Spectatorat the close of the public breakfast of the emigrants about to sail for- Canter- bury in New Zealand and their friends. The excellent Chairman spoke of the remarkable and...
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Vthattn net Srnt ihiug in Vfirlianitut.
The SpectatorPRINCIPAL BUSINESS OF THE WEER. Horn OF LORDS. Monday, May 5. Mercantile Marine Bill; Petitions against, presented by Lord Stanley. Tuesday, May 6. No business of interest....
The Parisians have passed unscathed through the ordeal of the
The Spectatoranniversary of the 4th of May, notwithstanding the anxious anti- cipations awakened by incendiary , manifestoes. Whether those documents emanated from bona fide anarchists, or...
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C O (nu t .
The SpectatorTHE Queen held a Privy Council at Buckingham Palace on Monday af- ternoon. Mr. Rutherfurd, late Lord-Advocate of Scotland, now a Judge of the Supreme Court, was sworn in a...
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i4 Alttrquitto.
The SpectatorAt a Court of Aldermen, held on Tuesday, the opinion of the Corpora- tion law-officers on the petition of certain inhabitants of Southwark to be allowed to elect an Alderman for...
Vrauturto.
The SpectatorThe Harwich Election Committee has determined that Mr. Prinsep, the sitting Member, was incompetent to be elected from the nature of his qualification, which consisted of income...
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fartigu rtuh
The SpectatorFitaarce..—The fate of the 4th of May passed off without any of the disturbances which were last week anticipated. Indeed, enough rain fell on that day in Paris alone to...
IRELAND.
The SpectatorThe Belfast Newsletter announces that " Sir James Emerson Torment has formally resigned the Governorship of St. Helena." " Domestic con- cerns originally had the largest share...
33!i5trlInItt0115.
The SpectatorAn opinion by the Law-officers of the Crown, Sir John Dodson, Sir Alexander Cockburn, and Sir W. Page Wood, in favour of the legality of the Oxford University Commission,, has...
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POSTSCRIPT.
The SpectatorSATURDAY.. The chief discussion in the House of Commons last night was upon the resolutions proposed by Mr. UntinnAar as an amendment to the motion that the Speaker do leave...
THE ARMY.
The SpectatorWAR-OFFICE, May 9.-2d Drags.—Cornet T. P. Gratrex to be Lieut. by purchase, vice Hozier, who retires. 4th Light Drags.—Cornet and Adjt. G. Ellis to have the rank of Lieut. ;...
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Last night's Gazette notifies that the Queen has appointed Lord
The SpectatorBel- haven to be her Majesty's High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. The appointment of James Douglas, Esq., to be Governor and Com-...
ilyntrro.
The SpectatorThe Opera season being now in full career, and his company complete, Mr. Lumley has introduced one of his promised novelties—Alary's opera buffs Le Tre Nozze which was produced...
The Hellespont steamer has arrived from the Cape of Good
The SpectatorHope, with news from the seat of the Caffre war. The position of things had little changed, and it certainly appears doubtful whether a vague and incon- clusive struggle may not...
When Moliere wrote his Misanthrope, his object was to exhibit
The Spectatora man dissatisfied with the courtesies and usages of his time ; and, consistently with this object, all the characters grouped around the principal figure served to elicit his...
MONEY MARKET.
The SpectatorSTOCK EXCHANGE, FRIDAY Arraromox. The English Stock Market has evinced more vitality during the last few days than for some time before, and prices have advanced from 1 to 1...
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At the Olympic, there is an English version of Use
The SpectatorBataille de Dames. Mrs. Stirling, who is the aunt-countess, can feel the finesse and quiet sentiment of the original; but generally the English actors appear to sad disadvantage...
It would be unfair to expect anything but pieces of
The Spectatorthe slightest kind at Punch's Playhouse; but Mr. Copeland need not encourage absolute trash. A thing called Taking the Census has nothing to recommend it in the shape of plot,...
At the St. James's, a Mademoiselle Faivre has made a
The Spectatorrespectable but not a showy debut in Hoffman's petite-comedic of _Le Roman d'une Heure.
TOPIGS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorHOW JOHN GETS THROUGH THE SESSION. "I Am afraid you are not strong enough for the place, John," is a well-remembered phrase ; and in practice it has proved to be true so far as...
tettr tu flit (Mtn.
The Spectator"FIDEI DEFENSOR." Stit—The origin of the above title is one of the foremost facts in history, yet in measuring the amount of Royal supremacy over the Church little use Is made...
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ECONOMY FOR SHOW.
The SpectatorRETRENCHMENT becomes not merely fallacious but mischievous when it takes the form of the paltry sham which Lord John Rus- sell put off upon the House of Commons on Monday last....
HOW TO READ THE RYPOSITION.
The Spectator" Toniormsprets, that is our motto," says M. Jules Janin, speaking of the French; and he appeals to the Exposition for his proof. What peculiar views people may take ! He visits...
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HOW TO COOK PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEES. Tar; active business of life
The Spectatoris a great school of practical education. Public men, like private individuals, are always learning some- thing from experience. When it does not teach them to amend their ways,...
PALMERSTON SUCCEEDING.
The SpectatorTEE Foreign Secretary is the cleverest man at official business in her Majesty's councils, and one of the most active, with the widest range for his activity; but, in the long...
THE CANTERBURY COLONISTS OF 1851.
The SpectatorTEE founders of the Canterbury Settlement proceed steadily with their work. Their first body of colonists sailed in September last, and news of their safe arrival has just...
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THE BLOOD-RED RAIL.
The SpectatorDEATH was inflicted in six instances during the collision in the tunnel near Frodsham, from causes that might have been pre- vented by ordinary care ; indeed, the causes were...
VISITS TO THE GREAT EXHIBITION OF INDUSTRY. Strassavuso the prevalent
The Spectatorinterest of the public in the Great Exhibition of Industry, the daily press is putting forth its expansive energies in de- scription and explanation. The Times has set forward...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorHARTLEY COLERIDGE. * HARTLEY COLERIDGE was the eldest son of Samuel Taylor Cole- ridge ; and was born at Clevedon, near Bristol, in 1796. Shortly after his birth, his father...
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LADY EMMELINE STUART WORTLEY'S TRAVELS IN AMERICA. * THESE volumes contain
The Spectatoran account of an enterprising tour, for a lady, made by Lady Emmeline Stuart Wortley in 1849 and 1850, through parts of North and South America. New York was of course her...
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HRS. NORTON'S STUART OP DUNLEA.TH. * AFTER a long relaxation, Mrs.
The SpectatorNorton appears again in the field of fiction, with a story that will not add to her reputation. "All is strange, yet nothing new " ; much is essentially common, yet there is...
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PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.
The SpectatorBoons. The Correspondence of Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford, and the Re- verend William Mason. Now first published from the Original MSS. Edited, with Notes, by the Reverend J....
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FINE ARTS.
The SpectatorTHE ROYAL ACADEMY EXHIBITION. A SECOND visit to the Royal Academy has confirmed our impression that this is an exhibition of more than accustomed interest. Works in the highest...
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THE SKETCHING SOCIETY.
The SpectatorA further and more extended collection of works by the so-called "Sketching Society" is on view at Mr. Hogarth's in the Haymarket. Our readers may remember that this body...
PORTRAIT OF Mn. PARTON.
The SpectatorIf ever publication professing to meet a demand of the time contained truth in its assertion, this is it. Mr. Paxton is, par excellence, the man of 1851. Protectionists and...
DIORAMA OF JERUSALEM AND THE HOLY LAND.
The SpectatorThis diorama, the third connected with Jerusalem opened within two or three months, has been painted under the direction of Mr. W. Beverly from sketches taken on his travels by...
PRINTING IN OIL COLOURS.
The SpectatorHere again we have a reminder of the great feature of the year. Mr. Baxter has applied his process, several specimens of which he contributes to the Great Exhibition, to the...
BIRTHS.
The SpectatorOn the 23d April, in New Street, Spring Gardens, Lady Harriet B. Hamilton, of a son. On the 1st May, at Marston Rectory, the Hon. Mrs. Richard Boyle, of a daughter. On the 1st,...
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PRICES CURRENT.
The SpectatorBRITISH FUNDS. (Closing Prices ) Satan'. Monday Tuesday. Tredues Thurs. --- 961 96/ 963 96 1 97 971 96i 96/ 97 971/ 951 94 96 EMI 951 951 974 971 971 971 2101 - 2102 210...
COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.
The SpectatorTuesday, May 6. PARTNERSHIPS DISSOLVED.-Young and Co. Wolverhampton, edge-tool-manu- facturers; as far as regards J. Young-Bradshaw and Knowles, Birmingham, plumbers-Hayman and...