Page 1
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorFATAL week to Protection ! The new great men, for all their freshness, have waxed faint—have yielded their strongest posi- -tioni without fight, or defended the indefensible,...
Page 2
Peaceable counsels appeared to be advancing in the United States,
The Spectatorat the date of the last accounts. The "international ad- dresses" of the Peace party here are not fruitless. A practical newspaper, the New York Journal of Commerce, responds...
The disturbances in Poland are still a leading European topic
The Spectator; but the information respecting them afforded by the journals, is still meagre, confused, and contradictory. The accounts are derived from the newspapers of countries where a...
Debates anti Vroretbings inVarliament.
The SpectatorFAMINE IN IRELAND. Before the House of Commons entered upon the Free-trade discussions on Monday, Mr. O'CONNELL put a question, of which he had given notice, "Whether the...
Page 5
THE NEW CORN BILL.
The SpectatorA BILL TO AMEND THE LAWS RELATING TO THE LMTORTATION OT CORN. [Note.—The figures arranged at the end of the lines, and the words printed in liatird are proposed to be inserted...
Page 6
gbt Or011tt.
The SpectatorTam Queen left the Isle of Wight yesterday morning, accompanied by Prince Albert, the children, and the Royal suite; and, travelling by the usual routes, reached Bnekingham...
Zbe Itletropolis.
The SpectatorCourt of Aldermen was held on Tuesday. The first business entered apon related to the correspondence which had taken place between the Town-Clerk and the Clerk to Christ's...
Page 7
211)E Vrobintes.
The SpectatorSaturday was the polling-day for Bridport ; and a severe contest there was from the opening of the poll till its close. The excitement within the booth extended to the mob...
Page 9
SCOTLAND.
The SpectatorThe Senate of the University of Glasgow have resolved to petition Par- liament for the repeal of the Scottish University tests, in so far as they affect lay Professors. The...
§orzign an Oolonial.
The SpectatorPOLsino.—As our Political Summary embraces in as connected a form as the disjointed and contradictory details which have reached this country will admit of, all the prominent...
IRELAND.
The SpectatorThe contest for the county of Mayo has terminated in favour of Mr. Joseph Miles M`Donnell, the Repeal candidate. On Saturday evening the official declaration was made—For...
Page 10
filtisttllantous.
The SpectatorTuesday's Gazette announces the appointment of Lieutenant-General the Earl of Cathcart to be Captain-General and Governor-in-chief of her Majesty's Pro- vinces of Canada, Nova...
EAST INDIA SHIPPING.
The SpectatorAirtime — At Gravesend, 9th March, Elizabeth Walker, GiRtes, from Manilla; and Malvina, Burton, from the Cape ; 11th, Orlando, Cockerill, from Calcutta ; and 14th, Hindostan,...
Page 11
Mr. J. A. Gordon, an extensive landowner in East Somerset,
The Spectatoraddressed a circular on the 4th ultimo, to above sixty of his tenants, offering to relieve them of their farms at Lady-day, if they felt alarmed at the repeal of the Corn-laws;...
POSTSCRIPT.
The SpectatorAnother precautionary measure for ameliorating the apprehended cala- mity in Ireland was introduced into the House of Commons yesterday evening; and produced an ebullition of...
The Frankfort correspondent of the Morning Herald gives the official
The Spectatorannouncement of the occupation of Cracow by the Austrian Commander- in-chief— " Cracow, March 3, 1846. "Conjointly with the Imperial Russian troops, and a portion of my forces,...
The Paris Tapers and correspondence of Thursday contain few new
The Spectatorfacts con- nected with the Polish insurrection. The Journal des Debuts expresses fears that the orders given to the commanders of the troops of the three great Powers now again...
MONEY MARKET.
The SpectatorSTOCK EXCHANGE, FRIDAY AFTERNOON. The Stocks for the April dividend closed at the commencement of the week, and business in them has of course been entirely suspended. Some...
Page 12
REGULATION OF RAILWAYS.
The SpectatorTHE Commons made "no House" on Thursday, though a great debate was expected. Why this loss of precious time, all too short for the indispensable business of the session?...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorPOLISH INSURRECTIONS. Pousif insurrections are always misconstrued ; on the one hand, by those who see in them nothing but the realizing of their own theories and wishes ; on...
Page 13
" ABSURD " VERDICTS: THE GOSPORT DUEL. Mn. Plcm, second
The Spectatorto the Lieutenant Hawkey who shot Mr. Seton at Gosport, has been tried ; and has been acquitted, in the teeth of the facts, the evidence, and the Judge's charge to the Jury....
RESPONSIBILITY OF EMPLOYERS IN WORKS OF DANGER.
The SpectatorTHE labourers engaged in the construction of railways are a pe- culiar class, immensely increased in number, though not originally created, by the railway furor. The "navveys,"...
Page 14
THE COMIC WRITERS OF ENGLAND.
The SpectatorThe last lecture of a course on this subject, extending from Chaucer through Ben Jonson and Beaumont and Fletcher to Butler, was delivered by Mr. Cowden Clarke, at the London...
TEMPLE BAR.
The SpectatorIT was a great improvement to the Strand the demolition of Butcher Row. Nothing could confer a greater advantage on the inhabitants of the vicinity in respect of health and...
Page 15
SPECTATOR'S LIBRARY.
The Spectator13.10osepar, Life and Correspondence of David Borne; from the Papers bequeathed by his Nephew to the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and other Original Sources. By John Hill...
Page 16
DR. MASSIE'S SUMMER RAMBLE IN BELGIUM, GERMANY, AND SWITZERLAND.
The SpectatorDn. MASSIE is a Nonconformist minister : his health having failed in the discharge of his duties, change of scene was prescribed by his medi- cal attendant. This prescription...
Page 17
THE NEW TIMON.
The SpectatorTHE true test of a story is an abridgment. The structure which is na- turally planned to exhibit a probable action, and whose parts have pur- pose in themselves and connexion...
Page 18
MUSIC.
The SpectatorTHE ANCIENT CONCERTS. THE Ancient Concert season began on Wednesday; and it promises to be productive, as several of the past seasons have been, of considerable interest and...
THE BEETHOVEN QUARTET SOCIETY.
The SpectatorThe first performance for the present season was given in Harley Street on Monday; when works characteristic of three distinct epochs in the life of the great master formed the...
PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.
The SpectatorFrom Harsh 6th to Harsh 121h. BOOKS. A History of Greece: L Legendary Greece; II. Grecian History to the reign of Peisistratus at Athens. By George Grote, Esq. Scotland, its...
Page 19
Evening Service in B flat, for Double Choir. Composed by
The SpectatorThomas Attwood Walrnisley, M.A. '1'rin. Coll., Professor of Music in the University, and Organist of Trinity and St. John's Colleges. A note to this production informs us that...
This collection of pieces, complete in a vocal form and
The Spectatorprinted in the proper clefs for score-reading, promises to combine the agreeable and the useful in a manner seldom realized by publications affecting a permanent and classical...
MILITARY GAZETTE.
The SpectatorWAR-OFFICE, March 13.-7th Drag. Guards—Major-Gen. Sir G. Scovell, K.C.B. to be Col. vice Gen. Sir E. Lloyd, dec. 7th Light Drags.—Major-Gen. Sir W. Tuyll to be Col. vice...
BIRTHS.
The SpectatorOn the 4th March, at Middleton Hall, Northumberland, the Wife of George Hughes Hughes, Esq., Of a Son. On the 5th, at Cohen. County Louth, the Lady of Captain Wynne, R.A., of a...
COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.
The SpectatorTuesday, March 10. PARTNERSHIPS DISSOLVED. Young and Co. Albion Place, King's Cross, linendrapers—Archer and Taverner, Old Street, paper-stainers—Grimley and Kirkby,...
Page 20
PRICES CURRENT.
The SpectatorBRITISH FUNDS. (Closing Prices.) Solord. Monday Tuesday $ per Cent Consols 951 931 953 Ditto for Account . 931 953 95/ 3 per Cents Reduced ..... 951 931 961 31 per Cents...