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The universal ferment which indicates the maturing of the Anti-
The SpectatorCorn-law agitation even to the stage of completion, may be traced in the fresh tumult among the journals. It was provoked by the declaration of the Times, on Saturday last, in...
The Anti-Corn-law League have not added Salisbury to their conquests.
The SpectatorIt might be observed last week that we had no sanguine expectation they would. Salisbury is precisely the kind of place where the influence of the League would be at its minimum...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorAT length, after a fortnight spent in delays, Mr. O'CONNELL and his associates have actually pleaded to the indictment, " Not guilty," and the case must come before a jury for...
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gig etourt.
The SpectatorTin stay of the Duke of Nemours at Windsor, so far as what appears in public, has been principally distinguished by his assiduity in field sports. On Saturday, Prince Albert and...
be _Metropolis.
The SpectatorA Court of Aldermen was held on Tnesday. On taking the chair for the_ emit time slim his eleetien, the b i nd Ms) , or shortly addressed the Court; expressing his ousurance...
The interest of Spanish affairs has passed from the provinces
The Spectatorto the capital. The counter-revolution is expiring : Barcelona, the first and principal place to join it, falters; and its last adherent, Vigo, yields. In Madrid, these few days...
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Zbr likobincts.
The SpectatorThe nomination of candidates for the representation of Salisbury, in the room of the late Mr. Wyndham, took place on Wednesday. The scene was the area opposite the...
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IRELAND.
The SpectatorThe State trials drag their slow length along. At the end of last week, Dublin was fall of rumours—such as that the Attorney-General was ill, and that there had been some new "...
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SCOTLAND.
The SpectatorMr. Duncan M'Neill, Lord Advocate of Scotland, has been elected Dean of the Faculty, by a large majority. This is said to be the only instance of such an honour having been...
5ortign anb
The SpectatorSPAM — There has been a "Ministerial crisis" in Spain. After Abe ceremony which gave a Parliamentary confirmation to the Queen's majority, S. Lopez and his Cabinet somewhat...
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itliscellantous.
The SpectatorAn extra Gazette, issued on Saturday, contained the following notifi- cation, dated from Whitehall on that day- " The Queen has been pleased to direct letters patent to be...
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According to rumours "among the Court circles," mentioned by the
The SpectatorGlobe, Queen Victoria intends to visit the King of Prussia after the end of the approaching London season ; and subsequently to proceed from Berlin to Paris, on a visit to the...
A Committee appointed at a recent aggregate meeting of Congre-
The Spectatorgational Dissenters has issued an address to the several congregations, recommending the establishment of several more daily and evening schools, to be "excellent of their...
•
The SpectatorPOSTSCRIPT SATURDAY NIGHT. 'With no very striking occurrence to relate, there is a not uninterest- ing medley of news and gossip this morning. The Irish Attorney-General gave...
The Globe has reason to believe "that Mr. C. Alexander
The SpectatorWood, of the Oxford Circuit, (a near relative of the honourable Members for Brecknock and Middlesex,) has been appointed by Lord Stanley to succeed the late Mr. Villiers, as...
THE ARMY.
The SpectatorWAR-OFFICE. Nov. 24.-31 Regt. Light Drags.-- Lieut. J. E. Dyer to be Caps,with- out purchase. vice Bond, promoted iu the 15th Light Drags.; Cornet 3. H. Travers to be Lieut....
Among the many excellent papers that the Times has produced
The Spectatorlately, one of the best occurs this morning, on the state of the law, or rather the law-making of Parliament. It is suggested by the fact that the great Irish indictment was...
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The Parisian journal La Patrie, of Thursday, states that the
The SpectatorCourt of the Tuilleries had received despatches by the Neptune steamer, an- nouncing that an application of the Duke d'Aumale for the hand of Princess Marie Therese, sister of...
THE THEATRES.
The SpectatorWllax with Anglo-Italian operas, Anglo-French vaudevilles, and ballets that need no Anglicizing, the British stage is almost denationa- lized. Beyond an absurd farce or a trashy...
The French telegraph informs us that Barcelona capitulated on the
The Spectator19th; both parties having made fresh concessions in the wish for peace. The Government troops entered the town on the 20th; the Captain- General appointed a new Municipality on...
At Huddersfield, on Wednesday, was held the first of a
The Spectatorseries of public meetings in the manufacturing districts to raise a fund for the pur- pose of liberating Mr. Richard Oastler from the Queen's Bench Prison, and pensioning him...
The Times relates an anecdote of noble generosity on the
The Spectatorpart of the Reverend Sydney Smith. His friend the Reverend James Tate, Canon Residentiary of St. Paul's and Vicar of Edmonton, a most emi- nent scholar, died lately. He had held...
MONEY MARKET. STOCK EXCHANGE, FRIDAY ITERNOON.
The SpectatorIt is now generally understood that the purchases on account of the Savings Banks, which have been so long continued, will cease for the present ; and this circumstance has...
EAST INDIA SHIPPING.
The SpectatorARRIVED-At Gravesend, 224 instant, Morley. Evans, from China. In the Downs. 21st, Asia, Davis, from Calcutta; and Dartmouth, Jacobs. from Bombay; and 224, Glenbervie, Russell,...
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WHAT IS THE REAL INCIDENCE OF THE CORN-LAWS? WOULD THEIR
The SpectatorABOLITION BE THE MEANS OF KEEPING THE PEOPLE IN CONSTANT EMPLOYMENT? TO THE EDITOR OF THE SPECTATOR. Edinburgh, 17th November 1893. Sin—In my letter contained in your number...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorSUPPRESSION OF DISCUSSION AT THE INDIA HOUSE. THERE was something very discreditable and also very suspicious in the proceedings at the India House last week. _ A General Court...
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WHERE ARE THE POOR TO GO?
The SpectatorTHE besom of improvement is at work in the Metropolis, sweeping it clean. Spacious thoroughfares are opened on both sides of St. Giles's, and encroaching upon it ; and a broad...
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ADMINISTRATION OF CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS.
The SpectatorAT times in the streets of some Italian city—say Florence, you may see the passengers step aside to make way for a strange group of men in black gowns, each with a peaked hood...
A NEW LEASE FOR THE COLLEGE OF ARMS. WHAT in
The Spectatorthe world can be done to save one of our venerated insti- tutions, which seems likely to expire of mere inanition ? It appears that the College of Arms is on its last legs; and...
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GLEANINGS.
The SpectatorThe noble mansions which arose along the Northern bank of the Thames, called "the Strand," were placed on the sites of despoiled episcopal residences and ecclesiastical grounds....
THE POET'S FAREWELL TO LOVE.
The SpectatorIMITATED FROM THE SPANISH. " No oso pensar el dia y hora quando His ojos comengaron a mirarte."—Boscaw. When first with all a lover's pride I wooed and won thee for my bride,...
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SPECTATOR'S LIBRARY.
The SpectatorBrooasput , Life of Gerald Griffin, Esq. By his Brother. Pravisvics, Simpkin and Marshall ; Cumming. Dublin. A Geography of Pennsylvania : containing an account of the...
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TREGO'S PENNSYLVANIA.
The SpectatorTHIS American importation is remarkable for its generic character. It is not that we have nothing like it in England as regards sub- stance, buts we have nothing presented to us...
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PARIS AND ITS PEOPLE.
The SpectatorHAVING exhausted all that was outward in "the Great Metropo- lis" of England, Mr. GRANT paid a visit to Paris, to subject the French capital to the process which enabled him to...
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PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED, From November 17th to November 234.
The SpectatorBOORS. Paris and its People. By the Author of "Random Recollections of the Lords and Commons," Soc. In two volumes. Greece under the Romans; a Historical View of the condition...
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MUSIC IN SCHOOLS FOR THE BLIND.
The SpectatorMR. Roanrsox, of Stonegate, York, has lately exhibited a new and highly-interesting musical experiment in the Blind School of that city. Having conceived the idea of forming a...
HANDEL.
The SpectatorTO THE EDITOR OF THE SPECTATOR. Loudon. 19th November 1843. Sea—I have just been reading your article on Deborah, and find some "historical recollections" in it which are...
MUSIC.
The SpectatorMADAME DULCKEN'S sondes MUSICALES. Tax first of three entertainments, at which the rarest and best cham- ber-music is to be the constant attraction, took place at the residence...
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BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, AND DEATHS.
The SpectatorBIRTHS. On the 6th November, at Aberdeen, the Lady of the Rev. Sir WILLIAM DUISBAH, of Darn. Bart, of a daughter. On the 8th, at the Rectory House, Cheriton2Fitzpaine, the...
COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.
The SpectatorTuesday, Nov. 21. PARTNERSHIPS DISSOLVED. Edmondson and Spence. Bradford, accountants-Panting and Holloway. Malmes. bury, brokers-Smith and Robins, Strand, printers-Richardson...
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PRICES
The SpectatorCURRENT. BRITISH S per Cent. Consols ........ Ditto for Account 3 per Cents. Reduced 3* per Cents. Reduced New 3* per Cents Loug Annuities Bauk Stock, 7 per cent. India Stock,...