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As the Parliamentary Vacation approaches its end, public meet- ings
The Spectatorhave become rather more frequent ; and also, negatively or positively, they have become rather more practical than usual ; the chief subjects being Representative Reform and...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorMeanwhile, the proceedings of Russia appear to have excited new vigilance in several quarters. The Government of Denmark is said to have expressed a desire that England and...
We have not yet quite done with the Convict question
The Spectatorin Australia ; nor will it be possible suddenly to out out that diseased part of the body politic : the more reason why every practicable step should be taken to secure perfect...
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The expiring scandal about Prince Albert has come to a
The Spectatorhead, and has burst spontaneously. The last form of the charge was the report that a pamphlet had been written in 1851 disclosing the reasons of Lord Palmerston's dismissal from...
C4 t (nu t.
The SpectatorQUEEN VICTORI.& has entertained a numerous and illustrious circle of guests this week at Windsor Castle ; including the Archbishop of Can- terbury, the Earl and Countess of...
Vnutiurto.
The SpectatorThe Manchester political gathering was held on Tuesday. Heretofore these meetings have taken place in the Free Trade Hall, in the presence of thousands; but as that room is this...
tYt Zernfoli5.
The SpectatorThe City Commissioners have examined this week a great many officers of the Corporation, chiefly those occupying inferior posts; and the evi- dence they have given consists...
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SCOTLAND.
The SpectatorThe great educational meeting at Edinburgh, postponed on account of the illness of Lord Paumure, was held on Wednesday ; his Lordship pre- siding. Among those who took part in...
IRELAND.
The SpectatorThe Lord Mayor of Dublin, Sir Edward M'Donnell, gave his inaugural banquet on Tuesday. The Lord-Lieutenant and Mr. Shaw the Recorder made speeches: each admitted that pauperism...
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furrigu null tolnnial.
The SpectatorFRANCE.—M. de Kisseleff was present at a ball at the Tuileries on Monday ; and, of course, was received with courtesy by the Emperor. The dancing was opened by the Emperor and...
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Ziorttlaututs.
The SpectatorA "suppressed pamphlet," said to contain something dreadful about Prince Albert, has been the subject of a nine-days wonder. A letter from Mr. William Coningham, of Brighton,...
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There has been another wreck. The Olinda, iron screw-steamer, bound
The Spectatorfor the Brazils, left the Mersey on Thursday, with a heavy cargo and several passengers. She met a strong head-wind, and, unable to proceed, was driven on the Harry Furlong...
33! It ir.
The SpectatorThe performance of Elijah by the Harmonic Union on Monday was marked by the appearance of Belletti in the character of the Prophet. Signor Belletti had arrived in London only a...
POSTSCRIPT.
The SpectatorSATURDAY. The telegraph still flashes news of Turkish victories on the Danube. A despatch from Paris dated yesterday says—" It is asserted that a great battle took place near...
The Moniteur of yesterday published a report addressed to the
The SpectatorEmperor by the Finance Minister. It shows that, by cancelling credits and by excess of revenue, the apparent deficit of 98,000,000 francs for the current year will be reduced to...
The Times of this morning reports a meeting held on
The SpectatorWednesday, at the house of the Chevalier Bunsen, including Sir John Herschel, Sir Charles Trevelyan, Professor Owen and representatives of most of the Missionary, Asiatic, and...
Cbt tbratrto.
The SpectatorThe appearance of Miss Charlotte Cushman at the Haymarket is an event of some interest, as the time since she last performed has been suf- ficiently long to allow the growth of...
Madame Goldschmidt—the Jenny Lind that was—is expected here early in
The Spectatorthe season. She is to sing only in oratorios, both in London and in the provinces.
The people of Edinburgh have this winter, for the first
The Spectatortime, got a re- gular opera, partly Italian partly German, with which they appear to be much delighted. The company is respectable ; including Madame Cara- don, Herr Reichardt,...
A Cabinet Council—the fourth within the last eight days—was held
The Spectatoryesterday at the Foreign Office. It was attended by all the Ministers, and sat three hours and a half. The steamer Itaj!di, sailed yesterday from Southampton - with fifty tons...
PARISIAN THEATRICALS.
The SpectatorM. Alexandre Dumas has been unlucky with his three " Jeunessesr (" de Louis XIV," "de Louis XV," and "do Lauzun,") none of which have been allowed to mature themselves in the...
MONEY MARKET.
The SpectatorSTOCK EXCHANGE. FRIDAY AFTERNOON. The Eastern question anxieties, which were greatly augmented at the close of last week, continue unabated. Consols, which after regular hours...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE OPENING OF THE SESSION. This time it becomes more than a newspaper commonplace to talk of the unusual interest with which the public awaits the opening of Parliament, and...
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REVELATIONS TO RUSSIA.
The SpectatorIF the aspect of the Continent, with all its brooding wars, agitated potentates, and perplexed peoples, could be portrayed in a picture, the view would be like some of those...
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PROPOSED REFORM OF THE ECCLESIASTICAL COURTS.
The SpectatorIF any man had a very precious cargo of goods to send from England to the ancient island of Taprobane or Serendib, now called Ceylon, it is not likely that he would seek about...
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LOSS OF THE TAYLEITR :
The SpectatorJUDICIAL INQUIRY INTO SIIIPWRECKS. IxornEn emigrant-ship has been lost, and of nearly 600 people on board not 250 have been saved. The ship started under circum- stances which...
SOME THOUGHT FOR NEXT SUMMER.
The SpectatorTHE " Friend s in Council," whose recorded conversations have been rendered familiar to the public through the Whittingham Press, have been agitated of late by anxiety for the...
STATISTICS OF REPRESENTATION.
The SpectatorSuooesnoss for certain changes in the classification-list's of the Statistics of Representation, published in a Supplement to the Spectator of the 7th instant, have reached us....
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'UNIVERSITY REFORM: THE DISSENTERS.
The SpectatorOxford, 24th January 1854. Sin—Allow me to offer a few remarks suggested by the letter of "A Dis- senter" in your last. It touches subjects on which .1 feel strongly, and on...
ENGLISH CAPITAL AND ENGLISH ENERGY.
The Spectator1, Adam Street, Adelphi, 23d January 1854. Sin—A strange notion has been put forth, that the present strikes are the precursors of the downfall of English prosperity, by driving...
fetus to 4e e[itor.
The SpectatorMOORE'S LATIN. 171h January 1854. Stn—The reviewer of Moore's Memoirs in last Saturday's Spectator, refer- ring to Moore's mention of the portrait of Galileo seeming to say,...
THE RUSSIAN WAR: UNPROTECTED BRITISH COM1SERCE.
The SpectatorLondon, 26th January 1854. Sra—I remark that in all the speculations put forth as to the results of a war with Russia, it is taken for granted that at sea, at least, we have...
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/tut 3,Ito.
The SpectatorJAPANESE EXHIBITION. The room of the Old Society of Painters in Water Colours in Pall Mall is now occupied by a collection less artistic, indeed, in the English sense, but...
DIORAMA OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
The SpectatorThat now long-established denizen of the Egyptian Hall, Mont Blanc, has since this week got Constantinople for its over-the-way neighbour. Mr. Allom, assisted by Messrs....
NAVAL GAZETTE.
The SpectatorADMIRALTY, Jan. 21.—Corps of Royal Marines—Gent. Cadets to be Second Lieuts. —A. Malone, H. Suther, T. P. Newell. ADMIRALTY, Jan. 21.—Admiral of the White J. Carthew has been...
HEALTH. OF LONDON DURING THE WEEK ENDING JANUARY 21. [From
The Spectatorthe Official Return.] ZymotIc Diseases Dropsy, Cancer, and other diseases of uncertain or variable seat rct ar iscases Diseases of the Brain, Spinal Marrow, Nerves, and...
On the 9th December, at Gibraltar, the Wife of Captain
The SpectatorR. Peel, Thirteenth Light Infantry, of a son. On the 20th January, at Marble House, Warwick, the Wife of the Rev. T. N. Farthing, Inner of Christ Church, Denton, Lancashire, of...
MILITARY GAZETTE.
The SpectatorWAR-OFFICE, Jan. 27.-4th Regt. of Drag. Guards—H. Ponsford, Gent, to be Cor- net, by purchase, vice Banks, who retires. 3d Light Drags.—Surg, W. 0. Macken- zie, M.D. from the...
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PR,ICES CURRENT.
The SpectatorBRITISH FUNDS (Closing Prieto.) &Surd. Monday. Tuesday. Wanes. Thum 3 per Cent Consols 3 per Cents Reduced 31 per Cents Ditto for Account Long Annuities Bank Stock, 8 per Cent...
COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.
The SpectatorTuesday, January 24. PARTNEUSHIPS DISSOLVED.-T. and .1. Hartley, Bradford, Yorkshire, stuff-manu- facturers-Hartley and Robinson. Bradford, Yorkshire, stuff-manufacturers-Rum-...
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London: Printed by JOSF.PII CLAYTON, of 320, Strand, in the
The SpectatorConnty of Middlesex, Printer, at the office of JOSEPH CLAYTON, NO. 10, Crane Court, in the Parish of St. Dunstan's in the West, in the City of London ; and Published by the...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorFANCOURT'S HISTORY OF YUCATAN.. THIS work exhibits considerable ability, with painstaking industry and extensive research, directed to a subject of little general interest. The...
*uppinitritt to tAbite *pertator POR PRE VEER ENDING No. 1335.]
The SpectatorSATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1854. [GRATIS WITH THE WEEK'S SPECTATOR.
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CISTELLAMONTE. *
The SpectatorThis may be a clever political romance, or it may be an actual autobiography, injured by expansion and over-detail, as well as by the introduction of an Italian love-story in a...
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BROOKS'S RUSSIANS OF THE SOUTH. * WHAT object took Mr. Brooks
The Spectatorto Odessa is not stated, but it would seem to have been to gather information connected with the corn- trade. That term, however, must be taken in a large sense, including the...
PROFESSOR FORBES'S NORWAY AND ITS GLACIERS. * TRAVEL in the common
The Spectatorsense of the word was not the purpose of Professor Forbes's visit to Norway. His first object was to ob- serve the total eclipse in July 1851 ; his second, to examine the...
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'BAILLIE COCHRANE'S FLORENCE THE BEAUTIFUL. * FRENCH scenery, French character, and
The SpectatorFrench provincial man- ners at the time of the first Revolution, form the distinguishing feature of this novel, and indeed constitute its attraction. The ma- terial may be...