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The week has disclosed two new features in Irish politics.
The SpectatorThe first is the adhesion of the Ministerialists to Mr. O'Coaregt.t.'s Precur.or agitation : and the second. which we hold to be more important, the establishment of a new...
Another arrival from New York brings intelligence from Canada to
The Spectatorthe 5th ultimo. There had been several meetings to address Lord DURHAM, but they were attended exclusively by the "British" party. The French inhabitants—" freeholders of the...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorToe Municipal elections for England and Wales took place on Wednesday. As yet, comparatively few returns have been re- ceived: but, so far, neither party appears to have much...
The revision of the lists of Parliamentary voters is now
The Spectatorcom- pleted, and the Tories make out a formidable statement of their successes. The Morning Chronicle, denying that the general re- sult has been unfavourable to the Whigs, has...
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Additional light from various quarters has this week been thrown
The Spectatorupon the extent and object of the military operations in Asia, briefly alluded to in our last Postscript. To make the sub- ; ject intelligible to readers not versed in Eastern...
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At the Marylehone Offiett, on Wednesday, Henry Jones and John
The SpectatorLees, two soldiers of the First Battalion of Grenadier Guards, were charged with a violent assault on Mr. Beery Stork, of George Street, Portman Square. It appeared from Mr....
The political news of the European Continent may be summed
The Spectatorup in a few sentences. The Sugar question in France has been disposed of, for the present, by an ordinance reducing the duty on Colonial sugar one third, and the imposition of...
At the Bow Street Office, on Tuesday, Mr. Le Breton,
The SpectatorClerk of the Guardian: of St. Martin's parish, charged a female pauper with re. fusing to work. The woman was the wife of a sailor, who paid 1Ss. a month to the parish towards...
The elections of Maryland, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, have been
The Spectatorfavourable to Mr. VAN BUREN; and this unexpected success has elated his partisans.
Ebt Alderman Atkins, an old City Tory, died on Friday.
The SpectatorHis ward was Walbrook ; and Sir James Duke having declined a contest for the Aldermanic gown, Mr. Deputy Gibbs will surceed Mr. Atkins. Yesterday, being the first day of term....
Elle Court.
The SpectatorTHE most remarkable point in the official record of the Court gossip this week, is that Lord Melbourne's name is scarcely mentioned. On Sunday afternoon, he is reported to have...
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Fredemiek Chapman, Deputy Clerk of St. George's, Hanover Sommare, decamped
The Spectatoron Monday, with 701. belonging to Mr. Powell, felerk of the Vestry. Three young men, employed as clerks in the offices of the Eastern e7ount'es Railway Company at London Midge,...
THE GALE.
The SpectatorLast week, the Western alai Southern coasts of England were visited erith a storm of wind and ruin, which reached the Metropolis on Sun- day night, and has seldom been exceeded...
..A clock placed in the shop.wintlow of Mr. T. Cox
The SpectatorSavory, Corn- lilt, daily attracts a crowd of spectators. It would seem to be worked ley a magimetic power. Tile hands are placed in the centre of a per- Iataly transparent pane...
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'fhirty.five persons were killed, on the :14th October, by a
The Spectatortree mendous explosion of gas in " John Pit," a cold mine belonging ets Mr. Henry Curwen of Workington Hall, at Lowca, about four miler- from IV hitehaven. The Mitcham& Herald...
Countrn.
The SpectatorThe Liberals claim small majorities on the registration in Reading and Peterelield ; and it is admitted by a writer in the last number cd - Frascr's Magazine, who has made out a...
At the Essex Michaelmas Quarter. sessions, the .71Iagistrates quashs.:: an
The Spectatororder which reduced the amount on which the tithe income of c clergyman was rated to the poor. The case is thus stated by the ilErning ChroPi(le-- " The appeal to the...
Some changes in the Ministry are reported to be in
The Spectatorcontemplation; and, if carried into effect, will cause new elections for the Northern division of Cheshire rind the West Riding of Yorkshire. Mr. Ed- ward John Stantley, it is...
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IRELAND.
The SpectatorIt is rumoured in Dublin, that Mr. John Leely Townshend, the octogeniatian Master in Chancery, has resigned ; and that Mr. Maziere Bredy accepts his appointment. Mr. Richard...
The Coventry Heruhl contains an mamma of a riot in
The SpectatorCovi ntry, in which twenty mot belona , ,ing to the Seventh Region at of Hussars and the Fourteenth Regimmit of Light Dragoons, biilet: ii ai Coventry on their way to...
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In reply to a letter to dine at Tipperary, Mr.
The SpectatorO'Connell says, that be is now engaged in the most important struggle of his life "that of obtaining for Ireland a perfect equalization of civil and religious liberty with the...
The Anti-Tithe meeting at Navan, on the :24th of October,
The Spectatorwas at- tended by many of the principal landowners and tenantry of Meath county. The High Sheriff, Mr. Corbally, was in the chair. Ile urged the people to persevere until they...
Referring to a late meetin4 in Waterford, whereat Mr. Quinn,
The SpectatorMr. Pierce 11:amity's " accredited ngetit," endeavoured to persuade the good people that nothing could be leAter than the Railway Commis- simmers' line, our evening cuntemporary...
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The address passed last session by the House of Commons
The Spectatorin favour of their late Chaplains is about to be carried into effect, by the appoint- meta of the Reverend Edward Vernon Lockwood to a Stall at Canter- bury, and the Reverend...
At the late Carlow Quarter-sessions, in the course of a
The Spectatorcivil bill action, a case of bribery against the Liberal party, who supported Mr. 3Iaule at the lute election, was clearly made out. M‘Dermott, an elec- tor of Cailow, required...
SCOTLAND.
The SpectatorA meeting of the working classes was held at Perth on the 19th ultimo, to adopt the National Petition and the People's Charter, and to appoint a delegate to the London...
iicellancouo.
The SpectatorDespatches, dated the 29th of May, were received on Tuesday, at the India Board, from the Governor-General of India. Sir Henry Ellis, who is spoken of as likely to obtain the...
We understand that Earl Spencer and the Duke of Richmond
The Spectatorhad an interview in London, a few days ago, in consequence of overtures which had been made to them to join the Ministry ; when, after mature deliberation, both these noblemen...
Lord and Lady Brougham and their daughter are staying at
The SpectatorDover for the benefit of sea.bathing. His Lordship is constantly the com- panion of the Duke of Wellington in his perambulations about the docks and the harbour.—Morning...
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The French papers of Thursday are bare of news. They
The Spectatorall ex- press admiration at the activity and vigour displayed by the British Government in India.
It appears that, notwithstanding his assurance to the States- General
The Spectatorthat DO addition would be made to the public burdens, the King of Holland finds it necessary to ask for a new loan of about a million and a half sterling.
POSTSC 1(1 PT.
The SpectatorLetters from Constantinople, of the 10th October, state that Mr. the Briti-li Envoy in Persia, bad returned to Tehran ; and that the Shah had forwarded submissive letters to...
The Gazette of last night announces that Lieutenant-Colonel WIL- LIAM
The SpectatorRein, C. B., h is been appointed Governor and Commander.in- Chief of the Bermudas or Somers Islands. It thus appears that Sir A SOREN' LEITH HAY, who had never entered upon the...
An address to the Irish People, signed by the authorized
The Spectatorrepresen- tatives—Chairmen or Secretaries—of one hundred and nine Working Men's Associations in England, Scotland, and IVale, has been sent to us. It exhibits, in the following...
Captain Marryat, who is travelling in the Western States of
The SpectatorAmerica, has been much annoyed by a false report of having intrigued With the wife of a physician in Louisville, Kentucky; and still more annoyed by the receipt of five hundred...
The Lady of Lord JOHN RUSSELL, who had been seriously
The Spectatorill, at Brighton, since her last confinement, was pronounced by her medical attendant to be in great danger on Wednesday night ; and we regret to add, this announcement was too...
The Princess of Beira got into Spain under tile disguise
The Spectatorof frmme de aambre to the handsome Madame de Fulgosio, well known both in Bayonne and Madrid. Madame de Fulgosio inhabited the Hotel St. Etienne, in Bayonne ; and was known to...
The unknown person who sent to this Office a small
The Spectatorparcel, about the siv of a news- paper, by the Birmingham Itailvi ay, .f.r the carrive tgr which 6s. 8d. was asked, this morning, is informed that the parcel was not taken in....
MONEY MARKET.
The SpectatorSToCK EXCHANGE, IFRIDAT AFTERNOON, The Money Market is not so firm to-day as it was at the beginning of the week ; some considerable quantity of Stock having been brought to...
BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, AND DEATHS.
The SpectatorBIRTHS. BIRTHS. On the 294 ult.. at Errol Purl:, Lady II Tall ETTA ALI EN, or a still - born son. On the 23.1 ult • the Lady f li stEVI,' Casto, , Esq . or Dumbarnie, of A SID....
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"OTHELLO" AT COVENT GARDEN.
The SpectatorA 1.1110VGII the milder opinion Wits otherwise, yet the lover of SUM:MI:RE may take it as it truth, that he will be unable to compre- hend fully all the beauties of the plays,...
EAST INDIA SHIPPING.
The SpectatorThe Baj Ranee, from Calcutta to Liverpool. was totally wrecked near the former play , on the lot August. It is Waned all on hoard perished e%cept the elite! nude. Arrived-At...
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LORD DURHAM'S ADMINISTRATION IN CANADA.
The SpectatorLETTER I. TO THE EDITOR Ok"PHE SPECTATOR. Gra.■'s Inn, 1st November IR—Lord Durham having suddenly determined to resign his powers ;overnor- General of Canada, the people of...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorSELF-DEPENDENCE OF THE PEOPLE. BEING convinced that amongst the causes of obstruction con- tinually operating to defeat the progress of the popular cause, ignorance and...
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THE VICAR AND THE WIDOW: POPERY IN THE CHURCH.
The SpectatorTim Sixth of the Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England classes the First and Second Books of Maccabees among those which "the Church doth read for example of life and...
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A LANDLORD'S GRATITUDE.
The SpectatorTHE English landlords are in high glee. The bed season and de- ficient crops work well for them. The prospect that for a long period the priee of corn will almost touch the...
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WREN 'sir. FRANCIS 13ARING's New Zealand Bill was discussed
The Spectatorin the House of Commons, GEORGE GREY, personifying olli- cial and bembureaucratie spite, went out of his way to misstate We turn to a work on the same subject, but of a very...
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Mr. Gottoest describes the condition of' the labourers. They WHILST
The SpectatorMACREADY is rendering the fine and mechanical arts, get spry high wages; but some expected. not merely a " land and the histrionic abilities within his reach, subservient to the...
The Pictorial Edition of Shakspore. Two Gentlemen of Verona.....KiWg and
The SpectatorCo. NATUR AL PHILOSOPHY, . 1CT ION, Bentley.
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MR. TOMLINSON'S MANUAL OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. Ie any person of
The Spectatoractive pursuits is at a loss to employ his spare time, or if any idler, with a mind not utterly unfitted for intellectual attention, is weary of his profitless life, let him...
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MELTON DE MOWBRAY.
The SpectatorAs a fiction, this book is almost beneath regard. What little of truth and capability the eletnents of the story possessed, is de- stroyed by the manner in which they are...
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The Lost Evidence, lty Miss BURDON, is a novel nf
The Spectatorcircumstan- tial excitement, full of nteident and mystery, adorned with sonic lively yassages of desci iption, and spun out with a quantity of characterless and artificial...
Mr. PRINCE'S Parellel of Universal History is a very useful
The Spectatorvolume,ehher for reference, or for reading as an introduction to the subject. The events of' the world are arranged into three epochs, of Ancient History, Middle Ages, and...
Report front the Select 0,mmitlee of the House of Commons
The Spectatoron Transportation, together with a Letter from the Archbishop of Report front the Select 0,mmitlee of the House of Commons on Transportation, together with a Letter from the...
Books on "etiquette" are no doubt quizzabie enough ; and
The Spectatorfollowing their instructions to the letter, will assuredly not convert a brute or a booby into a gentleman; but there are many very worthy pe; sons to whom the smattering of "...
Mr. SMITH is again in the field, with added numbers
The Spectatorto his Standard Library Edition. The two parts before us consist of /lligh's Narrative of the Mutiny of the Bounty, and the Poeti- cal ltbrItsqf Henry Kirke White. If there are...
PROGRESS OF PUBLICATION.
The SpectatorNOTWITHSTANDING a pile of printed paper upon our table, fashioned in the likeness of books, sufficient to form a decent collection so far as were bulk and number are concerned,...
Motives to the Study of Biblical Literature is an agreeable
The Spectatorcollection of information relative to the Scriptures,—touching upon philology, bibliography, criticism, and the manners and customs of the Jews and other nations with which they...
An Examination of Phrenology, by 'THOMAS ShWALL, M.D. This little
The Spectatorbook is an American publication ; and comprises, in two lectures, some succinct arguments in opposition to phrenology, based upon the most convincing species of argument,...
Hints for the Table is a selection of facts and
The Spectatoropinions onmat- ter s of eating and drinking, gleaned from the pages of physicann and cooks, and the table-talk of epicures, classed under dif- ferent heads, as " Dietetics,"...
Ada, a tale, by Mt s, N xonsst, is a
The Spectatorsketch of a coquette, wrought up into an Mu:re:tiler story of a sentimental kind. The evils of self-love an.I vanity are depicted in such a way us to make them felt by the most...
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A variety of other things are cumbering our table. Of
The Spectatorthese, the only ones whose presence time and space will allow us to note, are three professional works- 1. A Treatise on the Structure, Economy, aud Diseases of the Ear. By...
1. Moons Life of Byron, reprinted by Mr. M URRAY, in
The Spectatora handsome volume corresponding in all points with his single. volume edition of the Poems. The illustrations are a vignette of Newsteacl Abbey. and six portraits of BYRON in a...
A Popular Dictionary of Pacts and Knowledge, by the Reve-
The Spectatorrend S. BARROW, has reached a fifth edition, without having fallen under our notice, or we believe that of any other chronicler or literature. Although the Dictionary and its...
The two last volumes of THOMAS'S Child's Library contain that
The Spectatormost real and romantic of fictions, Robinson Crusoe ; the narrative being made more suitable to the comprehension and en- tertainment of children, the omission of such minute...