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Colonial Secretary, on whom, according to usage it falls, Mr.
The SpectatorSid- ney Herbert intimated that an additional Secretary for Military Affairs will be furnished to that Miniater. Lord Ellenhorough has been the chief critic in the House of...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorMINISTERS have postponed the second reading of the Reform Bill —in other words, withdrawn it for the session. We were too sanguine, it appears, in supposing, because a measure...
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Something in the way of material improvement has been done
The Spectatorout of doors, and something has been undone. Lord Palmerston has received a numerous deputation in sequel to that suggestion which originated amongst "Friends in Council," and...
In foreign affairs, the European war against Russia forms the
The Spectatormost prominent topic; and the Emperor of the French has made an important contribution to the historical notices of the subject, by his opening speech to the Senate and the...
/3 thatto anti frorrtiungo in Is arlinunt.
The SpectatorPRINCIPAL BUSINESS OF THE WEEK. HOUSE OF LOans. Monday, Feb, 27. Courts of Common Law Amendment Bill ; Lord Chancellor's Statement; Bill read first time—County Courts Extension...
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311ttrninitit.
The SpectatorThe Corporation of the City of London have sent in to the Royal Com- mission a report agreed to in Common Council, setting forth such altera- tions as they recommend in the...
tuurt
The SpectatorTan Qum: and the Royal Family witnessed the parade of the Firet Battalion of the Scots Fusiliers on Tuesday . morning, from the balcony ' of Buckingham Palace previously to...
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SCOTLAND. _ The Lord Provost of Edinburgh has returned from
The SpectatorLondon, where he has been urging Ministers to grant money for the establishment of a Scot- tish National Museum. The Scotsmen says that the Highland Society were about to send a...
- IRELAND, .- The official statement , of the poll at
The Spectatorthe lantivelaction is-LrOrteseue, 91-6; Cantwell, fliffifla In the course of the speechmaking on the dead - ration-day, at Dundalk, 'Mr. Cantwell-boasted that he - would-unseat...
Ct 7grniurro.
The SpectatorAt a meeting of the electioneering committee of Mr. Milner Gibson and Mr. Bright in Manchester, on Monday,—Mr. George Wilson in the chair,—Mr. Bright made a speech against the...
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furtigu nut Ciluutal.
The SpectatorPc.—The Emperor opened the Legislative Session of 1851, in the Hall of the Marshals, on Thursday. In the first part of the speech he delivered on the occasion, he referred to...
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WAR PREPARATIONS.
The SpectatorAnother body of Guards marched from London on Tuesday morning ; and the spectacle was still more remarkable than the starlight departure of the battalions last week. It...
Ziortilautun
The SpectatorSince Saturday there have been four Cabinet Councils : otie on Saturday, at the Foreign Office; a second—which sat for several hours— on Sunday, at Lord Clarendo'a ; a third and...
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POSTSCRIPT.
The SpectatorSATURDAY. In the House of Commons; last night, Lord Sons: Ritessm, stated the reasons which have induced . the • Government to postpone the second reading of the Reform Bill„...
.plants.
The SpectatorOn the 5th February, at the Government House, Halifax, Nova Scotia, the Lady of his Excellency Sir Gaspard Le Marchant, of a son. On tbe 18th, at Bath, the Wife of the Rev. F....
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Mr. Ltiotta,underajeitt yesterdny, a severe and Alietresting,examination- heforethe.Cannmittem for inquiring
The Spectatorinto, the allegedieerrliptiens of Irish Membera..A• He :complained of being unfairly ;pressed eliinied that he had madeany chergetlie had spoken on mere riuneatre'4.taral he...
An important deputation is to wait on Sir James q
The Spectatorond4y, on an important subject—the copal:option of a liathoue,pfhrefoge at the mouth of the Tyne.. There is no suchlarbour from Hatlkte,Leith. That Part of our coast ia mainly...
The Reform Club will entertain Vice-Admiral Sir C. Napier, cons-
The Spectatorminding the Channel Fleet, at dinner on Tuesday next. Lord Palmer- ston will take the chair.— Times. The following unintelligible telegraphic despatch has been received from...
The reigning Duke of Saxe-Coburg Gotha arrived 4t Paris on
The SpectatorThurs- day, and took up his abode an the Pavillion Marsan ; Where the Emperor and Empress paid him a visit. The Gotha Gazette intipastes that the ob- ject of this journey is to...
PROGRESS OF PARLIAMENTARY BUSINESS
The SpectatorSELECT COMMITTEE DEPARTMENT. Ministerial. Small Arms to consider the cheapest, most expeditious, and most efficient mode of providing Small Arms-for the public service. (Mr....
MONEY MARKET.
The SpectatorSTOCK EXCHANGE, FRIDAY AIITERNOON. The fluctuations in Government Securities this week have been compara- tively trifling, and the speculative operations for a fall not...
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THE DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE AND ART.
The SpectatorWe have received from the Department of Science and Art circulars showing the progress of the movement for indoctrinating the country with the elementary principles of drawing...
/int arts.
The SpectatorTHE ARUNDEL SOCIETY. The fifth annual report of the Council of this Society, and the engrav- ings which accompany it, show a satisfactory state of things. The artist selected...
33iiitstr.
The SpectatorThe production of Mr. Henry Leslie's new oratorio, Immanuel, has been expected for some time with considerable interest. The composer, though a young man and an amateur, is well...
The series of thirty-two drawings by which Raffaelle illustrated the
The Spectatorstory of Psyche, as told by Apuleius, has been engraved by M. Adolph Gnauth, and is in course of publication at Stuttgart. As a sample of his ware, the publisher, Id. Kohler,...
PARISIAN THEATRICALS.
The SpectatorMadame Emile de Girardin has achieved great success at the Francais, by one of those brief embodiments of an idea which are so thoroughly ap- preciated by the better class of...
4t bratrts.
The SpectatorSome American genius having swelled out the neat little ghost-story of the Corsican Brothers into a dreary five-act play, deemed suitable for the talents of Mr. G. V. Brooke at...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorNEUTRALS AND COMMERCE IN WAR. Loan Joint Russzu, has announced that Ministers have under consideration " the whole question relating to neutrals in war time," and will probably...
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REORGANIZATION OF THE CIVIL SERVICE.
The SpectatorTHERE has been a good deal of writing lately against the proposal made by the Commissioners under the Treasury for a reorganiza- tion of the Civil Service, explained in a...
LAST MOVE OF THE HEBDOMADAL BOARD.
The SpectatorIF it were possible to watch the progress of a movement so practi- cally important as University Reform with an interest dependent simply on the cleverness displayed by parties...
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THE GOVERNMENT GUN-SHOP.
The SpectatorTHE do gmatic ob j ection" a g aibit I any attempt at trade, manu- facture, facture, or Other industry, by Goterthnent, will not stand -either the ge neral application which is...
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WHEN WE SHILL HAVE PUBLIC E'DITCATION.
The SpectatorMnirsTeus have promised a measure on the subject of Public Edu- cation, and the public has expected one at their hands. We have ourselves, some time past, argued both for the...
THE LATEST IRISH BUBBLE.
The SpectatorThe recent outburst about the corruptibility of Irish Members be- gan with the attack on two gentlemen who had joined the Govern- ment, and the gravamen of the attack was...
MAYORITLES AND MINORITIES—THE STATE AND THE ELECTORAL DISTRICTS.
The SpectatorTHE columns of a weekly journal are not infinitely elastic ; they do not permit either a frequent repetition of arguments on single points or an unlimited insertion of...
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110W BARRISTERS ARE MADE.
The SpectatorJr is never too late to learn ; but we know no instance of a de- ferred question so remarkable as that raised by Mr. Napier on Wednesday in moving for a Royal Commission...
CRYSTAL PALACE VICISSITUDES AND PROSPECTS. THE Crystal Palace is to
The Spectatorbe opened in May, that is, as certainly as human calculation can make it. The huge arched palace of glass, containing the most wonderfully various specimens of art in all...
MILITARY GAZETTE.
The SpectatorWAZ-OFFICE, Feb. 28.-Brevet-The undermentioned officers to be Brigadier- Generals while employed upon the Staff of the forces about proceeding upon a parti- cular service,...
NAVAL GAZETTE.
The SpectatorADIIIRALTT, Feb. 24.-Corps of Royal Marines-Capt. J. Buchanan to be Lieut.- Col. ; Capt. H. G. Mitford to be Lieut.-Col. vice Dawes, to retired loll-pay; First Lieut. E. T. T....
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COMMERCIAL GAZETTE.
The SpectatorTuesday, Fthruary 28. PARTNERSHIPS DISSOLVED.-Vincent and Fenton, City Road, silk-braid-manufac- turers-Powell and Popplewell, Castleford, Yorkshire, brewers-May and Godfrey,...
PRICES CURRENT.
The SpectatorFriday, 91 1 911 81 3 921 319 51 237 Is BANK' OF ENGLAND. An Account, pursuant to the Act 7th and Sth Vittoria; cap. 32, for the week ending on Saturday, the 26 th day or...
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Loudon: Printed by Iosara etarton, of 320, in the Strand,
The SpectatorCounty of Middlesex, Printer, at the office of Jowl. Cratton, No. -15. Crane Court, in rise Parish of St. Mo - ntan% in the West, in the City of London ; and Published by the...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorHOOKER'S HIMALAYAN JOURNALS. * ON looking at a map of India, the reader will see that the Hima- layan range drops in a South-easterly direction from its most Northerly point,...
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BAYLE ST. JOHN'S PURPLE TINTS OF PARIS. * RAVING been disappointed
The Spectatorin his hopes of the French Republic, Mr. Bayle St. John appears to have set about reflecting upon the causes of its failure : and he finds it in the moral or rather immoral con-...
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MAUDE TALBOT. * GREAT power of delineation is the principal trait
The Spectatorof Maude Talbot. There is some novelty in the story, or rather in the character of Maude, which may be said to produce and govern the leading in- cidents. The incidents...
CHOKER'S MOORE. * ASCHIM characterized the class called wits as being
The Spectator"open flatter- ers and privy mockers ": the Postscript of Mr. Croker to his • Correspondence between the Right Honourable J. W. Croker and the Right Honourable Lord John...
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PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.
The SpectatorBooss. The Mediterranean; a Memoir, Physical, Historical, and Nautical. By Rear-Admiral William Henry Smyth, K.S.F., one of the Board of Visitors of the Royal Observatory; some...
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OBJECTS OF EDUCATION.
The SpectatorSix — During the years (not now a few) in which I have read your paper, I have often had occasion to notice your candour in stating an opponent's position. I might almost say...
Ittttro to Of eltitor.
The SpectatorTHE LAST DISGRACE OF OXFORD. Oxford, 24th February. Sin—The ruse of the Heads has succeeded, and our University , is forced . by the vote of today into a position antagonistic...
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Camberwell, 22d February 1864.
The SpectatorSin—Deserving as the Reform Bill of 18,54 in its general features may be of the warm commendation that you have bestowed upon it, several of its parts are nevertheless, fairly...
DEFECTS OF THE NEW REFORM BILL.
The Spectator22d February 1854. SIR—Your remarks upon the Government scheme of Parliamentary Re- form will have great effect in recommending it to the public, by pointing out the principles...