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The Portuguese Cortes have been principally occupied with preliminary regulations,
The Spectatorappointing committees, &c. The Oppo- sition in the Chamber of Deputies is discovered to be stronger than was anticipated, and may be said to number about 40 members out of the...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorWHEN orators or writers wish to attach vast importance to the acts or deliberations of any individual or body of persons, it is very usual to say, " the eyes of all Europe are...
Louts PHILIP has given up his journey to the South
The Spectatorof France : lie has too much on his hands to permit his absence from Paris. Marshal GERARD has been exceedingly ill, though he is now re- covering; and TRIERS is neglecting...
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Accounts from the West Indies to the 5th of August
The Spectatorwere re- ceived yesterday. From an epitome of their contents, published in the Courier, it appears, that at St. Kitt's the Negroes had re- fused to work, and manifested a...
The King of Bavaria has recalled the members of the
The SpectatorGreek 1Ftsgency, who were said to have been bribed with Russian gold ; and.thes well-meaning and sagacious Count ARMANNSPERG has Secoveied his ascendancy.
Etc Court.
The SpectatorTHE King, who spent the first part of the week at Windsor, arrived at St. James's Palace on Wednesday, attended by Sir Herbert Taylor. Boon after his arrival, the Sheriffs of...
Various alterations have been made in the Courts of the
The SpectatorOld Bailey, it being imagined that the increase of business likely to he caused by the new Central Criminal Law Court would render it necessary that they should be more...
There are some very contradictory accounts from Constanti- zople. According
The Spectatorto one version of the design of the Sultan, he intends to attack the Egyptians in Syria, without delay, being en- couraged in the attempt to regain the ceded provinces by...
Cbg flitrtropaIi4.
The SpectatorA public dinner was given on Wednesday, at the Albion in Alders- gate Street, to Mr. Wolryche Whitmore, M. P. by about eighty gentlemen interested in the success of the New...
The Americans are much pleased with their new gold coinage.
The Spectator21e mint strikes off to the value of from 20,000 to 25,000 dollars daily. Gold coin in the United States has till lately been a rarity.
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Cnuntrp.
The SpectatorThe South Lancashire Conservatives dined together on Thursday, at the little town, lately the rotten borough, of Newton, which lies half-way between Liverpool and Manchester:...
During the performances at Sadlers Wells Theatre, on Wednesday night,
The Spectatorthe audience were thrown into confusion by a report of flee. At the end of the Wood Dimon, after the explosion of a train, the curtain fell. Some of the scenery, made of very...
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On Wednesday evening last week, as Mr. Joseph Elms and
The SpectatorMr. Powell were passing down Clowance Street, they observed a soldier of the 98th Regiment coming towards them with his bayonet drawn, and apparently in a state of excitement :...
A smart shock of an earthquake was felt at Portsmouth
The Spectatoron Wednes- day night last week, about ten o'clock. Several houses were much shaken, and some slight damage was sustained. In other houses, articles placed against the walls, or...
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The Marquis of Downshire has announced his intention to pay,
The Spectatorin future, to the clergymen the amount of time composition due to them from parishes on his Lordship's property. The Dublin Evening Post has the followin g remarks upon this...
IRELAND.
The SpectatorMr. O'Connell has addressed a lon g letter to Lord Duncannon, in p erformance of his promise. The first part of it consists in an ex- posure of the absurdity of the Oran g e...
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The Edinburgh bankers, Messrs. Robert Allan and Son, suspended payment
The Spectatoron Saturday last. The Edinburgh bankers, Messrs. Robert Allan and Son, suspended payment on Saturday last. The mill-house and a granary of the Lochrin distillery, near Edin-...
SCoTLAND.
The SpectatorMighty preparations are - making in Edinburgh for the dinner to be given to Earl Grey on Monday the 15th. The list of stewards com- prises the names of two hundred and seventy...
111
The SpectatorWe were right in anticipating that Lord Brougham would be un- usually active during the recess. Indeed, scarcely a day passes that we do not bear some account of his rapid...
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The French Astronomer-Royal, M. rag°, is now in London, on
The Spectatorhis way to Edinburgh, to join the meeting of means which takes place next week in that city. 31. A rago has been coinmissioned by his iovernment to entirely remodel the...
The following biographical notice of Mr. Telford, the civil engineer,
The Spectatorwho died this week at his house in Abingdon Street, is extracted from the Courier. It is, we believe, in the main, fairly drawn up ; but the encomium on Mr. Telford's candour...
Donna Francisca, the wife of Don Carlos, died at Alverstoke
The SpectatorRec- tory, near Gosport, on Thursday afternoon. The immediate cause of her death is variously stated. One account says it was the typhus fever; another, that leeches having been...
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Optutottd of ibc t9rt114.
The SpectatorCATCHING AT STRAWS. MORNING Posr—Our columns of this day present a cheering and heart- stirring proof of the existence of strong constitutional feeling! , in the most MI-...
THE EMIGRANTS' FAREWELL.
The SpectatorSUNG AT THE DINNER OF rue SOUTH AUSTRALIAN COLONISTS, SEPTEMBER 3. Although we leave thee, Fatherli n Aril seek a foreign shore, And the delightful scenes of youth, Relinquish...
M. Carrel, editor of the National de 1834, was again
The Spectatorcited on the 29th August, before the Court of Assizes, sitting in banco, for another breach .of the injunction issued by the Court, interdicting that journal from publishing any...
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It is stated in the Dublin correspondence of the Miming
The SpectatorHerald, that Mr. BLACKBURNE had been offered, acid refused, the Puisne Judge- ship, vacant by the death of Judge JESS ; and that Mr. CRAMPTON, the Solicitor-General, has...
The Bank of England has put forth the following statement
The Spectatorof its assets and liabilities, on the average of the quarter, from the 3d June to the 26th August last inclusive. Circulation £19,147,000 Deposits 15,384,000 £34,531,000...
A house fell in yesterday in Glean Alley, Tooley Street,
The Spectatorand buried fifty of its inmates under its ruins. They were shortly afterwards dug out, but most of them seriously injured. The dead body of a child was picked up this morning;...
The additin- • ,.lat articles to the Quadripartite Treaty were
The Spectatorratified at 1VIadr;• 3 1 .41 on the 29th August. The memorial of the Cortes Bond- molders has been laid before the Finance Committee. MARTINEZ DE LA ROSA, in his reply to Mr....
The following paragraph appears in the Times of this morning.
The SpectatorIt is intended, we presume, as a reply to the pressing calls of the Morn- ing Chronicle of yesterday for the grounds on which the Times charges Lord BROUGHAM with treachery and...
POSTSCRIPT.
The SpectatorSATURDAY NIGHT. Advices have been received from Jamaica this morning, by way of New York, dated the .38th of July inclusive. They are of very alarming character; stating that...
BIRTHS, MARRIAGES, AND DEATHS.
The SpectatorBIRTHS. On the 31st ult., at Elvetham, near Hartford Bridge. Lady CHARLOTTE CALTHORTV, of a daughter. Ou the 28th ult., at 41, Moray Place, Edinburgh. the Lady of Sir RALPH...
EAST INDIA SHIPPING.
The SpectatorArrived--At Gravesend, Sept. 1st, Sir Joseph Banks, Daniells, from New South Wales ; and 4th, Courier, Palmer ; from the Cape. Off Dover, 4th, Mary, Turean, tram Manilla. At...
The cholera is making dreadful ravages in Sweden. In Gottenburg,
The Spectatorout of a population of 2:10/0, it has swept away 1,800. In the capital and other places the mortality is great in proportion.
MONEY MARKET.
The SpectatorSTOCK EXCHANGE, FRIDAY AFTERNOON. The principal feature in the English Money Market since our last, has been an extensive sale of Exchequer Bills, which was at first stated to...
Sir DANIEL SANDFORD has intimated to the Principal of Glasgow
The SpectatorUniversity, his intention of resigning his seat in Parliament as Repre- sentative of Paisley.
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Thus far in reply to the Courier of Tuesday. Since
The Spectatorour re- marks were written, we have seen an article in the same journal of Thursday, from which we learn that our contemporary is in a puzzle between his desire to find...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTIIE EDINBURGH DINNER. Emenreau has been happily chosen as the place for the great gathering in honour of Earl G EY. There is probably no part of Britain in which the late...
DUTY OF THE MINISTERS IN PARLIAMENT.
The SpectatorTHE Courier admits that its own notions of the duty of Ministers are exceedingly vague : they seem to be exceedingly convenient for Ministers also. There is a " conflict," we...
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CASHIERING OF HALF-PAY OFFICERS; CASE OF DR. WILLIAMS.
The SpectatorAMONG the notices which stand in the Order-book for next ses- sion, is one by Sir EDWARD CODRINGTON, for a return of the officers who have been deprived of their half-pay,...
CONSERVATIVE DESIGNS ON THE PRESS; WHIG DEFENCE OF THE TAXES
The SpectatorON KNOWLEDGE. THE last Number of Blackwood, in an elaborate article on the " Influence of the Press," suggests a plan for converting the People of' England to Conservatism, by...
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We lately announced to our readers, that a Commission had
The Spectatorbeen appointed by the Lords of the Treasury to inquire generally into the system of the General Post-office department, with a view of ascertaining whether any alterations of...
The report of the proceedings of the Court-martial which sen-
The Spectatortenced fluTeniNsosr, the private of the Scots Fusileer Guards, to the terrible flogging which excited so much public attention, has been published in the Daily Papers this week....
A man and a woman were each tined by the
The SpectatorLord Mayor on Tuesday, for having smuggled brandy and tobacco in their possession. 'the contraband trade is carried on to a great extent, with the assistance of the numberless...
A public dinner was given at Leamington on Wednesday, to
The Spectatorcelebrate the rejection of the Warwick Borough Bill. Several speeches were made in reference to the subject ; and after souse encomiums n upon the Lord Chancellor for having...
At the Marylebone Office, on Wednesday, a footman in the
The Spectatorservice of J. Car- ruthers, Esq., of 52, Upper Harley Street, was charged with the following impudent conduct. It appeared that the defendant was so vexed at having re- ceived...
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An affair of the "shop" has occupied considerable space in
The Spectatorthe important columns of the Times and the Morning Chronicle this week. The Chronicle lately anticipated the Times in the publi- cation of the Queen Regent's speech at the...
CITY OF LONDON LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC INSTITUTION.—The nineteenth half-yearly meeting
The Spectatorof the members of this society took place in their theatre, 165, Aldersgate Street, on Wednesday evening. The chair was taken at eight o'clock, by Dr. Southwood Smith. The...
MIRIAM COFFIN.
The SpectatorIN an introduction, not very felicitous, and : dealing too much in Yankee politics, this work is represented as the production of an old sailor, but revised by the...
SPECTATOR'S LIBRARY.
The SpectatorFICTION, Miriam Coffin, or the Whale Fishermen ; a Tale. 3 vols. Whittaker and Cu. BIOGRAPHY, The Life, Character, and Literary Labours of Samuel Drew,A.M. By his Eldest...