22 DECEMBER 1832, Page 15

We aro gravely informed, in one of those no-meaning para-

graphs that serve to fill blank spaces in the Daily Newspapers, that "Mr. LONG -WELLESLEY is, placed under"—not arrest, but "peCuliar circumstances"—delicate insinuation!—by the result of the poll, which ejects him from his seat in Parliament for Essex; and that " Mrs. W. is said to have been deeply affected by it We are not told how demly the pseudo IvI.P.'s tailor was affected. There are two sorts of qualifications for legislators—the one is a . certain income derived from land, the other an uncertain amount of debts. Many M.P.s possess both. How long is' Parliament to be made a,..medern-Aleatia