25 SEPTEMBER 1858

Page 1

NEAVS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

ScraNcE has usurped the foremost place in the popular regard this week, having summoned its representative meetings in va- rious parts of the country.- Early in the week, Lord...

Page 2

Cht 311ttrufn1is.

The Spectator

London streets are subjected to repeated obstructions by authorities and public companies, obstructions productive of great inconvenience and expense. The subject has provoked...

Vranintial.

The Spectator

PUBLIC MEETINGS. Political movement seems to be entirely confined to those gatherings which distinguish the British autumn, when the county Member meets his constituents at...

Page 3

LORD BROUGHAM ON SIR ISAAC NEWTON. The inauguration of the

The Spectator

statue of Sir Isaac Newton at Grant- ham, on Tuesday, was celebrated with marked success. The monu- ment is the work of Mr. Theed the sculptor. It stands fourteen feet kigh, and...

THE BRITISH ASSOCIATION.

The Spectator

Leeds, selected as the rendezvous of the British Associaiion this aa- tumn, began to fill with visitors on Monday. The earliest proceedings took place on Tuesday, when the...

Page 4

SCOTLAND.

The Spectator

The news from Balmoral continues to report the daily drives of her Majesty, and the assiduous attentions paid to the deer in her forests and the grouse on her moors by the...

IRELAND.

The Spectator

It is rumoured that the Irish Government are about to prosecute Tipperary journal for reporting the flagitious and seditious speeches of the O'Donoughue and Father Kenyon at the...

Page 5

furtigu nut tend:al.

The Spectator

frearr.—The Emperor, contrary to rumour, had not quitted Biarritz at the date of the latest advices received yesterday. Prince Napoleon, it is said, had been suddenly called...

Page 6

alioullattutio.

The Spectator

THE WEEDON INQUIRY. The Royal Commissioners appointed to inquire into the manner in which the great military clothing depot at Wooden is and has been conducted, commenced its...

Page 7

THE ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH.

The Spectator

Some steps have been taken to ascertain the causes that have led to the failure of the Atlantic telegraph. The cable has been sub- jected to a series of testa by Mr. Varley, the...

THE PORTLAND MUTINY. The first detailed account of the convict

The Spectator

mutiny at Portland has ap- peared in the Times from an "eye-witness." Hearing the convicts were expected to strike for wages, he went to Portland, pocketing a friendly revolver....

Page 9

S4e SOratrr5.

The Spectator

Young gentlemen, who detest young ladies they have never seen, merely because they are expected to marry them, are exceedingly useful to playwrights, however troublesome they...

POSTSCRIPT.

The Spectator

SATURDAY. The great Boyne Hill confessional case was yesterday the subject of an inquiry in the Toumhall at Maidenhead before Commissioners ap- no i n r e d by the Bishop of...

MONEY MARKET.

The Spectator

STOCK EXCHANGE, FRIDAY AFTERNOON. The extreme easiness of the Money Market and the enormous amount of bullion accumulating uninterruptedly at the Bank hits not yet succeeded in...

Page 10

TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

THE COMING REFORM BILL. IT is difficult to believe that the coming session of Parliament will result in orderly legislation upon so momentous a subject as Re- form or, indeed,...

Page 11

LYNCH JAW AT NEW YORK.

The Spectator

1T is not three months since we had occasion to comment on Lynch-law at New Orleans. Now we have to remark on a de- monstration, otherwise essentially unlike, but still...

Page 12

THE STATE LESSON OF THE MONEY MARKET.

The Spectator

IF Peel had survived to this present year he would have had the finest opportunity that ever opened before him, grander even thee his acceptance of free trade or his adjustment...

MR. BARTLE FRERE.

The Spectator

GREAT services demand great recognition. The Indian war has been fruitful in heroic men and in heroic services. Had a series of occurrences been designed by some overruling...

Page 13

QUARANTINE REFORM.

The Spectator

" Jr a Government does enforce quarantine," says a correspondent of the Times writing from Malta, "it ought to make such ar- rangements in its lazarettos for the reception of...

Page 14

THE CELEBRATION AT GRANTHAM.

The Spectator

WHAT do we know about the immortality of the soul, that we should doubt it ? As little as the rose-leaf beetle knows of the generation that comes after her, for whom a divine...

A MARCHIONESS ON THRIFT.

The Spectator

THERE are many agriculturists and working men who annually share a meal with the owner of the land on which they live, and at that annual dinner exchange, not only felicitations...

Page 15

fetus 1 t4t Clan

The Spectator

ABOLITION Or CHIJRCIi-ItATES. September 21st, 1858. Sni — If I understand aright the drift of a "Political Dissenter's" letter published in your last, he honestly admits, and I...

Page 16

THE YORE MUSICAL FESTIVALS.

The Spectator

Sra—In the report of the Leeds Musical Festival, contained in your last number, it is said that the York Musical Festival "was crushed long since by the interference of clerical...

BOOKS.

The Spectator

WINTER'S SIX MONTHS IN BRITISH BURMAII. * IF " the eye can only see what it brings the power of seeing," still more true is it that a man can only observe what the charac- ter...

Mr. HF.NRY WARBURTON, once so prominent among the Whig Radicals

The Spectator

in Parliament, died on the 16th, in his 74th year. He was the son of a Lon- don merchant engaged in the Baltic trade. Educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge, he entered...

Page 17

NEW NOVELS. EVA DESMOND—DEATRICE CENCI. • THE elongated composition which has

The Spectator

grown to be a trait of the ambitious " tale" appears in Era Desmond in the three volumed novel. A whole chapter is devoted to the description of an Irish country-house and...

Page 18

CORNWALLIS'S NEW EL DORADO. * HAVING sung his song of "Yarra

The Spectator

Yarra," and said his say on more prosaic life in "Howard Plunket," Mr. Kinahan Cornwallis has turned to a new trade, and succeeded better, we are happy t o find, in gold-seeking...

Page 19

PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED.

The Spectator

(Front the 9th September.) Rocas. The Courtship of Niles Standish, and other Poems. By Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Author's protected edition. Studies of Christianity: A...

Page 20

BIRTHS.

The Spectator

On.the 15th, at Naples, the Duchess of Castrovillari, of a son. On the 21st, at Eton, the Wife of the Rev. J. W. Hawtrey, of soon. On the 27th July ' at Courtallum, Madras...

DEATHS.

The Spectator

On the 31st August, at Bad-Brackenau, in Bavaria, Mr. Andrew Shortrede, pro- prietor of the "China Mail." On the 10th September, at Gais, Switzerland, the Rev. Valentine Samuel...

flit Arlin'.

The Spectator

FROM THE LONDON GAZRITE, SEPT. 21. WAIL OFFICE, Pall Mall, September 21.—Royal Engineers—Lieut.-Col. E. Frame, from the Seconded List, to be a Supernumerary Lieut.-Col....

MARRIAGES.

The Spectator

On the 9th, at Coleshill, Warwickshire, Anne Eliza. second daughter of the Bey. John Wingfield Digby, to Iloratio Granville Murray Stewart, Eat., of Catty, Kirk- cudbrightshire,...

Page 21

'grata.

The Spectator

PROM THE LONDON GAZETTE, SF.PTEMBF.R 21. Partnerships Dissoleed.-Redgate and Co. Sneinton and Nottingham, lace-manu- facturers-Carson and Kilgonr, Liverpool, drysalters-Grime...

litht nut. FROM THE LONDON GAZETTE, SEPT. 21.

The Spectator

Ammar:re, Sept. 17.-In consideration of the successful operations on the Polio, as recorded in the Supplement to the London Gazette of the 27th of July 1858, the following...

PRICES CURRENT.

The Spectator

BRITISH FUNDS. (ClosingPrices.) 3 Per Cent Consols Ditto for Account Redu tPer Cents ced ew 3 per c, nti Long Annuities Annuities 1885 ( 11 ::, k 133°3 k. Per Cent S tock...