The intelligence from the Continent this week is very important,
though scanty. A military insurrection has compelled the Queen Regent of Spain to give in her adhesion to the Constitution of 1812. The soldiery forced this step upon FERDINAND'S widow at two o'clock on the morning of the 13th instant, at Oa Palace of St. Ildefonso. No outrages were committed; and Madi id was tranquil when the last accounts were despatched, on the evening of the 13th. It is not known what course QUESADA or CORDOVA would take. Catalonia continued free from insurrectionary move- ments under the control of MINA.
TRIERS had a difference with Louts PHILIP on the subject of intervention in Spanish affairs ; the King being averse to the de- cided measures proposed by his Minister, who resigned his office on the 17th, together with PASS', and several other members of the Cabinet ; but the arrival of a telegraphic despatch with the news of the military movement at Madrid changed the aspect of affairs ; and TRIERS recalled his resignation, and gave up his pro- ject of intervention for the present.
The condition of the British Auxiliary Legion in Spain becomes every day more deplorable. The agents of the Spanish Govern- ment in London have dishonoured the bills drawn on account of the Legion ; the recruiting depot has been broken up, and two hundred newly-inlisted soldiers have been disbanded.