Page 1
— NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectatorno ties between England and America are continually growing stranger and closer. The London newspapers find it necessary or advantageous to supply accounts even of the trivial...
Intelligence to the middle of September has arrived from the
The SpectatorWest Indies. The Negroes were happy and hazy; the 'Planters Intelligence to the middle of September has arrived from the West Indies. The Negroes were happy and hazy; the...
.• A very 'Unpleasant reception for Mr. PODLETT TnosisoN in
The SpectatorCanada was prepared. Sir Jowl COLBORNE'S departure was gene- rally regretted by the British party, who had resolved upon annoy- ing his suecessor by all available means. In...
The Ministers brought forward a bill to "confirm the Fueros
The Spectatorof the Basque Provinces ; " but the majority of the Deputies refused to pass the chief resolution or "article," unless coupled with a salvo in favour of the Constitution. Tito...
Page 2
The Middlesex Sessions commenced on Tuesday ; but the Court
The Spectatorbad very little business, owing to circumstances explained by the Chair. man, Mr. Sergeant Adams, in his charge to the Grand Jury— It appeared from a paper he held in his hand...
The English and French fleets are ly lug together off
The SpectatorTenedos, apparently in much amity—both receiving additions. The Eastern question seems to make no progress.
The Paris papers state that PASSY, the Finance Minister, had
The Spectatorresolved to please the Court by proposing an establishment for the Duke DE NEMOVRS, and the public by a bill to reduce the Five per Cents. BLANQVI, who was implicated in the May...
A boy of fifteen killed himself yesterday by leaping from
The Spectatorthe top of the Monument. It appears that his name is {awes, son to a widow at Chelsea. He left St. Ann's School, Brixton, (where he received a Bible as a reward of good...
The Morning Chmiele gives the following as the result of
The Spectatorthe Mid- dlesex registration, which was finished on Thursday- " The Tories have made all the tight thee possilil • could, and what have they done ? Served I,lt. 4 0 notices of...
An experimental trip was made by the Archimedes steamer, on
The SpectatorWed. nesday, in the presence of a number of distinguished Naval officers and engineers. On starting from London Bridge, which was covered with spectators, the Pool was much...
tr_bc Court.
The SpectatorTEE principal occurrence at Windsor Castle, this week, has been a fire in the chimney of one of the offices. The routine of walks, rides, and diuners, is kept up by the Queen...
jtirtropolis.
The SpectatorThe Court of Common Council held their usual weekly meeting on Thursday. Some conversation occurred relative to the choice of de- signs fbr the new Exchange. From the statements...
Page 3
1.Sbe Vrot)inrts.
The SpectatorThe Duke of Somerset has served notices to quit upon all his tenants who voted for Mr. B. Baldwin at the late Totnes election. Many of these notices have been signed by the...
Lord Lyttleton has been aopointed Libel-Lie:Lien:int of Worcester- shire, in
The Spectatorthe room of Lord Foley. Mr. John Bather, Recorder of Shrewsbury has sn'Tered an attack of paralysis, his recovery frotti which is doubtful. is the gentleman v,Iuvn! death was...
A letter in the Shillchl Iris, from Mr. Poulton. the
The SpectatorAnti-Corn-law lecturer, states that he had been prevente I from delivering lectures at Worksop in Nottinelmiashire. by the interfere:Ice of the landlords in the neighbourhood of...
Page 4
SCOTLAND.
The SpectatorThe Fife, Herald of Thursday contains resolutions passed at a Welk meeting of the electors of Dunfermline on the 1 lilt instant, expressing dissatisfaction with the conduct of...
IRELAND.
The SpectatorAt a meeting of the Dublin Trades Union on Tuesday, it letter was read front Mr. Sharman Crawford, in reply to the address which tatted upon hint to head the Repeal agitation....
Alderman Pirie was alarmed on Sunday week, between four and
The Spectatorfive o'clock, by the noise of a person breaking into his house at Gravesend. The Alderman, with the assistance of a servant, captured the robber. In the course of the flay, lie...
A riot of a serious description occurred last week on
The Spectatorthe works of the Chester and Birkenhead Railway. The following particulars are taken from a Liverpool paper- " On the line of railway now forming between Birkenhead and...
We observe from the London Gazette of the '10th. that
The SpectatorDr. Lee has' resigned the 'Secretaryship to the Bible Printing Board for Scotland, :holy conferred upon him ; and that her Majesty has appointed . to that - office Dr. Welsh,...
Page 5
The Duke of Sussex is eeie:e.ed at Leal:Asia Caatle on
The SpectatorTuesday next, on a visit to Lord Dui :hem Dr. Prosser, who died lot a: Belmont. Ilerefordshire, in his ninety- fourth year, was a Prebendary of Durhter, Cethedral, and had...
With the exception of the very earliest spots in Scotland,
The Spectatorthere is still a good deal of grain exposed. In the immediate neighbourhood of Edinburgh, and in the low grounds in this (the Glasgow) district, the fields are entirely clear;...
The newspapers this week haye given currency to a rumour
The Spectatorthat Loal. Durham is likely to lesseme mhassador at Constanti- nople. We neither know wn. cave whence this report originated, but are satisfied that it wss intended to injure...
"The Marquis of Htmtly's failure."—A paragraph under this title, is
The Spectatorgoing the round of the papers, pretending to be quoted from the - Herald, stating, among other strange things, that from "the schedule of funds, it appears there are not Is. f...
Helen Macdonald, nurse-maid ii . the family of the Reverend
The SpectatorMr. Thomson of Shettleston, near Cie lies been centraitted to Glasgow Gaol, charged with the murder of be: own child, nineteen months old. She had had twins, by a man who...
An account of an attempt, and failure, by the Reverend
The SpectatorMr. Burns, to get up a "revival " in Arbroath, is given in the Arbroath Herald 01 the 1 1th instant- " Except from the pulpit of Lady T.oan Church, we understand, the recent...
Arrangements have been made for ptlyntent ut errears due front
The Spectatorthe Spanish Government to the B: itish Auxiliary imeion. The Morning Chronicle says—" A proposal hes b. on me •.• the I.Let few . days, by the highly-respeetable l•aniek•-lem,.•...
Page 6
Official returns connected with the export of gold and silver
The Spectatorare in the hands of some of the leading City merchants, which, as their accu- racy is not to be disputed, must lead to some very remarkable conclu- sions. These returns extend...
The soot in the chimney of the laundry at Windsor
The SpectatorCastle took fire on Tuesday evening ; and a report was immediately - spread that the corridor and a large portion of the Castle were in flames! The troops turned out at the...
A body of Bristol merchants, who state that since the
The Spectatoropening of the Canton midi! in 1t they hare imported teas on which duties amounting to z' at a miiiioa !•terling have bean paid, have presented a memorial to Lord Palm:: t a ....
The Dublin Evening Post•says-
The Spectator" None of the English Tory journals, certainly not any of the!r organs pre- tending to a shred of character for accuracy, have yet been brazen enough to claim an advantage at...
The Committee of the French Chamber of Deputies appointed last
The Spectatorsession to report upon the question of slavery in the French Colonies, did not complete their labours in time to lay the result before the Chambers ; but the following...
Page 7
tt Boarding is live doihr: per day at the hotels
The Spectatorin Tne re- p:lb:di is sending a strong ti,rce azainst the Indians. Th.. enuntrv all I ports are pronounced lwalthy; hat ,1t1,•.rantille revtlations aro keer, out the yellow...
The New York papers contain elaborate artielos on the same
The Spectatorsulmject. The Ihrnioy Mead. after stating that specie exportefl from New lark IC Havre aud. to Eugland, between time 10th of July and the 1st of October, was 3,891,02: dollars,...
The British Queen arrived on Tuesday at Portsmouth from Nyw
The SpectatorYork, having accomplished the voyage in thirteen days and twenty hours. She left New York on the 1st instant ; and brines seventy-three pas- sengers, 700,0N dollars in specie,...
0 The Great Western, which will leave King's-road, Bristol, on
The SpectatorSaturday ; the 19th, for New York, will take out her full complement of passengers. The applications for berths have been far greater than the ship can accommodate. The British...
Page 8
Respecting the state of the eunuchs generally, and the reception
The SpectatorGovernor Thomson was likely to encounter in particular, we quote the following from the Morning Chronicle's correepondence- " Canada is by no means its a quiet state. Internal...
The Governor of Janntien, e.:ir Lionel Smith, had prorogued the
The SpectatorIsland Legislature to the 24th of September. His Excellency bud re- ceived many addresses front the Emancipation perty, expressive' of regret at his departure rend cordially...
" The state of Massachusetts (under the Claim that it
The Spectatormake to a certain portion of the land upon the Aroostook) has issued through its land -agent it great number of ' permits,' its they are called, to cut thither; these permits...
Page 9
The following advertisement, which appeared in tine Morning Chro- nicle
The Spectatorand other papers on Tuesday last, offering to settlers in New Zealand the opportunity of " choosing such lands as they require in the country, and making their own bargains with...
We bear that a fast-sailing vessel, of between three and
The Spectatorfour hundred tons burden, named the Mor, is about to be sent out to Canton with orders from the British Government in relation to the misunderstand- ings which have sprung up...
We have no amendment to notice in the Continental exchanges.
The SpectatorTine quotations are still drooping ; and, but for the support given to the market by the house of Baring, Brothers. and Co., who are believed to be acting for the Bank of...
Accounts front South Australia to the 1st .Ttme, and front
The SpectatorVan Die- men's Land to the 14th June, arrived on Thursday. The new colony was thriving in spite of drought and internal dissmisions. Between the 5th and the 23t1 of May, nine...
Admiral Fleming's appointment to be " Master of her Majesty's
The SpectatorHospital at Greenwich " is officially announced in last night's Gantte. His successor in the command at Portsmouth, is not yet announced, though probably determined on. The...
The Grenada Free PPM mentions the arrival at that island
The Spectatorof the hired transport Louise Frederica, with 168 Africans, part of a cargo of 5,0a0, which had been cooped up in a slaver, run on shore by her Ma- jesty's schooner Pickle : the...
POSTSCRIPT.
The SpectatorSATURDAY NIGHT. The Paris papers are much occupied with the "reorganization of the Council of State." 31. Cousin, an Ordinary Councillor, having been re- moved for the alleged...
Page 10
The following extract from a despatch of the Marquis of
The SpectatorNormanby to Sir George Arthur, states an important opinion of the Law Officers of the Crown respecting the Canadian prisoners vrbb were lately released—namely, that a criminal...
MONEY MARKET.
The SpectatorST0eR EXellANOE. FRIDAY AFTLfeffION. The buoyant appearance of the Money-market to which we last week alluded, has given place to one of a very different character, and its...
A " Supplement to the London Gazette" this day furnishes
The Spectatorthe "fol- lowing article omitted" [by mistake?] yesterday. Quarterly Average of the Weekly Liabilities and Assets of the Bank of Eng- land, from the 23d July to the 13th...
EAST INDIA SIIIPPING.
The SpectatorArrived—At Gravesend, OM. 15111, Woutimansterste, Ilinderwell, from Mauritius; W. Wise, Ellis, from Van Dimiett's fatal ; ana 18111, Premier, Weir, front China, At Portsmouth,...
Page 11
. USES OF AGRICULTURAL SOCIETIES. TO THE EDITOR OF THE
The SpectatorSPECTATOR. Peterborough, 14111 October 1839. Stu—You refer in your last number to the increase of Agricultural Societies, as tending exclusively to strengthen the Conservative...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorLOCAL COURTS. AMONG the numerous reforms promised by the present Govern- ment, one of the most prominent—as beyond question the most necessary of them all—related to the...
BIRTHS, 'MARRIAGES, AND DEATHS.
The SpectatorBIRTHS. At Leamington, the Lally of the Hon. Captain SOMERVILLE, R.N., of a ' , on. At Pardon, the Lady or Lieut..C...1. ST. 3011N CLERICE, Kit., of a daughter. Ott the Gth...
TIlE ARMY,
The SpectatorWAlberVica, October Itegll or is s itt iss e o.-.(ssosi Is it, nrett s tohoto is 1.ii purchase, N ic E. Oeils, who retires; W. K. Eraser, Gent. to he Cornet, by porvliase, 'tue...
Page 12
BLUNDERS OF MODERN WHIGS AND TORIES.
The SpectatorMEN make money by lucky hits in trade. A blockhead once sent a large quantity of warming-pans to Cuba; and it happened that; the sugar-crop being remarkably abundant, the...
Page 13
SIR ROBERT PEEL AND THE LARGE TOWNS.
The SpectatorA WRITER who undertakes the defence of the Whig Government in the current number of' the Edinburgh Bedew, assumes that Sir ROBERT PEEL, in olive, would find the larger towns...
SIR JAMES CLARK'S EXPLANATION.
The SpectatorWE should not have returned to this scandalous subject, believing, it to be quite past the point of profitable discussion, but for the. letter of Sir JAMES CLARK published in...
Page 14
THE THEATRES.
The SpectatorCOVENT GARDEN has kept the lead, this week, by two " revivals "- an old comedy on Monday, an opera on Wednesday—and by several "first appearances." The performance of...
Page 15
A new play by Sir LYTTON BCLWER is announced at
The Spectatorthe Haymarket ; and a play by a new candidate for dramatie fame, though a veteran author, .Mr. LEIGH IleNT, has been accepted by the management of Covent Garden.
At the Adelphi, VAN AMBURGII'S elephant is the attraction, pending
The Spectatorthe production of a new piece, announced with all the mystery of a paragraph of fashionable intelligence, which is to employ all the re- sources of the theatre. The elephantine...
Horace Vernet, the celebrated French painter, is about to proceed
The Spectatorto Egypt, and thence to Syria, in order to paint on the spot a picture of the battle of Nezib, for which Ibrahim Paella is to supply him with the necessary information. The...
The merriment at the Haymarket—the very atmosphere of which is
The Spectatorexhilarating as the laughing gas—has this week reached the con- vulsive point, by a combination of Powmi's oil of fun and BERNARD'S spirit of humour. Powsat, on His Last Legs,...
Drury Lane opens on Saturday next, the 26th. Mr. HAststoxy,
The Spectatorthe new lessee, took leave of his Strand Theatre audience last Saturday, in a smart and amusing speech of negative import, implying that neither German operas, French...
Page 16
MR. OGLE'S WESTERN AUSTRALIA.
The Spectator'IP the reader take up a map a the world, and look on the Western toast of New Holland for the thirty-second degree of South lati- tude, he will have the embouchure of Swan...
TT 7- Sii6TAT0R'S LIBRARY.
The SpectatorCouotwertos. • The coltitty of Western Australia; a Manual for EmigrantS to that Sattlement or ha Depeuttencies; corrwrising its discovery, settlement. ahorigines,...
Page 17
MRS. GORE'S COURTIER, AND OTHER TALES.
The SpectatorTIII3 V0111111C, which has reached us from Paris, and forms one of the series of GILIGNANI'S editions of English authors for Conti- nental supply, has been or is about to be...
Page 18
M. KNIGHT'S ORIENTAL OUTLINES
The SpectatorIs a pleasant and lively narrative of a Mediterranean trip,- embracing a visit to the Grecian Islands, Constantinople, Smyrna, and its vicinity, with a sojourn at Pisa, and a...
MOOR E'S A LCI emit o N—T IIE it AN.
The SpectatorTHE new attractions of this edition of the :Epicurean are the illus- trations by TURN ER, and the poem of Alciphron by Mown:. The illustrations consist of vignettes, each a...