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Review of Politics. 
378 
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REVIEW OF POLITICS. 
—<—==~——- 
HERE is little to say, at present, on 
this subject. At home, the only sub- 
ject of general interest is the Catholic Ques- 
tion, which seems to have been artfully 
involved in else unnecessary difficulties ; by 
coupling, together, the emancipation of the 
Catholics with the pensioning of their 
priests, that the prejudices of intolerance, 
too feeble alone to resist the claims of jus- 
tice, might be strengthened, by the alliance 
of prejudices of the purse. In the Com- 
mons, however, it seems that emancipa- 
tion and pensioning will both go down. 
The issue in the Lords ismore doubtful. The 
heir-presumptive of the throne puts himself 
conspicuously at the head of the opposition, 
and talks of the coronation oath,—as if that 
were intended to limit the constitutional 
powers of the three estates, instead of re- 
straining the unconstitutional assumptions 
of one of them ; a barrier against parlia- 
mentary legislation, not against monarchic 
usurpation. 
In France, all things appear to be going on 
prosperously for Ultra Royalism and the 
restoration of the legitimate glories of the 
age of Louis XIV. Still, however, there 
remains one voice, at least, in the Chamber 
of Deputies bold enough with resolute per- 
severance to denounce the legitimate Fer- 
dinand of Spain (the rebellious dethroner 
of his father, and the perjured betrayer of 
his people) as a swindling bankrupt; and 
Rouen has been inflamed into menacing 
tumult against the Jesuits, and the en- 
croaching arrogance of the Clergy, by the 
interference of the Archbishop and the 
military, to prevent the representation of 
3C?2 Moliere’s 
