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of this Will-o’-the-wisp, the liberties of Europe, and the | They now lie buried sing bl = hts ea, and I | very mu ch from 
eines’ ot of power, thon has been extracted yoni U = in- | suppos e, ex0 ept by their mothers, who don't soom forget lone stance bes of roe ae are many 
dustry of the people of this small island no less an | children—I apos they a are mostly fo for spo otten. re = a ong is ver instraction. ‘and from which e geley—which are 
amoun . sterling not inact e gh pen ig ve that the French grea ment di = ehave | pleasure and ini information. ‘Burely onah? reada them tty 
wi 
j presume it is some- | country all through these graye and momen! tous trans: Then, t O place in ipes li = è 
thing like ast and inc comprehensible shiv odbtecal but I have heard it stated by those who mus ust know, thet nothing these institutions ? Which p a = things to he 
distan ces with phishe we Pav been lately made familiar; but, | could be more honourable or more just than the conduct of the | with readin ng rooms ‘and the e a 
r familiar, we feel that we do not know one bit more | French Emperor to this Government throughout the whole b th mt path. institui 
Biy em than we did 0 When T try to think of that | that eeu. _— recently, hipin the war in China was bej w 
ion passes before my by on AY eo ve ons, the E por oi the ena ment in Ts are contemporary thi ro 
ing e ren n 1 i x mang 
mind’s eye. see you sant e i eaa spel plough, mper ri bA will say, but, I am afraid, not the —not alwaps am 
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c, with his seen countenance and his matchless skill, hostility on his part eset oni The an ror of the Trench ness of the news 
tailing a ath his bench or his forge. I see one of ‘the werk in n> to London, and some of those powerful — — re curacies of the eaupes ae occasioni 
our f: in the north, a woman, = a nd peel ai oy be e taken the line of which I am complaining did all but | to our craving for ear! early intelli utable in 
oe pens sed as many of them are, and mera the PINA of London to evens anes. Meer not the thing whic Neda What is ous 
ters are—I se ah ntent upon a PERENA pan par 2g the wheels of that chariot which c yed alon eets | what is believed at ie ee vane taped bs 
tions are so rapid that He p fails altogether to detect them, | the revived monarchy of France. "The Gossa o£ lani subsequent events frequently iif theretom 
or, repeatin, ye e alternating flights of the ae se shuttle. I | went to Paris, she a she not received there with as much inaccuracy therefore is in Piers re ree: Pengo Ts 
turn again nother portion of your r populat and I see a | affection and as respect as her high gece: ed Lo her upon being provided with ni oom EE akeo Phew 
man hong sta needs in mines, forgets that the ose el ae and ye song > character atie her to? What has occ since? | plain. But newspapers do somethi We have no Pepe 
digs from the dae Erro £3 the earth the elements of the If ther unpleasantness, I pir èe qui z sure | They give to us the most admirable beyond unem. 
riches an a ome gem owe: a me all this I have | that a Sy pacha S ma will agree a: that, under the pecu poraneous questi I 
before m hich I am no mhe save | las ientatiog aena of = moment, preg Be at count: do 
east as 
few 
try. Thearticles which appear. inthe nowepapera, agra 
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cases a half, never less than a third, of all the results of that | France, which has = boas more than 100 years in progress, 
apn space, w Apy Agin o ch time on omn han 
not mi 
sed rie 
industry which God intended should fertilise and bless every | which was not devised by the prerene Empe of the 
home in Bogisg, but the fruits of which are sivendare in | French, n re his will, For xe years grea s had bee 
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—_ May ag = ce Apae ive character. We | vi Si pend Face thy hd re not invited. And yet in { La 
hav call. a eat itvatitamnes the | all this we a told ‘that ta is something to create extreme 1M 
coment ae a debt ¥ which, fs aa 80 Le that the most pru- | alarm and s hon; r yao id never fortified any places | rai s history of wrspaper is 
dent, the most economical, and the most honest have given up | —we, who St ebastopol at Gibraltar— | the practical wants of pogo 
all hope, not of its being paid c off, but of bes ne, ae a we, who hav “pry = ETA gees st Malta, who have | has always ap 
amount. We have, tee tac which havi n duri any | not spent the fortune of a nation almost in the Ionian islands— | useful then n they are, and I ares a Pond 
a ous that the: ae been fr aad when the ‘patient we, who are doing nothing at Alderney ?—in fact, there never | we shall seein the new: wspapers a w 
t of burden threatened to revolt—so onerous that it h: was a nation so perfec stly y guiltless a preparing to do anything | tend to cuales them much safer ang wi w 
been utterly impossible to levy pats with any kind of honest | to anybody ! ha say of a nation which lives | this re 
uality, according to a means Mn the people z pay a wuee a perpet tual AAEE T it is going "e be attacked—a 
We have tha n OVi nS h i see onder to all | nation which is the most combined on the of the earth, r writers are anon 
igners who pret a ee ge be appa - | little less than 30, bic podol peop nie ad united ni eraGovernment | that for the mission of public instruction 
rently immov: TANS saetti whisking strangers is baliya irre- | which, though wi end to m it, we do not the less | disadvantage. p 
concilable with the fact that we as a nation produce more of respect, a an which ze oie eh cone and wealth to which | authority the most scrupulous and the most unscrupaloss 
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g bor th caine poli te aai their fellow-country: as sho ag “Tike to ask you whether 
reforms such en not a again pn ‘the SAE 1830, and thes regener are t to last for ever, Relais = pati y is to 
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of the Premed globe, would be undistinguished. he mpg 
Perhaps t in this onal am sure there are the dutie: k of go EA E al ve ete as you have observed, is occasionally 
in the Ro load al persons who hold a supersti-| pleaded that this country should eae without adequate and pated. but he tn vat to go through 
tious traditionary belief that, somehow or how, our vast trade | scientific means of defence. I acknowledge it to e the duty ved to be wro He is a 
is to be attributed to what we have donein this way—that it is | of your statesmen, acting upon the pit. opinions and prin- ites mar buth 
thus we have sage a and ane t of English con, See cf 99 out of ible 100 persons in the country, at all | I think that newspa} writers do not write 
wit! possible e: ow Be — which paper W otherwise 
on something in in the English 
ttage; and un itutio: 
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y a country, proton 4 a province of the vast expanse persed s your ‘the vaca 2 are printed there in the feelings | it now is. A man w always 
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me dependency ah the Sow which, if ae Aer eto rocks on Ee nss the ph se nditars PE “uy shilling, the engagement | anonymously, bs en the; 
what it bas and protection, would not be found to | of every man, the rapoh of every ship which has no object | known many gentlemen 
be a aye et iss the people of this country. Take the | but intermeddling in the affairs of other countries, and endea- | but I ha 
United States, with — we eA such an betsy and con- | vouring to exten the boundaries of an empire which is already 
stantly increasing trad = statesm a a = — pod tt Lote to Bawa J the greatest ambition, mi I fear is | the impressio 
4 Sure schoo a r the highest statesmanship which any | as anonymous writers. In the 
—ruled over by a monarch hs they tell otk asa z patriot man hak te ana 
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= S ntis Mr. SIDNEY HERBERT, M.P., at the inauguration of and der cover ofan anonymous 
colónias of the Unit ad States insubjevtton tó the dacs of | the Wathitenteb Fryns last week, spoke as follows hich pecme would not xt bring forward 
England: Add u interest of that 130,000,000/. for all this | on ss subject of novel reading and newspaper litera- Thave no doubt that in a few cases the pu' of 
time, and how pty me ‘you think it will be before ther re will be | t iti ne 
5 eont on the trade w ith the United States which will repay 
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to such s. Who is it that sits doen day's sea Pn Ae Ae ae 
balls, are vai ‘Polish Wes ae rhe er sees Por wars, and | work—I ’t care whether it ina physi po or mental ES ee ae 
ole Peg the multiplicnion table, or who can do se pis ane ibe a Tity anteilig 
a iplogt wit = arithi metic. fines ‘glorious ret revolution,’ y FRipAY.— 
enthron > tion : ai the rent Norman territorial | We want parla ng to be a relief to the tension which the | Money MARKET, fo the 10th Nor Di 
mind has lately been undergoing, and I do: < care w. Fbad that | sols clos josed at 98 for Bank Stock, 
rovided it is w to 98; Ditto aes ets ; New ome 
h Cents. Reduce indian Debent 
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em in which it was deplored that novels were read. But | 994 
vels—good ones I Tnvcan are, in my mind, a great school of 
man nature. at the effect upon the literature, 
have been at a: 
doubtful — t your per would Y e been no less i o 
and n o less profita able had pe peace, heehee and justice been ier 
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fa ich had m and acted. There fa another class of Fives, 
novels, novels of the d domestic class, which has vas t 
a ence. I recollect hearing a very —— nt Frenchman, M. 
say ti 
word 
word I utter, passes a rapidit 4 of whisk = - 
fathers were utte “this ignorant, tot the Fyi ye s E re 
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books of that class are uliarly Englis' y are le 
a Sek, ië M describing a virtuous domestic life—books describing a simp 
intimate alliance was entered into bets oor | — but 4 Kii do not go to the tragic or ngs on, n oa 
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same field, seo thay sion, ime qos — on the panting! ig the Weeneh | Arr has no existence in i dffers | Wal Writer—! a pee = Kamu, 
same neglect. | The French have their description of domestic life, but i 
