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S ept. 29, 1860] The Saturday Analyst an...
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SERIALS. Tlio Cunihill Magazine,—London....
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.AUTUMN ON THE THAMES. ! ~ So gardens of...
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STATIC DOCUMENT. Ax Auukesh to tub Spani...
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Miscellaneous Works. Llaiul-Bookof The H...
lor itself . -Neither the . high-esteem- with which the editor of these paces regards Mr . Richards personally , nor the admiration lie entertai n s for that gentleman ' s great and varied talents , has induced the publication , of this pamphlet . The issuing of these psges proceeds from the simple desire to ' see' public justice done to . a- public man . Sir . Richards' labours have been long , as' a reference to the following pages will testify ; that they have been earnest no man can doubt , and that they have been successful wo hare the daily evidence in the martial groups of citizen soldiers that meet the eye in every street in the metropolis , in every town in Britain . During ten long years has Mr . Richards devoted himself to the establishment of a volunteer force . Desp ite the sneers of seeming friends , the bitter hostility of some , and the indifference of the many , he has unremittingly devoted" his time , his talents , a-nd Ills purse , to the achievement of his great and . darling purpose , lie has never halted nor hesitated ; case-hardened to the taunts and deaf to the sneers with which he was assailed , he has pursued the even tenor of his way , and now when all England and Scotland too are of the same mind , when twenty millions of Converts share his opinions and admit the justice of his views , it is but right that we should publicly acknowledge the prescient wisdom of the nian , who with the true instinct of genius , foresaw fully ten years , ago what we all see now , viz ., tho necessity find expediency of a grand citizen army of volunteers . " /* i'dpu . < eil complete edition of the Exist iit ' j P ' nbl ' u : fitcitufvs ' , rcif / i E . t . phiitiiturii l * reftice . Tables of all lite Public Statutes puxscd t'lurifnj each Session , ' Jlcjistcr of J ' ub / ic ' \ Sinlutes anu-iidi'il , < £ •< . -., aitil . lnilf . Kcx to Ewjlixh Statutes , liy . Carncri liijr-f . London : ¦ Si mpkiu , Marshall , and Co .- Wiitorloivniul Sons ; I- ' .-S . Kinsr . Mr . Biggs's proposal for a new edition of the statutes resolves itself into two branches . First , as to tho statutes relating to the general law of England , —To edit and publish ( without any aid from the ¦ ¦ public revenue , or any stipulation , for the purchase of copies by government ) a complete edition of the "Existing Statutes relating to the General Law of England , " uniform with the "Statute Book for England , " provided that the text of . the statutes printed therein receive , proyious to the publication of the work , the sanction of some . authorised officer . Secondly , as to the statutes relating to Great Britain and Ireland . —To edit aiicl publish a complete edition of all the existing public statutes , passed by the Parliaments of the United Kingdom , relating to Groat . Britain and Ireland , at the rate oj 2 , 400 pages annually : provided that Her Majesty ' s Government will subscribe for 1 , 250 copies , for the use of the legislature and public offices , at a reduction of forty per cent , froin the publication ' ' price . At the close of each session , the sliceia containing statutes in which amendments have been made , to be reprinted , and 1 , 250 copies supplied to perfect the yror-k to-that time : such . sheets , to bo included in the 2 , 400 pages to be annually published , or otherwise to be charged at the same rate . . That no payment shall . be ttiade by government otherwise than on account of volume ' s or parts actually completed , and of which 1 3 25 O copies have been delivered to some oilicer appointed by government ; but at the close of each quarter the copies so delivered to bo' paid for in cash , subject only to the discount of forty per cent , from the publication price . The specimen volume before us is well arranged , digested , and put together . It is lucidly compiled i ' or reference , and . contains a good index . Sueh a proposal if carried out will be in the hig hest dogreo conducive to public utility . The Rev . Mr . Jamks White'd sev . ' Histokv ov Engtlanjl ) . —The Rov . James White , the well-known author of some valuable historical worts , has now in the press a History of England , 1 o bo completed in Ouo Volume , uniform with tho sumo author's History of Franco . From Mr . White ' s peculiar qualiJlcntions for sueh an undertaking , tlio work in question can scarcely fail to supply a want that liaa long been felt ; we have reason to expect from his pen a history that shall bo nt oneu compendious and sufficing , clour and impartial , and , in fact , both in stylo and treatment , leaving notjiing to bo desired .
S Ept. 29, 1860] The Saturday Analyst An...
S ept . 29 , 1860 ] The Saturday Analyst and Leader . 835
Serials. Tlio Cunihill Magazine,—London....
SERIALS . Tlio Cunihill Magazine , —London . No . 10 . October . Smith , Elder , and Co . —Tho October Number of tho Cornhill M ' aijaz ' utv contains some excellent papers . Tho amusing and interesting " Ph y siological Riddles " roach their conclusion j and tho papers on "William Hogarth" their ninth number . " Framly Puraonago " progresses through tho chapters 28 , 29 , and 00 . The " Roundabouts " aro as chatty and nuausing as over . Thero aro good articles on "Tho Situations of the Moment in Ituly" and " England's Future Bulwurks . " Elizabeth I 3 arret Browning contributes somoohurnetorislio versos— "A Foi'ood roeruit at Solfcrino . " "Tlio Four Georges " tuke tho usuul procodonco of royally and stand at tho houcl of tho contents . Thou wo have eomo talk nbout " Chinese Pirates . " Mr . Rusk in contributes paper No . 3 of tho sorios entitled " Unto This Last , " whence wo extract the following passages on tho subject of Froo-lraelc !• — " Most people ' s minds uro in curious confusion on tho subject of freetrade , booauso they suppoao it to imply enlarged competition . On tho contrary , froa-trndo puts an oncl to all pompot itiou . 'Protection ' ( among various other mischievous functions ) , endeavours to onablo ono country tp compote Avith anothor in tho production of on aitiolont a disadvantage When trudo is entirely froe . no country can bo competed with in tho articL-a for the product ion of which it is naturally onloululod i nor can it compolo with any othor , in tlio production of articles for which it is not naturally onloulutod . Tuscany crimnot compote with England in Blool , nor England with Tusoany in oil . They must oxcluinyo their Btool and oil . Wliieh oxolmngo should hj ) as frank nnd froo as honosty nnd tho soa-winds cuu make it . Competition , indeod , arises at Xiret , and eliarply , in order to prove which is strongest in ony givon mnnuf ' ttoturo posbible < o both ; tins ppint onoo asoortuinod , coinpotition is at nn end . " ¦ ••' ¦• MaomUlaiCs Maqazlna . No . 12 , Ootobor , I 860 ' . Cambridge nnd London \ Maoinillum and Co . —Tills numbor contains a , very interesting artiolo on " Oo-oporativo Sooietios ; their Social and Eoonomioul Auuoots . " It is a prominent part which oo-oporativo organizations nro playing in tho proaonb developmont , of society . There Is no doubt in tho rumda of thoao > vho are oapablo of interpreting the eigns of tho timos , that wo ano rapidly sliding into a tvanoition etoto botwoon the
old egoistic system of individual acquisition for individual emolument , and that higher and improved stute in which tho whole social organism will assume the form of a vast system of mutual assurance .- There is not a work of any note . in which questions of social economy are at all discussed , in which the important subject of co-operation does not occupy a conspicuous place . It is one of the prominent topics embraced in Mr , John Stuarfc Mill ' s masterlj work on the " Principles of Political Economy . " And there is not ono periodical of note that has not recently , either directly or indirectly , treated the question in leading articles . The new nunber of the " Cornhill Magazine " maybe cited as an instance . in point . The rest of the contents of the current number of " Macinillan " are of the usual attractive character " Tom Brown at Oxford , " and "Kyloe Jock , " progress with spirit . The Rev . F . 1 ) . Maurice contributes a paper on " History and Casuistory ;" and there are in addition a varied list of well-written articles . BlaclcKoocVs Magazine . No . 510 . Oct . 1860 . London and Edinburgh : Blackwood and Sons . Black wood this month contains some good articles . There are the s . eeond part of " The Romance of Agostini , " and Part IX of " 2 sorman Sinclair , " and papers on " The Fresco-paintings of Italy , " " Tho Amndel Society , " "The Papal Government , " & c . "Tho Reputed Traces of Primeval Minn , " is an article in which a most curious and interesting subject is discussed . From the first article in tho table of contents , entitled "Seeing is believing , " we extract the following pas- ¦ sages : " There is no popular adage less understood than this . With an ill suppressed irritation at any expression of scepticism respecting tilings said to have been seen , a narrator asks whether or not he may believe the evidence of his own scn 3 Cs ? That argument seems to him final ; and it oftons happens that his opponent , evading , instead of meeting it , retorts : 'Xo ; the evidence of the sensed is not to be . trusted , when they report anything so absurd as . that . I would not believe such a thing if I were to see it—tlio ¦ absurdity is too glaring . ' Bath are wrong . Seeing is believing ; and he who distrusts the evidence of ' liis own sight , will iind a difliculty in bringing forward evidence more con-! vincing . Tlie fallacy lies in confounding vision with inference ,- —in supposing that facts are : scin which are only inlbrred . There can bo no mistake iu trusting to . the evidence-of sense , as fur as that goes . Il id one thing to balieve to / tat-. you have seen , and another to believe that you have seen all there was to be seen . The fallacy is widely ' spread and very injurious—so injurious and so uususpected by the mass of mankind , that we are tempted to consider its operation in the forma' tion of opinions , and especially in the acceptance of that ignoble and ' j . debasing superstition , which , under the nainps of Spiritualism , ' 1 ' Spirit-Rapping , ' and 'Table-Ttu'ning , ' disgraces Europe of the ' ' pro- ' . sent day . " 1 ' upular Manual nf I'hrenolotjt ) . By Frederick Jirkl ^ 'cs . . London ami Liverpool : George Philip u-ncl Son . Press of matter prevents us this week from noticing at greater length tins lucid and compendious hand ..-book .
.Autumn On The Thames. ! ~ So Gardens Of...
. AUTUMN ON THE THAMES . ! ~ So gardens of ancient or modern times eniv compare with tho Royal Botanic Gardens at 3 £ ew for the innumerable variety and number of foreign plants , rare and majestic native trees and exotic forns , thriving in health and marvellous beauty within its ample domain . To the young artist and artificial ilorisfc desirous of nmking progress in their culling , the months of September and October oiler a most favourable opportunity for tho study of foliuge in all its endless variety of form , size , and hue ; tho lover of jS ' aturo , too , in one of her most beautiful aspocts , and tho admirer of gorgeous colouring , may also , at this season of tho year , enjoy a treat of tho very highest order , aa the old and new aboretums , thopinotum , and many of tho conservatories aro brilliant with a thousand exquisite tints , the whole forming a series I of sylvan pictures , rich with excoss of bounty , forcibly reminding visitors of the departing glories of ancient ; Shorwood , and tho grandeur and niii ' Tni ( ieonco of American primeval forest scenery during the full of the leaf , or Indian summer , of that vast continent . Standing on tho wostorn terrace of tho great tropical Pahn-houso , gildod by the setting sunbeams of u fine autumnal cloudless sky , tho matchless view , onibracin tho whole of the oxtonsiVo ampluthoutro , enclosing the now aboretum with its llural tomplos , groups of pal riare ] i-nl elms , lofty pinos , stately oaks , spreading cedars , woodland ghuios , and noble avenues , bounded by tho culm , flowing rivor , which , soon at ) high water from un ominonco ( Victoria Mount ) , has tho nppouranoo of an cxtonaivo sorpontino lakethe stream , reflecting tho bright nzuro of tho lovely sky , realizes tho idea of a Bplondiu shoot of lapis lazuli , or un immense turquoise , euwroathou with omumkld , variogutod with tho most costly goins—is bountiful and picturesque nlmpat beyond tho power of language to dopiot 5 no written description oun convoy to tlio reader its enchanting loveliness mid surpassing bounty ; the prospect , from its magnitude , loveliness , and solitude , approuohos sublimity—it must bo seen to bo enjoyed and appreciated . This glorious and perfect panorama in univorsully allowed by competent judges to bo unrivullod as a snoohnen of English landscape gardening antl rlvor sconory throughout tho world .
Static Document. Ax Auukesh To Tub Spani...
STATIC DOCUMENT . Ax Auukesh to tub Spanish Pjeoi'MJ , nv Don Juan jjk . Uouuon , flliOONI ) tiOX OV TI 1 IC LATH DON CaIIU > S , OV Hl'AlN , TftU ( jCIitiN ' ri l . NC'LU , AND YOUNCIKH BnOTIUJll OV TIIR OOVNT UK Mo . NTKJIOU . V . Spaniards , —On addrosalng myeolf to tho Cortos in . tho month of Juno last , making nso of tho right of pot it ion , imtl demons ! rating dearly and plainly tho grounds upon which I considered my rights to bo bused , 1 did not obtain a hoaring . Tlio prosont Assembly , tlio result of nn vleoliou with which ovary one is acquainted , had to bo Biibn ' iissivo to tfio etiolates of tho ministers . Tho Senato , from its composition , more immodiutoly eubjeotod to tlio will of the person who at pi'osonfc oooupiofl tho throno , naturally followed tho ( jawo oouruo . Thus avoiding all discussion tho circulation of my writings was also prevented , by which moans clearly evincing tho
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Sept. 29, 1860, page 11, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_29091860/page/11/
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