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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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SS ^ aSiyli I tl ! Ss ^^ iSiw ^^ p ^^ CII ^ I ^ piWie ' ' < ^^^^^ l ^ M . at a s ^ & ^ at dateluS \^ , #$ ^ $ 0 $ gg communication . ' * ' The long and- " ^ he \ . % hoi $ / . j $ x £ > ; : planation , however , is . all open to . ei e ^ r ^ b || j ^ Sir James meant to be jolly—tliat as Jj |( e , wji ^ mystery , . The explanation , however , I £ * iferii 3 ^ 7 scandalous to Mr . Bright , who cannot conceive ! how a man sitting in the same august assemblage 1 with ^ himself can be jolly on the aubject of ^ Jaii , for
U« ' M al ¦¦ : : . * .-JBftr ^ .:.. ' *! : ^» : vs . ** , i .- ^ iag ^ is&Jjissej ' it- ? for .: we xaiv j ^ er ^ hat ^ tj ^ ' ^ f ^ M |^^ p | 8 pi . % * ^^ o : ?^ ;; ^^ 6 ^ i : ll ^| ii 6 ^^ : ^ % ^ n ^^^^^ p ^ m ^ m ^^^ ^ ^ k ^ r ^ mf ^^^^^ tM ^ MiT ^ m ^^ 1 mf ^^^^ m ^^^^^ { table ; - ; a / jfcj ^ ^^ mi ^ i ^ is . ^^^^^^ coBehed . in the 6 ffieH ^ h | t& | e $ ^^ less explicit ., - H ^ ying-Mo ^ d : tMt ^ PKiSfe ^ lS ^" fegifeM &sb # «» sstisiiwi ^ BauticSir James nowexrftam&iMakxiB ^ I ^ MiM ^
• . ¦ . ; ' \ ¦ ; ¦;•¦ ' vJ / : e ; i , ^^ -a , ^ . i ^ ¦ •> % i :. ^ Jtrrtu * , -- > - ;• - going to join thief armies : in tfeedBast donpt set out with any expectation of fifnditog ii a noliday parade , and Sir Charles Napier h&b cautioned the public that the inagnificent fleet , of which only the first division has mailed $ > r the Baltic , may not be able to accomplish , so much as in our fond pride we are prone to expect . We may , however , expect great things from it , nevertheless ; for a fleet of forty-four sail , manned by 22 , 000 English
¦ ¦ '" By 3 fT »^' Bi ^ j [ ' ^ £ ixm . oiQ ^ s c ^ ufife s ^^ nti vB- ' ^ vfifonii opposite that : ^ c ^ ^ is siaElH : : ^ --for ^ 1 IiiK # Jffi Tb ^ officers who are
sailors , well officered , charged with sustaining the repute of England , and accompanied by a fleet equally responsible to France , if it cannot presume victory , will unquestionably be expected to add new honours to the national flag . Sir Charles Napier sailed on Saturday morning , literally escorted to sea l > y the Queen of England ; and , similarly attended , Rear-Adiinral Corry followed on Thursday . ,
The military preparations are also pushed forward with vigour . Lord Luean takes the command of the cavalry , with Lord Cardigan in command of the light , and Colonel Scarlett of the heavy brigade . The latter will consist of the 4 th and 5 th Dragoon Guards , the 1 st Royal Dragoons , and the 6 th Enniskillens ; the former of the 8 th and 11 th Hussars , the 13 th Light Dragoons , and the 17 th Lancers . It will bo
remembered that the Royals and Enniskillens were brigaded , together with the Scots Greys , at Waterloo . Probably those " terrible Grey horses , " whose fine appearance at Cliobham hist year recalled one of the most glorious episodes of June 1815 , will accompany their old comrades to new fields . But the principal military fact is the appointment of Lieutenant-Colonel Muntlj to be Military Secretary under tlic Secretary of State for the Colonies . Out of the Itu . sso-Turkish question have arisen a cloud of smaller questions , begetting small perplexities to Ministers , and forming tin atmosphere
in which the ingenious arts of Opposition haye revelled . The grandf question of last week , — i' - Wh * j& didf -Sir kTameg Graham mean , in saying ; th . at Sir . Charles ETajuer had : his , authority to declare war in the Baltic ? ' — -has been , almost ,, though : got ' quite , ; superseded by the qiieation , " What did ; the EWp ' eror mean in sayiog . that there had bfeen ne jgolifitioiisobetween Englapd ahd > Russia witht xqeve iDa
gard : ; to ^ tjj ^ sferi * v , est ntualities yi rkey ? r ^ Ihe&iwi ^ tidid ^ tibiei inim ^ jnean by explaining . thatt ttelre : Aarfj been such negotiatiori ^ and tljat Lord Jobn Pvusaelihftd ^ pell 0 ^ ctne' pwp ^ sal piecing W Ruwwu ; lSr « Kfti . -hoai ^ i ^ i the . ^ iesf ' sM ^ m knqwledge of tho unpubli hed , correspondence ? AJttd what did various people mean by tie assertionsr . which they make in explaining that publicaticfioulibe Times ? - ' - - > . /
The meaning of the Emperor is now tolerably dear . When he was over here , in 1844 , the probable disruption of the Turkish empire induced him to lay his views before the English Ministers —notably the Duke of Wellington , Sir Robert Peel , and Lord Aberdeen ; and Count Nesselro < le reduced those views to a memorandum , which he lodged with Lord Aberdeen , and the
tenor of which Lord Aberdeen at present forgets . Subsequently , similar views were laid before Lord John Russell at the time -when he was acting as Foreign Secretary , and it ia implied ' that he declined to fall in with jtbe-desfre of Russia to discuss the gray ^ e eventuality . Ministers , however , have promised the correspondence , or such parts of it as can be given without injury to the public interest .
But , then , haw did the fact reach the Times f Probably , Lord Aberdeen thinks , through a young gentleman whom Lord Malmesbury put into the Foi'eign Office , who left that office , and who has recklessly talked about the identical correspondence . This Lord Malmesbury demos , pointing to the want of pi-oof in support of the assertion , and advancing in the young gentleman ' s defence the valuable evidence that bo has married a . lady of fortune . The greatest evidence , liowever , is , that the young gentleman , was not in office late enough to know all that the Times stated to the
public ; so thaL the manner in whieli the great journal abnorbs the information lying round it still remains a mystery to the contending legislators . Evidently the Times knew -what Lord Derby know already , ; md how ^ did he know ? That was a home question put by Lord Aberdeen . A further question ini'Hit be , who did vot know
and who sermonises Lord Falmers ^ on speakirjg on that luerabripus . « l 4 ^ CJ ^ i ^ 1 twfcy *!? . ' . ^ " , " j , ' , ,. ' The Ministerial scheme , for Reform at Oxford w . fca , described last night by ^ Xord John " Russell as a " lar ^ e and com pr ehensive measure ; " and in sotiie respects it deserves the praises lavished on it Bjr its author . In re-organising the c ^ n ^ ti i ^ tiv ^ ioni qf the University , the Government ^ a ^ i » partially adopted , the recommendations of the Commissioners . The Hebdomadal Board is to be replaced by a Board of twenty-ibur members . The Vice-Chancellor and the two Proctors are to
be members ex officio ^ and the jresfc , cpnsjefciug partly , of Heads of Colleges , and partly of Professors and senior members of the University , are to bo elected , with some exceptions , by Congregation—tlic oldest form of the lifc « rary public of Oxford—a body composed of all the resident Masters , and which it is now proposed to restore . The exceptions are that one Head of a College a . nd ono Professor will be appointed by the Chancellor , while one Regius Professor of Divinity will bo a member of the Board ex oflicio .
The distinction between the University and the Colleges is to be recognised , and the benefits oi the University are to be extended by the establishment of private Halls , with the permission o Liu : Vice-OIianeellor , and under the superiateu deuce of a wenior Master of Arts . The reatric lions upon Fellowships are to be abolished , -wit ! an exception in favour of public schools ; an the Colleges arc to be allowed to free one-fourt
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^^ PtfrtTOTOfe ^^^ ' ^ Ur :- ' ^ ^^^^^ , ^ M V-I to ' ^ with yom BWBooks ! ... 233 THE ARTS- - ¦ ¦ < ¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ . . . ., ^ " ^^ - ^ % SP * p d ^ MgMjga ^ HliK ¦ : ^^^^ mmm ^ mm WtBmm ^ 0 ^^ - "> *^^ l ^^^^ n ^ , ;; : . ; Ig ^ fe ^ lS ^ rse i " 288- ¦ ; . ^^ ^^ fm ^ m ^^ mm ^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^ m ^ i "^ « ife : :, aafevis » s ^ . »\ ^ WtiMmSKm ^^ - i ^ on ^^ Ti ; : & :: ^ r ;<**^^ 00 ^ "f . s . fi , a '' jfr . ? -. w- t ^^ f .. p .- .. * . ^* s- ? 4 ; -m-. . ' ; ¦ - a '«»• . 3 .:. --i ^ ¦ ... . •' . ¦¦' - r ' ¦ ¦ . ¦ . ¦ •¦ : ¦¦ . > > » . ' . « ps » m «»»« ibj «»« ..... ' . ( .- ... - ,, -zui ^ mr'
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), March 18, 1854, page unpag., in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2030/page/1/
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