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EEMODELLING EUROPE.
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SUNDAY TllADING.
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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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IT is doubted in Paris whether the visit of the E : \ fpebor to Baden'is to be considered a failure or a success , but , taken in conjunction with M . About ' s pamphlet , it can only be regarded as -designed to hasten the internal commotion of Germany , in order that France may have some new " idea" to recommend others to fight for , or , if it should prove convenient , to fight for herself . We have long recommended that the English Government should express itself in favour of German unity , leaving- the Germans to . make what arrangements . they pleased for the
realizareckon that the blaze of revolution will soon be kindled —if it is not so already—on the mainland of Naples , and then . Austria will find herself so hard-pressed , that avoiding a conflict will become impossible . At Rome , Lamoiucieee has been of more service to the national party than to the Pope . He . has been so craftily opposed by Antonelli and the priests , who profit by corruption , that he has reorganized nothing , while his efforts have served the purpose of making confusion worse confounded . A storm in European politics is manifestly brewing ; and when the Pkince of Prussia tells the German Sovereigns assembled at Baden , " that in order to come to an understanding Austria has taken some steps to which he attaches great value , " we are curious to know what sort of an alliance with that
tion of a project dear to the national heart , and / necessary for the common safety of Europe . Our Cabinets , whose policy lias the appearance ' . ' . ofhaving been picked up at an : ' * -old . clo ' shdp , " redjolent with reminiscences of other days , has not given any aid to the - . liberal party in Germany , whose principles ally them naturally and closely with ourselves , and now the Emperor of the French starts forward in advance of England as the advocate of beneficial change . He forestalled us in Italy , and he forestalls us in Germany ^ We are thrust back as belonging to the past , while he moves' forward as the man of the present and of the future also . —
miserable power the Prince will agree to , and whether any such altiance has the approval of the English Court . It is our misfortune that we do not know what our rulers are about , Diplomacy is still a black art—shrouded in mystery , and only worthy of distrust .
In Franco M . A bout ' s pamphlet will win great popularity for the Government . The nonsense about French liberty may be laughed at , but the national pride will be gratified by the belief that Trench ideas and French power are about to realize their old ambition of remodelling the world . The rubs for Prussian constitutionality will tell . Neither the Prince of Prussia nor any other Gei'man potentate can exclaim with' Hamlet , " Letv the gnlLed jacie wince ; ' *~ a nrl poor . Fkaxcts Joseph will shake in his shoes when he finds the conqueror at Solferino
speaking through his scribe , and , alluding to tho Germans , ; say , " They know that in accepting the domination of Austria , they must renounce even a hope of progress , " for , as he says in another place , ( t Austria represents the doctrine of divine right in its most absolute rigour . Political and religious despotism , abnegation of the rights of the people , the most enormous concessions to clerical authority , and blind worship of the past , and an obstinate hatred of all progress , those arc the wormeaten bases of the Austrian monarchy "
The King of Prussia is asked by M . ' About whether he sides with divine right or popular right—" with'divine right , and'the King of Naples , or with popular right and the Empkhoh of the French nmj the King of Sardinia ? " This pamphlet , like other expositions of policy , will very likely bo disavowed by Imperial authority , but it . would not have appeared , unless in conformity with the designs of the astute Jtuler of France . Taking it altogether , it is not comforting for Germany , but it , certainly offers a . way out of all difficulties ; and if the ' PHixon of Prussia would forget his political bigotry , and declare himself , as recommended , in favour of popular right , he would at once secure , in the numerous and intelligent German race , a counterpoise to any evil
designs of Monnparfist ambition . Our pence-at-any-price contemporaries profess to believe that everything betokens u continuance of calm , but while Louis Napoleon -invites Germany to a rebellion against- its prinncs , and holds Austria up to contempt , events march on in Italy , and bid fair to bring Sardinia once more into the field , without mueh further delay . If the Neapolitan Government gives up the . two steamers wliich have been sei / . ed merely on suspicion , and whiuh aro formally reclaimed , Gaiuhaldi will have another useful triumph , anil the moral power of Bomb a II . will sink still lqvtrer . If , on the other'hand , the latter refuses to make restitution , a war with Sardinia will bo imminent . Anyhow wo may
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YOUR well-meaning man is invariably a mischievous legislator . He is so anxious to put everybody and ' everything-right that , if allowed to have his own way , he will worry people out of their lives with his tender precautions for their welfare . -Whenever he sees a nuisance , or what he deems a hardship , he hastens at once to remedy it by Aet of Parliament , never considering that small inconveniences are the inevitable accompaniments of laws of a high utility , or thinking that his remedy in . healing the
particular sore which disgusts him will make the whole body politic exceedingly uncomfortable . ... Lord Chelmsfoiu ) is distressed beyond measure because the shops are kept open in some quarters of London the whole morning , ; - and introduces a Bill into Parliament the practical effect of which would be to inflict immense inconvenience upon the poorer inhabitants of the metropolis , and fill their minds with a bitter sense of the injustice or indifference of thei upper and powerful classes .
Wherev er the shops are open on a Sunday they supply a-public want . If there were no suctf want ,- if the customers of the tradesmen in these quarters ' could ' make their purchases on Saturday , the shops could be closed just as easily as warehouses' and banks are now closed on Saturday afternoons . In the wealthier districts of London , where ¦ the residents' can conveniently lay in quantities of the conimoditius they are 'likelv to eon / miic , the
shops are all closed ; they are opened in the poorer parts because the working-el asses can only buy in very . small , quantities , and are afraid to keep the meat or fish for their 'Sunday , dinner a whole night iiv their close unhealthy dwellings . The poor prefer , too , to " . make their purchases on the Sunday morning , because ¦ they have a natural suspicion of the articles palmed oil' upon them by gaslight . Lord Ciiklmsfohd , indeed , admits the necessity of some SmKlaT ^ traTliiig , iiiasiriuch as he al'ltfwS 'somtf
shops to bo open until 10 o ' clock , aii . d a-few during . the . whole day , and by that very admission gives up the principle upon which he . professes to-legislate . It' fruit maybe sold all day why not vegetables ? Are , gooseberries clean and greens unclean ? What new revelation justifies Lord Cmelmsfoku in pronouncing tipples legitimate objects of transfer on the Sunday and water-cresses objectionable ? How is the lino to be drawn ? The . police will have ; to compile a catalogue of tho'" forbidden fruits" for the benefit of greengrocers and street hawkers . Lord Ciiklmsford , perhaps , thinks that by letting tho shops be open ' until ton he allows everybody plenty of time to procure all
he may want for the clay ; but his lordship , if ho knew anything of tho ' habits of the hard-working population of the inciropolis , would be aware that Sunday morning is an especial season of indulgence with them ; obliged to get up ¦ to ¦ work every other clay . at five or six , they like to take several extra hours' . sleep on the-Sunday . Of course ; no tradesman ought to be obliged to keep his shop " open to indulge this lu / auess , but he ought not to be . compelled to shut it against his will ; and H there is such a necessity for the o )) oning of shops on tho Sunduy that tradesmen cannot of their own motion force their customers to buy on tho Saturday , it- is absurd to try to dVoot the object bv penalties .
Lord Ciiei , m . spoh , u , indeed , rests his ease very much upon the hardship in 1 lictc . nl u ]) on the shopkeepers themselves , who wish , lie says , to bo obliged to close : on tho Sunday . With all deference to the ex-Ch « ncelior , this > isfll » iei' nonsense . If tli « buhint ^ d now done on Sundays could bo dout ; before tun , iiio t . r < idn- > ni » sn could accomplish . all that tho Aet would try in vain to do . They sny , however , that , ono of their-competitors may keep open , : ind therefore ' they must do the same , much as it hurts their con .-iciieufc ' os . The linc ' iulrapcrs , when first asked to closo earlier in tlw rvoniutfs , mado tho . stnno objection , but they have now discovered that , then ; was nothing in their , fenrs . They do not lo .-so customers who would pay i ' or the gas tlioy must . burn . So it would bu
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been , from the legitimate service of the country , to serve the purposes of a class . Thus , to extend the system , while we cry out against the clothing-colonels'fees , is knocking out the btaighole , and screaming with despair at the waste of a leaky spiffgot . It is a vast extension of military misrule ,, 'while the Hotise of Lords deliberately Usurps a power over the . property" of the people . The power of the sword already belongs to the aristocracy , and with this amazing extension they also claim the power of the purse . What better England will politically be than Venice was , or than the military and bureaucratic
despotisms of the Continent are , should the Peers be triumphant and Sir Chakles Wood succeed , ingenuity is puzzled to discover . We don't despair , nevertheless , of the country . Its living power is in the energies of the people , not in political organization ! But we di'ead , as the consequence of such a combined usurpation , a swifter destruction to the power of revolutionary conservatism than may be compatible with internal peace and welfare . England must avoid the continental series of insurrections , revolutions , and despotism , in pursuit of freedom and security .
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June 23 ., I 860 . ] The Leader and Saturday Analyst . 585
Eemodelling Europe.
EEMODELLING EUROPE .
Sunday Tllading.
SUNDAY TllADIXG .
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), June 23, 1860, page 585, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2353/page/5/
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