On this page
- Departments (2)
-
Text (7)
-
««^p/W / .^fe# / Tw^^-^w^fe/ / /'' /. . ...
-
"The one Idea which Hi3tory exhibits as ...
-
<£ontent£.
-
NEWS OF THE WEEK— "<" Police Cases 33 Va...
-
VOL. VI. No. 251.1 SATURDAY, JANUARY 13,...
-
1(& *tt f 4-frtv litivivk- X6 *tu0 Ui Uj£ XT'ltlW
-
W AR -was all in the ascendant last week...
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
««^P/W / .^Fe# / Tw^^-^W^Fe/ / /'' /. . ...
««^ p / W . ^ fe # Tw ^^ - ^ w ^ fe / / /' ' / . . .. ¦ •/ ^ j ^ ggp wr Aauet .
"The One Idea Which Hi3tory Exhibits As ...
" The one Idea which Hi 3 tory exhibits as evermore developing it 3 elf into greater distinctness is the Idea of Humanity—the noble endeavour to throw down all the barriers erected between men by prejudice and one-sided views ; and by setting aside tne distinctions of Religion , Country , and Colour , to . treat the whole Human , race as one brotherhood , having one great object—the free development of our spiritual nature . "—Humboldt ' s Cosmos . ¦ .
≪£Ontent£.
Content ;? .
News Of The Week— "<" Police Cases 33 Va...
NEWS OF THE WEEK— " < " Police Cases 33 Varieties 36 LITERATURERenewed Blockade of the Danube . 26 The Rev . _ Mr . . Davies and the Miscellaneous 38 Summary 43 The War 26 London Misswn .............. 33 Postscnpt . 36 Social Aspects of German Life 42 TheQueen and the Army ............ 29 Cardn . al Wwe ^ n and the Im- PUBLIC AFFAIRS- History of Political Literature ... 43 Arrival and Departure of the maculate Conception .. «* 3 public fthr « ms A Batch of Books 44 Crimea Ships 30 Proceedings Against Archdeacon Russia Winning the Game 37 Adventures in the Sun ' . 45 Shipping Speculations for the Demson j " « . "" T ™«^» 'i The "Immaculate Conception " ... 87 Crimea 30 The Emperor and the Imperial The Ditcher-Denison Case 38 Messrs . Price and the Ordnance- Guard .. ... . 35 Underneath the Pall 39 office 30 Metropolitan Commission of Memoir on the Conduct of the Births , Marriages , and Deaths ... 46 The Hospitals in the East 31 Sewers ... 35 w S 9 SBtt ! 1 ! !! : : : & & 3 ^ 8 fert * iffiK * 3 * OPEN council- commercial affa . rs-Military Convention between Aus- Lor ^ ffin ^ tLivernool 35 The Coming Peace 41 City Intelligence , Markets . Ad-Th ^^^ n ^ iey ipiaie :::::::::::: I aa itf !!! ! : : ::::::: : II ponce- rofcei :..... - * vertisements , & e 4648
Vol. Vi. No. 251.1 Saturday, January 13,...
VOL . VI . No . 251 . 1 SATURDAY , JANUARY 13 , 1855 . [ Price Sixpence .
1(& *Tt F 4-Frtv Litivivk- X6 *Tu0 Ui Uj£ Xt'ltlw
Mm * nf -tjrt ' Wttk .
W Ar -Was All In The Ascendant Last Week...
W AR -was all in the ascendant last week . Peace , -without interrupting the action of the armies , steps into the foreground , though , as yet , covered by a mask x > € diplomacy . Such is the rapidity of events resulting in the _ report that a congress is to assemble on the 1 st of next month to arrange the peace between the belligerent parties . Russia has astounded the world by a new invasion = — invading the proceedings ^ bf the AllieTby the sudden , unexpected ,
unprepared declaration that she accepted the four points as interpreted by the Protocol of the 28 th of December . Down to that very day the Emperor was haranguing the population of all the Russias in the most warlike tones . Since it is not understood that the Allies have at all departed from the substance of the conditions which have been so often published ,-the sudden-change o £ counsel in Russia occasioned natural astonishment , and has been followed up by a still more natural suspicion . That she lias meant mischief ever since Peter the
Great bequeathed to her the enterprise of undermining every other authority in Kurope and taking possession of the Continent for herself , is believed as devoutly as ever ; and when the Russian Envoy suddenly announces , on the 7 th of January—seven days before the term assigned to his reply—that Russia abandons her refusal to listen , accepts all preliminaries , and desires peace , it is palpable that some new scheme against the independence of Europe has been devised at St . Petersburg .
The conduct of Prussia in part explains , though it does not clear up , the proceedings of her ally . Prussia , who lately refused to supply the contingent Austria claimed in defence of Germanic territory , has recently been mustering all her disposable forces , and putting them in a state of preparation , without declaring for what purpose ; intimating that the preparation is only transitory , and evidently being prepared to fall in with the
alliance , or to desert . Subsequently , it is reported that she has given her adhesion to the treaty of December 2 ; which places an agent of Russia once more completely in the council of the Three Powers . The representatives of those Three Powers , however , had not taken a position which entitled , them to repel the overtures for peace . The apparently complete acquiescence of Russia would have disarmed resistance , and the Congress
appears to be the natural consequence of the present turn of affairs . Whether ihe . Allies will be more strong in Congress than they have been in the Crimea remains to be seen ; but the gravest fears must be entertained that they will now enter into a contest favourable to the enemy . In the mean while none of the three Allies desist in their active proceedings . In a speech to the
Imperial Guard on the 9 th instant , the Emperor Napoleon cheered them by the promise that they should _ soon be assisting their comrades ^ to plant the Eagles of the Empire onJiie walls of Sebastopol ; and our own Admiralty has issued an announcement , that the ports of the Black Sea , and the sea of Azov , in the possession of Russia , will be strictl y blockaded .
The United States propose to offer a mediation between the belligerent Powers . This proposition is the result of a natural movement in the United States ; it follows-from the meeting of American Ministers at Ostend . And whether or not ' the
mediation be accepted , it is a step that promises great results for Europe and for America hereafter . It is true that America is acquiring interests in every country where her ships seek trade ; it is true that the Atlantic cannot divide her from the interests of Europe ; true that her own prosperity and power entail upon her the duty of sustaining in other less fortunate countries the political influences from which she derives such benefits . There is no doubt a disposition in America , and in our own land , to deal with foreign States too much as if they were
unquestionably represented by their constituted Governments . Technically , this is correct and safe ; practically , it violates the very spirit of those institutions which regard the people as greater than its officers . There is morCT than one peop le on the Continent w hich is less fortunate than America , in being saddled with a Government that it does not choose , because foreign States have conspired to keep that Government upon it . Take Naples as an example . American politicians can string up a list of such countries . It is not every state in Europe that has combined
the intelligence , the public spirit , the common sense , and the good luck , to form for itself a representative Government like that of Sardinia ; but to sustain Sardinia against her external enemies , and hold out a hope that the people of Naples would receive a sympathetic support if they could show themselves independently of their > aso Court—these we conceive to bo the duties
of Americans , greater than that of mediating between their felon-flatterer Nicholas and the Britons who share their blood and their political feeling . We hail the intervention of America on the Continent ; we must hear more of this ediation before we can be sure that it would command our approval ; but in any case we have the utmost confidence , that leading and influential men in America cannot really mingle themselves in European affairs without effecting good .
The story of Sardinia even within the single week is a great and noble episode in the history of Europe . Continuing the development of its representative constitution , softening those extreme desires which might otherwise divide a generally liberal people , Sardinia has placed its Government in such a position , that it is able to undertake the suppression of convents and monasteries ; while by her adhesion to the alliance of France and England for maintaining in Turkey the principle of national independence *™* international " justice , she has be- - come an example , and an auxiliary to the upholders of public law in Europe .
- We respect individuals who conduct themselves well , and so act as to promote the welfare of others as well as their own : can we apply an opposite principle to States , and equally encourage those who are the murderers of States and those who are the regenerators of States ? Lord Panmure , speaking at the Edinburgh Bible Society , cuts the ground from under Mr . John Bright . It will be remembered that at a recent meeting of a Bible Society , Mr . Bright stated , amongst other extenuating circumstances in the case of defendant Russia , that the Emperor Nicholas encourages the consumption of Bibles , and subscribes to the Bible Society . Lord
Panmure seems to convict Mr . Bright of an anachronism . The Czar who encouraged the circulat ion of the Bible in Russia , was , not Nicholas , but , Alex ander ,-and Nicholas positively prohibits what his brother promoted . Indeed , the suppression of any printed writing goes so far , as a contemporary observes , that a censor took exception to the Lord ' s Prayer , " For , " said ho , « ' give us this day our daily bread , ' savours of Socialism , and 'thy kingdom . ^ -r ^ w come , ' implies that tho people arc disconten ^ O , ^ vY : * yyrt £ with their present Emperor . " The sort of W ***^ ¦¦ ¦¦ ; ,: ' , } i * > ttj tianity which the Emperor really encourafeeB to , \ ^ : l j ;; \ - < embodied in tho doll and raki that ho sept •<*>• : ¦ ¦; ;; . : VJ -- j W stimulate , tho religious instincts and the norvetf . of . . . -. J £ , the soldiorB beforo Inkerman . IA . " ¦ " */ ••' - - ' >\ [ 0 "¦ » ¦ '*> Jilr
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 13, 1855, page 1, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_13011855/page/1/
-