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^ TH E LEADE R. [No- 270, Saturday,
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ToraHalf-Year. * u * a » / To be remitte...
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NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. No notice cau...
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• # * Fivepexcb is now the price for an ...
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^ — v / ^ SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1855. ¦ ¦ ¦...
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There is nothing so revolutionary, becau...
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• THE DUTY OF TO-DAY. The objects of the...
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VACANCY OF HER MAJESTY'S OPPOSITION. The...
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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Transcript
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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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
^ Th E Leade R. [No- 270, Saturday,
^ TH E LEADE R . [ No- 270 , Saturday ,
Terms Of Subscription To
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION TO
« 7lhe Header " *
" 2 £ & e lUaUe * .
Torahalf-Year. * U * A » / To Be Remitte...
ToraHalf-Year . * * » / To be remitted in advance . tSS- Money Orders should be drawn upon the Strakd BraSch Office , and be made payable to Mr . Alfred E . Galxowax . at No . 154 , Strand .
Notices To Correspondents. No Notice Cau...
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS . No notice cau bo taken of anonymous communications . Whatever is intended forinsertion must be authenticated by the name and address » f the writer ; not necessarily for publication , but as a guarantee of his good faith . During the Session of Parliament it is ofton impossible to find room for correspondence , even the briefest . Communications should always be legibly written , and on one side of thepaperonly . If long , it increases the difficulty of finding space for them . We cannot undertake to return rejected communications .
• # * Fivepexcb Is Now The Price For An ...
• * Fivepexcb is now the price for an Unstampkd copyof the JLeader , and Sixpence If Stamped . A Stamped copy of this Journal can be transmitted through the Post-office to any part of Great JBritain as frequently as may be required , during fifteen days from its date , free of charge ; but it is necessary that the paper should be folded in such a manner that the stamp be clearly visible on the outside . The Leader has been " registered" at the General Postoffice , according to the provisions of the New Act relating to Newspapers , and a Stasipkd copy has , therefore , the privilege of transmission through the post beyond the United Kingdom on payment of the proper rate of postage . »
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^ — V / ^ Saturday, July 28, 1855. ¦ ¦ ¦...
^ v / ^ SATURDAY , JULY 28 , 1855 . ¦ ¦ ¦ — ' ¦ ¦ — ' ¦
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^ ttblir Maim
There Is Nothing So Revolutionary, Becau...
There is nothing so revolutionary , because thereia nothing . so unnatural and convulsive , as the strain to Jceep things fixed when all the world is by th . e very law of . its creation in eternal progress . —Dk . Abhold .
• The Duty Of To-Day. The Objects Of The...
• THE DUTY OF TO-DAY . The objects of the war are undefined to those who regard it aa a crusade for liberty and civilisation . They are undefined to those who regard it as undertaken for diplomatic purposes , always shifting as circumstances change , and perpetually reconstructed " out of the ashes of others which are floating in the air . " But to us they are defined sirnnly and sharply by the lines of the Allied armies round Sebastopol . The nation undertook the expedition to the Crimea to destroy the
Euaeian stronghold in the Black Sea . Whether our blood and money might not ljave been better expended is another question . We stane , with the whole resources of our empire , and . in conjunction with oar ally , before the ramparts of Sebastopol ; and honour , fidelity , and policy alike require that we should persevere till we have taken those ramparts or proved that they are impregnable . All thoughts but victory are out of # he question , for the present . The Peelifces and Lord John Hussein
have probably brought themselves to believe that they besieged Sebastopol only to coerce Hussia into granting them a paper treaty of limitation , and that this paper treaty of limitation being granted the siege may be raised . History , recalling their denunciations of the " standing menace , " will fix them with a different design . They designed , and Iiord Joun Bussem . * at least boasted of
Ms design , to obtain from Kussia the only limitation of her power which is worth an hour ' s purchase—the actual diminution of her means of . war . But' their hearts fail them , not unpardonably , at the sight of so
much blood and such wreck to civilisation ; and the recollection of their original design accommodates itself to their present feelings . They , however , like their colleagues who still remain in the Government , must persevere in the enterprise for which they are responsible , and not till that enterprise is accomplished can their voices be heard for peace .- overnment to be
We believe the nresent Greally , as well as professedly , united in their determination , and undisturbed by any of those differences of opinion which it is the patriotic object of Mr . Disraeli to evoke and display to Europe . ~ No doubt there must have been discussions on the Austrian propositions , but into these discussions neither friend nor foe has a right to inquire , provided they have ended im unanimity ; and the malicious anxiety with which such inquiries have been made in the House of Commons
merely shows that the spirit of faction reigns uncontrolled in that assembly , even iu the most extreme peril of the nation . The Government stand , it * not strong , at least united before the nation , and in the face of Europe ; they have triumphed gallantly , if not greatly , over all attempts to shatter and displace them ; they are clearly , for the present , the only Government we can have ; and , therefore , it seems our duty and interest for the present to support them . The Roman Senate gave a profound lesson of policy as well as a high example of magnanimity to after times , when thev thanked the sreneral who had lost
Cannae for not having despaired of the Republic . The old Premier does not crush his assailants like a great man ; but he parries their furious thrusts with high-hearted bravery , showing some Euglish stuff , and verifying the Duke of Wellington ' s saying , that his dandy officers were his best soldiers . A \ e could reprobate his levity in a national crisis more cordially if it were not hypocritically reprobated by men within the House of Commons who deal themselves , at all seasons , in libellous satire and coarse invective , and who assail the buoyant old man with intolerable insults at the same time
that they sanctimoniously exhort him to speak with the gravity of a judge . If anything is more calculated to excite a reaction in his favour than this , it is the attempt made to condemn and ostracise him for maladministration to which he was not really , though he may have been constitutionally , a party , by men who , since the facts , have sought for their own ends to associate him with them in a Ministry , and offered to act under him as leader of the House of Commons . The
technical plea that the facts known before to all have since been legally certified by the finding of the Sebastopol Committee , is a subterfuge which only serves to show that those who use it are conscious of their offence . To offer to combine with a man in the most confidential relation , and , when he refuses , to
take part in visiting him with infamy for things done before the offer was made , is a proceeding for which there can be but one name among men of generosity and honour ; and nothing but the forensic manner in whigh the Attobney-General put the point could have prevented its having the duo effect , even in the House of Commons .
The late appointments , too , havo given hopes * of better things , and improved the position of « fchc Ministry in the eyes of all but those whose dreary vocation it is to growl at everything without discrimination . The mass of the nation will cheer tho Premier on in the good path upon which he seems to have entered . With our statesmen as with ourselves , the generous acknowledgment of good
actions is quite as potent an instrument < reformation as the denunciation of bad ones The other parties are nowhere . The grei majorities on the Confidence question though they were not majorities for Goveri menfc , were majorities against anyone els The Tories are avowedly divided '; the ^ mo ] respectable members of the party refusing t commit themselves to the factious manoeuvr * which are sup-crested by the craving appetite
and shortsighted cunning of their leade : The Peace party are impracticable . Th Peelites , opposing as ex-Mmisters the nrost cution of an enterprise which as Ministei they originated , are very wealc , if not in sinister position ; and they seem to have falle under the inauspicious guidance of Sir Ja . me Graham , whose moral weakness leads hin self alternately into panic and bravado , j combination of the three sections is as in
possible as the accession to power of any on of them ; though , so far as ]\ Ir . Disbaem : concerned , there is no living thing wit which he would not combine to oust th occupants of the Treasury Benches . I spite of the customary malignity of part imputation , we have no doubt that th coalition against the Turkish Loan was ue premeditated and transient . It is , then , in face of a manifest necessit
that we preach the political duty of support ing against a foreign enemy a GoverameE which its rivals are unable to replace . W have watched the struggle of parties with th coolness of bystanders , and , as citizens , w acquiesce in the result . An appeal to th people for better men , we are firmly thoug sorrowfully convinced , would not be re sponded to at this moment : the men are no ready for the people if the people is read for them . We should have the old fans
ticisnis , the old party cries , the old attorne organisations—a two months' anarchy , scandal in the face of Europe , and no ade quate improvement . Wo must promise our selves , and try earnestly to prepare for oui selves , better things hereafter ; but for th present we must make the best of tha which our own past conduct has given uf As the Ministry has fairly survived publi opposition , we must uphold it against th attacks of personal envy and malignity ; w must treat it as tho national Governmeni
and endeavour by generous treatment , an something of that loyalty which ought t dignify commonwealths as well as despotism * to exalt it before Europe and our enemies and to infuse into it the majesty and spirit o the nation .
Vacancy Of Her Majesty's Opposition. The...
VACANCY OF HER MAJESTY'S OPPOSITION . The Queen is not likely at present to sen < for" public men , for a reason which th < people should ponder . There is in reality i post which is preparatory to that of Minister and all posts of that kind at tho prosen moment are vacant ; we mean the seats ii " her Majesty ' s Opposition . " Thcro is n < such body at tho present moment . Person in the House of Commons set themselves u ] to speak in tho name of great public in tereats , and raise a pother about the domeriti of measures emanating from Ministers , or make obstructions to the passing of resolutions ant bills whenever thev can j and votes of censure havo been lavished this session . A Membo
cannot entertain conscientious or party objections to the course proposed by Iiord Pal mekston , Iiord Joror Russeli ,, Lord Ahek diukh , or any Minister in or out of office , but he must turn round and ask tho House ol Commons to adopt hie sentiments in ft formal " vote of censure . "
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), July 28, 1855, page 716, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/ldr_28071855/page/8/
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