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A POLITICAL AND LITERARY REVIEW .
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— * ¦ — T HE ceremonial of the Royal marriage of Monday last passed off without a single contretemps , and evoked a large amount of popular enthusiasm . London made holiday , and loyally tired itself out with wandering through and about the metropolis in search of something to see or something to do worthy of the high occasion . Bitterly cold as was the early morning , thousands and tens of thousands sought the roadway between Buckingham and St . James ' s Palace , for the chance of catching a glimpse of theQuEEN , or of the young bridegroom , or , best of all , of the bride ; and possibly one in a thousand or so was gratified in the way desired . But the sight of the carriages in which the principal actors in the Royal nuptial scene were supposed to be was sufficient to set the concourse shouting , and shout they did in a way never exceeded . The Queen and the young couple must have been deeply impressed with the heartiness of their public greeting . In the transformed Chapel Royal the marriage service was performed with incidents of touching grace and interest . The bearing of the young man to whom the future of the earliest born of Her Majesty ' s children has been confided was such as to make assurance doubly sure ; ' and there is this great difference between the public feeling upon the present and upon past occasions of Royal marriages ; the public regard it wholly from a domestic point of view—they care nothing , or scarcely anything , about the alliance which it may help to strengthen ; their sympathy is with tho Queen as a mother—as the type of English mothers—and witli her anxiety for tho happiness of her child . It was this sympathy that gave heart to tho chcors whioh greeted Her Majesty ' s pale but serene face on Monday , and tho pale , tearful , but happy face of tho Princess Royal . There has been groat activity in Leadcnhall-street during the wcok , and tho right of tho Company to remain in its present position has been debated by tho proprietary and directorate with many words and much division of opinion . Their discussion is ofValuoTTiFiraip in ]^^^ c double Government' to a oloar issue . Meanwhile , the arguments of tho defenders of the proscnt state of tho Indian Government aro , that tho real government of India is diotatod by tho Imperial Government through tho secret committoo ; that ail tho lfttor wars and annexations wore forced upon the Court of Directors against their inclination , to tho
impoverishment of the Indian Treasury , the stoppage of great works of public utility , and with other evil consequences . Sir Henry Rawlinson , a nominated Director , appointed ' by the Crown , ' desires to see the Crown exercising a direct power , instead of using its influence in the present indirect and covert way . There is no doubt , that the opposition to the threatened bill daily gains strength , through force of argument , through dread of acting while India is in civil war , and through the aid of political opponents of the Government . Count de Persigny ' s answer to the address of the Corporation of London conveys a threat from which attention must not be diverted by the flowing civilities of speech in the midst of which it was uttered . He makes no demand with reference to the attack upon his master on the 14 th of January , nor does he call for the expulsion of refugees from England , about whose position here , on the contrary , he says some very handsome things in favour of the custom of this country ; but he does strongly suggest that the open counsellors of such attacks should be expelled . They would be expelled from France , he says , as soon as their intentions became ' notorious , ' and he thinks that the same course of action should be pursued in England . But this ' notoriety ' is an assumption on Count de Persigny ' s part , and the power of the British laws to expel aliens , even in tho event of a notoriety such as that which is assumed , is also assumed . The British laws give to the Government of England no such powers , and the Minister is not very likely to be soon forthcoming who would attempt to enlarge their powers in the direction indicated by tho French Ambassador . As to the alliance betweon this country and France being endangered by tho refusal of Lord Palmerston to attempt to mako English law conformable with French Imperial necessities , and English freedom with tho condition bearing the same name in France , wo do not believe that Louis Napoleon is half so wilful as to blind himself to tho plain fact , that ho would bo ton times tho greater loser by a breaking of his present relations with England . Therefore we do not look for any serious results from Count de Persign y ' s -threat-ubout-dangoi' -to-tho . allianco- ^ but-thc ^ . tono . of almost dictation assumed is not to be unheeded , especially when it is known that tho Emperor Napoleon is using considerable moral pressure at our Court , and is publishing in tho Moniteur tho addresses of his Puntorian . guards , offering to be tho advance of an army to drag tho ' wild beasts 'tho refugees— ' from their lair , ' England I
The latest news from India shows that the British operations are being extended over a wider field , and the engagements reported appear to be isolated and fragmentary . Sir Colin Campbell , well rid as he is of the proximity of the Gwalior Contingent , has a great deal to do before he can fairly commence the Oude campaign . The position of Sir James Outram at Alumbagh , though said to be threatened , is defended by 4000 men—a sufficient force to hold it sown against any attack that can be made by the enemy . From the Punjab a column is advancing towards the north-west of Oude , through Rohilcund ; and Jun g Bahadoor , with nearly 10 , 000 Ghoorkas , is to advance by Gorruckpore towards Lucknow . These forces , with the British reinforcements steadily moving up , will leave little room for doubt as to results . But the number of troops on the way is insufficient , and more men- from England is the burden of every letter from India . Yet where arc the men to come from ? Enlistment is at a discount : the standard of height for recruits has already been reduced to within an inch of what it was in the sternest stress of the Peninsular war , and the cry is still' Soldiers wanted ! ' The other day at Aldershott not two hundred militiamen were obtainable for the line : and why P For more than one reason . It may be the interest of the adjutant , but it is not equally the interest of tho other officers of a militia regiment to turn their men over to the line , for if they lose their men tho regiment is disembodied , and their occupation is gone . On tho other hand , the militia being composed of county volunteers , the men are attached to their officers , and decline to be absorbed into strango agglomerations . They will readily join the regular service bodily , officers and all , but they shrink from separation . Twenty-five now battalions arc to be created ; fifteen thousand monger annum will bo wanted for the East ; but tho routine of tho Horse Guards displays its activity and ingenuity in doubling tho fortune of a few aristocratic favourites , and declines to mako tho army , by an infusion of now blood , a national service . If tho flagrant injustice in tho distribution of honours wore not enough to disgust high-minded goutluincn , tho prevailing system with respect to tho milftla would"bTlmfllcio » rio ^ dotor" --volunteers from tho ranks . Tho preparatory state , iu which tho naval and military operations against Canlon havo so long , stood , is about to pass away . Lord JE ^ jrttf ; . dfi : ' privod of his first army by the necessities ' ttf- ^ lidfa , has managod to get togothcr a soconij Jorpty with p ' ' ¦" ¦ ' : . •¦ r ' ''
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VOL . IX . No . 410 . ] SATURDAY , JANUARY 30 , 1858 . Price CSS "'^ . ° " : I ™ ~
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dse-K ^^ s ^^^ s ^^^^ HsassfflKss ?^^ of our ipin ' tual nature . "—Humboldt ' s Cosmos . ^^
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%Tvkvx Nf Tjie Wnk.
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 30, 1858, page unpag., in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2228/page/1/
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