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MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS.*
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FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE.
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It is not our intention , liowever , nor would it be possible , to go over the various matters which are registered in this instructive volume . We can only record the general headings . In addition to those we have already noted , there are the " Chemistry of Metals , " Poisons , " " Hippocrates , " " Physiological Chemistry-, ' " Chemistry of Food , " " The laboratory , " " Chemical Manufactures , " General Science , " "A Chapter on Chloroform , " and an appendix , with a complete index . In all respects , this new volume is equal to its predecessors—m some , superior , particularly with regard to the completeness with which the different topics are treated . Mr . Timbs has educated his readers , it may be presumed , to an advanced point , and can now afford to deal with his argument in a graver and fuller style than formerly . In some instances , he has , indeed , been exhaustive . We « omtnend this book unreservedly to the patronage of the public .
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mHE merits of Mr . Abbott as a story writer are so widely known - * - and appreciated , that we may predict considerable popularity for the " Stories of Kainbow and Lucky" among youthful readers . The genial character , the natural action , and genuine tone of truthfulness and humour which characterise these stories , are the sources of their power to please and interest . There is , likewise , the great charm of instruction as well as amusement in these tales , yet the instruction is so skilfully interwoven with and subordinated to the purposes of amusement , that the young reader will imperceptibly , and without the slightest disposition to reject it , imbibe the fine
moral lesson which they inculcate . No one is conscious of the presence of the oxygen while he inhales and is invigorated by the air lie breathes . In this manner does the clever story-teller , while he endeavours to amuse and delight , mix up with his narrative wholesome and pleasant draughts from the cup of justice and humanity ^ and put in this way the instruction is highly acceptable , and of course makes the narrative very popular / Finding as we havesaid . this method of teaching successfully adopted by Mr . Abbott , ¦ we recommend the more confidently to our readers the little volume of stories of " Rainbow and Lucky . " _ it is to the of
As ^ superfluous expatiate upon merits the " Vicar of Wafcefield , " a tale-which everybody reads , we have only to draw attention ta the surpassing excellence of this edition of it by Messrs . Griffiths and Farreri . ~ It is printed and bound in the best style , and the illustrations by Mr . Absolqn , the well-known and skilful artist , are deserving-of all praise . ; The adherence to the letter of the first Edition is also in character > and is itself a decided attraction , ' TbeDawn of Love "is an elegant little volume of sonnets , by Calder Eliot . . They exhibit considerable elegance of diction and great delicacy of sentiment , and we have no doubt that their peculiar charm of music and sweetness of thought will gain for them much favour among poetical readers . They are dedicated to the surviving sons of Burns .
Messrs . Smith , Elder and Co . have published a new edition of the interesting story of " Kathie Brande . " This cheap edition of a good fireside history should find a large number of readers . —^ 1 ^ gg ^ nf 1 ^ Jftfi »^ n < X > xforiLffliidfiJ ) Qok f is an able and complete little work on the course of education pursued at Oxford . It will , no doubt , be valuable to the student on commencing his career in that great seat of learning " . To others it will afford a perfect idea of the sort oif training which a man undergoes in the Oxford Colleges , in order to fit and qualify him for eminent arid useful positions in life . ¦ We have received the second edition of " The Divine Life in Man , " consisting of a series of sermons by the Rev / James Baldwin-Brown , minister of Claylands Chapel , Clapham' Road . Thesa sermons are characterized by a healthy religious spirit , and great earnestness of thought and purpose . ,.. i ^ .
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ists were expressed in the extract which I gave last week of M . voasr-Benxigsen ' s speech in the Hanoverian Chamber;—those of the abolitionists are that the idea of a union by violent means is . altogether chimerical , and that the efforts of the Liberals ought tobe exclusively directed to the abolition of the guild regulations , thepassport system , and the introduction of what they term " Freizuegigkeit ' , " that is , the right of settling in any country of Ger > - many without naturalisation cr permission of the authorities . I must confess the abolitionists have my sympathy , for they have a tangible object in view , and have already effected several breachesin the guild and police system . It is a question , too , which goes
home to the great body of peasants and mechanics , who can easily comprehend it , and therefore come forward in support of it . The Unionists , as represented by the National Association , can only obtain adherents among the rich and educated ; the common people hold aloof with the most phlegmatic indifference . Of this the Unionists loudly complain ; but what can be expected yrhen the German working man is under the tutelage of the police in his own locality , and finds himself treated like a foreigner in every other locality of the Vaterland ? The great Union question is not a personal affair , like the right to move , settle , and trade . Even if the union could be effected as the National Association desire , it could
be of little benefit to the people , unless the whole system of local legislation were overthrown , unless the shackles were completely cast off which tie the German to his native place . The cry for a United Germany resounds from all sides through the press , but , ridiculous enough , those persons who exclaim the loudest against the selfishness of the princes , because they will not sacrifice their hereditary sovereignties for the general welfare , are themselves possessed of the most impolitic and unsocial of privileges . The writers of Germany are constantly bewailing : the unpatriotic readiness , with which a German " throws aside his nationality and becomes an American , a Frenchman , an Englishman , or Russian , as the case may be . But what right has Germany to claim the love , and perhaps the
blood of her sons , when she denies them the common rights of man , the first conditions of social' existence ? If they were excluded from such rights and conditions by all the rest of the world , it would be another matter , but they can obtain them freely in greater , wealthier , and more powerful countries ; Those rights of man which are denied to the German in his own country , he can have eveu in that country of France which his tyrants would teach him to hate and fear . The German can freely range from one end of France to the other , and settle wherever he _ thinks _ he can best gain his livelihood j there he can buy and sell , there he cairown land , and there he can , many without ani insulting police certificate , which is more than-he can do in the freest localities of his Vaterland .. _ The instinctive
desire to found a home , and freely gain his bread by his own mi = fettered labour , must be nearer and dearer to the millions of Germany than the more ideal wish of a united Germany and the retention of the Rhine provinces . The journals are constantly whining about the never-ending stream of emigration to foreign lands , where Germans amalgamate with the people and arc foreveilost to Germany , but few trouble themselves about the self-evident remedy . But though the press- —fearing the loss of ^ subscribers , the generality of whom are guildsmen , and other privileged persons—is ¦^^ ilflnt ^ iipon-. th&-. sul ) j £ otj ^ tlifi- abolitionists are up and doing , and making preparations for their grand meeting in the autumn . Two meetings have lately been held by them , one at Freiberg and the other at Gotha , at which it was resolved to agitate chiefly for the
abolition of all restrictions upon labour and the right of settlement . The renewed activity of the National Association , which aims at the annexation of all German countries to Prussia , and is consequently a direct attack upon the princes , has called forth new measures of repression on the part of the Hanoverian and other Governments . I hear that the police have been making inquiries among the booksellers as to the . persons who have subscribed to the weekly journal of the Association . Hitherto the Hanoverian authorities directed their attention only to those who were members , they will now make it criminal to read the proceedings . Instructions have been issued , it is said , to all the post-office authorities of the kingdom , to ascertain how many copies of the journal in question
pass through the post-office , and to take note of the parties to whom they are addressed . The upshot will be the refusal of the post delivery , as the sale of the journal cannot be prohibited without a breach of the law . The exasperation against M . Yon Bobbies has been still more increased by His elevation to the rank of " Count . " It has been regarded as a defiance to the whole of Germany , that is to say , always , the rich and educated classes , and the outcry is terrible . ^ The Minister , however , takes it vory easy ,, dines at times with Ins royal master , attends meetings , and makes very loyal speeches , as if he were the most popular , instead of the most detested person , in the kingdom , and indeed in all Germany .
SPECIAL . Hanovee , June 12 th , 1860 . THERE are certain indications of a strong divergence of opinion in the Liberal party , or rather say liberal thinkers of this country—a party in the English sense does not exist . We may be said to have now two sets of thinkers or wishers : the one , which I may term Unionists , the other Guild-abolitionists . The Unionists would have a union by any means , —war or revolution ; the Abolitionists care not so much about a nominally political union of all tho States under a central authority as the abolition of all restrictions upon labour , trade , and settlement . The sentiments of the
Union-He seems to know perfectly well that the opponents of himself and his master are mere writers and gossips , that the great mass of the people , the common people , the thews and sinews , not tho tongues of the country do not erne a fig about what he says or . duos In . a late debate upon tho civil list * a great number of arbitrary purchases of private property with State money were brought to light . One of these , a bold counterpart to the Deister mine affair , exoited considerable sensation . It turned out that the Minister of Finance had expended the sum of 41 , 800 thalers for premises to serve as Government offices , when a similar sum had been obtained in n former session for the selfsamp purpose . Tho excuse was , that the building had been let by the Government to the English Clrnrgd d'Affaires , as it was found to be unsuitod for the c-bjeot nt first required . M . Von Bennigsen opined that probably the premises
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574 The Leader and SaturdayAnalyst . [ June 16 , I 860 .
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* Stories qfjtainlotc and XMoTcy . ( Selling I / hcTcij . ) By Jacob Abbovt . ,. Jjpndon : SampBon Lowr , Son ^ Co . The Vicar of Wdicijfleid . A Tale . By Omvbr ftbtPSMlTn . With Illustrations , by John-Absojlon . London : Griffiths and Tarren . Tlio Dawn of Love . By Caldbr Eliot . London : James Blaokwood . ' Kathie Brande ; a Fireside History of a quiet Life . By Holme Lee . London : Smith , Elder tc Co . JPaas and Class . An Oxford Guide-book , through the Courses of LUterw Humaniores , Mathematics , Natural Science , and Lair , and Modern History . By Montaoue Burrows , M . A . Oxford and London : J . H . and Jae . Parker . ' The Divine Xtfe In Man . By Jambs Bam > wih-Brown , B . A . London : Ward & Co ,
Miscellaneous Books.*
MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS . *
Foreign Correspondence.
FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE .
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), June 16, 1860, page 574, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2352/page/18/
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