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THE CIVIL WARiJN THE NORTH OF SPAIN.
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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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Untitled Article
By av Eye-witness . [ We have looked with an eye of interest to the affairs of the Peninsula , and have occasionally given brief statements and opinions concerning the principle and progress of Spanish affairs . But , previous to entering into any practical detftjls , or elaborate discussion of the question , we resolved to wait
until we obtained such authentic particulars concerning this Civil War as an intelligent and honest-minded eye-witness could alone collect and communi cate . We are now placed in possession of a series of facts which have npt hitherto been made public ; and with a full copy of all the " General Orders " lying before us , we are enabled to give our readers such an account of the character of the war , and the movements and military government of the British Auxiliary Legion , as will demand the attention of Ministers , and be interesting to all parties . Some of our friends may not be pleased at what they will find ; but all tjiose among tne philosophic reformers—to whom this magazine is chiefly addressed—will be glad to obtain truths , whether pala table or otherwise , as constituting the orily sound basis for future arguments ajicj deductions . —R . H . H . ]
Thp north pf Spain is still the arena of a civil war as cruel apd sanguinary as any that has ever yet been recorded in the annals of any nation . To us , just returned from the seat of military operations , little appears to be understood in this country concerning either the physical and moral character of
the ytty , or the prospects of the contending parties . His Majf ? 8 ty , in the speech delivered by commission before the House of Lords on the opening of the present session ( 1837 ) , it made to say that < ' he laments that the civil contest which has agitated
the Spanish monarchy has not y&t been brought to a close ;*' that "he has continued to afford to the Queen of Spain that aifj which , by the quadruple alliance of 1834 , he engaged to f ive if it should bepome necessary : " and that " he rejoices that lir f i > , film * . ; . * ^ r -t . ' j j /» i A ** * \ . i _ is co-operating force has rendered useful assistance to the troops of h ^ r Catholic Majesty . " His Majesty ' s Ministers should not make their Royal master rejoice when there is WQto
t ^ ing rejoice at ; for nothing has been yet accomplished which promises to terminate the struggle or pacify tne disturbed state of the Peninsula . The origin of this ciyil war is too well knoiyn to require any very circumstantial rec ^ pty ^ Uitipn . It js notorious that Ferdinand the Vllth , ( who in real life dramatized bigotry to the utmost , prostrating himself ostentatiously before priests and altars , and even embtoifieririg ^ Jjth % bwrt Royal fingers tippgts and j ^ i ^' ^ AeTp mix t yd mm * m $ w tSm muguw of lupines * , « u ; % to * tm > m
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The Civil Warijn The North Of Spain.
THE CIVIL WARiJN THE NORTH OF SPAIN .
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No . 128 , I
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), March 1, 1837, page 129, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1829/page/3/
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