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or say two millions, as the threefourths produce of outward freight would, perhaps, not quite compensate the one-fourth on inward and outward cargoes to the Russian shipping. Even such a balance is exclusively and unjustly large against a country which, like Great Britain, is a consumer of Russian products to the extent of seven-twelfths of the total exports of Russia to all the world. The consequence is, that the rate of exchange is almost invariably against this country. Lord Howick, indeed, most quixotically deals with adverse exchanges; he disposes of them sum. marily, and in a style that must have astonished the people on 'Change. This disciple and representative of Mr Edward Gibbon Wakefield's economics in the House of Commons, as Lord Durham was before his political disciple, and the victim of his schemes colonial, thus decisively disposes of adverse exchanges in the celebrated debate on Import Duties, taking Por tugal for an example.

"A large increase of importations from Portugal would necessarily be attended by a proportionate increase of our export trade. Was it not clear that every merchant who imported a pipe of wine would anticipate the bills drawn against him on account of it, and that, whatever would be the increase in the amount of imports, there would be a corresponding increase in the amount of the bills drawn against us? How were our merchants to provide for them? There would be no difficulty in it, whether the trade of Portugal increased legally or illegally. Suppose an increase of imports into Portugal, there would be an immediate demand for bills to Portugal. The consequence would be, that if there was any other country from which Portugal received more than it exported, the bill-brokers would get bills from that country, and our manufactures would be sent there instead of to Portugal. Admit that you could not find in any other country the means of discharging your debt by importation of your manufactures, bills on Portugal should then rise to a certain premium, and gold and silver would be sent to discharge the debt. The gold and silver would come from some other country, and the consequence would be that we should send our manufactures, not to Portugal, but to South America; while Portugal would be obliged to send the bullion to some other country that it might carry on a smuggling trade with its neighbour, Spain. It was impossible for

the ingenuity of man to point out any different result."

The "bill-brokers" will be greatly amused with the new line of business chalked out for them, of "getting bills" from other countries when short

in this. There are two descriptions of "bill brokers," but the class bear. ing that designation purely deal with domestic bills only. The other class are known as "exchange brokers," because they meddle only with foreign bills; but as to "getting bills" from abroad when bills are wanting here, that trustworthy and respectable description of agents certainly never dreamt of such an occupation. Lord Howick would seem to imagine that manufactories of bills existed specially abroad, and that people could draw with as much nonchalance from Paris or from Hamburg, upon Jack Nokes and Tom Styles at Amsterdam or Frankfort, as here Lord Huntingtower accepted for his dear friend the Colonel values uncared for, or as folks familiarly talk of valuing an Aldgate pump when an accommodation bill is in question. May we venture to hint to the member for commercial Sunderland, the ex for Northumberland, that the functions of "exchange brokers" extend no further than to ask A if he has any bills to sell, and Bif he is a buyer; whereupon he has only further to learn what rate the one will purchase and the other sell at; that knotty point arranged, the bargain is concluded, and he receives his very small percentage. The operations are carried on every day, more or less, but on Tuesdays and Fridays, being especially "post days" on London 'Change, where Lord Howick any day may be initiated in the mystery, if not punctilious about being unceremoniously elbowed and jostled about.

In the principle of protection, we hold Russia to be perfectly in her of it, she damages herself. Prohibiright and her interest; in the abuse tion is not protection; restrictive duties equal to absolute prohibition, like the 85 per cent prohibitory tax, formerly levied here on Indian cotton fabrics, in favour of Lancashire, are not protection in the legitimate sense. The late Emperor Alexander hit the true nail of principle on the head when, in 1819, he reformed the Russian tariff on the calculation of imposts ranging from fifteen to forty per cent.

We are, nevertheless, bound to say, that, even as protection is understood in its exaggerated sense by the Autocrat, the system has worked well for Russia, as indeed we have shown. She has accumulated wealth by that system; she has secured by it the possession of a large proportion of those precious metals, which are indispensable no less as the medium of foreign exchanges and balances, than as the means by which, above all other means, the operations of industry, and the employment of labour, are facilitated at home. How would industry progress, and wages be dispensed, if the master manufacturer could offer payment of wages only in yards or pieces of cloth, the iron-master in ore, or the laud-proprietor in oxen, sheep, corn, hay, or cabbages? In respect of commercial balances, that of Great Britain against Russia is liquidated probably, to some extent, by the yearly balance resulting against Russia in her dealings with Persia; for the policy of Russia is to favour the commerce of Asia, whilst oppressing that with Europe, and Persia is always indebted to Great Britain. She has, however, the game in her own hands. Can we wonder that she plays it to her own advantage, half-political, halfcommercial? She knows as well as we feel keenly, that the raw materials, in which she is so rich, are indispensable for our use; she charges accordingly. The time may come when we shall be more independent of her, and then, then only, she will conform to altered circumstances. The able and

distinguished diplomatist at her court, Lord Stuart de Rothesay, who succeeded in the arduous task of negotiating the recent treaty of navigation with that crafty Government, is the man also who will not be slow to avail himself of any favourable conjuncture for turning circumstances to account, and redressing the adverse balance now against this country.

As before said, our intention, on this occasion, is not to dissect principles or theories, but to present facts. We have still more in store for the absolute theory men. But, in concluding, we may be allowed to observe, that the causes why a restrictive and exclusive system does answer for Russia, and, on the contrary, tends to the ruin of Spain, are simply these:-The raw materials of Russia are indispensable for this and other manufacturing countries, because cheaper and more abundant than can be elsewhere pro cured, and the price of labour is low. The raw products of Spain necessary for manufactures are on the reverse, dear priced; her products of luxury, even, are dear; her rates of labour are higher than in this or any other country of Europe. Two shillings and sixpence a-day, or fifteen shillings a-week, with, besides Sundays, a hundred saints' days or holidays in the year, put her labour and produce quite hors de combat in the race of competition. A Spanish operative would no more toil on a dia de dos cruces, (two saints on one day,) than he would fast on a feast-day, with an odorous olla podrida before him on the table.

INDEX TO VOL. LIII.

Aden, on the occupation of, 484.
Affghanistan, the war in, 17-review of
the events in, 239-the evacuation of,
266.

Agriculture, the practice of, 415.
Akhbar Khan, murder of Macnaghten

by, 257 defeat of, at Tazeen, 269.
Amalia, from the German of Schiller,

442.

Immalát Bek, a tale, translated from
the Russian Translator's preface,
281-Chap. I., 288-Chap. II., 296–
Chap. III., 464—Chap. IV., 471—
Chap. V., 478 Chap. VI., 568—
Chap. VII., 573-Chap. VIII, 579-
Chap. IX., 584-Chap. X., 746–
Chap. XI.. 750-Chap. XII., 752—
Chap. XIII., 755-Chap. XIV. 759.
Anti-Corn Law League, failure of the, 6.
Antique at Paris, the, from Schiller, 312.
Antique, the, to the Northern Wan-
derer, 312.

Aristocracies of London life, the, 67-
the aristocracy of fashion, 68-of
power, 227-of talent, 386.
Arnold's lectures on history, review of,
141.

Astronomical works, from Schiller, 311.
Attorney's Clerk in the Monk's Hood,
the, a review of Chatterton, 780.
Auckland, Lord, remarks on his policy
in India, 18, 266.

Bailey, Mr, his Reply to an Article in
Blackwood's Magazine, on Berkeley's
Theory of Vision, 762.

Ballads of Schiller, the, see Schiller.
Battle, the, from Schiller, 446.
Battle of the Blocks, the, 614.
Berkeley's Theory of Vision, further
remarks on, 762.

Book of the Farm, review of the, 415.
Buckingham, the Duke of, his resigna-
tion, 5.

Burial march of Dundee, the, 537.
Burnes, Sir Alexander, murder of, 244.
Cabul, Eyre's Narrative of the Opera-
tions in, reviewed, 239.

Caleb Stukely, Part X. The Revulsion,
33-Part XI. Saints and Sinners, 213
-Part XII. The Parsonage, 314-
Part XIII. The Fugitive, 496—Part
Candia, the siege of, 718.
last, Tranquillity, 651.
Chapters of Turkish History, No. IX.
Capello, Bianca, history of, 554.
Rise of the Kiuprili family-siege of
Candia, 718.

Chatterton's Poems, review of, 780.
Chief End of Man, the, from Schiller,
311.

China, state of our relations with, at the
commencement of 1843, 19-justice
of the war with, 20-future prospects
of, 21.
Claverhouse's Burial March, a poem,
537.

Columbus, from Schiller, 312.
Commercial Policy in relation to Spain,
review of, 673-In relation to Rus-
sia, 807.

Comte, Auguste, review of his Cours de
Philosophie Positive, 397.

Corn-Law, Sir Robert Peel's alteration
in the, defended, 5.
Correctness, from Schiller, 310.
Count Eberhard the Grumbler, from
Cromwell and Sir Oliver Cromwell,
Schiller, 628.

Imaginary conversation between, 209.
Cunningham's Life of Reynolds, stric-
tures on, 596.

Curse of Glencoe, the, by B. Simmons,
121.

Death of Thomas Hamilton, Esq., 280.
Delta, the Lost Lamb, by, 395.
Disturbances in the manufacturing dis-
tricts, the, 11.

Division of Ranks, the, from Schiller,
311.

Dream of Lord Nithsdale, the, by Charles
Mackay, 83.

Dundee, the burial march of, 537.
Dumas' Travels in Italy, review of, 552.
East and South of Europe, the, 101.

Eberhard of Wurtemberg, from Schiller,
628.

El Empecinado, passage in the career
of, 343.

Fllenborough, Lord, policy of, in India,

18-his policy with regard to Aff-
ghanistan, 266-his proclamation on
evacuating the country, 276-defend-
ed against the charges of the Whigs,

539.

Elysium, from Schiller, 628.

Europe, the east and south of, 101.
Evacuation of Affghanistan, the, 266.
Expectation and Fulfilment, from Schil-
ler, 439.

Eyre's narrative of the events in Cabul,
review of, 239.

Fantasia to Laura, from Schiller, 638.
Favour of the moment, the, from Schil-
ler, 438.

Fight with the dragon, the, from Schil-
ler, 175.

Financial position of Great Britain at
the close of 1842, 6.
Florence, sketches of, 561.
Flowers, from Schiller, 445.

Foreign affairs, aspect of, at the com-

mencement of 1843, 15.

Fortune and Wisdom, from Schiller, 631.
Fortune-Favoured, the, from Schiller,

439.

Founding of the Bell, the, by Charles
Mackay, 462.

Funeral phantasie, from Schiller, 626.
Genius, from Schiller, 310.
Gentility-mongering, on, 379.
Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield illus-
trated, review of, 771.

Good and the Beautiful, the, from Schil-
ler, 309.

Great Britain at the commencement of
1843, 1-her position on the meeting
of parliament, 5-financial state, 7-
aspect of domestic affairs, 14—and of
foreign relations, 15-state of her In-
dian empire, 18-and of affairs in
China, 19.

Quillinan-between W. S. Landor and
Christopher North, 518.

Imitator, the, from Schiller, 310.
Income Tax, discussion on the, 7-re-
marks on, 8-causes which led to its
imposition, 10.

Infanticide, the, from Schiller, 631.
Ireland, state of, at the commencement
of 1843, 14.

Italy, Dumas' travels in, reviewed, 552.
Jeweller's Wife, the, a passage in the

career of El Empecinado, 343.

Jove to Hercules, from Schiller, 311.
Khelat, occupation of, by the British,

274.

Khoord Cabul pass, retreat of the Bri-
tish through the, 262.

Kiuprili Family, rise of the, a chapter
in Turkish history, 718.

Landor, Walter Savage, Imaginary Con-
versations by-between Tasso and
Cornelia, 62-Cromwell and Sir Oli-
ver Cromwell, 209-Sandt and Kotze-
bue, 338-lines by, 337-Imaginary
conversation between, and Christopher
North, 518.

Last of the Shepherds, the, Chap. I.,
447--Chap. II., 449-Chap. III., 451
-Chap. IV., 453-Chap. V., 455—
Chap. VI., 458-Chap. VII., 460.
Lay of the Bell, the, from Schiller, 302.
Leap Year, a tale, Chap. I., 603—Chap.
II., 606-Chap. III., 611.

Lesarques, or the victim of judicial error,

Chap. I., the four guests, 24-Chap.
II., the four horsemen, 25-Chap. III.,
the robbery and murder, ib.-Chap.
IV., the arrest, 26-Chap. V., the
trial, 28 Chap. VI., the execution,
30-Chap. VII., the proofs, ib.-Chap.
VIII., the way in which France rec-
tifies an error, 32.

London, the world of, see World.
Londonderry, the Marquis of, review of
his steam voyage to Constantinople,
&c., 101.

Lost Lamb, the, by Delta, 295.

Group in Tartarus, a, from Schiller, Love's Triumph, from Schiller, 635.
627.

Tamilton, Thomas, Esq., death of, 280.
Hector and Andromache, from Schiller,

441.

History, Arnold's Lectures on, reviewed,

141.

Honour to Woman, from Schiller, 173.
Ideal, the, from Schiller, 433.

Ideal and the Actual Life, the, from
Schiller, 435.

Ignacio Guerra and El Sangrador, a
tale of civil war, 791.
Imaginary Conversations, by Walter

Savage Landor-between Tasso and
Cornelia, 62-between Cromwell and
Sir Oliver Cromwell, 209-between
Sandt and Kotzebue, 338;-by Edward

Mackay, Charles, dream of Lord Niths-
dale, by, 83-Founding of the Bell,
by, 462.

Mackenzie, Captain, account of the mur-
der of Macnaghten, by, 257.
Macnaghten, Sir William, description of
the murder of, 257.

Maître-d'Armes, a passage in the life
of a, 733.

Marli ki's Ammalát Bek, translation of,
Chap. I., 288-Chap. II., 296-Chap.
III., 464-Chap. IV., 471- Chap. V.,
478 Chap. VI., 568-Chap. VII.,
573-Chap. VIII., 579-Chap. IX.,
584-Chap. X., 746—Chap. XI., 750
Chap. XII., 752 Chap. XIII., 755
Chap. XIV., 759.

1

sation by, between W. S. Landor and
Christopher North, 518.

Retreat from Cabul, description of the,

Marston; or, the memoirs of a states-
man.-Part I., 693.
Martyr's Monologue, the, a poem, 125.
Master, the, from Schiller, 310.
Memorandums of a month's tour in Si-
cily leaving Naples-steam boatia-
na, 799-churches, 802-visit to the
gardens of the Duke of Serra di Falco,
near Palermo, ib.--the Thunny fishery,
804-the fishmarket, 805.
Merchant, the, from Schiller, 312.
Might of Song, from Schiller, 172.
Monaco, sketch of the history of, 573.
Moralist, to a, from Schiller, 630.
Mulready's illustrations to the Vicar of
Wakefield, review of, 771.

Music in England, state of, Part I.,
127.

Mystery of reminiscence, the, from
Schiller, 442.

Natural history of the salmon and sea-
trout, the, 640.

Non-intrusion controversy, account of
the, 352.

Nott, General, movements of, in Cabul,
270.

Occupation of Aden, on the, 484.
Opium question, the, 22.

Parr, natural history of the, 640-its
identity with the salmon, 643.
Passage in the life of a Maître-d'Armes,
733.

Paul de Kockneyisms, by a Cockney,
366-a cit's soirée, 373.

Paving Question, the, 614.
Peel, Sir Robert, difficulties of his posi-

tion on his accession to power, 2-
errors of his predecessors, 5-his al-
teration in the corn-law, 5-his finan-
cial policy, 7-his tariff, 11.
Philosophy of Dress, the, 230.
Poems and Ballads of Schiller. See
Schiller.

Poetry-the dream of Lord Nithsdale,

by Charles Mackay, 83-the curse of
Glencoe, by B. Simmons, 121-the
martyr's monologue, 125-the poems
and ballads of Schiller, Part V., 166
-Part VI., 302-Part VII., 433—
Part VIII., 626-the young grey
head, 202-lines by W. S. Landor,
337-the lost lamb, by Delta, 395-
the founding of the bell, by Charles
Mackay, 462-sonnet, on viewing my
mother's picture, 495 the burial
march of Dundee, 537-the vigil of
Venus, 715.

Poetry of Life, the, from Schiller, 313.
Pollock, General, advance of, into Aff-
ghanistan, 269.

Poor-law, support of the, by the Con-
servatives, 14.

Practice of Agriculture, the, 415.
Pretenders to Fashion, on, 234.
Quillinan, Edward, imaginary conver-

261.

Reviews Londonderry's steam voyage
to Constantinople, 101-Reynolds's
discourses, Part II., 181-conclusion,
589 Eyre's Cabul, 239-Auguste
Comte's cours de philosophie positive,
397-Stephens' Book of the Farm,
415-Dumas' Travels in Italy, 552-
Young and Shaw on Salmon and Sea-
Trout, 640-The Vicar of Wakefield,
illustrated by William Mulready, R.A.,
771-Chatterton's poems, 780.
Reynolds, Sir Joshua, review of the
discourses of, Part II., 181—conclu-
sion, 589-defence of, against the as-
persions of Allan Cunningham, 496.
Riots in the manufacturing districts, the,

13.

Rousseau, from Schiller, 631.
Rowley's Poems, review of, 780.
Rudolph of Hapsburg, from Schiller,
169.

Russia, commercial policy in reference
to, 807.

Russian Literature, remarks on, 281.
Salmon, Natural History of the, 640.
Sandt and Kotzebue, imaginary con-
versation between, by Walter Savage
Landor, 338.

Sangrador, El, and Ignacio Guerra, a
tale of civil war, 791.

Schiller, the Poems and Ballads of, trans-
lated. No. V. The victory-feast,
166-Rudolph of Hapsburg, 169-the
words of error, 171-the words of
belief, 172-the might of song, ib.-
honour to woman, 173—the fight with
the dragon, 175-No. VI. The lay
of the bell, 302-votive tablets, 309—
the good and the beautiful, ib.—to
310-genius, ib.-correctness,
ib.-the imitator, ib.-the master, ib.
to the mystic, ib.-astronomical works
311-the division of ranks, ib.-theo-,
phany, ib.-the chief end of man, ib.
-Ulysses, ib.-Jove to Hercules, ib.

the sower, 312-the merchant, ib.
--Columbus, ib.-the antique to the
northern wanderer, ib.-the antique
at Paris, ib.-the poetry of life, 313
-No. VII. The ideal, 433-the ideal
and the actual life, 435-the favour
of the moment, 438-expectation and
fulfilment, 439-to the proselyte ma-
ker, ib.-value and worth, ib.-the
fortune-favoured, ib. Poems of the
first period, introductory remarks on
them, 441-Hector and Andromache,
ib.-to Laura, the mystery of remi-
niscence, 442-to Laura, rapture, ib.
-to Laura, playing, 444-flower
445-the battle, ib.-No. VIII.

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