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LON'>ON, JyNE t(( Thursday.

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LON'>ON, JyNE t(( Thursday. WE l.ave received the P"™ f 5ise„Mio„, „„ ,he They are again fi ,;rades against Kngland elections and will, <k« „Koun,s brought by tlie and M. Gmzot The Pac^c jrg jhe w&r Arcadia from the United n Jonalban, but party enormonsly. They withoHt an object, he has more sense than to g roee(i of the English and with his best_cii8tomer. ident at Paris was held Noblemen and GentlemeiHotel, for ihe purpose of on Tuesday at ^aws0 jie Q„een congratulating her preparing an Address to the JJue The Majesty on her late and fljlly a„ended. The meetin? was most respecta^. Earls Marquis of Wes m- < d A ,mer proposed and L.even and Melvi le and gllbmitted the draf, 0f seconded the resol«tJon j usl appr0ved of. The an Address, which was p* Qf non-appearance n the Ex.queen of Spain vation th«Jet'eurbSed in our last, may be said to to Don Carlos, Pub,s" nf th olv to that letter establish iu no /n.wer to been .Wined, on the partof Don C»rl collected from the 1, the "^dK from Queen Chr.V follomni,bein^he ;»c M M Mj ,nd £$ Highness Don Carlo,, Infant .Urnd .« 6r.„. bim forth.. purpose..Hence those points ef (tie proposition which to me in the above-named despatoh, to which I l°l 80bmKi*Ji^8To%d" anoe. and I enumerate those only wbtch appear to me susceptible either of considerable modification or "^TlhXiCcribe to the marriage which you propose to me Spain, and bit Highness the Prince \ie" 9 of a this consent on my ma? rnn J5000 erf„rtfl;neri it is my duty, powerful Throne, which have been l«nS„d nr«d on b v for tbe prosperity of my well-beloved si J > ^ratifying to circumstances, to unite with \our de _*affectjon On your »to pretbi. p"°.f°f.r.' *2:urj l sxr: i-- ■-»' jS'bd.Vrfo°bo ratoral to me immedi.telj powers—powers which are 10 ue •ft."1 r" of those even who have suffered for you, I caanot, however, re- ceive as a condition their restoration to high and publio nfltces and the less so, as the Cortes or Constitutional Spain cannot re- gard witb confidence Ministers who might in some respects ap- '>f<B«r<p"^very'rea8on which I have here alleged woald suffice, if necessarv, to prove to your Royal Highness that it does not enter into my views to deprive Spain of a Constitution, although at the same time I must admit that that which is now in force necessitates certain modifications and meliorations. It is my pleasure to believe, that after mature reflection yon will regard things more temperately time advances and flies, and in its progress it carries us onward, and imperatively com- mands us; in a certain measnre therefore we cannot evade obedience. ■ > I also desire that all my objections, which I make only after a well-weighed examination into the details of your proposition, may be appreciated to their just value, and that without further hesitation you should commence, with the enterprise projected between as, the regeneration of a country equally dear to both. u Your affeotionate, M. C. Madrid journals are to the 9th inst. The negotiations for the formation of a cabinet were not completed but it was stated that Mr. Ferrafc has accepted the -department of Finance, on condition that the Ministers shall dismiss all the public officers who on examination shall be found incompetent to discharge their duties and that, in the event of the Chambers evincing hos- tility towards the Cabinet, the Government shall im- mediately dissolve them.—The Gazette of the 6th pub- lishes another circular against the Republicans, signed M Infante, the late Minister of the Interior, but which is supposed to be the work of the Regent himself. This document is couched in terms still more energetic than the former, but would not, it was feared, prevent the proclamation throughout Spain at no remote period of the Constitution of 1812.-At all events it is said the -Regent ia., determined not to dissolve the Cortes, as the doctrines of the Constitntion of 1812, now widely propagated throughout the kingdom, appear to him pregnant w|'Vdaogertm» con»enaeo*ea in the evpntof a General Election -The banquet offered to the re- tiring Ministers by their Parliamentary friends, took place on the 5th. The number of guests was about 70. The Ministers present were, Messrs. Gonzales, Infante, San Miguel, Alonso, and Camba. M. Sarray Rull, who had been likewise invited, was indisposed and -could not attend. The greatest cordiality prevailed during the dinner, which was concluded by toasts to the Queen, the Constitution, the Regent, the Ministers, the Presidents of the two Houses of Congress, to the memory of Riego and Mina, to liberty, and to the union of all Spaniards. M. Gonzales declared on this -occasion that he and his Colleagues would support their successors in office, provided they did not depart from the Constitutional path. Letters from Brussels state that the Court of Cassa- tion has rejected the appeal of General Vandertneer and the other conspirators condemned to death for the late plot against the Government; but at a subsequent Cabinet Council, at which the King presided, the punishment of death, pronounced against Vanders- missen, Vandermeer. Van Latchem, and Varpraet, was commuted to that of hard labour for life, which however includes public exposure in the pillory. The Levant mail has brought dispatches from Alex- andria to the 26th, and Constantinople to the 27th ult. the intelligence from the latter capital is unimportant. The Pacha of Egypt has resolved to levy three per cent. ad valorem duty, with the right of inland and municipal dues. This measure is in opposition to the hatti- scheriff, which fixed a five per cent. duty to cover inland as well as ontland dues.—A report prevailed that the English Government was arranging with Austria to forward the overland mail from Egypt to Trieste, and thence to the Rhine, to descend that river as far as Cologne, and join the railroad to Ostend. As the distance saved is about seven hundred miles oy the Trieste route, it is calculated that the mails wQtild reach London before a telegraphic dispatch could be received in Paris from Marseilles by the present route.

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