musics )iN,'rnLLicEivcii;j, LATER. iritoiu Eu1tora.—~Another . nrrival--the South ‘America from Liverpool, in apassage, for the season of the year, most unusual-brings London dates to the _16th iilt. A The South America arrived off the Hook Sn. turday, and sailed on the 17th December, ma- king the passage from port to port in 23 days. The new Engliisli Administration is formed. Sir.Robert Peel as Premier; and without any ad. mixture, as will be seen, of Reformers. Appplication was,7it is said, made, but without success, both to Lord Stanley and Sir James Gralram, to join thegadministration, whence the inference seems reasonable, that no such as. gursnfce was given of the future march of the Cabiiiiet,even in the circumscribed path of reform, whichthose gentlemen have followed, as would justify their“ taklrigsoflice. The dates from Paris are of the 13th. The Chainberii, as we stated in’ commenting on the news by the Sylvie de Grasse would be the case, did not meet between the 8th and 13th. On the 13th,‘ Saturday, nothing special was done, and nothing at all on our subject ; so that up to Mon- day, 15th Dec., no mention appears to have been made of the American treaty. In Spain, Mi-rm’s name and services do not ap- pear to have produced as yet any confidence in, or good resultto, the'Q,ueen's_ cause, nor to have in any manner dispirited the Carlists. The packet ship United States, (Holdridge master, in coming out of the dock,was run ashore byithe ;pilot, and was obliged‘ to be discharged, h|'v,iIig, however, only slightly damaged her car- ‘ She would soon be ready again for sea; ' J _ Excnimn. I Lennon,’ Dec. 11.‘-——'Illl‘8, ‘King held a Privy Council yestardav, which was attended by the Lord ‘Chancellor, (Lyndhurst) the.Duko of Wel- lingtoii, Ma’rquess'of' Camden,‘Earls of Roslyn, Amhuret, and Jersey, Lords’ Ellenborough, Cow- ley, ‘and ,Mary_borou'gh, Sir R. Pe'el,'Sir C. M. Sutton, Sir John Becket, Sir H. H_ardinge,Messrs. Goulbiirnanrd Hei-ri'es—-our future Relormiers. Sir.‘R..’Peel was sworn into ofiice as Chancel- lo‘rofthe‘Exc'li'e'quer.‘ and received the seals of office l'romitl‘ie King.‘ He will alsoibe first Lord ofthe Treasury; but with respect to the latter some delay must take place. ' Parliament was ordered to be further pro. rogued from the 18th of the present month to Thiir_sday,, the_ 15th of January. But this is a more matter‘ of form, as Parliament can be dissol- ved at any . time. ’ Nothing, however, is yet known of the dissolution, though itis probable that the; moment the ministerial arrangenients are completed it will take place. [1f'rom.tI:e_Lan¢lo7i Globe, Dec. 15-—-evening] Tlie’Neiu'Briti8kMinistry.-+Tl1e following is a correct list of t_he_,ne.w Cabiinet M_inist,ers ap. pointed at the Council held this afternooii at St. Ja_rnes’s_ Palace : . ‘ Sir R. Peel, First,Lord of the Treasury and Chancelloruof the Exchequer. ' ' ‘Lord Lyndhursrt, Lord Chancellor Dl,llt1:g.lt)f Wolliiigton. Foreign Secretary. Lorllwhaprncliffe, Privy Seal. Earl of Aberdeeii; irst Lord of the Admiralty. Lord Rosslylu, President of the Council. Mr. Goulb_urn,, Secretary for the Home De. ‘O. partment. M f . . 'Mr.]‘H'erries, Secretary of Wu” Sir"I*I'eni-‘y Hardin“ge,"S'cci‘etary of Ireféind. Sir G. Murray, Master.Geiieral of the 0rd. nance. , P "t ‘ 3 ‘ Mr. A. Baring," Prcsidentof the Board of Trade. Sir L. Knatchbull, Paymaster of ,h,. Forces. " Lord Ellcnliorougli, Prcsiilciitof the Board of Control.“ I i V The‘ above form the Cabinet.’ J . The Secretaryshipgfor the Colonies, land the Ch'ancellorsl'iip“for the Duchy at" Lancaster, are not yet filled up. .. . *9 The foI1ow'u;g_ appointments have been made: Sir,J. Scarl,ett,»Chief Baron of the Exchequer. Sir EV, Sugden,_Cha,‘ncell4er of, Ireland. Lprd Jersey, Lord,Cham.l3er1atn. Lord Stanley.——No doubt the refusal of Lord Stanley to take office will be fastened on bythe men of the crisis as a proof that the country is on the eve of great disasters. We ll'dVG,l’.l1e sa- tisfactionlof being enabled to calm their ruptures, by an assurance that Lord Stanley, though de. cliuing toltake office for the present, has une. quivocallyasserted that he willsupporl the King and the Ministers of his choice.-—[West Kent Guardian. GHENT, Dnc. 13.-—Our arrivals from Germany mention that a marriage had been determined on between‘ her Royal Highness’ the Princess Vic. toria,’presumptive heiress of the throne of Great Britain, and his Royal Highness’ Prince William Alexander Constantine, the second son of his Royal" Highness thc'Prince of Orange. This al-I liance would he the presage of tlieimostvintimate and friendly ‘relations between the Netherlands’ and England.‘ It would enhance, if possible‘,tlie splendor of the House of Brandenburg and the‘ imperial family of Ru'ssia.—[Messager dc Gaud.] Fiuincs. PARIS, DEC. 12.-—M. de Broglie is definitely appointed Ambassador to London. Nothing is waiting for to make this nomination oflicial, but to know the ministerial arrangements of the Eng. lish Cabinet. It was said on ’Change, thatthe Chamber in- tended to apply to the National the maximum of the penalty, yiz : five years imprisonment and a fine of20,000 francs. This may be the wish of some fanatic, suchas we sometimes meet with, but we _find it difficult to believe that the Chamber 3of'Pcers can have so far engaged itself thatitlcan ‘be announced beforehand that it willcondemn, and to_ what penalty it will condemn. T The Paris paper (the Constitutional) states. that 1* Prince Talleyrandspsaks of a letter which he has received from the Dukeflof Wellington, invit- iughir_n_ to return to London, and assuring him that no alteration would be made in the foreign relations of the country." 'I‘he,principle topic of reflection at present in the Paris papers is the citation of the editor of the‘ National before the Chamber of Peers, for ‘publishing in hisjournal an article derogatory to the dignityvIofRthat body. In rpursliianae of ftllilis summons , . ouen, the respectab e e itor o t e National, presented himself at the bar of the Chamber of Peers on Friday last, and on his tip, plication a delay of four dayswas allowed him for the purpose ofprepariughis defence. At the sitting ofthe Court of Assizes yesterday M. Bichot, editor of the Tribune was arraigned for a libel against the King, coiitiiined in an arti- cle published in, that journal, entitled 6‘ Du Vay. age, dufioi a Gompéigne ” in which allusions were made tothe events iit Lyons, and to the un- lfolftllll-fl.l,6_ duelin wliich M. Dulongwas ,kill,ed.—- j,M. Bichot was fouud,gi_iilty,and sentenced to 12 months imprisonment and a fine of 6,000 — francs. Si>.uN. Postscriptof the Journal de Paris, of Dec. 13: A General Mina, on the 7th instant, proceeded ‘to Letiz in oider to protect a convoy ofmoney ex. lpected there. No new engagement has taken place._ On the . %follo,wing dayhe. returned to Pampeluna. Don‘ Carlos was at Escura on the 7th,; when Zumala. rcarreguy was directing his steps towards the Borunda. PAR1S,_DEC. 1‘.2.—,-—A courier _froni_Cadiz brings us tlieintelligencethatpn the__19th, the annivcr-J sary of the _Queenfs birtliday, the civil governor having objected -to‘ ,the.,siiiging of the patriotic songs by the actors. the spectators throw stories into hisbox, and they went to his palace, which they attacked; one ofthe domestics was wound. ed. At the departure of the courier the agitation had not ceased, and had spread to Xerxes de la Frontera. Go7I.zpr0m_iS0 in Spain-r—TlieVMemorial des Py- , rcnees of Pan $£1yS~——“I!-‘l8r8_lllfllIE(l‘lllttt Zumal-. I acarreguy.has.writteii iotigeneral I,VIina,rp_rVop;c3s,; , mg. aa“a_mea.ns. of putting auend, to ih_g_.efi'usion ; of blood in the Peninsula, that at marriage should i J 7be I conitrjaé£e,.i‘,b§‘r,»;vgE.i i¥01l"g _Q:“.‘3é“ ~=son of Don Carlos ; but"Mina replied,‘ that rebels must: first lay down their ~arms.¥ The war, there: fore, is aboutto recomm.cnccw1tl_1. Increased fury. and will become a war of extermination. It is conjectured by the Timcsof the 16th‘ult~ and by the Standard (which as a Tory paper may be supposed the more accurate now in such mat- ters,) that Lord de Grey, betterkuown as Lord’ Grantham, is to be the Vice Regent of Ireland, ‘in the place oflthe Marquis Wellesly, who had gained his governinent, _as will he seen by the annexed, K _ ARRIVAL 01-‘ 'rrir:'Loitn LIEU'1'ENAN'I‘ I on IRE; LAND.‘——Tlle Marquis and Marchioness Wellesley and suite arrived at the Clarendon—h‘otel, New Bond street, on Friday ,evening,_ from the ,Vice-, regal.lodge, at Dublin_ Castle. The Firebrand Government stea’rner'conveysd the Marquis and‘ Mai-chioness, with" their carriages and luggage, fiom Howth to Holyheadaa Mr. and Mrs. Caton arrived at the Clarendon on the preceding event ingofrom Ireland. I The Rt. Hon. G. R. Dawson, brother-i,n.law of Mr. Peel, is to be the new Secretary for Ire- land. . The Examiner thus speaks of Sir R. Peel. Sir Robert Peel has answered to the Duke's whistle. He has hurried home and sprung’ into oflice with the speed of niischief; Hishpolliics turned with his coach wheels.» Perish principles: —-welcome place! Whatrare now his opinions? The opinions which he finds in the coat pocketof his oflicizil uniform. Miraculous as was the Dukc’s conversion to Reform, that of Sir Robert must have been more sudden. He receives a note ofinvitation—-it was but" to ask and have-—-to governor not to govern was then the short question———was he to stay at Rome withliis prin‘ciples,'or to orderTpost=liorses and dash home through thick and thin forthc- prize ?-—he was a Reformer in the crack of a whip. His professions were of no more concern to him than the cattle which speeded him on’ his jo'urney———what mattered it whether he was drawn by a black, 21 white, or an piebald, so. that he advaiicodto his goal“! What cares.he.for the color of his opinions, so that they forward his fortunes’? The journey to government was no more to be. accomplished with his own principles than with his own horses, so he tookihiack-post; e_rs. And now here he" is seated in the Treasury, First Lord and Chancellor of the Exchequer’; what else he is to be, whether anti-reformer or shani.re'foriner, is doubtless to him immaterial-A he will take the part which place makes" conve. ment. Madame Recamier has left the interest of 20,. 00Of. as an annual prize for the best treatise on the influence of grief asa cause of sickness‘ and- deatli. The prize is to be awarded by the Acad- émic de Médecine. The uutortunate —lady»[wnn. herself fora long times prey'_to wasting. sot]? rows, under which she. at . length sunk The consciousness of herappiouching end, and of its cause,_no doubt originated the idea of this singu- lrnrbequerst. .Jau_rnal Hebdomadaire, Oct. 25. [Thé principal cause ofthe grief ofthis ‘once beautiful, i and always amiable lady ,was.th,e,,los,s ofher per- sonal charms. She.didnot feel what everybody whoknew her did—e—that.age ;had ‘not impaired her power of pleasing and interesting all. who sawlier.] _ I i The Liverpool papers of 17th December, an-. Bounce the arrival by_the_ “E_nglan_d, from this is one of the fruitsrofabolisliing the monopoly of the EaS§_ll1dl_a,Compirny._ g , _ _ Digzith of the Rev. Eclwarcl‘ I1iving.——-Onytlie 6th instant, at Glasgow, between the hours of 11 and 12 o’clock at night, died in the 43d Yfiar Ofliis age, the Rev.‘ Edward Irving. ‘He’ was sensible to=the last, aiirl.—:liis‘~depart_ing.wordli. were ‘f ln.1i.l.'e or in death;I..a,ni,ihe:Lordfsgifl-REA: vious to which, he sung ine_2,3d,pgsi1,m,in Hebrew. ii‘/clzcompaiiied by his wife’sfathcr; the" Rev. John‘ artin. " P0”. 01". ninelzundred andfifty chests tea.” Thing: —