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A LIBERAL WARNING.,

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A LIBERAL WARNING. Already the results of the Liberal victory are so magnificent and the rejection of sham Imperialism so crushing that it will take some weeks before the Liberal party have sobered down. They have already begun to look out for the spoils of victory, and each wing of the party considers itself entitled to the first share of the plunder. It will never do for the Liberals to repeat the mistake of the Highlanders, and fall to quarrelling over the booty before they have made quite sure that the enemy may not rally. Already there are signs of division in the Liberal camp, and there is much need of a Com- mander of such authority that his very presence may awe the mutinous into sub- mission. For this reason it is well that the Midlothian Election is over, and in Mr Gladstone's return nothing to prevent his making his presence felt South of the Tweed. In one respect the Liberals are fortunate. The elections could not come off at a more convenient time for them. The new Parliament cannot settle down to work and the Liberal Ministry after their re-elect- ion settle down into office much sooner than by the middle of May. By that time we shall be over the Whitsun holidays, and the second and shorter portion of the Session is all that remains for the legislation. Under these circumstances no Ministry, though loaded to the muzzle with Liberal measures and sent up to Westminster with a mandat Imperatif from their constituents, can be ex- pected to do much at such a late stage of the Session. Time will be given for public opinion to mature itself on a number of questions of the first importance, but con- cerning which hasty legislation would do more harm than good. Take the Land question for instance, which many ardent liberals put at the very top of the poll. It is not to be settled out of hand by any one sweeping measure. A great many reforms of tenure, some of them involving legal points of a highly technical character, and all affecting that most Conservative of bodies, the family lawyer, will have to be dealt with. Public opinion is in a vague state of invitation with regard to legal obstructiveness, but how to deal with the law of settlement and how to make land as transferable as a chattel is a question which when soberly faced is seen to carry with it more difficul- ties than candidates for Parliamentary honours like to state to their constituents. Or take again the Eastern Question and the task of compelling Turkey to carry out the clauses of the Treaty of Berlin with regard to Greeoe and Armenia, it is easy to see what difficulties the omissions of the Con- servative party have thrown on their suc- cessors in office. This coercion of Turkey is very nearly as idle as to galvanize a corpse. The truth must be faced that the Porte is dead for all purposes of the future, and the only question is how to keep up the sham of the Sultan's suzevainty till we have got something better to put in its place. The Liberals know this, and mean to act on it; but they must do so with discretion: they must take one step at a time, and one only, and they must not needlessly alarm the fears of bondholders, lest there be another anti-Gladstonian reaction. In a word, they must walk warily,—must beware of the sin of presumption, and bear in mind that the day after a victory is the day of real difficulty. Given eight months' compara- tive quiet, we see no reason why the old Liberal coach should not take the road again, and run without another upset for many years to come.

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'■HOWWE LOST^ CARNARVONSHIRE."

---THE NEW PARLIAMENT.

- PARTY GAINS-

CARNARVON'S NEW MEMBER-

LESSONS OF THE CARNARVONSHIRE…

DECLARATIONS OF THE POLLING.

-MENAI BRIDGE.