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t is a circumstance not to be regarded as insignificant. As for the Times, it is a very powerful, yet a very inconsistent and unprincipled newspaper. It is an fickle as the New York Herald, and as unscrupulous. It is more respectable, indeed; but still it can sometimes descend very much in decency. Its attack on Messrs. Mason and Slidell, if properly represented, is that of a blackguard. it has one advantage of the Herald: that its editors have not been cowhided or booted; but then Bennett is known and accessible, while the editorial head of the Times is a myth, a thing intangible. It has neither a soul nor corporality. So that, while the Times is a paper of great energy, great ability, it has no sort of sensibility, no sense of justice, no character for consistancy, sincerity, or fair dealing. In cold shoulder to the South to-day is no guarantee that it will not be its warm defender to-morrow. The Times will in the ensuing months give us, no doubt, a vast deal of exquisi