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d language about it as "a representation of the facts," would suggest the inference that it was not very sharp; that it was hardly up to the example of the United States itself, when it not only demanded that the British Government should disapprove Mr. Crampton's (British Minister to the United States) agency in the matter of enlisting troops in the United States for the Crimean war, but that it should withdraw Mr. Crampton from Washington. One would think that the opportunity being good John Bull would seize it to retort this practice precisely upon Jonathan. Possibly he may have done so; but Earl Russell's statement does not encourage the belief that he has. The British Cabinet is evidently afraid of Jonathan; it will do anything to avoid a difficulty with him. It refuses to recognize the Confederacy. It will most scrupulously preserve that centrality which is throwing every facility in the hands of the Yankees, and putting the most inconvenient and serious obstacles in our