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n already the evils which Earl Russell foresaw, and he resigns himself to the fulfillment of his own prophecies with the best grace in the world. Thus, when he heard of the capture of Vera. Cruz, he instructed Sir John Crampton to read to Marshal O'Donnell and M. Calderon Collantes the preamble and the article of the Convention, " which defines what the intervention is intended to do and what it is not intended to do;" and he regrets the determination of the French Emperor to send 5,000 moreon as a scourge to Mexico — as a hopeless labor for those who make it, yet he takes a ready part in bringing that intervention about. The fear of Spanish misconduct is ridiculous. We do not attach too much importance to the professions of Marshal O'Donnell, but we believe in the insuperable obstacles in the way of Spanish success which Earl Russell has himself pointed out. We do not believe Spain can conquer Mexico; but if we did, we should ask for the adoption of a bold, honest policy toward