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THE Whole So, 6137. NEW YORK, TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 27, 1848. = == = HIGHLY INTERESTING INTELLIGENCE, THE DETAILS OF THE NEWS. | ARRIVAL | oF THE BRITANNIA AT THIS PORT. ‘We published in yesterday’s Herald, a telegra- phic summary of the foreign news brought by the | Britannia, which was expressed from Halifax to Portland by the steamer Buena Vista, Capt. Jarvis, thence to Boston by special locomotive, and thence | to New York by telegraph. | Since then the Britannia has arrived at Jersey | City. ; | She left Liverpool on the 10th inst., arrived at | Hulfax at 4A. M., on Friday, left again at7 A. | f M., and arrived at Quarantine at 8 o’clock yester- | ay morning, and at Jersey City 25 minutes befored 9. Our Lonton and Liverpool papers are to the morning of the 10th inst inclusive. The Latest News by Electric Telegraph and Express. ‘The annexed important news reached Liverpool just previeus to the departure of the Britannia :— Lonpon Heraip Orrice, t Saturday Morning, June 10. Panis, Friday, June 9, 1848. Paris was very much agitated last might. The house of M. Thiers was attacked, but the mob were driven away by the military. The proclama- tion against attroupements was torn down, and there wasserious fear of collision, but, happily, the mobs were dispersed without accident. Marsmun.es, June 6, 4 P. M. Thave this instant received from the comman- der of the Cairo, which left Alexandria on the 29th of May, the followinginteresting news :— j ‘An extraordinary express reached Alexandria from Suez on the evening of the 28th May, too late for the despatches to be sent by the post, with the important intelligence, “that the Sikhs had re- volted at Lahore, killed two English commissaries, and massacred all the British troops.” The European Times, dated one o’clock on Sa- turday, the 10th inst., contains the following in- telligence ; it is to the latest moment :— Letters from Vienna state that hopes are enter- tained of the Emperor’s return. The liberal pro- gramme of the Foreign Minister, had met with the Emperor’s approval. {Further accounts state that the Austrian Gene- ral Radetsky, had succeeded in reaching the rear of the Sardinian army, and forcing its retreat. A report from the city of Messina, states that the inhabitants were entirely ignorant how long the metropolitan garrison would delay hostilities. Business was improving. The state of Germany continues very discour- aging. Berlin letters state that 13,000 persons had left the city. Many houses and shops were empty, and there was no real value for property of any de- scription. From Deamark,we are informed that the govern- ment had voted $260,000 for the defence of Nor- way, by Norwegian troops and a fleet. Amsterdam letters mention that rumors were afloat respecting the failure of Jacob Post. The report of the agsassination of the King of Naples is unfounded. Our London Correspondence. Lonpon, Friday, June 9—7 P.M. Interesting Intelligence relative to the Continent. On Monday night the Bulwer affair came on, but Government has managed to throw a veil over the whole, and the affront offered to the nation by the dismissal of the Queen’s representative, is quietly pocketed. I scarcely think, however, that . the matter is quite over yet. Mr. Bankes rose and moved— “That this Houso learns with deep regret, from a correspondence between the British government and the government of Spain, now upon the table of thix Houso. that a proposed interferonce with the internal concerns of the Spanish governmont. as conductod ‘under the anthority and with the entire approval of her Majesty's Ministers, has placed tho British govern- munt, and our representative at tho Court of Madrid. ina position humiliating in its character, and whieh {6 culculxted to affect the friendly relations heretofore existing betweon the Courts of Great Britain and of | Spain” "An interesting debatevensued, the nets he being + Robert Peel, Disraeli, Sheil, Lord Palmerston, Lord John Russell, &c., and the result was that Mr. Bankes’s motion was negatived without a di- vision. Lord Palmerston took the whole respon- sibility of Mr. Bulwer’s Ppecais ae himself, and high encomiums were passed by all the orators on his talents as an ambassador. Bulwer has pub- lished a defence of the charges imputed to him, which is no defence at all. Lord Palmerston has refused to hear the explanations of Count de Mi- rasa!, who was sent to London for that purpose by the Spanish government, and the Count has re- tarned in dudgeon to Madrid. Thus matters rest for the present. All this time we have no ambas- sador in Spain, and the arms are taken down from the embassy. One of the charges against Bulwer is that he excited the ney to revolt. Lord Howden has arrived in London, from the River Plate. | Portugal 1s in statu quo. From Egypt we have advices to the 224 May. Mehemet Ali is still | tance. the attroupement shall be dissipated by fore al Bu: iness dull. If the attroupement ag ene, the ed after The commerce of Trieste has suffered from the | the first roulement of tho drum, shall exhort the citi blockade of that port by the combined Italian, fleet. | #08 t? disperse. “If they do not withdraw. three suo- They made a show of attempting to bombard the town, but did not, probably owing to a small note from the commander of the English steam-frigate ‘Terrible, which is at anchor in the Trieste roads, There was a report that an American squadron had entered the Adriatic, but it has not been con- firmed. GERMANY. | beak Vienna and Berlin are tranquil; but it is the tran- quillity of a luke, which the first breath of wind muy raffle, and the arrival of the Prince of Prus- sivat Berlin may be the signal of revolt. The idiotic Emperor of Austria feels himself too happy, away from his liege subjects at Vienna, to go back again in « hurry; but if he does establish hia capi- tal at Prague, I fear his quarters will be hot enough. 4 are a turbulent set, and more prone to acts than words. DENMARK. Notwithstanding the miny rumors of peace-ne- gotiations that drop in from all quartera—notwith- standing the reply ef Baron Arvim inthe Prussian tthe war with Denmark was nmch mination than Its commencement, and his assertion that the English ambassador at Co- enhegen was using his endeavors to effect a paci- Re solution—the accounts received coutinue to be of 1 most warlike description, The sene qua non stipulation that the embargo Jard npon wll German vessels was to be raised, is seemingly but slightly regarded by the Danish au- thoriti According to letters from Copenhagen, of the 27th ult., various vessels had been condemn- ed as lawful prizes, en premiere instance. SPAIN, The latest, advices from Spain are to the 4th June. Madrid was tranquil. The refusal of Lord Palmerston to see Count de Mirasal had caused some annoyance to the Spanish government. THE STATE OF FRANCE. It would be a hold thing for any man to assert one day what would Li in Paris the next; but as a mariner can forete] the coming storm by the as- pact of the horizon, so may the observer of the po- | fition! horizon proynostieate events by the rapid flitting of the expressions of public opinion. T fear that Pranee is on the eve of another emrute. Lous | Bisne and Causeidiere, both of whom took, un- doubtedly, an active part in| the attempt on the National Assembly, have been whitewashed by their colleagues—the debates in the Natioval Assembly are regulur riots, and it is necessary to diepliy an imposing military force to prevent the mob installing itself on the ministerial benches — But the great cause of alarm at present is the worl ing men’s banquet, which is to take place on Su day next, close to Vincennes, in which fortress Barbeés, Blanqui & Co. are locked up. It is a no- torious fact thut this banquet has been got up by | for every event. | Vi | the Executive Commission all the meaus of defence | Louis Philippe. the friends of the prisoners. Two hundred thou- sand workmen have inscribed their names as ready to attend. d The Constztutionnel says :— “The commandant of the Chateau de Vincennes has taken the most minute precautions to place t! fortress out of the reach of a coup de main. The in habitants of the houses which are within range of the fire of the batteries have been warned to be prepared We are assured, moreover, that the military authorities have strongly insisted with the Executive Commission to have the garrison doubled, and a squadron of cavalry placed there. ‘The fort of incennes to be properly guarded requires active sur- The fifteen hundred men who are charged with this task are, it is said, extremely fatigued, on ac- count of the considerable number of posts. and the great extent of the fortifications. ‘The vicinity of the veillance. | wood, which can hide large columns of aggressors, and permit them to arrive unexpectedly up to the brink of the ditches, is a further embarrassinent, and it appears that it is to prevent an attempt at surprise by escalade | that the employment of cavalry would be necessary. But, however that may be, it is to be desired that the commandant of the fort of Vincennes may obtain from which he demands. in the event of an attack by open Troops arrive in Paris, and it is not known they are to be lodged. Why not send them to Vincennes ?” The Patrie says:— “The Exeoutive Committee is much engrossed with the 26 centimes banquet. The majority being MM. ‘Arago, Marie, and Garnier Pages, are for concentrat- ing troopsat Vincennes, The minority, MM. Lamar- tine and Ledru-Rollin, differ from this opinion, and ropose that Barbi's, Albert, Blanqui and Raspail shall & transferred during the night to Lilte or some other fortress, This question has seriously divided the Exe- cutive Government, and the retirement of Ledru-Rol- lin is spoken of.”” i Not only is the retirement of Ledru-Rollin_ spo- ken of, but also that of every other member of the government. Each day has its ramor. “I, for_my part, am internally convinced that the present form of government cannot last. The French nation want a point d’appui ; they want some one to lead them, be it to good or evil, a Washington or a Na- poleon, or a Robespierre and Danton. Some man, whose star has not yet appeared, 19 on the eve of rising. The very arekeire of the naine of Napoleon is now stronger than ever, as the result of the new elections of the Department of the Seine will show. The French people recall the days of the Empire, and a marked tribute has been paid to Louis Na- poleon, in his election for Paris, for Corsica, and two of the French departments. The most re- markable fact is, that he was started asa candi- date only the day before the elections, that no fuss was made about him, no list printed, no jouraal to advocate his cause.. He has been returned by the spontaneous vote of the people. Itis a tribute to the Emperor. But Louis Napoleon Buonaparte is not the man destined by fate to lead France. The principal actor of the coming events has not yet come forward. i yi You will see, by the subjoined list, that M. Thiers has also been returned for Paris. This is a blow to the present Ministry. Girardin has been rejected. : The following are the successful candidates :— +147,400 Victor Hugo. . ,....86,965 | +126,880 LN, Buonaparte. ..84.420 Caussidie: Moreau. . Doudchaux. . Changarnier. Thiers . Pierre Of the unsuccessful candidates, those who ob- tained the greatest numbers are the following Thosé... -73162 Raspail. 7 Kersau . 438 Girardin But there are other intrigues on foot. fidently reported that the Duke D’Aumale and the Prince de Joinville are concealed at Paria, ready to seize the first occasion to re-establish the fallen dynasty. There is a rumor to-day that the Prince de Joinville has been arrested. ., THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY. In the sitting of the National Assemitiy on Sa- turday, M. Clement Thomas, the conmmander-in chief of the National Guard, pean forth a violent invective against the cross of the legion of honor, which he styled a ‘‘thochet de vanité,” (a gewgaw of vanity ) This called forth the most violent ex- clamations in the assembly. In Monday’s sitting M. Clemgpt Thomas found it necessary to make an apology, and being a favorite just now, he got off easter than might have been expected. General CLesaent THomas ascended the tribune to give acme explanation relative to the words which had fallen from him when speaking of the decoration of the legion of honor, In designating it “a gewgaw of va- nity’? (hochet de la vanité) be never meant to allude to thoxe brave men who had received it asa reward for their conduct on the field of battle. His thought, when he epoke, was directed to the dreadful abuse of the de- coration during the two last reigns, when it was noto- rioasly employed axa means of corruption. No one could suppose that he referred to any honorable man who had really merited the distinction by his services; but to prevent any misapprehension he now declared that be had not meant to offend any one. The umende honorable was favorably received. He has, however, been called out by a cavalry officer, M. Napoleon Bertrand, Chef d’ Escadron, and the meeting was to have taken place to-day at the Bois de Bologne. Bertrand’s seconds are Ge- neral Sourd and Colonel Bernon. : In the same sitting, M. Senard was appointed president in the stead of M. Buchez, for the next month. | A In the ae of Wednesday, the 9th inst., the following bill for preventing public meetings was adopted after a most violent debate. Art. 1. Every armed attroupement in the public streets or roads is interdicted. Every unarmed at- troupement of & nature to disturb public tranquility is also interdicted. Art. 2, An armed attroupemant constitutes a crime, if it does not disperse at the first summons; it only constitutes an offence (un dé/it),ifonthe first sum- mons it disperses without resista: Art. 3, An armod attronpement is, firstly, when seve- ral of the individuals who compose it carry arms openly or concealed ; secondly, when a single individual, car- rying arms openly, is not immediately expelied by the persons forning part of the atiroupement. Art.4. When an armed or unarmed atfroupement shall have formed itself on the public way, the mayor, or one of his deputies, or, in their absence, the Com- missary of Police, or any other agent or depositary of the public forco, or of the executive government, wear- ing the tricolor. shall proceed ts» the spot. A roll of the drum shall announce the arrival of the magistrate. Ifthe attroupement be armed, the magistrate shall or- der it to dissolve and disperse. This first order remain- ing without effect, a second summons, preceded by the beating of the drum, shall be made. In case of resis- It is con- cessive summons shall be made. In case of resisvance, the attroupement shall be dispersed by force. Art. 5. Whoever forms part of an armed meeting shall be punished as follows:—If the attroupement dir- perses after the first summons, and without having made ure of arms, the penalty shall be an imprison- ment of from six months to two years. If the atiroupe ment take place during the night, the penalty shall be an imprisonment of four to five years, If the attroupe- ment does not disperse until after the first summon: but before the uve of for and without having made use of arms, the penalty shall be two to five yours. and three to six if the aftroupement be during the night If the attroupement doer not disperse. except on the inter- vention of force. or after having made useef arme, the penalty shall bo five to ten years? imprisonment (réclu- sion). It shall be from olght to twelve years if it be during the night In all cases the guilty parties shall lore their civio rights Art. 6. Whoever, forming part of an unarmed at- troupement, shall not have abandoned it after tho roll of the drum preceding the second summons to disperse, shall be punished with an imprisonment for from three months to ove year, If the altroupement cannot be dispersed without force the imprisonment shall be for from thirteen to eighteen months, Art.’7. Every provocation to an attroupement armed or unarmed. by speech. writing. or printing posted up or di-tributed. shall be punished asa crime or an offence according to the distinctions above established All the rinters, engravers. lithographers, posters, and distri ators, shall be punished as accomplices. Ifthe above mentioned provocations are not followed by any effects, they shall be punished, if fora nocturnal and armed attroupement, with imprisonment for from six mo nths to one year. if for a non-armed a/troupement, with {mprisonment for from one to two months, Art. 8. Prosecutions for the crime or offeace of at- troupement shall not be any obstacle to prosecutions for particular crimes and offences committed in the at- troupements. Art. 9, Art, 463 of tie penal code is epee offences provided for and punished by this prosent law Art. 10. Prosecutions for crimes and offences of at- troupement shall be tried before the Court of Assize. The adoption of this law has caused a great sen- sation. The out-and-out republicans sav that it is worse than the famous laws of Septenioer, under | able to the There is a report that the banquet at Vincennes has been postponed. | ITALY. Lerma, “Duke Alba!” Atma, “Atiast! thank God!" Schiller’s Don Carlos We chime in with the Duke’s exclamation, “At | n field. But it has come at last; and the da after the anniversary of the defeat of Frederic! Barbarossa has witnessed the defeat of another em- eror. Peschiera has fallen, and 30,000 Austrians ave been defeated in the open field. It is still to be seen how the victory will be followed up, and whether the King of Sardinia will ips as good a eiravegiat as he hus proved himself gallant in the ie The Concordia of Turin gives the following ac- count of the battle :— “ Gorto, May 30, Half-past 7, P. M. “ Thirty thousand Austrians attacked our positions of Goito; 16.000 of our troops defended them, and beat the enemy completely on the open field. General Bava | led our men, and proved himself most experienced and | valorous. The King receited a contusion on his ear, and the Dake of Savoy was slightly wounded in the thigh. He did not, however. quit his saddle. ‘Two regi- ments of cavalry are pursuing the enemy.” The following account is from General Salasco : « Peschiera is in the hands of our troops. The efforts | | of the enemy to prevent or retard its fall have boon | vain. ‘The day before yesterday Marshal Radetsky | marched during the night from 20000 to 25,000 men from Verona to Mantua, with numerous artillery and cavalry. The garrison, thus reinforced, made a sally against the Tuscan troops who were besieging that | fortress on the right of the Mincio. ‘These troops, who had several times on other occasions repulsed with valor the sallies attempted by the enemy, resisted dur- ing three hours nearly the overpowering forces which had so unexpectedly attacked them, but were at last | forced to ubandon their positions. Lieutenant General Bava immediately hastened with part of the troops of the first division from Costosso to Vola, and hia sadden appearance before the enemy brought them to a atop ; at the same time matters had taken a more cheering aspect for our troops at the extreme left of our posi- tions at Larise and Colletarino; the enemy, who had hoped to derange moro directly ‘the siege of Peschiera on that side, was vigorously repulsed, wit® great loss, by the fourth division, commadned | by Lieutenant General Federici. This morning the King sent, under the orders of Lieut General Bava. the greater part of the troops of his own division, and those of the reserve. ‘This army, marching from Val-ggio and Volta, ad- vanced towards Mantua, without succeeding in meet- ing with the enemy. who svemed determined not to leave the fortress. His Majesty had already ordered the troops to take up their positions on the eminences of Goito, aud was preparing to return to his head- quarters of Valeggio. when suddenly the report of can- non was heard, and the battle began, the King turned his front towards the enemy with’ satisfaction, and hastened to the fight before Goito. Here the engage- ment was fierce, but the excellent order of Baron Bava, commandant general, seconded by the well-known yalor of the Duke of Savoy commanding the reserve, by Gen. d’Arvillars commanding the first division. by Gen, Oliviericommanding the calvary. and by the artil- lery, who behaved above all praise, obtained a completo success, and the enemy was routed. The cavalry sent against the fugitives at the decisive moment comple- edtheir defeat. At that moment. the King received the news of the surren ier ef Peschiera. which be im- mediately commun sted himself to his brave army, who recelved it wit!) \oud crivs of: Vira il Re!’ * Viva | Vitalis!’ A cannes ball pa his Majesty that he received ght contusio. on ear; the | Duke of Savoy ot a wound from a musket-ball, which was not serious, and not heeded by him. The victory obtained on this day against ‘much more ou troops has raised the spirits of our troops— th» move 80, as our losses in dead and wounded are but It is but due to the brave commander of Pesch- say that he did not surrender till the whole s literally knocked about his ears; and f the capitglation are honorable alike rsand the vanquished. zimento of the 2d June, gives the fol- bo ulare :— On Lhe evening of the 80th ult., In consequence of a capitulation, the Piedmontese entered Peschiora, and distributed 1.700 rations to the famisheds inhabitauts The next day the Austrian garrison. 1.600 in number, marched out with flying banners, and all the honors of war. They were to lay down their arms at a mile distance from Peechiera. and thon be marched to An- cona to embark for Trieste. The capitulation stipu- lates that they shall not take up arms against the {talians as long as the war of independence la-ta fous to the capitulation, the Austrians had made an attempt to relleve the fertress on tho side of the Culma sine ; # body of from 6,000 to 6.000 men attacked that place, but were repulsed by the 2.000 Piedmontese. who were stationed tiere. 117 picees of artillery of differ- ent culibre were found at Peschiera. Among the eorceogs taken at Goito, is Prince Hohenlohe-Reuth- eim * A letter from an officer of the army of Italy, dated the 31st ult., says :— “ About eight o'clock. on the 28th ult . it was known at Bardolino, on the Inke of Garda that from the di- rection of Caprino a body of Tyrolose chasseurs were advancing ‘The free corps of Pavia attacked them and the combut lasted for several hours, until the ar- rival of other Austrian troops, who forced the free corps, who were too inferior in number to withstand them, to evacuate Bardolino. which was completely pillaged. However, the Piedmontere arrived with can- non and cavalry, and the Austrians were completely beaten, overthrown with the bayonet. and dixpersed Tho loss was great on the sido of the enémy ; the un- even natare of the ground alone prevented that not an Austrian returned to Rivoli. A body of 4.000 or 5.000 men on tho side of Villafranca was repelled with much loss by our artillery. It is said that they have lost 700 or 800 men killed, wounded. or prisoners. Another corps of about 10,000 men had joined, by Isola della Seala, the troops which left Mantua,’ The Tuscans were vigorously attacked in their advanced positions towards tho Mantuan lake ; they supported for four hours a murderous fire with heroism, although far in- ferior in numbers : unfortunately, some grenades hav- ing fallen into the midst of the ammunition, an explo- sion took place, which caused great ravages amongst the Tuscans, who, mutilated, deprived of ammunition, and borne down by numbers, were obliged to retreat with precipitation. The number of their killed and wound- ed is set down at between 500 and 600, and amongst them are several students of Pisa and two professors. The Tuscans had been ordered to fall back slowly to- wards Gioto, us soon as they were attacked. The ardor of these brave men, for the most part volunteers, by causing them to disobey, brought about the rude lesson which was given them. Although this check of the Tuscans ruined for the moment the brilliant op- portunity of surrounding the enemy, the result was fortunately not less complete on the 30th near Goito, the point towards which the enemy had advanced The battle lasted until night; our troops performed prodigies of valor, and tho Piedmontese artillery main- tained its euperiority, and made a terrible slaughter of the Austrians, Their rout was complete; they left 2000 dead or wounded; a great number of prisoners were tuken, and the rest are in full flight. Itapp=ars that their retreat has been intercepted towards Man- tua. as it was this morning announced, that between Giudizzolo and Asola an Austrian body covered the country, and that our troops were pursuing them,’? There is a report that a second battle has taken place under the walls of Mantua. This is not i probable, and doubtless, now that the Austrian forces are concentrated, the decisive moment has come when they must fight or flee. Come what may, evacuate Italy they mifst. When a people rise like one man, when women and boys take a share in the war, the Emperor of Austria might as well attempt to stop the advancing tide with his puny breath as to stem the generous impulses of a whole nation. Our Liverpool Correspondence. SUMMARY OF THE EUROPEAN INTELLIGENCE. Liverroot, June 10—12 M. Alleged Assassination of the King of Naples—Sur- render of Danish Troops to the Prussrans—Out- brenk of a Legitimist Insurrection in Perpignan, France,and Proclamation of Henry V—Citadel of Messina in the Hands of the People—Further Serious Chartist Disturbances in England—Ar- rest of Several of the Chartist Leaders—Great Battle—Defeat of the Austrians, and Surrender of Peschvera. Since the departure of the America on Saturday last, there has been, 1am atraid I must say, no visible improvement in trade and commerce ; as to this town, matters, I verily believe could not be worse, unless they were dead and buried, too You nay traverse the entire line of roud from the Clarence Dock at the north, to the extreme South Dock, adistance ot about three miles, and meet with neither difficulty nor danger, in cmssing the streets, from carts. Indeed, I um not going too far when I say, that at times a wagon of merchandise isararity, In cotton alone does there seem to be anything doing, The accounts from every-part of the country are ot the same tone. The Manches- ter Guardian, of Tuesday says: “ the demand that | previously existed for the home trade has declined, | and the market has been, on the whole, quite as | flat and depressed as at any period during the last month, *** Prices are_ still rather drooping.” | Up to Tuesday (the 6th) 7360 hands were out of | employment in Manchester. The business done at Leeds, in the week ending 6th instant, is stated to have been very trifling. ~imilar accounts from Huddersfield. Indeed, us 1 said before, through the length and breadth of the land we have similar reports. The decided steps now being taken by the go- last! thank God!” For the last two months, Eu- rope. and [may add the United states, have been | arony, awaiting the news of a battle on the | plains of Lombardy. Day succeeded day, and the | sun rose and the sun set, casting its last rays on the bright helmets of the Sardinian dragoons and the bayonets of sentries, as they paced the ramparts of Verona; and the steeds neighed in vain for the | | veroment towards the prosecution of sundry lead- ers of the chartists, may possibly do something to- wards restoring confidence. Three of them were apprehended on Wednesday last, on charges of sedition and attending unlawful meetings, and were brought up at Bow street police office, and | they were all committed for trial; but were admitted to bail. One of them, ew) | don’t*get the charter before.” ‘The mob was ulti- sell,) who had preached the assassination doctrine, (wnd abjured his sons it they would not admit his doctrine,) was required to give bail in £300, and find two sureties of £150 each. Upon Mr. Exnest Charles Jones being brought up, a short hand writer having read a report of the speech de- livered by the prisoner on Sunday the 4th instant, he (Jones) was asked what he had to say; upon which he complimented the reporter upon his ac- curacy, but contended that there was nothing in the speech» to warrant his arrest. The magistrate however, thought differently, and committed him to Newgate. On Sunday last, there were sev. riotous meetings in London. For three hours skirmishes between the mob and eitelice continued, and there were some broken heads and serious bruises. During the melée the rioters cried out : “ We in- tend ‘to Keep up this work fortwo years, if we mately dispersed by a party of police; mounted, and armed with sabres, The Swine language was used by Mr. Ernest Jones at two other meetings, of the same character on Sunday. He said :-— “ My friends, I know the bloody government are mad, but not mad enough to put down these meetings. On the 2sh we shall show them what wecando. On that day, we shall have such a demonstration as was nover befoke seen in England. In conclusion he advised the Chartists to “ Orgenize, and im afew days the green flag would float o¥er Downing street. Mitchel and John Frost would be on their way to Enginad,and Lord John Russell and Lord Grey on their way to Baftin’s Bay.” After the orators had left. the round, another dreadful row took place between the mob and the police,who were, 1n return for sundry knocks from their truncheons, assailed with brickbats in abun- » In their retreat, the rivievs broke the win- lows of a church. : It appears that the commisstoners of the _metro- politan police are in Porcnun of information that the chartists and confederates intend to hold a se- ries of meetings, with the purpose of tiring out the authorities; and iis proposed to hold monster meet- ings all over the metropolis, and in the provincial towns of England, Ireland, and Scotland. Orgauizjng of clubs has been going on for several weeks; and according to the chartists’ own show- ing, they haye at least 200,000 members belonging to the organized classes, and they speak confident- y of great additions to this number within a few a) 3. There was a meeting of about 1000 chartists and confederates in a chartist hall in London on Wed- nesday evening, at which most violent speeches were delivered. Those present were strongly recommended to attend the meetings that are to be convened for the 12th, with arms, The chairman said :e— “They wanted physical force more than ever, be- cause they had an English Mitchel at tho present time Yes! Ernest Jones had been taken by the govern- ment spies, and it was for them to liberate him.” [Cries of yes—we will.””) sx FRANCE, = _¢ At the sitting of the National Assemblv on Tues- day last, M. Leon Faucher said France was rapid- ly proceeding towards a national binkripicy, He accysed the government with, meanwhile, ‘sittin; quietly on their benches: and not even condescend- ing to say what they intended to do, although a de- cision was the more necessary from the distressed state of commerce. He said the conduct of the moxpcnineny was not calculated to restore confi- lence. __M. Garnier Pages accused M. Faucher of mak- ing exaggerated avsertions _ 1. JuLES pe Lastryrre maintained that the gov- ernment was aitogether too careless of the inter- ests of the country. The position of the finances of the Government was feartul. M. Berrver denounced in the strongest manner the dilatory conduct of the Government sin the financial matters of the country. 2 » M. Garnier Paoxs then contended that, with a little energy and a littie good will trom all, France would fulfil every demand against her. Accounts have reached us of an outbreak ot a legitimist insurrection at Perpignan, and the pro- clamation of Henry V. The police are actively engaged in endeavoring to discover the retreat of the Prince de Joinville es Duc d’ Aumale, who are both concealed in aris, . On Thursday, the National Assembly was en- gaged in discussing the measure for the prevention of armed assemblages, presented to it by the Executive Committee. ~ DENMARK. 7 Intelligence to the 3d inst. states that two Danish battalions have surrendered to the Prussians, and a Danish corps d’ armée of 6000 men, was complete- ly hemmed in by the confederate troops. SICILY, Accounts to the Sist of May, announce that the citadel of Messina is in the hands of the people. vat NAPLES. At Rizzio, the people and the troops were, on the 21st May, in a state of collision. The heights, the forts of Scylla and Monteleone are in the fiers’ power, headed by the Marquis di Juzhardi. Naples 1s still in mourning. The Swiss are invariably slain, when eneountered singly, by the ented inhabitants. Rumors are prevalent in Naples, that plots against the life of the King extend within the palace itself; and itis said, that many persons have solemnly vowed to avenge their relatives and friends, who were AREHE feh royal order, on the 15th, and to expiate them by the blood of King F¥rdinand. All conciliation between the King and the people is held as impossible. : A private letter from Turin, reports that the Minis- ter for Foreign Affairs received a despatch from Naples, announcing that the King had been assas- sinated. ROME. The Gazette dt Roma, of the 26th ult., announces officially, that his Holiness is about to send pleni- potentiaries to negotiate a peace between Austria and Italy. ie. A AUSTRIA “Thirty thousand Austrians,” says the Pied- montesee Gazette, in a bulletin dated Gioto, 30th May, “attacked our.position at Gioto, which was defanded by 15,000 of our men. We completely defeated the enemy. We ha this moment re- ceived information of the capture of Peschiera.” Two Sicilian deprties reached ‘Turin on the Ist inst., to propose the in of their island with the kingdom of Upper li!) : The Emperor of Austvia has determined upon not returning to Vienna, until heisfully assured of a change in the disposition of te inhabitants. IRELAND. The foreman of Mr. Mitchel’s jury has received five letters, threatening him with assassination. One (addressed to Mrs. Whitty,) menaced her and her children with certain death. Others of jury have received similar communications—1.e'} one of them has esenped. A fellow passing the shop of Mr. Fletcher, of the jury in this case,) his window. Are you aware that Daniel O'Connell once warn- ed Meagher to beware of Emmett’s fate ? The Irish Inns of Court have refused to call to the bar Dr. Gray, of the Freeman's Journal—also Mr. Joseph Henry Dunne, on the grounds that one has published seditious writings, and the other de- livered seditious speeches. TINGS THEATRICAL. Van Amburgh makes his appearance nightly on the stage of our Tneatre Royal with his trained animals and other justices of the piece, as “Morok the beast tamer.” On Monday night last the lions of the might wer Dickens, Mark Lemon, (editor of ‘ Punch,.”) John Forster and others, who formed (10 ¢ramatis persone of (of course,) an amateu t eat the Amphitheatre in this town, ‘The oljcet was to aid the fund now forming for suitably endowing the curatorship of * Shakspeare’s house,” at Strit ford on Avon, with the view of making it worthy of the acceptance of Mr. Sheridan Knowles daring his life. The “Merry Wiveg of Windsor,” was the play ; and “ Love, Lawand Physic,” the farce. The house was literally crammed. The parts were adfnirably played. Mr. Lemon was qmite at home as “ Fat Jack;” and no wonder, for Paneh has a _paunch of his own, and has certainly aj peared before the public as often asany man. Dick- ens enacted “ Flexible,” in the farce, very cleverly Nineteen hundred and_nine persons were present; the money received £451 ; of which it is expected £350 will be clear profit.” Next Monday our favorite, W. J. Hammond, will take his farewell benefit «t the Amphitheatre in Liverpool, previous to his departure for America. His position in England asa comedian has long been preeminent. However, you have his equal in America in J. B. Fuller, who takes the same line of low com» dy character, although I have net heard of him lately. He is better known at the Charleston, 8. C., and Baltimore theatres, than in New York. The London actors, headed by Webster and Buckstone, have petitioned Parliament to restrict the foreixn theatres in London. ‘The crops around us, and throughout the entire coymtry, look extremely well. The week has been what may be termed wet, and somewhat cold. F (one broke five panes of glass in | this afternoon, However,’too much rain has not fallen. A much earlier harvest is predicted than was counted upon early in the spring. Under this impression, hold- ers of wheat last ‘Tuesday submitted to a decline of 3d per 70 Ibs. from the rates of the previons Tuesday. Flour also declined 6d per sack and per barrel. 5 f 2o’clock, P. M. The weather is now fine, and likely to continue so. Wind W.N.W; fresh breeze. _I cannot hear of anything further worth commu- nicating to you. The “Britannia” sails at 3:30 ALBIONA. Parts, June 7, 1848. The Bourse and Money Market. The general heaviness of the money market 1s | the surest indication of that want of confidence from which all classes of society are suffering. Confidence cannot be restored until the National Assembly, the interim government, and the Minis- ters, are unanimous, and seriously set to work to form a real government, and restore affairs to that regular course which was interrupted by the revo- lution of February. the majority of the Chamber to declare itself, and looks anxiously for the project of law, the decree, the vote of confidence, or the division which will mark out its distinctive charac be it republican of the ‘ veille,” or republican of the ‘endema!.’ On the day when this majority shall be declared, we shall know in what hands is the power; we can Oppose or support it, and can form a judgment as to the probable stability of the new order of things, and place, such confidence in itas we may deem wise. Itis this which is desired by men who have devoted their lives to commerce, to industry, to agriculture,to all the professions, in the active pursuit of which depend the riches of the country. They commend the report of M. Talloux, on the amelios rations in the arrangements of the ateliers nationaux of the Minister of Public Works, tending to the same end, and conceived in the same spirit of jus- tice and firmness; but unhappily this i#but an ex- ception to a rule. We see M. Dialers, the Minis- ter of Finance, at war with M. Billault, the chair- man of the Committee of Finance; and worse than this, two committees of the government, hold- ing directly opposite opinions on the same subject One says, “repurch the railways,” the other, “do not violate contracts.” The Minister of Fi- nance requires the repurchase as the basis of some gredt scheme of finance that is to relieve us from all our embarrassments, but refuses to declare what ishis scheme. The chairman of the committee declares it has no foundation or solidity, be it what it may, When are we to be relieved from thiz con- fusion? We advocate strenuously respect for con- tracts, and fulfilment of all our engagements; but to accomplish these we must have a government who possess power, firmness and. intelligence With restored confidence, there would be no diffi- culty in finding capital, no difficulty in contracting a loan of four hundred millions, no difficulty in meeting all our engagements—without confidence restored, every step we take will only plunge us into further embarrassment. The funds have varied but little since my report of last week. In railways nothing has been do- ing, since holders will not sell, and no one will buy under present uncertainty as to the measures of government with respect to them. Bank shares are at 1235, the last weekly bal- ance sheet being very uasatistactory. The Bink has now in hand upwards of fifty millions of francs in disbursed and protested bills. It has not, nor is it very likely soon to resume cash pay- meats. Treasury loans have considerably improved, being at only 22 to 21 discount; this improvement has arisen from the declared intention of the Com- mittee of Finance to recommend their conversion into five per cent stock at 70. A Italian stocks have considerably improved with in a few days, on account of very favorable news received from the seat of war of 4 victory obtain- ed by the Italians over the Austrians and the sur- render of Peschiera. A meeting has taken place to re-establish the coudisse for the purpose of time bargains, but as yet no definitive arrangements have been made; itis said, the sales will be more stringent than heretofore; at present, however, its re-vstablish- ment 1s not of much importance, as, under actual circumstances, there are very few, if any time bargains done beyond bargains for the day. Threes are at 46 25. Fives at 68. Irish Intelligence. Ata great meeting in Dublin, the preparatory step towards a consolidation of all repealers, Mr. Meagher delivered the following eloquent speech : Mr. Txos. F, Meacuer next preseated himself, and was recelved with tho most rapturous cheering. He said—Citizens of Dublin, since wo last assembled in this hall an event has occurred which decides our fate. We are no longer masters of our lives. the country—to liberty—to vengeance. (Loud cheers.) Upon the walls of Newgate a fettered hand has in- scribed this destiny. We shall be the martyrs or the rulers of a revolution. “One, two. three—aye, hun- dreds, shall follow me,” oxclaimed the glorious citizen who was sentenced to exile and immortality upon the morning of the 29th of May. (Loud and prolonged cheering.) Such was his prophecy, and his children will live to say it has been fulfilled.” Let no man mis- trust thesg words. Whilst I speak them [ am fully sensible of the oblization they impose. It is an obliga- tion from which there is no exemption but through in- famy. (Loud cheers.) Claiming your trust, however, 1 well know tho feelings that prevail amongst you. Doubt—depression—shame ! those whose advice restrained your daring, Depres- sion, inspired by the loss of the ablest and the bold manamongst us. g(Hear, hear, and chvers) § excited by the ease, the Insolence, the impunity with which he was hurried in chains from the island to whose sorvice he had sacrificed all that he had ou varth —all that made life dear, and honorable, and glorious to him—his home, his genius, and his liberty, (Loud and continued cries of hear, hear.) In those feelings of depression and shame I deeply share; and from the the members of tho late Counei!, I shall not hold m» self exempt. If they are to bla so aml. Betiwer stand. with the members of the Council, and warned back the precipitate devotion which scotfed at pru- denee asa crime. (Loud crivs of hear, hear.) 1 am here to answer for that act. If you believe it to have been the act of a davtard, treat me with no delicacy, treat me with no respect—vindicate your courage in the impeachment of the coward. (Cheers.) ‘The ne- ceasities ind perils of the cause forbid the interchange ef courtesies. Civilities are out of pluce in the whirl tumult of tho tempest. And do not fear that the for- feiture of your confidence will induce in me the renun- ciation of the cause, In the ranks—by the side of the poorest mecManic—I shall proudly act, under any exe- ecutive you may decree. (Hear and loud cheers.) <ummon the intellect and heroism of the democracy trowa the workshop, the field, tho garret—bind the brow of Inbor with the crown of soversigaty —place the sceptre in the rough and blistered hand—and, to the death, I ehall be the subject and the soldier of the plebeian king, (Hnthusiastic cheors.) Th the Counoil to the people of Ireland—the address signed by Willlam Smith O'Brien—bears witness to your determination. [t states that thousands of the Confederates had pledged themselves that John Mitchel should not leave these shores but through their blood (Cries of hear, hear.) Wewere bound to make this ‘tatement—bound in justice to you—bound in honor to the country. (Hear, heat ) Whatever odium moy spring from that scene of victorious deflance. in which the government played its part without a stammer or « check. none fallson you. You would have fought had » not seized your hands, and bound them = (Loud sofhear. hear.) Let no foultongne, then. spit its sarcasms upon the people, ‘Phey were ready for the sacr fice; and had the word been given, the stars would burn thie night above a thousand 8 (Loud eries of hear hear, hear) The guilt is our’s— let the sarcasms fall upon our heads. We told you in the clubs. four days previous to the trial.the reasons that compelled us to oppose the project of a reseur — Tho concentration of 10.000 troops upon the city—the incomplete organization of the people—the iu- sufficiency of food in case of a sustained resi uncertainty as to how farthe country districts were prepared to support us—theee wore the chief reasons that forced us in'o an antagonism with your generosity, your devotion. your intrepidity, (Hear. hear) Night af. ter night we visited the clubs to know your sentiments, your determination—and to the coursd we instructed you to adopt, you gave. at length. a reluctant sanction (Hear, hear) Now. Ido not think it would be candid to conceal the fact.that the day subsequent to the arrest of John Mitchel, J gave expression to sentiments having a tendency quite opposite to the advice | have mon tloved. Ata meeting of the Grattan Club, | said that the Confederation ought to come to the resolution to resist 14 fo\ve the transportation of John Mitchel, and if the worst befel us. the ship that carried him away should rail upon a een of blood. (Hear, hear ) this, and [hall not now coneral it, Trnid this, and 1 shall not shrink from the reproach of Imving acted otherwise. Upon consideration. I became convinced they were sentiments. which. if acted upou, would associate Rh name with the ruinof the cause (Hear, hear.) 1 feit it my duty. therefore. to retract them —not to dis. own but to condemn them—not toshrink from the re- sponsibility which the avowal of them might entail bat to avert the disaster which the enforcement of th would ensure. (Loud cheers.) You have now he all | had to say upon that point; and with a conscience happy in the thought that it has concealed nothing. | shall exultingly look forward to an event. the shadow of which already encircles us, for the vindication of my Public opinion defnands of ‘They belong to Doubt, as the truth of mistrust with which some of you, at least, may regard the hearts of the people and the bayonets I took my addross of ance—the | I said | sey Price Two Cents, | conduct, and the attestation of my truth, (Loud cheers.) Call me coward—(cries of “No, no”)—eall me renegade. (Renewed cries of “No, no.) I will aceept these titles, as the pemalties which a fidelity to my con; victions has imposed. It will be so for # short time only. To the end J see the path [ have been ordained to walk, and upon the grave which closes in that path, [ean read no coward’s epitarh. (Cheers,) Bitterly, indeed, might the wife and children of our illustrious friend lament the loss they have sustained, if his exam- ple failed to excite amongst us that deflant spirit,which, 1 spite of pains and penalties, will boldly soar to free- dom; and from the dust, where it has writhed add fret- ted for atime, return in rapturos flight to the source from whence it i (Loud cheers.) Not till then— not till the cowardice of the country has been made manifest—let there be tears and mourning round that | hearth, of which the pride and chivalry has passed sway. | (Hear, hear.) I said, that in the depression which his | loxs inspired, I deeply shared. I should not have said so. [feel no depression. His example—his stern for- titude—his tranquil heroism—forbids the feeling. (Loud cheers.) Alithat was perishable in him—his aad blood—are in the keeping of the privileged felons who won his liberty with their loaded dice. (Hear, hear.) But, his genius, his truth, his heroism—to what pen settlement have these immortal influences been con- ? Oh! to have checked the evil promptly—to have secured thelr crown and government ast him and his teachings—to have done their treacherous busi- ness well—they should have read his mission and his power in the star that presided at his birth, and have stabbed him in his cradle. (Loud cries of hear.) They seized him thirty years too late—they seized him when his steady hand had lit the sacred fire, and the flame had passed from soul to soul. (Enthusiastic cheers.) Who speaks of depression, then? Banish it! Let not the banners droop—let not the battalions reel—when the young chief is down, (nthusiastic cheers.) Y have to avenge that fall. Until that fall shall have been avenged, a sin blackens the soul of the nation, and repels from our cause the sympathies of every gallant people. (Cries of hear, hear.) For one, lam pledged to follow him. (Loud and protracted cheering.) Once again they shall have to pack their jury box— once again exhibit to the world the frauds and mocke- ries—the tricks and — upon which their power is based. In this island, the English ne —never, shall have rest. (‘Tremendous cheering.) The work bogun by the Norman never shall be completed. Gen ration transmits to generation the holy passion, From the blood which drenched the scaffolds of 1798, the felons of this year have sprung. (Loud cheers.) Should their blood flow—peace, and loyalty, and de- basoment, may here. for a time, resume their reign— the snows of « winter, the flowers of a summer, may clothe the proscribed graves—but from those graves there shall be a resurrection, (Loud cheers.) Pence, loyalty. and debasement, forsooth! A stagnant soola- ty!—breeding in its bosom slimy, sluggish things, whieh to the surface make their way by stealth, and there, for & season, creep, cringe, and glitter in the glare of # pro- vincial royalty. (Hear, hear.) P loyalty, and debasement! “A muse of pauperism!—shovelled off the land —stocked in fever sheds and poor-houses—ahipped to Canadian swamps—raga, und pestilence, and vermin, Behold the rule of England!—and in that rule, behold humanity dethroned, and Providence biasphemed. (Hear and cheers ) To keep up this abomination, the enact their laws ef felony. To sweep away t home a nation, we must break through thelr (Hoar, hear and joud cheers.) Should the laws fail, they will hedge the abomination with thoir bayonets and their gibbets. ‘Those, too, shall give way before the torrent of ff that gathors in the soul of the people. (Loud cheers.) The question so long debated—debated years ago, on fields of blood—debated latterly in a venal senate, amid the jeers and yells of faction—the question, as to who shall be the owners of this island, must be this year deter- mined (Enthusiastic cries of hear, hear.) The end is at hand, and so unite and arm! (Loud cheers.) A truce to cheers—to speeches —to banquets—to‘-import- ant resolutions” that resolve nothing, and “magnifi- cent displays,” which are nothing but preposterous de- ceptions. (Hear, hear) Ascertain your resources in each locality—consolidate, arrange ‘them—substitute defined action for drifuess passion; and in the intelll- gent distribution and disciplined exercise of your pow- ers. lot the mind of the country manifest its Purpose, wath and give permanent effect to its ambition. (1 hear.) Incarrying out this plan, the country have the services of the leading members of the Coun- cil; and from this great task—the organization of the country—we shall not desist, until it has been tho. roughly accomplished. (Hear, hear, and cheers) When it is accomplished, the country may resume its freedom and its sovereignty. ‘To tho work, then, with high hope and impassioned vigor (Loud cheering.) There is a black ship upon the southern sea this night, Far from his own, old land—far from the ad soll, and sky, which standing here he uséd to claim for you with ail the pride of a true Irish prince—far from that. circle of fresh, young hearts, in whose light. and joy- ousnessand warmth. his own drank in each eveniag new life aad vigor—far from that young wit hose heart the kind hand of Heaven has king gentle heroism, sustained by which she looks with rerenity and pride upon her widowed houre, d in the children that girdle her with beauty, beholds the iuheritors of © name whioh, to their last breath, will secure for them the love, the honor. the blessing of their eountry—(en- thusiastic cheering)—far from those scenes aud joys, clothed and fettered as a felon. he is borne to an island where the rich, and brilliant, aud rapacious power, of which he was the foe, has doomed him to a dark exist- ence. (Renewed cheering) That seutence shi reversed—reversed by the decree of a free nat jon. array- ed in arms andin glory. (Great applause.) Tillthen, in the love of the country, let the wife and children of the illustrious exile be shielded from adversity. (Loud cheers.) ‘True—when lie ftood before the Judge, and with the voice and bearing of a Roman, told him that threo hundred were prepared to follow him—true it is that at that moment he spoke not of his home and chil- dren—he thought only of his country—and to the honor of her sons bequeathed the cause for which he was doomed to suffer. Butin that one thought all other thoughts were embraced. Circled by the arms and ban- ners of a free people, he saw his home eecure—his wife Joyous—hia children prosperous. (Hear, hear, and loud choers,) This was the thought that forbade his heart to blench when he left those shores—this the thought which calls up this night,as he sleeps within that prison ship. dreams full of light and rapturous joy—thia the thought which will liguten the drudgery, and reconcile his proud heart to the odious conditions of his exile. Think ! oh, think ! of that exile—the hopes, the long- ings. which will grow each day more anxious and im. patient. Think! oh, think ! of how. with throbbing heart and kindling eye, he will look out across the wa. ters that imprison him, searching in the eastern sky for the flag which will aanounce to him his liberty, and the triumph of sedition. (immense cheers.) Think! oh, think! of that day when thousands and tens of thousands will rash to the water's edge, as « distant gun proclaims his return—mark the ship as it dashea through the waves and nears the shore—behold bin standing there pon the deck—the same calm, intrepid, noble heart—-lis clear quick eye runs along the shore, and fills with the light which flashes from the bayonets of the people—a moment's pause !—and then, amid tho ronr of cannon, the fluttering of a thousand flags, the ‘ pealing of cathedral bells, the cheers of millions, the triumphant felon scts his foot once more upon his na- tive soil—hailed. and blesse:l, and welcomed as the first citizen of our free and sovereign state. (Enthusiastic and deafening cheers, amid which Mr. Meagher retired, , Ia. an editorial article in the Dublin Nation of the 10th June, addressed to the oppressors of Ire- land, the following paragraphs appear :— * * * * * * * * Such are the thoughts of the people. Is not thia fear of the future the worst of slaveries? Nowhere on tho round earth is man so littly his own master. A bailiff comes with a crowbar in one hand. and an hahere in the other, and in half an hour the pyasant has neither house, nor home, nor holding. ‘The crop hw planted grows. and is thrashed on the high rund, forhe has no barn to store it in—what would he bo doing witha barn? He sacks it with his own hand, and loads it too, and sees it carried from his own door to feed and enrich people abroad, while, for the want of ithe and his die by inches at home, He has no hold on life, no tenure of existence. Like Saint Kevin he lives for ever on brink of a precipice, from which any adverse wind of landlord caprice may cast him down, with all his house; and yet this man, with his latest breath, “sitting on his dung hill,” blesses Goda— and dies While thus body after body, and soul after soul, are parted by the murderous laws of this realm, we hear of certain iords. and LL D.’s, and barristers-at-law, m king deciarations against “the repeal agitation, tending to destroy “the peasy and prosperity of this country’ Truly, this irony ix too ill-timed. You know. and right well you kuow, you robber lords and | !at professors. that here ia neither “ peace mor pros | perity’’ in Ireland You know, ye fulse-faced hypo- | orites, that thousands bave died and aro dying of Ber | tish rule every month of your lying lives. You seo | ships crowded wth exiles, baniched—not, surely by | © peace and prosperity ?°—fleeing your shores, aad yuo | ckanot discern from what quarter the evil wind coimes | that hurries themaway, No! youcan'tsee that. A | cowards that you are, you know in your hearts that | you vomit a foul fale which stinks in heaven’s nostrils; but you fear—y al with the ruin yourselves have made, Yes! it is your eraven order, always so ready to be spat upon. and to be grateful—to be insulted. and submissive—to be despised. and devo- | ted—it is you and yours who have piled this island with | eskers of craves; and now, rather than confess your crime. you seek to destroy the surviving wituesses to it. This i* your policy. But you shall fail, »nd your arch accomplices, the English oligareby, with you The people will not be stopt in thelr course by ail the coronets fm the peerage. | Vader all this outward sham of submission there Hes @ ferce hostility and a desperate indifference to life. A wise councillor has safd to you, « beware of the energies of despair An organization of despair seems to have | no terrors for you. Put it is growing up, Sign away, sign away; record, fur the ast time, your | own tocompetence and your treason ; but know thes, that lefore A8 is past and gone, the people will have trediden you and your allies inta the earth of the island | you have so long plundered and outraged with imp nit | Tur stare or Ixeiasn is vorcaxtc. The natio % [every day being more and more driven to the 4 From day to day roundwork of h «pe is being more | and more cut fre jer her feet Ineult. wrong. ap- press on, legal and wilitary tyranny, thrests, acoffs, re- Milings—all hese meet the people vf ireland. at every | turn. whilst taxation and pauperism are hurrying on inthe same ratio Every homestead ix beset, aplea qvnry newembluge ot peueonbleeitiznns degeaded by detectives ; the ruffiuns of the government are every