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ARRIVAL AWERICAN MAIL STEAMSHP ATLANTIC FOUR DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE. ADVANCE IN COTTON. Important Intelligence Relative to the Insurrection in Cuba. Movements and Intentio s of the European Powers. HE RELIGIOUS EXCITEMENT IN IRELAND, ‘Our Park, London, and Venice Corre-pondence ‘THE INSURRECTION IN CHINA. ‘The Time for Kossuth’s Departure for America, THE CLIPPER YACHT AMERICA, Eic., Sit., Ge. ‘The United States mail steamship Atlantic, Capt. West, arrived yesterday morning, at about 5 o'clock, making » passage of eleven days and four- teen hours. She left Liverpool at three o'clock on Wednesday, 20vb ult. 1c. Miss Hunt, Mes Mi) irs Mears, Miss ehild Dulau, 2 axon, Mr Candi a i servant, Mins noe! and MreW H Carey, child and friend, N leaveland, Me Mewitt, WH Bidwei!, D Campbeil, Mr James, J W Qeborns, } Mr Garven, » Rev Mr Mas aad Mre Ht Camere d lady. Mi Mr and Mrs W F Bol‘iey ond daugnver, Dr ", Leavitt, Jr, Mrand Mrs E Leavitt, Mr McMorsn, J A Hopkins, KM Mey omedina, Mrs Warren, Mise Joon- Mons and Madame Thillon, Mr G on, & Burnett, ‘arner, Mr Wilking,,Mr JohnsdnyMr Chapuian, Mr Duas- combe, Dr Peters. Mr Wolschian, Mr Walao. Mr and Mrs Jobnson, Mr and Mrs JH Lamp, sir and Mre ti B Tathaw and ers, Mr Launder, Mr Wills, nsell, J Rich, J ® Flaunsgen, nes, ER Edwards, Mr Brewster, A S$ Whitney Woods, Mr Topping, ing, Mrand Mre T Bell, itre Smith servant, th, KS Grant, J $ Sanborn, Carson, Dr Mof- r JA Bu E Blanchard aad end. F A Chace, Joan Fraser, Keenan, W H Childs, BS Pops, tt, Mrs Warner ( ), Mr Vertue ani iciond finéhaugh, E F urafe, nleton, ip, ¢ A Weibell, Mr Croyeau, Mr Kinsey, Dr Norwood, BF Baker, G H Taylor, J Trow, G © Jordan, F Cogswell, C 8 Baker, Cli Wilmerding. ‘The cotton market was very firm. The sales on the 19th ult., amounted to 4,000 bales, 3,000 of which were for speculation and export. i fally one-eighth dearer than at the departu: Jast steamer. Pernams were selling at 6 and Maceios, 6jd. a 6».; Egyptain: ry Sarete, 2jd. a 3jd. Importssince Friday, 25,102 bales. & JP Je ‘M Lambe Dail Lip- Me ry The market was of the 3 Bahais Paris, and 0.29 per cent dearer ia London than in Hamburg. The exchange between England and America is nominally 0.67 per cent in favor of England, leaving a@emall profit on the importation of gold from the United States. The shipments of specie for ladia by the steamer Pottinger amounted to £10%,20— the ater part was in silver. £55,300 being for ta—the remainder was destined for Singapore ff The mecting of the Spa in London onthe 17th, was very thin! was ultmately postponed, there being no other al- ternative. rs, held Severe censure was of course cart w the Span- ish ministry, by some of the speakers, fur confis- cating property. Advices from Madrid to August | ate that the | Spanish government have reveived accounts from Havana to the 17th ult., in which no mentioa wa made of the insurrection said to have broken out at Puerto Principe on the 5th The number of persons who visited the Crystal Palace, on the 1%h,, amounted t+ 57,050 persons, and the receipts amounted to £2,7737s. It bae been do- cided, by the Commissioners, that the building shail clese on Saturday, October 11. A meeting of the Commissieners will be held at the Crystal Palace on Wednesday, Ostober 15, to receive the reports of the several juries, &ce. On this occasion, the at tendance of the exhibiters, the jurors, and the foreign and local commissioners, and the mombers of the local committees, is required. Immediately after the close of their proceedings, leave will be gtven to exbibiters to remove their goods ‘Tho reports of the juries, and the names of the persons receiving prizes, will afterwards be pub- dished in the Londen Gazette. Medals will also be given to the juries—the foreign and lecal som- missioners—the chairman, treasurer, and secre- tary of the loa] committeos, and other porsons who bave rondered services, accompanied by a cor tifeate and a copy of the reports of the juries All the memorials will be presented simultaneously, Dut 00 dete is yet fixed The King of Denmark had a narrow escape, on the Mth. The horses of his carriage took fright and ran away, bet were stopped ia Lime to any injury to his Majesty. The carriage w dered useless. The ELvenement contains an address from up- wards of fifty English journals, to Charles Hugo, on the occasioa of bis imprisonment for an artic! against the punishment of death. They express, im strong language, tho sympathy they foel for his porition. The cutter yacht Bacchante, won her Majesty's cup at Cowes, on the 17th ult. One bundred and cighty-seven out of th bundredand sizty-three ouncils (jenera! of Prance have voted in favor of a revision of the coastitu- tien. The Pasha of Egypt had rejested propored by the fultan, wlio wa: to the five powers to make bis » vent ren- su baal | Athens acoounte repor: that there ib | Fal conficts betwocn the police and brigandr, eove _- tal killed and wounded on both sides Advices from Berlin state that th King of Gia and the I:mperor of Aurtria aro ab | | liately at Jschl; and it ‘s also said that a is to take place next month between the of Russia, Austria, and si a. he English orchards, this year, are yielding in vce. There will be plenty of prime sider and st a moderate cost. Advices from Hamburg snnounce that the quar rel between Austria and the free ci of Ilamburg, on the cabject of the St. Pauli riots, i+ been ami vably arsanged, and the Austrian gortigon is about | to be withdrawn from the Hamburg territory. The Pie/momtese Gazette contradicts, by aut the statement with respect to tho interviews ad ‘conversations raid to have taken place betaeen the | Kinge of Sardinia and Saxony. It was rumcred that the old and respectable house of Richard Gsuid & Co., in the fusion trade at j Manchester, bad stopped payment, and # prirate Meeting of credivirs was summoned. Tho liabili- Aiea are ertimated at £15,000, and the asscte at about £90,000. The lose: will fall prinsipall, the bankers and wpon relatives. Me. Gould ia with the frm of Gould & Cooper, ~~ h but tbis firm is understood’ te be feilure of Meters. Cast Gineti eo. methants, of London, was ann on f. of the Electric Telegraph Comp: ot Lingle or the Bast halt you exceeded the by £10, A dividend of £2 per has declared on the paid-up capital been dividend is at the rate of 8 per cont Several persons of the Latter Day Sainte are FE YK cola A other towns to Naavoo, # ter- clmost a0 lange a0 i 0 1a nat loss 300,000 of them have ap tareir abode, on of pear the hanke of the reat salt Lge Gold is about the same price in London as in | It | 17 | abe as artic | of the Queen of es | more—only one, save this | tho Americana, ur London Correspondence. _Lonpon, August 19, 1851. The Potato Rot— Political Mis-statements of Facts— The Progress of the Revolution in China. All is comparatively dull. The American clipper, of which I wrote before, excites increasing comment and admiration, as you wilt perceive. The account I previously transmitted, of the potato rot im Ire- lend, is unhappily confirmed. Joinville, it appears, in spite of the admronitions of the Times and the press in general, who seem mostly to support Louis Napoleon, has intimated his intention of becoming candidate in 1852. It is an important step, and | may be appropriately called, in referenceto its con- sequences, ® pregnant one. By many private ac- counts and representations, which are not admit- ted into the London journals generally, who give colorings the other way, it would appear that | the ultca-demoerats in France are much more powerfal and formidable than the European press in any eountry is willing to represent them. The fashion is to describe them as few in number, quite contemptible, and mere socialists. Though having at one time partly believed this, I now begin to think it is utterly untrue, and that the real state of the case, as regards the strength of the genuine de- moeratic party in France, has been greatly, and no doubt purposely, falsified. By the last accounts from China, it appears that agreat and highly important revolution has been for some time past actively at work in that country, the true character of which was disguised and con- cealed by the governmental authorities, under the contemptuous name of aa insignificant rebellion in one or two provinces. 1t now, however, ap- pears that there is every probability that the pre- sert imperial family and the Tartar dynasty, which, for two hundred y have subjugated and reigned over the genuine Chiuese nation, are on the point of | being dethroned, aud the whole Tartar race ex- pelled from the country. At about the time referred ve, China was conquered by the Tartars, and Tartar faumuy occupied the imperial race of the Tartacs exceeded the Cai- ry fame and prowess, and in fact they bie in presence of the more effeminate Chinese. his military renown they retaiaed without dispute cr abatement, and kept hold of power by the mere prestige of their invincible character, until the jate war with the English, when the natives beheld these iavincible and boastful fellows beaten everywhere, and put to shameful fight at every rencounter. From that moment ibe spell which bound the Chinese nation was broken, and the charm which kept them hum- ble and submissive, lost its power over their minds. The people began to meditate upon their former tence, when they we: ir race, and to call to mind the ancient fami- ly which had been dethroned. A rebellion broke out in one of the provinces, at first of no great ex- tent, but it has been spreading, and one of the descendants of the old Chinese tamily is now a: its head. They have routed the Tartar troops seat to quell the ri accounts, were about to take possession of Cantona, the large kin. Of the extent ofa Chinese city, we may form some idea, perhaps, when it is recollected that some years ago Pekin used to be quoted as the largest city in the world, having more than two millions of inhabitants, and it Las not been on the decline ever since. it.is confidently believed that the expulsion | of the Tartar race and dynasty from China is at hand, and in a few months will have been accom- plished. If so, and there seems no cause to doudt it, the effects to flow from this great revolution in that wonderful empire with that wonderful people, | are of the utmost importance to other nations, whe, | for above two hundred years, have bean absolutely prohibited from holdirg intercourse with this na- tion. A new world, of immense extent—a new people of immense resources and of astonishing skill aud ingenuity in arts and manufactures, will be open te Amorican enterprise; new, because the slight footing which commerce hitherto has had on the edge of one of ber cities, and only one, viz, Canton (not baving been permitted ever to enter inte the city itself), has not been sufficient to make us know anything, to any extent, of this wonderful people ‘Thus the world wags. If the storms and tem- | pests of the human race are hushed for a moment | in one quarter, the lovers of excitement have only to direct th lew to some other quarter, and a wide panoramic view of battles, agitation: | strife, is open before them. . | Loxnon, August 8, 1851. Brief Review of the Scenes at the Crystal Palace— The Notable things in it, §c., §€. I heve seen the great, the grand, the sublime ex- You are undoubtedly aware that f phants” ever come up to my anti: ination, when I allow itto range. This | surpassed it—outdid its loftiest, loveliest flight. | The building, which contains so many exquisite beeutiful and grand—though vast yet light, graco- fal, convenient. Yeu look down from its intermina- b! eries upon the gay and thronging myriads beneath, and carry your sight up the expanded aiscs with sensations like those we experience in an exalted dream. You behold buge, tall trees immense as the palaces of the king of the giants. The rising tragrance of flowers—bursts of musis— all that sight can for, are here; and magnificentas it is, afew months back | passed where it stands, and saw but the cold green sward. Weil may its princel, may he be humble when he sees what the broath of Ged in ane enables man to do, who else were a senselere © my taste for the fine arts. Here Jended with every useful manufacture— laseseem, if possible, to be im closer jonshio then man and wife—‘ formed to meet nto think that nothing can be t some beauty or « tish department execeded m| was therein a display of taste of execution, for whieh f of Great Britain credit pehind in coloring, wanting given tbe pe are tall # little lightness and freshness in thie respect, but ev thie they have improved. heir furniturc i t carving in oak and walau wisite—nothing equals it. Indeed, I be be 4 this art, whieh i thts act, Shieh ro was lost, swoms t ok | a more righteous cause, should declare themecleos | Of Mtns ag buried at Idstedt, but that attack | gq laces, have no « inal in their own country. This | Pt. Among those few, however, has been Mrs. rate, yet elegant cide boards, tables, a, | Snd forsake the ranks of the enemy. For this rea- | "The ror of Russia has consented to the | Mtuherof these Alaheed en yor {he future, the | Buel, wife of the American Missionary of that he. be, @0 2 | area ie rather @ bappy circumstance, than a cause | choice made by the King of Lenmark, to adopt for rendervous of Peaucaine Will increase at tho | nome in Greece, who was on her return to her hus | Semnay, aad ¢ |-ef regret, that priestorat aod yreany ace devaien, bis heir to the crown of that kingdom, the young | Tye cy le people of Paris, as is well | >and, from a visit to the United States, accom- bh mort curious and interestin, dene. - * ‘rinee Christian of (:lucksbourg. ” Pan sure you would dream of them nightly for 8 twelve, | Wefly baling i ore, and exhibiting their | In Servia, a great excitement prevails all over the Gon eel — eg iitgs sad now panied by Miss King, daughter of the celebrated month. The French do very well, but you know | "hetration, where princeuns Sold of interest and | counter, and it le euppeted that another ineurree- | sisg teft us,the vacation of all ous toteem cous, | sigejomaty at Athens. Nekccr aed tented eeictene natath, net massive | deified, where the ruiers of Europe tre coquating | {7 wil «oon gariade are the Iraders of the ord. | ciae, and busiacer men, gives to Paris thersight | hee paeemane be pap epee hn relish, Tarcitere Nace adiaicable | and contriving which of them shall get the terpene | mvaciamenton S|“ ‘ue Waders of the pro | of Necropolis. ‘There are nomore to be seen these | ited by the ¢ ladies, in undertaking and The Austrian inlay | | rooms furnished n their national styl, and an admira- aad it is of no use to tell deli ly carved, italian marble mantel f the richly ornamented pianos, with tor- not subjugated by the | , in every encounter, and, at the last | st city in China, next to Pekin and Nan- | eat | *pecimens of cunning workmanship, is itself very | originator be proud—better | y | other representati yet discovered the causes of this unusual cataclysm soup which he had placed befo: ‘two groups 0+ iece of floating wood, which al ‘ ® and nt. The | have uo house and sans dessus dessous of nature. P “ was also a bottle Pe 3 Shia, ORS as soon as the Hon of | Belgium shall | “Tare waa a very greateight, on Thursday after and stembler. It is al thats man who “4 oy = little tatlves in Europe in earnest session. . noon, at the Hippodrome, where Sir John Musgrove | could remain for three oazs and three nights on the seems inevitable. ween ce ¥ ee as peertile, os Lee and about five or six hundred Englishmen, with la veneoem Lise dames » except sharks presentat . poleon nas asa \. 5 Cras ihe representation of the otter grout: | Neperthelear if thus cafes in epioesance, Lacs toid | #¢% had congregated to witness the performance | *™} ir moae Matetman, M. Thiers, though a v for breath after his fierce scutile andshaking, that he will not enjoy his otium cum dignitate, and essai yp serof tl M. Pia paneet | small san, io kis Ans, a8 9 slate We dove no little i | it is certain that two months of vacation wi number ente: nt re was a - | com er. ¢ name ie ee _ ol ie | Se cpayed by him to renew his journeys through | Joon, to which two nels rsonating France | of that lady is Mme. Ripert, and she keeps » pcre fu: departmenis he visited Ia ‘According | 1° . » ve eg boarding house, or rather a table d'hore, at thece tpl vn hy ee Herosback, comboting oy deperemonne Be. A sae er eg fe Tor Boe | 8nd England, or rather (Queen Victoria | perry nohead A, large assemblage of people con- a fre See, woman with @ | deaux on the 20th or 25th instant. From Bor- | and our republic, were to be tied, and to Friday last, in front of the house, spear in her hand, but one you would not like to | deaux, where he will receive the doputations of | take a flight in the air, hand in hand, waving 1 re Deane peda 7 many meet inthe rush’ of war. Some beautiful statues, | Heclonse, Agen, Montauban, am, reagienne; | each the national flag. Such a sight was, of course, ated ak har 2 poem ‘Mee an sister of ta ppromantiog veiled Sgnres, ore "eid voll ie sold | coed So Ea Koshello: Rochefort, ant throes Yo Bete Tiare Seeing ; and alt cur guests would no’ miss | Hiicrs, formerly President of the State Council; ob; > J . 8 ure. man My ” marble, the fase’ appeats distinctly—it isa simple, | gueux, Limoges, Moulins, and Nevers. The Pre- | sng God ‘as says the Precok ret aoe | Set sed | reid bar Regc ag Shige phn ng AY Pci yet surprising artifice + | CRE Tes, te Seoemmpacien. ae pauney by four o'elock, just when the performance hai be- to tale off this bill but, to thale greah satontshe 1 eee a ee sa net ae ‘Sabrins, be, aresiatuet | Coneral Rendon, Mis ‘War, and M.A: | Sus, the rain fell in torronts, and it rather feed | ment, sho showed them the’permission she bad obs | b * Tsho . ; i ° f all : : tained from the Prefecture of Police, granting her Rey coop ae at Creiprg I gy ge Tine alates Ko: Noneee ty » fon cow Yy Lingl py poms Maha Soe enenaies the permission to insult her brother publicly. with his suite, have already received insti ions deed, for the present, say no more about the exhi- I to the population to be as “polite” and as enthunastio as po ible! 9 | bition itself, for the same reason. | hope you will it, for it will enable you to get a dozen | beanies: ee time—will m: von lies much No doubt that, also, ia the course of Sep‘ember longer without increasing your age. Ww. next, the of the review of the fleet at Cher- Lonpon, August 15, 1851. bourg, will take place either at Toulon or Mar- rinse a a seilles. The French squadron is daily expected in The Corrupt Church beginning to show fight in Ire. the harbor of Hyeres, ‘and I am told’, Z land against the Catholics—Candidates for the | man “ who knows,” that the object of this meeting is to raise, as much as possible, the Bonapartist feeling in favor of the ne 9 As may be seen, the postulant to the next Presi- dency of 1852 will not neglect any means to rule for four years more. Will he succeed? i doubt it very much. ‘There is a large competition in the field for the Presidency, and it is hard to know how it will end. The rovges are still hesitating on the subject of their candidate. ‘ho will he be? M. Miot Sau- riae, or a member designated by ballot? No one can tell, as yet. It is mow certain that the object of M. de Girardin’s visit to Ledru Rollin, in London, was to persuade him not to presext himself asa can- didate for the next Presideacy, but on the contrat to employ all his power to have M. Carnot nomi- nated and elected. An unexpected candidate is also on the tapis, who has created much sencation in the circles where Orleanism and legitimacy are still discussed. The name of Prince de Joinville has been smartly put forward by the /ndep Belge, the leading organ of the party, and is was picked up @ la _res- cousse by all the other Orleanist newspapers. Some other, less ambitious than the Jnd e, Says that the Prince de Joinville is only electioneering for the succession of General Magnan to the governor- | ship of the Parisian garrison. This is really a Presidency of France—The Times—A Poet’s Claim— Rome, §c. Politics end fashion are in abeyance, for the mo- ment. Very little of interest is befors the world to stir up attention, and as to excitement, it is fallen into a dead sleep. Not even the threat of an Irish Religious Agitation, and all the incipient steps and preparations of the belligerents are sufficient to | create any stir or apprehension. It is all likea sham fight at areview. There is a great deal of emoke, and a great dea! of firing, but the guns and cannons are only loaded with powder. That imbe- cile and most contemptible old woman, the Estab- lished Church of England, is so completely in her dotage, that she has stepped forward, in Ireland, flourishing her broom-stick to wage open war and bid defiance to the Irish Catholics. What fa- tal results, what bitter exasperations, such mad- ness and folly may lead to, is not to be conceived, None but the church and its prelates established by law, are guilty among the Protestants, of this folly; | the Tithe Church stands alone in the movement, . . ood joke. A prince of the D'Orleans family the It is a singular fact and especially deserving histo- | fr diade camp of the hero of Boulogne’ aud | rieal attention, that whereas in former days, when Strasbourg! Itis impossible. It will not be, for it canvot be. Amidst this firework of news, which is foreseen amidst a range of clouds, rather than certain, | must mention the destruction, almost, of the flags of our national glories, which were the best ornaments of the celebrated church of the Invalides. On Tues- day morning, at 12 o'clock, the ceremony of the burial of Marshal Sebastiani was to take place The church had been decorated with mourning a | parel and ornaments—the catafalque was surroun | ed by innumerable candles, when suddenly the dra- ry took fire, and, as if by lightning, the flames | much right to make such bishops as the Queen. | devoured all the inflammable goods, and attacked, | The fact is, the prelates, by their gross, corrupt, | also, the flags which are hung along the wall, and | govetous conduct, their arbitrary insolence and | which, as is well known, are those which have been gust to the whole ae | conquered by our armies in the different battles Popery was in question, the Protestants of all names sided with the Church of England, yet in the present memorable age, they have all deserted | her. There bas been a great eye-opening among | the Protestants; they see, and even proclaim and assert, that the Queen has no more right to make bishops and give them territorial titles, and large revenues, sucked from the people, than anybor else. Therefore they say, with a truth and logic | which cannot be refuted, that the Pope has just as | lordliness, have become a tion. Yet these prelates have the madnos against the enemies of France. A great number of folly to undertake a religious campaign in | persons employed all their exertions to save these and to try to rally a few eld imbeciles and | monuments of our glory, and they somewhat sue- ers of the State, under the miserable, selfish, worn- | | out ery of ‘the church ia danger.” Like midnight | burglars, they are determined to betray and ruin | themselves by their own b B The next subject of most public interest is the ceeded; for the only ones which have been entirely burnt were those of ths Spanish war in the Penin- sula. The celebrated parasol of Abderhamman, which had been captured hating 3 the battle of Isly, in Morocco, in 1847, was partly burat; and if it was state of France. The 7mes, and many others, are | caved, it was vad by the care taken by M. de saldy afraid that the Prince do Joinville will come | Greslau, one of the ‘officers present at the cere- out as a candidate in opposition to Louis Napoleon. mony. Inthe meantime, the body of Marshal Sebastiani | had been removed outside of the church, and an | altar bay ing been erected in the garden, the funeral services weie performed with all pssible dignity. The remains of the old soldier were then put in the vault of the Marshal, which is situated under the The Times uses (as an argument that he should not do so) the very argument why he shoul4, viz: that be would be supported by the republicans, the reds, and other malcontents. The probability of success is the best reason why any candidate should go before the nation, and with such support, besides his own party, the Prince would have great | pulpit of the Invalides. Louis Napoleon, who was bability of succe. Notwi:hstanding his al- | jot present, as will be explain 1 pene bye, leged refusal, it is believed he will become the can- | soon arrived on the spot, and directed the exertions it would doubtless be a misfortune to France if he should sueceed, yet there is greater chance of success for him than some are willing to admit, for he always has been immensely popular, and many of the old legitimists would gue bim Bor te. He is prudently waiting didate. made to save the Invalides. ‘The plot of the republicans of the southern parts of France, which was discovered last year, and at the head of which was M. Gent, one of the mau- vaises tétes of France, in the socialist party, is now | rather than napar ¥ under examination before the Court of Sessions of “and watching. If Varnot or any other candidate is | | yons. Many very curious incidents are daily toons out, it is not likely he would consent to | unveiled, and it is quite proved that the only object run; but he, as well as everybody else, laughs at the poor Z'mes’ reasons sgainst his rusning, which reasons are, “ Don’t run, tor the people would sup- port you, you wovld not like that.” | A curious claim has been [a before the Judges | of the Exhibition. A crack-brained poet put a vo- | lume of songs and ballads in the Exhibition; body thought of course it was of these conspirators was to mettre (e feii aux quatre | coins dela France. A protty good joke, is it not t | Itis tobe hoped that these sanguinary socialists ll be sentenced to the same fate they wished to ee upon their countrymen. i Cabet, who, as I wrote in one of my letters, . Very | has been discharged by the court on the accusation intended as a spoci- | which had been brought against him, for having | robbed his correligionnaires under false pretences, will not s0 easily eseape these men. Jt is said that a jury @ honnewr is now examining the case, in order to decide if there has been any swindling in that affair of Icaria. men of typography and book- binding, but he insists specimen of poetry per se, and now prize for himself as the first of po- particular, with such | upon it, it isa calls forthe first ! Speaking of poetry, in one. may not pee ‘8a, “= is ber i ¢ mighty battle w involves the question of | ws ther @ con! humen poagiees and liberty, is undoubtedly to be ig iy alte atacieaaon _— fought at Kome, ifit has not already begun, and is | ‘The negotiations which have been undertaken by not now going on there. On one side, allied with | the Austrian government at the court of Turin, re- royal pertidy and cruelty, is aco af sleck and | jative to the refugees of Germany, who have been cily-tongued priests, setting the example and giv- | received in that kingdom, will ‘probably have no rise from the floor, appearing in perfect | ing now fe aa hay? eye riests P wnpon iigs ban result. pale ‘ he world; and, on the other side, are the with | i keoping with the sparkling, dashing fout | ihe bennervafuried of eqeal’ rights sid hatvecsal | acne Cera gay tains, colossal statues, and other works of | liberty. At the head ot priesteraft, now closely | admitted in full in the German Confederation, will art near them. How extended is the view! | allied with the d and despotism of the world, | have no bet! fate. It ‘ars that t! wetyy ham Id, | have no better fi appear, he Diet has How innumerable and various the objects ofsight— | the Tope himself, making common cause with | declared that this protestation was a “foreign in- how bright the scene, yet not too glaring. All is | AUSIAs cand theke cumean Halle Te is good to | ‘rusion,”” which was to be sneered at, and of course soft and delicate as fairy land, yet the is | know the enemy, to see their ranks drawn battle array, to understand who they are, are their head quarters, what their forces, what their p ses. It must ever be borne in | mind that the power and organization of the false, | wiry, oi ningeen pots @ totally different thi | from religion and truth, and that the cause ot | priesteraft is the true opponent and antagonist of he cause of justice and virtue. Nover will > | e long spoken of interview of the King of Prus- wi | sia, and the Emperor Nicholas, and Francois of and | Russia and Austria, will decidedly take next autumn, in Siblia, at the Chateau d’Erdemanns- dort. Some newspapers had published that the inter- view would take p! at Ischi, @ the sham war, which will be exhibited at the same epoch. ‘This is not correct. Two plots of much importance have been dis- covered in Germany. The first was to stab the | | men act honestly to one another—never, with | | the law of kindness and love, rei over | Emperor when he visiteltaly, and to murder all the mankind, and society become « band of harmony | Asories, officers. The roel is, signed by two hun- and peace, so long as men follow the rule aad dred leading men, were found by a nota: measure of life and conduct which ee Yo of all the apers belonging to a names lay down for them to follow. It istime that apoplexy. The second was the world thould kaow that the abandonment of 4 cjub held its asemblies in a tavern which was four. is the abandonment of villainyanderime. situated in the t is not, so they pectant, 0 Seesaking of the true and yaded the spot, and found all the proofs of | holy principles n and virtue, but itis a fore | which had for ite object to overthrow the g | seking of the false, deceitful, and bitter antagonists | ment, and to replace it by the republican form. | thereof. | Hricetcratt, with ita head a: Kome, and | We received advices from the Dutchies, contain- | despotism its ol, th its tail at Naples, bas taken ing the new: riot which took place on the 20th offthe mask. The sympathies of all the enemics of | ult., at Schleswig. The Vanes tried to insult the buman progressand iness are on their si i | itis time that they whw have better eympathice for | (ieT@ant, who had covared with flowers the graves l, wi entwined seeptre in his ha eby to possess | The Turkish government has decided that, onthe ibekl and pearl keye; of the English, French, bh, Pere‘an vets, of exquisite dyes, pat- ip; Bor ot the numberless work, #0 porfect as to be mis taken for ted engraviogs. The Indian displey is, <f course, very gorgeous. Had 1 not vat my taste for shiclde, spoere, swords, pistols, etc, here would have boon # great treat for me, bere they are, rough with gold and jewels, ve a* ever-changing tho innumerable. ® displag of plate ie bere, English, recn, gold ane silver, moulded into every shape of uretull sod ornament. Jou can seo till your yes are weary of the variety. Some specimens as rga--triumphe of art. The jewels n (french) are exceedingly he mountain of light, the | merely om terns, and workmens! specimens ef needle fn al: an will be tili Now let me speak of what I | love beat to speak--of sonlpture. Bat, before I begin, you will ask--* But Amerisa’!” “Oh, what failing aT was <here.” Micerable-~after ali the bombastic talk—-miscrable in the extreme | is the display it anadtes in the fine space alloted to | it. Marry, afew epiendid = and one thing | partment from com | tempt--Power's Greek Slave To Powor ought | in humble thaskfulness, to present | heavy lump of Californian metal, for “redeeming them—for, vay speoking, just savil ir bacon. at think you f exhibiting in an extensive apartment a paltry eet of petty American newspapers. Pshaw! Ard some other of the articles of show are equally Prepoetcrous. But the ‘Greek Slave” (1 never *aw the original before) is the fines: statue in the exhibition. It ie a ‘om—a great triumph in the highest range of art. e Is for ail | cam see, frultlese—the fare ges thoughts an? sive of the eculptor’s + tor enMeten Proportioned figure wdbubentive is 562 be Germans have made a and astort a high cla many o ‘oat step in advance, im for their soulptors, Some | ee, and rales man | Sep " i i The ele- | Athens, entire!: » y may | 1 the | the ambassadors of all the foreign nations, Aus. | 40D0ré, have opened their wings and fled to parts ve deomed it possible! Had t two ladi 4 hemeely ddo- | tein ie the on} wer whe hes woreued ainst it, | “known. Our dandies bay Seappeared like ne- | been all their lives innured to hardship and ex abe instantly fe oftheir own | and though eA tate Ba the ‘tieat oh “ by her | Sromancers. In short, Pari gone out of town. | eure; had they been familiar with the Toute by Geeruptions.. Such’ may ie finale of | and Turkey, i ie porpered ie cit Perens Oy, BF | With the intention to give. 8 shook to our | which they travelled, or with any one of the }e% So emen tastness | “Te last’ news reveived from Alexandsla, ane | $84.13, Mors. Toran, Vince and Ituggierst | guages of the continent’ Coxceyd inedcn theeah iins:Seains triad | mauncs hat a pleuiztentary” hae beam set by | 2'6 {he og2ic of a tevtivat whieh to begin om | Sud nally, Rad they been protected by " tee - r Monday, and only to be e on ugliness, sti @ enterprise exhibi: eit Kuro sree Saas te ihe Festa Ottoman, doctncing thes | same day a week ater. ‘They eve peat ous thot | thee most laudable. Fut they crest eae his intention ie not to ober, and that he will cas Paris, August 14, 1351 in bis rights to establish and collect duties j bi wd by origin, education, or ra A pi } are true, the reecipts made by the gentlemen who | habitude to bardebip ; t! hav The Nasional Assembly The Representative Asseme | ree . Pane reons of the Hungarian | Wet@ charged to collect subscriptions, amounted, | with either French, Uprmen, or Italla 7 lies of Ewrope—Lowis Napoleon and hie Plans | emigration 4 ‘now ia perie They ore MoM last night, to on: indred thousand franes. Be it | never on the routes of © 1 Movemarts—Durning of Nations! Tro | arte, ex Minister of War, M. Mote Colonel er | *towD, that only 1,500,000 are wanted for the affair, | their lives; and they have both many personal * . ~ | yer hogs H . and it is certain that they will achieve the amount | charme, w one is ¥ an, id Pe Republican } Cabet--Poitical | artillery, who fought Ban Jellachich at , : | ‘ery young and very beauti- " ; cal | ond C IK id di f( of their wishes. Now, it is understood that this | ful; and y beauty are the ve Gossip—Plats and Promuncirmentos, &e., he | on. tenn, ald de-comp of mammoth festival will begin on the Lith of next | protectors of in. They crossed the ocean The National Assanbly is now prom quel, ant Count of Thomet, ex-President of the Council of month, and nothing of kind will ever have | under the obi the gallons captain of the about half of the membe: not wait the appointed € Paris ard enjoy the vac the legis Saturday last) to leewe of Queen Donna Maria of Portugal, is now ia Pjorre Bonaparte, a cousin to the President, met, . on Monday last, with an accident. He fell from & | nore the : 4 Vnited States minister at 4 ve heen re t - ageanti Such a stupendous sight! ; ’ What have heen the imrortant Works of the A& | horse and broke hie leg, two bones being » it at | ‘There will be “an clephant like on Yephant.”* aan 5% ty caetemed, them to our sembly during the last nine months ) the rame time pol Wen | During the prerent dulness of Paris, much gam- | (hem to th i urdy consigned . " . ;. | bim, d, though not on good terms with him, em to the American consuls at Trieste and Ve- rangements have been taken to quiet ths popula politically speaking, he aaea him with much png, a eee Fe paises a Foner gia but our | nice. From don to ‘Trieste they travelled i b for " * ce, ich are the u the wo: 0 i " precdo boda ch Tay for the future etrug~ | tention. He wae near him when the fire of the Ia- | Watching movements. which are} pe chen = nighte—two of them being ampere coniidence has been given.to | salides took place. _& ttealing, and other crimes of the of the intervening da or by the journey the aountry | What good laws have been made by . Jest day’ of the week, the Cafe Angla encow Dot one Aiteciee anes ce tel, thay theto babblerst What Gnoncial reform hae yet Gossir oF PaRts. considered one of the best restaura: offensiv iMeulty, delay, obstacle, or Panis, August 14, 1851. | Weather—Ballooning Extraordinary—The Grea Stam—Its Effect Throughout Europe—Earth- quake at Algiers—Algerines in Paris—The Fire Annihilator--Elect i¢ Cannom—Annual Fair of Beawaire--Paris gone out of Town—Grand Fes- tival—Gembling—M. Thiers end his Sister— Leutze's Picture of Washington ~ Theatric te Catharine Hays, &c., &e. It wae well that the Lord Mayor of London, and been vated to renovate (be rotten machine of this part of our government! A!1 these questions have been quite @ lordredu jour, to use the common “shang” of the Atsembiy, and, no dowht, the man- dalatres Will &e summoned by the electors to answer. It is somewhat certain, that if no \uestion of the kind ie put forwsrd by those who have en interest in doing it, that ¢he next session—if there is no | charge occasioned by unforeseen evente—will be | as duil anc useless a@ those which have taken place | since the revolution of J#1* | hie companions, loft Parie on Friday afternoon, for emissarics, and, if the reports of the nowspapers taken place like it, in any part of the world. Gant eeceeen of invaded at balf-past one o'clock in the m the “stars,” followed by the “moon,” in the strength. id fare ir with Gensepandiorane of a Commisaire de Police, and th 0 glittering finds ansthiv rd pty fy % persons found, in a emall a ers. men busil: fina ams cord.ogly em- e D prisoners, and obliged to give | be: hed at sixi ‘viett | tor of th . » aud, | them, and after showing them the i fea- it is said, it amounted to about 25,000 2 i J : Will let you know about the trial, which, fon sigha nina rerio Yhosse” rat will be of a funny character. called le vogueur, Seine, every day, at four o'clock, i uy . t The King of Wirtemberg is h da visit A fact worth being mantioned iv, that now that very curious to wit ; ud ere, anda ig ovr Astembly hes sored. - doors, ait the’ other | ¥¢ B84, on Saturday and Sunday Inst, the nrost ter- | very ev by M. Beebeat, whe, Wik thease, por. | promieed by the young Emperor and old Marshal tive nosemblies of the constitutional powers | ‘ible thunder storme ever known inour city. lam | 7 y machine, awims j lvestions, rede ‘ cane | qeeguras, Vy (ye! has behaved so well, they think Franee, En land, Pram | sure (hata strange change has taken place in ‘he paren emokes bis segar, sleeps, on the water. | 7 pans op dend, pl en ‘ P Serteionet Porte ayaria, And | tecopernture of the World; and po astronomer hag | | sow him, even, on Sunday Inst, eating, bowl of | awartiet from Rome, arrived here with Ietters from How queer. and play as if the rays of the sun were shining on | “ ‘Th'son of M. Adam, the composer of so mi their heads. M. Godart himself, who had to leave hpredinn apes 4 P any ound elegant comic operas, died en Saturday last, by am ews ft ae ie ao Leviton nie | attack of aneurin "Tt is said that this ung men who consented to share his wet fate, | ¢Btleman promised to be one of the best painters ike rope was loosened, and the balloon Eagle weat | ° the age- M. Dupaty, one of the members of the academy, whose literary fame was known all over Euro) died on the 8th inst., and his funeral was atte up, amidst the most deafening hurras of Ex; lish crowd, and the most enthusiastic bravos of the French beholders. It is even said that Sir John by all the body of © iterail ef cnr ol Musgrove, despite the gravity of his position and 5 ¥ of savante oni i of oar city~ cake make = oilemen a French pun, which 3M. Dupaty was much appreciated among his co~ was as follows:—‘ Ab! ah! these Frenchmen will find de Peau en haut,” and his pretty niese, who ac- companied him, as well as many aldermen, who ‘The admirable picture of the famed American ainter, Leutze, representing “Washington cross- ie the Delaware,” has just sent from Dussel- were at his heels, laughed very much at the joke. | arto New York, where it will be exhibited to the On Friday morning, at about noon, the Lord amateurs of the great city. A gentleman who had Mayor and his com, ou, Aas having shared an | t)¢ pleasure of seeing it, assures me that there ne- se poner * ts apr ies took three | vor was anything more beautiful seen on the other carriages, escorted by a body of republican guards, to the depot of the N. orthera railway, where shay: | 149.04 the Adlaoiia, “Mit. Zale ‘to the hrongt Parisa few days ago, on his way Statey, where ho wil arrive a short time before hig tableau. He had with him a ma, cent daguer~ reotype of his work of art, which I had the pleasure of seeyng at Messrs. Goupil and Co.’s, the renown- ed print sellers. ‘his mere sketch of the picture is really so beautiful that I do not hesitate to say that there is but one painter in Euro Vernet-- able to compose ang execute suc! Ere long you will see and Judge for yourselves, Theatricals have been dull for some time past, and it is probable that my next letter will have to mention waay interesting novelties which are now in rehearsal, and will be produced in a few days. The only new play worth being mentioned, is he: were read by the administrators and by MM. Berger, his son, and M. Carlier, the Prefect of Po- hee. They all arrived safely in London, at hulf- past twelve o’clock the sume night. The Com- missioners of the Exhibition of the Crystal Pa- lace, a8 wellas the famed Chinaman, Key-ing, re- turned by the same train. ‘The storm, which now rages all over the conti nent, has caused much damage in several places and citie! any departments of I'rance have been ruined by a sudden flood, and the incessant fall of r At Lyonr, the river Rhone ran over its le- vees, and half of the city w: jomerged. Several houses, a large number of boats of all kinds, wood rafts, and wine trains, were cut into pieces and de- that of La Goton de Beranger,” a vaudeville in peor 4 apne Uhole somntey, yon the other side of five acts, by Messrs. Corman Dutertre and Gran- In the department of the Ain, accidents of all | S¢» Which created quite a sensation at the Thea~ . me Page, the prettiest ac- tress of Paris, enacted the part of the famed Go- ton, and was capital. The other réles, by Leclére, Perey and Mutée, proved very successful. Besides this new play, the Spanish dancers are still attract- ing crowds. Messrs. Godart and Poitevin are still continuing their ballooning excursions through the air. Whils; { am writing these lines, 1 see from my window the balloon of M. Godart, passing above the Place de sorts took place. Stee coaches were overwhe|med by the waters, steamboats ran ashore, and were wrecked, and several thunderbolts caused the death of men, women, and cattle. In Switzerland, at Berne—in the Oberland, at Unterseen, and Ellenbach, the rivers have reached such a height that the sudden flood has caused the utmost age. In the Dutchy of Wurtemberg, and inthe Grand Dutchy of Baden, many disasters have taken place. = lies of Ulin, otingen, Esslingen, Uron- pee ry it ray gdera bight, Oe ae s ‘q Mellbronn, Maggold, Alltensteig, Kan, Among the wonderful enterprises of the age, I Leonberg, Kirilheim, Obendorf, Rottenbourg, Tab- | past necessarily mention that of a company which, bingére, and Ibenem, have been particularly in- jured. The smallest rivulets were changed into torrents, and «ince the flood of January Lith, 1819, no flood as terrible as this has been witnessed. ‘The railway of Carlsruhe has been much damaged. At Mayence and Nuremberg, the Rhine reached a height of 13 metres 3 centimetres. for the amount of $3 (15 francs), proposes to furnish. every subscriber with thirty tickets (first rank) to all the theatres of Paris, including the Grand Opera, the Theatre Francais, and the Comic Opera House. The bills of the enterprise are alread: posted, the prospectus pul ed, and toe affair i r going on. Thirty evenings spent in all the public Pe ks pie erry 4 et Eeagieal ted ae Places of amusement for Who will not sub- where the trees were torn into pieces, the roofs driven off, the fields opened, and the crops destroy- A statue has just been erected, in Leipsic, to Dr. Haknemann, the celebrated inventor of homeopathy. ed, A large number of cattle were killed, and yg About two hundred families ‘were left witaout a | A very curtous fact is, that the very ci:y which now renders 0 many honora to Hahnemann, was shelter. In Gallicia, the same storm caused much | £0 bitter against, him that he wae obliges to lovee ee Al it, so disagreeable was his life with the inhabitants. Mile, Catharine Hayes, the great vocalist, is here in Paris, and will soon depart, with ber fellow artiste, to Liverpool. Mr. Davis, manager of the French company of the New Orleans theatre, is busily engaged in forming his new troupe. From what I know, he will return to Louisiana with an excellent company. AMERICANS IN PARIS. G. Elliot, New York. J. B. Lawrence, U. 8. Le~ gicre, a violent chock of an earthquake was felt on the first Sunday of this month (3d inst.), at ten minutes past six o'clock. A violent subter- ranean explosion was first beard, and immediately a shock was felt, which was followed by two others, at the intervals of two minutes each. Never, since 1825, has anything of the kind been felt at Algiers, and, though it was not as violent as at t! epoch, when the city of Blidah was overturned, it caused many curious | ( jjyypelit 5. Cen jon incidents. Inthe public coffee houses, those who pons ppm tng al s. aoe Leon Cincinnati. were busily engaged with an ice cream, ran off. | 7, M. Judson. . J. Arthurs, Penusyivauia. The native ladies, who ordinarily are so much | 8 Levinger, Utica Dr. J.P.A.Thinson, Charles» covered that one can scarcely see their eyes, ran | Wm. Baker, Jr., Boston. ton. J. W. Beott, Lexington. G. B. Barrows, Frivburg. J Drake, New York. J.B. Biltbee, Philadelphia. B. T. Fly, Louisville. Teter Roberts, N. York. b, Biseaccianti, Londom. J. Cushing, Baltimore. G. W, Morris. 5. Javolina. J. P. Harrison, Cincinnati. in the streets unveiled, and in a very natural cos; tume, which was, of course, to be unted for, at this warm season of the year. Their husbands were so much frightened that they did not observe that their better hal ves had forgotton to cover jr New York. 8. Jones, Penusytvania, themselves with the costume @ lt Bloomer, and they | H. It Per Providence. John Routh. Loalslane. only thought to utter she well known sentence, | Dr W HL Massey. Cinein, ©. M. Connolly, New York, “There is but one God, and Mahomet is his pro- | A. B. Nichols, Virginia, L, A. Thomar, Keotueky, het !”? W. Bond Norwich. Whilst the “true believers” are thus afilicted in Algiers, a certain number of their brothers have invaded the streets of Paris, and it afiurds much pleasure to the curious to look upon these Algeriaes Ww Dv York Gressed in the genuine costume, caring hate wea- | }; 4 Be wiuie ds” vo pons of w: nd thus visiting the monuments and | 8. . B Rodriguez, New Orleans. places of amusement in our capital. Some among | E. Eowere, Baltimore. W.E Aiken, 8 Carolina. them are able to understand and speak some wor W. Brown, New Jersey. John Leask, Albany, of the French language, and they do not hesitate to | T- © Ellesor, Bellevue, T. & Coles, Virginia. ask the details upon each monument they are look- & A. Bruoeter. 8t. Louis. ip, When they wish to express their gratitude Fasithon Motus, W. Test. > a Geddes, Cincinnati. J. J. Porter, Pennsylvania. attention by the Frenchmen, they olfer | Pennsylvania, W. 8. Nadoisk, Virginia. them a cigarette, which is, among them, the greatest | A Shee Seer ay : bonor they can offer to one. Decidedly, Paris | J. W. Brown, New Jersey. will soon be the rendezvous of all the nations ofthe | § Miller, Alexandria. worl Hi. Hardisty, Bal These Algerines wore all present, on Sunday last, | More anon, at the Champ de Mars, to witness the experiment of Mr. Phillips, who, as is known, is the isveator of an annibilator, by the aid of which a fire is imme- diately put down and reduced to nothing. A wood- en house had been built in the centre of this large ground, aud it had been filled with tar, shavings, and combustibles of all sorts. As soon asa match had been applied to these inflammable matters, the whole was in a blaze; and instantly Mr. Phi having opened his apparatus, which looks like a big lantern, a sort of white gas evaporated, which, directed upon the blave, put it down as if by on- chantment. Thousands of plaudits were bestowed upon the inventer, who has decidedly won much fame, ard deserves to be decmed ono of the bene- Our Venic > Correspondence. Venice, August 8, 1551. Thé Free Port of Venice—Two American Ladies Travelling Alone—Art—A Copy of Titian for Baltimore—Gossip--Americans in Venice, &. The restoration to Venice of her tree port tran- chise seems already to have imparted an impulse to her mercantile transactions. Her port is already quite Glled with vessels of all deecriptions, and from all nations; and not a day passes that does not wit- ness an addition to the number. Soveral large factors of humanity. Another riment of the | 2glieh ships have recently arrived. The arrival of same nature = grep ys , next. ‘ the bark Hebron, from Richmond, I mentioned in canton, t! of wi ut into effect = clecteialty, has just p thee ned ris Vineonean po my last, and other American vessels are shortly ex. pected. Everything now enters Venice free of im- Post except tobacco, salt, ealtpetre, wine, and provi- sions in quantities. Arms and munitions of war aro not admitted at all, and are deposited with the port officers while the vessel is in port. The Hebron sails for Marseilles, in ballast, in about a week whence the returns to the United States. E But few Americans have visited Venice the week proved very satisfactory. No doabt this experi- ment will create a revolution in the art of war. ‘The annual fair of Beaueaire, which, as is known, is early the rendez rous of ail the commercants of the Western countries, has not been ag profitable as it usedto be in former soasons. Nevertheless, it has been remarked that this fair was much more visited than heretofore, by ‘Turks, Greeks, and Ey ptians; and it is said that these sons of the 0) ha bh rient found out that Fronch goods, particularly the cloths beautiful carriages, to which were harnessed the this journey of 6,000 miles, from > most magnificent horses of the world. complished (adios, unus: Southampton i rnaut, in India, will not | r ts oy a festival of Paris, in 1851. t ced upon their ba; great seal of his le to Mr. Barnard, London, Mr. Law- KEAge the protection gation, aad consigned ugge ar ccmparison wit! Lock out, Americans, and come to Europe to wit t or word, upon their long and tedious journey b out twent; engeged ina game of brecar jog ties ther teu to le ing the steame; wae on ind they had a day hey were ali take: t for Greece, and | | + vight on the steamer Trieste. At six the morning they reacked that port, ond immedi went on board the steamer for Corfu and the Tacos. The experiments with the ewi inming garment, are still continued on the River It is, indeed, |