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= ee IEG ‘ which, deciding , from sheer neglect. I nope when I | de Pi But there are relatives, more or lees | vernment and police could not ‘the peas Saw givers,” continued the General, ‘ omitted to ta- aay gest which old tare le pc abe wicca antag ihe Crp tai a Cia counee etinagebel be wrth By battary inn ald,” eet sorade, more or as iatimala, ofthe ce of Anricae citizens, ae " Slade parricide in their penal code, because they | TF ihe noble Vissount to the surface. That he is am- | (2 Amides ep tel rp feed ghes (oy hod paar As fox, bounds, accustomed (0, hollow, de | Seetipher famAy,” eaplacee the Preach, oa crane impossible; even so must | bitjous of guiding the vessel of Btate throagh | ° Alma, {in him a devoted friend in dimeult vi. | Botbing te whe ht know, hate the ‘. Senna none enol | Me Serhan jonain rama acesatccrgicd, | reared, eer Sms cas | em ine arses (tae ann WAR. : ‘ pe in the hour o oubt 50 | Baworthy of consieration, since gach union would | es ATMS ever entirely ooaed. 1a the evemt | snrs"(iies to tie grattuse of efpubl aad ts os | Gclclous period of ta it dela vile, when its Gegus: | er: Frasilimy Deane and Lee; becense, Voltaire be 3 racter of murder. ties are 0 | are powerless to soothe a yours, an mit 0 . hy have all the cha a oF amin ipeciel exile, Gpeo yer — om Hr teins ausursuce Uncieehae ti a forthe eet nics canbe enjoyed ‘without the cere- | blessed a grandson; becouse Lafayetteand | |. THE WAR IN TRE CRIMEA. | The reply of Prussia to the last Austrian cirenlar | each other, and the almost certainty of probisitory | wyslf of ihe Marshak, the thaents’ with which he is Tow col is Paris such a sea | several other French officers, whore names they sy od femme at pnd ot tae 0h. September has been published. Itis a | taxation being resorted to he the parpans ot the fam iy fe Massel, Gotu ets x3 iam se bog A ohana the oat abu pa ped “on our side” in the révolu- bg brmine f mes a besleged yom mu may loog winded document, talking loud of German in- we ae, Ps es ee —— | pincere expression of them. N oa iluetriong spirits of Ragland take this opportanity a) war: ‘and serene, M. Gels jot as written : he Perle an Aad grn bn 9 nga J ses a new protocol (!) and farther ja be everything to the latter, as The date of this letter is the 16th, and it is only to cross the channel, boudotrs whic! eulog, ‘ashington, inform A letter fromVarna, dated 21st of October, ‘that the per cael waa by thes the ieaderahip of the House of Commons | published in the Moniteur on the 26th. ‘The doca- | te sendin Sie aeninn oiteeenatemaion: thom taal lne eae Penal reneet took blaoty oad + fre of the allied land batteries was Syed at half-past iy, but the texthas not yet reached me, ‘here | Would be removed from Mr. Disraeli, This leader- | emt it appears, waa not originally intended for 12.Juxtsporiton with the “ingng Jak se swith the veryuame of "repub- | o'clock the 17th against Bebaatopo. AX the cme ay aguateustatha’ Andisiaged Praminaioaient | > OO ae eres Wad ould never‘sate. | official pablication; bot, in cobsequence of provgy, for iden, plleopbical mon come to Paris to meet | cyto permitherepailican sympatsonat Lafayette | 9. port ibe Fogle tose athe la, ad tuo Prenat Zoaddress another joint note to Russia, Truly it is Fy be renewed; but to Lord Palmerston they would | lent rumor throughout Paris that the Emperor Cee ee ee ran Ba oneger ng Soll pom weawaie: tie one Ye | those on the right. zie Falls blew up the outer fort ‘me th te documents were over. | be obedient as lambe, ane | at heart anything but sorry to have lost s very trou- | i7'he Drees he silent, tongues, bothof men and women | themselves have never forgiven him for having pro; | tower,” while the French the quarantine fort OE uoananartseh-tes Gn Ghonasten |. secret of this dislike to Mr. Disraeli oonsists |, b1seome friend, the friends of the famally made it a leverMorn moment ceceer "That season is, almost glaimed Lule Fhilipe aa thebestof republicans” | cn sir wei! ican ted teentered the Principalities, thon is Austria ed Nog an adventurer. Haat Ball 1 | special request that his Msjesty would order its in- teeinning oops generally facta babes ; tifea ‘at — 7 Dame in = capitals pot | Lord Westmoreland received a despatch y, aC~ Dound ‘by her treaty with the Porte to drvad of being juggled, and looks upon Disrsell s8 | gertion in the Moniteur. Nothing certainly can be be? f° ths tit of Stuasry, Wien ie fe hoped thas | library of St, Genevieve, and on trout of a large | cording to, which the pang of the tno forts ot tne em expel tha force. This would settle the neither more nor Jess thana very talented rascal, | sore bona Ade than the expressions of personal es- bastopol will. be natured enough to capita. | house, built by one of his admirers, and still stand. | tr1nce to the harbor of Sebast Pithe allies had about 1 them by 08. wo se wuo would sell bim to morrow if it served his titude it ; at the same time, | Inte before bad w sets in, both on account of | ing in one of streets of Paris—his bust ie artillery 6 the aliad. Seste_ specnvennes oes uestion at once. Irather think, therefore, that 5oge, Mr. Disraeli has gone thi evel teem and gra' contains; ’ e befo A at the ‘and bis aite ine men wounded, b ‘allies and for the sake of that deversity of topic J, and bla porte rery | ‘Vixxa, Sunday, October 29, 1664. the Russians have not reentered the Principalities. _ of the politics] vane, and men ¢: forget it. fhe | the old saw, which cays mich forms the great charm of Parisian . | printshop window. But it be remembered | ric Fremden Blatt newspaper yesterday received news General Baron Hess, commanderin-chief of the | tory party mado a rich use of him a OE eee i Sebastopol is uppermost in all men’s | that Franklin earned the conspicuous place which | of date 19th, from the Crimes. It was said that the a sali Ivania, has | that great man’s death has the most invet- | 1s of the samo opinion stil, thoughts, and however other enbjecte may be talked | he held in the Parisian auciety of his day in spite of | discontinued the bombardment because the vattery Saeeen Seres fa. Galicia and Trisayivesis, crate of his encnties, and the instramout of his tor. | d more than one illust-ation on this occasion. eat Once the | his republicanism, by his io fame, Not to | quarantine fort, at which they fired, were silenced. been oned to Vienna. He has hadtwoor ture ig hallowed by no one, will find more , ss about, all ideas are concentrated there. athe | oe Aral Ratmaedintcie | “Saas locn on tle part of teal easanatinemaes Maree Interviews with the Emperor and Count Buol. ouger lives for Disracli Pm tye glory of | jardbrigpa sate <i — fortran eattled, them, fanoy ny. will eagalels. ad aby reach pb OF those airs of try From the camp before Sebastopol, Ooteber 19, i at gentleman, therelore, very much ted. | wi Adams Gelightod Mates ten :— Wf Anstris can ouly decide, she at once gains s | ft) Sill minister, no conservative, aiministrstion | $urer; an admirable tool fer the Emperor's parpoces | 18 oe Nea a erion We'atec: | Helvetina, Few éiplomatista have better + realised” | SNTICeD ve atlonced the Qua: long desired object—supremacy in Germany—and | wonid willingly dispense with him, for his powers of in times pest; but now that the boat which carries Mate te sive, Bak Yor the present I am | the advanta; of their being ‘ladies’ men” | rantine battery, and continue their attacks Fort Prussia will sink into a second rate power. If the | mischief are on record, and are not likely to be easily | a hie fort hi foie Aas water, © b o ‘pugnaciously disposed of | than did “poor Richard” at Paris. He knew | Alexander and the loop-holed wallthat ‘the tewn Emperor hag the pluck to grasp the banner forgotten. peeee nes has 62h Pane | the, United States thet I hear’ of nothing | what he was about. Did he not always | of sebactopcl on the southwestern side, areiiany traily in bis left band, and draw his beaon of the late Sir R. Peel is taking a leading | most excellent hg = Moe yee mY De | ema > good will towards her have in bis toy of, 8 acientine | “it ras not without loss that the allied squadron bord ogeast Tas, the German empire may bo | Bf the wounded, Hi fater lef hints car iagome | Seb oe many lat, he makes France believe Pod snd nelelaned simran oe Inrge, expanse of oan ne the poune D TT ADIaMIn? Bovine | lost altogether 100 killed and 00 wounded iat Three Tevived under the house of Hapsburg. of some £20,000 ayear, which he ts understood to | dées Nayolconce, ere ee ee ase has just returned to Paris ofnot atow ofthe grandesdames, | {7.42 aid de camp of the Tren ate a There is nothing stirring elsewhere in Europe. 8Pend tolerabiy freely. The late baronet and ho | coxtrary. | ee ae ll heen ilinatured | who bad caught the fashion ling him, some! ‘Agamemnon, bearing the Ang of Sr Etmand Ie A ssiaraay abn cncdnd ou French Lt feat ata ibrar |, tt he ml of te Maral the long yg Wk Sr pr of | ered i ern the mgm Of | to Mee kta ¥ 5 F 3 ry company. In Spain a ministerial crisis is spoken of. | fe was outlaired for delt for several years previous paar rie drama canis ce caleigetey i each chara, rithous acquit 6Ry ne ee rey er Groait his gge ine/Weambler: “TGanek: | ete a ete eae OF, ee. Seana ie Dena” the prouesbarradctae ot yet fue He mgmang. atone let, Ou | hla wih hk Araed hun oly angie, | ABAI-Gaon nin word tha man Us pane: | be me mre hfe abi | Ma cig Sa rn." ones. Hoe isa g is S ’ een created. Te fe note pretty wertatn’ that zoe | Hikhly, and would ike to'poawoss his father's Roto | who was about tobe married; a few days before the | #ly dill fairly settled, we should really | the king cared to show for tho republican philoso: | sapult, of which we bed tie tessine coocment bp Oe ere eC ae ce em saat the | riety and fame, without undergoing the necetsary | T. ooscny took place, the Emperor desired him to | ats aePeerabensrtce Muely setlod, we shoddy oF, tases the King lost no opportunity of tena. | Sar steamer from Europe. Emperor cf the French and the Empress Eugenie labor and painstaking. His brother, Frederick Peei, him folhis cabinet, ‘after ig | Cri Pen ‘s nt of more importance those ladies of the court who had been bewitched | Private information us to suppose that the aye uhm nomi MRE Reh cicnsen | earn ine havea | sic OWS arpa | Wasnt An anon at | Sra ey re a ee eee ee tbe caauals i | to him. Sir Robert's income was upwards of £59,000 | ter o¢ indifference to him, he ‘presented him a roll | Di,the, Gor! a ee nusted ar the populseity | venient utenell, ved at Sevres, | Huasisns threw up daring tie Ini tigre tee Windsor Onstio at his last visit are to be sumptuous: | a year, and to each of his younger sons he left.an in- of notes to the amfount of 400,000 francs, a3 a dota- | buntin, of Espartero, who, in his turn, is of iu fone with a portrait of her idol: | Ootoher, and from they threw shell with ted up. A series of bails and festivals are to be | come of £5,000. 4 By-the-bve, #: is nientioned in the book ing effect into the French trenches. ney te eel | ,, Hasty gossiping sketches of this nature are somo- | tion to his daughter, The Marshal pocketed overned by an irresponsible society, per: | | By these, ei in the book | snnoying . given in their honor. The Emperor is to be invest- | 4.69 neal s who, ins foreign couatiy, | the sum, and gave his daughter half! In fact, ly sitting at id, which exercises a fatal | in which Mr. Jarvis, the delineator THE RUSSIANS SAY THAT NO DAMAGE 18 DONE. bd with the order of the garter, with all the cere- taken interest in British politics, and’ as euch'i | the Marshal's whole history is sife with similar nec: | influence over the National Guard, the Ministry, Bendwich arn » tried bis hand ao bing expbasy at "Vienna had received & monios of the occasion. I dined yesterday in Kiog venture to offer them. Untversity Civs. | pote ae castlee cage was in She habit of pad by saey sil i arg pny noe Gout amine 6B serers ay Btep into ee a awe morning of Aa kowd jag enim Mb Biro carter teehee Renee Lonpon, Tuesday, Oot. 31, 1364. | ever, thia occupation proved too great temptation | is «ndeayoring to play tween the | 'a afew minutes ago, I learned the # all on 'y to the 20th, but Toould discern s small, unpretending honse,in whfoh | yy, six1; ayain—He is Expelled from the French Terri- | for his principles. Considerable curiosity isexcited | people dia ie court, but’ the latter’ has | the copies of this book on sale in Paris have jast | without much damage to the defences. sho present Emperor once had « mall spartment | tory The Sieve of Sebattopel—Contradictory Statements | t0 know whom the expression, ‘materé de timides | sad misgivings that ltg end is approach. | been seized Pete ao nok Leow hat was its | , October 26, saying:— ‘Tempora mutantur et nos mutamur cum illis. “Lan Boon fis Toa Dior Napoleon's Letter to | he splits to he Duke: of Cembeldgo and ing. bgt bi the of Mee Saas is | or tieal coms Perhaps it was mistaken for | ,, The bombardment of Seer contioned up be T forgot to mention that Eupartero has beem aban- = Madame St, Arnaud—Timid Counsels—The Austro™ | age 2 expedition. madness, ‘ad "Admiral | the way of abdication. ee fairly to | St. John’s “ Pictures of Paris,” which, of | # pea popes eo @oned by the English. | Prussian Policy—Prussia Plays Double~Bavarian | Dun Hansen lost eae ‘England in re- | have explained the dificulties which such a demarche bec pre ae ead Russian pease ue dora ceggat The Queen Dowager of Bavaria has just died of Advice—The United States and San Domingo—Return | ference to it; but is it probable ti&t any such allu- | would entailon the Committee of the National v ieieea? which bas just 9 se the | | Baines sidesauxse, 6 Panera BI ratty the cholera. Of the Baltic Fleet to Kiel-—iscellaneous. tion could he endorsed by: Negoleaad Zoesomplaints | Guned, the real, tacks F eteataeatbaty ine ae Teagasc sae eens volame | 204h.—‘We returned the fre of the «cay withaue- ” fe ‘ons a Cruvelli's whereabouts has not yet heen discover- In my last letter mentioned that Mr. Soulé, | Bebreeret gi thin eau gh tye ce Em. | the Quen quiet at all riaks; but the royal lady 18 a | entitled tf eat lowera- 5.08 <xtect Wes | Tho:fro from the enemy's shipe! Bad 1c) beta Fee ®4. She is spending the honeymoon somewhere; American representative at Madrid, had been refased | peror will undergo a more rigid criticism in England | little di It, and there are few ae co gr | signed, hte sohbet aio Baer credo A part of our reserve has arriyed, 01 (he remainder is bat it will prove an expensive one to Baron Vigier permission to pass through France on his return to in France, than nae Sevgrasined step rae = yon td ine band, and is ecb oi expected. ‘ fi | _ The Council of State has received instructions | strange it must seem ica | hes , 4 BREAGH EFFECTED IN THE WA! Af Whe’ does not soon come to terms with the opera | the Spanish capital. It sooms that the statentemt from the Emperor to take into its consideration a | ful, wrong headed, obstinate girl, should have it in | lately publisied aittle beok— Ger ties title of Les THE ALLIES PREPARING 1° fhouse. She has been condemned to pay heavy dam- py peak It soa regen el eer os | Pension of 20,000 france fo Milane St. Arnaud, as | her power to make or mar the happiness of — ae a pied an zy yon mt cee ‘The Paris Moniteur of ths fges, aud « fine per diem till she resumes her engage- ican residents at j, ON . Mason = a nat recompense. game * ‘mmes abuse revious pension also for has had some communications with M, Drouyn _ the w fe of Marahal Bu, KS Isly, in to be aud, de, THye, the Freath. Miner of” Foregn | Sued ty tho mame nat d vo Affairs, on the subject. It appears thet Mr. Soulé Jant has received the following despatsh from Gen, left London for Calais with the purpose of visiting | Canrobert:— Paris, and so on to Madrid. On his arrival at Oalais | he was waited upon by the Mayor, who siguified to | Bile “Giak av onte id bee received, from ‘the | fer wivcid moe imeem istliccmeertigar wien ee French government to prevent his passage through | were pusuing 80 industriously. I trast that after to. the French territory. Mr. Soulé then asked what | morrow, the 15th, we shal ve seventy pieces in bat- Would be done in caso of his non-compliance. The | fr at intervals an’ animated cangonade: suretiane report is (I cannot vouch for its accuracy, that the | ment. Lonpon, Oct. 27, 1854, The English Ministry—Is Prospects and its Em- barrassments—Sketch of Sir William Moles- tworth—His Position as Regards the Cabinet— Chances of a Coalition between Lords Palmerston and Derby—Disracli— Tie Peel Family, §¢., &c. ‘The ministers are all constantly occupied, and the State of public affaira keeps the town in an agitation She like of which has not been witnessed since the pessing of the great Reform billin 1332. Thare is wothought of Parliament being assembled before February; and, in the interval, many circumstances May oocur to prop up the administration. Sebaste pol may prove & tower of strength for Lord Aber. een, if not for his friend the Czar. At the same Rime there are signs abroad that the coalition is not &o be permitted to ride off on the glories of the ; ib was quite enough that they should do so on ite speculations during the last session; and already many anxious deliberations have taken place at the various ministerial residences, the importance of Which would not be unworthy of more formal cabi- net councils, Lord Aberdeen is not disinclined to another Reform bill from Lord John Rassell, if only 8 means of drawing off the public mind in some Gegree from the war; and Sir William Moles rorth, QUARTIER GENERAL, DERANK SkBasrovoL, October 13, 1854. We opened the trench on the $th at 10o’clock. The enemy, who did not appear to have ex; us upon any success. Our loss ls next to pale. The ee Mayor telegraphed to Paris for instractions, and Ls ateraci sranphocnh comtes aanaicessigely o6is; Lan received for answer that if Mr. Soulé persisted, he , fortunately assumed its former fineness, was to be arrested. Mr. Soulé thenreturned to | Again :-- daehilvish Bhatia ance London. . P ‘ : 4 A ) Ai France Excelienc: As regards the siege of Sebastopol, the accounts Pr srry rr le i rl to hits ed are very coatendictory. It is offlallyconrmed that Tv of var one, Rrnch and he other Bagi, the bombardment commenced on the 17th October, | they bring news, of Sebestopol from the oth. It ap. by land and sea. The last relisble accounts are to the poe certain that the fire from all the Pestecies, aro fy 2let October. We learn that the fleets were pctively ps. ohened on fhe 171) | the tro ects ree? end thelr engaged and suffered some loss, namely—90 killed | room to believe that the ships might be usefully gmploy- and 200 wounded. The Agamemnon, Admiral Lyon's | 61102 an Kmportant Botnet me not, Goubted, that the aid i page to a suffered most; the Retri- ere position was soot aakiaree ory, and the sanita- ution hada mast carried away by a shot, and ashell | ty state of the s excellent. which exploded on board Admiral Hamelin’s ship, | Ageia An ofa do sor agp fc | the Ville de Paris, killed one of his aides-de-camp | Warsaw the 24 th, gives the Sollowing sews " and wounded an>ther. Fort Quarantine is reported ‘The allies open on land and sea on the ° to have been silenced by the French squadron, {among the tin Prince Pasklowitsch nde that om the member for the metropolitan borough of Southwark, whist the forts to the left of the harbor on entering | morning of the 18th, at the départure of the courier, the Takes such a bill a sine qua non of his continuance | fire from the ships had not recommenced but that of t dre said to have been blown up by the English, | {'t from the ships had not Ya the ministry. : Another account adds that a breach had been made | ‘The date of all this is Vienna, October 25. ‘The position of this barone: by the sideof Mr. i the walls, and that the Place was to be stormed _ The Monveur gives also the following from Wel- Gladstone, Chancellor of the Ex shequer, is certainly at the point of the sword and bayonet. Prince Men- oe ene Riker nitsepiorea hot among the least remarkable of the chances and schikoff had not made any attempt to attack the novcret sete ence hares swe have already an: Bhangés which have occurred to party in England camp of the allies at Balaklava. A Russian tele. duce! and Saxe ducal powers, at which M. le Comte Gauring the last twenty years. Sir William is the Beust, Envoy at Berlin, assisted, in order to deliberate graph purports to bring news from Sebastopol to , on the attitude necessary to be observed in the great eighth baronet in descent from the first, who was | the o3q. It enya that the bombardment Continued, question of the day, and ospecially in face of the differ- Governor of Jamaica in the reign of Charles the Se- that little damage had been done to the forte, that a scbeat pessoas existing between the two great Gorman tond. Hesucceedod to the title at the early age of successful gortie had been made against the French, | The necessity of union and common getion oa td thirteen. He was bornin 1810. At the age of nine- n which eleven guns and cight mortars were apiked. parol praetor core Sol Aen he went to pursue his studies at Cambridge, but, ye death of Korniloffis confirmed. Lord Dunkel. defensive, between Austria and Prussia, on the basis or- scale in Comey ig te neem bead on be Mara of Caso, re Gi Se oem _ bs) saconnpent Soe oe pres al ported to have been made prisoner by the Russians. | et the courts in question to act in this sense, both at , that he remov name from From all this you will see that the accounts are Berlin an 4 s Sransfer it to Gottingen. Hore it wasthat Sir Wm contradictory. tase “and tua public of the ie Tanase Moleorth imbibed, among ether philosophical 8” "Some sensation has een coated in political ci acgordance' with its sentiments — a caine! Quisitions, opinions on revealed religion ~ cles by the sentence made use of by Louis Napoleon |. We are at length in posscasion of the text of Ger his present jaxtsposition with Mr. Gladstone in his letter to the wife of the late Marshal St. Ar- | {eneicl of the 10th inet, by which Prussia replies to Crrhose views verge on Popery) #0 extraordinary: noug, He there alludes to the timid counsels over: | from this document that not only does Prassia main- Bir William edited the works of Hobbs, and openly yuicd by the Marshal. Explanations will be de- | Seaeor Caution bet ake. declares, in the plainest Proclaimed himself a deist. On the passing of the mended from the government as soon as Parliament | manner, that she will not in any way'unite in the views scsmiticgaished hist ta Parinovent as on clare, ™ett® s8t0 Whom these words are applicable. Tein of Auta. ot roads the ine of conduct to be purrued and distinguished himself in Parliament as an ultra (ear that there was not unanimity in the councils | sent European complications, Aa to the form of the Mineter—and Rochuck were termed the first fruits = 7» a.ustro- Prassian entente, or rapture, whichever | (tlie at Berlin, ‘wanting in bitterness towards Austria, bf the Reform bill; and when the authors of that titled | The despatch does not appear so favorable to an under. you may choest to eall'ts; kas stot yet bean sevted landing between the two great German Powers as was Breat mencnre became afraid of thelr work, a2 either way. Courlers are travelling daily between ,'nJinf between the two great German Powers as was Were attaining overy nerve to allay the popular e@- vienna and Berlin, and the strings are at the pre- | froma first reading, to form a just appreciation of the Ebusiaem they had exited, it was these three young ent moment in the hands of Baron yon der Pford- Cneon Ph pment nt na ee fe mai] ‘men that led the Sy opie baie gener ten, the Bavarian Prime Minister, the same indivi- not always interpreting them in thelr due sense and oa their banners the word “ Onward.” Poor dual who presided over the Bamberg coalition. H> ™eaning. & back, who became the terror of the House of Com- has intimated to Prussia that if she quarrels with | mansedby Gee ee Son opposer no} mons, has been smitten down by paralysis, whenall A xetrig, Bavaria, Saxony, and the other States of looking towards Percop, ready to repulse the hus. the world was opening to him. Leader, of whom the Ramberg coalition, will be under the necessity, slans in the event of their marching on Sebastopol. — etrong age sins it Uk cit on the principle of self-preservation, to join Austria, the 14% from Varna for the Crimea, way, an % He therefore recommonds Prussia to make it up with i tters from Bt. Petersburg state that the rela- De the first city in the empire, retired ‘Anstria—to join Austria at the Dict, and thus pre- 4 between Count V. Enerbaxy, the ‘Austrian othe south of France, and is still living an epicu- Germ: join. | Aimbaseador to the Russian Oabinet, becomes every rean Li Cannes, righborh: bia) saan nee any, tae oe Wise 8 View vo jue wore cool. An insignificant formality alone prée- eS ae Wak a reat Tae oo ham Moles ing the Western Powers, bat to make conditions | vente a formal rupture, and for a long time Es z= wrte (fot poor Chavis, Batler, who was Lord | with Austria, that {in the interests of Germany she | hazy has been made to feel that such a ru Durham’ 7 —— = fone ~ yt only re- | ) Austria) will not go to war with Russia. | ture is approaching. The same letters sta! course eon & varie ayes one; but, to honor be it spoken, he has never swerved from hhis principler. Cornwall, on becoming more ac = with his religious opinions, oustsd him the representation. On thia he sought an Dpen-armed coustituency in the town of Leeds, which Biadly availed iteelf ot his services, and finally the Metropolitan borough of Southwark elected him | thet Prince Menschikoff has come in for a copicus smount of derision for his notion that the position | on the Alma was so exceedingly etzong; and for thie, itis said, he is chiefly indebted to a strcng- minded woman, who, having secured to herself a good place for seeing the battle, expected to beho! arother splerdid illustration of the overthiow o' Pharaoh and bis host. This is the last way the wind blows in thi: quarter. The Morning Post publishes the followiag para | graph, the truth of which I leave to you to decide:— | Woe believe we may state, without fear of contradio- , that « series of negotiations between tho govern- tof the United States and the Republic of San Do- m Ata member, which be coutioues to be up tothe mifogo, has resulted in the establishment of -a protests But the sufferings gone through by the allles since : gee time, His talents azo of the hghiat class, rate onthe ‘part of the United Biates-saromiting vies t*e battle have been terrible. Feat the following industry immenee, and bis ambition of the tually, if not absolutely, to the annexation of that por- tion of theisiand of San Domingo which belongs to the | letter from a private of the Royal artiilery:— republic of that name. The acquisition of so important | “When the troops barked, I was unable to go ashore, and had to be lifted in and out of bed, and most elevated charactor, It is to him it owing that Canada now hasa government of its " 3 a position in the West Indies by the government of the | & C rus abtehy his doing. The Coote hs Pr noncbemg pon United ates—a portion Uorealexing on either hand the ag oor in ae al porta a a , 5} islands Cuba and Porto Rico, and so directly | % bo he placed himeelf is Mr. Grote, the banker, once ie cur evasWeabditian vuuplegnccunust bavi a4 ont hntlgs + Bethe. board member for the city of London, and the learned | with indifference. It Ix manifestly one of the results of , tke Kangaroo steamer. What with the cries of the historian of Greece, Mr. Grote’s opinions and that ombitious and aggressive policy which the United | dying meh and the horrid stench of the vescel, I Rhose of Sir W. Molesworth, on the ballot, are States appear determined to pursue on both sides of the Was nearly dead myeelf, for there were about three Adentical; and on that subject their arguments have Atlantic. hundreé sick men come down in the same ship, and wever,in or out of the House of Commons, met with an answer. Bat Sir William is alone in the on the ballot, and last session the somewhat Tudicrous fhe Cabinet—Lord Palmerston and Molesworth— we had forty deaths during the pass: ‘hen I airived at Scutari I was admitted Ih heard y ave heard nothing more respecting the con. into the hospital, grees of United States envoys in Germany. London is gradually filling. The weather is quite sight was witnessed of two members of hundred wounded men came down from the field; ana rg ® ey ces mild, like spring. - ~~ = a to cron the aio — out of arsw EASE other, if such it could be called, The Baltic fleet haa returned to Kiel. Sir Charley the hospital that were able to move, to make room Wittum hes ithe pretenava: tothe eherseter of | Naple i il. tuorning to see the doctor, We were vary frtenets adebster, and scarcely ever speaks but om some Our Barts Correspondence | with oar battery during the time the cholera was prepared roy ol His voice is husky, and his treat- ag f in 80 prevalent; for in the First division, to which it socut of his somewhat too philosophic for a : Panis, October 26, 1854. belongs, consisting of three Highland regiments ee eee aren at and — Letter from Lowis Napoleon to Madame St. Ar- and oe tes yd Gears, the ed ey On ppreviat (ouse. I—Sarcasti¢ ANusions in it to“ Te X welve men each every day. ink the Se was {2 allusion tobiin tat Ale Diath rata | Maud—Sareastic AMtuions in it to Timid Ad Jom of the Brith army, by ‘cholers, siace they visers”—Charactervstic Ancedote of the late Mur- ‘thal— Progress of the Siege of Sebastopol— Oficial Despatchcs— Conference at Weimar of the Min ters of the Minor German States—Menschikoff and his Cher Amic--Sufferings of the Allied Troops— The Allies and the United States—Pub- | lic Feehng in Paris with Regard to M. Soulé— the. He Affairs of Spain, §c., &¢. The Moniteur this morning contains the follow. ing letter from the Emperor, addressed to Madame St. Arnaud, It cannot fail to be read with interest: Sy, Cron, Oct. 16, 18 M r mo then I Mar yon ee eho ministry on the withdrawal of their 1 fast y When he said See how your promise wt this measare rerved you in the formation of your @abinet,'—and this i» the part, Bhe landed in this country, is about fifteen hundred, and ihe Frerch far more. Ihe men who survive are 80 weakened that they are scarcely fit to do any: ing. The Guards, 1 think, Yost the most of Since the great ‘battle of the Alma, the estimated loes of the British, killed and wounded, ie about five thonsand; the Freach not so as they were under cover of the guns of » There are a great number of Rassian prison sent down , aod among them threa gor crals ond officers of cifferent ranks, It is a ln mentable sight to ecethe poer fellows in the hospi- tal, lying about in the wards and ages, some of them wounded in five or six different places, some baving lost an acm, some lega, others shot im the head ond different parts of the body. Unfortu. nately qyere is not a sufficient umber of doctors to attend Them, and they are dying oif fa great num- bere every Gays Lsaw twenty one men buried in He hele Lag other Gay) sad they are dying by heopg : y who now waits on formance of that promi-e, much to the an- ce Of certain other members of the adminis tion. Lord Palmerston professes to be indifferent Bbow the matter, “TI shail support yoa, bat you il bring (be house tambling about your ears,” was fs wo ds whem consulted; but it is quite probabie bat be cold not allow bis rad aed of his colleagues | bh a mesouro to interfere with his formin t with Lerd Derby, in the event of a brea reform was entirely out of the question. fet cf the war on public moasures it is Mero eatinate, aod # really popular Vamerston, golag heartily igot, in the humor tie anelve or parry | <1 sptrgagded are maay tar is country - Bo 6 In Maré casted Dig mame Fila the maa and was in for two or three days, when about eloven | lantic. what yet a a jouth belo when French i Madrid. of the | inl” in M \'es they Aime, more ysteriously whispered al full-blown conspiracy for the? asesassination of | the Emperor was discovered, Levan fi Mer period of the ican jter’s 80- ig ear to the Madrid journals Mr. Soulé of at the ver Lt & willin, derously , which the other fis ‘been den princi ll this accused hand, teirito Barqnine ‘The cause for this act of courtesy, not to say for this insult, to an accredited Minister of the United States—a Power with which the French government is, at present, on terms of peate—is, of course, not yet publicly known, Hon. Mr. Soulé is accredited as minister, not to the Court of Napoleon, but to the Court of Isabella. But in his recent visit to Paris, ‘as well as when he first arrived here on his way to Madrid, his passport as American citizen, not to mention his passport as American miaister, sufficed to protect him against all possible inconvenience, for which his escape, years and years ago, from the consequences of his trial for alleged libel as editor of & French journal, might have afforded, however remotely, any pretext. whispered that during Mr. Soulé’s recent visit, pre- viously to hia departure for the conference at Os tend, his apartment at the Hotel du Rhin was fre- quented by as motley a set of visiters as flocked to the apartment of a certain other guest in the same hotel, in 1848, when Prince Louis Napoleon arrived there from London. If it is not openly alleged that the American set et of omaes to foverment,reoehing even ot anteca hi fow individuals whore and tightly buttoned frock coats are always suspicic aan Police, and who are innocent}; gray to. Coyenne, of consigned to" Brussel ‘awa: OF Switzerland or the Iale of Jersey, that Mr. Soul¢, while aps spol characteristic ers th A Looe dng a the fact that Mr Soulé ion into Prance, as a “sign of its inherent weakness, which it ackno iteelf, by starting at every shadow.” Itmay 2 doubted, however, if the which at this moment presents so impos! t) the world, and rests on 0 solid a basis, alarmed at shadows as itsenemics—‘ their wish ig father to their thonghts’—imagine. Even if it be conceded that the probable cause of the insult offered to Mr. Sould is from the simple fact that he is hy. Soulé, there will not be wanting even Americans who will continue to think that the friends of the American Minister ¢ which, on this as Madrid, those friondg as the Hotel du Rain agaicst the other, the clue to the secret the latter in his dipi may be, neither Soulé (and no political man in the United States has warmer friends or more determined foes than he) can forget that be was en American Minister he was ene oo gd fibidden to land upon Ww , to the Court towhlc The Madrid corresp journal, the Maen nani ea soys that “public opia- | ion is very much occupied with the retarn of Mr. | Soulé, representative of the United States at is probable that this diplomatist will return before the meeting of the Cortes. Many per- fons wonld desire the go sible means to obtain from the American govern. | ment the removal of a man who is known to be one | obstacles to the reesiablichment of the tranquillity of this country.” “poseible meats” be the imifation by the 6; government of the inhospitality of the Preach go- verpment ? We shall seo. Since the English and French alliance, 6ven those Americana in Paria who have loast faith in ita dura- tion beyoud the present war, in more than one way of their old agreeable delu. | sion, ‘‘ that the Americans are better liked by the French than the English are.” ficial the friendship may be which is now pro- Jeered by the French and En; ‘natural enemies,” the friendshi Americans {6 not 4 whit more profound. tay pe Rape Pilg which, as be ivtimal Miss Le bad the misioriune to inspire ‘‘a little French glove shop onthe Rooey were always weloome, doubtless, as long were Sue the Paris, October 26, 1854. men can be accounted for by the possibility that one ae thoem we torr ion then tot oaiien. Hostile Conduct of the French Government towards | Mr. Soulé—Diplomatic Motives Assigned for it » —How Americans Generally are Looked Upon in | o¢ the France—Seizure of Mr. Jarvis's Book, entitled | “ Parisian Sights and French Principles, Seen | through American Spectacles." French Cartca- | ioe Bega coer, company, tures of New York Manners and Usages—“ In- | 9 teresting Events,” not Political, §¢., Ge, $c. | Transatlantic steamers ‘and electric telegraphs | leave you to expect from a Paris correspondent something more than what he finds in the newspa- pers. For once, at least, you will not be disap- pointed. The Paris journals copy, this morning, from the Daily News and the Post of London, the announcement that His Excellency P.Soulé, United { States Minister to Spain, had left Dover by the | South Eastern Company’s packet, on his way to Paris. But they do not add the fact thaton his ar- rival at Calais, night before last, Mr. Soulé was re- d admission into France, was obliged to remain on board the boat, and to return, by midnight, in the roughest weather, to Dover! Such is, neverthe- less, the fact. With this bare statement of the fact, T must deliver it over to the comments which it can- not fail to provoke on the other side of the At- Tt is true that the In diplomatic circles it is the visits of the imperial jours not a beards, slouched to Brussels, to —if it is not said and acted with mot reserve o whispered. y It that le who Whioh slan- complicity with the listen to hoe whe e enemies of the actual French imperial govermment, a front 80 Ca- erate the personal enmity wellas ona forner occasizn at eribe to one of the gursts of , aad consider 2s | of difficulties encountered by | jormatic career. - However this friends nor the foes of Mr. en he was arrested on his way | h he is duly accredited. | jondent of that semi official | vernment to employ all pos: | Will one of those spanish | have been disabused However super those ancient p of the French for Did D'Or er interest” with jaroline Pottatoes, joulevards? He and . Hebert is about to publish a yhiet in ex- Reis and vindloation of the Franch leave which Hedame nein ae Vigier (Cruvelli) lately took ‘m. Niblo has just left cee Stes Lops leted organiz: ion ol - ah op of which I am told et Winio hed also: Soguged ] ornament 4 eo 60 | Carlot Grisi, but Carlotts, who with Giulia won a double fame for the name of Grisi,must post- pone her visit to America until next Me len princi; oee bast ed on the 17tb, arrived. oe Figaro. Paais, Oct. 26, 1854. United States and her Propagandist Politicians —The Soult Affair and its Consequences—Mr. Reply of our Minister to an Angry Tirade from Drouyn del Huys. The “fall of Sebastopol,” so pompously an- nounced by the Emperor on the “field of Hon- vault,” where he courageously awaited the shock of Not to pause upon the way, the “young hope of Austria” fell into the snare, and the results in the precipitated hostilities between the Czar and his protege, and not—coming nearer home—now dwell- ing upon the exulting threats against Yankee arro- : i H rs i ny EF aug eee Eos ae i (i see e i! 43 zee BREE te Ht i ste ct as8 Bee ae i 33 F | States. Of the probability of this gar people will form their own judgment from M. Bonsparte’s course and character. On Tucaday last, Mr. Soulé, being on his return to could go no further in France. He asked to see a copy of the order; but that not being obtainable, he o: &@ telegraphic despatch to be sent to the Prefect at Boulogne, who confirmed the order—Mr Souls having prac determined not to leave the goverament the opportunity of evading the eyorna = rug! wards, of his being refused a passage Fiance. The Acer begged Mr. Soulé to ackuow: ledge that he bad his disagreeable task with as much bina 4 as possible. find no fault with you; the infamy of such acts pare stots only on the forehead of him who insti- es them,’ On the same day Mr. Magon, calling on Dronyn de l’Huys, found himself detained outside with marked diecourtesy for a very long period. When he was gine admitted, the ogee manner a is previous ession. He ts .. wre United States in aga.net the licy of sanestngy the awictt Isles, the Bay of Samana, in their design: inst Cuba, and #0 on in such wise, as to awakt the mind of our very courteous Virginia gentleman the kicd of sensation an Amer- ican fecla when be finds himself without, much doubt, the subjext of personal and national insult. L’Huys went on until he came to the statement that his Mojesty had determined not to pernait Mr. Soulé to pass throngh France on hisreturn to Spain. Mr. Mason asked the reason, but only Abe a gene- ralities were given; bis radenost increasing in earnestness, (to report mildly.) nntil at last he broko out into a violent tirate against one George Sanders. “How,'ttr, do you expect any friendly relations botween the two go- what they please abcut his Majesty’s goverament and potest The Emperor himself, sir, baa red to mie the letter of your citizen to the subjects of his mojcsty; acd, sir, your government must restrain the language of your people; if there is to be a cou- tinuation of fienoliness between the two govern- ments.” The baughty assumption aad the whe ‘Dear ing of the minister roused in the breavt of the Amo- Maisom Dorée, or chez nata Diva, o¢ M'me la Qomkiase rican representetive an indignation quite as bik, if not mush more diguified, than tho me of the eugust No; , as deactibed Huys; and he told Bim very propptly, that all te Gmperor’s go, “Certainly, sir; I | vernments, when your citizens are allowed to say | Pp *_ A letter from Varna info: us that a French steamer, which left the Crimea on ‘i 21st, confirms the news re- spectin, ieety loreover, the land batteries had made a breach. The allied armies were culy waiting for the opening of @ second breach, in ordcr to make the assault. SPIRITED SORTIF OF THE RUSSIANS—A FRENCH BAT- TERY CAPTURED—SIXTEEN GUNS SPIKED—LORD DUNKELLIN MADE PRISONER. According to a Russian lished in the Kreuz Zeitung, date St Petaratare, ref et ) Was, m prisoner. SONS OF THE EMPEROR NICHOLAS DESPATCHE it jcommenc- | Prince vat the awe vibtory hasnot yet | active service in the Lowis Napoleon Getting Werathful Against the | yoked S;ain, was informed by the police at Calais that he |. | | | THE CRIMEA. Sire) and Scholae, youngest send at the Cane atrived at Odessa on the 15th; thence woud roceed, in ‘a day or t juarters, ~ Previous a religious 36,000 of the army. knelt on the field, tis pusrds, and. Ouadlan I, with the Czar. held, in presence his by aoe ander is at Warsaw with tine is the only son now THE BALTIO. Ostentatious peeparstdons bei made tn land for the siege of Oronstadt, which, itis stated, will be the first act of the Spring campaign. Sis ger oie the construction 0 tating belseric, cesrying sack TOE Ser Sees. 2,800 guns—to be ready by the opening of maviga- tion in spring. The are likewise preparations. fleet wil, next tine be under the command Sir Edmund Lyons. . Napier is eick—anable to leave his ship. 5 i 1 F ES 3 7 xe i 8 tS E E i ul BF H E i i bi 4 E E fdr silt Hl E é E 5 | : i i E i é i i G 3 RET 4 4 i ¥e inthe facdity we be fo fac we have acquired for shelli town with our beav, guns, while the attack oo the gsrrison and the forts is brought more nearly home on the other side. The French were enabled te og their first parallel —. 300 yards nearer te peony varies i oy found s layers’ ‘eens sevlonatte ey found a for the ot intrenchienta. ‘Fomine ition probably be found thst, while making 4 1 diversion the Gecisive attack will be western ity of tho lines, General has succeeded, with the assistance of the navy, in erecting a redoubt on the extreme left'of the pe ion, Which has been armed with no less than five batteries, mounting in all fifty-six guns. Meny of these pieces ara of the largest calibre, and have beon taken out of ships of the for the purpose. Tbia work has the double advan. tage of affording an effectual shelter to the French army, in the eyeat ofa strong sortio of the arrison, while,on the other hand, tome of those batterios are £0 placed as to command the western forts and outworks of Sebastopol. It was no doubt against this work that the sortie of tho garrison waa directed which is wentioned by Prince Menschikoff aie despatch of the 230; but we must wait for @ tter authority than that of the Russian Come amine A al before Me credit the aagertion thet eleven French mortars and eight gous were Dy the Rogsiazs on this oocasion.© oa ‘On the Russian forts which are situated nearest to the fea the maritime attack of the 17th of Oolo- “ber waa made, and apperently with success; We still await with extrome interest the part feat of of this engagement, which ig the firat Arme performed the Black Sea forcing the lise of cuukem vessels and the donble boom which obstruct the entranos of the harber, Were fe Rg doubt Shak ome venmela could oome tay