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Patural to them, and a body of $00 or 19,000 men rash- | Although it wonld not be reasopable to found any while the only progress of their adversaries consists ina who had been taken ers on the 25th. He uareasgnably senactiog, advanced te the walls of the piace. They were there | confident a pations om the brevity of the oficial | series of convulsive efforts, not one of which ip suc- , learnt, to the regret all, that out of the many | population, wealt e means of convene Feceived by a we ¢ c h kille despatches, it is not impossible that 1h eserve of the cessful. missing, only two officers, Cornet G. Clowes, of the | were very much less they are now, we mumber of them, # 1 Geuerals may be designed t vn intention of [From the London Globe, Nov. 17.] 7th Hussars, and Cornet’ T. Chadwick, of the 17th | armies, not only in one field, 3,000 miles of, but Wigor, forced them to lings. ly adopting the most vigorous dings. Prince ‘The generai order conveyed to the British army before | lancers, bad escaped that murderous fray, These two | in many places all over world.” We had every- 4 During this last a little before, three clikoff, In his slloged Cespateh to Prince Paskie- febnetopel, by her Majesty’s command—which has just | officers, along with Captain Landriani, a Sardinian off- | where, and never for a moment stopped to consider $m the afternoon, al with & t of th h, ontentatiously announces he will imme- returned to this country after its publication to the | cer, an emateur with the French y, had been made | whether we had not enough on our hands. I fact, ' forces under his 1 the wine the oilensive, and nof allow ‘he allies a troops—smust bave been regarded in itsel’ as anevent iu | prisoners, Prince Menschikoff is said to have remarked | England at that time could be compared to nothing so \ A desperate engage t 1 o Vs however, Lord Raglan and thateventfulquarter. It is not only that British troops | in the eourse of the conversation, that much as he re- | much as that beautiful piece of sculpture represen! Yrom Teborgun the troops pald vilee General ( nay have ascertained that the enemy — will always receive with gratitude the sokaciaienenis gretted it, the allied force was a lost army. child carrying more fruit than it can well manage, and | aaste to support them. is, for th subled from active operations, In of their sovereign, but in this case the manner adds grace Ov the 30th the British heavy cavalry brigade and the | unwilling to relinquish’any of its burthen, even at the | Our dragoons executed two brilliant any ca: ie com! ergy and caution which have — to the act. rempaats of the light cavalry inoyed from their encamp- | risk of the whole. We had wars in all Europe, ia the | fnemy defended themselves most stubb thus far been display th ‘ogress of the siege, | The general order states, within the compass of a very | ment near Balaklava to within the line of redoubtscon- | East and West Indies, and in pmeien, oi at once, | approach of night alone put an end to the éombat. afford sufficient ground for the atthe as- | concise document, the reasons for which the thanks of | atrucled by the French, to the rear of the allied army. and seemed to think that, while our \s were in it her Majesty are conveyed to her soldiers; and in stating i It had been seriously contemplated to abandon Bsla- | we might as well go on. Everybody knows | sg | ane In our share of the day's proecedings 22,000 men were hurried nor uniitly del engaged on both sides. The losses have been great; y follow fi i il business to accumulate, parti- ay follow from the capture , these teasous with the power of lucid and direct lan ‘and thus to contract the lines of defence. The | there is a tendency in al " ours lias been about 4,000 men, and that of the enemy wn cannot yet be fully appreciated; but the all- | guage, the general order shows that the exertions of the | great inconvenience which would have resulted from | cularly when it is not well ba eds! we habitual), at least os grent. t achievement of destroying the enemy’s fleet | offtcers and men baye been thoroughly understood, | leaving so excellent a harbor overweighed every con- | underrate its importance. Thus, in the late war, while This sanguinary affair has been only one of those ac- cannot be much longer postponed. deeply felt, and fully appreciated. man in that | sideration, and Balaklava will be maintained, Every mea- | we were undertaking the war in the Peninsula we sont widents which occur so frequently in war. ih j an : | Had our , S isoacd sate | force will Lave accepted it as a double assurancethat the | sure has been adopted to render the approaches to the | expedition to Sicily, and picked a quarrel with the U forces been concentrated, we should, without doubt, ngdomoaichat the Wein Tusk which ap. | bloodand sweat of the battle field have not beeu spent | placeas formidable es possible. A breastwork with editeh | ted States, At this moment, happily, we are at pence have reduced the enemy to the utmost extremities. We ipdsemesatan OF weateehagh, senate saat erie: Salete é a+ been drawn along the entrance to the valley leading to with all the world, éxeepting cal chad our mill- | nient , the party towards whom they were advanc- are now getting all our reserves up from Simpheropol, only a fow hours later. chan General Canre. ‘The allusion which the minister at war has incorpo- | Balaklava,and an assault from theenemy’s cavalryis thus | tary operations are confined to We have our | ing fired into them. This Gre they returned, but almost . Baktchi Serai, and Sutachiva. Weare about to reso! ii of the same date was recelved in Paria, | rated in this general order to the one omission of Lord | rendered imy . The breastwerk is de by the work before ua, and it is really if we choose | immediately afterwards the remainder of ’ Lieutenant Jutely assume the offensive, and we shall not allow one e of telegraph berween Cronstadt and | Raglam’s de«patch—“his own distinguished services,” | Highland brigade, under the command of Sir Colin Camp- | not to do it well. All Phen ty Present is | Webb’s party, who had been concealed, Sockaspet ate Gay's repose to the enemy. ‘Their forses are diminish. Sa sitlendelanes Ser aad to the triumplis, side by side, of the sons of the nation | bel. The batteries formerly occupied by the Turks have | to keep up the force in the fel Satan ae Minies among them with well-aimed effect. ‘The ing visibly. The partial reinforcements whieh they auc- terial intelligence m this despatch to what waa | 20W allied with us, and to the assistance of the fleet, | been entrusted to our bh ets. The Diamond and | 30,060 at a point barely a = * —_ were seized with a penie, many of them threw down cessfully have received have not been sufficient to All up transmitted by Gen Musobérk Eek llat of the En, will be felt to extend the acknowledgment, and will ex- , Sanspareil sweep the ‘with their broadsides, andthe | from Portsmouth—that is, no’ _ gps pola their arms, and all in disorder. Their leader alone the voids which war and malasies have made in their | jish general olicers wounded on the sth. ‘Tho length at | sit even yet higher in the eyes of his men, that pupil heights commanding ’the harbor are manned by marines. | time, trouble, and fa ocr a Al ac was ner, | showed courage. When his men commenced to waver yanks. Their number cannot be more at present than | ¢yis fist together with Lord Ragian's intimation® that | Of Wellington who shares with the French commander | Unless the ene ence ns eee aining force, | years ago. we cannot hemes brs , Mt | he seized one of their muskets, and, wa it in the air, 60,000 men. | ‘Thia army cannot escape us; we have for | the enemy was nor ropuleed till ve li eta that the | the lead in these triumphs. no danger of Balaklava falling into his hands can been- | we will not do this—we may as wel Cg up at once,”’ tried to rally them. While itin ition he us the moral ascendancy and agreat superiority in mum- | number of the enemy much Ceonetnis That Oonosad’ $e But when in this admirable composition her Majesty tertained. The force of infantry we could oppose to any | and say ‘Good bye”’ to the British emp! ia ht received a ball in the elbow, and at once to okt ies aad ra. We are on our own ground, and we are fighting | the allies at Alma, are sure indications of ag varluous | €Xpresees her participation in the “affectionate anx- | such attack is, however, too small for the occasion. Be- | While we urge immediate reinforcement timate Se | in the other hand. He was thus vainly to at the samo time for our soil, and for the most holy of | struggle. It is gratifying to peruse Lord Raglan’s sim. | ity’? of the friends of the wounded, and in the griefs fore the Highland brigade could be supported by | keep up the effective force to the es + We | courage to his men and urge them forward, when two of causes, ‘ Dut carnest acknowledgment of the essential ser- | £0F the departed, it wil be felt that something more | any English or French division, much valual will not assist our purpose by wilful xe", weakly fang; | the shooters took at him. One of the balls [From the Paris Debats, Nov. 15.] vices rendered by our French allies on this occasion. Aa | than a royal or offiical sympathy is avowed, and that time would be consumed. A Turkish detach- rating the foe, There is a remarkal peantions Mefone wor him severely in the neck and face, breaking hia The despatch of General Canrobert proves that the at Balaklava, General Bosquet’s division eame promy tly | there exists that relation between every soldier onthe ment is posted, it is true, in Balaklava itself; ussian figures. Their armies are -very Larry ‘ore ® | lower jaw, He then to retreat, but —- Russians are making the most desperate efforts to ave and effectively to the rescue; and General Canropert | field and the highest in the land, in which gracious | but from what we have seen of these troops, any great | battle, and very small after; so that it woul eaem we | soner, and brought, together with one of his men, fate Rebastopol. The disposabie reserves have at last as- gave the support of “his assiatance and excellent coun- “ection and chivalrous devotion repay each other. dependence on their firmness would be mis) The | not only killand wound some two or three pane camp. He was a powerful man, and scarcely “4 xived from the banks of the Danube, the Dniester, amd (o).7 I Ti Nov. 1 rear of the positions occu; by the troops has | men of mortal mould, but a phantom multitude guished in dress from the soldiers ‘he was » Five the Don, and with these troops the Czar sends twoof his “Wyte the British army and its general are gratefull (iron the Lonien Times eri aey been now rendered nearly impregnable. Along the | sides. The Journal de St. Pelersbourg makes out toits | Of the Russians who had been killed were bi on the Bons, to raise the courage of the garrison. ‘The wrenches acknowledging. the support they. bave sceolved er they | 4 The extraordinary character of the diffion ties attend. whole extent of the lines & massive breastwork, with a | own satisfaction that Prince Menschikoff had only und by the sharpshooters. Several wounded eses, Of the besiegers had advanced to within half musket handsof their French brothers in arms, French officers | {D4 OUr present operations before Sebastopol is not likely | deep ditch, has been constructed by the French division | 33,000 on the heights of the Alma. This is encoi . | Back to thelr lines, One man of the 77th regiment, Bhot of the place; the reaching batteries were con- gre enthusiastic in their tributes to the incredible | to be fully appreciated without some insight into the forming the guard under General Bosquet. This | Should Providence ro favor our cause that we beat the | iitied, was the only casualty in Licutenant Webb's structed and armed; two of the principal batteries of — of the F: ry rear lish. Reciprocal esteem and admiration per, | Dature of siege undertakings in general. In the preveat | work interceptaall the roads leading from Balaklava to | garrison of Sebastopol and the army without, we have | party, | age it is recs tbe town were already breached by the English and ade the two armies. Their leaders appene te wetae it | as a maxim by military engineers, that cepastopol. A postern gate, broad enough to admit of | very little doubt that we shall hear, on the best sutho- INDIVIDUAL BRAVERY OF A BRITISH PRIVATE. French guns; and it was announced that the assault “ is sreniriking aun. | {ue means of attack are superior {o the means of de- | 1), passage of artiller: on the high road. Three | rity and with much that the garrison was only | 4 private of the 33d regiment (Duke of Wellington’s} could begiven on November 5. Itison that very day | {imatel by one ming. There is iudeed a striking auml- | fence, or, in other words, that if any fortified place, | (ri DivteSecwe the haiette which sometely dominate | 25,000, and the army outalde no more’ Doubtless there pri \ ) ity o : 4 | by name Maguire, has attracted the notice hat, af the same time, on two potate of the Tine of in- uly UNdeRees eee ee however strong, is attacked according to rule by & the plain. The allies can now venture on an assault | has been much exaggeration on their side, for, ifwela- | CYmanderinchiet by an act of daring. “westment, the Russian army made, with . 4 J (2 made pro: all its forces, @ | gacious. These qualities aro exactly what is reqaired tn | Perforce of men and guns it must inevitably fall within | Fon Sebastopol without dpreading a successful diver- | bor under difficulties, #0 also do they. in advance as. sharpshooter, and was prisoner. : : me : : certain time, unless preserved by some rare and singu- | “P* PEC RE 4 ulsed with the most valiant energy. The despatch of | (han'di¢ allies wad aie cones ea eta Ee Ay, | barked on the shores'of the Crimes in strength sufficient | sid a fuat tribute to the bravery diaploped by theun- | food and ammunition, and with every kind of distress. | {Hers & third being ip ress, Whee, wetbg hia used for @ jeueral Canzobert, which could not at the frst moment | Guuesel Caneabcen aes Loe ietuence is, that for a time | to conquer the enemy in a pitched battle, and as they | fortunate brigade, Never did cavalry charge with nuch | Wholly exeluded from the sea, the Rossians cannot Oe waidealy seiel a loaded seaiieedticdul ois of tanene ter into the details of the affair, allows us, however, | ‘aglan have bad a superior | pave now for some weeks been besieging ete poodle dauntless disregard to overwhelming odds and porta large army in the Crim least, in men at his side and discharged it at him. No sooner force opposed to them, One curious result of this is, | a most powerful force of artiller: ” Lr ‘supplies. pel. ihiat the tables Dave in rome ensure been turned. on | AUREL ITC OF ae ie may be asked woe | DUtalso never were troops led to.so cruel and certain & Sr we kyr ace Stine eabestopel’Rhets | BP done this than he swung round the butt-end, and the allied arnies, and that it is not easy to say | circumstances liave retarded their success, or why the | “Our “<ites the French, continue to va. relaterce, ‘| Chien Wilbetaen an8 eiiilave coy Bir: at gett acd wath | Veo coe germepiore — pian = Wow ont i whether they are besieged or beslecing. The posi- | place was not sooner taken? To this inquiry we subjoin | ments. A battalion of ica Ba nras’| the commpend Cf -@ a port, and withouteven the | ‘pe head which felt inveth ae al Lp Ww be this. In the aflair of October 25, at Balaklava, | tion of the allied armies is covered by entrench- | an explanatory reply. fended sesieotay & Moga psi ante. eer | pawte tt anueoneit rR aan Pocandlh Ocoupying pos: | 8h lecamped, Moxais « fected ati sae. ae cette prea eee was ae tw hstenidiag. the tele patteries oat, sales, hebgimegt it ds boty When a siege is undertaken, mi first bis fis what | marched through Balaklava with quick ‘and elastic step, | sibly our own camp, they will have to draw a ad ee estar ees — nie 01 saga jae sapture of three redoubts, and in spite of the losses un- | covered by the sea, and these defences have been repeat- | js called the ‘investment’ of the town—that is to say, , a a taken from his, dergone by the English cavalry in a.chanze of too hazard- | edly assailed by Lipraddi on the east, by Menschikoif on | the town is surrounded on all sides by posts of the be. | {Ze formed.a most striking coutrast with the slouch: | sll their supplies either from the remote parts of the | ieing carried by one of the two men by his side; but he ws @ character, that general had perceived the impossi- | the north, The whole of the allied force is cooped os | sieging army, £0 that no ingress or is any longer probe both typhus and porcine hae te n out | Isthmus of Perekop. We ahall see how that state | Knew this had ‘been discharged, and ‘therefore seized a Bility of foreing' on that point the redoubts and the line | within its intrenchments, whilst the Russians, in adll- | Oracteable Thia ts not eoly the fest step, bat. itis Pecans Sn yes capris pr Pr i dear of things will endure. ‘If it lasts long it will be a new | musket from the other soldier, which fortunately turned of circumvallation of the allies, the escarpment of which _ tion to their {roops in Sebastopol, have an army in the | that on which all succeeding steps more or ay depend; eashedl to the first Britta, division, and are employed | bepter in the history of war. out to be loaded. The affair was witnessed by a sergeant was almost everywhere unapproachable, The Russian field. The attitude assumed by ‘the allios comos more | for the superiority of the attack to the defence arises | {ii trenches and in constructing the Bt q of the rife brigade, and in consequence of ls re gm in attacking on November 6, with very superior _ and more closely to resemble that of the Duke of Wel- | from the fact that, whereas the means are unlimited in | thisnvish took plucs oa the night of the S0ts hetwees | RUSSIAN RETROSPECT OF THE CAMPAIGN, | Lot Raslan rewarded Maguire with a gratuity of £6. lorots the English army on its right, close to the river lington behind the lines of ‘forres Vedras. The assaults | the former case, they are limited in the latter. When a | {hu"rtutn'.a°momign afranced pickets, enotal | RETROSPECT THE CAMP . | SYMPATHY OF THE OZAR WITH THE WIDOW OF AD- Dhemnaya, soem to have been anxious to force the line of the fog break on the ramparts, and fall back like the | town bas been invested, and thus cut off from all com- | Sipe Lacy Evans is at present om boked the Sisco, | one rom,the Journal de St. Petersburg, Nov. 7.) MIRAL KORNILEFF. tae én to get ete thst line and that Os circun waves or oe wee has rere on son Jrep-lioape | munication with the adjacent country, its resources in | inuispoced, The lent pececal is suffering from | ieee woatatns ant wee paises f ache a rectifiestion, san Hambeig Cage agate of bos scutes ay | wallation, in order to fall on Balaklava. that manom coast. ‘The time will come when Canro! an lan | munitions and provisions become at once confined es : } gon November , Says:—Account ‘wre had succeeded, the Russian army would have taken will sce the right opportunity to lot loose their soldiers | Yo the stocks then’ actually within. ite walls, whilo caraes, Sami the effects of fall from his is the unavoidable lateness of our answers. When inst. from St. Petersburg, state the great public aym- wn the rear both the trenches and the positions on which on the enemy; but perhaps this may not be until after | i the oth bel umptively | DOF. | details of events, accomplished at such Paget cage thy shown, on the death of Admiral Kornileff becom- he exterior redoubts of defence are placed. At the same they have been reinforced. “ aoe ee er mounts gan make exactly suck spat, | -,7ie Russians are in considérablo strength to the rear | reach us, public opinion, engrossed by moro Tecent | P » form an idea of the batt Ni, to appreciate itx result, The plan of attack of the Russians may be consi: in its ensemble, and, above DY forced. | masters of the country, can make exactly such img known, towards his widow. The Emperor and Em- Aime that the English troos were vigorously attacked by Upon mature reflection, we are far from participating in | Tyewt‘ne they think proven: If they cease t» be snastere of Hearn, arene cn tae eh ee ee te ne | Erecocepenodn, secelves nr retrospective explans- | press have’ both sont her letters of condolence. The She Russian army of reinforcement, the special gurrison the ‘impatience that is expressed in many quarters at | the country—that is to say, if a superior force of the | “Osten-Sucken has arrived, itis sald, from Odessa, and | pe the lot of those which we sabjsia., "For ail’this wy | following is a translation of the Emperor's letter, from BE Sebastopol executed a gram! sortie against the French — the protracted operations before Sebastopol. We have 20 enemy approaches from without, the siege must, in ordi- | ;, rion ir Sebastopol” d a ralege re te ‘Yor the sake of trath, ead inthe is, | the St. Petersburg Journal:— Grenchés. It is easy to perceive all the consequences wish to extenuate the delay that took place bofore theex- | nary cases, be raised, and the town is relieved according. | '* 4) Pyotr | exdecs Disive been ferueds<: Cities: y * | The glorious death of your husband has robbed our that might have resulted from so serious anattack, pedition sailed from Varna, or the miscalculation which | jy. Supposing, however, the necessary superiority ing gen Test of 7 fleet .of a dist ‘Admiral and myself of one of sandas ably com: —senta force so disproportioned to that which itis now ap | yvaide at all events for, ibe time, with the beslegers, GENERAL ORDERS. According to the report of Marshal St. Arnaud to his | 11y most beloved fellow-laborers, whom I had fixed w Fortunately the Eng- parent that Russia has been able to bring into the fleld | then ghey select that point inthe defences of the Pee eA MRISS OFS Br AAEE. 1 soremngn, gs Racoeles Sas Aled, Sneunie tome oh to follow up the successful labors of Michael Lane: ish army, although not very numerous,supported onthe against us. | But we are impressed by a deepand sincere | which appears most favorable for their operations, and” (xo. f.) yonets, 6,000 be , saa 80 Frag lo poco In | yew. To the mourning of the whole fleet, and the sin- xight this formidable attack, with the :mpassible firm- conviction that, under the direction of an Allwise Pro- here the ‘advantage of the attack over the defence be- ‘The commander of the forces feels deeply indebted to _ another report of the al to ir o wae, cere sharing by all in your grief, I cannot add more in meas which characterises it, and the French troops had vidence, these very errors will ultimately prove condu- gomes instantly apparent. Whatever may be the | Major General Sir Colin Campbell for his able and perse- | our cavalry was estimated at only 5,000 horses. ing | honor of the remembrance of the deceased than to re- Gime to come and reinforce their allies, whilst the sortie cive to the triumph of the cause for which we are In strength of the place in respect of artillery, it is obvious | Yering exertions in the action in front of Balaklava on | pointed out this divergence of the tworeports emanating | peat with respect his last words, He said, “I feel hap- Bf the garrison was vigcrously repulsed on the left by arms. Had Sebastopol fallen at once, we have every that only a certain number of guns can be brought to | the 2ith instant, and he has great pleasure in publishing | from one souree, we are going to present at the same | 5y in dying for my country.” Russia will not forget Bho French in their trenches. ‘The battle lasted all day, reason to believe that, in the Crimea ‘as in the Aland | {he deferce of a certain portion of the ramparts, where, | ‘0 the army the brillant manner in which the 934 time the numerical Ust of our soldiers on the position of | P¥ 00 Ging for my country.” Russie will not, forget nd was of a stubborn character, says the despatch. Isles, theallied governments, satisfied with the éclat of gy the attacking force can concentrate upon this one | Highlanders, under his able direction, répulsed the the Alma :— will stand foremost in the history of the Russian havy, At adds that the Russians have lost from 8,000 to 10,000 such a victory, would lave withdrawn their troops to point all the guns at their disposal. e defences | Chemy’s cavalry. The Major General had such confi- | Men. Iremain your ever well affected, ‘NICHOLAS. Zuen, comprising the one thousand men of the garrison. winter elsewhere, This would-have been to neutralise Of @ town may mount 600 guns; but, if any par. | dence in this distinguished regiment, that he was satis. | Infantry—Forty-two and a half battalions, say Garscumna, Oct. 26. Eo large a loss can only be explained by the extraoriin- and nullify all the efforts of the summacr. But nowthat | ticular front mounts only “60, and ‘the beriegers | fd that it should receive the charge in line, and the ab0ut......ssseeseeseerserese +++ 88, The Express. in ber letter of condolence, has named pry desperation of the enemy, and by aresistance notless the Russians have girded their loins fora winter cam- can attack this front with twice the number, they heve | Te#alt proved that his confidence was not misplaced. | Cavalry—Sixteen regular squadrons and eleven Madame Kornileff one of the ladies of the order of the xemarkable on the part of the allies. ‘The Russian gene- _paign, the allied governments have no choice; they must the superiority of fire at the only point where such #u- | Potnlas of Cossacks, SAY.....+sseseeeeeseeeee 8,000 | “Holy Grand Martyress Catherine,” of tne second class, als arein the habit of not sparing their men, and of exert themselves for the permanent wresting of the . (x0. 11) ori ired. It i ql dition of . | F The Commander of the Forces considers it his duty to —_— i J Bacrificing them’ by massca in order to obtain the Crimea from. Russia, Instead of a mere buceanceriog eee ea ree ee ont aa icmpomreoe ta | notice the Drgliant conduct of the division of cavalry Forming... sasseagess 33,000 | the insignia of which order wore enclosed in the auto: y j ‘ biseid USEI 00/655 cece an ; grapl cocomunieatioa, xesult which they aim at, It is not astonishing that dash at Sebastopol, we shall have a material diminution entirely excluded from allexternal communica. | under the command of Licutonant-General the Earl of | Artillery—Eight batteries, that is, eighty-four pieces. % Sn ordee to gain these points they should have hada of the extent of the Russian territories, Instead of the | $Plte® gntirely excluded from all external communica | Tucan, iu the action of the 25th inst, He fulates | Such were our forces; whereas, to ‘ulgety the indi. Pie Noone Prati idm eles reife wast number of men killed in their desperate efforts. winter being wasted in diplomacy at Vienna, it will be | Ayailiug themselves of the protection derivable from | Drigadier General the Hon. J. T. Scarlett and the officers | cations of the press and the depositions of the prisoners, Stornik, in one of the copious articles relative to the Mur losses must also have been rather great. In this turned to good account by earnest fighting inthe Crimea. | trenches and covered ways, they gradually push their | and men of the heavy brigade, upon the successful _ 28 well as by the data obt: from our own sources of | Operations in Sebastopol, from the 17th to the 20th of Souble attack of the Russians against the line of siege, ‘The temporary popaclatity of numbers on the part of | patteriog so close to the place thats bi ach ‘is made in | charge and repulse of the Russian cavalry, in far greater | information, the troops of the enemy must have nearly October, names seven superior officers killed and 1,100 hey must have momentarily found themselves masters the Russians inthe Crimea gives us no alarm. i fs walls, and, as they gre always presumed to excced | force than themselves. While he condoles with Major | attained the strength of 70,000 men, men wounded, ss ‘©n tome points of a part of the trenches and of some Canrobert and Raglan will make good their position | the garrison greatly in Aida ried stranoth thee gifsh ip | General the Ear] of Cardigan and the officers and men of ‘All the heights,” says the marshal, ‘were capped EXPLOSION OF THE REDAN (RUSSIAN) BATTERY. Jiatteries, | Prince Menschikoff, in a despatch on this af- and carry on the bombardment of Sebastopol too—until | and earry the town by storm as soon’ as’ its defences | thé ight brigade gp the loss ther sustained, he feels it | with redoubte and formidable batteries.” Inreality the | rperdre Sebastopol (Oct. 22) Correspondence of the LOn- fair, states that the gans were spiked in an English bat: reinforcements reach them, let the enemy do iis worst. have been beaten dows. It la considered that a town | due to them to place dh econ’ the gallanity they dis- | whole was reduced to two simple épaulements, one of ‘don e5 @ery and ina French one. His itch is terminated France and England are now~ at last bestirring them- i s f 15,000 las and the coolness and ce .with which | which was at our centre, with twelve guns of position, v ts i dy a remarkable circumstanice which General Canrobert selves in earnest. Large bodies of troops and ample orns 000 fen ta pedtoge tt’ and when tneletere ate epee pl of the most arduous astecks thas were anacthes omens rigis pene, wun ags Tent fad pie "| prench battodee tinerted thelr Fig Fe pt ee Goes not mention. According tb Prince Menschikeff, the supplies of the munitions of war are being despatched ever witnessed, under the heaviest fire, and in the face | ikoff,”’ says the Marshal, fc allies, in pursuing the “Russians, delivered an assault from both countries; and while these main bodies aro eer tan eee tee Been ete) cr cmectal tollee otactillaeg cerelcrmadtatarieg. | Hage. I have token if with his portfolio and correspond- into thelt toler eat tata ee te oor tate aint @hich did not succeed. That result was, without doubt, on their passage, subsidiary reinforcements will keep | T“I¢tnes¢ obsorvations are applied to the sane of Sebas- (so. 111.) ence. , I shall protit ty the valuable intelligesos I nd tn | 01.404 in the middle of thelr reserve aiamunition, {¢ She consequence of the impetuosity of our victorious dropping in from’ various quarters. Our readers will | topol, it will at once appear that none of the assumed | _‘The commander of the forces has the greatest satie- | it.” The following is the truth:—Prince Menschikof? : exploded, causing, of course, a fearful loss of artillery- Groope, who dashed at some point where the breaches bear us witness that we have not been slow, or ceremo- | advantagen of a. bel force. are thore'to be found. | faction in thanking Licutenant-General Sir De Tacy Jost no carriage, nor any correspondence belonging to SSploted, cOnene, Ok paar, s tearrel is, about re: Were not very practicable. But that very circumstance nious in our language, to rebuke the tardiness and inde- Sebastopol is not invested. The ‘peculiar position of the | Evans and the officers and men of the second division for Bad testa ssueegs 66 nging Sale ears mit | past two—another shell was directed towards the same Proves in a most marked manner that the Russian army cision that has been betrayed by our own government; {own, ecmbined with the limited strength of the allied | the gallant and energetic manner in which they repul- Bap ientpen feos n to a place of safety, The only | fpot with similar unfortunate results. ‘The Russian bat- ‘was vigorously repulsed. The Alma, Balaklava, and the but now that we sce signs of growing activity and ear- armies, rendered it impossible so to surround the place | sed the powerful sortie made upon this position on the ne mers “ ttach ed to head.quarters, who left | *rien having it now all their own way, hammered unre- Battle of November 5, demonstrate the incontestable su- nestness of purpose, we are ready, for the sake of na- ys to cut off its communications with the interior, and | 20th inst. The conduct of all engaged was admirable, | 2 seatontl bol Fhe - \davot Oe battle to re} the | mittingly upon us with the greatest vivilcity. They had sent Periority of the allies over the Russian troops, whom tional unanimity, to’ forgive past shortcomings, and if the north side is left completely open. The consequence | and the arrangements of the Licutenant-General were | 51! Phin 1 4 baie ( bottg fe pron Thats ‘of | forth sa Allele ae ud shouts of defiance or of ey have three times beaten, although having the ad- we do not forget them they shall be remembered only a8 jg, that there has been no hmitation of resources on the | so able and effective aa at once to ensure guccoss, and in- Gate papereia Siact tint aieew biher papers prysot great | Victory when the explosion of the French and English i Syantage of numbers. a warning and alesson. It is only the factions and the A th it itis rather the | flict a heavy logs upon the enemy. order, \razines them of misfortune; but it [From the London Chronicle, Nov. 17.] friends of Russia that ean seek to make political capital ercntop rainy rill tad stood tg tila peatieaneen ts - Fey BB. Percokr, ihe) apenas), Re ae eee peer hnr ini ty eat foe ‘about half-past 8 there Tho official account which bas been received from the | Cxtof bygone errors and sins of omission, and bring for, whereas the allied forces have been gradually [From the London Timos, Nov. 17. ug his fate. | The pro | Phage aa oe ‘ : J lish Commander-in Chief, of the great and important | ®vout a ministerial crisis. diminished by the casualties incidental to their opera- | ‘The following is another record, from the best wietory achieved by the allies on ‘the 5th instant, full Tn common with the great mass of the English people, | tions, the garrison has received repeated accessions of | ow; ¢ ‘ prt tse stateiment transmitted by General Canrobert. 80 that the work of England be well done in ths business strength: feem without. Provisions, too, and aunt. | jcurctty Of the allied progress in the siege up to the 3d his government. The most material addition to our Of the present war, we shall not grudge one iota of th tions of warmay haye been imported with equal faci- | "The French are steadily sapping towards the town. eros information, which we derive from Lord Rag- honor thence accruing to those into whose hands it ha jity, though so extraordinary, in this respect, were the | Qurengincers have been equally active. A large covered a's despatch, consists in the fact that the number of féllen at the outset. Our ono object, in all our stric resources of Sebastopol itself, that few additions eould | way has been constructed. which extends fron Gordon's Bussiaus engaged in the battle much exceeded that of tures and exhortations, is to maintain unity, and ® | jave been required. battery towards the Russian Redan fort, and turning off athe troops who were defeated on the Alma. Itis trae, *Hirit of earnest endeavor in the national mind. It is next to be remarked that the Russians at Sebas- | ata rightangle, faces the latter formidable defensive mnfortunately, that the enormous injury inflicted on the —,, The chances are immensely in favor of the allies, if {oyol are by no means in the position of a garrison infe- ‘This will serve to cover our storming party when enemy was, in some degree, counterbalanced by great they are true to themselves. The harbors on the south rior in numbers to the attacking force, but relying upon e day arrives, on our own part; and the country willanxiously ©°#8t of the Crimea do not freeze during the winter; the ¢1.¢ protection of artificial defences, against which the ‘A body of 1,600 Turks have been attached to the First await the arrival of detailed accounts of an engagement Constant transmission of stores and provisions by sea | hes'ezers advance. They are encamped to the south of | pritich division, and are employed in the trenches and Gn which a brilliant success has been achieved ata se- need not be intermitted fora day. Winter is, itis true, | the town in very strong intrenchments, which are armed, | in constructing the covered way. Alskirmish took place were sacrifice. Lord Ragion enters into few particulars {he season for transporting goods in Russia; but the a5 Lord Raglan’s despatch observes, ‘with an appa’ | in the nicht of the 20th between French and Rucsian the events of the day, and an apparent mis- | Crimea ison the utmost verge of the region of sledge | rently unlimited number of heavy ans, amply provided | advanced pickets. tint in the despatch creates soms uncertainty even as ingeif not, indeed, beyond it; and even sledge car- with gunners and aromunition.”” They have raised bat- | “The Russians have thrown up works in the town fhe list of the troops engaged. If, however, an the season of snow cannot be brought into com- teries against our batteries, and earthworks against our | which enfilade our front batteries, and we have raised Wdvious correction is supplied, it may be collected ion with the water carriage for which the state and — earthwork Shey reture “phot for shot, and so far wore | others to meet the new difficulty. "The Lancaster guns hat the forces employed to repel the main attack mercantile navies of France and England offer the means. we from establishing an advantage in this respect, that | jinve been moved further in by five hundred yards than wt the enemy were. the Second Division, under Sir 10a short time we shall havea numerous force of French On the second day of the eaunonste. their fire was supe, they were at first; and the French, being better situated Fd ge ee General Bentineh’s Brigade of a taro creer egies ed Bey E ptenige rior te our own. Tiate front hong ee frep- | for advancing uate works, ro now fising away at a di juards, rht Division, under Sir G. Brown, the rw m be rage resenting a confined space, ‘expo: all the concen- | tance of ur hun ‘ards fro. he _ 6 after say that at last we have had the misfortune to lose one Zourth division under General Cathcart, and a portion of _ Turkish troops, they may be made admirable auxilliaries. trated fire of the attack,’is actually, as Lord Raglan | For some iar Taconite shells: au foenten te Goes eee tent o at ae taro tees of our oficere—not by ball or sword, but by deficiency Bir R. a's third division, together with a large Jt it mest unjust to forget the gallant exploits of thearmy | describes it, ‘more extended” than our own, and they | thrown into the town, but they have reached nothing for six days, without shelter and almest without help, | Of vision. Lord Dunkellin, who is’ exceedingly near- ody of French troops under General Bosquet. Another | f the Danube—their unrepining Jong endurance of cold; (the besieged foree) are thus in the possession of the | that would produce a conflagration. A few poor houses |." of them only had their wounds dressed, and even | sghted, started during the night of Saturday with » @onsiderable portion of the French army was, as we 8nd other privations—their bravery in the fortress and | advantages ordinarily enjoyed by the bestegers. have been fired occasionally, but have beta pulled | then with hay and straw, instead of lint, which could | P@rty of the Guards for one-of the batteries, missed his Bearn from other sources, simultaneously occupied in im the field—because one small detatchment of Turks Jn point of fact, there would really be lit exeggers- | down at once by the enemy ‘before there could be any | put render their state worse. When, therefore, they { Toad, and walked into the hands of the Russian outlying Zepelling the sortie of the garrison on the left. The only Fave way at Balaklava. Tho Turks at Balaklava did not | tion in saying thet one of the armies in the Crimea is a8 | communication with the neighborhood. arrived at Odessa, almost all the wounds presented | Picket. He must have been well in advance, for his men, Singlish troops held in reserve consisted of a part of the axe worse, not so ill as whole armies of Portuguese effectually “besieged” ax the other. Both have their | “On the 26th of Oqober the weather set in bitterly | & hi discovered Tee re that bad ceamaned site setrtike, suddenly shot upwards from the works, or rather the "fie enciny’s comnuanders professed to have lavished | Redn on our front, « white livid flame, which ascended the most prompt attenticn on our wounded. We do not Sectatie, Tecan whieh winds he ter 5 peel age tiers og deny in any manner their humane feelings, nor their | Pretucie, 8 sored et ae awial? renort tlie sincere wish #® put them in practice; but it is publicly u notorigas that the enemy's army was without a sati- | bat the Redan had ceased to exist; for in ‘the next minute ita garrison of hundreds, blown to cient siumber of surgeons. His own wounded would ver: naturally have the preference before our own. Hence it | tums, dismembered, and mutilated by the is but too true that several of our wounded who remain- at epee aecee ae Pg td ed in the power of the enemy rejoined our semy- dusitig Noirs har yal yi I san AR Ne the course of the following day, of the day after that, Sa and eee sarees rete anes ee and even of the fourth day after, without having had | 101 hope ever again to witness. In at at 9. fant their wounds dressed. Among our soldiers who were lume of smoke and sparks, which resemb! water. the most severely wounded and who remained on the | SPout ascending to the clouds, were visible to the naked field of the Alma, 320 received no succor from the ene- | Ye arms, et, Lage and hi oc ~ Rui my; out of this number 70 contrived to drag. themselves | Tiort, mingled with cannons, w) ever ” as far as Bakshiserai, and the others were conveyed by | Military warfare, and I may say with every living thing it ourselves to Simpheropol. contained. The explosions in the French and Engl Another very mad ihestimnony to the Pande pe > bestowed bts 27 isang Rashes in the pan of a musket com- on our wounded, state of suffe: @ ustion i ‘The correspondent of the London Morning Post thus thie Brabe'o ea fin of Soper fay alludes fo the capture of hard Duakelli ro ann sorry te beer when they their error, rushed st once from hird division and of Bir Colin Campbell's brigade, which 904 Spaniards did at the outset of our Peninsular cam- | communications open—tho Russians by land and the Engl symptoms of gangrene, and by the 23d of September | the danger, and cecaped. Being unarmed and few in (ras probably employed in guarding against ponsible paigns. ‘Let the allied commanders take upon them- | allies by sea ; both have their strong positions—the | suet have felt eu Pv, hawever, benslooesole: | Cater n)) Uateyene ‘of Cae nuaiber LA ateahy Fae | sates, a ‘vanlataten Ao, Sets obeenmaevegtiet tier Bowcnolcrpeiy nate whotiver ie wasassuled,tceor, armien, as" Weington “did the Portuguese. and the Rilgiemas sag ctarbe Sptretions have eines ars | tom to hear that, though the enemy within Sebastopol | "ihe proportion of one French coxpse to seven Russian | aueetion; moreover, t was qalte atk. As Prince Men. not express whether he was assailed, accor- iu 7 lava; a1 ve 0 pro- 8c! isone of the bt Ging to Prince Menschikots version of the affair, by the | Spaniards, and the reeult will be the same. The French | ceeded, #t would be hard toreay which party. scemen to arene ith feutss ‘Ow the Let of Noverver tie ct bodies, admitted by Marshal St. Arnaud, is also in- “greatent attention to be ‘ not, direct the greatest attention to be paid to his noble of Sebastopol, or by the main Russian army; 804 English have fastened a hold upon the Chersonesian he the assailants and which the defenders. We are bat- ivenn nople faracan | Comet. -Acqending te thie Rhaninous depositions OF the joner; and there is a further reason why Lord Dun- it his report of the numbers of the enemy sufficiently peninsula, which all the power of Russia cannot compel tering the works of the Russians, but they are | Frughtrved, (fom Constantinople with one tho Prisonere, She English lost 2,000, men, and among this | Feilin should be well cared for—his father was once aum- Proves that Generel Canrobert’s account was perfectly hem to let go, Retaining that hold, they have only to also battering ours, and whereas we have not | ‘On the 2d of November the fire on both sides had been | 2,'1"bes woomeers; the loss of she French. is estimated | ya ssador to the Court of St. Petersburg, and necessarily Boo! It must be assumed that Prince Menschiko Witch and seize every opportunity of extending the ter- | yet regularly assaulted their lines, they have at- | more brisk than for several days previously. On the | St Js600 men. Ours, even acco! yd gb eign nally acquainted with the Prince. ’ Lord Raglan has the valley of the Chernaya forits entire longth, » Titory they occupy. | The very greatness of the effort by | tacked ours in such force as to occasion most san- | same day the Russians in large force reconnoivered Bala | S<P0Tts. Would smoun ie emep siemens freed wae Uirected that, for the future, all parties shall be guided Bs well as the southern side of the ravine which extends {Which Russia has been enabled to opposo a more obsti- guinary conflicts. ‘The enterprise, in short, is not a | Hawa, which it was expected would be soon mttacked, | °° dd yay vip: -deibrpmstni 9 to their respective posts by staff oflicers thoroughly qua- slong the rear of the allies, in the direction of Redalelaee (Balgsresistance to the Allies in the Crimea than was siege, but a camgaign. We have effectde » lodgment | and under this idea 450 marines were about to be trans: | Mis lecedian Gael ead teehee ken by | lifled for the service. ‘wa; and, thus overlapping the Buglish pabition with fintlcipated, is our warrant that it cannot long be per- on Russian territory, ‘and we are encountering the | ferred thence from Rupatoria, Lard George Paulet, in | «yayicr,the Russian General and the five guns taken by | eer DECRASHD AND WOUNDED OFFI- Breatly superior numbers, the Russian general had the Misted in. Bon ag armies which the Russians bring successively against | the Bellerophon, wa to leave Katcha on the evening of | Monitcur Universel, the fact is, equally inexact, CERS, MILITARY AND NAVAL. Power of acting at the same time on our front ‘agd'on THE SIEGE OF SEBASTOPOL. | us. One army, reg egaatisy Brod Cpeaes of Sebastopol, | the dth, to take charge of Eupatoria, the holding of |“ Excepting Generals Goguinoff and Stchelkanoff, both om tne London Times, Nov. 16.] ur flank, [From the London Globe, Nov. 17.) | is encamped under its walls behind earthworks like our | which will be exclusively confined to marines and blue Gadgerncaly wounded, and left on the fleld of battle Among the many valuable lives which the Te gannot be collected, either from the English orfrom) ‘tn the intervals between the despatches tnnouncing | SM thd GL Uae eek cree at da aun eA ioe nckets chs from General Canrobert, dated the a, has | Mere Was no Russian general taken prisoner. “In so far | in the Crimea have cost us, not the least to be lamented Sarpy to tan uacths "Both Lord Balan nom agaecl Bape ieee eat coe nme cemsinnes, | Nothing ean be broader Wantmany of theadvantages of beviogers, we arc not | that the trench works of, the French carap were then a | otlier had been previously spiced by ous beavs'artillery. | Hngineer of the army in the East, ‘Colonel Alcs robert must, however, be understood as assigning 4 thé , fans and that actually made by the allies. Prince | Without some of the advantages of the opposite Kind: | 140 metres from the enceinée, but that the difficulties of | mon, owed his first sword to the Duke of Kent, and his com- i for such is the strength of our position in this angle of | the soil precluded the possibility of thei? bel hed Barrison only a subordinate share in the battle. On the’ Menschikoff has been severely praised for the compara- ¢ho Russian territory that ose peer owaltiitty oi ing pushes Lastly, Marshal St. Arnaud asserts that it was the | mission as second lieutenant was dated July 20, 1813. r y r ‘y that we are enabled to repulse the Mh y d Gractaw, expresey sine: that the attack! aguioné the | {TeytyCaetelners oF the statenents, which have been attacks of an enemy numerically saperior to ourselves. | wie ine andi Stes emesatecegtt xan of tt tat prevent aparag ae Tae | Rem bat ine Me Helena (rere be wan charged tea or 5 i ignatu: ; , therefore, although the Sebasto- € a 1 d Eee zight and left of the allied position consisted of sorties but the truthfulness rather consists in omitting direct Sibel Davenatanced Bes slewiy, the cfetla OF the seul Bae Samana Roe Reick of the bat | tack us, and even to turn our right flank, but it was our With the duty of superintending the exhuming of Zrom Sebastopol. A fuller yersion of the matter, pur- falsehood, than in stating the whole of the facts; and | Campaign are favorable to us. a tee comands hacen ea eaanl hussars that forced it to retire. ly of Napoleon), in the Weet Indies, and the Channel ting to be a despatch from Prince Menschikoif to the Russian statements themselves prove their own in- As besiegers, we have been retarded in our progress by | The dan ane oamenien neat = etree poreenernanl) ae he was on duty when selected for service nce Paskiewiteh, is in some respects grossly inacen- accuracy. | According to their accounts, the first sortie the non-investment of the town, by the intrenckments | ;reencmy Was constructing | %, INCIDENTS OF THE SIEGE. tp ny Th pee lh em Coe rane te, iprandi is th ted as havin, sth i r $ Frend fet 4 . view on the works of the had flung himself on his bed, it undi for Bttscked the Engle Tines about tite ovclock in the | Ov, tve Sth inst. against the French was perfectly sue; . thrown up before its walls, by the constant reinforce- | giites, The struggle was obstinate, but the fire of the THE MILITARY BLESSING OF A RUSSIAN ARCHBISHOP. ng ag ery Caeithnonn Ts in the | cessful, and the French were beaten ; yet it is admitted | jpente received by the short sleep, after his return from the ; , an i It ‘ garrison, and by the presenee | tess On the 2th ot October the first two regiments of the Bitorneon; and itis added that the battle was only ter, | that tlie French endeavored to return with the ying | Sta strong relieving army in the fick. But we have | seed was commanded by that ot the bestegers: ThE | yourh infantry corps of Kuasia left Odessa for the Crk eth ree Seenky de fo sree ee gainated by the approach of night. Yet it will | Russians within the walls of the townyand itis unusual | maintained our footing on Russian grourd, we have were fortifying themselves on the heights to the north: | Ma, and before they began their march they were ad- | frei quqeere befens Lebaeto mee whioh Sir J. Bare hhave been noticed that Lord Raglan distinclly | for the beaten party to pursue the victorious party 10 | henten the Russians thoronghly whenever they have at- | Cyst of Balaklava, which they menaced on the left. ‘The | 47esved ax follows by the Archbishop Innokenti, in the wan veporie4 to Loge Fenmten teste bod. rae declares that the struggle lasted from dawn till | the gates of his own strongh ete ex eiiece, | tacked us, we have already half ruined the fleet and ar- | Gimost vigilance of the allies generals were directed that presence of Generals Annenkoff, Pauloff, and Ochter- | So¥ye Tehiried to lord Colon ner we ove Bnortly after midday. “If the document in ques- | the Russians have succeeded in drawing down reinforee- | senate which gave Sebastopol its importance, and we | Wimost rigilance of the allies gomerals wore directed that | [>p9°0° Toone teacelben tan teseesthe sun tacaieeriey near ion, ia pot. altogether spurious, the motive for | ments trom districts to the North, and have usod the | have fairly established our superiority in allrespeetabut | 'a'tarigue ‘withe that of te whey, Which on Laeswa, | Victorious warriors, adorers of Christ! Adorers of | ihote trene! ephemera tere ay hg tm Se Buch a misstatement may be eaflly understood. General | reinforcements in those convulsive eiforts that have oc- | that ef mnmbers. What remains, therefore, out to ap- | CMPariaen Will that of the enemy, which was known | cu.sict and therefore victorious! You have not been po spl Far fe atlalprmas ent 2 mr Aprandi is accused of acting without the orders of his casioned the events most recently reported. | proximate, as we can do, toan equality with our an- y “ a, able to rest long after your fatigues and exertions on the y a8 Geldworks never were before, have x0 stoutly smmanier-ia chief, with the view of converting @ vi. | We explained yestersay—and our explanation, we per- | {uconist in this reepect alo, nnd to despatch those rein. | SY Was excellent. The weather wasfine, though coli. | Crier ide of the Danube. The voice of the Emperor di. | Md successfully stood the trial. Among the friends of Prous sortie into ategular battle. Prince Menschikol | ¢eiy actly parallel to that g J , he - Colonel Alexander there is but one t beyond those by our contempo- | forcements which our victorious, though overtasked | gq ppyi * EN ects your steps to the Taurida, to punish and defeat an | { if 3 represented in this despatch as alleging that the heavy | yaries in Paris—the reasons why Prince Menschikoff is | ;, squires? This done, the advantages as well as | SURENGTH OF THE CONTENDING ARMIES— | airocdnt enemy, who, blinded by thalice and pride, has | Parable from such bereavement—that he did not live isa sustained by his troops was only one of the accl- throwing all the strength that he hes upon these hasty | il honcrs of he campaign will belong, we inay cont. | NECESSITY OF ALLIED REINFORCEMENTS. | Crossed the vee and. invaded ovr a iow to sce the achievement te the consummation of which he ient country, the f le of that Christianity which reagent | Dad eve cere ees or bie “2 ay = aia. and the place where the Grand Duke Viadimir | teath, encountered at his post, in harness, front to the 7 will be present in your rank, an Pere eine peaie eit oR et ane foe.. ‘The only consolation for the widow he leaves be. fents common to war. “‘Had our forees,’’ says the efforts to bring the siege toa close. He has resources | dently i J writer, “been concentrated, we should without doabt | {hat ought to give him. the power of doing 80, if he were | “Mt! hope, ys apne ke Recast Hy: 18 ‘The siege continues. Omitting the doubtful report of a ceases tie miihae sittsatte. wdsatis attribates | ence, or in the efficiency of his arms. The anomalous | 14 sien are strongly reinforced. The weather had be- | ‘72hlc bulletins of the siege up to the 8th and Oth, an [From the London Times, Nov. 17. invis - ortifieati < Is evident that at those dates ‘i bers | : . hind will be to know thet her dead husband's country- Kes doubrtess the policy of Russia to represent a dest: | Which preveuts “Thats ipyeetanent by a afiny oo. Daatied | come extremely coll; The Russians were earrying stores | uf padpessot.the ‘emmy aud og aie ear aee Soom as: nie aueet taal men s0 look upon his death. Sd Bive effort on the part of the relieving army asa merely x that of the allies, the command which Prince Menschi- | {0 ‘he north aie of the harbor, aud were making arma | cyerations before the walls. | It is only said that the | yyaid willingly return to his home. on the wings of the | a 28e service has also sustained a most severe loss wents for the transport of ‘troops to that quarter. his induces the belief that they did not expect to be g@asval aflair. = ae Lager Bae: sot koff has of a numerous army, and his a! sotmieianion. | hh Detter informed, and General Canrobert expressly de- tio, teide, enable bim t hi tion into one | Ihis 5 nee, Se 3 pees lares that the cnemy had at last collected hls reinforee- | Uf siege ngasfota mege. He has the superiority ta maine | able to retain the south side. | Ecarealy a house in Sehas- yt from all the peetbers provinces of eo bers. ‘Yet he bas not been able, fe 6 single day, to delay frente of ine hevpihal cadet aioer pi. toe anid of: and thapresence of. two princes im) ¢ {ho progress of our operations, with the sols exception Lg baa dae re ) ‘ { Bf iteelf afforis n tumielent proof that a general attack — Of tik tecilental explosion of « French magazinn on the | He great mortality in Febastopol, appear to be correct. | jy continual slekness, and now and then a victory. The | Monarch, take advantage of the race opportunity, gallant regiment he served in India, and returned pre- had been as deliberately planned as it appears to have 17th, He bas not obliged the besiegers to alter the | " Le Xnat th thovities hat tae i th prospect is sufficiently serious, but there is no immedi- 3 fo his regiment, having been for home Doon teavety exerted. tieds of their operations ine single part, ‘He has not | {tisoners state that the authorities had inflamed the | \tocnuse for anxiety. Ail the letters from thoarmy show | STRENGTH OP THE RESPECTIVE ARMIES IN THR CRIMEA | service. be doubted whether an: edent can be taken possession of Palaklava, he has not been able to | Hatred of the and people towards the allies to | ti feeling of perfect confidence and composure as to | The Paris correspondent of the London 7imes, writing | The Hon. Walter Charteris, of Lord Lucan’s staf, was Tt may . Whe i a, the prenmnes of | eutablich himeelf in ‘the fear of the Desiogers. He has the greatest intensity, by stating that the Russian pri- | 4), present state of affates, but some little solicitude as | On November 13th, says:—I have been desirous of know- | son to the Far] of Wemyea, consequently brether of Lard bagel y, itself ie tree communication with the — not obliged them to abandon the operations against any | foReTs and wounded were treated with barbarous cruel- | (o the future. Reinforcements are wanted even for pre- | ing fomething about the actual state of the respective | Elcho, and nephew of Iucan and Cardigan, and O hin feat Italian campaign ortion of the walls. He has not inflicted any serious | {¥- The men were, therefore, determined to resist to | sont effeat. Every man in the army/s overworked. Officers | @rmies in the Crimea; but in this, as in so many other | brother-in-law of the Earl of Warwick. rl merous thaa thé fos upon the armies of the allies; even including the ac- | te last. Spirits were freely distributed to the troops | of the highest rank are dying, not only by the usual | matters, the accounts are contradictory. On the one | was in his 26th year. He was an officer of the 92d rison, while ie defeated a superior army that was | cident st Balaklava, the loss ty the guns and the sortien | CWRVEG! on We earthworks. | 1 1 pig, | cusualtieg of war, and by exposure to cold, but by sheer | hand we are told that the Russlans have at least 140,000 landers, and was latterly on the staff of his uncle, ‘advancing to the relief of the fortress; but no commu- of the besieged has been comparatively trifling. Se hard work, None of the proper rtions are main. i iea do aor] , on the | Earl of Lucan, as extra ai ter 5 : “ by allies are fortitying their position on the left bank of the | \jnd: but he te ve | the death of Captain L. E. Nolan, the celebrated writer ‘Tebiernaya, as inight be expested, seeing that the right | een ob Prete timpe 24 cnly necenney to re gn cavalry strategy, who was slain in the, aflair on the ank 18 oceupied by the Russians. The belligerents may | him the final blow, and to throw him as a corpse into | Airey, Quarterm wp hon ing 3 sav hace! ke igadier Lovefore easily keop their several positions for the | the sea, ‘This honor ia reserved for you, Hasten, then, | Sires) Quartermaster General, Captain Nolan for mes iresent. What we have to deplore is the steady drain | ond to ihe joy of Russia, and the giory of our beluved | 2 nged to the (King’s) Hussars, in w! . tions of the town, discovered a strong Russian mine, in- i . | other, it is affirmed that we have over 100,000, and the Majo ith Light also “KSrlan eoe dence fromthe Bye ‘eWhanbean inthe inpascree for conlosive actions. we aretooapt fied to low sip a reneh Dronehing attery” ihe | \m'w tye besieged the member of rllerymensi'mot | Ramians only 60,00 (excusive of the garvvon)ta000 | was papher of Si Collm Halket, Governor of Clseg Ave os - iwht of Sebastopol | French then countermined, and remove ewt, of pow: | in proper proportion’to the guns ; the men in camp are whom are the late-xeinforcements. Who shallrecon- | Royal Hospi Eragon wenger «heh coo Sams Yay tn Ihe 8th of September: by preat exertions, npor a. | dee from the Russian mine. tol in proper proportion to those’ in the trenches the | eRe this contradiction? It ix not improbable that we | Lieutenent Morriss, of the 17th Lancers, who was so 0 carry on & siege house Oi eer ceanet te, tion to the hours | have gone to the Crimea with very little knowledge | severely wounded, saw. distinguished service in India, of much interest | of work. Everything is ntretehed, he pzmy | tend- | either of the force to be brought against us, or of the | under Hardioge nd Gough, and holds (if alive) 26th ult., | ing itself, as it were, to dimensions not its own. Such | strength of ig ee and its capabilities of defence. | two medals ands rs 4 Ke. a violation of the laws of strength and health is sure to | This is, 1 know, admitted in almost every private letter Copied Sie wsety the Firebrand steam frigate, ae_ revenge itself. If a man is always walking beyond his | Which has been received from the officers of the French | vere! ly wounded during the naval bombardment of Sebas strength, or straining his muscles, or over-exerting his | army. The inferiority of our guns to those employed | topol on the 18th, having his arm and side lacerated, is dificult ground, they were able to open fire on the 17th THE LATEST, joe cee peel caogesi Gera aor: HE Nees | of Octotery nctwitbetanding. the ‘peculiarly. aaltous,|.. Nothiog has ooeureed (00 Nev. = svels however, that the operations of the Allies nature of the sieg arch of the siege works to- since the advance of a Russian colun ‘O. orved ‘would be impossible unless they were wards the walls ie continued uninterrapted down to the | with the view of turning the British arainst ‘nd of ‘a; aud the indispensable cd-operat | latest date. The loss which the besieged failed to inflict | — Tuleseribed in my inst the failure 1. ermine fost must not be forgotten when the army us is not spared to them. The shellx of the allies | terprieo, and the signal defeat experlenecit H 4 i has already been noti imiral Houston Sto; y 4 eral times inflicted great sla ‘The loss sustained by tho Russians that day was | voice, or working his mind too much, he may do it fora | against us has already been noticed. But, whatever be | the gallant son of Rear jouston Stowart, super- zrccives 19 due ‘mead of prtiee, Tie iy duriog: the Tcoubioder taetuniats to conse: Moe Oy eee imagined. Above 300 | time with impestty, but the day ‘will come when he | ie eount of our arsoy, it le indiopensible. that rein | intecdest st malta, and nephew Of tho Duchess of Borer Ji:ir admirals have bad no oppor tor the old ms against the riflersen, both of the Fr . fin’s that he bag ‘done himself an irreparable injury. | foreements should be sent out as quickly as possible. | set. His gallant conduct in rescuing the Albion, and priseat war, of laying their si a. oe eapel hy, confess how murderous has been the fire se Tie learn wisdom just in time to be a warning to others, | The soldiers whose period of service expires this year, | towing her out under most heavy fire, has been a Yocbion of mayal warfare, —— Peifilant as the; ainst their artillerymen. The conflagra tione ivision, fr It ix possible that by next Christmas we may find our- | 2nd who wore to have returned to their homes, ‘o- | theme of general nee _ the fleet. She was toe so 107) Oe caus the toed cette ascents, sais. the town beve » ation re. | shirmisherg; but far beyond this, even te the'very walls | velvern most excellent schootbay example of the danger | Vebly Le retained in the field, ond i is stated that in- | clove to the shore to be able to turn, and, ‘being on fi ere , H of Sebastopol, the flying Russian’ were mowed down by | of dela they 4 basis for the military opera con: J; ion of. supply. | partments to burten te Grsving of tie ceseeiiee at | toe tamietinaly botnet sear tue sft tarng a jo @ secure i ‘ ' { stationed in Captain | We suid yesterday that it was ‘a question of supply. | asten the drawing of the ; r towi w- wo are invading an enemy's country, pi 9 ME hea | Peells tater scan eeeoeea Pile | stot the supply should be has been already fxedy ata | f0r the anileipated levy to. wich Lalluded. seme days | fers, and backed out with her Ho had before greatly retain the advantege of greater prox Mure Sas | The extent of iho-werk ; in: | ‘Since that cay the enemy ha not molested the allies, | time when tie diticulties of the siege and the number | 80, The drawing, which usually takes bout | distinguished himself rescuing an Austrian transport .9 of tabn and of stores. all Seareatae | vestmant of Sebartegcl, all fan enormous | who have continued cannonading with great energy the | of the forces Russia could bri upon us from without | April or May, is intended for January, and the conserip- from under the guns of Fort Constantine. fo the lint of ‘the events of the 5th, to be improgni ine sunt of strong: ta hiep wp the de The repair | defensive works of the town, The Freneh are steadily | were certainly not aver-estimated. Westarted with the | tion, from which in ordinary years only 80,000 are takon, | those who suffered fe name of Mr. Henry Baillie, ‘¢. pasault; and whilat the works are stony Nomente | of Ureecher, which fs the bract of Russian despatches, | tapping towards the town, and before idea of 10,000 ax our contribution, and it was distinctly | but which last ear yielded 140,000, will be expected to sninehinenan of peeieny's hip Spiteful, sen of Mr. dodarda the town and the harbor, dare reiiyudlered, by | wust in lke manner absorb a large proportion ot the ef: | giemd ossault will be made wy csplained by all military authorities that an army re- | Zive, in 1855, 160,000 George Bail stain, Mr. Baillie’ is described on H ¥ , ° ipa “ } abs ; iat ax being “wounded severely, havin Y | fective strength, ontinue st hawstion of the fineers have been cqually active in preparing for the | quired recruiting to the extent of a third of its number HOW THE ALLIRS FARE ‘THERE. in the official ‘ti if. yu ly, ic ae as will kanes. | see nada athe meanelile sbaatness of provisions is | great event. A Inge covered way bas been consiructed, | cvery year, News at the last date the whole elective’ | The correspéndent of the London Times, entrenched, | sustained « deep lacerated. wound By 8 fragment of o eas year, *t “Aste such a pocition as Trine Menecht- which extends from Gordon’s battery towards the Rus: | force of the British army was no more than 15,700; so | before Sebastopol, says:—Salt is aluxory which is rare. | rocket in the upper and back part of the left t ot that the sre fresh troops which may land ee tet oe ae strcuity Tox eertait: net ante foe tlw | hen Redon ford, and turing e@@be Mgmt anale, foees | (hatte ting Twp te SOMOS weaReGR have to ‘acai at | ly to be lind unless fe eonianetion with porky fibre, and | Hy e letter from Mr. Henry Bulli, dated fromthe Naval will have the advantage of acting With | fe or his army, but the sparing of the inhalitants the latter formidiile defensive work. This will serve | enee 14,300, But the instant the new troops brenthe! the | as to milk and butter, @he very eee eee p Thaearin, Oatober 24, we are glad teearn that a campaign of afew weeks, hare acquis | Cf ticity ant ite neighborhced from starvation. Lmit- te cover one storming party when the Acirive day ax- | 1esutuerhere, slept on the grownd, anit exposed them- | ten. Tord Haglan was Fery glad ¢0 get « ttle cold pig | be was rapidly recovering... of veterans; whilst, on the | 0) ty v lore, as the numbers of the ailice. and of the , ties. Captain Fellows, of the Tyelith Lancers, was | elves to the Bre of theenemy, they would become amena- | (pork), and aration of rum and water one Bight on out «ba coy oan (Fifth Dragoon Guards,) who nd voven the obstinate courage of Russian gol. | ty) i ee ceupy necessarily are, they have shown sent by Tord Kagion on the Qtth ult witha fing of | be to the same Jaw of waste as the army they wont | march here. However, the hardest lot of all is LF nt bof dpe wounded at Balaklava on tho t ie future encounters, be at least partially | 6M iin ie erlority of strength by the provess that | freee to Prince Menechibo™, fo ascertain the names | cut to reinforce, and there would still be a neces:ity for | for our horses, All hay rations for baggagera are | 2 imo, is the youngest son of Lond Brarbrooke. A i amish iP ccolleotion of repeated reverses, unvaried j they have sustained from the first to the latest date, of the efficers att:-ved to the Light cavalsy briga’e © more troops. To many young geacers this may appear | rigidly reYused; they only receive « few pounds of ia- The name of Viscount Fitrgibbon, (Righth Hassars,) aken bs .