The New York Herald Newspaper, January 20, 1856, Page 2

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2 | NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY,/JANUARY/ 20, 1856, the peace propésitions, semt to her iately by | was observed that every carrlage contrived to be | the only cavalry which formed part of the spectacle. | low stream, hed by the abodes of misery, in s0 Count Ezterhazy, is nat yet received. There is no Cirle pep yin ye mong Bp wthe almost immediately after came the Emperor, in a | chocking avd dilapidated a condition that it would doubt that she will make counter propositions, in | styi¢ of turn out.” ‘There is leas finery and more | Eeneral’s uniform, riding the magnificent chestnut | seem disease and death had there a permanent har ‘order to conciliate opinion at home and abroad. If} beauty. At the same time they are still very | charger which on all chief cecasions his Majesty | vest, and that the churches were only there to ad- ay; 3 she wasin a tal humor; perhaps rhe desired to persuade her German ailies that she was anxious to make peace, and that the fault muat lie with States who were insolent enough to refuse terms so advantageous. We know not what effect a means of controlling’the mas:es "Th the leading men in that movement cou, i embitious views—dreams of the supre ot the church, as it existed i the middle ages, ‘gradual absorption of Protestantism from internal divisions X be true, as asserted in diplomatic circles, that an | inferior to the Engtish in this The London | ures, He was accompanied by a brilliant staff, and | minister comfort to the dying. ard weakuers into the bosom of the mother church, | the proposition was intended to have; but ove effect " Ss equipage bas @ completeness w! that of Paris is with its inflexible dogma of nulla sal Je. | it certainly could not havo—that of counter pro- Understanding does exist between Louis Napoleon | ‘ftom attaining to” The first thing an inglish | ** 600m a8 be reached the opening of the Place Ven- | Tentered Rome ut 10 o'clock in the evening, and | Y71) ‘Gcihoticam, hus been charged upon then erat | Position to terms not yetoLered nor agreed upon. and the Czar, then the reply of Russia will go fur | nobleman does is to buy, not his carriage, but hia | deme, he advanced several horses’ length before his | proceeded through via Del Corso, the finest street towards mecting tle terms that have been forwarded | horses, as infinitely the moat deporte item. Five | geucrals, and putting his beautiful steed to a gentic | in Rome, to the Hotel des Isles Britaniqnes—the first to St. Petersburg. In this case a peace will be posi- hondieg De esd oat 2 en nee canter, fode immediately towards the pavilion of the | hotel in the cityat which were then lodging the tively patched up, in spite of the opposition of Lord. | jing Heten ayy ithe tants chick chek eaucky. | Empress, the troops uttering enthusiastic cries of | two archdukes of Austria, Albert and Renier, with Palmerston. blerby-iée axes . An Lain orna- | “Vive ’Empereur,” echoed again by the ten thou- | » batch of minor Gennan princes, Well, on the ‘The French Emperor got up a military spectacle | ment. is-held in horror. harness is never over- | sand spectators, whieh, in a columm fifteen feet deep, | route through that street, to that hotel, a distance of of the olden time on Saturday last, for the grath Save with metal, Bo ornament ja suffered to interfere | ringed the Place, and acc: mpanied by the waving of | more than sn Englich mile, I met, perhaps, balf a fication of the show-loving Parisians. The Impe..of the horees. ‘The servanta sre ished by 2 | handkerchiefs and hats, from the windowsand various | dozen persons. The chops were closed, and beyond ria} Guad, which was created by Napoleon | perfect severity of cleanliness. The tie of the neck- j balconies. Having teken up his position here, his | the tread of the French sentries and patrols no the First, then suppressed by the Restoration and | ‘loth, the smoothness of the. hat, the polish of the | Majesty remained quiescent for about twenty mt- | sound was heard to disturb the silence of the night, restored by, Louis Napoleon, made a teiduphal em | Ree te Hoy, nee tan tince more imgpertant than | utes, lll the main body of the troops should arrive | At the hotel T was fuformed that, after the French The —— soos balsed ihe ahaa ok or searlet breeches, gold hatbands, and embossed headed | to defile betore him. During this interval, while, | had entered the city,the shops were closed at 7 of those ‘pointed addresses for which he “ts so | cRDes; basis Paris, paint, anh shane leone bai ons prea iy jase bgp rag a d clock; bat now an extension has been granted, is t u alTLe) \e . sn as to meres pokey A oo carothily ed ae ined pal illemade coaches, and | had an oppotunity of witching the fair dames which, however, is not taken advantage of by eeven- and political quidnunes hardl Ree het eee unwashed footmen and coachinen. who, both trom the Empresy’s pavilion and the gur- | eightbs of the tradespeople. Their profits do not to attach to cautious iplinises” ‘He pio het However. with such a sun overhead, such beautiful | rounding windows were intently gazing upon him. | pay for the oil or the gas which they would con- the “ war was not terminated.” This information, | *teets, uch magnificent cavalry grouped in all the | with a specin.en of his noble horsemanship. A | come, and they prefer rettring before the hour fixed however correct, is_ not very new; but what ‘aid 2 | places, ench delicious strains of music wafting with | number of dogs, of all sizes and races, had somehow . tract attention and excite surprise ction | the zephyrike atmosphere, hypercriticism was out | or other got into the Boulevards, which, although | PY the military commander. that he did not say. It was yaa ia adare ‘ane of the question. In.the Palace sut the Emperor and | hermetica)ly sealed en all human intruders, were The present city of Rome, its government, laws, hie troops on the subject of the = “that fie nev . beautiful Empress, receiving from relatives, ec | not proof against ingenuity of these curious | and the condition of the people, are all remnants of made the htest. ion to his ally. Eu, laud € ieal dignitaries, high constituted bodies,de | canires. As soon, however, as they wade their ap- fhe middle othin, ‘4 Tsay“ . What was his motive for this atthine Son | Corated marehals, admirals and generals, ermined | pearance, whether in a Daan of revenge for their | the m Secon g more. Isay “ remnunte, it is hard to say, but it rl cre hw 2 Be deal of judgee, avd municipal officials, salatations—cach | more uappy fortune, or in eheer loye of mischief, | because the middle ages were the times of Roman goesip in private Cicies. ne vieing with the other in ardeney of coud wishes. | the spectators on either side set up, by mutual con- | grandeur after the fall of Rome; the present is no No = astonishment has been excited by the re- | t twelve o'clock, all withdrew to the chapel, to | cent, a series of yells, 60 deafening, frightful and | thing put an elegy on the city of nobles and turns of the state of trade for the past weg which | hear mass; and as the sun shot its brilliant gleams | threatening, that the poor dogs, dropping their 8 ey Past—a city Wha Metil ts cxecad conciiorelly those, of the pre. | though the richly colored windows, which was re- | stems to the ground, ran as if for their very lives. | beggars, of antiquated feudal splendor and the most vious year, so that it appears the war has tnorenbed voted on their heads, the gorgeous crowd of sena- | The fester aes ran, the louder rose the cries, till, | squallid poverty. Palaces and churches go to decay, elie than diminishes by uth imports and export ‘n legislitors, military heroes, and high diploma- | maddened with the terrific noige, per auimals | ang the government itself is only sustained by for- This is to be accounted for ia part by the epening of | He tinctiouaries trem all civilized countries, while | Hew like greyhounds throu h the streets, | oj Wi hew markets in the Hast, which will Lontines beraug | the Emperor and Empress. those wondronschildren | till they reacted the Place Vendome, where, finding | ©i8m bayonets, Whichever way yon tarn your eyea, doubt to be permanent ones. The pean oF | ot fortune—knecled apart in prayer to the King of | an open area, apd,in deference to the august Pa you behold the grandear of the past eclipsed by the world is in gtd condition enough; but strange | Kings, the scene was imposing in the extreme. The | sence of the Empiess, a calmer here, they | meanness, dirt and wretchedneas of the present, the to say, financial aflairs are not in in an equally satis- | Present deeply interesting position of the Empresa, } sudden}y came to » halt, and, in groups of twos and memory of wealth and power efficed by the sight of factory state. In spite of the high rate of the bank | the prospect of an heir to the new dynasty, impart- | thees, seated themselves on their hauaches, Por y: - interest, bullion Pit rons out ‘e the country, and | ©@ iueredsed enpressenent to the scene. futively surveying the glittering corps d’as-| Starving men and women, and the senseless pomp bank directors are at their wit’s ends ah Meanwhile, never was the population of this any mée by whom they were surrounded. They had | of politica) nonentity. stop it. Neither from the United States nor from | City 80 gay before. Talking of hatting in the Cri- | remained in thi position some ten mi- But is Rome really 60 powerless asthe dilapidated, Anatraiia nor Mexico does gold come in as farmerl mea, the huiting of the Boulevards must beat the | nutes, to the amusement of all, when the En- . Whilst the cxperne of the war drive it out ig | Bast out of the field. On Saturday, the 29th, ia | peror, apparently tereceeing some catastrophe if filthy, dingy city would lead you to suppose—ia there alarming mautitic % What will be the et is | Consequence of the entry of the Imperial Guard, | they should remain till the troops arrived, rade his { uo power here capable of exercising an influence at pretty enidont if the drain goes on. A suspension eh ore eae e erected, ee bee nate ines. er og oan ee dogs ¥ Mey a distance? My snawer is, no! The power " } ff no! fw ctacle over, and the streets on fire wi ie | not to he route ie Eny phicate . 4 ‘i of specie payments {: the ovly remedy, if no other | ‘oy ctl ittmination which followed, the whole cauge- | ‘They broke iheirianks and retreated, but almost im- | of Rome at the present day {9 a gift bestowed upon we ya th ar h ag ip eka fealer 1° ‘a8 covered with these little wooden tevemeuts, meduitely foimed agam, and impudently squatted on | it by foreign potentates, in their own well wader: ail depen is ont ate oyheory Z ballise in e ashy enchantment. Before midnight a per! eos for- | their ia kad the sme one ey pane be etood interest—the Pope possesses no more real bank vaul sidnaeam ete : tof timber bristled along the Boulevards, from | vre egain. The Emperor laxghed heartily, is 7 ank vaults. ‘Tremendous efforts would be made to | eT INT hitlar of ine Madellene, to, the eo- | thre be seemed to toueh his superb chestnut with the aver a8. Leven snd -Ansizio are. willing ta beritw obtain gold from all parts of the world rathor than | i... four miles away in the Palace de St. Antoine. | «pvr, for rearing his forelegs and leaping up in air, | 00 him to counteract other influences which they ei payments. desperate act as the suspension of } jy night long the hive of toymen plied thelr trade, ceuted a caracol which set the determined ecnsider more threatening to the perpetuation of € i Ee fret 5 and when the Sabbath broke upon the intoxicated jelping and running in every direction. One ii . Se anlech a Caton tor Nope rma te be Juss nies tod city, far as the eye could Teach a line of infantile only Teiueed to tun talk ard he, a white fellow of me nee jive acer ise ees rs he tye Me a eat mrs Ag ote inn eronad, | 2llurements, in the shape of bails, windmills, tops, | the teunapit breed, crouched on all tours so supmis- | “6274 power, was the protector of the pocides Ireakine sete part other Mochinore Taese | Whips, trempets, hoops, duodecimo editions of | sively and looked in the Emperor's face so beseech- | laboring classes, the umpire of kings—who con- ee eT ee ese teem Gee, | Zbips, theatres, battles, ‘mechanical tools, houses, | ingly, that nothing more was done to interfere with | sidered no other authority binding upon them many apd proj ted bi The Posse and they will temples, carts, wagons, cannohs and horses, were | him, ond | observed that throughout that formidable | _ond the conservator of public morals in an hardly ou * ina Jain with the Bremen lin given to view, such as no other city but Parisever | defile ot perhaps 100,000 troops, he never stirred “ P : eg et segs general ata company, S; | preceuted to the rising generation of mankind. ‘Till | fiem the rame spot. age of barbarism and arbitrary rile. ‘Times the day. The management of the Bremen vessels | tWelve o’ciock, however. the venders had it all to But now the formidable betey tS promenade hid | have changed since. The discovery of America has reflects great rcrents Upon their active and courteous themeelves. Here and there some ne’er-do-well | commenced. Would that I could a anes describe | opened new roads of commerce, and the wealth of agents, Croskey & Co. Southamy ton; but the ckill, | Purchaser, with his littie ones, might be seen; but | it in the very few minates I have to fore the | the New World has given a fresh stimulus to enter- attention and amiable qualities Br the well-known | 88 2 rele, true to the Roman Catholic discipline, | mail Jeaves! The pupils of the school of St. Cyr Bree and industry. e growing wealth of the mid- commander of the Havniatin, Capt. E. Higgins, has | Which divides the Sabbath into hours of prayer and | preceded it, marching with all that mechanical pre- | dle clasees has effected their siete aes trom feu- contributed largely towards irene “an, large a | Fclaxation, all were, or supposed to be, at their de- | cision ard carrying their arms with military smart- dal thraldcm, and the sovereigns of Europe them- share of public patronage to.tids tine.: Mo. lin | Votions. But betwixt twelve o’clock and one, a | nese, which might be expected from the model in- | ¢elves have availed themselves of this new power to the merchant | sas deo me an country is insucha | Wenecrivl hubbub broke over the stillness of the | etitution they belong to. ‘Then followed a portion of | sutdve their rebellious and law-defying nobles. The i isci t dpeanern’ ‘and besides | Scene. ‘The venders lannched forth their voices | the Imperial Guard, clothed in heavy marching or- | industrious claeees were combined into corporations, the care and ur- | With terrific volume in commendation of the extra- | der, their long coats almost reaching to the ground, | and, armed with this new political power, resisted banity of Captain Hi never fall to secure | OTdinary virtues of their articles, umd the more they | their knapsacks, blankets and canteens on their | euccesefully the encroachments of the aristocracy; for his paseengers, it is something to feel sare that his | shouted the fuller the pave before them grew. | bucks,om their heads their ordinary fatigue caps. | while at fame time they succeeded in many vessel will never run eground or break her machi- | Such clapping of little hands, such joyous tones of | Each musket was crowned with a of laurel, and | States in obtaining a share in the political covern- nery, if experience and vigilance can preyeut it, ag | @uCouragement from papa and maza, such pushing, | as the cye stietched over them from the entrance to | ment. This was especially the caxc in the Nether- they" eee always done bitherte.. The Belgian line | Leaving, tossing to and fro of that dense throng—it | the piace Vendome to the corner of the Boulevard, lends, where the combat between the nobles and the must get more skilful commanders, else the specala- | ¥#; indced, the child’s jubilee run mad. It must be | wheve they turned into the Rue de la Paix, one was | bovrgeoise drove the former entirely from the We observe that it is stated by a foreign con- ae a oa the ue an have Be ol fo the pacifica ehiee left to he provided tor by treaty betweett’ Turkey and Russia This ought not to be, and we are quite confident Not the case. We capnet conceive on what grounds even Russia herself covld gravely submit such terms to the con- sideration of the allies. If Turkey had besa able to treat with Russia as an equal—if, indeed, she had been able in any ps to pesos in the ce af ber mighty neighbor the attitude of an n- dent State, the intervention of the allies i: very, Poasibly have been dispeused with. But, what wil hose Who were avowedly in Russian pay, and those who only desired an opportunity of becoming so, it Waa felt, and justly felt, that the Divan was unfit to be trusted the safety of its own country, and the very last assembly in the world to which could, be committed for a single moment the guardianshin of the destinies of Europe. We were obliged to take more care of Turkey than would have been‘ taken by the Turks themselves, and to watch over her destinies with more care than she could be induced to bestow on herown. The only act she bas done as a Sovereign Power was to declare war at a time when the allies believed thet the possibilities of negotia- tion were not yet exausted; but since then. how has the supported the vigor of that proczeding? Her troops have indeed displayed the same stubborn ya- lor and magnanimous contempt of death for which they have so often been remarkable, but where have we found the men to direct and to train them? Zhe 4] upper classes of Turks know not how io command, nor how to govern. ‘They owe all the sneceas the: have obtained to the agency of renegades or of aol- diers of fortune who have volunteered their services. Their civil gewernment haa been a succession of mi- serable intrigues, ix which the factions of the Se- vagliohave contended for the laat plunder of a perishing country. The absenceof the English Ambastador for a single fortnight produced a revo- lution, and his return opernted a counter-revolution. Solow have probity and public spiritsunk in Constan- © tinople that the allies have been obliged to appoint a commission to prevent the statesmen of Turkey Jjrom. plundering. theloan which the gus antees of England and France have enabled her to raise in her last extremity. Our correspondent considers that much will be achieved if the commission can induce the harpies of the divan '‘o content themselves with the plunder of £2,000,000 out of £5,000,00% Axe there the men to whom the Western Powers are willing to intrust the gnardianship of those terms which have cost them such infinite labor and expense to obtain? Are there thg men to whom the states- men of Europe will be content to delegate their functions, and in whose sterling probity and enlight- ened wicdom they have found the steadfast and im- movatie bulwark which is to roll back day after day and — after year the ever swelling tide of Rassian insolence ard aggression? Ayre we to intraat the safety of Europe to men so signally incapable of pro- viding for their own, and rely on the probity and dis- erction of a body where all that is not fanatical is venal, and all that is not venal is fanatical? When we drew the sword to prevent the verritory of Turkey from being overrun by Russia, we laid down no asl sera undertook no obligations which could prevent us from speaking and thinkin, of Turkey as she really ie. It cannot he suppose that the exhausting war in which she has been engeged for two years and a quarter can have aeaerce her decaying institutions, or breathed into her exhausted frame that national spirit and energy which has so long and so gradually been ebbing away. It to accelerate the inevitable revolution in Eastern Europe was the object of Russia, that object she wil doubtless have ; obtained, nor is it in our power to prevent her ; gearcely devied. The desire to make proselytes ox- iste, probably, in ali churches, but ea: iatty th those which are not provided for bya Btatoe-tablishment, Kke thet of England, but mast necessarily exist among the Cathclics, with whom is merely a desire to recover for the church the power, infleence and unity which it has lost since the Refor- mation. With the Catholics it is « mere logical and bistorical consequence of their doctrine and faith in view of the new position of the church, a3 the con- seivator of the political systoms of Europe. Scme of the Protestant princes, aware of the revolutionary tendency of Protestantism in its new ical form, hastened to make their peace with the Pope, but did it, likethe King of Prussia, so clumsily that he hax laid the foun dation toa nent Catholic opposition ia the Rhenish ices, while his own ‘Protestant party accuse hin of the design to-establish an episcopate in Prussia, with a view of placing himself at the head of the Protestant church of Germany. These German Protestants look upon every species of ertho- doxy 28 a sin against ‘the Holy Ghost, (which with then means human treason,) and will sooner pardon . the Charch of Rome for persisting in its ay than the King of Prussia for returning to itiaa uew form. It is they who Reve raised the cry againet Protestant Jesuitism, preferring the real bona fide Jesuits to the zealots without faith. All these things are so intimately connected with polities, with the revolutionary movements in Eu- repe, and the attempt on the Be of reyalty and fae fy LT ad them, that the politics of Austria, in concluding the recent concordat with the Pope, becomes at once apparent to every observer of parsing events. Austria cannot hope to secure for herself the ad- hesion of those Protestant provinces of Germany whore traditional policy, ever since the religious war, has heen opposed to her house and throne. She cannot expect to secure the active support of Hanover, of Mecklenburg or other Protestant States; but ebe can strengthen the party which adhered to her during thet war and since in Bavaria, a part of piace ag! Baden, Nassau, Saxony, and espe- cially the Rhenish provinces and Westphalia. Here she carries the war into Africa, and raises among the most fertile and powerful provinces of Prussia an opporition to the House of ee eentog which, some time or other, may prove fatal to that dynasty. In all these provinces the vltra-montane part; 1s peramount, from two recsons: first, from the aasee, a8 above expreesed, of religions independence of the political aims of Prussia; and second, from the silent 20-operation of the Protestant opposition tothe King, who see in the Church of Romean element of power to be euccess{ully employed against the government. It was not soficient for Au:tria to remain, as here- tofore, simply a Catholic power; Austria, to make proselytes in Germany, had to throw herself into the arms of the ultra-montane part , 80 a8 to get rid of the reproach of treating the eee merely ag ascrvant employed by the Imperial honse for ita own security. Other Protestant princes had formed a concordat with the Pope; hence it became Catholic Austria to do more than they, by acknowledging, in the most solemn form, the supremacy of the in all mat- ters relative to the church. Even the doctrine of mixed marriages was left to be established by the church—a thing especially refused to it in Prussia, and thus a line of demarcation drawn between the partial concessions made Hy the Protestant eh sovereignsof Germany to the e, and the com- plete power ted him in all religious matter by the ancient house of Hapsburg. Here the policy of Frercis Joreph differs very materially from that of Joreph I1.; but then it must be remembered that the democratic innovations of that Emperor failed prin- ‘ P . confessed, however, that ‘hese are occasions when | almcst reminded of “‘Burnam Wood” and Macbeth’s » and established, par excellence, a confejeration | cipslly through the opposition of the clergy; and d, 0 ; Wro.wil be wes ene. |) 0 * ce the French character is seen under its most glorions | verification of the prophecy that it should come to | of tcwns. a ; that, ‘to secure the homogeneity of the Sitch but it isin our power to ee that from. this Our Paris Correspondence. phase. Whatever the fault of that character, its | Dunsivane. It was really a touching sight, « ‘Then care Protestantism, which, in its inception, | provinces, and to bresk down the power of the } revolution, whenever it ta lace, Russia, at Pants, Jan. 3,185, | smiability to children, to helpless humanity in amy | thcugh one knew thatthe gallant feilows had « vas not so much an effort at purifying religion as an | Nobles, the co-operation of the charch in its most | any rate, shall gain nothing. We ‘cannot re-create ab do ee form, is pre-eminently beautiful. No nation that I | rived seme three weeks ago, and that they were cUempt to emancipate the States from the suprema- | efficient form must be cecured. Under Joseph II. | the Turkish nation, but we can preserve and defend The Peace Pamphlet—The Emperor's Addvess to | now, exhibits this the Turkish tervitery. This, however, can only be done by a firm and straightforward policy, by plac- ing the power in hands that can use it, instead of neutralizing or surrendering the power by reposing it in hands that cannot. 1 Russia is to be kept ont of Constantinople, her ships of war must he kept ont of the Black Sea; and, if her ships of war are to be , kept out of the Black Sea, the treaties that insure its neutrality must be in other hands than those of the Turkish Divan. Better to fight for a complete and satisfactory peace than to obtain its terms in name but lose them in reality, by intrusting the care of their observance to hands which, we well knows will never dare to enforce them. The Late Moxsacre of Ghinese Coolies on Board the Ship Wavertey. [From the China Mail, Nov. 16.) The atrocities of the coolie trade from China have the higher nobility formed a league with the church against the Empercr; this league is now impossible, since it exists by the concordat between the church and the Emperor himrelf. As a great political move, therefore, the concordat consolidates the power of the houre of Hapsiurg at home, while it gains for its allies throughout Germany, which way hereafter favor her design of placing herself once more at the head of the confederated States. And it is also a step toward that opposition to Russia which secks to weaken the religious power of the Czar. The Catholic clergy of Poland cannot but envy the con- dition of their brethern in Austria, and deste to be united with them in their spiritual Lord and Master. If monarchical doctrines prevail in Europe, the con- cordat between Austria and the Pope was a politicel move of much wisdom; if the revolution succeeds, Austria muet fall with or without the concordat. Asay e . haracteristic in an equal degree. | exactly the toil-worn soldiers they cevised to ve, | cy of Rome, and the political consequences flowing the Imperial Guard--Stupendous Preparations | 4 child in distress, an accident to old age, a piain- {| +till there was the fuct that they had been to the | from that supremacy of ecclesiastical power. No- Sor the Next Campaign—Neaw Year's Day i. tive ery, wakes up all the woman in their souls; aud | Ciimea, had endurcd all_ the horrors of lost winter, | thirg shows go completely the intimate connection Paris—A French View of the Present Positi now when it treats of the gratification of | had etcrmed the Malakoff and red Sebactopol, | between the early Protestant movements and Russi their own younglings, the very floodgates of | ond moreover, had lost of their sin killed and | the effort pate re-organization as the fact of Russia. 4 bomen tenderness seem to be opened. | wounded come 6,060 men. The cheers with which | thatthe introduction of the new doctrine led al- The great pamphlet has bothered people enough. | No request seems tobe made in vain. The little | they were received were unmistakeably sincere. | most everywhere to political revolution, and in conse- By this time you will have received the criticisms | pes, like ents returning from their day of forage, | The sir rung with acclamations, and when occa-} quence of it, to war and bloodshed. The of the Englich prees, which has failen foul of it with are een bending under the weight of sugar, of | sionally scme spectator from the thickly crowded | religious war in Germary was o@ war be- * Soaps = * P cakes, of drums, horns, gurs and India rubber | causeway rvebed among the ranks and seized by | tween the lower nobility and the Enrpe- a cranimity that leaves no mistake about the na- | bells, which have been presented to them. The cas- | the hard some old acquaintance, the cheers rose | ror; in Englond the . introduction of Proies- tional feeling on the other other side of the Channel, . m 4 ee to wait for sean of the oak de | io te still. Scon, SONNET a ey es Hi ea ieee medias ay Or Ae me 1c in *, dot 7 uth cn, bat to prepare a considerable garrison of men- | to the gazer’s sympathy was afforded, by the a) rrance to the political power, an: nally to the ex- in heey A basting Hoag peairtr os te tal amuzement previously. On the hrrival of the | pe of the Paeecateel ho, without arma, palo pulsion of the Huguenots; avd in Sweden and Nor- the French journals have m1 httle More con- | new year, however, there are generally some es- | ud halt, some with their hends bandaged, their | way to the establishment of a great Scandinavian siderate, and though none are so hardy as to pro | pecial e¢renner which are so mysteriously preserved | arms in lings, or with the vacant sleeve pinned to | Power. Those States which did not participate in nounce its imputed imperial authorship impossible, | 14 the house that, when they make their appear. | their breast, or on crutches feebly hobbling on with | iLe new moyerent—such as Spain and Portugal, all seem only to lay by for an officiel denial to sa ance, the general belief is that some good angel | the cre leg that remained, marched in bodies of fifty | Polerd and Italy—fell into 2 species of political tor- i ae has dene it all. The little folks put out their shoes | by themeelves. They, too, had laurel on their brows; gece m which they were only roused by the French de excited universal indignation, both among those who that ench was their belief from the first. over night to woo the angelic regards; and seldom } bit the spectators, not content with these, showered | Revclution of 17%, Proec Bentiments ofthe Czsr—Latest Russian | know they are generally the result of ignorant or Iam inclined to think that the writer, like Ju | do they W00 in vain, for the next morning, by the | upon them bouquets from every window. The ‘Thee fer, Projesteutiem, as a political Principle, ny Cixcewar. brutal management, and others who understand housesscemed to shake with the enthusiastic accla- { had been inore or less true to its mission; and when The following extract of a private letter from St. | Retbing about the trade, and make no distinction 7 P Se " ‘oneresdonal | Shoute, bustle aud wild shrieks in the nursery, the aay vio Pieris Seis! The: Congressional | porentsare made aware thut all yorts of wonderful | mations that burst frum them, and ag the Fejprec. mode of settling the war evidently don't tuke, and ecidents have happened iuthe night. And then | bent foiwardfrom her beltonv gna waved her ‘Ro more will be heard about it. In the meantime, | this issuch a day ter the restaurants, Que would | bondbercbief in ratees 47, ‘neir faint cries of vive 1’ the Emperor hae =poken in an unmistakeable lan- Ll ag Me perchiy oo tases Oc rreach | Empercur, vive UInperatrice, tears started to her e in bi “3 t G aie Be © uhily at home wnen the ménage of | eyes,and hers were notthe ouly ones so inois- seage in bis sdiress to the Imperial Gard on is | the restaurants offers sueb pumixed delight, To dine tened. Many a : rovgh cheek attested a entrance into Paris, About this there is no dela’ | there aml on to she 1 Oe pera is,in troth. | manly sympathy for the glorious brave, between hired coolies who are treated as slaves, aud voluntary emigrants who pay for their own passa- ges. But all former instances have been outdone by a wholesale massacre of which accounts have just been received. The horrible tale may be briefly told:—The Waverley, an American ship of 750 tons, recently eailed from Amoy with 442 cooliea for Ha- the whele sccial edifice of Hurope began to give way in 1793, the dangers to which the States of Barope had teen exposed from Papel supremacy appeared as nothing comparcd to those attending an abjura- ticn of ail reiglon ond the indiscriminate attack on all exixting governments. It was then that, under the auspices of Protestant England and Prassia on Petersburg will be found interesting, although not of the most recent date. The spirit in which it is writien is thoroughly Russian, and it is evident that the writer is well infurmed :— For some time we were spprepenetely anxious as to the resnit of the Canrobert mission to Stockholm; but since the text of the treaty that has been con- rion; his Majesty regrets uot ta b-- i uh French gak 5 and va Ni and the Emperor himeclf kept his _ head | tke one side, and Catholic Austria on the other, the | ,jnaca has been published, and the tenor of the so | Vana or Callao. The captain having died shortly me - the far Ea:t: he bh le vara re aR Years the Fey ‘didicalty 3310 fina Ming “Touma 8 bare while the a wares of ch nse suf: py al gg Lege etal ama were earried on called secret a ticles has. come to our knowledge, rihawtl cad eee ucian ae Rem Heron = i East; s recalled them ive i \ e than once the poor | 2, 3 : i : hey} } ante oebivglece are: one place or she cthes. HLL Renee Nae ih poker oy fond ecmbined forces of the Greek, Catholic and Protes- tation ound 2 aah in Stweskian iro ma it tat is the curing another officer to take bis place. On anchor- m a slight repose, and in order to have a chosen T must reserve a description of M. Girou’s estab- | fellows were invaded by the crowd anxious to ps one te P tit in case motters nearer home | lishment for another fetter. Such aristocratic | them a hand, but in gencral they were strong enough 4 fi ee. Look to it, Prussia | | Stimulants for the infantine mind require a page | for the march they had undertaken. é i shall call for bis interference. Look to i, Pr * | of their own. I have left myself little room for After there came the Zouaves, allin their wew Of old timea king of your house cooled his heels | » otitics; but the following precis, drawu up by the | Oriental attire, and it is impossible to imagine any- for balf an hour in the anti-chamber of the Corsican | Pays, of the moral bond against Ruasia, eppropos | thing more picturesque, at the relapse x, and another may yet do the same when of the continuation of the war, is wortby of atten- | then their a erry They, too, had their ray Woy HY ~ aaa tion. 1 condense it as much as possible :—~ wreath, and they, too, their wounded; ond thoug) the de=cendant of that conqueror, flashed with “the Four Powers are belligerents—France, England, } the welcome they received could not be more entha- victory of Sebastopol, sheathes his maiden sword ia | Turkey and Piedmont; two are allies of the belli- | sieetic than their comrades of the Guards, it was no the palace at Potsdam. The war i« every hour widen- | gerents—Austria in virtue of a treaty which con- | way inferior to it. The drvms beat before each re- ro ‘ ‘ aster proportions. There | ‘ins certain offensive eventualitics, and Sweden in | gimext, and the various bands of the line and Na- ing its circle and assuming vaster proporti = respect to a defensive treaty; two others are neu- ticnal Guard whieh lined the route, struck up beau- fe uot the remotcst chance of peace. What the | tra! with an evident disposition to take part in the | tiful airs as they paseed. Some ideg of the numbera Czar may choose to do in respett to the alti- | alliance, and, if necestary, in active hostilities— { my be formed by the fact that, moving he in omy tam offered him by the allies is nothing to the thege are Spain and Portugal; two others are strict- | of a hundred, with a space of twenty tect between eres 4 h ly neutzal, although they have repeatedly manifested | each company, more than two hours were occupicd question. This only is clear—that, in the end, be their sympathies forthe triumph of Buropean rights | inthe march: The Boulevards, and the Rue de la will not accept. Lord Palmerston is very anxious, | — Belgiam and Denmark; two others, also, are neu- | Paix ase about forty yards in width, without the foot- naturally enough, to bave have a good case to meet | tral—Prussia aud the Sermanic Confederation; but | way, and es the eye contemplated Hert a itich Parliament with. it is not so sure thet Prussia bas in. numerous protocols condemned the { lax of armed men, as it moved bd rai hs ed She Bata Pe “ig aie S icy ef Russia, and Germany has ee that | peror and paseed cn through the ve Castiglione the Emperor of Russia, perfectly Lnowing the or- | the four guarantees contained the Lig an equit- tbe Rre Biro, it ete | ike a tes of ro ar ivati bly—ite mixed character, | able . Then, finally, two other States are nev- | thing mere impressive than such a a eerie beer rram in not return an an- tral, with sympathies moce or les avowed for Rus- | fantry, wound up by a body of formidable artiliery, — L pean . he | a—these are Greece and the Kingdom of Naples. | cannot be conceived. ‘The day seemed created for swer tending somchow or other to damage the | Bot the firet has commenced to abdicate a policy | it. Following after the peace pamphiet, it will Englich ministry. A plain categorical “yes” or | which menaced it with disasters, whilst the se-ond | show, at all events, if France desires peace, she has “no” is not according to Russian policy, and no one pesesece a very weak influence in the councils of | little reason to fear war. The interest of the scene, war for not departing from the ral jurope. Ruseta has, therefcre, only one Power in | too, was not lessened by the 4; in which all this ean blame the Ozar for not departing from "° | its favor, ard that a little State of third rank, | tock place, in the presence of that colnmn, imitated ing at Cavite it would appear the mate had alarmed , the captain of the port about the sanitary condition of the ship, which prevented free intercourse with her; and as, besides the captain, one of the coolies had died, the prejudices of the Chinese were offend- ed at the mode in which the burial was about to be conducted, or at some other unexplained treatment of the dead bodies. But the only explavation accorded to them was the mate’s hi ing @ revolyer and shooting down one or more of their number, the rest being driven withont difficulty below and made eecore under hatches, without an: caution or apparently any thought about ventilation. The mate thereafter attended the captain's funeral, and spent the day on shore: and it was not until after =a that the agents of the ship, who may till then have been unaware how the matter stood, took alarm, and insisted that the mate should then ascer- tain the state of his human freight; and so, at two o'clock next morning, twelve hours after the hatches bad been pul on, they were removed to dis- cover that 251 of the coolies were lifeless cor < Forty-five more were missing, leaving ool 146, of whom several are not likely to survive. je mate and crew have been imprisoued by the Spanish authorities, and it is suid that the United States Con- su] declines to take any cognizance of the matter. Other coolie sbips have recently left Chiaa under circumstances that afford ground for apprehension that they may not complete their voyages without tant churebes. The Pope was reinstated by the combined diplomatic act of all the Powers represent- ing there churches, not so much to re-establish the political equilibrium of Europe, a8 to act as a check on the growing tendency toward total unbeliel’, which was looked upon as the baxis of all re- volutionary movement From that time France ard Ansiria, with the tacit consent of Hugi: ° and Russia, became the special guardians of tu Fone, whose power had ceaked to be a canse of na- easiness in any price or potentate, but whose posi- ticn at the head of the Catholic church was still capable of acting a8 a conjuration formuls on the turbulent spirit of the masses. It was not.so much the affairs of Italy as their own which inddced this lisy towards the head of the Catholic church. ‘he e had no Jovger the power to strike, but he possessed still that influence over the minds of thou- rands which might serve to maintain the sfasus quo between the poe and their respective govern- ments. The church, instead of hol meg wer over kings, became their servitor; it quitted the position which it had maintained during the middle ages. and instead of sustaining the people ngainst the nr- bitrary power of princes, exercised its influence i» induce their obedience to their respective sovereigns From that moment the church was made the point of attack by the revolctionists, while the sovereigus of Europe assumed the obligation of protectin; {t, ard with it the sovereign pontiff. only bait that Napoleon has held out to King Oxcar, that he gives him permis-ion some of these days to bring forward the claims that he would fain make upon certain tracts of territory at present in the poesestion of Russia, and which might perhaps be conquered, we connot be astonished at the latter's hedging himself in with all manner of clauses ond provisions; and very possibly the treaty, which in all probability will rever come into force, was con-- cluded only for the purpose of getting rid of the diplomatic’ importunities of the Western Powers, and procuring quiet for the winter. How very Hittle serionsly Sweden (and of ee there has not yet been any mention made) is thinking of a grave conflict with Rnssta is evidenced in her conduct and attitude; stronger influences than English armadas and French missions are necessary, it Sweden is to be inspired with a new idea, Letters from well intormed ns in Paris state that the result of the Canrobert miasion has agything bnt entisfied the Empeior, and that the a) chin; elevation of the General to the rank of Marshal France is actnated solely by the desire not to ail another d/amage to those he has already met with in the Crimea and Scandinavia. This bug-a-boo you see is, after all, nothing. * * * The second, the mission ef Count Valentine Esterhazy to St. Peters- burg, is still Jess, if possible. We have been inform- ed, by way of Warsaw, of the object of his mission, which seems not to have been made any particular i . Mai Perrons. (I ' . % jan, but cording deeds ten thon- While these things were ig on, Protestantiem ocret of, and etill more so of the circumstances that | disaster. In connexion with this subject (which has in he ae re etn aie gland are really stent lect fate Se arte fond ot rhaletenoieets ever itself hed assumed various forms, and gene throughs Tea to it.’ The Emperor Francis Joseph, impelled by | Bot hitherto heen treated as slave dealing) we may ee a 7 wale Pants, Dec. 29, 1855. ‘uch a remarkable change in the weather in | a variety of phascs. In Englaud it assumed the | his own interest ardently to desire the diacovery of | mention that the Governor of Macao bas inprisoned two Portuguese subjects charged with buying Chi- nese girls, chiefly at Ningpo, for the purpose of ex- porting them to Havana; in short, with slave dealing, [Fxtract froin a letter to Ellwood Walter, Exq., of New York, Secretary to the Board of Underwriters.) Mantua, Nov. 9, ELLwoop Waxten, Esq., Sec., &c., New York :— Dear. Sin—-We enclore herewith those of yester- day's date, in which is an account of a tragical oc- currence on hoard the American ship Waverley, which yesgel took coolies on board at Swatow for Callao, and put in here on 25th ult. for an officer, Capt. Wellmano a died a few days before. There are many conflicting accounts as to the amount of sickness on board, and a notize pub- lished in the Official Gazette here, which we en- cloge, asserts that the captain stated to the health officer inthe first place that Capt. Wellman died from ton and many of the coolies from the , same disease. We are informed, however, that but two of the coolies died between Swatow and this place, and that ae Wellman’s complaint was not dysentery, so that there secms to have been not the slightest ed for ordering the ship into quarantine, and as the first officer of the Phoenix was quite willing, to ship in her with the consent of Capt. Honier, her master, it is most unfortunate that the Waverley was not allowed Se posed at once on her voyage. After proceeding to the anchorage ordered, dis- Epirecpal form, in which it became a most powerful political coadjutor of the government, rendering it the same gervice which the Pope, ia a more indirect way, rendered to France, Austria and Naples, while in Preasia, where the me ogg form was juded by the Evangelical church, frequent conflicts arose between the ‘King and a portion of the clerzy. Pro- testantiem in Germany, having failed in iis politi-ul mission of regeneration end reorganization, bec. me merely speculative. It ceased to be doctrinal and became cither abstract ratiocination, or at best philocophical criticiem of religion. Phis was the point where the progressive Protestanta of Germany met the Catholic encyclopedists of France; it was the point of ecepticism, of pe cherished mere'y as un historical tradition. This would not have boom the cage, if the Protestant religion, after a succer - ful etruggle for political ascendancy, had been raised to the dignity of a riko of State, or if Germany, by some political combination or other, had been republicanised. in either case the clergy would bave hada mission corresponding to their holy hee; they woold have helped to constract inste4 of applying the diseecting knife to both Church and State. ‘The gradual transition of Protestantiam to Acism in Gexmeny bad a two-fold effect. It drove a po tion of them to the establistunent of Protestant os- thedoxy (what the others called blue popery, be- cavee they declared the dogma infallible) ; and ano- ther back toward Catholiciem, where rationaticion some basis for a peace, had at first the intention of sending the most confidential member of his entour- age, Count Grainne, with an autograph letter and extensive powers to the Emperor Alexanaer. On the representation, however, of what an equivocal porition he would be bronght into by au unfavorable answer, he kept the Count (Graiane) back in re serve, and cent out the younger diplomatist, as a sort of skirmisher in advance. What the Hungarian Count (Esterbazy) is bringing with him are propo- sals which Russia canin part eecept, aud will per haps secept, but they tn no way bear the character of en e/timatum, though they do bear that of an ur- i al. aha {From the London Times, Jan. 3 } A nofjgn bas, we find, obtained currency amon the public, of which it is extremely important that they ehould be dieabused. It is supposed that the oporitions of Russia, which we alladed to yester- Toy, baxe been put forth aga counter proposal to the overtures of France, Englond and Austria, in- trusted to the keeping of Count Valentine Bster- hazy. The fact is entirely the other way. Before those na were formulated, Russia had of- fered her solution of the difficulty. She has been on the preeent occasion, and the peacerongers are welecme to make the most of it, the first to offer terms of accommodation. If we are correctly in- formed, Prince Gortschakoff, at Icast three weeks since, went to Count Buol and aunounced thet he stapendous, and a determination existe to make i he Tnperi —— ing Incident— | Frence has never been known by the “ oldest in- such @ lunge this year as shall Kill or cure. In gaia as stant tats Rusia habitant.” A week ago the Consonant of fuel is ing more popular every da, Louis Napoleon Engaged in a Dog Chave—Af- | ire ees was enormous. ‘There veemed to be nrestaiaete sin cenae ie tie eeaer 4 Secting Demonstrations on the Appearance of the | 0° reans of etting sufficient heat. Now, I am or i OTE MLO ETT a Wounded Soldiers— Moral of the Scene, &e., $c. | writing with the window open, with on exhausted rations; the rewards so abundantly showered down | 1.004 fuct come from witnessing a military spec: | fire, while the birds are singing as if in the cheer. ‘upon the combatants; the thorough identification of i ful month of May. The etreets would be ina ter- mo E i 11 milit ffairs; the species of tacle which would require the pen of Napier, tle rible state of filth but for an army of 3,500 scaven- ponies gia nian sai arty on hi historian of the Peninsular war, to do justice to. | gers, who, as if springing by enchantment from the universal good luck that ever seems to await him, | y/o vit cated as we are in Paris to things of the kind, | earth, cover the thoroughfares like iocusts, and with have greatly tended to populirize the war, a0 CX: | 1076 was w novelty, interest and reality about this | broom and ehovel commence their cleariug process ample of which might be seen at the grand military that flung far into theehade all previons spectacles— oe ba Se Oo Ik Sac ecaneet rh Bie i 8 ; spectacle on Saturday. Never were the spectators | i+ roast all such as have taken plave since the fall of | ‘The number of American citizens at present bere is so entranced, and never 80 congenial to the occa- the first empire. suppored to exceed that on any previous occasion. gion. Everybody was on foot. Few shops of any I placed myself in the house of a friend, one front They monifest an intense desire to Cole ate in the 34 fi ih “i Palatial gaicties which generally attend the inungu- description were open; “all madly blythe the mingled of which faced the Place Vendome, the other the | ration - the New Year and, ie all things, to be sayriads rang’ to see that shade oa mighty name, the Rue dela Paix. With great difficulty I broke resented in due form to the Emperor. The 4me- Imperial, or Old Gard. And they aid shout, eae Soh tlc a "Fale ‘liseli hd Bebe Oab- Han Miners in rat beats break they ~ ras — wae at ba tiglione and effected a puasage across the Place; bat down with the weig! names inec! je nel pagent shea Pr with politics hens Ms when once arrived, I had a coup d’@il such a3 few their husbands, did also wave their ‘kerehiefs, and | ‘7 Paris mie have ohtaineds pace Pon ig a cob tears of sympathy, aa that throng of holt and that boautift! pillar surmounted by ue maimed and Timp docked soldiers hobbled throagh | Napoleon the Gieot, which records a series of victo the streets, bending alike under their infirmities and | ries that cast into ehadow all the conquests of the the thousand chaplets of honor which, from house | ancient world. The area on the left was occupied and steeple top, fell at their feet. There wns a «p08- | 1) some thousands of infantry drawn up in com Oar Italian Correspondence. Romé, Dec. 18, 1855. Aspcet of Rome to the Lye of a Stranger—Its Pre- sent an Elegy on its Past State—A Review of its Political History——Popery versus Protestant Sewuitie The Avtirien O dat, Sc. ge tant some seven or eight miles from them, anda tapiet} hich was quite uniqs “My master,” he eaid,"'consenta iy of fosling, wi a et. Toe This is Rome, but imperial Rome no more! This 1 interfere with their faith. i oe pete mation of the Black Sea, and in order | imile or two from Cavite tions were being true oceasion—one eminen ty ealcalated ‘9 wouc)sthe | panies. Amongst them, scattered here and there, | waa naturally be the exclamation of an antique | Qyahriice of Germany inthe meanwhile, took advus. | £o¢ket outraliention ie willing thut the fleets of the | made to take the body of Capt. W. on shore, when the rising of the coolies occurred. It would -ap ear by evidence since collected that there wer it few troublesome characters among them and that those were the leaders, the rioting being quelled almost immediately, after a few ¢! from the erew which killed and wounded two or three coolies only, the rest retreating below. The hatches were put on, and chains or other heavy things placed upon them, and will remain in this atate until 6 8 are heard from. The charterera of the yeeeel sent one of their clerks to remonstrate with te creak ect “meen ened fo res of life, Te- movin, the hatches ft wae ‘ht that a number hearts of 2 sensitive people: and if ev: war as | were general officers, field officers and aides-de-camp sumed a lar staan, ieee aeemout, | on superb chargers. The right, or west side of the ‘a. nyo antiring pleasure which | Column, was left clear. It is on this side that the every similar epectacle universally ofiords the | Minister of Justice's house is situated, and here a bal- French people, one would en that these military | cony, overhung with a crimson awning, was appro- @emonstr: a hes ~ tart 4 pristed for the Empress and the ladies of her court tege of this split in the Protestant ranks, and of the political divicions to which it led, to recover the round they hrd lost since the Peace of Westphalia. They did not like to seo their religion degraded into a mere bandmaid of state—o 3 Of police estub- isbrent in foro consciencia, to retain a certain num- tor of 'toyal famities upon the throne. They insisiod on the Pope being supreme in all matters relating to the charch, andjnot the meré employ¢ or agent of the EU or Emperor. Religion was not to be de- graded into a mere policy suited to the worldly pow- ers; ard the head of the church, who favored tho cause of royalty, ehouid also have the power, if need he, to favor that of the people. In this manner the allics ehould be banished from ite waters, and that, the number of ships-of-war to be kept by Russia and Turkey should be ee & treaty between themeclves, to which the other Powers should be no pasties. To this the Western Powers replied, rather Giyly, that they did not think negotiations for peace could Le advan’ commenced on such a ba- sis, and eo the Russian flew back with the olive brench in her mouth to the ark from which she had been atched on this hopeless errand. This over- ture the Russian organ in Belgium now seeks to mantfacture into a eounter proposition by Russie, aud would lead us to believe that terms so ridicu- lous have been gravely offered and can be serious- Roman, could be rise from the grave and behold the degencrate race that now dwell in the place whieh once gave laws to the world. What remains here of classic antiquity is so completely ensconced in dirt and filth, and in the debris of the middle ages, that - rs it cannot impose on your senses, The ruins of ar- ht be afforded to a really interest- | Every window in this beautiful Place was filled with 1g event, saa ta that of Saturday last. gut as in spectators. Fiven the roofs were covered with them. | ‘ent Rome, without the palaces, churches nd inan- Scotland, both “old and young ran to their feet | , ge the Place dela ‘ merable dwellings of vice and misery—the creation , ‘Davie doth ‘The eawe was the case from ce de la Bastille, a id strike the travel when thoy hear Daintic Prarie: ial dram beers ia | stance of three milos up to the Rne de la Paix ali | Of modern Rome— won aigdbegre tors France. along to the Ree Castiglione. The weather was | ™ore forcibly brates e enero of an herote age other feeling is absorbed in | mild as a midsummer evening, sot wind blew | fet in the rubbish ¢ middle ages and the flith of B beg its hi -montane, or Pope's party, el . This,we have said, is not the | was svffocated, and upwards of forty bodies were anxiety to do ee hed sere enemy thn 4 from the south, not a cloud waa to be seen—not a | modern pavperiem. miey = Of its historieps pe the Rhenish province of Pras rand Ba, Y aie has made no counter proposition, for | taken out, when the cotlies were 4 ordered be- new year. Never, in the memory o i monuments, is a city which really presents nothing | * alle, in the G pa ¥ ee time to | low end the bedi a Pane nol Ist of January seen. There was a token of a winter, which but a few days ago had | © be varia, in Westph a in the Catholic povinee of | the very bas has no time low i e ies thrown overboard. Eventually, mut atch as might have a lovely day in June, | sct in with terrible severity, and which rendered the imposing to the stranger. T' ro i nowhere a con- | Wurtemterg in Belgium, and finally in Bavaria and | make spy. Her is yet to come; and when it | na we lear, it was found that 200 had perished, s @ softness in the ‘dr doubly delicious from the cou- | idea of a grand out-of-door spectacle something tao | tecutive view of palaces of architectural grandenr | Anstiia themeclves. Their object was to force | does come to be Cia mney Oy ve pecs examination has Proved, from Soe, Sst viction of its brief duration, and a bird-singing | | sbeurd to think of. The streets were sanded, anq | ch as you have in the Place de la Concorde | their we, eee on enter iato a | doubt not that od bay po poy ly recom: va ing tea te so a y al someness in all natare that produced its on | Phe tea th te ranee of 01 ones aus in Parts, at St. Maro’s in Venice, or on the etn sali 68 Catholics ana seorean tee ovetay hasten us Phare! ot bere, ‘ ‘Austra, ‘There cent be little quesiion that measures taken fale Yt a sere tas eae erie. Prom caer) “3 ii pn o'clock prs ihe tans o¢ | Piszza del Duomo in Florence. Churches and | ment fiom tampering with their religious privilegca | while regretting sho news of the Emperor, | were unnecessarily hareh, and that the, Hsing ~~ sire aio; om ach | oi med oe earn Tbe 8 ave ew el | 78 ME mcm a deka | SC eon Wat ns | Sam ue al a pod rollin, 1 Serards ths Poses at conert “i lting | entered the Rue de la Paix. It was the band of the | filthy hovels, and in front of the Pope's palace it. | ji, gavisers; in other words, they wanted Telfzious | ealled upon to convert her ultimatum into an ultima- | was held by the officers, and in wenoe, the. bolt it in all the bondage of march ties, rf Guides, monrted on white horses, followed by two | telf you have a vista which would scurcely do | independence and protection against that species of | tive, and, ‘of all, into an ultimaticnimum. Why | Jatter are now imprisoned here, and a jndicinl inves and sree lace, and unaccustomed cocked hate, It squadrone of that splendid corps. This wag almost | credit to the Five Points. Tp Tiber is a dirty ye). | arbitrary rale, which looked upon religion meroly ap | Russia made this absurd advance it i pot ensy to } tigation is In process,

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