The New York Herald Newspaper, October 5, 1856, Page 2

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2 NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1856. THE , silver of the headpiece; the Heralds-at-Arms | but enriched, above all, grand CORONATION oF EMPEROR ALEXANDER, Stralted ahecs talemon colared ‘boots with gilt spurs, | venuto’s own hand, for LF pad hong em! heads of departments, the dons of the Rus- | Domine, fac Imperatricern, to which the choristers ap smnesty and the Annnnnnnnnennnnnntanmnne rlashed doubleta’«’ cloth of gold, and ombla- | £10000 sterling Om we left there is av estrade or the bs the managers of the theatres, the re- cided ed mao annos, and at the same instant, the bells reforms. The following are con zoped with the arms of the empire, aud Spanish hose, wo | orchestra ond tor the singers, among whom are Latviache, of all the troops of Cossacks, the Mar- | which had been silent, burst forth soaataore with ve: A civic and military medal for all who ‘The People of Moscow at the Gates of | delixbifully cbivsiresque and crusaderlixe, that I waa | Dumeric, Boeiv, Calzolari and Taglatico, shals of the y, Count Armieldt and the Fin. | mendous clamor, and the guns of the batteries fired 101 | part, directly, or indirectly, im the war. F ie the Palace | ‘inie angry with one of theta who suddenly’ came forth | with cramoiried purple velvet, with golt fring nish and Polish masters of the coremo | rounds, The smoke ‘over the walls and floated | dom’ from military service for four years ihrov for the Royal magenta, to destroy my delusious by mews of @ pair of mild look- | borders. The lmperiat throne is piace! at the eud of | ries, heralds at arms, officers bearing collar of | like @ fine veil over the flashing arme of the soldiers and | out the empire. A most equitable assessment of Bn \pertal ing speciacies, through which he surveyed the gay crowd | the room, opposite the buffet on the right hand side, the oraer of St. Andrew, the standard of the empire, the | over the crowd inside, It was at 10:20 that the mouth of | poll tax. ‘The Emperor accords a0 amueaty to the } Prince Gortse! ‘and other Celebrities | wih thorough Pickwickia expression of countenance. | Three seps. covered with gold embroidered parple vel | seal, the sword, the mantle of the Empress, thatot the | the capnon announced the ere which his Majesty, | tical offenders of 1826 apd 1831. All the Jews of the ne in the Court Yard—Ar | But there are realities bere that cannoy be destroyed so | yet, lead to the platform on which the throue is placed, | Emperor, the Imperial globe, the sceptre, the two dia- | kneeling, addressed before all his people to the King of pire are frerd from the special burdens of the recr rival of Foreign Ambassadore—The Ro; al | easly Above there is ® canopy, with an imperiaic of cloth of | mond crowns (each ‘guarded by two Grenadiers of | Kings to sanciify his reign All this tumult suiden | ment that still 0} nes thom ‘The children of sold Ins quiet group, beside a golden pillar, there stan Ix | gold covered with Tmmperial eagles, with acrown in the | the Palace), then s of the Charaier Garde, a | ty ceased. There was a murmur of voices for | that were brought up by the and as such for: Party in the Cathedral—The Empress, Em- , ese Mother and ©: Family | Gortscbakoit, whose name will be ever rssocuted with | centre on a cushion of yelvet and cloth of gold, with | Marshal of tke Court, the Grand Marshal, the Archmar | ® moment in the court, which was hushed at once | part hitherte of the fon—Keligious Offices an Rettre= | that masterly reweat which deprived France ana Kugived | fringes and acorns of gold, shot with yellow, black and | sbal of the Imperial canopy | asa bell tinkled once or twice from the cathedral, and | serve as soldiers, are all restored to relations. ment of the Procession—Popular Rejolcings | of baif ther triumph, When last the writer xa sar | white, The edge ot top of the canopy ie carve t aud | comes in sight, and the Emperor presents himself t» the there was a profound silence, while Kapress, Metropoll- ‘TUESDAY MORNING, 8 A. —Banguct and Parades. great gavpt figure i was staikiog up the isle of St. | gilt, and im the centre is @ shield with the [m- | people, not amid cheers, but loud shrill cries, which | tan aud people inside all knelt down addressed thei Yesterday there was Lr ry) of the Guard at {Correspondence of the London Times. Pavi'e at the foneral of our great Duke. Since then years | perial cipber, with the Imperial crown above, encom | overpower the tolling of the bells, the crash of arms, and | prayers to Heaven for the Emperor. He alone stood | o’ciock, in the Kremlin, and a levee and presentatio juscow, Mol 1856. —and a few months which Drought with the! cares | paseed by the collar of the order of St. Andrew. At | the loud flourishes of drums and trumpets which riso ali | upright as they prayed. At 10:45 the Della broke | mid-day. There was also @ State ball on # very gr M », Monday Morning, Sept. 5, 15: iets. yf ‘The Czar is now the Lord’s anointed. ‘The great ‘cere. | #8 Years seldom kuow—bave bowed dowa his figare, and | each side are smaller shields, with the collar of St | sround us. Before him march two priests witha gold | ont again, and the % Deum which heralded the | scale at the palace. The Emperor received the Am) mony which has consecrated bis power ia the eyes of so | bave wrokled that broad high brow. The Prince is | Andrew m, richly emblazuned, and all | basin fuli of holy water, which an Archbiehop sprinkles | high mass was chanted. For the long ceremonial which | sadors and Ministereat bis levee, and spoke to each | many millions of bis subjects bas been performed with | Covered with orders, crosses, and ribbons; sara of div | three are draped witb imperial standards, At the ends ‘on the ecarlet ‘cloth. The canopy is upheld by | now took pluce I must refer to the printed programme, | some time, and the Turkish ted rare precision and success, ynd with & magniticence to | monde glitter op his breast; but there is @1airo gravity | ct the top of the there sre aigrettes of ostrich eral assisted by Colonels of regiments of the | every detail of which, minute as it was, was most scru | tials, The illumivaticns were r last evening, | ‘which vo Distorieal pageant known to me can claim su. | 84 care about him which shows that these honors have | plumes, dyed yellow, white and black. Beneath, at the ‘of General Major. His Majesty,who is ia military uni | polously followed and obeyed. for one hour anda haif | a gentle breeze whica sprang up after sunset blow r periority. The day—how much of our graddest efforts | Bot been ightly bought. His eyes are dim, and the use | back o the throne, is displayed the imperial manile of | form, is followed by his Ministry and aid de-Camp Gene | the crowd inside the church were engaged in assisting or | of the lamps out. Gopead vn that which we cannot control!——was beautiful, | OF & pair of buck mounted spectacles adds to the severity | ermine, with the arms of the empire tu a golden border | rals, and immediately bebind him walks :he Command he elaborate rites with which the mass aad At sunrige all Moscow was up apd stirring and betore it | of the expression of bis face. It is very striking inacev | in the centre, and the imperial cipher protuscly embla- | ant of the Chevalier (iarde, with his naked sword in hie | the imperial sacrament were celebrated, and during | The Burning of the Steamer Niagara on Li Was day ihe bum of yoices and the tramp of feet rose | 0 see the number of Russran oftivers who are obliged to | zonec on it. The cdges of the steps of the platform are | band and his heimet on bis head. This officer, who isa | the same time the crowd outside were eng: vory Michigan. fom the streets, At 6 o’elock the Kremlin was assaulted | "80rt to such aids to imperiec: visiou. Thee wust b» | ornamented with large salvers and goblets of gold, on po. | General in the army, is a man of great stature, and his | much as all popular assemblages are whea they have no APDITIONAL PARTICULARS. by a sea of buman beings, who lashed themselves angrily | *ometbing peculiar in their habits or ip the climate which | oestels of malachite and goid; the three ancient ‘brones of | person is set off by is unform—a gilt casque and crest | thing particular to do—eating, chatting and staring at each irom ‘tho Chicago Press, Sept, 27.) against the gates, and surged in like waves turough the | Tenders Wt mcesssry for #0 large a propordoa of | the Czars are placed beneath the canopy, and on the left | of silver eagie, a white tunic with a scarlet back and | other. In the seats just before me are the Turkish Am- Captain Diller, of the Niagara, aud the first mate, portals. This ts to the Russians what the Tower, | "he military men to wear glasses. In another | there is a table for the crown, sceptre and globe, covered | body, on both of which are stars of brillianus and silver, | bassador and his suite, who of course require ® good dea! | Gillis, arrived here yesterday morning, by the ates i. Paul's, r ‘Abbey, the cathedrals) | group uear the Prince may be seem toe jotrepid litte | with crimson velvet embroidered with goid, and a cloth | snd iorg jack boots. The Emperor, who possesses the | of rigorous investigation, and who receive it accordingly } Arctic, from Ozaukee, Oaptain Miller made his E sed ibe unl ail in one, would be to ag | PAvAl Cicer Biruleif, who bas received hgh marks | of gold beneath it. Toere is a table at the steps to the clea advantages of the Romanoff family—a (ue, erec: | from all sides. me are in good places in the front ro#, | @t that place, and did not bring a copy with him. Ha: Evgiishinan—it is the heart sad the soul of of faver from bis countrymen for his conduct at sebas plaviorm, vbich js tobe borne up to the thrones when | and stately figure—marched with a measured stride, aud | aod 60 all the ks and Greeks and soldiery | been up all the night before, he wan asleep at the ¢ Morcow, as Moscow is tbe heart and the soul of Russia, | 'OpOl Hie led no less than thir cen sorties against the | the banquet commences by taree of the High Chamber. | bowed right and left as he passed down to the estrade enerally in the court, having nothing better to do, | the fre out, and was not waked in ‘to agat Weis ber bistorie x! monument aud the temple of her taiv’a, | Milled trenches, and eecaped unhort tll the las:, when he | sips of the empire. On the left of the pillar are placed | The Empress followed bebind bim, under the same ca } urn round and lock at these good gentlemen | apy command. We obtain bis statement from a le, Agaiust theee wails Dave been broken the hordes whic | #8 bad'y wounded, aua retire! to Moscow to reap ths | wo tables, extending the whole length of tbe room, for | nopy, with thirteen ladies of honor around her, ‘aud her | end at the galleries full of people. The two races | from Ozaukee, and pubiish it below. for eo many cen\uriee sought to destroy, in its cradle, | ‘Tus of bis intrepidi'y. In auotuer spot Priuce Menscui- | the guests. These are weigbe¢e down likewise with gold | appearance was the sigual for repeated outbursts otcheer- | are face to face, and, except in height, the Turk The mate was a wheel when the tbe Hercules which was Dora to crush them, and within hoff, who is stili a favorite with ‘be Russians, is speaking | and silver plates, goblets, plateaux, epergnes and sal ing. Her Majesty was dressed with the utmost simplicity, | bas Doll to fear by the comparwou. The repre He immediately proveeced to the quarter deck usual dryness of manner van attentive litte | vers. The chairs, of white and gold, with crimson vel | and presented a most charming coutrast to the glare bs | sentative of the Ottoman Porte is a handsome middle } the boats. but could 26h Sad achaad tobeipb 3 them b assed most of the great b with lesen oes yoo Sanne Toros all teat ppd nudieres, The Prinee ta very gore reepectiag the crit: | vet rents, are placed at the left sides of the tables only, so | which she was surrounded. was a gracefulness in | oged man, with fire intelligent features, full of swectno:s | crew. With the assistance of Passengers Jaunched precious and most sacred to the Russian race—the tomds | ¢i*B to which be bas been exposed for bis plan of defenco | bat ail the gueste wil) have their faces turned towards | her movement'—a quiet dignity and gentlencss, whicu | and tonhommie; be wears, of course, the red fez, but ic te of the quarier boats, which only one sa Of the kings, dukes and czars, the palaces, the cathedrals, | St tbe Alma. and the letvers which bave appeared in tie | heir Mojestics, Such are the glories of the banquet room | tovched every beart, and turned every eye even trom the without the brass button at the top which symbolizas the | launched, and which saved over twenty pergons. he treswurce, the tribunala, the boly images, the miraca- | Public rapers from him and wis, aooasers are s wr foa | of the Caar. Se petten of bar Imperial hustand. "an the canopy we- Siciet, ane Ths oat — er ge aren ss Pl rineorcar og = bys meget Sar wate jon shes, i u of s ture in Russian journaligm. ince’s fiiends iy ‘ou do not wish to be as miserab| , ©OF ne down the steps amid the sheen of glittering awor pear on —* wi up iD —{ ree rew and the ol: at ge ply sin aged aca igen me pe 9g ,, wey mgm ty : . iB awer | Collar, embrollered on the neck, chest, back, and sleeros | boy, who she directed to swim after it. Mr. form it is an irregular polygon, with a tower at caca | Dif plan was frvistrated by the negloct of the Genoral who | forth into the fresh air, and get a look at the pure blue | blades fit urished at the presence «f the Emperor, th Ma Anglo of Ue walle it fe heunde! by the river op oue | cOmtnanded he left wing to carry out bis instructions; | sky, which is sbizing with heaven's ‘own brightaess, De | picture offered by the court of the Kremlin was such with the richest gold lace. His suite censists of eizht or | Houghton, wife and two obildren, of Westport, Ric side, and by boulevards marking the course of aa ancien: | these were, to slow tive or six battalions of the French | scend the scarlet staircase between tiles of the Chevalier | one seldom secs—tho splendor of tho pageant, th pine persons, all dressed in the same way, with the ex- | Lake, were also saved in this boat. fren, Low as dry us the Cephisum, 9n the ouher, aud ite | t0 get Up to the edge of ths plateau. and then to aitack | Guard, the Garce & Cheval, the cuirassiers of the guard, | steady lines of the soldiery, and the waving masses coptien of bis son, who wears a scarlet cavalry jacket. There were five boats on the Niagara, hich, ir ely the size of the whole city of Mos- | %«m, and burl them doen oa the columns asceadiag | the grenadiers of we guard—all now dismounted ‘and | of the gallaries as they rocked to and fro in thetr | Whether the infidel would have entered the very heart | had been properly juvnched and handled, could he early Czars. irom below: but instead of doing 0, the General permit | torming a tence briet ing with sabres between the ecarlet | homage and ecstasy. A platom of the Chevalier | of the Greek church, which is to him the most obnoxious | saved every person on board. One of the life boats Thad inten ea @ mora minute lescription of this sacred | ted pine or teu bettaiius anda pattery of artillery to | cloth and the nobility. Pass by the Church of the As- | Garce followed the canopy, and after them came a and dangerous *form of Christianity, or preferred a seat | the upper deck was launched without any line b: spot, bvt for the present | tbust be convent with saying 20 | CFOWN toe eights before he assailed them with ali bis | sumption, and out under the archway to the outer court | member of cach family of the high Russian nobility, outside, I cannot determine, but he certainly was more | attached to it, and drifted off so far none & chen they wore too strong to be dislodged. | of Kremlir—the scarlet cloth still is beneath our feet, aud | three and three, behind whom again, in strange juxtap? | Conscientious than seme of the other representatives | reach it. munen. ly a8 it is, Our p Hh fc foree, aud Farly ss 1" is, our party, ail iu uniform thous | ore eee eoay. he, itis cortata that the ituesians re. | the raised cetrade on which the Emperor watks after | sition, marched’ a baud of artisans and manufacturers, | Had he gone in he must have aseisted at rites wnich | — While the stern bost was being Iauached, uearly fi thoogh they be. havea hard strugglet ea of tae ee een te ene eee one ore’ | gard Prince Meuscbixol! as the most accomplished general | leaving the church is carried round outside into the outer | after them followed tho corps of the First Guild of Mer | would have appeared to him ridiculous or impious, | with people, » nap jumped into it from the burric 2, Of well clad b , of stracze peasants ma | luey (omeesn, so far us regards the theory of war. He is | court close to the galleries erected for the occasion till it | chante, by threes, and the procession was closed by ano | 2nd wherever be looked his eyes would have seem the | deck, sirik'ng it with such force that the rope brok or Sa nt! of pikes in otf, on poem lag extremely well read in many branches of iearning, and is | re enters the inner court by the archway, at the south | ther platoon of the Chevalier Garde. Tho flourish of crescent placed beneath the cross, and similar alle the bow, and the people were all spilled out and droy fret ana face Said to be us various atd versatilcas our own Achttopbel— | eastern extremity, ‘This estrade is protected by a railing | trumpets, the strains of the numerous bands, the cheers | gorical representations, which the Greek church, } togetber, while the boat was swamped and rende ed up with carriages, | ChYmist, doctor. naturalist, goologist, lewyer, dipiomatist, | and at each side there is a wall of soldiers, part of which | of the people, the measured hurrats of the soldiery, the | &# the protagonist of Christianity against Maho | usciess. 4 For the places reserved | Folcier, sailor, &>. His manner ts imperious and harsh, | —a detachment of the lancers of the guard—is com | roll ot drums, the clang of bells, deafened the ears auc | medaniem, exults to portray. We must, however, Captain Miller furnishes the fullowing list ot pas ets are vecersary, and most | Slbeit be is given to theory and reverie rather than ac | manded by Major Hali, who ts descended from an Eng almost overwhelmed the senses. The Motropolitans o' | in the interest of truth declare, that either tho | gers at Ozaukeeon Thursday, which were saved :— fiop, and be never ‘receives’ at bis house, or studies | lieh family. Ana bere I may mention that among the | Moscow and Novgorod, who had previously blessed thy | Greek church or the Russian government is much more Caniy.—J. W. Bolles, W. H. Hamilton, Oxford, ( {the names | imperial ensign, stood at the door of the Cathadral of the | tolerant than that of Rome. for not only are all religions | nango Co., N. Y.; E 8S. Ensign Pitcher, C. D. Ada cS made the courtyard tic people are rot abie t tad inetr slips of colored card at the very © two show them, aad so | the arte of popularity. Tostleben is algo ia the ail, but | Russian oilicers | have met there are bearer: Mere is oF y onfasion. I cannot see him, lost as he is in the crowd of generals | of Ramsay, Greig, Beli, Ocbteriony, &c. Tue first— | Assumption, and as thelr Majestios approached tho tormer | permitted to have their cule in this gigantic empire, but | Chenango Co., N. ¥.; John C, Thomas, Caio, 1 was 0 morning thas Lord Wodehouse | 82d statesmen. There, too, is the second Gortwh kol!, | who is the ‘descendant of'an old Scottish family, beariag | presented them rhe holy hood to kias, which they did ee Gre omer ee Ce ages privileges. During the | N. Y;; Frederick Driscoll, Fulton, Oswego Co., N. obtained a smi; tickets from the Ra who is as celebrated as bis great relative, aud the biai!, | the arms of Dalhousie—is one of the ableet geoerals in tae | mort reverently, and the latter sprinkied them with holy } height of the war the English church was never closed Daniel Lee, Waukesba, Wis.; K. K. Hurlbut, Moackir SULLor tiex for strangers of distinction two view the p: soloierly and jntelligept-looking Aide de-Cnmp General | service, and was specially engaged in the cefeace of Fin | water. at Moscow— once, indeed, the Russian authorities slightly | Mich.; C. B. Peters, porter, Chicago, Ill.; H. ely, ersrior y ie de@pair, for thotims | Ludere, whose arrival with fabulous reinforcements was | lund; the others are most likely the representatives of ‘We are now inside the cathedra! with them, and wo are } objected to the passage in which the Gey tye Pree in their | talo,N. Y. wes rani: » tacos wots mot te m, | GBF Constant Dugbear in the Crimea. Towering by a | tho. adventurous roldiers and sailors of fortune who | about to witnosea ceremony instinct with moaning and | prayers for tne Queen add, “Giving her the victory over head, at least, ower all this assemblage, and evospicuous | flocked from Scotland to lead the battalions of Noctheru | full of acted so emnity to the mind of the unsopbisticates | all her enemies;” but they were satisfied when thoy for bis fine bearing and face, notwiih-tandivg those horria | Furope to victory by their discipline, valor av‘ sagacity. | Russian. The eye uninformed by the spiritcannot right } were in‘or med that these were spiritual and not temporal | children, of Westport; Lewis and Francis Willard, epectacies, Major or Colonel Stalipine is readily eonepioa The foreign Ambassacors apd Ministers, wh» assemoled | ly interpret a great symbolical representation, aud we | epemics, though on what authority the distinction was | boys trom Piattaburg, New York; Pat O'Neal, Mary — ous, and, although not many Englishmen or Freachmen | at the palace of M.#e Sorny at 8 o'clock, will descend | must for the moment put aside our modern day, constity | made I know not. Odcly enough it was that inthe very | lone, Neal 0’Neal. Mary Laba, Rideau Lake. may have beard of bim, heis known throagaout Russia for | from their carrieger at the northern angle ot this outer | tional, and essential English ideas, if we would righily | next row, behind the Turkish Ambassador, were two ‘When the Arctic left Ozaukee four bodies bad been his bravery and devotion on the day of tbe Teheruasa | afrade. appreciate the effect of what we are about to witness. | Roman nobles in the acarlet uniform of the Papal Court, | covered, three of whom were ladles. One ot the la He verved on the staff of General Reat, aod when ‘Just a toinute or two before $ o'clock there is a great | Some notion of its sigrificance will be conveyed to th- | snd next to them were the Marquis de Sotomayor, | bad on her person $600 in new bank bills, in bank that officer fell be was seen, under a tremendous | commotion among the people, who are clorely packed 1 | Euglish mind by the thought tbat it is im the eyes of the | Comte Brunetti, the Duc de Frias, and other | ages. None of them had been identified. Among the interior ot v was found to be ict eeah reer Corps diplomat oe Toers | ire, coolly walking through tbe tleld, lookiug for bis | this outer court, and the gendarme ridiue gently throug | Russian people the sacrament and visible cousecration o | géntlemen from Spain, in scarlet aiso Of course the Ro | certainly known to be lostare Mrs. Hutcnison of are opiy 200 tore p'aces ingile for aii th» aobiluy, | BOY; BOE Succeeding in that object, he came, howey them make a lane tor the first carriage of tbe French Em. | tht lute power of one man over 60,000,0°0 of his fel | tan Legate will not arrive till after the schismatic pro. | city, and two children of Mr. Heron, also of this Ministers ard > pores pf all tho Rusras {t | 8pon the piace where General Mayera was lyiag badly | parsy. It comes up right gorgeously—running foot | lew beings. Something of the terror inspired oy such | ceedings of the Greck Church bave term‘nated; and as jor | Hon. John B. Macy, of Fond du Lac, took passag woonded, and. taking bim upon his gigantic shoulders, | mer, bewigged couckman, grand chasseur—a reguia- | an denis modifled by thefact generally and heartily be | the Spaniards, though presented at Court, and received | Mackinsc, ana 1s supposed to be lost, as there 18 no tr he bore him out of the Sght and escaped, ia spite of all | glass coach, al! gold hangicgs; the horses and harness | heyed, that in the present instance the prince who is t at Court balls, they are not officially present, and Spain | of him, and he was generally known. the efforts of the French t» shoo: him down as he strods | are uvexceptionadie, but it is rather starting to hear | be invested with such awfal power is mild ia disposition. | is, as yet, unrepresented here. Whatwill Rome say to Capt Miller aseures us that the number reported of with bis burden, in the Kremlin a’ vigorous ipterpellation addrerse) | upright im character, and sincerely desirous that hi- | ber erring sops who took part, bowed, knelt, and mae | board at the time was too large. Therewere only Am. thei rriors and statesmen ladies in fall Court | from the dignitary on the box to the leading pale | reign should conduce to the happiness and wellare of hix { believe to pray, inside the walls of the cathedral? Some | cabin passeug-re after leaviog Mackinac. About Crees are pressing towards the inner apartments of tue | frenier, “Now, then. Bill! why the —— don’t you | people. ofthe Persian suite were seated in the same gallery as | of thore got olf at Sheboygan, The stage agents at £ palace, radiant with diamoa ts, for the display of nh | leave ‘the oeses’ ’eds ba one?” The reply is lost in Let us fort the moment try to identify ourselves in | the Turks, avd the young Prince of Mingrelia (a bright | boygan imformedthe clerk of the Arotic that seventy ) wmaot AlWacs | We Muscovite headdress now in vogue is peculiar y | the Kuseian cries of ‘attenuon” aiong the lina as Count | thovgbt with one of his people. The Russian fads him | ¢ye¢ vivacious boy, who seemed to give the usual amount | sepgers, cabin and steerage, lauded at Sheboy, 7 Beep their promises or have weir desires fultilled. pied. This consists of a bigh circlet or coroaet of s2- | de Morny descends from bis carriage and steps on the | eelf in the centre of thie maxviticent church, every tucn | 0 trouble to his mother) was another good staring | crew are mostly saved, and it is now believed th movement given to the peopl» and the | a Velvet or cioth, which encompasses tho top of the | estrade, where be ts received High Chamberlain jn | of whose walls glitters with gold, aud whose pictor: point for thecrowd. It is nowa quarter past twelve, | over fifty were drowned. rmeris deserve every praise, bat we | head, and i stuad/a wtb precious stones. Persians, tn | waiting. Tis Excellency ta drissed de rigueur, and is | sides offer to bis eyes allegorical representations of hir and just at this moment a little bell tinkles once more: Nothing has yet been heard of Mr. Healy, the elerk ‘can both aud ty | Ligh bieck sherpskin caps, and rich loose dresses of the | really @ well appointed “fine looking gentleman.” as our the oue hand he sees the saints under the ai | the big bells begin to ring loudly far and near, and 101 | of Mr. Clark, Steward. Mr Leonard, the first e ‘nlia. Hare our | pest silk, and gossamer sbawis—tat faced Tartar depu- | great Pendenn'x would say. Some of his suite hare ar caly pre, 1ooktog up t> Hea’ th the ago | gums prociaim tha‘ the Emperor has received the sacra- | neer, wax not on board. ‘oue who nas bven delegates from the further‘«bores of the Caspian, | rived on bors*back, and th» other carriages of the em ery, “How long, 0 Lord?”’ (a the other he view ment, and bas been anointed with the holy chrism. ‘The bull of tne Niagara sunk in seven fathoms wa a Circassians, Abasses, Tcberkesses, Miav-e | Dassy are rather put into the ehade by the splendor of | the ovenging Lames glaring out of the pit of the wicked Shortly afterwards the Empress mother end her suit about pine miles orth of Ozavkee, and about a mile | cme gue or two of the Kagieh tad, bi the great of the empire athe leks con ent to get away draq breath in the wrer court of th party was forinpate epougl to m« to vs the Kindest of fiends, the moet aon" . ebliging, and smiab!o of men. His position is bis emvilest ‘onguls, Gourians, Daghostsaes. Koords, | their chief's. He is attended by 3 Bandin, First Secre | while from the top of the gorgeous ceiling a gigantic | the Graud Duke Constantine, the Duke and Dachesses abalf from shore. She bad on board one hundred t recommendatc oecasing, 43 On Many others, Cossacke—mingling with Rassiaos, | tary; Vicomte L’Espiné, Second Secretary; Vicomw si bead of the Saviour looks down in peace, and giver | the be a family, and their suites and attendants, issue | of merchandise, and thirty of fsb. She ts enabled bim | service: aad, onder bis | French, Foglich, Spsoiards, Romans, Greeks, Ans‘riany, | meon, quis de Rennes, Marquis de Sayre, Comte Joa | corsolation’ to his soul. All asourd him ace the racrec | from south gate of the cathedral, and proceed toenter | known to have been insured, ‘was owned by C goidance, wander face to see WOat are the pre. | Pruseiane, sexeps, Danes—bere was an epit mo ofthe aci- | chim Murat, Comte de Lavalatte, le Duc de relics and images of the saints, and before him | the palace by the perron . They are greeted slong | Reed, and worth $60,000. « paravions for (he gre omy ulic apd European races, all in toeir flaest bravery, mingliug | Caderourse, Marquis de Courtarvel, General Leb railed op @ plaiform, and under a canopy o’ | their march by cheers and loud cries, but the Russian One of the many aillicting scenes attending the frig “Ascending the ad staircase, which ta two flights gelber in tbe parrow compass of two grand halls. | tulery of the Goard), General frorsard (Eoeincers), velvet and gold, are tbe throves of the Czars John It! | ladies have not yet learnt how to impart animation to | ful diraster to the of the iilfated Niage reaches {row thr court t0 the Upper story of ihe prises | From the Hall of St. Audrew the doors on cue side leat | eral Dumon (Infantry), Colonel! Reillé (Eat Mayor)—ali | and Michael Feodorowitch, prepared now for the Em such scenes by Sige | their handkerchiefs, and, as they | was that of the loss of the entire family of Mr. Ainswo; Enc to the esplanade oute1’@ the Haliot St. Anorew, we | 10 the fue promenade which ts formed on the tp of tae | Crimeans; Prince de Bsufremont (Ilassars), Marquis de ror and Empress, t! inauguration of whose | do potcheer, their ip the proceedings is to try to | of Vermont. Wib the careand painful anxiety of fied at the first landiog a wide door. which opens into ths | first story of the f-gyse of the Imperiat palace. As we | Gallifet, Comte i"Espenille. ani M. de Piquemal. eaven bestowed power he is about t> witness. Th | look pretty, and to look as bard as they cag. Meantime a | jather and busbynd, be had gathered his wife, his aged gate chamber— ia itse! ee the dull cf oe Georas. | Stepped out on this explanade a sight such as can neither | officers’ of cuvairy and the staf, alt in full uni | Emprees dowager and the Imperial family have already | Splendid procescion ia defiling out of the north door of the | ther of 70 years, and three children, about him, and v Fhe rtaircase is covere: pits scarlet clota, from Wick 2 | Be ceseribed Lor forgoten met the eye. It was yet carly | form. They proceed along the scarlet cloth to the | extered the church and taken their places on the piat catbedrak aud passing under the archway into tho outer | all the precaution that the terrible ‘coufusion would = 7 ror ecWto, nat it 8 Gant'oa bath | —about balf past rix o'clock; the sun shining trom the | north gate of the cathearal. where they take the | formaround the thrones. Atnid the ringing of bells au | Courtofthe Kremlin, to go round to the cathedral of the | mit, lowered them from tbe deck and away from { Jeli lighted wp the git domes and vanes of the Kremlin | places assigued to them. Toe next carriage, which ie | the shouts of the lace the young Emporor and hi- | Archangel Michael, on the left hand side. Presently forth | advancing flames. to the more welcome but ngs by the alive Garde, to gil Geagem, atin sliver egies’ as erect, git Garde, 10 © | gud those of tbe eburchey on the right of tae pture with | Lot so showy, but {x in all other respects at least as good | Empress reach the entrance of the church. And no« | stalks the Emperor. But now he wears an imperialrooe, | lev fatal waters. |The palsy of age, the terror of won oats, and dark blue trow T a ricb orange flame, that seemed to die away or gniter | we the Couni’s ccach, is hat of the Eogiish Ambassador, | they detach themecives trom the crowd of officials abou' | and on bis head there is a crowa 01 dazzling splendor. | and the fright of childreu, did not unman this hardy tate which we emt fresh vividness as the vapors of the morning rotied np | who, ant ihe Countess Grenville, descend, are received | them, and, g along the gorgeous screen that seo: | The sun’s rays seem to seek congenial light ta those | of the Green Mountains; but with aiscrity he awam fr gold, sarteived > more censely from the river, or thinned away before the | by the Chamberiain, and in like manner enter the cathe- | rates’ the chancel from ihe ebureh, they fall oo thei | flashing diamonds. The eye cannot vear the briltiancy. | ope to anotber—now helping bis wife to retain her b Tapges of * fickle breeze. The view i# bounded by the Kremin oa | dral. Lord Granville weara the Windsor uniform, and | knees before the images of the saints, kiss with fervea, | ®Dd the mujik and the prostrate Nassian may weil be | upon the treacherous hawser—now be gy en ogy cop ibe right by the buildwgs of tae palace, | Lady Granville, who to sil our eyes is dressed with great | reverence the sacred relics, and offer up silent prayers to —— if, wita bis imagieation heated by all that be | in her struggles to catch at some buoying object. he fagade. Below the s wotator there 1; | ricbbess amd taste, is quite giorious with diamonds, The | beaven. Let the perfect grace and earnestness wit!) as seen and heard—the chaunting of the choirs, tue ca | what intense exertion he redoubled his exertions when , Outside the palace, alreasy thronged | horset are worthy of the best turn-out in ‘the pai Qu: | which the young Empress performs these acts be notea | Tillous of belis, the strains of music, and the clamor o | saw his youngest child, of three years, sink to his ¢ _ cons de plus? The seeone carriage contains the Mar. | Sbe is richiy attired ina white robe, stadded with th | voices, be thinks be rees a halo of heavenly glory aroun’ | grave! ‘Then came the death struggle of bis aged parc 4 only by he: | the imperial head. Such homage to a man can only be | nd be saw, amid bis divided exertions, the gray hair: Bamented. The pillare are made of za) Peliet. At the enc of the ball» a Kae tee patron Faint of w, kitiag cross apd star of toe oF the carrieg wth spectators Of the lower classes and masées of 20 Sirs Fr, rioaly gilt, ate ex ell over the walle, The floor is of thm taeat parg Tits way te ou the ve: goof the plateau on which the Krein and Marcbioness of *talfurd. the Earl of Livcoln and | pest jewels, but her head adorns Sisy wo ds acd i highly poliehed, Gs tho wall | lw etrnue, over the course of the Moskwa. Nearer 10 tbe ite Dun, anor Hardinge; the hed, Lord aran, | own luyuriant hair, without a siagle ormment | Pardoued oo the ground that he is ta¢ elect wud | bis father dlenppear for © ph men alas ab eee eee ey Cone. a ikaocot ta | river there ts another broad path, close to the outer wil etber ahd Lady Margarel Lavevoa Gower, Loca | Her sight hand is Ungloved, and with this she re | incited, of the Tord, aad, iasoer, mod glory et ee See ae ee Sion, ‘tewiodiog the readers of (he. purses or | Which surrounds the ancient foritess and overlooks chy | Ward ard Col al Horse Artillery, (of toe tn | peatediy crostes herself a she performs her religious o° | irom the skies with All the power and glory ot | waves wo apart by its less Rarews bistory; «fae are placed at this cide, out thero | *!Fee™, avd aiready the artilerymen a ¢ standing by tee | moasold I oop of Crimean report); the uiers Sir K. | fees, Rot mechanicully, as if going througa part of a pre | & Celestial meesenger, he foould scarce have excited | and bis task grew heavies as his we aod dang ‘vere doubled upon bias. Ele had 20 tne to look for © hot dow. | Ube mounted ox ope of the oid Gottic forts whicr dreak | Veel amd Lady Fumi y Peel ant Lora Ashley, Lord sey scribed ceremony, but ferventiy, religiously and with» | More fervor of adoration than oid the ©: ¢ lives Of the crenelated wall The peopleare hereaso } mour, the Hon. Gerald Ponsouby, &e.; there wore also race of perfect womanbood. And now the Enperor | #itb bis figure drawn vp to the highest, bis eye flashing t boats, but only suilicient to gras; chair, cir (aece turned up to the wh'te wails of the palace | attepdance Lord vavendieh, Lord Dalkeith, Captata King, liowed by his Empress, mounts the platform of tr | 80d bie cheek flushed, but his tread as tirmas @ lion's, he | eetbing brand and broken panel, and @ove ! ner side ot the river, which ‘oactwo han | Mr. Lister, Sir Jobm Actou sud Sir RK. King. May it be | throue, and repeats from a book deliveres to hima by the | Came forth from the church and stood, with globe ant | might, ‘with exbausted arm, to his wile ards aerose, tbore is apotber walk hued wna | said ere all proud of our fale counteywomen, who | Archbishop of Mcscow the confession of bis Christian | Sceptre ‘r bis hands, in the blaze of the wun before niv | he had not been tried enough, aud the wa'ves came andr ees—a veritavle quay, on which mon and wonea | might he li dared comparizon, had taero been any | faith. He then receives the benediction of the Arch | People. in how mavy wild tongues, with what franuc | ed angry surges over the chilly wife an@daughier, bu ta Glied with w multiiude of officers ministers and mem Chudren are standing 1a groups, looxing towards tre | to mstitute, with ibe ladies of any cthor eadassiesy The | disbop, and raddenly the choir, which has*hitherto pro J Kesticulations, aid they call on Hearsn to dieses bim! | ing them from bis agopiaed sight All were now g: vis cba atallthe courte of hea | Afemuin. B-hind this time of buuses opens ovt the oi'y | tact is .hat there were nove, for ours is the culy embas | served silence, bursts ont in psalms aud praise to God | Many a tear rolled down the rugged cheeks of the ruce | save bis litle boy of eight years, who was als wear scarlet trowsers win o eOMO grest sea, the Bouses are almost hiddes by the | sy with * ladies’’ attached and the boly "building vibrates with toe ring o | Coesacks, aud io many a strange dialect did the desoont with tbe gea to maintain a foothold Wib gold lanecals, up. thice heze of Russian autama, bot above it for many | are only two—that of the Upited States, to which Mra thelr bi onlous voices. There ig no note of or ants Of dwtant races implore thelr common Fatuer t | As the berote little fellow would ps, ant glicora alga: | miler, inevery possivie shape, cupola, tarret, dome, | Celt and Mins Jareis are attached, and of Saxony, which | gan nor sound of | other iustrument. The singers >. every biessing op him who represented their | seat, the rea would strike itand roll it from under bis t« oted by stars on the | Spire. crovs, minaret rise to greet the sap, aad reilec is represented by the Darou and Baroness de admirably organized, and chanting with asioiels forgotten conqucst, bondage and thraliom, aud the in | Time after time did the brave boy clamber Pa shoulder strap; their head dress is a casque of silver, or a | bis rays from their gilded surfaces. It ts imposaibie to | which are gallant enough to come with their w ing power and precision, need no support; the plato | uence of whose pame alone bownd them up with the | often would the beavy sea break over him. Diack patent irather beimet with golt iver mince froagine this scene. itis in vain, indeed, Moscow. And now, amid a little batialion of barels tive roprato voices of the boys rise clear aad distioc | Ruseiav peopte, What miglit not be done with euch sub: daboat that was bottom up, but seeing fog, and a spike on the top, from which there depends | Wh) -b gazes ov it seeks, as it were, to telze the running footmen, 8 y.ry fue old coach, with a poor eam | above the deep toves of the rich bases, and th- | Jects ana with such devotion and such faith. The Loarish- | boy in such fearful peril, at once sought to ren @ large plame of black, yellow ant white feathers. Toe | Of the world of clockto palaces, churches | of horses, drives up, and from it desconde— sustained barmouy, solemn and affecting, throds throag’ | 'N€ of trompets, the crash of bands, the noble | assistance with what energy yet remained i Etat Major wears silver instead of gold lace: al officers | Sd public butloings which mo wo ve | Avery fue old gentleman, inceed, somewhat goae ia | the holy building. ut already the Imperial mantle o ewell of the noble national anthem, “God preeerve | lands anc in bis heart. With des be ‘on duty bave a silver ince sash round their waist, act | "OF 88 the horizon itself, springing up amit years, but right royal aua splendid in air and attire (1 | #iiver and ermine, richly stuaded with gems, is in the the Czar,’’ which pearly equals our own, the rol! aad or dgdine! brave little son, the of y, those who have distiugushed ibemselves cay de knows | SPd separated vy, boulevards, meaiows, gardens | is Price Paul Keterhaxy, Ambaeaidor of Austria Hs is bands of the Archbishop, who proceeds to clasp it round | tek of drums, the bells, the voices of the propie—ail re reaching bim he disappeared and, followed Dy their sword knots of honor, which at once show iq | 8Bd small piartations. All the arctite-tures, as ail | ¢ressedin pucesils or velvet; with « hussar jvcket of tae the shoulders of his sajest Next follows the great | these formed a strange melange of sound, and stunued the grandfather, bis mother, his sister, Sd ge | service they have been engaged by their | the nations of the glove are represented hers Mere a | same material, braided ali over with pearls Diamoads ands on the Impe. | ¢@r: but when the Czar, passing out by the archway on | to their cold gravo at the depths a Us yr color and material. Those General belo Any | strange looking dome reminds yo of Cxcutia or some | fash forth from all the folda of bis clothing. Hia maroon | rial bead, reverently bent to receive it; and the scepire | OOF right, made his appearance to the larger crowd, there | life was now scarcely worth preserving. e id ong to to to the knoe, are crustet | and globe are then delivered to bie Majosty, wane wasa cove bke a roar of thender or the waves of the | hope now helped bim to save bimself: it was that fa no other for: liure ia it; above the threr arc way? which lead one to tbe hall of st Vi for ap orchestrs; at the further extremity is of Alexender eweki, thie ie ballt of rose colored at the o marble, covered with gildmg and emPiazormone of tre epsigne of the Order, sua hike the ilai! of St George. tt & gold siripe, green fr: right collars, and shoulder et Jeties and tarrels: their rank is di ermy of the Taucasus wear a prodigion vy | Indian city; deride it is te mural tower and othic bat | co‘ored boots, which come sack bonnet of long fine white sheep's wool, with a eew Uement of the Crasa’¢; the sentries on the tire towers | with pears and diamonds, and on bis heels are spars oF vested with there royal insignia, seats himself on the | #8, Which swallowed up all else. The people oa the | might yet recover the cold corsee of his drowned fam Jet conical crown piec ped wih gold thread, “Feem | Sem gigaptic in the haze, @h¢ justes you Degin wo fhucy | brilisnts, which glitter Wuely iv the sunshine. Ove | throne. The Empress now approaches with & meci yet | terraces below. on the banks of the river, and in the | and lay them with aie own hands in the ground. the “alle @’ Alexandre we pats on to the Hall of St. A they are warders oa the donjon keep Fou make out t ‘would almost be proud to be kicked by such # boot, bm | dignified air, and falis on her knees before the Km | streets outside the Kremlia took up the cry and shouted | succecced, and was saved, the only member of a hay drew, at the end of waicn is the imperial throne, the tower is not Norman, but very modern Byzuut perhaps such ad honor is onty reserved for the great and et His ‘Majesty, lifting the crown from his owa | like the rest. and rome lam told went on their knecs in | tamily that nad bute few cays before left a home of ple abd gold, with roven steps axcen ting to it. Aba and that the man wears the jong coat and {iit c nobie. His Sxoaticncy bes & very bililiant suite, bat fur ad, touches with {i that of he Empress, and agaic gers | the Cust and prayed for ibe Caar. In afew miautes the | fort in the beautiful valley cf the White River, . emblazoned “ L'QNl de Dirw,” surroanced by « ga tuve fervice, There you see Chinces willow patiorn edi. | their names, and for the list of the other arrieais, I ma-t | iton his own brows. A leeser crown is then brougnt, egy began to wind through the arcuway on our | casiern and sunny slopes of the Green Mountains, L y. Tha wails are oovered with biue, the color of | cer beside Gotbic churches, next toa green dom» fan. | refer your readers to the programme and to the Russias which the Emperor places on the head of the by , and to pass before the Cainedral of Michael, The | Evengeline at the grave of Gabriel, he is wo day watch Si Apdrow ribbo, with the armoris! beariags of all | tastically carwoa like & protigions pineapple, The fog, | Court Circular ; for there is a great sheering in the incr | press, where it is properly adjusted by the Mistress o' priests in golien stole and surplice are waiting at the | the beach at \izaokee, im hopes that some friendly wi the kingdoms, principales, duchies, and proviaces 0” | bait emoke, ball vapor, is tinged with many colors as it | Court. apc wo must run to take our places the Robes, and bis Majesty, having invested vhe Em. | g8tes, @nd as the Emperor and the a, may rend bim up, from the bosom of the lake, his kc the Russiam empire. aad between ihe windows are ra | Foll# amid this forest of glittering spires and domes and Now, you all know the Inner Temple, Well, just place — ith the Imperial mantle, draws ber toward, | (Whom we have quite forgotton im all this wii forever host family. Presented in gilt relisf the chain and cross of the Apostie, | (he Vast mosaic of variegsted cloud, root and house- | yourself at the archway which leads into the large quad in tenderly embraces her. “Taw is the sigual for | triumph of adulation end Czar | worship.) come LETTER FROM CAPT, MILLER, At the upper end of the hall, oa lef: band «ite, there | tops. As one gazed upon this ecene he could mot help | rangle near the Taxing Master # oflice, avd you will have the whole |mperial family, with the foreiga Prices, to | PP, rinkle them with holy water, and give To Ti Pevtic—ince my arrival at Chicago, I hy fe @ great crowd of per ‘At eno side of a smal! | Deipg etartied if he remembered that 44 years ago Napo. | beiore you a space abuut the same size ne that of the ia | approach and congratulate their Majesties, asd ooctiny them the cross to kiss. On entering the Czar and Cearins | frequently been asked about am anonymous letter wh table. They are fensting uneir eyes on the erc jeon looked down on a rimtlar scene frem the walls ot z of the Kremiin, and wil be placed vory | | can be more touching than the speciacie, from tae ey, | kis the boly reliques, and knee! down to pray before the | was found by the steward in bis ottice, afer the Niag tay eae with: reward to the -reater part of 110 ceremony. | dent earnestness with which embraces (which arc indeed | tombs of their aucestors, after which the Domine, saleum | lett Collipgwood on her Iast trip but one; apd in order the olt Kremlin. Next Sunds7, mdeed, one week anniversary of that into Muecow | Just befure you, at tre King’s Bench walk, ce avenged at Sebastopol. tr | the Palace of the Czars, with ite perron rev sceptre, avd the globe, which will be used en im the great ceremony of the dey. The oF thet can be given to diamonds belongs to the expression of the deep and corcial love which |inds | ac is chanted, and the Emperor and Kmprest contious | give the whole matier to the public, 1 now writet in One common bond +! tenderness nil the members of th ‘their sbort march for a tew yards to the Courch of ‘.e | communications Imperia] family) are received and returned. Ob, for the: | ADwunciation, where the same ritual is observed. The treen Bay boats runaing between Collingwood s the crown—they are very b ind very bright. The Fogteod e second landing at the height the upper w Gecs et waa of Mts wt tee & e (ast day ponred that deaoietiac | that ree o tile. On joer BR hand. repre touch of nature which makes the whole wor a On their way the cheers, the music, the bell, thers. | Green Bay are, and could not be depended on, and the Wreath of diamanes ip th m Of oak leaves aroand it | ftream of fre and iron 09 the cevoted city which te. | the nearer part of the face of qua © Unroag> | electric is its effect! Here, ia the midst of a coretno: non never ceage, It is just one o'clock as the proces. pode] en bonn1 to Green Bay were frequen which js dazz/ing a# the ean bimeci? Many o° these | Talded the grand assauit, and on this day jact two years | which you pass tuto Serjenute’-Ina oF Blect stroet. is t recessarily stict aod formal, there ia suddeoty on sion begin to ascend the perron rouge The enthusiacn | obliged are the we of plsvol balls of the good old duet | S40 the ailied squadrons sailed from Varna to iweir | Cathedral ot the Archange! Michael; the (tne face | part ot the priveipal pertormers a genuine outburst and with oatraise! | the und@rstanding thatif they got llery fall o! | Datural feeling; and mark iis effect—there is scxrcoly | arm seems to rewurn the of his people, He | the y eye among the masees crowded in the churen, | DOwS to all around ws be reaches the landing, aud, | on their delivering up their tickets to Green Bay, or + i@ the feeble frame of the Empress Mother | Standing forth from wader the canopy, looks dowe | would be landed at any porton the west siore of Lx weoptre, there ia a tip to it | FeBdesvour at Baltabik t prepwe for the descoat on ine | is represented for half its distasce by os which’ ones aim Crimen. Ax MotwOw has riken [rom ite ashes, #o will | #pectators, and then the small projecting bi tly bite off the position of «ae As nbede | & did not venture to state how | Sebastopol rise from iv rains. Bat bark! there onve | on your ieft front necira’ | content myreit by og | Senin 1 © Old familiar voices of the Russiag can | ofthe Apnvnciation, More in front is the perron rouge, | Wtlere with outetretched arms towards the Imperial soo. | pon the scene below. In @ few moments more | Michigaa, but no money refunded. This, it appears, ¢ ® the precios stote for which Catherine [i Pow ost of fire spirts from an embrasere oelow, ant | scarlet etairoase, or Kraznot Kriltzo, ant the sive ofthe | and passtovately clasp and noi’s him ia a long emorace be turns, and is lost to sight im the interior Pog gees bad reo eee paince, Below this etuiroasd (the g and tears aud smiles mingle together ax the little Grand | Of the megnificent palace, through the walls of King’s Bench walk) are raised . Dukes are seen to clamber up to the side of their (athor | Of which, however. those sounds must follow him. It is women in fuli dreee. Tbe ttaircase cexcood« | and uncle, who bas to stoop low tn order to roach tle | With the greatest difficulty, of course, that the bands cac little faces which ask to be kissed. be got to stop playing ‘God preserve the Czar;” aad But the most important and solemn part of the cere with the usual infatuation of musicians, several times throughout the day they strock up at wrong times, and od and gave nearly £50.000 and a large pension for life to a ran | the thick white smoke rushes into the ret tloore way lave. (Vide every story book.) Turning away | YR, the dull roar of the iron messenger o from these" impertant ingredients in the ceremoaial | heard again, but instead of that angry voice, @f to-day, let us look at what is corious or worthy of | the Church of the assemption ring out merrily, and at | right in front wo the estrade, which r c fotice in toe hall jtrel!. The diamonds will remain | the signal the thrasand bells of Moscow take up the | court towards your » ight wil it comes to Paper Baudiag< forever, and will be just regarded with the same feel chorus. It # seven o'clock. The echoes of the cannon | Bot you must good enough to take the first block of mony bar now to be perfurme!. and there is a gene: of tradibonary stupid acmiration as they ace cow | fhake the old Kremlin twonty-oae timoe in rapid sac- | Paper Boildings, aud apply? it to King’s fioneh walk at | stilinees in the church, as the Emperor descends ir could not be got to leave off, or would not go on when some chemist {ashione them, like Prince Kupert’s ceasien. ‘This te the signal for the various persons en. right age, ‘80 as to Clove up the space right across, and on poomnens Bee entrance of the chapee: ~ ited. So far as the vast proportion of . j o Es the cere: val e - re * the C re he Arcl. bis! ow, who bolds , by the dozen There are objects here which | gaged in movial to repair to the places indica. | when you have done this you bave the Cathedral of the by op loscow, who bol but still thousands lingered all day about the Kremiia, But last so long. [a two |: Naes, from 4 to | tea i the programme end ordre du jour. ‘tere * a per. Astut on ir bend, aud the eatraace to the | ia hie hands the sacred vesse! which coutains the bol: jong i im door Le sale nom repress Feast ime | on. Stretching forth bis right Lend, the venerabie taiuor | abd seemed quite coptent to know by the sound of th? door of the Hall of St. Andrew and of the Hall of #t ceptible movement among the uniforms, and, tarning to | staircase exactly represents the porch wo George, are drawn up the Grenadiors of the Palace | the left we come out upon tne end of the | de leads from the foot ot the ecarict etalre: This | takes a golden branch, with which, haviog dipped itin | Cannon that the Emperor aad his nobles were feasting fhe veterans of the great war. To me those ‘ine old | perron rouge, or Krasnoi Kriltzo, at which there t* placed | trade is lined all aiong by fo! lier, but toe «pace in your | the consecrated oil, he annoite the forehead, eye inside. If] have omitted many of the details of the cero. eoldiers were more joteresting and atiractive taaa ali | We canopy beneath which the Emperor and Empress | front up to it is filed with & crowd of Cowacas, strangers hande and breast of the Emperor, pro. | mony it is owing to the fact that they have been minutely the display of riches and the plage Of gold aad silver | will march to the Church of the agsomption. It is of | Of datinclion and of no distinction, avd all elas of usi- | nouneing words—" ¢mpresrin Spirius | detcribed in the programme, and that to any one but ths ‘round and above us. Their dross recalled ths days of | Orarge colored cloth of gold, embroidered with Imperial | form, civil and military. The three cathedrals [have | Sancti.” ‘The act is done, and Russian of look withawe | !mmediate spectators they were destitute of meaning or hoes Titanic stroggise Which shoot all Europe, The | eagien, and is beld up by 1 wands of stiver gilt orna | named are very i, The gate which we see of the | upon the anointed of (od, the delegate ie power, the | interest. Ihuge bearskin cay, with white tassels and gilt cords, the | mented with yellew, black and white rivands. Oa the | Assumption looks south—that of the oo. th ts oa our rigat hb Priest of His church—at once Emperor aud Patri 1 car not describe the ban uet, because I was not there, . ‘ample broad chested coates and cross belt, and the white | bargings are embroidered the Emperor's cipher, sur. | frovt. The estrade again begiag bere and pastes along | arch—consecrated and installed in bis high temporal and ‘and the curious will learn better than | can toll them | everything is in with many butions at the outer side from ths | mounted by a crown, surrounded with the order of %. | for a few yards in the direction of the loner Temple ger. | *piritual office. A salvo of cannon, the bray of trumpets, ‘what tock piace by referring to the great work by the | to take care of ourse! to the foot, reminded one of the time when Katasoit, | Andrew. It is surmounted with 16 aigretios of tricolored | den ravie, till ft goes out throurn an archway close on | the roll of drums, apnounce the completion of the sacred Master of the Ceremonies tu which every genuflexion @nd Blucher, and Marat, and Wellington were the heroes | Ostrich feathers, and is emb: with the arms of | your right hand side to the outer court of the Kremlia, | eet to the ears of those who are w: the churca and | Sndaction throughout the day is minuiely recorded. Of ‘ast recurring battles. These men are picked from | the empire, as well as those of Kazan, Astrachaa, Poland, | just as if itcontinued by those rails, wil it ‘under | cannot witness ft. Meanwhile the Empress comes tor. | Hangry and faint ax the r must have been efter ‘Fariour regiments, with some regard perbape to aize, bat | Siberia, of Tauria, Kiet, Viadimrr, Noveorod, Finiand, | the arch at Crown (iffice row into Middle Temple inne | Ward, and is in like manner anointed —— Archbisho », | ait bis vigils and fasting, he had yet long ordeal to got certainly with undoubted claims op score of service, | and other devices. All these and many more details do | then it turne up towards Fieet strent till it comes to | baton the forehead ouly. Thea the Emperor and Em’ | through before he could cat or drink. It is astonishing for there is not one of them who does oct boar five oc | 1 quote on the authority of the great work by the Master | Pump court archway, through which it turns, and comes | presa—the one on the right, the other on the jeft, of | 10 the Russians to see how weil the Empress Mother sup- ix ribbons and crosses or medals on bis breast. As you | Of the Ceremonies, for indeed to me atl is gold that git. | out again at your left band side, clove to the Taxing the presiding Archbishoje of Moscow, % |'svers: the fatigues of the day, weak sad shattered in walk thet wall of soldiers it titicut to believe | ters, and in the generat impression produced by the sight | Office, which repros-nte the porttion of the Osthedral | burg and Novgorod—receive the holy sacrament; to tno | health as she bas been for so many years. The crowd three Emperors, and have | of ruch things one ransacks the memory in vain for ths | of the Archangel Michael, in the \naer court of the it | Outside fels bupgry, and ate crauthes of bread irreverent They sre all in per | Component paris which pleased him. Kremlin. This is the coorse of the provession. At your | S# administered in the two ki Empress receiving | !¥ long betore the ceremony was over, and a Jew behind | ter. the sacramental bread which i* pertaken of by all | the clock tower, who sold bad gavouse and donkey saad- Now,T am confident that the boat did not take ¢ E i : i i i fect preservation. The only thing to betray old age ts a ‘What a scene there is in that court below '— | back ix a block of small churches wiih bigh steeples, and | only Certain stillness about the knee, and thore implacebioand | an assemblage of parasole, bonnets, helmets, coats, | the tower 0: Jobn the Great—which block represents the | members of the Russian cherch. Once more the choir iches at the price of champagne ss de fune, made '¥, nor from the boilers, as every, Javincibleand inevitable wrinklos which wilicomsapon ua | thawle, all of the gayest bues, At the foot of | chambers parailel to King # Bench wal ‘ne front of | burst oot in foll jabilant chorus, and their Majesties ono» | ® email fortum jew minutes, aud was cleared ou hold waa fire proot. My opinion 2-4 records of so many lustres. The hair \s jet biack, the | the jrense thers is one large raise! stand fy there chambers is nicely fitted op wita tiers of seats | Mote mount the platform of toe throne, and rtand ere: of his stock almost as soon as he was ditcovered. H» | the fre was causea by some combustible material stow moustache Is |ustrous and dark as the boot whicl, ont | Of people—there is also a gallery on the right hand bumbered and ticketed. the centre part of which is go) | While the mass is intoned by the priests. re filed the empty bottles with water, and dispoved of a | under the shafts, but the nature of which wo were unal to sffright the feline of our boyhood, and the whiskers | from the palace to the church, fail of —betore spart for strangers of distinction, and here) a | enid | sponses are chanted by the vavir. The boly service be recond stock of still gazeure’’ at a very satieactor: of tell, a packages frejuently orme so dieguiset that” torone, | rate: and, if the ceremony had continue till might -epnot tell what they wre; but it must have been sos Dg the ceremony ot tne proces | ig concluded the Emperor steps down from t * whirkers—are of (he same tae all the church beltries are foil of psople, and the coart is | before, that you —tor oid Russia wore PThe surprise thropged also. Taere are two streams of people, in unt tion, til! you pass into the cathecral. Toe aun it bright | bows right and left to the great dignitaries of State, to the would have descended from the clock tower as rich a ‘bing of that kind, trom the fact that it enveloped the be suth evidences part forme and court ¢ reser, Posring up and down from tao | anc Warm—tnere if not a cloud io the bine eky over | prelates, to the representatives of foreign Powers, and | Rutheebild. fn flames almort instantly; and when firat discovered have seen the horrors of palace to the court. Ry the dais there is for the pre | Moscow—#o be good enough to grt rid of loner Temple then leaves the church by the northern gate, accomps The throne room, in which the banquet takes place, | wes impossible to surdue Marat ture his beck at Yaroelavitz, ie removed, however, | sent only an eseort of the Grenadiers 4 Cheval, coder the | weather for the prevent. It is now ahout 10 o'clock and | bled by @ splendid retinue, and followed at a sort dis- | hee been already described. The Emperor sis with the Leanpot. at present write more, as I am now on t when you see tbat the veteran who touches bis moustacue | command of Lientewant Colonel Fanshawe, a nephew of | the crowd clears away to the vests as the beat of @ | tanee by the Finprose. Fiuprese Mother on his right hand, and the young hm ve of leaving the city to return to the wreck. norus Diackens the fingers of bie ; he hes had bis hair | ovr stout Admiral who commanded the sailing squadron | grand procession brgins to appear on the upper lantiog a® the brillant proceesion pasres out of the church, | press on his lett. ‘The great dignitarics of State atvan se hink is more necessary. FRED. MILLER, dyed, jont ae bis bouts bave been polished—for oact. | atthe great naval review at Spitheat so we years ago. | of the rearlet stair ane iesaing from the palace before us, | the Ruesions, with eager eyes, seek Gut and tienug: bearing iver dishes, which they ph Lato Master Steamer \ingare. their illostrious fellow countrymen. Thore iv the rear of | Perial trio, who commence their . oe : rere ne roar ot | Ie room ie acupied by the members of the fest acd | The brig White Chott tots Grae seer second classes of iass'an nobility, who. standing in the t | terday aiterneon, having on board the body of ere 7 places at the tables prepared for them, wait unti! | on whose person was found the fol hee Bome of there veterans are historical momumeats—some | At present the silver batous wm hold by private sol. | Preceded by masters of ceremonies aot chamoerlains, Rave served under Suverci’at Ishmael! avd in laly—othere | dier only, and tuey evidently regard it a# & moet solema | Fitended by a magnificent /etinue, the Fmpres Alexandra, | the Emperor walls tse man bow famous throug hort have marched trimuphantiy into Parte—oth! have | and sac ir, Every one who passes to sad fro ua- | in ap Imperial mantle, with arown of diamonds on her | rope—the young and galiant soldier, the defenter of § Crome’ the Balkas with Dietitech. Of all thei¢ numerous | covers bis head. lartiog throozh the crowd along the ike along the vpper landing, bencath a dias ike | bastopol, the intrepid Todtieben, Ki decorations thee veterans seom to prize the l'aris | upper janding, over & rot riet cloth, we some agai peror, and begins to descend the steps | @nd full Of hero like decision. bat be imperial family bave concluded their repast medal and ribbon the moet, and they point to it with | to the door by which we firet entered the paincs. Tuo Jamation® of the people, Khe vommied | limpe on with the ald of a cane, before Shey ot dows, to the bengast ie sore tor Teena Se eee el © still standing a# rigid and at by th 4 Prkes aed by th tr he etill sutlers from @ wound re them. The diplomatic corps #tands {n front of the imps . 186. yds ay Be AS gp aly +! = rial table. Suddenly bis Majenty calle for eiee, and this | ma acerenes that Polly, Kennedy has been an uccepte joat pride, though it hangs amid meworials of tremen old Grenadiers Kove Vattio Holts. How these rugged od warriors, the | am before. Let us go in again, and turn to the right, | followed by the foreign Princes, Maldx of Honor, and | fore the town which hi retion of Avstertity, Friedland, Eyiax, Pultowa, and BD». ‘ing between i) Of soldiers. ot us Onter ths | Indies of ber Court, and thos she eo countenence is tu!l of in ; | 18 the signal for atl foreigners and those who do not tak» Podino must smile it their hearts at the medal which has | banqveting ball. Surely bere are chan of the | passes on before vin to the door of the Cathedral of the | bin chin, the mort remarkable foatare in bis fage, ia inety | Part in the banquet to withdraw. The imperial bang this day been given away to neariy al! sia on ac | World’ Sucha aglare of gold plate, euch a wild profa | Acsumption, where she is received by the clergy with | developed, and bespeaks the iron will which belongs tothe concludes the ceremonies of the corr nation oay, and j count of the late war! The lime in w the soldiers | sion of goblets, vases, cops, silvers, hoaped on tabies, | the cross and holy warer, and then ehe enters the batid r whiier, Alleyee are vponhim There, too, waiketue | ite by the worn and exhausted looks of their imperial A ew coat was alro picked up by the White Clo X paces apart, | massed on sideboarde or carved stands along the walls } ing with her suite, and i lost to wight All this tims Fiena ‘of the Emperor Nieuolas, the gaardian of bis soa, | Majceties, hnman matare could scarcely bear the faugae | was light colored, with dark lining, and the dealer’ ma and from time to time the General on duty for the 1 of this glittering room. This is the Granovitaya Palata, | the menilou ng of bells tre I the the negotiator 0! (he treaty of Paris, the upright and gal of thelr prolongation. on the collar. The body and coat were pick ‘ ngs wun bo ¢ J esoow: t ‘enh 2 ten procs ured ar ¢. Mv M the Bratetoast, to the health of the Keperor, the | miles off Port Wasbington, Large quaatitiee of the fe ber of the Methodist Episcopal eburch of this rire ©. ©. SYMES, mat &.—The balance due # Kennedy, bot. hi was paid, MONROE KENREDE moved up and own the ravks, took bearings with hia | the Hall of the ancient Teare (for #0 ths Raseians apeil the | of Moscow, but abos sali rounds the great thro of | laut Oriof and there also is decried the world famous from breast to breast, and “dressed” them wih bi: | word in French). Can it be described’ Assarediy not | the betl clowe at rh Wiki (lobe | Mepschike(! who was selected for that disastrous mission | artilery fire 61 gaus: to the Emprosses, eush 61 guns; to | ing wreck were driikd about. bande. They were of different height, being selested | by the pen, nor by the pencil of any artist out one | the Great). As the last of the impress Mother's to Constantinople oot of which grew the war—the | the im house, 51 guns; to the clergy and all fathfal ‘The brig Burns, for Milwankie, and the Sam Hale, f for merit and rervice, buton an average they were six | who can dip his brush in the hues of the rainbow The | leaves the upper landing of the suarlet stairoase a p (Meneebikef! eu pa # some foreigner irreverensly | subjects, only 21 guns. It was nearly four o'clock beiore | Chicago, were near the spot where the Niagara burn feet high. In the alleys formed between thom, and in | low, many arched root of the hall ie sustained byahuge | of the Chevalier Garde, with two officers come forth re. But the forcicner, too, i# engaged in looking | the banquet was over, and their Majesties retired to take | when the White Cloud left, with their boats out, and we the intervals between the rear of the line and the sides | rquare pillar im the contre, round which is placed a pat | from the palace, aut the \tperial proossston begins as foreigners fve distinguished individuals and dis- | come repose. In the evening all Moecow was illuminated, | fren to pick up objects (rom the water, the Barns # of she hall, moved the most ged Crowd tnat it is pos. | form with receding ledges to the height of nine or ten fect, | follows —Forty eight pages, two masters of the coremo which latter must not be om: bat, ## the patience of your readers ix exhausted, a arrive in Milwaakie to-day, vibe t janey—en evershifting play of color, changing | each lodge groaning With ancient vases an’! dishes jo gold | pies, the chief peasants (¢ +, serie) o the State domaina, noe pearl embroidered comt of the Hungarian jj {luminations are pretty mush alike, I most defer A wreck of a veatel was discovered about two, yr" hike some rich web ehot with various hoes, in woh Some of there are of the quaintes: form aul | one for each government; three deiogates of the German | Heble Prince Reterhes, @ Ambassador of Austria, | what | have to say about them til! next post It ie suf. | from the spot, with « person on « plank in the ‘con, gold, and silver predominate, The casques of the ous workmansh/p—mocels of old cartier ant pa- | and other colonists, end representatives «f the sorts of the | There, ton, stande the Ambassador of France, and besice | Holent to say that the city wae a blaze of light, that vue | rhort distance from it, waving a handkerchief. A be surmounted with long tri-colored plames, yel- pgeamimals, bettlepieces, bir'l«—oraft!ly work ppaneges by threes. They ave alt clad (a the | him thet of Fagland, wer tog the “ distinction (as Prices | strecta were thronged to suffocation that carriages | from another ves*el near by reseued the sullerer. Wi nd white, of cocks’ feathers, are well suited ntaries by forgotten descondan’s of fal alCaln jan gerb—long come and otd have, and mung of | Metternich rales it) of an embroidered comt unadorned | coud rot pase through the thorongnfares; that rhe | ‘ber he was one of the Nisgara # passengers, oF belong ri heat ard det and smoke were uw ie, aad el which wust have been lost during tne ls of fleet #hatever way th are worn, ‘and Insite thy and exch a murenm ia ieee? On fhe rignt hsnd of the hat, ee roe te bon a0 ie some 7 Wan orinrieete ev took back the thet the fogien Embassy waa very finely iin |» could not ascertain last night. bale me they were borne on owners’ arma thowe | on entering, there # @ Siifet hice seems crashed he mercbante of the ey! in Rueia and Poland, the foreign At ine moment that tne Rmpercr eoeptre ne v wn ' ain plo mes Cuttered or drooped gracefully over the polished ' neath the masses of Oe cee train cisar | careaent, een fenmmwenriy ths Graiel ot'Gate | os the globe the priest proclaimed the Imperial tie, minated, The Czar has signalized the day of his | Mr. Jerome, w whom we are indebted forthe abe

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