The New York Herald Newspaper, June 8, 1859, Page 2

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2. NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1859.—'{RIPLE SHEET. fiat! Sei seein eis |e | 2 ettrrographic studies, The ungatural compoand | {At ie ae eh wcPiedm’ @, You ongbt t0 coD- | tour man, vet 1 feel perfectly coriain that if no wore to , ment me: series the war such as it is—Piedm batialion of Chasseurs, who hac jus arrived from Cana. THE WAR IN ITALY | eee oleres rectl Pe indirect, ine fear wien | of BP orcgeous homer bo eee © ang, oar peep the ee ie wat and france on the | rise thie dey from his grave, with ali nis bigh towering | iy ' ’ fi FA apy part, directly er indir Sah | ote ae which goce te Pr on. the name of Austria, 18 srinon the other; and on | gibition, not even he coald exter now on tha career o! a With all this, it seems that Austrians and French enter- bas just ‘commenced on the Continent, and 4 MAN | » , trom being kindred 10 race 10 Engianc—ie so far | thie ground | ebould ask—Are son willing to guarantes | Conquerer. At certam times ceria (hinge a? ipo tain ‘a sirict ad impartial neatrality. This cemeary | trom being German—that, though st the last census, Of | with your to beligerent Austria the | ple: and this is one of them, Furtbermore 1 kuow tt a aipell melt inte Montebello, whare 4 tearful bulouery i f n -e, upshot of the matter was that the Aug- he cop 1851 the government of Austria employed both artifice RE oF naneanly bay «her non- Italian porgeseione? t cannot be in his \gterest, nay, tbat it is pogitively | trians retired, leaving a fearful number of killed aad i a OWIDE V go | sb lerroriem to celablish for their doopinions the charac. | Are you willigg to have Y oar country plunged in war fOr | ageing bis intereet, to sim’ at the oppression of na. | wounded all along the rod. H onal spirit whic they displayed ip sowie ¥.s0 | (ocr German nationality, they found it lmpossiole 1) | vations ea, conslstentiy, &, Austria from such military ope | Goualties, (Cheers. It was the irreverent diereger of | The Sardinian cavalry, who behaved with a degree of | @ for the demands of public opinion, maniferted with | 18h Oye ber of their German enbjects higher than to | rations as, cone with the law of nations, ber a the sentiment of nationality which gent Nagoleon I. | intrepidity that is hardly done justice to in the bulletiaa, die a fetlered cayle on the scorching rocks of St. | attempted to pursue them, but Were too fatigued to do sc Austria i the only power in Furope | If you are not prep red to do this (as I trust you are no"), it ip the eame irreverent disregard of the | effectually. pal character; it i8 of no country, of | well then, do not rest satisiled with vague Wectarations, | gentiment of uationelity that will ebatter to atomg | The Austriane retired in perfect order but 200 pr! i gim- | but go straight 4o the practical polat, and let it be clearly | the to:tering throne of periidious Austria, 4nd verily | ners remained in the victors’ hands. They must” +. | the character of # settled Cages cr — to ply the houee of Hapsburg—no, not even that; everythiog waderstoad y the governmen:, that whether the battle | ¢ does strike me that Napoleon ILL. i not ewactly the | been greatly surprited, and not a little relieved, « Rave Napoleon’s First War Bulletin — worscations, its even more than heltre necomsary that | nat accursed house 1@ usurpation, down to thelr very { eld is contiwed to the Po, or extend 0 aay other poriion | man io vepeat the fuull Uy which Naplem L fil’ By | ing ne tres wroops were sont in pursue They at wie apo eon’s ‘iy the expression of public opinion 6 ony -not relax; HAY, | iame; they are not Hapeburgs, they are Lorrain-Vaude- | of the Austrian dominions, you wish Fogland to main- | gory good to the oppressed nationalities he may carn gicat bebind the Po, moving along the Piacenza road, ©” retired ta Thr ie Wat tshould be made even more cro! wit than bitherto, | Ponts, rebellious crown officers of France, as Napo'coa } tain a etrict and impartial neutrality, and that you will | jaorct ‘utvantage: ty doing them harm he could vot earn Stradella, and’ then crossing over to the northe*as far ag to Eugenie. p order that no room should be - sor any doubt a6 t0 | J" veed to style them—vot they, Dut the Lords Den- | ag little vote one penny of subsidy, or sacrifice One dron | gnything tut run for himself. (Cheers) In forming | the river’ ‘Zhe road to Piacenza is now thereforsa bank of session the eenke in which the people of the ge realms desire the | y of the house of Fielding, are the only Hapeburrs | of English blood for the safety of Austria in the | my opioue ] ake for starting point interest uot | French wnlere there bean Austrian, force 242 open to Fee ee eo ub nied’ 4,2e,understood, and | cart. (Cheers.) However, aince gue declara- | Adriatic, on the Danube, of on the Theiss, ag you would | men, and xcowibg thai ‘n matters where go much {8 at | Glovanhl, a fact which ie uot un yet cleared v1 Castel See asie ce iy u ~ it ougl e Rita tei ioe Tatas ig & right move in the right direct redit is owing to her Majesty's goveroment More Partioulers of the Battle © of Montebello. @ than ordiuary. empnssis, eae ree ems AtORE Aout 7,000,000 out of & Fopatation of $7,000,000. (Hear, | tagoniste may think “yi to direct againet her without Italy? | yng the elections, i aga hei ’ that if ib hear ‘ In fi ‘eh bag no | _— it is just a dynasty, and nothing more; it \ So far so good. Buti make bold to 8a" desired that the proclaimed neutrality she .j * 7 ) 4 Y eympathy, coupled with recognitions of the | do it for her eafety on the Po. (Cheers) I think it both | gtake men aro uot likely to disregard their intereste, 1 At the Leginning of the aciion the Austrics fuiercsting Incidents from the Seat Of Chen. “Neutrality is a general ex7 cession, yet it implies & vomenued rights of Auttria, went. forthe in. ap ollicial | urgent and important, my Lord Mayor, dost public opinion | Sake,men & the soundness of my conclusions. Aud ater | cided numeral edvancage, Lut at the cluethe Ws had @ de- hie specia) meaning the bearing of which cannot be | tanner from the Euglish government, it is no! to be | Fhould be explicit in its manifestations, because 1 Cannot | all there ig some guarantee in the force of circumstances | numbers was whol om the side of the French. — lwantage of Operatious. fally fwthomed unles# we have it clearly under- | voodered at that the impression prevails through- | forget that some distinguished members of her Majesty's | too. Suppote—-I give to you a8 @ supposition—-supjose Our bulletins tell us tha: the loss is oly = Sea stood with whom of the contending parties her | cot Germany and thronghout the At dominious that | government hinted ai the pogeibility of England tiying to | (hat the logical developement {of the pres-nt war ebould, | killed and wounded; but I believe this is a8 mubout 500 vit et: rin Majesty's government wou | side if they were 6% | ir 'soit0 of ihe declaration of neutrality England will come | the reecuc of Austria if she were to be attacked in the | oar to my own cation, not wh incitement to hazardous | the mark aa the numer seid to bave wee hi pind UTH ON THE WAR, | toremain neutral. | (Hear, hear.) Now, my lord) 10 | pound by-and-bye, and in one way or another will find | Adriatic, (Hear.) And, 1ask, wha! is that Austria (0 | deacitory “riote—tha: I should steruly adviee ber to | Austrians (2,000) i¢ above it. ¢ by tae KOsel + not remember to have bé ard of one eingle offisial or ‘out some pretext for either be fa ting Austria cr | you, that she should be hogged to the provecting bosom of | gyoid—Out ehonld ctler her such a chance as would, [Paris (May 21, evening) correspondence oi ' ~~ tem) official declaration W'aich bad left the impression assisting Germany in supporting r (hear bear.) [his | Britannia, at the cost of your bicod to beehed ia stream: with reasonable progpects, place her initepe Herald} ‘sadn Cu my mind that if her. Majesty's government were | ‘oi yeseion exerts such & Gelsineaian tadnoncs on tne | of your tomey to be trent by Hundreds of mallione within the —_ of her own determination ould There ig no lopger any doubt of the faet, th His Hepes of Italian and Hungarian cot to remain neutral, they would side with Sardinia | or or le oppressed nationalities a8 I am sure every | the cost of bringing incalculable confusion ino your com to reject the chance because, unde i gia I ad Frauce againet AUBY ia, Bat I have heard of mauy peliakman will lament. On the other | mercial relations, inflicting deep wounda, { may be in Hin of Providence, tt wkd have | Austrians had the worst of it at the smart affair’ the rye 3 Itberal mmded Eng c Ny y f A took place the day before yesterday between Strach Nationalities. Geclarations Lorcibly 166 .ting to the juference that the sl | biG i pushoe Germany into a falee direction, which, if curable wounds, én prompariky, checking your pragremand rte? Why, che would boa oot to | and Voghera. Not only were they driven back im te | larnaye hier renahey Nee Berar ed not checked ia Saas, was Fer or aay fret entangio peep ia oo Te en ere rat trond ‘ nents) ze " 7 (Loud cries of ‘no, ne, ry ; e M Fogland into untoward ¢om| jong, and then drift ber, - , 5 ase | department; she is Doth too strovg and too distant for | put they have abandoned thei r i oY MAN ON THE WAR, mitted that ip the be ginning Eogiand was w remain Dew | uoder some eventual pretext, into the war. Ithink it, | of Avgtria to you? (Renewed cheers ) ‘Zs its caistorwr | that: her digtamce aloue piaces ber out of tuat dan. Bee ee x manana 5 ms Roattion om, the bills rend CARDINAL WISE! * | tral; bot it was added that she shovid watch wha: tir | thererore, argent that, while approving of the policy of | advantageous to your commercial interests? Why just consult { ger. (Hear, bear.) And even us to Itsly. Hated as | Frenen, When an army pt eh ore po- ry! events would take, and should arm in the meaniime, 69 | pareja pies nit atrict non-intervention, the pub- | the latest returns of the Board of Trade, and you will sec that | Avatria ie by every Italian, the iron rod of Austrie was | sitions it held after the battle, but withdraws ome fifteen si to be prepared to ‘do— what? To repel any agxrcesiva Ya | ic opinion of the English nation should emphaticaliy repu- | your commerce with small Out free Belgium is nearly stroug enough to orevent Italy from organizing and arm- | or twenty miles, the retrogratle movement (Cheers. ) gary cannot be made a attempt to gain possession of the village of Montebello. her territori28, €¢ lonies aud dependencies’ OF courroibet | Gite the idea of lending. under any circumstances, her | times as catensive as your commerce with the big Austy ing the nation, Thanks to the assistance of Fracce, the f cannet be con- ATTHUDE OF THE GERMAN POWERS. abould be dome, that would be done, and gioriouely | ule tt fo aura arate oa fain of Caer age eel ye vrata Hele erates ca do i Let them be wise euough to take pe fidered at anything but a confeation of thetr having ue 0 alitles oppreseed er (lou ers. now come tlippine de is, poor Norway a le Greve each e of the occasion, and, having had nesistance in gettin renee ; ‘Come, thf, three corners of the world in arms! ihe pretended. inviolabillty of the ‘Menten of 1610, | dor austria, Bac! Know that when the heleroreacoue | {of ‘ “! gong | mand of Count Siadion, but the telegraphic despateb says ow thf rest of the proud, bold strain. ching ts tion Ofattack and dete Tye French Squadron in the! Adviatic, : tvered from the foe, !f they should uot know how to | nothing of the | ich the Austrian. oor F Ii is the more important to bave the mist of | compound of that European nuisance is once dissolve’, | geoure their foture Independence from the friend, they Paneenie ak ae neon at ‘bout 4,000 mea, hore ad Prejudices cleared away in this regard, as it | your commercial intercourse with Hungary alone moet be | would not deserve to be free. (Loud cheers.) When combat—doubtlese an exaggeration. b : estcommon | can admit of no doubt that, should it so bappen | ten times as extensive as itis with the whole Austriau | the fate of nations ie trembling in the scale, woe to the ana the p! e reties ion will suggest it, tuat Eogland will not be which God forefend) that England were to depart | empire now. Or is it true, as some have toid you, tba: | men who, loving himself more than be fatherland, ates s : ee, he ae. a city 7. this war ‘fine does not run into it hersel! ‘on the Mere Hy Hy W would be done in favor | Austria is yor ful ally, botn faithful and true’ | would alicw Nieuahia he a ed in his judgment by his INCIDENTS OF THE WAR. . (Cheere.) No, it was said that England ehould arm, in | of Avetria; it would be done on the ground and uacer | (Laughter.) fl, indeed; I know that Ausiria wae the | pergonal eyrcpathies and sntipathies, rather than what he | MILITARY, FINANCIAL AND DIPLOMATIC MOVEMENTS _ to protect aes interesia. A I | the pretext of the EceAS ee a of 1815. - Tt | tpeat mee tigen or mayends ae ae ert bottom Owes to hie country. 1 love my fatherland more thao AND GOSSIP, ‘aaitic be wer in ood: oaly that “interest’’ isa very | is wotul to remember, my lord, that the eovereigne who, | lees sack in ic! and pou millions from to: | wysei!—more (han apytbing on earth; and, inepired b: stag mae itmay mean nothing oritmay mean anything | on pretence of assertigg the liberties of Enropes enticed | life sweat of her industrious pecpio, Limow that in the | thls Jove, Yack ne em—anly. one bimeprom England, | , ree Paris letter im the London Wows saye:—The Duke oe eelay mornings, we the faucy Of the coming inoment. (fear, ‘near.) | the nations to shed their blood in streams for hearly a | late French wars you gave ber the ittie epug eum of | Gnd that is, that he «howd nt cupport Auie, Eugiund | 4€ Chartres, second gon of the unfortunate Dake of Or- ™ ike FF Pm a yi we bave been vouchsald a foretas‘e of what it migh: | full quarter of a century, and to waste away the prospe- | #eventeen millions of pounds; but wha! advantage Lave | pag nut interfered for Liberty ; let ner not intervere for the | leang, bas entered one of the cavalry regiments belonging ng extracts taken ae m, relative to the row 0y | | h fleet should f if” a it from hi -—that ig not yet recorded i rth. We bave been told that if a French fleet I id | rity of gemerations for the preservation of dynasties, at you got from her in returo?—t not yet recorded in | worst of dee; ms on earth—that of Austria. (Great ‘i 3 the Adriatic it might be the interest of England to | last requited the deluded uations at the Congress of | batery. (lavghter.) I know that you have eaved Aue. cheering.) e only boon 1 ask ie etri pmenireliags Aer baled Two days ago his royal highness war swe have been told, and on high authority too, | Vienna by reliing and bartering them like oastie, ant vy | trial, but] do not know that you are indebted for you this, too, ] should pot asic if] were not cartain in my con- | Ordered on a reconnoisance in the direction of Trine. The oi | | | esie Were to be attacked it might be the interest | treating “Europe like an allodial farm. (Hear, be safety, for your rank amonget the nation, for your pros | ecience that England’s interference ia the war would bring | Young prince is scarcely sixteon years old, and is very Fngiand to defend it—vay, the inspired ministerial | Thus it isthat Lombardy, thus it is that Venice, ine Fairy | perity or for your freedom to her. (Cheere.) A dear ally incaiculable calamity on this your free and bappy coua | active and intelligent. Everybody here speaks of bim in warda the delligerents apcidate for the west riding of Yorkshire even told the | City, robbed of its glorious independence o! thirteen | rhe Was to’ you, forsooth; only too dear. But bow try without any possible present profit or future compen of the “nationalities,” | electors that it might be the interest of Eoglaud to protect | hundred years’ atanding, were tossed over like u cricket “ugefulf’? That I have yet to learn. Austria, you | gation. (Hear, hear.) lowe, aud gladly confess to owe, | the highest terms. He did not meet the Austrian, but he om what? Of course, from the great misfor. } ball into the grasp of the House of Avatria. (Heqr.) | faithful ally, faitbful and true! Why, gentlemen, re | eternal greaitude to Pngland. ‘I should feel it mach like fa | came back with very useful intelligence about their moye- — interes t g emancipated from the deteeted yoke of | Theeo jast forty-four years o! Italian life, with their cver- | member the Crimean war. Cast your eyes at the gloomy | misfortvne befaliing my own native land ehould Fogiand | menta, The report made by him on this occasion wee grow stropger Aveiria. (Cheere.) Thus, turn @s we may, the alterna- | growing hatred and discontent, with their ever-recur- | churchyard field before Sevastopol. It is faithful Austria anconsiderately rash into « calamitous couree by couplu presented by pate the Emperor, who said he ebould volunteer rile | Gve ts thi either England remains neutral, or else she | ring commotions, cenepiracies, revolte, revolutions, | that pale phantom of death, that seut your heroes to die | her own to the House of Austria. (Hear, by be very happy when he could send to the Duke the gold z r.) The 4 witt aderfal (Tue be Lrought to support Austria. If in this war Fogiand | with their scaffolds soaked in the blood of pitriots, — in vain on that barren fleld, while she stood idle by with | fyglieh pation Las mighty destinies in her hands. Please | medal of military valor. What strange events we are es sebeccasnamy e to depart from the {kort ple of strict and — with their horrors tS Solved and cogpire Saag out firing Fined withons r oe a finger in rota os i | to bear well in mind this, that no war can be thoxght to | witnessing! y Were as (re neutrality, you would be in danger of seeing the colors | the chafing anger with which the words ‘Out with the your congideration for her. (Hear, bear } cas | have assumed European proportions unlese Germany and ‘The banks of the scans honaty ana Mie athuad cf England railed to the mast of Austria~yox would | Avstrians. tremble on the hips of every Ttaliap—theee | find no auewer to ie questios, « What i Austria to Eng. | Beveaeume » Parties to it. Now, my lord,1 am of | clear of austrian toons” AN Me eine now completely sepa ore y chose bave th naine of Britannia coupled to that Bavy- | forty-four years are recorded m history a8 a sianding pro. | land!’ could teli you a tale of borrore about what Ave | opinion that, though the German nation be uncommonly | appeared to be ‘about to operate at tae ie ae Jon of abomination whose power rests on a tissue of con- | test against those impious treaties. The robbed protested | tria is to the great birthright of mankind—liberty, what | excited, Germany will not fly into the war to the rescte . Leen b qoent ae WL Tre Manchest Guardian of May 2 Y duet wh 2 Professor Newman remarks, in his work | loudly enough agaist the compact of the rovvers. she is to freedom of conecience, what she {s to culture an! | of 4. ‘i, unless Prusssia takes the lead (hear, hear). pe perder rg — have marched towards the a peat nal Security on the es of the house of Austria, even in the am | (Cheerg.) Yet, foreeotb, we are still told that the treaties | enlightenment, what she is to everything that good men | thus cbjuriig the policy «f Frederick the Grea, whick raived : j hy og een noted for cient heathen times caused the holders of power thug | of 1815 are inviolable. Why, Ihave heard it reported | prize. No, England caunot, England will not, load her | jer to the portion of ae ne of HB of fs the case—that departure from the principle of neutrality | suicide; aud eball we, in 1859, be offered the eight of Eng | to be marked by the finger of a long forbearing but jut! | thai the Regent of Pruasia will risk ihe dangerous hazard | ®H0t thie moring at daybreak. Last night a deputation - pe ey sone eaves support of Austria—should never for e moment be | land plooging into the incaiculable calamities of a greai | Providence, whose wsysaro often mnyeterious. “nd why, | uaigce Regent of Prussia will rink | Delng supportel by. | of the principal men of the town waited en the Adjktant foil dee veeterday were ‘the next mail. lost eight of. It will convince every true hearted English | war for no better purpose than to uphold the accursed | I sek, should England plunge into the calamities of | England. Thus it evidently depends on the bt of bi Wille agen alter the arr 3 Than that (bough the proclamation of neutealiiy is devery. | works of the Castiereaghs, and from no better motive war to-keep that Austria eafe? Ono anewer ie given to | England winether or not this war is to agsume general | 20 doubt of his guilt—no doubt that the Piedmontese 2, fo: ym Berlin of the 19th of May saye — ing of unreserved approbation, there is much left to be | than to keep the accursed house of Austria safe? (Cheers. ) | thie question, which brivgs me to the Inst chapter of may | European proportions; because, if Prussia, from reliancs | Vérpment has employed, and still does employ, other i] | Se paper of thai establish. and deserving of no defence from men. This feature ot | ward judge—corscience—led the hand of Rete to | between Austria and retribution, for which sbe appears | be likely to take in euch a case—I, for one, cannot think duce some hi to desert. He was sentenced to be | resolution of | Gemeral to entreat that he might be spared. There was h . ue ie ! i id i % for the ame disgraceful purpose; yet Count Gyulai rrived bere at eight o'clock yesterday even. watched, to be cleared up, and to be controlled by public | Inviolable (reaties, indeed! Why, my lord, the fortyfour | retarke. It is eaid that the integrity of the Austrian upon England’s support, plunges into the war on the side | 28ents ul Cyoyal family abd the court were im wallng cpizion,’ The 'mportant jueetion ie—-What isthe world to | years hat have since pared have cridbled luce trevtus Tike @ | empire is necessary to the wainteasece'ef the balance of | CPR eTeMEY E support, plunges into the nticipate that | $88 morning pardoned this man. Ee bas’ not say sation wreceive him. ide Majesty en- understand by the assurance that the English government | sieve. The Bourloms, whom they restored tothe throne of | power. Ob, this word, spectre as i; France, in ihat case, will be eupported by Rusela. (Hear, Long = ine Pa wo ~~ any demonstra- the light of common sense—this word is hear.) ’ Let, therefore, her Majesty’s government well Dara Seal oe ae the townspeople, : to whieh right, justice, political morality, freedom, and | ponder over the consequences of a rash, inconsiderate | Put bis, family have free sccoms to | bim, a rew bouquets of flowere into his carriage. tacit provigo that England will remain neutral provided | traneformation of Switzerland from a confederation of | the exietence of nations have been immolaied ag so many | step, and let them well weigh the immenge responsi ties uecae ae an iy ‘om ped WO, oD condition gentof Prossia has given @ private au- the war remains restricted to Italy? Or is it meant to inti. | States into a confederated State, and the independence of | bolocaus's. (Hear, hear.) Let it not be said that Eng- | bility of their Position. The course which the national > itis oa both ae ae a lai is much beloved = 7 " ya) mate that Fogland will adhere to the principle of impartial | Belgium, bave been accomplished in spite of thosetreaties, | land persisted in perpetuating the sacrifice. 1 shall not | jptereats of England recommend is very clear. Keep toe othae Hittle rs sa men; be is very careful to tde Beust, who delivered to his royal povtrality and strict non-intervention, aithongh, in the | {o the profit of liberty; but, for the reat, the distinctive | now epter on a theoretical elucidation of the fallacies of yourself out of harm; develope your own freedom; ad. | M ABB pee a fo AB Does bie, and insists on the com- tiere from the Grand Duke of Saxe Wiemar, | natural course of events, the area of the confMet may bap- | feature of the cribbing process through which those | this cabalistic Abacadabra of batance of power, which, un- | yance your proaperity; go on steadily on the road of ae = ay a oe my oe their ay by them. cng him as reeident minister at Berlin from the pen to be extended to other parts of the Austrian domin- | treaties have passed is this, that every poor plant of free- | like that of the olden Syrians, creates the diseases which | progress to yoar own advantage as weil as to that of bu- pres sod exe it Li ra oe who have meneeres or vr Jons, and the eventual issue of the complications happen | dom which they had spared has deen uprooted by the | it is intended to cure. “‘Ishall restrict myself to one re | Inanity and of civilization, and allow me to express a | in the occupied territory for his moderation, and e0 is his Ovaris oi Anhalt, Ducal Saxony, Schwarzbarg and Reuss. 10 Ye correspondingly enlarged? I wish this assem: | unsparing hafid of despotism. From the republic of | mark ofa practical character. Artificial States, without | hope that, if under the mereiful dispensation of Providence army; |The poor people expectod to be ll-treated, having Goon: Buo! hae left Vienna for his estate at Buzeredor’, ply to come 10 a proper conclusion on this sub- | Cracow, poor rempant of Poland, swallowed by Austria, | ei:her organic cohesion or harmonizing cement, are an in- | g chance of national emancipation should arige from the dolicbtedand poe ne aun wild beasts, and are 2 ort time proceed to Carlsbad. ject, 1 shail, therefore, with your leave, my lord, enter | down to the freedom of the prese guaranteed toGermany, | citement to war, instead of constituting a check upon it. | presen! complications for any of the nationalties whom rit ty fot ve hod ine en in the power of ne oe on a brief inquiry imto certain preconceived ideas—I | but reduced to the condition that in the native land of (ier, hear.) ‘Against what kind of preponderance ‘e | Austria holds in bondage, the good wishes and hearty | # smonsniy koad sau fet of men. The Keeper of a in erates that Colonel Count de Mun- yyisi1 weil call them prejudice-—which, if they are not | Guttenberg not one poor square yard of soil is left to ses | the Austrian empire meant to constitute a barrier? Evi Prayers of this free, generous nation will nob be with we | CAneucuse, Alla Liberte Italiana,” and another of an . has recently been om a special mis- ly repudiated by public opinion, will be likely | sfree press upon, everything that was not of evil in those | dently either against Russia or against France, Well, as | oppressor, but will be with the oppressed: that Fogland what ear 14 gi meres ut to paint out these i bae since left for St. Petersburg. Gene- to, England into the war in spite of the prospects held | inviolable treaties had been trampled down to the prodt | to Ruseia, There are in the Austrian empire seventeen | will not be backward in cheering the eudeavor with her ee ae to sired inners One poor wo td - out by the proclamation of neutrality. These prejudices | of Cony concordats, of Jeeuite and of benighting | millions of people belonging to the Sclavonic race—al! of | apprevation, and in encouraging it by her eympitby. aug) is house must be pulled down because on the ) x st rate Power. And 1, for one, A Pavia letter of the 18th of May says:—A native shop- ai © anxety,agthere gained to be regarded as self outlawed, hatelul to gods, | that England rung with a merry peal when the stern, i2- | self with the reproach 0! oppressed millions, by stepping | considering the attitude which the Czar of Rugsia would | Keeper of Mortara bas been convicted of attempting to in- i i carriage and proceeded to Charlottenburg, are firmly purposed and determined to abstain from taking | France, have vanished, and the Bonapartes, whom they oud acclamations from the assembled any part in this war? Is this deciaration made under the | proscribed, ave restored. (Hear, hear ) Oo changes—‘ae raiGuc: (alvensieven, after Baving completed (Ge MIE tor ip the first place, around a radical errooeous inter- | darkuess. All theee violations of the inviolable treaties | them dieeontented, because not only oppreseed politically. | (Great and loug coutinued apptause). ate Was painted “Morte ai Tedeschi; and could hardly men * th which be bad been charged at toe Court of Ba pretation of t ip called the Italian question; secondly, | were accompliehed without England once shaking her butaleo deprived of national existence. Now, imagino Rus- ( Mr. Deputy Daxiy then teen the following resolution:— bese egy arsenide a were met by roars of voria, bas & Lat Stuttgardt to fulfiia similar one at around the undue regards which we hear professed on the | mighty trident to forbid it: and ehall it be recorded in sia desiring to strike an ambitious blow anywhere. Will ‘That in the opinion of this mé . itis of the bighestimoor | wwilteee tet ir ab a = Gees of safety. You 3 Part of Fugland for the treaties of 1815; thirdly, around | history, that when the object ie to drive Austria from Austria be a barriertoher? Was she evera barrier at | isice io tue honor end interest of Eniciend that ake aioe ob. Y 4 om feb or Piedmontese get a footin, the Grort of Wurtemberg. vebat diplomatiste call the localization of the war; and, | Italy, when the matural logic of the undertaking might | any single moment of the past? Why, Rustia need only | gervestrict neatrality between the contending Powers now | fF one day even in the Duchy of Parma they will pul Jand has arrived at Svuttgards, on 4 jastly, around that greatest of ail imagiaable misconcep- | preeent my own native iand with a chance of that de- to fay, asthe Czar Alexander instructed Admiral Tsitea- jog war on the Continent, andavoid allentangling alliances | OWN and destroy every emblem of Imperialism, as the tone, that the integrity of the Austrian empire is liverance fo which England bade God ¢; witha mighty | koff togay,if he found Austria playing fast and loose, ‘treaties which may lead to complications endangering that | former detaced all the Lions of St. Mark on the public } Hai to the maintenance or the balance of power. May outcry of sympathy, rolling like a der from John | “Ye seventeen millions, rise againet the oppreesor of your | Deutrality. ; buildings of Venice sixty years ago. But then they are S please sour lordeiip to allow me io make some remarks | o'Groat’s o the Land's Eud—that deliverance for which | nationality; here 1 am to help you!”” and they will rise; | Before the resolution was put civilizers, “ 1 the on each of these points. Firet, as to the real merit of | prayers have ascended and are ascending still to the | and where will Austria be? Thig isthe reason why Aus: dr. P. A, Taytor roge, and, amidst great confusion and The Opinione of Turin publishes, as a curice: ipespsi town in Canada, and versa, atthe charge of the Italian question. There are commotiong which owe | Father of Mankind from millions of British hearts— | tria did not dare to draw her sword io the late Crimean | noise, e2id be had au amendment to move, whereupon lowing order of Genera! Gyulai to the autho: a A aaa iuak’ ans ding £2 and Qe. for any sim ‘Weir origin to maladminietration and misgovernment. | chal it be recorded in history that at such a time, | war? Is that barrier? Why, it isa high road, inviting Mr. Gitvix, M. P., roge, and said that notice of the | province of Novara:— je. for any eum not exceedii nd 7 su These may be put to rest by searouable concessions, im- | thot under such circumstances, England plunged into the | ambition toan easy march. (Cheers ):Now, reverse the | amendment ‘ving been sent up to the table, he found that No. 184.—For the regular provisioning of the Austrian poye £2, and not excee beyond whicb ar rovernents, reforms. But, my Jord, ili governed | horrors and calamities of war; nay, that ehe took upon future. Let those 17,000,000 be delivered from the Aue- | it was of such # nedure as to form an aldendum w the re- | troops, the following articles are required, which must = ender can be granted = lay With the exception of Piedmont, the | herself to make this war long and untversa!, for the mere | trian yoke, and they wou'd be what Sclavonic Poland was | solution after it was carried. He put it to the meeting immediately procured by requisition on the part of hed a “question ig not of this ehar ter, Too pro’- | purpore of upholding the inviolnbility of thoee roiten til! quartered with the concurrence of Austria, Againyas | whether Mr. Taylorahould be heard. (Renewed uproar, | authorities of thi ‘She office of Consul ef claiming its adequate #0) whieh has becn vacant for some months, hae been filled by the appointment of Mr Skater Cover! at Venice Whee: is being deepaiched as rapuily «2 peseiie from y 4 ‘ovince, aud by deliver avon in | ireaties, thoge highwaymen compacts, infavor of despotic, to Franee, On the 19h of November last Igpoke at | and cries of “No, no,” “Yes, it it is a publi: meeting,” | of the contractors’ with whee, the maid autnorities Data question ig not such or snother form of govern. riest ridden, bankrupt Austria, good for nothing on earth | Glasgow the following wo “Ip any war in which | &c.,) in the midet of which the Lord Mayor, who seemed | stipulate regular contracts, The province of Ni aulay, formerly Usited ment, ruch or another azuge or griovance, demanding | txcept to epread darkness aud 10 perpewwate kervilude? France will etand on the one sideand Austria on the other, | weak and exhausted, left the chaile, woich was taxon by | aepunte tee! forty-eight hours 260 oxen, aad dete ay nc oa thor impre: nt, copcesgion or redres#. No; f (Lond cheers.) Then you bave that Austria in Piedmont Frauce hes but to advance to the froatiers of any of | Mr. White. brente of wine (the brente is 72 litres or 16 gallons), 30 2 question is a qveation of nationality, And be- § carrying on a war ina manuer that recallg to memory the nationalities oppreeeed by Austria, and say, ‘Here I Mr. Tayion then came forward and etated that he did | brente of spirits, 60 cwt. of ke of cats. and & queation of pationality, the fir foremost | the horrors of the bygone ages of barbariem (loud cheers), | am to help you; rise end throw off the yoke of Austria,’ | not wieh to mova an amendment for the purpose of divid- | The said provisions shall be dnivorcl oe ee ra ty the | oh Seamane. jor u ct that all r r solution is the tota) and{defini allowing her rigorously dieciplined soldiers to act the part and they will hail the invitation with enthusiasm.” You | ing the meeting, but in order that they ebouid pass a rezo- ‘oper functionary of the Intendan eee, ee nese tat of Jun@ nent vn | polsion of Austria trom Italy—(cheers)—her expal cfroubers, let looge, upon an ofending population, to are just on the eve of sesing thie anticipation re- | lution whieh sould be worthy of ins acceptance of an | Of tem in accordance with the ported dec oe eee eee er the fret of Jane next will gucpa manner that ehe should not beable to go buck. | olter violeice to families of women, to outrage daughlers | alized in Italy. As the French advance you mey | intelligent body of Englishmen. (Gries of “Read, read.’”) : on. As te bread and rice he will ; presence of their parents, apd’ revel in such other eee them raising up an armed foe to Austria from every | The amendment was, communes should always keep fered SIN torm of thuader, lightning and rain burst of @ compromise, but this is one of thoee whick can admit | eavege crimes as the blood of civilized men curdies at stone, Aud you may gee the anticipation by and bye ‘That this meeting, while repudiating all idea of British inter- | ready, both for the troops stationed there aud for those aie © the 3 aid y of no compromise. Fither Austria is dednitively ejected | bearwg related. and the tengue falters in relating. realized in other quarters too If Austria held not Italy | vention ix the presen: struggie between France and Austria, | eventually parsing threugh. | truet [shall not be obliged to nigh ee ane Apes. I> tate from Italy, or else—do what the Power of Europe may— | (Hear, hear.) Such ehe was always. Tacse horrors in her gragp, would an Italian question he poasibie? No; | yet desires io eroreas ita deep conviction of the ceesesitvat re) | Suc tany pasting y ¢ igorous measures to obtain the regular ngth for three hours and did great dam’ the I stion would recur again and again. Noad- | but faintly reflect what Hungary had to eutfer from uot a barrier; ber very exetence ie the eword | OE ig the pa ee ceneny, pode 1a eo tdeks | and exact delivery of the articles demanded as above.— Betwcen twenty and thirly pereous were drownei in tive reforms, Do readjustment of provincial fron- | her io ovr late war. (Hear, hear.) And ehallit be oclee suspended orer the setiled condition of af us wit aad Uproar), as much in the iaterest o: Lm acme Headquarters at a places where 1 was thougot the waters could never of duties. (Renewed cheers.) Many politica’ questions may admit + < 1 aca ‘i “ . f 100 long delayed justice to the fortara, May 16. #. could sopjure it, and no terrorists couid stifle it, | said that Engiand, the home of gentlemen, sent ner brave Europe; it is the cavern from which the uropean volcano | } Burope, as an act of 100 long delayed justice to the Italian othing short of the utter extermination of tre Italians | sors te shea their blood, tos in fight- | jefed. (Hear, hear, and cheers) Le, Austria vanish | POMC: ARG thie necting herchy declares its opinion that mo | A letter from Serravale cf the 18th of May in the Pays, . r es gland which is not based on the | from @ person accompanying the French reweb d in ruins, nearly sll could secure the rule of Austria in Italy; and a nation | ing side by side with ‘such ? for the into the guif of eterual perdition which is yawning for | principle of Italy jor the ltaians, (Oheers.) oad from Genoa eset dre, prensh troope-ca the the siete great portions of the ct. tweuty-eix millions bales even” extormination, | maintenance of those bighwaymen compacta of 1815 to | her—(cheers)—and we may yet bear, perasps, of focal He cared nothing about the struggle between Austria | Tod ,(rom, Ger been wad encria, says:—Dariog three eed e owept ini Well wrote Lord Napier to Viscount Palmerston ia | the profit of that Austria? (Loud cheers.) No, let the peo- reads were © into The Prince of Wa olution, but they will remain mere’ domestic affairs; | and France, but it'would be ; g in mud, and Thave been wet 1848. “The Ttalians may be crushed, but will | ple of Fngland raise loud their mighty voice—letthem thun- European wars of ambition will become for ever impos- | forth that at the very commencement of awar ehwert tain the re ootaed dv and lnk then de rg 1 not be extirpated. The enthusiasm of bope}will kia- | der forth the forbidding words, “‘L6, this shall not be!” ible, apd you wili not eee any lenger the life-eweat of | gret rate Powers of Europe, England should pledge hers2'f | faces, and when thi anor ce ee die, ami the broken thread will be knit again | Jet them give to the government of the nation the pillar of Europe drained by the keeping up of large standin, 4 y 6 BUN shone o; bse received the dieting 4 4 jut joyous gongs were - “ that under no circumstances whatever would she take I wemouge ; . Me ol aH ung. Jn truth, there is nothing more melauch fen “4 and again. It ig from thig nature of the Jtalian question | the nation’s clearly expressed willto lean upon, remind armies, because the idependence of every nation wil! fn i 7 4 me! oly than Ik of eerer Ieabelia of Spain is encientc. thes treaty, jp 1846, when the Papa! dominions were y Sar v part in the gle. We would not fight on the side of | the route over the mountain—no hem that they are the ministers of England and not of sgnarantee inthe independence of all. | (Cheers.) The | Ausiria, neither, on the other hand, would we take part | torieon-on the right, on the I gh no Perspective, ao y 5 yen worte governed than they are now—and to Bay this The nations agglomerated | with the worst of despots, Louis Napoleon. Mr. Taylor, ria, and fortify their national position against the in- truth is very plain, my lor , underfoot and over- HE 2 a d a f i js head, every where rock—alwa} ck. Our first is to say very much indeed (laughter)—the moderate li. | fuence of foreign insidious whispering. (Coeers.) There | into the artificial compound calied Austria certainly con- | yy enoke amidi 7 2 Ly Syrock. r evening, KOSSUIH ON THE WAR. tees parte the mocerate party—deciared to tae | ip danger, I teil you, men of Eogland—there isdanger be tain considerable elements of power; but it i a very Sens ieiiay woud Dee inn Tene ee oer Levecary or ny nara THe ah ene ere | ae ars Rata gna os cd ees Papal Commi what, however dreadful, however ia- | fore your coors. Do not blindly confide ip appearances. | great migconception to deduce from this fact the inference | mous ery of No, ‘no,’ accompanied by bisees and reams] ee heeled rs wi ie ¢ inhabitants bad converted ity of the Neutrality of Engiand— | *epportable were Re particular sulferings of the Roman | The wooden and iron bulwarke of Eogland went forth to | that the Austrian empire is a powerful ingredient in | forced him to resume hie seate ag | rginadeatuee Labor ing company; and therestill re- | Wise Hesusetty & 2 bd cople, the'r questions with the government had for them | the Mediterranean with sealed sesret ordere. Wact if what ie calied the syetem ofthe balance of power. (Hear.) ge, acurtain, Scenery and foot-lighte. Nothing | Prospects of Another Revolution tn Hane | 01 a secondary interest—the principal was Italy; that Mr. Grirw accused Mr. Taylor of having endenyored to | was wanting but the actors; but our m gary—The Treaties of 1815 Torn to Plecese which revolted their feelings more than anything else, was nt papers should have had something to.do with the | The world hag progressed, my lord. The gentimeni of na- ceed a sp Oritm, moored athwoart the port of Grner, eo aa to im. | tionality which Sty yeare ago. the dynasties aronesd ay | Stttify the proceedings of the meeting. en consid hat they were | opportunity too favorable not to give the inhabiteate's specimen of their talents. Immediately splendid bills { for was solely to advocate non-intervention, and be pro- . that the Papal government had made itself the slave of ede the disemlarkation of French troops, and refusing | the protection of their thrones ig strongly developed eve- : Napoleon and Nationalities=The Austrian [0 tte eat end that whenever a Opp ¥ 9 Feeling of the English Government, ry : Op Frias ening, the 20 i t j f eve- | teeted most loudly against English money being spent and | wore'stack ap mine na : ity for | move an inch cut of the woy? It is rumored that the in. | rywhere. If it be stropg in the German nation, it is | English blood shed in the quarrel pote. t 3 lage, announcing a performance ing the Angirians should offer iteelf, the Romans | dignation of the Genoese was loud, that Bogland’s naval lg, strong in the Italian, Hongarian and seisvonie | "fhe Gramuas then rose yo pot die qdeadce area there | £7 tue betel by the beat of dremine gue Was, Ukewise id Join in the Aight with the energies of @ wearied and | officers were obliged to stay all night aahore, ag even the | nationalities—nay, even stronger, because these are sub. in the village, accom- ult.,a large meeting washeld | wo od fe 5 Were loud cres of ‘withdraw the amendmenta,” met by | panied by the custor declarati i ai € Ty for the purpos. ng the | indignant people, because the life of ail Italy was elevated | poorcet gondolier refused to row them to theirship. What | ject to foreigndomination. Therefore, the fact ia, that the | Cries of «no. no. mary declaration that it was to be ‘by: st the Loudon Tavern for the purpose of considering the | 10 the scutiment of natiouality. 1t is likewise owing to | {t you ehould hear of the recurrence of petty ampoy: | uations which are yoked together ‘under the’ strictly | CCS: Taylor eventually withdrew the amendraent, ana | Pétmission of the, Mayor.” In the evening the theatre : of expressing an opinion that this nature of the Italian question that, when Venice and | ances, may be chance, may be design, but at all events | military rule of Austria detest that role. Consequently, | the original resolution was carried ananimosely. ried—pamely, a vacdevillen a pen teees Cereal Bly Ya Megiand ehow!d adopt @ strict neutrality inthe great strug. Lombardy had risen in 1848, the whole of Italy united in | calculated to annoy the Freoch and Italians, and to pro- | in any war waged meee Anstria, one or another of Kossuth addreeeed a similar meeting at Manchester on | singing Moke ‘the nari Lan griey @ ballet and: gie wich has burst over ope. a crusade egainst Austria. The same nature of | voke some untoward velligion, upon the ground of which | them, it may be all of them, will aiwaysbe found ready | the game gudject and in almost the same words. Tabancets ap lawied the wi gba inhabitants of The Right Honorable the Lord Mayor (D. W the Italian question explains the fact that when, | you may then hear Eogland’s honor talked of in stirring | to join apy forcign power againet Aust by , they must have been delighted. Esq. yresided: and amongst those present on the platform i n 1848, from fear lest the French might enter | Variations, and,as you bave been appropriately warned | tions, emancipated from the yoke of Austria, would cer- For aye part, I laughed until tears fell from my eyes “: rien it 3 ; ? it the ballet. which was executed b: ds Jamee Duke, Bart. M. P.; Mr. Locke King, M.P.; Mr, | Italy, Avstria offere the provisional government of | by the Times, you may go to bed one evening, believing | tainly form powerfui bulwark’s of Europe's independence; S y a dozen Zousves conn, if P-2 the Hon, W. Cos M. P.; the Hon, D, Milan the unconditional independence of Lombardy, with | yourecif at peace, raed wake oo the Bap finding | but coupled together by force and violence in au unnatu. THE BATILE OF MONTEBELLO, Who were attired like the dancing girls of the Opera, In Kinnaird, M. P.: Mr. 8. Mor’ ulty to dispose of themecives ae they might plese, tne | }ourself at war?’ And all thie for the glorious purpose of | ~ ral compound which they detest, they are not a barrier, but the course of the ballet were a gavoéts and @ pas, composed that they | Yindicating the inviolability of the precious treaties of | the vuinerable point of Europe's peace axd eccutity. by the dancing master of the regiment, and the finale was Milanese rejected the offer, with the dectarasi ah a ; Venetian | 1515, (Cheers.) Let the peopl.’s vtce kep England out | (Cheers.) Ihave thus endeavored, my Lord Mayor, io The following despatch from Napoleon to Engenie was | £0 grotesque as to be impossible to deacribe. would never separate themselves from their snd i. Louis Kossuth, the wae loudly ap Mons. Koss brethren, and that they would fight not for Lombardy, but | «f war tili Parliament meets. Parliament will keep her | elucidate the four points which I beg the meeting well to | pofted up at the Parie Bourse May 21:— A letter from Aleseandria of the 19th of May eays:— dy, then epoke ae follows:— Mayor, ladies and for Italy. It is equally for this nature of the Italian ques. | safe when tt shall have met. (Cheers) The huctings gave a | consider, becaure it is on the view which the Englieh nation BMYEROR TO EMPRESS, The French Emperor in hig excursions is ‘accompanied by | Pentlemei—The cloud called, the ‘Italian questioa,”’ hag | tion that we sce, at this very moment, the people of Pied- | guarantee for this. But if the people reiax ia watchful. | sball take of theee points that the policy of Rogiand 1 SDRiA, May 21, 1859 very few persons. He goes on horseback in the undress wt laet degui charge the electric fluid with which it | mont, though happy and contented with their own condi- | ness, the evi! of an “accomplished fact” may come be. | willeventually depend. (Hear, hear.) There is one point LESSANDRIA, May 21, . of @ general, and nothing escapes his notice on the was overcharged for more than forty yearg. Itisamo. | tion, cheerfi road. accept all the eacritieve aud suiferings of | tween, which even Parliament may find it difficult ta re- | more to which I desireto advert. It is eaid that if the Austriang. about 16,000, attacked advanced posta of the | His Majesty everywhere meets with the warmest welcome meentous event, likely to become epochal in the history of war, waged iu the most barbarous manner by theenemy— | drces,’ The third point which I have ts elucidate is what | Italiane—if the other nationalities whom Avatria holds in | Corpe of Baraguay <’Hilliers. from the People Of the country. In the small y: Borope. What is the position which Fngland ought to take (ear. bear) that King Victor Emanuel uaving ingcribet | diplomatists call the localization of the war. If this | bondage—would act alone, England would not feel tempted | _ Driven vac vy Forey’s division, which behaved admi- | through which he passes the people ‘run out. of ties ‘@ thie critical emergency? Your lord: on his banner the independence of Italy, sees a great num- | expression bag any meaning at all, it is meant | to intervene; but the French intervention alters the case, , Tably, und carried the village of Montebello after a des- | houses and ealute him with loud acclamations. His es- darry wth them ® tbrecfold autoority—that of ag inde. ber of republicans rallying around bim, just as the | to eay that the war sball He fovglit out on Italian | (Hear, bear.) It ie said that the Emperor of the French | perate four hours engagement. cort, whieh hae hitherto been furnished by the gendarme- pendent Englieb patriot, that of a tried and consistent monarcbiste would bave rallied around the banner of territory. Well, my lord, I apprehend that those | Capnot be actuated by any other than ambitious views— Piedmontese Sakae under General Sonnaz, showed | rie, is now composed of the Cent Gardes, ‘@ detachment of friend of liberty, and that of the exalted representative of Italy if the republicans had unfurled it with a reasonable | who say eo talk absolute nonseuse: they have not Cae hear)—that he means conquest; and this England | Uncommon energy. Two hundred Austrian prisoners, | that force having arrived by land from France, this great commercial metropolis of the world—your prospect of success. It is from the same cause that Tus. | consulted the most elementary principles of strategy. | should not allow: nor should Italy or the other oppressed | among whom nconel. French, 500 killed and wounded. | 4 jetter from Yi lerdadip hee answered the question. Tne position which cany threw iteelf into the arms of the King of Piedmont; | If the war is to bave ay peli at all, ie nationalities lend their hands for exchanging one task mae- Austrians in retreat since last night. French fiver bas raat ein eereaee satin bere Engiand ought to take, and from which she ought not to — that volunteers frorn all parts of Ita'y flock to the banner | Austrians must not only be ejected from Itality; they must | ter for another. (Hear, hear.) These are grave conside- {Turin (May 21) correspondence of London Herald. } tricolored flag is plainly visible from the oe “ich Gepert, i that of honest neutrality and strict uon-inter- of the King; that the mest extraordiuary mea- | be ejected in euch a manner that tuey shall not beable to | ratione, indeed, and here is my brief, plain answer to them. On Thursday it ‘was well known at headquarters toa! | Mark, and for that reason the Public are no ie Lata niles vention. (Cheers) I feel greatly honored in being per- ures of rigor have to be resorted to in Naples | go back again. Tactical victories, without a strategical | It i oaay to say that the oppressed nationalities should | an Austrian corps, ahout 6,000 strong, was assembled at | to ascend ty” toe Austrian yeesel which cares the wen mised to take part in the proceedings of this evening, | to prevent the people from joining them; and, last, | result, never bave finished a war, nor ever will. (Hear.) | actalone. Unity of will and barmony of design are not | Stradella, and it had commenced its march along the | between this city and Tricate left esterday ap ta Gent Shough I know that in my individual capacity my humble not least, to the same cause is it due that we gee the | Now, in the rear of tue fortified defensive position of the | everything; dction must be combined on a preconcerted | Vogtera Toad, the artillery using the causeway, and the | shortly afterwards returned. The’) oA hota Ned opinion can pretend to no weight with thie distin. FrencB rece'ved with joy and enthusiasm in Tialy. | Auetriang, between the Mincio and the Adige, and a little | plam, end before that cqmbination can be arrived at in | horge aud foot the level groundeou ihe mere’ Boe tee ‘ passengers had thelr : money returned, and must make the joi db hed assembly. But, though by the stormy wav (Cheers.) Now it does strike me that in all the transac. | distance beyond the Tagliamento, is the frontier line which | countries where speech ¥s atifled and the press is gogeed ublic never imagined there was anything in it, Ii wi During tl " lof the vessels of ational ‘adver ty I was cast a homeless exile bit pred tho declaration of war by Ausiria there | separates Lombardy and Venice from the other domin- | the disciplined army crushes the oo Popular tnere recosuaieeat ce afeint, too traneparent not to be the Teyt'e Compar y tare Aine Tatagord ils yorvor it tm the shores of this coantry—the happy home of the | was that eboricoming in the policy of England, that the | jons of austria, Well, imagine (hat the A@iistenny, | masses, and, ihe. barpean’ amt seed om @ scaffold do | seen through, &¢. This opinion appeare a h iecca free and the sanctuary of the oppressed—still, the muni. | Italiay question was not viewed as a question of nationall- | tacked in front in that famous position, despair of holding (Hear, bear.) This is the key to the | to Mendquarters, it i Pere | eaten cipel.ty ofthis great metropolis deigned to receive meas ty, but was viewed a# cue that might and should be | their ground, and retire behind the Tagiiamento, Does | mystery that with a couple of hundred thousand | It appears that during the night from the 19th General Luders, who has been appeinted to the com- the representative of the down troften Hupgarian nation. | colved on the baste of Austria retaining her Tlal.an pos. | fuglagd mean to eug that Frevee ead ete ene ee | Daldeay militias oe bravef liberty loving people may | 20th bie Majesty the. Tiperom was knocked wo fe the | mand of the Russian corps of observation in Bessarabia, sliy cowards of one hundred cities, boroughs and cor, seseions if sbe would only consent not to interfere with | forbidden to follow them? (Hear, hear.) Doet England | be held in bondage for ages. Rare are the instances re- | middle of the night by ua aidede-camp from Maraha, | 2rfived at Kischeneff on the 4th of May, and cetablished lowed im the wake, and the liberal instincts of | the rest of Italy. I ehall not now enter on the tasic of | mean to say that Austria, being at war, should enjoy all | corded in history in which deliverance from oppression | Baraguay d°Hilliere, telling him he expected to be at. | "8 headquarters there. Vogland and Scotland vouchsafed to make | showing tbat it is the strangest of all atrange misconcep- | the advantages of neutrality in her seas, or on her own | Was achieved without foreign assistance, The United | tacked at daybreak, or very soon after. «\Eut-ce la tu’? | _ A Paris letter of 284 May, in the London Hrald, saya:— ‘peeitory of the tokens of their sympathy for my | tions to believe that Austria may be left in the possession | territory/—that ebe has only to retire beyond a certain | States of America bad the assistance of despotic France in | retorted the Imperial Commander-in-Chief, ‘ce n’etai | Mavy departures of Hungarian refugees have taken Place wative land. TI my Lord Mayor, itfell to my lot pro- | of Venice and Lombardy, awd that she could be bound by | line, there stop, and mock her enemies, because these | establishing their independence. (Hear, hear.) Even Eng- | vrarment pas la peine de vous déranger.”” (What! is that | Within the last few days. The Count de Kiss, who has soinentiy to eland wdentifed in public opinion with the any treaties, by any arrangemente, not to exert the pre- | would be obliged, by the localization principle, not to | land, heroic and brave as she is, bad the aid of 18,000 | ali? It was hardly worth while to trouble you for such a | b€@n living here in afiluence for some yeare, married to cause of the oppressed nationalities, and of Earopean lib- | pondering influence of ber position ‘on central and south. | everstep the Italien territory? (Hear, hear.) Why this Doth grenadiers nnd a Dutch fleet of 600 sail; it was message.) Ido not > Such being the peculiar marantee the truth of’ this, @ rich widow, has left with a Sardinian port, \- y_of my individual posi- | ern Italy, in the direction of that principle of unmitigated | isjabeolutely preposterous. \(Hear,hear.) We inourown | with these that Wiliam of Orango came to the reecue of | likely it 1 but one of the many stories current ae oietd pany with General Klapka, “Their tention ito" ois the tien. I, for ope, cantot help deriving corroborative per- | despotism in which the House of Austria lives, and moves, | war of independence ejected three armies in succession | her libertics. We Hungariang achieved our independence However that may be, next mornin; corps of Prince Napoleon in Tuscany. The spy who was zuasion from the oimcidence that the conclusion at which and baste being. To show thie I ehould have to refer to | from our territory, they ew acrose the frontiereof neigue | without foreign assistance, but /: was by foregn tatereex, ee & S a g “ : 4 early, and, ordering big horses and escort, soon taken by the French is well known in Par: ‘! your lordebip arrived from, an Eoglieh point of view, ig | diplomatic documente which ought not to have escaped | boring Turkey, an we did not foliow them from respoct | tion that we were enslaved. Wht ctirious change has peared along the oad leading to lereae ahicores Pasco, a man porseseed of considerable landed perpen exactly the same at which I have arrived {rom a European the attention of contemporary statesmen, but which would | for the neutral rights of our neighbor, But Turkey aid | come ona sudden over the minds of governmente and of | Pisited the seenc of the battie Meanwhile, Sursbal Bara. | &hd who was in tho habit of paying frequent visite to thé point of view. (Cheers.) Asan cxile, aga Hungarian, as carry me toa greater length than I can affordon the pregeat | not disarm the ejected Austrians, ag by the law of natio aristocrats that they raise a hue and cry against what the; uay a’Hilliere, whose corpe is . | French capital, where he transacted much & member of an oppressed nationsiity, as a man idectited | cceasion. Therefore 1 will only remark, that unleseitbe ex- | sho ought to have done, aud theresult was tua’ they came | call the Intervention of the French iu ltaiy?’ Why,imy | fut qiseaters vopnectoec ee Gormard dueut Siz | sbares of all Kinds, and otter Becbange: meen, 2 # aspirations with the cauge of ‘le cmane'pation, 1 plicitiy understood throughout Europe that the maintenance | back and attacked usagain. (Hear, bear.) However, in | lord, for about forty years we have scarcely heard anp- Squadrons of cavalry \(Piedmoutese) to reconnoitre and | News of his fate is looked for with the greatest anxiety repeat, ag an ardent prayer, what your lordehip ad- of Austria in Ler ili gotten Italian possessions does not en- | that cage they retreated to a territory which was not their | thing clsethan foreign intervention aguinst liberty. There | check the advance oF tue ausirines) se Possible; and or- | By the articiea of war, and all military jurisprudence, it vanced ag the well matured conviction of an boglish ter into the intente and purposes of England, no proclama- | own, and, therefore, wae under the rights and duties of | was intervention in fon st Naples, in Piedmont, in | dere were immediately given to General Forey to get his | 1 thought he cannot long escape the death ho has risked patriot—that England should deliberately adhere to the | tiour of neutrality will preserve your country from, soon- | neutrality. But jn the present cage it is pretended, u Sicily, at Rome, in Moldo Wallachia, in Hungary, in | division under arms, and to start immediately for sfonte. | He has many intimate friends in the Fronoh army, and Policy of honeet neutrality and of strick non-interven. er or inter, being drifted into the war in consequence of | the principle of localization, that Austria, though bellige- | Corsica, in Baden, in Schleswig-Holstein, everywhere | bello and Valeggio. The utmost des: i patch was use: great interest will doubtless have been m: tion. (Hear, bear.) If, im consequence of this concur. + ingling alliances for which it is manifest that mighty | rent, should enjoy all the privileges of neutrality in ber own | there bas been intervention against liberty, and f do not | owing to the bad state of the roads and fate dimante et delay, if not commutation, of bis penalty, ade to obtata rence ct opinions, J were 80 be asked whether J anticipat: that noes areat work. It is a strange sight to sec what | sens and on her own territory. She docs not confine her | know that England bas ever drawn her sword to | which one regiment was encampted from another, Gen. A letter from Marseilles of the 20th of St the wor which is just commencing may eventually result to _ is joet now going on in Germany; that the German nation, | means of warfaro to those retources which she might draw | forbid it. sometimes a tame remonstrance may lave been Fozey had to start with the seventeenth battalion of Chas. | superior officers belonging to the old arm; Phomeiee Rast iiosuget, T choudd unkectatingly doclare ud Ti, | thosid anpeue ready Wenge enna ay Sine Purpoee, | from Italy; they would be scanty resources indeed. No, | offered; but in the cago of soy own dear native land Eag- | seura, commanded by M. Ferrusart, aad tue, Sereuts. | dally passing inrough taet cose co arity oF Hungary are hua entified. I should sunkesitatingly declare Oud I'dy | should spear ready to sink for once all dissensiong in the | she uses every nook of her dominions, whether connected | land’s government had not even one word of obser- | fourth and Eighty-fourth ‘regiments of the line, under Major Vincent Malenchini, Py eS AL ae Saeed, Nah cn meal eu prowided Bnglan’ dons not | determiization to real a supposed dash of the French at | with the Germanic Ooniederation or not, for raising | vation to offer. (Hear, Rear.) Well, bere at lagt eacase | Brigadier Genesal Doureh, leasing wee chen vee aoe or on h reduerte eotional Minister of War a i : a erog chat me te or agen hae ae | oe eed ny lord, ) ay socsnteay de the etl a le drawing wey implement and supplement of in beige orl of Prnen gs ayo a the yoke of | bis division—the Ninety-tirst and pees lity So foot, to | to resume the command of his batialion of Ch f terfering with the war. (Cheers. anwic! | ti i ible man. ere is, however, mucl warfare from everywhere. Yet it ig preter that ustri preeenting ite an interventiou—if in- | follow. : % ie ‘ ae ion jasseurs Of Rot flow. mny Lord Mayor, from the excitement with which | a falge alarm at the bottom of that agitation, ag it is per- | the powers with” whom che is ag wae’ ante | tervention it becand’s hue ant cry ig ralsed against it; | sion, encamnen oe ree eee anes heton | the Apennines in Piedmont, the sion, enc he Tuscan government has Fee aes ay at uuatorally have operated oa my feel. | fectiy absurd to suppore that the French goverment, hay- | hold her territory inviolable beyond Italy: it is | and principles are invoked in favor of oppression which | to tie summert of Geen) oa bier a Woihe vacent seatt Colonel Nicolini, Governor of Elba, HES. opiyerally ise great teacher, my lord, and the oy | ing already one war on band, could meditate an attack on | pretended that she may be belligerent, but should be | were never ‘nvoked in favor of the oppressed. (Hear, | The Tredmontese cavatry, after oscupying Casteggio, | fg appointed cred ee me emote dearee, Major Biscoss| time if a mighty digencbauter. I have suffered the Rhine—an attack directed, not Bgainst Austria, but | thongbt neutral, too. (Hoar, hear.) A) ‘that hear.) It isn discreditabie h: risy. Let Austrii and military commander of the towa mouch in the last ten years of my tempest tossed life, and | ogainst Prussia and the confecerated minor German Sates | avectite nonsense, (Cheers) therein yet thes te ) en the iy | into Montevelor where Wee eae Nene Reise arcs | MB¢ Port of Legh P ; ‘ q replaced in the position into which the beroic arme of m into Mont up by the force ia sompensation T bave learut something—I have learnt | —an attack which would be sure to i & mighty Europe- | tion. The drategiont position of Avidtsin im the famoug | nation had hurled her in 1849, before foreign intervention cater, Piney aue Deni ght iter ret Tok place in The Akhbor, of Algiers, gives the following account of Sot to cluteh with eager impatience fhe fecting forelock | an coalition in battle order against France. The fact is, | muare betwen the Mincto and Adige, with ie four, - | lifted her up from the duet, and be gure neither Italy nor | the atrecte of the village, from whence the French were | the capture of’ two Austrian veascls by a French vessol of of ilugory hopes. I have learnt with calm refiection | that there are influences at work {0 turn the patri- | es vn its four comersmone of them, Verona, nota mere | We shall want any aesigtance; but if England permitted ultimately driven, after two hours’ hard fighting; but at | Wr:—The Croiseur, a small steamer which is employe in to trace the law of concatenation between cause and | otic feelings of the German nation to the pro- | fortress, but @ fortified camp, copable of sh-Utering sixty | Austria to be saved, and the rights of nationalities to ve | this time a reinforcement made {ts appearance in the | Watching over the coral fishery on tho coast of Algeria, effect which prosides over the logic of history. Tax- | fit of the Houge of Austria, for maintaining their | thousand mena thal position i not whal it wwas #n the famous | crushed by foreign intervention, let it not be recorded | shapo of half a battery of artillery and the Nincty.first | fell in with two Austrian vessels laden with coal, which Fee eee PbIe Axion that ng ee ciPations ca | foot planted on the neck Of other nationalities wich have | campaign of 1798, Jt was lil: an embryo then: ita Ines a | that, when such Intervention might have turnel to the | sv Ninety-cighth regiments. The village was recaptured | She captured and carried into the port of Oran, ihe incontrevertible axiom that the ditfoulties of as much right to assert, or tore assert, an independent ui giant now. (Hear, hear.) And diplomacy comes with its | advantage of the oppressed nationalities, then only was | after much and Austrians fell back along A letter from Fiorence of tho 15th of May, in the Paris oppressor may become 4 clance of deliverance | tional existence as Germany bas to mairtain he idea of localization, and claims from France and Piedmont | it oppored for the iirst time by that Engiand which Toad to Casteggio in perfect order, closely followed by | Siécle, eays:—General Mezzacapo has collested a gront fer the oppressed. 1 see Franc ie Joseph of Austria, Cheers.) But believe me, gentlemen, in spite of the pr. that they should be content with a front attack—content. wae £0 much Indebted herself to foreign assistance the French. The Austrians suffered very geverely in this | number of volunteers on the Roman fromtiers. The troops sbe murderer of my nation (loud cheers)—the b'ood vailing excitement, the noble instincts of the German n ag it were, with running their heads against a wall; ‘and | for her deliverance from oppresion. (C score.) Besides, | retreat, and would have done still more #0 but for the | are full of enthusiasm, and are anxious to meet the ro stained wrurpor of my country engaged iu x great war. | tion could never be deluded into the disgracefal Dart of | that they thould abstain from taking the power of Austria | in this case there is uot exactiy intervention, there | adinirable conduct of thelr artillery. At Casteggio they | trians. It is said that’2,500 men are to leave almost im. dy ae mretgioa oe tales wis Sg parties, | being made the valet de bowrreau (hangman's assistant) of | in flank and rear either by sea or ‘by land, on any oth ig war between cstablithed goverbments. That one or etopped their retrograde movement, and a battalion of | mediately for the camp. The country is tranquil, not- must develo; the house of Austria for enelaying otber nationalities, | point of her dominions. Why, the preter more nationalities may take advantage of r posted some well wood themselves in the course of the war, I come tothe | unlese it was supposed that Engiand’s government eympa solutely monstrous. (Hear, r oft tosis a He at 1 ge AEE a a4 re Ti he Heck eee | cetamss ecia eres igo r.) Thea, what is to | is,1 should think, not exactiy a proper reaeo: 4 ot up @ galling fire against th 7 7 conclusion panic at nO ogee) Vee ilo et age Will be thized a Avetri Ane (gets [Sabb vg ao bn Sel i ye considerations, with regard to | land to Ltd Brennue-like, ber sword into ts. pauls ta Seventy fourth regiment, alone had shout one that fe Mgoreraraeal, seem ‘Geelroe ihe Ca within the reach of some lonalitic:, the oppres- | her entitled to retain ber Italian possessong, and was fa- | the policy of England? It would be utterly vain to spect | favor of Austria, u name synonymous with monte hors de combat at Casteggi x i won of whem, by the house of Austria, © the great | yorable to th that the integrity of her dominiona | late upon what !ngiand would have to do i France eae % Ties aie’| cenainn Tee nee oe orbiter ed ;uscans ‘tre in accord in recognizing " A with the murder of nationalities. (Cheers.) What may | ous rifies of the Tyrolese jagere. The of j« | the impossibility of bis European nuisance, without the removal of whic patcu- should be maintained. (Hear, hear.) Unfortunately, it | to dash at the Rhine, and orcupy Belgium, or attack | be the special motives which indice the present raler of ans developed theteetves in fields oa Whe ee deapite fact, fe propaced Toe aeaeiies eet ye ‘work arrangemets may be devised calculated to disguise hag been proclaimed in Parliament, by the offiual organ | Germany, becaure no’ man in his sensor osn think that | France 10 engage in this war] do not pretend to know; | reversal very gallant attempts of the Sardipian horee to | to the welfare of the country. The government is ‘orn and of the whose Tuscan cons. in Tuscany, having requested permission to retire in order ' for a little while longer the dry rot of the politica! strac- of England's forcign policy, that Austria awe strong claims | the Emperor of the French can ve extremely anxious to | but I know what ; not be in bie intereet, and therefore t them, The French made a desper Hack io | ROW occupied in reorgani % - wore of Europe, but oth @ permanent peace aud asett'el on your sympathy bec she ia kindred ia race to the % Prussia and Germany to torn upon him while | cannot be in bis ntions. It cannot be in hie iaterest to tion of the village, but they were pli nn pi cided thatit shall Souslat of thie civisncn ee 0, teres Sendition of the Furopean community are utterly impos- Anglo.Saxon. (Lavghter.) Well, 1am bound to remark, io e has Austria on his hangs, 8 attacked by | enter on the carcer of a conqueror. because thet would be erable dvorder to Montebello, the Austrians | or four brigades, according to the number of’ volun: tile. ‘Your lordenip bas sypropriately alluded to the | aii bumility, that this pitifo! appeal to your commiteration | them, he will, of couree, defend biineeif, and will not be | positive ruin to him, we it was the ruin of Nepoleon | \7 5, that each brigade ball be of two Foye! prociemation by wh °G Fer Mejewty’sgoyeromen, Lappereto bea very unfortunate display of proficiency | wishont alliee, J iroaging; boy tbat be ehoyld intend to af. Nay, jbough tbat grost captain was corte’ 7 an ambi a GGA Gb fous cilia

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