The New York Herald Newspaper, October 4, 1860, Page 2

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< i ace, Eo ke NEW YORK HERALD, THUR’ spay, OCTOBER 4, 1860.—TRIPLE SHEET. 7 .. 8 * france, Franco haa | the temporal power, with which the Or me bet wioereis conescrated, | been ip vested for a period of its biste Fh Ryn fo p sols by which Pied- | ritual power, which w the eternal ar 4 “Uochaiebic buss velf more and more | of its religious authority. But our hopee go still further. Vi» pave the confidence ‘mn and bis place will be occupied. There will be no void; , sald to ne that it wee France who made the war in taly. | ers have urged the Court of Dut the city, coring from its ecclesiastical character, | But we shall anawer that she made it exprossly for re | seasonable concessions to (tue age and to olviliza- ~iNl fall back to ite atill more aucient functions w# the | establishing and cating, to be resposted this principle | tion, and bave warned {+ of the evile its metropolis of Italy, This time tue revolution hasbeen | watch we lay down, Jt was Italy that was then in courte would bring om. Now that their progacetics are | made aeliberately and with ali proper proparatioas; ail | situation coptrery t all iho rights of Layne Ld was | realizing, Lu thut she spectacle of the ananimit » of the patriotic seati- | the parte are ready to form the whole, and if tho Pope | either occupied bY foveign forces oF, govern by princes, | table undo tba the fall of Naples and Sicily | mente that now burst ‘orth th joughoa: the whole of | would take the advice urged upon him by bis timorons | whose power was (uly based oo — tion of the Twatian patriots to the | Italy will remind the Sovere! Pooti® that he was sore | frlevde, and—may we add?—tbe hint now given him dy | France's act wes to celiver the captives, _ atte Caste gcoot to them ovher attempts hay | years ago the enbiime 4 # of this great national | bis imperial » We apprehend we should bear no | arms and say to these, Now, defead yourselves. » realization of their dreams of wuity. | movement. The vell w: counseliors, animated by | more of the Pope of Rome e: it an tho hierarch of one | this ie what they are ¢ oing. tee outstripped Dy Ovis strong (exalle) senci- | mundane intercti¢, Paced OF » hig exes will fall; nod | of the three great gocts of the Caiholic Church of Ohris- Tt might be also ga!d to us that by entering , Beaten alee of comirciling and regulating u by plac: | then, recognizing What the rey ~noration of Italy is in the | tendorm. tbat invoke her, Pie¢wont is committing an of ‘ator. head appear to have vinpelled Piedmont to | derigue of Provicence, he Wi) 4 geain become the Father Tbe only fear we bave in this country {s leat M. Grand- | vention, This reasoning is a piece of sophistry y guillot’s apprebevsions shouli not be 80 well founded aa | bigh time to expose, To say that Piedmont is intervea- we could wish them to be. It is hardly to be expected | ing in Sicily, in Naples, in the Roman States, is (eo eme that £0 judicial # blindness should have fallen upoa the | thing as to say that the Italians are intervening in Italy. infallibie Father of the Church as ‘© induce him to furego | We do not say they are not. They are intervening pre Im short, sino the pesoe of | never ceased to profes * por to sdviee agaist and blame sivey weparated her os and the Comment at Si, Jone, | Sinuts” fat vs mable altack dtrected nat the States the | Of the Italians, ae be bas DEY er oeused to be ibe auguet nn Ne id and ‘yeaorabie Father of all the Faithful, WHE WONDERFUL EVENTS IN ITALY. on He -~— however explicit it might be, with Medmon: GARIBALY 7 AND CAVOUR, . anne France could not reat content with HUTOR EMANUEL GOING TO NAPLES. | sutivrinel of Unie morning justly says, ® Gisavowal wat | myo Morin correepond® nt of the Constiiutivnned Writes Ae the power be now possceses of embrot!ing al! Kut with | domo sd, pro aris et foci. They are at home. They are | necessity! neceesary follows, under On: Of” eptember 16 iopaaiy. Such an abandonment pone etre con: Dghting tha “ice a tatir alters, Unely a By fe eaten Bh yang jaw pai Oar government for tho par Las the Retains bo tne Oe & o sietewe ees. ‘The Parliament is © moked for the 2d of Cotober. The on eh er aie ane por ert he br for the English. Beain for the Spaniards: we ‘were Besos, the Powers pro! ‘mean no phn a - e verbment tay please Unem, with the reserve (hat sion, was doch ee eee ote f Ancona Bost get j whom fhe dou it; but the nero of Ont at = ded on yesterday i ( Pombard t 0 clo, andof he Papacy which represents ‘comprises Count Trechi, old de.camp of Gar!baidi, and Dr. Bram- Nine Hours Pombardraen Fae npr oe gem Ahram meray e m | late Mele dacamretGeri sD, Dre . i ni: te rime 0 ca wn ere or jo 99 4 by the Sardiniavs, Seen ean ene eee of tne goveroment of Cae f Race unlimited & mfidence, arrived yesterday evening & s ‘thizers have been wasting @ great deal of earnest | going to say as Rome is for the Romans, but Rome they | embarrass themselves of all responsibility for the even- K be po @ very inadequate occasion. While the friends Srettua is all the world,and we stopshortatob- | tualities of the Italian movement, We are willing to be- of lialy ip this country have been dreading the advance | ttacles, reapecting which we do not intend to argue. lieve that our government bas never sought to shelter of Garibaldi towards Rome as an evil which would put all lask what mau of good faith, or what individual of | itself behind adhesion from other Powors, and still lee ‘Ubings in peril, and while we were apprehenstve of seeing | good sense will be persuaded that Garibaldi, commence! to sender taem responsible (or its actions aad ite policy | ing gear m rs Turin from Napl se. They are bearers of a letter from the patriot: whom there are not too many 8 war with 800 men, represents what is melodramatica!l The polic.* of our goverament can have no other thalleity | no army, rambiican or seyal, wil deprive the} “iamous Gener? to the King, ‘The audacious warrior ta | ihe work they bavoto do, ceasing awny thelr livceasclees, | called x foreign horde! When be lands on the sol of St. | of mesporescent then et or te ae independsace, Ree een ene eee aiiy as long ag France | Wis letter War 4x the enme programme as that developed | j.'s Meine: French bayonets ; while wo were doprecating | olly or Calabria he planta hi foot on the aoll of his coan- | bascd on quict, order and liberty. Thwe wiecion’it ares? the free cxerciee of weltgions autherity, as long a6 France | iy the procia’ aaticn w the —— of Palermo, that ‘2 to thee march to Rome lest Garibaldi should embro!l himgeif | try, on Ltalian ground; be speaks Italian, and is answered | sumed ie a geserous one, and the most regular pata na her rank in the world, fay, tout be ball rotr misgion as terminated GARIBALDI'S DISTRUST OF CAVOUR | ” re rrison at Rome has, therefore, been tn- | unui! be bas, arrived at Rome and Venice, and that, des- bas the | been sought for its fulfilment, not ee) ng tbe national ign cause from the general interest of Europe. Bat all the 0 £ Thali with Pyarce,M Grandguiliot has received intelligence that | ip Itallan, and when he utters the cry of deliverance the enemies of Italy are themselves likely to do more | echoes of all the raountiins, of all ban her own sons could effect to secure her resurrection. | walla, reply to him in bis native tongue. Powers do not give it credit for this solicitude, Some oi They who would concede nothing are now importunate to | hordes were those mercenaries from ur | them would be terrified wore the revolution, Sorng concede everything. They are, according to M Grand- | so wany years bave been encamped din the | down its banks, to inundaie ueighboring guiilot’s information, contemplating @ step which would | principal towvs of Italy, who shocked native ears with | threaten tne public peace. And yet they are set France freo from the complications of her t po- } their barbarous languages, and communicated with the | witb the government that has so inoderated \t that it may crewaed, \n-order to provide for all eventuatities, and the | oie bis ardent desire for immediate apnexation, the in bi tereets of the contiouation of his ent ise are opposed make known to Piedmont the poiioy of Frenco—for 982 1 to that wensure _ THE POSITI‘GN OF THE POPE, | tnows it pertoctis, by nll the representations whicn have, |e eer eT iudee lite letter by saying that he hs no deen adaressed to her--tham to g'vea public pledge 0 We | oop jgence in M. Cavour, and that that is the reason he com Hivieter of Franco at Turin, bas boop recalled, ivas to ” right of patious which bas been violated, and 0 tho lW y- | nor risen to acvice ent him from Thi hich would sim thing tha. . cow le through di w the Turks do. It requires, | attain its object and yet avoid those evils which almoat ae sity of Rurepe yoand regretable Uais |. 7P'8 letter, which ts not known to the public, and of Sone: v ite good eeraeiaee Dut verified, and Fe tooth, © mngulat confuston of ideas to pretend that in | all great poiitieal reveiations lave indicted Ge States that WAP OLEON Te TPALB. |e ee ieee ee iuly may bo, ie | SO 8 can guaranteo the most perfect authenticity, bat | Ph Pope would but follow the exatmplo of that true sou [gtuly it fs the italiane who are the foreiguers, and that it | hoped to leok on aa mere apoctators, If the Ttalian amore. POLICY ! + | last yocident to the interval troubles of luly may!) it | procuced @ great enaution im official circles. As yet no- | Oe ‘Holy Church who set out the other day from Naples, Mf the Swiss and the Bavarians who are the natives; but | ment bas been preserved exoess and disorder, if it dors not Berm to ur rossovable to be frighiene x) ode thing bas been decided as to the terms in which the King’® | yw. bappy everybody would be, The French, even | people have been so accustomed in history to make bas astonished Enrope by its moderation, that result ie Be ee ssnee ae sal ae Poveer intcepect 10 ad | Uy RO Renae Sooretary of the Pmbnsty, han | Wie they politely counsel bim toremain, give hin pain. | prey of Tay, that tbe Italians have the air of taking | due; ina groat arto the rod same Of ‘the people and yeace Will defont Rom if. , rst 8 nary, My “1 ‘ : : so much ig certain; Berone canvot delay hees: Prato Charge dAttaires during the absence uf ly fo understand how delighted they wowld be to get rid of | property not their own when aga’ ing posseasi: national concord, and also to the direction tmprtut. in the aifaire of the peuineula to puts stop w | qe Jalleyrand, the dlaorder and determine ite reouit, ‘The Italian patriote avd Piedmont have been able to PROCLAMATIONS OF THE BELLIGERENTS. fe Ttaly. but it is for Pranos and Europe definitively ° sgiuate Italy Nero Kier the atauition, | ¢22¢,Cpinione of Tarin, of the 14th 8 2 6 Popuipte f 1 text of Geveral L iclere's jamation b: Bar’ finian Intervention | i.) poi witias poet wee wea tho apart ot | S24 (averal Lamariolero's procamaling by which be Mim. The Sardiniane would doubtiess be ready to build a | their own country. ed on it by the Sardinian Ministry, to their golicitade io bridge of gold to facilitate his drparture, and to send him ‘We must then send back to those who deserve it the | kee) rif constant supplics of the same metal to purchase higab- | reproaches of invasion, of violating international righta, | of Emanvel on the whole of It tence. Then bloodshed would cease and peace once more a ater DE earn, oe ame Dies would fain use as The Bourbon dynasty having fallen, and Gar!bald) hay would reign in Italy, Lamoriciere might spare the bri- | bugbears. first violators of right arefthey who occu- | ing entered Naples, was it to be thought that the gade their drill “The Germans and Swiss might avoid | py a country against its will, Now, how can we doubt the | of the Marches and Umbria would crouch under unpleagant encounters with the Alpmen of Dahli, | Will of the Italians when we see the immense enthusiasm | of M de Lamoriciere, and while their brethern “ IMPORT ANY OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS. ] + E é 2 moderation and justice is siege. This document, the existence of which haa beou ‘with which they are hurrying on towards unity’ What will | gained liberty {be contented with the regime of the state i a Etalian Affairs, Spllated” vier ant “Agutcwilif triumph stat | 20uvted, Dears the date of Spoleto, Soptember 7, and is | temoly purrendered themselves prigoners. of war to. the | {Ake place later we do aot kuow: but what weeeois,tbat | Oecigel, Thad was to demand: aa’ tarameieanne: Rae ¢ i or Irritated, rand right wilig triumph st lest | compored of nine articles, Chletly relating to the estab: | Saroipiane—returning to their applandiog triends, might | the invincible, irresistible idea of unidcation has possess- | people who have no other fecling than thet of hated and gs Me Recipe 8 oy ae AER se ro pebiment Of the court martial, which, as caual, isiovesied | seatier thewselves over the face of their island in'joyous | ¢4 Maly, becauee it haa felt that this was the sole mode | contempt for their own government, and who hare the seeurity of the Pope #oes pot depend on what the thee the powers of the civil authorit! then praise of the generosity aod good cheer of the Papal ser | of eGecting ite liberation. Garibaldi is a sword, but at | already, under other circumstances, shown that they ES ei an r 5 4 Sub, 0 JETIA QUESTION | tuys of Sardivia of of Goo. Lamoriciere may do, | Wphortant echoes are the Oth, 6th and Sub, che rst of % The pate of Katy ant the wxwity of the Pope are inte hands | exceeding 160,000f., for persons sonvicted of open ineurrec- ~~~ Cartes eases tee on is to say, thai men of | tion, or their abctto ané for thave who bavecarriedon a euse Duy reaswure therm! ; ace, endeavored to tamper wit. ms jari " fidelity of the Papal troops, or brolen the wires of the 4 gsizia Pecuniarily Unable to THE SARDINIAN INTERVENTION, cicotrio telegraph.” Arties "6, punishes wits the pulleys Provi Tho Turin Uficual ¢ fagniaien tue text of the mo- | and & fine got exceeding 50,000. ail those who have Vin mor acd: creseed by the Sardinian government to ite | epread alarming pews, ted shelter to persons accused: Defend her Provinces. Fepreseptatives at furcign oouris. In explanation of its | cf the former crimesy distrioaved seditious emblems, col- motives for marching troops into the Roman States. | lected money for purposes hostile to jovernment, The doccment, which beare the date of the 12h inst., is | torn off government edicts, &o. Article TH IR VE vice, Then, also, no dirastrous coufitcta would impede or | the potpt of this sword there is an idea, and even were | knew bow to do justice to themselves when Burope re- darken the march of the Italians to tbeir own metropolis, | the sword to break the idea will be taken up in blood them, go and if the peace bestowing Pootiff should take the French | apd pursue ite onward career. To call Gartl i's expe- | fere to impress moderation on the revolution of the Roman gerrigon with bim as an escort to Ctvita Vecchia, every | dition an invasion is an insult to the most ord! capa- made for formidable dis- Italian es well as every Suropean object would be at once | city. It is probable that be would not with his vo- | orders and commotious. attained. Z; all this good fortune for the of the world | jonteers bave taken possestion of a kingdom containing It would be au inferual policy to counsel a government quite past praying for? “M. Grandguiilot seems to think it | Several millions of men if those millions of men had ve to remain an indiffereut spectator of perturbations that u sol ond ir Grandguilict ought to Jnow. Some persons | wished for bim, and that man is a singular armed con- | would prepare the way for foreign iutervention, apd so Telght read this «rticlo in the Constatutionnel a3 rather a | Qveror who enters alone the capital of the conjuered | ermpromise all the advantages Toaped up to this time, etrorg bint to!» Holy Father, and, if such hint were | eountry without arms, and without encountering any | Such a policy would be condemned by Itaty, aad could int nded and were required to be strengthened, General | danger save that of being buried beneath towers. It is | not be carried out by the Sardinian government. No Goyon, the friend of Fio Nono, returns to Nome ata criti. ; not Garibaldi who has gone to Naples; it ‘a Naples tuat | Ministry would assume the respousibility of au altitade nacts that, < as jorlows:— Ss Soon 48 & delinquent 18 condemned as above, his pro- ‘momen! . No doubt, it isa | bas gone to him; it is Vesuvius that hag gone to Maho- | that would discredit the government cause ‘@pwions of the English, French, Rustian | “ro 'yace of vitiatanca, by astnring to the Ttalians the | erty etal! be instantly placed under sequsstraticn, in or- | CM moment to repent the goggestion, | No, doubt, it ig.e | Has KOR ofalitepreatge a a right of disp wing of their own fate, enabled the popula. | der to Insure the payment of the fine. ‘Nono bas not shown himself very tractable oven to his ‘This impolee of Italy towards unity ir pynhis A The Mloievens of Victor Emanuel had no choise, Of and Sardinian Press. tious of eoeeral prov nine of Abe north und ceuire of the | | The Jndepandence Belge haa the following remarks upon | fengg, and it ie much to be feared that cen Whe Chrie- | clare, ao universal, that in the preseat state ef things | various paths, one alone was open to tem, aud teat they Hta}an peninsula to pubstitute the national government | the above pro.lamation:— tian motive of pleasing his euemics may fail to induce | tho intervention of Pedmont, regarded as a revolutionary | needs must take, Should Furopo raise obstacle, Italy of King Vietor Emaguel for governments subject to fo- This document i8 one of the saddest pagos in the hie- | inn to run ‘away. fot, is in our opinion & counter-revolutionary act. The Se eee at but other States would snifer sti.) , rotgn infuence tory of adventurers. It does bot mero'y coniirm, but it | “(rom the London Post (government organ), Sopt. 18.) | King Victor Emanuel and M. de Cavour are, as times go, | moro, seein » ip the Consciousness of ber right, SWATINUED FIRMNESS IN DREADSTUFES, Thie great trausformation has been accomplished with | exceeds what had been announced by the telegraph of the Sardinian diplomacy and Italian enthusiasm have both | committing a reactionary act. The movement that wou will in constituting herself notw ‘the admirable order, w ut disivrbing any one of the prin. | bratal severity of the orders given for the repression of ciples upon Shbich social order is based. Tho events that | all instrrectionary attempts. ‘Thuse who thought them- Re, Re, ae have beep accompisbed w Emilie and in Tuscany have | selves at liberty to deny the barbarous commacde attri. proved wo Rorope that the {taliana, far from being actua. | buted to the chief of the Pontifical band, will perhaps in fier readipg this oréonpance, what authorised 3 dum of Connt Cevour, the | bave carried Garibaldi to the gates of Rome would have | difliculties that surround ber, whilst the other States will heey pt apt Garibaldi. It woula | been too strong for even him to control, and then not | find in the disorders oxcited by themselves an obstacle to be unfair to apply the same standard of thought or jan- | oply the fate of Italy but of Europe would be at issue, | the return of peace and the germ of fresh * guage in our estimate of these two documenta, of which | The regojation taken by the Piedmoutese government, —_—_—, the one scrupulously observes the conventionalities of | Which has all the appearance of being a movement in OPINIONS OF THE RUSSIAN PRESS. ral passions, only asked to be governed by | forta we, we ‘ oe \ watitucion orm hem {© contradict information which ie, uaforiunately vance, is, on the contra halt; itis even a dike , ‘Me stvamehip Arago, Captaia Linea, from Sovthamptoe ai institutions. If this transformation | w » » | Huropean chanceries, the other addresses itself to the | ™ » 8, Ys ; From Le Nord, the Russian organ in 7 could havo been extended to the whole of the Peninsula | only too true, and what atrocities their protegé ought to “ thrown up tocheck for the moment the general Italian i y po edbes Joop! pe the 19th uit , arrived at this port yerterday morniag | 46 Trylian question would have been by this timeen- | bave signed in order to merit the censure from which | D¢WY emancipated citizens of Palermo. But ii there ve 4 If the Sardinian government bes apy troth in the French saying, “Le syle ¢’est Vhomme,” | Movement. If any one has a right to complain of it, it | tum toCardinal Antonelli, it has evident! ena as tecsese pesultancously with the Saxonia, which eailed fr Urely svived. Far from being @ cause ot epprebension | :hey wished to screen him. satisfactory to Ubink that the Italian canso possesses | i the party that desired the complete un'ty of Italy; But | {ym yccumeinalAptoneli, it has evident mame port on the prev . The Arage Uriage 226 pen | aud danger to Europe, Iualy would be henoefarih an ole, | General Fanti, om assuming the command of the er: | 51 “the present moment, in tho cool Deadct states. | they who treat tbe King Victor Hmanvel and his Minis- 1859 the Worteru Powors ren ep oan s ‘ i ment of peace ancl corsorvation Unhappily, the peace of | dinian troops concentrated on the Papal frontier, issucd | Tenship of Oount Cavour, @ corrective t tho im. | ereas revolutiosists commit a great Jnjustion, for tbe | Sea, When a State declares war on the Pengers, the usual matis and 900 tone of merchandise. Fillufrance cauld but embrace a portion of italy. {t loft | the following urder of the day, dated the 10th, from his | Duisive’ enthusiasm of Caribald! or his’ advisers, | occupation of Umbria aod the ae 7 the regular | siicses for entering & campninn io eee nb ee it The advices by these arrivals have been en ted by | Venetia under the dom of Augtris, aud it pro- | headquarters at Arezz0:— @ entertain great doubts whether the address | troops of Piedmont is precisely that which ig able to ar- | fy guns. Now, the vorlt <td er teas yin aeveral days by the Cenada, tclegraphed off Cape Reco on | 40 ed vo change {n southern Italy, nor 's the provinces Officers, ommissioned Officers and Soldiers—The | 4," tho people of Palermo ever proceeded from | rest the revolution in Italy and war in Burope. government bas tn view in py tn bee Sard ® ale a . that remained bnder the temporal Gomination of the Holy | events which ave taking place south of the kingdom, aud , t " ‘o- | For Italy iteolf, this bait is doubtless the wisest thing that nen oven; Roman maces Poonday worming, and the North American at See, th the neighborhood of our frontiers, have induced his | Garibeldis pen. The carcor of the great patriot gone. | | But te it still leaves in the handa of the enemy | 10 Prevent Garibaldi from going a8 he declareo bes the recoption of our iles enables us to furnish copious | — We have no inten disoussing here the question of | Mojesty ‘be King to order @ concentration of troops on | T#! bas hitherto distiagui iy pradense: bu : he wil. do, to the which would cause a ool- the pur jmplied ta the Palermo ation, of pro. | One of the finest pear!s of ber crown, the biack pearl of | jision with the x waar ae aren hostility of one little evi. | the Adriatic; but the ravisher has enciosed it in such irou | Kine Victor demanen 4 wehoe at ae, Bed Cexce of @ discretion which, in the preseat instance, wo | #a/es that it will take a long time, besides men, blood and | of exciting the ill-will of all Italy, b Stopping Garinaids should recognise as the better part of valor. Unhappily, | money, to reobtain it. The day will come, perhaps. In | by force, or of brevkivg off. iy wita the extreme good nature of Garibaldi has accorded a de’ | the meantime, the best thing for the Italiana to do is to | Cae Gy onn weak on gree of influence to certain persons whose counsels and | discipline themselves, to re organire themeclves, to make the question. In princy; no doabt, the dec! war acts reremble more the ravings and outbreaks of un- | their uniep more and more perfe “i bura the corpses percipitately taken ; abe Getisuee “Rt tteemtmmceaie | Sut tadaaa seen tata naa | Gaye meh a br a tional politicians. Wo are strongly tempted to believe, 5 el frem the Interval evidenve of thedocument, that the ex: | there will no longer be a king of Pedicout, but a King 5 pt ereedinge without aconiliot, and is r a * Venetia It w fico for ua to vail to mind that as long | the confines of the Marches and Umbria, and to honor mo ‘Betails of impor Burepenn intelligunce down to the | iris question be anactiled Barege compat Gulag & cate ththe command of them. In coming amongst you I 3Mh of September. ond siccere peace. There will always remain in Italy @ | must not conceal from yon the probability that tne coun- ‘The steamship Connsught, Capt Leitch, setiyed .t St. | powerful cause of tronb!es avd revolation, which, despite | try may again have recourse to your arms to restore Jebns,N.F., yesterday fom Galway, Ireland, whence | the cilorte of governments, witl incessantly threat an | to neighboring towns, and prevent ite being disturbed with- Beet yy “ . outburst of insurrection and war in the centre o the | tn the kingdom. It is the more agreeable to me to as aby sailed on Tueeday, the 25th wit, coptinent But that solution must be left tg time. What- | sume this command at svch a moment, as I am convinced Adviocs fram Kome assert that tbe Pope |s about to ie. | ever may de tbe aympathy which ho daffy increasing | you will give new procis of that discipline for which you festo, culling upom the Ca.bolic Powers for aa. | WTetcbedness of the fate »f che Venetians justly inspires, | are co much esteemed, and of that valor which you dlis- ree sas ’ Furope is £0 anxiouly cecnpted with the tnealcuisvle played i the inte campaigns, and by which you acquired s ae if by enchantment, of all the army and all the bavy of P : Minister Crispi har siguulized his advent tn the Neapoli. | Italy crowned at F the Kibg of that country, can leave room for astonishment ; wiwtance. conmequence of a #ar, che bas £0 lively desire, go irre- | puch fame throughou: Italy. ‘The King has full confidence . 4 From the Paris Debats, Sept. 16 ’ Mttoal ae ak Medria journals of Sept. 18atete thet, in cansequonce | sistibloa need of pease —ibat would be unwise Eot to re- | in you, and you will bot decelve bia bopes mor thoee of | fansca'purcy get shanyceace Ya tytees ton BO: | vemaro snl Tybino, wich, the woope of Ueneral cia. | Baby mer siya ily Pt pg ot Piece of the gravity of the situation in the Papal States, M Ria | Srectglier will, , the country. ANTI. | | generally to March bares. Gint have just occupied, are situated at the foot of the | be thie time once again saved, it will be owing to this is : But rot se withthe qvestion# relating to Central and On the following day, baving received orders to cross di four breathes a wiel: eastern 5! of the A ines towards the Adriatic. Pica: Roses, the Spanish Ambassador at Rome, who waa in | eourhern Italy the fr be The 1emorandum of Count Cavour br a ly fudden and bold decision of mont. Diplomacy, no , pute aly . fronticr, be issued & second order of the day, which | gigerent spirit. It is a State paper of the highest abili- | Whilst Cialdini was invading that region with tho left | Gout, cannot adopt this point of view and ‘thie in. ‘Spain on leave of absence, had received orders to return \tiached ta traditieral system of policy which bas | rurs thus — ty—an ability shown quite as mnch in the tact with wiicn | Of the Sardinian army, General Fanti, the commander: | jerorctation, whch, howower eccept * ms Shes ta not beep lees fatal to his family than to his poopie, the | — Foreign bands collected from every part of Europe on | '¥=' 4 h a the right the other side | lerpretation, which, ngite the true ones. Wo tuumodiately to bis post. Cus of thet says also that the | otis of Naples, from Bis sooeenda to the intone, | the tollet Unobrio nes the archon Loan thene displayed | {20 Writer glides over thin ico of international law, when oT ihe Aprouincs towards. the Mediterranean, thot nae | Weed, Lomtherefure, feel surprised that the minis government bas presented eight picors of moauiain ar | pieced himself io Lagrant opporition 0 the uatioual sents’ | the falec standard of « religion they deapige, Without a | {£eati0e of the oorapation, as in the Political conditioas of | £87, 10 the strategical region in which Tome te placed, tere have jroteatod, bat we do not believe that will Bilery to his Holiness. iments of the Italians, as well as to the priocipies that go- | country, without @ home, they provoke aud ingalt the Central and of Sovtbern Italy. Starting from tho peace | He occupied on the 11th Citta di Castello, a small town of e > - of courts verp civilized countries. Deaf to the counsels of Frasce | popelations ty order to obtain a pretext for tyrannir! 1s was thought in Paris that the interchange of courts. | inc of England, refusing oven to follow the advice of a | over them. Buch torments mast cease; suck’ iapotanes Bea between the Courts of Vienna od St. Poteraborg | goverrmens whose consiaat and sincere friendship or ite | must be suppressed, by carrying the assistance of our placed the fact of the resonciliation beyond a doabt, in | attachment to the ay « ed peg = | nage] = peo beg Fn Italy who ia vain for : : Coubs, be rejected for a whole var all the < justice apd pity from their government. mission, spite of all that had been said to the contrary, F lng of sardinia to tead bim toa system of policy more | which King Victor Emanuel sutrvete te unre witan | conformable to the rentiments that animate the Italiaa | cx = oye ant Purope learn that it tape longer at the ple merey of boldest or mort fort: veatarer. THE WAR IN THE PAPAL STATES, jy. tsco and ronson could not obtain, a reyolntion FANT. yam acconmplished—e prodiguus revolutho—wbich bas | | The folowing wae the order of the day imsued by Gen, Olied Hurope with astonishment by the almost provi - iniaipi on taking tl whic commented ‘The Policy of Sardiaia—Garibaldi’s Distrust Of | gin; manver in which it "as worked, and has excited tte | cu tor ite vehement nod trucolent tenes y 6,000 souls, not far from the Tugean frontier, close to the gases ment as a bebehoent pact to eeeabiish in behalf of fay | source of the Tiber, which town is 8s the entrance of the THE NEWS FROM NAPLES, the principle of non intervention, instead ot bel it | upper valley of that river, and the day after hoentered ip Bi pret pic pig iene a guarantee of rosetta vs | thavalley lmelt. ‘The upper part of the Tiber 1s com- | Another Interview wich Gaertbaldi-uie the Pope and the Austrian |rinecs. Thanks to its bonefl. | manded by the citadel of ey Bye hai been De | Opinion om che Italian Questions—Tnt — Lnathon poe a Wy van clea — have oat vay! Enthusiasm in Neples—Garibaidi's orporated w a ictor Emanuel. Ttalian order and European peace hace tesateed freeh ec- | leet extremity. If the information transmitted by tele- and Actions—Victor Kmanuel’s Troo; curities from the incorporation ; but its im Possession of the City—The Ming’ were Wmited in extent. They were not felt Ve- nice, bor shared by Naples, nor aid they” affect Army at Capua, &c.—The Neat Militar: f 4 My x the southern portion of the Papal States. Count | {om Tuscany Movement to Drive Them Oat of th ry - aduration for the {los ious warrior whore glorious ex- Soldiers of the Fourth | lead you against a band Caveur--Pians of Napoleon—Opinions Doli recall al, at postry and history narrate ws maost | of foreign adventurers whom the thirst for gold and the | CAYOUr (ces pak cpeaen Som fe Crees Senne eat | Pe 7 ea Kingdom, é&e, from the English, Freneh, Russian turpriving love of plunder have brought into our lands. Fight, | Sresslne his belief (hat wad Venice, shail become aman i- Events in Naples progress wonderfully well 2 tien Bean Tho traueformation which has taten plage im the king- | ruthlersly scatter these wretched braves. Let them feel | Fwd from ihe Austrian deminiom, there oun be mo perma. Jdronsed to the French | kingdom je rapidl oan 0. Gan ey an J dom of Naples, thongh it hax been effected by means less | from your Bands the wrath of a people that wills ite na. | 7% Cs meen ing that be will only at- td rapidly assuming & Sardinian aspect. \ (i be goneraliy in say Brg Fooly irepens > Ra ty a ‘hat | tompt resistance under the walls of Ancona; but accord. | °%tracts bring the news down to the latest moment. ide and rego’sr than that of Central yo fd the | \iovality and its independence. Soldiers’ Perugia do- NAPOLEON'S POLICY IN ITALY. ae leeitimate. lie consequences are pot the favora- | mands vengeance, and though it be late she shali have it. 2 in | tg toother accounts he te collecting his troops to take The following is an extract of a letter from Mr. Ed: r . Die to the true interests of order and to the cousolidaiion CIALDINI, & Sain cor fer Ge Grain of Vente aculehae | SSS Coe, aves the eentrel paint betwoss Prom an article ae ae ios, 16 the Psrla | of the Ruropeaa gull am ‘ The General Commanding the Fourth Corps. | wiaey coat wp bone wi 90 many interats, aabgne as: - ew hg James bed se friend, describing another interview w: - ot'the great ietas fer mn x snersica | will ne - oo rope, that, at whatever sacrifice of matiomal ferling, the at- {From the Paris Constitutionnel, Sept. 16.) fo many events have come, ono after tilt needy re SEY Rote werenees @ Wine beanan WILL THE POPE LEAVE ROME? tempt to strike off the chains from the Queen of the Adriatic As to France, what ought her attitude to bave been? anuse hhaly 0 deviaio from the path ia wt a- | ageless taamteRi) DOUG Monedatianaee vate ie The Constatudionnel publishes an article, signed by M. | must be de to some future day. We canuot but ap | Too firm to ve carried away, too powerful to take advan- Servensien bed pl . fe ictaer fad ¢ thestee’ where the mott fare en, | Craadauiilot, against the extreme party, whieh, aiter | prove the pelley of this decision. tage of ber streugth, too generous to disavow her own - | convene rh uaaene of seen, oP oh loam of excitin Kg counselled the Tope to follow a policy without war ageust Venice must be a revolutionary | werk, it became her to remain calm in presence of these | foe cntuy of ot penaillie auoet anon, "AB | concetsions, now advises him to take to flight without | war throughout all Austria; a revolutionary war | upexpected compiication®, and to allow time for the good | Men miput then be actuorized vo think that Italy may M. iguitlot recalis that as long as the French | throughout Austria ia almost certain to pues into a | genee ard patriotism of the Itallans to bring thom back to | satetal eulhe ghebe, of Atamane ob Guat ee. re Bt Rome the security of the porson aud the | general Puropean war, and @ European | the practical solution which alone could sssire the pre- | acon aunienten’ 0 aan tea as at the eats ik Abority of the Pope are guaranteed. ‘war might leave the Italian people in a mach worse | sent and reserve the future. That is what the Emperor's Fath of the Peulapuie wore. hot separated by proviaces | pM, GrMedguillot expresses an earnest desire thet the | Coniition at ite clots toan that fa whieb they found them. | goverument, bas either exaggeration or The policy bad in vow to pet au eud to the | as are in 0 Gealavabiecime 7 pro Pope ehould not quit and continues thua:—"la ex. | selves when the war commenced. When the thin wire ‘When the snnesation of Tuscany was in ques: zo of th tof Vieana, whicl The Roman mde tom ont having declined to associate | Pres#ing these w shes have only ia view the intorests | work of non-intervention privetples is crushed tion, it epared no convince Piedmont that it eas tho Pontasetn by geoucntes itecif in any degree with the great tational tmoremeat, | Olle Papacy, for that which at preseut complicates the | the heavy tramp of a million of armed mea, Italian eym" | would 'be'wine to the of that pro- averted |) velopement of national policy, nad | haying om the eovtrary. cunttined ts oppene it with the | Petition Of Fravee is the pretence of her army at Rome, | pathies and hopes, Itaiiau interests and rights, will be | vince. But fie were not ed: and fromm that weakere! overnments in wounding tho digo‘ty of most Ecoentabic eentane bas long placed iteelf in w ‘f this cecupation could cease all would be | treated with vo more reepect than hae been accorded in ecejonction way be dated the first disaccora between Paris tee lations sail st with Cho pepeaations tiah taSe tad Gosesebe in | “implied. at least in Ex political poiut of view. | aM eges to the earthen pot when it happens to clash with | aud Turin. That disagreement beceme still more maai- Sadan object was involved, besiden, ta theemetent | Ceti wis ‘ne populations thas Rave, Ros, succes keep | (1% Pot Rome that we ocowpy, bud i is the Papacy which we | ite iron fellow. fest when the King's government did not hesitate to pro poli Under every goreramout, | them down, to prevent theta from mautforting thous | & nd Gur cecupation coud in nO case assame « politi But Italy, it may be said, is now strong enough to hold | claim tbe aurexation of Romagna. France, on that jom as under the goveroment of Jaly, | tonal sentiments which aalmate them, it has made uso | CM! Character. The first consequence of the flight of the | her own. It Sen coe may Dave time so | occasion, atvempted a last compromise, and endeavored 31, France had prote ord With | of the | power that Providence bas euteasted to it | 12" Would Le the evocuation of xome by the French, and in to organize and develope ber great nataral resources, that | to protect at least the = of the Pontifical sove- 4, againat the exclusive Austria if | for am object of far other grandeur than that aesigaed to leoring we should carry with ws great wnexsiness respecting | she may hold ber own enemies, or even againet | reignty. Batowing to 1! ance of some, and tho iy, and the temporary occupation Ancona hed | politica! goverpment he Juuve of the temporal power of Oe Pope.” allies, that we applaud Prudence of Count Cavour's | untoward eptbosiasm of others, her citorte again failed ghown to Europe that Frasco would not miler with im Ty presenting tue condition of Italy to the Ostholie fegolution pot to ruah prematurely and reckleesly into a | * ~ * * * panity that exaggerated protection of Auatria, which, !n | popnlatione under falso and sombre colors, by making ® OPINIONS OF THE ENGLISH PRESS, war wiih the Austrian em, for ing under her hand the greater number of Loe | passionate appes! to ferllog, or rather to fagaticiem, (From the London Times, Sept. 19 Present is to remain upassailed. sovercigns, was lor bor equivsient to @ veritable | which still excreises #9 much sway incerta uncniight: | Who are the new objects of M. Grandgaillot's indigna. | ‘ue Se eee rane extention of torritor, ened clasrer of society, tt has sucoeeded in gathering | tion? Of whom does that “extreme party” consist which Veni? apply neither to Sate Cppreamon aD the ‘Thas, the intervention of the Emperor Napoleon rralisec | mouey avd men from every corner of Earope, and in | the Conslitutinnel i@ instructed ty devounce because, . a cruelty of the Neapolitan rulere, | of necessity to cease, and disaccord to be changed iato @t Magenta and Soferino the protort of Lonis XVI‘I at | ferming am army cowspored almost exa@usisbly Of ied). | ‘fuer baving counselled the Pope to follows policy wien. | Siler excluding them from the pale of “international | dieavowaly Ofcourse, this. is far trom 1088 TOP- | nected with Dis aseumpticn of Lagbact, and the menacer of Louis Philippe s viduals foreigners, not only to the Roman States bat to | ott concessions, it now ad rises bum to take to fligat without | Court’ spect, woked, justiied and se- | ture. Our interest is still the same; it is that | said be, aod a peculiar lighting if, om the one band, the inter ibe whole of Italy. Loner’ The suggestion of the existence of tuch a party | cured warden | Piecmont sboold remain the impreguable rampart of the | once struck me, “di plome tant for objest to disengoge Maly fron foreiga proemure, | it bas been reserved to the Roman States to offer ta our | at Rome filis us with surprise, Faropean politisiase are | ¢YDast whirl. | Italien peningnia, and the legitimate additions derived | (5 Victor Bmanuct. I'lore hi to Tolgns ibe imine Aid | apo the strange and fod epectac.c of a governruent reduced | Bet, \udeed, ueually very deep ln the secrets of the Vat. | Wind. To what hand eball be transferred the scvptre now | {rom our common victories and the treatics which sanc- him within om oath, 1 Sections of the peoplo | to maimiain ite abjects by the ineans | Con, Zor are they commonly very ereduions of the yatue eted from their feeble, yet blood stained grasp’ | tion them can in po cage be compromised. But our bovor porwr [0 proc | of frreign merce blinded by fanaticiem, or enticed | of any secrete which may there exist, Certain old trast | Naples must remain ® monarchy. A Nespoiitaa republic | siro required that France should uot in any way be re- | Sr yo, thingt 1 must do in my oon monner.”” | Dy the Tere of promises that could not be fultilled except | Mont, tendeg to resins everything and change nothing, bw pedey of s py Agi Mp SIS —_ pam te Hd anrengalee ¥ accord: S bated Honed to him that anarehy migbt prevati at Sapien y throws: ‘ovinces inte distress, are understood to be ibe rtoek i ef r 5 Fegar a ent, nacional ~ famous, pa » France jo 2 LA r bet Tae ee ec emaeY | Sate, siding by 19 fenasial aon militcry und naval re Italy merely to defend f that all the hopes which England entertained ke, in the highest degree, the indigas- | sad the sam of ite political witdom. Bat if ever there reat political cause, but to pro- | pat; Tal; ohare achioved their liberty and | was a time when storafastness might be counted ugon on eae mer said, “of thet fouroes the interests of the common couatry, this regult | tect a great religious one, 2s manner ae | of sympathy for their brethren in | the part of the Roman bierarchy, surely it is pow. We | CAM Only be wecured by ite incor With the do (From the Paris Siecle.) 7 ghoar an It was loyal, the polic the po tar! la the Marches, they manifest ob all eldes tho | bare beca told ewer and over ‘tguin’” by" these | minions of King Victor manuel, unt Cavour, thore- | It ie not to gratify vain devires of glory or ofageran. | [ball do all § to promote the anuerstica Bala—Indiqendence of italy aion of ro of be to put ao rnd toa state of things which | of bis advisers who ought to know their own minds and | fore, Prociatms the readiness of bis Sovereign to nccopt, | dizement that the King of Piedmont enters the Stares of nealiny Rakan tor he w » ontrage upon the prine)ples of justice and of hamani- | his, that the Pope bad resolved never again to leave | ' the interests of monarchy iiseif, the crown now held | the Church: be eacrifices himscif—that | the proper ex. t Papacy» y Dee we t ty wounds the national seatiment Rome; tbat to bomaa power shpuid ever force him from | vt to hit on ibe pout of Garibaldi’s sword. Pression on this occasion—to the iptercsta of Europe, of “1 go,” sabi be, the Rent @urrounds it, aud the | raring aie painfel emotion, the government | the spot wherein he covid hold fast by the patrimony of | | But while Northcrn is thus willing to unite with South. | Civilization, and even of Catholiclam. What was the | {a suis uictel kovernment hope saesk tone tee? world of the King thonght it right bitherto to prevent any dis- | St. Peter; and that, even if Garibaldi an his Lands | ¢f® !aly, the Prince Pontitf of Rome stands in the midst, | situation of the Papal States? Every one knows, it was special train of about twenty carriages was in waiting orderly attempt to deliver the populations of Umbria and | should penetrate once again into the Holy City, Pio Nono | #04, '0 the ‘ntoreeta of his own temporal sovereignty, sa | and is still the moet pitinble thatever existed.’ Jo all te ten o'clock, and we obtained « seat in the g mediale!y at opee, the bopes of the Marches from eke that oppresser them. Gut | would await martyrdom from them at tbe altar @ st. | Well as of the whole Catholic worla, forbids the basins. | parte mercerarics menaced the popelations of the towns to 3 carriage ne} Bel sireaty done to much, the, it was | ti could not dimemby thks the tncree ing trritaston of tas It was the univereal understanding thas’ the He does #0, Cont Cavour here informe the diferent Tn. | and villages; ebieie gave the most barbarous ; the to hopies, w every, rime. 7 on hat timo and the wisdom of the Italians populations co: tained without having | Pope's resolutions bad all been wound up to the heroic | Fopean goveruimenta, for objects at direct variance with | remembrance of Perugia was, as it were, snspended over | Coinupinem of the people exceeded ti fect donor pliah ibe rest. : Teoourse to toree and to violent measures. Moreover, the that be was resolved to ght if he could, and to | Sil good government, aud in a spirit directly oppcsed to | every head—s terrible and eanguinary conitiet was aboat | {on Wemen and gals pron nica ce ee Gon 0 ‘ revolution baying triomphed at Naples, conld 1s be stop- is own if be might, but at sll evente to etay where | S!! true reliion. That be may be evabied to continue | to break cut on point of the territory: but | into the carriages, struggled to kise feed oft re do rot depire to examine to day al the csusos | ped at the frontier of the Roman Statee, whore it is ia- | be was. Why else the curolment of those Swiss and | te oppression of his subjects a homo, be eystematical’y | what do we say? It bas broken out already. Tue King | General. Mayors ind ry ndice ejaculated : indeed the treaty of Villafrancs from terminator | yoked by aberee not lees ecrioas than those which have | German troope? Why those chartening massacres at | *i@oders and calvroniates them abroad, Without the hold | of Piedmont throws himecif{ between the two combatants Hone: priests ond monke stood, ae, gue Smmediately tho agitatitcs iy; Dut ft teessentini to | jp. biy led inte “iculy the volunteers of Upper Italy? | Perogia and elsewhere? Why the enlistment of those | Which interest and ive to good rulers over the | sud separates them; ke prevents new mamecres of { wretched s a 4 4 Fecal) two important things: the first is that since the The whole of Tialy was moved atthe cries of the in- | mild and docile aud easily cootented irish gentiement | Support and afections of their subjects, he has no mean | Damescus, and goce to protect order in the Mazchos and seace of Villafranea the policy of France bas sot chang: | wurgents of the Marches aud of Umbria. No power | And why the apt choise of a commander in Lamoriciere, ing power except by employing his spi | In Umbria, ae the Freach do im Syria. We repeat second is, that France bas const ont. p could bar thonvands of Ttalinns from rushing from | cunaing in contriv! raring on Arab Dovars, and | ritual imficence to money and sobijers | that cothing would bave been easier for him than to Neg * aloof from any enterprise conceived | the centre aod tne verth ot the Peuingula to the aldo | quick to extirpate tribes that hesitate before bia | from The power of the Romaa | display & barrow seliebuess and enjoy the ¥ aA * Peitied at Villefrancs, and whic L thelr brethren, threatened with disasters similar to those | command. All this was ‘tion for battle, sot for | Prince is only o by the calumnios which war bad given him. In og sii vey bt Lersel! bound to joiu in dircotly, or tacitly to | of Perugia. fight. But why shouid Pope meditate flight? Or | bit own people whi peniie hy uproar atte bis | to chivalrous heart he had to (a wrath poe Or Wrnd to. It Mt remained passive amid this universal emotion, the | why shonid his ‘friende meditate it for him? ‘Was nes of Toman 4 to the fanati. | Austria, and perbaps, the (litosntent of , and he W Var the incitement of Tiajian patr much more | King’s government would place 1a direct opposition to | he, or what have they to four’ Rome was never in ali i | Cit™ end ignorance of all countries he has raked | might bave fonnd bimeself in acrual embarragement. Bat than Ube dircct and sincere wish of tbe lations, oor. | the pation. The generone outburst which the eveute of Na. | hislory s safe a place of residence for a Pope as & it now, weaeneueiel recalling the most shamefal and | whe idea of what is just and good gained ye J ed to Variant the Duchios and Tuscany, France sincerely | pies and Sicily bavetprodaced in the messes}would degens. | Rome ts deAnded at ‘hts moment by an army of 2 hundreh | PKS memories of the Miadie Ages. In the inte. | ute ce que dots, uivienne que ) was bis counn, ©! her ally to adotain rate ar epeed ly into anarchy and disorder, urneand Frenchmen, for al ‘those muabers are not | Tete of order and independence, not less tham in | on thiseceasion. We venture say that, by his de Thes ¢ ion of Lombardy was a fuficlontiy hand It would then be poteible and even probable that the | rivibie among the ruins or the public places, oF the suburbs of | {De trne interests of the head of the Cxthelie Church, tho | cition, he bas rendered fervice io the . pome pr f the strargie undertaken, to make (t reaton. | regniar movement that bas hitherto deen working might | the wmerable city, the last man of thoce aie hundred thou. | Serdinian ronment has resolved to free the Tapa the name of shich war about to be di in blood ang gbie te & ‘content therewith, and it rood for Med- | guddenly aseame the ebareeter of violence and passion, | sand ie pledged by the honor of Koance to defend Rome from, Staves of this swarm of military locusts; to give tothe | to the French government !teelf, which, having to protect mont not: © Fire occasion to Faroe to think tat there | Whatever power the ideas o! order roay exercise over the | invarion or insult to iomp as it remains the renidence of the | ‘babitants of the Marches and the Romagna an | Pome, could not have seem with pleasure the army of the wee more.» S>ition than patriotiam in her aesynue and | jialians, there are provocations which the most civilized | J'ope. Woe must credit M. Grandguillot with io. | Bity of eo ae proven hao ee views aud a2 | Its)innrevolotion im the Marches, under the orders of 4 cople cansot restwt. Asruresty they would de more to | formation upon the subject on which be officially | thelr fori ernment, and of interposing the | General Garibaldi . her Sitention was very ein Pe Piniea than Diamet if for the first time they gave way | ryrcke, but it certainly is news, and strange news, i | ‘reps ard the jonaries of a recular covernment be- 0 * bd ° * fo viel at reactions, Uhat would lead to the most lamenta- | Furope that the nitramontane courtiers of the Pope | tern the advancing bands of Garilald! and the clorical | That the King of Piedmont was, besites, ina situation comtritms | t bie consequences. Bustory informs ts that @ people now | should be at thie moment attempting to persude him to | Tvler# whom they would sweep from the face of the | in wbich self defence wae kgititpate, will and deploring t! ein fau - | at the head of e'villzation bare, uader the empire of less | abandon Rome. General ie Lamoriciere ber roepo: WHDIity Crom the factitious sanegat ferioas canger, committed the most deplorable excesses. Yet, if such am event were to occur, how suidenty it led to tbe.r ~ wher | Showid it expese the Peningola to similar dangerr, the | would unravel ail the entanglements of the ta ‘When advancing Mother step. Pec mont ‘bongiht ‘her | Kug's government world be culpabie towards Italy, and | tion. The very arguments vred by ii, Grandguttion im the duty to seine the Ley ‘Wins, the representations of Fretce | would pot be less so towards Enrope. Come tuisonne! to dissuade the Pope from sach a step show wore, aad were boun be, not more sincere, bit more | Tt wou'd fal! tn ite duties the Italians, who have | how beneficent would be its resuits to Ghristendom. “The Sivays bearkeno? to the Goussels of mofteration it has | first consequence of the fight of the Pope,’” M. Grand. etre them, and who have entrusted to it the high mie- gett “would te the evacuation of Rome by the French." fon of ¢ reeting the eational movement. * great | mpediment to the at once It would fail io ite duticn towards Europe, for \t hae | o! the desires of the Italians aud of tbe unity of Ttaly tracted towar: ‘the moral engagement of not allow. | would fall of it® own aceord. If the Pope were to with- | the Iralian movement to degenerate into amarcay and | draw, the mission of the Froneh varrison would be at an | \= be Freneh occ spation world ceane, Rome might be- tavolred ral quest. 80, @ roligious queetto ona portion! quest by oft ‘oo @rder, in the ; of wnieh France bas & & t interest, trad't) ental ‘ Kis known bow clear thet ee Tt ts to felt thie double duty that the King's govern- vention « € the Mt, 80 PoOD AF tLe lerurgent Jat of the pen rT yet? yop might Kk .| an ge were amnion the ave: J | Mot, so 20 infargent popaiations larches | uni po top of the Quirinal, mournfal | presentative, sete re of Ni oa 6 secant profomndig re tetable rendere | | ana Umbria eent Gepatations ‘to Invoke ite protection, Prove, retiring in the distance, would “ with | with reneral roles; hoya cry hie war has beet cqniesh tee aoa out, but the disagrwem wet between Frunce and | hastened to gran’ them. At the sause time it sent ® | thom great uneasiness log the future of ler. | ken Who would Thought of hir subjects. priesthood ery and the lowest orvers bare boon hie uch mente sa there he bas. destroyed, at frees al ie Piedmont soquires thereby are Mer notoriety ant extent, | diplomatic agent to Home to ask tbe Puctifieal gurem- | ritorial power of the vit would be ag Cee toro a8 8 Of Lely AWAlled, a8 ment to Hone Awe the forcign legions, woiad ft could not | {hes to eaden thelr homeward march itn plows ns ‘won: = | | I Swait, the sacction of 1 ‘erope, tue Ceeen- | make use of to reprors the manileatations of the | Duk we mort adi fvch apprehensions | =F te Parnoy wee at it's still, at Romo, abel | vinces that touch upon oor fronticre without forcing ws to | Weil grounded What the valve of thas i fered, with wll @ powors and af) Ne prerogatives ander | interfere in their favor. territorial power now is may not be Worth much theatre, the Mag of France On the ;¢fusa! of the Court of Rome to comply with that | discussion, but tain! asswune: When, laler, that biint and confueed agitation broke | request, tike Rive gare orders to hie troope te emis the \ oe LE -y- 4 hn AO Europe. nitePimal amount the moment Pope paseed forth foowe, under which the bow of Rearten has | dria and the Sareter, wich tho mintion of re-cetab.ishing | through the gates of Rome. The rerulution before which . ii "4 2 aie Ps " ' to sambed feTieventiy ingior my SioNy order there, and of lewving free thekd 1 the popaisiions | ibe Pape woul! vow retire ia akin to no otber whies fi wee, ree ta her polley. Fhe bvid | for manifesting their eentimeats | ariven himself or either of bis prodecessors from thot bt 5 nd ierently contide tft Tho repal troops are sorapulensly to reepect Rome and = chair. The edom has sorvived he persecutions of ‘the one =. and advieed Pi Animated by the territory thet surrounds it. They woud lend their | Emperors and the outrages of ineurreetions. It has iived for Mipereo,, convictioas, oF perbape driven on in Splic of her. | gupport, should It ever be wanted. to preserve the reei. | Gown the scandal of ceotents between confiteting siaim ; on the aisore: ‘ty storm of Utopiaa let locee upom Maly. Met | i ce of the Holy ether againet any atiack or meusce; ents to the Holy fee, and it hes waited without ir jary which they it it Seareety nectswary to conceal her Cooperation | for the King’s government will always Know bow to con- | while Rome wa cceupied by a revoletionary republic these limits ‘events Of Bieily and Naples, Nobody hws doubted | ciliate the groat Intoreste of Italy with the respect due to ivi the present tao diferent occasion Phe vite of the Pope. no one what- thie cccasio.” ther the joy which che heritage of the sogust bead of the religion to which the country @ | Gem then remained @ wid; mow ut ie wantel yor aly. Vo Frescie 1 canned in Pi@lnont, Bor tho joys! abstention pincerety attached. erable as It i, in compariton with the ancien: oc? of non- of France from thé ev.0l* which led to the dewtroction of | In acting thos it hes the conviction of not barting the | who now claims t return the Popedom i) buts A Bis sanbor'ty foelings ‘enlightencd Catholics, who do Bot cuafound | gosru uscrpation. Directly ibe Pope goes, ltaly reps Wma

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