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EE ' WHEW YORK HERALD, SATUP:DAY, MARCH 2. 1861.—TRIPLE SHEET. - 1 1 | U millions of Ameri- | bie between Count Schwerin, the interior, | Prussia and Denmark. Prussia, they will no blood bas yet been shed in ; ties that would accrue from the splitting up of « mages- Wut das not yet arrived. So much for some Americ ne ogunat Lone to he ‘and the epstien frou ‘the’ Grad Der ct, bo Bassin will taterfore ia faves of the Danes, quarrel. The action of the Presi- | ficent confederation into an ive number of petty ‘and Amerioan institutions in England. cea aals pie he , at all events, with | complained of the infraction of the’ eaty of Vieana by | we will then conclude ap alliance with Pruesia and attack | dent and of Congress spocars to be completely | sovereignties. Pa sutra, ioe Progress of Amerie sioataibyeove- what reason Lord John Buseell, the Foreign Secretary of | the Prursian government, amd cjaimed the fullll- | the common enemy in the north, while the Prussian | paralysed. Washington, under the direction of the american Dispute ~~ ‘tic countrymen. Thescbeme | England, wrote on the 24th of December last:—'But in | ment of the promises made to the Polish ua- | forces occupy bim im the gouth, If such, however, are | Veteran General Scott, ‘is about to be placed in a | The San Jua' . ry ‘ Case. rad of your talented and energe ~ be ta, the Emperor of the | tion by King Frederick VW" iy; IT. in 1815. | the calculations of the Swedes, I fear they are reckoning | position of defence, and the incoming President om Slave MfaNorth Atlantic telegraph, under the direction of Colonel | withdrawing his feet, from wh, eco atrained | Mf. de Schwerin replied ir, {Hem UT | in AS | thous their host; for if Prasgia should threa-en to sub- | wil thes, in all probablity, be permitted to assume the | In the British House of Commons, on the 12th inst Safiner and Mr. Croskey, is progressing, Ue Gre settied, | bis policy to save the personal dignity of a | manner, reproaching the Pole”, with gheir solitious con: | vert the Danich momarchy she will Jind herself in antag- | reius of office, we cannot say of power, without the risk | Mr. Bristow asked the Secretary of State for Roreign A Sangitle shape, 106, when aroaleettiement of the | dirtremsed” sovereign, he by mo means wished | duct in 1831 and 1888, by w" sich they had forfeited all the | onism with both France aud Sngland; and Russia, who is | of meeting civil war at the very doors of the Capitol. But | fairs what measures had been en, oF wera in conte ‘will come Setare Gowan fe apg ec on ‘wire that | to. forbid in Southern Italy that freedom of | privileges accorded to they ,” “V. Richensperger, t) 1 | on good terms with both her and Denmark, is more likely | the ssocettoulst States seem to forget that there is a great | piation, to protect British interests im Mexico, 4 a on of pierc: he bad so powerfully maintained | of the vitramontane fact.) pleaded the cause of Austria, | to act as mediator between the belligerent parties than Sha carey civilization and ceumane Sew aen tes | ae Nowth” The French Emperor, however, despite | and trusted the Prussiay. go¥érnment woull not follow the | to afford ber armed assistance to either of thew. eee ee ernie ractionslity. this intimation through Lord Cowley, delaya this with- | example of Sardinia. 1)" was not Austria, but Sngiaud, | From Central Asia we have received intelligence of an CE eres Maperaiing with ie gigantic | drawal of his tect some seven or eight weeks after this, | that was the sworn © omy of national freoiom ani indy- | event which may five rige to, complications 1m that quar. and obvious distinction between de facto and dejure in- | — Mr. X. Mills also inquired of the noble lord whether the dependence. Georgia and South Carolina at the present | disputes concernirg respective rights of Great Britain moment are beginning to show those signs of mutual | #ad America in the straite of St. Juan de Fuca, under the jealousy which spring rather from commercial than poli- | Ashburton treaty, had | been adjusied. Aldo, whether Mr. A. D. very far to a2cept the insiauation this | pendence, and if she joj ais Napoleou in encouraging | ter. ‘The Emir of who for many years has been | tical rivalry. The New York Tribune says:—‘ The singu- | ay cori seed between her Majesty's dmorican derrick, snd reining wrecked vemeee ond | eres bis, " The Itallabs to sub-set tho saitd Aten at the Fore | arm alty of Russie, awd’ with whew 2 treaty was con. | lar Toanner in which Georgia has seceded is thought tobe | government and that of the Uuied States, on the case of wtber property with the same bay i. “held iece. ‘The journals are not satisfied with the new arrange- | and the Neape)'.an Bourbons, it was not from ab- | cluded in 1859 by General Ignatieff (ow Ambassador in | inspired by an ingenious by mn that nd wi B... a igitive slave Anderson, ag affected by the provisions yi8 io picking up a pin or lifting @ fold Pie | meats for giving publicity to the debates and other sub. | stract altacbny xt to liberal principles, “but mere'y | Chia) which is hight Riyininesterien, bet a dram, from Chariot Se Revezeah.” Now, 6 DO} OCIA i cscunseienilll wean sewing machines are eparing the Angers, | Mgor public interest. A subscription of eight francs | from religiras bi and with’ an oye to | tical and @ commercial point of view, has died sudd that commercial considerations, the joo bg a ante w ge BR RE pe jistols are ready for the term of the Parliamentary session is demauded | commercial profit, if a Berg, who combines the | poisoned, it is reported, by a Jew doctor at the instiga- | of @ direct free trade w! . wad | Sr * mea-ures yg rgd for » whole nation. American rifles aud pistols aro oor | from each of them, The Siecle says:—‘ Journals cannot | heterogene’jus characters of a Roman Catholic prieat and a | tion of bis favorite Sultana. As usual in Oriental king-| ® revival of the African ave trathe pare | eee soo, owing to contests we oe seeian opines Fane Boll'g enemies; Mirican cotion | impose this increase of price on their yeaders: and as to | democrat'c leader, mand a speech in which these opyonte | doma, bis death ba been followed ‘by insurrections in pal the symparbleg, a8 they have, infiuetoad the | two parties struggling supreme power in that state. sachs eevee: it themselves, they would be ruined by it. | tendevo'es were curiously blended, and concluded it by | various parts of his territory, and although the new ithern 9 pomp Seemed to think manne et CaeEy- | sletbes, and American breadstufis ford, bim and bis ti | SoFh et cs a umber would represent for tho Opinion | bugger ting anacsundment to theradaress er iow of that | Ean ia?'s' man Of taleus,’ and has eewured our | tom the local authorities are to grant clearances, and that | 10g war was by robbery committed on foreign- merous fasily, while American gold fils his cofers with | TET) Uris Ta000, to 180,000 Franes, The thing is | provsed-by. Vineker to the eftect thet es united Italy | agent that be intends to. 'maintain” the frieodiy | a vessel tailing. from that sta enjoy all he prit- ere (angter)and “consequently instances of robbery be" is projected for 1862; but | absolutely impossible Each journal sold for (teen cents | weuld only be compatible with the interests of Germany | connection entered into by his predecessor with | Jeges of a national vessel. phceeegre Rnegeret) oot. hich. one wm. the restoration of 9600, an yes, ibe aftr ag tie bands of Tamail clique, headed | tothe country subscriber pays six cents for amp and @ eovared from, the . of French influence.” The Rusia, cs is ont Bl ue ol oe = ph psy ig Pornggo a —— hy a Ceantinn, F b ; ; adjourned at two P. M. restoring tranquillity, Bokhara | recogn: facto : Albert, and, oo far, hea given universal disse. | four cents fOr postage; tbat is to say, two thirds of its || House and if | Georgia, Alabama’and Florida, If a maritime war be: jon. It eeems to look like a gigantic “job.” After | selling price, Let the rnment remit thtee centimes Fen. 6, 1561. would be exiremely detrimental to our commarce, pe the North and the Seuth shoud nt endl + Mod ‘ plan for the build of the st which will cause a reduction on three hun- ornil the reigning dynasty should be overturned, and a new some favorite to work out a pial for Oe ‘ig your | dred and sity tubers of 4ef, 80c, and wen each jour. | THe address debate was remmed yesterday m ne | one catablished, there ja e chance of its forming an al- ie all concoct Central Park did in their piabe—the | al will be able to supply to a readers, without loss, tne | With the discussion of theamendment of M. Behrend | Hance with the Khan of Kokand, which might tempt the Sar t Kind of notice is given to revelve proposals for | official cocuments Parliamentary debates. The gov. | respecting the removal of functionaries whose antecedents | jatter to renew bis incursions in Trausilensia, notwith- ‘edi fi hen, of course, no oue cam enter the liste | ernment proferses itself tohave need of more publicity; | were not in union with a liberal system of government, | Standing the bloody repulse he has just met with. The We edifice, whence of euccess. ‘The — iilustrious | let it render the means. {t sacrificed ninety millious for i, | Governor of Orenburg, General Bezock, has set out for or “DY the concern at Kensington is 80 | free trade; it may well sacrifice a little for the diffusion | 12 the original draft this topic is alluded to in| Ajmaty, in order to be nearer the scene of action, and to eaorpicvous in these afuirs that the site, of the exbibl; | of eocurate lnformation and yolitical ruth.” Thus you | a very delicate and gingerly fashion, and the | take such mearures ae may be required im conseqience of Tore the Kearington Museum—is called ‘Albertopolis.” ive we are becoming more outspoken. amendment was intended to give s rathor more | this untoward occurrence. , 00, sening of llustrious perschs, there sre several cases | "The jouraais pram express themselves satisfied | forcible expression to the’ opinions generally | Jater adviees, which are not without interest. it appears tue, the courts administering the law of nations would be ) laced in a position of great perplexity and r. Itis ifficult under any circumstances to draw the line where lawful resistance ends and revolutionary force, or inother | shameful deecription, namely, that which had oocarred words treason, begins. Is the government of this coun- | im the city of Mexico itself by the govern- or the Foglish Admiralty Court to becalied upon tode- | ment of General Miramon. Her ys go- « ide whether the Union of 1788 constituted a compact from | vernment gave immediate orders that Testora- which any of the parties was at liberty to retire, or abond | tion of the money should be required, and satisfaction the violation of which amounts to the crime of treason? | obtained. The honorable gentleman would gee that Will foreign nations recognise blockades, embargoes, pri- | regard to the application of any force there fons Ine | considerable ¢ pI that now make standing topics for gossip which must | with the Queen's speech. It would be strange indeed if dietiatadd dette entlent, nd Tadicesvectnese of which the Emperor has made up his mind not foreman, wo ‘alata’ wal ta out dean teen fuerte itficulty, because reprisals ree for sears’ to obla'S what ahe cikims usher Hignte to | SRCK hand ke Lord Palmerwion's left them much 10 | Oo") ers coetrated by the disclosures recontly made | where he had rctired ‘toon the apinroach of the allies Us | warfare when sought to be exercised. by provinces who | (m the coast would uct be against of ee eT ee te er i Smaoe | ‘uch upon. | The Debate expresses iteelf thus — i, een ne bee his capital. He is in great pecuniary difficulties, and hae | : re engaged in insurrect inst a Stato with which | courge, to carry war into the capital of Mexico iteclt the Duchy of Lancaster—a royal P rye ayn 8 ramor “Her Majesty briefly recapitulates the facts which led | im the Stieber affiir, M. de Vineke was the prin:ipal oat pn Soaniattione ter ey and isions to provide ever: er in the world is atamity? The people of the | would bea measure of extreme , Which ber Ma- says with prospects of success. Then there “ave fuuy | 10 'e French occupation in Syria, expressing a contident | speaver, In a brilliant oration he detailed all the abuses of | {ovina necdsettion of bie cour’ at his now residence, Fo. | Fouth may rejoice in having in’ their poseession many of | jésty’s goverament did not con , but very soon Sendo up thatr’ ralnds upon; that to that ir, Keoat wan | Bove, tbat tranquillity will soon Be restored in the Labe- | ho a0e sa.rinistration, and declared that no permanent | couraged by" hie. helpless, south ‘Tae-Pings had | the federal ports aud arsccals, but. they caroiessly count | after that intelligence ved, they sent orders to made up their minds upou; that is that Sr. Kent was | pon, and that the object of the Convention will have been 4 _ ? Genasate carch aren Pekin ond end to the rule | the cost when they forget that New York, which has | Mr. Mathews that he immed! communicate the slayer of his own son. That he is the holder of a completely attained. The untoward events which | improvement could be hoped for while the men who per- ofthe Mapekco 4: thes. ae ab te ‘jeopardize the | offered both men aud money to preserve the Union, can, | with President Juarez, and if he should be ready to ac: | ge ce under government; that the governing | pod threaten the future of the American Union are mentioned uated them remained in office. He was answered by | fruits of ihe odhamad that has just been signed with | single banded, by mears of its mercantile marine, sweep | knowledge that his govermmeat was for ale © ~ Rave held a protecting arm over him, warding off'ail ex- | ip the royal specch with a peculiar accent of interest; | Count Schwerin and Boron Paton, who insisted upon th© | she Chinese authorities by our plenipotentiary, it is | from theseas every cotton ship which may venture toleave | those losses which had occurred to Brit x Bminations and investigations go far as be may be & | axq we should almost say with a sympathetic emotion of fi ce in Ministers, EITy 0, the crime ; that “the examinations | which covtrasts with the reserye manifested by the | ant’ 'aowing, thom. to ter the b P Wve been stopped jong before the public mind | Queen on questions of Furopean interest.” 3e [patisiied, and that Mr. Kent bas bad another | “Great eatisfaction ig felt here at the check Barox de god office conferred on him, far from the scene | schieinitz, the Prussian Minister, has received from M. ‘of the unfortunate affair—are all corroborative of the qu'st | Vincke by 159 votes to 146, showing that Prussia and Yumor that circulates round in whispers that the suspect. | Germany have no interest at variance with Italian con- 4 gent'eman is an illegitimate son of the late Duke of | sondaticn. Kent, and consequently half brother to the Queen. A not | “The news from Gaeta is ominous. The town would agreeable story, but, as it is in everybody's mouth, | pave scarcely sued for an armistice of forty-eight hours you may as well have it for what it is worth. unless driven to great extremities. The Sardinians, who ‘The siege of Gacta drags along, but the public scom 0 | hed ascertained the position of the powder magazines, Mave lost all intercet in it, in the immediaie Ly mere of | had at last succeeded in blowing them up. No vessels of greater events. There is nd possible hope for the unlucky | Persano's fleet have been able to approach, though one movarch. of the frigates had fired on the town with rifled cannon. The efforte for the suppression of the African slave | We hear likewise of a letter having arrived from Francia Wade are arsuming a now phase, The King of Dahomey, } to Napoleon. with bis 100,000 subjects, and twice that number ‘Strange reports are current about the “vexed spirit” enemies, is believed to be’ the bead and front of the in- | that haunts the Empress. It is, I believe: cortan that harbor. Jf civil war is to come, it will ‘not be fought out | that case this country would recognise the t Stand upon the ocean, where the annihilation of | of President Juarez. But before the a Sutern commerce will only precede internal weakness, con- | General Miramon had been overturned and the city vulsion and disaster, When the American government | Mexico had fullen into the hands of President Juarez, w’ refused to concur in that declaration of the Treaty of | derived his title from a constitution which was Les Paris which says tbat “privateers ig and remains | when Comonfort was President of the republic, and © | abolished,’ people little imagined this barbarous | was called upon to acknowledge the of the relic of thy middle ages might speedily be used by re- | State to foreigners, and the greater part of the coun- publican America ag a means of enforcing obedience to | try was now in possession of what was called the | a Union which its authors believed would endure for all | constitutional party, and if order should be restored in time.. But, whilet these complications are likely toarise, | Mexico, that rich country, with its great resources, they Congrees ia wasting its time with impracticable resolu- | had every reason to believe, would again Cre Need ite tions and impoastble compromises. The State Legisla- pee ba long interrupted, be re-established. should tures of New York and Ohio are willing to | mention also that the agents of the British resort to coercion, but the announcement of this | had succeeded 6 Ae ree howe eee policy only irritates and offends Virgmia, which | forty per cent, end an itional ten pat still hesitates between separation and union; in the | added for the purpose of 5 Bi words of the Governor, this menace “will have no other | honotable gentleman ite (Mr. Mills) bad aeked wl thought that Count Mouraviei! Amoorsky may send a and allowing them to be the best judges of b See . te ej demas of tui ‘brates Donat freon to aesiat the Emperor in repelling the in- Several of officials, who had made use o . ‘ 2 dik influence derived from their station tocounteract the | 4.4 couth’ er Itnesia trose Bulgaria and from thin, part of measures of the present eee bad been already | Bessarabia that was ceded to Moldavia in 1856. They dismissed, but as long as they confined themselves to the | will have lands assigned. them in the Crimea, which has strict performance of their duties, and no wtual mizde- | Poon gimort depopulated hy the exodus of the Noghal Maan es rover mee mam, woe peas Tartare to Asia Minor, and where these industrious Carls: permeoute them for private opin! J tian colonists wil forma very advantageous substitu’ tracted discussion the amendment Behrendiwas } for the indolent and disaffected Mussulmans. Upward of fipally withdrawn, and the para; sed inthe form t "s egeeed by the Cemeetinen a ate was then once | ree thousand of them have already arrived at Odessa more adjourned to this day, when the question of foreign policy oat be taken inte. pee: Aw including tae Our National Troubl projected commercial treaty between France and the Zoll- THE FEELING IN ENGLAND UPON TH verein, the} conclusion of which, says the address, ‘will - QUESTION. be received by the Chamber with satisfaction, opening as (From the London Times, Feb. 7.) i SECESSION 52 it does the cheering prospect of a@ friendly competition ‘Time has been called the avenger, and in this charac- | effect than to excite resentment, inflame judices, in- | ther the dispute respecting the rights of Great Britaia Raman traffic, and the cotton and peace party are for | phe gufters a most unwonted degree of depression. The | between two great ations in the usoful arts of pence.” | ter he is doing justice between te American people and HMouitics, and embarrass all eflorts to-adjust com. | nd America’ under the Ashburtou treaiy bad been ad. Fe ie sett ane ond ta tho | P™peror’s attention and solicitude are said to be un- | “to understand this affair of the ‘reactionary ourselves, Every mail whieh arrives in the United States ” ‘The impression in the South evidently is | jvsted. The disputes did not arise under that treaty, but fnions. T'wish thom a large amount of | POWded. But there is no doubt that her mind does at | aries,” which has created @0 much excitement in and ont | from this side of the Atlantic must oppress the morecon- | {hat Virginia and the other border States, taking advan. | tnder the Oregon treaty. The claims had not been ad- ie dominions. Iw’ ge 8 limes display a weakness that is very distressing to those | of the Legislature, it should be borno in mind that the | scientious politicians of the republic with feelings of tage of the secession movement, without directly om. | justed, but there bad been an for a temporary Rear er. There ie always one striking charm in her cbaracter, which, even in its decay, is still predominant— Our Paris Correspondence. ite unfeigned and unfailing benevolence. Only two days Panis, Feb. 8, 1861. | ago, under my own eye, I witnessed a very gonial scene: és - L—The Em- u ein the Bois loge, a little fellow, clad _ in Brance the Palicy of Napoleon 117 Th: Bn | much after the fashion of children of the higher order in weror's Specch—French Policy in Maly—Views of the | the neighborhood of, the Pyrenees, was akating. He was Paris Press em Queen Vicoria’s Specch—Prusia and | only nine ears old, and no one else had had ihe nardi- ‘Raly—A Mys‘erious Spirit Haunting the Empress, de. to venture on’ the undulating ice. ‘The Empress, 7 who had been watching for some time his Qu th Myou have time, in the interesting state of your own | is starlet, cap plotarcemee enone ations, wiv Politics, to give an eye to those of others, the last few | sers, suddenly desired one of the eqneries to beckon to @ays of Paris excitement cannot fail to attract your at- | the lad and invite bim tocome to her. ‘Who are Foon 2 : mon enfant?” said she, as he lifted up bis sunay tention. The mystery of mysteries—the genius of the | from which the long curly hair fell ack'in ringlets: “36 Jest half of the nineteenth cevtury—has lifted up the = hein me haul Madame,” said the Ea le fellow, the veil whi his poli 1y | Without blanching. ‘and where do you live?” “No. aaa of Meri aae eavelopes hia policy, only} Te avenue do Visperatrice.” “Ab, Lhare ‘cften seen to let i again immediately. you and your petile frere in your half Spanish dress, The speech of the Emperor—to drop metaphor—bas amine your a, as I passed — the — : What is your father, mon cher?? ‘Tl est homme told no one anything; and every man is just as wiee as | Wh lettres, Madame.” “And do you often go the Pyrenees, attack of the liberal party was chiefly levelled against the | shame and regret. With what willingness would they Police President of Berlin, Baron Zedlitz, whose conti- | now see the waters of oblivion cover the most pointed nuance in office is generally looked upon as a public scan- | sarcasms and the most sonorous rhetoric of their Fourth dal, The Ministers, with the exception of Count Schwerin, | of July orations! It is not merely the remembrance of who is bis sworn patron, would perhaps be glad enough | falsified predictions and of boastings which, for a timeat to get rid of him; but unfortunately he has gained the ear | least, must be hushed. Certainly that wantonness and of the King, whe refuses point blank to part with afune- | arrogance of prosperity which, according to the poets, tionary whom he considers indispensable for his personal | it was the peculiar office of Nemesis to humbie, have safety. Three times a weck he makes a report to his | never poen i OCs in any modern nation as in Majesty on the opinions of the Pome gd drawing up of | the Americans. have taken credit, not ouly for the which report is entrusted to a favorite instrament of the great qualities which are really their own, but defunct Hinckeldey, a personage of Hebrew origin,who ex- | for all tbat Providence has given them. The extent tracts the most spicy articles from all the red republican | of their country and its fertility, their mighty rivers, Journals published in divers parts of Europe, which are | their boundless lakes, their forests, their prairies, the submitted to the King as procesding from the leading | gold regions they possess, the silver regions they can orgaus of public opinion, and the poor old gen. | seize at will, the command ef two oceans, have been di- tleman is thus led to ‘beliove that he is sur- | lated upon as if they indicated an intrinsic superiority in rounded by @ set of bloodthirsty rebels, from whose | every citizen. The old Puritan feeling that the Lord has nefarious designs he can only be preserved by the inde- | given the earth as an inheritance te His saints prom fatigable activity of the President of Police. If he had | a continual jubilation on the subject of their natural ad- to choose between him and his Ministers, it is not un- | vantages which passed the bounds of wisdom and reve- barking in it, may eventually extort from the fears of the | occupation by Gen. Scott of San Juan. A proposition had North Sechesbicas respecting the Fugitive Slave and Per- | been made by the British government to the American foual Liberty laws which may bring back the rebellious | government, which na conceived ina falr spirit, he States to the Calon.” Mr. Buchanan must have some hope | trusted would be received by the latter; Dut America ha of this kind, otherwise he would see the fatal consequences | recently been naturally oc>upied with her own interna of permitting to continue a state of things whichis not | #flairs to such an extent as to preclude the orange 8 a ; only unfair to hie succesgor, but shows the utter incapacity | the proposition receiving immediate of the federal government to enforce she law and to pining the haawer wasrecelved he ect. Seer el ke treason. In this state of affairs, one which excites the | care that the house should sympathies and regrets of the English people, the massea | gard to the last question, there had been noother corres of the American public, at least in the North, appar to | pondence but the demand by the American government view with comparative indifference events which already | for the delivering up of Anderson. have seriously affected their national er and national _— be he 8 We hear nothing of indignation meetings; | Probable Result of the Bonaparte-Patte: in fact, the recent proposition of Mr. Bushanan to assem- son Case. ble « national convention met with no response. The [From the London Times, Feb. 13) activity and success of the South, however, may be con- A new end unexpected turn has been given es ' trasted with the apathy and indecision of the North. | suit of Patte-eon vs. Bonaparte, now pending in the 4 The spectacle of a great nation falling to pieces thi is | of First Instance, by the argument of M. Duvignaux,‘the own folly and internal jealousies is enough, but | substitute of the Imperial att ) The sudden ap- its features are heightened and aggravated when the public | pearance of this officer and his semi-authoritative review the day before he uttered it. Yet it must be confessed, | my child?’ “Once a year, Macame.”” “Then when you go likely that the latter would bave to go to the wail; and it | rence, At x moment when they seemed to grasp all of | vice speaks with @ sound as uncertain as that of a weak | df the case is not the least among the anomalies of Pro- ; . n is no wonder, therefore, that the; sueh ‘strenu- | which they had ever dreamed, the American people | Eccutiv ivided federal Judging from what J have since seen and heard from men in you must ask papa to bring you to Biarritz.” “But | oug resistance to motion the effect oF which weuld hare | eee been ct ae Te aaa, ‘he American people re and an affrighted and divided federal Legislature Leow himeme ng verplrod Engl pares is we . ‘@f all parties, there is in France a very strong disposition | Who are you, Madame?” suid the little fellow. The Em- | heen that they must either have removed Mr, Zedlitz or | excited the wonder of the world, had not attention been Seam: gay evidence, the written statements of ‘persons, te be pleased with it. press smiled, took off a brooch from her collar, fastened | resigned themselves. Nay, a member of the Kreuz | engrossed by the secession of the South. Ata time of bei juced, aud the declarations of dead Pl iton to hie ghirt, and replied, “Iam Madame Eugenie, | 5 Piquant English View of American In- | capable of being produced, ie think 1 om ’ plied, ™ genic, | Zeitung party did not ecruple to hint very plainly, that if | when an American city with its suburbs had attained stitutions. rons in their own favor, admitted without challenge: As regards the press, men think it promises mucl my cear, and I live in the rue Rivoli,” whereupon she | the Legislature abused the privileges granted them by | to a Population of more than a million; when (From the London Tele; raph. Feb. 1 ut the introduction of a “expert,” invested with ‘Wat it is right to take, under present circumstances, | Kieed him and relieved him from the carriage. It 80 | the constitution to do violence to the King’s feelings, they | the pioneers from east and west were meeting amid Tita ie noe Wee. Grab time thas the cantvietiod hes béedi’| an official, yet mon-judicial ter, what they can, and be satisfied. M.Persigny’s severity | DaPpeDs that the little boy is a locataire of the same i ri u - oad peel and 1 won Peeping. aa ape te hea aan, | might expect royalty to make short work with the’ con- | the golitudes of the Rocky Mountain; when Mexico bad us completely forced upon ug that the portion of the Transatlantic con- by surprice, What heightens the novelty is the fact that 1s as stitution itself. been almost given over to conquest by the public opinion to M. Grenasco, the unfortunate editor of the Courrier | good neighbor, when the scene above described occurred; 2 Se. 2 eeiutope the iden ne at se ee ee prmeeappay ig Og CO Rg ee pe belay SS @u Dimanche, is, it is true, strongly commented on by | ‘therefore — it — la ‘i ; Our St. Petersburg Correspondence. do so much suddenly fell to picors. At this moment its | Everything American 1s marvellous. © We area great | on the motives or poerible consequences of the pro- al pertice, and all the sympathy is on the victim’s side. | , 4 case of interest to occupiers of apartments in Paris Sr. PereRsBURG, Jan. 29,1861. | fate cannot be divined even by the most experienced. | country, sir,” is the common remark—between whit- | ceeding, be admits broadly the prima facte Justice of i, has just been decided before the Civil Tribunal. It has ‘Bot there are indications of M. Persigny being conscious | long been a question whether a teaant of furniehed or ©f his mistake, and it is thought that in the end good | vufurnished apartments may sublet, eepecially the form may come out of it. 1 may mention, en parsant, that | {fap ‘express clause im hie lease, tthe gee tere more than one riotous demonstration his been made in | gentleman who paid a thousand francs a month did all ‘M. Grenasco’s favor. First, it was a body of some hun- bo ages oneted a landlady, ing oe —_ - . ned in damages and expenses for the injury her ered of law students, who found some employment for | pont has sustained. It Jewell for Americans visitiag Wee police; and next, the Quartier Latin vomited forth w | Paris to know the fact. Jeng live of medical students, who proved the most Yreublerome of al). Some arrests were made, and a Gur, Meritn Coes 5 a ‘whisper bas gone abroad that M. Grenasco will havea i oe aoe _— mitigation of bie sentence of banishment. But to return | 7™ sae poy Difieuliy—Prasian Povicy—attt te the specch—the speech or war policy. As I enid be- onde fied one sei - ig te Hing Daee Gore, nobody is a bit the wiser, yet all soem gratified. ps rk vi neta re ae : We bave really a great man, it is said, at the head of mnpreomen eppenst. 20)'De, gaining, growid shai wrance. He tells po one the mode in which he brines 1t | %¢ Sebleswig-Holstein dificu'ty will be ottled without dout, but we Fee plainly tbat all hie des'gus tend to one | CME to blows, or, to speak more correctly, that it wil, ead—to render France great, glorious and dominant. be left unsettled till some more favorable opportunity ‘The English s:and with bated breath while be speaks; | THC “counts from Copenhagen, indeed, are still very in itgelf is eomething. ‘They kuow that there very | Nate; the naval conscripts bave been called out, the exetence as a great nation depends on the broath of | &™Y is being mobilized, and the King of Denmark ha France's ruler; that ie a little more. But all Furope acd | @i#tiesed the Diet with a speech, intimating tbat if thei a check the wheels of their policy till the mot | TSU should be attacked the people would know how ON it Mi ve i ordre ie given in France; and this Ie 8 greater satio- | {0 tsvoe demonetetions, The Prealans hare begun the Maetion etill. Well, but I ask, do you infer from the e of brag, and the Danes, who are certainly a plucky . , 861? “We 7 jg | Same 4 Ser costal rans, “inde ootlaret ra ae “ little pation, are not slow in taking it up; but in pla @ ‘@uly diding the time when a legitimate excuse shall be iedibeen cop pp snedkee eel 2p bar py wand onal aforded, and then you will see our legions precipitated | the preeeut, to have no other result than a copious elle ‘Mike ap avalanche. Where will the war begin? On the | sion of ink. Rbine, to be sure: do you not sce that all things point | The great Powere—especially England and Ruesia—have " r Americans, in conversation and \n letters, reiterate that Rairement of Prince Orlof—False Rumors Concerning the | there is to be no disruptien, but they can give no reason Movement of Rusian Tronpt—-The War Fecting in North- | for thes opinion except faith in their country’s destiny; Murepoomailaaidh —Enigra‘ion into | nor can they suggest how the necessary reconciliation is ho as Sgn as ve (he Fat—Kmigraion into | tye emcied. A politician of good sense and feeling must Scuthern Russia, dc., de., de. therefore remember with chagrin a great deal of tue elo- As was onticipated in my last despatch, Prince Orloff has | quence which has been hitherto fash.onable. “Bat no! retired from public life, and Count Bloodof hag been nom- | Ought he to regret more than the manner in which bi - acini his countrymen have been accustomed to speak of Kug- §wated hie successor. In an autograph letter addressed | iand, After pointing ont that England was inferior fa to the Prince, accepting his resignation, the Emperor al- | “size to the single State of Virginin, © speaker would com. monly ¢escribe the people of this country as envying the Judes in the most flattering terme to the services: rendered proeperity of America, plotting to it her progress, by him to his predecessors, Alexander I, and Nicholas, | misrepresenting her institutions, ‘ing her states- especially in concluding the peace treaties of Adrianople | men, and, in fact, doing all which envy is capable of and Paris; regrets that his failing health should prevent | When it meets with ior virtue, energy and success. , ting and expectorating—of shrewd Yankees to English | Bonaparte's claim. The plaintiffs produc a certificate of a tourists. We go Tortie ines this assertion. Nettaly legal marriage; it is for the epee party, to demoliet , are the States prodigious in extent, but they are extraor- | its validity. Now, it is well known the marriage dinary, astonishing, bewildering, to an almost incredible | law of France is peculiarlystringent. The pereona) statur extent, in their progress, their civilization, their | #ud liabilities of a Frenchman attach to him wherever be press,’ their politics and their government. In | may be domiciled, and a a oe cal bir discussing things American we feel the weak- | abroad within the ‘age of consent’? will be. invalid, ur ees of words, however we may “ pile up the agony’’— | less the conditions prescribed by French law be satiated, to use an American phrage of verbal amplitication. | although no clandestine ¢vasion of those conditions may What rivers are so great as the American rivers; what | bave bees contemplated. Inasmuch, however, as grest cataracts so big as their cataracts? Do we possess any | doubt ed whether these conditions had not, in fac’ prairies, any “salt licks,”’ alligators, any rattle- | been act@Ally or by implication fuldlied, MM. Ber:yr tnakes? Js there a single “enag” in the Tsis, ‘or a soli- | snd Allou bad labored, the one to rebut, the other to e tary “sawyer” in the Cum’ Can we build a railway ina | ablieh such circumstances as would amouat to fortnight, throw metals over corduroy roads, and ——_ of fraud and Y sweep cattle off the line by means of a hearth broom at- e ” How far these asser' have been from the truth m taches locomot What counsel him from continuing to fill the high offices entrusted to | pow be piain to the whole world, ‘That the Ataerica Some cocwnea with the igantio pth a of ts French Ltabesaedee and the French Admiral, 1 him, and expresses a hope that repose from the cares of | believed them we have no doubt, “for the | Gignation meetings of the State’ “Muat: mor our corinn, | reception Dy President jeforeen ned rice 1 " ? by fu State may recruit his strength and enable him to afford da we toautty “3 Engel _ = mas show of prize swine hide its diminished head before | pressions contained in Mr. Patterson’s wilt Stren, ge the benefit of his further advice and assistance to] They thought that their secetsion would be re. the porcine glories of the great pig city of Cincinnati? | say, M. Duv ix passes in silence over the whole of th “bis grateful and affectionate alexander.” This | ceived with delight by the English” poople, and | We haven't a street in London as long dal the Bey of | th eg ig gee GES ag haven't a harbor in Great Britain to equal the P rg | aseitted with every Macaiavellian art by our ‘“‘aristo- . ~ hope is not likely to be fulfilled, the Prince’s cratic” government. ‘The event S. sarpe New York, our fire engines are ly toy gr 4 law, and concentrates his attention on the exceptional re- Jong and painful illness having not only shattered his con- | even to the moet enlightened Americans, to thoee who | t0tBé, Woudrous hydraulic machines of the New York Cremcnta of tne Bren Code aa to parenta) consent and stitution, but also impaired bie mcntai faculties. The phy. | knew England best, and believed least in oor antipathy | Priéade. The American trotting horses can laugh our | publication, and the of ‘subsequent imperial de- ~ leverest butchers’ ponies to scorm. We can’t make | crees. It will be remembered that the protest of Ma- eee p ; | to ther country. Not only has the English press shown | © ee “ sicians have advised him to try the effects of a change of joy at secession, given #0 encouragement c the South, eight-and.twenty different ‘drinks’ with eight-and- | dame Letitia was not recorded within the time after ° , 10 air and a milder climate, and ip the spring he will accom. | and turned away from the bait of a free trade, but it has, Sees brandy ETE ne enn? na] eee ot Daceneee ene So oo magedeerg ar Pany his son to Brussele, where the latter is Ambasea. | ae far ae lay in its power, strengthened the federal gov. Aad ki Bg A ° : y i cenienens ber ea ed ions of sympath: 1b Americans can. We don’t know the use of a bowie knife. | which Mr. Duvigneaux virtually recognizes as fa' In dor, but it is not thought that he will live to return to mt by eaenens expression: Soh ciibet et | They do. We can’t play “poker,” They are adepts at | fact, ho narrows this most material part of the question pi aly = en eee AR Wholly Without etivct. | that exciting game. Our transatlantic ‘cousine’ have to a single iseue:—'Is the marriage null for want of pub- violence of the Southern ge treacon (of & | picked our locks; outeailed our yachts; very nearly, but | lication in France?” M. Berryer's had beer The appointment of Count Bloodoff is pretty generally | section of the President's Cabinet, and the weaknoss of | hot quite beaten our champion gladiators and our De ‘by | that tne neglect of such publication did not render the approved of. In his youth be belonged to that little knot Ege —— ete ae ee cracks; reprinted our literature without paying us any- | marriage void, but ‘voidable—voidable, that is, on of literati who eollected round the poet Jonkotisky (the | Tpinion: ‘aad it more vigurons Deets ate American | thing for authorship. and ‘‘catawampously chawod us | precisely the same iple and within the same jimi: Emperor's tutor), and to whom modern Russian literature | of the republic be taken, it will probably bo in some | efpiured General purteeroe sod fone of having | tation of time as if the ? sanction were re- : captured General ne Lord Cornwallis w! fueed for other reason. publication ‘ meaat wo that direction?’ Deep waters run still. Ob- a the Denioh Chai may be anid to owe ite existence; and our famous histo. | Measure due to the fact that Englishmen have | their horses and ail thelr men, nod driven the yeteran to inform the family ef the parties, to appeal to all whose gerve how quiet the speech was avout Prussia, | cautioned the Dani pemepesydiasuiaen Aakteer agg PE ia: uolectod bins oh his Giathbas .¥ the | Chenly expressed their astonishmet at the doc- | legions of the Penineula away from New Orleans by the | consent the law required.” The ex liminary defect, he et Prutsia was in his eye the whole time. | steps, and urged the necessity of further concessions to | T", Karamzin, eelected him on hie deathbed ,to edit trine that the United States constitute, not | ingtrnmentality of popguns placed between cotton talee,” | argued, was onrea hei very existence oF the lavy Wrat!' do You think the Emperor would make | meet the just demands of the Germanis Confederation- When ‘ rN Jast volume of his great history of Russia, He was the | a we but a : elgg 3 of Seventy i united only for convenience and during pleasure. But saslatant and successor of Speransky in the laborious | tine cend Oe" cote public le now ae hoon work of arranging and codifying the Russian laws, |. jyayment of the government and the Tegpiatare. We and is known to be well inclined to the administrative exteem Mt a fortunate circumstance that the meeting of ‘itil iament ®! ¢ place at a time when and legislative reforms that are bow im progress. His | 108 Griwiclence of the soceation torent han only fault is that he is eeventy-five years of age, and can away—when, in fact, the South has to face the di ity hardly be expected to possess the energy required in the | of establighing a new federation in the midst of anarchy ex we have to deal with a land of such almost | lowing a year for the exercise of the parental veto, fabulous wonders as the United States we may well be | this period “covered as well the want of biication ae excused for surmising that it must be difficult, if not im- | the want of consent.’ To the doctrine i poesible, for any man who has not resided many | ‘‘decree’’ of March 6, 1837, is directly opposed, ‘ears on the other side of the Atlantic to have anything | tir, ishes for this purpose between marriagce contr: ond the baziest and most indefinite notions of Ameri- | im France and in foreign countries, on the ground thy temperarie, we have Deen seriously deplorg eee | cule tec Sy penatied ay Set vn }, we have ser : on its ewn civil officers, wh featly immtenas disintegrations of the amerian Union. | in the latter it can only visit the offence on the contr Secret ntimelante, after bie own tesbiop, oo geet Penti2 | proposals will therefore be submitted to the Bund in re" = Ce Ed Gd las tea heme — wil sited, ference to the privileges of the Holstein estates, which, e , ; wn into a conflict «+ Fonte Tight and justice, | The Savor aad Ning yuck | though perbsps not satisfactory, will at any rate lead to mess will then be re-enacted a little nearer home, and | Protracted deliberation in that assembly, the dilatoriness ‘When the breach with England will follow, unless,’as is | of whose proceedings is sufficiently notorious, and of Bat probable, she is contented to eat her leek and leave | course the “execution” must be stayed until the repre, France to do as she liste : i end terror, bankruptcy and famine, The voices of the pressed our ‘and unfe ‘ ties. How — ‘il this would be mere rhocomoatade acd gaecouading | Settatives of the many-headed Germanic body bave made | Presett ee ane or cab Circumstances, when the em: | Sovereign and the Legisiature are heard at the conctusion | Waeav’,= compilcatioes betweea North ang fombent | choige benwess ooeencting 4 tek ai any other te: but the timer are ot of jimt. The | up their minds to acceptor reject the Punish overtares. | Pte if onthe Drink of compicte soll revolition. ‘Its | ofthe tratact o the great drama. The Queen's spocen, | pctiamate complcators between North and Sowa | choice between poy moment the Rhine is #0 much as binted at,every French- | thie may not happen until late in the epring. if | fortunate that Grand Duke Constantine takes a loading | and the address of both houses in answer to it, put ou | Sma ninsnows 4 Pat hil man, no matter what his party or politics, goes off at a 7 Sangéct. "Thin may be seen by conwilting'the Dew, the | the FDswer if unpropitious, a new respite of six Biecle, tho Conmttutionnel, the Gazette de /rance—journale | weeke or 20 will be granted to the Danes defor? 38 wite as the poles asunder on all other topics, but r , t Siwasnan one on thin. Napoleon reminds thenetion they | tive meascres are taken to enforce the de Bre now forty mil! : the army, in the highest state of | crees of the Bund. Then there will ve fresh negotiations equipmnent, is dying for employment; the Fmperor bas | propoeals and counter proposa's; interminadie notes wil tened and partly brought about a ire | & measure of ’’ and thus 4! of the uhi between the States of the gseat federation of the New point ia ‘ae ee ek astern te he tareiona World, But so astounding and inexplicable are all Ame- more delicate task rican institutions, from the ballot box to the bowie | empito to deal with imperial decrees, knife—from caucuses to canvas back ducke—from Ameri- | W whichg M. Beak onl discharged thi of le of not record the national regret of the British people at the part in the deliberations of the Supreme Council, and en- troubles which have befallen America. nly dothe deavors to infuse a portion of his active and resolute | Quoen and the estates of the realm announce that ‘it ia irit into the hearts of the statesmen who - | impossible for them not to look with great concern upon psig — com: | any events which cap affect the bi ‘and wafare of tg " apeople nearly 2 lied to our own by descent, and We are surprised to see that the French and German | connected with them by tho most intimate and friendly can oysters to American overshoes—that we should not | his duty to the be at ail surprised if we were told next March that the | the French: bar. M. Allou himself io whole of the secession movement is @ joke, and only so sisted much on the want of the First Congul’s consent. aPea'y proved. that he knows bow to lead it to victory: stinmees , ese is still harping on the tumors of Russian arma- | relations.” Their “heartfelt wish ia that these diffe- “ 7 fend he himoeit, it is eaid, is Uren cf reyroe, Te meanery; | be exchanged, and the whole summer will thas ve spent | PFCs® aoe * | rences may be tiblo of a sniiefuctory adjietment.” | arn a ken ihe Free any Boze ass the 100 faatoen rx ed aes the hop windows on tho Boulevards and other pabits | i= diplomatic ekirmishing. Both parties being equally | Mente. Large masses of troops aro alleged to be con- | “Etta have heon comes whem puch pbrages woud have | agitation, and that the Dublicity of he geared be, — Paterson "Repeleon , 4 thoroughfares are exhibited copies of mape purporting to | obstinate ox) equally impracticable, a foal agreement | Centrating in Besearabia ond Poland, and it is even | been considered a tribute to growing power of the North and South is nots preparatory step 10 ndvortise- brother a prince, and it would be a fi interpreta L ee ed Aream of Europe in 1861. Ht ipever vail | con hardly We efiected, Ut, et a!) evente, the threatened | asterted that a division of the Qauonslan army is under = ge Sea ae ee timidity. | ments setting forth the proximate appearance of afresh | if not contrary 10 the second article of the Cate Nan» ‘Vhet they are printed inGermany by avtbority. Tn tbs a! ; Re i 3 "4 hing orders for the south ef Russia. Nothii resent time '¥, | mormaid or a new headed horse, To sober Eng- | leon, to give enactment a aura vs Feduced “alaost to the ha | roptere ie Cefervee sie @ie. In te resent etate of Ba- | Marching ne | admit their sincerity. Nor aro thay the mere Coy oy A —4 ag GF a ogy | rope we ane Det. acces wretrate very deep into | Whatever bas been heard of all thia in our best informed | presvion of ational courtesy. Let auy OMe who ie sot fee ony commited “cae — h--5 et fai Ook Obs teorettunat beh aan sae ee oer Norman Possessions are annexed to | fturity. and ib baving gained afew | clroles. Tn Bessarabia the fifth corps bas not moved from | fatiafed with them glance over the debate in cach House, | of rebellion and high treneey, ihe. federal | lance had Been placed on tbe eireuamstanoe the wor % rovinoes Pyrenees are phiaatahs thao . 0 same there expanded in various | government; but Amoricans, the Northern | projet was endorsed on the draught of this document, ‘Se lipetn’ siunses a fur an Bardonet, "tai cares en ce, | Menthe of r © Ang inge 6! Lowi Na the cantonmenta it occupied last spring, whem Princo | ways. Lord Derby, speaking for the which j 4 com regura ave ef tae ‘prov ‘sudh am eddoremnans ‘with several other slices beside, aré handed over to Sect. | coon be La leuf, whiev was joked forward | Gortchakoff firat called the attention of the European Pow- rally ‘opposed to the prine of ‘Aimeriean inatitudl a wise ane taunt vent ee cena seater and Miat'it bore the. izuper ial an moh ome! land, &e., ke. around this map are certare observa. | 0 wiih Tear see trembling, i¢ coueidered, on the to the disturbed state of Turkey; and there is no idea | dec! that “‘thore is no man in this country who would | Garolinian ‘“emartness” and -‘go-aheadism’’ than other- ugly looking dit but M. Dapigeemamoret coat eae, surpoved to be translated itersily frown tho Ger Risley io heve 8 yacife 1 of its croenimg the Pruth unless the Austrians or Turks frend egrets te toe onan writh the deepest anxie- | wise Whilst the American fill one the occasion. Bs aid bot sition free caamoten 0 rope '# to «ismember France after such afnetion. Notkiug | i geversl, aire tof should enter the Principalities, in which case Russia | tone prevailed, and the be pdm g Le learn that Sine enven| eommancenen ot ontilitien ad thettmcet the Principle of the constitution of the year Xy wb ee es jansoe of are mere then | ‘ens. oe bee oo. would claim the right of a neighboring Power to co-ope- or rc ag adi oe which Inge forthe ainieter of a servile rebellion and an in- | limited the executive to the r! Dot of enforcing tbs exe 0 5 matance of fore'ge postponed hie dengue hb them in the restoration of “order.” In Poland people there was ‘one wisb—that ternecine war, in anothe: be found light heart- | tion of the Jaw; it was an infringement of the fourtee: policy draws attention to act gecgrayt ti dietrib cee, | poopie ae hegre f rate wit er.” Io should compose thetr diiterences ir ance q deonton Const yer xi Revoniy ieee, B the hawkert is thopwepereonied | lant me cae ae there is a certain degree of agitation, which, thoagh very vapid Sror'n the path of prose 'y = moemaee et Union, and Jocwar com Gevteren wo the perch» rors regulaiing them everywhere, anc crowds of men will gobere) crowd that we we It is pos. | much exaggerated by the Polish revolutionary journals, ‘aid that, in the opinion of those best quali- | mente on the of affairs out.” Ame. | the future only the conduct of the imperial family and ee wan > oper ther mares, Bele, to ber re, tad the ge be | published in London and Paris, have rondered eome mea. | hemes yee 3 attitade of England has tended much to | rican community resident tm Europe are, we informed, | it encroached on the fondasertal divirion of A pardiy etopy ber was t euadied to extngo'eb t Ws bi ing didcourage the Sontherners and to incite the Unionists to | the most determined skeptics as to the Iikehood of dis: cording to which the ocvrte of iaw have the sole | " nap sucb ae 1 beve ft et descr een Got fo vancus pariaef F % DEL the tek isalmost | 8ures of precaution necessary; as yet, howover, they age J seomnup tie tae tion pone) union, and Le ir frionds that thero is | diction ovar the civil position of individuale, th, ) — ee pich 108d by every 3 6 the) they have displayed on former | are chiefy confined to replenishing the arsenals and es conspicuous by ir » and that the ‘‘muss”’ in which Uncle Sam | added M. Devignsux, ‘‘constitational or uncons itu provocation. ‘ Laet week the dra®t of @ St 10 tbe King in reply | Whoare suspected by some to be in the pay of our goot | yeomanry of the country districts having little sympathy ‘A recent in the New York Tribune that | But, Es. fact, Tike ‘Tn tenes oh ity. Spather the legislators sone # mistake oF not, and te he Mo cety sepcech wae laid before the Heute of Dep- | friend, the Eraperor Napoleon; while others believe them pL eee Stine ote ae oe he State we ieteipys out of the never published at all. Ath it tor upon a vit Merrereee nea an cate? in the wreug, place, I do ie. | he te . committe © 80 pinted ie, that Bis, | 10 be the perbaps unconscious tools of Austria, in whom | sGyocated by the Wd vert ‘rue aes bows 3 z az Ceeetation oo 0 Cy bap public law, conta Strict injunctions | the real entbusiasin displayed vy the Senators when the | out,’ however, presenting much interest, “Tho | 3: Would bean excellent stroke of policy to draw Russia | decision reete entirely with the the border | hazards s satirical surmise that Missieeippi had better | could. Be produced eg °. alluded vo Francis ii. and his defence at Gaeta. | addrees itself is in the main a mere pata | and Prussia back tothe holy alliance by alarming them | slave Le Be that if these di the ®e- begin by paying back the money she borrowed years ago, | brought to the notice of any of the parties whose inte aes termatiog personece than tit Tew Je Paris afar | phrage or echo of the royal oration, ani the few | for the safety of their Polish possessions, As for the | cece?®: the latter will have, sooner oF later, to come ‘ut of which abe has been continualy swindling het | Feats were offected by t.. Upon the M. Daviguas more interesting personage than Victor Fmanvel—he ie, | passages in which it ventures to differ trom the views |“? ¥ d Ree altar nator anrny,'® Pending in the | creditors.”” Ill natured as the remark is, it affords im- | concludes, not without ily, that it was ee im fact one of the may mysteries of wl leon | ernitted im that document are couched in so moxorate and | ®°MY of the Caucasus, no one in his senses would think of | Obio Legislature providing for the appointment of Com. iat matter for reflection. American hav Be seeree ‘ panics have quite frequent enough, and the bonds of States in- Doide the key. The Siecle of this morni ‘twelf | modest a tone that, if it has disappointed the wi e of ation, as e . public who th such ma, clined to the principles of repud 5 Alabama, | hi considerable part of it while the followors | Misrioners to visit the border slave Btates and to hold ealied wpon to explain, or rather eneer at, the applawse | bad expected more nervous aud decided neguage, & oun detaching any ‘able part conferences with the Southern Executives. Commission- to this portion of the tmperial speech. it desires | tcarcely ofeud the famlidicus ears of at re of Sehamy!, though apparently submissive, are till rood: | org have also been sent. by the Governor of Pennayiva- | Mississippi, and the immortal Pennajl fallen by legitimise and clerical will ot set to0 mvt siore | Jour Majerty,” it says, “in desiring cre cganioto | tng over their defeat, and while the warliko Shaproogs | nia to confer with the Governor of Maryland,and they | quite Top leoegh tn, tao marin ter toronto the by a little cl of hands on the part of @ mixed audi. | the federe) army on’ principles insuring the Pafety and | and other Circassian tribes are yet in arme against us, | bave been received, though not The border | hotion of a mod of eeparate sovereign States. uj the ence, Senators, fine gentlemen and ladies Fever cf our common country. Bat, sir, we must frank- | i¢ ony armamenteare really taking place, it is not in the | Save States, in the meantime, do not remain passive. | plan of a cotton confederation to have falien ‘Brough, Sympathy for misfortune is natural to France, but if tue | ly exprose our conviction. that a reforms of the mailitary ny ae re tt Virginia is about to appoint commissioners to meet and every Fouthern State to have gone on its own hero of Gaeta hopes for anything elo he is mistaken. | wystem will uot suffice to meet the just wishes of the | fouth, but in the north. Fentatives of each of the other States at Washington, | hock, ‘aud trying to borrow mi in the Bu- But from what J glean from private sources the Emperor | Vermon nation. The unanimous action of the ©: ‘® wel) content to have his policy in this particular appre. | States will only then be rendered durable an \ effiobent it ( Siated. He bas his own views with respect to italy, | it i# founded on political inetitutions corresponding with ‘The young King of Sweden, Charles XV., bas inherited coe é by to tg ed bg a “ with ~ — : ae of the martial ardor of tm prede- | he Grivented = sion. These rt, it which a prolonged reristance at Gaeta essentially sub- | the general desire of national unity.” Refer 1 ceesor Char! ., and indulges in visions of conquest | was expected, would receive great ferves It is intended that Italy should be impossible for | Heseian queetion, the address regrets that ‘ae esluiary which are shared by bis subjects. In Stockholm a war | New Hampshire and Connecticut, known Serdinie signe. The interposition of France must become | counrels of Pruesia have mot beon listened to by the | with Russian for the recov ery of Finland is openly talked | ®nti-tlavery States, by a Be pany, of compro. Pomerat eeig tht ‘wenty-four miliious, protested by a | Elector, and hopes that all suitable meane will be emerge. | of, and they are persunted that a Swedieh army would | mice in the forthooming elections. Whothor theee stanch powerfal reighbor will, for the present, answer all the | tically employed by thie governmentto restore a wronged | be received with open arms by the Finlanders, who would | 1ittie communities will abandon the “impracticable doo- & pang of anguish by many @ defrauded bondholder, and | ceive a court elevated above all Vogal rules and fi that Chilian mining {1 ure, and a cew | follow the reasoning of the acklog ater inp a . ee Bet - the present question With that on which the Court of St. James’, the bench that they have ihehally 00 opt et rere OE Aumezation, “That man,” ‘pointing to the | and loyal people to the enjoyment of their conatitntional | be glad of an opportunity to throw off the yoke of Tus. | tine of human freedom,” as recommended by a demo- the rival plen'poten: | tor. Still lees can we sym ~y LTD Sanpers, a Senator to me when the epeech was de- | righte, It acknowledges the duty of Prussia and her | eae Whether trey are correct in this apposition ia dit: cratic New York newspaper, wo cannot say, but it seems Tmagine a ‘ diffieulty” on the of Moriey’s | sumption that imperal judges hace’ feos nei on tenn Bree means during the next decadeto tllour country | allies toeffect a sat Solution of the Schieswig. | ficult to tell. In the war of 1854 and 1865 Rusela had no | tbat some etrong effort nt reconciliation will be made Imagine Alabama shooting Georgia ‘at sight”— | sgainst a natural partiality for the cause of an hts Freprene (yeTPOwering | glory; hut his onward | Holatein affair, and with assurances of readi- | rearon to complain of her Finnic eubjects ; the rogular | during the prerent month. That the sentimonte ex- | for even Southerners comet: between them. | lady inst the allurements of Gore “nor! | og i of’ the sorpent, aad | nese to aesert ‘the national interests of Prussin and Ger- | troops tought bravely at Bomargund and Hargo, and at | Pree#ed in England may induce the Southerners to mode- hid in St. James's | In spite of the umblemished parity. of rt, fave Seems to fecernte Cie: ke the rattieznake, no | many, ‘to which alone the blood of her sons must be de. | Gormia Carlely the people themselves roae to best off the | rate their , and the free States to ing attempta to | it that tn Pave, Dae Hite le hay nity every thing his eye comes | voted,”’ This last sentence {8 covertailuaion to the theo. | invaders. But then it must not be forgotten that concession which ie consistent with honor and self. Fore have ere now | stitntional law the opinions of A oon g el $0 contact with. He bas looked at Austria, Rassla, Ttaly, | pew et the Philo-Austrians, according to which Prussia | were eaaaperated at the barbarpus ravager ‘committer ox | feepect, we Grmly bope. "Nor do "we lesedenire to. ee ol the United States to represent them in | tiet have striking reed } anthor: he is now . faring At Proseia perhaps,’ he wiied,“with a | would be bound to defend Th Iy +1 their political bias be Mincio against | their conats by the Knglish Aeet, which converted a the Americane at length recognise that neither old wars | rurope, Mr. Belmont, late at tho Hague, was a French- | This tendency is pecul Bearteous eile, he) will rot dure to lock at England. | all comers ass barrier necessary to the security of Ger- | ple of a quiet and ie ic temper, id probaviy or diverre interests, nor vara ical remoteness, nor | man’ M. Sows, "Madrid, likewise Frenoheaan; Mr, y 10 peculari the doutt ture weet wah ii ie easted armaments and com: | many. Among the amendments te the address, of which | very little disposed to take part in a quarrel did not | discret ich ind and tastes have de- | Owen, late at Naples, was the son at least of an Englieh an act it ie constr Abere ie pe ‘of corruption Tan (hal warlike epicit, | notice bas been given in the House, that of M, de Vick | concern them, into bitter and determined enemice. With | stroyed inks w the two nations together, fubjedt, How would it be if it ocenrred to the pei / ES necesma. the country, tere is ouch tines oo ‘es very heart of | is the moet important, It if the same tha: was thrown | the Swedes, en the contrary, they are connected by an- From the London Post, Feb. 7.) State of South Carolina to accredit to this coun! a re to fi mere, ar ite great Penetectiring intereate iy, Per threatening | Out to the select committee byt majorly ef one, and | cient historical traditions and by the ties of rel Georgia, following the example of South Carolina, Ala- | John Mitchel—patriot, rebel and felon.” Mr. Mitchel interpretation He, It Ie 100 ADE to present ca wel cao teen Et Lene a consequence of | nti “that both Prussia an@ * interested | though not of blood, as ‘in gravely imagined, the | bama and Florida, CL seceded from the Union, | would be quite ready to undertake the mission. Ho is i} Probab. . Stee promt 1 'be ‘any eaception to the sale’ 3 oon not | in UF eonrolidation of national v1 -? Another | Fine are quite a reparate race; besides wlan Tn apnouncing this fact the citizens of Georgia state that | an “ ‘ bed n g Tee | ae jna. | however, what ‘not feel called the ever ago we were nd to iar, Du we. ay 'y years | amendment, Fopene by M. Behrend, Dantaic (ad- | sent Governor ‘al, Count Ber, doing his to | ‘Georgia is im full possession of those rights of sove- | tifled by the ‘commercial exigencies of the ; and |. Berryer terest in his cliente. POS Dread of umetion, and Bow, chastenea Pav’eatee, tue | vanced liberal, fe directed sagatat the reactionary fine, | slienate the inhabitants by stupid ‘bureaucratic pedantry | reignty which belong and appertain to ures and inde- | if he came bere in fy, aod under the aarges in bie clients, We w Wut with ell ewelling hearts, we intend to'march gc: | Coneries eppoinied under the Manteuffel regime, and | and a syetem of petty despotism to which they are not Penaet Stain.” No one cas doubt that Georgie and ihe | regio of i eredentiae, the ‘ernment would Hation anette incurr Faia" pre Rahat bx omc! | "hate aiceyaf an re ait aa Serta at ve Eat ae | eae crags ones” hk tata | Rare otarea bukea ets” tenet | Saat, eterna, rye ” 6 publi joe can never be et cane 5 lence. ) ja. - | ve . } roy hae prepared for Fran T know, al this | ly ae long ar the administration is delegated to organs | Of course the Swedes could not dream of mnastioning ‘a | levied war against the Tentral govermes rig they bility of this jail bird over retting hie f 9-4 law ‘fee yt we mip tncet oh yd really got gréas iDiuence to this language sy aie ine ent | from whom a ccrmplete and einoere adhesion to the ;wrevon | war ogainst Russia ringlehanded. their hopos are foundo’ eeverywhere deposed the feloral ition, and, | Roplond, wave urder the cloak of somo mean diggniee, iz, | royal ard imperial mnccssnions ave tae or cee apenas oF the widest tbemeliog mene the cor. | Fystew of government in not to be expected on the general acramble that ia looked forword to m , acoordirg to the ccpet tot the Voit Woe admit, remote Gnough; but the thing might happen, | be distu bed lightly, and if the emu e'® things FerpODaeEs of We ¥ tept cirgulating journal op the eartis Foaterery’s “ebate wan chiehy remarkable for seq. | PUMmer, od more eFPEPIally OD the Citcvity betwe oommpuitte Jol berate | ang the contingency may be reckoned among tbe diifly.!’ ; naparte's deecendanle by hig Leet at rome at} rrr