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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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As the Bourse was violently agitated by all these thtJatenine rumours of projects and measures , h . R ^ te ^ igneda retreit ;¦ W ** de ^ ***¦ ¦ « & m SSSZ His intention is ve ^ cle ^ r- ^ tp caress ijp ErSSes , on Whose support he rphes ^ nd ^ s ^ the rich classes , who are hostile to _ him . He will , therefore , lighten the indirect . taxation , which _ fells uDOnthe former , and , on the other hand , augment the direct taxes , which fall upon the . latter , . . Au r&e , it fs the Sme ' with financial as with _ pohtieal questions ; suffer control
nneithercase will Louis Buonaparte any TTp « determined to dispose of the entire resources of SrbudgeM 1500 million francs = 60 , 000 , 000 / , ) at , his own free wfll and pleasure , and render no account to living man . The Legislative corpse will , vote the Budget of receipts , but it wont vote the Budget ot expenditure . A round sum will be appropriated tp each Ministry j but the apportionment and the vote of the different estimates will be henceforth abolished . What a capital milch-cow is France for the son of
Admiral Verhnel ! -.. '"¦ A decree has just appeared in the Motoiteur reestablishing convents for women . So here we are landed again in 1825 . One step further , and we shall be refreshed again with the sight of Capuchins , Dominicans , Franciscans , Benedictines , Celestins , Augustins , &c . &c . The con&iderant of this decree declares that it is "in the interest of the people" that the measure is taken .
Thursday , Feb . 5 th , was the reception at the Academy of M . Montalembert . On these occasions it is the custom for the newly-admitted member to deliver an address in eulogy of his predecessor . M . de Montalembert , in mentioning a-history , of the French Revolution , by M . Droz ( his predecessor ); attacked with extreme violence the principles . of 1789 ;; that is to say , all the rights and-8 ( 11 * the . liberties of peoples . It was M . Guizot who had . been commissioned to reply to M . de Mpntalemberfc .. Hs 4 id' s ° in . noble language , taking pcca ^ ipn , in contrast ; with the new Academician , to dejeaid ., jConstitution 4 . X 3 ^ Pvernn ^ ent . The two discourses , were-, not . aUowedv « tq . appeai : ; in the public journals until , ih ^ 'tacl-undergone 4 ue , inutifation from the , ; Ce ^ sot » hip , Four passages ; , o £ . the address of M . de - Mbntalembert were suppressed . ; = T
The secret of Lord Palnxerstonu ' so retireraent , is mm known in France * The good English public Hia » been befooled , just , as we are befooled here- in t France , : iby the truth bei » gkeptftonitUB . ; It is , the Gazette d'Augsburg that has given us ; the key of the rftystery which had been refused to ypur curipsity . . ThisjoiArnal . receives , ast you know , the semi-official . communications of the Cabinet of Vienna .. This is the note published in its columns , on the subject :-r-r ( :. ;;> > , >
" Whatever the English journal * may sayj . it is certain that Lord Palmeraton was driven tfroni office by the remonstrances of the great Powers . Such a fact may be disagreeable-to . England , but it is true . A collective note was addressed to the British Cabinet , by the Cabinets'of Austria , Prussia ,. and Russia . In substance , this' note was oa follows : — 'It is useless to insist once more upon the dangers which the plots of the " refugees' in London , are preparing for the Continent : it is equally useless to recal the , desire « xpressed by the English Cabinet : to abstain from extending its protection to these intrigues f it fa
enough to recal to the mind of the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs that we have never applied , against British subjects on the continent , the principle which Lord Palmerston himself expounded in 1848 to the Government of the United States , on the occasion of the arrest of two Americans in Ireland . At that time not only did Lord Palmerston justify that arrest , but he invoked tlie principle that every government is supreme within its own erritories , and , consequently , has the right to remove any foreigner whom it may suspect of an intention , to disturb the public tranquillity . '"
To this note the British Minister found it quite impossible to reply : but , it seems , feeling the absolute necessity of submitting to the opinion of his colleagues ; who were inclined to give satisfaction to the demands of the great Powers , he never appeared again at" the CouncilBoard , but sent in his resignation instead . It results , then , that i he infraotion of ministerial discipline or of official etiquette was but a pretext to salve over the susceptibility of the national pride .
General Cavaignao has accepted the oandidateship of the 3 rd arrondisaement at Paris . He has > person ally , great probabilities of success . The Orleanist Opposition has also put forward the names of MM . DeleBsert and Mortimer Ternaux . MM . Marc Dufraiuse and Gueppo , ex-representatives , who had boon marked by Bonaparte for transportation to Cayenne , have just been sot at liberty , with orders to quit France within forty-eight hours . The several detachments , the employia and agontadeatined fpr the pretended colony of Cayenne , have received orders to embark at Brent . ' B ..
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CONTINENTAL NOTES . ^ Martin Mbbi ^ ^ e ^ nisib re ^ stranffulatipn on Saturday , the 10 th in | fc , after hp . vin ^ su&ered civil degradation % having-h « pnes * s wbes stripped off . He Was tried summanly ; by , the , OTdmanr tribunals ; and his awlypcate ; was refused penmssuJ )^ the court to pbtain evidence of , th £ prisoner ^ instort ^ . Ije was s ^ fy ^ hre ^ ye ^ s ^ a ^ ciscah orde ^ buVw ^ laying mass jit ^ church of $$ n , S ^ stian on the Toothing tff his eriine . \ . ' , : ^ ,, ' . '' .. " ..,.,. " * iW ~ vv- * T ^' i 3 in ; una 8 t ^ 9 e ^ : ! of theja ^^ ^ re . ^ f ^}^ ? - f he queen ' was traversing the ; lphg £ per # which leads frPm the Mace chapel to , the jrpyal / apartment , . when an aged man lin thfegart > of a ^ pnest ad ^ nced from the crowd ' and % reyr ihiftself ^ ot hisic ^ es b ^ forfe her . rThe quee ^ suiippsin £ him to be ^' betitipner ; KeJd ; otit . he * ; hand , having the' ibfa ^ tt ehftf j n "; her att » a , ^ he ^ th > as ^ ss ht drew W ktiife ^ queen with v vioJenbe jiisjfc abpyfe "tjae g ) fbii ) : thie queeti uttered a piercing snriek , butdidhot iajl or lbse her presence of mindv Shell ^ tided ; < ytr « r the child to th > king . The assassin % a ^ i ) d'the act < if aiming a- sefcbhd blow when His han ^ wia' ijm&ted by 1 Count PinoHerV mbso of the royal hoti ^ ehoMv whosefingjejr * were riea ' rljr cut off iti'thesftriiggle ^ The ; queei'ffiade . an ^ atteStt t rt to ^ proceed fcut y ' mpst : imniedi » % ieljr Mnted ; in- the atifis j of a lady in wMting . (! Her 'flr ^ tKdtighfc ^ as ab out net ; child . ' AU this ttnife ;* v ^ fi ^ bKebi ^ ei ^ ; for the royal ' pr ; oc ^ S 3 Jx ) n ^ kfri ^ th ' e' cbnarxjh '^ ofi A'Wonsfi j When the ia ^ auit -was ikHo' H ^ Dr , ' gr ^ tMsyiMp ^ thy'aiid cdnsternaiajoW prevailed > &Wmg- th « f loyal / popttlati ^ n ; of Madridi'' gThey : wbwld b ^ vfet ^ m the ^ s ^ ila ^ itito pieOBB had it npfebeenfora ^ tiwsgg ^ &rdii Allthe ^ wfchoiiitieB ; attended ai ; the ipalaee Iwi ^ » resk « i 8 inquiries . ; 1 ! he 1 queen is said tpvhave >»« flfered > frriiri -ieVetj Jtnd / might- i mare : for a few nights , b ^ fe the iunfevourablesyonptoans j were subdued ^* and -. by- rthe ifetesfe . accounts , she .: was ' declared to ^ be ^ * comp ^ teryy <) ttt ^ irf dflEgeruot'TheiiStafe must . have . Iwenaexceedingly ^ yioleatyiaaitee dagger ; passed * htpugh heavy ve ; lvjM ^^ V » es ; : uadfeT- ^ r » s « ** ?>' ' I
5 tays > andinflicteda ^ fcundneai ^ Tlie cpnduqt of tbe ^ mBone ^ afterfti ^ j » we > s ^ > svaw ^ hajridr enedy tautal , and ^ ynicai ; in th ^ exiseme , oHH 9 i 8 hjowed nPjrejmQrije ^ fcrv thj © , ¦ prime , , b « t ? te ^ ttad !( # hat . his , 3 ai » d j ( i ctt ^ e | fe « tej r « rgreat ; good j ^ ro Boci ^ lg ^ oi ^ . iMA in .-tei ^ e 4 . tp as ^ sina ^ . t , h «/ jftHe ^^[ M 5 ^ h ^ r ^ ^ appearsrtovh ^ y ^ jserye ^ in , t |» e . ^ lis ^ iwrmAe ^ -pffld to have . been for ^ gome . ; tfme ; p ^ lgd i < from . , ^ pain ,, , ^ e behayed with . f ^ treine ii ? 8 pience ^ and . perfectcqmposMtre to the hist . . His ' Ias ^ hour ^ are , j ^ es « rxbed ^ xyf , % e- cojr r respondent ; of , a , daily jp . urnai ; - ^ A ^ t ^ jl he '^ mcid ^ ¦ was . placed rin . emmta ,. two ql ^ gyme . n . consta ^ tly f | , lfc r
tended him ,, He , saidtp one ^ of thpm who ;; offered tp confess i > un— ' ^ 1 thpu ^ t BOm ^^ . bpen ; . qen ^ tao . m ^ fp ' r . ij ^ epurpo ^ .,, As ^ ifcp . ypu , Ik flqw ypuj&b . weU ^^ ^ Jovl ¦ arJB " . ap grei ^ t ^ ^ eprp bate as X ^ ty W ^ v 'T PM ? ? l r duct ' is . ^ e l ) . JKTvciwA , to , iiae ,..,, Begone , " \ Mer in ^ ., ^ 1 ; , ^ quie | ly listened to ^ he second eccl ^ ffl ^ stic ^ but wl ^ en th , ^ lattjei- sppk < 3 , to Hm pf h (^( , ari ^ , hiB : crime , he , su 4 < i ' e % iy stopped i nini , sajying , '' Let us not talk of iuch iionsense . Tpu no ttipre believe in hell than I dp ; . Leave me quiet ., lean dispense , with your ^ ermohs . '' ' ! ; " , in
. e ijroy . er ^ pr . pii . ^ iaarui , Aayj ^ pg nparo ; ^ ax- . a ^ . ^^ tenjipt , wpiiid ., ^" ., ipa ^ d ^ t » y ^' '' fW ^ R . ^^ i ^^ Rfti tfri ? cul p rit , and tp tqar jbiBTt ^ P »» eces pn jhig . ^^ y . t& . ! ej p&T c \ V *? . >? % ffl&S ? ' , W $ ft ft P ^^^< M « such attempt would be resisted , an ^ thjat tj ^ e ' er ^ mx ^ u should die b y th , e jhlanda of the executioner . "''' /! ... ' ; " ., , < The mode of execution ( garotte n < ilp & 9 } t . is called ) i ^ i described graphically by thp ^' ww ' prre 8 pon 4 e ^ . t « .: ^ t is an instantanepuft death , the s ^ iidaen compreafiont of thei garotte 8 queezing , the neqk quite tiat , ; , vT ^ m ' p m ^ ni a , nian' is doomed in Spain ,: Jie 13 cpnijidered a 8 , alre ^ , ([ i y beipnglhgtp another world , ^ nd V ^ g ^ i ^ ed alm ' o ^ wi ^ awe . lie is attended V » v all the ' conaolationn of " hin
religion , and , as hq paases fhrpugh the streets " p ' n a mule of lpw size , 'Vrepeating prayer ^ Sfor ' tlie " dyitigj and accompanied by the' pries ' ts , riamj () eauac "' are biirriing in the balconies , r and iheri , women , arid children on their knees in the 3 troeta praying for hia ' aotil . At the place of execution , there ia no indecent mirtli ; when the prisoner ib on the platform , and tha Instrument adjuatedl , every head Is unc 6 vered , 'r ihfl th 4 > lipis of all in prayer . '' At the lab t moment ; ijdo /' ai groan ; but not of disreajpec ^ , is uttered'by thfe multitude , '' aa if it were the last adieu td the sriul . " This Merino does not appeal ito have belonged to any ' conspirabyJ but to have been a thoraUghiy' abandoned a ^ d'dl ^ sjperate man . His crime has made the garb of th& priesthood very suspicious ' at Madrid . '" ¦¦ ¦' ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ '• ¦ ¦))
From tlie rent of the Continent the neWa , is : very scanty . Ih the Chambers at Turin , the debate on the new ^ ress law , reatricting ' observations bn foreign ^ bverhmentB , has been in ' watm'discussiph . The Marquis d'Azeglio has described the measprip as riot liloroly politic ' and , heceqaary in the peculiar relations of Pieflmont to heir ' powterful nefghbovirs / but aa In itself wise and just . It will prbbably be carried , ' as the ministera have made it a cabinet question . ' ' ' ' A secret treaty between Austria arid France , ns to " certain eventualities in Switzerland , " is' sjaoken of , Whereat Frusiiiit ( riot being conaultetJ ) takes umlfruge .
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Milton ' s Mubio . —The instruments which Milton preferred as a musician , were , his biographers tell * us , the prgan and the bass-viol . This fact seems td "ha to bo not without its significance—JVorM British Review , No . XXXII .
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146 fJfl ' pAtfl i ^^ RPAt ,
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THE SOCIETY 0 F THE ^ EBEitDg nia ITALY : ; :- ; . *^ T ° ^ $$ Pi ^ -fmi ¦ tost- ; fyfo&s « Mofo : ! Qif the above society was Wia oil . ^ dri ^ lay ; ^ evemng , ; at % 3 FreenQaspns' Tavenf Griw *; $ « wn ^ 3 et £ afld ^ viw ^ i ^ nded by ^^ hundrS plh ^ e ^ an ^ . ge ^ emen . ^ At ^ ight o ' clock the ^ S i ^ as ^ taken ^ by- J 4 r . Pbxeb l ? a . Ti . qB , whp , in openW th pa » cee ( 3 pg 8 r ^ , eKpxessed the jpJieaiwre whwh he felt in j / trpducing for ? the first tiroe > on such a platform , and to the ^;; Englieth pulWic ^ ' ¦; one of whom he might declare that- the ' nlore ithii nation , bedame adquaihted with him ' the tnore wBSthefr *^ t ^ cause > vhij } h h 6 advpeatedi ^ u * for his personal conduef whileWak 0 iiis fbir it ; ^ rCKeerB . 'V' v
¦ : i M ; Mj ^ z ^ ri ; Wtis- rfeceryea Ufth Idtid manifestations of ^ ympaflrv ^ V ? Hic |( Tie ajt ^ no ^ edged m appropriate . te ^ f insV ^ th ^ | Spipee ^ : W ^ |^ a ^^ of 'His ^ hiayinjg ^^ been misrepresented on ijaany points , and of ; hjus feeing ^ uiiabW '¦ $ > ' : , speak ; EngKsh otherwise than ^ T ^ rjr imperifec ^ lie jbad ^ w % b ^ tt best tp reduce his j % > iig ) b | p ^ rw ^ in ^ , ^ . hp : would ; now jle ^ pjrej ^ edi tp , ^ amidst ftequentioutbHrsits of apphiuse , the * following exposition
Of ftltrVWWSrJrr- r r i ' ! V ; ¦; - :.. ] ^ , ^ ! ; -. ¦¦ ' ' . . ¦ j s 5 « Sfhrefe'duties ^^ » e 1 incntabent ,.-I- ; think , upon any man whtf ^ ifees in a - foreign land" to claiin sympathy , or more < Hreci ^ eflacted ^ he ] p ; i for' his ^ own « oun % r to state candidly , uttreserirfediyi , % ife own ^ ca . ^ , his-objects , his aims , what h&strotfgleB for ; fi ? omwh ^ cer his right , the right of - . | Bs « coufftryv is ; derjveU i iJtp ^ rov 6 that his -ai ra is possible , practical ^ ni ) t a ^ 'no bte jftreSnuito ^ . be perchance realized in far i ?• . distant < uncertain' > titae / btlt an' actual ; claim of real strnpog Kfei cheefced ot'isli ^^ eSi e ^ byfevil agencies which iniy and ' < jan ^ be renaPved j ^ iibtt 5 the fondled thought of a solitary wer « hipper > -e $ the ided ^ ibnt the feeling , the
heartpulsation of 4 hef milfi&ns ? nbt ^ a 'prophecy , but a line of ^ o ^ tein ^ raiy histbryir aM lastilyV to declare iwambigu-OQ sIy > without anj * cowai ^ yi Jesuitical reticence , what he Wantfe from ¦ . the fend' wheire ' Mb ' aj > peal is put forward . Thanks ! God ' ¦ and Ziny : ( < fe § untry > 1 can ¦'• fuM these duties . ^ Wha < 7 we , * he NatiOrial Italiatf ^^ art ^^ ai ^ what we Want , Iwhatwe ^ hopie , what ^ to ^ ili % la ^ $ 6 u ^| it to d p for us , may be frankly stated to 'fltt / Engufh \ atidieBce , without fear or tacticianry Jprecauiiobsi ( V ^ e ^ hti v ^; nothing to conceal . We oaft bfl'WixMig of- right ; mistaken or sanguine in some of . our initelledtual views , tint # e « rU and ever will be , true ^ trae to others as to oui ' selves . ' : t > Itria '' -A comfort , a
comfort that soothes even exile , td « e ttblfe to 1 say so in a time ia which all dartngi 5 of- 'mWal ^ Beft ^ i 1 seems to hi extinct under the athei 8 ti <» l , Conventional'iiesi-of What they call the political ^ diplbmsftife , bffiteiaVworld- ^ that 1 s , of a world the mission ^ ofwhich obght' ^ 6 be ; speaking out boldly and powerfully the WPrd of the silent ' unofficial millions . It ia a comfort to mei irii a titte in ^ rhich no statesman ventnres to say tb ^ o ' usur ^ r at his ' own door , ' You have hrokeiryoufc dathiydii have ; -wfthotittheleast shadow of necessity . ^ and' merelyfor 'Personal ambitioh ' s sake , shot ,
butchered , transported ; piHagifcd ; therefore we cannot transact-business ' withl ' yoa j' ^ -rtnd when fetein republican manifestoes Have prbmylgatbd from Paris to the world the impioua doctrines now iil'Cdurie of expiatidri , that a fact i * to b « acc 0 pted , thtougn ' l ^ e righteousness pfthat fact is deniedH ^ -to ftel that'll dlrfn eagWly seize' this first occasion of expressing Buinniarily tlttfahns-and views of theltolion nyili ( ni « lrf |» BrtyfwJth ^ wifth ' that evfe * fthing I say may be reriicmbei-ed by erich of yofl , * and prove a test for judging what we have done , " and what we shall endeavour to do . 1 ' . " i' - - r j . l '! IiV ' . ' il ¦;» i || ' . : , Ji' ! ¦ '¦ ¦ ¦' . - ¦ ! . ¦ . '
" , Fii ? s | , 'ithen , wW wp arp , ' The ralinjgr spirit ; the gcue-^ 1 6 ^ ed ^ pr , indiyiau > it ejtceptiona yo «| . V » U not take to aCjCoubii- ^ -pf pur jijailpnat partyl J ( b is not enough that Ve have . artd , claim a nghf ; ' yoi ^ must know the direction in whic ) hi we « iean to e&rcwe . it Life ifl no sacred thing , unlciaj-it fulfils , or Btrug « leKo | u ^ , « missjon . Bight w a nicrfi nssuinniio ^ uwk ^ B j ^ migB , from the intended accpVnplishmen ' t ' * of * duty . '' There " have been in these ttoublecl days ^ sa many errpr » , engrafted on truth , so many OA /\ V O n M # l , ' klnsaAHann . 3 < viv . _ . ! u a . — . '_ J ^_ ^^ sm « mmhA MallfPinfl ' fit \ JlOvl ™
like ljiuniauUy—and t ) here 1 ave been—thcrci are still—so maijy daliim ^ i ^ s an ' a ' accusatiens heaped ; intentionally or hot ; pi / Italian liberalism' and on mys ^ f , that it has grown impossible , to ata ' te pimply " my own belief , but one fccW bpundto de ' cialre , first / what hi 8 , he , lief js not . This , then t am ; going to' dp , ns briefly < m < 3 ' a 0 < m * » , 1 . ° f ' . ^ ate not atheifits ; unleUeving <* acep tipal , Atheism ib despairf scepticism wc ^ kricsBl And we ore full with how , faith ; and energy , that ; nothing , t * me pr events , ww quench , ' piir wliole life is an nnpen | , a protest agwn « bnitnl force . To whom , if " not to God P Between God , the eyeria ^ ing truth and / force--between providencei . mm ior
fatality—can you flndnn intermediate safe ground struggling nation f We believe in . God , as we believe m gtof flnnl triuniph of justicp on cartli—as wo bclievo m J « idxjal qf perfection to b <| puroufid by mankind , m . r ? ihiBsipn of pur country tpwarda it ; in martyrdom , w "' has no senao fdr the godles ?; in love , which is to rao bitter irony , if not n promise—the bud of immortal'ty . The analysing , dissojving , dissecting mftterialist doctru ^ of t | ie 0 ig % «» t ) i tontwy my prove unavoidable ,
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Leader (1850-1860), Feb. 14, 1852, page 146, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1922/page/6/
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