On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (5)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
' «3 * j * i t ofM- *. ^VVWvU QJ Iu£ QiUlvSR* "?¦
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
-V THE long delay -which was beginning to try the patience of not a few even of the peace-loving of our country raen , appears to be rapidly drawing to a close , judging by the most recent intelligence from the seat of war . The many changes and shjftings of the Austrian position and line of defence , if it can be said to have had either , up to within a few days past , would seem not to have been without object . If , as a late telegram from
Pavia informs us , a collision between the Austrian and Tranco-Sardinian armies was expected on Thursday , or , at the latest , on Friday , the conclusion is pretty clear that the battle would have to be fought somewhere in the neighbourhood of that city , and with no small advantage on tho side of the Austrian Cormnander-in-Chief as to position ; that is what he has gained by the seemingly confused and purposeless tactics which he has been employing almost froin the day he first crossed the Ticino . .
In other respects , General Gyulai , if we may put any trust in " official " information , may count his gaius by waggon-loads , for the report is , that ho has almost entirely exhausted the track of country over which his hungry regiments have passed . The correspondent of the Times , who follows the steps of the Croat general , tells preposterous stories of the delight with which the Austrians are everywhere received by tho Piedmontese , who , he says , look upon them
as their natural deliverers from the despotism under which they groan as the subjects of King Victor Emmanuel . The man is , of course , either gulled by the people ho talks with in tho Austrian camp , or he is attempting to gull the readers of tho Times . In either case , the question that first suggests itself is the same : what is tho Times about , to pennit such monstrous lies to appear in its pages ? ' A tclogram from Borne ( not tho best authority , it must be admitted ) states that , so far from tho Piedmontosc talcing delight in tho presence of the Austrian hordes , General Gyulai is nearly at his last shift to get frgna them supplies for his ravenous soldiors . The telegram adds , that it will not bo possible for tho Austrian Oominander-m-Ohief to hold his position in Piedniont fox * more than fifteen
of fiuy-six ; tho general result being that , practically , they are not hi any better position than they were before IJord Derby dissolved the late House . Still we hear of " understandings " between the Premier and Lord Palmcrston as the basis upon which the present Ministry will manoeuvre to keep Lord John Russell from power . For the sake of tho Liberal party , we heartily wish that Lord Palmerston would go over to the Treasitry benches ; unfortunately there is no chance of his doing so ; but there is too much likelihood that he will soon be doing something on his own account , the effects of which will be felt in a renewal of the disunion which has so long paralysed the action of the Liberal party . Relieved from the trouble and excitement of the elections , the country is devoting itself with growing earnestness to the duty of providing for its own defence in tho face of the assured possibility of foreign invasion . All the great towns are arranging , for ths organisation of rifle corps , and the daily newsi ^ apers teem with letters of advice and inquiry as to the most effectual mode of . arming and
dressing the volunteers who are hastening to enrol themselves . The movement , which is in every wa ^ a salutary one , appears to express a truly national feelimr . . . Another feeling , equally genuine , is also finding expression in all the leading cities and towns of the kingdom ; that is , the desire ' of the-people that this country should be kept out pf the present Continental imbroglio . Several of the large towns have resolved to address her Majesty , praying her to carry out the desire of her people in tliis respect , and other towns arc likely to follow the same course .
are in a desperate state of collapse , and a new loan is to be screwed out of unhappy Lombardy . The sum demanded this time is seventy-five millions of florins . The circumstances connected with the publication of tho French loan are like the incidents of a romance of money . Five hundred millions of francs were asked for the purpose of making war in Italy ; and , lo ! about five times the sum is
eagerly pressed upon the Imperial Government ; Precisely stated , the capital subscribed was , at the dose of the subscription list , on the 15 th instant , 2 , 307 , 000 , 000 fr ., advanced by 525 * 000 persons , 244 , 129 in Paris , and 281 , 000 in the departments ; ' of ' these , 375 , 000 . were subscribers for lOfr . of rente , whilo 150 , 000 were subscribers for larger sums ; results that show , says the Mbjiiteur , " the . intimate union of France and the Emperor , -and the entire confidence of the nation in the strength and wisdom of the sovereign who presides over its destinies . " Beloved or hated , trusted or feared , it is certain that Napoleon HI . has a wonderful opportunity for retrieving the past . Will he take advantage of it ? Otherwise , lot him lose a great battle with the Austrians , and woe to him and to his dynasty . Events aro gathering ; and the game which for tho moment seems to show favourably for him , may be taken out of his hands . The position of Prussia is becoming more and more a grave
matter for the rest of Europe . In closing the Diet on Saturday last , the Prince Regent made a speech , which was certainly anything but pacific in spirit . " The attitude of the army and the spirit which animates it , " he said , " fill mo with confidence , whatever may be the events which the future has in storo for us . I know that when tho country shall require its services , thearniy will not remain behind the deeds of arms and military prowess of our fathers . " In tho meantime , Prussia is
Meantime , her Majesty has published a Royal Pi * oclamation , announcing hqr intention to preserve a strict neutrality , and warning her subjects of the pains and penalties to which they will subject themselves by doing anything against tho laws wlu ch govern , the intercourse of neutral states . The shipowners of England are made very anxious by this proclamation , for they cannot precisely determine what they may or may not do in tho way of their calling , without making themselves liable to the law of contraband . Tho Foreign Office is not able to determine the point ; and the only way out of the difficulty appears to be that which has been suggested by tho Shipping Qaselte , nnmcJy , for our Government to call upon tho beJhgeronfc Powers to name tho articles which thoy determine to consider as contraband of war . At present thoro is a doubt whether even coals may not come within tho circle of prohibition . Perhaps tho most notable itom of tho week s home news is tho account of Tnntia Topco ' s summary trial and e xecution , which haa readied ue by tho Bombay mail . Opinion will bo divided in thia country as to whether hia crime was of a nature to call for such a punishmont ; it will , however , be time to dlaoues tho question when tho fuller details of his trial and doath roaoh us . Meanwhile , it is interesting to know that , while admitting that ho was associated with tho Nana Sahib , at the time of tho Cawnporo massacre , ] x < j deifies that either be or tho Nana had anything to do with that atrocity .
opposing the right of her influence to prevent tho acceptance by tho Federal Diet of the proposition mado by Hanover to form a federal corps d ' armee of observation on tho Rhino . That which gives the gravest importance to tho movements of Prussia is the fact that Russia has just placed five corps cParmle on a war footing , calling in . all rosovvos , and making other arrangements for being in a state of readiness to inarch within threo months . Tho destination of theso troops will determine the course of Prussia ..
Tho week at homo has been very full of event , although nothing of momentous importance has occurred . Nearly all tho oleotions aro ovor , and Liberals and Conservatives have "the results in blaqk and white before them . The Conservative party tdkos into tho House , some seventeen additional members , but they start in an ugly minority
days-longer—a statement that must be accepted with a very large grain of salt . Within tho time named , in all probability , other oauses will have made it advisable for General Gyulw to place his troops within roaoh of the well-stored magazines of Lombardy . Sevoral of the moro recent telegrams state that he has made good provision for retreat . Meantime , tho finances of the Austrian treasury
Untitled Article
THE LEADER .
' «3 * J * I T Ofm- *. ^Vvwvu Qj Iu£ Qiulvsr* "?¦
% m \ m of flw m * & .
Untitled Article
CToittcttts :
Untitled Article
REVIEW OF THE WEEK- General Summary 039 HOME INTELLIGENCE . PAGE ORIGINAL CORRESPONDENCEThe Elections ... '¦ < 53 G France ...... ' . 0 * 0 Guthertn ^ ffom L ^ fnd Police ° ° INDIA AND INDIAN PROGRESS- . Courts • G 3 ° Indian Army Organisation ...... 641 Criminal Record .... 036 Indian News ttti Accidents . i JS 2 ' ' Naval and Military . 037 Facts and Scraps 642 Volunteer Rifles " 37 -PnatsiriDt < H 4 General Home News .. 037 m , ° . ^? 1 « V , RSL FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE . PUBLIC AFFAIRS _ Continental Notes C 3 S The Politics of the War .......... 045
A Damper for Volunteers ,. * . ; ... 045 The Opera , Crystal Palace , and Backwardness of Government .... 040 other Entertainments 051 Italian Liberty—No . II ... 040 __ , „ ,.. _„_ ,.. The Galway Outlay 047 COMMERCIAL-. The Trade of Neutrals . 052 Money Market and Stock Ks-LITERATURE , FINE ARTS , ETC . — change 052 ' , . . Rio General Trade Report . Fankwei y . « V 'A ' - ''"' So Home , Colonial and Foreign 1 'ro-Manual of Geographical Science 049 duce > Markcte **• G 53 Romance of the Ranks . 04 j Railway Intelligence .. G 53 General Literature OjO joint- Stock Companies O 53 Marochetti ' s Statue 000 stocks and Shares 054 Art Critics - " °° . ¦ ¦ .
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), May 21, 1859, page 635, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2295/page/3/
-