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NOTICES OP BOOKS, 41-7
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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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.
«O» The Vicissitudes Of Italy, Since The...
Adriatic , still _jsemained for him to conquer I * * * * * ¦ velopment " The jealousy with the and arrival disaffe of ction Mazzini so earl who y per restored ceptible , from acquired his long rapid 1 exile
defor hy the political amnesty intri recent gue , and ly granted undying by hatred Piedmont , to the , , broug King ht of undiminislied Sardinia , to foment ardor the estrangement . Charles Albert 3 iad already awakened to the conviction
ing of his for imprudence immediate ; annexation and Mazzini . found This course the royalist had been party strong activel ly y censured canvass- . The original error could only have been rei _3 aired by the speedy and
successful termination of the war . The conqueror of Austria might have dictated his own terms ; whereas , in the present juncture , this departure from the'heroic abnegation expressed in his first manifesto to the Lombards ,
laid the king open to the imputation of duplicity and personal amMtion , of which Mazzini was not slow in taking advantage . " Gioberti now appeared upon the scenerestoredlike Mazzinito Italy
after an absence of more than fifteen years , . The presence , of these , two cele- , brated their prolonged men in Milan banishment , both so upon remarkable the minds for of the their influence countrymen exerted , at during once
arrayed the two opposing parties beneath their guidance . In Giobexti _, the recognised Albertisti , or their fusionists champion , generall ; his rival y comprising gave his the name upper to the classes _JKazziniam of Lombard . y ,
the " soberness The veneration and dignit and y of gratitude his arguments inspired , for by a the short author time of bore the JPrim down a all io , Grovernment opposition . _j The ) roceeded most to fa demand ctious seemed the suffrages over-awed of the , while provinces the in Provi favor sional of
they immediate had been conj volunt unction aril with y forestalled the kingdom by Parma of Sardinia and Modena : a measure , the population in which never showed themselves ambitious of higher destinies .
parture " But from the evil his first genius professions of Italy , was dark not allusions to be thus to foiled the charges . The of king by ' - s gone deyears set before , the the impending Lombards bondage . Inflammatory of a military addresses dictatorshi from p , Mazzini were all were skilfull pla y -
carded on the walls ; and tumultuous assemblages of the lowest rabble , led on by a certain Urbino , one of the most violent of his partisans , filled the
presented without streets of parallel the Milan humiliating . in So Austrian latel spectacle y freed policy of from . internal Urbino the common , sedition the raving , enemy fostered demagogue , this by city arts , now was not
afterwards discovert d to have been a , paid spy , one of the many agents the Imperial Grovernment did not scruple to employ in various parts of Italy , to instigate the people from excitement to crimeuntil the desired acme was
attained . " , The victory of Goito was hailed with rejoicings throughout the
country . Charles " But Albert it was committed at the very the momeirt greatest when military he oversi was most ght of applauded the camp , ai that gn .
good Instead order of closel upon y Mantua pursuing ; whence Radetzk rall y from ying G his _-oito troops , he allowed with admirable him to retire promp in - titude Roman , s he who marched had not upon yet Yicenza obeyed , the garrisoned injunctions by of Durando the Encyclical and the Letter 9 , 000 .
vinces The possession and opened of this all the city communications was the kev to with the whole Austria of . the Nugent Venetian had been progallantl , y repulsed in his first attack , and ined the Durando king _^ , not could counting still on the
rap groun idity d of and Eadetzk took no y ' s step movements s to assist , imag him . Invested by upwards of hold 40 , 000 his defender men , and , sVicenza 110 pieces of itulated cannon on , after tlie 10 a resistance th of June highl ; its y garrison honorable allowed to its cap
, , the the enemy honors . of The war hi , were gh road pledged to Venice not " was to bear now arms free for to the three Imperialists months against _; and
Notices Op Books, 41-7
NOTICES OP BOOKS , 41-7
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), Aug. 1, 1859, page 417, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01081859/page/57/
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