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464, T HE LEAPEB. [Saturday,
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^ w v f^ ~^ — — h v "— ¦ f J THE PRESENT...
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EXECUTION OF PIANORI. Pianobi's appeal t...
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^^ EXECUTION OF PIANORI
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CONTINENTAL NOTES. THE OPENING OF THE PA...
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Congratulatory addresses to the French E...
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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Transcript
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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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Fall Of A Shot And Shell Foundry In Sout...
hasty retreat , giving a general alarm . Before he had time to accomplish this object , the girder , which was ninety-nine feet long , snapped short in the centre , and floor after floor fell to the ground . Upon the roll being called over , it was ascertained that the only persons missing were those who had been conveyed to their homes or to the hospitals . It is thought that all the sufferers are likely to recover . ^ « a « v *~ f ^ ~^ — — _____ h v
464, T He Leapeb. [Saturday,
464 , T HE LEAPEB . [ Saturday ,
^ W V F^ ~^ — — H V "— ¦ F J The Present...
" — ¦ f J THE PRESENTATION OF THE CRIMEAN MEDALS . A spectacle , more imposing and affecting than any that has been witnessed in England for several years—appealing to the eye by its military pomp and gorgeousness , but much more strongly moving the heart and the moral sentiment by its associations , at once mournful and triumphant , saddening and exalting , pathetic and jubilant—took place yesterday morning on the Parade at the back of the Horse Guards , where the Queen presented with her own hands the Crimean medals to the noble heroes of that gigantic struggle , which in times to come will take conspicuous position among what might almost be called the mythologies of history . As early as nine o ' clock , a large body of troops took up their position on the ground . They were within barriers , and were stationed as follows : —The 2 nd battalion of the Grenadiers on the right , the 2 nd battalion of the Coldstreams in the centre , and the 2 nd battalion of Scots Fusilier Guards on the left . The invalid and other officers and soldiers entitled to the decoration , comprising detachments from every regiment in the Crimea , Cavalry , Guards , Infantry , Artillery , and Marines , as well as seamen from the fleet , were drawn up according to the seniority of their respective corps , in
the rear of the line . The boys belonging to the Royal Military Asylum , Chelsea , had places allotted to them between Dover-house and the Treasury-chambers . The bands of the 1 st and 2 nd Life Guards , the Grenadier , Coldstream , and Scots Fusilier Guards , were in attendance . In addition to the strong barriers that enclosed the ground occupied by the troops , videttes of the 1 st and 2 nd Life Guards , and sentries from the household infantry , were thickly posted around , together with strong bodies of police from the several divisions , under the immediate superintendence of Sir Richard Mayne .
Her Majesty arrived about eleven o ' clock . The first medal was awarded to the Duke of Cambridge ; and among those officers who followed were Sir De Lacy Evans , Lord Cardigan , and Lord Lucan . Captain Sir Thomas Troubridge was wheeled up to the throne in a Bath chair . This noble officer had had his right leg and left foot shot away at the Battle of Inkerman , but refused to be moved from the field until the day was won . Sir Thomas was loudly cheered by the people . In less than an hour her Majesty had distributed five hundred medals to as many officers and men . The royal suite then departed , and reached Buckingham Palace a little after twelve .
Execution Of Pianori. Pianobi's Appeal T...
EXECUTION OF PIANORI . Pianobi ' s appeal to the Court of Cassation for a reversal of his sentence , on the ground of certain alleged informalities , having been over-ruled , the criminal waa guillotined on Monday morning , at the new place of execution in front of the prison of La Roquette , near Pere la Chaise . The Daily News Paris correspondent gives the following account of the execution : — " Although the morning was wet and cold , and although , according to laudable custom , no public announcement of the day of execution had been made , a very large number of people were assembled . The spectators were kept at a great distance from the guillotine by a square of troops . Up to a late hour on Sunday
night , the authorities repeated to Pianori an offer which has been frequently made , that his life should bo spared if he would discover his confederates . His only answer was , that he had no revelation to make . Tho Abbe " Hugon , the chaplain , was with him during tho night , to afford him spiritual consolation . It is understood that ho expressed some sort of regret for what ho had done ; but , from his subsequent conduct , it is probable that this regret only referred to tho laws of tho church , which the priest told him ho had offended , and not specifically to tho crime for which he was to suffer . When the
fatal toilette was made , ho cried in a firm voice , ' Vivo la Republiquo ! ' at the moment when tho executioner threw over him tho thick black , veil appropriated to tho last moments of a parricide . Ho walked barefoot to tho scaffold with a firm stop , and mounted tho ladder without a moment ' s hesitation . When tho veil was taken off , ho looked calmly round upon tho crowd , and at tho moment when the executioner and his assistants seized him , to bind him to tho plank , ho cried , ' Vive l'ltalio 1 ' A moment after tho knife fell , and all was over . Tho crowd dispersed in silence . "
Tho Paris correspondent of the Times says : — " In the faubourgs it is rumoured that it was not I'ianori , but a mannequin , that was guillotined , and that tho real person ( who , of courae , was a police agent ) has been aent out of the country with a pussportl"
^^ Execution Of Pianori
OPENING OF THE PARIS EXHIBITION . This event took place on Tuesday , and passed off without any untoward accident . Owing to a great amount of rain on the two previous days , the streets were in a most wretched and muddy condition ; and rain fell on the day itself . Paris , however , was full ; a great number of handsome carriages drove towards the Palais ; horse and foot soldiers out of number were to be seen ; and there was a large attendance of visitors . The building itself was in a depressing stnte of dirt and confusion , the side galleries being
completely filled with unpacked cases ; but in the centre of the building there was a splendid throne and canopy for the Empress and Emperor , and this , perhaps , made amends . Oh the arrival of the Imperial party they proceeded to this dais , but did not sit clown . Prince Napoleon , President of the Imperial Commission , then read an address to the Emperor , to which his Majesty briefly replied . The most remarkable part of his speech consisted of the words : "In endeavouring to call together all nations , I desire to open here a Temple of Concord . "
" The Emperor and Empress ( writes the Daily Neios Special Correspondent ) descended from the throne , and tnrned towards the east end of the building , proceeding along the Euglish portion of the nave . They next passed along the French side of the same , returning to the throne , having passed successively by the way the stalls of Bavaria , Wurtemburg , Hanover , Prussia , Austria , and Belgium . Throughout the progress of the procession the crowd was put aside right and left to make way for their Majesties , but only an instant before they actually passed ; and I must say that not even in
England could there have been less precaution taken against treachery . Had there been any person with evil inclinations , the Emperor might have been struck down a dozen times over . After making the round of the building , the Emperor and Empress returned t © the throne , where they bowed again to the spectators , and then retired amidst the same cheers which had greeted their arrival . But these cheers , I must say , were by no means enthusiastic . Shortly after their Majesties ? retired , the barriers around the interior of the building were taken down , and the exhibition of the Fine Arts was at the same time thrown open to the public . I
cannot say that throughout the ceremony much interest was shown by the spectators regarding anything connected with the Exhibition . Up to to-day only 5000 season tickets have been sold , and of these 2500 have been purchased by English people and other strangers . The French care little for the Exhibition itself . The Emperor looked very ill throughout the morning . He is certainly twenty years older in appearance than he was three weeks ago in London . The Empress , also , has a most careworn , anxious appearance . " The ordinary Paris Correspondent of the Daily News gives a different impression from the above , and says that the opening was very successful , and that it was a gay and joyous scene . The Napoleonic Post of course blows a loud trumpet-note of praise .
Continental Notes. The Opening Of The Pa...
CONTINENTAL NOTES . THE OPENING OF THE PAIUS EXHIBITION . ( From a Private Correspondent . ' ) " . . . . It would be scarcely possible to exaggerate the disappointment which the ceremony of last Tuesday has generally created amongst those who were present at it . The postponement of the day of opening , from the 1 st to the 15 th , was regarded , in the first instance , especially by foreigners , as a breach of faith towards them ; and though it was excused by the fact that the building and its contents were really not in a state of exhibition , great hopes were entertained that the delay of a fortnight would give the Commissioners ample time to set their house in ordor . Such , however , has not been the case . The interior , with the exception of the Great Hall , presented the appearance of a trunk-maker ' s atelier , where packed and unpacked cases lay huddled together pell-mell against the partitions of unfinished stalls . In the Great Hall a little more activity and readiness have been displayed , but when I entered an hour after the opening of the doors , workmen were still employed in bringing in , and placing in the basins of the fountains , pots filled with flowers . In fuct , the only departments that can be said to bo in any ututo of forwardness are those allotted to British and Belgian exhibitors . The blame of this incompleteness has boon shifted , like all official blame , from the shoulders of ono person to another ; but it appears at last to have settled fairly on those of the Prince Napoleon , who , fliiico hia return from the Crimcu , not having anything olso to meddlo with and show his incapacity upon , has undertaken to alter tho previous arrangements in the Palais do l'Industrio . " At twenty minutes poat ono—instead of one , tho hour
appointed—the Emperor entered the building . He accompanied by the Empress , and met at the entran by the Commissioners . It was expected that , as the whole affair is a national affair , a certain amount of enthusiasm would have been got up on the occasion But with . the exception of the senators and the members of the household , who gave a few stereotyped cheers , there was scarcely any demonstration made . There was no waving of handkerchiefs from the galleries , no livelv greeting from the lips of the fair , usually so e xcited on such occasions . I never saw an assembly met toge ther for a special object so negligent , so impassive ; and when the Emperor and Empress , after having received the apology of the Prince President of the Commission and accepted it in a speech remarkable only for its e xtreme brevity , passed down through the centre of the building , only
a very few voices shouted the imperial cry . It waa generally observed that the Emperor looked more than ordinarily livid and fatigued , and walked as though he expected to meet at every step the avenger of Pianori . By-the-by , putting the justice or the injustice of the act aside , the time chosen for the execution of that patriot was impolitic . An ordinary execution would have passed unchallenged . The eyes of Europe , however , were fixed on the Italian , and the general topic at the breakfast-table the next morning—the morning of the 15 th—was the policy or impolicy of destroying him . The unpleasant feelings created by such a topic could not be shaken off—at least by less than imperial spirits —in an hour or so ; and there is no doubt that the coldness of the whole affair may be attributed in great par t to the gloom thrown over the public mind by this judicial murder .
" The impression produced by the opening of the Exposition Universe ] le de Paris may be summed up in two words—disappointment and alarm ; disappointment at the utterly incomplete state of the Exhibition , and alarm at the want of enthusiasm manifested towards the Emperor—a feeling which the Emperor himself is shrewdly suspected of sharing , as he did not remain above half an hour , and left the building in apparent disgust . A change is looked forward to . The timid call it a revolution ; the moderates a political crisis ; whatever it be , come it will , and that soon . Everything is working together for that consummation .
" The ceremony of Tuesday was altogether a curious spectacle . France had called the nations of the world together , and invited them to assembled her Temple of Peace , and there , as it were , in the midst of her guests stood the elect of seven millions waiting to receive the tokens of her children ' s loyalty or submission , as you will , that strangers might testify his power abroad ; and there , in the hour of his apparent triumph , he stood alone . No burst of loyalty responded to his appeal , no sympathy bounded to him from the hearts of those around him . Not a few , who at home had been accustomed to hear of the popularity of the Emperor , went away with their eyes opened , ' and convinced that the Child of Destiny was not the Idol of France . "
Congratulatory Addresses To The French E...
Congratulatory addresses to the French Emperor , on his recent escape from assassination , have been presented by the two chief sections of Polish refugees—one signed by Prince Czartoryski and his friends , on behalf of the aristocratic and monarchical party , the other by General Rybinski , who is considered one of the chiefs of the democratic body . These documents have been published in the official Monxteur , and have on that account created considerable sensation , as they are considered to leave thus assumed the character of an indirect menace to Austria and Prussia . The Czartoryski address affirms that the Polish refugees pay with ardour " a tribute of gratitude to the nephew of the hero who was the regenerator of their country —the glorious Emperor who inc sud
. 1 !>„! :. . 1- I .,.,. .. * Knnt wifll lli _ ll- > " TllCSUb " makes every Polish heart beat with hope . - joined are the moat remarkable passages in the Rybinski address : — " The hope of a calm and grand future which prevails at the present moment in Europe cannot be realised , Sire , except by your truly providentiul and heroic initiative . Without you , Europe would stand still , or fall back into perdition ; with you , its veritable chief , it will advance boldly towards its new destinies . Poland has religiously maintained with love and veneration thoso glorious traditions which , taken up and developed by your Imperial Majesty , open a new epoch to Franco and to Poland ; and , by the union of those two countries , to tho great European family . Sire , 1 olana andihor tiutn
hopes everything from Divine justico ; , n in your Majesty , she is convinced that that justice wiu only bo administered by you . The sentiments wJucli i respectfully present to your Imperial Majesty in tne name of the officers and soldiers of the old I ' ohsh army aro shared , 1 am assured , by the whole of l ' oland . » ue would not disavow mo if nho were allowed to express her mind . Yes , Sire , <* ho HtiflbrM , and she looks towards tho West , where nhe only beholds and loves your -imperial MajoHty . " Tho Poles aro now indulging m " » most extravagant hopou with respect to tho roHtoration of their country ; and tho appointment of . Count W » - lowski as Minister for Foreign Afiiiira \ a looked uponiiy thorn an significant . Tho count ' s mother was a 1 olisu woman ; and hia lather , it is generally boHovod , was m « Great Napoleon hiinuoli ' .
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), May 19, 1855, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_19051855/page/8/
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