On this page
-
Text (4)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
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
the eighty leagues coming , " to and from Dijon , which saluted Louis Napoleon . As the Revisionists only obtained a majority of 60 votes on the whole , the Republicans naturally regard the result as a triumph . In his last pamphlet , M . de Cormenin ( Timon ) has thus expressed the present state of the European question : — " I defy any party to reestablish in France a monarchy vrhich shall not concede a parliamentary government and a free press ; and I defy any monarchy which shall concede the liberty of the press and representative government to continue longer than three years . " The Republic alone , because it is right and true , can and may be discussed with impunity .
" The question henceforth in all the great governments of Europe will be between the Republic and Absolute Monarchy . ' ? These are the two terms of the question from which there is no escape . " Ferdinand Flocon , writing in the Democratie du Bas Mhin , declares that the first thing that the Republican party will demand when the time cop- is to revise the constitution , will be the abolition of the Presidency ; declaring that , for their part , they neither want a Prince nor a Soldier .
The commission appointed to consider the propositions for the revision of the Constitution met on Tuesday , and appointed M . de Broglie , president , and M . Moulin secretary of the commission . A subcommission of five has been appointed to examine the host of petitions for revision which have been presented to the Assembly . The names of the five are—Dufour , de Corcelles , de Melun , Baze , and Charras .
Untitled Article
KAISER JOSEPH . The Morning Post gives the following sketch of the pet of the Czar—the young Emperor of Austria : — " The Emperor returned to Vienna and his faithful lieges on the 3 rd of June , and the papers are permitted to announce the gratifying fact to us this morning . Now , as the town is very full , and most of the celebrities are here , and there is no political news , perhaps I may amuse some of your fair readers by giving an account of Franz Joseph the First , and the pillars of his throne , and of some of the beauties that give grace to his court , of the wits that brighten , of the good that endear .
" Do you lemember , then , ladies , in Schiller ' s noble ballad of ' The Diver , ' the stately boy , with an ' aspect unfeuring but gentle , ' who broke the silence which succeeded the king ' s throwing his jewelled cup into the deep ? Of course you do ! Well , then , just such a ' herrlicher jungling' you may fancy the Emperor of Austria . A figure of singular grace is set off by a most gallant carriage ; personal bravery is shewn in every look and in every quick , firm movement . He is considerably above the common height , though not absolutely tall . His face is very peculiar . To the marked characteristics of the House of the
Hansburg , he adds an expression which I never saw in any other of that family , either in a portrait or the living face . The forehead is high and beetling , the nose and mouth well formed , but nothing peculiar . It is in the eyes that something remarkable strikes you at once ; they are not large , but sunken , and the eyebrows form over them in a singular manner—they are piercingly bright , and have an earnest , almost melancholy look , which must have been planted there by thought beyond his years . The eyes , then , are the chief characteristic of his face , and mark it out so strongly that once seen it were hard to forget it .
?* The Emperor never appears but in uniform , and generally wears the plain light grey coat of a general . He is seldom decorated , except on great occasions , and his whole appearance is strikingly simple and military . Unlike any of his family , or the Austrians generally , he ia a most expert horseman , and a keen sportsman . He rides straight across country , and seldom goes home while the dogs last . He is a capital shot . A soldier at heart , he is little luxurious , and his private apartments are the least splendid in the palace . The room where he usually sits at Schoubrunn has a fine look-out , and commands the garden where Napoleon used to walk and meditate , and which still goes by his name . It requires little stress of imagination to suppose that such a prospect may often set him musing , and
check aspiring , and rebuke pride . The wulls are covered ¦ with maps ; on the table lie books of reference , mostly on military matters . He rises early , and not seldom indulges in the pastime of riding out unattended , and paying viaiitj betimes to barracks and public places to see with his own eyes that all things are in order He inspected the artillery barracks a little while ago , at seven oVlock in the morning . This keeps up a great state of qui vivo . He ban an extraordinary eye for detail , and will detect with u glance if an officer be not wearing the proper regulation sword . He has the royal gift of remembering names and faces ; and if an officer uhould not be in uniform , be his rank what it may , he had better not fall under the eye of the Emperor . There is a Btory in the army of his having one day placed six general officers under arrest for this breach of orders during u stute of
mege . 41 He in very accessible , and since his reign the rules of the court huve been a good deal changed in this rtHpect . HiH chief sonicty is , however , that of military men , and not a uay psiHtws but Nugent or Hchliok , Hess or Win riiHchgrntz , arc invited to bin table . Rudetzky , while in "Vienna , lives with him altogether , ainl sleeps in tho palnce . When in public , and of course surrounded by a crowd of gazcrx , hia eye wanders about in Hearcli of a known face , and if he finds it he will talk plcuHuntly for w long time with the huiuo poraon . Like the Emperor
of Russia , whom , perhaps , he may in some degree have taken for a model , he is fond of surprises , and likes to appear unexpectedly everywhere : it may be owing to this fancy that the journals have been forbidden to chronicle his movements till officially announced . There is altogether an absence of parade about him , except on state occasions . If he drives , which is but rarely , it is in an open carriage wi th two horses , and a coachman and footman in undress liveries . No guards , with nodding plumes and caracolling chargers , surround him—not even an outrider precedes ; and were it not that Vienna is one vast camp , and the
soldiers turn out and the drums beat when he passes a guard-house , a stranger would scarcely suspect ' he ruled the land . ' On horseback , a single English groom , wearing the plain livery of an English gentleman ' s servant , rides behind him , and Count Griinne , his adjutant and constant companion , at his side , but about a neck in the rear . He will change his horse several times in the same ride , and appears usually on three or four during his afternoon ' s ride in the Prater . To sum up , as my letter is ending , I will finish in the words of a Russian general — ' To ladies he is gallant ; to the men courteous . ' I will sketch the court less in detail in my next . "
Untitled Article
GENERAL CONTINENTAL NEWS . The Daily News of Wednesday contained the following announcement : — " Telegraphic advices from Rome of the 2 nd of June received via Vienna announce the advance of Austrian troops into the Papal province of Spoleto . The intelligence is official , being confirmed by the Wiener Zeitung of the 7 th instant , which mentions the movement as in course of preparation . " The Lithographirte Correspondenz , also an official medium of publication , adds that the movement has taken place in conformity with a convention passed between the Austrian , French and Papal Governments . We cannot but receive this explanation with great suspicion . The movement , at any rate , is curiously close upon the publication of the celebrated Papal memorandum which we lately published , and which the Governments of Vienna and Rome were so quick in disclaiming . We do not hear of any diminution in the immense army which the King of Naples has as-embled at Capua . Rome is exactly midway between Capua and Spoleto . " On the same day the Morning Chronicle said : — " Letters from Rome of the-2 nd of June state that in virtue of a convention between Austria , France , and the Holy See , Austrian troops were preparing to advance into the province of Spoleto , beyond Term . Letters from Vienna confirm this intelligence . " This , if correct , is probably the first move of the New Holy Alliance of Warsaw and Olmutz . The Hamburg journals state that an usually high rate of mortality prevails among the Hungarian soldiers who form part of the garrison of Rendsberg , and that cases of suicide are also frequent among them . The Tyrolese regiments also suffered much when in the district ; the mountaineers of the south soon became afflicted with Heimweh , and pine among the flat sandy plains of the north .
The severe regulations respecting the saluting Danish officers by civilians in Suhleswig , which caused so much irritation , have been suspended ; among the expedients the people adopted at last to turn the order into ridicule was the following—they agreed to meet each otlier with the slightest nod of acquaintance , but to salute every dog , pig , bullock , and Danish officer with a profound bow . The absurdity became popular , and , it is stated , has been one of the causes of the order being revoked . It is understood that the English Consul in Hamburg , Colonel Hodges , at present on a special mission at Flensburg , had felt it necessary to make strong representations on the effect of the regulation in some parts ojt" Schles wig .
The Portuguese news is of no note politically . The captains of the English ships in the Tag us have been killing time with dancing . The ball on board the Leander on Friday week , given to the English residents and a portion of the Portuguese nobility , was particularly successful . " Upon the splendid upper deck a tent-like saloon was beautifully illuminated and decorated with flagH and ilowcrs , and although there was nothing wanting in any of the
arrangements , it ia a fact that the vessel had been officially inspected , with her crew ut quarters and every gun in its place , three hours before the ball ; nor had the whole of tho delighted participants in the evening'a uiuusements reached tlu : shore before every vestige of the arrangements had disappeared on board , and the Launder , with her gallant captain and crew , might have been inspected , und would have been found in its usual ellicient state , ready for sea or uny other service . "
The so-culled kingdom of Poland , patched up by the treaty of 1816 , has had , up to the present moment , a separate postal administration , und now , by an imperial ukase of March 1 , 1 H / H , this administration falls under the disposition of the general imperial hoard and control , and will hen-after form the thirteenth postal circle of the Kuswian umpire . Thus vanish oius by one all traces of a separate existence established by the Congress of Vienna . The fate of the Russian exile llakoonin , who Home time ago wan dragged from the Saxon fortress of Konigstciu to that of OlmuU in Austria , Jam ut lust
been decided . The decree aginst him is thus worded : — «« Michael Bakoonin , born in 1814 , at Torshok , in the Russian Government of Tver , of Grecco-Russian religion , legally and in virtue of his own confession , convicted of the crime of treachery against the Austrian empire , the court-martial , by its decree of May . 15 last , sentenced him to death by strangulation , and to pay the expenses of the whole trial , for which he is mutually responsible with the rest of the guilty persons . " This decree was legally sanctioned , but commuted by the Emperor to carcere duro for life .
Mark this solidarity between the continental despots ! Bakoonin , a Russian by birth , lieutenant of artillery in the Russian army , accused of having taken an active part in the revolution of Dresden against the Saxon Government , is condemned by an Austrian court-martial , as guilty of a crime of treachery against the Austrian empire ! To what extent the German writers have lost all feeling of dignity and national honour , is shown in a leading article which the Prussian gazette { Die Neue Preussische Zeitung ) of May 24 published , and which expresses itself as follows on the occasion of the King of Piussia ' s departure to Warsaw : " After many disturbances which have occurred during the two last years , the monarchs and the peoples have reentered their natural relations . The monarchs
tendered to each other a friendly hand , and the peoples look now with joyous confidence towards futurity , and the benign blessing which a lasting peace and the reign of order and law will bestow upon them . We greet the meeting of the monarchs in Warsaw with joy , as a token of a new and closer alliance among them , which , in our eyes , acquires an enormous weight if we consider the friendly sentiments of the Emperor Nicholas toward our country .... It only requires that the Russian statesmen should not judge with prejudice , but acknowledge that Prussia can win much in the present circumstances , and that nothing can be lost by preserving the closest relation with Russia . " The author of the article then
endeavours to show that from Frederic the Great up to the present time , it was ever a national interest , a sound policy for Prussia , to go hand-in-hand with Russia . He then thus concludes his arguments : — " Frederic William IV ., faithful to the principles of Frederic the Great , and to the last wish of his neverto-be-forgotten father , went to Warsaw , in order to renew the alliance with his imperial brother-m-law . The foreign and internal enemies of Prussia may look upon this event with a malevolent and curious eye , but the more it disquiets and displeases them the greater the reason for the friends of Germany to rejoice , and to place an unlimited confidence in the Congress of Warsaw . " A correspondent from the frontier of Poland thus
writes : — " There is again a great difficulty in the kingdom of Poland to obtain passports . Even persons going to the Avaters are obliged to obtain certificates from responsible physicians , and to depose written declarations that they will not go to London . This is the more surprising , as a ukase had been previously promulgated , by virtue of which no obstacle was to be put in the way of obtaining passports to those who should wish to proceed to the Exhibition of London . Some attribute this change to the circumstance , that wh <> n the "Russian ambassador announced to th . e
English Cabinet his master ' s intention oi visiting London , and required the principal refugees to be removed from London during his stay , Viscount Palmerston , it is said , answered that H . I . M . should be received with pleasure , but that the Government could not condescend to satisfy a claim which was contrury to the laws of the country . "
Untitled Article
HUNGARIAN CAPTIVES IN TURKEY . The following letter has been received from the Foreign-office , in reply to a memorial agreed to at u public meeting in the Tower Hamlets , last week : — " Foreign-onlce , June 7 , 1851 . " Siu , —I urn directed by Viscount Palmerston to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of yesterday ' s date , enclosing a memorial , signed by you ua chairman of a meeting of tho inhabitants of the Tower Hamlets , praying the interference of her Majesty's Government , in order to procure the liberation of tho Hungarian refugees detained in Turkey ; and I am to request that you will acquuint the memorialists that her Majesty ' s Government have been using , and are continuing to use , their good offices with the Turkish Government to obtain the release of these Hungurians from their present captivity in Turkey ; and her Majesty ' s Government trunt that their endeavours may before long lead to « favourable result . " Inm , Sir , your most obedient humble servant , " Stani . ky of Ai , iinni-MY .
" T . Hunt , Esq ., 10 , Wellington-street , Strand . ' Active exertions are « till made by the people oi Sheffield to sustain public sympathy in favour oi those Polish Hungarian exiles whom they have succoured ho generously . A public meeting wus held at Stanningto " , noiir Sheffield , on Monday week , in their behalf , and tittonded by a numerous und euthuuiautic audience .
Untitled Article
I June 14 , 1851 . ] ffl > * % ia< * 551
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), June 14, 1851, page 551, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1887/page/3/
-