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THE intelligence from the Crimea is of the highest interest , although , transmitted by telegraph , we still lack the details . In the immediate vicinity of Sebastopol those attacks upon the outworks commenced on the 1 st of May have been pressed with continued progress , and General Pblissier has made his mark upon the stronghold . On the 24 th of May an expedition , in steamers of light draught , accomplished the approach to Kertch , an Allied force was landed there , and the Russians , after blowing up their works and destroying their stores , fled . The place was taken without a blow . Thence , on the following day , the expedition proceeded to the armed station of Yeni-Kaleh ; two days afterwards it appeared on the point of coast to the north at Berdiansk , where the Russians again destroyed their ships and some grain ; and on the 28 th , Sir George Brown went to the very bottom of the Bay of Arabat , where a hundred of the Russian transport ships were destroyed . This gives tin ; English the command of the Sea of Azof , and of the road along the spit of land by which reinforcements have reached Simphcropol . Xor is this all . An advance has been made on the Tchernaya , of which the right bank remained in possession of the Allies , bringing them closer to tho Russian forces in the central part of the peninsula , and in fact marking to that extent a retrograde position for the Russians . The effects of this success are obvious ; the Sea of Azof is under our guns ; all the Russian trade that passes through the Straits of Yeni-Kaleh—by " which 1000 vessels entered and issued last year—is closed ; the Russian power towards the Caucasus is weakened ; the inlet to the Crimea by 1 ' erekop is narrowed ; the channels for conveying reinforcements arc greatly diminished ; the confidence of the Russian troops must be proportionately depressed ; the moral elT'e . ct in Russia itself must be very considerable ; and the inlluence will not be mi felt in Vienna and lierlin . Tho signs of trouble in Russia hud already been increasing . The EiurKitou and his brother Constantinm have * been to Cronstadl . examining { he defences . The comparative weakness in the Crimea is not concealed , and reports of distress from St . Petersburg do not diminish . The lvuseian loan , so long in tin ; Dutch market , and sustained by no many efforts to keep up tho
quotations , has undisrgdii ^ tf ^ jew i -sh ' q . dfe- ' aiicl : - "de- ' clines . ¦ ' . j ' . " , " - v " ¦ } jv ' ;\ -iv :.-X ^ -- ^^' -i- ' ;' The Austrian Government has put fai £ k ?¦ & German version of the Protocols of the < Dbn-y ference ; and in doing so has accompanied thein by a note , wth the signature of Qount J 3 . tJ ' ojt , explaining that the issue has been rendered necessary by the publication of the Protocols in'England . A Ministerial contemporary ' writes as if this remark of Count Buoy ' s were only a pretext to be pleaded before certain German Courts who might object to the publication , and as proving that the Austrian Minister does not feel sore at the publication of the papers by our Ministers ; but the general impression is , that the irritation of the complaisant Count cannot be concealed . If we were to suppose that Count Buoi . was prepared boldly and steadily t > act upon the plain interests of Austria , there would be no question that the publication of the documents must be beneficial to Lis Government ; but it is evident that the Count is strongly impelled by three desires , which be displayed at the Conferences in j a greater degree than his col If ague the Baron Prokjcscii-Okthn : they are , the desire to place Austria in a course advantageous for her material interest and her influence in Europe ; the desire to maintain good faith with the Western Powers ; and the desire , above all things , to avoid giving oHence to autjnuhj , Russia include . 1 . JN ow the protocols huve given offence to Russia , and 1 herofore to Prussia and Saxony . The Sardinian Chambers have closed their sittings , after having passed the bill for the regulation of convents and the suppression of a considerable number . The measure was not a strong one , and it was not rendered stronger in the Upper Chamber ; nevertheless , it is a step in the direction of the English Reformat ion of Hknky tiiu Eighth ' s time , and we mubt remember that its effect is likely to be much more powerful . Opinion , aided by constitutional freedom and the circulation of ( be pnw , may give fo naked enactments a . hundred-fold the moral and practical ellecl , in Northern Italy , in IM . ">> , that would have been given to them even in Knylun I three hundred years ii ^ o , The last purl of the eout . inge . nt h : is left , ( umioii , and the Government at . Turin is busied in recruiting to supply the deficiency occasioned in it .- > own army . When the vessels bearing the soldiers passed through the Straits of Messina , ( hey were cheered by the resident subjects of Fi ; au > inani >
* fifii S ^ ogm'iS 8 &M : t $ i ^ aPX signs . i ? f i £% gg ! & , ^^ ng ¦ 4 9 ^^^^^' ¦' ®^^ ¦" •^¦ MW ¦ iS ^ Jp ¦ Uo M B ^^ m ^ M ^^ ymp P ^ S i thff . people liave spnae ^^^^ ihei ^ ferfi ^ o ^ er ^ m ^ r / want Mmo , . ' ahctold ; ZkeJi ^ iUifm rffe Austria jcopvert .. tta ^ presefek ^ Jf Europe : Jfe / agititedi America is not less so . . The ICnowrmothiags ?! , Jia . Ve become decidedly a power ii * the Fritted States . One of their conventions has put forward a new epitome of their principles , " Americans shall rule America ; " there shall be " no North , no South , no East , no "West ; " there shall be no sectarian interference with legislation or administration , but hostility to the Pope , and reform of the naturalisation laws . We have already explained how this movement arose , out of the endeavour of the Roman Catholics to encroach in the management of the free schools , followed up by the endeavour of the Irish emigrants to exercise an influence in the public affairs of the Union . Against this interfernnce the Know-nothing move is a reaction ; but while the Yankees are about it , they also propose to stop anti-slavery agitations and to moderate immigration of labour , which is beginning to tell upon the native-born Americans ; hence the proposal not to grant naturalisation under twenty years ' residence . But as usual with such bodies , particularly when they have grown fast , and work in a free country , the Know-nothings are getting tyrannical . A part of one of their committees latelv visited a convent school ; the members thrust themselves into every private corner , invaded the sick room of young girls , and bullied the nur . ses . The Irish who went to the United States as to a laml of freedom find Yankee tyranny even worse than English . MJ ' - l ^ Altt ; v Mao Gjsk , who hits sent home a letter on the subject , is not the flivst Irishman to raise tho cry of oppression agaia . st , " the S . ixon" <» n the westurn . side of the Atlantic , and ( o advise Irishmen not to emigrate to America for freedom —religious or pulilk-iil " . lie liiuls that Canada is a place of greater toleration , allboi . gh under the royal Hag of Knglnnd . The Know-nothing-parly , however , is not strongenough to keep down ( lie emigration from Europe . It was checked fora time , but it . has renewed its stream in full force . The fact , is , that the fertile lands which are Mill unoccupied are n prize too .,.,.,. ; , ( , tu ])( . neglect ell fit her by native-born Americans or by industrious I ' -uropeans ; and there is io inlluence in the Union which can act us : i
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NEWs 7 § F ' THJEWEEK ~ . .- >* # rV "' . ; The WtOr ' .... ^ :.. 600-War Miscellanea $ < # The Baltic .:..:... ; .. 508 Th © FrericTi Reply to Russia ; 6 Q 8 India and China , n ....... . 508 America .... ; ,..... i .. 509 The Humanity of a Cosmopolite ... 609 - Administrative Reform ............... 509 Two Cases of Patriejto i" — ' — - " — 610 Our CivilisatibtfXiviSi- ^^^^^;^ . . 810 TheRegistTar-General'aQuarterly Return >„ ...... „ ....... ........... ; 610 ¦ JTaYal and Military News . 611 .
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Leader (1850-1860), June 2, 1855, page unpag., in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2093/page/1/
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