THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURE SAE 
[Max M, 1864, 
: pos ESTA STENT 2 int of from | to del ie Passive Debt. , A total GES 
intolerable. It was said formerly that wa ld | her filling up herjcadres, if necessary, to t| the : am mount of 
ra the supplies for war; but if id body at " present 600,000 to 700,000 men. The expenses ai the army, bee of opinion on die à rini "political qeu 
practis sed tbat maxi would raise the world against him. | could not soon be reduced ; and, as for those of the navy, 2| between "- Olozaga, Marshal 1 Esport 
If anybody gave up the country in whichth ad rto must return from distant pesto vium transformation 
army, would ‘ha 
pe and Dh 
their matériel must be completed, be foreithey « co p hope for a | Pr im. e diff compan 
t departme 
reduction i "e penses Dt tbat art onclusion | applie concessions to pas, em io md 
pum l States were like seconds in - M" l, o require as | he said—'' I have heard many si and E ng hat credit institutions, based upon landed p 
generosity as courage from the tants. At present | * What ill u have? The y possesses e Bd ffected a fusion 
these armies bouis be p S discipline cy the submission of activity that it must be constantly supplied both at hom ui D aroma —T e. Colaibi MUR 
the countries oceupied were to be naintained. This explained abroad. When we have not Sebastopol or Milan to age f . st ents, among whoy 
why t e la he © imea pem in Italy were so cost! must go to Pekin or Mexico.’ That is very true. LA m ome s lately occurred in conse ene of 
indeed, more NK: than any of the wars under the dam that France has a genius of powerful activity, an dx introduction of a new Ministerial decree ha the 
He desired that ountry should be distinguished for its ng aliment must given to it. A eem oo | Minho, the soldi having fofi >e, have left fp 
humar p its courage. Inthe present day it was | back two centuries at aliments Providence: de p-|4 , ith t 1 ke coming, 
peace which should maintain -war at reason go plied, I am not surprised at the desire x ei ause 1 1 m. he students are returning b 
management of the finances was k — of a goo more. Und bons XIV = ee ze ey the | Coimbra without further disturbances, The 
direetion ar. o great respect was felt for ers se al genius roy, 3 ; à toposa] 
finances were RRN bu! oo lliance of those whose | same time as the Cid, Athalie, the Misanthrope, an = railway Huge, ar - been ers by the we 
nances were in condition ought for, and sometimes bl t t 8th century there was not the ER E EL n Swedish an 
others became dependent on them. For that reason p! le | glory. France allowed the Great Fede to fill the are to assemble off be s. ide the [ow 
eh he coalition of 1814 lasted four y ; it was | of Europe with his victories, and conso d berself with rere. May, under the command of Pri rins 
ded arvel, b he marvel was easily explained. | over the regeneration of human society. “abe laboured t "- Dünrisi:iO0n Mol the 
There was a man in the camp of the coalesced Powers who had | end by her writers, and exulted in the pes of puton . ay t an flee, 
nothing in him of the magician, for he was the most sagacious | tesquieu, Voltaire, and Rousseau Then came the Revo! wet — of A frigates Pt i imde ot 
of men—Lord Castlereagh. He dispelled all difficulties with | when France no longer pursued the work of ri generation by gun d the aky, o guns a 
one word. He opened or closed English subsidies. Indeed, it | the pen, but by the swords of her generals. She herself was Feats je ue jin d hw 
might aid that it was he who led the agp to the gates regenerated. Blood flowed where she passed, but civilisation " pro d ng to be. 
ofParis. He — not speak of the close relation between | followed her; and the world, while it detested our glory, W. when the Danis squadron, coude of three fri 
the financ good publi per vat tl Formerly | obliged to acknowledge our benefits, é came pe nd tha BED Juel, of 40 guns, and the D cna 
people did pay eie the bad management ott their finances | What aliment was then offered to our devouring genius of 16 rs 
until they fell under pa weight. In modern times well-being | Libert (Loud approbation.) Here for 30 an JOa 
and distress were felt m rapidly. The ee oa skill of | this tribune, and before I ascended it myself, I respectfully ‘0 
Government were set o n auction on pe ose great public | listened to the great minds of our age discussing the affairs of 
markets ealled the Stock Ex Jens Confidence rose or fell, | France of the whole world. Me is impassioned for | 
and the prosperity of the public increased or diminished. It le causes—for or Ital d 
might, then, be asserted that, in treating the su! 
grand ideas and nob Gre 
i bject of finance, | these passions aad struggles there were illusions, butthey 
military power, political ascendancy, and - publie prosperity | bas 
i o8 ralities 
based on noble motives. The ge enius of Franc d ees ardently | 
of France w: isc He would quit those generalities to | occupied, In 1851, the interest of o du. d 
enter into the subject, and he would forth explain his |sary to drop the curtain on the scene; fed rat ite 
lan. d ndeavour tate precisely the present | occupy the country otherwise, d our dget may tell you 
state of the French budgets; he would seek their starti it costs to occupy the country oth — - 
dt the course they had followe He would |liberty. But I hope that if ano eror persis: 
f those budgets, and afterwardsexplain by | doubt he will, his noble policy of ANY xedtóring 
what means a condition mig attained which reasov might | 1 e issue will prove that liberty does not deserve all T 
avow without al: ng the prudent. would ask what was | the evil said of - And, f it should, there is one e or Nor : 
e true sta budgets? Even that was difficult to | reflection, which you have doubtless made—namely, that if battle are given in the Times of yesterday 
rtain, cn ^ taken in somewhat disguising | liberty has all e d demerits laid to its charge, there is no jan fri 
their amou —a distinction had been made bes the great Le € vie ok substitute for it." Loud 
between the ordinary P. extraordinary budget. He was never | cheers.) The debat s then rned, 
satisfied, however time-hc d t an was, 
iis w nile rdimary for X should finish by | In the sitting m «ad M Berryer reproached the 
being called an ordinary budget, mu dies b per ed this Phu who had def. d the e wi be Govern- 
term ‘extraordinary’ certain exp w con- P 
tested and certain receipts of a very doubtful iind were os post for their em and sive at E pepe the Pa rlia rey velo, and. the crew: 
to pass. Cochin-Chinese and Mexica: — ex OL mentary vl stem, Sal 
80 boldly pe in a budget not extraordin: — ME the nipotence ofa single man. Among other iva a crüiss of El 
nevertheless, admit the deneon ents to eek ted Merced E R 1 th when a tel 
ber apr a fom 100,000,00 ao Ge ot eh fron Det Stee s he atter system. M. Rouher here interr upted M. | infor n were bearing 
zuo. T Sh age SAN a partielar head. A special Dee r by saying that the Restoration was brought towards A oland. This intelligence Mii 
Mn we Y imag ined, compo: ecl of departmental ex ponaos 5 ir ich | a t ^i the foreigner, and fell under the contempt 
at al y^ is were annex nistry of the Interior, ` 
gud anaal expenses, which ‘figure Tie De n; | Of the people. The President of th mber observed, a 
f Finance. He then went over the financial oe = that both syst had their faults and misfortunes, and | the 
or. € Brig somnis Lem sent, and described their | that it bes! nfine oneself stat 
parts the bu of the sent Gover! i i 
the enormous increase thi ihi had. i bserved that cs Dg tryer then continu peoc 
all mystery as to the uu ae BS eT disappear principally censured the want of measures fo 
bor Rua Shake examined, tothat|the reduction of the publie debt an 
every three or fouryears France should em t war, | expedition. He spoke in favour of a e policy, and 
and if, after h carried on a great war of undoubted public : : : 
interest, and rhe rah time to breathe. or to | demanded the reduction of the effective home ate plates 
recover a part hat it had spent, it again on anoth to 250,000 men, which w ould allow of order being E 
ar le y understood than that of ; restored to the finances, aad would insure peace a of : 
be gen but only for an idea, as a war for Poland would be, | }; 
an uc 
iberty. M. Rouher replied, first, to M. Thiers, 
rance a 
a = his | Lyons was wont to do gam To 
figures, and that he was behind his age and unjust side against the enemy's shi ia on x tor side of him. ali i 
wards “to whom, i ouher, er ag taken — de this daring Ld. 
* we owe so many noble initiatives and so many bene- disque e in retur 
AA pean at. all this, "akin A bare the — 
of the present condition of e^ He co 
he sanded that „peace was especially the work. of “Imperial 
France, 
and LET d convince one another, He said. :— 
erious guarantees. I have 
peace 
e tim at 
rests upon s 
less—urgent expenses as well as those LETT ight be post- please in Rpetiug, with M. B 
er, t. is in the 
—th he 2300 millions, the | hand of France; but France will only o when 
oo and all Pursuing this train of argument he | co: 1 bates d her honour or the inviolability of her 
"Gate rip ert Sa Coe n od frontiers. As regards the sad conftict in the pe, 
m. (To i 
armiug was to give E derstand that France was td Aer e ety EIU re Mave E T 
to expose her to be every day called i 
He could tell them who were in arms in | The icine ae the vent an —À of the 
M with a view to My hich was Mexican question, which he consid 
Austria, o ig AS andw as fruitful = am "thecaeot N, 
of 
wo years, Prussia was 
was not armed, but in great vais o of maar Per 
nd|,F only, wad on areal he sod 
à i was in ipe ad t that NOM 
dan army of 400,000 men Now Ayn 400, rhe ere 
100, 
ree b thea al wards the fl 
uld be rejected. er ere at 24 [vo or killed, T ur 
ree decision of the Court of Aix was set aside, | and 40 sligh dy unded. | — ugh 
Las been pie to discuss the ied mis h d 
uld be ds. I 
m Mania: for ‘Africa, : although i made 
towards d ue sd elf to France, would 
tal 
u e 
that it produced unhoped-for results, The losses of the | 9th 
Tb 
ness, 
disabling the 
y e enormous, The steamer Florida has arrived ofthe engagem: 
A een iier era Cruz mostly on h 
Bs 
d 
E 
T 
abot, in A on her 
—The estimates were voted on Tuesday night directed the fire of her 
4 TL soe p an extraordinary sitting of the Cortes. The Council | gn 
morai 
ing the right of public meeting introduced b y vem 
E Minister of the In terior. In the sitting of the - 
À mo longer rece is Pei (in pest that nobody should "ewe 
"i eire to annex to her territo; 
re, A that "Prussia 
ready so large, a for 
a ddira around her. mi 
would not 
cabin, 
decision has been come to by the Commission appointed mashed to ato toms a portrait of ca sbal 
nw 
