———e~=S— ttt 
370 
. 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE NEWSPAPER. 
[NoveMBER 22, 1856. 
Russia covertly recommended. The follow- | 
of yet been given of the close alliance between 
an extract from the article, which is too long 
ire : 
and Pon et 
Vie and St. asa 
pe 
England 
urts of 
exist an Englishman wh 
nt gian to gov ern the adi world. 
our pe changes, of all, the double- 
k twists of our let but th 
e contrary, t 
believe that the Hra between Russi i eitia 
delicate character, and that = 
the A 
Foreign Offi the » ord, and every person, from one end of pety ti e Austri 3 e onerous stip ele of the 
the British preety to the other, is Da eee pesay of d enai was subjected ‘at bop irtera ee comprehend, in fire, that “ ae putin, 
me mind with regard to what should be done abroa e first instance by England, are bu aggravations o the WTO; 
pi in any opera have the scenes been more suddenly shifted Moscow, have contributed ‘to “make l atters he orse be- |< thelr futility is a o far evident. It appears, in — et, phe sent 
than has British policy—to-day Liberal, sw a st— Itisa fa ctt rat since t ne return | is reduce ssity of looking out for s, however 
now taking the oe of nat a malities, and n ead oppress | of Pri } Austrian fe t 5 gn "to the publie ra a the continent- sneh 
them Ta tur meouragi: and inte: pme Pared religious pro. | even evidencing the fac ne real views have been carefull 
dis: Bar etie towards Ai strong, and ting religious pro: | aristocracy for Russia have greatly diminished, | dissimulated for — _— of disguising the actual objeets A 
p ihe ally of all Powers and all rebellion, according to the| IraLy.—The e de Paris publishes the following | which the parties themselves ai gland would not, of course, 
interest of the year, ha day, wig of = hour-even. lege whether | curious orrajt The first is a letter addressed Countenance Raan objecta i the were clearly unveiled. To argu- 
just or unjust, ri or wrong, the acts of the ernment as e present in arlene Lente Piin ments she opposes injuries. She replies with bad faith to the 
respects foreign nations gery alanx Sinaja them. | t0 p 8 p 4 PP© appeals made to her fidelity, and combats by intrigue the efforts 
One might imagine that land had borrowed from the twọ | Shortly after the revolution of July, which occurred that are mee ard o an honourable and pacific under- 
at rivals of antiquity their*distinctive characteristics. | three months before the accession of King Ferdi- | standing. Her A : ia i pirra A ike raak ee of 
arthage has bequeathed her Punic faith, and the oracle writ! | m | covetousness, of hatred, of audacity, and of falsehoo e goes 
by Virgil on the le of the peopl fing J has been taken for | and The second documentis the reply of the King upon the principle that the whole world was made for her alo one ; 
her motto: ‘Tu regere imperio populos, Romane, memento, by of Naples : 
It is this desire, this thirst of dominion and ea prepon- 
haps, Providence which onee more smiles upon the 
derance, which is the cause of the feeling of union which 
between the ple and the Government af England; and, | Naples at a time storm of revolution has been let loose | 
although there is much in English history which morita eterr over Europe. The Farms health of his Majesty pablo See | 
condemnation, we cannot help admiring the harmony which i s | not have withstood the repeated shocks which succeed eac 
thus able to Pras = the nad aes berm es | Aca politica life. | | other, and the end of which Goi ly knows; but I haye long 
Indeed, not adm: it— wo oculate |h rd your Majesty praised for energy and foresight, and T do 
France t not doubt that you will bappily weather the storm, for your | 
Sparn,.—The s of siege was raised on Satur urday | | Majesty is under the necessity of istir the sa ime the 
Boa S ste Ramki N. dangerous Haiyan bg without which might urge you 
throug t paidi y, Roya! decree. ogotint ions are | to an anti-national policy fatal to your interests and to the 
in progress for th a fusion between the Carlist | | | Sete, of the people you govern, and the internal pres 
1 j> su: 
nd passions might exercise upon the free action of your 
“Tt is, pi 
exists | family of TSt. Louis that a called your Majesty to the throne = 
hat | 
See Se 
wishes to familiarise itself more and more 
obtain from it the re- -establishr 
Tress t 
questions raise 
They 
and, in eels puis is said that, in the exuberance of her pride, she 
magines s that the world is placed under her exclusive 
—Aecounts from ee woe to the Sth 
at al the Ministers remain in roy schid Pech’ 
Ca xcept the i Pa cha, 
| speech of Lord Stratford d e Redilifn S the aE 3 
the Sultan, at the investiture of his 1 Majesty with the 
expre e great paene 
e 
p Ai AT AH aK aes haa di 4 his abate with Age ons ees 
Tas hiick Dp g overnmen quan with Ti uai ns an : 
A a ia 7 6 oe PRAN | Severe counsels with which your Majesty is beset t promise King-at-Arms, receiv a nificent diamond- 
e | you into a blind line of policy, but I am also su hat your mounted sabre fi the S n. 
the decree of suspension. t | Madesty gale suffici a ee, and foresight a not i be THE ree Ea.— It is rumoured in Russian circles 
that ed astray. e are in a period o sition, e n a little diffe ti th 
Madrid Senor e Bravo Murillo. = sbat to be | | must be relinquished so that all may not be lost, and it would a | Pak wit d view w, settle e the A : A 
appointed Minister aa x real joy to learn that your Majesty has giv ties, Russia 
pe a ap gh the ‘Spanish Government can minenin and of severity which caused many days | has p roposed that the island sal 1, and that 
uch a step, as it was Senor Bravo Muri 
out. reen Ch Chuistina = rear ~ sam a Marseilles on | rity you will insure y 
her way Fass hou oye The symptoms of agitation are so strongly pronounced 
+, | and humerous in Italy that an outbreak may be expected sooner or 
0 spi te of the prompt and charitable aid | inter, accordingly as the stern measures of Prince Metternich may 
rendered by the British Government and people to the | hasten or postpone it. Your Majesty #ill be dra to the 
inhabitants of Madeira a le late visitation of current if you not prepared to stem ae tide, and your house 
rant ill be burst into either by the lutionary stream or by the 
cholera, sures of repression the Vienna Cabinet may think fit to | 
their old principles of b way paian t Protestantism. | adopt. Your jesty may. sere everything by anticipating 
ishes an 
me: 
ado 
Rita Gomez, a Portuguese Protestant, ‘died at Funchal | | voluntarily and w e the 
towards the end of last mon nth, people ; for if the hanta Laiki iat in Ita! 
o act as absolute mistress, and I shall be compelled t 
P > the | steps I merged wish to avoid at any price; and i fro pan 
body was a into the sea. [E agis and, if she does not anticipate me, will not 1 alon 
DENMARK.—A rumour is current at Copenhagen that E neither Eg us can allow Eai to extend a flees z 
the Italian peninsula. ar bro sin, 
King Frederic! k VII. has serious intentions of abdi icating 
It y dea: ther, 
ephow, that aan will think. pismi the wishes ji pcr the | rahe 
| E s ti pre 
ss to your Majesty, and that you wi aot be Aa ET, 
«Loy s Px 
ommission, who sl or the anen of 
the lighthouse. Two Eng rigates and a despatch 
steamer are always at anchor off the island, ‘while 
— r English vessel is ape ye cruising betw een 
t and Odessa—with a view o 
the Russians, and preventing them fro muni- 
ais with the island. The garrison peat oy of 60 
| Tu rkis h ment who live on good terms with the half 
| dozen Russians, who seem deserted in a corner of the 
| island The ser e lig 4 
IE 
| Russia is w 
t | Serpents state she 
ar | a Pe a preparing ta pies Giurg 
pe ll be 
o 
fi 
Jl 
] 
) 
4 
i 
tablished in = environs. i 
his morganatice wife. Should this design be carried i into | experien Se eae: —An Tae lish gunboat has been fired 
effect, Prince Ferdinand, who has been just restored to Na g ‘ tate F. he Bee apt ne death pir ciple, 1 | upon ty ie fort of Yenikalé at the entrance of t Soper 
H shou e to e era ba a at po o acobins 
the command of the rey y, will 1 succeed to the throne. for which my al omg has proved feloniously my more than | | of Azoff. Ita ApPESrS t the a- Auga ns gti be ng d 
once against the house of its Kings. Liberty is fatal to the | Abasia haying captured man, many Turkish vessels laden 
marine telegraph from the island of St. Thomas in the | House of Bourbon; and, as regarde myself, I am resolved to | ois contraband salt, Admiral Lord Lyons | despatched i 
West Indies to the United States, Mexico, and the avoid, at all price, the fate of Louis XVI. and of Charles X. My | ; 
islands in the Gulf. peopl obey reo and end their necks, but woe’ me should her | One of these gunboats, the Badger, was desirous to d 
Mazimilian, brother of the E Mr hens tc eter, a ea cis evmmetec aes | sol tsi rr ecruaation to yams fA MRE TELLS, 
uke ) imilian, r o apenn us- eee 5 ny ut Bive prospe; my | refu: er permission to pass 
tria, and the Princess te of , da re e «care aa (Me ied Ebel Dek, 
g ld, and first cousin of yas Victoria, | think; I ares pon thyself the Phare ot pin api p) their gk E island of Candia seems to have been 
The Prince is 24 years of age, and the Pr not 17. dignity. I have inherited many old grudges, many mad desires, | the ce action of the recent earthquake, | The 
>—The missi neral arising fo from pE aei nd res art oa | ine sit must | number - babi s killed d 
of the French is consi a pledge that | Austria without mi piei ‘ot hon, it. ES See: pear of | isl isla: nd was 1970, viz., 1400 Turks and 570 ‘Chriotians 
tel question will ee — Iti is | this cen The Bourbons are ancient, andif they were to try 
believed that if the prisoners are released, t ing of | t° Ps "Gsesasetees vadobetiiig to the pattern of the new Pre a The reports of the Pe rsian ope erations 
Prussia will not be exacting as to the conditions — |H apsburgs ar ‘ne Ba a yey w i at lest he Fl befor "Hats are extremely contradictory. One 
which his sovereignty over the o be selves. Nevertheless, your Majesty may rely 1 m ator kegs that the city has been captured, ani nd that 
knowledged. | live wale sympathy and my warmest wishes that you may succeed | the 
Nassau.—S e was entertained in Germany oP cn A that ungovernable people who scape s 4 e| and ie neers while another account says that though 
that the example a “by Prussia of abolishing the 5 the Persian general obtained admittance into the 4 
-tables would be followed by the minor states Russta.—The Grand Duchess Marie, sister of the | fortress, the Affghans afterwards repulsed them _— a d 
y. A Nassau paper, however, announ Emperor, and widow of the Duke de Leuchtenberg, who | Joss of 1000 d wounded, up their 
the duke has concluded a th lin house | ioned last week as likely cond | advantage and again defeated the Persians in the open 
Wi tables from the year 1857 to 1872, | Wife of the King of Sardinia, is sai ve married, | field, success or failure of the Persians ap 
iving them also an additional th fin the y or out the consent of her Imperial brother, be regarded in the light of a party question by the 
on their trade. The engage to pay | the Count Gregoire Strogonoff, and hav Affghanistan, and it is clear that neither 
10,000 florins a year to the support eatre, | St. Petersburg with the Cou at on a tone Bu | of “hie conflicting reports is "l be ay peak on. 4 
and 50,000 to the musical b peror of cen ts letter to oars A large corps of Russian troo ring towards f 
Bavar. — V: i h ideen giving him absence for a year On| the Persian Pronit in pang tain Time : 
in Bavaria ca the High h Consistory wa the Lutheran vunt of his hae  sigieanly sree ce iy “hope influence in i tie approaching crisis pits England 
Church of th e Confession of Augsburg insisting on that if circumstances give occasion to recall yi, tO and | the Sha 
befi d Indi the following list of 
he will come to resume his duties with the same zea daa some peri taff destined for the Persian Gulf :— 
and alacrity npe —_ hitherto si ee his military H.M. 64th from Belgaum, the 2d Europeans from Hy- 
career. The onan as contained of | drabad, the 4th Rifles, under Colonel Honner, from 
late several oalon “whieh ea Ss on the conti- | Poona, 20th N. I. from Belgaum, the Belooch Battalion 
nent as semi-official manifestoes against England, In} from Hydrabad, the 3d Cavalry from Rajkote, 200 
one of piotat in language which might be | sabres of the na Horse, under el T 
suitable had = p been r victor instead o con- | Seroor, and a like number of and Miners from 
quered, conduct of Austria and England, in a under Major HiH, Captain Blake’s troop of 
attempting, vingio handed z s enforce the execution of | Horse Artillery from Poona, Captain Hatch’s Company 
the Treaty of Paris, It says that ag I hata are e Ist Euro rtillery from Poona, and Brett’s 
not to be tolerated ; or if they n France and | Battery fro’ Karra — amounting in all to sbout 
Russia, to compel Austri ana m execute their | 5000 men. The sta ows :—Sir James > 
en should send back Aa to Turkey and to | K, C By Commander in Chief ; - General Stalker, second 
Ria In ae it appeals to Europe not| jin mand ; Colonel Í Adjutant-General ; Cap- 
to san ; oiko of the law of nations. eile Co ier, assistant ; Pope, or peere 
t vindi- | don, Lieutenants Grey, Strange, and onrhe 
cation of English olie i in ote ke Siècle, makes the follow- Assistants in charge of the Com = 
ing attack on the part taken by England ir in the og sinter t is under charge 
Sea, the langue o of which, it will be of Captain Wray and Lieutenant Holland ; the i 
| t used by the Oriana Ore De Dent under Major and the Me 
in Patis, a notioed în o ur French news :— M‘Kenzie, The foree, if not very | 
The reason why Le Siècle has had the to | ae oe t and cr oleate 3 
ai jone Hoei the Ie evon today of this bes 8 je poney i ppd Tete: and quite capable of performing to ii 
is simply because it is 
} revolutionary. It likes English alliance, it flatters it, it 
that may be assigned to it. 
