Minister and a Member of Parliament in the House of Commons. 
This, said the Dake, is not the first time that an English 
This is the r part o 
ech sa ried with loud applause, an 
THE NEWSPAPER. 
Te Engiand, that rei s ov er so many mar--| drawn immediately atter its appearavce Thi 
ou wi , ia hat of Belg m! No, she cannot. | protectorate, a protectorate not yet sanctioned by 
i It ha 
upies le co ents in O ia, | ment, continued for 14 months t had, it i 
: if seen at Scant me t two pettyislands! No, difficulties and embarrassment: > 
she canno! . She, that possesses a large portion of Asia, can- hing like tumult or sedition, everythin 
t relinquish to on. the inhospitable coast of Af: ! No, | and peaceably. Ww hen, o 
she cannot; and will. hen, therefore, you demand of | Thouars thought it his duty to renin the prote 
neve Ww 
England a reciprocity 7 pe ieee 
the ablest statesmen of this 
tai ou pursue a nian s 
e th 
to protect the 
less, I ne Scns 
ols of E ai was se by M. de Peyra- 
Wed 
epek who add uced by! the Op- 
odment 
m the et of ron might t en 
sain si 8 the exclus 
flag, w as adop ted unan a 
+ tah 
o last addresse: 
o place com- 
Guizot having readily 
e De psani inserted i in 
relative 
usive srvellane of the e national | fo, 
nim mously, ce | 
Sate above, the address was finally voted 
a majority much larger r than "Ministers eros ed. 
and d acknowledged with the usual complime spee eech. 
t of the Chamber ror Deputies 
read ae address of that branch of the Legislature, a 
drawn p by the Committee. Although three wake 
h was delive rap the 
address is little more thana a paraphrase of it; but 
Var 
angry ‘discussion. The debate commenced o N Mond 
and excited an extraordinary degree of Taterest, as it was 
felt that upon the result depended, in a great degree, the 
the Soult-Guizot Cabinet. Five oe ce 
hg Tavsan Bod Rh Cabinet, and MM. Liadi and 
asparin in 1 om orators expended 
their pinion pn Semt: is called the “ discussion géné- 
e skirmish which precedes the divisions on the 
several paragraphs, an nd of course the folie} Shee: 
ie existing Administration if it be in rar de The. eo o 
T which will excite interest in this country, were 
e of M. de Beaumont and M. de Tocqueville. 
p de Beaumont praised England, and admired its works 
force, but strongly advised France not to ally with it; p ra 
= connection with anything so great could, only have 7 
effect of making Fran le. Besides, public opinion 
tron 
favour of a close i 
id be cultivated with her, but that was all; fi ot 
ible that a cordial al co exist between tw 
countries whose interests w v e not only on o 
point but saeh over the globe. 
—- nar queville then rose, and said that he could not 
opinion that the policy of the Cabinet had been 
Pomona tg to; and successful, when i pansion that it 
made the alliance of England i 
espect 
ribe to an mcessi xistenc 
price of it; if she Tost ti the monopoly ‘of the trata of the world, 
she must perish. He then asted a political position of 
both ies. was athe d heart of democracy, 
and her interests co! ded te as muci pos- 
8 
a we 
Spot Ito her 
orid, foe: of supplying the go world with 
= conyers of is aa Sacer which to live oe 
uation. 
Industry an meres 
what England is in ehold, ge ti 
activity, all the energy, all isi science, all the pronouns of 
nclosed, concentrated, accumu ulated, if I 
in the f ind 5 
kong! Trenta 
re ther ndividual 
oe is oon ils state of England 3 
ition 
ee waters of pyrope will 
= miy the — of its 
. ss, but prt D rantee of its existence? 
Gamat bes ¢ commits error. No, lak: Pasari act 
a ld be ever present to the — of those who 
with her—England requires, = pos to live, th 
worid be open ; arete cg i 
a. be ces Sof ie 
be e ail-powèrfal cone Say not 
em the real an of 
land to open y market, 
> to 
Wil | poles moke ol ike all the con- 
you will obtain nothing. 
as eager 
o France. 
ely entered into a cons 
prevailed in Oceania. ne 
to allow the angry feeling which had been raised in 
W ~t moment arrived to examine the 
oe 
the payment ofa 
——— for, but the negotiators should have ins 
guarantees being conceded which wo mie rented 
equence of the difficultie: red by the season that the 
ty had been so hastily concladed ; it was owing to he appre- 
hension of ne mpli n 
unded, and it appeared, even by t! 
"he victory of ies that she ee 
France was co 
quently at the time in a fi baie ile condition to obtain an 
vantageous peace. But then she w: ngaged in one of th 
most serious complications with England; ng diploma- 
ed tne intere: sts of the 
for a little deur, and th the reat I have to say on 
the harbours would be useful fi h vessels on their way hall enter more i 
hina, n it was well known to Etis aardi that they t of the glist 
would not pass within hundreds of miles of these islands. t mad 
deprecated the right of search as a means of alliance wit! Ene. 
land, but the Gover: t had, in a moment of weakness, con- 
sented to it, and now th d not out of it without being 
giand, you fl 
trincas in place of om 
given us oan Dre pe eee pret the treaty of Morocco, 
ti the As M. Thiers 
and the comm arch.” 
sat down the Chambe Ga in ae ate of f great agitatio: 
sitting was. Soe tas d for some es.) 
M. Guizot then rose to reply, and i in a long and most 
importan of whi 
by th 
head, as having been already judged both by Fra 
e Morocco titty sid ti to ‘the 
Europe, he hats oceeded to ari; iai fear Are 
charge ving been E Eiai in concluding a treaty they can, in i displaying eir forces of e onl com 
f peace. and wi with ¢ depend ais svernmenis which belier 
E 
“It has reg = said that we did this on account = Tahiti—the 
ise. Were there not eine, 
vars two G 
sertion is fal 
the world—had her intere sts not been 
ith thos 
re toy can 
to the honour 
sti 
3 
p 
hav GEA said, will not reproac! undue atten. 
tion to ey legitimate vse of] t Baglama i y atals circumstance. 
regard to Tahiti 
self 
n his instru Tw 
erien eee to 
| and the 5 other that we did 
