Aprit 7, 1860.) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
s tance and support of his ally, the King of Sardinia. | with regard to the ‘revendication, that it is stated | still fresh in the memory of mankind; their renewal wou d 
a FEN rations T his imperial Majesty, upon several | that ‘la revendication. a tien lorsqu’on réclame une i ape indeed, be a. deplorable mx misfortune, scien Pl be surprising 
occasions, made as to his intentions, and as to the objects of the | laquelle on prétend avoir droit.’ Now, the arrangements of | that the attention of f patong and of their rulers should 
war, led the foei a of Torop PAE Shae aE maA bd A 5 rr ae, of short duration, and, Raion been | directed, with anxio tude, to events which 
di raka without any y by | superseded by those of the treaty of 1815, they cannot be | bearing both reseni sg 
A a an nd that its object was to restore Italy to herself, and / appealed to as the foundation of ey ah erate bo olsi jaia. by | of the fattia. F eo fe i es i TE 
more Of Italy BF penn which it was alleged | a p to treaty of Tae did not give either Savoy or the | this declaration to M. Tho 
Franc I 
i namely, prenem Austria should have dominion up to liat mii a to EPA Airy small portion of Savoy ; but tha = 
ne ses of the Alps, or welt Italy should be frée from the | portion was immediately conti Paya the Wrench A dion, pre In acknowledging this despatch M. 1 es nel expresses 
fedite an to the Adriatic. M. bin owt & that solemn | was at a distance from ed opes of the Alps. The words of to Count de Persigny his very live y feeling of i 
acts, trealy o neluded — a eal y varieta: h had ree ones | ri pelt on co point wi reas follows :—‘ In the department t he has not succeeded, as he desired, in mod! 
‘ul for the ar: 5 proo: ne France ac Arent e Sub-Pri bi i 
eP h Government had not for its object any roe tat wit pe pa i tion rth — E Hopie i. = ree oy opinion which was already ii to him through 
aggrandisement when it was led by the force of events to inter- | d'Albigny, la ett Iso the Sub- | the previous commun: F pana on bar 
fere in the affairs of Italy ut he adds that though the | Prefect eof Aloan "with ¢ enaa vd portion of the | He states that the prolongation of a 
n ment could not but foresee hypothetical circum- | canto: averges situated to the east of a line passing between | th ubject would hi tical haters g and = 
stances in ich disinterestedness would have ay to Ourechaise and Marlens on the side France, and Marthod i jai e 
p , the treaties of Villafr: caand of Zuric entirely shut | and Ugine on th posite side, and which afterwards follows pr er a pre Noge resh exchange of 
ut such a contin; This statement seems to explain the | the crest of the mountains as far as the frontier of. the | explanations equally painful both countries, to 
surance our Excellency by Count Walewski in July, | Canton of Thones. is line. together with the L fine h lf to asserting b] n Russell’s 
1859, when the Count being Son ent h ofrnmoursthat | cantons before mentioned, shall, this side, form the new h e character of a est. 
P 
ges 
4 
+ 
gs 
i 
a 
prol 
hat, if suak eh i rE ee a roth 
that, such a scheme had Eene —that is to say, on the prinel e of ye in ajesty declares that it does not share the o 
ever been ‘iad r then entirely dese Fe A à p ali J ined pe fh 
er path t S Keere AA o infer on Thouvenel’s isto 
Fre 
i hat just 
ag = È grady th at in scar Te had 1 been contemplated that | claim which, however limited in its presen’ lication, is ini: i ; 
Savoy should be dace ery a by pets France; but thal ots E he agree- | ceptible of being extended to such raat am ‘dimon- Duka, E * harsi aera Minster es Paris, nan placed b the 
ment of Villafranca and the Treaty of Zurich h: wing left to | sions. M. Thouvenel, indeed, rds the d pan pirra spon- . Thouvenel a new test on t he part of his 
Austria the Doevernion. of Venetia, the idea of a ater of Savoy | taneously made by his Imperial Majesty on ascending the Government aaa ainst all or any execution of the treaty 
to France, which it now appears had been entertained, was | throne, sad the governing rule of his relations with eee of Savoy to France, and against 
given up, as stated ta Count Walewski. M. Thouvenvel, how- wee aboa e for treaties geanneed by pee Gove: the ossession, in any form, of the neutrali 
ever, goes on to say that;combinationsin Central Italy, different f Fran and M. Thouvenel declar sisa erag king p! 1 any > 4 J ised 
e which the French Government had ‘fruitlessly bine of cd Be which his Imperial Siajocty eri pa Ei perme aa until a previous pet rape with the 
o s 
lal ed to bring about, compelled the French Government to | it to himself a law to sania een l. The declaration referred > 
injury whi ew arrangements taly mi to s was ht have m| with th law 
carry with them to the interests of France; and he proceeds to ponpe from the just and ppe a e d p na by. ales it nateases and w e second article of the 
a ardini in| w: e; an by > 4 
y, wasa 3 wi strictly i treaty is pomat aijn porta effected. The Marite 
i t i the security | the allies of France and satisfactory to the. Fad. of — of Frida: ay p published the text of the treaty, which is 
Sa’ u . Thouve gi i ‘ollows 
might have in her own hands the northern slopes of the ae case, that changes which have taken place, and which are | 
The new danger to which M. Thouvenel alleges that Fran e| abou territorial |. “In the name off Lea ag y and indivisible Trinity, the 
à! be iny wee from ini ae prin established by existing treaties, and that those | Emperor o of the French Taving explained the considerations 
tenet y arran: gomont a ot to be etri which, in AE of a e T Biain made in the territo: 
hate & er. piee ne remment hig the annexation of Savoy and of figs oa arrondissement of- to 
that Be bo emit pa to Fra) would 
z ie I France, and the King of Sardinia having shown him: 
rote sin taly bat i there a St a rh mae 
of a co; 
hostile Powers. But-her Majesty’ s yae peeh aE would beg to 
ane that to imagine that Sardinia, even with a population 
zor: aes a 
nf pa eg org y and i ind Po rance, 
among other her Powers nee eee herself bet treaty to respect | Sie ed Plenipotentiaries, &e., who 
and maintain, and that State Pepi suffer the most serious | following a cies: :—Art. 1. The King ors inia cduenie ds 
APARE e oe be anges xation of Say oy and of the arrondissement of 
and renounces for himself and all his descendants and 
f Vi f 1815 th 
asa mastic, ahon oaaae ant gnanioo! the intact andthe pnp | nt any constraint upon he wn of fe opal 
things. There are, besides, man re deal, pansiaerations p up 'rench 
and that neutrality it was 
which go to show that the tendency of Sardinia must always 
be towards maintaining the most frien: ions with 
dismiss the notion that France 
should’ be actually at war, or ‘whenever ther 
wi the 
with tl 
King of Sardinia, the Rovarin of Savoy, which ma; 
happen to se in those provinces, shall IE jip iea the su, Which result the stipatat ions Tnded to 
ing, if necessary, through the "Valais, and that no pet in the present article. Art. mixed byrne oy 
f ; otier Fower shall either traverse or be stationed |. determine o {in a spirit of equity, the ‘frontiers of thet 
‘ s o as o account the satenii of the e mounteins m 
Europe es ? to main- aspi ko Which Franoe to yaa tr within a 
relations th France, and there is | is a t a security to aga | ef delay, crs Incidental, anealioas to which the 
none that —e Boost reap any advantage from | danger coming from 2 5 tee what would become t cgi jemi poss ion of the, 
a voluntary. and sis rupture with so la State. | security if Savoy were annex ow France, and if i be very ha bution of Savoy and of the arr motte Nice to the Į 
But the anaes pas Rardinia a becoming an instrument of such a inst which 1 this access to Switzerland has been barred | debt of Sardinia, and the View = 5 of the obligations 
y have be should become the owner T the barrier thus erected for the | from contracts entered in Go 
protection of the Confederation? It is indeed implied in the | Which, however, <a to Neeson itself the ont 
ch in taki Savoy, ver rough the Alp: Ghost 
observe that there never can be a 
st France Diss sit be for common 
n of Fra and th 
woul 
sed a 
would accept also the engagements by which the King o 
Gda ak t, 40 th AE aA i as r s Payfuttontiribs of the civil and pea order 
aoa Wy Mga by onic Age Bera 08 tha longing by their birth to the province of of Bavoy, ‘or to. the 
coi 
i could consider ho 
7 b such an arrangement as affording to the Thtegrity and neu- the rights which they haye acquired an ed to 
with Austria, and has looked to France, and notin vain, ity of the Swiss Confederation that security which the bis sr seni Salers ain will cape 2 enjoy the 
friendship and support. Sardinia, therefore, is "eet likely tien f Vi are magistrature and of the guarantees 
ever willingly to give passage to a hostile Sain bei ges g a, o enter army. 
tralit 
ted dh assured to ay 3 . 6. Bastiging: subjects original, 
that it pean a ties “i apy EASAN ray wrondissement of Nice, or domiciled actually in 
ia i 
Ti 
pe a ena a e aj ze 
VOY, passage 
ý proni ae into France to the troops of a hostile conten. 
ian s, then, to her Majesty’s Government that The BF 
ping ee in favour of ee annexation of Savoy to France, fed | en n S t ri r vi, Aa P BS 4 
-ont med insecurity of the French territory bordering | vantage to her, as well as to Europe. e neutrali 5° 98 shall afar 
supon SaroF, falls to the seg iy und when it comes to be fairly | those two States pola h hos line of frontier along which hos- raliioatlons paat ie Titino poma of 10 days, 
examined. M. Thouvenel says that this demand for re enri | tilities between France and Germany can take place, and, | OF earlier if possible. Tn Taith of whieh the ve 
of Savay to France ought not to give umbrage to any Power ; | adding to the security of sath, it tends to give stability to the | tentiaries have signed it and affixed theirs rh thi 
that it is founded on a just balance of forces, and is especially | general peace. M. Th hi sion | Done in mags at Turin the s pa az Ai a z pte re 
inted out by the nature of things, which has placed the | of Savoy and the county of Nice to France raises n tion | TALLEYRAND, 
of the western slopes of | incompatible with the best established and mest Rone care |The Mon of S unday contained naa follo eri ae 
? |o v. He points to similarity of character, of.lan- | nent in Seetee to the Pope’s bull of excommunica- 
fo 
the Dips But her Majesty’s Government mN be allowed t f EAS SIT at na in laity a ‘ an 
remark that a demand ft cession of a neighbow’s territo! guage, of habits; to the geographical configuration, an t) 
made by a State sı ata aa raniad, and w = rand not | commercial interoourse, as having prepared and adapted the | eo wit $i H a y view of preventing its publication in 
olicy of territorial aggrandisement brought count- | people of tuono, poynizi s azor npnprakion to France han he | Fra 
non Europe, cannot well fail to give umbrage | says that the Alps ought t the line of separation between 
to every State interested ee the balance of some and in the | France and Ita aly. and that thus the eae boundary Ae ar es is | it ~ hts i o Gs bat F} pik, eal the os articles of th Concordat 
maintenance of the general e, n that umbrage be | proposed to establish between France and Piedmon iiey thik s duty to brie f, reserip pty mandate, p rovision, or 
diminished by the grounds on which the claim is a soy ionin orce of things. This state ent, paps Ge pe document from the, 3nd si 
because, if a great military Power like France is to dem de field for conjecture as to the re, and though it is | : 
the territory of a neighbour upon its own theory of what pas immediately followed by the somewhat assurance | , seat 
stitu hi ts proper § f defence. it is thatit is not upon the of ideas of nationality, nor upon 
iksa s lhe e te aak, rom the aggressions of Ay tod natural So ee lene Bugle 
more powerful neighbour; that might, and. not right, would | o ce is demanded, those argum barr e g he “regime 
henceforward be the rul: int deter! by territ i pis ssion ; | to the most serious reflections. Her Government ; reduced by two com; ? er Me 
and that the integrity and Staton | thin, would Beg to subiri that aoea cele x cscs TA t, the a Univers, has returned to 
rope perpe! pardy. | jus ion o necessary d 
But M. Thouvdasl ahaa 5 A a B tins gai in aret France, and that this cession cae most eee ne in | Paris from Rome. On the day after his arrival the 
ofithe pee [now made. Her ajesty’s Government wili not | violation of treaty ‘engagements materially erdhen ith police ste information from on ee their secret 
eniri i ae mination of what took place in regard to the | arrangement which united apie ees has pro : sps ae aig enek | agents, who accompanied hi him trom Rome 
on to the throne Pia Be Sogn: Sie Shoan | forthe neutrality and integrity of Switzerland. Gass without exciting his suspicion, that EM. Veuillot. was the 
fe throno “aa gas Cnt: aS manly an C oan thie amatan, oh Tater gf dadeatales pat Oia Gelints free as 
a f | no unfrie eel el 1 1 
uropean repaid « meen gl of a Sects he on this subject roe proceeded. Her Majesty's Rindge Papal Court to th Nuncio, in Paris. A search was 
which h M. Thame Te , the arrangements of tho | ind deed, are deeply impressed with tho conviction that ud | accordingly made at his residence, which has resulted 
treaty of 1814—her Majesty's Government would beg ` to torritorial advantage e whieh France might on by Hoe propaan the seizure of papers, which have been placed'in the 
observe that the arrai f that by no means bear i annexation.would be far more than count ced by the | | in the seizure of pap sl hat M. Veuillot had 
out t m now France, and that it cannot be with | distrus with which it would inspire the other Stal ds of justice. The pment t! . Veui 
reference to the pet Lt of the treaty of 1814 that the | Powers of Europe. The calamities which Overspread by turns p ted t editerranean squadron 
can | almost every part of the.continent of Europe g | eft Toulon on the 31st ult. Dr Italy, a the Brest’ 
d 
ee ee ir Dakota’ vores of Say a ete eke eee oa | or of the last and, the early of the preseiit century are | 
