THE FIELD 
333 
April 8.] 
' THE BALTIC FLEET. 
r penhagEJ* — 1 The navigation from Revel to St. Petersburg is reported 
, 0 ’ U ite free, and the ice broken up. 
The fleet has left Iviogc Bay, and sailed southwards. 
The Bulldog, Cfesur, and Austerlitz have arrived at Gottcubnig. 
The Isle of Aland is being disarmed by the Russians . . 
tTipw* pridav. — 1 The Greek Government have purchased three Russian 
' 1 ' r ‘nr now lying at Trieste, with all the material of war on board. 
I ? c ? j gai( i ^ Vienna that the Imperial family of Russia will proceed to 
} i * nT ! -.is residence at Moscow. . ... . 
"L _“The Legislative Body has had submitted to it a bill increasing 
t o 140.000 men, instead of 80,000, the number of recruits of the class of 
1 Constantinople — M arch 27-Tlic possessions of the Mosques are to be | 
the property of the State. The refusal of the Sheik-ui-Islam to , 
^ c n _nt to this arrangement, was the cause of Ins deposition. All the 
Chtarv posts in the city have been reinforced, and strong guards patrol • 
"L st rcets. Vessels with cargoes arc not allowed to enter the Black Sea, 
' nd several have been stopped bound to Odessa with coals, rhe following 
, l -els remain in tho Bay of Bcieos— French steamer Sane, English Tiger 
'X Retribution (for repair), Niger, and Sampson. The last-named 
Stmm areTaiting to tow to the Black Sea the frigates Arethusa and 
r ...ndcr which the Carndoc passed m the Dardanelles. ... 
L ShSmla, March 13.-Si. Jolm Burgovnc and suit arrived here yes- 
, Varna in order to make arrangements with Omar I ashu 
of tile allied armies. lie had a lo» S 
tclatnc to p ils]ia ' tl.is morning. Miss Burgoyne accompanies 
S e jo,m in his official tour. [He reached London, April 6 ] His military 
< Consists of Major Dickson, of the Artillery, and several other dis- 
5U -3 officers J Miii'ii* Dickson, besides being a highly scientific 
officer, speaks Turkish fluently, having been long in the arsenal ol Con- 
S f 1 * v t* t ' a° —M arch 30.— Troops have arrived, all well, in the Georgiann, 
Imlu l Cape of Good Hope, Taurus, Vectis, and Golden Fleece, which last 
L s left Ibr Gallipoli, with General Sir Geo. Browne, the Rifle Brigade, 
i c . d inner-; General Burgoyne arrived to-day, in the Ciundoc, 
from S Cou s t an t i n cm 1 e . The Camc.bnry, Sir George Pollock, Orient, and 
Georgian (inmsports), with a few commissariat officers, mules, and stoics, 
sail this day with sealed orders, hut supposed for Gallipoli. 
T«rS»KW«M. COMMASUIXG-.N-Cl.ircF, 
StATF. — Viscount Havdinsc, £» = ? 
, 1 1 Earl Of Lucan, the ilitiri oi ^nruigmi, avm ^ ■ ■■ - ■■■ . - 
, rlynn General Wetherall, General Frecth, General A orkc, 
G ciK' nil Aircv, Brigadier Bulleu, Brigadier Estcourt, General Su Richard 
England, Colonel Steel, Lieutenant-Colonel Muule, Lieutenant-Colonel 
Munduv. and the lion. A. Hardingc. 
The Earl of Cardigan has supplied his men with every possible iv.qm- 
site, at an enormous expense. He leaves behind him an income of 
£35,000 per annum, in order gi.it he may serve lus country abioail. 
TEMPLE OF JUGGERNAUT. 
The last Indian mail having reported the destruction by fire of the 
far-famed car of Juggcni.uit, wo hasten to lay before onr readers engra- 
vings of this vehicle of death and fanaticism, and the temple dedicated 
t0 Jagrenatta, or rather Djagannntta (Lord of the Universe), a name 
of Krishna, worshipped in the temple of Djagrcnath or Djaganiiath. 
This edifice may he termed the Indian Pantheon. The building is of a 
solid description', almost to a fault; and can boast of f "of f^ S ' nnd 
design nor purity of style. The grand tower is about 20o tcet lngl , and 
serves ns a beacon to the vessels which navigate the dangerous Coast of 
Orisah. A vast court enclosed by a wall, 24 leCt high, enciicles tlie 
temple, and contains about 50 other small shrines, consecrated to diffeient 
divinities. The statue of Djag.mnatta is painted black, lha oi 
hadra or Zaluramn white, and that of Soabhadra yellow. 1 hen giand 
festival takes place, in the month ot March, at the time t ,e S ““ 
enters the sign of the ram. The cars ot the three demos me then 
paraded about, richly decorated. That of Djagaiinatta lms sixteen 
wheels, in four tiers, each about six feet in diameter, and the plat- 
T1IE TEMPLE 
rm they support, upon which is placed the statue, 
month a pyramidal canopy which rises in the air, is full 
■j feet above the ground. On the front of the car is 
laced an enormous statue, intended to perform the office 
f a driver ; wooden horses are sometimes attached to the 
uwieldlv machine, and the whole is drawn along by men 
arnesseil to six ropes. An enormous crowd, composed of 
THE CAR OF JUK.LRNAl I. 
people from the most remote countries, follows the ear, 
shouting victory to the Djagannntta. The town is over- 
whelmed with pilgrims, and the whole surrounding country 
is covered with them. Fakirs, to obtain alms <>t the 
faithful, perform extraordinary tricks and exhibitions ot 
strength. Some pass an entire day with their feet in tnc 
air ; others stand upright, with one of their legs fastened 
to their necks; some keep a vase filled with fire on their 
stomachs ; and oil., rs bury themselves up to the chin, 
F-uiitii s are sometimes seen, whose number, it is true, is 
not very hkn.ble, mid is becoming ‘Vnall b 7 
and beaut iiallv ks-," v,l.o throw them^lves under the 
wheels of the car, mid are crushed to death, thinking, poor 
fools, thus to obtain an eternal paradise. 
