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JTOE 13, 1857;} THE Jj E ADEP, S59
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Coxntiinen T A L Jn U T E S. Fiusci;. Tu...
^ ¦ ^^^ ^ H — ¦ ¦ — nation by the Emperor at the beginning of his reign , that "liberty should one day crown- the edifice . " M . Bosselet thinks that the proper time has come , and it is for that reason that he presents himself as a candidate . « If " he says to the electors , " you return to the Corps ILeg islatif the old deputies , you will show yourselves satisfied with the present state of things ; if , on the contrary , you vote for the independent candidates , you will declare that in your opinion the hour has come for the fulfilment of the promise made to the nation , ' Liberty shall 1 crown the edifice . ' I , therefore , ask for your suffrages , being one of those who think that the time nas arrived , and that the management of public affairs should now be in the hands of independent men . " The M'essager dn Midi , so far from being of the above opinion , thinks that the hour of liberty will never strike for France . " France does not know , does not love , does not understand , does not wish for , liberty . " The Ind € pendant deVOuest contains the following brief statement of its intentions : —" We had been forbidden to discuss the electoral question ; but this prohibition Has now been raised . "We avail ourselves of the freedom granted us to declare that we shall abstain . " Baron : Mariani , Chevalier d'Honneur of the Princess Bacciocchi , and the Government candidate for the new circumscription given to Corsica , has issued a circular to the electors . He here states that the Emperor himself supports him , and that , if any other person should present himsel f , that person would be guilty of an act of opposition to the sovereign will . He appends a letter of Napoleon's , signifying that he " shall be very happy if the confidence of the electors places" the Baron in the Chamber . The Opposition candidates for the electoral districts of Paris are—M . Laboulaye , formerly one of the editors of the Constitutionnel , candidate for the first arrondissemsnt ; M . Bethmont , second ; General Cavaignac , third ; M . Emile Ollivier , fourth ; M . Carnot , fifth ; M . Goudchaux , sixth ; M . Darimon , of the Presse , seventh ; M . Vavin , eighth ; M , Ferdinand de Lasteyrie , ninth ; and M . Regnault , former Sub-Prefect of Sceaux , tenth . The Assamblee Nationale contains some information on the electoral movement as follows : —" It is known that , with few exceptions , the candidates supported by Government are the late deputies . We are now acquainted with certain-of these exceptions . The Due de Cone " gliano , Chamberlain of the Emperor , will oppose M . de Montalembert in the Doubs . CountTascher de la Pageiie , son of the Chamberlain of the Empress , and himself Chamberlain , replaces the Due d'Uzes , who is set aside in the official list . In the Calvados M . A . Rene ' e , political director of the Constitutionnel , and ' special defender of the cotton goods interest , ' succeeds M . Leroy Beaulieu . Count Migeon is replaced in the Haut-Rhin by M . Nizole , jun ., ' a man new to politics , ' says the Prefect , ' ¦ who has offered to Government a devoted co-operation in order to- support a dynasty which has saved the country and covered it with glory . ' M . H . Bosselet has addressed a circular to the electors , declaiming himself an independent candidate . M . Jules Brame likewise presents himself to one of the districts of the Nord as ' an independent candidate ;'" The number of non-official candidates is said to be far from numerous . " & % . Brifaut , member of the French Academy , and a dramatic author , has just died at the ago of seventyseven . Professor Carlo Matteucci has been elected a member of the French Institute . He is Professor of Natural Philoaophy in the University of Pisa . M . de Segur , First Secretary to the French Embassy at Constantinople , who is in Paris on leave of absence , is not to return to Turkey . It is thought he will be promoted to the Ministry . A review of infantry took place nt Longchamps on Thursday week in presence of the Emperor , the Empress , and the King of Bavaria . , The weather has been intensely hot in Paris . Marshal Randon has received the submission' of the various Algerian tribes against whom ho has recently been operating . The Loader was again seized by the French authorities lost week . It was the only one of the English weeklios > thus distinguished . General Count Kisseleff , the Russian Ambassador at Paris , having obtained leave of absence for two months , has determined to pass that poriod at one of the wateringplaces of Germany . During his absence , M . de Dulubiuo will cany on the business of tho embassy . Tho King of Bavaria loffc Paris at ; half-past nine on Monday morning by tho Strasburg Railway . A vory serious Are burst out on Tucsduy morning in the Kue Ponthiou , close to the Champs Elyse ' , in the hayloft of a dealer in horses . The beasts— as at tho flro rn thftsaino day at Pickford ' tt , in London—wore rescued with groat difficulty , and it was foarod at ono timo that the . flames would have aproud to a lamentable extent . As it was ,, a great deal of misohiof was done . H . A . Fould , Minister of State , has loft Puds for England for a fow days . DENMARK . A no to has'been addressed by the Prussian Government to , HePr voft Steffona ,, its Chnrgd d'Affairos at CopoaUagen . It hafliuefeijen . ee to the D nob . Ida of Holstein .
and Lauenburg , and in it we read : — " The Danish despatch [ of . May 13 th ] contains the promise that the provincial estates of Holstein shall be convoked , at the latest , in August of this year , and a revised draught of a a constitution for the ' special affairs' of the Duchy be submitted to them for due deliberation according to the forms of their constitution . It contains also the further promise that this draught to be submitted to them shall also contain those provisions which shall define the scope of the ' special affairs' of the Duchy of Holstein . Finally , there was specially the express assurance given in it , and . to this we attach especial weight , that the Assembly of the Estates should have ample opportunity afforded them of expressing themselves freely and unhindered on the limits to be put to the competence of the Estates . In all this , however , there is nothing said as to how far the Danish Government will be prepared to meet the claims Which the promises of 1851 and 1852 entitle the Duchies and the Confederation to make . On this point we must wait for the results of the approaching deliberations of the Estates , and although in respect to it we confidently reckon on the wisdom and justice of his Majesty the King of Denmark , all tho rights must of course be reserved and vindicated which flow out from the constitution of the Duchies , and from the" undertakings entei-ed into by the Crown of Denmark with Prussia and Austria in the years 1851 and 1852 . . . . Under these circumstances , we , in common with the Court of Vienna , find ourselves at the present moment under no call to bring the matter before the German . Diet . It must be observed , however , that the Copenhagen despatch holds out an expectation of a draught to be submitted to the Estates of Holstein only in respect of the ' special affairs ' of the Duchy ; of the constitution for the ' common affairs' of the Danish Monarchy there is no special men ^ - tion made . .. .. Finally , the despatch of the 13 th May does not make any special mention of the Duchy of Lauenberg ; we presume this to have arisen from t ' ue circumstance that , as is currently understood , negotiations have been opened with the Estates of Lauenburg , for we believe we may look on it as beyond all question that the . Governmeutof his Majesty the King of Denmark is prepared to recognise a no less amount of rights as resident hi the Estates of Lauenburg than in those of Holstein .- " _ . SWEDEN ; . The King continues ill . His Majesty is labouring under a nervous debility , which renders him incapable of deciding on important questions in the Council of Ministers , and , if his health do not speedily improve , it will be necessary for the hereditary Prince to assume the government . SPAIN . Lord Howden , on the 31 st ult ., gave a magnificent banquet to the Prince and Princess Galitzin . Thirtyfive persons sat down to dinner , and several members of tlie diplomatic corps were present . Marshal Narvaez was unable to attend , owing to indisposition . The dinner was followed by aa evening reception . Dcsperdicios , or Domingucz , the famous toreador , lies dying , having been frightfully wounded by a bull in the ring of Puerto tie Santa Maria , in the presence of ten thousand spectators . Tho boast caught him with its horns first on the right side , then on the left , tossed him , and , as he full , caught him under tho chin , splitting the jaw , and driving the horn up to the right eye , which it forced out . Several other ucoklonts of the same kind are also recorded . AUST 1 UA . The Princess Vogorides , who has just been divorced from her husband nt Vienna , arrived with her family , and will leave in a few days for Paris , where she intends talcing up her resUenoc . ITALY . Monsignor Barardi ( says a communication fro in Rome of tho 2 o " th ult . ) hua oboyod to the letter tho instructions of Cardinal Antonelli— that is , ho is constantly near the person of the Tope , and prevents him from having any direet communication with thoso of his subjects who might respectfully explain to him the truth us to the deplorable situation of the country . At Perugia , for instance , his Holiness was earnestly entreated by an inhabitant ( his devoted adherent ) to prolong his visit one day , and the Pope consented , but Monsignor Borardi obaorvod to his Holiness that if he did so the order of hid journey would bo altered . The Pope was forced to ohango his resolution . During his stay at Porugia , Mousignor Berardi provonteil the citizens from approaching his Holiness , and tho forty-six hours he remained there were spent iu visiting tho convents . Tho deputations from somo municipalities w ere only suffered to approach tho Popo to kiss his foot ; thoy wore not permitted to speak . Tlio Sardinian Minister of tho Interior has given ortlora that tho body of tlie Protostunb which was rofuBod sopulturo in tho churchyard of Fura shall bo disiuturreu and buried in cuisooratod ground . Tho atudouts of tho University of Parma , in conjunction with thoso of Placenta , havo forwarded 420 C . BOo . to the Minister of Finance at Turin , to be added to tho subscriptions sent by other Itallun students in , aid of the purchase- of ono hundred guns for tho fortress , of Alessandria . Tiioy hope that tha following inscription .
• will be placed on one of the guns : —" The Italian students . " : Cardinal Antonelli has addressed a circular to the provincial authorities of the Papal States , forbidding the Communal Councils to assemble . The cause assigned ' for this measure is to prevent the Council from taking ' advantage of the journey of the Pope to express theit complaints and make known their wishes * Pia JNT-ono > in his progress through his dominions , continues to be received respectfully , but by no means enthusiastically . A striking romance of Italian life is told by the Gazetta Popolare of Cagliari , where it is stated that a solemn reconciliation has been effected between the villages of Perfugas and Bortigadas ( island of Sardinia ) , the inhabitants of which had lived in perpetual feud ( vendetta ) for upwards of a century . The most singular circumstance connected with this event is , that it has been brought about by a notorious bandit named Pietro Manas , a native of Perfugas , who has been the terror of the country for the last twenty-two years . He obtained a safe-conduct from the Government , in order to be present at the ceremony of the reconciliation , and it was . intimated to him that if he would constitute himself aprisoner , and submit to a trial , he would obtain a-pardon , in consideration of the important service he had done to his country ; but he refused , and returned to the woods immediately after the banquet which closed the proceedings , saying that " birds liked the forest better than , the cage . " The silkworms have suffered in the districts of Mantua , Brescia , and Cremona , but the apprehensions of the inhabitants of the country around Milan and Pavia are ; said to have been exaggerated . The worms are thriving , in Friuli , Venice , and the Tyrol , . as also in Modena , Parinn , iu the domains of the Church , and in Tuscany . Jn Sardinia , the prospects are but middling . The trial at Parma of the prisoners accused of having been connected with the political disturbances of the year 185-1 has taken an extraordinary turn . One prisoner , who had given iuform & ti . > n against his accomplices , Has refused to appear to give evidence against them in public . He declares that he had received a promise from the authorities that he should not be confronted with bis confederates . Every . inducement has been held out to him to prevail on him to repeat his evidence in court , but he remains obstinate . The judges have consequently continued the trial without him , and it is believed that the other prisoners will be acquitted . The Pope arrived at Rimini on the 4 th inat . TURKEY . Tlie Porte is said to have demanded of the Belgian Government the recal of its Minister , but it has refused compliance . It is anticipated that there will veryshortly be a suspension of diplomatic intercourse between the two countries . The cause of the dissension is not known . Diplomatic conferences are about to take place shortly between the Grand Vizier and the Representatives of the Powers who were parties to tho Treaty of Paris , in order to agree to the interpretation of the Finnan for convoking the Divans in the Danubinn Principalities . " Above 4000 peasants of all religious creeds , and without firearms , " says' a letter iu the Austrian Gazette , " are assembled near Tusla ; they demand the reduction of taxes , the removal of abuses , and the realization of the Hatti Houmayoun . The endeavoxirs of the authorities to dissipato the assembly have failed . The peasants ask for the formation of a commission composed of Turkish functionaries and European consuls , in order to have their grievances taken into consideration . They also intend despatching a deputation to Constantinople ;" A conference took place on tho 80 th ult . at the Porte on the subject of the Damibian Principalities . The persons present were , the Grand Vizier , the Minister for Foreign A ffairs , and tho Representatives of tho Powers which signed the treaty of Paris . Tho object of tho meeting was to inquire into the complaints against the Government of Moldavia , brought forward by some of tho commissioners , especially those of Franco and Sardinia , and also to solve somo difficulties encountered in carrying out tho provisions of the Imperial finnan . The conference lasted several hours , and broke up at aa advanced hour of the night . It appears that the points in dispute wore settled to the satisfaction of all parties , and more especially of the Turkish Government . — Times Conetan ( mo 2 > l < i Correajjonden t . SWITiSlSltLiAND . Tho Fudoral Assembly met on Tuesday . The message of tho Federal Council proposes and rooommonds tho ratification of the treaty rolutlve to tlie affairs of Neuohutol . M . Ksohur , President of the National Couucil , oxprossodj himself in tho same souse . The treaty has boon roforrud to a committee . O 1 UOAS 3 IA . Tho Russians have opened tho campaign against Sohaniyl . Prince BavyatlnHlil oommunds tlie expedition . M . Fiuuk , Consul for Franco at Tillls , aocompaniotj tho Prinoo . RUSSIA . The C / . ar moans to call his infant child Sorgius , having , in company with- his consort , vowod boforo the tomb of tuo saint of that name—tho ' , protootor ' of Russiathat , if the Emprosa should bo safely delivered o £ ft son ,
Jtoe 13, 1857;} The Jj E Adep, S59
JTOE 13 , 1857 ;} THE Jj E ADEP , S 59
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), June 13, 1857, page 7, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_13061857/page/7/
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