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The LEABEB. [No. 409, January 23, 1858. ...
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THE ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OF LOUIS NAP...
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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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America. Great Excitement Continues To B...
very sanguinary collision was anticipated . Mr . Pugta , a member of the United States Senate , has asked and obtained leave to introduce a bill to provide for the admission of Kansas into the Union . The bill was referred to the Committee on Territories . The New York Legislature met on the 5 th inst . ; but the Lower House failed to organize itself , three attempts to elect a Speaker having proved abortive . The New York Herald , in an article on the Atlantic telegraph , says : — "We understand that , in addition to the two vessels which have been detailed by the British Admiralty , the whole of the Channel fleet , consisting of some ninety or a hundred vessels , will accompany the telegraph squadron to mid-ocean , from which the work of laying the cable will be commenced . Next June has been decided upon as the most favourable for the purpose , so it is not improbable that the cable will be laid before the 4 th of July next . The Niagara will not leave for England before next March , to assist in the undertaking . " General Scott , at the last dates , was in Washington , planning the spring campaign against the Mormons . « Mr . Lettsom , the English Minister at Mexico , has been attacked by a band of robbers on a high-road near the capital . His horse and watch were taken from him , and he was slightly wounded by a pistol shot . His servant ' s horse was also taken away . The Mormons continue to harass the expedition sent out against them . They have burnt all the grass , and the animals are dying at the rate of one hundred per day . All the passes to Salt Lake City are being fortified . TJ .,-Walker refuses to yield up the command of the Filibuster movement against Nicaragua . The President has transmitted a « Message' to Congress on the subject of the arrest of the Filibuster . In this document he asserts the illegality of Commodore Paulding ' s course , while giving him credit for pure and patriotic motives ; and denounces the conduct of Walker in strong language , but expresses his opinion that it is ' beyond question ' the destiny of the people of the United cStates to spread themselves over the continent of North America , and at no distant day , ' by means of emigration . A letter from the Secretary of the Navy to the commander of the steamer Fulton , dated October 12 th , has been published , in which the commander is told that his instructions do not authorize him to act arbitrarily or upon mere suspicion , but that , where he finds an American vessel manifestly engaged in carrying on an expedition or enterprise from the territories or jurisdiction of the United States against Mexico , Nicaragua , or Costa Rica , he will use the force under his command to prevent it , and not permit the men or arms engaged in it or destined for ft to be landed in any part of Central * America or Mexico . Similar instructions were sent to Commodore Paulding .
The Leabeb. [No. 409, January 23, 1858. ...
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The Attempted Assassination Of Louis Nap...
THE ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OF LOUIS NAPOLEON . It is long since any event in France has caused so much excitement , or led to so much unanimity of feeling , as the attempt , on Thursday week , to take the lives of Louis Napoleon and the Empress- All parties have agreed in execrating the design , and in congratulating themselves on the fact of the assassins being foreigners . The French and English papers have teemed with details of the event ; and from these we gather the chief points of interest . A feeling of uneasiness had prevailed in Paris for some time , and it would appear that , on the morning of the day on which the attempt was made , the police received information that some dangerous scheme was being concocted . Two or three Italians were arrested , and others would also have been seized had the authorities known where to find them . As it was known that the Emperor « nd Empress would attend the Opera that night , an additional force of military and police was stationed on the boulevards , and the street in which the Opera-house is situated was lighted with an extra number of gas jets . A few minutes before the attempt , M . Hebert , an officer of police , met , near the theatre , an Italian named Pierri , who had been ' expelled from Franco in 1862 , and had just come back under a false name , and with on English passport . Ha asserted that he was an Englishman , but M . Hebert recognized and arrested him . A revolver , a dagger , and a hand grenade , were found about his person . Having transferred bia prisoner to other hands , M . Hebert returned to the theatre , and was just about to open the door of the Emperor ' s carriago when a hand gronado was thrown under the wheels of the carriage , and an explosion took , place . There had been two previously to this . The first bomb was thrown at the carriage just after it " - " ¦^ aifeata ^^ twenty persons wore wounded . The coachman then whipped on his hones 5 but almost immediately a second bomb burst , and one of the horses fell wpunded to the ground . A slight delay in the progress of tho carriage , ' owing to another being close before it , had apparently deranged the projects of tho conspirators , and caused them to do their work with loss oxportnoos . Tho third bomb foil beneath tho carriage itself , just as it drew up before the theatre . By this explosion , M . Hebert was wounded . In all , ' ono hundred and nineteen people wore more or less hurt—some very dangerously . Six persona ¦ ' 1 1
were killed . The Emperor and Empress had not alighte at the time ; and to this probably they owe their escape . The carriage was much shattered ; one of the horses was killed on the spot , and the other mangled so much that it has since died . The ground was covered with blood ; the gas lamps in front of the theatre were either extinguished by the explosion , or were purposely turned off to aid the plot ; the windows of the neighbouring houses were shattered , and the front of the Opera-house was dinted deeply with the iron fragments of . the shells . In the midst of these circumstances of horror , the Emperor and Empress alighted ; and it was then observed that the white dress of the Empress , and even her face , were reddened with blood . One of her attendants had been wounded , and it was probably from her that the blood proceeded . But the Empress herself seems to have been slightly scratched on the cheek , and Louis Napoleon was also just grazed . His hat was cut to pieces , and his cloak rent about the collar . The utmost consternation prevailed , and several persons rushed wildly from the spot . Some of these , there is no doubt , were the assassins . One of the men who thus fled exclaimed , " The Emperor ' s carriage is blown to pieces , and he is exterminated ! " In the meanwhile , the Emperor and Empress busied themselves with seeing that the wounded were properly attended to . Both behaved with great coolness and courage . It is said that the Emperor proposed to return to the Tuileries ; but the Empress suggested that they should enter the house . ¦ This they did , and orders were given that the performances should commence . The greatest agitation of course prevailed , and , on the appearance of Louis Napoleon and the Empress in their box , they were received with loud and prolonged cheering . The Emperor afterwards presented himself at the door , and in the balcony outside the theatre , and was greeted with another ovation from the crowds assembled in the street . The performances then commenced , though it mav be supposed few paid much attention to them ; and the Emperor and Empress remained until the conclusion , which was about twelve o ' clock . It is said that not less than twenty of the projectiles were intended for use . Four were flung under , or close to , the carriage , but only three exploded . At the moment of one of the explosions , a man was seen to rush to the carriage , armed with a dagger and revolver ; but he was caught by a sergent de ville , who , after a desperate struggle , in which he was wounded , secured the assassin . Another man was also arrested on the spot , carrying a carpet-bag , in which were pistols , daggers , and a small box . Two hundred and seventy francs in gold were in his pockets . A third man , well dressed , and wearing white gloves , was seen to raise his hat and wave it—it is supposed as a signal . He also was arrested . Some of the prisoners ( who are all Italians ) \ 1 1 : nJA : T > . kMCn + K « Anir hafjtrn The oHlAf Ckf „„ . —
112111 uuiy UlllVCU *« - *• c * i * o ( . u * j *~*» J ^»^* v » w . -. ~~ — the conspirators—a Count Orsini—was apprehended during the night . He was himself badly wounded , but contrived to escape to his lodgings . His servant , a man named Antonio Gomez , went about , shortly after the explosions , inquiring in a very agitated manner for his master . At length , he entered a chemist ' s shop , where Orsini had had his wounds dressed , but here he was questioned so closely that he fainted . The police were sent for , and he then gave the name and address of his master , who was accordingly soon in the hands of justice . From eight to nine thousand francs in English gold and bank-notes were found at Orsini ' s lodgings in the Rue Monthabor . The Count confesses to having thrown one of the bombs . In the course of the night , some of the Ministers , law-officers , and heads of police , assembled at the Prefecture of Police , and commenced investigations . Immediately after the horrible occurrence , " it was supposed , " says a writer from Paris , " that the authors of the attempt might have escaped into some of the houses , or had even prepared means of flight that way . A large body of police soon occupied the Diner de France , formerly known as the Diner do l'Exposition . Meantime , of course , additional troops were sent for , and the Boulevards were soon occupied by cavalry , " From another source we learn that " detachments of horse cleared the Rue Lopolletier and the neighbouring passages , and some occupied tho side paths to provent any one from slipping along . From the Palais Royal came Prince Jerome and his son , Prince Napoleon , and the Princess Mathilde , to assure themselves of the safety of the Emperor . " Immense numbers of persons flocked on the following day to the Rue Lepolletior , and some few , who made comments which wore not to the taste of tho authorities , were arrested and sent away under a guard of soldiers . A groat many arrests , indeed , took place all over Paris , and , according to tho Patrie , tho police-offices are literally crammed with prisoners . It is whispered that the conspiracy had ramifications in " WFautwn ^ SrA ^^ " ' "« Tt flpp ' oare , " saya GSliTF nani ' s Menaeiiyer , " that tho projectiles omployod wore bombs made of oast-iron , having sevorul tubes advancing slightly from tho outward surface , and provided with detonating caps , bo as to explode cither in falling , or by being trampW on by tho horaoa' feet ,, or by being crushed by the wheels of the carriage , should tho shock Of tlio fall not have proved sufficient to ignlto tho caps . The intorior waa entirely filled with old nulls , pieces of * This is tho official account ; but iu aomo places it iu stated that tho number of woundod ia groutor .
iron , sugs , a , , w place , were scattered with immense force in every direction . The technical name of such engines of destruction is , we believe , carcasse . " The projectiles have beon examined by a commission composed of artillery officers . It has been ascertained that they are charged with fulminating mercury . They each produce from seventy to seventy-five explosions . On the Imperial party leaving the theatre , the streets were still found " to be filled with crowds of people , who cheered vociferously as the carriage passed quickly along . The vehicle was surrounded by Lancers ; but the Empress ' s hand could be seen from one of the windows , waving a handkerchief in acknowledgment of the shouts . An empty carriage went first , and the whole cavalcade swept rapidly through the streets . A great many of the houses were illuminated , and the windows and balconies were thronged . By the time the Emperor and Empress arrived at the Tuileries , they found that the members of the Diplomatic Corps , and several other high functionaries and dignitaries had assembled at the palace to offer their congratulations . The people endeavoured , after the Imperial party had left , to enter the Rue Lepelletier , the street where the Opera-house is situated ; but the police kept them back . In the course of the evening , up to a very late hour , several persons attempted to gain admission to the theatre with tickets , but were repulsed by the authorities . Next day , the excitement was as great as on the previous night . The Bourse opened with loud cries of " Vive l'Empereur ! " and " Vive rimperatrice ! " There was no perceptible effect on the funds . The Emperor and Empress , in the course of the morning , visited the hospital to which the wounded had been removed ; and , at about a quarter to four o ' clock , they left the Tuileriea in an open carriage without any escort , and drove up the Rue de Richelieu and upon the Boulevards . It is needless to say that their reception was most enthusiastic . Political differences seemed to have been overwhelmed in disgust at the atrocious nature of the crime that had been committed , and in indignation at the fact of foreigners having sought to take upon themselves the initiative of revolution . The Senate , the Legislative Corps , the Council of State , and the Municipal Council of Paris , waited on the Emperor on Saturday , to express their indignation at the attempt which had been made , and their gratitude for its failure . They were received in four rooms , through which the Emperor passed successively , attended by Prince Jerome , Prince Napoleon , and other members of the family . Of the Legislative body , Count de . Morny was the spokesman . He said : — " Sire , —We have waited on you , that we may tell van how deeDlv we are thankful to Providence for
having protected your life and that of the Empress ; but we have thought , likewise , that you might allow us to utter words dictated by legitimate indignation and profound attachment to your Imperial House . We cannot hide from you , sire , that the population with whom we have been of late in contact is appiehensive , on account of the effects of your clemency , which takes too much the goodness of your own heart for a standard by which to judge . When they see such frightful attempts prepared abroad , they ask themselves how it is that neighbouring and friendly Governments are powerless to destroy those laboratories of murder , and how the holy laws of hospitality are made applicable to ferocious beasts : Sire , your Government , which is founded on two principles—on authority and on the protection of honest people—must , at any price , put a stop to these periodical convulsions . You may bo sure of the cooperation of the Legislative body for attaining such a purpose . You are only attacked in this way , because you are tho keystone of the vault of public order . Ana we entreat you not to follow the inspirations of your courage only , and not to forgot that , in exposing your person , you expose the tranquillity of France . Siro , 1 am naturally tho organ of the deputies , but for tho sake of respect and observances , ray words are only a feeble expression of their sentiments . " The other addresses wore to similar effect . To all tho speeches the Emperor made an appropriate reply , in which ho said that ho should rninglo moderation with firmness . A Te Down was performed on Sunday in all tho churches . A similar religious ceremonial took place in London at the French Chapel , King-strcot , Portman-aquaro . Tho French Ambassador was present , and Cardinal Wiseman officiated . A bill is about to bo presented to tho Corps Logi « l « U f for granting pensions to tho victims of tho exp losions , and to thoir families . Tho Dames do la Hallo have forwarded an address ol T < MmgratulfttiQjqpJh . oJ ^^ c , „ ,. moaauroa are to bo taken againat tho Italians In l nris . Rigorous measures ngainat tho press , in consoquonco of tho attempt of Thursday week , have already boon takoii-Tho Jievue de Paris and tho Speatatenr ( formerly "ie Aaaemblde Nationale ) have boon suppressed . In his roport recommending this arbitrary act , M . Ulllault , t » u Miniator of tho Interior , obsorvoM : — "As long ft » » England foarod , fpr tho fumily which now roignu , iw attacks and tho Intrigues of tho frlonda of a Protonuoi , that liberty of which sho is proud gave way to mow rigorous inoaBuroa . Your Government , Slro , la ai w
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 23, 1858, page 4, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_23011858/page/4/
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