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NAPOLEONIC TACTICS.
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3IETllOrOLITAN 310MU)- OP WORKS. ¦
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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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hrvHE Government of Xapoleox III . may do good things as J [ well as bad things , but it has no capability . Tor . ' siinple , straightforward , . intelligible conduct ; : Its foundations \ yeve laid in unv . eracity , and its superstructure does no discredit to its cornerstoiic . A little whileago a London journal predicted that spine attacks would be made upon England in pursuance or orders from head-quarters , and accordingly-we were accused of inciting the insurrection in Sicily , and the Carlist movement in . Spain . If we compare these attacks with those which occurred at an earlier date , we notice a diminution of virulence , and , after they had served their purpose , a remonstrance from our ambassador caused an official communication to be sent to the Pay * and the Tatrie , in which the " imputations against a neighbouring power " were called " lamentable , " and the papers in question weie informed that " they ought not to have accepted these imputations , knowing-that thev were devoid of authenticity . "
The fact is , the * French Government is in the habit . provoking animosity against -England by way of a . counter-irritant whenever Imperial sehemes ' roquire ' suc . h a diversion , and as an apothecary- removes a blister when he thinks it has done its work , so the ' Napoleonic practit ioner withdraws his international canthrirides plaster as . soon as the cuticle of his patient has been sufficiently disturbed- Such a plan is not honest , and may one d ; iv end in producing more inn animation than is required , and it has , taste for recrimination
moreover , the characteristic , of exciting a and scandal that it may not- always be convenient to gratify . There are states of society in -Ay-Inch making accusations first and withdrawing them afterwards , damages the reputation and inniience of the person so acting ; but where a genuine public , life is iiot permitted to exist , there is a probability tUafc the slander will Vo further arid live longer in men ' s minds than the retractation , and this is why we regret that the Imperial information manufactorv . should ' so often be employed in producing a fraiidulent
article . But we do not argue , from these incidents that an important separation ' of French and English interests must necessarily occur . In both countries there are parties who dislike to witness an extremity of friendship , and whenever the Emperor rinds himself accused of leaning too much towards England , lie orders the Gallic cock to utter a qiierulous or a threatening " Cock-adoOdle-do ! " In England we have parties quite as mischievous as the Anglophobists of Prance , and they get what they want said iu the newspapers , without ' troubling the Queen" . or the PRiNCE-CbNSQitT to drop a communication ia the editor's box .
and contempt . Whatever may be its defects or collisions with other . European . Powers , there is reason to hope that England will be far less dissociated from France as an empire ; , than . from France under any form of Bourbon misrule . It inay prove well for the ultimate interests of Europe that a strong arid dexterous Government should exist oil the other side of the channel , which is bound , for its own safety , to lower the influence-of the Ullramontanists and the Pope .- The Holy Father cannot forgive the seizure of-the papers he had intrusted to M . Vkuillot , nor is the exposure of the plots of the Vatican . likely to soothe the mind of the occupant of the Tuij'eries . In the Papal quarrel , however , as in other things , the Imperial Government plays a tortuous course , and , by sanctioning the strange . act of LajiobiciEhe , he gives his enemy an able general in exchange' for the maledictions which Pro Xo ^ o is pouring forth-. There is , 'however , policy in this . ; and LamouiciEiik ia encouraged to lose his character and reputation , just as Odillo . v BauuOt was victimized at au earlier date Imperialism is a gainer when France is taught Jun despise and ' distrust- her public men ; and the spectacle of . ft republican general acting against the liberties of Italy is ¦ ¦ weft '" calculated to produce this eifect . In a few ( lays ,, universal , suffrage , worked . according to the Imperial patent , * will have obtained . the predetermined vote from Savov .. Trickery and coercion will prevent the feelings * f the inhabitants of tin ; Swiss valleys from expressing t . lieirx ^ v ^ eal ^ thoughts , Having cleared away all justice and right , the grouncT will their be free for an act of grace , and it k not improbable that Nap . ol . eox . 111 . may think it worth while to purchase laudation by the- prudent step of conciliating ; I lie Swiss , who might he dangerous cue ruies if forced to abandon their neutrality ami seek safety in an alliance with the German str . tes . AVe may also look to the forthcoming pamphlet -for a further - exposition of _ the programme for 18 ( 3-1 . ; according to . report it will threaten to bnlani \ -i the ¦ nationalities against any monarchical coalition-that is likely to occur . . . Next month Quakers-are in season , and peace principles , will resound from the . platform of Exeter Hall ; but the country is more . likely to i > ay attention to the ' Take care of your pockets " alarm given by the Duke or . CambIiiug-e at the Easter Mohdiiy Mansian . House mixture ' of war and turtle . His lloyal 'Highness recommends a '' judicious lout ample expenditure" for the . safety of our island . Tax-payers may be sure--it-will be " ample , ' and every tiling : is "judicious " that adds to the patronage of the Court the Jobbery of departments , and tho depression of merit to make wav for rank . -
The merchant and speculator groiv weary of the uncertainty that hangs over foreign affairs , and which continually proves a hinderance to business , and checks the ardour of t rade . It is always easy to get up a cry against letting France grow too powerful , and douiiriate too much over mundane affairs , We do not take upon ourselves the function of prophets ,. because , judging from the past , great movements have usually the character of a surprise , and such movements are possible at any moment ; but we have reason to believe that an , occasional difference of opinion between tlie two countries is precisely what the French Government wants in order to flatter the national vanity by an
appearance of independent and autocratic action . Y \ e are therefore ready to imagine that when the Swiss or other difficulty has served its object , we may . find it susceptible of removal without any particular harm being done . The French empire wns itself a surprise , and it lives upon surprises and states of bewildering expectation . If the French were not always expecting- that tlie lessee of their Imperial theatre was on the point of bringing , out a new piece with startling effects , they would endeavour to become managers themselves , but they are content to be spectators so long as there exists enough ' prosperity to supply bread , anil their rulers furnish the circus games .
Napoleon HI . is like Mettjeuxicu in being too jenlous ot rivals to give any prominence to able men , mul were it not for an occasional exhibition of public spirit by the bar , France would bo apt to forget that a pcoplo can have any other relation towards its Government-than that of being cither its tools or its slaves . Looking to the importance of any dignified protest on behalf of freedom , it is gratifying to see the way in which tlie bar of Paris and fourteen other cities have espoused the cause- of Emile ' Oluyimi ; and although the Court of Cassation has
stink'deeper into disgrace by rejecting his appeal , there is son ™ hope for the future , when Government usurpation-in courts of law is strenuously condemned by all the principal lawyers of the land , ^' o trust the day is not far distant when France will become an object of imitation for civil liberty ; but , in eontemj ) latjmg tho faults of the Empire , we cannot forgot that the elder Bouiuions lnu ' u proved themselves the unscrupulous enemies of liberty of nil kinds , while the Chlbaxs branch worked'the constitutional system-so disWnestlv , us to bring- it to destruction
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A HILL to . confer increased powers on the . Metropolitan Board of Works has been prepared under the direction of that body , printed , and privately circulated , previous to its consideration in 'Parliament . The degree of publicity t , hus given to the designs of our legislators for London , as well as the pressing importance of the subject , renders any apology superfluous from us for directing early attention to tin ; subject . ' Questions of the utmost practical moment arc raised'by thu contemplated intension Bill . Tho act , under which the ^ letropolitan Board was called into existence three years ago , was oonffssi . 'illy aiu experiment , it may possibly be said that it is too sooii to cull for public judgment on th « , cuujstion , wlicthiT or iiot that expi' - rinicnt has succeeded ; but if those to whom its conduct has'been
con tilled insist upon a verdict , they must abide the issue , lew persons outside the narrow circle in which Messrs . 'Tiovaitks , Tite , and Company live and ' move and have their Mrtropnlitnn being , ctm dbubt what that verdict will be . As ¦ ndnunisinitors , the past cairtrr of tliti Board lins been eharrictowml l > y un ineptitude and ineftieiuney painfully surprising . As linaiu- 'ii / rs they have contrived to earn for themselves the reputation of l ) i . ing unequal taxers and public wastrels . As a corpora to body tluy have comi } to be regarded as about the most precociousl y aeooni " plis'hed job-ocracy going , in this judgment the imilir ? eeniii ) U ' public will of course be told by its Guildhall tax-masters that it js entirely in tho wrong . . 'bili g eri ' eo , they will ho told , wns never more exemplars ' , or disjntt'ivstedness more trailspareiu tiiiiu
that of the existing Board . If hardly anv minor improvement are to be s-hown tor tlio vast resources nuule available 1 ' ^ r nu'tropolitun purposes generally , it is bueause those resources ( ire beiiisc hoanlud frugally to meet the requircmeuts of the lnngniiu'C'iit ( lesions for seeuVing the health nudjpomfort of unbuni ^ 'ncnitioii ^ by the heavy taixnt'ion of this . And when sonic ( iuvruloufs entit exclaims , How about the estimates ?—ho is met with the m ]» - paiit reply , that a wide disparity between tenders for htr ^ v pubm ' oontracts ' is a fact fami ' liav . in railway undertaking- , «« "l " ;¦ Others of like magnitude : —a reply tmleuhitod to jirovoke i- 'eruiin sharp' rejoinders , rather than to sileneo grove ini ^ ivm ^^ But wluue \ cr junv have been tJio Jo ^ -ieal process by wlneli tin '
Untitled Article
$ 44 The Leader and Saturday Analyst . [ Apuii , 14 , 186 . 0 . ¦
Napoleonic Tactics.
NAPOIiEOJsIC TACTICS .
3ietllorolitan 310mu)- Op Works. ¦
METROPOLITAN BOAm ) OF WORKS .
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), April 14, 1860, page 344, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2342/page/4/
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