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    Be Meese as

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    RE

    * and four beyond the Belgian frontier,

    THE WAR.
    ‘THE BATTLEFIELD OF SEDAN.
    - The following is taken from the letter
    of the Special Correspondent of the Dub-

    Freeman: _ :
    Aboot four or five miles from Sedan,

    Was the commencement of the great
    battle fields ofSedan, They were easily
    recoghized by the extinguished camp
    fires, extemporised huts, the latter con-
    sisting of branches placed on an angle
    against the side whence the wiud caine ;
    haversacks and pannikins strewn over
    the fields. By and ly 1 passed fields on
    each side of the road where severe fight-
    ing had been, They were divested of
    very green thing, and had been so trod-
    den that nothing was left but the bare
    earth, whilst all over were scattered let-
    tera, baggage, helmets, caps, shoes,
    Hoots, &e. By the raised soil, there
    Was no mistaking the spots where thous-
    andsofthe dead soldiore had been buried,
    and by the numerous crosses made of

    THE HERALD, C

    HARLOTTETOWN, - -

    seo soe wate ene ee

    . * . - - - -

    - + WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1870.

    DEFENCE OF PARIS.

    Siuce the fall of Metz, the interest in the
    war centres around Paris, ‘The news which
    areive aim there comes by balloons or
    carrier pigeons, or by the underground
    Telegraph. ‘The Prussians naturally enough
    try to keep their plans as much a secret as
    possible, Intelligence must, therefore, for
    these reasons, be very meagre,

    The second balloon, which arrived from
    Maris, brought the fellowing news from the
    capital: — ‘The defence of Paris continues
    to be carried on in splendid style. ‘The in-
    habitants display admirable patriotism, and
    the National Guard make every day fresh
    progress tu discipline and soldierly spirit.
    The Prussians ave oblige to remain on the
    defensive, and have been compelled to fall
    back behind the plateaux of St, Cloud and
    Mendon. Before taking the ofeasive, Paris
    aWaits the support of the departments,”

    The Government of the National Defence
    orders bolers of spirits in Paris to bury them
    beneath sand, Court-yards and wpper tloors
    of houses are to be cleared of combustible
    materials, unnecessary curtain hangings,
    books and paper hangings to be removed,
    easy menus of necess to roofs of houses to be
    provided, and sacks of earth kept in readi-
    ness to close openings in basement stories;
    ample reservoirs of water are to be provided

    #traw, or of one rod nailed over another,
    where were the last resting places ef the
    «flicers who had so nobly led them, The
    common soldiers were uncoflined, buried
    Gn tens and twenties, with norecord over
    them to guide their friends to where
    they lay. But with the officers the ar-
    rangement was different. These were
    each put up in a rade coffin, with their
    wane and rank upon a plate on the lid,
    and either buried singly or in threes or i ‘os
    just described ; and upon that part Of| extensive scale; more than two hundred a
    the holy ewblem thrust below the sur- | qay having been killed in the last week in
    Tace, were engraven the names of the september. It is foresight and prudence
    dead. This arrangement has already rather than the actual failure of supplies that
    enabled relatives to find the graves, and | has limited the amount allowed for daily
    in many ‘instances, to transport the be- | consumption. Mont Valerien commands
    loved remains to Fatherland. a oS ee | scape -conghathcsnt
    Jast week, as posige Ai halfa dozen cof within tt ‘perimetre of six inmates of all
    fins, containing the bodies of deceased tye German works, and has destroyed the
    a paw 0 ops on = ~~ batteries which the gga had ne
    ween Sedan and Libramont. Onsuch ored to construct. The castle of Meudon
    occasions, there is always a guard of is completely destroyed, and Prussian
    honor.to the Belgian frontier, and an- engineers haye been dislodged from Clamart,
    other from the German frontier to the Bas Meudon and ono Dag Besides
    home of the deceased. Tho expenses | Villejuif, Cahan has now also been retaken,
    incurred are borne in the first instance 4s Kuil and Bonqeval. Ginevillers has been
    hy the relatives, who are afterwards re- | freod from the presence of the enemy by 2
    imbursed by the Government. 1 am cavalry reconnaisance, and will henceforth
    here reminded of avery tonching story | be protected from their return. On the
    with which I will conclude this letter, etstern side a very vigorous cannonade has
    about four in the morning, to give our ts evactiate Champagny. ‘The circle formed
    horses a couple of hours’ rest, 1 and the | }y the Prussians around Paris, therefore, far
    rest of the company were startled by a. from narrowing, is becoming every day
    fine old gentleman stepping into the more enlarged, to our advantage. “As re-
    room and sitting down without speaking gards the manifestations alleged to have
    aword. French soldiers who were pre- | been of annnirclfical charact r, with which
    English and Beigians who had smuggled Koon of an’ insignificant character. ‘The
    arms across the frontier into Belgium, | saydard says if telegrams from Tours of
    became uneasy, ‘The question was asked the state of Paris be trae, the position of the
    with bated breath whence had he come, city has certainly changed for the better to!
    and whither was he going. By and by an enormous extent. The Prussians evi-
    one slipped out and returned with the dently cannot erect batteries, which Pa
    intelligence that there was a coffin out- | Receary gp ony sy oe hes nf te eae
    side upon the cart which had brought “3° B4M* Fe Close as Mey expecken
    the strange gentleman. ‘The latter soon on
    os — and va ster and
    forwards in front of the house, as if im-
    atient to resame his journey. At gives the following account of the Excar-
    ength he spoke to me, and in a little | ~ va
    time he told me that he was an English-
    man, and was taking to Germany the
    body of an officer killed on the Ist Sep-
    tember. Atthe outbreak of the war the | i :
    aficer was going to be married to his|ment of the siege. Neither party, coule
    to be delayed, and he had to harry off to_ plan, they yet inflicted great loss upon the

    and buckets kept on every story to extin-
    guish tire from ae, Colonel Lievd Lind-
    say was permitted to enter Paris on Wednes-
    dav. General Buraside has had several in-
    tesviews with Count Bismarck since his re-
    tarn from Paris, The /atrie says that the
    Prussians around Versailles have no camps
    but sleep in the woods, ‘The Parisians are
    now curtailed in their food. The latest
    letters state that the daily supply of meat is
    fixed at 2} ounces for every person in the
    eity, and that the butchers’ shops are open

    The correspondent of the Dublin Freeman

    MENT AT CHEVILLY:

    The battle of Chevilly, on the morning of
    the 50th of September, was by all odds, the

    join his regiment. The friends were in- jnomy, and showed the Prussians that the
    formed in due course, of his death on the | young Mobiles are_no mean antagonists to
    battle-field, and desired that the body encounter, ‘The charge across the plateau
    should be buried beside that of his fath- of Villejuif, once the rising ground of L' Hay
    ers, The gentleman got a letter from | and up to the entrenchment of ¢ hevilly,
    the Prussian Ambassador in London ee a ae pod ad ibonaea
    2 ’ * és ‘! b . *

    the Prussian Commandant at Sedan, re- gave wn instance of valour worthy of the
    questing the latter to afford the bearer | jays of chivalry. ‘The place of attack seems
    every facility mn his attempt to find our | to ‘have arisen from the public (rossip after
    the grave of the dead officer, After a’ the battle of the 25rd ult., it being rumored
    search, so prolonged that he was about | for some time after that the Orleans Railway
    to delegate the duty to others, the gen- Wis — and communication established

    * : jwith Tours. After the attack upon Villejuif
    — ae pode pina oP | the French held possession of the redoubt
    being pulled ont, showed that the © of Haute Buyres and Moulin-Jaquet, both
    ceased slept below, and the Brave was being within range of the heavy guns of the
    accordingly opened, the plate on the) forts; while the enemy held the rest of the
    coffin lid read and the body taken out. | plateau of Longboyou, the pickets being
    It was, indeed, that of the affianced of) posted in advance of the village of L'Ilay.
    his daughter, and it was to her and to They still held com nlete possession of
    the relatives at Hunover that he was Choisy-le-Roi, upon the Seine, and of the

    ; main road from there to Versailles. Strong
    transporting the mortal remains. entrenchments were thrown up at Choisy to

    | protect the passage of the Seine, and at
    No onecan doubt the ardent sympathy. pgp og =e the He gee valley

    : m ‘J ‘ 4 non (Oe tae evyre. ConsideYing the large con-

    of tho Hinerve ys k gots and ste brave ; centration of troops at Versailles, it was sup-
    soldiers, But tho Afinerve, as must posed that only a moderate force remained
    ~~ honest Frenchman, feels degraded | yon this platoan, and it was thought pos-
    ree poe ag 3 S Pesach of a nani sible to drive the enemy from Choisy-le-Roi,
    valli at the head of a French army, who,

    eet smn me

    across the Seine, by cutting the line in the
    in his usual buncombe or bombastic) middle and driving the foree at Chevilly
    . ; ' ‘ Me rsitilles. ieners
    _ 7 a - ns pom . — £88 | Vinoy could force the enemy from Chevilly
    ee ne terms-—then, 88Y8 |i, this direction it would prevent a concen-
    the Minerve, let France perish ! tration «of the force upon the plateau, and
    * If Garibaldi,” says our respected leave Gen. Exea to chase the Prussians from
    contemporary, “continue to parade at Choisy-le-Roi and the line of Railway.
    the head of the French armies, his mouth | Phursday mg a og above 9 ag
    fullof impicties and insolent threatenings eee ieee e ana ie eee rea of alae
    i order of & ready to move forward at break of day.

    against the social order o Hurope, We ‘raking a lesson from former experience,
    can but invoke fresh humihation for the troops were put in motion without the
    — Beogeee they are doomed coor aon tor drum. But in ho
    to m on, France cannot, at one | instance, again the enemy were warned o
    and the same Raccckcoceuer > means | the attack, for the forts opened fire before
    of Garibaldi, and remain untouched in| the army was fairly moving, sending a
    her honor,—Rather may she perish than shower of shells to rouse every German
    hersel! all otornit if iti sleeper from Choisy-le-Roi to Chattillon and
    disgrace re Had oe _ pty A ba . life, Chesitly. Be conoquences ers that ~
    such | French had barely reached their own ad-
    vi has ceased to be Catholic, and we vanced pickets before they were greeted by
    are no longer French.” eg ~ _ the deg a ‘
    . . Which continued a running fire until the
    — fp y ad ot tolgy he the feel-| “itlage of L'Hay was reached. ‘There 1 stil
    ng Py vel b hotter fire was encountered from a body of
    the crusaders” will surely never sub- jafantry, bat it was also driven back, ‘and
    mit to vr antgead of being led by a Gari-| heyond the village the Prussian artillery
    baldi for them, less dishonoring began to work. The first batteries limbered
    poco? | it be for them to allow their tothe rear in haste before the advancing
    to become a province of Prussia, Freneh, and in a few moments came the fire

    end re French made a eh von ila:

    which was swperb. The Prussian batteries
    were oan ly served, as usual, and above
    the rear of the artillery and infantry fire,
    could be heard the rattle of the mitraifleuse.

    |The Prussians have been driven back as far’

    | the full extent of their loss,

    i

    most serious engagement since the commenc- |
    Neither party could

    ‘and sons are

    the line andthe Gardes Mobiles of La Vendec.
    A large majority of the dead bore the num-
    ber “35” upon their eaps, and three-fifths of
    the loss was borne by the troops mentioned,
    The younr Vendeans behaved like old
    soldiers, vied with the regulars in daring,
    and showed greater coolness and better order

    line, Even the Prussians say that the con-
    duct of these young men—mere lads as yet
    i—-was very remarkable, The Vendeans
    ‘have shownthe enemy that the Gayde Mobile
    is not to be despised in even a hand-to-hand
    encounter, ‘The leader of these gallant men
    was Gen, Guilhem, who, at the head of the
    ath, fell dead upon the field, the first gen-
    eral oficor iitled in the siewe. Tle Was a
    man universally respected and beloved both
    as acitizenand a soldier, Eutering the army
    asa volunteer, when only 1 years of age—
    he won each of his grades in battle upon the
    tields of Algeria, of the Crimea, of Italy, and
    of Mexico.” Gen. Guilhem was 55 years of
    age, and leaves a wife and Ovo children,
    Ilis brother went out yesterday to get the
    body, and found it covered with flowers, the
    enemy intending to bury it, with the honors
    due to the rank of the dead, and with the
    respect which a brave enemy always gives
    toa brave man who falls upon the field of
    honor, At the same time, and as a part of
    the general plan, an attack was made upon
    Cholay-te-Rtal, by the forces under the com-
    mand of Gen, Exea. From the first moment
    that the enemy was encountered, a terrible
    fire was opened by the infantry, artillery
    and (attrailtouss, which must have inflicted
    severe loss. On this side, also, the French
    charged up to the very earthworks, but the
    fire directed against them was not so accur-
    ate as that at Chevilly. ‘The enemy was
    less contident, anda force of men, 30,000 it
    is supposed, believing that the works had
    been carried, tled across the Seine. Seeing
    this force in confusion, at the forks of the
    road by the Carrefour Dompadour, Gen.
    Exea turned his fire upon it, inflicting a
    preceptible loss, Subsequent reports show
    that the enemy lost heavily at this point,
    But meantime the men in the redoubts rallied
    and as the force began to press back across
    the bridge, Gen. Exea found himselfobliged
    to retire, fecling that the batteries were too
    strong for an assault. At the same time,
    also, a force advanced upon Creteil, but, for
    some reason or other, returned without doing
    anything of consequence, and with the loss
    of men, The losses in this engagement in
    killed and wounded will reach 8,000, 1
    ventury to say. If lam correctly informed
    —and I got the news from a neutral general
    oficer who crossed the lines yesterday—the
    Prussians confess to a larger loss. An
    armistice for the burial of the dead was
    agreed upon. Yesterday morning the chief
    of the general staff went to L'Hay witha flag
    of truce, to male overtures for an armistice,
    but he failed to get an interview with any
    of the generals. Several times he was told
    that by orderZof the King, there could be no
    interview except a Cretiel, across the Seine,
    This leaves the inference that the Prussians
    desired to gain time to take the most of their

    }own dead from the field, in order to conceal

    under the tire than even the troops of the |:

    The Herald,

    Ot aang Paty att taf aa tet ee

    Wednesday, November 16, 1870.
    ‘ a

    ws eereaianperresimnrsonaraunssaanetaiersinnes

    We have heard with satisifuction, that
    some steps have lately been taken by our
    City Council, in order to furnish the inhabit
    ants of Charlottetown with wholesome water.
    It is impossible to exaggerate the importance
    of such a measure} and the sole wonder ‘is,
    that it should to this time remain unaceom-
    plished. Any one who looks at the sur-
    roundings of the public pumps of the city,
    must be perfectly satistied in his own mind,
    that the water which is taken from them
    greatly lacks purity. They are stationed
    in places into which must percolate much
    that is pernicious. Asa rule, the natural
    wells and fountains which have supplied the
    rising village with water, are found to be
    dispensers of poison to the large and popu-
    lous city, City magistrates are careful,
    therefore, to order all city wells to be filled
    up the moment the inhabitants have been
    supplied with water from some rural dis-
    trict. We know not what report the En-
    gineer employed by our civic authorities has
    made; but we would say from casual obser-
    vation, that there ean be found in the im-
    mediate neighborhood of Charlottetown,
    abundance of wholesome water, sufficient to
    supply it for many years. + The cost of the
    works necessary for its introduction may be
    an obstacle, Yet this, when compared with
    what must be expended by cities elsewhere,
    will be trifling. Qur soft soil will offer few
    obstructions which the pick and the spade
    will not remove, The civic taxes are light,
    and no one would gradge an annual assess-
    ment in order to secure for his household
    the inestimable boon of good water. We
    believe that many householders pay now in
    the course of the year, more money for fresh
    water than they would be called on to pay
    under a water assessment; and even though
    the sum were higher, the health, comfort
    and convenience secured, would be cheaply
    bought. )

    The introduction of water intu every house
    necessitates waste-pipes, and waste-pipes
    entail the adoption of some system of sewer-
    age. This would indeed be a great boon to
    the city. At the present time, even the
    rudest attempt at drainage is discernible no-
    where. The removal of whatever is offen-
    sive seems to be left ina great measure to

    The moral)
    strength given to the Mobiles by this
    engagement is very great, and a strong:
    fecling of emulation has arisen,

    }

    |

    FRANCE.

    Tt seems well nigh impossible to arrive at-
    anything like certainty of the condition of:
    Vrance generally, or of Paris in particular, |
    The minister Gambetta declares Paris to be |
    impregnable to an enemy. Meussin, he con- |
    tines, relies upon sedition and famine} but
    sedition, he says, will not arise, nor famine
    either. We hope he is right.

    Of the state of France, the following is the
    gloomy picture drawn by a French journal-
    ist —

    “Daring the five days that Thave travelled |
    to obtain an accurate iden of the eondition |
    of our unfortunate and beloved France,
    have been able only to collect one single im- |

    wression—a feeling which is bitter and eruel- |
    y true—that impotence exists everywhere. |
    mpotence—the child of disorder, of ignor--
    ance, of frivolity, of want of experience, and |
    of pride—is our evil; it is this which is |
    bringing us to loss, fatal and terrible coming |
    loss, if we do not halt on that descent upon
    which the faults of the Empire and our two)
    months increasing reverses have east us. |
    Where is our brave army? On the walls of
    towns and villages are posted the successes
    of the Franes-tireurs, glorious bulletins stat-
    ing that the enemy has been conquered, and
    has left two Uhlans on the battle-field. Let}
    the truth be told; our gangrene is impotence, |
    and must be amputated. When a man
    svizes forcibly upon the power which has
    heen wielded by men whom he considers in-
    capable, he has but one excuse, which must |
    be to do better than his predecessors. If he |
    do not better, he must be dismissed; and_
    let us spenk the word. Nearly all the men
    of the Government of Tours are unfit for,
    their task; they must be dismissed... «|
    I have seen the army of the Loire, and 1.
    have conversed with its generals. The an- |
    tagonism of civil and military power paral-_
    yzes everything, engenders irritation, and.
    will lead us to defeat. There is no order, |
    and the Government is incapable of supply- |
    ing it. At Nevers they have guns, but no-

    . iv :
    carriages for them, Nothing is being done, |
    while the provisions of Paris are being used,
    political feelings are opposing each other,
    and the Government goes from one fault to
    asecond, And during this time the general
    disorganization of France terrifies those who
    desive to assist us, who anxiously inquire |
    which is the true Government of France— |
    that of Tours, of Lyons, of Marseilles. We,
    are lost if we do not speedily put an end to
    this impotence,”
    PROSPRCTS OF PEACE.

    Whatever value, says the Daily News, |
    may be attributed to peace negotiations |
    which reach us from Brussels, it is obvious
    at least that they step in at a very viliar
    crisis in the history of the war. The state
    of affairs in France has now got beyond the
    a of military calculation. With the
    dispersal of the army of the Loire, the Ger-
    mans may be said to have encountered and
    beaten all the opposition forces about which
    any definite statistics could be had. Gen-
    erals Von Moltke and Von Roon have sue-
    cessfully carried out their programme, and
    probably wait at this moment for the capture
    of Paris, as the climax of their planned cam-
    paign, Outside and beyond these ealcula-
    tions, nevertheless, the Germans are con-
    fronted by an unknown quantity, No man
    ean tell what strength or will of resistance
    rests with the French — Thatis a
    problem which it is impossible to solve; and
    yet on the practical solution of it, should
    these rumored peace negotiations be broken
    off, depend the fortunes of the war, and the
    terrible contingencies which hang about a
    prolongation of the struggie. There is no
    general on the Prassian staff, or on any

    private enterprise, or to an individual sense
    of propriety. This, in a few rare instanees,
    may be well and effectively done. But the
    instances wherein it will be badly and in-
    eficiently done, will be greatly mere nu-
    merous, Noisorve and poisonous vapors
    will be exhwled. The currents effeeted by
    a fall of rain will carry along the surface of
    our streets, matter which should have had a
    way made for it some feet below the surfaee,
    and in event of the force which pears it
    along ceasing, it will rest, and roused per-
    Hrivpe fete nation Dag the oegreretat Durning
    sun, breathe forth disease and pestilence,
    We have ourselves known every house inan
    aristocratic street of a large city infected
    with disease from a disarrangement of the
    sewerage. In London, the poisonous vapors
    exhaled from the gratings over the sewers,
    killed in one day five persons. If Charlotte-
    town escapes such startling effects, it is be-
    cause its population is less closely packed
    and less numerons, than the population of
    Edinburgh or London—not from a greater
    respect pald to the observance of sanitary
    laws. Even as it ix, we are sure that every
    medical practitioner will bear us out, when
    we say that we are, by our inattention to the
    proper drainage of the city, securing a wel-
    come and an additional virulence to every
    epidemic that may appear amongst us,

    We, moreover, congratulate our civie
    authorities in haying begun at the right end
    of their sanitary measures. They are look-
    ing around them first of all for en efficient
    supply of wholesome water. ‘They are seek-
    ing to find an expelant power before they’
    enter upona systemofexpelling. They are
    going to introduce what is eminently healthy,
    in order to drive away what is decidedly
    noxious. This is consistent with reason.
    A current of fresh air introduced into aroom
    under the requisite conditions will purify,
    and that too by expelling the foul air, In
    good drainage the same result’ must be
    brought about by the adoption of « kindred
    process, A strong and constant, and living
    stream of water should be made to pass into
    the drains. This would dilute the impuri-
    ties and carry them forward, without suffer-
    ing them to stagnate and putrify. We trust,
    therefore, that when the water is brought
    into the city, it will be in no stinted supply,
    but in plentiful abundance. The rain-fall,
    also, is a most valuable auxiliary to sewer-
    age, Were it properly turned to account,
    another very important result would be se-
    cured. Our streets would be made passable,
    and would not, as they now do, wear for
    several months iu the year the appearance
    of mud-lagoons. ‘The rain-water at present
    is allowed to run as it lists, and find its level
    anywhere at all; provided it be notin our
    collars. Ina good system of draining this
    would not be the ease; it would be taught
    to find its way into sewers, and aid in driy-
    ing away the refuse and impurities, The
    disinfecting agents, flushing of sewers and
    other operations resorted to in large cities
    to keep the drains clean and healthy, are all
    rendered necessary by the scanty supply of
    water sent through them. This need not be
    our plight, except perhaps in an exceptional
    year of drought. We have made no remark

    other staff, who ean say whether the France
    of 1870 ia about to show herself the France
    of 1702, or the France of 1814.

    A peace party begins, the Aeho states, to |
    arise, ‘The Landwehr men will long to re- |
    turn to their families. ‘Their families will |
    yearn for them, and complain that husbands
    away home,
    needlessly humiliating France., Count Bis-
    marck, too, has suffered it to be very appar-
    ent that he desires the advent of : and

    we may be confident he will waive a
    point or two in his demands in order to ae-
    celerate And when ham in Paris

    upon the engineering difficulties to be pver-
    come in the operations here alludedto. We
    have taken it for granted that they can be
    overcome, and that an attempt will be made
    to overcome them, That the attempt may
    be crowned With whhvate success, the first
    requisite is to secure a plentiful supply of
    wholesome water. Our civic rulers have
    done well, thetefore, to turn their attention
    in this direction first.

    ee

    A correspondent pf the Ialifax Citizen,
    writing from Sydney, C. B., informs that
    paper that on the Ist inst., a plank fell from
    the western bell tower of the Roman Catho-
    jie Cathedral in St. John’s, Nild., striking
    two women on the head who were passing.
    mangling their heads ins fearful manner,
    and killing them instantly. One of the
    women leaves two children, the other was
    unmarried,

    GARIBALDI REDIVIVUS.

    cet tee,

    Wr could scarcely have anticipated, when
    we sketched the “ Dramatis Persone” of the
    then opening tragedy, that the now almost
    obsolete figure of Garibaldi would enter
    upon the stage to take its part in the catas-
    trophe, But so it is, and we have in the
    event another proof of the trite remark how
    much stranger is fact than fiction, even the
    wildest fiction of the imagination. France
    has had many disasters to undergo, but who
    could have predicted her coming to that of
    placing her demoralized forces under the
    command of Garibaldi ? Te has been her
    open antagonist in the fleld; he has headed
    movements in Italy in 1848 and 1867,in which
    combatants under his orders spilled French
    hlood; and he has for years past been chiefly
    known to the world as the enemy, or rather
    as the scurrilous insulter, of her religion,
    her poliey, and her dynasty. It may, in-
    deed, be, that France has need of Garibaldi :
    he certainly possesses a reputation of a cer-
    tain kind; and now that her Emperor, with
    his Paliknos, his De Faillys, and his Le Baufs
    —the generals who trained her armies for
    the field and commanded them there tu their
    first defeats—now that these personages have
    disappeared in disgrace, now that the brave
    MeMahon is disabled, and the loyal Trochu
    shut up in Paris, France does not possess a
    single commander in the field whose name
    is even known to the general public. It
    may then bea gainto France to have en-
    listed Garibaldi in her cause, But what a
    gain! And what a humiliation to her that
    it should be a gain!

    We have said that Garibaldi has a reputa-
    tion ofa certain kind, Some how or other
    the general public has, ever since 1847, ac-
    cepted him as the type of an accomplished
    and successful captain. Butisthe judgment
    of the general public infallible upon the
    point? ‘To judge of the merits of a military
    commander is a point of military science,
    and on such points itis needless to say that
    military men alone are competent to pass
    anopinion, TIas any military verdict ever
    pronounced Garibaldi to be an able com-
    mander? Ifso, the fact is unknown to us.
    Onareview of his career, we find that his
    chief admirers have all along been seditious
    mobs, foreign conspirators, hysterical wo-
    men, and eccentrie dukes. It was the des-
    perate cause of revolution which he despe-
    rately espoused, and not any real service
    which he has rendered to that cause, which
    has given him notoriety, When we remem-
    ber the burst of enthusiasm with which
    * Cicerouacchio” and his pariizans received
    him at Rome, we also remember that he
    had not then done anything ostensibly to
    merit such enthusiasm, Of course, in the
    secret working of revolutionary sects there
    may be dark exploits done of which the

    world never knows the authors, but which
    may crive a eont of anbtoerranctun .UaGUN TE

    certain individuals; but, as regards public
    reputation, Garibaldi was certainly almost
    a nobody, when he became, in 1848, the
    soldier of the short-lived Roman Republic.
    Whence then the enthusiasm that greeted his
    debut on that stage, unless from the source
    we have hinted at? What, however, was
    that enthusiasm: when compared to the fa-
    rore with which he was reecived in this
    country, where, in fact, he enjoyed the great-
    est of his triumphs? Who does not remem-
    her the excitement of London and the pro-
    vinces at his arrival, the dinners, the recep-
    tions, the ovations at the Mansion House
    and the Crystal Palace, the homage of the
    noblest and the fairest, when even Royalty
    itself honored him with notice more distin-
    guished than has often been bestowed upon
    illustrious distress, and when in the House
    of Lords, a high Tory and High Church
    Prelate stretched out both his hands to the
    sworn foe of priests and kings.

    But all that was merely the fervour of the
    hour, and the contagion of popular excite-
    ment. It was soon over, and after a hint
    from across the Channel had cut the illus-
    trious foreigner’s career mysteriously short,
    England awoke out of her delirium, hence-
    forward safe from eatching the disorder
    again, In fact, it was both thought and
    said at the time that much of that British
    gratitude was meant in payment for services,
    not rendered, but to come, and which never
    have been rendered. Garibaldi has not
    done Rome the damage Protestant England
    expected of him. His blows, though struck
    with good-will, somehow failed of their effect,
    and the Pope has seemed none the worse,
    but rather, if anything, the better of them,

    Unless it was supposed that Garibaldi
    would prove the soldier of the Revolution
    and most effective adversary of the Catholic
    Church that has appeared in our time, we
    own ourselves unable to account for the
    public interest manifested in him in 1848,
    1864, and subsequently. Expende Hanniba-
    lum. Let us briefly review, without malice,
    but also without partiality, the career of the
    man to whom France (or at least a consider-
    able part of the nation) is now looking in
    the hour of peril, and we shall find it to
    consist of a succession of defeats, with hard-
    ly a single gleam of success to chequer the
    gloomy history. In 1852, his first enter-
    prise as an abettor of Mazzini, in compass-
    ing the death of Charles Albert, was a fail-
    ure, and caused his banishment; so was a
    renewal of the attempt two years later,
    when he was condemned to death. Eseap-
    ing from prison and reaching Tunis, he was
    taken into the service of the Bey of that free
    and enlightened country, but failing in pi-
    ratical enterprise, or whatever other duties
    his Moorish patron niay have imposed on
    him, he became a privateer in one of the
    innumerable and unintelligible South Ame-
    rican wars of that period. In this he evi-
    dently failed, for he was taken prisoner and
    tortured; and we next find him heading a
    band of Italian free-lances against the Die-
    tator Rosas, whom he did not defeat in bat-
    tle. In 1847, he had the impudence to offer
    his services to Charles Albert, who of course
    rejected them ; and the rejected of Sardinia
    became the champion of Roman republican-

    where he obtains a command during the
    French intervention on behalf of Victor
    Emmanuel, It is stated that he had under
    his orders a body of troops called (if we re-
    member rightly) ‘ Alpine chasseurs.” Their
    name matters but little, for in point of fact
    they effected nothing, though we hear of
    theb: presence at Varese, Camerlata, Como,
    Brescia, and elsewhere. ;

    Now comes what we must own as the one
    military success (as his admirers would
    claim it to be) of Garibaldi’s career—the
    descent on Naples with 1000 followers, an
    enterprise which resulted in the expulsion
    of the reigning Sovereign and in the Free-
    booter obtaining the honor of being the first
    at Gaeta, to salute Victor Emmanuel King
    of Italy. But it has to be noted that there
    are here two conditions which seriously de-
    tract, when the facts are known, from the
    military credit of Garibaldi. They are, the
    British co-operation, and the treason at Na-
    ples. Tad English men-of-war and their
    crews stood aloof and refrained from aiding
    the assailant of a kingdom that was at peace
    and in amity with England, and had there
    existed anything like an ordinary amount
    of loyalty and honor amongst the ministers,
    officers and soldiers of the King, Garibaldi’s
    enterprise would most certainly have been
    crowned with a very different issue. Fight-
    ing was no doubt wanted for the completion
    of his enterprise, but Garibaldi did very lit-
    tle of that fighting; Gaeta was, no doubt,
    heseiged and taken, but not by Garibaldi or
    his thousand. However, let the success
    stand for what it is worth; anyhow it is a
    solitary success. The subsequent history of
    our hero is too fresh in the memory to need
    even recapitulation here, It is a history of
    defeats and disasters; not military ones on-
    ly. Aspromonte and Mentana tell their
    own tale; but the attempted insurrection,
    on behalf of the Hungarian rebels, so coolly
    extinguished hy General Klapka, and the
    utter failure in the Chamber, where the
    “testa di legno” had to be kept muzzled by
    his own friends —these things afford but
    slender proof of the intelligence needed to
    save France, or even to command a French
    army.

    Would that we could see it otherwise !
    Bygones might well be bygones, could we
    see in the arrival of Garibaldi any real hope
    of safety for France, or even of real loyalty
    to her cause. But the manifesto of Gambetta
    this week, shows that what is uppermost in
    the thoughts of those who now bear rule is
    rather the establishment of Republicanism
    than the defeat of the Prussians; to exploiter
    the gigantic effort now making by France
    for hey national existence, by forcing those
    who fight against the invaders to be really
    fighting in favor of the Revolution. Tt is
    a hard trial for the Catholic soldiers of
    France, the faithful men from Brittany and

    Normandy, and the 400 Pontifical Zouaves
    whe owe «oraaced vo ive taken service in

    their eountry’seause. Garibaldi’s command
    will tend but little to simplify their dilem-

    min.
    mas A GO neat tre

    FOR THE FRENCH
    WOUNDED.

    Cowsvt General Gautier, of Quebec, has
    remittedto France upwards of #6000, collect-
    edin Canada, Nova Scotia and New Bruns-
    wick, in aid of the French wounded, and the
    widows and orphans of those killed in battle.
    Newfoundland has contributed very hand-
    somely toward the fund, and we regret that
    Prince Edward Island (a portion of whose
    inhabitants, at least, have received substan-
    tial benefits from France in her prosperous
    days) has not thus far responded to the
    charitable call made upon her in this behalf,
    We trust, however, that the opportunity will
    not be allowed to pass away altogether
    without manifesting, in a practical way, our
    sense of sympathy for those who have been
    disabled for life and whose homes have
    been made desolate by this terrible war.
    Atrifle given in this way will not be missed,
    and may be the means of assuaging the
    misery of more than one poor family, bereft
    of its bread-winner by wounds or death,
    ITumanity, to speak of no other considera-
    tion, requires it at our hands, and we trust
    that whatever may be given, will be given
    speedily and ungrudgingly. Dr. Hobkirk,
    the Consular Agent of France, for this Island,
    will receive subscriptions to the fund.
    Whilst upon this subject, and with a view
    of stimulating the charity of our readers, we
    may copy the words of a New York paper,
    in reference to the sufferings of the French
    people. The Herald of that city, says :—

    « The giant spectre of famine looms up in
    more gigantic and gastly proportions every
    hour over the once fair land of France. The
    nation but yesterday so mighty is ‘hard
    bestead and hungry,’ and neither rulers nor
    people know whither to look in this hour of
    their tribulation. ‘The trials that have fallen
    upon them are almost apocalyptic in their
    suddenness, their completeness and their
    terror. With the threatened dearth comes
    the nameless horror of the ‘ pestilence that
    walketh in darkness,’ which falls upon all

    RELIEF

    hot-blooded races driven to despair. ‘The
    hour seems close at hand, indeed, for the
    beautiful, the imperial city of the late Na-

    leonic empire, when ‘the keepers of the
    oan shall tremble and the strong men
    shall bow themselves, and the grinders cease
    heeause they are few, and those that look
    out of the windows shall be darkened,’ and
    all the proud nation shall share in her sor-
    row,

    «This is a terrible contingency for Chris-
    tendom to contemplate—a momentous lesson
    for ambitious princes and statesmen to pon-
    der. It cannot be underrated or fail to be
    comprehended. Let us hope that its instrne-
    tion will not be thrown away, Yet again,
    mingling with the abstract idea thus pre-
    sented to our minds in the agony of indivi-
    dual suffering, not among stalwart men
    alone, but among the innocent and defence-
    less victims of the war—the aged and intirm,
    the wounded and the sick, feeble women
    and helpless babes. At the thought of their
    dark, dire, irredeemable destitution, the ve-
    ry heart of humanity thrills with pity. But
    on this side of the Atlantic we have never
    yet confined our sympathies to mere com-
    miseration. As for the Greeks in their hour
    of misfortune; as for Poland and Hungary,
    when both starved and bled; as for
    Ireland, when her homeless children were
    eo the highways or in

    pest-houses of their native » which
    should have been the Island Canaan of the
    north, the hand of American bounty was in-
    stantly and repeatedly extended, so let it be
    held out now over the stormy sea and thro’

    the wintry , to stricken France. And

    there is no to lose. Every day of delay

    may be fatal to many a poor brother,

    sos of dnestee eaienating boxe an been
    ized twa to aid the and

    web’ in butte Germany and France, and

    famished regions, and of the still more

    native subscriptions have not been wanting;
    but the imminent pressing need at. this mo-
    ment is for help in kind to whole masses
    of the French population. Let, then, the
    concerts, the discourses, the lectures, the
    exhibitions that are wont to be offered for
    minor churities be turned toward the re-
    sponse to this one terrible ery for help from
    hose Who wre ready to perish in an allied
    fand, the carly friend of our own republic
    and so long the intellectual guide of Chris-
    tendom. Our Legislatures, national and
    State; our municipal bodies, our boards of
    tradey our moneyed corporations, our orders,
    clubs} and societies of all kinds; our agri-
    cultural, railroad, mining, and moneyed
    princes; our teligious congregations, and
    the whole people, collectively and individu-
    ally, could perform no holier or higher act
    worthy of our civilization and our progres-
    sive age—more full of solacing remem-
    brance to each heart, more in beautiful ac-
    cordance with our Christian profession,
    more fraught with glorious auspices to us
    and our children, now and hereafter, than
    to succor our fainting brethren of France
    and exorcise, with the white hand and the
    gentle word of Charity, this grim spectre of
    fumine from their doors.”

    Comment upon our part on the graphie
    picture thus presented to us, is unnecessary,
    We leave the subject in the hands ofa hu-
    mane public,

    Revirw.—We have received a copy of a
    report on the Sherbrooke Gold District, to-

    gether with a paper on the Gneisses of Nova

    Scotian, The report is of the most careful
    description, It enters inte minute details,

    and furnishes tabulated statistics of the re-
    turns from the mines for each year, from
    1865 till 1869. Lithographed geological
    maps, neatly executed, are bound in along
    with the report. The paper on the Gneisses,
    is also illustrated with carefully prepared
    maps. At the end of the work there is an
    abstract of a paper on Gold-mining and its
    prospects in Nova Scotia, by Henry Youle
    lind, M. A. It was, we are told, read this
    year before the London Geological Society,
    and the Society of Arts. The publication
    will be most valuable for those who take an
    interest in the studies of which it treats, as
    also in furnishing reliable statistics of the
    success of our neighbors in Gold-mining.
    nem ti ae

    Tue United States’ steamers Neipsic,
    Frolic and Guard have returned home from
    the Dominion fishing grounds. They report
    that, at one time, eleven British ships of war
    were on the grounds, but no misunderstand-
    ing occurred, Five American vessels were
    properly seized for fishing within the pro-
    hibited limits. The catch was not so good
    as in former seasons.

    Correspondence,

    alt lt

    ‘To tne Eprron or tne Herarp,.

    ‘There appeared in the Progress of the 24th
    ult., over the signature of * Norwegian,” a
    communication which was, throughout, eha-
    racterived hy abourdity, etupldity and false-
    hood. “ Norwegian,” in the first place, with
    a degree of unpardonable effrontery, deliber-
    ately states 2 notorious and palpable false-
    hood, in asserting that Mr. A. Callaghan
    addressed meetings in this part of the dis-
    trict—meaning ‘Tignish—where he indited
    his self epistle. The truth is, sir, and the
    pa a of Tignish well know it, that Mr. A.

    ‘allaghan never did, at any period of his
    life, address a a meeting in ‘Tignish,
    convened for political purposes ; consequent-
    ly, the assertion that Mr, A, Callaghan ma-
    ligned Mr. Bell's political character at public
    meetings held in Tignish, Kildare or Alber-
    ton, isas void of truth as its contemptible
    author is of manly principle and common
    sense,

    Again, that pitiable and stolid object,
    designating himself ‘* Norwegian,” evinces
    a lamentable and utter disregard for every
    principle of truth and honor, when he asserts
    that Mr. A. Callaghan publicly condemned
    the — system of education, and advo-
    cated Denominational Schools. On no oe-
    easion did Mr. Callaghan speak disapprov-
    ingly of the present system of education;
    nor did he ever designate it a Godless sys-
    tem. But Mr, Callaghan is of opinion that,
    besides the common schools, we should have
    superior educational institutions, wherein
    the youth of the Island, after acquiring a
    preliminary education, might, if wishing to
    qualify themselves to engage in any of the
    learned professions, avail themselves of the
    advantages of a superior education.

    ‘That such institutions should be endowed
    by the Government of the Colony, becomes
    obvious to every rational man, when he re-
    flects on the advantages that would accrue
    to the young men of the Island—many of
    whom possess ability, but who, from limited
    means, are unable to expend the large
    amount necessary to enable them to pursue
    a Collegiate course of studies. But should
    the Col “es of the Island be endowed from
    the public revenue, it would, undoubtedly,
    have the happy effect of rendering the board
    and tuition cheaper to the student in these
    institutions, thereby placing the poor, as
    well as the rich, in a position to ayail them-
    selves of the henetits of a superior education,
    Now, sir, Mr, Bell has publicly avowed him-
    self opposed to the subsidizing of any supe-
    rior educational institutions, and in promot-
    ing that intolerant policy, he is to a great
    extent impeding the ess of the youth
    of this Island, But Mr. Bell being of a tem-
    porizing disposition, may find it as conye-
    nient, at some future crisis, to renounce his
    eos policy and advocate endowments, as
    1¢ did to join the present Government, and
    cecede from that portion of the Liberal party
    who, throughout, op; the grant ques-
    tion, thereby sustaining him in the views he

    consistency in this matter, is too glaring not
    to attract public attention, and ultimately
    bring on him the just reprehension of a dis-
    cerning public.

    Had the electors of the First District
    selected Mr. Kelly for their re ntative
    in the Legislative Council, they would,
    judging from his antecedents, have a more
    progressive legislator than they at present

    rossess, in the mapregresive Herbert Bell.
    jut I presume the time is not far distant
    when be r. Bell's peony ey will re-
    gret the great error they have mitted in
    ae him to a mod in the Loglalative
    Jouncil,

    Before concluding, sir, permit me to con-
    fute one more unfounded assertion made by
    * Norwegian.” Ile states that disappointed
    office hunters labored to malign Mr. Bell's
    political character at the various public
    meetings held in this part of the district a
    few days previous to the election, and that
    the most conspicuous of those were Messrs.
    A. Callaghan and Joseph Muyphy, ef Lot 11.
    As I before stated, Mr. A. Cal n did not
    speak at any public meeting held in this
    part of the district. Mr. Joseph Murphy did

    accompany Mr. Kelly whilst ex in
    this part oft the district, whieh hekacta yatibes
    oo to do; but it was not peaapaedl o-w se
    of seeking an office, as is meanly a y
    stated by “Norwegian.” If Mr. Murphy
    recommended Mr. Kelly to the electors of
    Tignish and vicinity, as a gentlemen of com-
    onion, cons and j » he

    what he may feel justl | He
    told an honest Be ary so doing, he
    does not now stand before the public in the
    unenviable of an wnserupulons liar,

    whom | as you do, Mr. * Norwegian,”
    1 am, sir, é

    MTORR WALT FT AUKSON,

    November 1, 1870,

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About
Title
The Herald -- 1870-11-16 -- Page 2
Date Issued
1870-11-16
Language
English
Type
Text
Genre
Extent
1 page
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Robertson Library, UPEI
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Reel Sequence Number
0406
Page Number
2
Physical Location
Robertson Library, UPEI