——— ee Mrs i sammie 1 TT mae . va _. st a = ti — cep eo who, with 520 Europeans, had marched to quiet Tuanpore,| »” = ica * - “ oe 1X AMINER a THE EXAMI Dn. é . f = oan a on S— . . . oo ’ : om * ’ % p 2 l:audsome cousin, with five (#®usand a-year. As forthe! ‘ 6. Norah! what a magnificent perfon your cousin B- savage blood in him, five thousand a-year would purify that | “Yes, he is very handsome,’ said Norah ; ‘or, at least, ’ ‘ | ‘ But you are so pale, Norah !’ said Lucy, gJancing in the | peaple say 80. gloss at her own velvetry, rose-red cheeks, rownd whieh her| Bat don’t youthink hbim-.so yourself, Nory? woo | dark hair, tarned back in a gorgeous roll, was set like ashining} ‘1 do not admire that dark style,’ answered Norah. | frame: while Norah's small, pallid face crowded up with a|* His mother was a Nubian, 1 believe, and the mark of his: profusion of colourless hair, looked like that of alittle ghost. race is too visible.’ : *L am always.pale,’ said Norah, ‘ but never mind me now. ‘Well, Llike it, cried Lucy. ‘Tt gives a life and anima-| Tell me of yourself, Luey. Think how long it is since [| tion which our red and white Saxon men want. His features have seen you!—two long years! Tell me all that has are regularly and beautifully cut, and I think that the dark happened te you since we left Madame Coson’s! Are you blood improves them. It would have been different if he going to be married ?—are you engaged yet ? /had been Jikea negro in feature.’ : ‘1? No, Norah? I have not had five thousand a-year| ‘1am glad you like him,’ said Norah simply. ‘ And he laid at my feet as you have at yours.’ thinks you beautiful—too beautiful to go about the world ‘I should care more about the man than the money,’ saidj alone. He said go,’ Norah, gently, ‘ though, indeed,’ she added below her breath,| ‘ Did he!’ laughed Lucy, looking more pleased than proud, ‘they areallalike!’ And she sighed. '* Rather an impertinent speech to a bride-elect, was it not, « Is that your experience, Norah ?” laughed Lucy. ‘Mine Nory? What did you say to him in return? Did you not is just the reverse. They talk of the dissimilarity of| scold him? women, and of our chameleon-like characters, but we are! ‘No; [said to him just what I said to you—that I was the very representatives of monGtony compared to men. ! glad he admired you.’ F Why do you say that they are all alike ® ‘ How charmed he must have been with your good sense !” « They are all such tyrants,’ said Norah. said Lucy. Lucy looked at her intently; then going up to her she! +‘ No, he was not,’ answered Norah, not as if making a sindothed back her fuir hair gently, saying :— | complaint, but speaking quite tranquilly, as if it was a nor- ‘Is that your experignce, my poor Norah? Ah! [ un-| mal condition of things, and she was used to it. * On the derstand it all now!’ ‘contrary, he was angry aud excited. He wanted me to be Norah’s lip quivered, and her eyes filled; but her hard jealous; but [ am not of a jealous nature, and if he thought life bad taught the little creature self-command, and, after aj} every woman in the world handsomer than L, it would hot m ment, the spasm passed, aud left her face as still and| disturb me. Indeed, I would be very glad if it quieted him, calm as ever. and took him a little more out of himself, and away from me. ‘And your's, Lucy ? Well! L must not keep you up after your journey. Good ‘Mine !—dear litle girl, what a question! Don’t you|night,dear. O! how glad I am that you are fere !’ know me well enough to know that the man does not live on She bent her forehead to her friend’s lips, and then went this earth who could or should play the tyrant over me?|up to her own bed-room; where, the sad foimula of the No, Norah! not the strongest will or the fiercest temper | night, she cried herself to sleep like a child. could conquer me. Let them try! There is nota man in| ‘ Poor Norah!’ said Lucy. ‘She does not love that man England that I could not make my slave if I chose.’ as much as I love my parrot! Whata tragedy is preparing And she laughed-—half in deprecation of her imperial] for them all! But what a superb fellow he is boast, half in conscious power—such power as women, when | G regory, riding home, could not help giving a thought to i ’ they are young, beautiful and self-willed, alone feel. Lucy. He was living over the evening again, and the new * Not your father, Lucy ?’ guest came in for her rightful share of the canvas. « My father? Bless his dear gentle heart! he would not| ‘She is excessively handsome,’ he thought, ‘ but I do not hurt a fly, much less offend his daughter, of whom he is so/ like her. Something about ker repels me. Her eyes are too extravagantly proud and fond. Dear, good-tempered papa !| free and her manvers too confident ; but she can love—-if he never said ‘ No,’ to my ‘ Yes,' in his life ; nor to mamma's | indeed any man could be found to care for a love which would either. No; mamma is more inclined to be tyrannical than | give itself without being sought. ©! Norah’s iciest cold- papa, but she is not difficult. I can soon kiss her into a| ness is more enchanting to me than this over-freedom of good humour; and then I gossip with her, and, dear soul!) giving, this prodigal generosity of love in this bold-eyed she likes that. So I get around her, too; if, with a little} beauty. But Norah! Norah! can I ever make you love me more management, yet quite as effectually as round papa ;/as I would be loved !’, aud they never dream of thwarting me—never !’ He took off his hat, so that the night-wind might blow ‘And your brothers? Am I troublesome? But it is so/ cool upon his feverish forehead, and setting spurs to his jong since I have seen you, that I understand nothing of | horse, galloped many a long mile, seeking by violent exercise your family or your position now.’ to sg sy agen tumult 08 7 7 pale SS ae Norah spoke so timidly, as one accustomed to refusals. |ing in her sleep, murmured,‘ Why may I not dic! * Ask what you like, dear,’ said Lucy, in her fine, patron-| why cannot I die now!’ ising way. ‘I shall be very happy to tell you anything. (To be continued.) Wel agg brothersethey are the esteretee QQ eee world! I have two—ass you may remember. Launce is the : ° ; ~ eldest ; he is like anit Rind: oth large, good-tempered Gleanings from late jJapers. i ee es ee ee orn Lan eee him Doggie when he is particularly good. Edmund is the THE REBELEION IN INDIA. youngest of us ali; he is a year younger than [—by the bye, just your own age, Nory—and one of the gentlest beinys|y_ rvprriLLED CONDITION OF THE BRITISH AT LUCKNOW. breathing. He is a spiritual, ethereal morsel, into whom we eee oe ph ei, rE garrison to relieve, or at least to reinforce. Between the wie ee irl Dien asin As Els 200 Sai’ aad jie Residency and its vicinity, where Outram and Havelock are “th g ok “i al eile niiiniind Sin Bleeds intrenched, and the fortified post of Alumbagh, on the gy crema cena pc mlaragr tir tc thn crepes i ger fire Cawnpore road, there is a distance of some three miles. o Tine mae. As he is, he holds very mach the office of the While from the Ganges to Alumbagh the road is, for a party berds of old with us ail. We ast Sie ee “ — of moderate streugth, perfectly clear, the remaining three tual matters, wever his advice on worldly affairs ; and, if he miles are beset with difficulties formidable even to an army. wore vet incorraptible, he would have been spoilt years 20, | tive are congregated in masses mutineers of the Oude with all the love and petting he has had. But, to go beck Irregular force and of the regular Bengal army, armed _re- to myself. You any by this sketch of home, Norah, that tainers of rebel Pathan or Rajpoot zemindars, and the loose I have no very formidable cypqnants See Launee ferocious population that swarins in the bazaars of a Mus- is too soft-hearted ; Edmund too goo ~—abesiden being £00) salman city ; and their position, though we have no exact abstracted—to ae = that, in fact, Nory, I rule the | details of its nature, is clearly a strong one, inasmuch as it h6use—and that is just the truth. consists of a portion of the city, thus involving an attack by : W hat a happy life!” said Norah, sadly. our troops in narrow streets and upon houses and walls held * Now tell me yours, Nory.’ by the enemy, a mode of fighting in which, and in which ‘O! no, no! never mind mine! It is too tame after ae ty Pe, sg ae ae _ : alone, as we know from old Delhi experience, the mutineers yours,’ said Norah hurriedly, ‘1 have nothing to tell you) Jo to advantage. ‘Through such a barrier as that con- but what you know.’ . . . . stituted by this formidable position it is not surprising that ‘Why, ehild! I know nothing. Ccme! your history or! hut Jittle correspondence has been able to force its way. your life, rebel! : : . | Hnough, however, has by one means and another reached At that moment a bell rang imperiously, as everything Cawnpore to show that Outram and Havelock were well = done at Lyndon Hall. eet Binh Gillian ttt holding their own at the beginning of the present month. It : she Gent dinner-bell, — ot ee 0 ng | was said a month back that the greater part of the city was o—- I a ” one, aaa as eee sian by that time in our possession. This came by letter from a ae oe ; you’ Cawnpore, nevertheless it appears to have given too favour- are in time, for 1 want you to be a favorite here,’ she added able a view of the state of affairs at the capital of Oude, for with S sad smile. —" . as late as the 16th of October only we read in the report of a ‘Very well, I will be punctual,’ said _Luey, hurrying 'spy, or “ man of the intelligence department,” that half the about her room and ringing for her.meeid.: Then, when | city was in our power. It was probably against the re- Norah had fairly closed the door, she ar aloud and said : maining balf, and in the attempt to cut a passage to, the ' Bor to-day only nae to feel my ground. : party at Alumbagh, that the efforts of the force were directed ¥ me to “p! os down ae came, — egg ne - the pea S ae of — er ensued, a e time, all radiant In peach-biossom and siiver. ittle | the result of this har ting we know nothing, save that Norah glided in almost immediately after, ip a floating light Alumbagh was not car a as we hear no further blue robe; the one self-possessed and queenly, the other! actions, we conclude that Sir James Outram and his col- timid and retiring ; the one with her broad black brows and | league, having experienced an obstinate resistance determined open eyes, her rich complexion and her ruddy, laughing | on remaining quietly in their intrenchments till the force at mouth, the other with say, melancholy orbs always hidden by} Alumbagh should be so strongly reinforced as to be able to their drocping lids, with sma}l and delicate lips that smiled | force its way through, or to atitack the enemy's rear, while more sadly than Lucy’s wept, they again assaulted his front. And, bappily, they would The Colonel and Gregory were waiting to receive them. | #0t have long to wait, The Colonel stood near the eee we watchful of narrow ESCAPE OF SIR COLIN CAMPBELL FROM CAPTIVITY— 2 : } , ainst the chimney-piece, -IN-CHIEF—8 ‘3 OU , ~~ ee ah. Th Col | with his ; y-prece FLIGRT OF THE COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF—SIR JAMES OUTRAM'S aes ee ing tor ai bh rt a , ed atten, | MESSAGE FROM LUCKNOW—ARRANGEMENTS FOR A TERRIBLE alr and keen grey eyes, his hawk nose, thin face and military BATTLE. bearing, looked the impersonation of severity turued gentle-| Qolonel Foye Grant with Colonel Greathed’s column, man; while Gregory, swarthy and excited, his large black 3.500 strong, reached Cawnpore on the 28h of October. eyes. taking every shade of feeling as mirrors throw back He crossed the Ganges on the 30th, with 18 guns, aad his forms, his thick red lips and small white teeth beneath, arrival at the Alumbagh has been already reported. He looked like what he was—tbe ee with the savege | met with no opposition on the road, which, indeed, during | element predominant. Between them oth bo wonder was! the late operations has always been clear, the enemy concen- it that frail, fair Norah’s life was core dying + of ber ; trating all their forces around Lucknow. The column will it 1 ® 7: mene Nae ut “5 been ak, 2h remain at the Alumbagh till the arrival of the Commander- As Lucy said—writing home to ber mother that might, and) jn-Chief, who left Calcutta on the 28th of October. Sir esaggerating in consideration of her mother’s weakuess for | (olin Campbell travels like a couricr, and on the 3rd of gossip—t she looked like a little white lamb between a lion | November he was at Cawnpore. He had, however, a most and a jaguar—the jaguar was the Colonel (added in a foot- /narrow escape en route. He persisted, in spite of the wart | note). * But,’ continued Lucy, with a burst of heroism by remonstrances of his friends, in travelling with his personal | no means common to her, ‘I will save her! I feel that [ staff without an escort, and when near Sherghotty eame upon | have had this mission given to me, aud that [am sent to) two mutinous companies of the 32nd Native Infantry. They efiect poor Norah’s release.’ . | were leisurely crossing the road, the men sitting on elephauts, When the party separated that night, Colonel Lyndon | with parties o! horsemen, probably of the 12th Light Cavalry, reviewed himself anxiously in his dressing-glass—specially }{olmes’s murderers, to protect each flank, The eoachman about his eyes and round his mouth. - After a few minutes aynounced their approach, and the Commander-in-Chief, he drew himself up, saying ;—‘ Not so many afterall! Ak! yesisting a wild proposal to show fight, retreated for ten miles, who knows but that 1 may even outlast Giegory,’ ‘till he came up to a bullock-train filled with Europeans. Norah accompanied Lucy to her room, It was such a They escorted him to Benares, whence it is believed he again Lucknow is still the object of hopes-—for again there is a novelty to her to have one of her Own sex near her, that she pushed on without a guard, This daring push excites some | elyug to Lycy as if she had been her sister. She seemed so admiration, but there was more than life hanging on the | kind and gentle and soft-hearted to poor Norah, crushed by ' Jommander-in-Chiet’s safety. Had the cavalry charged on) her father, seorehed by her lover, and terrified by both, that, the carriages and eabred the inmates, Lucknow might have if she eould she would never have left her side. Yet Lucy fallen, for we should not have heard the fate of the party was only a year older than her young hostess, for all she for weeks. fle is, however, safe, and every available patronised aud played mother over her to such perfection, detachment is concentrating behind him. Col. Berkeley's Luey spoke of Gregory. Her lids fluttered for a moment column is ou its road. Gol. Hinde, with his force in Rewah, over her dark Blue eyes, as she said with girlish frankness: ig said to have reeeived bis orders; so has Col. Longden, | ‘Sikhs and Ghoorkas at his disposal. Ue will not have so ‘of its danger may interfere with a complete victory. It is | Sir Colin silence with the guns at his disposal the batteries the Col. Wroughton, with most of Jung Bahadoor's Ghoorkas, is already on the frontier of Oude. Some Sikhg are on theirapareh from. Delhi, and altogether Sir CeGampbell) ought to have at least 5,000 Europeans, and some 3,000 myny for the actual relief of Lucknow, and he has received a letter from Sir James Outram, declaring thatthe garrison can hold out for some days yet, and begging that no thought understood that Sir Colin will, when all is ready, cross the Goomtee, advance on the bank opposite the town, and from that vantage ground shell the enemy out. He will then recross, and enter the Residency. Lucknow, once secured and fortified, will become his head-quarters, whence, inch by inch, he may reconquer Oude. The plan is strikingly able, but its success depends partially upon two contingencies. The first is the time for which the garrison can hold out. That appears to be settled by the letter quoted; but an accident, the explosion of a mine, or the loss of any of the powder in store, may upset all calculations. Secondly, ean rebels will erect on their own side of the river ?. The Sepoys work their artillery well, and possess quantities inexplicable to men who forget there are 400 fortresses in Oude, not one of which has been dismantled since the annexation. If we may judge at all from previous experience, the plan of the rebels will be to fire as long as they can, then evacuate the city, permit the relieving force to enter the Residency, and close in upon them again. No man, however, can venture to predict the movements of Asiatics. TIE WRITING ON THE WALL AT CAWNPORE. The following is an extract from the letter of an officer of the Madras Fusileers at Cawnpore :—* 1 went the other day to see the house of horrors where the unfortunate women and children were massacred. Atthe entrance I found a gibbet, and under it the carcass of a wretch who had just been hanged as a spy. It is a small brick building built ina square, the rooms opening into a small court-yard in the centre. The place is still strewn with fragments of clothes and lots of shoes. The walls in places are sprinkled with blood, and the mats on the floor appear to have been drenched with it. On carefully examining the walls I found scratched on the plaster behind a door, the following—written ap- parently by the wife of a Kuropean soldier, of whom there were several shut up there :— «*Countrynien and women, remember the 15th of July, ‘57. Your wives and families are here in misery and at the disposal of savages, who have ravished both young and old, and then killed us. Ob! oh! My child! my child ! Country- men, revenge it!’ ” I don’t think anything would appeal so strongly to the feelings of our countrymen at home, as this simple statement of misery. lt is expressed and spelt as above, and seemed to have been scratehed with the point of a knife. The walls of the little room where it was written were spattered with blood, and the plaster cut in several places with swords. I went to see the intrenchment where Wheeler defended himself so long. It isa low mud bank about three feet high, surrounding two large buildings that were formerly hospitals. The walls of these are literally riddled by round shot, and the roofs of both have fallen in. It seems quite miraculous, when you look at the wretched defence, how men could have held out one day, much less many days, against a host well armed, and provided with big guns and every requisite material. ‘They must have beca arrant cowards—as, indeed, we know they were—for they never dared to come out into the open, but fired from the cover of some half-finished bar- racks near the intrenchment. If with the small force we have had hitherto we -have been able to command victory, what will it be when England’s armies now arriving march through the country? In six months India will be more entirely in our power than it has ever been before.” BOMBARDMENT OF FUTTEYPORE-SEKREE, AND DEFEAT OF REBELS AT MUTTRA. On the 27th of October Colonel Cotton, with a small body of troops, made a forced march from Agra towards Futtey- pore-Sekree, where a large body of the Indore fugitives were said to be assembled. The force consisted of 200 of the Engineer Brigade, three light field battery guns, two 8-inch lashed the horses throng! a band of mutineers, while he with cool aim shot dead one who seized the horses’ h and another who climbed up e carriage behind to cut him down. Ou the fied, till again found themselves g foes, ond a rope stretched a@ross the road made further appear impossible. True to herself, she dashed the horges gt full speed against the rope, and as they, bearing it down stumbled, she by rein and whip raised them, while her husband's weapons again freed them from those wh in leaping upon them. He was wounded, but both escaped with their lives. In anothe: place, a young lady, the of an officer, shot seven matineers. before they FIT omg A captain, pressed by his Tan his good swotd Sle twenty-six of them before he fel! !” ————- Ss Ehje Examiner. — CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E. 1, JANUARY 138, 185s, ouites ot cdmirnin ghattn pute 18 iy THE GOVERNMENT AND THE BANK. ia We have no desire to protract the discussion which has bem! forced upon us respecting the application that was made to the Government a short time since on behalf of the Bank ; bat the facts which we, as a public journalist, felt it our duty to. announce in reference to that application, having not only been impugned and stigmatised as wilful misrepresentation, but the. Government as well as ourselves haying been maligned for the information we offered to the public, we consider it due to our- selves and to our readers to produce the necessary proofs in. support of our affirmations. It was certainly the duty of our assailants in this matter to prove the falsity of our assertions, if they could. If barely telling a person, however, that he ig a wilful falsifier of certain facts, can be aceepted as evidence that he is such a character, the writers in the Is/ander on the Bank affairs are entitled to the credit of having discovered a new mode of ratiocination. _ In the Examiner of the 14th ultimo, we stated in an article on commercial affairs generally, the nature of the application — which the Bank deemed necessary to make to the Government, ing of the President and some of the Directors, had waited upon His Excellency the Lieutenant Governor, and requested | that the Government would give public authority for postpon-_ ing the call of the unpaid Stock — suspending specie payments, and to declare that the Notes of the Bank would continue to be received at the Treasury in payment of duties and other obligations —the Bank offering to place in the hands of the Treasurer Goyernment Warrants sufficient to cover the amount of Notes so received, as a collateral security for their redemp- part of the request, but declined to authorise the postponement _ of the call of Stock, or otherwise to interfere with the operation | of the Bank Act. At the time of-making this statement, we itself, that the account of it we had received was substantially correct. ‘To our announcement of the facts indicated, we ap- pended the following observations, to the trath of ‘which we have the testimony of the Bank Directors themselves, as will likewise presently appear :— ‘* Although we consider that the Notes of our Bank are quite as safe as any description of Bank Notes afloat at the present’ day, when Banks from one end of the Continent to the other are daily succumbing to the crisis, we must not shut our eyes to the fact that the yma excitement would not be so soon allayed, and our Bank paper allowed to pass current as here- tofore, if the Government had acted in a churlish spirit, and refused to receive their Notes at the Treasury.”’ As a reply to these observations, the Is/ander of the 25th ult. published a communication, which bears internal evidence of howitzers, a detachment of Sikh cavalry and infantry, uader | having been written by one of the Directors, in which two the command of Lieut. Sheriff, and the militia cavalry. | very important facts of our statement are set aside, and after They reached their destination on the morning of the 28th,|, display of much ill temper, the public are informed that the but found that the bulk of the enemy had decamped during the night. A few desperate men still beld a very strong position in the Tehseldaree and buildings around. After a Bank merely requested the Government to authorise a post- ponement of the call of the unpaid Stock, and to imtroduce a short bombardment, a 9-pounder was brought to bear on the | Bill to indemnify the Directors for that infraction of the Bank eastern gate, when the troops burst in and stormed the} Charter. We quote the passage which bears upon this subject place. Twelve men were killed inside, and five cut up by! from the communication referred to :— the cavalry when attempting to escape. We had seven or ‘* The Bank Directors, acting, of course, under the respon- tion. Westated that the Executive readily assented tothe latter not seen the written application of the Bank Directory, but. we shall presently show, by the production of the cocaine eight men wounded, most of them slightly, amongst them was Lieut. Glubb. No one was killed. The Kerowlee Rajah's troops had before this destroyed a portion of the | ing to so alter the Bank Charter as to enable the Directors same set, when attempting to cross the Chumbul. The | to postpone the call for the remaining £7500 of the subscribed column next proceeded towards Muttra, at which place they | stock to a more opportune period, when it could be more arrived on the 3lst, having cut up some 150 rebels at the | easily met by both farmers and merchants, and yet be paid village of Bnegree, where a large quantity of ammunition | time enough for its actual employment, when the notes was secured. They were still at Muttra on the 2d Nov., | issued got into full circulation, = * > ae and were next to march towards Hodal. ’| The Directors, on being refused so reasonable, and, to all ap- arance, so necessary a request, in order to save the Bank THE IMMENSE TERRITORY TO BE RECONQUERED—CENTRAL INDIA | Charter, deemed it most prudent to suspend, for the time IN A STATE OF HORRIBLE ANARCHY, aon the pees ey notes > ie, 80 as to have the About Jubbulpore all is said to be ina state of anarchy. ried te dpe of £7500 lio - wait a ne There are two regiments of Madras Cavalry there, but the | Charter in defiance of the machinations of all those inimical rebels are in every direction, like flies in summer, and the | to its existence. After the Charter shall be so perfected, we force cannot leave the station. Sir R. Hamilton, the active! understand the Directors will go on paying cash on demand, sibility of their position, asked the Government to promise to Resident at Indore, leaves Caleu‘ta by this steamer for | as heretofore. Now, it must be quite obvious, that, had the 3 , ill find l f Europeans, with | “overnment met the request of the Directors in anything else Henkes. See Ss et ee me than ‘‘ a churlish spirit,’’ there would be no seountiee what. whom he will march straight on Indore, re-establish the a i oe re ee See ee a authority of Holkar, crush the rebels, and cleanse Central | 4°" “Qr ® Syspens’ We wetteeee a » ER pe wag GEN India. There is no danger of his showing an unwise leniency. | Notes being taken into the Treasury on condition of the Bank Another column moves as soon as possible from Bombay giving security for the amount of notes so received ; but what through Saugor and Bhopal, rebuilding our shattered prestige | amount of security the little Examiner man does not say,— there also. It seems to be thought in England that we shall | although it is not many days past since a single ‘ bawbee,’ have almost too many men for the work before us. It is) We believe, would be better security than all the treasure in forgotton that the territory to be reconquered is larger than | the Treasury }”’ » France, Austria, Prussia, and Spain all put together, with; From that part of the above extract between asterisks it will no means of communicayon, and a population at best pas-| be distinctly seen that the Government are accused with having sive. At the present moment Oude, with its forts, its chiefs, compelled the Bank to suspend, whercas we shall presently and its armed populace is in open insurrection. In several : : districts of the North-west the authority of the British is | *"°W that the Bank Directory had in the first instance conte®- limited to the ground they stand on; Central India is in| plated a suspension, and asked the Government to authorise it. horvible anarchy. Anarchy in India is not merely the! In the Islander of the 8th instant the editor steps forth # absence of the constable. It means the rule of banditti endorse the views and statements-of his correspondent, whieh, springing in every direction out of the ground, the subjugation | 4¢ oourse. he implicitly believes: and t k ion to charge. of the merchant, the artisan, and the cultivator to the classes eee ee 7 ae Saye .ee seer who live by plunder, and who in their hour of triumph |"* Wid ** snleragetonntatinnts” Gnetating'the aatenn et es invariably display the cruelty innate in the Asiatic, In quest preferred by ‘* the infant Bank,” of an attempt to injure Bengal Proper, the richest of our provinces, there is not out which the Government areaccused, We take from the article of Calcutta a disposable European, Assam, a province as referred to, the following extract, to show how completely our large as Wales, is guarded by 100 sailors, Dacca,a country 4.0. porary has be lled by hi aaaaatied the exports of which alone last year were worth £2,000,000 | pay. Pa eT eee ' sterling, has another hundred, Dinagepore and Rungpore,| . ‘‘ The Examiner of the 14th December says, that a ase districts about the size of Yorkshire, have not a man. The tin of the Bank Directors + waited upon His Excellency ; : ‘ ‘Lieutenant Governor, and requested that the Government troops are wanted in 5Q points at once, and until the North-| would give permission to suspend specie payments.’ We have west is suhjagated they cannot be spared. The number of ciated that we did not blame the Government for declining to deaths, too, will be very great’both from battle and exposure, | comply. with the request, though the refusal was inconsiste aud reinforcements ought to be poured in to the extent of with the boasted advantages of Responsible Government. But at least 30 per cent. of the original force. ‘from a communication to the Islander of the 25th ult., it ta t of the Eraminer is essentially Frmate Heroism in [yp1a.—The Rev. Mr. Scudder, an jaw R gyre doen of the Bank Deedee, being for the American missionary in India, gives the following instances Gg .ornment to introduce a Bill into the ture to of heroism :—“ In one place, a lady and her husand fled in = ostpens for a short time, the payment of £7 500 by the their carriage, He stood upright. She took the reins. She Stock-holders, next month.” introduce a Bill into the House of Assembly, at its next meets s \ * Our statement was to this effect: that a deputation, consist- \ ,