EE ee Ghe Graminer. | destined, in a few centuries afterwards, to become the in your own Island. These passages which are called Cata- a ‘apostles of Christianity and civilization to the euergetic but| combs appear to have been originally excavated to procure After baying married, and survived her husband, Mrs. barbarous vations who sabverted the Roman power, and, | this tufa, which, when pounded and mixed with lime, forms laddock becaaie the laundress in this gloomy old house, after conquering the Roman arms, yielded to the Roman | the celebrated Roman cement, These passages were enlarged, | ‘bere aow she sits telling us the story. faith. and taken possession of, by the Christians. They are so) And Mr. Silas. What of him? Ife is the owner of the; The position of Rome, in the ancient world, was peculiarly | tortuous, and extend so far under groand—in one case, It Is | *ollards now. and of a large house in town, and has many ‘adapted as the centre of universal empire. All the great |said, twenty milés, that no one could venture into them with- | eryaots. Mrs. Haddock could tell you strenge stories of events of the ancient world—were, I may say, grouped ‘out a guide; and it would take half a life-time to become | wild orgies, gambling, druakeaness, and debauchery ia which, round that great central luke, the Mediterranean, he acquainted with all their intricacies. Here and there larger they say, he spent some twenty years. But that is over; ancient seat of civilization, the East, sent forth its colonies | recesses are excavated, capable of containing twenty or thirty | aod for these teo years past, he has lain bed-ridden. With- ‘all along its shores. There Llomer sung and Virgil poured persons, and one of them served as Cathedral to the Pope. ovt friead o¢ relation, with no one to care for him or attend | out his melodious strains,—there, in Judea, the great mystery | There you yet see the altar, and the remains of the rude) to him, snve bis hired nurses—dragging oa a wretched exist- | of man’s redemption was accomplished. Italy then occupy-| fresco painting, for even in these caverns the Christians as | ences from day to day, with nothing to live for, yet afraid to | ing the centre of this great basin, and Rome the centre of far as they could, adorned the House of God. Here, in fear | die; paralysed, helpless, unutierably lonely and miserable, | ttaly, it was exactly placed where it ought to be for a con-| and in trembling, the divine sacrifice was offered up—the | old Shes Gurdlestone awaits the dread summons calling him |quering people, destined to build up an empire like that of sacred hymns, smothered in the bowels of the earth, were so the tribunal before which he must reader an account of | home. | not heard by the blaspheming Pagan overhead, though they | his deeds. God be merciful to bim! Never before, and in all probability never again, will there | | penetrated to the throne of God ; aud when frequently they SS ae be seen on the earth anything like the Rowan empire, of| were interrupted by the tramp of the soldiers, led, perhaps, | ROME, PAST AND PRESENT, Which the city of Rome was the centre and the head. The/|by some false brother, the terrified flock would disperse | A LECTURI: whole civilized werld was subject to the Roman Emperor. | themselves through the erooked passages among the tombs | Delivered in St. Dunstan's Cathedral in Charlottetown, P. E. Istand, in aid of the Funds of the Irish Volun- One thousand subject cities poured their wealth into the |of the martyrs, and the Pontiff would be dragged from his) teers, on Thursday evening, 16th August, 1860, BY THE RIGHT REV. DR. MULLOCK, Imperial Treasury. High roads of such extraordinary humble throne before the Magistrate, there to profess bis! BISHOP OF ST. JOUN’S, ¥. F. ———— solidity, that, like Watling street in the north of England, | faith and seal it with his blood. : | |they are in use at the present day—traversed the empire| How many hours have I spent in my youthful days in the | from the Capitoline hill to the frontiers of the Asiatic desert, | Catacomb of St. Sebastain, masing among the hollow niches, | and to the western shores of Scotland. All around the fron-| and the sepulchres of the martyrs, or in the humble recess | ‘tiers of this compact empire, the Roman sentinels kept| Which served as a Cathedral, and comparing that with the, watch against the predatory incursions of the Celtic Scotch | dome of St. Peter’s and the sp'endours of the Vatican! L) and Jrish, and the fleet Arabs of the Eastern desert, and the | _— 7 of the impression these a 5 eae gst own . : dusky races of the Subara, and the fierce barbarians of the) ™ind. I[ cannot answer for others; but on me they always | an . fasems of the north of Europe. One hundred millions of | badgshe effect of exciting the most lively emotions of faith, | The subject on which [ am about to address you is one | nhabitants—all governed by one will, speaking, in a great anda most ardent desire— would to God that the impression at ali times most interesting, but at present, I may say, all “measure, one language, protected and kept in subjection by | Were permanent !—of labouring uatil death for the glory of absorbing. it 7 Rome, past sad present,” and especially | hundreds of thousands of steel-clad soldiers, the famous Roman | that Church whose humble child I was. in comnection with the Papal power. 1 regret, indeed, that | legions, the hammers of the earth—paid allegiance to che | (To be Continued.) ‘Imperial City, and aspired to the honour of being made | 1 bad not more time to prepare a lecture on this important a ae os oa only a re ae oe Roman citizeus, for the Civis Romanus was the lord of the} ~ called on me and sugges’ e subject. I am obliged, oy fore, to depend entirely on memory and on personal obser- a } i ; a ' |GARIBALDI’S REPLY TO THE KING OF S ; sare, children, She cannot forget that he vaulted to power in France with a solemn oath on his lips to defend and payee reply the Republic, and that be used the power 80 a » | overthrow the Republic and slaughter an-l exile its de‘en ers. They cannot forget his pacific assurances and prutcsta- tions that he had sot armed, did not meditate war, &c., on he eve of his late bloody struggle with Austria. They can- not forget his protestations of disinterest: dness and aversion to conquest—his vaunt that France alone knows how to make , i cand when my | War for an idea—so soon followed by his Shylock a of sna ne caeeeiaadcd &ott le ae ae ri at your feet, | Savoy and Nice. This mau—of whom a Freuchman as ae tt ido speeks, and yet be always lies” tersely said *‘ Efe se! ies" ~ writes a letter to Persigny ritrcharged with professions ARDINIA’S | LETTER. 2 , The following is the substance of Genera Garibsld' . to the letter of the King of Sardinia. lt» dated Me ot July 27. The General says, that notwithstnding the — which he must entertain for the wi-hes of bs Sovereign, = devotion to the cause of Italy forbids bia ofeytng the west ts desires. By doing so he should fail in his duy te the peop who have summoned him to their aid, and she'd Rampromieey the Trahan cause by such a display of hesitation. ‘* Permit me, | it task shall be sccomplished, | will lay my and obey all your commands for tlre rest of my Ife. THE BRITISH ARMY IN CHINA. of good will and disc'aimers of evil designs toward Great Tixa-Hlae, Cuvsax, Mav 26.—The san is gtiing Very! Hrirain, the effect of whieh will doubtless be to hurry up her powerful, and ovr troops must soon relinguish ther wid-day | ow fortifications. They can hardly be finished too soon. dcill. Two men fainted during Divine service las Sunny») nr teon tells tine Kinglish that he desires on!y pence— ’ fever already attributed to the apo a e Ce uxt and there is one serious case of fever a y wie to the | hat his Navy is still too sinall and his Army imperfe se Falnckatin exteodt ava ia coe A we {has really but Four Hundred Thousand mea under arms ! one of some importance, as it may give use , Seulas Fhe gainer gin Sct aoa a nil, want to discover—namely, the sysien of t»xation pur 'Y | He has gr jue , nes ne the Court of Pekin. ‘The engineer department is engiged 7 / ang within the limits of Franee. bterpreting bum by making a survey of the town. Ting-hae was certainly suveyed rule of contraries, which experience has shown to be the only belore. but the survey has been discovered to be faulty. Shops eafe one, we look for a new and bloody European war te are starting up in all directions. The siznboard whichnow |) ot cithin the next year, and to see him at the head p20 Merge Feo Biogen orben a a nial rw of an immense army in Italy or upon the Rhine. We du co scichoen mana on od ‘of i Chin-| not think his time for an invasion of Kogland will come few cricketers practise daily on the scrap OF common at CniD- | no es vit has uihadiie hae tin, which goes by the name of the Garrison Parade-ground.| before 1862. It may never come 5 J saat On the 22d I joined a piratical expedition, which was designed | fauit. We all know that invasion is one of the Napoleonie to be a combined attack of the ellied torces by sea and land 0) Tdeas, and any of these may be deferred, but never aban- some 200 desperate men, chiefly from Canton and Ningpo, led \doned. So let John Bull strengthen his Sess Guth Mech weld by Gn English pidatr O17 0t6 sing ieee eee muh to his strongholds. These may save him; Napoleonic letters morals. ‘The gunboats opened fire early iv the morning with ae Y, Tralee emall arms and canister. From the usual mismanagement | 8¢Ver Wil. 4¥. 2. . te which attends combined atticks, ae a ——— i ( e before the time specified in orders, were tour ale aaron ai ai = geen) per ‘all a pirates escaped over the THE SYRIAN MASSACRES—RESCUE OF WOMEN mountains. The troops were of some nse, a 7 a AND CHILDREN AT DEIR-EL~KAMAR. ‘ on could be obtained from the : ee Ga ae The following is an extract of a letter dated Pirgeus, off Athens, July 23 :—“ We received euch startling intelligence by telegraph from Syria, that our captain, upon bis own res- sion there were 105 dolis., jars of opiuin, caps, and gunpowder. | villagers. One ruffian, who was concealed in the mountains, had a brace of double-barrelled pistols upon him. Lu one barrel there were five bullets, and in a box found in his posses- | | ponsibility, steamed off to Beyrout at once. Two or three vation. I can, however, promise that I will atate no fact of | which I sq got perfectly sure, and that the observations I wil! make oo places, men and things, are the result of close, aod I hope, impartial observation, carrie on through a period of over 31 years, when I first visited the Eternal City— resided there for some time, and subsequently visited it again x times, generally remaining there for seyeral months. The | areums of my boyhood were realized by the sight of the im- perishable monuments of ancient pagan Rome, and by the glcrious edifices and institytions of the Christian Capital of | she world; and [ cap assure you. in al! sincerity, that age bus brought no disenchantment. Rome, the city of the soul, | is @ place of which no one can tire. |tome! who does not | feel bis heart throb at the very name of the Eternal City— the mother of arts, arms and civiliza‘ion—the mistress of | nations. From her all the nations of Lurope and America hare received their religion, for even the great nations who hare rebelled against her authority have becu and sre still her ehildren, though they may have for a time turned against their mother, aud have outraged her, which she, howeyer, forgives | with all a mother’s love; for the ungrate‘ul conduct of the | ebild never can de-troy in the breast of the mother that un- Rome had at least seven millions of inhabitants. All the| power, the wealth, and the intelligence of the eaith centred | there, The most grand and gorgeous edifices ever raised by human hands adorned the Cupitol. The bowels of the moun- tains of Asia and Africa were ransacked fir the rarest marbles. The artists of Greece made the marble breathe and the walls alive with paintings. The Imperial Palace, the goldeu Eden, was a city in itself, and its ruins at the| present day, though it has served asa quarry for fifteen) ~ a S hundred years, would build a great city. received here on Friday morning last. In every region of this vast metropolis temples were er-| extracts from our latest papers as furnish all the intelligence ected to every false god; and as if even that was not sufli- cient, lest any vice or form of error should be unhonoured, in the centre of the great public park of the City--the| Campas Martius—arose the Pantheon, the temple of all the ods—the greatest edifice ever erected by man, until | He was tuken on board the Bustard, lefthigh and dry upon the | Che ECxraminer, en eee ee 'mud, where he contrived to poison himself, before 12 hours Charlottetown, P. E. 1, August 28, 1860, were up, wth opium. In this quarter of the globe French and | Eagliah pull wel) together. The 24th was duly observed at | i ithe fiery hour of noon by our troops, who were oe up ol . o * . ‘the ramparts and fired a feu de joie. The Chinese prwder used | Latest Intelligence fi oni Eur ope. by us was either bad or damp, and half the guns did nothing | | more than breathe out flames and clouds of innocuous smoke. | Tur English Mail, with dates to the 11th instant, was | hope to be able to report in my ea letter a capture = Pia al |Nankin. ‘There will be few eventa in the way of conquest to | ve = pare anh ‘record this year. Winter at the north wil! soon set in with its | usual eeverity. July and August are rainy months, while from | October till March there are frosts, ond the cold is far more) intense than at Moscow. — Se of any importance. The government have had a serious struggle in the House | of Commons on the paper duty question, but succeeded on the | NAPOLEON'S PROFESSION3 OF PEACE. ! not allow the people to depart. days after that we were sudden!y ordered to get up our steam with all speed, and found we were gong to rescue some poor wretches whohad escaped a fearful massacre at Deir-el- Kamar, and had managed to reach the seashore about 15 miles off. When we got to the place pointed out, we saw on some hills, about two miles off the beach, crowds of women and children huddled together, apparently in great distress, and we could not make out how it was they did not come dowa’ to the beach to be taken off. So the captain sent me ashors with all the boats to bring them off. I made all the boats lay off the surf, and then landed myself with an interpreter. I met an armed party of Druses on landing, and told them I wished to see the chicf, as it appeared it was he that would I went about two milestoa village where the chief lived. On my way up I met crowds buildings, were | Michael Angelo, inspired by the genius of Christianity, | boasted that he would erect a Pantheon, not on earth like 'the idvolatrous one, but in the clouds of heaven, as befitted ‘the Catholic faith; and he realized the sublime conception im the dome of St. Peter's. In different parts of the City, overtopping the o-her erected the Circuses,where man was butchered dying love which is stronger than death itself. From Rome | by his fellow man for the amusement of the populace ; and a'! modern nations have learned their civilization. Municipal iustitutions, laws regulating life, property and personal honor, | ere all ip a great measure derived from Roman Lostitutions. | The people of the greater portion of Europe, of all North | America, still speak the language of Rome, though corrupted by the intermixture of the Northern dialects; for the Roman. languages, {talian, Spanish, Portaguese, and even French, | sre but offshoots of the great Latin tongue, like the young | shoots which sprout up from the roots of a great tree after | the trunk is cat down ; an] even our own Teutunic tongue, | that copious and nervous language, the Haylish, is already | half Rowan or Latin, and is daily, by assimilation to the | cultivated languages, becoming more 60, Modern warfare, though carried on with different instruments of destruction, | ead with modern scientific appliances, is still but ao improve- | meat on thet system by which the Roman legions conquered | the world. Qur marriage and fyneral ceremonies are Roman. | The very measurement of time, munths and days, is almost | sitogether Roman in fact and nomenclature. Our public’ festivals are bat the continuation of the Roman festivals, | softened and sanctified by Christianity. In fact, a!l modern | civiligation and religion is more or less Roman, tage so fo the end of time interesting thag to trace the rise and origin of this extraor- state, erpecially in these days of trial and affliction. The pas history of this wonderful city, and its inbabitants, is lost in obecurity, and the legends related by Liyy and other Ro- men historians, sre not to be depended upon. great and vivilized people called the Leucanians or Etruseans, inhabited the central portion of Italy between the Celtic races on the north and the Pelasgian on the soutiern part of the Peain- sula. Their buried cities are stil! contributing their treasures ts the museums of Europe. Jewellery of the most beautiful description, bronzes, and «bove all that beautiful pottery s> artiatiesl!y and gracefully modelled and ornamented, whic) we call Etruscan vases. Among the many small cities with @hich Latiam was studded, was the ancient Rome on the Palatine mount, about 100 feet from the Capitol. Romu- jus, who eppears to have been a sort of filibuster or Genera! Welker ia bis day, seized on the Capitoline hill, and estab- lished there the city we know ag Rome, which soon absorbed its more ancient sister into its ample circuit. From the day the first rude ensign of Romy!us was planted on the Capitol- ine mount, it never ceased to advance until the whole civilized world was subject to its sway, and the world became | the ordis Romanus. For over 400 years was the infant republic—for it soon ceased to be a kingdom—struggling with the peoples who surrounded it, before it burst through the narrow enclosure of Italy, and absorbed the world. Waat was the seeret of their success, and which we, the founders of great nations that will inhabit these provinces hereafter, should learn ?—Self-reliance and Perseverance. Their character bas What sub) ect, then, can be more | where, soon after, the greatest edifice of the ancient world was to be built for the same purpose, but to become also the glorious arena where the Christian martyrs expired in tor- ments before an infuriated populace, who regarded them as the enemies of the human race. The stupendous ruins of this amphitheatre—still the Collisseam—stand the grandest monumevt of Imperial Rome; but the blood-stained arena is now decorated with the stations of the Cross, and is tri- umphant over the ruins of Roman power. While Rome is thus at the summit of its grandear—the most wonder‘ul creation of human power, energy, inte!li- gence and wickedness that the world ever saw or ever will see—the great Babylon, as St. John calls it—an humble way-worn traveller—one of the thousanls who every day pass in and out of the City—enters by one of the gates. He is unnoticed by the millions who throng the streets and public places. We may suppose that the sentinels on the gates did not notice the humble Syrian emigrant, who came, like thousands of others who sought their bread by labour in the City. He passed on, as we may suppose some poor emigrant and will coa- | 8 our own days lands in some of the great seaports of the | western cootinent—unnoticed, or pitied, or, perhaps, despised | Ah, little did they think that that | dioary ¢"1y and of the power it represents, and its preseat | poor Syrian emigrant —the fisherman from (ralilee—was the Je . 7 ’ | by the people he meets. | Vieegerant of God on earih! Little did the Pagan P.ies's jimagine, as winding along in gorgeous procession through | the Via Sacra, abuut to sacrifice to their gods in some of the numerous temples which adorned the Forum, that that poor man bore the death warrant of all their pomp, of all |their power—tbat their reign from that day was past ! | Little, above all, did the haughty Senators and Magistrates | —surrounded by their lictors, who wou!d have struck to the earth the poor Syrian stranger if he impeded the march of \their patrons fur a moment—jmagine that he was the only | saviour, the only renovator of Rome—that all the pomp and | power of the Imperial City would, in a few centaries, pass | away, and its very existence depended on the selection made by that stranger of the City as his residence! | the enthusiastic Rom.n citizen—when pointing out to some | provincial friend the magnificence of the temples and palaces —the golden roof of the Capitoline temple and the golden house of the Cassars—imagine that all these would be crumb- led into ruins by the barbarians; and that the tomb of the poor Syrian, then crossing their path, would surpass in jthe greatest of their temples! Wonderful are the ways of 'God! All this we have seen accomplished! fisherman was St. Peter, the first Pope. Peter’s Church—the greatest edifice ever erected by human hands; and for fifteen centuries his successors have been the sovereigna, the fathers, the preservers of the Great [m- perial City, which, but for them, wou!d be like Buby!o.: or Little did | grandeur al] that the world ever saw before, and put to shame The Syrian | His tomb is St. | Oth inst. in carrying their pavit by a mojority of 33 vores. The | ‘question was ably argued by the best men in the House, and | ‘no inferior was indiscreet enough to disturb this battle of the | _gisnts. Mr. Gladstone led the way in a speech of surpassing ' power,—cool, argumentative, and at times bitterly sarcastic, in | which he showed that the principle of free trade during the last twenty years had been applied to every great interest in the, ‘country and in the Colonmies,—to the West Indians, to the ' shipuwner, the corn grower, the silk weaver, and others, and | was now to be directed to the peper maker. He denied al- together that the paper maker depended on the foreign supply | of rags, but, if he did, the case was not altered, inasmuch as England had pursued her free trade policy irrespective of what other countries had done or intended todo. In the neutra! markets Mr. Gladstone proved that the English paper maker was more than a match for his French rival—in the Unned States and India for example ; and he exported a larger amount | of manufactured psper than the quantity of imported rags represented. Tue coronation of the King and Queencof Norway took place on the 5.h imstant, in the Cathedral of Droathiein. In foreign matters the affuirs of Sicily and Syria still hold prominent interest in the public mind. In the House of Com- mons on the {0.h inst., Lord Join Russell, in reply toa ques- tion put by Mr. H Sherilen respédiing the expedityon 10 Syria, | stated that the marines had orders.to land for the purpose of | preventing massacres. bis Lordship also etited that he bad just learned that Paud Pacha hed arrested 400 of the most active of the murderers in the late Benes, and many of them had been executed. tle added that the troops at Damascus had shown great loyalty, and the authorities had afforded every facility in the way of restoring ofder. The energetic course pursued by Faud Pacha would soon, he thought, be the means uf giving the country pace once more. The sccounts- relative to the destruction of the Christian popu'aton in Syria are sul! being received, and tiey depict a terribie state of carnage end bewtality on the port of the | Mahowedans. One of the writers, Dr. Thompson, sn Ameri- can missionary in Syria, declares that he hie witnessed six | cruel and devastating wars in thal country, ex'ending over six ‘or sever and twen'y years; but the worst of them were were | boys’ play compared with the scenes of slaughter that have been recently witnessed, The number of destitu'e he esti- mates at 75,000, including 10,000 widows. It appears that the previous record of the slaugiter in Damascus was far beluw the mark. I) that city the number destroyed is now | siated to be 5000, and the numer of houseless victims nearer 20,000 than 10,000. Of fugiives flocking into Beyrout the name ie ‘ legion,’’ and the most earnest entreaties are made to the charitable in this coun'ry for pecuniary aid under cir- | cumstances so appaling, and the call will not, we are sure, be made in vain, The sum of £2500 has aiready been transmitied to the relief committees established in Damascus and Beyrout, | but this sumis toia'ly insufficient to afford any adequate relief. Ihe Queen and the Prince Consort have placed their names at the head of the subscription, and in Paris the Emperor has subscribed £1000 and the Empress £400. Some of the great mercintile houses in London have alsu generously contribuied, / but the enormous extent of the destitution will swallow up much more than ts likely to be received, without a strong and continued exertion in every pirt of the country. FRANCE. | The Presse having expressed an opinion that the subscription _for the Caristians in the Kast will prove, like many others in France, a comparative failure, the Constilutione/, in the course /of an article declaring that it differs from its contemporary, says, “ It is our bounden duty, under present circumstances, to | offer to Syria at least what Eagland gave us in 1856. ‘The Tur fullowing is the letter, referred to in our last No.. addressed by the Emperor of the French to his Minister in England, in which he attempts to show how groundless are the fears of the English people with respect to an invasion ‘by France. The dark policy pursued by the Emperor | throughout his eventful carcer, and the treachery and perfidy | which he did not hesitate to use to gain his present high position, can command bat very smal! consideration for his Majesty's profess ons of peace, especially if he sees any prospect of playing a successful game at war :— Sr. Croup, 25th July, 1860. My Dear Persigny—Affairs appear to me to be so com-) plicated—thanks to the mistrust everywhere excited since the war in Italy—that I write to you in the hope that a conversation in perfect frankness with Lord Palmerston will remedy the existing evil. Lord Palmerston knows me, and when | affirm a thing he will believe me. Well, you can tell him from me in the most explicit mennor, that since the} peace of Villafranca I have had but one thought, one object —to inaugurate a new era of peace, and to live on the best of terms with all my neighbours, and especially with Kog- land. 1 had renounced Sivcy and Nice ; the extraordinary additions to Pielmont alone caused we to resume the desire to see reunited to Fiance provinces essentially French. But it will be objected, You wish fur peace, and you increase | }immoderately the military forces of Irance.” fact in every sen-e.—My army and my fleet have in them nothing of a threatening character, My steam navy is even far from being adequate to our requirements, and the number of Steamers does not nearly eqail that of sailing ships deemed necessary in the time of King Louis Philippe. 1 have 400.000 mcn under arms; but deduct from this amount} 60,000 in Algeria, GU00 at Rome, 8000 in China, 20,000, gendarmes, the sick, and the new conscripts, and you will sce—what is the truth—that my regiments are of smaller effective strength than during the preceding reign. only addition to the Army list has been made by the creation I deny the | The | of women and children in a fearful state of distress, but no ;men; they hadall been killed. I was rece'ved jn great | State by the Druse chief, he and I sitting down and drinking | coffee, while all the smaller chiefs stood round uncovered. [ then told him I had come from my captain, to request him to allow the unfortunate women and children to embark on board of us without further molestation; that the Eng} ish liked the Druses, and admired their bravery, as long as they did not hurt women and children, but if they injured them they would make the English their enemies. The old Druse chief told me they never warred with women and children, and that he would be very happy to allow them to embark, ,and that the armed Dru-ea wich them were only for their |protection. Sol told him to send them al] down to the |beach at once. I was quite astonished to sce the number of them ; insteid of 200 or 300, as we heard there were, there were at least 1,500, and the mest horrible part was, there was hardly a man to be seen, or a boy over 12 years old; they had al! been massacred—husbands, brothers, and fethers, every one. We only had about eight boats, but these we began to load with al! despateh, every poor woman and child having to be carried through a tremendous surf to ithe boats. However, our blue jackets worked well and cheer- fally, only I must say that they very unfairly gave prefer- ence to the pretty girls, and when any old mother wanted to be carried off | was obliged to order some man personal!y to do it. Someof the women and children were badly wound- ed. They had been wounded while clinging 10 their hus- bands and fathers when they were kil'ed. As soon as a boat | Was loaded she was sent off 'o the ship, and the poor wretches stowed as close as they could lie on board, and then the | boat was sent back. After two hears’ hard work our decks were packed as close as_ possible, and we had room for no more. The gunboat was fall of fugitives from Sidon. Tue sun had set; the surf was increasing fast, and two or three of our boats had been pitched bettom up on the beach, and there were still 700 unfortunate women and children on the |beach with hardly a stitch of canvas_on, and that litt'e wet, all foot-sore, having travelled 80 miles the previous day, and some of them had not touched any food for two or three days. I sent for the Druse chief, and made him promise of the Imperial Guard. Moreover, while wishing for peace, | me to take care of them until the morrow, when J said we I desire also to organize the forces of the country on the! best possible footing, for, if foreigners have only seen the | bright side of the last war, I myself, close at hand, have | _ witnessed the effvets, and [ wish to remedy them. Having) said thus much, I have since Villafranea neither done. nor even thought, anything which could alarm any one. When) | Lavalette started for Constantinople, the instrections which | I gave him were confined to this: * Use every effort to maintain the status quo; the interest of France is that , Turkey should live as long as possible.” | Now, then, occur the massacres in Syria, and it is as-| beer that Tam very glad to find a new occasion of making a little war, or of playing a new part. Really, people give | me credit for very little common gense. If [ instantly pro- | posed an expedition, it was because my feelings were those | of the people which has put me at its head, and the intelli- | gence from Syria transported me with indignation. My first thought, nevertheless, was to come to an understanding with England. What other interest than that of humanity | Nioeveh—a que heap of ruins, and merely a name in his- | English have spontaneously contributed an important part of | would come again and bring off the rest of them, as the Gannet was firing guns for my recal!. I went off, leaving them all horribly disappoiuted ow the beach, poor things ! When [ went on board | found almost every inch of deck co~ vered. We had 700 women and children on board, and only about a score of men who had escaped. It was the most dis« tressiug s'ght I ever saw or hope to see again, for now that the immeJiate fear of death was removed they began to feel con- scious of the full extent of their misfortuaes—houses burnt down ani all their male relations massacred, and they bezan ts scream, tear their hair off in handfulls, and beat their breasts in a most horrible manner. We did all we could to soothe them. Officers and men are al! vie‘nz with each other in feeding them and giving them clothes, &c. Next morning the gun bo»t was sent up, and brought dowa the remaining 700 that night.” LF CR ae — Tae Islander asserts that the statement made in the a ae ane his ‘ 4. CGN As Magni *ccord the 171 Other Charly hospita the 8ple Next m, &frived | 20 excel! The Par number Carriages Crowd of the Bishe, the People Uniform, a A field pie @°veral tim, interesting, which the | o | i . i ° i . : ; ld i ; stry 2 ‘ . . . heen beautifully described by the poet“ Tu me cede malis oo i aut Sdundiininn ofthe teens, "l | the result. Reap liberalny of Kagland to foreign misfortunes | = = bat psa rsa Te meee aca eeeley! 8 = Re erne Pot FELT nk to OE ius ito.” whi i . , i 8°Js an example which ought never to be forgotten. : *| representatives of the Briti i DS ee en ee ee Ene | ea Se aa | Can I conceal from myself that Algeria, notwithstanding its | . orn wee enge Samy on: ‘ ; . - — | firmly believe that ro disinterested man, who would argue) ; op leateaae rr atlantic yeroacular—* Dou't be cast down by any difficulii s, wr ’ 3 AUSTRIA. | fature edvantoge, fe a. snares Of ‘waihkatel to divans, atieh| occasion of the Prince’s visit—*‘ is incorrect,” for, says the Welcom ing a they had loye Parish Priest : fairly and logica!ly, could refuse to believe it, bat alwa aheai.” When the Panic enemy was en- . 7 ee petal < : : -. | Islander, ** we h to k t ic : camped ae the walls, the very ground occupied by their) We have row. Ladies and Gentlemen, seen the Papacy | VIENNA, Ang: U0. a td ng to a communication from | for 30 years has devoted to it the purest of its blood and its | er, ** we happen to know thata ticket for the Banquet Tespecting the tents was sold, for the Imperial people had such self-reliance, |establisbed in Rome, but it is still like the acorn buried in| ee in - - ogne — wee pecree ae going gold? I said it in 1t52 at Bordeaux, and my opinion is , on presented to the correspondent of the London Times, Was all that : e by - 5 ’ on between the Courts of Vien.a an ome on the sul ject of | csi se ; . : . ' euch confidence in their own energies, that they knew that | the ground before the snows of winter, apparen'ly lost for-| the eventuality of an invasion of the Pontifical Siaien by ~ wie “He, a have sg to — but only in and oe 4 the gentleman r. presenting the Z/ustrated on the minds ¢ the stranger wou'd never permanent!y occupy their homes. | ever, but destined to sprout out in the Spring, become @) Garibaldi. The Duke of Modena has promised to uuvite, in the ae hee cones en ee Sorc — London News.” * Some of the gentlemen representing the and regard wh Onward flew the Imperiai eagles of Home, north, south, east spreading oak, and for ages be the monarch of the forest, de-| :hat cuse, his troops to the Papal arme. can Sean ae © acts ae a ae a oa | press of the United States were also present at the Banquet.” Bishop. The and west. The effeminate but civilized cities of Asia fell one after another, until the frontiers of the empire reached the deserts of Asia; and the Nile, and the Euphrates, and the Joréan became Roman rivers. Al! slong the African shores of the Micditerrancan—on paat the pillars of Hercules to the borders of the Sahara, williags of Roman citizens dwelt in splendid cities—some of them, iike Carthage, almost rivals of Rome herself—cities which produced §t. Cyprian and St. Augustine—-a region formerly the seat of over 600 Bishopricks, avd thea through heresy and dissensions, and the sesh of Mahommedan barbsrians, reduced almost to a deser Now, thank God, the light of faith is dawning over that darkesed region again, France has oace more raised the chair of a Bishop on the ruins of the See of St. Augustine—Julia » now eailed Algiers, is once more a living L iocese of the Catholic Charch; and O'Donnell, the descendant of our old Milesian Kings, has, at the head of bis brave army, planted the cross om the towers of Tetuan, and established fying the storm. While all forms of error are not only tolerated but encouraged, and temples erected to the idols of | | every nation, truth is persecuted. The few Christians—| Manseirtes, Aug. %.—News from Messina states that |. It was difficult for me to come to an understanding with ted and calumniated as adorers of a man with an Garibaldi is preparing to transporf troops to the main land. | Kogland on the subject of Central Italy, because [ was, ass’s head and devourers of children—rally round their | The preparations have beea witnessed by travellers. | bound by the. peace of Villafranca. As to Southern Italy, leader. St. Peter, and hear with joy that he, the founder of |. 4 letter am rere a one of the papers here, dated the | 1 am free from engagements, and I ask no better than a the Church, has finally left Antioch, and chosen their City eee ees “a en pear fe Genera! Clary | concert with England on this point, as on others; but, in as the seat of the Primacy of Christiauity. In a little time seeclioe over te Garibali of the hort iets ease a it penton rome cs Se gminaht Hien “ vg placed o the their meetings are found out. St. Paul is already in prison, | Messina ; the undisturbed embarkation of all the pirsonnél end heat of ten Rengriel goperement lag maid patty Janlonsien and about to sanctify the Imperial City by his blood. He) material of the Neapolitan army ; the reciprocal engagement, | and unjust mistruste. . : : dies the honorable death of a Roman citizen, by the sword; | in case of hostilities recommencing between the citadel, which | Let as understand ous another = good faith, like honest and not like thieves who desire to cheat each but St. Peter, the Syrian fisherman or peasant, is not en-| remains in the power of the Nenpolitans, and the city, to | He 48 We are, titled to such an honour. No—for him 1s reserved the dis- proclaim the termination of the armistice forty-eight hours at | other, a ; graceful and eruel death ofa slave, such as was ivflicted on least in eee nae it 18 remarked by the writer of To sum up, this is my innermost thought. I desire that his Master, who, though God, took on himself for our re. | thie gorge bee per Anes sth gars: aspect: every-| Italy should obtain peace, no matter how, but without demption the form of a slave. He is, therefore, crucified. | os pr eMtee: ny dee “gst Cee state nent ba foreign intervention, and that my troops should be able to But such is the humility of the first Pope, that he accounts | invabianis believe any hostility on ‘a ord creas = quit Rome without compromising the security of the Pope. himself unworthy to suffer as his Divine Master did ; and he| be impossible, now that these ships have come back. t could very much wish not to be obliged to’undertake the is, therefore, nailed on the cross with bis head towards the| Geueral Garibaldiand his staff have gone to Faro, at the SJ'#a expedition, and. in any case, not to undertake it alone, : entrance of the Sraits of Meseina, where a gerrison was | firstly, because it will be a great expense, THE SICILIAN INSURRECTION, and sufficient to satisfy it. and secondly, This is the first we have heard of the fact, for no one seems to have known that the persons referred to participated in the enter ainment. Of this, however, we are well aware, thats? invitations were sent to the representatives of the Press until the very evening on which the Ball was given, and this mark . of courtesy would probably not have beer shown if our co* respondent—who, like all the other representatives of the local press was shabbily treated—had not brought the subjet | to the notice of the Committee through their Honortif Seerstary. It is well known to scores of people in this cos munity that the Foreign and British Correspondents cost plained in no mild terms while here of want of courtesy attention ; and we ourselves heard many respectable perso in the City censuring the neglect or forgetfulness ef the Cot mittee on this account. The Js/ander gives a long extract from the Montreal Hera ground. Now at least,” said the Pagans, “ we have put an end to the Nazarean superstition. We have caught their head, and we served him just as our Governor Pontius Pilate served his Master. We gave him the death ofa slave. He was but an ignorant, poor, Syrian peasant, and of course that sect of fanatics will now give us no more trouble.” Little freedom for the Catholic Church amongst the Mograbbin Arabs, the most ignorant and fanatical of the followers of Mabomet, Thus the renovator of Roman and Christian civilizstion ia the ancient province of Africa, Tingitana, is one of our own old Celtic race and blood. Northward the frontiers are extended among the rugged inhabitants of placed forthwith. It issaid that the Calabrians on the opposite coast are vreally agitated. But it is given ont as quite certain that a numerous deputation arrived on the 29th from Regyio, |and that the members of it declared to Garibaldi that “ the nounce in favor of the national movement.’’ It is evident in these circumstancea that the truce had been agreed to merely | Calabrians only waited for hia presence among them to pro-, in praise of the demonstration here, and as proof that all the gentiemen of the Press were not displeased with their reef tion in Charlottetown. We are truly glad thet there is who can speak a good word for our city und our Island; there is no doubt that he was well and generously i because [ fear that this intervention may involve the Eastern question ; but on the other band, I do not see how to resist or opinion in my country, which will never understand ee we ar —_ — not only the massacre of | Christians, but the burning insu! ‘our flag, and the pillage of LS ei cecen ie i aader g eh were uader did they know that the weakness of God is stronger than the strength of man ! Linus steps upon the bloodythrone of the Apestles, while another tyrant puts him to death. Cletus suecels him and is executed. Clement follows; and thus for three centuries,one Pope alter another, with, as far as I can re- collect, one or two exceptions, all died the bloody death of martyrs ; and atill the Popedom is not extinguished. No— these three hundred years of persecution only strengthen the Papacy. The root is deep in the earth in the Catacombs, and every time you ou: off the shoots that appear above tho ground you only strengthen it. During the greater part of this time there is no Church visible above ground. Extending under, but in general out- side Rome, for miles and miles in every direction, and pas- sages cut in the tufa rock of which the soil is formed—a rock of a soit description, very similar, except in colour, for Germany. Batavia and Hungary. The undisciplined valour of these children of the forest cannot resist the advance of the Roman legions, and the Rhine and the Dunube are atud- ded with Roman cities. Westward the eagle takes bis flight, and from Cape Finisterre or the Land's End, in Spain, louka over the great Atlantic, not knowing that there was the great western world beyond, awuitiug the time when (iod wouid send Columbus, under the banner of the Blessed Viggin, to open this magnificent |icmisphere to the descen- " @deuts of Japeth. Westward again the eagle flies ti!l it veaches the western shores of Britsiu, aad jouks over to the isle — Terra Hiberuis, our own beloved Ireland. By the avystericus providence of Gol, bere the Imperial eagle paused in bis figh!—he never alighted on the shores of dz tend. For his own wise purposes, the Almighty wished w keep the Irish people apart from Roman civilization, and, for by some of our hospitable fellow citizens. But wé that the witnesses on the other side are not only more name ous, but more positive in their statements. The St. Job (* B ) Glode, of a late date, speaks in very disparaging 3 our display; and the correspondent of the New I ‘ribune ~smarting under a sense of the neglect whieh experienced at the hands of the Committee—is not is without giving an unfavourable account of the di a Charlottetown, but grossly libels the character of her community, The Protestant of Saturday last quotes th in the Tribune, and we give it as we find it in the a ** But what shall I say of the method adopted by the and looser masses of the population to signify their # ing of the necessities of public jubilee? In Halil streets were sometimes loud with ever-exalted tevele™ our protection, I have told you all I think, without disguising or omitting anything. Make what use you may think advisable of my letter. Believe in my sincere friendship, to save further effusion of blond, and that Garibaldi is employ- ng the interval in arranging his expedition for the main land of Sicily, where the troops, as well as the people, are ready to receive him with open arms. The London Court Journe/ states that ‘the presentation of Dr. Augnstua Rawlings at the Queen’s Levee, on the 24th of April, was caused by tulse representations as to his nationality made to the United States Minister, and is to be considered nul!, and as not having taken place.’ SWITZERLAND, SWEDEN, AND SAVOY. The Federal Council has received a note from the Swedish Government, deied 18h July, rewerating the intentions of Sweden to support the claims of Switzerland at the Conference on the affairs of Savoy. The anuual Federal fete has taken place at Geneva. Officers from all parts of Switzerland, to the number of 1,200, assembled on the occasion under the Napoxegon, “ THE EMPIRE 13 PEACE.” _ Louis Napoleon has written another letter to his Minister in London for publication in the British newspapers. Its purpose is to calm and reassure Mngland by the most solemn protestations of friendship and good-will : its effect will of course be quite other than this. England could not forget if she would that the author of this letter owes his life to the clemency of Louis Philippe, and that he repaid that clemency - 4 the sume time, from Roman idolatry and vice—a Virgin it is durk grey, to that soft red sandstone I have seen here — oo Presidency of General Dufour. The enthusiasm was general. | by confiscating the property of Louis Philippe’s widow and the rigors of the law kept them mostly is resteaith believe, surpas lower Provinces Of it, but we m: to us almost wor Could be erecte, Preparations for those who were t; OD & grand scale. Wasa Saloon, 8omé ® great abundance Partake of thew. Saloon, about seyen, direction of Mr, Ha, Breens ang # Which woulg do grea for the Peception of ; Srrangemente Were ; credit on a’) Parties ¢ the Bishops, Priests , ©ccasion, Were most h, *ntertaineg by etay there, Variet the ]