* ill-IASZARD’S GAZETTE, JULY 25. ’ columps. 'l.‘wo small bodies are marching in a direction towards the roadstesd, and one has nearly arrived at the usual point cfeinharkation for crossing to the south side. A ion convoy of wagons is slowly weuding its way ‘a bag the brow of the mountain, raisin ‘a cloud of dust as it moves towards the Star Tort. Ten’ .m.—The fire from thc"batterics was ke t up with energ throughout the afternoon, and lasted till the aylight disappeared. Seen from the heights above Sebastopol, the sunset were all the appearance usually presented during a thick fog. :\s it sank into the sea, a harbour.‘ It is to consist of the 18th, 38th, and _44th Regiments. he 10th Hussars have received. orders to hold themselves in readiness for ppeclal service. Fift troopers from each regiment of the cavalry ivision, excepting the ltltli, are to move to the front at daybreak. It- is generally supposed, that a simultaneous movement will take place in the lain, that a part of the Sardinian and Frenc forces en- camped there will cross the fchernaya river, and attack the Russian position on the Inher- mann mountain, and so draw ofi rt of the troops on the north side, which might other- reddeued glare was east through the atmos- phere of smoke, and our the distant hills. he guns shortly afterwards ceased their tire. and the accumulated haze gradually disap- peared. '.l.‘he French division of troops which feigned inovcnicnt on the left, taking advan- marched to the plain yesterday has not moved , tage of any circumstances which may oflcr from the position it then took up. At an E themselves. Another rumour states, that the earl hour this morning, musketry, followed , ilcet will eli'oct_an entrance into the roadstead, ‘pg 1: _e reports of heavy guns, was heard among , and assist the land forces. The First Division 6 hills beyond Tchorgoun, and shortly after , is to move to the front at an early hour and one o’clock in the afternoon ti. few ans were 3 form aseeoml reserve. Such is supposed to be heard in the direction of‘ Maclienzie’s farm. , the general plan of the attack. It is probable that a portion of the force ‘in the ‘ June 15, 8 a.m.—.\ few lines wi have been mahingai reconnaissance d Th: non srations were ordered to be cooke an issued this afternoon for to-morrow, and it is no longer a secret, that a grand attack is con- templated against the whole line of batteries, from the ;\1alakofi' to the Barrack battery de- fending the Kzirabelnaia suburb. The utmost confidence is expressed by the highest authori- ties of success. The French are to storm the Malakofi Hill and works, with a total of 25,- 000 men ; the English, the Redan and Garden batteries, with 8000 troops. The following are reported to be the arrangements agreed upon between the allies. The bombardment is to be renewed at dayli ht, and the whole power of artillery in the atterics exerted a ainst the enemy‘s works. It is calculated t at after serve of Guai-ds and ghlanders had not yet four hours’ firing, the enem ‘s position will he arrived. A muskctry attack was least'of all rendered as practicable as t ey are like! to be expected atthat hour. The Russians had ad- made by gunnery. Ala given signal, the ‘reach . vanccd by the left of the Malakofi Hill, and tali- Ire to_advance against the .\l:i.l:ikofl', it being ing advantage of the uncertain light of the early essential that this point should be at least cn- ' dawn, had iuade a. sortie against the French in aged, ifnot occupied, before the attack on the ' their advanced trenches on the Mamelon. ’l‘hc dan is undertaken. A considerable number sortie was repulsed ; and had it ended here, the of guns on the riglitof the lllalakoff cover the chief points in the programme of the day's Bedan, but the Redan does not bear on Mala- events need not have been interfered with. But koif. ‘l.‘lio English troops are particular not by a fatal mistake, the success in repelling the to show themselves in the trenches, so that the ‘ sortie was at once followed up, and seizing the enemy, supposing that the assault to be con- ; temporary advantage, the re ulso became con- fined to the Malakotf ilill, may be diverted from j verted into an attack upon t ic Malakotf its-.-ll’. concentrating a force to efcnd the Redaii. _S0lllC 01' the French troops mounted the hill, The attack against the Rcdaii is to be made by ' others. pursuing the Russians who had made three storming columns. They-.iro to be under the sortie. followed them to the gorge of the ‘gm commipnd of Lieutenant-geiierai Sir George work, and thus actually gained adiiaission iifio rown. ' he columns are to be com osed of the woi-kitself. Now the error was iscoverc ; men from the Light, Fourth, and Secdiid Divi- the Russians showed themselves in overpower- eions. 'l.‘lic columns from the Light and Fourth ing nuin!-crs. and but few ofour allies who had wise hq brought across to reinforce the ri-ison of Sebastopol. l t is presumed, the 10th ussars are to act in con'unction with this force. It is also asserted, t at the French will make a ll suflice to and the Rcdan. Shortly before three am. the in their respective positions in the trenches, be- fore the snii had risen to dissipate the dense vapours which a slight breeze froiu the eastward fai e musketry between the Malakofl’ works and the .\lamelon attracted universal attention. The long lines of ambulance mules of the French were only commencing to thread their way through the ravines to the scene ofintcndcd at- tack, the leading troop of the cavalry expected fi-oiii below was Just appearing in sight, there- i Divisions are simultaneously to attack the two gained admission into the works ofthe lllalaholf menced, The d,.mc;,,,,,,,,,,, or C3,,-31,-y whici, , ' had been ordered up to the front, and which it flanks of the Redan; the Li ht Division nssault- ‘ effected their escape. At the same time, the ing the left flank, the fourt I division, the right enemy crowcded u on the parapets, and poured flifli_nk.d “Eben these are carried,and ii. lodgment a deadly rifle fire into the troopds attempting to 0 sets , t e column of the second division is to mount the hill, while re. 9 an canister were attack the salient angle, and to make a road 'discharged from field-piecdls placed in command- there, for the entrance of the working parties. ' ing positions. Our allies were absolutcl forced [fa retrenchment be found within the work. it 1 to retire within the protection oftlieir ii vanced is to be converted into part of the cover: if 2 trench. Before this shelter had been obtained, none exist, the working parties will at once and while the troops were fighting within and establish the necessary protection. Each storm- around the Malakoff, the flag was hoisted in ing column is to consist of 400 men, and to - the 8-gun-battery. Late in the day previous the have a support of 800 men. Reserves will be ' arrangement respecting the composition of the in the trenches. The working parties will be ' storming column under Colonel Lysons has been 400 strong for each column. The coluinus ‘ changed. Instead of 200 men from the 23rd attacking the two flanks will be each preceded ‘ Fusiliers and 200 men from the 34th Regiment, by a covering party of 100 riflemen. There ; the column was to consist wholly of men of the will also be an officer of Engineers, with some 3 34th, the number remaining the same. This slippers and Miners, a body of men of the Rifle involved other changes in the composition of the Bl'_l‘glld8, carrying woolsacks, and a body of supports and woriking lpafities. The storiging nai ors can in scalin ladders. These two : co man from the ourti ivision romaine as columns areytog be forged in the Quarry out- before arran ed. The signal for the assault was work, the trenches connected with it, and , no sooner ivon than it was perceived, and at leadingbtoward the Redan, and also the trenches once these rave men left their shelter in the snpde yr :.l10FRll58lllnI to the right. The trenches. Just whutthe Russipns were waiping co umn o t e onrth Division is to assemble a for; tlieeolumns had no sooners iown tliemse ves on the left of the Quarry work, to be nearest l than the fire from above opened. it was not to the ri ht flank of the Redan; that of the to be counted by guns—it was a ra in storm, Light Division on the opposite side. The first an incessant rain of grape and rifle al s. The brigade of the Light Division will furnish the ' dead and wounded strcwed the ground; it was assaulting column, support, and working per. a miracle how an escaped. On the left Colonel ties. The second brigade are to forui the guard ‘ Shadforth had fallen; on the rightCol. Lysons. to the trenches to-night, and the reserve to- 3 wounded in the knee, found himself close to the marrow. 'l‘hc storming column is to be under 1 deep fosse, but out of his 400. With 110‘ m0|'0 the immediate command of Licutenant~coloncl . than 40 around liiui. Neither the woolsacks Lysons, 23d regiment, and is to consist of 200 ' nor the ladders were at hand; but that was ii men of the 93d and 200 of the 34th regiments. matter of little import, for the parapets were I. Yea, of the 7th Fusiliers, is to act as covered with dense lines of the enemy, and on Brigadier-general in the Light Division attack, every side the deadly gra e swe t down its vic- Wd G°n- L d of time. The Redan was _fil ed wit troo s. Su - rin tea is to assume coinman the whole division, while Sir George Brown ports sent to the storming parties cou d not e ' of any avail, and nothing was left for them but commands the general attack. The storming column from the Fourth Division is to consist to retire, with the hope of reuewin the attack wholly ofmen of the 57 Repiient, and to be at a more seasonsble opportunity. ntil the of- under the command of Lisut.-Col. Slisdforth. fieisl returns are collected. it Will not 50 p°IIi- bls to know the total loss on this occasion. (hpt. Peel, R. N., will command the navel . Bggndier-General Sir John Cam bell, who con at. George Brown is to be in the _ _ dglit- en battery, in rear of the second ll- ed forward with the Fourth Div sion storm- ing column, and Col. Lacy Yes, who was com- ol, rig I attack; Field-Marshal Lord Ragfsrii is so take up a position in another battery of the mending the whole Light Division attack, and -usuie stuck. The dgnsl for the British assault who also ushed forward with the storms eo- h to be a flag hoisted in the eight-gun battery. liiuin nu er Colonel Lysons, were both ed. A brigcvle the Third Division, under Major They M1 near to the enemy's works. The 57th General-Eyre, is to make an attack upon the had tlidr colonel and two ollicers killed, and -Garden Battery, on the west side of the south seven oleers wounded. The 34th had four on- eers killed and four wounded. The 33rd Regi- ment had four ollicers killed and two wounded. The 7th Fusiliers had one ofiicerlkilled and nine or ten wounded. In the Rifle Bripde two oili- cers were killed and three wounded. Lieut.- Colonel Mandy, of the 33rd Regiment, who was lately wounded in the shoulder, and left the sick list to take his share in this attack, received a gun-shot wound near the hip. Lieuts. V. Ben- nett and Langfurd Heyland. of the same regi ment, were killed; Lieut.—Col. Johnstone lolt his left hand, and Cupts. Quayle and Tll0[nI'§B W ickham were badly wounded, the form". It 1' to describe the result. so contrary to what was i the work against which their force was directed, anticipated, of the assault upon the Malakotl‘ hug have been umbye to take any advantage of attacking columns, su ports, and reserves being d to remove, and just as the batteries were l expected to open in full force, a sudden tire ofl ,our right flank against any approach of the enemy, or assisting in some movement in that y direction, as it turned out were intended only ' to revent spectators from advancing to obtain feared, mortally. Major-General Jones. 0f N16 Royal Engineers, who was in the eight-gun 53}- tery in the ri ht attack, received an injury In lthe forehead rem a stone driven from €110 P3’ rapet by a round shot. and suffered from PTO‘ 5 fuse bleeding. In the same battery Capl- George Browne, of the 88th Re iinent, had 1! I right arm carried off by round s lot. The 69-1110 , shot killed two men at his side. Lieut--COL I Tyldena of the Royal Engineers, a most valuable . oliiccr, had both thighs pierced by a rifle ball; I the bone on one side, it is said. being broil}!!- The brigade under Major-Geiieral Eyre carried 3 their success, in consequence of the failure in l the attack upon the Rcdan. They are indeed. rfor the present, prisoners in the battery they l have taken : they are unable to leave it witho,ILt l being exposed to a deadly fire. Their loss is not known, but one or two messages have been managed to be sent. The regiments will not be able to quit, until darkness has arrived. Many bodies are still lying on the round near the Redan. Some of the wounded ave contrived to creep into our trenches; among others, an oili- cer who first fell wounded at the ditch of the Redan. tle held up a white pocket handker- chief, as a signal that ho surrendered himself, but the Russians standing on the parapet fired a volley, and again wounded him in the chest. The Russians must have suficrcil severely, for the shot and shell fell thickly in the Malakolf batteries and Rcilan, while the enemy crowded the works. About five a. in. some very heavy firing was heard on the extreme left, and itwas generally attributed to l)l'L).'l(_itllLll}S from our fleet. A hope was suddenly felt that they had forced their way through the sunken ships at ‘the iinuitli of the roadstcad. and would soon ‘ divert the fire from the Russian steamers, which were niaking scvcrc havoc in the French co- ; lumiis iic.ii' the Miiiiiclon. But in a short time ; the tire ceased, and the hope was dissipated. | The expected attack on the right by the army in the plain, against the Inkerinann heights, was 1 also eagerly listened for, but nothing was heard, I that an ‘expedition consisting of a force of S“- dinisns and, French together with 500 men of our 10th ilnsssrs, is to start to-day in the di- rection of'.Maclienzie’s farm. 0th H were under orders last I to move to the plain_ about two hours beore doytireak this morning. TAKING OF THE CEMITIRY, AND AN ENTRANCE lN'I'0_ SEIABTOPOI-_. The brigade under Major-General Eyre, which was destined to occupy ihe Cemetery snd_to car- ry ihe Barrack Batteries, consistflg of the 9th regiment, l8th regifliem, 28th regiment, 38th regiment, and 44th regiment. Four’ volunteers from each company were selected to form an advanced party, under Major Fielden, of the 44th regiment, to feel ihe way and cover the advance. The 18th Royal Irish followed as the storming regiment. The brigade was turned out at twelve o'clock, and proceeded to march down the road on the left of ihe Green-hill Battery to the Ceme- iery, and halted under cover while the necessary dispositions were being made for the attack. General Eyre addressing the 18th, said “I hope my men, that this morning you will do something that will make every cabin in Ireland ring again !” The reply was aloud cheer, which instanily drew on the men a shower ofgrape. The skirmishers advanced just as the general attack began, and with some i-‘iench on their left, rushed in the Cemetery, which was very feebly defended. They gm possession of the place after a slight resistance, with small less, and took some priso- ners, but the mlllllrrnl the enemy retreated, their batteries opened a heavy fire on ihe place‘ from the left of the Rrilan and l'rom the Barrack Battery. Four companies ofthe 18th at once rushed on out of the Cemetery towards the town, and actually succeeded in getting possession of the suburb. Captain llayinan was gallanily leading on his cunipany, when he was shot through the knee. Captain l‘iSIlI0i'lll0 followed, and the men once establisliecl, prepared to defend the houses lhey'occnpie<l. As they drove the Russians out ihcy were pelted with large stones by the latter on their way up in the button‘, which quite over- hangs the suburb. The Ru'ssi:ms could not depress their guns sulliclcnlly to fire down on our men, but they tlllt,‘Clt'll a severe flanking fire on them from an angle of the Redan works. There was ll(lllllll'__' for it but to keep up a vigo- rous fire from the houses, and to delude the enemy into the belief that the occupiers were more numerous than they were. Meantime the Rus- sians did -their mmost to blow down the houses with shell and shut, and fired grape iiicessnntly, but me goldiers lu-pi close, though they lost men iiccasionully, ;n~.«l they were most materially sided . and it has since been asccrtaiiicd that it did not ‘ take lace. Two Russian battalions crossedj from the north side after the attack had coin- . was supposed had been reserved for protecting ii. view ofthe engagement. Tlieyextcndcd them- selves in a line across the sloping ground from (ireenhill to the Careening Ray ravine, and kept back from passing this barrier many an anxious visitor from Balaklava and elsewhere. Two great mistakes appear to have influenced the whole of this attack. The first was in permit- ting the enemy b the early sortie to divert us from the origina plan ofthc undertaking: the second an over-confidence in our own strength and resources as com arcd with those of the enemy. Had the hem ardment from the bat- teries taken place, the enemy would probably have supposed it would continue all day, and withdrawn a great part of his troops, for their security, from the neighbourhood of the works. L columns of 400 men each appears to have been It might be resuiued that the enemy would not . have made tlic attack against the French at the . ltiamclon without having large reserves within , rcacli. To attack the Redan with two storming ‘ a hopeless case ; the ditch was deep and broad, the abattis dense, and there were at least 5000 men within the work. The sailors, if employed in the undertaking. might perhaps have been more useful otherwise than in crii-i'yiii;_v the lad- ders. With their comrades falling about them, and under the excitement of getting at the one- my, the ladders were not carried to the lace intended. A rumour has gained ground, t int 9. dc-scrter from our ranks had made the Russians acquainted with the intended attack, and that it was a ruse to anticipate it by a soi-tie. It is not necessary to resort to such an explanation. The Russians had a flag flying within the Mala- koff works all the time of the en g‘e.ment. J nus 19.—-The success of r ' the enemy last night to make a sortie in force against our advanced works and those of the French. At half-pest twelve o’clock, a tremen- dous iire of musketry e ned, and the divisions in front were called un or arms. The tire ceas- ed, however, without their assistance being re- uired. No particulars are known beyond the act of the Russians being gsllantl repulsed. Their lou must have been great as ey retired from the tire of the batteries. The Guards sad Hi snders gave the greater port of the trench du es in the right-attack. It is currently stated by the fire of the regiments in the Cemetery behind ihem, Wllll.'ll was directed at the Russian cinbrasures; so that the enemy could not get out to fire down on the houses below. Some of the houses were comfortably furnished, One of them was as well fitted up as most Eng- lish mansions. the rooms full of fine furniture, a piano in the drawing-iooin, and articles ofluxury and taste not deficient. Our men unfortunately found that the cellars were not empty, and that there was ahnndtince of fine muscal wine from the south of the Crimes, and of the stronger wines perfumed with roses and mixed with fruits, which are grown in the interior, in the better houses. Some oftlie officers, when they went away, carried of!‘ articles of clothing and papers as proofs of the entrance into the place, and some others took away pigeons and guinea-pigs, which were tame in the huiises. The lrlmpc pmercd the place about f0lll' o'clock in the morning‘ and could not leave it nine In the evening. The Russians blew up many of ihe liuuses and set fire to others, and when our men retired. the flames were spreading along the meet, The 18th Regiment lost 250 men. In ihe middle of ihe day, Captain Eomonde wrote to Geiicr.-il Eyre to say that he required support, ihal the men were short of ammunition, ‘and that the rifles were clogged. The rifles, which were of the Enfield pattern, had been only ‘served to the regiment the day before, and again it was found that these admirable weapons are open to the grave defect which has been so frequently mentioned, and that they are liable to become useless after tiring twenty rounds, A seiycant volunteered In creep back with this letter, but, when he iv-acliod the place where the general ought to have been, he found that the latter had been obliged to witlidraw owing to his wound; and he iheiefoie delivered the documents _tu Colonel Edwards. As there was no possibility of getting: support down to the troops,_ Colonel Edwards crept down along with the Iel']OI_l|l Ind into the houses to see how matters were going on. The officer in command, on learning the state of the cue, ordered the men to keep up_lhe hollfll fire they could ; snd meantime they picked up the rifles and ammunition of ihe killed and _woIIMlO(_li and waste by that means enabled to continue their ‘I: e. The 0th regiment succeeded in effecting I lodginenl in the houses in two or three difmlfl places, and held their osition as well as lb! lfith. A serjesni and a handful el men twill?! oueuion or the mile Wup Bsmiy._|I which there were only twelve or fourteen Russisl srilllsrynien. The tied at the approach bf all men, but when the tier turned round, they dil- covsred they were quite unsupported; 00 "V S I ..