®@ME.flEE@EAEl.. PUBLISHED ON Establisneti I823. DHASZARDS GAZETTE Published by Geo. '1‘. Haszard ' Queen Square, Is issued twice 9. week, at 15s. per year. AND CONTAINS, TIIE I.A'l‘F.S'l‘ .\'l]\VS, AT Il0.\ll'-1 its ABROAD. (CONTINUATION) l 1 OF CATALOGUE OF BOOKS ! ON S.-\l.E AT 1 onoaes r.nsszanns. l Q,UEl£N’S SQUARE. l 'l‘he connection of the physical sclellces. by Mill)’ ' Soinerv 6. I _ ‘ The philosophy of the plan of ll|_lVfll|0Il,‘fl book for ; the times, by an American Editor, 2: bd t Perils of adventures on the deep, ltls ‘ ‘ The life of John Knox containing illustrations of the ‘. history of the reformation in Scotland, by Rev , Tho: .\lcCrie, -Is ; Scripture truths in verse for the use of the Y°“"Sv , 5a (id _ _ l Pascale thoughts on religion and other subjects; ls, I-jiery dav duties in letters to it young lady. by ~l~f" y‘ dant, 8s . _ ‘ l Siit disquisitions on doctrinal and practical 'lhcolo,<_ty. ‘ by Wm 'l‘ho. Wishart of St Johns New Brunswick. 49 Meiiioir o the Rev. 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Holy seiison ofl.ent, by lll(9.R.lglll Rev lngraliain 1 Kip D D, llishop of(‘.iiliforni.i, 4% ’ The double Witriess of the Church, by the Rev “ In Ingrahziiii, Kip D D, auttiortif l.eiiten Fast. 68 3d , A system of intellectual Philosophy, by the Rev‘ Asa Miihiin, 6s 3d . _ _ 1 Nature and hlessedness of christian purity. by R“ R 8 Foster, 43 (id ‘ ‘ _ i The elements of moral science, by l'I’II1C|l Way-l land, I) D. 5! ‘ The philosophy bv the Rev Ilermzin llooker, 4s 9 Outlines of moral science, by Arch. 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George, 2: 6d Discourses on human nature. human Life, and the nature of religion, by Orville Dewey. 0- D-. 3 v s, I . Religion teaching by example. by Rwlllfd W- Dickinson, D. D., 7s 6d The Riches ofGrace° or the blessings of perfect love, late Pre- 6d . believe. as experienced. enjoyed, and recorded, by sixty- two living witnesses. on s CIIaI"t‘I:tt or THE nisrottv or run LATE \VAR. (From th- European Times.) After the lapse of many centuries, Nine- veh has lately been disinterred by Mr. Lay- ard ti'oiii its shroud of sand, and we know something about the actual city. Hci-cuI:i- neum an-.l Pompeii, recovered from their lava. grove, tell us what was the home-life ofthe old Roinaiis ofthe Empire. Horace V \Vnlpole’s letters, published long after the events to which they relate, throw new mid strange light. upon what was before suppos- ed to have heart the history of England in the times of George the Second. But our iiiipatieiicc is not always so severely taxed. The secrets ofcoui-ts and the mysteries and intrigues ofcabiiiets and statesmen are still only to be guessed at. But, barring such points, we have an opinion that persons, possessed of an ordinary degree of saga- city, can read history from its facts, without waiting until the writers of it have turned it into fables for the crediilous and siiiiple. At all events, the great features ofit have a pliysiogiioiii_ which may be understood by Cullllllotl sense with a Lavnter-like pre- cision. \\'e will try our hand to-day on is chapter ofit, wliiclt has often and riiticli oc- I WDENESDAY dL SA'l‘Ull.DAY. New Series. .\o. 380.‘ I two birds with one stone.’ He had aveng- ed Moscow en the lvill.-SIIIIIS and taken the .-lime out of the V\ atei-loo redcoats. He had, tlierctore, done enough for himself, and he is not the Illilll to do aiiv thing for any body else. Hence we are convinced, we should not be more so, it it were wrmen in 11 book before us, that from that very day Ilcg(rClttll.iIlS were coiinin-nced bv him with Russiri, elllICI'.t.llI‘8Cll_)’ per se, or indirectly per alias, that is, the An.-trians. This be- ing admitted, we comprelii-iid at once the siispictpiis conduct of l)€llSSl(‘l', but not otherwise. \Vithout this reading, it is an impenetrable inystery to us. He had his ortlers non quiela morcrc, not to give any ttirtlier annoyance to his master’s possible ti-tend, tlic C_ziir. llv-nce, too, his aban- donincnt of lxnrs, which was to be ti sop to the pride of Russia, in the shape ofa sci-nfl' tor the capture ofthe soutlierii side of Se- bnstnpol. But, acquittiiig the French general of anything like cowardice, we _still rather wonder at the want of self-i'e- spect which would allow liiiri to rt.-main for a single day at the bend ofnn army which was not to act, to the tnriiisliing ofhis fuiiio and the blightiiig of all his former glories, in short, reduced to the condition of a inuzzlcd hero, running iiiutt-.. Only funcy cupied otir tlriiiglits. It \vill,for instance, ltlie first Napoleon, or Marlborou-vh or we may suppose, in all probability, be said \VelIington at the head ofthe army Dwhich of the pres-ciit times by some future Hume, 1 did nothing under Pclissier and Codi-ington! Clarendon, Goldsmith, Alison, or Macau- lay that the late war, between Russia on the one hand, and France and England on the other, was brought to a conclusion in March lb‘-36. Thus will the dupes of dip-‘ loinatic jargon write, and thus will idiots But we venture to contradict them by anticipation, and to assert that, as far as France was concerned, the war end- ed on the 8th ofseptember, I855. On that day, it reached its conclusion defaclo, ifnot dc jurc. Let us consider how this was managed. After the result of that bloody day, Pelissier, the French general, found himself at the head of an army which might have led triumphantly anti Victoriously to any given point on the face ofthe earth. But he did not riiove. He threw away all the fruits ofvictory. He even throw away all his own laurels, by allowing himself to be shut tip and besieged in a narrow strip ofthe Crimea by the fragiiirnts ofthe rout- ed garrison of Sebiistopol. History has no precedent for such a disgraceful issue, ex- cept, perhnps, in the fate of the Athenian army under the ill-starred Nicins before the walls of Syracuse of old. How was it? Why was it? Were all the energies ofthe fire-eater rind Arab-smokers of Africa crushed at once and in an instant by ll. paralysis of fear? Was the soldier of for- tune, who had carved out his way to dis- tinction with his own good sword, suddenly transmuted by some strange miracle into a wretched and pitiable coward? To this ex- planation we have a sufficient answer in the fact, that he remained at the head ofthe French army. The slightest symptoms of irresolution would have brought him home. There was, then, we opine, no cowardice in the matter. But we verily believe that there was treachery, not on the part of Pelissier, but of his master in Paris. VVc arrive at our verdict by circutiistitntiitl evi- dence. But it is often the best. Let us consider it in this case. \Vhen the Molok- hofl was so gloriously stormed by the French on the 8th ofsepteinber, the English, under that tame man, Codrington, being at the same time most disgriicefully repulsed from the Redan, Louis Napoleon had “ killed 3' O lV\'liat a whirlwind of chivalry would have swept over Russia, and changed the dos- tinies of the world! But, to go back to' the iiegociations which, as we suppose, were entered upon between France and Russia immediately after the 8th of Sep- tcmber. As soon as they had ripened into maturity, England was called upon to sign them as 8. meek ally or a jiiniorpartner, on the penalty of being left to carry on the war alone. And so was the fable turned into a life thing, and acted on the world's wide stage before the eyes of men. Eng- land was the cat's paw, and the monkey got the cliesnuts; and Napoleon was ad- mitted into the conlraternity of continental despots, and that was all that he had struggled for and all that he wanted. He has got his “ Open Sesaine,”—his imperial and royal diploma, and is admitted into the inner circle, of which the other members are the potentates, of Russia, Prussia, Austria, Naples, and now of Spain. That is our version ofthe history of the concluding, apathetic and take it easy and sleepy eight months of the late war: and we have not it doubt that is the correct one. VVe feel it to he a moral certainty that, if the archives of Downing-street were search- ed, or Lords Clarendon and Palmerston and General Codrington were examined at the bar of the House of Commons, they would not differ from our account of the matter to the extent of a hair’s breadth. Is it yet too late to have the matter sifted P Is there no independent member of the House of Commons who will yet undertake it, and stand up for the honour of England? The more we think of the matter, the more we are convinced that we played a very poor and a very shabby second fiddle in the late war, and we have aright to know “tho reason why.” In a thunderstorm which broke over the village of Berghinfield, on the road Wurst- burg, in Rhenish Bavaria, a few days ago, the lightning set fire to a barn filled with forage, and the flames spread so rapidly thiit they destroyed not fewer than 130 houses before they could be extinguished.