33 THE EXAMLNER. - ford. It is not wel) to enter early into revolutions; the while been reinforced by the acaderaical legion. The | late father; that he had come back, without any guar- first fall victims. What do yo think would have hap- parties stood thus opposed to one another until a body of) antee, aud in full confidence, to his people; a small but P pened ? workmen proceeded to seize a powder-wagon and four| audacious party had gone to extremes in Vienna; mur- ‘The Reformers (Place, &c.,) talked big to me, and) guns, which they effected without any opposition from) der and rapine had prevailed in that city, and the Min- felt assured of success. ‘The run upon the banks and the artillerymen. Bat this act of the insurgents gave, | ister of War had been assassinated. He (the Emperor the barricading of the populous country towns would nevertheless, the signal for a bloody conflict. trusted in God and his own good right [in other words, have brought matters to a crisis, and a week they, the| ‘he Nassau infantry fired three successive volleys,) Dieu et mon droit), and he now left the vicinity of hig Reformers, thought would have finished the business.| which were answered by loud cheers and quick dis-| capital in order to find means to bring aid to hiso ‘They meant so to agitate here that no soldiers could |charges from the national guards, the students, and the| pressed people (um Mittel zu finden, dem unterjochlen have been spared from London, and the army is too grenadiers. The Nassau infantry were soon forced to| Volke Hulfezu brinyen). small elsewhere to have put down the rebels, In Scot-| retire, and on being charged with the bayonet, their re- ——_ —-- | tand, I believe, the most effectual blow would have been trograde movement became a downright flight. Gene- baila ” a struck, andit seems difficult to have resisted the popular|ral Brody, their commander, was shot. The govern- BORRISPOWVSY 33. movement. ‘The tories, however, say the duke would|ment troops had 20 killed; the insurgents 5. There bs have succeeded. No doubt the dicipline under which|were many wounded, but their number has not as yet SE : : solders Jive might have proved a stronger element) been ascertained, AN INSTANCE OF MONOPOLY AT THE BAR. i 2 than the public enthusiasm, 1. e. unless the latter was | After routing the government troops, the insurgents! We Wuretan— Hi a universal or extensive, and then it would have carried marched from the suburbs into the town, where they , all before it. ‘Fhe task would have been to bring society placed their guns in the middle of the University-| !t may be that, as one of the Legislators of the pre- to its former quiet state! Thank God we have been square ; the gates of the town were guarded by detach- sent day in this Colony, you may be able to explain the spared the trial; but, as a matter of specalation, te]] me ments of students and national guards, the tocsin Was’ part you necessarily had in passing the Act of last Sea- what you think would have been the result? Am [ sounded, anda central committee formed for carrying’ .. intituled ‘An Act for regulating the admissi Fight in my conjecture that you would have refused the on the war. buns eee . 6 ‘6 “ of Birmingham invite, and kept your sword in its scab-| At one o'clock a party of the insurgents and national | Barristers and Attorneys of the Supreme Court.” That bard ?—Yours, ever truly, ‘TY. |guards were attcked on the Stephen’s Platz by a party you as well as other members of the House, and indeed ‘ Thanks for your first volume ; Jones has come back/jof Joyal national guards, whe stood by the government, | the country, have been taken by surprise by the enact- better. but after a short fight the latter were forced to retite| os of some of the clauses or sections of this celebrated - into the Cathedral of St. Stephen 3, the doors of whieh . ‘I. I doub b , te ye GERMANY. they then barricaded from within. But the insurgents| 4ct, will, | doubt not, be easi'y made to appear. Aware : battered down the doors, eatered the church, and dis-'of the very just and wholesome provision of the previ- Saxcuntaky anp Successeut Insurrection iN VIEN-|Jodved their antagonists, whose leader was killed on! ously existing Law, by which gentlemen who had been ‘ Na.—Fuiicur or roe Emperon.—MuRDER OF THE the very step of the altar. ‘ Md > | Mameren or. Wan. ee an ee) i eiiaiihe al bail admitted in any of the Courts at Westminster, or in: ; y gates, the Burgthor, still remained) itled aa An insurrection has taken place at Vienna—the Em-|in possession of the government troops. ‘Three com-/those of Scotland or Ireland, were entitled to admission peror has fled—the Minister of War, Count Latour, /|panies of sappers and miners, with four guns, entered | thereunder inthis Colony, | was not until yesterday has shared the fate of Count Lamberg ‘and the two this gate at three o'clock in the afternoox, They were prepared for what would appear to me to be a melan- Zichps; and Vienna was in the possession of the insur-|at once attacked and totally routed, in spite of the grape). ,) nd to-be-deplored change of the law in questi genwon the 7th. Fur the first time in the revolutionary and canister which they fired from their pieces. Man ra : P 5 Paneer events of Germany, a body of soldiess wese found on/of them were eaptured, disarmed, and confined in the @fested by the Act of the last Session before referred * eee m ene ” ee eeepc) sent ie EP <ncapamar amarante" ~ ee ae ent ad et senses the side of insurrection. Within the last week the Vienna court, and Count Latour, the War Minister, especially, have been pub- licly convicted of the most gross and revolting treach- ery towards the Hungarians. In the very face of the most solemn promises, assertions and protestations, that neutrality should be observed between Croat and Hungarian, letters were seized, showing that the Croats and Jellachiens were the mere instruments of the court of Vienna, receiving arms, pay, and orders direct from Latour and the Arch-duchess Sophia. The people of Vienna, witnesses of this. treachery towards the Hungarians, who had aided them in com- pleting and upholding their revolution, could not but feel that the same false and treacherous policy would be observed towards them if the Hungarians were pat down. War had been just declared against the Hun- garians.. The court had thrown off the mask, and ap- pointed Jellachich its commander-in-chief. During some time past, the democrats. had been actively engaged in propagating amongst the military the principle of fraternisation with the people. ‘Their labours were not unsuccessful, particularly amongst the German grenadiers. in garrison in Vienna. This fact was not unknown to the authorities, and it was accord- mgly resolved to send two.grenadier battalions out of the capital and to forward them to Moravia, in order to incorporate them with the army preparing there to make an attack on the Hungarians. This contemplated removal of favourite troops for the purpose of being vppesed to.a party for which all the popular sympathies are enlisted, created considerable discontent, particular- jy in the suburb af Gumpendor, in which the barracks af the grenadiers were situated. Early on the morning of the Gth the grenadiers were ordered to march, and join the expedition against the|barding the arsenal, andthe firing contigued all the Ilungarians, They did not, indeed, refuse to quit the Jarracks, out they were forewarned of their march and its object, and had communicated with the corps of national guards of the suburb of Guwpendorf, in which their barracks were situate, and with the academical legion, frou..both of which they received a promise that measures would be taken to prevent their departure. Some measures, were indeed taken. ‘The national’ guards from the Hunadsthurm assembled at 6 o’clock on the morning of the Gth atthe terminus.of the nor- thern railroad, from which they removed the: rails, for the purpose of preventing the departure ofthe gren- adiers. The latter arrived soon after, and the command- ing officer, seeing that the removai of his troops-by rail was impossible, gave orders for their. proceeding en foot, to Gansendorf, a station on the line, from whence University-buildings. Formidable barricades were con- strueted while this fight was going on. ‘The old forti- fications of the city were occupied by the artillery of the national guards. After this the tide of insurrection rose to an uncon- querable height. The rioters entered the War-office’ between the hours of five and six, seized the cannon and arms deposited in that buildinz, and captured the | \wholly and totally useless to the colony. to, by which this important and valuable provision has been taken away, or so fettered as to be rendered A Gentleman of the name of Smith yesterday sought admission in our Courts as a Barrister and Attorney, and was refused, the Judges expressing their regret Minister of War, Count Latour, The wretched man was conducted into the street, and then he was murder-| ed with blows from axes and sledge hammers. ‘The. people tore the cluthes and orders fromthe bleeding) body, and hung the naked corpse on a gibbet, where it remained suspended for a whole day, during which the) national guards riddled it with musket balls, Count} Lathour’s papers were Seized, and brought to the Un- versity. It appears, that a deputation from the Diet,| with.the vice president Smolka at their head, were at) the time.in the residence of the Minister of War; but) that all their endeavours, seconded by members of the | academieal legion, were unavailing, to avert his fate. | At half past six o’clock. there was but one place of) refuge left for the troops and national guards who sided | with the government—that place was the arsenal, fa- nous for its glorious trophies from the Turkish wars,—| The people surrounded the arsenal, and demanded from) the garrison that they should give up the arms which it contained, ‘They refused. A combat commenced, in| the course of which the garrison swept the Renngasse | with grape and canister, and:killed and disabled a great, number of the insurgents, whose fury increased after each unsaccessful attempt-to possess the building.—)| The committee of students sent flags of truce, summon-| ing the garrison to surrender, but the bearers were shot dead on. the spot. ‘The people then commenced bom-' night through, ull six o’clock on the morning of the 7th, when the garrison surrendered. ‘Those among the po- pular party who were not provided with weapons were then armed. ‘The number. of killed and wounded is said to be very great. In.the midst of these scenes the Emperor and the other members of the imperial family lett Vienna at! about four o’clock p. in. onSaturday. They were es- corted by 5000 cavalry, and took the road towards’ Lintz, The transactions of the Austrian Diet, while the above bloody deeds.were enacting around them, were equally striking and significant. The Diet declared stself in permanency, and a depu? tation was sent to.the Emperor of Schonbrumn, deman- ding a popular ministry, and the revocation of the decree he hoped’ it would be possible to effact their.conveyance by the railroad. But this-plan, too, was resisted by the national guards, the numbers of which increased every the name of the Diet. niinute. A barricade effectually, stopped the march of| A second decree announces that measures had been Orders. were taken to clear the town ot the military, and to declare a the regiments near the Tabor Bridge. given for the storming of.this barricade; andthe War-! affice being aware of the mutinous dispositions of the! grenadiers, several battalions of cavalry were instruct- | ad to, escort them. But the grenadiers crossed the| aridye, scaled the barricade, and fraternised with the! national guards. ‘The latter destroyed part of. the’ ‘wedge, thus preventing the cavalry from interfering. Regiments of infantry were then drawn up to reduce’ the insurgents, and to enforce obedience to the com- mands of the government ; and the artillery arrived at sovereign could do; he had renounced the unlimited ven o'clock, when the rioters were summoned to sur-. appointing the Baa Royal- Commissary of Hungary. Various proclamations were issued during the day in general amnesty for all persons concerned in the insur- rection.. ‘The Diet at the same time resolved to request the formation of a popular ministry, and revoke the de- that they felt themselves fettered by the Act of the last Session, as they were satisfied Mr. Smith would have proved an ornament to the Bar. Thus has the Colony been deprived of the distinguished talents and abilities © of a gentleman who, 27 years ago, was called to the English Bar and practised thereat, and who since that period has been uniformly engaged in the duties of his profession in the West Indies and other British Colonies, under the operation of an Act eminently designed to foster the particular interests of some half a dozen of | individaals composing the local Bar of the place, at the expense of the public interests. Surely this is a state of things which ought not to be tolerated. Is it by ineasnres of restriction that this Colony is to go ahead, rather is it not by those-of the directly opposite tenden- cy? Inthe meantime what raparation do the framers and compilers contemplate offering to their justly of- fended constituencies for the part they have taken in concocting this abuse of the powers entrusted to them, is a question I leave them to answer. My time will not permit my further continuing the subject, which I have no doubt will be taken up by abier peas. I am, Sir, TRUTH. November 2, 1548. [The Act regulating the admission of Barristers was introduced into the House of Assembiy, if we recollect rightly, by Mr. Palmer. Relating solely to his own profession, it was left, on its second reading, to the care of himself and his brother Barristers, Messrs. Long- worth and Haviland. Being ip the House on the occa- sion of its second reading, we remember distinctly that there was no debate on any of its clauses, the unprofesa- sional members taking it for granted, we presume, that the gentlemen of the long robe had the best right to judge what provisions would or would not subserve the public interest, in reference tothe admission of Barris- ters. Confiding in their integrity as Lawyers, it was not supposed, we apprehend, by any other member ot the House, that the slightest advantage would be taken to introduce into the practice of the Law the cursed principle of monopoly which retards improvement in cree appointing the Ban Royal Commissary of Hun- gary. Another decree ordains measures to be taken | to prevent the arrival of troops by. the railroad. Before leaving Vienna the unfortunate Emperor for-| warded a sealed document to Herr Kraus (the Minister every thing else connected with our local legislation. If the people of Charlottetown feel themselves aggriev- ed (as they have every reason to be) by the enactment of the Law.for which Mr. Palmer acted in the capacity of Finance.) to the effect, that he had done all that aj o¢ chaperon, they will shortly have an opportunity of ) ing fr centleman an explanation of his, power which he had received trom his forefathers; he| demanding from that g p pater, ‘This they refused. w do, for they had meun-|had been ub!iged in Moy last to leave the. castle. of his conduct in refegence to this matter, — Euston, Exe, _—