2 ae ee THE EX - ai ' #\? rer! SP PL Se eae eT wes m swe We 4 | Gortschakoff-or'the offigials at St. Petersburg who published | OR PO ek aR ‘ J ; YD R a las much of bis reports ag is deemed expedient—does not go | ; -% as€ ‘ ai EE EEL EIDE EL ILENE EE LE ee ‘ : ; i ~ ee wend a Ste, See ™ + s - ewer mes \ tie length of telling explicitly how many of his men have | cman 1835. heen put Aors de combat, but he gives a tolerable inkling of | ‘ _ jit, Tle acknowledges to the toss of a hundred men while Te 7 2 crossing the bridge; and adds that he was obliged to leave OLLI LO CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 1, (From our Extra 0 Friday (ast.) /« five hundred men grievonsly wounded on the southern side.” | c : If the wounded, whom it was found impossible to carry along -_- - = 7 a eR reyd ’ > , FALL O: SEBASTOPOL with the retreating army, amounted to so many, those who er 4 ae © C1 “were able to accempany it, or who were sent away before the ARRI VAL OF Tih & NG L ESI M A LL. , retreat F ostaenned: Foie have been much abe sutkerthe i and if 100 men were killed in crossing the bridge, the num- fhe City has been thrown into a stat : ‘ber of those who fell during the bombardment aud in the étoment this morning by the arriv lof the Lady Le | secault must have-been much greater. The epithet, too, which ra floating ia the breeze, and) the Prince applies to the fire of the Allies, feu d'enfer— infernal fire) would seem to indieate that his nerve had been | a little shaken by it. It is equivalent to what decorous one Sup] oak as Englishmen would call an admission that the Allies had | er had searcely touclied the wh rf, when the following telegram, | made the place too hot to hold him.j the Eastern Chronicle Office at Pictou, was e of the most pleas- ing ex *.% ‘ -_ Marchant, wiih ali ber cord 1 up tle harbour, announcing, as every | ( firing @wns as she steame seol. the FALL OF SEBASTOPOL. The steam LATEST DESPATCH FROM GENERAL PELISSIER. | The following despatch from General Pelissier was on Thurs- | Jay posted on the walls of Paris :— ; ‘ he i » yyy) ea) Sf Crimea, Sept. 10, 11 p.m.—I visited Sebastopol and the The America arrived this morning at 6 o’elock, with Jine of defences to-day. Lt is difficult to give an exact picture | Liverpoo) dates to the loth. of the results of our victory, of which inspection alone can give Sesasvoron Fanurn!—Caerure or tun Maraxnorr!— an idea. The multiplicity of defensive works, and the mate- | Crimea, Sept. Sth.—The Allied Forces attacked Sebastopol rials and means that have been applied, surpass every thing The asaenit on the Malakhoff has| known in the history of war. The taking of the Malakoff, which eansed the enemy to fly before our eagles, already three times victorious, has placed in the hands of the Allies immense establishments of materiel, of which it is impossible to caleulate @ the advantage. To-morrow the Allied troops will occupy Kara- of the enemy, ‘ : belnaya and the city. An Anglo-Freuch commission will be Six hundred and fifiy Russian soldiers and twenty-seven engaged to report on the maserie/ abandoned by the enemy. een pees ' ‘DESPATCH FROM ADMIRAL BRUAT. —THE GUN-| The southern side of Sebastopol is in possession of the oe "BOATS ENGAGED. we Allies. ; : : . The enemy, during the night and this morning, are ex- | f oe aan beldywing telgrghte dstpetah | lo ling their mines and setting Gre to the whole tow rom ‘\ _ AdmizelBract 7a. 38 1 | ee ne eh rr PR? Rane ‘© The Crimea, Sept. 9, 10 15 a. m.—The assault upon the | All the ships of war in the harbor, except three steamers, Malakoff Tower was made yesterday at noon, and later in the were burned during the night. ‘day on the Great Redan and on the Central Bastion. A gale’ ‘The appearance of Sehastopol is as that of a great furnace, | from the north kept the ships at anchor. The mortar boats, | from the mines which have been successively sprung at dif-| & be enabled to fire, were obliged to enter Streletzka Bay. They fired 600 shells against the Quarantine Bastion and Fort. | Alexander, The six English mortar boats, also at anchor in| Streletzka Bay, fired about the same number of shells. Last | Fee ee ee ek te night vivlent explosions and yast conflagrations led_us to be- | JECAS FE}OICINg ANG ExeiteMens in Lnginnd. ‘lieve that the Russians were eyacuating the town. We ascer- Pelisster is ereated a Marshal of France. tained to-day that the Russian vessels had been sunk. The Pelissier telegraphed for instructions in case Gortschakoff bridge was covered with troops retreating to the north side. | should ask to espitulate. The reply is reported to be that | After eight o'clock the bridge was destroyed. Only a few the Russians mast surrender at diseretion—lay down their Steamers remain in the port, anchored near Fort Catherine. arms, and give up to the allies all their fortified places in the , appr vached the Quarantine eetiaien this morning, on board Crimea, including Odessa, with all their munitions of war, | the Brandon, and ascertained myself that they are now evacu- ? , wi ae Bi. ; ats ated. They have just been blown up. Our soldiers have left aud without doing any previous damage thereto; but Gorts- | their trenches and spread themselves in isolated groups on the chakoff has not yet asked for peace. ramparts of the town, which appears to be completely aban- An attempt has been made on the life of Napoleon, but the doned.”’ man has since been proved insane, and sent to an Asylum. | ‘The Baltic fleet is said to be ordered home, Breadstuffs unchanged. issued from handed sropnd by Capt. Irving among:t the crowd of persons . } ) chronged the wharf to learn the news :— who had tar this day at 12 o'clock. heen snecessful, and the work is now in possession of the French. The English took the Redan, but were compelled to cede the work again to the powerful artillery and reserves ferent points. The Russians are on their way to Perekop. The loss of the allies is probably under 2000. SINKING OF THE RUSSLAN FLEET. The following is the copy of a despatch from Sir E. Lyons, dated September 10 :— . : ; ** During the ni Saturday) t! sii The following short despatch, issued from the Telegraph. Daring. he night (Saturday) the Russians sunk all the P | line-of-battle ships in Sebastopol harbour. Office at Halifax, places the loss of the Allies at 15,000—/| , pare ee , | SEBASTOPOL AY IMMENSE BLAZING FURNACE. an cnormous sacrifice of life, if true: — | | The subjoined telegraphic message from General Pelissier is FURTHER INTELLIGENCE BY TELEGRAPH, _ | dated Crimea, Sept. 9, 8 p.m.— | ‘Tf convinced myself to-day that the enemy had sunk all his }steamers. His work of destruction continues under the fire of | our bombs. The frequent explosions impose on me the duty of deferring an entry into the place, which indeed_ presents the Co }appearanece of an nmense blazing furnace. Prince Gortscha- Sebastopol taken on th Sept. Killed and wounded of Kett sorely pressed, requests an armistice to remove his wound- | the Allies about 15,000. Russians retreated to North side ed and bury his dead. The bridge near Fort Paul has been | after sinking and burning the ships. broken up. Allis well up to the moment of writing, We | JAS. SLEWART, President, | watch the Tchernaya vigilantly. The enemy does not appear,”’ Feeling, as we gll must, the liveliest interest in the import- | LOSS OF PRITISH OFFICERS. | The list of officers killed and wounded in the assault on the Redan, will fill many a honse with mourning; and even : : - P ‘those who, in perusing the dread record, find the name of “ no pace before our subscribers, aud the public generally, without | friend or brother there,” will feel the thrill of triamph tem- delay. _pered and allayed by sympathy for the bereaved. And in the YALL OF SEBASTOPOL. -humbler walks of'life—where affection is every whit as strong Wan Derarrmeyr, Sept. 10. land enduring as among the more favoured of fortune—the ago- ford Panmure has received the following telegraphic de-»'8iDg uncertainty of suspense must be endured for some time snatel fran Gedéral Simpeda. dated ? ” longer. It appears that in the assault on the Redan twenty- ee Cxrmza, Sept. 9 ‘six officers have been killed and one hundred and seventeen | Sebastopol isin possession of the Allies. a te. |wounded. Of the latter, eighteen are reported to be danger- ‘The enemy during the night and this morning have evaen- | ously wounded, fifty-five “ey wounded, two severely con- ated the south side, after exploding their magazines and | tused, and forty-two slightly wounded. One officer is report- soiling Gre t6 the whole ef ihe town. ed as missing. The grief of those whose friends are irre- \!] the mev-of-war were barned during the night, with | mediably lost must be left to the assuaging hand of time. the exception of three steamers, which are plying about the| They whose friends are dangerously or severely wounded, may ‘ea _yet cherish the hope of being allowed the privilege of soothing ‘ne bridge communicating with the north side is broken, | PY their attentions the permanent sufferings of our maimed iow Wi * a heroes. As for the slightly wounded, the scars which prove THE STORMING OF THE MALAKHOFF, that they have done their duty as becomes British soldiers FRENCH OFFICIAL DESPATCH. | will ere long be rather a matter cf congratulation. As far as Panis, Monpay.—The Moniteur publishes the following| we can conjecture from the return of killed and wounded, acvount of the storming of Sebastopol. It is from General | twenty-four English regiments (in whole or in part) have had Pelissier :—- | the honour to be engaged in the attack onthe Redan, These “The assault was made at 12 o'clock, on Saturday, on/ regiments are :—The Ist, 3rd, 7th, 11th, 17th, 19th, 20th, the Malakhoff. Its redoubts and the Redan of Careening | 20th, 83rd, 84th, 41st, 49th, 55th, G2nd, 63rd, 77th, 88th, say were carried by our brave soldiers with admirable en-| 90th. 95th, and 97th, with the Rifle Brigade and the Regi- thusiasn. Amidst cries of “ Vive l’Empereur,” we at once! ment of Royal Engineers. set about lodging ourselves securely there, and at the Malak-| 1. ear T2AND Ie 7 7 . hoff we have succecded. But the Redan of Careening Bay FIFTEEN THOUSAND KILLED AND WOUNDED. could not be kept in the face of the powerful artillery which | The total loss of the allies is said to be no less than 15,000 swept away the first occupants of that work. ur solid in-| kil!ed and wounded. _ It is scarcely possible to hear so terrible stallation at the Malakhoff will soon cause the fall of the @@ announcement without asking, as if one had never asked Redan of Gareening Bay as well as the grand Redan, of | before,—Is it possible that anything can justify so terrible a which our brave Allies carried the works with their usual | Sacrifice? We are fortified against the misgivings that vigour. But like ourselves at the Redan of Careening Bay, | weak nature may suggest at the thought of these lamentable they were obliged to give way to the artillery of the enemy, | losses and sufferings. No price is too great for honour. and to his powerful reserves. When we saw our eagles! This is felt not merely as a public consideration, but still more floating over the Malakhoff, General de Salles made two at: deeply and tenderly as the precious balm of private sorrow. tacks on the Central Bastion; they did not succeed, and his, We will venture to say that there is not one parent,one brother, troops returned to the trenches. Qur losses are serious, but | one child of an age to appreciate honour—we could almost { cannot yet state them. ‘They arc amply compensated by add, one wife who would wish her husband had not been the taking of the Malakhoff, of which the consequences will | there, or that Kogland kad not bearded the aggressor in his be immense.” ‘stronghold. If anybody doubts this, let him read over the PIKOL om eneeeerine names, most of them already honourable, some of them noble, J mee Uk GORTS HAKOI MS DESPATCH. ‘and he will find, one by one, that he cannot doubt how such 10 av Niear.— Phe garrison of Sebastopol, after sustaining and such a family will bear to have paid its dear tribute to an infernal lire ( few d'enfer), revulsed six assaults, but could the cause of our country, of liberty and of honour. But, aot drive the enemy frow the Kerniloff Bastion (the Malakoff apart from reflections that would have oceurred even if the Tower.) Our brave troops, who resisted to the iast extremity, | assault of September 8 had failed as much es that of are now crossing over to the Northern part of Sebastopol. | June 18, it must be a comfort to everybody to know Lhe eremy found nothing in the Southern part but blood-| that the price bas been paid for a substantial advantage. stained ruins. On the 9th of September the passage of the | Instead of that horrib'e struggle in the trenches, all but garrison from the Southern to the Northern part was hapd to hand, in which latterly the British army had been accomplished with extraordinary success, our loss on that losing fifty a day killed and wounded, besides the victims of occasion being but 100 men. We left, I regret to say, nearly | disease, and in which it is said our Allies lost several hun- 500 men grievously wounded on the Southern side. dreds daily, we have now gained the prize of a twelvemonth’s |i a is & cool, self-complacent effrontery in the bulletins eontention, and put the land harbour between us and our foe, a : oes aa om has never been | $0 that we Can now rest awhile. This advantage we have Seemann tom “won e we gan congratulation ; obtained at a gost which, terrible as it may seem, is little ae ee ng ios - a will boast of the more than a u.onth’s consumption of men. Sebastopol is ile appearsto think that his De a as rs aoe neiled io poise WHNGED #, Beng be. Sry Foe th i a ana have sng desrmens item Sinn pecs 7 ~ nee nee their way to its. walls step by step, from Kalatima sptkiaeaahaameeni dae wt “ The enemy foun | Bay to the bloody rampart of the Redan, have not survived g B side bat blood-stained ruins.” He | to enjoy, or even to know, what they have gi ig. announces that “ the passage of the garrison from tl eae : anna Suey pave givun: ut: iaees insbe catedharnebed tee suite Cone mn the southern Sebastopol so entirely burut and destroyed as the Russians poi 8 mp pushed with extraordinary |intended. It has now been traversed by the conquerors, and ’ § jaunty an air as if he were talking of an/ found to be something more th } i advance, and pot of a retreat. A man of his ohanots 1 inething more than a heap of blood-stained sho 50 equsdly-peadtl-of drabhine aad tl aracter— | ruins. The establishments aud magazines, the cannon, the ig ana being drubbed—does_ stores of projectiles, and other munitions of war, while they Teteorarn Orrice, Harirax, Thursday September 27, 1855. To Local Directors, Operators and the Public: — ant triumph of the allies, we hasten to gather from our Maglish papers the following additional particulars, which we AMINER._ notemefe exhatsgtion that drove the Russians across the hat. bour, ‘They prove also how long the would-be eonqucrer of ‘the Hast’ had been preparing fox the execution of his long- cherished scheme, and how correctly he appreciated its dil: ficulties. . What, however, places beyond a doubt the import- ance of this achievement is the vastness, the ingennity, and the completeness of the inver lines of works, on which the Russians expected to dispute our advance step by step, even when we had gained the Malakhoff aud external fortifications, - —— 4.2 ——— ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OF THE EMPEROR NAPOLEON. Saturday se’nnight the Emperor visited the Italian Opera. As the carriage of the Dames d’Honneur arrived at the door- way, a man on the trottoir discharged two small pistols at the eafriage. No one was injured! ‘The Emperor was in another | carriage. The assassin was immediately arrested. His name is Bellemarre, a native of Rouen, aged 22. When he was 16 he was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment for swindling. At the expiration of two months the Emperor (then President of the Republic) commuted his sentence. He pretends to have afterwards taken an active part in the event of the 2d of De- cember, to have fought behind one ef the barricades of the Rue Rambutean, At that time placards haying in large char- acters * Motiyes for the condemnation to Death of Louis Na- yoleon’ were seized by the police. During the examination 3ellemarre declared himself to be the author of those placards. He was sentenced by default to two years’ imprisonment, and was transferred to Belle Isle. Since he left prison, in Febru- ary last, he lived at Paris wader a fulse name, and had accept- ed an appointinent as clerk to M. Jeanne, constable. He had taken up a position of the entrance of the Rue Marsollier, on ll ete ae we such works ag these, they were subsequently compelled t» tire from them under a fire which they could neither reach, fepel, nor in any Way evade. To have remained where were would only have been to court a destruction which have been as as it was certainly inevitable, As soon as the French eagles were een to float on the khoff tower, the French General de Salles made a diy from the Allicd left attack on the south-western side of though this assanlt was twice repeated with incom obliged to withdraw to their trenches. The grand work, however, was already accomplished, Every. thing was achieved in the capture and t ‘ the Malakhoff. Success upon that point. involyed every where else ; and when Prinee Gortschakoff saw his top driven from that position, he at once knew that Sebastopol was sealed. From that moment all further tance was at an end, and the garrison thought only of ‘Then began that work of wholesale destruction and devastatj which invariably precedes and accompanies the retirement ; a Russian army before the face of anenemy. Searccly had the night which closed this memorable day set in, before the Allieg were startled by the explosion, in rapid succession, 6 magazines within the fortifications, by the crash of fal buildings, and by the lurid glare of a burning city and a burp. ing fleet. Prince Gortschakoff was eon the place—his retreat to the northern heights had commenced ; but before he left not one stone of Sebastopol was to remain upon another nor one plank of his master’s boasted Black Sea fleet to float “upon the waters which iteould not defend. ** Our brave troops,” ‘says he, in his despatch to St. Petersburg, ** who resisted to the | last extremity, are now crossing over to the Northern part of “Sebastopol. The enemy will find nothing in the southern yart | but blood-stained ruins.’’ This was perfectly true. General the foot pavement opposite to the entrance of the theatre, and Polissier, in writing to his Government on the 9th, says: “J he fed his two pistols at the moment when the eries of * Vive have deferred entering the town on account of the explosion of l’Empereur’ made him faney that the carriage which conveyed | y,jnes which still continues in rapid succession. At this moment, the ladies of Honor Of the km press was that of His Majesty. indeed, the city presents only a vast circle of conflagration,” A city policeman on duty — point instantly pulled down And again, in a subsequent despateh, he suys—‘« Karabelnaya, the er sare and Reprare mn at once, , 1: ,_ and the south part of Sebastopol, no longer exist. The enemy, The cause of Bellemarre’s mistaking the carriage which | geing our solid occupation of the Malakhoff, has decided upon contained the Ladies of Honour is worth being noticed, An | evacuating the place; but prior to his retreat has blown up or old man who seryed as a soldier under the Consulate and the pyrnt everything that pees be destroyed.’’ Every remainin first Empire, and on whom the present Emperor has bestowed | ship of the Russian fleet was burnt or sunk by the hands of the a pension of 1,000 francs, happened to be standing on the path-| Russians themselyes on the night of the Sth—the garrison way at the moment the carriage droye up, conversing with the | effected their retreat on the evening of the 9th ; and when the beprapier of ths Speniee Nene Wire and en sage pene ‘morning of the 10th broke, the Allies saw before them ae e happened last night to be standing quite close to Bellemarre | yt the smouldering ruins of the vaunted impregnable city, a when the carriage drove up. At once he began shouting with | a nanan of the ie ship-less galph which vecented thal all his might and main, ‘* Vive /’Empereur !’ ‘* Vive I’ Imper- | from their defeated enemy. atrice /” and his friend the tapissier, and his wife and children, | ‘Thus fell the city of Sebastopol. The question that instantly joined in the chorus. It was at that instant that Bellemarre | suggests itself to every mind is, what will be the result? stepped forward hastily ; his moyement was observed by the | Having lost the «ity, will the Czar endeavour to retain the sergens de ville, who struck down his arm. territory. Sebastopol being in ashes, will the Russians make a | further fight to preserve the Crimea? These are questions to which, as yet, no reply can be returned. In all probability the Russians themselves are at this instant undetermined as to what course they will adopt, It will be for the allied Generals Tux utmost enthusiasm pervades all classes of the popu- | to quicken them in their resolutions. The triumph we have ; ’ err ained, great as it is, is still incomplete. The foe, whose lation of our City. Groups are to be scen at every corner, | insatiable ambition has so terribly disturbed the peace of ~~: > STATE OF FEELING IN CHARLOTTETOWN. communicating to each other, and commenting on, the glo- | rious news from the seat of war, The ‘flag that braved a Europe, must be incapacitated from ever again renewing his outrages. His navy in the Euxine has been destroyed ; his arsenal, where was fabricated and repaired the artillery which enabled him to make so protracted a defence, has been reduced thousand years the battle and the breeze,” intermingling its ‘ ! : é : r ' to ruins and wrested from him; his warlike, stores have been folds with the tri-color of our brave and gallant Allies of jn a vreat measure wasted and exploded. The troops which France, floats proudly from the various publie edifices of the have been driven back from the Tchernaya, and forced to _recross the harbour of Sebastopol, are doubtless dismayed and place—the Government House, the Colonial Building, the | dispirited. But he has still a numerous army in the field, Temperance Hall, &e., and many private houses in the city covered by the inlet of Sebastopol, the fortifications which bristle along the heights on its north side, and the entrench- celebrate the auspicious oceasion by a similar display. The | ments which extend from those strongholds along the Mackenzie English Church bell rings out a merry peal, while we write, | Heights to the base of the mountain range that overhangs the : ; read to Simpheropol. We conceive, therefore, that the blow in honour of the victory,—~guns have been fired,—and a large which has been struck ought to be followed up before the enemy bonfire, we understand, is in preparation for this evening. has time to recover from it. The Russian army in the Crimea ' | j ; | must be harassed and assailed until it is forced to surrender. Every thing else appears to be forgotten in the enthusiasm Ny mistaken generosity must be displayed towards a power of the hour, and much as we appreciate and applaud the | whose threatening am)ition has for nearly half a century hung b y . : _ | like a dark thunder-cloud over Europe, and has at last burst in present efforts to give expression to the public feeling on this storm. Our armies have done their duty, and are ready to do great and joyful oceasion, we trust some other means will be | !¢ 4&1" the nation are still animated by the'same deliberate ; . . iresolve with which they entered on the strife ; it is for the tried more adequately to express the uniyersal public re- governments to take eare that such heroism and self-sacrifice joicing —Exztra of Friday last. shall not have been displayed in vain. We await with eager lanxiety the tidings which shall acquaint us with the next move in the great game of war which is now displayed before us. —— THE ANNIHILATED FLEET. (From the London News of the World.) Next to the fall of Sebastopol itself, the most important FALL OF SEBASTOPOL. event is the annihilation of the Russian Fleet. The dismay ‘and consternation with which the news of this catastrophe Sebastopol has fallen. The great Southern strong-hold of ore " ie 5 u ‘ . neey Russia exists no more. The fleet is utterly annihilated. Its | ve ae an - oe ar ~ eel i oe ee blood-stained ruins are in possession.of the Allies. The work of (°F "5 88 SeREORSS <7 ES AO Sn EGS Cage ' , : ‘set thereon. From the days of Peter the Creat, the one con- the last eleven months is accomplished. The united flags of) ont. settled. pervading principle in the policy of Russia has France and England wave upon the spot where Sebastopol was. | joon to ceuehle aah on the ocean. F Her restlessness in The news of this triumphant result of the toil and sufferings the ice-bound regions of her original territory, and her steadily, of the last year has filled the heart of England with joy. Let | though cautiously, aggressive movements, have been dictated us see how it was achieved. not more by the lust of territorial aggrandisement, than by From the telegraphic despatches which have reached us — | the desire to obtain possession of a seaboard, that she might fragmentary as such communications necessarily are—we learn Create a powerful navy, and train her subjects to familiarity that the bombardment was renewed, for the fourth time since | with the sea. With slow and stealthy, but sure steps, she had the commencement of the siege, on Wednesday, the 5th inst., crept forward to her design, and had equipped navies which, when the tremendous effect of the heavy guns and mortars lat- 0" @ Teview at least, ee a formidable appearance both terly conveyed by the Allies to the front of their position, |i" the Black and the Baltic Seas. [low much of interne’ weak- speedily became apparent. Despatches, forwarded on the fol- | "°*s the gay show concealed might be unknown to the rest of lowing day by the French and English generals, brought to. the world, but it seems that the Kussian Government was never Paris and London the gratifying intelligence that the fire from | blind to the fact, that much was still necessary before those the newly-constructed batteries i dnoneted steadily and fayour- | fleets could meet adversaries on equal terms. No pains were ably, and that one of the Russian ships of war in the harbour spared to make them so, and in the meantime it was hoped had already been destroyed. On Thursday and Friday the that the painted shadows would suffice to impose upon their bombardment was continued with unremitted energy ; and on | neighbours for formidable realities. It is impossible not to the evening of the latter day another ship was observed to be revert now to the Congress at Vienna, and ali the long, elabo- in flames, a portion of the town was set on fire, and a maga- rate, and most fruitless conferences which took place there re- zine on the north side of the harbour was exploded. The super- | Specting that very navy which has now ceased to exist. The iority of the allied fire was now conclusively established, and events of the war have cut the Gordian knot, whieh the wits of the batteries of the Malakhoff were silenced. The time had the keenest diplomatists were unable to unloose. We shall evidently arrived for using the bayonet to complete the work. | 20W hear no more of those protocols — we need be under no For this the allied generals were perfectly prepared. dread of a renewal of them. No statesman in Europe will The morning of Saturday, the Sth of September—a day that | think it worth his while to spend days and months in solemn will henceforward be ever memorable in the annals of France conclave, on the argument how many ships Russia shal! be and England—was ushered in with incessant salvos of the most @llowed to maintain in Sebastopol, and how many the Allies terrific shauseiee from the whole of the antilioes in the Allied | Shall send to the Black Sea by way of compromise. batteries, and at noon the word was given for the long-desired 4 ; = : ee assault. This was delivered siuplianondeig upon oe differ- DESTRUCTION OF THE RUSSIAN FLEET. ent points—the Malakhoff, the Careening Redan, and the| SkBastoron, ar Last, m4s Farven.—The rumour which Great Redan ; the French advancing upon the. two former— produced so much excitement and diffused such universal jo the English assailing the latter, At the first rash the whole of about 11 months ago, has been finally realized. The bidhaitiieed- the three points were carried; but it eventually turned out | ment was renewed, for the fourth time since the commencement that the Malakhoif alone could be permanently held. It is of the siege, on Thursday se’nnight, when the tremendous effect necessary that we should enter into some explanation here, be- of the heavy guns, which with so much pains and labour have cause, from the tenor of General Simpson's first despatch, a | been conveyed to- the front, was speedily apparent. The painful impression was for a moment produced in this country besieging force was now able to commayd positions which that our brave soldiers had failed in their assault upon the formerly were quite out of their range, as was proved by the Great Redan. It is clear, however, from General Pelissier’s conflagration of a line-yf-battle ship im the harbour the ca better worded communication to the French Government, that evening. On Friday the bombardment was stil] continuaed— this was by no means the ease.‘ Our brave Allies,”’ says this | another ship was obseryed to be in flames—a rtion of the gallant officer, ‘* carried the salient of the Great Redan with town was set on fire, and a magazine on the ak side of the their usual vigour, but,’’ he adds, ‘like our own intrepid | harbour was exploded, The superiority of the allied fire was troops who had also carried the Redan of Careening Bay, they now conclusively established, and the ue ee of the Malak. ff were obliged to give way before the overwhelming and irresis- | were silenced. “The time had evidently come for usi the ee fire a ro enemy was woke to pour upon those ex- bayohet to complete the work, The : - posed points,’’ There was no defeat—no failure in this; for | day o day, the viagix i while the internal defence, commanded only by the Malekhot mandate nan = ey a remained unsubdued, the tenure of either of the Redans by an | with so much Success in storming i foe, "The ohjeot ae a me - ~ impossibility. It was not so with probably was to allow daylight sufficient for the stormi ee oe alo a : ft ow nee af its a parties to secure themselyes within the entrenchments, shou ever they might-be + onde — n * 1 , olders, who- they succeed in the assault, while the continuance of the g ; consequently, when the French had} bombardment during the whole of the morning would leave once entered it, they had no difficulty in retaining it, and in|the enemy no time to repair the damage thus effected. making themselves permanent masters of the position, The} The assault was made accordingly on three different points— oo of the two Redans was totally different. The crenel- | on the Malakoff and on the Little Redan covering oe farni — of —_— ve faced only to the assailants, and) Bay, by the French, and on the Great Redan by the Briti _— \ on protection of any kin whatever to the troops troops. Qn all three points the assaults were successful. who mig succeed in surmounting them. They were at the | The fortifications were carried with their accustomed bray a aoe tere oaeuelee by the interior works of de- | by the allied troops, and the enemy was driven from his e enemy had skilfally-raised, and which enabled | positions. But though all three fortifications were carried, Further accounts from the Crimea. #ot fake much pains to cor is losse is | weal his losses, It is true Princo’ swell the value aud honor of the prize, prove also that it was him to sweep the exposed summit of the Redans with a fire and the bravery of the allied army was so. far equal, yet only -» kore that nothing mortal could withstand. It is no disgrace, there- one of them, the Malakoff, could be permanently hel fore, to the columns of either army if, after gallantly carrying /tunately that one was the most important, aa secured the town, by gallantly assaulting the Central Bastion ; but al. iE bravery, the attempt did not succeed, and the assailants wep, E period chosen was mid- ian hig oF a 2 feat, i i le i a i ee