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For his chance was fairly sped.

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He but hoped to "save the fleet" in its need, Yes-yes, I knew it must be so-I told not all

So to Bomarsund he flew;

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my dream,

VOL. VIII. 49

I saw my gallant boy ride forth, where crimson | Our foes hailed his rise as the dawn of our fall; flowed the stream; For "destruction which follows on madness," they said,

I hear the shouts of victory-cease, cease those sounds of joy,

They cannot glad a mother's heart, nor give me back my boy!

Both.

God of the battle, hear us now, and yet thy will be done,

A sister for a brother mourns, a mother for her son;

We cannot share the glory now-but ask thee still to save

The noble hearts of England, the beautiful and

brave!

J. E. Carpenter.

Must await the doomed nation that choose such a head.

Two years of unfortunate bungling revealed
He could fight in the Council if not in the field.
When he suddenly turned, and in terror went out,
When the Commons but asked what he had been
about,

And betook him to guide the Kirk session in peace,

For the Court and the Country a happy release."

Here, in grim desperation, his last venture done,
In the midst of his victims reposes Lord John;
None so daring as he an exploit to begin,
Or so rapid to quit it when once fairly in
A mixture most subtle of courage and fear-
? Still snatching the rudder though fearful to steer;
Mistaking ill-temper for wit in debate,

QU'EST CE QUE NOUS Y AVONS GAGNE
A story I've heard ('t is an old French Joc,
It happened, I fancy, long ago,
When the pit was the place for the swells to go)
Of a gent who, between two acts of the play,
Rose up to stretch his legs and survey
If he could n't discover some coryphée,
Behind the proscenium, so pretty and gay,
Who with her sly ogles might wile away
The dreary quart' d'heure that must needs be done
Ere the actors resumed their pathos or fun;
But he'd hardly been gazing a minute or so
When a cry was heard:" Il nous tourne le dos!"
Heavens the din that was then set up!
One yelled and snarled like an angry pup,
Another siffléd, another swore,
Till the row about him was getting a bore.
Our friend turned round with a ghastly grin
On a face as ugly, -
-as ugly as sin,
And, as he showed them his hideous phiz,
He gravely said, with a pleasant quiz:
"Vous voulez la figure et non le dos,

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And placemen's hack-phrases for maxims of State.

As "sincere, but mistaken in judgment," he passed,

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AMID the clouds of grief and wrath That o'er the heart of England brood, One, bright star holds its blessed path, Unswerving, unsubdued,

A steady radiance, breathing balm

To throbbing limb, and wand'ring brain; Investing death with hallowed calm, Taking the sting from pain.

Through miles of pallets, thickly laid
With sickness in its foulest guize,
And pain in forms to have dismayed
Man's science-hardened eyes,

A woman, fragile, pale, and tall,

Upon her saintly work doth move. Fair or not fair, who knows? But all Follow her face with love.

Lady-thy very name so sweet,

Speaks of full songs through darkness heard,

And fancy findeth likeness meet
Between thee and the bird,

Whose music cheers the glooming wold,
As thy low voice the anguish dim,
That through these sad rooms lieth cold
On brain, and heart, and limb.

God guard thee, noble woman! still
Wear the saint's glory round thy brow,
Let bigots call thee as they will,
What Christ preached, dost thou.
[Punch.

From the North American.

pires," he says, "which now stand banded

AMERICAN VIEWS OF THE EASTERN against Nicholas have all their separate in

QUESTION.

terests and aims, and though each people desires peace, each has its views fixed on a differBEFORE the difficulties in the way of the ent career in the new age which is to succeed capture of Cronstadt and Sebastopol had been the settlement of the Eastern question." He brought home, in their present calamitous as- admits frankly that the Turks already enterpect, to the public mind of Great Britain and tain most serious apprehensions, and that, of France, at a time when their statesmen were all the nations, they are most anxious to end yet indulging in the bright dream of razing the war; not that they expect advantages the latter and destroying the Russian fleet of from peace, "but from a consciousness that the Black Sea, with the prospects of reigning su- their state becomes worse every day, and that, preme on the waters of the Euxine, an Eng whoever may gain from the continuance of lish Minister, in insular self complacency, and hostilities, they themselves can only suffer." Louis Napoleon, in recollections of the military The following passage is somewhat calculated glories of France, proclaimed, elated with an- to throw a ray of light upon the "noble conticipation of certain success, to the astonished duct" and "disinterested motives" of the world their ambitious design of regulating the Allies:-"Every day that sees the strife condestinies of "either hemisphere. And though, tinue and the capital of the Ottomans occu as yet, they have been deceived in their ex-pied by newly arriving forces, witnesses also pectations of triumph, the coalition of these the weakening of the independent action of two mighty maritime powers remains never- the Porte, and the substitution for it of the theless a menacing reality, well deserving of will of the Allies. It is necessary for the safethe vigilance and attention of the people of ty of Europe and the final settlement of this the United States, and of the serious reflection question that the influence of the West should of our statesmen. General Cass, in alluding, continue to increase. The time has not come in his recent speech, to the various pretexts for an abandonment of the position gained under which the allied powers opened the war by so many sacrifices. In this lies the chief against Russia, exclained: "I do not believe cause of difference with the ally whom we one word of all this." We fully concur in his protect." disbelief, and are convinced, with him, that "England and France are fighting their own battles, each for its own purposes."

Further, we are informed that the Turks are utterly discouraged as to the result of the present occupation, that they wish to see If facts, as they already have occurred- the close of it at any price, and that ever amongst others, the evident purpose of the since the struggle before Sebastopol, the Ruspreliminary four points, totally subversive of sian party, to whom some of the wealthier the Sultan's sovereignty, and designed to es- Pashas belong, has gained considerably. tablish, as far as possible, their own authority The correspondent candidly confesses that in his dominions did not prove the assertion, this party considers it most prudent to lean on a retrospect of the history of England and Muscovite protection, in the confident hope France could not, for a moment, allow a doubt that the Czar would preserve their present to the contrary, to cloud the judgment of the system of government. He regrets as an people of America. The past history of unfortunate circumstance that England and France and England contains the revelation, France have not even tried to conciliate any and prognosticates the future lot of Turkey, of the races which inhabit the land; that, on should their endeavors be crowned with suc- the contrary, they have been ill-used, ridiculcess. Algeria and the British East Indies ed and beaten in a manner that has created present the solution of the momentous ques- the most bitter feeling among high and low in tion. The London Times of the 8th of Feb- Stamboul; that in consequence no good will ruary, in a correspondence from Constantino- is borne to the Allies, which—the correspondple, significantly hints a plan in reference to ent remarks is another reason why we Turkey, the boldness of which could only be should materially humble the enemy, (the equalled by its glaring perfidy. The purport Russians,) and place our influence on a of the whole article appears to be calculated strong basis." "The capture of Sebastopol to broach nothing short of the colonization is likely to give us that influence in the East, of the Turkish dominions, by England and France, and to stretch forth a feeler in order to ascertain public sentiment respecting the subject.

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without which the war has been waged in vain." In other words, the capture of Sebas topol, according to the correspondent of the Times, is necessary and indispensable to the The correspondent of the Times opens the Allies for the purpose of subjecting, not the matter with the annunciation of a fact upon Russians alone, but the Turks also. The sum which no reflecting mind could have enter- and substance is, that the Allies are detertained a shadow of doubt. "The four em-mined to make the most of their position.

They occupy Turkey, and do not intend to any real knowledge can be obtained by the maleave it. They must defeat the Russians, not chinery of Pashas and Councils can be believed to re-establish the sovereignty of the Sultan by no one acquainted with the East. If we wish to and the independence of Turkey-no-but learn something of the country we must have refor the sole purpose of being, after a victory suls of England and France are to be found men course to European observation. Among the conover Russia, enabled to turn their treacherous long acquainted with the several districts of the weapons against Turkey itself. The moral of empire, and of capacity to judge clearly, and give the story is founded on the principle of " Beati trustworthy opinions on almost every point. The possidentes" or, in plain English, "posses- internal state of the empire has now become of sion is nine points of the law." Thus much such consequence that it would be no waste of infor the "disinterested and noble motives" of tellectual labor to employ some of the ablest men the Western powers, "the representatives of of civilized Europe to examine into and report civilization," the "protectors of the weaker upon the information received from every quarter, against the stronger," the "champions of or even to send such men to make a personal inliberal principles! The Turks must be im- spection and survey of these rich provinces and their various populations. It is by the use of such bued by this time to their heart's content with means that we have tranquillized India and dethe superiority of Christian morals and civili-veloped its prosperity; without it we can have no

zation!

Now follows an interesting paragraph which palpably broaches the subject of colonization of the Turkish empire by the allies.

idea of the secret causes of discontent and disaf

The correspondence concludes with the following remark:

fection, of the reason why regions the most fertile are untilled and unproductive; nor without such an examination can we hope that the hardy British and German races will ever choose the East Every one who looks forward to the future of as the field of a new colonization, or that a real this Empire, and who is impressed with the con- barrier will ever be built against the designs of a viction that the war with Russia is only a secon- Power which has raised its power on the decay of dary matter compared with the establishment of a its neighbors. Unhappily there is more than ever solid and prosperous social state within the limits a necessity for such an infusion of new vigor. As of the Ottoman dominions, must feel anxiety when every success must have its drawbacks, so it has he sees the whole question of political and mate- been an unfortunate result of the present war that rial reform forgotten in the excitement of a war- the growing prosperity of the Eastern population like struggle. Still deeper must be that feeling has been blighted and rooted up. when he is persuaded that little is to be expected from the action of the existing government, even when urged on by the arguments or threats of European representatives. Perhaps even deeper than political reforms lie the benefits to be re- It is to be hoped that, with the close of the war ceived from a proper use of the material wealth of returning prosperity may visit this unhappy land; the country. Although in the present collapse of but it cannot be doubted that its chief hope of salthe national resources no enterprise can expect vation lies in the spirit and enterprise of the Westassistance from the public wealth, yet it is a ques-ern nations. If we act with energy and determition whether some inquiry might not take place nation, we may direct the future of the empire as to the material wants of the country and the for many years to come. The chief practical relatent riches which it is so well known to possess.sult of this war will probably be that France and Probably no subject will interest Englishmen so England will have established a just claim to a much after this struggle is over as the capabilities vigorous interference in the East, and if they use of these regions for settlement and the investment their right with proper resolution, they will not of capital. On all these subjects little or nothing is have fought in vain." known. The travellers who have visited the East have been generally among the shallowest of their class, and their books only show how far a man

Another letter, dated Constantinople, Jan. may go without observing anything worthy to be 29th, from the same correspondent, if we may recollected. Such volumes as "The Cab and the judge from its evident bearing upon the subCaique" and "From Turnham-Green to Tophaneh," ject broached in the foregoing, dilates, after a seldom contain anything that will repay the trou- prelude intended to disguise as much as possible of cutting the leaves. The soil, mineral wealth, ble its real aim and purport, with apparent healthiness, and commercial advantages of vari- unconcernedness, upon the subject of African ous districts in Roumelia and Asia; the capacities slavery in Turkey. The Africans, it says, are of the population, their readiness to fraternize with not cruelly treated when once in Turkey; and work for strangers; the tenure of land and the but the overland route, which they have to obstacles to its acquisition or demise, are all sub-take to reach the point of their destination, is jects of the greatest importance for the future; full of terrors, and the desert is represented to and yet we know hardly anything of them. The the horrified mind of the reader as actually use of agricultural and commercial statistics is

recognized in a country of so much education and whitened with the bones of the poor creatures; publicity as England; much more is some infor- and although the Sultan had suppressed the mation necessary to guide the settler or capitalist trade and was enforcing the law directed in a new land and among a new people. That against it, some might still be brought in by

stealth, upon which apprehension, of course, maritime powers, as would set at nought every the necessity of keeping a watchful eye on the resistance to their cherished plan of extending matter is recommended. The game is too old their influence East and West, encircling the not to be understood instantly. Really, a sub- whole globe, and regulating the destinies of ject backed by so much philanthropy, may" either hemisphere." After the capture of prove useful and furnish a convenient pretext Sebastopol and the destruction of the Russian for the occupation of Eastern ports by British fleet without which the plan would be utvessels and British surveillance in Asia Minor terly impossible serious apprehension might and Egypt. When the mellow and tender be entertained of the formidable coalitions of heart of the Briton begins to overflow with England and France. The pressure of such a philanthropic emotions, and he points out the ponderous weight all in one scale might make course of his sympathies, we may safely look into the opposite direction for the discovery of the real aim of his charitable endeavors. Thus the Times contemplates for Great Britain another East India" another accession to her immeasurable encroachments. But what becomes, we may ask, of that "balance of power," for which the Allies wage this bloody war?

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itself felt in the relations of this country to the West India Islands and Japan in a way to involve us in the calamity of repulsion by force of arms. If, hereafter, Spain should deem it her interest to agree with us, upon terms satisfactory to both parties, in reference to Cuba, these powers might interpose their veto. England, with breathless uneasiness, has watched all the movements of political and commercial progress in the United States. She has followed us, with insolent interference, to Mexico, Japan, Cuba, the Sandwich Islands, etc. And now she combines her power with that of France thus adding another weight to the scale which already inclined all on her side.

The fact is, that this "balance" is nothing else than a phantom- -a hallucination a political hoax! When Napoleon I. spoke of the "balance of power," he meant, and could mean nothing else, than his own supremacy on land -on the continent of Europe, where he dictated the destinies of empires. When Eng- The plan of a colonization of the Turkish land speaks of it, she means nothing but her dominions would necessarily produce a great supremacy on the seas. When Napoleon, by his change in the commercial and political relacontinental policy, tried to counterpoise the tions of the world. England and France both supremacy of England, in order to restore a have had their eyes fixed, for a long time, upkind of equilibrium, England drenched the on Egypt. To England it is of immense imwhole of Europe with blood-she was at the portance for the protection of her East India bottom of almost all the wars of that period. possessions. She has already, silently and stealWhen the formidable coalition of England and thily, approached the fertile regions of the Nile France at present tell us that they wage war with her capital. She has taken preparatory against Russia for the maintenance of the bal-steps in order to raise, at a favorable moment, ance of power, they mean nothing else than the rod of the taskmaster over the wretched that they will prevent Russia from reaching population that dwell near its banks. England the Mediterranean, as such an event might considers herself entitled, as a matter of course, form, at some future day, a counterpoise to the raw material of the whole world against their present world-menacing su- not excluded. Nations are only made to suppremacy. ply her demands. Her selfishness is so unbounded that it would draw the universe into the vortex of her numberless spinning-wheels.

men

The scheme, as broached here by the "Times," is indeed entirely consonant to, and in conformity with, the aggressive practice Asia Minor, Egypt, and European Turkey and policy of the government of Great Britain. have a climate and soil most propitious for all It is the more likely that efforts will be made the productions of the Southern States of this to accomplish such an object, as a colonization Union. The soil is among the most fertile of in Asia Minor, Egypt, and Turkey, would the world. It is adapted to tobacco, rice, cotprove a barrier against Russian advance to- ton, corn, oats, etc. The cultivation of these wards the British East Indies so seriously articles at present is not carried on on a large apprehended by England. The greatest dif- scale, for want of capital, and on account of ficulty in the way of success would lie, how- the indolence of the people. The United States ever, in the agreement upon satisfactory terms now command the cotton market of Europe, with France and Austria. The colonization principally on account of our greater proximiof European Turkey, Asia Minor, and Egypt ty to that market than the British East Indies. by England and France, would necessarily A colonization in the Turkish Empire, howproduce changes of prodigious magnitude in ever, would offer to England immense advanthe present conditions of the commercial and tages. The distance would be considerably political world. The flags of England and less; and, moreover, the innumerable points France would gain, with this uncontested su- favorable for coal depots would admit of a very premacy in the Mediterranean, such an im- extensive steam navigation, particularly of mense ascendency over all the rest of the screw steamers.

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