t f r - 4. . ill t V I tl J r.r iflin :M !vr,) i,ii I.::! r-.lun shxck the meih jf vwcty bv lit' .iui:t:i,cutitn of the , ..' - 1 I! . ! ... II - i;i me ii;ji- bgol vliiih U.f l.visu l.dbcrn so lopg octti pin'. (Heart) His h'rt!:.!:p ;iImi icptobatcd, In the severest tctms,tbc conOkt rihc Milan torn ttiiv.ionen v.., luvin.j been appointed, hot to j;Mt(iii'e the truth, but to obtuin Uisiimuny ol in.ill, had f;:iMl in lias country but too urrufan ititJintt'ftti to t'W faith In til the Mortes their . ugehls ;iii'bitncc Jtiit -invent asaimst-tht , honor lul nutHi if4be 0ieeiM?f Wllrhaln. Tli ic still his been, that, after inqulile sctict lind open alter the greatest calumnies 'and I he foulest libtU lad been im.de the subject of dctuil ind dcb.itr for fifty flays tftcraltthc infirjrth: t I: wis posst.Me tu no the Uuctn had been actum plHhcd. the bill. was nhandoncd, not without rea on Lnt bSMirtdlv without apology. Mis lord LLip-ndutlcd-Ly- assuwng- ce-lordon-i brj .... other uJuiUt-hc-jeiple m ureat Hmain wnwa not be satUhed with the mcrc.withdrawtng of the ' J jncailrttvl'iit N'hl demand a sttict inquiry Into its foundation and origin. (drcat applause. lxirdT.rskine "addressed o'few vord to'Vlulr lordships, in a manner truly emphatic ami stii ' king: " 1 hac heard fsaiJ he) the proposal of the l.oble call I see the Jute of this odious measure consummated, und I feel nothing but the most lively end entire satisfaction. I heartily rejoice in this event. My lords, I nm an old man ; and my life, whether it have been for good or for evil, has been passed under the sacred rule of the iuw. In this moment I feel mv strength rcnova ted fand repaired, by that rule being reatored the ixcurscd chaigc wherewithal vc have been menaced has tns&ed over our heads ; there is an end of that horrid and portentous excrescence of ;i new Lw, retrospective and iniquitous, and op pressive ; and the constitution and scheme of our jKility is once more safe My heart is too lull tl the escape wc h:ie just had, to let mc do more than praise the blessings of the system wc have iCs'uincd; but I cannot praise them adequately my?e!f, and I prefer expressing my own senti ments in the jine language ofone oQhemost eh cement autnors o: any aire. Hooker, wno tnus speaks i liis jM'cat work, Ms I'.cclcsiastical Poli ty : "01 law there can hero less acknowledged than that her scat is the IxKom of (Jod; her voice the harmony of ihc world; all things in heaven and earth do her homage ; the very least ;ts feeling her care, end the greatest as net ex empted from her power. Doth angels arid men. r.nd creatures of wh.it condition soever, though each in different sort und manner, yet all. with uniform content, admiring her as the mother of their p?acc and joy." The Duke of Montrose said he should oppose the motion for throwing out the hill. He was convinced ofher majesty's criminality, and should never look up to her as ;uccn. The motion was then put, and agreed to; and the house adjourned to the 3d inst. the Cay on which the Commons meet. Her majesty was in attendance, in her private cpartment, at the House of Lords, from a quar ter before twelve. Whilst the peers were oing thiough the process of voting seriativiy prior fj the di vision, her majesty's counsel, who were be hind the throne, were noting down the votes. As soon ;is they ascertained that the majority would not exceed nine, they repaired to the presence of her majesty, and advised her to present a petition to be heard by counsel against the passing of the bilK Her majesty received the news of the ma jority for the bill with great fortitude, and signed the petition drawn up by her counsel with a smi ling air, saving, as she wrote the words Caroline Ucina, There, Rcg'ma still, in spite of them." In a few minutes, her counsel rushed into the room with the gfod tidings that the bill was re iccted. Her maiestv spoke not a word : she looked fixed and msensible as n statue. Mr .Iirougkini-stigesird the propriety of her ma jesty proceeding immediately to htr carriage her attendants handed 'her down stairs, her ma ;esty still remaining pcrlcttlv silent : aiul it was r.nt till after she had l)cn some minutes in her carnage, that, a flood of tears coming to her re lief, she was able to resume her speech, and her wonted serenity and hrnmcss. In the mean time, the cheers of the noble lords who opposed -. i mi . . . .' 1 . . . inc oui, were rc-ecnoea py the persons assembler in' the' lobbies;' an ne cause, which hadcxritci intense anxiety in tiie multitude which hHc hdyee-vard, wa soon after explained by Mr.'Vi- .iu!,vio came out on the leads over the piazza , . . . .i 'i . . . .. .. 1 i was -at inis motnent tnat her majesty v:-.s m tiring her cani.ige. ;The intelligence was re ccived vaih shouts of Joy and congratulation which spread in .every direction with the rapidity ci an cicct.nc stiock. I housaiuls pressed arounc i:er maesty s carnage, as it drove slowly on to wards Drandenb.urgdiousevanel felicitated her up cn her triumph over the malice of her ad versa. Tl.,. i it. r . it ..: -L.. ,. -,.;:'A,VJf VU'.'LJJ'vUiOurcncs rang mt-iry .eais; at all tne t.'ieatres that were open, " (Joe ., c Qtieen" was., called for, .arul. cordially 'uineu in Dy the perlormcrs and audience - I" -the evenmg-therewas r4l:hiwiTiatifirAvK - i cnerat ami brilliant ms could have been expected on so sudden an emergency, and, to the. mid igtit hour, the streets were crowded with mul utuuesot persons, congratulating each other on tue rejcction.of the bill, as if for a'U'ipoitant .vi- unixiiftjcci vu-tviy iiclueved over an enemv ; -approached to our .vciv ihresliohh The Dews o'f the-rejection of the biil havin- me . . tied her n.ajcMv, vast i.mmJ,crs assenddeil at llyt:p raik coiner, uho,, as hei1 maiestv .i 1 1. . :. i. . i . . .. ' ..nil ;',rnt'.i'int-. vl.o l..ui ilc . t :.lui:..' i. i-i tivid in this tountiy t- j'ive cvii'iiue in l.ir li vor in the House of (!oiiiiuons, If (hi va ope: ted) the bill jdouM have hi'en arnt down lo that hotisf . Thry had the honor of riiuing with bet tnajcitjVjnifnlso Mr. AhUinun Wood, (Guldens Oldi, ( oloncl Olnlcia and bis lady, und a Mini l.cr of other of her majesty's (tend) snd thr cvitdntr wHS spent yiith the grtutcst delight and sauviucuoii. . I l.oxnoKt hov. In, J The hon. ftcppcl Ciaveiuouo of the Queen tier Thambcrlainrfnirby-ordctrof her majesty! written a letter to the Larl ef Liverpool, dcinan 'ling u suitabl: rckidcncc ami cublihment h r he i i.iaiasty. The Itttrr-ttatei, That he hud hf'iiUijcstyV'corniiiatT'Ts To iTcjuTfc frrun fits majesty' government, that, without any further delay, a palace and cstamishmcnt should be pro vided suitable to her majesty's rank, in the coun try )n whldrfcrrTovv'io itislc VltTiat tldXhwl . r T-7 I ' ' ' I . .l I .. '-I iKC-ri inucn icjo ioiij; utiei ito, wiui a view cnurr to t lie station ofher inaks'.vicr the honor. ' the crown; licvfrthclcssrtliatrin the circumstances of the time, her majesty, was M illing to overlook sued delay ; but that It must be evident that no lurther tunc cHight to elapse without finally ar ranging this matter." The Queen intends jgoing to Hammersmith church onSunday next to receive the sacrament ; and on the Sunday following to St. I'anl s, piib licly to return thanks to Almighty (lod fr her deliverance from the foul and wic bed conspiracy directed against her honor and her life. A torn munication has been made to the lord mayor of her majesty s intention ; and vie have no doubt but that his lordship will attend in state, with a considerable number of tire corporation in their robes, to meet her majesty at Temple bar. Her majesty has fixed Triday, the 2 lib, for receiving a considerable number cM addresses ol congratu lation already voted. Her majesty has invited many distinguished noblemen and their ladies to dinner on Monday next. Her majesty has re ceived, in answer to her letter to lord Liverpool, demanding a suitable palace and establishment, that lus lordship lusxommuiiirateiL her demands to his majesty, but has, as yet, received no an swer. Lord Liverpool pleads his absence from town as an excuse for his delay in answering her majesty's letter. A guard-room for an ofliccr and M) men Ins been erected round the king's cottage at Windsor. It is mmored in the fashionable circles thai the Queen has declared her intention of com mencing an action for slander against a cci tain member of the royal family. It is generally understood tint. Mr. Canning condemned the proceedings against the Queen, and refused his co-opcraliou in that odious meas ure. It is also said that he offered to resign his office, but that his colleagues requested him to retain it, and that he kindly yielded to their soli citation. Globe. The rumor still continues of the desire ex pressed by the Larls of Liverpool and Harrowby to retire from the cabinet. The noble lord at the head of the treasury is said to have declared, that he could not concur in any general declara tion against the Queen, of the nature suggested y lord Lllcnlwrough ; and if his colleagues en tertain any 6uch purpose, he will certainly re sign though every means have been resorted to in the highest quarters to induce him to change his resolution. A court of common council is summoned for Tuesday next, u it consider the propriety of pre senting an address to her most gracious majesty Queen Caroline, upon the victory she has ol- tamed over a foul and atrocious conspiracy, seek mg no less her majesty s destruction, than vim ing a blow at the known laws of the hud, and the dearest rights of Englishmen." In the case of the King vs. Sir Francis Eur delt, in the court of King's Bench, the further arguments were resumed this morning Parliament will meet again the 23d ; but it will meet, we believe, only for the purpose of being prorogued. It is likely to assemble again, lor the despatch of business, about the middle or latter end of Januarv. Courier. LONDON, NOV. 17 The-future destiny of -the Queen is presumed to engross at present the attontion of ministers. The insertion of her majesty's n'aftYe Mi thcTit' ury is the first difficulty which they have to sur mount. ..' ' . The French papers announceV witli.sonic corn ;,i licence, that great events are expected in Italy ; and add, that the advanced guard of the Austrian army is concentrating at Tcrrona. Apprehensions arc entertained, that the snirit of revolution is making a rapid progress in Swit zerland. All its machiuary is represented as in rapid motion at Zurich, Basle, and other nriuci- I'iM Pjtie ocieties in the Tyrol arc said to be intimately connected with those in JSwiizcrland-. 11 their correspon dence iscahiedon by verbal communications, ma.dc.by travelling agents. - I he King of Piussia Jelt Jierlm on the 4ili in stant, for Troppau. , An article from Frankfort states, lliat a -trcatv has been concluded by the British government i...i !. i ,i't', tl.t i. i f.;r.r.t:i:ub:r i.!,. i: hate I journal before thr lords of the I'dmiraliy. Wc undcr.tati.l, l.oweur, that I.lrtit. T.iny entered by Lain ustcr Sound, pioc redi'd over (.'apt, lton "... a. . . ..i t i sprcl il (halt of land, end reached in Hie parallel ol 74 or "5, 1 U orj 15 weit iihoul 3 50 milts far- ihcr thaii Cttpt. Itosi iTicitcd the polar sr4tobc navigable. 'In 90, the ships fell In with Island, which continued Micccssivcly till they retched the extreme westerly point of enc i. II5 where whiter overtook them. They wintered In a mug hay In Jancastcr Sound, and did not get clear of the'Ice tltl 5lh of Aug. lhi ycir. From Octo ber till February, or for iibout 100 d.irs, they were iii cbirkncs j hut with abundance t t wholesome mmisions pa. u'd tiie time very agreeably The crew were umuscd with games of every kind, and occasion' ully :hcy acted plays for mutunl entertainment. UlSJitf &UnJ'P f the kcJhi.i tcumn, ut tcmpta were made to proceed westerly "but im mtnsc barriers of ice from the polar sea to the northward shuLupidHiopcsouccecding in the parallel of 74 ; and before they couM return to castwardand -renew. the uttempt in u lower lati tude, the navigable season, which is confined to Au;;ust ci;d a few days. in September, offered no rcanonal Ic chance of succeeding this year; in dependent of which provisions would not have held out in so precaiious und dangerous a navi gation for the winter, and tho time they would fcitainly have been ftozen up. The existence of a jxdar sea to the westward of llearn's river ii incontesiibly established ; and experience has taught these hardy navigators, that in the ?$mth of AwftiHti inch a ftorvcrul rudiathn from the land takin ilucc, a to render a (hunvrl tujficient to de mon tt rale the certainty cf the exinteme rJ a north- vjcut iat.uie, and that a nacticable ine but not often to any fi'ttibte commercial fiurftone. In 90, the compasses w ere useless on board the attrac tion of the needle was extreme. The crews o.f the vessels have conducted themselves as became men in such a momentous expedition. They have been particularly healthy, and returned to Lngland with the loss only ol one man, that from a easuaUy ; which isa I4gh tribute to-thedisrK plinc and rare of the officers commanding, with the thermometer of Fahr. 55 dcg. below zero, where the Neath of every one, in his sleeping place, formed a sheet of ice over his head in the morning. 1 he ships have been out for ebout 13 months, having sailed from Shccrness on the litth May, 1819 Sunday last i.c commanch r, officers, seamen, and marines of his majesty' ships employed on discovery 1:1 the Arctic re gions, returned public thanks lo Almighty Clod, in the church of St. Mary-le-Strand, London, for the many mercies received during their perilous undertaking, and for their safe return to their na tive land. CKRMLYi'. The sovereigns of Europe have already begun to assemble ut Troppau, the- cental of Silesia, preliminary to the opening of the Congress at that place. I be-Emperor of Austria anived there on the 18ih ult. and the I'm per or of Russia and the Crown Prince of Prussia on the 20th. The arrival of several ministers is also announced, and Lord Stewart, the British ambassador at the court of Vienna, is expected to be present. The principal subject of the conferences will relate, it is generally believed, to the late changes in the government ol Spain, Portugal, und Naples, and to the means by which they have been ef fected. .V'.iAV. Papers and letters have been received from Madrid to the ?fth u!t. They convey the nest calamitous intelligence of the increase of the fe ver at Xcrcs dc la Fiontera. In ten days, from the 4th to the 1 4th ult. the number of deaths was 255, end of new cases 5'JO. The sanction of the King to the law pronouncing the abolition of mo nastic orders was registered in an extraordinary silting of the cortcs on the 23d ult ; and couriers extraordinary had been sent into all the provin ces, with orders lo the magistrates to take pos session of the suppressed convents. The de lay which took place on the king's assent to this measure is ascribed to remonstrances from the court of Home- A report recommending the uncpialificd .cxdjuion of foreign manufactures and produc ts, having ftiet with great opposition, was referred back to the United committee of fi nance and commerce. , A COmiiTiUCe Had- report ed in favor of conferring estates, yielding a ren tal of 80,000 reals, on General lliego and Quiro ga j-and estates of-40,OtKrcalsuyciVorivei al other officers, who had been instrumental in liberating the country from the yoke of despo tism. With regard to Bicgo and Quirogn, it is further proposed that the king should be request ed to honor than with Castilian titles of Nobility. The bill relative to public education has under gone a particular discussion ,jind several of its clauses approved. A "IT'lF has been introduced for punishing with death, astrai.tp.r3,.ll,pe.rsons. conspiring 'oirectly, -and 'd'e'facto to subvert the existing constitution ol Spain, in church or in "mc hern' agreed cn, and ratified cn board tbci H : it In It cutter Bscer., The point of attack ujon the tily was unfur innately the quarter where the English leslded, in that wc were under considerable apprthen slons had the troops been able lo enter the city. The scene wui dreadful. The number of killed was very considerable. Oh the morning; of the 2"th, 30 carts filled with dead bodies passed close by the street where 1 live. The fu ing from the Palermo batteries and gun-boats bat done great injury to the' palaces ol JVmcc Cato and Prince Catoiica.' The public gardens unci the botanical gardens, both very beautiful, ate nearly destroy ed. In the suburbs the, troops and the gticiilla have burnt and plundered a grciitl;unibcr of hou- ts ; m fact, the scene of devaktation over about three squire miles of the adjoining country, and my part of the city is deplorable in the extreme. One. meet of. naw. liouir iihm4 arrfrcf : m)r "hOUse, Is entirely destroyed, rhe people fought with the greatest desperation. Had they unfortunately got the Lellcrofihc troops, which they had cvary "chance ordolrij' otrthe 2rtliithc'" ccniwcpicriccs to i'alci mo would hare been dread. ' ' ful, as the toulace were much exasperated a gains) the nobility and all the respectable people, for being favourable to the Neapolitan troops en tering the city as friends. Nearly the whole of the merchants here, have been cither afloat or in the country. The trtiity concluded by General Pcpe with the citizens of Palermo was submitted to the parliament at Naples on the 1 4th ult. and reject etf unanimously by that body. The rejection ii believed to accord with the popular feeling on that subject. A proclamation was in consequence issued on the. following day by the vicar genera), declaring It void and of no effect. Ccn. Pcpe was immediately recalled from Palermo, and Col k tto, with a force of 6000 men, appointed to suc ceed him, and to reduce the Palermitms to an unqualified submission. Letters to the 23d ult. have been received from Naples, staling, that although advices had arriv ed from Palermo, up to the evening of the 21st, t he citizens stitt i c msln"citTiingribah jection of General Pcpe's treaty by the Neapoli tan parliament on the 14th. It is evident, from this circumstance, that the Neapolitan govern ment, conscious of the treacherous part it has act ed, is lajKring lo defer disclosure as long as pos sible Whatever arguments may le adduced in justification, it cannot but be condemned by eve ry honorable mind, and regarded as a foul blot in ihc proceedings of a nation just installed in the possession of liberty. No fears are now enter, tained tot the tranquility of Palermo, as the dis arming of ihc citizens had continued for so long a period, that resistance would be OUtof the ques tion. If wc may give credit to letters from Trieste, of a recent date, the situation of All Pacha is not ho ucpcriU.a th -Austrian joumsls Tvav:' -stuted. They say that the Pacha, who is shut up in the citadel of Jannina, makes the most vig orous resistance to the Ottoman troops, and that he may hold out a long time. To the reiterated summons of the Turkish government he has re plied, that he will rather bury himself under tho ruins of his fortress than ever surrender. It even appears that he has made some sallies which have occasioned the Turks some loss. 71 TEST ritO.U i7?. LEOXF.. NtW-TOHK, nCC. 2 5. ...NOON. Arrived below the United States' sloop of wa? Cyar.e. Captain Trcnchard, from a cruize on tho cc:at cf Africa, and 59 days from Sierra Leone, whence she sai led the 27th of Oct. Two of the officers came up this morning in a pilot-boat, from whom we have obtained the following par 4 iticulars: The United States' ship John Adams had ar rived on the roast, delivered her orders, and sail ed from Cape Sierra Leone on the 18th Oct. for Hio Pcngas, in company with the British Wig-of w ar Snapper, to cut off an American sixteen gun sltlvc-vcssel which, it was understood, was in that quarter. ' . Wc also learn, that the remainder of the colony- cf blac ks were in a very disaflcctcd state Several officers of the "Cyane lia4 been n shore and taken a particular account of their Yitualion, to report to of the Cyane .arVfcreoocI health. " : Til l) SICILIES. - - -". I'Alf.kmo, or r. 6 On 'the night of: the 20th ulrfthc'Xca.poiitiin troops were repulsed at Por to Hcalc, and retreated intn tho rminii-u. nluint u inc rorie,wnicn nas otlended the Lmperor . mileMrom town, where on the 27th and ol Kussia, and may even influence the negoti-Wett.-ral' eniraiVemcnts took rciivUU..J'n. 7'" . 4 ' ii aiso inenuons a repon, mat siueraDie loss to both parties. On the 29th ancl w.v, l.m.,vmji Alexander nau wiuuirawn the con tract fcArTjrtigTis army. from' Lngland, and H'hM il on a company of Prussian jnaiiii- laciurcrs fenceless populace oOth, v erv little firinir took nlar.e. it phnparimr ti, man nrt rhildren. V be, the iiitenii. of Gen. Pepe to starve. thcm'infth trrcat square. ; and several thousand i to submission by cutting-off all supplies from the The following is'an extract from a verv inter esting work entitled " Memoirs of the Mexican devolution, by W. D. Robinson, who was for a long time held by the Royalists as a prisoner m South America. J , " Character of Don Maria Felix Callcja, denom- inated the cruel. ' - "Calleja novv enterecT the city brtluanaxuato ?s the conqueror, and thcie. exhibited hisjinclic- ,. live and cruel disposition without restraint, ten dered furious bv the liniefy retreat ol Aidalgo, awiifetb : city had displayed in iUvour of. the RelelJjcin, ne determined to me 'ah example so dreadful, as should striketjerror into the revolted provinces. The sacrifice of the prisoners taken at the tai tie of Marfit was not enough lo satiate his V101C live spirit.- He -glutted his vengeance on the cc, . enfp pss no ouiate m. uiwhjau"" i-.i nrders, into men upa cniicircn,wcic mi, niv . . . ano in i -- r. nr'tliP. urrtrhesi were Mltcncicu m HHUllU'I ' v..!.-- - - " r - . . k..Mii. were. 1 r ir i i ii-inni i..nit ...... nn.i . : . .1 . i.Mkntinnc mann.iv ni'ir Liu iWMutHHS- t-lTnil''-h'ln-wiH-Krn-' I. 'rrrr rr. ... ' ' . L--:;-" "U-'KiH "1 J uifcujm maw turn were T I lie niusi - - - - i;,.P. ; ; (' iiv"' Clod preserve v mi from vour 1, ; J 1 rv n r v V- , ' .' vc,y scarc':'a. Jimcs not to be procured. On cut the principal tountam or iqe r ('ii'l erreiurn fo liranden: , ,.1"" .9 "! " Pa5Iaf thf w"ercstbSS? vov-f ! t.inst. tl,c .Ncapjalitari general. sent a flag ally overflowing with blood, aftd Jar " ' ' v i,Hid:eW 'luiuu Z e n" CW tlblUcers" and cow ot of truec to treat for peWi'ancUfter an ar,,V,s- ceali.tfTthe savage acts,CalIe,mh,s dispatc , " '',. --,...-'. ' ' ' ''."'.' ' .,.'.''- . ' . V .' ' . . ii '"' .':') '''."' -' .' ' ., .;-.' '."',. ' ' U """7 ' ':. ' .'.'' ' : '"1.' - : '''-.