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Hcav?lorl? V0L? XXVI.IN0* 7,9i>9. IVE W-YORK, TttSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1866. TRICE FOUR CENT?. EUROPE. NEWS Iii THE ATLANTIC CABLK TO NOV. 26. Bt TILMiaira TO rat raiBra?. i.KKAT IIRITAIN. Till ALABAMA CAftK KI -DI'UNBli- MR. ft KW A Bl) DK MANI 9 THK NBTTLEMEIIT OF THB < l.AIUH FOR DAM? AGES. 1 M" *. Mon.liiT NOT. .*. A lo'' bti in Tit Datif ?Vrtr.? to-day, t.tat ing that tim (.DViruuient lias volunlanly r?3op?ned the teat ot tbe privat? er Alabama. Mr. Stu-ard, in behalf tf the Ataerkem ttaaartaaettk, demanded the utilement of the claims for damagit by thal etssd some tito months ?go. I'M'A M..11.1.IV Not U Ir-lx -\',?.)i. TAR MU--. ADITATION-ARMS KO* THK IRISH ?"N STABLE8. Twelve thousand bretx-h-loading rifles arc to l>e sent liy the Briti.-vh Government to Ireland for the nae of lb?? conntablf?. Arrests of Fenian? routinue to be made ia Ireland, and the troop* are vigilant. Further arre.?t? ci i Iipxtatj Fenian*? have batt rotuli in Ireland. 'Hie nat.(.nul tr???>??s ore read v t<> move at a moment'?- warning. 1III-: vXKARAOCA ROlTIl. A paaaatO. i- Las been pulili-Oied ?.iving the pinn? for the proposed Nicaragua route. The Ttmts thinks It would lie well if the entire ?th?me were divided h? - .LiiGoTf n.uiiii!? of Kniilitiid, France and the lii.itetl States. FKI'SSIA. ? ".?MCI? t.KI?I RAL FOR 5KVV-T0RK ? ITY. Hi 'd is Moinliii N? ? The Prussian Gk>TtvU-_MBl .mends to have a ('oiis.il Qaaaaal lotaled ia tta City of New?York. FRAN? I \ IK. (I I KEIl BI.ll AN ()Ri.4*IIllATI()*v. 1 ? \l? \ M.tii.liiv Ne? a I ?. It ia rnniored that a Republican or-.'aiii/'.it'on bas i"-t>'ii Matatatti ?n r. THK BMPRBr.8 ASP THB PRlitCB IMPEBIAU It in (?aid that the EaifW Kugenc and her YOU vv.ll tpend t'hristuias at Koaie. HKKLY. MORB VH.HIINt. iN CASPIA -DtFFAT OF THE TIRKS. 1 'V)MIS .Mt.mlav. Nuv M Tliero ha? been renewe?! lighting in Candia. It in BHid that the Turk? have been badly In-aten, and have anffered gnatly-no les- than ...(MM) baling batt killed und %SS? eaken prisoner-?. MAKIN!. INTELUCKM K. LO?? OV THK BARK ALICK HRVT. I.r. ) MM Nui it, lx???-N't???n Ttoa hark Alki? ('wv tttm YOttigor. Main?*, lina bttven k>it at Ma 1 be mate waa iii?.? ..?*-?I but the rait i>l tba crvw air aafc. ARRIVAL OUT. ?J?i ttaatatrt X11 .< - ile A ni* bor Liar <'<.ni|>ai;v ? Strum tvk.iiiii ?I. .!. ??ulr.l frtitii New *i ei_ Nov M tO-C-H larrr thi? moriiin. eu Ftttl to I.iven*n4>l. FINANCIAL AND COMMKRCI.M.. LIVERPOOL COTTOK MAKKRT. !v?ot. X.fv '."t.-now - Tit- ?'?itttm tnaxket tfttt .|i.i?"t ami itradv. MiditliriA.' I"?,.U?itO? arc quoteil al J4J_?1. 'J'hr aal.? today ?ill l'ioballv mt. lu (??0 .?alf?. ItttaatM Rae. ..*- *vf?_ing - The Cotton n , fut i ha? |?i>. Brradst.ifi? L.i.iluiiiviil. l.nnl i.? ?? LONDON Mti.ir? MARKKT. Li'M?.'? Nov. .-..-The ?our? market ?i . 90 he money. American Saturi'.iea operMvMl at ti- tulkiwiBg i-Btet . ?TAI tilt WNallat io} Britt 4Y\ MtaeM i"c_tr_i? n L4iM'(i\. Nov. _t-Kve-iiiK - TI1*' Burney market i? e??i?r focnol? cloned at v"\ tor money. A air rit- Sccintiot i loa? ?J at the folrowlti|r rate? 1'nlted State? }'in m.nt .? N| Lue Haare?, i', i ; llliuoia (.entrai Shan AMBRI4 AN RKCCRITIBS AT L0*?J?N. l.4?\i?<v?\. Mov. ".?*'.-liiert it a ?jater ttet olwerrnril? in the Market tor United Stat?- five-tweaty Imndt tint mori.it.?.' and bui?iin? hat been done for caih at t?ot_ Toi, and "1, the latter ijiKtta?oii being the on.' now curreut The American railway* ara lower in Illinoit ('entrai-?inota liont being marked off one j? r cent Erie ?hares are ?teady at Sat urda? t tain, ihougb Hint authoritiaa tay they an ___N LIVERPOOL PROVISION MARKKT. I ivikroci?. N"> M - Kii'tiiiiir - I'rovi?H'ii>--ihe maiket i? feiieraliy (juin, l.ard cloaet dull andheaiy. THB ANTWIRF PKTROLErM MAKKKT. N. Satonlay, Not '.'4 Itsii?;. A telepram from Antwerp of thi? day't date report? the nuir _et for Petroleum inactive at > ? .>|f pat li") kiloa thowing a ilecline ?ii?oe la?I rei??rt of 1 a ii A I.ONO AND KXI'K.NSIVE ?ABLE Dl-I'AI? ? The longent dispatch tr-iiamiUed over the Atlantic Telegrapl Cable wat tent on SaturiJay, by a Govirnmeut tiSeial et mm Viittil Stute? to one of the Minuten of tl.it rotintry on tba CoDtment of Enroj*. It contained OIT tv tho-Kuid wort}?. FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE. THK KING EM VKNICE. IKITCB OF TEE GREAT CAB-ilVAL OP IKDKPI5DI5CI. Wtom Oat -pB4*ial CorrnpoidtDL VEMCR N' The firnt letter I wrote you irave the story of tbe Auttnan? quittiii|? Veuice; aftertvanl I d^s? rib?jd tbe Venetian officiait? tttifr) ing the King in Turin that be had been ?elected to rule over them. To-day, very weary with hearing and Bight-seeing. I aui to try to tell you how the King entere?- the city. You mun divest yourself of the notion that the King i? anything more in carriage and stature tlun aliidge Bate?), your mili--colonel, or Squire Wilkin?, your Congreawuian, who grows very polite tu you be ftirt) eltvctinn*'. A loud awakeuing of nobotii tvurreu in Euro*?- tome 70 year? ago. f-inc? which time the mont familiar ideu of amonarch is to be conveyed ?ya man with a smile tied round hid face arid a sword ?wkwardl- concealed at hi1- h.}j, v?-_o bi-jfv-s you to look ?i-ro??? at a c?-rtuiii mvuiindrel, your neighbor, and Sick? your -pocket o? tases while you are doing rio. he tings used to he lion), love all their souls and hall their boden before wearing a crown, anil ?-ietly decree the mmerj of mankind, whose binlieri l_nd rvouls they had inherit' 1 i:i i.e .?.mjde. A poor d4;!>ased cln- ilitta they were, dropping ironi lurt to prayer vith servile facility j and only uow and then sonic barbaric stature rot?e among them like a Cr-eless pyramid upon a fruit "NVhcn the i gol th?*m to their heels or knee?, they purcbi_?od ?n?l Hcgged the way bivck to what waa tailed " i-oii Atifutional mouanny." the history of which ha? been a I Bag ie of kings. de?iMing the niimlirics? of men to lawn upon thi-m. and gitiof notLiag to ibt people lint promise*?, ?avi" \.\n>_. terrible coinpulnion. To neither 4.1" these clatae? lim!- \ riuel lielong, t>ut he in yet m Ide liken.-?? of ordinary mortals, and lu my kiiowliHlue. ?lix? not go to lireakfast. ?v-" old women ni Indiana imagine, with a crown on his bead and H a rolling-pin in his band. Tan will see this gentleman, when you come ben, wt-.r tug just such a fr?K k coat and l'l? a? vm. go to nuaiuess willi; out os h.. ha?, of bite year?, bad a great deal of hard fighting to do and more military organisation to tvcompliah. be most often pu**? oa the half-uniform nf an officer, and tak-? t?? review or to but lo m tt. He doe? not eut ofl gold plate?, throw ?liver for ?bOTl amble alter, nor have anybody bawit.i_fi lieve his neuralgia. Il< .?n t xtra irdinarv nor a blameless man. Newspapers abur-e hin sem? respectfully; on hululai ? bt m tMtttti. His popu? larity, at p"r?vvsent. is derive.! from tbe Ittct t lat he is wore like common people than any King ol his age. If yon can imagine Mr. Lincoln coinni- _p Broadway in a tiiirouche or ou loot, alter having won ha k pea.-e and tbe ciuntry, yon will *?ery ni ?rl. Knianuel d? from Ihe exj which hi ought him to \ ? i^ TUB Kl.tO Bl ROI'TB. w iii the ?I-OII i-Kiiui M1 ia a caM larfolk logtft at, and Turin b.ilf de-erted licluiid lum hy UM ihoti taaa. wba aMAot to witi ijy loto ?.? -%__ijt and J^^abiii4_', jy.il a(all twok u npecial train I eastward on Tuesday, and made tin- miles of iniill?t'rry Hiid grope rinp j.nut lum. You have heard (if railways burdened with mm1???; ?aad, indeed. Ibis name railway hn?l itn complement i?t infantry mid (anno.*), Itfaitlfa 1'iit three month?? tipo toward I' i^t<.//1. st?MUM- back again willi MtwdJia; ncinaiTfi. aid at laataaaaanW f.?r 11 ard and northward mth the t-ky-hl-w Austrian, the lu?! of lu? ( lan, ?milking Inn inccr-ii' i uti in ? ontenti d ili?-hiin(ir. and a? r.a?li, to-morrow, lo jicttlo here anew, without a shadow of prvt-ft Hit the i-ast ivard train? through Lombardy on 'I' n sday were the greatest pleiiiiure-trainH I have over known. We had none nek during our war, neither en route to Wash? ington t?i Mi" Mtait and Sherman euler, nor en mute io Neu York to the (.'rymill Palace, nor even to Chicago to the great political Convention. Over this Milan and Venue Kiutway. between Saturday and Wednesday, a fill train passed evtry hour; and the depot at Venice, the switch Rt Mentra, ia new a hague of carn; half [he rolling stock of Italy ?8 gathered ipon the banka of the Lagoon. There are, ii ithout doubt, half .. million people in this cramped citi to-day. To-night, they rost in tieri?, loiter on bridges, lie upon the Piazzas and Caiii|i:s, make hotcl kei-ping a liiMiiy and a slavery together, and every priiate house m Venice has gathered them in as he who made the wedding compelled the folk? of hedge?? and highways to shore his hospitality. If there is any particular ad \ au tage iu being a monarch, it is to receive the wann applause of one's siil'icct?. us UM King got it o\cr all tin? marvelous highway. At all the stations he wat ? heered hy all tlie people who li led near enough l?y to w?lk to the railroad in a half-day. He depopu? lated, or rather concentrated Upai one line, A belt of humanit*. 30 miles in breadth. At Milan the splendid eily of the Lombard? gave him a welcome great enough lo shake Sam! Carlo Ilorromeo out of his grave; itt llcrgaino omi Bl-Mil the white-walled hills were !hundero is with cannon, and every spur of the Alps poured down the mountaineers to bless him. The people themselves elimhed into nil the?-burch tower-', dunging hospitality and love, lint wticn ho entered tba Quad-lal-ral, I-a King''? mind was sijt on other than the people. This was the -cene of his lri ?cars struggle; the monarch was a soldier for the instant. Ile was seated, most of the nay, baakta the Count Solar del? Marguerite, the Minister ol State of Carlo Alberto, his father. This venerable old man hod been a counselor in those early Piedmoiitese Cabinets, ii hen in the espousing of the Ilalion cause MM bro-i tiiil, and the nar again-H Austria resolved upon. He hod shared all the ?-iithu?i.i?!ii of the early buttles m Lumbar li, ami seen Victor Baan uel, a sworded stripling, ga f'orih from Turin at ihe head of his divi? sion. Ile. also, lind bidden ,'iilieu to the ruined ???iVi-T eign. alter Ida abdication on the held of bailla, ami seen him embark for Oporto, mined in crown nul spirit, to die before !he hop?' of his conntrv had re? viled anew. Win ii lhc?e two men, the spirit of the present, the link from the past, paused at. I'esch?era. and its noisy reioicing had died awuy. they drew nearer together at tho head of the car, and looked away to the south ?iver the rolhug country. On every margin there were j>eo|ile waiting, in all ?orts of notional MM? turne, waving and (-boering; but tie King tnaile tin m no rej'ly. Ile looked away at the towan of Si.ln rica and CiiRtoz.a, in the line of Mantua, and every swell brought te bia mind some mile stone of st niggl?'. This was his battle scene with ApoHyon. Mere he had seen victory gained and lilt bed away; here, scarcely breathing-time ago. he had Mood in the fur? nace of musketry all day long and retired with a heavy heart The old man, like the ghost of hil father, leaned toward him. The King's dark mu J. tai hod face grew swarthier. None knew hut V In re they pointed, and there was a quictneas of deepest sentiment in the train. O it of this recollection (ney broke upon the roaring multitude of Verona, where they dismounted. Its acr??s of foitilii atious, its deep and stagnant ditches, the half dry basin of the Adige cutting the town in two, the ib-t-olato barra? V.s. the blockiitJF?**- everywhere of bondage and desertioii-save where Ure tn-oolor laughed ot the peak of its red and the |ieople in the streets were nosegays ol' beautiftilneias -thf-so lay together, strang?- contrasts in the King's way, as he bowed to len aud right, and cripple and baby cheered him together, lb-?nie the weird f? nil.ii arches bud battlements of Ihe I'lace lira, under !!.?? iitali ??f ihe grave Human amphitheater, the thou? sand? who hat] looked in deadly hatred a fort? night before at the lagging Austrians, gore him happy hospilolity. and the beatili!til land?-a?ies, high up on the mountain spurn-where the ancient walls i limbed, like, the ('auls sealing the capital-were bright as the (ature that seemed to lie warmly along them. These wondrous piles of savage atfgt. tower, macbiolation, triple gate, gnm arch, reven -ml theater-had seen many triumphs shake their mosses down; but nono so earnest and universal as this. To achieve it the tynadnlateral. reaching before the lily of Mantua, had become one great (einetery, ru li with dead men. So long as Verona shall lie subject to It al v no battle will pai?s wilhin her children'? vision again. The (? ladrilateral is ?seles- to its ow n people, strong for stranger? only. The rest of the King's ride was like a May-day honor. He flashed under the tri? umphal arch of Mcstra. passed the lagoon, ami BOM to, with i. great bray of cannon, on UM brink O! the (?rand Canal. A W*n\*Xh\\m TO VBKK Y. Here the glory of Venae tame forth to meat him. At the re?u!t ol the Plebiacito, if perfect agreement bad not prevailed before, perfect co?tent ment and gentleness followed. All wire resolved to so ?bal with the King that he should have no mason to re? member any greater moment iu his lifo than tin ir hopeful reception of him. Therefore, when he step? pet, upon the quay, a grand arch rose over him, llew? en wreathed, tapped with bia crown, beariiig the hu? man, living 4-lLgy "1 Venice aa a 8ea (Juecn. ouir.-d in bridal robes, reaching down to Lim tier hand, with the ring clasped in it wherewith she used to wed the Adriatic; behind her a train of waiting ladies and sea nymphs liugered, and the motto ttttml ? Weif?-t- M our _aaaa_ Stag \ i< nu B_aaa-I The julian of the arch were inscribed with the rame? of the h?roe* of the war of independence, and the battles they had .?night. The railway platform shelved down to the canal, where the splendid gon? dolai were waiting, and as the King received the .??-I come of the Pode ita here, ( very JoOBBi-f ttti win? dow and foot of standing room MM-rted .?oinc human being waving the tn-color, whether in flag or hand* kerchief, and the multitude of them making loud rirn?. The day was bright on city and canal. 1 King, wah a tort of bluff itolidity, looked steadily into the FodaaWl face; he bowed with grave gruel ousnets to balcony and barge, and behiin? him 8MM the bray of drumi, home by ihe Nation.ii (ii,.?ni?. who??. MOMI ranks made an ais.Y oft ti/cn gray, lipped with crimson. The space wa? very com rai -ted, nut to counteract the narrowness of the land, the canal waa deep with gondolai, all of them ha-, in?, their canopies withdrawn, anil holding in the naked ?hills thrice their usual complement*. The whole surface of tbewator, event?.luli recaaaaa under the shadows of strange churches und ten? i, wo? an expectant humanity, out-tn-t' hing hand?. They crowded the iron bridge before rt.?- depot, BO thatnone dai ed pass: they climbed upon t-I Hung buttresses of an opi?o?it_ church; a tall sc?ti??l?l, near by. was one great framework of I "?ya and _MS| MM roofs aud palaces afforded procurions looihohllor B-08_ adventurou? even to death. Yet no epis?nle of blood is curri?! ; a? doun the stone quays the guard.? beat vociferous druin?, and the King, uncov? ered, in the midst ol his cabinet and the royal 1. hold, fallowed hythe Kiiiba.?sailoi> of almost fiery cullae. State, walked courteously down th?? margin to the Hoy al barge. Tint was cousinicfed upon the amended model of thel. Bucentaur, wherein the lloge* wont solem:alf Lo ned Venice t?i the Adriatic. It was a grand gondola, pro? jielieti hy l8 rowers, dresaed in straight na- ti. I wearing crim-oii aa?bes, slippered, in blue trouser??. and at their throats the tri-colored tie, pinned with the royal crown. They bad been ?elecl.il with rtrler euce to their power and facility of stroke, all tall Venetian?, of better class than the hack gondoliers, and when they stood to thoir oar? the genius and dis upliiie ol' niu-cle mu manifest. No iwan on the wat? r guded lu-r>?ll more gracefully, nor pnt more uncoilsi-ions tiower into hi-r Htroke. The gondola lUtll was the nu??: gnr_.-i.us craft that ever ?ailed the lagoon. Forty wal la length, per? haps, built high yet light, flat bottom.-, h ga al ti.? poop, whereat a I a:i"py of tricolor velvet. looped with gold, coi e-ed u throne, supported by conchan' Hool and horses, ?rvoudrou?ly carved. Around it were ?innlar chair? tot th*- Poyal Primes. Here the King, v.ith (jinet grin?', .seated -l-M-lfi Bia family CtWWl made t '!.?' C iiiopy, plated with 1 routed g?.ld and net with pradO-l pearls ami brilliants. '1 ! . were waahed with uiver; the oar-lock? were ringa. with gold: at the leaked prow, built high and menac? ing, ti e ?ion ni St.Mark,with fore-paw? advanced.wings -prea?l i.,r dight, bardon it? haunch-?, and tail ami malle raging to the wind, held desperately in it? Jaw^ the , rown ,.| italy. The whole gondola wa? a living. ? VOMtiling, iight aad savage, in perfect tiute, *, _| ?vi rj^?y? uDpv.i???!p_; ?{$ H^B^ il C?P1? ^o Cabinet, the provisional and permanent Mayors of Venice, the Royal hou?i'htild, tlie (Jenerals ti the arm',' and the naval hero?"?, the Kiuba.?(-adors, and the ?lif-iiugiiish?'?! r.'preceiitatiiiH of Metal tollte. It took half au hour to arras? them, the whole lund??ape r-igin| virai meantime, and when they started, to the blowing of trampet?, a gun boomed from the iron hridgc It wa? ans?.red by a score of ret-pom-ivi? 4 annonB in every nari, of Venue. Then the great brat?? band played the Marcia Reale, tu Royal March, and the. cortege kept down the (Jrand Canal. PANORAMA OF THK ilRArTD CANAL. Now the long line of i'iil.K?? ??ii either sid?' bmptM to drift paf-t. The railway -t ilion m tin?-! ut the ?i?stern und of the (?ranil Canal, and between it and ?Saint Mark tSmtt are IM palicc? arranged on tim Matera edge, their grc.it carved portal? hardly abov?i the line of the tide; and ut M pim?' h the width of the Canal greater than SOO feet, it? length between the pointa ?pcciried being 2_ intlc?. For ihiH diitanco every palace ?howed ?99tit and color?, motto) H and rharactcrizatiim?. Venice hut been called the most (iothic city which cxistin, and the original variety of tho ?jothii! y to be studied here in ? very civil and d?iuie?tic development. Tho only building in ?New York to remind you ot there p?late? ia the new Academy of Dui-ign on Fourth-ave. From thiH you can glean some notion of the teiM'lated marbled that make the front? of thei-e palace?-, the tall, tlim w nido*?*.H that open in theui, the window in the cen? ter through every ?tory, being fix or ten of these tall wintlow.? interlaced, and under each ti the?o central window? a balcony, in architecture to match, look? down upon tho Canul. Fiery palace it roofed with red tile?.; many are pinna, led and checkered with ft at lien, gome neem to be bodily upheld by great sea green caryatide?, wb<>?e kneen ure in the nea; before all ?if th4)m hugo paintc4l barbers' pole?! aro driven, a hereto to t-ci ure gondolai?, as well au to break the force of their concussion agaiurt the palace?. Here und there ulong the Grand Canal a strip of ?idewallr, reii<-!icn a tai or two; but mont of the hon?c? n.-c boldly from the brine, and on the (?rand Cu?al thero are many buildiugi thal are very far from ranking a? palai'cf. Ben. therefore, bevide the King, it the noble I?om? hard pile of the I-lace Calcrgi, lilli*?! with ?plendid canvate?, and inhabited by that Hucheas De Berri who??? h unhand was ilum at the oneru in ?'ann, anil who, hi B-K t?' Ml ure the throne lor his non, invml? ?I I.a Vendee. She waa overtaken on tho way, being detained beyond her expectations, by the hirth of an ill? gitimate child, and ?traightway her hcron-m turma t" ?i an.lal. Suiie domer-tie? throw out a tlag from its bale?me?. ClOM by in tin? pu!?u e Kinnimo St 'l'un hi, v. lire Vein, i? UM ii togi'.e hns'ilalily lo 'l'iiiki?h inen nant?, and, ?Iraugeli, there are turban- how mg frein its window?. It la a good .unen for the trade d Vi u.c. l.Il'l all the p4"4)ple . batt. l'miii the golden ru.lnig? of the ( u d'Oro, cr itVltb-ii BoaM, the Monta M IIMMI M-lpt-rx, vkkewaal i a?(jiK"4 iiiterpored, ami hU-iiih i! xlylt-i ?I mtitic, diamond, ?oiuponte und lunn, Lnve grown to bianti ful women, wini nal ter flow cru on the royal barge; ami jouder where dwell I tl_-r_M (ornare the widowed queen of Cyprm?. She ?tainl? in counter felt, a_i among her nnnd?, with the tn-color at har ginlle. Hani by, on the ?nperh transition archil??' lure? of the I'lilut e Murohini, thukeicd with in fttgniaa of the Arabic Byiantine, there ?tarni? an elderly nohlcwt.iuuii, in mtiatt rat'', while Laired her fmied trr??e? very pltntilul ami liounil with tr. color < oi kade?. Hl.e thron? .i ki?? h ?un the 1 | -1. I.i. h a duke ha?, ki.??e.l down to the royal gondola, and bo riae? to return ii. Now he ionien in light of the ?trong, ?trange bridge (>f Rialto, built of Intnuii i-tonr. IM) year? alter the du et/ton of Amen. a. It i? agraml triunipbal anil to? day, ita ?to-net of ??Iver gruv, grown cruutou ami emerald with the 'haihiw? of dug? The auge!? ti ita ?pandriU carry lh?!jubilant uiotio of life to tie King and Italy. lu great central an h i? like au urn of flower-; it* ?hop? are bung with <*.? rgrrtnt-, Virgil? io white along it? parapet, ?Urewmg oi?_ige bl?)iM?nii? down, rtprr.-eni ail the uti?? of the I Vi intu?a, with Venice over the key i ton*. crowned with triolor?, and at her r.ght hand, w.ih ?ha. ki.? al lui a pleading t?i I lie King, i? Rome. Al ".i-ngl.t ..I ti.,.? ti. en? it % to xa of hand? and banner??, the IIIUMC uinkit I ti ?j loud Garibaldi hymn; every soldier ?tanda uprigbt, uncorirtsl, with in? hand at li ? ?word lull, ?uti lb?: people at windoirr, on the broad qua*.?, al in? Han ?viv i man balInatradet, cry lika ti.? ??nain of eitglea, "Vira Ram? '" Out of the ?piarter of the at Ilier4 bunt?, Irom the pftrti? eci? of H.nlit Jacob, tihcfe Hhylotk wa? bullet? d for tukmg u- iry, pre?? strange old ineu, wild-haired with poverty, the glotty i ntl? ti ,!e??ico?, children in ?carlet ?arf? and gieen ga.ten?; they all ?eli the ahm k1 ed rfligy of Rome, ami reich their pale or trembling palin?? in'o the noon, ??a, u.g "Long live the King of Italy and Koine'" Tat great banner 4i\er the apex of the Rialto lang ii the King bow? and "hoot"? the Military un h ' The group of oinnibu? gondola.? fnr?>v?>r ?tainting at the pier? ?if the bridge aro all in glorion? reg.?] day. Their gondolier? ?bout like gunner? in naval buttle. Thi u the Kalnee of Italia, the lo.t Doge of the Republic, he who fainted when Honaparti tar? it-ndered Venue to the Anuir?an?, (onie? i lc?e by, bidden, nave ita ?plendid -alconie?, with ?lower4 and mottoe?. Out of the 1'alacc l.orcdan, where Kiona I'iMjopia made ?nblimeat pMlMMkj the love of wi man, upon'white lignre Hingt a ?ingle white ro!<e and the King pim it to hi? button. Now over the I ulm 1 I on inn flout?, the r.UM>ian eagle, to which the Klug and ?oldiert bow 1 and at the 1'alao" H.nzoni, where Madame Iten-om gave recherche intellectual ! there comer a bree/e that ?how? beneath the beautltul colors a company us cheerful and beautiful. Next ?ItMir i" the home of Taglioiii, the renowned _?iamii?-, nn?l it is quite given un to elderly ladie?, who look their muiieinr*? ol J atU upoi) the pa?tmg pageant, waving handkerchief? the wnile. tf/fe?tt 1? the rtatat Marbango Mia Tar? rara, whero the veiiernble Titi.m lived, and hit bearded portrait look? utti? fiction down tro-Ji it? luperb facade ; he livi-d nearly Ion year?, requiring the plHgue to take linn oil at l,i?t, but how would he have thrilled to i-ee thi? glad regeneration of the 4 ity made a -.?-hool hy bit g-BJQi I bee, now, tho 1 'nin? f Pitta!, iiaineil for that fanion- Admiral abo cuni'' Ironi hi? dungeon to ttti hi? uugrateful t >wn ?MB to vu tory, where lM| the noblest work? ol l'aul V?rone??" made peqieliial n-vclry of it? deiertcl bull. The liou ol f?t. Mark, with jaw? wide open, growl? up the ??ruml Canal, from it? ?plendid portal. Cheer? and ribbon- tall inun the r.d.uiv _li.((-iii?.'ii, where Hiroii ln.-d with hie tenu 1 gaut mi-tres?.. Margan! . b.'ikor'? wile, and wrote the early part of Don Juan to her l_-piration, w-itb Munno I altero and the 7?ro Fosean. Here, hard by, i? the Fo??ari ?labu-e. al?o. where niuiii monan-h? have rc?id?.d, placed to command two ann? of the (.rand ('.mul. long the homo of the Stuart? of \ inn e. it? lieir? lirokeu and hunir-hed, it? p_iutii?K4 rold and diaperr-ed, torture? inflicted oftt it? patron?, and thot-e who remain, p<M>r u? winter. 1.1 thi-y, with their towm people, groct the King, hopolul of C4)mfort and jti?ticu t?> MWM, K4) the io\ al 11101 e??ion glide? down the green cur? rent. ?aaM-?I ti,?- l'ulace ol the DariMH ol' I'tirniH, Napoleon Honapart?'? widow, who married her > barn benaan for tb? parpotM related of Hamlet'* mother, (uni Maia her inciiiory (not by her ebon e, but by her heartletsno??) le?? than a wantonV; p_?t the Am-n. au Hag, waving Irom the window of the American ('.?n.-ul in the I'UIHCC ('iiiatniiani-at whii li Kiiit. ami oHic.r? n?e to bow, for our Republic, by it? g-N-MU example, i- 1 wonder to king? aud a bojie to pOOpl?*, and no? where more lieloted than here in the Rejuiblic of the Adriatic Shooting the l'oiite Nuovo, built by un BnfKjjbmaa. to get talli at the tMjaatt ti the boauty ol tl,e ( ililli. V? MC the (I? ? orated pille I ol tbe lui!'. non? A'!?tr.ati EMtlmtAJ, now run oivay with hi? colilltniiicn; and, ieftcllllig tile li... . 11 full v.i'w tiie Via.elta of ?H. Mark. THK L105 OF HAIST MAHK ROA-8 TO THB KI.VO. Al tin? ?pot the glory of the marine view rea? bed it? chiefe?t lieauty. To the King'? right, gliding ea?t ward, wai the ('burch of Sauta Manu India Salute, grav am! gold in the noon, a double dome, high and huge, and raninng ?uti? the long dognna or <PttRtAX*? boute, where, at the point of the tt?A\ a globe of gold upheld by two atlai-e? (-ustaina a gigantic MM raMl of Fortune. Reyond thit ibigaua. cut tharp a? a fortre??, granite, uiaative, ro?? at tome di?tance, on ? -(parate lehn-, the Church and Campanil? of Bt (?eorge the Great. They were mirage-, a!ino?t, in the ?oft atmoFpbere of the lagoon, lying agaiiiot tht? horizon like impalpable bnei?, the dream of an archi? tect, lifted i-t.'t.ply Irom tho M I lletwecn them ami bimaell, in front, along the trmvdcd lnole. in tin great OJM-II harbor where h,h iuen-?jf-w-ar lay at anchor, Victor Emanuel ?aw u-ion every wai?! I Nymph <>r a Triton TheWat-l? ?Ott Mied willi let tivi-.l boat?, bcarcely let- beantilnl upon the lifhl ?Well Of thO lagoon Ililli) neemed to tlloM? who filled them hi? triumphal b-t^M, roiinrling the li?nv ..! the Canal. The ling In? fat-st I, ni borpe lo expe. led defeat waved niro?? Wy trtt and ilieiiiip?'ded luni/ii. tvery bmumi ?ouj wa? ?"tnu?!ing up, WK91M9? JII the Southern inn, bidding him welcome. In the ?par? and rigging Of ships thero vero MM with glat-se? ? iircluiig his fate. On the water, darkly checkered, lhere were all melting hues that air and light produce, delicate a? tie vems m maiden'? temple?, s<ift like the glance of harel eye?, warmed in rare spot* to burning to? i, whence the lotilh seemed to radiate flame; co?l under the shadow? ti < '?txiipanile?.. an if southed by the (|iiietne?.s ,,f hells. To the left, place of all places to Mut o king or a poet, the grand tableau of Faint .Mark hunt upon tho blue lagoon-the noblest collei non of an -Intei Uri?, that eur descended to the ?lope of the tea! Two granite shafts, rising from a marble pia.etta, \vl,u?e flanks are ?et with noble facades, lift into the il? m? i day, the one a flying, lighting lion, the other a H-.nt driving a naked lance into a crocodile. In Ihe oblique tai e of these stand? the Ducal Palace, A woven ?hing ot tesielated marble, no versatile in dyes and design that it? enormous weight ben like a zephyr garment upon two row? of florid orche?, gold and ?now and mold. Its balustrade of softened pinnacle?, its dimble hohony-one only looking to the land, oue to the seo-its humid tint?, making it ecein to be an exhalation, lie softer agaiiu-t the darker foreground of the Ancient Library, nAiitrt} open doors reveal tho tor? ture? of crouching giant?) straining in ?-tone under their mighty burden. The royal barge? glide to the foot of the piazetta ????ps. The King, dismounting, see? before him, be? tween Palaco and Library, the transept ol' Saint Mark. At once all the cannon bellow; a mighty multitude that no man can number ?hout vociferous welcome; all Ihe men-of-war fire broadsides; the gon? falons before Saint Mark are dipped. Ile see?, from hi? niche among the National Quants, the piaretta, and tho pinr/a into w hu h it opens, a MMtMRM latta-} of people, so close that they are like tho stone? of the pavenu nt, sprung up to welcome him. The Mannus of llrerae, Prefect of the pala? e, meet? tho King. Ile show? him to the multitude. The neus are the very heart? of men, speaking all good fame and ho?pital.ty. At this moment the ?tranger, looking from the immensity of tho people to the face of the King, noticed a strangely ?nrious glance emit from him, aa he took one qu.et survey, with uncovered head, of the dense population (diluted on tin? historic spot, to give him suth welcome on no Doge nor Admiral ever ha?! helen-. TbiB scene and city, for which he hod contended eighteen bloody years, he had never lookid upon he lore, ut hat not sim e early youth, when he might have paid it on iiiiognito vieit; but even of thi? there is no reionl. In 1 ?--ai?, daring the insurrection, it wort thought the linke of Savoy had penetrated to Venice. It ?o. li? dream of the Piazza di Mau Mareo was at best a p.tful one. 'I'o day it lux, given freely to him. They lead him forward to a nearer prm-p?? t. Til K I HI Rill HKHVIKll IHK KX( (?IIMUN H'A'I KD SUN I'pon the Mjaata ti St. Mark, op? mug out of the I ,,-i/etta. ?ni urn ?1 ?.no of ihiiBo anomalous eiiitiodc? whii h it vi M? ?I,ti.?tilt for in?* to comprehend. Nut the I'lnli ?-iii, tl,<- II? M1 of the National <?tiai<l, the oldest It? publican, nor jtl the tii'jst ancient sufferer from Austrian ?Jaaaotiaaa, tufftti forward to welcome the King. Ile who?se ann? were reached wide open for the liionur? -h'h ?nil.rai ?. wa? Ihe older Archlm-hop of Ven? in . !l.e pr:t.? .?.al ranimai, Monsieur, Mr. or Sigiiore I DOB I. ..gi Of father .l?.?eph LewisL d.rielly ap? pointed by the 1'ope,who bad eironiinnoicated vktof Kiiianui-I, omi for Ihe reason that ho had rendered ??i?,.! ??.riii-en to OtI Austrian!. The personalilIj of thi? reu.,.; I? ?! la - ? > I? ?initie was very striking; he wo? a patr.ar? h in jiars as well as in name. Long white beard reached t?i hi? middle; in hi? face resignation ard tin- contended together; he waa tall and power? ful; Lis greeting was so iloce to feeling in eipresMon, that one could hardly doubt it? sincerity. Yet, tim et-cletiastic, if ?lie's record be any measure of his fr.i: pie hud f?uight againit the uiuty of Vfiuc? With tal Witta all the u.juilu ions li-ro.itj of his ? lass. He had uo'le li,? An !,.? piMopal n ndence aplace for Ali? r.ati ion .Yri-tiice; had personally prca* bed agaiuit th? ?ming of ?hat he call? d the Pietlmonie**-; hail i to ?lu-ploy the tn-iolor when the patriots en nay' it waa saul that he had forwarded to TI? - '.. purse of Samt Mark, and had used the Meratl of he ri?nfeH?ioiial to prejudice the popular i II m? ??-.on to the King's Interest ?bows either a U,- diploma, v or a rcolve to ?aec?'de from 'lie posi tio!) ?U U.?' l'onnll With outstretched arms Unit ?eii erallt? peri-on, who hod deuounced the unity of Itaiv. ble??e?l Victor Kmauual, the ciiominunicated King, on the great puMic sipiare' Strange t?> ?ai, not a voice respomled in a cheer. I laughter attended the raising of his hand. A few old Women kneeled upon the pa?ellient; the mm Mood boll upright, scornfully or curiously, and directly there v?.i? a shout of: "Viva \ mororo Kuia:nue].' Viva Garibaldi ' Vivoltalu"' A? Vi-i MB gigantii im?iu!?e all the people, .'.".tsiO in ii'iiiihi-r. with a roar that moile ? ainpninlc. palace and call.? ?Ir?l tremble, an?werc(l " El i ,i a '" Still the Patriarch, calm u?t frost, with extended arm?, kept Ins place before the King. The latter Lowed, L it did not bend. Ile wa?? a ?maller man than the priest, aud by far the le-i-er and more ordinary figure. Bil military dress shining in the noon, Mt head uncovered, his stern, almost grim face, searching ibe marble pavement: ibu V-eatMBM of li:-? olor?, all bearing his ?'?-'low ciow?, slntding his epaulette?; tbe woiubrfil IBlu]Hit idI paused Ml if hr? athlc??, deeply (lacked ??ii balcony, lower, roof, and Ihreshold; these made a ?, en?- almost feudal to me. like victori"U-1 V.-n.ii- of old whti.'i her Admirals caine home with tpofla. Ii wm -o grand in it r? suggestivi-ness that, for awhile, tin- dead .-l?eme was like a slei ping ubiijuity on mun and water and ring. Tba ti,-:, ?st Jacobins vr. re unused in ?t, if no more; the wcok-hearted paled aged people crossed themselves. irtuii tlie- loot of the great granit?' colii.nn, ..I Bt George came like ablast of discord o\er all: "A has I' Egltte ' ' For a scjoiul there was g wavering confusion, a ?.?]'pre?-?-d babble a.? of a Billion tongue, m quick COB* ferenCBj then, like ihe tiiinhling down ot the city, Il.e ?i: king ?if its pile*, the ?wallowing of its waters, a veil d l:?-ar-i, nubchiAiug, seorulul rug?? repente?! . "Vlf* Ita!lia, \ittoru fniminele-, (iiinbaldi! " It ? ti'-i? <-?t i ry I ever beard; the travailing ii* digiiat.oii "f a i heated patnoti?ini, an expired credul Hy, a wounded ?irayer, an unreturiied loTB. " A bus FioSmo'" and all the throats, wah hands and elMMa, ami inu-ki-t bamh in them, yelled to tin-, "Al bot'" In th? . piti h of the terror the King'? ann wa? dra_-to tba nfti-M_ft? tiny waik?-?i tot-a Cat-a? I dral t.igether. THE KIMI IS TU H i'ATHBDBA!.. St. Murk, as the world knows, wa? the BlBOU- | ?latroii "t th'- Veiiitiiiii?; they brought his relus home j willi fiantI fMMtm fruin tin- Ka-t, and buil! f??r bim, ! upon the model of the Church of Si. .Sophia at Cou- ' ?tuiitinople. a cathedral in the most elaborate Hy t intu??) ,*?r. hitei lure, fine i nimia? (ioinmeer al'ovi' it ; within ami without it is tmereil with huge und b-Btt? tifiil iiio-.-ii| ?, many of them inn?) ?-entunes old, but as fresh in color and a.? durable M ever, aud th?-?-fever, unitedly, 4U,(MB> ?(mare feet ol MM-MM I'm-huidied coll*, iMB! "I ian- .-?rp?*ii t ?no j???r|ihy ry and v'-rd antioue support or onianu-?t this rtriicture; the laOlt, an Iles and Walls are plentilul with tli'-e pn-i-K'ti- ni it'iiiil- ; Ihe cnpul,M und foal MV tm c1 with ?Hire foil, The exterior, t<nvar?l which tha King advanced with the ecrlesiiMUc, showed one broad, gilded >cri'??n, pierced with mighty MO-M, and OTB. UM MO--_ of the .?? the four bron/e bonN of8t Mark looked down through the tarnish of LOOO years. Be? hind them o second screen uiose, lul?3 rmtliii.? with niche?, pinnacles, pediment? and Mat--*, Mll-i over this again, the domes went afar. OBKM. with bullions Eaatara BO polas. Ko IMMMibMM O? ?i.*-?ri*>t i.m can make vi?il'b? to \ou Un, extraordiuary basilica. M OTBsiO-M with ornament, conic down (ninian atclu t? ?turtil age when we searched l,>r l?i:il?l<-rs closxti to UM grave ol Chri't. ami they hartad apon tle-ir -tructtires all the gorgeous imagery and maten ii? of t!n> Ka?l. It is io grotesque', tint its grandeur is not ?t first appareut; over it., splendid adorumcnl-t Iho groyne?, of age has soniewha! fallen; but, on this day, young with tricolor robes flung from every pinuaclc and ungle, crowded above th?' MMM w ith women's faces and drapery, every perch bj fa architecture a liiiinaii statue, glinted w it ti ali Autumnal southern ?un, aud Ot*aaaa_ with shadows of green and ? ruii?"ii, tim a?|KHt of it, as the pr?O-Balon enter??il, waa recoDt liable m uo respect with the century in which we live, l'ageant and archile? tun* were of re lliotot feudulilc. It seeini ?I that .?nilli" great CrU;a?b'I waa COBiing back (rOM wai', cairried aloug on the thun? der of cannon, and hell?, and voice?, and repairing straightway to the altar iu thankfulness for victory. A Mt i!i??qi?"'.ired under the deep portal, a ?ilence al lii'it devout fell lip ill the tll"U?'i!nl? ?I li?'?, un?l ?liieitly they boara the Te Damn bin?ung the doon ainl iri-miiiiiig up the gre..! tjoaia like tba i ' .i[" 11 '?mis. ii. au lu.atitiit il,e paoplaiatlM opi u nil i." I? u(i th.ensure, mu?!?- being iituitivi here, anil half "I Vi in? ? folll weil Hu- gil it "igan and UM hand?? of bfMM. Hulking |Bcb D HBO tbM I doubt I it h.ts bun ?icvlled buito tho Aim? of ?bo Cro.? | entered Jerusalem. I'p tbe narrow i-auala, from house-topa, from shipping in tbe harbor, the cadences uro??', and the daylight waa a solemn serenade, where thankfulne?? and happinesa seemed to have impr?3vi_od the same glorious song out of the perfect accord of half a million. Christ come again could ?caree bato Mich a welcome. T?R TB PEClf. "Within Ft. Mark's the scene was aofter, darker, ; trunger. Out ol the great nave reached golden ground archet?; the mosaic? were rich in the ceiling*?, touched with concentrated light* venerably deli? ate luit haul fonts and urns of holy water ?tood against the rich pillars of block ami white porphyry; the Moor waa one great surface of mosaics, so that you walked with self-upbraiding to crush ?uch ??ensi?ve dyes; aero?? the choir, dividing it from nave and transepts, a ?creen of marble, with fourteen statues in itt archi? trave, lifted the great crucifix, where Christ dies for? ever amid his gorgeous antiquities tScen through tbe fissure? of the screen, beyond the carv?'d chairs of the (hoir, set amid prized bas-reliefs and elderly bronzes the high altar of Greek marble, rose into a canopy of verdantique, furni?bed to-day with the most brilliant ?.weis in the treasury, and covering with it? base the body of Saint Mark, the Evangelist. The bottom of the church, where the spectators strood, was very dim, the light lying wannest around the ceiling?, yet one could see the fla?h of sword-hilts and epaulettes and the shiaing decoration? on the breasts of the re? warded, oven the features and eyes of those around the King, aa they ?tood, bending, before tbo altar, all uncovered and ?till. You could hear tho pace of the txift-footrd prient?, the ?'?-hoe? to whirpers of prayer that fell abrupt, like kisses against tbe domes; tbe iiiurtiiur, a? of surprise, for a moment, at the weird tie,-? fit the building, into which, most probably, the majority of the King's party hail never before enter? ed; and then-?o universal, with such ?pace to re ?.411111(1 in, with vich sweet energy anti inspiration pro? nounced, that it ?eemed to have neither choristers nor abode-tiM Te Denn pealed along the aisles and arche?, like tuneful thunder lotxened. One's memories of grand omotions are apt to err in favor of the latest. If I should say that this Te Denn wa? the most wondrous music I ever heard, perhaps I might be repeating what I have said of other oci-a? ?.ion?. The glorious harmony ol'a full military hand going into action, the serenade on the waters, tho ( amp-meeting hymns in green wood?, the diana??,n of tftta? ?u?taitietl by ? multitude; these recollections come ha. k to me weaker than ever before, for the lilting up of this Te Deum was like the flight o? nu n's ?oui?, burst out of them with song. They ?tood so listlessly below, tbe melody was so strong anil sonorous above, that the discrepancy of cause and effect made of them, io tbe mind, automatons merely, like fountain-statue?, motion If)*?, that Hing up mighty water jet?. Into the cornet, drum and organ, the human -Ming poured like the ghan of an army into one bugle-blast, and every glad emotion went up to CM with the dignity of men whose faith in the end met it with no surprise. It was a ?ting for Cal?, in to nave heard, recii_ciliti& faith and ?It-??titly a? be only Mieved it. It was a song to be gil en by the people of Moses when the last wave rolled over their enemies. Calm thankfulness, so ? aim that out of its good consciousness and self satis* la. lion it drew power, s wellet! at last intooue mighty climax of praise, tenaciously prolonged, the last com? prehend v?mes? of gratitude; and then fell absolute I net upon king, priest and ?oldler. EM I UK SC "8 A UOIT THE KIM). The galaxy of which the King was tho the center, grouped under these golden domes, before the blaxing altar, was one ti the most remarkable that Kuroi>e hw ever seen. Of Italian*, the Chevalier Kdotiard de Botta, a true patriotic Venetian, descendant of him who wrote the earliest reliable bi?tory of the Ameri? can Revolution, the Cardinal Trevisinato, strong churchman, but not all forgetful of the glory of his people and their bappine??, moving to the tinkle of It-ell?, in wondrous rubes, a* in the stalwart days when l'ojier- i o ild command Kuropo to a crusade and Car? dinal? bewild??r Kings with borrowed thunders; Count I.uigi Michieli, the chief of the city when the .?Austri? an? had retired, a ?trong Venetian face, like a Doge's come down from canvas; the Signor Fellati?, Chief of the National Guard, to whose offices tbis concord between Bishop and King is due; the new Mayor or l'odesta. Count Uiambatista .1 i.tiniaiii, whose name is that of one of Koine? memorable Emperors, and whose blood is old ?? the (vospel, a silver-bearded man. like the aucient admiral?, very calm and grave. Commander Tecbio, an exile from Venice for eighteen years, come back to be at the head of its Court of Appeal!; a lace whom) look ia the sword of justice, and whose hairs are the weaving-? of wisdom. Kniest Kenan, the latest biographer of Christ, aman with little love of what he caunot see, yet seeing even at this Te Dtnm such wondrous and solemn earnestness that he looks through half-shut, measuring eyes, with I boy's flush u|)on his cheeks ; the Doctor Achillo Helder, a mun endungeoned, menaced with 'tenth in his time, but ever plotting and fighting fur the better days, now come to him and to his neighbor?; the 1'rince of Carignano, uncle to the King, brother to Carlo Alberto, close to whose side all tin? drama of Italy lias been conceived j (Jen. Triii). of .Spain resolved to revolutionize and republic aune that peninsula or die at the farro?-, tbe beautiful Princess della ('interne, dark and glittering with j 'wel?, with a fortune of .t,?.tiW,..00, and the affianced, as ii i? ?aid, ol tho King? son, Amadeus; Louis Kos suth, still waiting for Hungary'? ?lay, worn and bent, the implacable foe of deupotisni everywhere, who needed but a fair (bow to stand in Hun? gary OH this King stand? in honor bare; Alexis Hozzari-i, the nephew of Mark Boz.ari?, the hero of Greece, sung by f (alleck to the joy of every schoolboy, a sinewy, ?mall figure, of proud eye and presence; Kobert llrowning, whose lady's sonnets and his own have gone wide and well, a tolerable Englishman, glowing gray; with William 8tory, our most ideal sculptor, the frieud of Browning, a fair New-Kngland personality, not quite all .?.nglicitod; the Countess Guicciola, but recently made a widow, come to Venice, her uative city, where ?he wa? ui.ud4>n and a poet'? mi.-tre*.?, fresh in her weeds, but of beautiful old age; the Duchess of Genoa, relic of that grand 8avoyurd abttt batlle-sx almost clave victory out of the rout of Novara, and whose daughter, be?ide ber, i? beautiful a- a poet'si'iieeii; heresre three journalist?.; Cspt. Hoses, the new military writer for Tkt Tila?*,, mbatt letters are prai.-vod l>cyt d Rue sell'i?; "Carlton," Of Mr. _____ of Boston, one of the naivf*?t spectators of our Rebellion, and George A. StiU, .?ketch-writer, of some good-ens of borrowad pliiiu.ige. Closer around the King are hit immediate ministers, headed by the anxiously glad face ol' Kica -oli. seconded by Depreti?, the Minister of Marine, with Cngia, the Stanton ot the war; Visconti Veno? ta, the loreign Mm.?ter; Jaciui, head of the Publio Work?; Cordova. Mmi-ter of Agtictilturc, Industry ninl Couiuierce; ?**.< mioja and Berti, heads of bureau.. are tho meu wbo hare made the King a Kiug luducd, ??ad Ibt ("iintri moro than ? geographical mosaic. It wa.? a ?plendid tableau, worthy to be painted beside Charlen VII at the c?)r4)ua"tion of l.heiin?. or Abraham Lincoln passing up the street? ot Kichuioud. THF TRt'B " MKRCIIANT (JF VKNICK.'' In tlii? displav the lou_ thin heards and bloodless face? of many obi ?oldiet? of tho First Napoleon were i.-ouhpictiou?. They ma?le strong features of the gathering; but tho*? who looked mont at them cheered but little. While the people ol' Franco obtain all'gratitude from the Venetian?, thuir ruling family of whom the Old (?uard were associate?., get no respect in Italy. Th? barter and sale of Venue was the work of NajKileon liotiapart?'. conceived by himself alone in the beginning of his career, without apparent motive, aud with the cold-blooded determination which ?hows that trtt while a Kejuiblii-in General ho was unscru? pulous aud ungrateful. Venice bad been the scene of great rejoicing after tin' l'maneipation of France, winch her aristocratic raitt, ia ?am attempted to re? strain into a calm neutrality. At the appr*>ac_ of the French the people overthrew their Government, I ho ?ted tbe tri-color, donned the red cap and cockade, and plant?'?! the Liberty Tree before the chu roh of St. Mark. Bonaparte m_?ie _M ti their v?>lunteers and | ve??el.s against the Austrian?, was greatly , beloved by them a!!, but when hu found a chance to treat with"Austria ?ni tho ba?i? <>l preserving the glory of his great campai_ii. he iji.ietly gave up hi? ally to the Germans, and condemned her to a boudage of TO years. I have been at pain? to s.arch out the corres t'ondeuce of Bonaparte aa this dark episode. Thai e wrote to Carnot, the French I*??-?*rotary of War: ' Vu.i,-.- l'ont?!']? it it trie* uti r??fr:.>t?. r 1?.?ir . ... -.W^i"*. li} .ll0 lfv-'"?' H,ui ,heT ',ul1 ,K! . ,Vli?.; liU-'i lt.l? ni lu?*? 14 not u m iii ttst il<*?tli <>f '.???JO) Krenchtneii " This is proved by all collateral evidence to have been a coarse, ti farte statement to clonk a mean act. Carnot. ? sincere Republican, wrote to Bonaparte on the -.HI] ol' September. 17{J7, in answer: ltir.it.? .ii.l.-i.t tihntt? vou laatra reata* t.? Au?tri?i the i.iu.-i mil i..iit'Ki.Mit on ti?" Aila* ? ?"'in ti.ti.e baan >>t I..'iiii??ii.l> no.I nui i. m-1, n hinitl le Na'ilf*? .Hill lininiiv I.. 4 i? ,! jin . II? |iiililic tims rim muutie?! ?II ?0 IMBa li? tint iori . ?II -In, II ?.Min IN I onie li? |, ? \l! ? lllil.'l.'ll'l, li el nu -I .nu.- .?i a aa mien lag \ i ah ? n... i.. ... i?. .?.?? The admirers of Bonaparte, who trac? in bia smart, bap-haiard epigram?! a mind a Lu? oat prescient, ?ill bo troubled to find a Bingle case wherein he matched this .?injecture of Carnot. The theft and tale of Venn ? baa been the source of all the later miseries of Italy. History will never forgive it and ita t-oaeqoenceB. And the old Italian sold ?-en of the Pirat Consul, aU-d? ing hera, were at once the vindicators of Venice and the reproach of the Bonaparte?. Ihe scenes afterward transpiring in the Cathedral were oomplimeuiary merely; the King held a groud reception in the Koyal Palace, adjacent to the Piazza, at night the Opera colled the Mate, waa open, and gave superb ballets and songs; all the theaiera repre? sented episode? curreut to the Carnival. At night, while ihe King was bamjueting with the municipality, all the islands and bay were lighted with bri) ban I fires. The whole lagoon waa ablaae, every poor sand reef making a beacon to answer the rockets of tho city. Throughout all Italy every village and city welcomed Venice to the new c.-federacy. The joy of the people knew no excesaea nor any reproaches; all1 who had loved them, all who had upbraided them, were friends of the Carnival. The King waa announced to? remain a whole week, and every night should bo ? new surprise. I shall write to yon once more upon the Carnival matters. TUB 05B STUBB 8PBCTAT0B. f While Venice is thus a tire at sea, a city of light? house., a great beacon burning down the Mediterra? nean, a new .Stromboli, with ?oula for coals in ita working crater, every sister city in Italy ha? Ie??ped into flame to honor her. There are burning torch*? at Palermo; Moaaena ii belting her famed Strait willa fire; the ila} of Naples is a beach of blaae; Florene? hoists the tra olor lamp to all her towera and campa? niles; Ravenna, in her remote and venerable repose, cries vivat for Venice at Dante, tomb; in Pian, ti*?a leaning tower swing? to the reverberating cheers; Hienna's checkered Cathedral flare? in the illumina? tion ; every glorious pinnacle at Milan ia white in th? flash of happy windows; Genoa, the creacent ot the sea, no longer threatens to bridle the hone? of Saint Mark, but wreathes their counter? feits in laurel; and every city under tli? Alps becomes a bonfire, to make this liberation an ?Hjual outburst of humanity and love wherever the ?oft language of the south is a household utterance. On? of the galaxy of great municipalities, alone stand? dark and sullen among her mountains. There is no streak of light upon har hill?. Around ber forum there aro tho?o who keep watch to murder him who cheers for Venice. Ber churches are dumb to the choral aoog of a waiting people redeemed and made glad by freedom.' Crumbling sternly and unbendingly to ruin, like her barbaric Coliseum, Rome, that ??annot be Mistrera ot* tho World, can at least rail upon it. From under Um fjre.it dome of St. Peter's, Hang over it by the Kepnb? icon arm of Michael Angelo, a strange, dimirian. reproof fell upon Venice the day that her peopl? crowded to the polls. Not a word of all hail lor th? fulfillment of suffering year?. No earnest of " bo happy, Italy, our native fond'" Bat a mad wail and, rail, and termagant shout against the deliverer? ami delivered of "our dear son in Jesus Christ, Francia Joseph of Austria '" , The scandal of this speech echoes through Europe. It is a part of the history of Venice delivered. It may? make infidels of some; of millions it will make better Catholics, showing them that till the temporal sov? ereignty of Home is suppressed, they will neither have at the head of the Church a wise priest, a good patriot, nor a rational man ' . To keep as a miser's inheritance this particle oft-? Earth, the Head of the Church ia compelling inde? pendent action aud even secession among bia Italian, clergy. The next ?political event, dne within two weean, will be the rising of the Kunian people against tb? temporal power. On the I7th iiwt. the laut l'a?ra?. gun, French nag. French standard and Frenchman wiil quit Civita Veechia. Two band? of volunteer fa. natics will give some military show fur a while to tea Vicru of dod, but these will have had both their seal and their reverence well corrupted by that tuna, aa it is imponible for any stranger of common b?s_rtf_l ness to look inside tbe Vatican and outside the fa?efi of ii? subjects without feeling his good will transferred to the latter. There is in Roma a silent coi-Mitteo, invisible, omnipotent, whune counsel atarla agaiiwa the dead wall? without a palpable agency, and burst? out of the dawn like the writing against Belsha/zar. The Pope baa spies ia plenty; but the presence of spies begets universal craftineae, and the Republicans of the Imperial City seen, t? work without bands. Therefore the march *A tikot temporal niillenium cornea sure apace. We shall seo,1 within the year, that seven-lulled city as free to travel and to happiness aa Venice, which wean with a gra? cious face its new tri color apparel. Meantime, UM Pope has issued two manifestoes, one leveled at bin countrymen, the other at the temporal head of th? Greek Church. In the latter he espot_.es the part of the Catholic Clergy ia Poltunl, ?heet _,.__-t.rws and great momkatie estates have been confiscated, bat pauses over the political wrong* of the Polish ?people, which it would be entirely inconsistent in him to aotiee. A temporal (iovemmeut so sensitive, little-uiiiuletl and Ul-administered as that of Rome, most make a? contemptuous paragraph in the history that deavribee it? downfall. Venice beheld her Geraum mercenary guards fade over the line of the Adriatic, th? Po?pe'a new enthusiasts, -recruited in ?Savoy, exhibited the tri? color from their garrison in Viterbo. The great Pontiff sent a special envoy to rebuke their command? er, vhn replied : .'Why! we meant to make the Roman peopl? cheerful." "Very ill-timed cheerfulneas,'' said the F?i*voy; " there is nothing in Italy to make the sui jeets of Uve Pope happy. Take down the flag and court-martial anybody that cheers it." atar* DEBTIHT OP BBW VBHICB. Heads wag around nie, Englishmen's, particularly.' when I say, "What shall \ enice become now teat her bonds are untied 1 " Yet there is more for bop? than when at the beginning of her race, just eleven centuries before her independence wa? given away, Venice elected her first Doge and set out upon '.he I commercial enterprise that gave ber victory over | Turk and Christian. She has all to expect from tbo ! dismemberment of the Turkish and Austrian deapot | isms, which will bo accelerated by the unity of Italy, i for even in the present Austria there are two million? of Italian people, a* Venice herself wa? first taft among , the Dalmatian Monds, on the Austrian toast Th? affairs of Greece, long etta?, bed to Italy, forbade ber J not remote desire to be attached to the peninsular king? ! dom she bas generated and adorned. The por ?.-r that haa ! the chance to succeed to the commerce of the Darda i nolle? is Italy. The boast of Napoleon, that th? j t-fediterraneau should become a French lake, ie not I unlikely to be realized by the people he gave awav. < li there is no coal in the Appeninee there ia plenty of 1 it on the opposite mainland. As a i-elf-s.staining country, Italy ha? few rival?; the maritime spirit of Venice Is fresh as in its Spring; when Rome shall be incorporated, the Italians will be tbe most harmonious nation m Europe, they have more dignity and de? liberation than the French, and the fwdom of tletir institutions will attract to them the componen- of those contingent nations which hate the Austrian and , contemn the Turk. Not for there physical reiuvona only, ! but for the spiritual ones that appeal more frankly and directly to the liberal man. I believe In the good siar of Venice. Her charity and brotherly love; her ' long-.-utienng, that bos not tamed her spirit butdieci phued it; her coutempt of gbam friends and preten? tious superstition-; her straightforward r?solve to have all that ia her?, to conquer it herself, to develop | it and intetlecttioliie it; something to me more than j this, the personal resemblance her people boar to onr own in America, and the common partnership WA j have in the gallant energy that made tyranny bia enemy when a fisherman's boy, ond rose to be the ?u perbe'st biography of the era in which we live. Thei? things rite to tell me that Venice ha? another chasca aud Italy renewing ?/lory. I walked, a few nights ago, upon the long dike of the Le?do, onion?- tbe grave?, of tbe Jews, The stonr of Shy lock and Antonio came to me aa I touched with my foot the stones of commemoration, and 1 saw Venice in the early dusk, hanging her lampa agair.it tbe ?nutet. I eto-nd between her-a mile lo my weat -and the Adriatic, plashing against the dike'at my feet. The city's songs of rejoicing were BO faint that it seemed a deeper silence where I bsiked alone. Here were the tombi of a rat? without a country; but in their unconquerable unity they bad compelled respect and gathered power among the peoples pf the cartu. They believed ia their destiuy, kept their blood pure, ?nd outlived .ho centur.i .-. What shall not yonder city, with etina* bomojwneity _, .vi|l. accomplish, now that her Boil ia her own, her toil lor another no more I Into the daik at last plunged Campanile aud Cathedral, gray an* nal and gossamer flag; but the light? wire stronger on the water; the c.iergy of evening TL?_11_ drove o,,,, ti.? lagoim; the great ligiithofi?e ?Bal .v. aiu'i-l ?'I *?*A throDgh the alnicei ol tho port, Apd aol ?KIO? J to ??e the li|_ht. JII.II I te ^d g'orV /hut BMI La Vtukt? mid ?CO- .E?. ?oMo. it? fortune.