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upon all classes that the same night he was set at liberty and allowed to return home.

We are now told that it was all a mistake!

His brother, the Marquis Bella, eluded the pursuit of the police, but it has been conveyed to him that he must leave the country.

Prince Camporeale likewise succeeded in hiding himself, but he has since been allowed to return home; and, in his case, like that of Prince Torella, the order for the arrest is now said to be a mistake.

Duke Proto and Marquis Vulcano have been arrested and ordered into exile without trial or examination.

There are likewise two Marquises Monte Rossi, and the MM. Vacca, De Simone, and two De Philippe, summarily ordered into exile. Of the two last named gentlemen, one is a lawyer, and the other an employé of the Government, and both leave behind them families depending entirely upon them for their means of subsistence, and who will now be left penniless and dependent upon charity.

During the afternoon and night of yesterday the town was patrolled, and the troops kept under arms, but no sort of disturbance took place, though the Government affirm that they had positive proof that there was to be a dangerous demonstration, and that a seditious handbill had been posted up.

Whatever evidence may be sufficient to satisfy the Government of the existence of plots or conspiracies, it is certain that the proofs are not such as would bear the light; but the denunciations of spies are received as conclusive, and the accused are summarily ordered into banishment untried and unheard.

I will inform your Lordship, by the messenger on Tuesday, of the steps I have taken with the hitherto vain hope of inducing the Government to pause in a course which, if persisted in, must finally lead to the destruction of the King and of his dynasty.

Lord J. Russell.

I have, &c.

HENRY ELLIOT.

No. 61.-Mr. Elliot to Lord J. Russell.—(Received March 13.) MY LORD, Naples, March 3, 1860.

I TOOK the earliest opportunity of seeing M. Carafa to inquire the cause of the arrests mentioned in my despatch of yesterday's date, and to ask whether the country was in so eminently critical a state as to call for such extreme measures, directed against men who could scarcely be seriously suspected of conspiracy or treason.

M. Carafa repeated, as he has so often done before, that the Government felt no uneasiness, but that they had received undoubted information of the intention of the partizans of annexation

to Sardinia of making a demonstration which it would have been necessary to suppress by force; and that to avoid bloodshed, the preventive measures which I had alluded to had been taken; and his Excellency triumphantly pointed to the tranquillity with which the day had passed as conclusive evidence in favour of the course adopted.

I said, that of course if the Government had the proof which he said they possessed, of a conspiracy to violate the law, they could not be blamed for arresting the persons implicated; but I trusted there was no truth in the report that those persons, instead of being openly brought to trial, where their guilt or innocence might be proved in the face of day, were to be summarily transported or exiled without trial or examination.

To my regret, however, M. Carafa replied that such was the decision of the Government; for that although they had proofs sufficient to satisfy themselves of the guilt of the persous arrested, the evidence was not such as would procure a conviction in a court of justice.

"In plainer words," I answered, "you have resolved to accept as conclusive the denunciations of spies whom you dare not bring face to face with the accused." And this, without apparent shame, M. Carafa frankly admitted to be the state of the case; repeating, that he was aware they could not procure a legal conviction, but that they had no doubt whatever of the guilt of the accused

I asked whether he or any one else could believe that a man like Prince Torella would be a leader in a seditious but childish demonstration; and he at once replied that he did not believe it, and that the Prince's arrest had been an "error," which was speedily remedied.

I begged M. Carafa not to talk of a man in Prince Torella's position being arrested by mistake; for that the only "error" which was evident was a miscalculation of the effect upon the public which had been produced by the arrest.

I asked whether Prince Camporeale, who had concealed himself, was a dangerous character, and with regard to him I was told that I might convey to him the assurance that he might return home without being molested.

I then said that the Marquis de Bella had been told that if he

gave himself up he should receive passports for the frontier, but that he dared not put himself in the hands of the police, as innocence uo longer protected a man from punishment in a country where he is not allowed to disprove the charges brought against him; and M. Carafa empowered me to convey to him the promise that he would be allowed to leave the country.

I used all the arguments in my power to persuade the Govern

ment to pause in the fatal course in which they have embarked, and I especially pointed out that, at a moment when the administration is without a President or Head, the odium of these measures would fall direct upon the King himself, and I concluded by saying that as I felt convinced that the destruction both of His Majesty and of the dynasty is inevitable unless wiser counsels are listened to, I would beg him to request for me the honour of an audience in order that when the catastrophe arrives I may not have upon my conscience the reflection that I had not done all in my power to save an inexperienced Sovereign from impending ruin.

M. Carafa promised to convey my request to the King, but I have not yet received an answer.

The French and Spanish Ministers have held the same language as myself.

Lord J. Russell.

I have, &c.

HENRY ELLIOT.

SIR,

No. 62.-Lord J. Russell to Mr. Elliot.

Foreign Office, March 19, 1860. HER Majesty's Government approve the step taken by you, as reported in your despatch of the 3rd of March, to ask an audience of the King with a view of doing all in your power to save an inexperienced Sovereign from impending ruin.

It is not probable, nor is it, indeed, to be desired that the Government of the Two Sicilies should continue for any long time to form a marked contrast to the Government of Northern and Central Italy.

It is, therefore, the obvious interest of the King of the Two Sicilies to endeavour to gain the affections of his people by attention to their welfare, and by respecting the principles of law and of justice in his treatment of suspected persons.

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ACTS OF PARLIAMENT. See GREAT BRITAIN.
ADDITIONAL CONVENTIONS. See TREATIES.
ADDRESS (Yucatan). Constitution of 1841 ...Merida, 31st March, 1841. 1111
AFRICA (WEST COAST). Correspondence with Great Britain. Slave Trade.

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1860. 963

Honduras and North American " Agricultural
and Navigation Company." Navigation of
River Aguan, &c.

Comayagua, 22nd February, 1859. 907

Decree (Honduras). Promulgation of Ditto.

Ordinance.
America

Comayagua, 20th February, 1860. 907
Dissolution of Union with United States of
...........Montgomery, 11th January, 1861. 895

See also UNITED STATES.

ALBANIA. Notification. (British). Turkish Blockade.

London, 22nd April, 1861. 529

ALEXANDRIA AND MALTA TELEGRAPH. See TELEGRAph.
ALICE MAUD MARY, PRINCESS. Act of Parliament. (Great Britain.)

Annuity. ................ 17th May, 1861. 1139

ANHALT-BERNBURG. Treaty with China, &c. Friendship. Commerce.
Navigation ...Tien-Tsin, 2nd September, 1861. 1248
ANHALT-DESSAU-COTHEN. Treaty with China, &c. Friendship. Com-

merce. Navigation.

Tien-Tsin, 2nd September, 1861. 1248

ARAPAHOE INDIANS. Treaty with United States. Cession.

Fort Wise, 18th February, 1861. 500

ARGENTINE CONFEDERATION. Treaty with Buenos Ayres.

ARKANSAS.

Union.

Paraná, 6th June, 1860. 904

Ordinance. Dissolution of Union with the United States of

America
See also UNITED STATES.
ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC OCEANS.

............6th May, 1861. 900

Contract. Nicaragua and American

Atlantic and Pacific Maritime Canal

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AUSTRIA. Correspondence with Great Britain. Affairs of Duchies of

Schleswig and Holstein

with The United States. Civil War in America.
Non-Recognition of so-called Confederate
States. Maritime Rights in time of War.
Privateering. Neutral Trade

...............1861.
Decree (Saxony). Agreement with Austria. Extension of
Resolutions of German Diet of 18th
August, 1836, and 26th January, 1854, to
Dominions of Austria which do not form
part of Germanic Confederation. Ex-
tradition of Political and other Criminals.

Page

78

Dresden, 16th January, 1855. 276
Administration of

Protocol of Conference with Turkey, &c.

the Lebanon

Pera, 9th June, 1861. 287
Armed Intervention
of European Powers for the Restoration of
Tranquillity in Syria.

Protocols of Conferences with Turkey, &c.

Paris, August, 1860-May, 1861. 278
of Meetings between Commissioners of Great Britain,
Austria, France, Prussia, Russia, and Turkey.
Disturbances in Syria.

Beyrout, October, 1860-May, 1861. 293

TREATIES, &c., with FOREIGN POWERS, viz. :—with
Hanover, &c. Treaty. Redemption of Stade Toll.
Hanover, 22nd June, 1861.
Protocols. Do.


27

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BADEN. Treaty with China, &c. Friendship. Commerce. Navigation.

Tien-Tsin, 2nd September, 1861. 1248
BAHAMA ISLANDS. Correspondence. Great Britain, and United States.
Belligerent Vessels not to be allowed to enter Ports

of the Bahamas, except by Special Leave.

31st January, 1862. 265

BAVARIA. Correspondence with Great Britain. Affairs of Duchies of

BELGIUM.

Schleswig and Holstein

...1861. 809

Treaty with China, &c. Friendship. Commerce. Navigation.
Tien-Tsin, 2nd September, 1861. 1248
Correspondence with The United States. Civil War in
America. Non-Recognition of so-called
Confederate States. Maritime Rights in
time of War. Privateering. Neutral
Trade

1861.

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