- • . ce is now finished, and yesterday Ase was to be clOMS I, andthe second ..•ding »f the bill fixer for next Thurs- d:"- It appears the general impression that she will be acquired. Prince Leo- pold has boon twice to visit her ; thus test lying his opinion/' On TiuTsdin the 2d of November Hie House of Lord< met to give judgment on the evidence before them. We hare on* ly the speech of the Lord Chancellor, and par*- of that of L«>rd Lrskine, who it appears was prevented proceeding by indisposition. Before proceeding, Lord Holland .stated, that he thought the pro¬ per way would be, that every peer should stand in his place, and that then the question should be put from the wool¬ sack—Content or Non-Content ; and that the house should vote thereupon ; etcry peer standing up in his place un¬ covered. This b-jiinj gone through, the Lord Chancellor should say how many had said Content, and how many had said Non-content ; it should then be competent to any peer to call for a di¬ vision. This arrangement being agreed to, the Lord Chancellor, in a speech of conside¬ rable length, unequivocally declared his conviction of the Queen's guilt. After some introductory and irrelevant obser¬ vations, his Lordship entered into a cri¬ tical examination of theevidence, which, he said, even throwing out of view those parts of it wlwrh lepra r/k.»-:J—J »»* a doubtful character, clearly made against her Majesty. He thought that the Coun¬ tess Oldi, Bcrgami, and otheratlendanls of the Queen should have been brought forward to invalidate the undisputed facts proved against her, if they could be invalidated. This not having been done left this material pnrt of the evidence, in his mind, com lusive and unimpeach¬ able. He also animadverted on the sad- den elevation*of Bergami,acircumstanec which strongly confirmed the leading facts sworu to on the part of ihe prose¬ cution. His Lordship concluded a? follow? : — >• liking till ill- Ll»«. ■ ..»-i4ML-.j a Js.- tailed by all the witnesses—attending to the sudden rise ol Ber^ami and of his fa¬ mily—he would not do his duty if he did not express his belief that an adulterous intercourse had taken place. The prin-' tiple of the law did not require that the act should be actually seen ; it was c- nough that circumstames were proved that in the mind of a plain and reasona¬ ble man amounted to the conviction that the act had been committed. It was for ;their lordships to say whether the fact was so proved to their satisfaction. lie would say one word more before he sat down. He did not mean to take any notice of what passed inside or outside of doors. Whatever did, whatever might happen, he was determined to do his duty j but he was sorry to have heard from counsel something like a threat—^ (hear, hear,)—a. threat to their lord¬ ships.— (Hear, hear.) It certainly was not ever held the duty of an advocate to address a court of justice in such a man¬ ner.—(Hear, hear, hear.) Such thread could have no effect on their mind?; they stood there the acknowledged pro¬ tectors of the morals, the lives, and li¬ berties of their fellow subjects, whatever might be the arts^of faction. He would not hesitate to say to their lordships, u bejust, a.id fear not." Whilst their lordships did their duty—whilst the) laboured to preserve the constitution, they had nothing to fear. Sooner or la¬ ter the people would be ready touckuovw ledge their services. Judicial men had no arts to employ—they had uo popular¬ ity to roart {hear, hear)—they had or^ ly to do what was right ; leave the rest to the justice and wisdom of God." Lord Erskine said that he had Interred • with great attention to every thing which Lad fallen from his noble and learned friend. He agreed wilh him that the re¬ al question before the house was, shall or shall not this bill be read a second time ? lie agreed with him that their lordships shouhl infix steadfastly upon their minds the sacred injunction—" Bv just and/ear wo/." He nlsougretd with him, that the woid " intimidation sh- old never be addressed to a court of justice. He saw on the woolsack many of the learned friends of his youth—tlie vene¬ rable judges of the land—and if this were now acting as a court of justice, he should exclaim with his noble and learn¬ ed friend—" Ruat ealum fat juslitia." —(Hear, hear.) But they were not sitting here as in a court of justice ; they were sitting here, and acting on the pre¬ sent occasion, legislatively ; and in pro¬ nouncing his opinion upon their pro¬ ceedings in this unhappy case, he knew not how to do it better than to lay open his breast to the noble lords whom he addressed, and express to them the feelings which actuated him from the beginning. How then did the case of her Majesty stand ? Soon after the death of the late king, and on the acces¬ sion of the preseut sovereign to the throne he was pleased, by the advice of his mi¬ nisters, to strike her name out of the Ritual, and exclude her from receiving as before the prayers of the people. Aud yet, notwithstanding the notoriety and flagrant injustice of this act in the first instance, they had been tuld by hisnobU aud learned friend, that they ought to pronounce no person guilty unheard, that they ought to hold the scales of jus- tree even between the accused and the accuser, and that nothing was so contra* ry to law, and so hostile to the princi- pies of justice, as to condemn an imiivu dudl unheard.—(Laud che-is.) Now h«: narl no di.lii ulfy in saying, that hi> Majesty's Ministers had eoudemutd her Majesty unheard. (Hear, hear.) Much as he had deplored theact of striking her M»j My's name out of the liturgy, ille¬ gal as the measure appeared to him from the manner in which it was effected ; still, when he first heard of it, he con¬ cluded that Ministers had a clear and unanswerable case to make out against thv Queen ; that the evidence they had a^r.inst her was as conclusive as it was credible ; and that they had not merely the obscure persons io adduce to facts in support of the charge, whom they after¬ wards produced—persons whom his no¬ ble and learned friend was obliged to throw overboard—that they had not on¬ ly these persons, worthless aud incredi¬ ble as they were, but persons of rank and character, who could depose to the facts, and leave in any rational and just mind no doubt oftheir acquital Had they produced any such persons whose evi¬ dence carried conviction ? Indeed, so far front hating such, they had brought for¬ ward none who stood secure, and in eve- rv step of this disgusting business they had so acted as to take upon their shoul¬ ders a responsibility for which, he be¬ lieved, they should one day or other have to answer. But what was the pro- reeding of his Majesty's ministers in the House of Commons? They sent down their sealed bag there, and yot a portion of the^e very ministers wcie content, not <-t*\j <s»nt t1 -sk^u!d not be opened, but that an address should in the most for¬ mal and respectful manner bo earned op to her Majesty, they, the Ministers in the Eion^ti of Commons, being a party thereto, offering her a compromise, if she would condescend to accept. They al¬ so agreed to a resolutioiT, stating that the very proceeding «hit h their lordships Irad since thought proper to adopt, was •k derogatory- from the di^nitv of the crown, and injurious to the be>l intends of the people-"—( Lotttltlircrs.) Though the representatives of the people had f-.ime to this decision — though his Ma¬ jesty's Ministers were a part* to it in (he ilouse of Commons, yet in this house the minivers ol the ciu»n tuuu^ui putpii (o persevere in a measure marked In the abhorrence of the people, Her Majesty rejected the proffered compromise, and the King's ministers called upon their lovdships in that house to go on with the bill. . LOUD ERSKINE was proceeding at a quarter past twelve o'clock. Jiis voice became very feeble, aud a generrtl de¬ pression appeared but too evident in his manner ; still he peisevered until the last effort of his strength was exhausted, and befell back on his seat quite insen¬ sible. We cannot desrribe the distress and anxiety which pervaded the house at this moment, and the confusion which prevailed amongst the individuals who were crowded together bciow the bar. Few of them had a view of his lordship, but their fettf? antieioated an event simi¬ lar to that which closed the political life of the great Lord Chatham. The cir¬ cumstances, we may be allowed to ob¬ serve, were not very dissimilar in the two cases :—Lord Erskine, like L*rd Chatham, was supporting the great prin¬ ciples of the constitution of his country : like Lord Chatham, he was attempting to point out the unhappy consequences of proceeding on a measure revolting to the feelings of a great community—both, too, stood as the advocates of an entire people. JI is Lordship wns carried out of the house by Lords Grey and Holland, and Baron Garrow. The house then adjour¬ ned for a quarter of an hour. An Ambassador T'xt.niord.it.nrv fiorn the King of ;he TwoSicifies to the King of England has arrived at Paris, on his way to London, where, however, it is said, he will not, for the present, assume his diplomatic character. Prince Schwartzenberg, commander in chief of the Austrian army, died at Leipsic on the 15th October of a disease in the heart, at^ed 19 years. After several skirmishes between the inhabitants of Palermo and (Jen. Pope, (he troops of the latter entpri d that city by capitulation on the 6th October, and immediately occupied the formications. Austrian and Neapolitan troops are ap¬ proaching the papal territories. All political "societies anil clubs are said to have been abolished in Spain by the Cortes, and "Kin*; Ferdinand, by ad¬ vice of his privy council, has.refused in sanction the decree of the Cartes for the reformation of (he Monks I The London Morning Chronicle of the c2Sth Oitober state , that Spain had RATIFIED TUT FLORIDA lUKVry. Meetings are called in various parts of Great Britain, to prepare petitions to the King to dismiss his ministers. In the borough of Southwaik, an address to that effect was unanimous!}' voted by the inhabitants. » It is stated in London papers, that an American schooner, from this port, with J00 bales of tobacco, had been captured off the coast of Ireland by a British cruiser. A new plot against the Dry of Algiers is said to have been discovered, and the conspirators taken into custody. The Morning Chronicle ttMet* that both tlie Attorney and Solicitor Gene¬ ral were originally whi^s." A reformed rake, they say, makes the best hu*band, which we greatly doubt ; but there can be no doubt that an apostate whigmukes a vile torv. *Livi;nrooL, Nov. 1. Royal and nolle visitor* at Branded burglf House. The following is from the Court Cir¬ cular :—" Princ^ Leopold called at Brandenhurgh Ho,ose 0n Thur-day, to inquire after the health of the Queen, having been informed that her Majesty had been taken Suddenly ill. His Royal Holiness did not alight from his car¬ riage, but Mr. Addenbrnke was deputed to make the neee sarv inquiries of Ljdy Ai-ne Hamilton." Prince Leopold, of Sa\e Cobourg, waited on Friday again, by appointment, on her Majesty. Tuc cause. bein>: vir¬ tually terminated, there, is now, we pre¬ sume, no reason why his (loyal ffifth* to Tie rani, or a corporal ina regiment wl.ih forms part of the garrison at V i- eim, and into which regiment he euter- „)sa private soldier. He appears oil paide v.ith the regiment in his uniform, got through his military exercise with ^rot precision, and is a very great fa- ite with the soldiers." von ness should not express that conviction From the London Sun, Oct. 24. It is i'ome coufolation to the outraged Wing* of the people, to find that the ©unfel for the (Oneen have at length clo- cd ihcii defence, and it ought not to be mputed to her Majelty, if they have re- fortcd to legal futnleties, and all the artifi¬ ces which a refolwte advocate can adopt to ferve the cnufe of his client, even as Mr. Brougham faid, if he were to risk the de¬ struction of the country. It is not^ier lord Chanccln r had summed up the tn<- timony decidedly against the Queen, Lord ErSkine roNe to <pcak on the op- position side. He hid not proceedn'. lar, when he suddenly fell down on hi.; face, and remained speechless on the 2d ult. The Traveller of rs",>v. 1, says— u When the bill of Pains and Penalties HEREAS the Subscriber on the MGHTofthe 6th inst. while w Inch he feels in common with eveiy bo- nest man in the kingdom towards the mother of his wife. Indeed, we have reason to know that the object of Prince Leopold's second visit to her Majesty was purposely to express his convietionjJ3 Way from the carrying place, head of the futility of the charges exhibited |C Bay of Quinte, to the River Trent, against her Majesty, and of her perfectLffaulted by Two Men, and HOB- iunocence. His Highness stopped anp0fhis Pocket Book, containing pa- hour conversing with the Queen. I)ut,fnoney to the amount of exclusively of the general object of thcifFl/ Ur%s vi fft\*£>rl visit,and the assurances that it was per-LI lit (56 JtjLZiilClf Clit fectly satisfactory to both parties, iljj) SEVENTY THREE would be profane to pry speak more of so affecting Wl u • t ' llio Russian frowrnmcnl !)a-; conclu¬ ded a loan of 45..00W,000 roubles tilth Baring, Krikfitcn Ac Mope Ss Co. rqual Io about .£'6,730,000 Melius;, touring au htcwiewJ DOLLARS, On S.mday, Ids Royal Highness the [/ Slindry NOTES of HAND, Duke of Sussex came from Tunbritlgerreeable to thefollo\vingdescnption9 ; Weils to vi&it her Maj My. After re¬ maining an hour with her Majesty, he returned to fI uubridge* tl above reward will be given to any on who may rrake fuch difcovcry of UobbersaB will lead to their convic- Lord and Lad} Fitzwilliam railed at|. Brandenbuivh House on th? same day. . Notes of Hand QS follows, Lord Darnley, the Duke of Argyiun Note signed by E. fa F. Tinker, and Mr. and Lad) I*. Butler, (brother lojablc to the subscriber,--------$75 the Marquis of Osmond) waited 00 tlie>nc ditt0'signe(1 Elishil Tink«T payable Queen at Brandenburg, House. fc "ft*11** 1 t i tii ffJUu «n ^ ... 1 * , »c . hie ditto signed John Tills payable to We arc as&irec] ihat her Majesty,; subscriber^-________:______£10- JOUgh very uuich fatigued from the>ne ditto signed E. "Wheeler, payable to umber of addresses ami iiUroduetioiisisubscribeiv-------------------------SiW that »ht P e/hed Oil UVdnesd;.), is tMltL^^^ggJ^P^*EgFaOA°K&f^W^ seriously indi.,>o.ed. Her Majesty re-l^ ditto id Martin Shuterley, pay- ^VV " 1 Wpi>!dl ltt iU"V*™Wt to Truman KinTton.----------S« ot utay Antra l..mnlton, the Maitjuis ofW ditto signed Calvin Rawson, payable Antalde, and b«f Chamberlain. Sheaf-Caleb Norton.---------------------ftl W terwards withd.^w with his Ltoyal I |;.,|^^e ditto signed Thomas Ward, payable ness to anotherpoom : aud we arc faau 'arnes Graham.———~-—£3 dv to learn thai I \! ' »ne «K«o signed Martin Rush, payable to .ytolcuntinu hei Majesty preserveslsub5cnber.:------------------------S4 her health unimpaired by the troulilesftneditto signed Barton Philips, payable and vexations ^ has extnuieneed. vVilliam Calkins, for amount of £[» less ..... * - '---------------- £3 Josiah Proctor, payable -----------------£3 9' 5 wit hill pen the Ins prir enh adv estc ger exii bes' lar j Sp: gro enc r Gr. Ge met I tau Be&ides the \\ rsons of rank «lm haipipr'ed ~--------~ aid MrMWU C^ub^l,, ol-f-SSl pa ready meulunie!, v.eiind the names ofWdittosigned George Simpson,payable the Couu'ess oJ Tank, rville, and L-rd pie subscriber.---------------------10s. and Lady Milton. It fenbu understood Together with fundry Notes and ac- that her Majesty would immediately visit nts which cannot be particularifed. Prinee Leopold, at Ch:ren.out. there topf the paper money, fix were ten dol- meet the Duchess of Kent. hills of the Montreal Bank. The City Invitation to the Queen.—At an ps were altogether of the Bank ofU. interview w itli h hieh .Mi. Sheritl* Waith-one ofwhich was ten dollars, and the man was honoured by the Queen on Sa- ers> of fmaller denominations. There trirdny hi-t, at Brandeuhurgh House, he »alfo contained in the I ocket Book, a expressed to hrr Majesty, that it was the Knee to Peddle granted to the fub- auxious wish of the Lord Mayor elect bcr on or about the 24th day of May and tlie Sheriffs, that her Majestv would *• eoiideseeud til honour the city of Lou.] PHILIP WHELPLEY. don with her presence at the approach- Bcllvillc, 9th O&ober, 1820. 42tf i.^festivaUiu the Guildhall, on Lord ^HE fubferibers, duly appointed Ex- iWyorsday , andthat the Lord Mayor ecutors lo the ]all Will and Teftament elect and heM arOttld wait upon h , wnliam Mitchcllf Efq. of her .Majesty in Nate aid, an .nvitiu.u fto hercbyrequcft all persona who indue ormatanyt:nu whveh.henn, r f J ^ ^ fc Bond please to appoint : or thai they would .^ Mn^ nr Book mark of their rt't' ntion : but, as she was not provided with a proper establish¬ ment, she Could not attend on the occa¬ sion in the slaf suitable to henank, and f\A *I Mil was therefore previ nted from acceding to their wi>he,s at present. Lcndcn", Nov. 2. The Discovery $itip$.— We have been favoured with the following extract of a letter from Leilh, Oct. 30. 1820—"The Discovery Ships arc safe left in lat. 68 • all well ;—had been up 500 miles ij Lancaster Sound ;—have tried it th, year to no purposi adjuftment, at the Office of the late lliam Mitchell. ALLAN M'PHERSON, JAMES MCKALLS, Jun. R B. The bufinef* heretofore car- d on by the laie William Mitchell, Efq. 11 be continued by Thomas R. Cart- ight,and Neil J. McLean, under the m of Thomas R- Cartwright & Co. 0 BE SOLD, and immediate pos- seffion given, the following Lots of and, in the 6th Conceflion of the Town- ip of Elmriley. viz. 19, 20, 22t 24, 29, were up at 115 lotfjo, moft eligibly situated on the North All the missing whale ships ai aide of the Rideau Lake, which forms their sale." I southern boundary ; the great road to A letter has also been received al the Perth Settlement, leading through one shall have passed, Kokand will have ceased to bt; muter the government of law." The Prince of S.ixc Coburg. has lately visited her Majesty for the fuvi tinte since* her return to Eiu.i.xud- Lord Ueresfonl, on hi* return frrr? the Brazils to loitueaU was refund a landing at Lisbon, under a pretence by the new government, that in the existing state of things his lord-hip's person miiiht be subject to lus'df. "Pais i^ net understood to be the r«al ea'i-^. It ^vua understood at Lisbon that lord l>erecord brought with liitn, from Rio Janeiro ad¬ ditional powers from the kins, which would have ^iven him a contronl over the whole kingdom, little short of mon¬ archy; and this belief, whether well founded or not, seems to have given de¬ cision to the refusal to land and to enter the capital, lii- lordship, with several of the lStt{-H*h officers attached l«> the Portuguese nrtny, have gene to IvnjilancL Paris dates aie up to the 36lh oi Octo¬ ber. 0nthatd;iyu ro>al ordounauev was issued, granting :in amnesty for ail forest offences, in commemoration of tin. birth of the Duke de Bordeaux. The Duke of Cambridge has finally determined to fix his permanent resi¬ dence at Hanover. Durino-the difcuflionagamfl the Monks* in the Cortes of Spain, the pious fathert Z3 avaikd themselves of the delajrf and cur- ricd from the Monalleries all the moveable gctds upon which they could by the* Bon hands. Many millions of property, it is Da) faid, will thus be loll to the government* J Day Qfjfa evuir. tee ojfw ca in defence of her , blajcuiij tuc tyucen* ■j * Yesterde.y proeattd the ttt v\ 1 occur- J rence of nor one only, but ot two dhi- ref sions in the House ol Lords, lu theii'sL the numbers were 159 to 51* The aihi- mative lidc of the proposition was, that fonlSacihTs attempts to suburn wituesSCfl Should be extracted from the witness Kl Sal?ator : but ihe noes prevailed, ila^- tt*Hi's wholesale subornation was prov¬ ed by Carrolin-i : but llastcUi, when - called lor to be confronted, was with- £A drawn. The next division was of <\ more, or rather of the moSta remarkaldt- kind: it wa5ou the appoiutment of a Select Committee to examine so much 0! PowelTscorrespondence with Brown ^r relates, merely to RasteUi's escape, lu this' division the chancellor spoke warm¬ ly, and divided against Lord Liverpool. The friends ol tlie latter leer, however, prevailed, the uumbers being 120 to 7'J. The Secret Committee is therefore ap¬ pointed. Tlie Duke of \\ -llington is supposed to he the only otlier Miuistcr who voted with the Chancellor. But now, it is obvious to remark, that the only interest which does or can suffer by ihe abstraction of KastelH is that of tiie Queen ; and what equivelant advatv tage she or her Counsel is to derive from the labours of a Secret Committee, it is not eu^y in this stage ol the busi¬ ness to perceive, however, thanks to Al¬ mighty (rod, her ca>e stands in need of no such aid. Vehteiday only one wit¬ ness was examined, but such an one whose clearness doited all cavils, whose sfiirion.pltr.d luin above suspicion, aud WTOiCAiugnij calumny itsell dares not to assail. Tins was Col. Oliiiera. Ks proved distinctly that Sacchi did not travel with her Majesty at all, on that journey from jiome to Siniga-lia, in which the tatter swore that, as her .Ma¬ jesty's courier, he w itnessed a mo^t ffro$3 sto Ki tre< dor dU< 1 ace the wi. for Y m of n? b gitude Lloyd's (his morning from. Aberdeen dated Oct. 29, with tl>3 following state of the Lots. They abound in excellent Timber, which from its being contiguous to ment.—A letter receded this morning water communication may be rafted to from the Elizabeth ef 'In* port, from, Montreal at a trifling expence. The qua- Uavi^'s Straits, date*! Slromness, 26th' litv of the foil and other advantages are inst. advises of bar an:™' there with the fuch as to render this a desirable purchafe to Farmers or perfons engaged in the Lum- Hill. Ellison—tiie former *i<h 14, the latter with 15 fish. The E/^'on -poke Jlcda and Griper discovery ship?, on their re¬ turn, in lat. 68 de$« iWfr u'9> a" wel1 and was informed that '^ey had wintciec in lat. 75 deg. long. 115 dejj." We hare since he^d that account; have been receired H the Admiralty from the discovery shil,q direct. It ap¬ pears thai they pene»'^ed consiflerabl) rurtherthan Capt. il'^s, viz. to 75 de- irrees latitude and IP de.;. longitude They entered what vy-feaUed the Crrf- ker Mountains, and t^e)' aff°"' cvtfry reasonable cxpeclatio- &al a north west passage may be diserv^red.—At all e- vents the Magnetic ly^le is conceived to be ascertained ; and t^refore, the great and long looked for oW^t of sufh expe¬ ditions maj be cousid1"^ to bc asw- tallied. We are hipfiy to bafll tins op¬ portunity of thus quoting the minds of amble of the bill the friends of the per^ns who have been j each SUCCeSSi en^a^ed in this periled^oyage. Buonaparte's &ott.~$ome tlme back it was mentioned in tf»« puhlic papers, that it wns intende.l to bfi'!* llP the young Napoleon as id1 ecclesiastic. A •VIM' IV, m I-;ii-i, s:,r tw This i', so fur from beiua the ei\M\tl'nf " **fe sef,f», in 0 letter from Vu-nuft, *n account of tin ber Trade. For terms of payment and other particulars apply to William Mar¬ shall, Esq. Perth Settlement, John Kirby, Efq. Kingston, orthe fubferiber, inWood- hoafe, London Diflrid. ROBERT N1CHOL. November 18, 1819. 7tf >• f IVj v Ull.tW ^.* an EttlncHoJ ueariy 7 per tent perunn. [ >UUI1g i>riuce Reicl.s^^ (f!i:sis bis Wle) Well, we reply, be it so : *hat " does that signify ? Will any man think ctthe worse of the Queen for it ? > This bdng the leading opposition paper, we may suppose that they think the passage of the bill pretty certain. The latest Times has a furious article, mingled with anger and despair, in which tie editor attempts a parallel between be tnal of the Qneen, and that of the late Queen of France. The Courier remarks, lhat "the pre- Wfts thrice proved; ve mode of proof rums over th, former ,„ due gradation of efficacy. I. losiUvcfa by the evidence produ- cod in support of Ihe bill. * Comparatively, by the failure of JJeevideuce produced against the bUL of .K PCrllaiivcl^ by *« suppression ;VI(l-;--' her Alajesty's power, and not produced.'* It is rumored verbally, that after the indecency ! Colonel Olhieru also prov¬ ed that her Aiiij. sty possessed no such cabriolet with an apron as that in which Rastelli swore that he had seen another in¬ decency pass between Bergai&j andthe. Queen. We ieate the matter here ; we cannot render it plainer. The only question fchiefa we a^k is, why does .such a cause &o on ; Evening M.^il Orncr, 2 o'clock. The business in the house of lord? this morning commenced by the carl llairowbs bringing up the report of the secret committee on the correspondence respecting ttavtelJi. It coniH>$<d chief¬ ly of letter-and extracts fiorn colon i Browne, relative to the alarm stated to prevail among the friends of the Italian witnesses respecting ti, ;r personal safe. ty ; extracts oi Utters from Mr. i'ou- ell to colonel Browne, respecting the mission ot liasleli, and orgittg his re¬ turn ; aud extracts of letters from col- Browne, announcing llastelli's indispo¬ sition. Mr. Brougham proposed to put in an Austrian Gazette, published at Trieste, which in contradiction to the preamble of the bill of pains and. penalties,. purports that her majesty had acted ina manner which derogated from the digni¬ ty of her station, and disgraced this country, this Gazette showed that her majesty, instead ol having been treated as a person of degraded character, had been received with all the honours due to her rank. It stated that her majesty had arrived at Trieste on the 15th of April, was waited on by the magistrates, went to the opera, aud left Trieste next day in the afternoon. The Attohnky a;id the Sor.tctTun- Generai* objected to this gazette, ar evidence which could not be revived i» the court', below. 64