en nis ferocious %&vtrfctf9 and tX to have gdftg to Switzerland holding him down until a young His wife has been exiled from Pa-. ris by Bonap.irte. bus campaign Igainfl: Bona- tltion ft. daughter, or i or 13 years came With an axe, and foon finiflied the Aid. pane, who it may not'withitanding t! co •^Ifr^V/*^ ■* t\*** •/ ^ *# FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. ' m ♦ - # • PRIVATE LE ITER. " Souitand iVlarclund have al f) been exiled. " The Chancellor d'Ambrays property is (aid to have been con-, fi xated. " Maffena is detained in Mar- feills by the people, who are all for the Bourb ns. en: was a teptitt that the Paris, March 1$. " Vv vx\ the moment Bonaparte landed in France he adopted a fys- tem of falfehood, ^flertinjr that bis enter prize was known and fa- vojred both by England and Aus¬ tria. " i-iow could I have efcaped fomElba," he faid, "but With the confent of the Englifli, whofe fliips hovered on every iide, and \vhofe Commiffioner was my dai¬ ly companion r' With Auftria he add d, he had made a tmce for twenty y^ars—* fferHng that the .AichduWe Charles Wa> actually with hin. arti that th£ Lmpreis Mr ia Louifa and ho vcun? King; out Paris, and if Bonaparte leaves •* Th people of Lyons had riien oa the garr.fdn. % " Bonaparte ordered all thfe (hops at Paris to be opened on Sundays. They would i.ot fhut them during the Bourbons ; but the moment Bonaparte ordered it they ihut thetii all. %c Thg churches of Paris are full and the p'r'eres is quara/ite hewes, for the King's iakty are faid in all '• There is creat gloom thro'- :r part bi the Marfhals, we are d to infer that their Mailer is I nf Rome were '.h their journey to Prance. Thefcftatemt-n'sheipread every where, aiTerting in aefdirion that the Allies were not forry to fee the Bourbons deprived of the Throne, on account of their un- willirignefs to aboLfh the ilave tia'e/ / " Since his ar? ival at Paris he is laid to have more t^.an once ex- claimed, Cfc Je suis arrive trip tot'7 *—• an exclamation which has be:n thu; explained—that be ought to have delaved his expedition until the monarchs had gone home and put theijr armies on the peace foo- tin*. ^ " ^t firft he flyled himself Em¬ peror of the French &c. &c. and J if ph Bonaparte, King Jof-ph. B t on a fudden he left out the &c.and ca led Jofcph merely Prince Jofeph He fent for Louis B-ma- pufe's wi'e foon after his arrival. The Huiffi.r announced her as P inc isliortenfe She turned to h' t > re nuke, frm when Buona¬ parte (ud, c It was by nay order «—you are only Princes and P«in- cciPs—ve renounce all dominion out of Fnflce." " He L de titute of Dgtterinei amifrfy and o* money. I he vil¬ lage* rou'-HPan's arvcrow ed wi'h troops, who are neither clothed "iu>r pa d. The officers who were or« h lf-pa\, ar,d are to be employ¬ ed a. ain, are quartered upon the in- a Grants o1 Piris. The Rival- jft> hive the g-eaternumb'-r. At . prefefrt he eould not brinr into' the field, at the ntmoft,- 90,000 ^efiective melocks. The o^rrifons are i:i p:*ovrded w.th necefl^ ics. c* Ney is formin^ an army. Ge¬ ne; jri Paffinge' is his chief d'Etat 3Major, and Gifneffcrs Brayer, La- f .lie and Barchelu, General's of Bi' ifion. Many have refufed to fe-ve under Ney. At Paris his conduct is acknowledged to be un peu trot) fort. Some of his old companions have reproached him for hv bafenefr, and he has been heard to exclaim, " j'at perdu qua- rante ans tfkoneurP " Seventeen Colonels have re- figned their regiments. Moncey and St. Cyr have refufed all over¬ tures from him. Others whofe names haye'been publifeed as go- 5' ;7 to vilit him, were font for by Leeourbe refufes e m i pioy- n.ent. iVlarescot, a General of En^ince s, had been imprifoned fcour \ears hy Bonaparte—"We fhall forget ar d forgife" he faid' to him Marefcot replied, " There have been many follies committed * ithin thefe 12 years/' < Hogsheads fu I,' anfwered Bonaparte. * Augereau's Pro- amation is a forgery, and he hinrfdf is believ-* it with the troops, the white cock¬ ade will be again displayed.,? h 27. BORDEAUX, Mar M. Ltflne arrived in this city a few days Slice. He waited upon the Du h -is of Anjjotlieme- and apprized her cf the entrance of the Emperor into Paris. Immediately after five men of the cavalry of the National Guirds palled the Garonne, and advanced to the banks of the Dordwgne, to interc apt the couriers, diligences, arid carriages, coining from Paris. It Was in this iituation of things a courier named Menard,- arrived with Proclamations of the Empe- jor. lie was arrei'ied and put in priibn. On the 9.4th fome par¬ ties, but next numrou>, traversed the cofiechoufe, crying Vive Ic Rui! The plan of the Rdyalifts had been to difarm the two reg'nienrs which are at Bordeaux, (he 8th light infentry, and the 6iL of the line 5 but thefe troops flic wed themfelves devoted to the Emper¬ or, and they dare not act a^ainft them. A few partizans endeav¬ oured to arm themfelves, fearinti that the rifmg of the people will not draw with it that of the foL dier So- French Journals, is equally active in preparing for the conflict which is to decide not only whether he fiiall reign, but whether he ill all be fullered to live. According to thefe papers Mar- flial Mortier (the Duke of Trew.fo) has been arreikd at Lille by order of Bonaparte. Our readers will recoiled: that this General was one of tliofc Whole attachment to his perfon and car.fe, Bonaparte made a great boaft foon after he reach¬ ed0 Paris. From the filence of the French Papers reflecting the grea- te displeafed wirh them for fome reafon or other. The caufe we take to be, what we ftatfed in a for¬ mer St'^r—their iiipulation that he ihould reign only by the laws of the empire. By the accounts from Vienna, it J J appears that there was not the flighteft diverfity of opinion am- g the Allies re^peeKng the line of conduct they were called upon to adopt, in confequence of Bona¬ parte's breach of the treaty of Kmtainbleau. The mo ft v/^or- ous Dieaiurcs #ere inftantly refol- ved oa,and orders fent off for the immediate advance of the troops of the refpective Powers. Three great ?rmies will act at once againit 1'ranee, viz. on the nor h, thefouth, and on the Ital¬ ian frontier. That .in theKorth will he commanded by the Duke of Wellington, and the Auftrian force to the Southward by Prince Schwart enberg. The tatter will cdnhit of i8csooo AuftrianSj 20,- 000 Sardinians, J 0,000 Britiih i of the atiuranccs" of M be prefumed, Court of Auftria to fupport t| ie filence of the Bourbons to the utir.oft extt-pm uy, in the expulhon of EonapaTtc Crpr and his adherents. Mr. Williams, the Meffen_. travelled from Vienna to BrulTds in the carriage next to that of the Duke of Wellington, and was a witnefs of the repeated demon. ftrations of joy from the inhabit* ants of alinoft every town thro* which his Grace paffed with his luite. on The Guards that embarked yes. terday at Greenwich were put on board fe\ en Berwick Smacks which are to convey them direde to Ofteni• ; thefe veifels were near Gravesend early this morning,& from the favourable wind that ftill continues, we may fafelv cat dilate on their reaching Oftend this evening before dlilk; • • Tuesday night a larjefiiip, bou¬ nd to Quebec was completely de- ftroyed by fire off Greenwich. The fhip and cargo is eftim'atedat from 70, to £Sc.ooo, London, April 9. A Bruffels paper of the 6th cm- from Czwvi, # article tains an which affords a moft fittirfaMjr South cf r. the Acid ae^inft the JvTvAWarued by U»d i^mia^,) :lrd toffi ,!o,ooo Neapolitan anx- jjiarics.—The whole force expect¬ ed to be in the t J Carper in the courfe of a few weeks is eftimated at 950,000 5 & this force, if we rightly undei'itand the accounts, will foon receive a ftrong rciiiforcemcht of Rudians, Alexandef having ordeeed hi whole army, n(>t excepting his guards, to adrancc againlt the ene- tov of Europe", conlirmation in France. Vontpelicr, Wishes, Marfeiller:, and Avigoa, had uni¬ ted arrainft the ufurper. 'Hie Royaliits had formed a camp near the Durance j and their corps b^ disarmed fome regiments d tfec lire, and Ihut up others. Yk.C have given copious extracts rrnni thefe papers, which contain mi< rnerous notices of tlie affetobbjc and march of the ! 1 nop of the tf Pied powers towards Belgium,^6 khine Sxvit/erhnd, ^c. h-if^ peeled that the French will not lonr> , >K> ex. ffrefhono r 1* U"e of tttrfrmiT nmiauces was lately puft£do; J fide oH-urnesi and did not re '" until a flag of truce had bee ndef patched to the cotoroandant Another fct of flr,^' Frankfort papere have M J ved * **** "**" ■ The Duchefe of Afl^lem€ re^ "fo t£TmeS time the Congrei^, both ^es are within iigh i*Jj **.- -ri_.,_ ^u.A.i. .?„ f*»fnIWd r.nf to hnve their kbcw* OIJler» ancl tna patroles cf quired, tlie Theatres to be fhut du- ring Holy Week. She has recei¬ ved the two regiments, and ihed tears when the brave men who compofe thefe corps refyfecl, in her prefence^ to cry I rue Ie Roi ! On the ~6a fermentation beeun fefolved not to have their labors fenderdd abortive by the move¬ ments of the Corfican, are prepar¬ ing for publication the new Confii- itution rrlven to Germany, which :.\h the name of the to manrfeil itfel'f, & is directed ag- ainii the Royalift party.—There' is a report that General Clauzel will arrive to take the command of the city, ia Emperor. All perfons of any influence al¬ low, except a few individuals, at the head of whom are M. Laine and the Mayor, that the whole population would declare ltfclf in an initant, if they were not afraid from fome perfidious fuggeftion, the Emperor would revenge him- 11 If upon the whole city, for the treafon committed in 1814 by a final! number of perfons. All the pcafants in the vicinity of Bordeaux have hoifted the tri- eoloured cockade^ wiif appear tn a wee^ or two. The Afchduchefs Maria Louifa has formally renounced the title of Emprefs. So much for the Cor- fican's paragraphs intended to im- prers the Erench with the Idea that ihe was on her way to Paris;' or :n ether words, that the Emperor Francis was acting in concert wkh the Ufurper. ort papere have juft ^ Ihe military preparations proceed on the fide of htlml With aaivity. The fentine^ * t of each of cavalry approach Within a fhort distance. Luxembourg and other fortrefe have been declared in a Rate of fiege. ^ 'fhc French garrison of Landau have already been guilty of fome excei!es\ ' It is not^poffi. ble for hofliiities to be long'pro, tttf&ed.* The head quarters of the allieddarmy in Belgium'wastobe removed to Sensv • *- Vienna, LONDON, Aprix 6, This day wc received a large fupply of Bruffels Papers to the ul inclulive. From the fuhjoined ex¬ tracts it will be feen that on every patt of the frontiers of France the greateft activity prevails in all the, armies ; and that every thing in¬ dicates the approach of a ifloft vi- t Arrival cf the Duke of Wellington at Bruffels.' , At a late hour Iait night Mr. Tohnson arrived from with difpatches from our Minis¬ ters there. This morning Mr. Williams, another meiTengcr, ar¬ rived from the Duk of Welling- *roN, direel: from Bruflels, His _ Grace had arrived there, and im¬ mediately took upon him command of the Allied Armies * aflembled there. His Grace has already had an? interview with the Duke of Fkl- tre and Marflials BERThliiR and Marmont as to the plan of the campaign which is to be inftantly commenced in France. Ihe Dispatches from Vienna are underllood to contain a repi. the' • Brufjth April u The French troops in the North and the Pas de Calais, have recei¬ ved considerable , reinforcements in the courfe of the preferit week. In Lifle, Douay and Valenciennes, fome regiments are arrived. Or- c hies, an open town three Featiges from Tournay, is occupied byi regi merit of cavalry. The French have placed along the frontiers a chain of pofts.— On our fide the fame is done, fo that the feaU8< els Hand in tight of each other ar.d the putrrvles of cavalry approach- within a fhort distance ; for tfie feft arf is qu^ct; our forces inqrde liourly. ThcPiufiian ucop^ tween Luxemburg and Maeie^ already chimated at 60,00e> Wjj and their numbers increafe &wf by the numerous rthdcucedent* which are on their march, The fine- weather highly^ the arrival of transports, and w lanciing of Brieifli troops atOfe*