12 DECEMBER 1835, Page 1

The " Act of Accusation" against FIESCHI and his accomplices

has been published in Paris. It appeared in the first instance in the shape of a report made by Count PORTAL'S to the Court of Peers. It is of enormous length, occupying the greater part of a quarto volume of 458 pages : a summary, and that of part only, occupies between four and five columns of the Times. The interest of this document by no means corresponds with its length. It seems to be made up of minute details of very trivia] circumstances; as if it were necessary not only to give a statement of facts, but to • record, for the edification of the Peers, all the gossip about Eisen', of which the Parisian public grew tired long ago. The only new circumstance which strikes us as being at all interesting, is one which rests apparently upon the statement of Fresclu him- self, and is probably false. M. LAVOCAT, Member of the Chamber of Deputies, and Lieutenant.Colonel of the Twelfth Legion of National Guards, had formerly conferred some favour on Flascm, who pretended to have a great reverence for his benefactor. The following passage from the report will give an id:ia of the truly French style in which, even in a document of this description, sentimentalism and the most trivial details are jumbled together; it will also show that (if the story is true) it was to FIESCJII'S re- gard for LAVOCAT that Lours PHILIP probably owed his escape. " On the fatal morning, Fieschi recognized M. Lavocat; and his mind so far misp-,ave him, that in h's emotion lie lowered the machine four or live iucheo. Had M. Lavocat stayed there, Fieschi would have done nothing. lie would Aare run down, thrown himself at his fret: made him ascend to his chamber, shown him the infernal machine, confilsed all, and eiren up the attempt. But be took a cinder from Me chimney and applied it to the machine. He does not remember that he procured a lighted candle at a neighbour's ; it would have been rather strange, as lie had a phosphorus-box with him."

The non-commissioned officers whO were stationed at Lano- line, and were charged with a conspiracy against the Govern- ment, have been tried, convicted, and sentenced to various terms of transportation and imprisonment, by the Court of Peet*,. Very little interest has been excited in Paris on their account. There appears to be no additional intelligence in relation to the dispute with America ; though the general opinion.-seems to

be that there will be no war. .•

The French Ministry are'said to have been much annoyed by a formal complaint of MENDIZABAL against 'the aid secretly given to the Carlists by permitting military 'stores and provisiont to be carried across the frontier. We have never given Lours PHILIP credit for sincerity in his professions of desire to put an , end to the war in, Spain : he has always been ready to wink at violations of the Quadruple 'Treaty, though he dare not openly take part with Don CARLOS. The accounts from Tunis represent Marshal CLAUSEL as being cooped up in Algiers and the environs, unable to venture into the open country, which is all in arms 'against him: he seems to have acquired . the universal hatred of the natives. The Duke of ORLEANS, it is expected, will return, after a journey, not of glory, but mortification.