27 MARCH 1852, Page 2

The prosecution of the editors of the Bulletin. Francais in

Bel- gium, at the instigation of the President of the French Republic, has been as signally unsuccessful as the prosecution of M. Peltier in England at the instance of his uncle. The pleadings in the trial before the Court of Assize at Brabant turned almost exclusively upon the personal merits or demerits of the Usurper. The verdict of the jury is therefore virtually a condemnation of the December coup d'etat ; and M. Bonaparte may be disposed to protest against it, as emanating from a tribunal that has no jurisdiction over him, in the way his uncle would have done—by military advocates.