30 JUNE 1832, Page 2

It appears that the spirit of the Poles is not

considered even yet as sufficiently subdued; if we may judge from the continued op- pressions of their barbarous conquerors. The latest letters from Warsaw mention the transportation of Generals LEVRINSKI and CHOVRINSKI to Moscow ; the death, from cruel treatment in prison, of Generals Isinoa, KRastsrsitt, and DRIAKONSKI ; and the banishment of the Countess SABANISKA from the Polish terri- tory. The Polish officers, who returned on the faith of the am- nesty, have been distributed as subalterns among the Russian regiments. The deportations to Siberia continue as active as ever ; and even women and children are among the number banished thither,—the children, by a refinement of cruelty, being separated in their route and destination from their parents. Some Poles, who had sought shelter at Dresden, were lately ordered away on the representation of the Russian Ambassador.