27 MAY 1848, Page 9

Letters from Naples of the 18th instant have arrived. They

give such de- tails of the frightful occurrences on the preceding days as lighten but little the colours of the narrative already received. The city has been placed in a state of siege; and the Chamber of Deputies, summoned for the lbtht had been dissolved.

The correspondent of the Times at Vienna writes, on the 20th- " Great surprise is expressed that no official account has been received for the last two or three days from Count Nugent.. According to private intelligence in the Abend-Blatt, he had been standing inactive for three days tinder the walls of Treviso; and the troops attributed this dilatoriness to consideration for his daugh- ter, who is a prisoner there. It was even said that he intended, on the plea of ill health, to resign the command.'