Prussian Government has made a formal complatkif tb _ Saxony
against the licentiousness of the DresdefinewsprpErs;04-:" told his Majesty plainly, that if he do not interfetretheii'rep sion, the Prussian troops will take the matter ';nfrinto,4beitr0 hands, and proceed brevi mann to inflict justi • tat-1461nm% The poor Saxony King says, he can do noth n ' Prussia act as she threatens, he will protest agat to the Emperor of Austria, and failing the Emperor, ilk ug
Of the French.
The Russians persist in tearing the children of the unhappy Toles from the arms of their parents to send them into exile, or snore properly, of destroying them on pretence of exile. At Kalish, this exercise of tyransay, of which no history offers any precedent —for HEROD acted under a fear of personal consequences, and lie only murdered infants—called forth the resistance of the peo- ple; and a struggle was the consequence, in which twenty Rus- .sians fell. What is to be done if these ruffian conquerors persist in this unnatural warfare? Is there a law, human or divine, that forbids any means, however desperate, of withstanding those who .are men in shape, but in conduct worse than wolves? We know .of none. If such a thing were attempted in England, we would look on the assassination at midnight of the monsters that at- tempted it to be as legitimate warfitre as the setting of a trap to catch a wild beast. The one would be as much entitled to fair fight as the other.