Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: October 17, 1863., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Maximilian or search for Maximilian in all documents.

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the place may tall. A letter from Brest, dated September 20, says the Florida has finished repairing in the Government dock and gone into the mercantile harbor, where she was refitting; she would go into the roadstead in about a week, but would not be ready for sea for three weeks or a month. The Federal steamer Kearsage continued at Brest, awaiting coals. It is pointed out that twenty-four hours must elapse after the sailing of one vessel before the other be allowed to depart. Maximilian replied to the Mexican deputation on the 3d inst. He is "ready to accept the throne on a free, spontaneous expression of the population, and by a guarantee for integrity in the independence of the country." The Paris Steels predicts that if Alexander H. Stephens expects his mission to France to lead to recognition he will be disappointed, as "the time for that had passed, if it ever existed." Consols closed in London, on the 3d inst., at 93 for money. The Paris Bourse was
nnati Times publishes and extract from a private letter received by a citizen of that city from a gentleman of Vienna, Austria, which discloses a new reason why Maximilian was induced to accept the throne of Mexico. The writer of the letter, says the Times, has from his position rare opportunities to ascertain diplomatic secrets:ket it. They believe here that the United States would not have done so to either France or England. When the first overture for the Mexican throne came to Maximilian, who, as you know, represents the little Austrian navy, the offer was accompanied by a suggestion from the French Government that the acceptance of the Mexican throne would, in the course of events, give its Emperor an opportunity to revenge the wanton insult to Austria's naval flag. Maximilian is said to have been captivated by the idea and the train of reflections it involved, and to have made the remark: "We will yet be even with the braggart nation" My informant is likely to be well