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a perfect analogy between the advance of the Federal army into the revolted States and that of Bonaparte into Russia — we mean the terrible servile alliance in each case offered Says Hazlett, in his licy is precisely that which commended itself to the greatest practical publicist of his age.--Bonaparte refused to avail himself of the disposition of the serfs to rise against their masters. And wut simply the restoration of affairs to the status quo ante bellam. That being the object of Bonaparte, as he himself declared, he did not doubt that his true policy was to prevent his "political wampaign: "There is no question that a civil war could have been fomented in Russia; and it was Bonaparte who rejected the offers of insurrection which were made to him during the time he was in Moscow." Now, if Bonaparte was impelled by the importance of not permanently alienating the Czar, and also by considerations of humanity, to avoid all incitement to servile war, the same policy is mo