Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 9, 1862., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Constitutionnel or search for Constitutionnel in all documents.

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s, whose fidelity to the Federal cause is notorious, remarks on this subject much more strongly expressed than anything we have published. These two journals are the Debats and the Siecle. Under date 11th June, the first writes: "The Constitutionnel expresses its astonishment and indignation at a measure, which, id the middle of the nineteenth century, revives confiscation, that barbarous penalty which the progress of justice and humanity has eradicated from our codes.--We should entirely concur with the Constitutionnel, and should not hesitate to brand the measure as infamous, if it were clearly proved to us that the American Government and Congress have committed the crime that journal undertakes to lay to their charge. " The Siecle says: "What we fear most for the cause of the North, even more than military reverses, is the fatal inspiration which has led the President to propose and Congress to adopt a law of confiscation against those persons in the South who
(of the Yankee army) has abandoned his position, after spiking his guns. Curtis is reported to be in a bad situation. His supplies can not reach him, and his army had been living on half rations for ten days. He will have to cut his way out or be captured. It is reported that the Yankees are again retreating from Holly Springs. The Nova Scotia has arrived with Liverpool dates to the 22d ult. The Emllie St. Pierre affair has been settled. The correspondent of the Paris Constitutionnel regards the mediation of Europe, respecting the American war, merely a question of time. Public opinion, both in England and France, daily grows in favor of recognition and mediation. In the House of Commons, the motion of Mr. Lindsay respecting British relations with America, expressing the hope that the Confederacy would be recognized, since 'tis now clear that its independence will be achieved, had been postponed to the 11th of July. In the House of Lords, Mr. Hapward stat