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be sufficient to warrant it. Of that every person who read them can judge for himself. But we know of nobody, at Washington or elsewhere, who has any "authority" to say that they "have no foundation in fact," at loss it be the French Emperor. Mr. Seward may not believe that France has any such intention — He may have been told so by Count though we don't believe he has. But that would by no means make it certain. There may be persons who confide in the perfect franka and voracity of all of a diplomatic character from the French Government; possibly Mr. Seward may be one. But, before we put implicit faith in them we should like some explanation of one or two past transactions in this department. On the 9th of November M. Drouyn de L'Huys, the French Foreign Secretary, assured Mr. Dayton, in the most client and explicit terms that the French Government had done nothing about intervention or mediation — that it had not even resolved on anything in connection with the subject; w