Anti Gallican Monitor (Newspaper) - January 3, 1813, London, Middlesex Mm Peace Ims tn if Frame in permit The putt and tincal entrance to our own ff to - Sna JANUARY 3, AND AN I SUNDAT on the 1BU, By several tiw to thx Notice and ot the The principles on which this Paper has been conducted arc well It was originally established for purpose of exposing the perfidy and of the French Government ot developing true character of mid of giving ti the people of this a clearer insight in tin the mi state of the different Courts of Mr. it Avas was well qualified thete from possessing the peculiar advantages of having resided on the Continent nearly ten vears of having travelled in those countries with which we arc principally undof in personally acquainted with the distinguished political characters of and with the aroma of tiie several Continental these the public have reaped the full benefit since the original establishment of Tnu Ax i for leading persons among all in limits well as in other have bene to the and important nature of those disclosures which has communicated in thin fhich have excited very con all and who now hold halted stations in the out Rental It has been confessed by that no ever possessed such ample aid satisfactory sources of information as has held situations on the which have furnished bim with facts and altogether without the reach of any other The public have blic luly appreciated tages and have caressed their sense oi hv the hearty and warp which they have bestowed on It was established two yeai and has since rapidly risen in the public and in the extent of its circulation Grateful for this increase of has determined to print it on a more without miy to its ly is well aware that the contracted vale of th c a v in the first instance was owing to its contracted notwithstanding and many its merits ii other respects have established it in the favour the The being this day published in its new t t Editor in consequence ot its enlarged siz be enabled to distinguish his publication by the additional features s Vuris will be regularly It is perhaps necessary to inform those have not seen any of these articles in the old of Tub that they are tota y both in manner and from the History of the Cabinet of by tli A column will constantly devoted to the insertion of ical Sketches from the lives of those persons foreign countries Who have made themselves either in the political or the literary particularly those who have themselves in the French will be arranged in Alphabetical orde liCas a very use with The bis former numbers likewise from giving extracts from new as he In the it is bis to insert a summary of select Works authors or booksellers who send copies of publications to the may depend remarks and extracts The Drama still tor in a prominent part among the features of this The Editor is in this be has hitherto given to his ami has fully redeemed the pledge which was respecting it ill his original The dramatic criticises will continue to be marked by the same characteristics which have hitherto distinguished them they will be further by elisions accounts of the and other foreign and a untie complete analysis of the comparative merit our modern dramatic productions with those oi other These allusions the Editor will be enabled to carry to a greater from the enlarged limits of his of tiik an The posture of public is much more favourable at the present than in conformity to the practice usually pursued by I addressed you ut the commencement of the past The who has rendered his odious throughout the whole was then in the plenitude of his and in the zenith of his military His armies were formidable and and he carried on a triumphant career of and He dictated laws to the Sovereigns of the and not even a municipal could be nude by them for the government of their own without the privity and consent of this universal It with rulers of as with other individuals crime and dishonesty may succeed lor a but the hour of retribution is sure to arrive in the The by which Buonaparte kept the powers of the Continent in is now which was never beaten when commanded by him in by the heroic Sir under the walls St. Jean is now discomfited and not He has been compelled himself to desert from and to under a from a country which be had already it a valuable voU either for entertainment or In th e sketches of eminent Artists as as will be included All State Pape and will render the annual and will other to make will be inserted at This object the Hitor endeavoured to accomplish in his former but the limited scale of his would bira to to it in every ed considered as a The system of cot resorted fo by this foe of human has but too well succeeded hitherto the Emperor of is now awakened to a full sense of its perfidy and This discovery he bus made in good time tor the preservation of He has become acquainted with the real cause of the fail of the aud Prussian Monarchies learnt j the particular means which the ob- ' of Austrian and lb fortresses without thd firing of a shot convinced that the foundation of the Prussian monarchy was already before the battle of Jena was fought j and is well assured that it was not the battle of Austerlitz decided the fate of Having now obtained the clue to the liis no wonders how he could have remained so long blind to the dangerous depraved system of his late treacherous But are not the men who are best informed of political The Ministers and answer dispatches and it is hy them a Sovereign is made acquainted with what occurs iu other Louis of the old court of established a new method of obtaining He would not confine himself to the mere diplomatic he would not pin his the sleeve of auy Minister of Foreign on that of any of his Ambassadors lie bad recourse to a surer and a method for it was he first established the which bus been since much of sending secret diplomatic into foreign who correspond direct with their His successor Louis did the and certainly the men who were employed in this way were persons of great as and Had the Emperors of Hussia and and King of instead of confiding in the the and the sent confidential persons to the of such were not in the way to be mystified by the as well as oat of the way of the carousels of Madame or the tine dinners of stood no being invited to the levees of and to the of his or of being delighted itii the private theatres and elegant suppers which followed at the Palace of St. had the Europe sent to 1'iancc, as their such persons as would presents instead ot and who would lane mixed with ail classes of persons iu instead of confining their visits to the Public Functionaries they no have been belter able to have ascertained what the real views and objects of the Revolutionary Emperor of The reader will perhaps what does all this lead do we not know it perhaps he is not that many Sovereigns and Ministers did not know the real and designs of the nor did they know * conduct of their own Ambassadors at his Court j nor the perfidies of the very sters about their own and at the head of their own till they read Secret of Cabinet of and some few Numbers of 1 for a positive that when a copy of the former Work was received at the by a private requested a loan of and it remained w itb the Impel al Family nearly two Nobleman now in makes no secret of the sensations it excited iu those who read it iu the Cities on the and publicly declares the interest it has raised generally among foreign The Emperor of or some of his confidential must well know the great opportunities I had of obtaining knowledge of the which I hart made known to the Such no other public Writer ever for the man who can get possession of Seiret must be no obscure My j have no hesitation in have hail such an effect upon those Powers who have not yet had an opportunity of knowing all the tricks of that they begin to look about tin and to be awakened to the sense of their 1'ioin the Russians learnt the true method of fighting with the mean and hence it was that the gallant declared hint an and seta price upon his That such of the Continental who have ever had predilections iu favour of feel uneasy at my expositions cannot be such disclosures may go too in consequence of such a J have suppressed a Work for the which would have formed a Supplement to The Secret of the Cabinet of It was already advertised in the as press but it was suggested to rue by some that its publication might irritate leading on the Continent who may be hereafter inclined to he friendly to this although they are not for the 1 weighed these observations well in my then decided to sacrifice my own as an to what I conceived to be the interests of my When I sought the patronage of the public as a I declared the grounds of rny claims to their notice to be the possession of various and important State } the