OCR Text |
Show Fhenvh Politics. A Paris ronrs-pondent ronrs-pondent of the New York Taws, writing writ-ing of the Frrnch elections, expresses thn opinion that, so far as the librrlies of the people are concerned, it makea very littlo il i f1"i-rf nco which parly wins. In actual practice tho Doimparlista havo been just as liberal as the republicans; repub-licans; and, as Mr. Seward told me when ho was last in Paris, the empire was more of a republic, in one m'nso of the w ird, than tho republic formed on the 4 th of September. In all such matlers people generally yield to their sympathies, and form judgements without full cognizanco ol cause. I havo had unusual opportunities for studying both systems, and while my sympathies nro naturally republican, I havo been convinced that the desired end would be better readied through another period of the liberal empire. |