What is thought of Haynau.— Gen Haynau continues to promenade Paris unmolested. At the opera on Monday, he was literally hedged in by a circle of policemen and gensd' armes. His presence excited remark, of course, but not the most distant manifestation or agitation. Ladies silently turned their backs upon him, and gentlemen iequisitorially lognetted him, saying, “ Voyous le/oueiteur de femmes !” His defence of himself on Sunday, amounts, as you will have seen, to nothing, be was sixty leagues absent when the Cqun tegs was. whipped. He does not say where he was when the lash was inflicted upon the other woman, with whose torture history charges him. A friend, lately returned from' .Germany, fells me that he met General Haynau upon a Rhitie steamboat. As be walked the deck the .passengers gave him a wide lx rtb, and at table there were half a dozen empty seat* upon each side of'hhn. He has placed his nephew, who is a/so his adopted son; in one of the principal institutions of th.ifeqityV ' • . - , ,
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New Zealander, Volume 9, Issue 717, 26 February 1853, Page 3
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171Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 New Zealander, Volume 9, Issue 717, 26 February 1853, Page 3
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