Sir EDMUND LYONS, British Ambassador at Athens, has written an
angry letter to M. RUDH ART, the Bavarian Prime Minister of Greece in the room of Count ARMANSPERG, complaining that UsinLio, an Italian with an English passi.ort, bad been sent out of Greece at the instigation of Austria. Sir EDMUND inti- mates distinctly that there is a combination between Austria, Bavaria, and Greece, to upset the British influence. The excuse for banishing USIGLIO from Greece is a suspicionthat he belongs to a revolutionary society called "Young Eurore." It is a curious part of this affair, that the Journal des Debuts ,t with the Greek Minister, and accuses England of • 4ira- cies against the Governments of Continent -T46. it is sur- mised that weighty reasons must have intiu Debats
to assume this tone.
Letters from Constantinople state that the Porte very readily granted a firman to an Austrian steam-vessel of war, the Ma- rianna, to proceed to Sebsstspool, where she was to remain at the command of the ArchdtikeiJosx of .Austria. It will be recol- lected that the Sultan refuse& pertsissien to a.French brig of war, and to the English steam-vessel, the Pluto, to proceed'to Odessa; and the latter only got through the Dardanelles by pretending to be a merchant-ship. The favour to the Austrian vessel is taken as a symptom of the desire of the Porte to seek the protection of Austria against Russia. As it is the policy, so at present it seems to be the design of Austria, to check the progress of Rus- sian influence in Turkey.