It now appears certain that there is serious dissatisfaction in
the Neapolitan army, and that both in Naples and in Sicily the people are disposed to be turbulent. Still the accounts from the South of Europe are extremely vague. The Augsburg Gazette cautiously discusses the propriety of an Austrian occupa- tion of Naples, in order to preserve the peace of Europe ; and the Temps, which is Count MOLE's paper, hints at the propriety of preparations by France to counteract any schemes of permanent aggrandizement in Naples which Austria is suspected of enter- taining. The Paris correspondent of the Times, however, would have us believe that the troubles in the Two Sicilies had no poli- tical colour or character, but arose from the cholera and distress. Very likely ; for most potut*Labsings are, at the outset, " insur- rections of the belly."