a national paper, puitusHF.n ws F> >r.- n ...,. ' ' A,iTT,r a ,r^r, [No. 48, of Vol. IV Foreign Affairs. PARIS, September 7. AT three o'clock in the afternoon of the fatal 2d of September, the sanguinary mob reached the Temple, where they were met by two of the commifliuners from the National Af fenibly. It was with great difficulty they could be restrained from fur ther aJis of violence ; they demand ed the head of the Queen ; the cotn niiflioners therefore to prevent a greater mifchief, found it neceflary to accompany them to the tower of the Temple, one of their leaders car rying on a pole the head of theprin cefs de Lamballe. The coinmillioners, attended by an officer nf the National Guard, and M. Palloi, the manager of the works round the Temple", undertook to in form th-e King and Queen of what was traiifacting, and Thar the people infilled on their viewing jfofara cle they had brought. Trie heaJtfTi the unfortunate vitftim was difplayedl on their Majesties presenting them selves at a window. The Queen, and her daughter Madame Elizabeth, ac cording to the report ofa violent Paris print, displayed, for the firft time, some fcnfibility ; and the King, who obeyed without any hesitation, said to one of thecommifiioners— Sir. you are right. [We have noticed this remark, in order ro (he - he base calumnies thai are propagated concerning these Au gust Personages. ] When the mob went to the prison de la Force, where the royal atten dants were chiefly confined, the prin cess de Laniballc went down on her knees to implore a (ufpenfion of her late for 24 hours. This was at firft granted, until a second mob more fe rocious than the firft, forced her apartments, and decapitated her The circumstances which attended lier death were Inch as makes huma nity (hudder, and which decency for bids us to repeat : Previous to her death, the The Queen is inconlolable. It cannot be denied, that the un happy Menarch of France has fallen a vidtim to the vices of his Minirtets and Minions. By weak and violent measures they dominated the feeds of the sedition j but all the odium was thrown upon the sovereign. The best of under the manage ment of bad ministers, ] o ses, never to be recalled, the erteem of his fub jeCii Suspicion begets difgult ; dif gntt begets contcmpt ; and contempt tails not to exprels itfelf in the most audacious and outrageous terms. I hus Louis was precipitated from his greatness. His final dertiny re mains yet in the womb of time No advices of any kind have been received this day from France, nor were there any regular accounts yes terday. J We understand that an eminent merchant in the city had an express, ftat.ng thai.the ci.y of Rouen had declared, that it was difpoled to ac cept the conditions offered by the in vadmg deipots of Germany, i„ pre . rerence to continuing longer exposed to the brutal violence of' the panv now prevailing , and that in confc qnence oftJiis, and of these ir that the example might be followed, a body of men had let off from Paris to chaf tile the city of Rouen. The garrison at Thionville have u"?, tW j- CC fuCCefsful in and thePruflians wiJl be obliged to com mence the siege in form, at a consi derable ekpence of what is oft va luable rofhem, ii„,e. Montmedi i, blockaded. The report here is. that the King of Prussia i s a jf 0 blockaded but this cannot be exa