ad p— Te a Pinladeifilna, Sefit. PROPOSAL, BY WILLIAM M’CARTY, FOR PUBLISHING A NARRATIVE OF THE CAMPAIGN IN RUSSIA, DURING THE YEAR 1812. 1814. BY SIR ROBERT KER PORTER. —— 4 GP TERMS. The octave copy of this swork sells at Three Dollars : the firesent edition will be afforded to sub- scribers, m a large duodecimo volumn of near 400 pages, at One Dollar and Fif- ‘By Cents in boards, &nd One Dollar and Seventy-five Cents, bound, payable on delivery. The work will be — & Qe & embellished with a likeness of PRINCE Kovrousorr, and two large maps, (a Juli sheet cach) ex- hibiting the advance of the French army to Moscow, and its re treat thercfrom. Should sufficient encouragement offer, the work will be dee livered to the subscri- bers ina short time. Tue « Narrative of the Campaign in Russia, during the year 1812,” has deserves edly received the highest encomiums trom different Reviewers. We copy the follow- ing from the account of the crossing of the Berezina by the French, in their retreat from Russia. « Two bridges had been completed, the one near Stubenzi, and the other near Ves- selovo. Here, indeed, was Napoleon.— The opposite shore was Zebmino. The instant the work was passable, the impa- tient Zmpieror of the French ordered over a sufficient number of his guards to render the way tolerable safe from immediate niolestation : and the moment that was as- certained he followed with his suit and prin cipal generals : a promiscuors crowd of soldiers pressing atier him. The bridge was hardly cleared of his weight and that his chosen companions, when the rush of fugatives redoubled. No order could be kept with the hordes that poured towards its passage for escape and life, for the Rus- s;ans were in their rear ; the thunder of Vigtenstein was rolling over their heads.— No pen can describe the confusion and hor- ror of the scenes which ensued. The French army had lost its rear guard, and/ they found themselves at once exposed 10 all the operations of the vengeful enpdy. On the right and on the left there y4s no escape ; cannon, bayonets, and sabys, men- aced them on every side ; cepdin death was on their rear ; in their froxt alone was there any hope of safety ; apd, frantic with the desperate alternative, thousands upon thousands flew towards