Letters from France, Written by J. King, in the Months of August, September, October, and Novemeber, 1802: In which Some Occurrences are Related which Were Not Generally Known : and Many Conjectures May be Found that Seemed to Have Anticipated Recent EventsW. Burton, 1803 - 212 páginas |
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Página 26
... aristocracy of France ; it is a motley crowd of servants , prostitutes , soldiers , and waiters , so dissimilar and chequered , as is scarcely to be paralleled in any part of the world . The nobility is fled ; most of the Revolutionists ...
... aristocracy of France ; it is a motley crowd of servants , prostitutes , soldiers , and waiters , so dissimilar and chequered , as is scarcely to be paralleled in any part of the world . The nobility is fled ; most of the Revolutionists ...
Página 32
... aristocracy , confront their enemy , and esta- blish a Republic : if they had preserved it , Europe would have been indebted to them for the glorious example ; but their fickle- ness has ruined the cause of liberty ; their laurels have ...
... aristocracy , confront their enemy , and esta- blish a Republic : if they had preserved it , Europe would have been indebted to them for the glorious example ; but their fickle- ness has ruined the cause of liberty ; their laurels have ...
Página 44
... aristocrats , mixed together , might seem convivial and happy , but they could not be sincerely attached . What friendship or re- conciliation could there be between men im- poverished and men enriched by the Revolu- tion ? It is ...
... aristocrats , mixed together , might seem convivial and happy , but they could not be sincerely attached . What friendship or re- conciliation could there be between men im- poverished and men enriched by the Revolu- tion ? It is ...
Página 48
... aristocracy that none but plebeians walked ; that if a man was not in a carri- age , he must be low and insignificant , and that there was no harm in driving over him if he did not get out of the way : no coach- man ever stopped his ...
... aristocracy that none but plebeians walked ; that if a man was not in a carri- age , he must be low and insignificant , and that there was no harm in driving over him if he did not get out of the way : no coach- man ever stopped his ...
Página 50
... paths . To bear being knocked down patiently , is a proof of good citizenship : in the Revolution the people rose to their right level ; they were then of importance , and aristocratic violence was checked ; a new aristocracy has 50.
... paths . To bear being knocked down patiently , is a proof of good citizenship : in the Revolution the people rose to their right level ; they were then of importance , and aristocratic violence was checked ; a new aristocracy has 50.
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Términos y frases comunes
Abas abject affected aristocrats arrested ascer assassinations astonished barbarous Bastile beauty blood Bonaparte Brissot character citizens committed Conciergerie constitution Consul Convention court crimes death deluded democracy democrats diction eloquent England English Europe extraordinary faction fancied fate Fayette fear ferocious fortune France fraternité French glorious guillotine hideous honor human imagined indigent Jacobin Club Julius Cæsar King King's La Fayette lady LETTER lettres de cachets Lewis liberty ligion lives Louvet Louvre Madame Madame Roland magnanimous Manuel Marat Massena ment military mind monarch motive murders nation never nobility opinions Orleans Palace Palais Royale Paris party passion person political populace present government principles prison Queen recollected Republic republican Revolution Revolutionary Tribunal Revolutionists rich Robers Santerre scaffold scarcely secret seems September shewed soldiers spies talents Tallien temper Temple tenth of August tion Tribunal Tuilleries twenty-two tyrant Versailles victims whoever wild wretched
Pasajes populares
Página 118 - That the influence of the crown had increased, was increasing, and ought to be diminished:" and Mr Burke's bill of reform was framed with skill, introduced with eloquence, and supported by numbers.
Página 74 - France, and tryed all he could to prevent it by repeated visits to the Temple, to instruct the king by what measures he might still save: himself; he said several expedients were proposed to the king, but his rejection of them evinced that he had no confidence in the nation and would retort upon it if ever he possessed power. Once he thought the king would accede to his overtures, but he required some hours to ponder on them ; he saw the queen in the interim and declined further treaty. In the last...
Página 67 - He shewed me the master key of that tower of tyranny, within the walls of which so many crimes had been perpetrated; and several species of fetters, one pair of which had been found on the wrists of a man recently dead, who was either doomed by those who immured t him in his cell to die thus miserably, or he was forgotten, and starved to death.
Página 74 - If this contest had ensued, thousands would have perished in it ; he perceived what was passing, and from the most humane motives, (and not to drown the king's voice, and distress him in his last few moments,) he ordered the drums to beat ; and, though the duty of seeing the king's sentence executed, devolved on him, it was impossible he could rejoice at an event, that however necessary was distressing and lamentable ; he deplored it as much as any man in France, and tryed all he could to prevent...
Página 73 - Santerre on these two points, I touched on them and paused, he saw my drift and without hesitation entered on the subject; he said it was expected there would be a cry of mercy, and he had received peremptory orders to fire on those who called for mercy; he saw several well-known aristocrats...
Página 109 - If there have been murders in Lewis the Sixteenth's time, so were there murders in Charles the First's time ; if the French had a Carrier, we had a Kirke ; their Robespierre hardly exceeded our Jeffreys : and the sacrifice of Dailly and the twenty-two had a precedent in the deaths of Kussel and Algernon Sydney.
Página 74 - ... he deplored it as much as any man in France, and tried all he could to prevent it, by repeated visits to »the Temple to instruct the. King by what measures "he might still save himself; he said several expedients were proposed to the King; but his rejection of them evinced that he had no confidence in the nation, and would retort upon it if ever he possessed power.
Página 74 - Marseillois watched them and meant to answer it with a contrary exclamation. If this contest had ensued, thousands would have perished in it ; he perceived what was passing, and from the most humane motives, (and not to drown the king's voice, and distress him in his last few moments,) he ordered the drums to beat ; and, though the duty of seeing the king's sentence executed, devolved on him, it was impossible he could rejoice at an event, that however necessary was distressing and lamentable ; he...
Página 73 - Santerre has been blamed for commanding the drums to fceat, when the king was haranguing the people on the scaffold ; the king had in the tumult of Versailles, in the carnage of the Tuilleries> and in his long confinement and sufferings at the Temple, shewn a calmness that savored of apathy ; now for the first moment of his life he frit emotion and was ruffled ; he has been censured too, for mentioning his death with exultation.
Página 62 - ... suffered, a mountebank had reared his motley chair, and was exhibiting his monkey antics; and while some were gazing at the strokes of the guillotine, others were laughing at the buffoon tricks of this unfeeling fool!