History of Europe (from 1789 to 1815). |
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Page 2
... remained to be seen what was the fate of the victors in the strife ; whether such crimes were to go unpunished ; and whether the laws of Nature promised the same impu- nity to wickedness which they had obtained from hu- man tribunals ...
... remained to be seen what was the fate of the victors in the strife ; whether such crimes were to go unpunished ; and whether the laws of Nature promised the same impu- nity to wickedness which they had obtained from hu- man tribunals ...
Page 12
... con- sideration which still remained to them . Nor were the Jacobins more successful in their exertions in this respect . The suffering was real and universal : no- 1 1 thing could make the people see it was owing to 12 HISTORY OF EUROPE .
... con- sideration which still remained to them . Nor were the Jacobins more successful in their exertions in this respect . The suffering was real and universal : no- 1 1 thing could make the people see it was owing to 12 HISTORY OF EUROPE .
Page 41
... remained in the desperate state of their fortunes . Their opinions , as usual , were much divided . Some thought that they should remain firm at their posts , and die on their curule chairs , defending to the last extremity the sacred ...
... remained in the desperate state of their fortunes . Their opinions , as usual , were much divided . Some thought that they should remain firm at their posts , and die on their curule chairs , defending to the last extremity the sacred ...
Page 68
... remained , wholly devoted to the faction who had mastered the convention.1 1 Th . v . 13 , 14 . meet it . Opinions were divided at Paris how to meet so for- Measures to midable a danger . Barrere , proposed in the name of the Committee ...
... remained , wholly devoted to the faction who had mastered the convention.1 1 Th . v . 13 , 14 . meet it . Opinions were divided at Paris how to meet so for- Measures to midable a danger . Barrere , proposed in the name of the Committee ...
Page 72
... Th . v . 360. in a few days from three hundred to three thousand , embracing all that remained of the elegance of the Fauxbourg St Germains.3 361 . town in France ; a more speedy mode of disposing 72 HISTORY OF EUROPE .
... Th . v . 360. in a few days from three hundred to three thousand , embracing all that remained of the elegance of the Fauxbourg St Germains.3 361 . town in France ; a more speedy mode of disposing 72 HISTORY OF EUROPE .
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Common terms and phrases
Allies amidst arms army arrest artillery Assembly assignats atrocities attack Austrians Beauch besieged Bonchamps Camille Desmoulins camp campaign cause CHAP Charette Chouan Cobourg columns combat command commenced Committee of Public consequence contest Conv Convention Danton death Decemvirs declared decree defeated defence despotic disaster Duke Dumourier efforts enemies exclaimed execution faction fell forces France French frontier garrison Girondists guillotine head Hist horrors human hundred inhabitants insurrection intrenched Jacobin Club Jacobins La Vendée Laroch Larochejaquelein leaders Lescure Loire Louis XVII Marat massacre Mayence measures ment military multitude Nantes neral never Paris party peasants Pichegru pieces of cannon principles prisoners Prussian Public Safety Reign Republic Republicans resistance Revolution Revolutionary Tribunal Rhine Robespierre Royalists scaffold siege sion soldiers soon speedily success terror thousand tion Toul Toulon town troops utmost Valenciennes Vendéans Vendée victims victory vigorous whole
Popular passages
Page 572 - Oh ! bloodiest picture in the book of Time Sarmatia fell unwept, without a crime ; Found not a generous friend, a pitying foe, Strength in her arms, nor mercy in her woe...
Page 132 - That it is a high infringement of the liberties and privileges of the Commons of the United Kingdom for any lord of Parliament, or other...
Page 340 - Vice is a monster of such frightful mien, As, to be hated, needs but to be seen; But seen too oft, familiar with her face, We first endure, then pity, then embrace.
Page 424 - Committees were alone permitted to issue tickets, authorizing purchases of any sort; one species of bread, of coarse quality, was only allowed to be baked ; and to prevent the scandalous scenes which daily occurred at the bakers' shops, where a number of the poor passed a part of the night with the cord in their hands, it was...
Page 285 - Cabinet, in opposition to the demand and earnest wish of Cobourg and all the allied generals, which occasioned this fatal division. The impartial historian must confess with a sigh, that it was British interests which here interfered with the great objects of the war, and that by compelling the English contingent to separate for the siege of Dunkirk, England contributed to postpone for twenty years its glorious termination.
Page 400 - It is in an especial manner remarkable, in this dismal catalogue, how large a proportion of the victims of the Revolution were persons in the middling and lower ranks of life. The priests and nobles guillotined are only 2,413, while the persons of plebeian origin exceed 13,000!
Page 261 - ... if the waves should throw them undrowned on the shore. The citizens, with loud shrieks, implored the lives of the little innocents, and numbers offered to adopt them as their own ; but though a few were granted to their urgent entreaty, the greater part were doomed to destruction. Thus were consigned to the grave whole generations at once — ' the ornament of the present, the hope of the future.
Page 52 - When they arrived at the foot of the scaffold, she had the generosity to renounce, in favour of her companion, the privilege of being first executed. " Ascend first," said she ; " let me at least spare you the pain of seeing my blood flow.
Page 354 - On another occasion, twenty women of Poitou, chiefly the wives of peasants, were placed together on the chariot ; some died on the way, and the wretches guillotined their lifeless remains. One kept her infant in her bosom till she reached the foot of the scaffold ; the executioners tore the...
Page 96 - Orleans demanded only one favour, which was granted ; namely, that his execution should be postponed for twenty-four hours. In the interval he had a repast prepared with care, on which he feasted with more than usual avidity. When led out to execution, he gazed for a time with a smile on his countenance, on the Palais Royal, the scene of his former orgies ; he was detained above a quarter of an hour in front of that palace, by order of Robespierre, who had in vain asked his daughter's hand in marriage...