Considerations on the Principal Events of the French Revolution, Volume 3Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 1818 - France |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 55
Page 4
... virtue of laws passed by the dele- gates of a people and accepted by the king , it is the interest of nations , who also are hereditary and even legitimate , to acknowledge a dynasty called to the throne by right of primogeniture . If ...
... virtue of laws passed by the dele- gates of a people and accepted by the king , it is the interest of nations , who also are hereditary and even legitimate , to acknowledge a dynasty called to the throne by right of primogeniture . If ...
Page 89
... virtue during the est charge against that degradation of knowledge fifteen years that it lasted . After Jacobinism was past , there remained a nation that had not parti- cipated in its crimes , and the revolutionary tyranny might be ...
... virtue during the est charge against that degradation of knowledge fifteen years that it lasted . After Jacobinism was past , there remained a nation that had not parti- cipated in its crimes , and the revolutionary tyranny might be ...
Page 90
... virtues could we find any trace in the political parties with which the Imperial Government had surrounded itself . The mass in all orders of society , the military , peasants , men of family , men in trade , still pos- sessed great and ...
... virtues could we find any trace in the political parties with which the Imperial Government had surrounded itself . The mass in all orders of society , the military , peasants , men of family , men in trade , still pos- sessed great and ...
Page 97
... towards misfortune ; all these virtues , which exist in our nature as well as in reflection , were treated as chimerical or as romantic exaggera- VOL . III . H tion , even by the young men of that school THE FRENCH REVOLUTION . 97.
... towards misfortune ; all these virtues , which exist in our nature as well as in reflection , were treated as chimerical or as romantic exaggera- VOL . III . H tion , even by the young men of that school THE FRENCH REVOLUTION . 97.
Page 102
... witness that they had acted in the most honourable and disinterested manner , according to their opinion , their minds were calm and benevolent . But those , whose virtuous indigna- tion against 102 CONSIDERATIONS ON.
... witness that they had acted in the most honourable and disinterested manner , according to their opinion , their minds were calm and benevolent . But those , whose virtuous indigna- tion against 102 CONSIDERATIONS ON.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
admirable ancient arbitrary army assembly Bishop of Troyes Bonaparte Bonapartists called cause character Charles II circumstances civil clergy constitutional charter court courtiers declared defend desire despotism divine right doctrine dread dynasty elections Emperor enemies England enlightened established Europe exist favour foreign France French Frenchmen friends of liberty habits heart Henry IV Henry VIII hereditary honour House House of Bourbon House of Peers human influence institutions interest justice kind King Lord Lord Wellington Louis XIV Louis XVI Louis XVIII manner Marshal Soult ment military mind ministers ministry monarch morals Napoleon nation nature necessary never nobility noble noblesse old government Paris parliament party Peers persons political possess princes principles public opinion rank reign religion render representative government respect Revolution royal royalists sentiments society sovereign talent Talleyrand thing throne tion truth tyranny virtues wish
Popular passages
Page 309 - One stain only obscures the perfect splendor of reason that vivifies that country ; slavery still subsists in the southern provinces ; but when congress shall have found a remedy for that evil, how shall we be able to refuse the most profound respect to the institutions of the United States ? Whence comes it then, that many English allow themselves to speak with disdain of such a people ? " They are shop-keepers,
Page 227 - Attorney-General (indeed, there can be no possible doubt), that if the same pistol had been maliciously fired by the prisoner in the same theatre at the meanest man within its walls, he would have been brought to immediate trial, and, if guilty, to immediate execution. He would have heard the charge against him for the first time when the indictment was read upon his arraignment.
Page 403 - ... more, unite in the holy league. Is it then from the calculations of interest, is it from bad motives, that men so superior, in situations and countries so different, should be in such harmony in their political opinions ? Without doubt, knowledge is necessary to enable us to soar above prejudices ; but it is in the soul also that the principles of liberty are founded ; — they make the heart palpitate like love and friendship, — they come from nature, — they ennoble the character. One connected...
Page 226 - The scene which we are engaged in, and the duty which I am not merely privileged, but appointed by the authority of the Court to perform, exhibits to the whole civilized world a perpetual monument of our national justice. " The transaction, indeed, in every part of it, as it stands recorded in the evidence already before us, places our country, and its government, and its inhabitants, upon the highest pinnacle of human elevation.
Page 229 - An attack upon the King is considered to be parricide against the State, and the jury and the witnesses, and even the Judges, are the children. It is fit, on that account, that there should be a solemn pause before we rush to judgment. And what can be a more sublime spectacle of justice than to see a statutable disqualification of a whole nation for a limited period, a fifteen days...
Page 193 - Jeffreys succeeded after some interval, and showed the people that the rigors of law might equal, if not exceed, the ravages of military tyranny. This man, who wantoned in cruelty, had already given a specimen of his character in many trials where he presided, and he now set out with a savage joy, as to a full harvest of death and destruction.
Page 402 - Stael, that throughout the world, wherever a certain depth of thought exists, there is not to be found an enemy to freedom. From one end of the world to the other, the friends of freedom maintain communication by knowledge, as religious men by sentiments ; or rather knowledge and sentiment unite in the love of freedom, as in that of the Supreme Being. Is the question, the abolition of the slave trade, or the liberty of the press, or religious toleration ? — Jefferson thinks as Lafayette ; Lafayette,...
Page 191 - Kirke, a soldier of fortune, who had long served at Tangiers, and had contracted, from his intercourse with the Moors, an inhumanity less known in European and in free countries. At his first entry into Bridgewater, he hanged nineteen prisoners, without the least inquiry into the merits of their cause : as if to make sport with death, he ordered a certain number to be executed, while he and his company should drink the king's health, or the queen's, or that of chief-justice Jefferies : observing...
Page 196 - ... heard of their joining the rebellion of Monmouth: That though she might be obnoxious on account of her family, it was well known, that her heart was ever loyal, and that no person in England had shed more tears for that tragical event, in which her husband had unfortunately borne too great a share : and that the same principles, which she herself had ever embraced, she had carefully instilled into her son, and had, at that very time, sent him to fight against those rebels whom she was now accused...
Page 194 - And on the whole, besides those who were butchered by the military commanders, two hundred and fifty-one are computed to have fallen by the hand of justice. The whole country was strewed with the heads and limbs of traitors. Every village almost beheld the dead carcass of a wretched inhabitant. And all the rigours of justice, unabated by any appearance of clemency, were fully displayed to the people by the inhuman Jefferies.