Lectures on History: Second and Concluding Series, on the French Revolution, Tom 2W. Pickering, 1840 |
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10th of August 14th of July Abbé afterwards allied powers allude appeared arms army Austrian Barbaroux Bertrand de Moleville carriage cause civil conceive conduct considered Constituent Assembly constitution Constitutionalists court crimes danger Danton declared decree defend dethronement dreadful Duc de Choiseul Duke Duke of Brunswick Dumourier endeavoured enemies faults favour Fayette feelings flight to Varennes foreign powers France freedom French French Revolution friends Girondists historian honour human insurrection Jacobin club Jacobins king king's La Fayette Lally lecture Legislative Assembly liberty Louis Louis XVI majesty Mallet du Pan manifesto mankind manner massacred means measure Memoirs ministers Mirabeau monarchy Mounier National Assembly national guards nature never observe occasion old régime opinions palace Paris patriots Pétion popular party principles prison queen reasonable Revolution royal family says scene sentiments suppose Swiss thing thought tion troops Tuileries Varennes veto violent whole wish
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Strona 331 - Cover your heads, and mock not flesh and blood With solemn reverence : throw away respect, Tradition, form, and ceremonious duty, For you have but mistook me all this while: I live with bread like you, feel want, Taste grief, need friends: subjected thus, How can you say to me I am a king?
Strona 331 - To monarchize, be fear'd, and kill with looks; Infusing him with self and vain conceit, — As if this flesh, which walls about our life, Were brass impregnable; and...
Strona 43 - Early reformations are amicable arrangements with a friend in power; late reformations are terms imposed upon a conquered enemy : early reformations are made in cool blood; late reformations are made under a state of inflammation. In that state of things the people behold in government nothing that is respectable. They see the abuse, and they will see nothing else. They fall into the temper of a furious populace provoked...
Strona 82 - ... impossible not to admire; but the old Parisian ferocity has broken out in a shocking manner. It is true that this may be no more than a sudden explosion ; if so, no indication can be taken from it ; but if it should be character, rather than accident, then that people are not fit for liberty, and must have a strong hand, like that of their former masters, to coerce them.
Strona 81 - Ye horrid towers, the abode of broken hearts ; Ye dungeons, and ye cages of despair, That monarchs have supplied from age to age With music, such as suits their sovereign ears, The sighs and groans of miserable men ! There's not an English heart that would not leap To hear that ye were fallen at last; to know That e'en our enemies, so oft employ'd In forging chains for us, themselves were free.
Strona 80 - Touched by the patriot flame, he rent, amazed, The flimsy bonds, and round and round him gazed ; Starts up from earth above the admiring throng, Lifts his colossal form and towers along; High o'er his foes his hundred arms he rears...
Strona 82 - ... even though against a predominant and fashionable opinion : — When I know all this of France, I shall be as well pleased as every one must be, who has not forgot the general communion of mankind, nor lost his natural sympathy, in local and accidental connexions.
Strona 325 - Tuileries be forced or insulted, if the least violence be offered, the least outrage done to their majesties, the king, the queen, and the royal family, if they be not immediately placed in safety and set at liberty, they will inflict on those who shall deserve it the most exemplary and ever memorable avenging punishments, by giving up the city of Paris to military execution, and exposing it to total destruction ; and the rebels who shall be guilty of illegal resistance shall suffer the punishments...
Strona 43 - ... imposed upon a conquered enemy : early reformations are made in cool blood ; late reformations are made under a state of inflammation. In that state of things the people behold in government nothing that is respectable. They see the abuse, and they will see nothing else : they fall into the temper of a furious populace provoked at the disorder of a house of ill fame ; they never attempt to correct or regulate ; they go to work by the shortest way : they abate the nuisance, they pull down the...
Strona 83 - I cannot think, with you, that the Assembly have done much. They have, indeed, undone a great deal ; and so completely broken up their country as a State, that I assure you, there are few here such antigallicans as not to feel some pity on the deplorable view of the wreck of France.