Lives of Remarkable Characters, who Have Distinguished Themselves from the Commencement of the French Revolution to the Present Time, Volum 2

Forside
Alph. de Beauchamp
Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1811
 

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112
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120
Del 4
186

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Side 227 - Madame de Lamballe's sincere attachment to the Queen was her only crime. In the midst of our commotions she had played no part ; nothing could render her suspected by the people, to whom she was only known by repeated acts of beneficence. When summoned to the bar of La Force, many among the crowd besought pardon for her, and the assassins for a moment stood doubtful, but soon murdered her. Immediately they cut off her head and her breasts ; her body was opened, her heart torn out ; and the...
Side 106 - Religion considered as the only Basis of Happiness and of true Philosophy, published in 1787; the Annals of Virtue; and Christian Hours.
Side 348 - Calvinist parents, was not five feet high ; his face was hideous, and his head monstrous for his size. From nature he derived a daring mind, an ungovernable imagination, a vindictive temper, and a ferocious heart. He studied medicine before he settled in Paris, where he was long in indigence. At last he obtained the situation of veterinary surgeon to the Count d'Artois. At the period of the Revolution, his natural enthusiasm rose to delirium...
Side 88 - South, he displayed all the activity of his coadjutor, and shewed besides an inexhaustible fund of cruelty, in his correspondence and in his private conduct. On their arrival at Marseilles, in the beginning of October, 1793, they organized there a committee, which occasioned all the calamities of the town, erected scaffolds, destroyed workshops, and ruined commerce; they published there a proclamation, announcing that terror was the order of the day, and that to save Marseilles, and to raze Toulon...
Side 87 - Freron was son of the journalist Freron, the antagonist of Voltaire and of the philosophic sect. Brought up at the college Louis-le-Grand with Robespierre, he became in the Revolution his friend, his emulator, and, at last, his denouncer. In 1789 he began to edit the ' Orator of the People,' and became the coadjutor of Marat.
Side 347 - Manuel was born at Montargis in 1751. On the trial of the King, he voted for imprisonment and banishment in the event of peace. When the Queen's trial came on, he was summoned as a witness against her, but only expressed admiration of her fortitude, and pity for her misfortunes.
Side 80 - Fouquier Tinville who was excessively artful, quick in attributing guilt, and skilled in controverting facts, showed immoveable presence of mind on his trial. While standing before the tribunal from which he had condemned so many victims, he kept constantly writing ; but like Argus, all eyes and ears, he lost not while he wrote, one single word uttered by the president, by an accused person, by a judge, by a witness, or by a public accuser. He affected to sleep during the public accuser's recapitulation,...
Side 136 - Father Duchene is very uneasy, and will be very angry when Sampson makes him tipsy." At the foot even of the scaffold he heard these phrases called from his journal. A young man, whose family he had destroyed, cried out to him, " To-day is the great anger of Father Duchene. We must see how angry he is with those false patriots who are going to play at hot-cockles, look through the little window, and sneeze in the bag.
Side 79 - They did not know," they said, " but he might run after the condemned persons and inquire;" upon which they all began to laugh, saying,
Side 173 - E. ,••!(•• with repeated cries of " To arms! to arms!" At this moment several deputies represented to the Assembly that the determination which it had taken was imprudent, that an end ought to be put to a dangerous crisis...

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