Louis XVII: His Life, His Suffering, His Death : the Captivity of the Royal Family in the TempleHarper & Bros., 1853 That ever yet this land was guilty of. Shakespeare: Richard III., Act iv., Sc. 3. Louis OF france, the seventeenth of the name, lived only ten years, two months, and twelve days. He bore the title of king only beneath the thatched roofs of La Vendee, and Within the tents of an exiled nobility. A few words, then, might seem to suffice for the narration of his life. -- Provided by publisher. |
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Side 43
... asking her who gave her that hat , she replied that she had it from her brother , who had given it to her when they lived together in the little tower , in order , as he said , that she might have something to keep that had belonged to ...
... asking her who gave her that hat , she replied that she had it from her brother , who had given it to her when they lived together in the little tower , in order , as he said , that she might have something to keep that had belonged to ...
Side 44
... asked the municipal to let the child have the chair which he generally used , and offered the man himself another . Bernard roughly refused , saying , before the Queen and the Princesses : I never saw chair or table either given to pri ...
... asked the municipal to let the child have the chair which he generally used , and offered the man himself another . Bernard roughly refused , saying , before the Queen and the Princesses : I never saw chair or table either given to pri ...
Side 76
... asking the reasons of things , as if reasons were made for him ! Come , come , silence Capet ! or I'll show the citizens how I work you when you deserve it . " The unhappy prisoner turned again to the municipals , loudly claiming their ...
... asking the reasons of things , as if reasons were made for him ! Come , come , silence Capet ! or I'll show the citizens how I work you when you deserve it . " The unhappy prisoner turned again to the municipals , loudly claiming their ...
Side 99
... asked whether she had hurt herself : Oh , no ! ' said she ; ' nothing hence- forth can hurt me . ' She got into a carriage with a municipal and two gendarmes . " I shall add nothing to this account , left us by Marie Thérèse . * I will ...
... asked whether she had hurt herself : Oh , no ! ' said she ; ' nothing hence- forth can hurt me . ' She got into a carriage with a municipal and two gendarmes . " I shall add nothing to this account , left us by Marie Thérèse . * I will ...
Side 103
... asked the master , with an oath . " D - ¿ King of Montbrison , thou shalt ery Vive la République ! ' or-- " and the sentence was finished by his attitude and gesture much more eloquently than could have been done in words . The Prince ...
... asked the master , with an oath . " D - ¿ King of Montbrison , thou shalt ery Vive la République ! ' or-- " and the sentence was finished by his attitude and gesture much more eloquently than could have been done in words . The Prince ...
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Louis XVII, His Life, His Suffering, His Death: The Captivity of the Royal ... Alcide Beauchesne Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1855 |
Louis XVII: His Life, His Suffering, His Death : the Captivity of ..., Volum 1 Alcide Beauchesne Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1853 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
9th Thermidor accused afterwards aged appointed Bacher Basle Benezech Brumaire cemetery child citizen citizeness commissaries committee of public Commune of Paris Conciergerie council-general Dauphin death declaration decree Desault door Dumangin duty execution eyes feeling France French Republic Frimaire give given Gomin guard hand head heard heart Hébert honour Huningue indivisible keepers Lasne Laurent letter linen little Capet Louis XVI Madame de Soucy Madame Elizabeth Madame Royale Marie Antoinette Marie-Thérèse minister morning mother mournful municipal National Convention native of Paris never Nivôse o'clock passed Pelletan persons police Prairial present Princess prisoners Queen remained replied residing at Paris revolutionary revolutionary tribunal Riehen Robespierre royal family safety scaffold Seine-et-Oise sent Simon sister suffering tears Temple council Temple tower Thermidor thought Tison took Toulan Tourzel tribunal Vendémiaire Ventôse widow wife words XVII young King young Prince
Populære avsnitt
Side 450 - Emperor of the French, King of Italy, Protector of the Confederation of the Rhine, Mediator of the Swiss Confederation.
Side 139 - I know how much pain the child must have caused you. Forgive him, my dear sister; think of his age, and how easy it is to make a child say whatever one...
Side 332 - Ma fille, tendre objet de mes dernières peines, Songe au moins, songe au sang qui coule dans tes veines! C'est le sang de vingt rois , tous chrétiens comme moi ; C'est le sang des héros, défenseurs de ma loi; C'est le sang des martyrs....
Side 174 - The door of communication between the two was cut down, " so as to leave it breast-high, fastened with nails and screws, and grated from top to bottom with bars of iron. Half-way up was placed a shelf, on which the bars opened, forming a sort of wicket, closed by other moveable bars, and fastened with an enormous padlock. By this wicket his coarse food was passed in to little Capet, and it was on the ledge that he had to put whatever he wanted to send away.
Side 306 - At last he suffered so much that it was no longer possible for him to walk, and his keeper carried him about, sometimes on the platform, and sometimes in the little tower, where the royal family had lived at first. But the slight improvement to his health occasioned by the change of air scarcely compensated for the pain which his fatigue gave him.
Side 201 - Cerberus, turning his lantern on the opening. ' All right. Get to bed. In ! Down ! ' Perhaps two or three hours afterwards the enormous keys grated harshly again, and the iron door moved on its hinges : it was the turn of some commissaries who had been delayed, and who, no less zealous or as curious as the first arrivals, wished to see the prisoner — thus bringing disturbance to a rest that was just again commencing, and terror to an imagination that was beginnmg to grow calm.
Side 63 - ... remaining strength of her perturbed heart, she sat down upon a chair, drew her son before her, laid her hands on his little shoulders, and calm, motionless, and composed in her distress, without shedding a tear, or heaving a single sigh, she said to him, in a sad and solemn tone : ' My child, we are going to part. Remember your duty when I am no longer present to remind you of it. Never forget the good God who tries your faith, nor your mother who loves you. Be good, patient, and straightforward,...
Side 174 - It was the system of solitary confinement. ' He had a room to walk in, a bed to lie upon ; he had bread and water, and linen and clothes ; but he had neither fire nor candle. His room was warmed only by a stove-pipe, the stove being placed in the outer-room ; it was lighted only by the gleam of a lamp suspended opposite the grating, through the bars of which also it was that the stovepipe passed.
Side 60 - ... them which was likely to enlarge their misery. But the subtlest human foresight cannot tell what a day may bring forth. Unthought of, and unsuspected by the prisoners of the Temple, on the 1st of July, 1793, appears the following decree : " The Committee of Public Safety decrees that the son of Capet be separated from his mother, and committed to the charge of a tutor, to be chosen by the Council-General of the Commune.
Side 224 - ... members of the Committee of General Safety repaired to the Temple, the barrier and the wicket were torn down, and " in a dark room, from which exhaled an odour of corruption and death, on a dirty unmade bed, barely covered with a filthy cloth and a ragged pair of trousers, a child of nine years old was lying motionless, his back bent, his face wan and wasted with misery, and his features exhibiting an expression of mournful apathy and rigid unintelligence. His head and neck were fretted by purulent...