The French Revolution (Vol.1-3). Taine Hippolyte

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Название The French Revolution (Vol.1-3)
Автор произведения Taine Hippolyte
Жанр Документальная литература
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Издательство Документальная литература
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isbn 4064066060053



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morning they prowl around the palace-railings. Lafayette, exhausted with fatigue, has taken an hour's repose,1441 which hour suffices for them.1442 A populace armed with pikes and clubs, men and women, surrounds a squad of eighty-eight National Guards, forces them to fire on the King's Guards, bursts open a door, seizes two of the guards and chops their heads off. The executioner, who is a studio model, with a heavy beard, stretches out his blood-stained hands and glories in the act; and so great is the effect on the National Guard that they move off; through sensibility, in order not to witness such sights: such is the resistance! In the meantime the crowd invade the staircases, beat down and trample on the guards they encounter, and burst open the doors with imprecations against the Queen. The Queen runs off; just in time, in her underclothes; she takes refuge with the King and the rest of the royal family, who have in vain barricaded themselves in the oeil-de-Boeuf, a door of which is broken in: here they stand, awaiting death, when Lafayette arrives with his grenadiers and saves all that can be saved—their lives, and nothing more. For, from the crowd huddled in the marble court the shout rises, "To Paris with the King!" a command to which the King submits.

      VI.—The Government and the nation in the hands of the revolutionary party.

       Table of Contents

      "If you have any influence with the King or the Queen, persuade them that they and France are lost if the royal family does not leave Paris. I am busy with a plan for getting them away."

      1401 (return) [ Bailly, "Mémoires," II. 195, 242.]

      1402 (return) [ Elysée Loustalot, journalist, editor of the paper "Révolutions de Paris," was a young lawyer who had shown a natural genius for innovative journalism. He was to die already in 1790. (SR.)]

      1403 (return) [ Montjoie, ch. LXX, p. 65.]

      1404 (return) [ Bailly, II. 74, 174, 242, 261, 282, 345, 392.]

      1405 (return) [ Such