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قراءة كتاب History of the Girondists, Volume I Personal Memoirs of the Patriots of the French Revolution
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History of the Girondists, Volume I Personal Memoirs of the Patriots of the French Revolution
HISTORY
OF
THE GIRONDISTS;
OR
Personal Memoirs of the Patriots
OF
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
FROM UNPUBLISHED SOURCES.
BY
ALPHONSE DE LAMARTINE,
Author of "Travels in the Holy Land," &c.
IN THREE VOLUMES.
VOL. I.
TRANSLATED BY H. T. RYDE.
LONDON:
HENRY G. BOHN, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN.
1856.
LONDON
PRINTED BY SPOTTISWOODE AND CO.
NEW-STREET SQUARE

Robespierre
ADVERTISEMENT.
We have not thought it necessary to preface this recital by any introduction of the preceding epochs of the Revolution.
We have not re-produced, with the minute elaboration of an annalist, the numerous parliamentary and military details of all the events of these forty months. Two or three times we have, in order to group men and circumstances in masses, made unimportant anachronisms.
We have written after having scrupulously investigated facts and characters: we do not ask to be credited on our mere word only. Although we have not encumbered our work with notes, quotations, and documentary testimony, we have not made one assertion unauthorised by authentic memoirs, by unpublished manuscripts, by autograph letters, which the families of the most conspicuous persons have confided to our care, or by oral and well confirmed statements gathered from the lips of the last survivors of this great epoch.
If some errors in fact or judgment have, notwithstanding, escaped us, we shall be ready to acknowledge them, and repair them in sequent editions, when the proofs have been transmitted to us. We shall not reply one by one to such denials and contradictions as this book may give rise to; it might be a tedious and unprofitable paper-war in the newspapers. But we will make notes of every observation, and reply en masse, by our proofs and tests, after a certain lapse of time. We seek the truth only, and should blush to make our work a calumny of the dead.
As to the title of this book, we have only assumed it, as being unable to find any other which can so well define this recital, which has none of the pretensions of history, and therefore should not affect its gravity. It is an intermediate labour between history and memoirs. Events do not herein occupy so much space as men and ideas. It is full of private details, and details are the physiognomy of characters, and by them they engrave themselves on the imagination.
Great writers have already written the records of this memorable epoch, and others still to follow will write them also. It would be an injustice to compare us with them. They have produced, or will produce, the history of an age. We have produced nothing more than a "study" of a group of men and a few months of the Revolution.
Paris, March 1. 1847.
CONTENTS.
BOOK I. | |
Introduction. Mirabeau. Marries. Enters the National Assembly. | |
His Master Mind. His Death and Character. Glance at the Revolution. | |
The New Idea. Revolution defined. Revolutions the Results of | |
Printing. Bossuet's Warnings. Rousseau. Fénélon. Voltaire. The | |
Philosophers of France. Louis XVI. The King's Ministers. The | |
Queen. Her Conduct and Plans. The National Assembly. Maury. | |
Cazalès. Barnave and the Lameths. Rival Champions. Robespierre. | |
His Personal Appearance. Revolutionary Leaders. State of the Kingdom. | |
Jacobin Club. Effects of the Clubs. Club of the Cordeliers. | |
La Fayette. His Popularity. Characters of the Leaders. What the | |
Revolution might have been | 1 |
BOOK II. | |
State of the Assembly. Discussions. The Periodical Press. The | |
King and his Brothers. He meditates Escape. Various Plans of | |
Flight. The King's embarrassed Position. Marquis de Bouillé. The | |
King and Mirabeau. Preparations for the King's Escape. Fatal Alterations. | |
Anxiety. Rumours. Count de Fersen. A Faithless Servant | |
suspicious. Mode of Escape. Dangers of the Route. The Passport. | |
Hopes of Success. Drouet recognises the King. Narrowly saves his | |
own Life. Varennes. Capture of the Royal Family. Entreaties of | |
the King and Queen. Refusal of the Syndic and his Wife. Conduct of | |
the Soldiers and People. Effect on the Queen. Conduct of the Parisians. | |
Their Rage. La Fayette attacked. Defended by Barnave. | |
Power assumed by La Fayette. La Fayette's Proceedings. The King's | |
Parting Address. Manifesto. Proceedings of the Cordeliers and Jacobins. | |
Robespierre's Address. Its Effect. Danton's Oration. His | |
Audacity and Venality. Address of the Assembly. The King's Arrest | |
known. His Hopes. The Queen's Despair. The Royal Family depart | |
for Paris. De Bouillé's unavailing Efforts. Indignation of the Populace. | |
Barnave's noble Interference. Barnave gained over. Drouet's | |
Declaration. The Entrance into Paris. Arrival at the Tuileries. Barnave | |
and Pétion's report to the Assembly. La Fayette and the Royal | |
Family. The Queen's Courage. Effects of the Flight. The King | |