قراءة كتاب A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 1
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A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 1
href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@11951@[email protected]#linkimage-14" class="pginternal" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">Druids Offering Human Sacrifices——111
The Huns at the Battle of Chalons——135
"Thus Didst Thou to the Vase of Soissons."——139
The Sluggard King Journeying——156
"Thrust Him Away, Or Thou Diest in his Stead."——160
The Execution of Brunehaut——175
"The Arabs Had Decamped Silently in the Night."——195
Charlemagne at the Head of his Army——212
Charlemagne Inflicting Baptism Upon the Saxons——215
The Submission of Wittikind——218
Death of Roland at Roncesvalles——227
Charlemagne and the General Assembly——239
Charlemagne Presiding at the School of The Palace——246
He Remained There a Long While, and his Eyes Were Filled With Tears.——255
Paris Besieged by the Normans——259
The Barks of the Northmen Before Paris——260
Count Eudes Re-entering Paris Right Through the Besiegers- —-262
Ditcar the Monk Recognizing The Head of Morvan——273
Gerbert, Afterwards Pope Sylvester Ii——304
Robert Had a Kindly Feeling for the Weak and Poor——313
Normans Landing on English Coast——353
William the Conqueror Reviewing his Army——357
Edith Discovers the Body of Harold——360
The Four Leaders of the First Crusade——385
The Assault on St. Jean D'acre——386
EXTRACT FROM LETTER TO THE PUBLISHERS.
Every history, and especially that of France, is one vast, long drama, in which events are linked together according to defined laws, and in which the actors play parts not ready made and learned by heart, parts depending, in fact, not only upon the accidents of their birth, but also upon their own ideas and their own will. There are, in the history of peoples, two sets of causes essentially different, and, at the same time, closely connected; the natural causes which are set over the general course of events, and the unrestricted causes which are incidental. Men do not make the whole of history it has laws of higher origin; but, in history, men are unrestricted agents who produce for it results and exercise over it an influence for which they are responsible. The fated causes and the unrestricted causes, the defined laws of events