Recollections of Republican France, from 1790 to 1801, Volume 1 |
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9th Thermidor Abbé absurd accused Albittes amongst appeared aristocratic arms army artillery Assembly aulic council became behold blood bound brother Buonaparte ça ira Cæsar called Camille Desmoulins Carmagnole celebrated Champ de Mars clergy Collot Collot d'Herbois considered Convention Court d'Herbois Danton death delight Denon denounced destruction doubt Dugazon Edition endeavoured enemies England English entertained excited exclaimed execution father favourite fearful ferocious fire France French Government guillotine hand head Ibrascha influence Jacobin Club Jacobins King ladies liberty Louis XVI Madame Madame Roland Marat Marie Antoinette massacre MEMOIRS ment monarch mother Napoleon National Guard occasion opinion Paris party person Peuple political popular Portrait post 8vo priests prisoners Queen recollect reign Republican Robespierre Royal Royalist ruffian Salut Public Sans-Culottes scaffold scenes Servois strange terror theatre tion took tribunal unfortunate victims vols women young
Popular passages
Page 3 - We must pronounce Miss Strickland beyond all comparison the most entertaining historian in the English language. She is certainly a woman of powerful and active mind, as well as of scrupulous justice and honesty of purpose.
Page 9 - Southey still in petticoats. Her Diary is written in her earliest and best manner ; in true woman's English, clear, natural, and lively. It ought to be consulted by every person who wishes to be well acquainted with the history of our literature and our manners. The account which she gives of the king's illness will, we think, be more valued by the historians of a future age than any equal portions of Pepys' or Evelyn's Diaries." — Edinburgh Review. " This publication will take its place in the...
Page 11 - LETTERS OF THE KINGS OF ENGLAND.— Now first collected from the Originals in Royal Archives, and from other Authentic Sources, private as well as public. Edited, with Historical Introduction and Notes, by JO Halliwell.
Page 2 - A work of greater interest than has been placed before the public for a considerable time. The Memoirs abound in matter which is both useful and amusing. The political portions of the work are of undoubted value and interest, and embody a considerable amount of very curious historical information, hitherto inaccessible even to the most determined and persevering student.
Page 16 - A more valuable or instructive •work, or one more full of perilous adventure and heroic enterprise, we have never met with." — John Bull. " It deserves to be a standard work in all libraries, and it will become so.
Page 17 - ... judiciously communicated — sound and enlarged views of important questions — a hearty and generous love of country — and the whole pervaded by a refined but sometimes caustic humour, which imparts a constant attraction to its pages. We can cordially recommend it to our readers, as well for the amusement of its lighter portions, the vivid brilliancy of its descriptions, and the solid information it contains respecting Canada, and the position generally of England in the new world.
Page 3 - A valuable contribution to historical knowledge. It contains a mass of every kind of historical matter of interest, which industry and research could collect. We have derived much entertainment and instruction from the work.
Page 9 - Madame d'Arblay lived to be a classic. Time set on her fame, before she went hence, that seal which is seldom set except on the fame of the departed. All those whom we have been accustomed to revere as intellectual patriarchs seemed children when compared with her ; for Burke had sat up all night to read her writings, and Johnson had pronounced her superior to Fielding, when Kogers was still a schoolboy, and Southey still in petticoats.
Page 12 - The most complete, the most convenient, and the cheapest work of the kind ever given to the public." — Sun. " The best genealogical and heraldic dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage, and the first authority on all questions affecting the aristocracy.
Page 12 - It connects, in many instances, the new with the old nobility, and it will in all cases show the cause which has influenced the revival of an extinct dignity in a new creation. It should be particularly noticed, that this new work appertains nearly as much to extant as to extinct persons of distinction; for though dignities pass away, it rarely occurs that whole families do.