The History of France, Band 4Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans, and Roberts, 1866 |
Inhalt
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Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
alliance allies army assembly attack Austrian Bavaria Bed of Justice Bourbon Calonne capital capture CHAP Choiseul clergy Colbert colonial command convention court crown D'Aiguillon D'Argenson Danton dauphin declared decree defeated demanded Dubois Duke of Bourbon Duke of Orleans Duke of Savoy Dumouriez Dutch edicts elector emperor enemy England English favour finance Flanders Fleury force France Frederick French German Gironde Girondists Jacobins Jansenists Jesuits king king's Lafayette latter livres Louis the Fifteenth Louis the Fourteenth Louvois Madame Madame de Maintenon Madame de Pompadour Maintenon Marat Marlborough Marshal Mémoires ment millions minister monarch national guard Necker negotiations Noailles nobles Paris parliament peace Philip Poland political Pompadour prince proposed Protestants provinces Prussia queen refused regent resistance revolution Rhine Robespierre royal sent soldiers soon Spain Spanish success tion took towns treaty troops Turgot Versailles Villars vote whilst XXXIII XXXIV XXXV XXXVI СНАР
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 488 - The King addressed the Assembly : — " I am come hither to prevent (enter) a great crime ; and I think I can be nowhere more secure than, gentlemen, in the midst of you." The President replied, " You may reckon, Sir, on the firmness of the National Assembly; the members have sworn to die in defence of the rights of the people and the constituted authorities.
Seite 459 - ... will discover an unknown figure in these pages. In his thirties the novelist was much more ardent and much less circumspect than the later James: he met life eagerly and often with exuberance. He was in the fullest sense an "addicted artist," but one who was guided at every turn by his intellect. And he was a man of action and a man of the world as well. No novelist of his time addressed himself more assiduously to wooing fame and fortune. 16 In my introduction to The Untried Years, I alluded...
Seite 603 - Liberty is happiness, reason, justice, equality, the declaration of rights, in a word, the constitution. If you would have me worship it, open your prisons, set free the 200,000 ye have incarcerated as suspects. I find no such crime in the constitution or the law.
Seite 623 - ... Duke of York, and to all the royal writers, the patents of that ridiculous dignity which they were the first to send me. Kings are too insolent in arrogating to themselves the right, when they are not sure of preserving their own crowns, to distribute them to others. " They call me a tyrant. If I were so they would grovel at my feet. I would gorge them with gold ; I would assure to them the right of committing every crime, and they would be grateful. If I were so, the kings whom we have vanquished,...
Seite 115 - D'Antin and D'O, and in a sharp manner, that told of vexation, and with a severe glance, suddenly thus addressed himself to M. du Maine : "You have wished it; but know that however great I may make you, and you may be in my lifetime, you are nothing after me; and it will be for you then to avail yourself of what I have done for you, if you can.
Seite 399 - He moved an address to the king for the removal of the troops, and the formation of a civic CHAP, guard to preserve order.
Seite 310 - The only thing that could be said in his favour was that, armed with the plenitude of power, he spared no class. " Terrai is a spoiled child," exclaimed the wits ; " he puts his finger in every one's pockets.
Seite 586 - He"bert came forward with a story that Simon the cobbler declared that he had elicited from the little dauphin that his mother had depraved him. Marie Antoinette refused to answer, but when pressed, replied, " Nature refuses to answer such an accusation made against a mother. I appeal to all the mothers here ! " exclaimed the queen, turning round. A murmur of approbation arose even from that audience, which was at least sufficient to silence He"bert.
Seite 401 - XXXYIIrThe people hastened thither, took those of Necker and the Duke of Orleans, who was said to have been arrested, and, crowning them with crape, bore them in procession through the streets.