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Taine, Hippolyte, 1828-1893

"The French Revolution - Volume 3"

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[53] Mallet-Dupan, II., 267, 278, 331.
[54] Mallet-Dupan, II., 265. "Not only have they discarded (at Paris)
the Republicans, but even those among the old Constituents, known or
denounced for having taken too important a part in the first
revolution . . . . Men have been chosen who aspired to a modified
and not perverted monarchy. The suffrages have equally distanced
themselves from the sectarian royalists of the ancient r?gime as well
as the violent anti-revolutionaries."
[55] Mallet-Dupan, 11., 298. "The deputies never attack a
revolutionary law, but they are mistrusted of some design of
destroying the results of the Revolution, and every time they speak of
regulating the Republic they are accused of ill-will to the Republic."
[56] Thibaudeau, II., 171. - Carnot, II., 106. - The programme of
Barth?l?my is contained in this simple phrase: "I would render the
Republic administrative." On the foreign policy, his ideas, so
temperate, pacific and really French, are received with derision by
the other Directors. (Andre Lebon, " Angleterre et l'Emigration
Fran?aise," p. 335.)
[57] Mathieu Dumas, "Souvenirs," III., 153. - Camille Jordan.


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