书城公版The Origins of Contemporary France
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第275章

Depositions 35, 83, 91, 98, 146, and 24. -- 4th. On the money distributed. Depositions 49, 56, 71, 82, 110, 126.

[32] "Procédure Criminelle du Chatelet." Deposition 61. "During the night scenes, not very decent, occurred among these people, which the witness thought it useless to relate."[33] "Procédure Criminelle du Chatelet." Depositions 35, 44, 81. --Buchez and Roux, III. 120. (Minutes of the meeting of the Commune, October 5th.) Journal de Paris, October 12th. A few days after, M.

Pic, clerk of the prosecutor, brought "a package of 100,000 francs which he had saved from the enemies' hands," and another package of notes was found thrown, in the hubbub, into a receipt-box.

[34] "Procédure Criminelle du Chatelet." Depositions 61, 77, 81, 148, 154. -- Dumont, 181. -- Mounier, "Exposé justificatif," and specially "Fait relatif à la dernière insurrection."[35] "Procédure Criminelle du Chatelet." Deposition 168. The witness sees on leaving the King's apartment " several women dressed as fish-wives, one of whom, with a pretty face, has a paper in her hand, and who exclaims as she holds it up, 'He! F..., we have forced the guy to sign.' "[36] "Procédure Criminelle du Chatelet." Depositions 89, 91, 98.

"Promising all, even raising their petticoats before them."[37] "Procédure Criminelle du Chatelet," Depositions 9, 20, 24, 30, 49, 61, 82, 115, 149, 155.

[38] Procédure criminelle du Chatelet." Depositions 7, 30, 35, 40. -- Cf. Lafayette, "Mémoires," and Madame Campan, "Mémoires."[39] "Procédure Criminelle du Chatelet." Deposition 24. A number of butcher-boys run after the carriages issuing from the Petite-Ecurie shouting out, "Don't let the curs escape!"[40] "Procédure Criminelle du Chatelet." Depositions 101, 91, 89, and 17. M. de Miomandre, a body-guard, mildly says to the ruffians mounting the staircase: "My friends, you love your King, and yet you come to annoy him even in his palace!"[41] Malouet, II. 2. "I felt no distrust," says Lafayette in 1798;"the people promised to remain quiet."[42] "Procédure Criminelle du Chatelet." Depositions 9, 16, 60, 128, 129, 130, 139, 158, 168, 170. -- M. du Repaire, body-guard, being sentry at the railing from two o'clock in the morning, a man passes his pike through the bars saying, "You embroidered b. . . , your turn will come before long." M. de Repaire, " retires within the sentry-box without saying a word to this man, considering the orders that have been issued not to act."[43] "Procédure Criminelle du Chatelet." Depositions 82, 170 --Madame Campan. II. 87. -- De Lavalette, I.33. -- Cf. Bertrand de Molleville, Mémoires."[44] Duval," Souvenirs de la Terreur," I. 78. (Doubtful in almost everything, but here he is an eye-witness. He dined opposite the hair-dresser's, near the railing of the Park of Saint-Cloud.) -- M.

de Lally-Tollendal's second letter to a friend. "At the moment the King entered his capital with two bishops of his council with him in the carriage, the cry was heard, "Off to the lamp post with the bishops!"[45] De Montlosier, I. 303. -- Moniteur, sessions of the 8th, 9th, and 10th of October. -- Malouet, II. 9, 10, 20. -- Mounier, Recherches sur les Causes, etc.," and "Addresse aux Dauphinois."[46] De Ferrières, I. 346. (On the 9th of October, 300 members have already taken their passports.) Mercure de France, No. of the 17th October. Correspondence of Mirabeau and M. de la Marck, I. 116, 126, 364.

[47] Correspondence of Mirabeau and M. de la Marck, I.175. (The words of Monsieur to M. de la Marck.)