The History of France, 第 5 巻

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Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans, and Roberts, 1868
 

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目次

Legislature and Tribunate rid of the Liberals
96
Press
99
Population vote the Consulate for Life
104
Troubles in Switzerland
107
Bonaparte declared Emperor May 1804
112
His Letter to the King of England
119
Battle of Austerlitz December 1805
127
Siege of Acrc
130
Battle of Eylau January 1807
134
It forms the culminating Point of Napoleons Career
141
Milan Decrees
147
Meeting of Napoleon and Alexander at Erfurt
158
On the 18th Brumaire Bonaparte disperses the Assemblies
163
Louisa
169
Its Fear that Napoleon will resucitate Poland
176
Napoleon at Dresden 1812
185
17
186
Napoleon quits the Army and reaches Paris December
194
Battle of Lutzen May 1813
201
Battle of Vittoria
207
Battles of Leipzig October
214
Napoleon at Fontainebleau
225
The New Constitution
229
CHAP XLIV
238
150
251
Talleyrand and Fouché
260
A Royalist Parliament
266
Massacre of Protestants in the South
272
Fouché Minister of Police
293
In Naples
309
Conspiracies of Béfort and Saumur 1822
316
Châteaubriand proposes military Intervention in Spain
343
The Coronation at Rheims
346
Attempts to establish the Right of the Eldest Son to inherit
352
The Duke dela Rochefoucaulds Remains outraged by the Police
359
Discontent first Barricades
365
Expedition to Greece
371
The Liberals go against him Martignac withdraws the
378
Parliament denounces the Ministry in the Address
384
Somewhat similar to that led by Blanqui to overturn
418
Châteaubriand proposes to maintain Henry the Fifth
419
Prussian Menaces to enter Belgium met by Declaration of Count
427
The New Electoral
432
His Interview with the Ambassadors
460
The Compte rendu
467
Lord Castlereagh replaces Lord Aberdeen in English Negotia
468
Prime Minister November
472
October 1832
475
Law against Associations 1833
482
The Belgian Revolution
490
Severe Laws of September
496
Humanns Purpose of reducing the Five per Cents breaks
508
The Coalition set aside it adopts the Cry of Reform
519
Lord Aberdeens Weakness
566
for the Liberal Cause owing to the Quarrel with England
573
The Tribunate
578
Revolution of July 1848
587
CHAP XLVIII
600
Meeting of the New Assembly May 4
617
Candidates for Power
624
Ville
629
Triumph of Cavaignac
632
Mission of Lesseps
640
Napoleon and the Monarchists
646
President dismisses
652
The Prince preparing should this be carried to march on
658
Deputies arrested
664
Insurrection at Grenoble May 1816
672
Napoleons Address to his Legislative Assembly
673
Moreau drives the Austrians from Swabia
677
Thiers for Intervention in Spain
681
Prince Talleyrand Ambassador in London
682
Bonaparte crosses the St Bernard with his Army May 1800
683
An Austrian Princess sought for the Duke of Orleans
695
Violent Death of the Prince of Condé
696
Expedition against Algiers
702
That of Montereau
704
Laffitte in Difficulties
708
Government resistance of the 27th
715
Dotation for the Duke of Nemours
717
His Resignation March 1831
723
Battle of Marengo June
724
Hôtel de Ville and Notre Dame seized by the People on
727
307
728
Is succeeded by Casimir Périer
729
Whom it overthrows Difficulties and Delays in forming
736
Périers Policy
737
313
739
Royalists at Troyes
751
Treaty of Chaumont between the Allies March
757
New Chamber gives but Majority of One to Périer
765
Diebitsch and Paskéwitsch
773
Fall of Warsaw September
783
Provisional Ministry March 1837
788
Negotiations for Peace
790
Deputies at the Tuileries on the 28th
794
St Simonianism in Lyons
799
Capture of the Louvre on the 29th
802
Battle of Hohenlinden
809
Marmonts Evacuation of Paris
812
Courts vain Endeavour to treat
819
The Emperor Pauls Hostility to England
821
Battles of Heliopolis and Aboukir
829
Semonville Mortemart the Duke of Orleans
831
The Red Flag
835
And in Paris
837

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194 ページ - ... on each side of which lay about sixty naked prisoners, prostrate but with their heads on the tree, which those furies were striking in accompaniment to a national air or song which they were yelling in concert ; while several hundred armed peasants were quietly looking on as guardians of the direful orgies. When the cavalcade approached, the sufferers uttered piercing shrieks, and kept incessantly crying, ' La mort ! La mart / ' " r DE CHAMBRAY'S ACCOUNT OF NEY'S RETREAT On the 17th of November,...
383 ページ - You will repel, with contempt, the perfidious insinuations which malevolence is busy in propagating. If guilty intrigues should throw any obstacles in the way of my government, which I cannot and will not anticipate, I should find force to overcome them, in my resolution to preserve the public peace, in the just confidence I have in the French nation, and in the love which they have always evinced for their kings.
381 ページ - The very name of Polignac as minister was a declaration of war on the part of the government against the nation.
195 ページ - ... his. He had enabled every great man of England, after he had achieved his task — perhaps it was a great speech, a great battle, or perhaps a great blunder [laughter] — to take up Punch and see himself exactly as others saw him. He had also taught the great men of England in the last half century that there was but one step from the sublime to the ridiculous.
194 ページ - Sir Robert Wilson proceeds to relate it 1 ' All prisoners were immediately and invariably stripped stork naked and marched in columns in that state, or turned adrift to be the sport and the victims of the peasantry, who would not always let them, as they sought to do, point and hold the muzzles of the guns against their own heads or hearts to terminate their...
383 ページ - If criminal maneuvers were to place obstacles in the way of my government, which I neither can, nor wish to foresee, I should find the power of surmounting them in a resolution to maintain the public peace, in the just confidence of the French people, and in the devotion which they have always demonstrated for their king.
650 ページ - ... candidature in the pending Presidential election. The Constitution forbade the existing President to be re-elected. Louis Napoleon demanded a revision of the Constitution, because the chiefs of the parliamentary majority had broken faith with him, and had put forward the Prince de Joinville as a candidate, demanding the abrogation of the Law of Exile, in order to permit the Prince to return to France, and to stand as a candidate. The refusal of the Assembly to revise the Constitution in the above...
406 ページ - It may indeed be so," rejoined the Duke, " but eruption or earthquake will at least leave me here. I shall not budge from this palace.
232 ページ - The allied powers having proclaimed that the Emperor Napoleon is the only obstacle to the re-establishment of peace in Europe, the Emperor Napoleon, faithful to his oath, declares that he renounces for himself and his heirs, the thrones of France and Italy, and that there is no personal sacrifice, even that of life, which he is not ready to make for the interests of France.
232 ページ - ... The document was couched in these words : " The allied powers having proclaimed that the Emperor was the sole obstacle to the re-establishment of peace in Europe, the Emperor, faithful to his oath, declares that he renounces for himself and his heirs the thrones of France and Italy, and that there is no personal sacrifice, not even that of life, which he is not ready to make to the interests of France.

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