File:Symbol and satire in the French Revolution (1912) (14596432758).jpg

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Identifier: symbolsatireinfr01hend (find matches)
Title: Symbol and satire in the French Revolution
Year: 1912 (1910s)
Authors: Henderson, Ernest F. (Ernest Flagg), 1861-1928
Subjects: Caricatures and cartoons
Publisher: New York, London, G.P. Putnam's Sons
Contributing Library: The Library of Congress
Digitizing Sponsor: The Library of Congress

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waist high, dividedthe hall in halves. The proprietor of the estab-lishment received the deputies with every tokenof joy but could do little to make them comfortable.A few benches and a writing-table were the extentof the furniture. Only an hour and a half had been lost by theunexpected change of locality. The deputies hadgained enormously in popularity because of theirfirm attitude, and a crowd of people surroundedthe door and stretched far back into the streets.Excitement was at the highest pitch. Sieyeswould have liked to have the Assembly cut loosefrom the King and move in a body to Paris; butMounier intervened with the proposition thenand there to take an oath never to separate, butalways to reassemble, when circumstances required,until the constitution of the kingdom should beestablished on solid and firm foundations. Tothis oath, each member subscribed in writing,though one member quickly wrote opposing Aulard, Etudes et Legons, i., 62. * Mallet du Pan, Memoires, i., 165, note.
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Plate II. Mirabeau in the name of the National Assembly defying DeBreze, Master of Ceremonies of the King. 37 38 The French Revolution after having affixed his signature/ That he leftthe hall alive seems to have been due only toBaillys interference. Yet the Assembly decidednot to erase his name. The King, it will be remembered, had announcedhis intention to hold a royal session. This theNational Assembly voted to attend, but it alsovoted to remain in the hall after the session shouldbe over and transact its own business. It hadmeanwhile been joined by the majority of theclergy—^not in the Tennis Court, for the ComtedArtois had sent word to the proprietor that hewished to play a game of tennis—but in the churchof St. Louis. The royal session was held on the23d of June. Never again was a king of Franceto appear with such pomp and circumstance.Through the crowded streets, Louis XVTs carriageadvanced in the midst of the falconry, the pages,the squires, the regiments of body-guards. Ar

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  • bookid:symbolsatireinfr01hend
  • bookyear:1912
  • bookdecade:1910
  • bookcentury:1900
  • bookauthor:Henderson__Ernest_F___Ernest_Flagg___1861_1928
  • booksubject:Caricatures_and_cartoons
  • bookpublisher:New_York__London__G_P__Putnam_s_Sons
  • bookcontributor:The_Library_of_Congress
  • booksponsor:The_Library_of_Congress
  • bookleafnumber:76
  • bookcollection:library_of_congress
  • bookcollection:americana
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30 July 2014


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