. Ninety-three . n war brings outagainst each other! On one side Santerre the brewer, on the other(histon the wigmakei ! My dear Vien\-ille, 1 have a certain respect for (.lastou. He didnot conduct himself ill in his conumTud of (lueménée. He very neatlyshot three hundred Blues, after making them dig their own graves. Well and good ; but I could have done that as Avell as he. Zounds! no doubt; and I also. The great acts of Avar, resumed La YieuAulle, re(iuire to beundertaken ])y noblemen. They are matters for knights and not hair-dressers. Still tliere are some estimable men among this Third E


. Ninety-three . n war brings outagainst each other! On one side Santerre the brewer, on the other(histon the wigmakei ! My dear Vien\-ille, 1 have a certain respect for (.lastou. He didnot conduct himself ill in his conumTud of (lueménée. He very neatlyshot three hundred Blues, after making them dig their own graves. Well and good ; but I could have done that as Avell as he. Zounds! no doubt; and I also. The great acts of Avar, resumed La YieuAulle, re(iuire to beundertaken ])y noblemen. They are matters for knights and not hair-dressers. Still tliere are some estimable men among this Third Estate,returned Boisbertlielot. Take, for example, Joi)y the had been a sergeant in a Flaudeis regiment; he gets himself madea Vendean IIdef ; he connnands a coast l)and; he has a son Avho is a Re-publican, and Avhile the father serAes among the Whites, the son servesamong the Blues. Encounter. Battle. The father takes the son pris-oner, and bloAvs out his lirains. Hes a ood one, said La Vieu\ A ROYALIST BRU T U S. NIIirEr Y-THREE. 29 A voyalist Brutus, replied Boisbertliclot. All that does uot hinder the tact that it is insupportable to heooninianded Ijy a Coquereau, a Jean-Jean, a ^Mouline, a Foeart, a Bouju,a Chouppes ! My dear chevalier, the other side is et^ually disgusted. Wo arefull of pleljeians—they are full of nobles. Do you suppose the sr»/.s-culottes are content to be commanded by the Count de Canclaux, theViscount de jMiranda, the Viscount de Beauharnais, the Count de \a-leuee, the Mar(|uis do Custine, and the Duke de Biron ! What a hash ! And the Duke de Chartres ! Son of Égalité. Ah, then, when will he ever l^e king . Never. He mounts toward the throne. He is aided by his crimes. And held back by his vices, said Boisberthelot. Theie was silence again; then Boisberthelot continued: Still he tried to liring al)()ut a reconciliation. He went to see theking. I was at Versailles when sonieliody spat on his back. From the top of the grand stai


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublisherlondo, bookyear1889