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The fall of Robespierre produced a marked change in the policy of the Convention towards the Royalists of this district, and they were promised, on laying down their arms, that they[445] should enjoy their country and their religion in peace. On this assurance, Charette signed a treaty of pacification with the agents of the Government at Nantes, in February, 1795. But scarcely was the peace signed, when Charette received a letter from Monsieur¡ªbrother of the late king, and now appointed by the Royalist party Regent to the Dauphin, now styled by them Louis XVII.¡ªassuring him of his confidence, declaring him the second founder of the monarchy, and appointing him his Lieutenant-General. Charette wrote back to inform him that he had been compelled to sign a peace, but that his submission was only apparent, and when the Royalist affairs were somewhat reinstated, he should be ready to take up arms and die in the service of his prince. The young General Hoche, who was sent to reduce the insurgents of Brittany, whilst Canclaux reduced those of La Vend¨¦e, did not for a moment believe in the sincerity of the peace. He was aware that Puisaye, the chief of the insurgents in Brittany, was gone to England, to endeavour to induce Pitt to do what all the efforts and importunities of the Bourbon princes and Emigrant nobles had failed to do¡ªto send an expedition to the coast of Brittany, with another to the coast of La Vend¨¦e, in which the British fleet should support the bodies of Emigrants who had, in England and the Channel Islands, formed themselves into regiments for the purpose. Aware of this, he still did all he could to reconcile the peasantry to the peace, and very soon they would have been pacified by this judicious treatment, and been averse from rising again, with a prospect of re-experiencing their former sufferings; but the Bourbon princes and the tribes of Emigrants now driven from the Rhine did not allow them that chance.

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This was the state of things when, on the 17th of August, 1792, the French deposed Louis, and prepared for his death. Lord Gower was thereupon recalled, on the plain ground that, being accredited alone to the king, and there being no longer a king, his office was at an end; he was, however, ordered to take a respectful leave, and to assure the Government that Britain still desired to maintain peaceful relations. Yet at this very time London was swarming with paid emissaries of the French Government, whose business was to draw over the people to French notions of republican liberty. Nay, more, Lebrun, the Foreign Minister, took no pains to conceal the assurance of the French that Ireland would revolt and that France would secure it. On the 18th of November a great dinner was given at White's Hotel in Paris, at which Lord Edward Fitzgerald and other Irish Republicans, Thomas Paine, Santerre, and a host of like characters, English, Irish, French, and others, toasted the approaching National Convention of Great Britain and Ireland, and amid wild acclamations drank the sentiment, "May revolutions never be made by halves!" The very next day, the 19th, the National Convention issued its decree, declaring war against all thrones and proclaiming the enfranchisement of all peoples. This was immediately followed by Jacobinised deputations of Englishmen, thanking the Convention for this proclamation; and the President, in reply, said, "Citizens of the world! Royalty in Europe is utterly destroyed, or on the point of perishing on the ruins of feudality; and the Rights of Man, placed by the side of thrones, are a devouring fire which will consume them all. Worthy Republicans! Congratulate yourselves on the festival which you have celebrated in honour of the French Revolution¡ªthe prelude to the festival of nations!"
ONE:A mule put its head over the wall of a corral and pricked interrogative ears. Then two children, as unmistakably Angles as those of Gregory the Great, came around the corner, hand in hand, and stood looking at him. And at length a man, unmistakably an Angle too, for all his top boots and flannel shirt and cartridge belt, came striding down to the gate. He opened it and said, "Hullo, Cairness, old chap," and Cairness said, "How are you, Kirby?" which answered to the falling upon each other's neck and weeping, of a more effusive race. TWO:¡°It will do no harm to go over,¡± agreed Mr. Whiteside, slamming the door behind them. ¡°It¡¯s shorter down along the water.¡±
ONE:Parliament assembled on the 9th of January, 1770. People had been surprised at the unusual delay in summoning it, considering the critical state of America, but they were much more surprised when the subject put foremost in the king's speech was a lamentation over the murrain which[197] had appeared amongst horned cattle during the recess, and which Ministers had taken some measures to stop without calling together Parliament. It was true that he afterwards alluded to the state of affairs in America, and trusted some means would be devised by Parliament to appease the irritation. But whilst war itself appeared imminent there, whilst the whole country at home was in a state of high discontent, and the Spitalfields weavers were at this moment in a state of open riot, the idea of giving the chief place in the royal speech to horned cattle caused a burst of universal ridicule. It was thenceforth called the "Horned Cattle Session." Junius launched one of his fierce missives at the Duke of Grafton, observing, "Whilst the whole kingdom was agitated with anxious expectation on one great point, you meanly evaded the question, and, instead of the explicit firmness and decision of a king, gave us nothing but the misery of a ruined grazier."CHAPTER X LARRY¡¯S CAPTURE

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THREE:Washington saw almost with despair the condition of the American army; any other man would have despaired of it altogether. He wrote to Congress that nothing could make soldiers trustworthy but longer terms of service; that, in fact, they ought to be engaged for the whole war, and subjected to a rigid and constant discipline. He complained that the soldiers were much bolder in plundering than fighting; and one of his officers observed that the Pennsylvanian and New England troops would as soon fight each other as the enemy. His Adjutant-General, Reed, declared that discipline was almost impossible amid such a levelling spirit as prevailed. These startling facts made Congress begin in earnest to look out for foreign aid. In the meantime, it voted that the army should be reorganised with eighty-eight[231] battalions, to be enlisted as soon as possible, and to serve during the war; each State to furnish its respective quota, and to name the officers as high as colonels. But Washington had soon to complain that they only voted, and did not carry the plan strenuously into action; that there was a mighty difference between voting battalions and raising men.

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THREE:And that was settled!He went over to the window and stood looking out of it, his hands clasped behind his back. Some children were playing tag around the flag-staff, and he watched a long-limbed small daughter of the frontier dodging and running, and was conscious of being glad that she touched the goal.

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THREE:

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ONE:It threw no beam, only a sort of dull phosphorescence; but Dick¡¯s quick eyes ran instantly to its source¡ªsome small flashlamp covered with colored cloth, a handkerchief, perhaps.

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THREE:Cairness suggested that they were given their supper at six.

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THREE:[319]

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THREE:¡°Go on, young feller.¡± The caretaker was absorbed.

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ONE:"By George! McLane, it strikes me as devilish odd that you should all give ear to the insinuations of a shave-tail like Brewster, against an old hand like myself. Be that as it may, however, until this thing has been cleared up, I shall thank all of you to continue in your[Pg 145] attitude of suspicion, and not in any way draw on your charity by extending it to me. I shall demand a court of inquiry." He laid the ruler back on the desk. "I report for duty, sir," he added officially.

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FORE:If the stick was jammed, it might be possible to get into the fuselage. There he might operate the elevator cable by hand enough to get that nose up more, flatten the glide, maybe enough to enable Larry, who alone had a stick, to swing around and come down on land¡ªsomehow.

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FORE:Brewster resented it, and so the next thing he said was calculated to annoy. "He says you are quite one of them." Victory of Pitt¡ªThe King's delight¡ªPitt's Finance¡ªThe India Bill¡ªPitt's Budget¡ªThe Westminster Election¡ªThe Scrutiny¡ªFox is returned¡ªThe Volunteers in Ireland¡ªFlood's Reform Bill¡ªRiots in Ireland¡ªPitt's Commercial Policy for Ireland¡ªOpposition of the English Merchants¡ªAbandonment of the Measure¡ªPitt's Reform Bill¡ªHis Administrative Reforms¡ªBill for fortifying Portsmouth and Plymouth¡ªPitt's Sinking Fund¡ªFavourable Reception of the Bill¡ªPitt's Excise Bill¡ªCommercial Treaty with France¡ªImpeachment of Warren Hastings¡ªRetrospect of Indian Affairs: Deposition of Meer Jaffier¡ªResistance of Meer Cossim¡ªMassacre of Patna¡ªBattle of Buxar and Capture of Allahabad¡ªClive's Return to India¡ªSettlement of Bengal and Oude¡ªDomestic Reforms¡ªRise of Hyder Ali¡ªHis Treaty with the English¡ªHe is defeated by the Mahrattas¡ªDeposition of the Rajah of Tanjore¡ªFailure of Lord Pigot to reinstate him¡ªLord North's Regulating Bill¡ªDeath of Clive¡ªWarren Hastings becomes Governor-General¡ªHis dealings with the Famine¡ªTreatment of Reza Khan and the Nabob of Bengal¡ªResumption of Allahabad and Corah¡ªMassacre of the Rohillas¡ªArrival of the New Members of Council¡ªStruggle for Supremacy¡ªRobbery of Cheyte Sing¡ªNuncomar's Charges¡ªHis Trial and Execution¡ªHastings' Constitutional Resignation¡ªHis Final Victory¡ªWars against the Mahrattas¡ªHyder Ali's Advance¡ªDefeat of Baillie¡ªEnergy of Hastings¡ªVictories of Sir Eyre Coote¡ªCapture of Dutch Settlements¡ªNaval Engagements between the British and French¡ªDeath of Hyder Ali¡ªTippoo continues the War¡ªHe invokes Peace¡ªHastings' extortions from Cheyte Sing¡ªHastings' visit to Benares¡ªRising of the People¡ªRescue of Hastings and Deposition of Cheyte Sing¡ªExtortion from the Begums of Oude¡ªParliamentary Inquiries¡ªHastings' Reception in England¡ªBurke's Motion of Impeachment¡ªPitt's Change of Front¡ªThe Prince of Wales and the Whigs¡ªInquiry into his Debts¡ªAlderman Newnham's Motion¡ªDenial of the Marriage with Mrs. Fitzherbert¡ªSheridan's Begum Speech¡ªImpeachment of Hastings¡ªGrowth of the Opposition to the Slave Trade¡ªThe Question brought before Parliament¡ªEvidence Produced¡ªSir W. Dolben's Bill¡ªTrial of Warren Hastings¡ªSpeeches of Burke, Fox, and Sheridan¡ªIllness of the King¡ªDebates on the Regency Bill¡ªThe King's Recovery¡ªAddress of the Irish Parliament to the Prince of Wales.

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FORE:¡°I¡¯ll go on!¡± Sandy murmured more cheerfully. ¡°I¡¯ll have a clear half hour to myself. Maybe¡ªwithout anybody talking and disturbing me¡ªI might think out some answer to all the queer things that have happened.¡±218

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FORE:But there was no night alarm, and at daybreak it began to be apparent to the troops that they had been led directly away from all chance of one. They made[Pg 121] fires, ate their breakfast, resaddled, and took their way back to the settlements, doubling on their own trail. They came upon signs of a yet larger band, and it was more probable than ever that the valley had been in danger.

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Watching intently, his comrades saw that the amphibian kept on toward shore in a taxiing course on the water surface.Sir John Warren put the two thousand four hundred Chouans on shore near Lorient, and left them to return to their own predatory mode of warfare. He then located himself on two small neighbouring islands, and waited for a fresh squadron carrying four thousand British troops, which arriving in September, he bore away with them for La Vend¨¦e, and thus terminated the miserable descent on the coast of Brittany. The descent on the coast of La Vend¨¦e was still more unsatisfactory. On arriving there, it was found that fifteen thousand Republicans were in possession of the Isle Noirmoutier, formerly the stronghold of Charette. The British, therefore, disembarked on the little desolate Isle Dieu, about five leagues from Noirmoutier, and there awaited the arrival of Count d'Artois, who did not come till the 10th of October, and then, alarmed at the fusillading of the officers at Quiberon, declined to land. On hearing this, Charette exclaimed¡ª"We are lost! To-day I have fifteen thousand men about me; to-morrow I shall not have five hundred!" And, in fact, chagrined at the pusillanimous conduct of the prince, and the approach of Hoche with his victorious troops from Brittany, his followers rapidly dispersed, and at the end of the year the British armament returned home, having done nothing. From this day may be dated the extinction of the war in La Vend¨¦e. Stofflet, in January, 1796, was defeated, and in February was betrayed to the enemy, and on the 26th of that month was executed at Angers with four of his companions. Charette was captured a month afterwards, and was shot at Nantes on the 29th of March. With him died the last Vend¨¦an general of mark. By this time, the spring of 1796, not a fifth part of the male population of La Vend¨¦e remained alive; and Hoche himself calculated that the Vend¨¦an war had cost France a hundred thousand men.
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