Authentic Memoirs of the Public Life of M. Fouché, Duke of Otranto: Comprising Various Letters Addressed to the Emperor Napoleon, King Joachim, the Comte D'Artois, the Duke of Wellington, Prince Blucher, Louis XVIII, Count de Blacass, &c. &c |
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Page 28
... police . At the period when Mr. Fouché was studying philosophy at Arras , he had known Maximilian Robespierre , and had lent him a sum of money to enable him to go to and establish himself at Paris , when he was nominated to the consti ...
... police . At the period when Mr. Fouché was studying philosophy at Arras , he had known Maximilian Robespierre , and had lent him a sum of money to enable him to go to and establish himself at Paris , when he was nominated to the consti ...
Page 32
... police , where he acquired great honour by the good which he did , by the evils which he prevented , and by the resistance which he opposed to the passions , in every crisis . His first act on entering into the adminis- tration under ...
... police , where he acquired great honour by the good which he did , by the evils which he prevented , and by the resistance which he opposed to the passions , in every crisis . His first act on entering into the adminis- tration under ...
Page 35
... police for justice . We have procured the two circulars which have served as a basis for this strange accusa tion . Their date is in the month of Brumaire , when Bonaparte was named chief of the government of the republic . When we re ...
... police for justice . We have procured the two circulars which have served as a basis for this strange accusa tion . Their date is in the month of Brumaire , when Bonaparte was named chief of the government of the republic . When we re ...
Page 40
... police its rapidity . The police freed from almost all embarrassments , has never excused in justice its delay . The re- proaches which they mutually make against each other are often made by the whole society against both . The police ...
... police its rapidity . The police freed from almost all embarrassments , has never excused in justice its delay . The re- proaches which they mutually make against each other are often made by the whole society against both . The police ...
Page 41
... police has been sacrificed to justice ; among other people more impatient of being dragged slowly in the forms and in the labyrinth of so many laws , they have made justice itself a police . If we cast an attentive eye on the places ...
... police has been sacrificed to justice ; among other people more impatient of being dragged slowly in the forms and in the labyrinth of so many laws , they have made justice itself a police . If we cast an attentive eye on the places ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdication agitate Allied army become Bonaparte Bourbons cause Chambers civil confidence congress of Vienna conspiracy constitution courage crimes dangerous dare desire destroyed disquietude Duke of Otranto DUKE OF WELLINGTON Durif duty Emperor empire enemies enlightened Europe evils excess exists eyes fear force Fouché France French German empire give glory government of France guarantee heart honour ideas incessantly independence interests Isle of Elba judge justice King laws letter liberty longer Louis XVIII Majesty manner means Memoirs menace ment midst mind minister ministry misfortunes moderation monarchy moral Napoleon narch nation necessary necessity negociations never opinion Paris party passions peace peace of Tilsit person police political prefects present Prince principles re-established received reign rendered repose reproach republic resistance respecting retired revolution Robespierre seemed sentiments serve Sire situation small number sovereign speak sufficient thing throne tion treaty of Westphalia truth ultra-royalists Vienna wish
Popular passages
Page 18 - My head and heart thus flowing thro' my quill, Verse-man or prose-man, term me which you will, Papist or Protestant, or both between, Like good Erasmus in an honest mean, In moderation placing all my glory, While Tories call me Whig, and Whigs a Tory.
Page 32 - NOT discovered to the king the names of the royalists whoi declared against his authority, and negociated with Napoleon. I wished not to lift my veil; those whose honor has been saved may return to virtue. There were only two means of serving the king — the increasing of his physical or his moral power. If a physical power is sometimes necessary to suppress disorders, it is not sufficient to establish a, durable order of things.
Page 110 - ... representatives of the nation are incessantly employed on a civil compact, of which the component powers, separated but not divided, all contribute by their reciprocal action to harmony and unity. From the moment this compact shall be signed by the Prince called to reign over us, the sovereign shall receive the sceptre and the crown from the hands of the nation.
Page 68 - Europe does not become your own ; and the title of sovereign of a few acres of land still less becomes him who possessed an immense empire. I beseech you to weigh these two considerations, and you will feel how well they are founded. The island of Elba lies at a short distance from Africa, Greece, and Spain. It almost touches the coasts of Italy and France. From that island the sea, the winds, and a small felucca may rapidly convey you to every country exposed to movements, dissensions, and revolutions.
Page 57 - When a man has the misfortune to be celebrated, the place which is the least known receives eclat, when he wishes to retire to it. I wished at least to escape from calumny, by the simplicity, by the obscurity, and by the happiness of my domestic life. Some are astonished, that, in quitting the ministry, I did not enter the Chamber of Deputies, to which several electoral colleges, especially that of Paris, had called me. Could I have struggled with advantage against the...
Page 53 - Tell the emperor," replied the ex-minister, " that for fiveand-twenty years I have been accustomed to sleep with my head on the block ; that I know his power, but do not fear it ; and that he may make a Strafford of me if he pleases.
Page 45 - The tranquillity of the state is intimately connected with the moral dispositions of the laborious classes, of which the people is composed, and which form the basis of the social edifice. A good police judges not of these dispositions by the applauses which men the most vile and the most wicked ever obtain during the period they are in power.
Page 21 - Whither has their obstinacy to apeak and ad as absolute masters, and to punish all resistance, conducted them? they have paved the way to the throne for the Prince of Orange, who, to maintain himself there, needed only to use his power with moderation, to dissipate alarm, and to diffuse security.
Page 43 - This is the police of a courtier who is desirous of pleasing, or of a subaltern who is in need of such means of making his merit be seen: it is not ours. A minister must calculate well on the indulgence or on the .weakness of...
Page 59 - XVIII. from nominating him his minister, nor the Allied Sovereigns from bestowing on him marks of consideration, could become, at this day, a subject of proscription ? If this were possible, it would not be the proscribed person whom we had reason to pity.