FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   356   357   358   359   360   361   362   363   364   365   366   367   368   369   370   371   372   373   374   375   376   377   378   379   380  
381   382   383   384   385   386   387   388   389   390   391   392   393   394   395   396   397   398   399   400   401   402   403   404   405   >>   >|  
hat smoothness of manner and guardedness of expression which they call "aimable," and which they have the faculty of attaining and preserving distinctly from a correspondent temper of the mind. It accompanies them through the most irritating vicissitudes, and enables them to deceive, even without deceit: for though this suavity is habitual, of course frequently undesigning, the stranger is nevertheless thrown off his guard by it, and tempted to place confidence, or expect services, which a less conciliating deportment would not have been suggested. A Frenchman may be an unkind husband, a severe parent, or an arrogant master, yet never contract his features, or asperate his voice, and for this reason is, in the national sense, "un homme bien doux." His heart may become corrupt, his principles immoral, and his disposition ferocious--yet he shall still retain his equability of tone and complacent phraseology, and be "un homme bien aimable." The revolution has tended much to develope this peculiarity of the French character, and has, by various examples in public life, confirmed the opinions I had formed from previous observation. Fouquier Tinville, as I have already noticed, was a man of gentle exterior.--Couthon, the execrable associate of Robespierre, was mildness itself--Robespierre's harangues are in a style of distinguished sensibility--and even Carrier, the destroyer of thirty thousand Nantais, is attested by his fellow-students to have been of an amiable disposition. I know a man of most insinuating address, who has been the means of conducting his own brother to the Guillotine; and another nearly as prepossessing, who, without losing his courteous demeanor, was, during the late revolutionary excesses, the intimate of an executioner. *It would be too voluminous to enumerate all the contrasts of manners and character exhibited during the French revolution--The philosophic Condorcet, pursuing with malignancy his patron, the Duc de la Rochefoucault, and hesitating with atrocious mildness on the sentence of the King--The massacres of the prisons connived at by the gentle Petion--Collot d'Herbois dispatching, by one discharge of cannon, three hundred people together, "to spare his sensibility" the talk of executions in detail--And St. Just, the deviser of a thousand enormities, when he left the Committee, after his last interview, with the project of sending them a
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   356   357   358   359   360   361   362   363   364   365   366   367   368   369   370   371   372   373   374   375   376   377   378   379   380  
381   382   383   384   385   386   387   388   389   390   391   392   393   394   395   396   397   398   399   400   401   402   403   404   405   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

gentle

 

Robespierre

 
mildness
 

thousand

 
sensibility
 

disposition

 

French

 

revolution

 

character

 

aimable


courteous

 
smoothness
 

demeanor

 

prepossessing

 
losing
 
intimate
 
contrasts
 

manners

 

exhibited

 
enumerate

voluminous
 

excesses

 

Guillotine

 

executioner

 
revolutionary
 
brother
 

destroyer

 

thirty

 

guardedness

 

Nantais


Carrier
 

expression

 

harangues

 

distinguished

 

attested

 

fellow

 

manner

 

conducting

 

address

 
insinuating

students

 
amiable
 
philosophic
 

executions

 

detail

 
cannon
 

hundred

 
people
 

interview

 
project