sagnac, II., 90. (Deposition of Grisel.)
Rossignol said, "That snuff-box is all I have left, here it is so that
I may exist."--"Massard owned a pair of boots which he could not collect
because he had no money with which to pay the shoemaker."]
[Footnote 3307: Archives Nationales, Cf. 31167. (Report of Robin,
Nivose 9.): "The women always had a deliberative voice in the popular
assemblies of the Pantheon section," and in all the other clubs they
attended the meetings.]
[Footnote 3308: Moniteur, XIX., 103. (Meeting of the Jacobin club,
Dec. 28, 1793.) Dubois-Crance introduces the following question to each
member who is subjected to the weeding-out vote: "What have you done
that would get you hung in case of a counter revolution?"]
[Footnote 3309: Ibid., XVII., 410. (Speech by Maribon-Montaut, Jacobin
club, Brumaire 21, year II.)]
[Footnote 3310: Dauban, "Paris in 1794," 142. (Police report of Ventose
13, year II.)]
[Footnote 3311: Morellet, "Memoires," II. 449.]
[Footnote 3312: Dauban, ib.,, 35. (Note drawn up in January, 1794,
probably by the physician Quevremont de Lamotte.)--Ibid., 82.--Cf.
Morellet, II., 434-470. (Details on the issue of certificates of civism,
in September, 1793.)]
[Footnote 3313: Archives Nationales, F.7, 31167. (Report by
Latour-Lamontagne, Ventose 1, year II.): "It is giving these
associations too much influence; it is destroying the jurisdiction of
the general assemblies (of the section.) We find accordingly, that
these are being deserted and that the plotters and intriguers succeed in
making popular clubs the centers of public business in order to control
affairs more easily."]
[Footnote 3314: Dauban, ibid., 203. (Report by Bacon-Tacon, Ventose 19.)
"In the general assembly of the Maison Commune section all citizens of
any rank in the companies have been weeded out. The slightest stain
of incivism, the slightest negligence in the service, caused their
rejection. Out of twenty-five who passed censorship-nineteen at least
were rejected....Most of them due to their trade such as eating-house
keeper, shoe-maker, cook, carpenter, tailor etc."]
[Footnote 3315: Ibid., 141. (Report by Charmont, Ventose 12.)--Ibid,
140. "There is only one way, it is said at the Cafe des Grands Hommes,
on the boulevard, to keep from being arrested, and that is to scheme for
admission into the civil and revolutionary committees when there happens
to be a vacancy. Before salaries were attached to these
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