Page [79]: royal authority now seriously theatened.

Page [85]: oppose testimony more distinterested,

Page [85]: confidental letters furnish us.

Page [146]: Footnote 48: varures, valued at two hundred thousand

Page [157]: troops, at the parades of the citizen soldiery.

Page [165]: exposed to one of those coups d’êtat,

Page [179]: the Secretary of State, La Veillière,

Page [184]: firmness,[”] says Lenet, “that he seemed as though

Page [202]: Footnote 61: Leomeni de Brienne, Memoirs, 1828.

Page [231]: to look upon her with horror. “He even blamed