[Footnote 3]: The tourniquet consists of two triangular pieces of wood fixed at about three yards distance from each other on a horizontal pole, which serves for an axle-tree; from each angle of the one to the corresponding angle of the other is drawn a rope; and the whole machine is suspended at about four feet from the ground. At one end is placed a pole, on which hang the prizes; and at the other is a ladder for the aspirant to mount. The tourniquet is held steady till he is firmly fixed, with each of his feet resting on one of the side ropes, and his hands clasping the centre one; and then he is left to make his way to the prizes at the other end. As long as he can keep himself exactly balanced all is well; but the least pressure more to one side than the other, destroys the equilibrium, and round goes the tourniquet.
[Footnote 4]: Be it remarked, that this is not entirely the case. In all parts at France frogs are still in high repute. The snail, escargot, is a favourite food of the people of Lorraine; and, in the south of France, I have been asked whether I liked anguille de haie or anguille de rivière; meaning, whether I preferred eels or snakes.
[Footnote 5]: The name of brigand was the common term applied by the revolutionists to the Vendeans.
[Footnote 6]: These two remarkable speeches are upon record.
[Footnote 7]: I have left the above passage exactly as it was written many years ago, though I perceive that the same ideas have returned to me in writing another work, and have clothed themselves in very nearly the same language. I did not perceive the fact till one work was printed and the other in the press; but the accident was sufficiently interesting to me to leave the passage here, where I could blot it out.
[Footnote 8]: She told me the story herself, heaven rest her soul! and I use her own phraseology as nearly as a faulty memory will permit.
[Footnote 9]: Some circumstances were discovered afterwards in regard to a traveller for some mercantile house, who had been murdered in the Landes, which threw greater suspicion on my friend the miller, and caused him to betake himself elsewhere.
[Footnote 10]: Those who imagine this to be a jest deceive themselves; I have seen the same more than once since.
[Footnote 11]: These passages were written thirteen or fourteen years ago, since which time France has made the most extraordinary progress that any country in Europe can boast. England has also advanced, but the change is certainly not so striking between what she is now and what she was then, as that which has taken place in France in the same period; but it may be taken as a proof of the justice of these remarks, that France has become much more English than England has become French.
[Footnote 12]: This appears somewhat exaggerated now, but it was very little so when the passage was written; and opinions as absurd have a thousand times been uttered by men otherwise well informed in my presence. Some late books of travels in this country, however, would tend to show that the French have not yet much enlarged their knowledge of England and the English.