Lebel, Madame de, [353].

Legendre, addresses the King insolently, [202].

Leopold II., his interest in French affairs, [23]; death of, [27].

Lessart, de, report of, disapproved by the Assembly, [28]; impeached, [30]; massacre of, [369].

Lilienhorn, Count de, one of the assassins of Gustavus III., [37], [45].

Logographe, box of the, [299] et seq.

Louis XVI., despised by the émigrés, [25]; letter of, to Gustavus III., [36]; appoints a ministry chosen by the Gironde, [103]; his deference to his ministers, [104] et seq.; declares war on Austria, [126], [129]; sufferings of, [132]; not a soldier, [133], [139]; has no plan, [135]; anecdotes of, by M. de Vaublanc, [139], [140]; sacrifices his guard, [145]; repents his concessions, [148]; for several days in a sort of stupor, [151]; insulted by Roland and his faction, [160]; Madame Roland's letter to him read in the Council, [164]; asks Dumouriez to help rid him of Roland's faction, [164]; refuses to sign the decree against the priests, [169]; accepts the resignation of Dumouriez, [169]; resists Dumouriez' entreaties not to veto the decrees, [172]; vetoes the decrees, [181]; permits the gate of the Tuileries to be opened to the mob, [195]; his conduct at the invasion of the Tuileries, [199] et seq.; his reception of the mob in the Tuileries, [201]; addressed by the butcher Legendre, [202]; in bodily peril, [203]; returns to the bedchamber, [208]; letter of, to the Assembly relative to the invasion of the Tuileries, [223]; interview of, with Pétion, [224]; incident of the red bonnet, [226]; conversation of, with Bertrand de Molleville, [227]; repugnance of, to Lafayette, [236]; address of, to the Assembly, [243]; letter of, to the Assembly, [245]; his plastron, [248]; takes part in the fête of the Federation, [249] et seq.; too timorous and hesitating to act, [257]; nominates a new cabinet, [269]; conciliatory message of, to the Assembly, [270]; declines to entertain any plan of escape, [273]; consents that the royalist noblemen should defend him, [284]; unwarlike character of, [288]; reviews the troops in the Tuileries garden and narrowly escapes from them, [289]; urged by Roederer, goes with his family to the Assembly, [292] et seq.; his escort, [295]; addresses the Assembly, [300]; compelled to remain in the reporters' gallery, [300]; orders the defenders of the Tuileries to cease firing, [305]; deposition of, proposed in the Assembly, [317]; acts like a disinterested spectator, [318]; taken to the Convent of the Feuillants, [328]; transferred to the Temple, [334], [339]; his quarters, [341]; gives lessons to the Dauphin in the Temple, 342: deprived of his sword, [346]; hears the proclamation abolishing royalty without emotion, [388].

Louvet, the author of Faublas, [54]; editor of the Sentinelle, and Madame Roland's confidant, [89] et seq.

Maillard, president of the tribunal at the Abbey, [365].

Mailly, Marshal de, the chief of the two hundred noblemen in the Tuileries, [284].