Monge, senator of the Empire, reply of, to Napoleon, [391].
Moniteur, the, on the fête of Chateauvieux, [121].
Mortimer-Ternaux, M., quoted, [279], [282]; his Histoire de la Terreur, [359].
Mouchy, Marshal de, his devotion to the King and Queen, [220].
Napoleon, a witness of the invasion of the Tuileries, [209]; asserts the King could have gained the victory, [286]; a witness of the attack of the Marseillais on the Tuileries, [310], [314]; visits the Temple, and has it destroyed, [348].
National Assembly, place of meeting of, [5]; impeach the King's brothers and confiscate the émigrés' property, [26]; impeach De Lessart, [30]; order the King's guard disbanded, [143]; decrees of as to the clergy and an army before Paris, [150]; Madame Roland's letter to the King, read to, [167]; letter of Lafayette read in the, [178]; receive a deputation from Marseilles, [183]; consider the admission of the resurrectionists to the chamber, [187]; the place of meeting of, [188]; deputation from, to the King during the invasion of the Tuileries, [208]; question the Queen, [216]; maintain an equivocal attitude, [222]; the majority of, royalists and constitutionalists, [272]; affect not to recognize the King's danger, [280]; send a deputation to receive the King and his family, [296]; number of members present when the decree of deposition was voted, [320]; terrorized by the Commune, [370]; royalty abolished and the republic proclaimed by, [387].
National Guard, at the Tuileries, [196]; the choice troops of, broken up, [268]; royalist, in the Tuileries, [279], [288].
Noblemen, royalist, fidelity of, to the King, [278], [284]; fate of, [322].
Orleans, Duke of, and the Palais Royal, [4]; and his party clamor for the deposition of the King, [270].
Palais Royal, the, in 1792, [4].