French Revolution

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘French Revolution’

13
Raw Haste Sir Reginald Coupland

The French revolution failed because real liberty cannot be enforced overnight, or indeed enforced at all.

By 1793, William Pitt, Prime Minister for ten years, was thoroughly disillusioned with the French Revolution. The kind of liberty Pitt enjoyed at home, Sir Reginald Coupland reminds us, comes from peoples and not from governments, and takes centuries and not days to mature.

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14
The Fairly Honest Lawyer Rafael Sabatini

Andre-Louis Moreau lives for vengeance on the master swordsman who killed his friend.

André-Louis Moreau, a lawyer by training, is broke and a wanted man in Paris. Passing by the fencing school of M. Bertrand des Amis, André reads a notice inviting applications for the post of fencing instructor. Unfortunately, as he is compelled to acknowledge, he can’t fence.

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15
The Glorious First of June Clay Lane

Admiral Lord Howe battered a French fleet far out in the Atlantic, and helped prevent the spread of bloody revolution.

As soon as power had been secured after the Revolution of 1789, France’s new government began invading neighbouring countries in Europe, and seeking to evangelize the world with revolutionary fervour. Happily, the seed of republicanism fell on very stony ground on this side of the Channel.

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16
The Battle of Flamborough Head Clay Lane

When captain Richard Pearson of the Royal Navy surrendered to American revolutionary John Paul Jones, Jones naturally assumed that meant he had won.

Following the Declaration of Independence in 1776, American resentment towards King George III’s dastardly oppression reached such a pitch that they made common cause with that champion of republican liberty, King Louis XVI of France. One mustard-keen revolutionary, John Paul Jones, even buccaneered around Britain’s coastline harassing merchant shipping convoys, until the Royal Navy stepped in.

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17
One Last Question Charles Dickens

English lawyer Sydney Carton goes to the guillotine in place of a French aristocrat.

At the height (or depth) of the French Revolution, Sydney Carton has exchanged places and names with aristocrat Charles Darnay, winning just enough time for Darnay and his family to be smuggled to safety in England. As Carton is led to the guillotine, a seamstress condemned to the same fate shares a confidence with him.

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18
The Pimpernel Fails to Show Baroness Orczy

Lady Blakeney agrees to spy for the French Revolutionary government in return for her brother’s life.

In exchange for her brother Armand’s life, Marguerite, Lady Blakeney, is reluctantly playing the spy at a society ball. Citizen Chauvelin, of the French Revolutionary government’s secret police, wants her to find out what she can about the mysterious ‘Scarlet Pimpernel’ who has been rescuing prisoners from the guillotine.

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