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 which it threw me, subsides only to give place to sorrow and apprehension. You presist, then, in the resolution to re-establish the throne of France, and yet not to restore those who were deposed by the revolution, but to seat yourself thereon? What power, you ask-what grandeur-and above all, what advantage-in this design? And, for my part, I venture to reply, what obstacles present themselves to its success-how great the sacrifices which must be made before its accomplishment can be secured-how far beyond calculation the conseqnences, should it be realized. How numerous the envious and discontented —how many plots to disconcert and conspiracies to punish! Kings will despise you as an upstart, the people will hate you as an usurper, your equals as a tyrant; none will comprehend the utility of your elevation, all will assign it to ambition or to pride, Doubtless, there will not be wanting slaves who will cringe to your power until backed by another, which they esteem a more formidable influence, they will seek to elevate themselves on your ruin. Fortunate also beyond hope, if steel-it poison!—a wife, a friend, dare not give pause to alarmed imagination on images so dreadful. This brings me to myself, a subject about which my concern' would be small indeed if I only were interested. But with the throne, will there not likewise arise the desire of new alliances? Will you not consider it necessary, by new family ties, to provide for the more effectual security of that throne Oh? whatever such connexious might be, could they prove, like those formed at first in propriety and which affections the most tender have since consecrated! I stop at this perspective, which fear-must I say love-traces in an appalling futurity. Yon have alarmed me by your ambitious flight restore my confidence by your return to moderation."