Page:Works of Thomas Carlyle - Volume 04.djvu/372



Lamoignon, Keeper of Seals, i. 74, 90, 97; dismissed, 111; effigy burned, and death of, 113.

Lamotte, Countess de, and Diamond Necklace, i. 57; in the Salpêtrière, 69, 94; Memoirs burned, ii. 329; in London, iii. 15; M. de, in prison, 15, 33.

Lamourette, Abbé, kiss of, ii. 210; guillotined, iii. 216.

Lanjuinais, Girondin, clothes torn, iii. 160; arrested, 162; recalled, 291.

Lanterne, death by the, i. 206.

Lapérouse, voyage of, i. 45.

Laporte, Intendant, guillotined, iii. 9,

Larivière, Justice, imprisoned, ii. 267.

Larochejaquelin, in La Vendée, iii. 12; death of, 298.

Lasource, accuses Danton, iii. 149; president, and Marat, 152; arrested, 162; condemned, his saying, 198.

Latour-Maubourg, notice of, ii. 186.

Launay, Marquis de, Governor of Bastille, i. 185; besieged, 189; unassisted, 190; to blow up Bastille, 195; massacred, 196.

Lavergne, surrenders Longwi, iii. 11–13.

Lavoisier, Chemist, guillotined, iii. 263.

Law, Martial, in Paris, ii. 17, 193; Book of the, 209.

Lawyers, their influence on the Revolution, i. 14; number of, in Tiers État, 144; in Parliament First, ii. 205.

Lazare, Maison de St., plundered, i. 180.

Lebas at Strasbourg, iii. 234; arrested, 280.

, Priest, in National Convention, iii. 49; at Arras, 222; guillotined, 305.

Lebrun, forger of Assignats, ii. 231.

Lechapelier, Deputy, and Insurrection of Women, i. 256.

Lecointre, National Major, i. 246, 265; will not duel, 248; active, 268; in First Parliament, ii. 207.

Lefèvre, Abbé, distributes powder, i. 197; in procession, 201; nearly hanged, 253.

Legendre, Butcher, in danger, ii. 255; at Tuileries riot, 261; in National Convention, iii. 49; against Girondins, 160; for Danton, 256; locks out Jacobins, 283; in First of Prairial, 309.

Lenfant, Abbé, on Protestant claims, i. 94; massacred, iii. 32.

Lepelletier, See St. Fargeau. Section for Convention, iii. 303, 309; revolt of, in Vendémiaire, 317–320.

Lettres-de-Cachet, and Parlement of Paris, i. 92.

Levasseur in National Convention, iii. 49; Convention Representative, in tidewater, 238.

Liancourt, Duke de, Liberal, 1. 145; not a revolt, but a revolution, 200; Royalist, in Normandy, ii. 268.

Liberty, on, ii. 26; tree of, 66, 259, 274; and Equality, 250; Statue of, iii. 182.

Lies, Philosophism on, i. 14; to be estinguished, how, 38; cant, a double power of, 55; their doom, 228.

Ligne, Prince de, death of, iii. 52.

Lille, Colonel Rouget de, Marseillese Hymn, ii. 273.

Lille city besieged, iii. 60.

Linguet, his Bastille Unnveiled, i. 56; returns, 135; irascible, ii. 240.

Literature, its influence on the Revolution, i. 14; in France in 1781–87, 55, 59,94.

Loan, Successive, scheme of, i. 89.

Loiserolles, General, guillotined for his son, iii. 282.

Longwi, surrendered, iii. 10–13; fugitives at Paris, 12.

Lords of the Articles, Jacobins as, iii. 233.

Lorraine Fédérés and the Queen, ii. 60; state of, in 1790, 83.

Louis ., l'état c'est moi, i. 9; booted in Parlement, 90; pursues Louvois with tongs, iii. 71.

Louis ., origin of his surname, i. 1; last illness of, 1, 15, 16, 17, 23; dismisses Dame Dubarry, 3; Choiseul, 3; was wounded, has small-pox, 4, 14; his mode of conquest, 6; impoverishes France, 15; his daughters. 16; on death, 18; on ministerial capacity, 21; death of, 24; burial of, 25.

Louis ., at his accession, i. 25; good measures of, 29; temper and pursuits of, 31; difficulties of, 40, 95; commences governing, 63; and Notables, 77; holds Royal Session, 90–92; receives States-General Deputies, 131; in States-General procession, 134, 148; speech to States-General, 150; National Assembly, 164; unwise policy of, 166; dismisses Necker, 175; apprised of the Revolution, 200; conciliatory, visits Assembly, 200; Bastille, visits Paris, 203; deserted, will fly, 223, 244; languid, 245; at Dinner of Guards, 247; deposition of, proposed, 258; October Fifth, women deputies, 265; to fly or not? 268, 270; grants the acceptance, 271; Paris propositions to, 274; in the Château tumult (Oct. 6), 280; appears to mob, 283; will go to Paris, 284; his wisest course, 285; procession to Paris, 286–289; review of his position, ii. 1;