Volume 4 (of 6) by Hippolyte A. Taine]@TWC D-Link book Volume 4 (of 6) 52/137 Out of twenty-five who passed censorship-nineteen at least were rejected....Most of them due to their trade such as eating-house keeper, shoe-maker, cook, carpenter, tailor etc."] [Footnote 3315: Ibid., 141. (Report by Charmont, Ventose 12.)--Ibid, 140. "There is only one way, it is said at the Cafe des Grands Hommes, on the boulevard, to keep from being arrested, and that is to scheme for admission into the civil and revolutionary committees when there happens to be a vacancy. Before salaries were attached to these places nobody wanted them; since that, there are disputes as to who shall be appointed."] [Footnote 3316: Ibid., 307. (Report of Germinal 7.)] [Footnote 3317: Wallon, "Histoire du Tribunal Revolutionaire," IV., 129.] [Footnote 3318: Archives Nationales, AF., II., 46. |