Calvet, M., sent to the Abbey,144.
Campan, Madame, describes the Queen's emotion on hearing of her brother's death,28; her account of Dumouriez' interview with the Queen,155; in peril in the Tuileries,324.
Carmelite church, massacre at,364.
Chateaubriand, quotation from,9.
Chateauvieux, the fête of,110et seq., mutinous soldiers of, punished,112; fêted by the Jacobins,113,118; admitted to the Assembly,117.
Chénier, André, patriotic conduct of,113,124; his ode to David,119; his fate,124.
Clavière made Minister of the Finances,103,160.
Clootz, Anacharsis, defends the September massacres,375.
Comédie-Française, the, in the Revolution,10.
Commune, insurrectionary, formed in the Hôtel-de-Ville,281; refuse to extinguish the fire at the Tuileries,325,335,345,355; invites every commune in France to follow the example of massacre in Paris,369; terrorize the Assembly,370; order the arrest of Roland,374,378.
Constitutional Guard, the composition of,140; disarmed,145.
Cordeliers, club of the,7; chiefs of,7; decide to attack the Tuileries,274.
Danjou turns the mob bearing the Princess de Lamballe's head away from the Temple,355.
Danton, cowardice of,271,316; his bloodthirsty speech to the Assembly,361,374; fate of,391.
Dauphin, the, the red cap set on his head,213; his interest in the guard, Drouet,217,219; his prayer for the King,220; on the morning of August 10,284; taken from his mother's arms by an insurrectionist,297; in the Assembly,299; in the Convent of the Feuillants,329,333; prayer taught him by his mother,347.
David, his part in the fête of Chateauvieux,119; conversation of,319; under the Empire,392.
Delorme, the negro assassin,367.
Desilles, killed in the insurrection at Nancy,111.
Drouet, the royalist guard,217.
Dumouriez, portrait of, by Madame Roland,94; Minister of Foreign Affairs,95; "a miserable intriguer,"95; his career,96; Masson's description of him,98; plays a double part,101; his description of Louis XVI.,104; made Minister of Foreign Affairs,103; Memoirs of, quoted,127,129,130; urges the King to sign the decree for the transportation of the clergy,150; has an interview with the Queen,153; refuses to be Madame Roland's puppet,158; aids the King to be rid of Roland and his faction,164; takes the portfolio of War,166; before the Assembly,167; resigns,169; final interview of, with the King,171; entreats him not to veto the decrees,172et seq.; goes to the army,174.
Duranton, made Minister of Justice,103,160.
Elisabeth, Madame, letter of, concerning the fête of Chateauvieux,120; remains with the King during the invasion of the Tuileries,200; mistaken by the mob for Marie Antoinette,202; rejoins the Queen,212; letter of, to Madame de Raigecourt,239; cherishes false illusions,265; pious maxim of,276; her gentleness,295; prayer of, in the Temple,347.
Emigration of the nobility the rule in 1792,2.
Federation, fête of the,249et seq.
Fersen, Count de, new information concerning,14; his chivalric devotion to Marie Antoinette,15; their correspondence,16; secret mission of,18; sees the King and Queen,19; his melancholy end,21,22.
Feuillants, Convent of the, royal family imprisoned in,328et seq.
Feuillants, club of,6.
Force, the, prison of,350.
Fournier, "the American,"369.
Francis II., warlike acts of,127.
Geoffrey, M., remarks of, on Gustavus III.,33; quoted,132.
Girondins, the,177; hesitate to depose the King,271; tacitly approve the massacres,377.
Gouges, Olympe de,240.
Gouvion, M. de, protests against admitting the Swiss to the Assembly,116; death of,167.
Grand Châtelet, massacres at,367.
Grave, de, made Minister of War,103; replaced by Servan,160.
Grégoire urges the abolition of royalty,387; career of, after the Revolution,391.
Guadet, hostility of, to Lafayette,234.
Guillotine, Doctor, and his invention,12.
Guillotine, the,12; diversion of society over,13.
Gustavus III., his interest in Marie Antoinette,17; trusted by her,17; letter of, to her,18; at Aix-la-Chapelle,32; his superstition,34; his promises to Louis XVI.,36; conspiracy against,37et seq.; assassination of,40et seq.; scenes at his death,42; character of,43.
Hannaches, Mademoiselle d',30,77.
Hébert, Abbé, confesses the King,276.
Hébert (Père Duchesne) on guard at the Temple,388.
Heine, Heinrich, quoted,278.
Herbois, Collot d', his part in the affair of the regiment of Chateauvieux,112et seq.; attacks Andre Chénier,114; fate of,125; boasts of the 2d of September,362; urges the abolition of royalty,387; fate of,391.
Hervelly, M. d', brings the order to the Swiss to cease firing,310.
Hue, François, with the King in his captivity,331; receives from the King a lock of his hair,346.
Huguenin, the orator of the insurrectionists of June 20,192; chief of the Commune,316.
Insurrectionists of June 20, organization of,182; enter the hall of the Assembly,193; break into the Tuileries,198.
Isle, Rouget de l', author of theMarseillaise,269.
Jacobin Club, place of its meeting,5; its affiliations,6; Lafayette's remarks on,9; joy of at, the death of Gustavus III.,44; the insurrectionary power of,177; of Brest and Marseilles, send two battalions to Paris,268; royalist, in June, 1792,385.
Jourdan, the headsman,120.
June20, insurrection of,186et seq.
La Chesnaye commands the force in the Tuileries,293.
Lacoste, made Minister of the Marine,103.
Lafayette, letter of, to the Assembly,178et seq.; his letter not published, but referred to a committee,181; his relations to the Jacobins,230; before the National Assembly,232; distrusted by the King and Queen,236; anxious that the King should leave Paris,256.
Lalanne, the grenadier, and Louis XVI.,200.
Lamartine, quoted,131; his observations on Lafayette,231; on Madame Roland,372.
Lamballe, Princess of,121,321,331; not allowed to go to the Temple with the Queen,343; sent to the Force,350et seq.; examination and execution of,352et seq.; her body mutilated and her head carried on a pike to the Temple,355; her heart eaten,358.
Lamourette, Abbé, his career,241; his speech to the Assembly and his proposition for harmony,242.
Laporte burns the Countess de la Motte's book at the Queen's order,142.
Lebel, Madame de,353.
Legendre, addresses the King insolently,202.
Leopold II., his interest in French affairs,23; death of,27.
Lessart, de, report of, disapproved by the Assembly,28; impeached,30; massacre of,369.
Lilienhorn, Count de, one of the assassins of Gustavus III.,37,45.
Logographe, box of the,299et seq.
Louis XVI., despised by theémigrés,25; letter of, to Gustavus III.,36; appoints a ministry chosen by the Gironde,103; his deference to his ministers,104et seq.; declares war on Austria,126,129; sufferings of,132; not a soldier,133,139; has no plan,135; anecdotes of, by M. de Vaublanc,139,140; sacrifices his guard,145; repents his concessions,148; for several days in a sort of stupor,151; insulted by Roland and his faction,160; Madame Roland's letter to him read in the Council,164; asks Dumouriez to help rid him of Roland's faction,164; refuses to sign the decree against the priests,169; accepts the resignation of Dumouriez,169; resists Dumouriez' entreaties not to veto the decrees,172; vetoes the decrees,181; permits the gate of the Tuileries to be opened to the mob,195; his conduct at the invasion of the Tuileries,199et seq.; his reception of the mob in the Tuileries,201; addressed by the butcher Legendre,202; in bodily peril,203; returns to the bedchamber,208; letter of, to the Assembly relative to the invasion of the Tuileries,223; interview of, with Pétion,224; incident of the red bonnet,226; conversation of, with Bertrand de Molleville,227; repugnance of, to Lafayette,236; address of, to the Assembly,243; letter of, to the Assembly,245; his plastron,248; takes part in the fête of the Federation,249et seq.; too timorous and hesitating to act,257; nominates a new cabinet,269; conciliatory message of, to the Assembly,270; declines to entertain any plan of escape,273; consents that the royalist noblemen should defend him,284; unwarlike character of,288; reviews the troops in the Tuileries garden and narrowly escapes from them,289; urged by Roederer, goes with his family to the Assembly,292et seq.; his escort,295; addresses the Assembly,300; compelled to remain in the reporters' gallery,300; orders the defenders of the Tuileries to cease firing,305; deposition of, proposed in the Assembly,317; acts like a disinterested spectator,318; taken to the Convent of the Feuillants,328; transferred to the Temple,334,339; his quarters,341; gives lessons to the Dauphin in the Temple, 342: deprived of his sword,346; hears the proclamation abolishing royalty without emotion,388.
Louvet, the author ofFaublas,54; editor of theSentinelle, and Madame Roland's confidant,89et seq.
Maillard, president of the tribunal at the Abbey,365.
Mailly, Marshal de, the chief of the two hundred noblemen in the Tuileries,284.
Malta, Knights of,338.
Mandat, M. de, receives from Pétion an order to repel force,280; goes to the Hôtel-de-Ville and is massacred,281.
Marat incites to the deposition of the king,270; on Louis XVI.,384.
Marie Antoinette, chivalric devotion of Count de Fersen for,15; her correspondence with him,16; places absolute confidence in Gustavus III.,17; letter of, to her brother Leopold,25; condition of, in 1792,73; has an interview with Dumouriez,153; annoyed and insulted by the populace,156,157; during the invasion of the Tuileries,210et seq.; opposed to vigorous measures,222; her distrust of Lafayette and preference for Danton,237; present at the fête of the Federation,251et seq.; her alarm at the King's peril,253; midnight alarms of,259; insulted by federates and forced to keep to her apartments,261; her estimate of the King's character,263; on the night of August 9,276; takes refuge in the Assembly,299; her hopes excited by the sound of artillery,304; in the box of theLogographe,321; in the Convent of the Feuillante,332; in the Temple,343; faints when she hears of the Princesse de Lamballe's death,356.
Marseillaise, the, Rouget de l'Isle's new hymn,269.
Marseilles, federates of, arrive in Paris,268; the scum of the jails,269; at the Tuileries,290,306et seq.,309.
Masson, M. Frédéric, his description of Dumouriez,98.
Ministry appointed by the King resign; new, appointed,176.
Mirabeau cautions the Queen against Lafayette,236; and Abbé Lamourette,241.
Molleville, Bertrand de, conversation of, with the King,227; quoted,273.
Monge, senator of the Empire, reply of, to Napoleon,391.
Moniteur, the, on the fête of Chateauvieux,121.
Mortimer-Ternaux, M., quoted,279,282; hisHistoire 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 theémigrés'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.