The Franco-Prussian War: Its Causes, Incidents, and Consequences, Volume 2W. Mackenzie, 1870 - Franco-Prussian War, 1870-1871 |
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Page 6
... remained more than 200 years unvisited by an invading army . In the reign of Louis XIV . the mere idea of the foreigner venturing into the heart of the country had come to appear so preposter- ous , as to lead to the razing of the ...
... remained more than 200 years unvisited by an invading army . In the reign of Louis XIV . the mere idea of the foreigner venturing into the heart of the country had come to appear so preposter- ous , as to lead to the razing of the ...
Page 27
... remained invincible on our own soil . The government of the emperor , which had long since separated its interests from those of the country , opposed that policy . We take it up with the hope that , taught by experience , France will ...
... remained invincible on our own soil . The government of the emperor , which had long since separated its interests from those of the country , opposed that policy . We take it up with the hope that , taught by experience , France will ...
Page 38
... remained at the palace . The official historio- graphers , whose narratives I have read , generally add - The principal functionaries of state crowded round the empress to take leave of her ; alone General Trochu did not appear . ' No ...
... remained at the palace . The official historio- graphers , whose narratives I have read , generally add - The principal functionaries of state crowded round the empress to take leave of her ; alone General Trochu did not appear . ' No ...
Page 47
... remained till the end of the siege . men . The palace of Versailles , in which the German headquarters were established , was founded in 1661 by Louis XIV . , being erected on the site of an old hunting lodge of Henry IV . , situated in ...
... remained till the end of the siege . men . The palace of Versailles , in which the German headquarters were established , was founded in 1661 by Louis XIV . , being erected on the site of an old hunting lodge of Henry IV . , situated in ...
Page 64
... remained to the end . To the petition addressed to General von Werder by the members of the former class , his excellency replied that they might go where they pleased , provided they kept clear of his army , and did not attempt to ...
... remained to the end . To the petition addressed to General von Werder by the members of the former class , his excellency replied that they might go where they pleased , provided they kept clear of his army , and did not attempt to ...
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Common terms and phrases
advance Alsace ancient arms Artenay artillery attack Baden Basel battalions batteries battle Bavarian Bazaine besiegers bombardment Bourbaki capital capitulation captured castle cathedral cavalry century Chanzy Chassepots Châteaudun church columns command Constanz corps Count von Bismarck D'Aurelles d'Aurelles de Paladine defence despatch division duke emperor enemy erected feet fight fire force fortifications fortress forts France French army front Gambetta garrison German army grand-duke guns honour houses imperial infantry inhabitants investment Jules Favre king Loire Marshal Marshal Bazaine Mecklenburg ment Metz miles military mobiles morning Moselle national guards night o'clock occupied officers Orleans Paris peace population position Prince Frederick Charles prisoners Prussian railway regiment republic retreat Rhine river road Roman ruins Schaffhausen sent shells side siege soldiers sortie Strassburg surrender TAYLOR INSTITUTION Thiers tion tower town treaty Trochu troops valley Versailles victory village Von der Tann walls Werder wounded
Popular passages
Page 298 - The negligently grand, the fruitful bloom Of coming ripeness, the white city's sheen, The rolling stream, the precipice's gloom, The forest's growth, and Gothic walls between, The wild rocks shaped as they had turrets been, In mockery of man's art ; and these withal A race of faces happy as the scene, Whose fertile bounties here extend to all, Still springing o'er thy banks, though empires near them fall.
Page 182 - That noble, patient, deep, pious, and solid Germany should be at length welded into a nation, and become Queen of the Continent, instead of vapouring, vainglorious, gesticulating, quarrelsome, restless, and over-sensitive France, seems to me the hopefullest public fact that has occurred in my time.
Page 6 - By the grace of God and the national will, Emperor of the French...
Page 299 - As it flows down from the distant ridges of the Alps, through fertile regions into the open sea, so it comes down from remote antiquity, associated in every age with momentous events in the history of the neighbouring nations.
Page 299 - ... and negotiations of modern times, of the coronations of emperors, whose bones repose by its side ; on whose borders stand the two grandest monuments of the noble architecture of the middle ages ; whose banks present every variety of wild and picturesque rocks, thick forests, fertile plains; vineyards, sometimes gently sloping, sometimes perched among lofty crags, where industry has won a domain among the fortresses of nature; whose banks are ornamented with populous cities, flourishing towns...
Page 79 - Men are not wanting. What has failed us has been a decisive resolution and the consecutive execution of our plans. That which failed us after the shameful capitulation at Sedan was arms. All supplies of this nature had been sent on to Sedan, Metz, and Strasburg, as if, one would think, the authors of our disaster, by a last criminal combination, had desired, at their fall, to deprive us of all means of repairing our ruin.
Page 217 - Seine has not yet arrived, but, as far as our intelligence goes, the general outine of the facts is known. ^] You are authorized, in consequence, to say to Lord Granville that we sincerely regret that our troops, in order to avert immediate danger, were obliged to seize ships which belonged to British subjects. We admit their claim to indemnification, and shall pay to the owners...
Page 260 - We, William, by God's grace, King of Prussia, hereby announce that the German Princes and Free Towns having addressed to us a unanimous call to renew and undertake with the re-establishment of the German Empire the dignity of Emperor...