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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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So little is the general course of French affairs attended to in this country , that when ., as at present , some single event , either from its importance or its strangeness , attracts a certain degree of notice , its causes , and all which could help to explain it , have
been . forgotten . It is true that the most assiduous reader of only the English newspapers , even if he retained all he had read , would understand little or nothing of the real character of events in France ; for the editors of the English newspapers are as ignorant of France as they probably are of Monomotapa ; and their Paris correspondents , being mostly Frenchmen , write as if for
frenchmen , and repeat the mere gossip of the day , pre-supposing as already known all which Englishmen would care to know . By being the solitary exception to this rule , the writer who signed € O . TP . Q . ' in the Morning Chronicle' gained a temporary popularity , merely because , unlike the rest of the fraternity , he assumed that his readers knew nothing , and had to learn everything . In the Examiner' alone , for the last four years , those who take
interest in the fate of that great country , which divides with ourselves the moral dominion of Europe , have had the passing events placed carefully before them with regular explanatory comments . From that paper we quote part of an article which appeared on the 26 th January , 1834 , descriptive of the character and objects of that portion of the French republicans against whom the procesmonstre is mainly directed .
' The Societe des Droils de VHomme is at present the hobgoblin or bugbear of the junte milieu . The language and manner of the partisans of Louis Philippe with respect to that association are a curious medley of affected contempt and intense personal hatred , not without an admixture of fear . They are constantly and studiously imputing to the
members of the society the ahsurdest opinions and the most criminal purposes ; they are incessantly averring , with a degree of emphasis which betrays a lurking doubt , that those opinions and purposes are abhorred by the French people , and that the society has not , and never will have , the support of any class whatever , even the lowest . Yet , in
the very same breath in which they declare it to he harmless by reason of its insignificance , they proclaim it so mischievous and so formidable , that society is certain to perish unless it be put down , by whatever means . 4 In truth , the alarmists are equally wrong in both feelings , whether the feelings be sincere or affected . This much- talked-of association is
not to be despised ; neither , on the other hand , is it to be feared . It does not aim at subverting society , and society would be too strong for it if it did , Weie we to believe some people , the edifice of society is so tottering , and its foundations so unstable , that a breath is enough to blow it down ; nay , there cannot he any stir in the surrounding atmosphere , nor any knocking upon the ground , without its certain destruction . But wo have another idea of society than this ; for us it is something more
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THE M 01 WSTER TRIAL .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1835, page 393, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2646/page/29/
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