To: Tailgunner Joe
Robespierre, cried and pleaded like a woman as they dragged to the Republican Razor, there was never a man that deserved his fate more.
15 posted on
04/17/2006 6:50:18 PM PDT by
Little Bill
(A 37%'r, a Red Spot on a Blue State, rats are evil.)
To: Little Bill
Robespierre, cried and pleaded like a woman as they dragged to the Republican Razor, there was never a man that deserved his fate more.
Yes, the article fails to point out Robespierre's demise:
"As his power increased, his popularity waned. On May 7, 1794, Robespierre, who had previously condemned the Cult of Reason, advocated a new state religion and recommended the Convention to acknowledge the existence of God; on June 8 the inaugural Festival of the Supreme being took place. Meanwhile, the pace of the guillotine grew faster; public finance and government generally drifted to ruin, and Saint-Just demanded the creation of a dictatorship in the person of Robespierre. On July 26, the dictator delivered a long harangue complaining that he was being accused of crimes unjustly. The Convention, after at first obediently passing his decrees, next rescinded them and referred his proposals to the committees. That night at the Jacobin Club his party again triumphed. At the Convention the following day, Saint-Just could not obtain a hearing, and Robespierre was vehemently attacked (the 9th of Thermidor). A deputy proposed his arrest; at the fatal word Robespierre's power came to an end.
"He fled to the Common Hall, whereupon the Convention declared him an outlaw. The National Guard under Barras turned out to protect the Convention, and Robespierre had his lower jaw broken by a shot fired by a gendarme. The next day (July 28, the 10th of Thermidor), he was sent to the guillotine along with Saint-Just, Couthon, and nineteen others."
21 posted on
04/17/2006 8:32:12 PM PDT by
Colinsky
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