The Secret Societies of the European Revolution, 1776-1876, Volume 2Tinsley Bros., 1876 - Europe |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 31
Page 8
... regiments forming the garrison of Paris , were to lead out their companies and direct the revolt in the capital ; and the leaders of the movement were to raise the pro- vinces in the event of the rising being successful in Paris ...
... regiments forming the garrison of Paris , were to lead out their companies and direct the revolt in the capital ; and the leaders of the movement were to raise the pro- vinces in the event of the rising being successful in Paris ...
Page 9
... as many men of his regiment of dragoons as he could induce to follow him . From Colmar the insurgents were to advance upon Strasburg and Nancy , intercept the communications with Paris , pro- claim THE REFORMED CARBONARI . 9.
... as many men of his regiment of dragoons as he could induce to follow him . From Colmar the insurgents were to advance upon Strasburg and Nancy , intercept the communications with Paris , pro- claim THE REFORMED CARBONARI . 9.
Page 10
... regiment garrisoning Neu Brisach ; and Colonel Pailhés , of the disbanded Imperial Guard . At night the conspirators put on their uniforms , armed themselves with swords and pistols , wrapped them- selves in their cloaks , and eagerly ...
... regiment garrisoning Neu Brisach ; and Colonel Pailhés , of the disbanded Imperial Guard . At night the conspirators put on their uniforms , armed themselves with swords and pistols , wrapped them- selves in their cloaks , and eagerly ...
Page 12
... regiment at Neu Brisach . Pailhés escaped to Colmar , where he and Buchez were arrested on suspicion . Tellier and a sergeant named Watebled were traced to a publichouse near Bâle , where the sergeant committed suicide by shooting ...
... regiment at Neu Brisach . Pailhés escaped to Colmar , where he and Buchez were arrested on suspicion . Tellier and a sergeant named Watebled were traced to a publichouse near Bâle , where the sergeant committed suicide by shooting ...
Page 13
... regiment from one village to another , endeavouring to raise the peasantry in the name of Napoleon II . , which he thought would be for them a more potent spell than that of the Republic . Unfortunately for himself , his visits to ...
... regiment from one village to another , endeavouring to raise the peasantry in the name of Napoleon II . , which he thought would be for them a more potent spell than that of the Republic . Unfortunately for himself , his visits to ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
afterwards Ancona Andryane arms army arrested Assembly Association attack Austrian Barbès Blanqui Bucharest canton Capo d'Istria Caravia Carbonari Caussidière centre Charles Albert Chartist chief Colocotroni Colonel command committee conspiracy conspirators Constitution Count Capo d'Istria Czar defeated deputies direction Duke of Modena escape excitement Fenian fired force France French frontier Garibaldi Geneva Genoa German Grand Arch Grand Duke Greece Greek Guards Hetairia Hetairists Holy Alliance Hospodar hundred imprisonment initiated insurgents insurrection Ipsilanti Irish Italian Lafayette Lamartine latter leaders Liberal Louis Blanc marched Mavrocordato Mazzini ment Milan military Minister Modena Moldavia Morea movement named National night Odysseus officers Omladina organisation Pacha Paris patriotic Pepe Piedmontese Poland police Polish political Prince prisoners proceeded Provisional Government Ramorino refugees regiment Republican revolution revolutionary Russian Sclavonic secret societies seized sent Skrzynecki Switzerland thousand tion town troops Turks United Sclavonians village Wallachia workmen Young Europe Young Germany Young Italy
Popular passages
Page 145 - Young Italy is a brotherhood of Italians who believe in a law of Progress and Duty, and are convinced that Italy is destined to become one nation— convinced also that she possesses sufficient strength within herself to become one, and that the...
Page 165 - I came to my better self alone, without aid from others, through the help of a religious conception which I verified by history. From the idea of God I descended to the conception of progress ; from the conception of progress to a true conception of life ; to faith in a mission and its logical consequence — duty the supreme rule of life ; and having reached that faith, I swore to myself that nothing in this world should again make me doubt or forsake it.
Page 164 - Italy, exhausted by two epochs of civilisation, were condemned by Providence henceforth to remain subject to younger and more vigorous nations, without a name or a mission of her own — whence had I derived the right of judging the future, and urging hundreds, thousands of men to the sacrifice of themselves and of all that they held most dear ? " I will not dwell upon the effect of these doubts upon my spirit.
Page 163 - ... when sustained by my mother's smile : as full of fervid hope, for others at least, if not for myself. But during those fatal months there darkened around me such a hurricane of sorrow, disillusion, and deception, as to bring before my eyes, in all its ghastly nakedness, a foreshadowing of the old age of my soul, solitary in a desert world, wherein no comfort in the struggle was vouchsafed to me.
Page 146 - The means by which Young Italy proposes to reach its aim are — education and insurrection, to be adopted simultaneously, and made to harmonize with each other. Education must ever be directed to teach by example, word, and pen, the necessity of insurrection. Insurrection, whenever it can be realised, must be so conducted as to render it a means of national education.
Page 277 - Ireland from the yoke of England, and for the establishment of a free and independent Government on the Irish soil; that I will implicitly obey the commands of my superior officers in the Fenian Brotherhood ; that I will faithfully discharge...
Page 147 - In the name of God and of Italy — In the name of all the martyrs of the holy Italian cause who have fallen beneath foreign and domestic tyranny — By the duties which bind me to the land wherein God has placed me, and to the brothers whom God has given me ; By the love — innate in all men — I bear to the country that gave my mother birth, and will be the home of my children ; By the hatred — innate in all men — I bear to evil, injustice...
Page 164 - I saw rising around me upon every side ; the failure of faith in those who had solemnly bound themselves with me to pursue unshaken the path we had known at the outset to be choked with sorrows ; the distrust I detected in those most dear to me as to the motives and intentions which sustained and urged me onward in the evidently unequal struggle.
Page 277 - Fenian Brotherhood is a distinct and independent organisation. It is composed, in the first place, of citizens of the United States of America, of Irish birth and lineage ; and, in the second place, of Irishmen, and of friends of Ireland, living elsewhere on the American Continent, and in the provinces of the British Empire wherever situated.
Page 164 - Chambery rose up before me like the phantoms of a crime and its unavailing remorse. I could not recall them to life. How many mothers had I caused to weep ! How many more must learn to weep should I persist in the attempt to arouse the youth of Italy to noble action, to awaken in them the yearning for a common country ! And if that country were indeed an illusion...