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riverwindphotography · 2 months
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LeHardy Rapids
(c) riverwindphotography, June 2024
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Give me the last words of every figure that had a role in the French revolution
(Maybe it will be to many so you can give a little of if you want)
Louis XVI — on January 22 1793, Suite du Journal de Perlet reported the folllwing about the execution that had taken place the day before:
[Louis] climbs the scaffold, the executioner cuts his hair, this operation makes him flinch a little. He turns towards the people, or rather towards the armed forces which filled the whole place, and with a very loud voice, pronounces these words: “Frenchmen, I die innocent, it is from the top of the scaffold, and ready to appear before God, that I tell this truth; I forgive my enemies, I desire that France…” Here he was interrupted by the noise of the drums, which covered some voices crying for mercy, he himself took off his collar and presented himself to death, his head fell, it was a quarter past ten.
Jean-Paul Marat — several people who came to witness during the trial of Charlotte Corday reported Marat’s last words to have been a cry for help to his fiancée Simonne Évrard:
Laurent Basse, courier, testifies that being on Saturday, July 15 (sic), at Citizen Marat's house, between seven and eight o'clock in the evening, busy folding newspapers, he saw the accused come, whom citoyenne Évrard and the portress refused entrance. Nevertheless, citizen Marat, who had received a letter from this woman, heard her insist and ordered her to enter, which she did. A few minutes later, on leaving, he heard a cry: ”Help me, my dear friend, help me!” (À moi, ma chere amie, à moi !). Hearing this, having entered the room where citizen Marat was, he saw blood come out of his bosom in great volumes; at this sight, himself terrified, he cried out for help, and nevertheless, for fear that the woman should make an effort to escape, he barred the door with chairs and struck her in the head with a blow; the owner came and took it out of his hands.
The president challenges the accused to state what she has to answer. I have nothing to answer, the accused says, the fact is true.
Another witness, Jeanne Maréchal, cook, submits the same facts; she adds that Marat, immediately taken from his bathtub and put in his bed, did not stir.
The accused says the fact is true. 
Another witness, Marie-Barbe Aubin, portress of the house where citizen Marat lived, testifies that on the morning of July 13, she saw the accused come to the house and ask to speak to citizen Marat, who answered her that it was impossible to speak to him at the moment, attenuated the state where he had been for some time, so she gave a letter to deliver to him. In the evening she came back again, and insisted on speaking to him. Aubin and citoyenne Évrard refused to let her in; she insisted, and Marat, who had just asked who it was, having learned that it was a woman, ordered her to be let in; which happened immediately. A few moments later, she heard a cry: "Help me, my dear friend!” (À moi, ma chere amie !);she entered, and saw Marat, blood streaming from his bosom; frightened, she fell to the floor and shouted with all her might: À la garde! Au secours !
The accused says that everything the witness says is the most exact truth.
Girondins — Number 64 of Bulletin du Tribunal Criminel, written shortly after the execution, reports that, once arrived at Place de la Révolution, the Girondins sang Veillons au Salut de l’Empire together while waiting for their turn to mount the scaffold. Lehardy’s last words are reported to have been Vive la République, ”which was generally heard, thanks to the vigorous lungs nature had provided him with.”
Hébertists — On March 31, a week after the execution, Suite de Journal de Perlet reported the following anecdote, though I’ll let it be unsaid whether it should be taken seriously or not:
Here is an anecdote which can serve to make better known the eighteen conspirators whom the sword of the law has struck. On the day of their execution, several heads had already fallen when General Laumur's turn arrived. Ronsin and Vincent looked at him at the scaffold and said to Hébert: ”Without the clumsiness of this j... f... we would have succeeded.” They were alluding to the indiscretion of Laumur, who would tell anyone who would listen that the Convention had to be destroyed.
In Mémoires sur Carnot par son fils (1861), Carnot’s son also claims that, on the day of the execution, his father got stuck in the crowd witnessing the tumbrils pass on their way to the scaffold, close enough to hear Cloots say: “My friends, please do not confuse me with these rascals.”
Dantonists — the famous idea that Danton’s last words were: ”show my head to the people, it’s worth seeing” is, according to Michel Biard, at best backed by a dubious source — Souvernirs d’un sexagénaire (1833) by Antoine Vincent Arnault:
I found there all the expression of the sentiment which inspired Danton with his last words; terrible words which I could not hear, but which people repeated to each other, quivering with horror and admiration. ”Above all, don't forget,” he said to the executioner with the accent of a Gracque, ”don't forget to show my head to the people; it’s worth seeing.” At the foot of the scaffold he had said another word worthy of being recorded, because it characterizes both the circumstance which inspired it, and the man who uttered it. With his hands tied behind his back, Danton was waiting his turn at the foot of the stairs, when his friend Lacroix, whose turn had come, was brought there. As they rushed towards each other to give each other the farewell kiss, a guard, envying them this painful consolation, threw himself between them and brutally separated them. "At least you won't prevent our heads from kissing each other in the basket," Danton told him with a hideous smile.
Biard does however question how reliant Arnault really is, considering his account partly contradicts what earlier, more reliable ones, had to say about the execution. None of the authentic to somewhat autentic descriptions of the dantonist execution I’ve been able to find mention any recorded last words from Danton or his fellow convicts. That has not hindered authors and historians throughout the centuries to let their imagination run wild with the execution — look for example at how many have had Danton say something menacing about Robespierre on his way to the scaffold. Early Desmoulins biographers often have him be a sobbing mess, saying things like "Citizens! it is your preservers who are being sacrificed. It was I — I, who on July 12th called you first to arms! I first proclaimed liberty… My sole crime has been pity...” (Methley, 1915) or ”Thus, then, the first apostle of Liberty ends!” (Claretie,1876) and for Fabre there exists the claim that he hummed his song Il pleut bergère on his way to the scaffold, or muttered his biggest regret was not being able to finish his vers (verses), to which Danton replied that, within a week, he’ll have more vers (worms) than he can dream of. None of these statements do however appear to be backed by any primary sources. Finally, John Gideon Millingen, twelve years old at the time of the execution, reported in his Recollections of Republican France 1791-1801 (1848) that ”[Danton’s] execution witnessed one of those scenes of levity that seemed to render death to a jocose matter. Lacroix, who was beheaded with him, was a man of colossal stature, and, as he descended from the cart, leaning upon Danton, he observed, ”Do you see that axe, Danton? Well, even when my head is struck off I shall be taller than you!” It does however strike me as unlikely for Milligen to actually have been able to hear anything of what the condemned had to say.
Robespierrists — like with the dantonists, we have several alleged last words from more or less unreliable sources. The apocryphal memoirs of the Sansons does for example report Saint-Just’s last words to have an emotionless ”Adieu” to Robespierre, and for the latter we have a story that his last recorded words were ”Merci Monsieur,” which he said to a man for giving him a handkerchief to wipe away the blood coming out of his shattered jaw with (can you even talk under such conditions?). However, here I have again collected trustworthy descriptions, and none of them record any last words. In this instance it’s not exactly strange either, given the fact many of the condemned had been injured so badly they were more or less unconscious by the time of the execution. 
Other alleged final words can be found in this post, among others Madame Roland’s ”Oh Liberty, what crimes are committed in your name” and Bailly’s ”I’m cold.” I will however doubt the authenticity of all of them until someone shows me a serious source for them (the author of the post doesn’t cite any at all). Like I wrote above, I doubt anyone actually stood near enough to hear any eventual last words.
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sumbluespruce · 1 year
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The Harlequins of LeHardy Rapids
5/23
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patricelecointre · 2 years
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Pour un séjour détente dans le Livradois !
Le Portail http://www.trouverunechambredhote.com/ a le plaisir d’accueillir et de vous présenter un nouveau Partenaire avec une Maison d’Hôtes de Charme & des Chalets d’Hôtes « BERGEVAUX » à BERTIGNAT dans Le PUY DE DÔME.
Coordonnées :
Monsieur LEHARDY Johan
Lieu-dit Le Perrier - 63480 BERTIGNAT
Tél. Fixe : 0631029337
Tél. Portable : 0631029337
Site internet: www.bergeveaux.com
La Maison d’Hôtes de Charme & Les Chalets d’Hôtes « BERGEVAUX » vous accueillent dans les Monts du Livradois et vous propose de vous héberger en formule chambres d’hôtes avec 2 chambres pouvant recevoir 2 à 4 personnes ou dans l’un des 3 Chalet d’hôtes pouvant recevoir 2 à 4 personnes.
Vous pourrez disposer de la Piscine chauffée avec autour grand terrasse avec fauteuils.
Mini-ferme, baby-foot, fléchettes, pétanque, etc.…
Restaurant sur place et ouvert tout l'année.
Amis Propriétaires de Gîtes et de Chambres d'hôtes, de Locations saisonnières et d’Hébergements Insolites, comme Notre Nouveau Partenaire « BERGEVAUX » profitez sans attendre de nos Formules d’abonnement ILLIMITE à partir de 19 Euros TTC.
Puydedome #Livradois #Charme #Evasion #Decouverte #Sejours #Hebergements #Chambresdhotes #Chaletdhotes
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l3hardy · 5 years
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These looney little #primates are the Ring Tailed #Lemur’s of #Madagascar or as I like to call them, Julien’s lol I could have stood there and watched them all day. So lively. What you think they were telling each other with those facial expressions? “The lemurs living at the Museum are a part of the Ring-Tailed Species Survival Plan (#SSP), a collection of zoos and nature centers around the United States committed to the conservation of lemurs.” - https://www.lifeandscience.org/lemurs For my #photographer friends and enthusiasts: Shot on my #Canon #M50 #mirrorless camera with the EF-M55-200mm lens which I was very pleased with. It did a great job of closing the gap between me and the #animals. Edited on my #iPad Using #Pixelmator and #Lightroom. #lehardy #digital #art #capture #endangeredspecies #focus #moment #photography #naturephotography #travelphotography #wildlifephotography #natgeo #natgeoyourshot (at Museum of Life and Science) https://www.instagram.com/p/B1ymbwbHZ3T/?igshid=1uibb8jvsproo
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mbsposts · 5 years
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20190614  Yellowstone National Park     Yellowstone River  LeHardy’s Rapids  Harlequins 
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cmr7701 · 6 years
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Bumpkin - Chapter 2 (on Wattpad) https://my.w.tt/XjeoayoXjT 10-year-old Matthew Gregory Lehardy begins the fight of his life in the late summer of August, and must fight hard to survive with the haunting thoughts of what he has done to land him there.
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rbzpr · 7 years
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Mourir en député (1792 - 1799)
In his excellent book La liberté ou la mort: mourir en député 1792 - 1795, Michel Biard establishes a list of the deputies of the National Convention that died unnatural deaths (e.g. assassination, suicide, execution); since he focuses on the conventionnels whose deaths were connected to their function as representatives of the people, Biard’s list is confined to the period between 1792 and 1799. In total, it comprises 96 names – over twelve percent (!) of the circa 750 deputies of the National Convention.
Le Peletier de Saint-Fargeau, assassinated (21 January 1793).
Marat, assassinated (13 July 1793).
Baille, suicide (2 September 1793).
Sautarya, died in consequence of imprisonment (27 September 1793).
Gorsas, guillotined (7 October 1793).
Birotteau, guillotined (24 October 1793).
Valazé, suicide (30 October 1793).
Antiboul, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Boilleau, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Boyer-Fonfrède, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Brissot, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Carra, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Duchastel, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Ducos (Jean-François), guillotined (31 October 1793).
Duprat, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Fauchet, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Gardien, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Gensonné, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Lacaze, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Lasource, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Lauze de Perret, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Lehardi, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Lesterpt-Beauvais, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Mainvielle, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Sillery, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Vergniaud, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Viger, guillotined (31 October 1793).
Lidon, suicide (2 November 1793).
Coustard de Massy, guillotined (6 November 1793).
Philippe Égalité, guillotined (6 November 1793).
Gasparin, died en mission (11 November 1793).
Manuel, guillotined (14 November 1793).
Cussy, guillotined (15 November 1793).
Chambon, assassinated (20 November 1793).
Doublet, died in prison (24 November 1793).
Asselin, died in prison (5 December 1793).
Kersaint, guillotined (5 December 1793).
Rabaut Saint-Étienne, guillotined (5 December 1793).
Valady, guillotined (6 December 1793).
Noël, guillotined (8 December 1793).
Fabre, died in combat (20 December 1793).
Grangeneuve, guillotined (21 December 1793).
Dechézeaux, guillotined (17 January 1794).
Bernard, guillotined (22 January 1794).
Cloots, guillotined (24 March 1794).
Beauvais, died in consequence of imprisonment (28 March 1794).
Condorcet, suicide (29 March 1794).
Basire, guillotined (5 April 1794).
Chabot, guillotined (5 April 1794).
Danton, guillotined (5 April 1794).
Delacroix, guillotined (5 April 1794).
Delaunay, guillotined (5 April 1794).
Desmoulins, guillotined (5 April 1794).
Fabre d’Églantine, guillotined (5 April 1794).
Hérault de Séchelles, guillotined (5 April 1794).
Philippeaux, guillotined (5 April 1794).
Simond, guillotined (13 April 1794).
Rebecqui, suicide (1 May 1794).
Masuyer, guillotined (26 May 1794).
Guadet, guillotined (19 June 1794).
Salle, guillotined (19 June 1794).
Buzot, suicide (24 June 1794).
Pétion, suicide (24 June 1794).
Barbaroux, guillotined (25 June 1794).
Osselin, guillotined (26 June 1794).
Vidalin, died en mission (22 July 1794).
Le Bas, suicide (28 July 1794).
Couthon, guillotined (28 July 1794).
A. Robespierre, guillotined (28 July 1794).
M. Robespierre, guillotined (28 July 1794).
Saint-Just, guillotined (28 July 1794).
Perrin, died in prison (14 October 1794).
Carrier, guillotined (16 December 1794).
Féraud, assassinated (20 May 1795).
Brunel, suicide (27 May 1795).
Rühl, suicide (29 May 1795).
Maure, suicide (3 June 1795).
Duquesnoy, suicide (17 June 1795).
Goujon, suicide (17 June 1795).
Romme, suicide (17 June 1795).
Bourbotte, guillotined (17 June 1795).
du Roy, guillotined (17 June 1795).
Soubrany, guillotined (17 June 1795).
Briez, died en mission (23 June 1795).
Tellier, suicide (17 September 1795).
Lebon, guillotined (16 October 1795).
Collot d’Herbois, died en déportation (8 June 1796).
Cusset, shot (10 October 1796).
Huguet, shot (10 October 1796).
Javogues, shot (10 October 1796).
Charlier, suicide (23 February 1797).
Bourdon de l’Oise, died en déportation (22 June 1798).
Casabianca, died in combat (1 August 1798).
Rovère, died en déportation (11 September 1798).
Bonnier d’Alco, assassinated (19 April 1799).
Roberjot, assassinated (19 April 1799).
As Biard notes, one could add a few more names to the list. Three deputies died while being on leave after a mission (due to illness, in most cases), which is why they do not fall into the category “died en mission”: d’Anthoine (19 August 1793), Petitjean (8 March 1794) and Gillet (4 November 1795). Another representative, Aubry, was fructidorisé in 1797 and deported to Guiana, but he managed to escape to Dutch Guiana, where he died of an illness on 17 July 1798 – hence not en déportation, strictly speaking.
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fishing-exposed · 6 years
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@FlyandFin: TBT Dreaming of Yellowstone Cutts, LeHardy's Rapids. #cuttroattrout #trout #flyfishing #yellowstonenationalpark #nikon #flyfishingphotography https://t.co/hZgCNyCGuI
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kimkatic · 7 years
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One-time seasonal worker lands dream photo job at Yellowstone In this June 8, 2017 photo, Yellowstone National Park photographer Jim Peaco, left, gives Sunnyvale, Calif., tourists Amanda and Stephen Chou a lesson in shutter speeds while photographing harlequin ducks in the LeHardy Rapids section of the ... #photographyjobsonline
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Yellowstone National Park - Day 2
Yellowstone National Park - Day 2
Wyoming
Tuesday, August 14, 2018
Smoky, 86°
 “Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature's peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees. The winds will blow their own freshness into you, and the storms their energy, while cares will drop away from you like the leaves of Autumn.” – John Muir
 The morning broke with the sun shining through the trees; the smoky haze that had covered most of the western United States was still in full force creating a blurry mist from horizon to horizon.  It was clear above with blue sky but as you looked toward the horizon in any direction, the view was limited to only a mile or two. Without the smoke it should have been for miles.
 There were no shower or laundry facilities at our campground so had to go to Fishing Bridge campground, as this is where the park’s showers were located. It took a little time to get there since the road leading to that site was under repair. Finally, we were ready for the day’s exploration of the park!
 A little past LeHardys Rapids, the road leads to the parking lot for the Mud Volcano.  There were many people walking along the trails around the features.  I was imaging something like Krakatoa: a massive cone, spewing muddy material.  I was a little disappointed pulling into the Mud Volcano area only to find that the “volcano” is nothing more than a giant pit which, granted, is muddy.
 Mud Volcano - (I know a let down for me too)
 The eastern half of Yellowstone National Park has two geyser areas, Mud Volcano and West Thumb Geyser Basin.  The two offers an outstanding contrast: where West Thumb is known for its relative tranquility and limpid waters, Mud Volcano’s fame rests on its boisterousness and acridity.
Most of the best attractions in Mud Volcano are located just outside the parking lot.  The Mud Cauldron is view-able from the pathway right in front of the parking area.  It is a large area of mud and water heated by steam escaping from far below. As you head left from the parking area toward a steep climb, a short side path leads to the Blood Geyser.  
 Blood Geyser
The sign said this feature used to “erupt” muddy water up to 50 feet in the air in the 1800s.  It has long since stopped this activity and, at present, is a sizzling mud pot area.
Continuing up the pathway, climbing the Cooking Hillside, which is quite steep but relatively short.  
 Cooking Hillside
 The boardwalk trail resumes at the top and soon comes to the Churning Cauldron.
 Churning Cauldron
 This area was a cool pool filled with bacteria until earthquakes in 1978 and 1979 greatly increased the temperature.  It tosses muddy water three to five feet high.  Further ahead, at the top of the hill, the boardwalk goes to the left and right.  To the left is a short side path leading to the Black Dragon’s Cauldron.  It is a large, sizzling lake of mud.  It was created in 1948 along a crack in the earth, and coated nearby trees in mud when it exploded into existence.
 Return to the main boardwalk and take the right turn back downhill towards the parking area.  A short distance down the walk is the Grizzly Fumarole.  
 Grizzly Fumarole
This feature’s appearance varies widely depending on recent precipitation.  It can be a watery mud-pot, a thick mud-pot, or simply a steam vent (fumarole).
At the bottom of the hill almost to the parking lot is Mud Volcano and a short side boardwalk leads to the Dragon’s Mouth Spring.  A favorite for many, it has nothing to do with mud.  I thought it was one of the more interesting features in the park.
 Dragon’s Mouth
It’s a spot where boiling water has gradually eroded away the hillside, creating a cavern that resounds constantly with roaring waters — almost like there really is a dragon lurking in there.  Bizarre noises emit from the opening, making the idea of a dragon’s mouth rather believable.
Continuing north on the loop road you come to Hayden Valley where bison and elk free range on both sides of the road.  The Yellowstone River winds along its way with rolling hills giving scenic views over each hill.  We saw several bison herds grazing in the distance.  Closer to the road, there were some individual bulls.  One, standing at the base of a small cliff had gathered quite a crowd of photographers and others that wanted a close up view.  It was easy to get great pictures from above the bison.
The Canyon Village area is one of the most majestic areas found within the Park boundaries. More photos and paintings are done here of the vast breathtaking views along the canyon’s edge of the deep canyons.  With the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone River featuring two breathtaking waterfalls, a vast canyon lined with yellow cliff walls, and a number of viewpoints and hiking trails, there is something for everyone.
 Upper Falls of the Yellowstone River
The walk down to Artist viewpoint is well treed with breaks giving amazing views of the canyon walls, the river below and from several vantage points, the Upper and Lower Falls cascading into the canyon far below.  
 Lower Falls of the Yellowstone River
Along with Old Faithful, it’s one of the park’s two marquee destinations.  Seen from above, the canyon looks like the earth itself has a loose seam: A 20-mile-long, sheer-sided gorge plunges more than 1,000 feet to the Yellowstone River, widening up to 4,000 feet across in places.  
 Yellowstone Canyon
Two thundering waterfalls pour over two immense drops in the river’s course, and a palette of bright reds, yellows, orange, whites, and browns swirls cross the rocky walls.  In short, it’s every bit as impressive as that other Grand Canyon, if not quite as big.
According to the ranger discussing the early exploration of the park, the first reports of Yellowstone, in the early 1800s, described a place in the northwest corner of the Wyoming Territory where mud boiled, water spouted, and steam came out of the ground.  The area in question was at the headwaters of the Yellowstone River, the longtime home of a band of Shoshone Indians.  In 1807, John Colter, a former member of the Lewis and Clark expedition, met with ridicule when he first described the fantastical place.  People then jokingly referred to it as "Colter's Hell."
Ferdinand V. Hayden, head of the U.S. Geological Survey of the Territories, decided it was time for professional explorers to take a look.  In 1871, Hayden led an expedition to Yellowstone to determine the real value of the land.  The expedition party consisted of a botanist, zoologist, mineralogist, meteorologist and a team of topographers who were there to collect scientific data about the landscape.  Also accompanying them was a young artist named Thomas Moran and a photographer.  For the first time, Americans were able to see what mere words had previously described. (NPS Ranger talk)
The day ended at Tower Fall and Tower-Roosevelt.  Located in the northeastern part of Yellowstone near Tower Junction, the fall plunges a stunning 132 feet.  
 Tower Falls
The unusual rock columns north of the fall were created by lava flow that cracked as it cooled. It was just over an hour’s drive back to the campground where a small waterfall was alongside the roadway. 
 Small Waterfall along Roadway
Back at the campsite, a great dinner with a campfire under the night skies ended the day.
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riverwindphotography · 3 months
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High Waters, LeHardy Rapids, Yellowstone National Park
(c) riverwindphotography, June 2024
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The condemned, as they were being brought back down to the Conciergerie, allowed themselves to sing in chorus the first four verses of the anthem of the Marseillaise, which they believed could be adopted in the position in which they found themselves. It was a few minutes past eleven in the evening, on the 9th of Brumaire.
The next day, the 10th, around noon, the condemned were brought to the place of their execution. Since 1766, at the day of Lally’s execution, and 1777, at the day of Desrues’ execution, one had not seen such an immense crowd of spectators. The ports, the quays, the squares and the streets were filled with numerous people, the windows were overflowing with citizens of both sexes. Along their route, they heard thousands of voices shouting: long live the republic, down with the traitors. None of them showed any uneasiness, with the exception of Brissot and Fauchet (they were in two separate tumbrils), on whose faces one noticed a dull and pensive look. Several of the others, notably Mainvielle and Duprat, chorused with the spectators several times along the road.
Around one o'clock, the condemned arrived at the Place de la Revolution. When getting off the tumbril, Boyer-Fonfrède and Ducos embraced each other, this was repeated by the other condemned, who were already at the foot of the scaffold. Sillery was executed first, he greeted the spectators to the right and left with a serious air. Those who succeeded him in the fatal operation spoke in broken sentences that no one could grasp. Lehardy, who shouted vive la république, was generally heard, thanks to the vigorous lungs which nature had provided him with. The others, while waiting for their turn, sang the refrain, plutôt la mort que l’esclavage, c’est la devise des Français. Viger was executed last. After the execution, which lasted thirty-eight minutes, people threw their hats in the air, and the cries of vive la république, repeated a thousand times, were heard for more than ten minutes.
The execution of the girondins described in number 64 of Bulletin du Tribunal Criminel (1793)
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sumbluespruce · 3 years
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Harlequins at Lehardy’s
5-14-21  Harlequin Ducks
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polohubsocial-blog · 6 years
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Sapphire–Bayswater vence en la final del XVI Memorial Conde de Guaqui en el Santa María Polo Club Con esta competición continua la temporada de los grandes torneos de polo, con una primavera llena de deporte y eventos cada fin de semana en el Club Sotogrande, San Roque (Cádiz), 8 de abril de 2018 El equipo de Sapphire–Bayswater se ha proclamado este domingo vencedor de la 16º edición del Memorial Conde de Guaqui, celebrado durante el fin de semana en las canchas de Los Pinos del Santa María Polo Club. El equipo integrado por Carlos Piñal, Pablo Mora-Figueroa, Diogo Gallego y Lawrence Isola, superó al cuarteto de Jolly Roger King of Polo, que tuvo entre sus filas a Niclas Johanson, Matt Evetts, Jamie lehardy y Anders Thulin.
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l3hardy · 4 years
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“Two roads diverged in a wood, and I took the one less traveled by... that has made all the difference.” - Robert Frost • l͕͖͉̭̰ͬ̍ͤ͆̊ͨe̮̟͈̣̖̰̩̹͈̾ͨ̑͑h͚̖̜̍̃͐a̘̫͈̭͌͛͌̇̇̍r̼̯̤̈ͭ̃ͨ̆d̥̝̮͙͈͂̐̇ͮ̏̔̀̚ͅy͉̝͖̻̯ͮ̒̂ͮ͋ͫͨ-g͎͚̥͎͔͕ͥ̿i̞̟̫̺ͭ̒ͭͣt̘̟̼̉̈́͐͋͌̊a̘̫͈̭͌͛͌̇̇̍l͕͖͉̭̰ͬ̍ͤ͆̊ͨ • For more please #follow my instagram account @ https://instagram.com/l3hardy #lehardy #hardy #duro #photography #fotografía #photographer #fotógrafo #nature #naturaleza #naturephotography #landscapephotography #travelphotography #hike #hiking #mountains #foliage #fall #NH #visitNH #autumn #franconianotch #flumegorge #fallfoliage #newengland #whitemountains (at The Flume Gorge) https://www.instagram.com/p/CHQ-agTnUZ9/?igshid=x4zjh6fug3ge
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