[History of the Girondists, Volume I by Alphonse de Lamartine]@TWC D-Link book
History of the Girondists, Volume I

BOOK IV
55/60

Placed between the recollections of all he had suffered for three years, and the lowering storms he foresaw in the future, he endeavoured to delude himself, and to feel persuaded of his good fortune.

He said to himself, that perhaps he had mistaken the popular opinion; and that having at least surrendered himself unconditionally to the mercy of his people--that people would respect in him his own power and his own will: he swore in his honest and good heart fidelity to the constitution and love to the nation he really loved.
The queen herself returned to the palace with more national thoughts: she said to the king, "They are no longer the same people;" and, taking her son in her arms, she presented him to the crowd who thronged the terrace of the chateau, and seemed thus to invest herself in the eyes of the people with the innocence of age and the interest of maternity.
The king gave, some days afterwards, a fete to the people of Paris, and distributed abundant alms to the indigent.

He desired that even the miserable should have his day of content, at the commencement of that era of joy, which his reconciliation with his people promised to his reign.

The _Te Deum_ was sung in the cathedral of Paris, as on a day of victory, to bless the cradle of the French constitution.

On the 30th of September, the king closed the Constituent Assembly.


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