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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: March 15, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for France (France) or search for France (France) in all documents.
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M'Me Paterson's Caution.
--An incident in connection with the Bonaparte-Paterson trial has excited some remark in Paris.
Mme. Paterson, coming to France, did not bring with her all the papers which sustained her case, for fear they might be stolen.
Some she left behind; while those she brought she had sewed into garments which never quitted her person.
This indirect imputation upon the honor of her opponents and the French police, excited a sentiment of indignation which has found expression in various ways.
Even her lawyer, M. Berryer, spoke of the apprehensions of his clients as illusory and ill-founded, while the defence made use of the fact to throw doubt upon the authenticity of the certified duplicates presented to the Court.
The Daily Dispatch: March 15, 1861., [Electronic resource], The evacuation of Sumter at Charleston . (search)
A Doomed family.
When Henry IV. of France — dear to romance as the hero of the white plume, and to history as the king who, most of all all his misfortunes in old age, was the greatest monarch that ruled France, from the days of Charlemagne to the days of the first Napoleon. We z. He dragooned his Protestant subjects.
He kindled a civil war in France.
He built Marli.
He entailed a debt upon posterity that brought i ll the renown of his arms.
These are the shades.
But look at what France was, when she came into his hands by the death of Mazarin, and see which belonged to his descendants, this is the last that is left.--France and Naples are gone from the Bourbons forever.
How long Spain will I. said of the Bourbons, when they were re-seated on the throne of France, "they have learned nothing, and forgotten nothing." This had been kin.--Louis Philippe had written to Bomba, advising him to imitate France, and relax the rigor of his reign, for fear of being drawn into the
The Daily Dispatch: March 15, 1861., [Electronic resource], The evacuation of Sumter at Charleston . (search)
The French invasion of Ireland.
--Smith O'Brien has published a pamphlet in condemnation of the project for an invasion of Ireland by France, which has attracted considerable attention.