: G.A. Henty
: No Surrender! A Tale of the Rising in La Vendee
: Charles River Editors
: 9781537812328
: 1
: CHF 1.10
:
: Erzählende Literatur
: English
: 465
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB
G.A. Henty was a well-known prolific author of historical adventure novels.Henty's books are also known for being historically accurate, making them both entertaining and educational for all readers.



This is a historical novel that is set during the French Revolution.  The action centers around a young English man who finds himself in the middle of the great conflict.

CHAPTER 2: THE BEGINNING OF TROUBLES.


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“THINGS ARE GETTING MORE AND more serious, Patsey,” said Jean one evening. “I don’t know what will come of it. The excitement is spreading here, and there can be no doubt that there will be very serious troubles, ere long. The greater portion of the people here are with the Assembly, and approve of all these decrees against the priests, and the persecution of the better classes. You know what has taken place in Paris, and I fear that it will be repeated here.

“We are split up. My father, dear good man, thinks that he has only to attend to his business, and to express no opinion whatever about public affairs, and that the storm will pass quietly over his head. My brother has thrown himself heart and soul—that is to say, as far as he has a heart to throw—into what he calls the cause of the people; and which I consider to be the cause of revolution, of confiscation, of irreligion, and abomination generally.

“I am told that my name has freely been mentioned, in his club, as that of a dangerous man, with opinions contrary to the public good. I hear, too, that that brother of mine was there, at the time; and that he got up and said that in a case like this his voice must be silent, that true patriots place their country before all things; and then affected to speak mildly in my favour, but at the same time doing me as much harm as he could. I believe the fellow is capable of denouncing his own father.

“From the Bocage I hear that the whole country is in confusion. The people, of course, side with their priests. The nobles and land owners are naturally royalists,