HO. TitE FKKtoOII IlKVOIiUTtOK. Si) of power, and with the completion of this consolidation the existing corrup lion proporlioniiMy increased. Being exempted from all taxes the clergy and nobility lived in luxury and wealth; but the common people became poorer and poorer, while struggling to supply the inordinate demands of a vo luptuous court. Louis XV, even went so far as to cstnblish a royal Seraglio in his palace, and La Pompadour was not only his mistress but also his counselor and even ruler for he surrendered to her all his sacred rights as monarch. She, thus possessed of the reins of government, was not slow to take advaulagc of it in satisfying her personal ambition and womanly fancies. So energetic was she in performing her responsible duties, that the treasury was speedily drained. Thus was the government hurried on with quickened pace to its terrible doom. To add to the weight of destructive evils the literature of the country was very degrading, since it ran in the chan nels of infidelity and licentiousness. The writers of the day were permitted to paint with glowing colors the enormous evils that were fust decayed monarchy. tainly did not prove very beneficial to that tottering structure Monarchy. Least beneficial were of Voltaire. One Minister ufter another was appoin ted to improve the deranged state of finan ces only to resign leaving it still more complicated- Finally after the nation had become totally bankrupt and the govern ment had reached the verge of destruc tion, a meeting of the States-General, an ancient form of representation, was con voiced for the purpose of investigating matters and adopting such measures us were consistent with the needful reforms. "This," says an eminent writer, "was in disputably the first day of the Revolu tlon." And indeed it was; for from tills time fortli monarchy, with its two sup ports, the nobility and clergy, was grndu- consuming the half This practise cer the cutting satires ally banished. This impetuous assembly tore away, as it were, the dykes of custom and royalty to let in that flood of despot, ic ruin, which soon rolled over the land, complctly obliterating all the land-marks of monarchy. The chief fault to be found witli this as. scmbly of the States-General is that it too radicilly changed the laws and customs then in vogue not that its aim was strict ly dishonorable, or indeed their legisla tiou unimpeachable; but the too thor ough renovation had at least a strong ten dency to produce, if not the direct eflect of producing, more confusion. And the two succeeding bodies, the Legislative Assembly and the National Convention, kept up the rapid revolution of a flairs until the wildest confusion prevailed. The aims of these, and especially those of the National Convention a conven tion that held sway during the most vio lent part of the Revolution, thus counte nancing the atrocious deeds there enact ed can seriously be called in question. The incarnate fiends, Marat, Dantou and Robespierre were the principal insti gators in those bloody tragidies, They incited the ignorant and brutal populace to overthrow every emolument that had the least semblance of right and order. Prisons were filled with the peaceful and prosperous citizens, who were seized solely because they did not show a sufilc ient amount of brutality. After a mock trial they were guillotined. Infuriated mobs rose up in all the principal cities, scattering deatli and destruction broad cast ovci the laud. It was indeed a time when, ''Sighs, tinil groans and shrieks that rent the air, Where mailc, not marked; when violent sorrow seemed A modern ecstacy; the dead man's knell Was there scarce ask'd, Tor who; and good men's lives Expired before the flowers in their caps, Dying, or 'ere they sickened." But dark us is the stain the French Revolution has left upon the pages of