Show nsf of all lessons derived from the history of human passion says lavallette writing of tile the french T revolution v ol ution the most important is is the utter impossibility which the best men will abw always ays experience of stopping if ehg they y ai aro 0 o our once 0 led into the path of error if a fow few years before they were perpetrated the crimes of the Ite volu tion could have been portrayed to those wilo who committed cd ed them eyou even es pierre himself would have recoiled with horror aten are arc seduced in ill the first instance by plausible theories choir heated imagination them as len eucal and easy of execution they advance from errors to faults from faulty faults to primes till sorl sensibility ty is ty y the spee spec maclo of guilt and tile the most savage atrocities are arc dignified ii unified by tile the name of state P policy 0 licy r P t 1 I 1 nt I 1 BP peronne eroine is ono one athe of the few french cities whore where the ap ago 0 u usages sages 0 of the thomai ai bajaro arc kept up tip AED osgy louis napoleons present personal appearance is ia thus described in a late letter from paris the personal appearance of napoleon III would puzzle the most ao ac curate observer of tile the face of the man mail with the fion aion mask is not more devoid of expression titan than is liis his one may study it for licurs liours without deriving tile the slightest satisfaction as to the emperors mental characteristics those fishy eyes the parchment like checks the still stiff pointed moustache all suggest a sort of artificial face prep prepared tred for the occasion while the real man like the priestess of apollo lies hidden and delivers short oracular responses behind it ho he is short in stature th though au 0 11 liis his body is full the average size hence lie appears to 0 greater advantage in a sitting posture of late years lie ho lias has grown somewhat BOme what corpulent like the first napoleon and the other members of liis his family his habits at tile present day aie said to be simple and regular perhaps necessarily so if the the stories told of his eady caily excesses betrue be true ilis his appearance on horseback bac k does great credit to liis his horsemanship which is generally allowed to be the most skilful in in E europe ile he is very fond of horses and andaas ape as that thorough understanding of the nature of the horse which establishes a certain pathy between that animal and his rider i |