‘APPENDIX to the CHRONICLE. 
tion, or a call from within the 
house. During the day, the orders 
of the constituted authorities may 
beexecuted in it. No domiciliary 
visit can be made but in virtue of 
alaw, and for the person or object 
expressly stated in the att which 
orders the visit. 
360. No corporation or associa- 
tion contrary to public order can be 
formed. 
361. Noassembly of citizens can 
call itself a popular society. 
362. No particular society em- 
ploying itself upon political ques- 
tions, can correspond with any 
other, or affiliate with it, or hold 
public sittings, composed of mem- 
bers and auditors, distinguished 
from one another, or impose con- 
ditions of admission and eligibility, 
or arrogate rights of exclusion, or 
make its members wear any exter- 
nal mark of their association. 
363. The citizens cannot exer. 
cise their political rights, but in 
the primary or communal as- 
semblies, 
364. All the citizens are free to 
address petitions to the public au- 
thorities, but the petitions must be 
individual; no association can pre- 
sent collective petitions, except the 
constituted authorities, and that 
only upon subje¢ts appertaining to 
their funétions. ‘Lhe petitioners 
must never forget the respect due 
to the constituted authorities, 
365. Every armed assemblage 
is an offence against the con. 
stitution ; it ought to be instantly 
dispersed ‘by force. 
~366. Every assemblage, not 
armed, ought also to be dispersed, 
at first by means of verbal com. 
mand, and, if necessary, by the 
display of armed force. 
367. Several constituted autho. 
1C3 
rities cannot meet to deliberate 
together; no act issuing from such 
a meeting can be execated, 
8. Nomancan wear distinctive 
marks which call ta mind funétions 
formerly exercised, or services 
performed. 
349. Whe members of the legis- 
lative body, and all the public 
funftionaries, wear, in the exer- 
cise ef their fun¢tions, the dress or 
sign of the authority with which 
they are invested; the law deter- 
mines the form of it, 
307- No citizen can renounce, 
in whole or in part, the indemnity 
or salary allowed him by the law 
on account of public funétions. 
371. There is uniformity of 
weights and measures in the re- 
public. 
372. The French zra commences 
on the 22d of September 1792, the 
day of the foundation of the re- 
public. 
373- The French nation declares, 
that in no case will it suffer the 
return of the French, who having 
abandoned their country since the 
15th of July, 178g, are not com. 
prehended in the exceptions made 
to the laws against emigrants; and 
the nation interditts the legislative 
body from creating new exceptions 
upon this point. The property of 
emigrants is irrevocably confiscated 
to the benefit of the republic, 
374. The French nation pro- 
claims also as a guarantee of the 
public faith, that after an adjudi- 
cation legally completed of na- 
tional property, whatever may have 
been its origin, the legitimate 
holder cannot be dispossessed of it, 
but a person reclaiming it may, sif 
there be reason, be indemnified by 
the national treasury, 
375. None of the powers insti- 
H4 tuted 
