The Mcmoires de Bailly 19 



four times/ the Journal dc Paris once,- the Point dii jour seven 

 times. ^ His own additions are numerous and often important. 

 Mentioning only those of at least a paragraph in length, they 

 are : an account of the critical session of the evening of June 16 

 (I, pp. 150-156) ; a correction of the Proccs-vcrbal (I, p. 167) ; 

 observation on the use of the word dccrct by the assembly (I, p. 

 171) ; observation on the expression classes priznlegiecs employed 

 in the king's letter of June 17 (I, p. 175) ; remark on the vote 

 par tete made June 18 (I, p. 175) ; incident of Madame de Tesse 

 (I, p. 175) ; disorder in the assembly (I, p. 176) ; Bailly present 

 in the street when the clergy voted to join the commons (I, pp. 

 178, 179) ; members of the assembly threatened with violence 

 because of their opinions (I, pp. 179, 180) ; the events of June 

 20, in which Bailly was so prominent a figure (I, pp. 180-194, 

 the personal recollections of Bailly being combined with the ac- 

 count of the Proccs-verbal) ; the incident of the return of Martin 

 d'Auch to the assembly (I, pp. 192, 193, 194) ; letter from the 

 king, June 21 (I, pp. 196, 197) ; the union of the clergy with the 

 commons, June 22 (I, pp. 198, 203) ; arrangements for the Royal 

 Session, call upon the guard of the seals, and midnight interview 

 of Bailly with members of the liberal nobility (I, pp. 204-206) ; 

 account of the Royal Session, in which Bailly supplements from 

 memory the accounts of the Proccs-verbal and of the Courricr 

 de Provence (I, pp. 206-223) ; admittance of the public to the 

 hall of the commons (I, pp. 225, 226) ; attempt of the people to 

 force an entrance into the hall (I, p. 233) ; attempt on the part 

 of Bailly to suppress applause in the assembly (I, p. 247) ; valu- 

 able personal recollections on the conduct of the majority of the 

 nobility and the minority of the clergy (I, pp. 247-264) ; the 

 affair of the French Guards (I, pp. 266-268) ; personal notes on 

 Villedeuil and Breteuil (I, pp. 307-310) ; recollections of the 

 14th of July, running through the accounts taken from the 

 sources (I. pp. 359-395) ; the king in the assembly (T, pp. 7-1 1). 

 With the 15th of July, the last period of the Mcmoires opens. 



^Ihid., I, pp 246, 3(M, 312, 317. 



^Ibid., I, p. 343. 



^Ibid., I, pp. 147, 192, 247, 253, 263, 275, 278. 



349 



