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TRIAL OF LOUIS XVI.
ON the 11th of December, 1792, about one o'clock, the mayor and secretary went up into the apartment of the late king, and said to him, "I am charged to declare to you, that the Convention wait for you at their bar, and I am appointed to conduct you." The secretary then read these words, "Decree of the National Convention, of the 6th of De∣cember: Art. 5. Louis Capet shall be brought to the bar of the National Convention on Tuesday the 11th, to answer the questions which shall be put to him by the president." This being done, the mayor asked him if he would go down, he appeared to hesitate a little, and said, "My name is not Louis Capet; my ancestors bore that name, but I never was called so; it is however like all the treatment I have expe∣rienced these four months past by force. This morning my son has been separated from me; it was an enjoyment of which they have deprived me. I have been expecting you these three hours
The mayor, without making any answer, invited him again to go down, which he determined at length to do. Being in the carriage, which was lined with thick cushions, in order to be musket proof, he kept silence all the way, till the carri∣age was stopped by some misunderstanding among the guards who escorted him on the Boulevards.
He arrived at the Convention about two o'clock. He did not seem at all troubled. The mayor and attorney-general were on each side of him; behind him were Santerre, Ber∣ruyer and other officers.
The sitting of the Convention commenced by reading the act of accusation against Louis XVI, which was presented by Barbaroux in the name of the commission of twenty one. It contained an enumeration of the principal charges made a∣gainst the unfortunate monarch; and each charge was fol∣lowed by a list of the pieces on which the proofs are to be founded. When it was read, several new charges were