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I've compleated transcribig the chapter on Saint-Just from JM's Thompson's book Leaders of the French Revolution. Here are the links to my journal. Its surprisingly sympathetic to Saint-Just. (Considering Thompson's protege was Norman Hampson, who called Saint-Just a "satanic monster")
Part 1: Concerns his pre-revolution career (or what little of it there was)
http://citoyenneclark.livejournal.com/1195.html#cutid1
Part 2: Concerns Saint-Just's political theories, and compares the "Terror" to other much more violent regimes in French History
http://citoyenneclark.livejournal.com/1344.html
Part 3: Concerns Saint-Just's appearence, and the "ideal revolutionary"
http://citoyenneclark.livejournal.com/1576.html
Part 4 and 5: Mission to the Rhine, and conclusion to the chapter
http://citoyenneclark.livejournal.com/2036.html
Now that the chapter on Saint-Just is done, which chapter would you like to see next? There is: Sieyes, Mirabeau, Lafayette, Brissot, Louvet, Danton, Fabre D'Eglantine, Marat, Robespierre, and Dumourez.
Part 1: Concerns his pre-revolution career (or what little of it there was)
http://citoyenneclark.livejournal.com/1195.html#cutid1
Part 2: Concerns Saint-Just's political theories, and compares the "Terror" to other much more violent regimes in French History
http://citoyenneclark.livejournal.com/1344.html
Part 3: Concerns Saint-Just's appearence, and the "ideal revolutionary"
http://citoyenneclark.livejournal.com/1576.html
Part 4 and 5: Mission to the Rhine, and conclusion to the chapter
http://citoyenneclark.livejournal.com/2036.html
Now that the chapter on Saint-Just is done, which chapter would you like to see next? There is: Sieyes, Mirabeau, Lafayette, Brissot, Louvet, Danton, Fabre D'Eglantine, Marat, Robespierre, and Dumourez.