After Waterloo: Reminiscences Of European Travel 1815-1819, By Major W. E Frye













































































































 -  He called the British government the
most dangerous, artful, and determined enemy of all liberty, - England,
he says, has been - Page 7
After Waterloo: Reminiscences Of European Travel 1815-1819, By Major W. E Frye - Page 7 of 558 - First - Home

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He Called The British Government "The Most Dangerous, Artful, And Determined Enemy Of All Liberty," - "England," He Says, "Has Been

Always ready to lend a hand to crush liberty, to perpetuate abuses and to rivet the fetters of monarchical, feudal

And ecclesiastical tyranny." And later on he inveighs against the English merchants, who "contributed with their gold to uphold the corrupt system of Pitt and to carry on unjust, unreasonable and liberticide wars."

Whatever may be the final judgement of history on the Tory principles in politics in the days of the Congress of Vienna, Major Frye's love of liberty and intellectual progress entitle him to the sympathy of those who share his generous feelings and do not consider that personal freedom and individual rights are articles for home use only. Since Frye wrote, the whole of Europe, excepting perhaps Russia, has reaped the benefits of the French Revolution, and reduced, if not suppressed, what the Major called "kingcraft and priestcraft." He did not attempt to divine the future, but the history of Europe in the nineteenth century has been largely in accordance with his desires and hopes. It is not a small merit for a writer, in the midst of one of the most rabid reactions that the world has known, to have clung with such tenacity to ideals, the complete victory of which may now be contemplated in the near future.

S.R.

CONTENTS

PART I.

CHAPTER I

MAY-JUNE, 1815

Passage from Ceylon to England - Napoleon's return - Ostend - Bruges - Ghent - The King of France at Mass - Alost - Bruxelles - The Duke of Wellington very confident - Feelings of the Belgians - Good conduct of British troops - Monuments in Bruxelles - Theatricals - Genappe and Namur - Complaints against the Prussian troops - Mons - Major-General Adam - Tournay - A French deserter - General Clinton's division - Cavalry review - The Duke de Berri - Back to Bruxelles - Unjust opinions about Napoleon and the French - Battle at Ligny - The day of Waterloo in Bruxelles - Visit to the battlefield - Terrible condition of the wounded - Kindness of the Bruxellois.

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