therefore advises his colleagues to make their political testament. Thibadeau immediately accuses Tallien of all the calamities of the revolution. Clairfait and Wurmser compel the French to repass the Rhine precipitately, and obtain great advantages over them. Baudin, the organ of the committees of government, proposes to the convention to adopt a plan of a general amnesty for any act regarding the revolution, excepting always the banished priests, the emigrants, the fabricators of forged assignats, and the assassins of the South. As to the punishment of death, it is not to be abolished till peace be established. 24. Rewbell pretends that the new government cannot establish itself but by calling in the assignats, and substituting an augmentation of taxes. The convention, having proclaimed an amnesty, declares its sittings at an end; and to make up the 500 members who are to remain, it constitutes itself into an electoral body. Le Bon is condemned to death by the criminal tribunal of Amiens. The colonists of St. Domingo, who are at Paris, nominate their deputies to the new legislature. 26. From the 12th to the end of this month the