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IN THE PROVINCES.
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Before quitting Vendée I should mention William Bulkeley, lieutenant in Walsh's regiment, who married a widow possessing an estate near La Roche sur Yon, and in 1793 placed himself at the head of his peasants. He was one of the tallest and handsomest of the Vendean officers, and his wife, still young and handsome, fought with him under Charette. His descent from an old Irish family is spoken of. He was guillotined at Angers in January 1794. He is the last victim mentioned by Angers in a letter to the Paris Commune—"Our holy Mother Guillotine is busy. In the last three days she has shaved (sic) eleven priests, one ci-devant (noble), one ci-devant nun, one general, and a splendid (superbe) Englishman of six feet, whose head was de trop; it is now in the sack." M. Dugast Matifex, the Vendean historian, possesses several of Bulkeley's letters, which show him to have been well educated, though devoid of military ability.

The butchery in French Flanders, under the auspices of an ex-priest named with cruel irony Lebon, included two Englishwomen. Jane Grey, widow of one Griffiths—"Milord Griphèse," says a letter by the Jacobin Leroulx—"was thirty-five years of age, and so far from being in the peerage, was a working woman at Hallines. She was a native of London, and was charged with making voyages to England to carry money from Madame