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THE FRENCH REVOLUTION: A HISTORY |
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BOOK VII. THE INSURRECTION OF WOMEN No, Friends, this Revolution is not of the consolidating kind. Do not fires, fevers, sown seeds, chemical mixtures, men, events; all embodiments of Force that work in this miraculous Complex of Forces, named Universe,—go on growing, through their natural phases and developments, each according to its kind; reach their height, reach their visible decline; finally sink under, vanishing, and what we call die? They all grow; there is nothing but what grows, and shoots forth into its special expansion,—once give it leave to spring. Observe too that each grows with a rapidity proportioned, in general, to the madness and unhealthiness there is in it: slow regular growth, though this also ends in death, is what we name health and sanity. A Sansculottism, which has prostrated Bastilles, which has got pike and musket, and now goes burning Chateaus, passing resolutions and haranguing under roof and sky, may be said to have sprung; and, by law of Nature, must grow. To judge by the madness and diseasedness both of itself, and of the soil and element it is in, one might expect the rapidity and monstrosity would be extreme.
Many things too, especially all diseased things, grow by
shoots and fits. The first grand fit and shooting forth of Sansculottism
with that of Paris conquering its King; for Bailly's figure of rhetoric
was all-too sad a reality. The King is conquered; going at large on his
parole; on condition, say, of absolutely good behaviour,—which, in these
circumstances, will unhappily mean no behaviour whatever. A quite
untenable position, that of Majesty put on its good behaviour! Alas, is
it not natural that whatever lives try to keep itself living? Whereupon
his Majesty's behaviour will soon become exceptionable; and so the
Second grand Fit of Sansculottism, that of putting him in durance,
cannot be distant.
Necker, in the National Assembly, is making moan, as
usual about his Deficit: Barriers and Customhouses burnt; the
Tax-gatherer hunted, not hunting; his Majesty's Exchequer all but empty.
The remedy is a Loan of thirty millions; then, on still more enticing
terms, a Loan of eighty millions: neither of which Loans, unhappily,
will the Stockjobbers venture to lend. The Stockjobber has no country,
except his own black pool of Agio.
And yet, in those days, for men that have a country, what
a glow of patriotism burns in many a heart; penetrating inwards to the
very purse! So early as the 7th of August, a Don Patriotique, 'a
Patriotic Gift of jewels to a considerable extent,' has been solemnly
made by certain Parisian women; and solemnly accepted, with honourable
mention. Whom forthwith all the world takes to imitating and emulating.
Patriotic Gifts, always with some heroic eloquence, which the President
must answer and the Assembly listen to, flow in from far and near: in
such number that the honourable mention can only be performed in 'lists
published at stated epochs.' Each gives what he can: the very
cordwainers have behaved munificently; one landed proprietor gives a
forest; fashionable society gives its shoebuckles, takes cheerfully to
shoe-ties. Unfortunate females give what they 'have amassed in loving.'
(Histoire Parlementaire, ii. 427.) The smell of all cash, as
Vespasian thought, is good.
Beautiful, and yet inadequate! The Clergy must be
'invited' to melt their superfluous Church-plate,—in the Royal Mint. Nay
finally, a Patriotic Contribution, of the forcible sort, must be
determined on, though unwillingly: let the fourth part of your declared
yearly revenue, for this once only, be paid down; so shall a National
Assembly make the Constitution, undistracted at least by insolvency.
Their own wages, as settled on the 17th of August, are but Eighteen
Francs a day, each man; but the Public Service must have sinews, must
have money. To appease the Deficit; not to 'combler, or choke the
Deficit,' if you or mortal could! For withal, as Mirabeau was heard
saying, "it is the Deficit that saves us."
Towards the end of August, our National Assembly in its
constitutional labours, has got so far as the question of Veto: shall
Majesty have a Veto on the National Enactments; or not have a Veto? What
speeches were spoken, within doors and without; clear, and also
passionate logic; imprecations, comminations; gone happily, for most
part, to Limbo! Through the cracked brain, and uncracked lungs of
Saint-Huruge, the Palais Royal rebellows with Veto. Journalism is busy,
France rings with Veto. 'I shall never forget,' says Dumont, 'my going
to Paris, one of these days, with Mirabeau; and the crowd of people we
found waiting for his carriage, about Le Jay the Bookseller's shop. They
flung themselves before him; conjuring him with tears in their eyes not
to suffer the Veto Absolu. They were in a frenzy: "Monsieur le Comte,
you are the people's father; you must save us; you must defend us
against those villains who are bringing back Despotism. If the King get
this Veto, what is the use of National Assembly? We are slaves, all is
done."' (Souvenirs sur Mirabeau, p. 156.) Friends, if the sky
fall, there will be catching of larks! Mirabeau, adds Dumont, was
eminent on such occasions: he answered vaguely, with a Patrician
imperturbability, and bound himself to nothing.
Deputations go to the Hotel-de-Ville; anonymous Letters
to Aristocrats in the National Assembly, threatening that fifteen
thousand, or sometimes that sixty thousand, 'will march to illuminate
you.' The Paris Districts are astir; Petitions signing: Saint-Huruge
sets forth from the Palais Royal, with an escort of fifteen hundred
individuals, to petition in person. Resolute, or seemingly so, is the
tall shaggy Marquis, is the Cafe de Foy: but resolute also is
Commandant-General Lafayette. The streets are all beset by Patrols:
Saint-Huruge is stopped at the Barriere des Bon Hommes; he may bellow
like the bulls of Bashan; but absolutely must return. The brethren of
the Palais Royal 'circulate all night,' and make motions, under the open
canopy; all Coffee-houses being shut. Nevertheless Lafayette and the
Townhall do prevail: Saint-Huruge is thrown into prison; Veto Absolu
adjusts itself into Suspensive Veto, prohibition not forever, but for a
term of time; and this doom's-clamour will grow silent, as the others
have done.
So far has Consolidation prospered, though with
difficulty; repressing the Nether Sansculottic world; and the
Constitution shall be made. With difficulty: amid jubilee and scarcity;
Patriotic Gifts, Bakers'-queues; Abbe-Fauchet Harangues, with their Amen
of platoon-musketry! Scipio Americanus has deserved thanks from the
National Assembly and France. They offer him stipends and emoluments, to
a handsome extent; all which stipends and emoluments he, covetous of far
other blessedness than mere money, does, in his chivalrous way, without
scruple, refuse.
To the Parisian common man, meanwhile, one thing remains
inconceivable: that now when the Bastille is down, and French Liberty
restored, grain should continue so dear. Our Rights of Man are voted,
Feudalism and all Tyranny abolished; yet behold we stand in queue! Is it
Aristocrat forestallers; a Court still bent on intrigues? Something is
rotten, somewhere.
And yet, alas, what to do? Lafayette, with his Patrols
prohibits every thing, even complaint. Saint-Huruge and other heroes of
the Veto lie in durance. People's-Friend Marat was seized; Printers of
Patriotic Journals are fettered and forbidden; the very Hawkers cannot
cry, till they get license, and leaden badges. Blue National Guards
ruthlessly dissipate all groups; scour, with levelled bayonets, the
Palais Royal itself. Pass, on your affairs, along the Rue Taranne, the
Patrol, presenting his bayonet, cries, To the left! Turn into the Rue
Saint-Benoit, he cries, To the right! A judicious Patriot (like
Camille Desmoulins, in this instance) is driven, for quietness's
sake, to take the gutter.
O much-suffering People, our glorious Revolution is
evaporating in tricolor ceremonies, and complimentary harangues! Of
which latter, as Loustalot acridly calculates, 'upwards of two thousand
have been delivered within the last month, at the Townhall alone.' (Revolutions
de Paris Newspaper (cited in Histoire Parlementaire, ii. 357).)
And our mouths, unfilled with bread, are to be shut, under penalties?
The Caricaturist promulgates his emblematic Tablature: Le
Patrouillotisme chassant le Patriotisme, Patriotism driven out by
Patrollotism. Ruthless Patrols; long superfine harangues; and scanty
ill-baked loaves, more like baked Bath bricks,—which produce an effect
on the intestines! Where will this end? In consolidation?
Chapter 2.
O Richard, O my King.
For, alas, neither is the Townhall itself without
misgivings. The Nether Sansculottic world has been suppressed hitherto:
but then the Upper Court-world! Symptoms there are that the
Oeil-de-Boeuf is rallying.
More than once in the Townhall Sanhedrim; often enough,
from those outspoken Bakers'-queues, has the wish uttered itself: O that
our Restorer of French Liberty were here; that he could see with his own
eyes, not with the false eyes of Queens and Cabals, and his really good
heart be enlightened! For falsehood still environs him; intriguing Dukes
de Guiche, with Bodyguards; scouts of Bouille; a new flight of
intriguers, now that the old is flown. What else means this advent of
the Regiment de Flandre; entering Versailles, as we hear, on the 23rd of
September, with two pieces of cannon? Did not the Versailles National
Guard do duty at the Chateau? Had they not Swiss; Hundred Swiss;
Gardes-du-Corps, Bodyguards so-called? Nay, it would seem, the number of
Bodyguards on duty has, by a manoeuvre, been doubled: the new relieving
Battalion of them arrived at its time; but the old relieved one does not
depart!
Actually, there runs a whisper through the best informed
Upper-Circles, or a nod still more potentous than whispering, of his
Majesty's flying to Metz; of a Bond (to stand by him therein)
which has been signed by Noblesse and Clergy, to the incredible amount
of thirty, or even of sixty thousand. Lafayette coldly whispers it, and
coldly asseverates it, to Count d'Estaing at the Dinner-table; and
d'Estaing, one of the bravest men, quakes to the core lest some lackey
overhear it; and tumbles thoughtful, without sleep, all night. (Brouillon
de Lettre de M. d'Estaing a la Reine in Histoire Parlementaire, iii. 24.)
Regiment Flandre, as we said, is clearly arrived. His Majesty, they say,
hesitates about sanctioning the Fourth of August; makes observations, of
chilling tenor, on the very Rights of Man! Likewise, may not all
persons, the Bakers'-queues themselves discern on the streets of Paris,
the most astonishing number of Officers on furlough, Crosses of St.
Louis, and such like? Some reckon 'from a thousand to twelve hundred.'
Officers of all uniforms; nay one uniform never before seen by eye:
green faced with red! The tricolor cockade is not always visible: but
what, in the name of Heaven, may these black cockades, which some wear,
foreshadow?
Hunger whets everything, especially Suspicion and
Indignation. Realities themselves, in this Paris, have grown unreal:
preternatural. Phantasms once more stalk through the brain of hungry
France. O ye laggards and dastards, cry shrill voices from the Queues,
if ye had the hearts of men, ye would take your pikes and secondhand
firelocks, and look into it; not leave your wives and daughters to be
starved, murdered, and worse!—Peace, women! The heart of man is bitter
and heavy; Patriotism, driven out by Patrollotism, knows not what to
resolve on.
The truth is, the Oeil-de-Boeuf has rallied; to a certain
unknown extent. A changed Oeil-de-Boeuf; with Versailles National
Guards, in their tricolor cockades, doing duty there; a Court all
flaring with tricolor! Yet even to a tricolor Court men will rally. Ye
loyal hearts, burnt-out Seigneurs, rally round your Queen! With wishes;
which will produce hopes; which will produce attempts!
For indeed self-preservation being such a law of Nature,
what can a rallied Court do, but attempt and endeavour, or call it
plot,—with such wisdom and unwisdom as it has? They will fly, escorted,
to Metz, where brave Bouille commands; they will raise the Royal
Standard: the Bond-signatures shall become armed men. Were not the King
so languid! Their Bond, if at all signed, must be signed without his
privity.—Unhappy King, he has but one resolution: not to have a civil
war. For the rest, he still hunts, having ceased lockmaking; he still
dozes, and digests; is clay in the hands of the potter. Ill will it fare
with him, in a world where all is helping itself; where, as has been
written, 'whosoever is not hammer must be stithy;' and 'the very hyssop
on the wall grows there, in that chink, because the whole Universe could
not prevent its growing!'
But as for the coming up of this Regiment de Flandre, may
it not be urged that there were Saint-Huruge Petitions, and continual
meal-mobs? Undebauched Soldiers, be there plot, or only dim elements of
a plot, are always good. Did not the Versailles Municipality (an old
Monarchic one, not yet refounded into a Democratic) instantly second
the proposal? Nay the very Versailles National Guard, wearied with
continual duty at the Chateau, did not object; only Draper Lecointre,
who is now Major Lecointre, shook his head.—Yes, Friends, surely it was
natural this Regiment de Flandre should be sent for, since it could be
got. It was natural that, at sight of military bandoleers, the heart of
the rallied Oeil-de-Boeuf should revive; and Maids of Honour, and
gentlemen of honour, speak comfortable words to epauletted defenders,
and to one another. Natural also, and mere common civility, that the
Bodyguards, a Regiment of Gentlemen, should invite their Flandre
brethren to a Dinner of welcome!—Such invitation, in the last days of
September, is given and accepted.
Dinners are defined as 'the ultimate act of communion;'
men that can have communion in nothing else, can sympathetically eat
together, can still rise into some glow of brotherhood over food and
wine. The dinner is fixed on, for Thursday the First of October; and
ought to have a fine effect. Further, as such Dinner may be rather
extensive, and even the Noncommissioned and the Common man be
introduced, to see and to hear, could not His Majesty's Opera Apartment,
which has lain quite silent ever since Kaiser Joseph was here, be
obtained for the purpose?—The Hall of the Opera is granted; the Salon
d'Hercule shall be drawingroom. Not only the Officers of Flandre, but of
the Swiss, of the Hundred Swiss, nay of the Versailles National Guard,
such of them as have any loyalty, shall feast: it will be a Repast like
few.
And now suppose this Repast, the solid part of it,
transacted; and the first bottle over. Suppose the customary loyal
toasts drunk; the King's health, the Queen's with deafening vivats;—that
of the Nation 'omitted,' or even 'rejected.' Suppose champagne flowing;
with pot-valorous speech, with instrumental music; empty feathered heads
growing ever the noisier, in their own emptiness, in each other's noise!
Her Majesty, who looks unusually sad to-night (his Majesty sitting
dulled with the day's hunting), is told that the sight of it would
cheer her. Behold! She enters there, issuing from her State-rooms, like
the Moon from the clouds, this fairest unhappy Queen of Hearts; royal
Husband by her side, young Dauphin in her arms! She descends from the
Boxes, amid splendour and acclaim; walks queen-like, round the Tables;
gracefully escorted, gracefully nodding; her looks full of sorrow, yet
of gratitude and daring, with the hope of France on her mother-bosom!
And now, the band striking up, O Richard, O mon Roi, l'univers
t'abandonne (O Richard, O my King, and world is all forsaking thee)—could
man do other than rise to height of pity, of loyal valour? Could
featherheaded young ensigns do other than, by white Bourbon Cockades,
handed them from fair fingers; by waving of swords, drawn to pledge the
Queen's health; by trampling of National Cockades; by scaling the Boxes,
whence intrusive murmurs may come; by vociferation, tripudiation, sound,
fury and distraction, within doors and without,—testify what
tempest-tost state of vacuity they are in? Till champagne and
tripudiation do their work; and all lie silent, horizontal; passively
slumbering, with meed-of-battle dreams!—
A natural Repast, in ordinary times, a harmless one: now
fatal, as that of Thyestes; as that of Job's Sons, when a strong wind
smote the four corners of their banquet-house! Poor ill-advised
Marie-Antoinette; with a woman's vehemence, not with a sovereign's
foresight! It was so natural, yet so unwise. Next day, in public speech
of ceremony, her Majesty declares herself 'delighted with the Thursday.'
The heart of the Oeil-de-Boeuf glows into hope; into
daring, which is premature. Rallied Maids of Honour, waited on by Abbes,
sew 'white cockades;' distribute them, with words, with glances, to
epauletted youths; who in return, may kiss, not without fervour, the
fair sewing fingers. Captains of horse and foot go swashing with
'enormous white cockades;' nay one Versailles National Captain had
mounted the like, so witching were the words and glances; and laid aside
his tricolor! Well may Major Lecointre shake his head with a look of
severity; and speak audible resentful words. But now a swashbuckler,
with enormous white cockade, overhearing the Major, invites him
insolently, once and then again elsewhere, to recant; and failing that,
to duel. Which latter feat Major Lecointre declares that he will not
perform, not at least by any known laws of fence; that he nevertheless
will, according to mere law of Nature, by dirk and blade, 'exterminate'
any 'vile gladiator,' who may insult him or the Nation;—whereupon (for
the Major is actually drawing his implement) 'they are parted,' and
no weasands slit. (Moniteur (in Histoire Parlementaire, iii. 59);
Deux Amis (iii. 128-141); Campan (ii. 70-85), &c. &c.)
But fancy what effect this Thyestes Repast and trampling
on the National Cockade, must have had in the Salle des Menus; in the
famishing Bakers'-queues at Paris! Nay such Thyestes Repasts, it would
seem, continue. Flandre has given its Counter-Dinner to the Swiss and
Hundred Swiss; then on Saturday there has been another.
Yes, here with us is famine; but yonder at Versailles is
food; enough and to spare! Patriotism stands in queue, shivering
hungerstruck, insulted by Patrollotism; while bloodyminded Aristocrats,
heated with excess of high living, trample on the National Cockade. Can
the atrocity be true? Nay, look: green uniforms faced with red; black
cockades,—the colour of Night! Are we to have military onfall; and death
also by starvation? For behold the Corbeil Cornboat, which used to come
twice a-day, with its Plaster-of-Paris meal, now comes only once. And
the Townhall is deaf; and the men are laggard and dastard!—At the Cafe
de Foy, this Saturday evening, a new thing is seen, not the last of its
kind: a woman engaged in public speaking. Her poor man, she says, was
put to silence by his District; their Presidents and Officials would not
let him speak. Wherefore she here with her shrill tongue will speak;
denouncing, while her breath endures, the Corbeil-Boat, the
Plaster-of-Paris bread, sacrilegious Opera-dinners, green uniforms,
Pirate Aristocrats, and those black cockades of theirs!—
Truly, it is time for the black cockades at least, to
vanish. Them Patrollotism itself will not protect. Nay, sharp-tempered
'M. Tassin,' at the Tuileries parade on Sunday morning, forgets all
National military rule; starts from the ranks, wrenches down one black
cockade which is swashing ominous there; and tramples it fiercely into
the soil of France. Patrollotism itself is not without suppressed fury.
Also the Districts begin to stir; the voice of President Danton
reverberates in the Cordeliers: People's-Friend Marat has flown to
Versailles and back again;—swart bird, not of the halcyon kind! (Camille's
Newspaper, Revolutions de Paris et de Brabant in Histoire Parlementaire,
iii. 108.)
And so Patriot meets promenading Patriot, this Sunday;
and sees his own grim care reflected on the face of another. Groups, in
spite of Patrollotism, which is not so alert as usual, fluctuate
deliberative: groups on the Bridges, on the Quais, at the patriotic
Cafes. And ever as any black cockade may emerge, rises the many-voiced
growl and bark: A bas, Down! All black cockades are ruthlessly plucked
off: one individual picks his up again; kisses it, attempts to refix it;
but a 'hundred canes start into the air,' and he desists. Still worse
went it with another individual; doomed, by extempore Plebiscitum, to
the Lanterne; saved, with difficulty, by some active
Corps-de-Garde.—Lafayette sees signs of an effervescence; which he
doubles his Patrols, doubles his diligence, to prevent. So passes
Sunday, the 4th of October 1789.
Sullen is the male heart, repressed by Patrollotism;
vehement is the female, irrepressible. The public-speaking woman at the
Palais Royal was not the only speaking one:—Men know not what the pantry
is, when it grows empty, only house-mothers know. O women, wives of men
that will only calculate and not act! Patrollotism is strong; but Death,
by starvation and military onfall, is stronger. Patrollotism represses
male Patriotism: but female Patriotism? Will Guards named National
thrust their bayonets into the bosoms of women? Such thought, or rather
such dim unshaped raw-material of a thought, ferments universally under
the female night-cap; and, by earliest daybreak, on slight hint, will
explode.
If Voltaire once, in splenetic humour, asked his
countrymen: "But you, Gualches, what have you invented?" they can now
answer: The Art of Insurrection. It was an art needed in these last
singular times: an art, for which the French nature, so full of
vehemence, so free from depth, was perhaps of all others the fittest.
Accordingly, to what a height, one may well say of
perfection, has this branch of human industry been carried by France,
within the last half-century! Insurrection, which, Lafayette thought,
might be 'the most sacred of duties,' ranks now, for the French people,
among the duties which they can perform. Other mobs are dull masses;
which roll onwards with a dull fierce tenacity, a dull fierce heat, but
emit no light-flashes of genius as they go. The French mob, again, is
among the liveliest phenomena of our world. So rapid, audacious; so
clear-sighted, inventive, prompt to seize the moment; instinct with life
to its finger-ends! That talent, were there no other, of spontaneously
standing in queue, distinguishes, as we said, the French People from all
Peoples, ancient and modern.
Let the Reader confess too that, taking one thing with
another, perhaps few terrestrial Appearances are better worth
considering than mobs. Your mob is a genuine outburst of Nature; issuing
from, or communicating with, the deepest deep of Nature. When so much
goes grinning and grimacing as a lifeless Formality, and under the stiff
buckram no heart can be felt beating, here once more, if nowhere else,
is a Sincerity and Reality. Shudder at it; or even shriek over it, if
thou must; nevertheless consider it. Such a Complex of human Forces and
Individualities hurled forth, in their transcendental mood, to act and
react, on circumstances and on one another; to work out what it is in
them to work. The thing they will do is known to no man; least of all to
themselves. It is the inflammablest immeasurable Fire-work, generating,
consuming itself. With what phases, to what extent, with what results it
will burn off, Philosophy and Perspicacity conjecture in vain.
'Man,' as has been written, 'is for ever interesting to
man; nay properly there is nothing else interesting.' In which light
also, may we not discern why most Battles have become so wearisome?
Battles, in these ages, are transacted by mechanism; with the slightest
possible developement of human individuality or spontaneity: men now
even die, and kill one another, in an artificial manner. Battles ever
since Homer's time, when they were Fighting Mobs, have mostly ceased to
be worth looking at, worth reading of, or remembering. How many
wearisome bloody Battles does History strive to represent; or even, in a
husky way, to sing:—and she would omit or carelessly slur-over this one
Insurrection of Women?
A thought, or dim raw-material of a thought, was
fermenting all night, universally in the female head, and might explode.
In squalid garret, on Monday morning, Maternity awakes, to hear children
weeping for bread. Maternity must forth to the streets, to the
herb-markets and Bakers'—queues; meets there with hunger-stricken
Maternity, sympathetic, exasperative. O we unhappy women! But, instead
of Bakers'-queues, why not to Aristocrats' palaces, the root of the
matter? Allons! Let us assemble. To the Hotel-de-Ville; to Versailles;
to the Lanterne!
In one of the Guardhouses of the Quartier Saint-Eustache,
'a young woman' seizes a drum,—for how shall National Guards give fire
on women, on a young woman? The young woman seizes the drum; sets forth,
beating it, 'uttering cries relative to the dearth of grains.' Descend,
O mothers; descend, ye Judiths, to food and revenge!—All women gather
and go; crowds storm all stairs, force out all women: the female
Insurrectionary Force, according to Camille, resembles the English Naval
one; there is a universal 'Press of women.' Robust Dames of the Halle,
slim Mantua-makers, assiduous, risen with the dawn; ancient Virginity
tripping to matins; the Housemaid, with early broom; all must go. Rouse
ye, O women; the laggard men will not act; they say, we ourselves may
act!
And so, like snowbreak from the mountains, for every
staircase is a melted brook, it storms; tumultuous, wild-shrilling,
towards the Hotel-de-Ville. Tumultuous, with or without drum-music: for
the Faubourg Saint-Antoine also has tucked up its gown; and, with
besom-staves, fire-irons, and even rusty pistols (void of ammunition),
is flowing on. Sound of it flies, with a velocity of sound, to the
outmost Barriers. By seven o'clock, on this raw October morning, fifth
of the month, the Townhall will see wonders. Nay, as chance would have
it, a male party are already there; clustering tumultuously round some
National Patrol, and a Baker who has been seized with short weights.
They are there; and have even lowered the rope of the Lanterne. So that
the official persons have to smuggle forth the short-weighing Baker by
back doors, and even send 'to all the Districts' for more force.
Grand it was, says Camille, to see so many Judiths, from
eight to ten thousand of them in all, rushing out to search into the
root of the matter! Not unfrightful it must have been; ludicro-terrific,
and most unmanageable. At such hour the overwatched Three Hundred are
not yet stirring: none but some Clerks, a company of National Guards;
and M. de Gouvion, the Major-general. Gouvion has fought in America for
the cause of civil Liberty; a man of no inconsiderable heart, but
deficient in head. He is, for the moment, in his back apartment;
assuaging Usher Maillard, the Bastille-serjeant, who has come, as too
many do, with 'representations.' The assuagement is still incomplete
when our Judiths arrive.
The National Guards form on the outer stairs, with
levelled bayonets; the ten thousand Judiths press up, resistless; with
obtestations, with outspread hands,—merely to speak to the Mayor. The
rear forces them; nay, from male hands in the rear, stones already fly:
the National Guards must do one of two things; sweep the Place de Greve
with cannon, or else open to right and left. They open; the living
deluge rushes in. Through all rooms and cabinets, upwards to the topmost
belfry: ravenous; seeking arms, seeking Mayors, seeking justice;—while,
again, the better-cressed (dressed?) speak kindly to the Clerks;
point out the misery of these poor women; also their ailments, some even
of an interesting sort. (Deux Amis, iii. 141-166.)
Poor M. de Gouvion is shiftless in this extremity;—a man
shiftless, perturbed; who will one day commit suicide. How happy for him
that Usher Maillard, the shifty, was there, at the moment, though making
representations! Fly back, thou shifty Maillard; seek the Bastille
Company; and O return fast with it; above all, with thy own shifty head!
For, behold, the Judiths can find no Mayor or Municipal; scarcely, in
the topmost belfry, can they find poor Abbe Lefevre the
Powder-distributor. Him, for want of a better, they suspend there; in
the pale morning light; over the top of all Paris, which swims in one's
failing eyes:—a horrible end? Nay, the rope broke, as French ropes often
did; or else an Amazon cut it. Abbe Lefevre falls, some twenty feet,
rattling among the leads; and lives long years after, though always with
'a tremblement in the limbs.' (Dusaulx, Prise de la Bastille (note,
p. 281.).)
And now doors fly under hatchets; the Judiths have broken
the Armoury; have seized guns and cannons, three money-bags,
paper-heaps; torches flare: in few minutes, our brave Hotel-de-Ville
which dates from the Fourth Henry, will, with all that it holds, be in
flames!
In flames, truly,—were it not that Usher Maillard, swift
of foot, shifty of head, has returned!
Maillard, of his own motion, for Gouvion or the rest
would not even sanction him,—snatches a drum; descends the Porch-stairs,
ran-tan, beating sharp, with loud rolls, his Rogues'-march: To
Versailles! Allons; a Versailles! As men beat on kettle or warmingpan,
when angry she-bees, or say, flying desperate wasps, are to be hived;
and the desperate insects hear it, and cluster round it,—simply as round
a guidance, where there was none: so now these Menads round shifty
Maillard, Riding-Usher of the Chatelet. The axe pauses uplifted; Abbe
Lefevre is left half-hanged; from the belfry downwards all vomits
itself. What rub-a-dub is that? Stanislas Maillard, Bastille-hero, will
lead us to Versailles? Joy to thee, Maillard; blessed art thou above
Riding-Ushers! Away then, away!
The seized cannon are yoked with seized cart-horses:
brown-locked Demoiselle Theroigne, with pike and helmet, sits there as
gunneress, 'with haughty eye and serene fair countenance;' comparable,
some think, to the Maid of Orleans, or even recalling 'the idea of
Pallas Athene.' (Deux Amis, iii. 157.) Maillard (for his drum
still rolls) is, by heaven-rending acclamation, admitted General.
Maillard hastens the languid march. Maillard, beating rhythmic, with
sharp ran-tan, all along the Quais, leads forward, with difficulty his
Menadic host. Such a host—marched not in silence! The bargeman pauses on
the River; all wagoners and coachdrivers fly; men peer from windows,—not
women, lest they be pressed. Sight of sights: Bacchantes, in these
ultimate Formalized Ages! Bronze Henri looks on, from his Pont-Neuf; the
Monarchic Louvre, Medicean Tuileries see a day not theretofore seen.
And now Maillard has his Menads in the Champs Elysees (Fields
Tartarean rather); and the Hotel-de-Ville has suffered comparatively
nothing. Broken doors; an Abbe Lefevre, who shall never more distribute
powder; three sacks of money, most part of which (for Sansculottism,
though famishing, is not without honour) shall be returned: (Hist.
Parl. iii. 310.) this is all the damage. Great Maillard! A small
nucleus of Order is round his drum; but his outskirts fluctuate like the
mad Ocean: for Rascality male and female is flowing in on him, from the
four winds; guidance there is none but in his single head and two
drumsticks.
O Maillard, when, since War first was, had General of
Force such a task before him, as thou this day? Walter the Penniless
still touches the feeling heart: but then Walter had sanction; had space
to turn in; and also his Crusaders were of the male sex. Thou, this day,
disowned of Heaven and Earth, art General of Menads. Their inarticulate
frenzy thou must on the spur of the instant, render into articulate
words, into actions that are not frantic. Fail in it, this way or that!
Pragmatical Officiality, with its penalties and law-books, waits before
thee; Menads storm behind. If such hewed off the melodious head of
Orpheus, and hurled it into the Peneus waters, what may they not make of
thee,—thee rhythmic merely, with no music but a sheepskin drum!—Maillard
did not fail. Remarkable Maillard, if fame were not an accident, and
History a distillation of Rumour, how remarkable wert thou!
On the Elysian Fields, there is pause and fluctuation;
but, for Maillard, no return. He persuades his Menads, clamorous for
arms and the Arsenal, that no arms are in the Arsenal; that an unarmed
attitude, and petition to a National Assembly, will be the best: he
hastily nominates or sanctions generalesses, captains of tens and
fifties;—and so, in loosest-flowing order, to the rhythm of some 'eight
drums' (having laid aside his own), with the Bastille Volunteers
bringing up his rear, once more takes the road.
Chaillot, which will promptly yield baked loaves, is not
plundered; nor are the Sevres Potteries broken. The old arches of Sevres
Bridge echo under Menadic feet; Seine River gushes on with his perpetual
murmur; and Paris flings after us the boom of tocsin and
alarm-drum,—inaudible, for the present, amid shrill-sounding hosts, and
the splash of rainy weather. To Meudon, to Saint Cloud, on both hands,
the report of them is gone abroad; and hearths, this evening, will have
a topic. The press of women still continues, for it is the cause of all
Eve's Daughters, mothers that are, or that hope to be. No carriage-lady,
were it with never such hysterics, but must dismount, in the mud roads,
in her silk shoes, and walk. (Deux Amis, iii. 159.) In this
manner, amid wild October weather, they a wild unwinged stork-flight,
through the astonished country, wend their way. Travellers of all sorts
they stop; especially travellers or couriers from Paris. Deputy
Lechapelier, in his elegant vesture, from his elegant vehicle, looks
forth amazed through his spectacles; apprehensive for life;—states
eagerly that he is Patriot-Deputy Lechapelier, and even Old-President
Lechapelier, who presided on the Night of Pentecost, and is original
member of the Breton Club. Thereupon 'rises huge shout of Vive
Lechapelier, and several armed persons spring up behind and before to
escort him.' (Ibid. iii. 177; Dictionnaire des Hommes Marquans, ii.
379.)
Nevertheless, news, despatches from Lafayette, or vague
noise of rumour, have pierced through, by side roads. In the National
Assembly, while all is busy discussing the order of the day; regretting
that there should be Anti-national Repasts in Opera-Halls; that his
Majesty should still hesitate about accepting the Rights of Man, and
hang conditions and peradventures on them,—Mirabeau steps up to the
President, experienced Mounier as it chanced to be; and articulates, in
bass under-tone: "Mounier, Paris marche sur nous (Paris is marching
on us)."—"May be (Je n'en sais rien)!"—"Believe it or
disbelieve it, that is not my concern; but Paris, I say, is marching on
us. Fall suddenly unwell; go over to the Chateau; tell them this. There
is not a moment to lose."—"Paris marching on us?" responds Mounier, with
an atrabiliar accent, "Well, so much the better! We shall the sooner be
a Republic." Mirabeau quits him, as one quits an experienced President
getting blindfold into deep waters; and the order of the day continues
as before.
Yes, Paris is marching on us; and more than the women of
Paris! Scarcely was Maillard gone, when M. de Gouvion's message to all
the Districts, and such tocsin and drumming of the generale, began to
take effect. Armed National Guards from every District; especially the
Grenadiers of the Centre, who are our old Gardes Francaises, arrive, in
quick sequence, on the Place de Greve. An 'immense people' is there;
Saint-Antoine, with pike and rusty firelock, is all crowding thither, be
it welcome or unwelcome. The Centre Grenadiers are received with
cheering: "it is not cheers that we want," answer they gloomily; "the
nation has been insulted; to arms, and come with us for orders!" Ha,
sits the wind so? Patriotism and Patrollotism are now one!
The Three Hundred have assembled; 'all the Committees are
in activity;' Lafayette is dictating despatches for Versailles, when a
Deputation of the Centre Grenadiers introduces itself to him. The
Deputation makes military obeisance; and thus speaks, not without a kind
of thought in it: "Mon General, we are deputed by the Six Companies of
Grenadiers. We do not think you a traitor, but we think the Government
betrays you; it is time that this end. We cannot turn our bayonets
against women crying to us for bread. The people are miserable, the
source of the mischief is at Versailles: we must go seek the King, and
bring him to Paris. We must exterminate (exterminer) the Regiment
de Flandre and the Gardes-du-Corps, who have dared to trample on the
National Cockade. If the King be too weak to wear his crown, let him lay
it down. You will crown his Son, you will name a Council of Regency; and
all will go better." (Deux Amis, iii. 161.) Reproachful
astonishment paints itself on the face of Lafayette; speaks itself from
his eloquent chivalrous lips: in vain. "My General, we would shed the
last drop of our blood for you; but the root of the mischief is at
Versailles; we must go and bring the King to Paris; all the people wish
it, tout le peuple le veut."
My General descends to the outer staircase; and
harangues: once more in vain. "To Versailles! To Versailles!" Mayor
Bailly, sent for through floods of Sansculottism, attempts academic
oratory from his gilt state-coach; realizes nothing but infinite hoarse
cries of: "Bread! To Versailles!"—and gladly shrinks within doors.
Lafayette mounts the white charger; and again harangues and reharangues:
with eloquence, with firmness, indignant demonstration; with all things
but persuasion. "To Versailles! To Versailles!" So lasts it, hour after
hour; for the space of half a day.
The great Scipio Americanus can do nothing; not so much
as escape. "Morbleu, mon General," cry the Grenadiers serrying their
ranks as the white charger makes a motion that way, "You will not leave
us, you will abide with us!" A perilous juncture: Mayor Bailly and the
Municipals sit quaking within doors; My General is prisoner without: the
Place de Greve, with its thirty thousand Regulars, its whole irregular
Saint-Antoine and Saint-Marceau, is one minatory mass of clear or rusty
steel; all hearts set, with a moody fixedness, on one object. Moody,
fixed are all hearts: tranquil is no heart,—if it be not that of the
white charger, who paws there, with arched neck, composedly champing his
bit; as if no world, with its Dynasties and Eras, were now rushing down.
The drizzly day tends westward; the cry is still: "To Versailles!"
Nay now, borne from afar, come quite sinister cries;
hoarse, reverberating in longdrawn hollow murmurs, with syllables too
like those of Lanterne! Or else, irregular Sansculottism may be marching
off, of itself; with pikes, nay with cannon. The inflexible Scipio does
at length, by aide-de-camp, ask of the Municipals: Whether or not he may
go? A Letter is handed out to him, over armed heads; sixty thousand
faces flash fixedly on his, there is stillness and no bosom breathes,
till he have read. By Heaven, he grows suddenly pale! Do the Municipals
permit? 'Permit and even order,'—since he can no other. Clangour of
approval rends the welkin. To your ranks, then; let us march!
It is, as we compute, towards three in the afternoon.
Indignant National Guards may dine for once from their haversack: dined
or undined, they march with one heart. Paris flings up her windows,
claps hands, as the Avengers, with their shrilling drums and shalms
tramp by; she will then sit pensive, apprehensive, and pass rather a
sleepless night. (Deux Amis, iii. 165.) On the white charger,
Lafayette, in the slowest possible manner, going and coming, and
eloquently haranguing among the ranks, rolls onward with his thirty
thousand. Saint-Antoine, with pike and cannon, has preceded him; a mixed
multitude, of all and of no arms, hovers on his flanks and skirts; the
country once more pauses agape: Paris marche sur nous.
For, indeed, about this same moment, Maillard has halted
his draggled Menads on the last hill-top; and now Versailles, and the
Chateau of Versailles, and far and wide the inheritance of Royalty opens
to the wondering eye. From far on the right, over Marly and
Saint-Germains-en-Laye; round towards Rambouillet, on the left:
beautiful all; softly embosomed; as if in sadness, in the dim moist
weather! And near before us is Versailles, New and Old; with that broad
frondent Avenue de Versailles between,—stately-frondent, broad, three
hundred feet as men reckon, with four Rows of Elms; and then the Chateau
de Versailles, ending in royal Parks and Pleasances, gleaming lakelets,
arbours, Labyrinths, the Menagerie, and Great and Little Trianon.
High-towered dwellings, leafy pleasant places; where the gods of this
lower world abide: whence, nevertheless, black Care cannot be excluded;
whither Menadic Hunger is even now advancing, armed with pike-thyrsi!
Yes, yonder, Mesdames, where our straight frondent
Avenue, joined, as you note, by Two frondent brother Avenues from this
hand and from that, spreads out into Place Royale and Palace Forecourt;
yonder is the Salle des Menus. Yonder an august Assembly sits
regenerating France. Forecourt, Grand Court, Court of Marble, Court
narrowing into Court you may discern next, or fancy: on the extreme
verge of which that glass-dome, visibly glittering like a star of hope,
is the—Oeil-de-Boeuf! Yonder, or nowhere in the world, is bread baked
for us. But, O Mesdames, were not one thing good: That our cannons, with
Demoiselle Theroigne and all show of war, be put to the rear? Submission
beseems petitioners of a National Assembly; we are strangers in
Versailles,—whence, too audibly, there comes even now sound as of tocsin
and generale! Also to put on, if possible, a cheerful countenance,
hiding our sorrows; and even to sing? Sorrow, pitied of the Heavens, is
hateful, suspicious to the Earth.—So counsels shifty Maillard;
haranguing his Menads, on the heights near Versailles. (See Hist.
Parl. iii. 70-117; Deux Amis, iii. 166-177, &c.)
Cunning Maillard's dispositions are obeyed. The draggled
Insurrectionists advance up the Avenue, 'in three columns, among the
four Elm-rows; 'singing Henri Quatre,' with what melody they can; and
shouting Vive le Roi. Versailles, though the Elm-rows are dripping wet,
crowds from both sides, with: "Vivent nos Parisiennes, Our Paris ones
for ever!"
Prickers, scouts have been out towards Paris, as the
rumour deepened: whereby his Majesty, gone to shoot in the Woods of
Meudon, has been happily discovered, and got home; and the generale and
tocsin set a-sounding. The Bodyguards are already drawn up in front of
the Palace Grates; and look down the Avenue de Versailles; sulky, in wet
buckskins. Flandre too is there, repentant of the Opera-Repast. Also
Dragoons dismounted are there. Finally Major Lecointre, and what he can
gather of the Versailles National Guard; though, it is to be observed,
our Colonel, that same sleepless Count d'Estaing, giving neither order
nor ammunition, has vanished most improperly; one supposes, into the
Oeil-de-Boeuf. Red-coated Swiss stand within the Grates, under arms.
There likewise, in their inner room, 'all the Ministers,' Saint-Priest,
Lamentation Pompignan and the rest, are assembled with M. Necker: they
sit with him there; blank, expecting what the hour will bring.
President Mounier, though he answered Mirabeau with a
tant mieux, and affected to slight the matter, had his own forebodings.
Surely, for these four weary hours, he has reclined not on roses! The
order of the day is getting forward: a Deputation to his Majesty seems
proper, that it might please him to grant 'Acceptance pure and simple'
to those Constitution-Articles of ours; the 'mixed qualified
Acceptance,' with its peradventures, is satisfactory to neither gods nor
men.
So much is clear. And yet there is more, which no man
speaks, which all men now vaguely understand. Disquietude, absence of
mind is on every face; Members whisper, uneasily come and go: the order
of the day is evidently not the day's want. Till at length, from the
outer gates, is heard a rustling and justling, shrill uproar and
squabbling, muffled by walls; which testifies that the hour is come!
Rushing and crushing one hears now; then enter Usher Maillard, with a
Deputation of Fifteen muddy dripping Women,—having by incredible
industry, and aid of all the macers, persuaded the rest to wait out of
doors. National Assembly shall now, therefore, look its august task
directly in the face: regenerative Constitutionalism has an unregenerate
Sansculottism bodily in front of it; crying, "Bread! Bread!"
Shifty Maillard, translating frenzy into articulation;
repressive with the one hand, expostulative with the other, does his
best; and really, though not bred to public speaking, manages rather
well:—In the present dreadful rarity of grains, a Deputation of Female
Citizens has, as the august Assembly can discern, come out from Paris to
petition. Plots of Aristocrats are too evident in the matter; for
example, one miller has been bribed 'by a banknote of 200 livres' not to
grind,—name unknown to the Usher, but fact provable, at least
indubitable. Further, it seems, the National Cockade has been trampled
on; also there are Black Cockades, or were. All which things will not an
august National Assembly, the hope of France, take into its wise
immediate consideration?
And Menadic Hunger, impressible, crying "Black Cockades,"
crying "Bread, Bread," adds, after such fashion: "Will it not?—Yes,
Messieurs, if a Deputation to his Majesty, for the 'Acceptance pure and
simple,' seemed proper,—how much more now, for 'the afflicting situation
of Paris;' for the calming of this effervescence!" President Mounier,
with a speedy Deputation, among whom we notice the respectable figure of
Doctor Guillotin, gets himself forthwith on march. Vice-President shall
continue the order of the day; Usher Maillard shall stay by him to
repress the women. It is four o'clock, of the miserablest afternoon,
when Mounier steps out.
O experienced Mounier, what an afternoon; the last of thy
political existence! Better had it been to 'fall suddenly unwell,' while
it was yet time. For, behold, the Esplanade, over all its spacious
expanse, is covered with groups of squalid dripping Women; of lankhaired
male Rascality, armed with axes, rusty pikes, old muskets, ironshod
clubs (baton ferres, which end in knives or sword-blades, a kind of
extempore billhook);—looking nothing but hungry revolt. The rain
pours: Gardes-du-Corps go caracoling through the groups 'amid hisses;'
irritating and agitating what is but dispersed here to reunite there.
Innumerable squalid women beleaguer the President and
Deputation; insist on going with him: has not his Majesty himself,
looking from the window, sent out to ask, What we wanted? "Bread and
speech with the King (Du pain, et parler au Roi)," that was the
answer. Twelve women are clamorously added to the Deputation; and march
with it, across the Esplanade; through dissipated groups, caracoling
Bodyguards, and the pouring rain.
President Mounier, unexpectedly augmented by Twelve
Women, copiously escorted by Hunger and Rascality, is himself mistaken
for a group: himself and his Women are dispersed by caracolers; rally
again with difficulty, among the mud. (Mounier, Expose Justificatif (cited
in Deux Amis, iii. 185).) Finally the Grates are opened: the
Deputation gets access, with the Twelve Women too in it; of which
latter, Five shall even see the face of his Majesty. Let wet Menadism,
in the best spirits it can expect their return.
But already Pallas Athene (in the shape of Demoiselle
Theroigne) is busy with Flandre and the dismounted Dragoons. She,
and such women as are fittest, go through the ranks; speak with an
earnest jocosity; clasp rough troopers to their patriot bosom, crush
down spontoons and musketoons with soft arms: can a man, that were
worthy of the name of man, attack famishing patriot women?
One reads that Theroigne had bags of money, which she
distributed over Flandre:—furnished by whom? Alas, with money-bags one
seldom sits on insurrectionary cannon. Calumnious Royalism! Theroigne
had only the limited earnings of her profession of unfortunate-female;
money she had not, but brown locks, the figure of a heathen Goddess, and
an eloquent tongue and heart.
Meanwhile, Saint-Antoine, in groups and troops, is
continually arriving; wetted, sulky; with pikes and impromptu billhooks:
driven thus far by popular fixed-idea. So many hirsute figures driven
hither, in that manner: figures that have come to do they know not what;
figures that have come to see it done! Distinguished among all figures,
who is this, of gaunt stature, with leaden breastplate, though a small
one; (See Weber, ii. 185-231.) bushy in red grizzled locks; nay,
with long tile-beard? It is Jourdan, unjust dealer in mules; a dealer no
longer, but a Painter's Layfigure, playing truant this day. From the
necessities of Art comes his long tile-beard; whence his leaden
breastplate (unless indeed he were some Hawker licensed by leaden
badge) may have come,—will perhaps remain for ever a Historical
Problem. Another Saul among the people we discern: 'Pere Adam, Father
Adam,' as the groups name him; to us better known as bull-voiced Marquis
Saint-Huruge; hero of the Veto; a man that has had losses, and deserved
them. The tall Marquis, emitted some days ago from limbo, looks
peripatetically on this scene, from under his umbrella, not without
interest. All which persons and things, hurled together as we see;
Pallas Athene, busy with Flandre; patriotic Versailles National Guards,
short of ammunition, and deserted by d'Estaing their Colonel, and
commanded by Lecointre their Major; then caracoling Bodyguards, sour,
dispirited, with their buckskins wet; and finally this flowing sea of
indignant Squalor,—may they not give rise to occurrences?
Behold, however, the Twelve She-deputies return from the
Chateau. Without President Mounier, indeed; but radiant with joy,
shouting "Life to the King and his House." Apparently the news are good,
Mesdames? News of the best! Five of us were admitted to the internal
splendours, to the Royal Presence. This slim damsel, 'Louison Chabray,
worker in sculpture, aged only seventeen,' as being of the best looks
and address, her we appointed speaker. On whom, and indeed on all of us,
his Majesty looked nothing but graciousness. Nay, when Louison,
addressing him, was like to faint, he took her in his royal arms; and
said gallantly, "It was well worth while (Elle en valut bien la peine)."
Consider, O women, what a King! His words were of comfort, and that
only: there shall be provision sent to Paris, if provision is in the
world; grains shall circulate free as air; millers shall grind, or do
worse, while their millstones endure; and nothing be left wrong which a
Restorer of French Liberty can right.
Good news these; but, to wet Menads, all too incredible!
There seems no proof, then? Words of comfort are words only; which will
feed nothing. O miserable people, betrayed by Aristocrats, who corrupt
thy very messengers! In his royal arms, Mademoiselle Louison? In his
arms? Thou shameless minx, worthy of a name—that shall be nameless! Yes,
thy skin is soft: ours is rough with hardship; and well wetted, waiting
here in the rain. No children hast thou hungry at home; only alabaster
dolls, that weep not! The traitress! To the Lanterne!—And so poor
Louison Chabray, no asseveration or shrieks availing her, fair slim
damsel, late in the arms of Royalty, has a garter round her neck, and
furibund Amazons at each end; is about to perish so,—when two Bodyguards
gallop up, indignantly dissipating; and rescue her. The miscredited
Twelve hasten back to the Chateau, for an 'answer in writing.'
Nay, behold, a new flight of Menads, with 'M. Brunout
Bastille Volunteer,' as impressed-commandant, at the head of it. These
also will advance to the Grate of the Grand Court, and see what is
toward. Human patience, in wet buckskins, has its limits. Bodyguard
Lieutenant, M. de Savonnieres, for one moment, lets his temper, long
provoked, long pent, give way. He not only dissipates these latter
Menads; but caracoles and cuts, or indignantly flourishes, at M.
Brunout, the impressed-commandant; and, finding great relief in it, even
chases him; Brunout flying nimbly, though in a pirouette manner, and now
with sword also drawn. At which sight of wrath and victory two other
Bodyguards (for wrath is contagious, and to pent Bodyguards is so
solacing) do likewise give way; give chase, with brandished sabre,
and in the air make horrid circles. So that poor Brunout has nothing for
it but to retreat with accelerated nimbleness, through rank after rank;
Parthian-like, fencing as he flies; above all, shouting lustily, "On
nous laisse assassiner, They are getting us assassinated?"
Shameful! Three against one! Growls come from the
Lecointrian ranks; bellowings,—lastly shots. Savonnieres' arm is raised
to strike: the bullet of a Lecointrian musket shatters it; the
brandished sabre jingles down harmless. Brunout has escaped, this duel
well ended: but the wild howl of war is everywhere beginning to pipe!
The Amazons recoil; Saint-Antoine has its cannon pointed
(full of grapeshot); thrice applies the lit flambeau; which
thrice refuses to catch,—the touchholes are so wetted; and voices cry:
"Arretez, il n'est pas temps encore, Stop, it is not yet time!" (Deux
Amis, iii. 192-201.) Messieurs of the Garde-du-Corps, ye had orders
not to fire; nevertheless two of you limp dismounted, and one war-horse
lies slain. Were it not well to draw back out of shot-range; finally to
file off,—into the interior? If in so filing off, there did a musketoon
or two discharge itself, at these armed shopkeepers, hooting and
crowing, could man wonder? Draggled are your white cockades of an
enormous size; would to Heaven they were got exchanged for tricolor
ones! Your buckskins are wet, your hearts heavy. Go, and return not!
The Bodyguards file off, as we hint; giving and receiving
shots; drawing no life-blood; leaving boundless indignation. Some three
times in the thickening dusk, a glimpse of them is seen, at this or the
other Portal: saluted always with execrations, with the whew of lead.
Let but a Bodyguard shew face, he is hunted by Rascality;—for instance,
poor 'M. de Moucheton of the Scotch Company,' owner of the slain
war-horse; and has to be smuggled off by Versailles Captains. Or rusty
firelocks belch after him, shivering asunder his—hat. In the end, by
superior Order, the Bodyguards, all but the few on immediate duty,
disappear; or as it were abscond; and march, under cloud of night, to
Rambouillet. (Weber, ubi supra.)
We remark also that the Versaillese have now got
ammunition: all afternoon, the official Person could find none; till, in
these so critical moments, a patriotic Sublieutenant set a pistol to his
ear, and would thank him to find some,—which he thereupon succeeded in
doing. Likewise that Flandre, disarmed by Pallas Athene, says openly, it
will not fight with citizens; and for token of peace, has exchanged
cartridges with the Versaillese.
Sansculottism is now among mere friends; and can
'circulate freely;' indignant at Bodyguards;—complaining also
considerably of hunger.
But why lingers Mounier; returns not with his Deputation?
It is six, it is seven o'clock; and still no Mounier, no Acceptance pure
and simple.
And, behold, the dripping Menads, not now in deputation
but in mass, have penetrated into the Assembly: to the shamefullest
interruption of public speaking and order of the day. Neither Maillard
nor Vice-President can restrain them, except within wide limits; not
even, except for minutes, can the lion-voice of Mirabeau, though they
applaud it: but ever and anon they break in upon the regeneration of
France with cries of: "Bread; not so much discoursing! Du pain; pas tant
de longs discours!"—So insensible were these poor creatures to bursts of
Parliamentary eloquence!
One learns also that the royal Carriages are getting
yoked, as if for Metz. Carriages, royal or not, have verily showed
themselves at the back Gates. They even produced, or quoted, a written
order from our Versailles Municipality,—which is a Monarchic not a
Democratic one. However, Versailles Patroles drove them in again; as the
vigilant Lecointre had strictly charged them to do.
A busy man, truly, is Major Lecointre, in these hours.
For Colonel d'Estaing loiters invisible in the Oeil-de-Boeuf; invisible,
or still more questionably visible, for instants: then also a too loyal
Municipality requires supervision: no order, civil or military, taken
about any of these thousand things! Lecointre is at the Versailles
Townhall: he is at the Grate of the Grand Court; communing with Swiss
and Bodyguards. He is in the ranks of Flandre; he is here, he is there:
studious to prevent bloodshed; to prevent the Royal Family from flying
to Metz; the Menads from plundering Versailles.
At the fall of night, we behold him advance to those
armed groups of Saint-Antoine, hovering all-too grim near the Salle des
Menus. They receive him in a half-circle; twelve speakers behind
cannons, with lighted torches in hand, the cannon-mouths towards
Lecointre: a picture for Salvator! He asks, in temperate but courageous
language: What they, by this their journey to Versailles, do specially
want? The twelve speakers reply, in few words inclusive of much: "Bread,
and the end of these brabbles, Du pain, et la fin des affaires." When
the affairs will end, no Major Lecointre, nor no mortal, can say; but as
to bread, he inquires, How many are you?—learns that they are six
hundred, that a loaf each will suffice; and rides off to the
Municipality to get six hundred loaves.
Which loaves, however, a Municipality of Monarchic temper
will not give. It will give two tons of rice rather,—could you but know
whether it should be boiled or raw. Nay when this too is accepted, the
Municipals have disappeared;—ducked under, as the Six-and-Twenty
Long-gowned of Paris did; and, leaving not the smallest vestage of rice,
in the boiled or raw state, they there vanish from History!
Rice comes not; one's hope of food is baulked; even one's
hope of vengeance: is not M. de Moucheton of the Scotch Company, as we
said, deceitfully smuggled off? Failing all which, behold only M. de
Moucheton's slain warhorse, lying on the Esplanade there! Saint-Antoine,
baulked, esurient, pounces on the slain warhorse; flays it; roasts it,
with such fuel, of paling, gates, portable timber as can be come at,—not
without shouting: and, after the manner of ancient Greek Heroes, they
lifted their hands to the daintily readied repast; such as it might be.
(Weber, Deux Amis, &c.) Other Rascality prowls discursive;
seeking what it may devour. Flandre will retire to its barracks;
Lecointre also with his Versaillese,—all but the vigilant Patrols,
charged to be doubly vigilant.
So sink the shadows of Night, blustering, rainy; and all
paths grow dark. Strangest Night ever seen in these regions,—perhaps
since the Bartholomew Night, when Versailles, as Bassompierre writes of
it, was a chetif chateau. O for the Lyre of some Orpheus, to constrain,
with touch of melodious strings, these mad masses into Order! For here
all seems fallen asunder, in wide-yawning dislocation. The highest, as
in down-rushing of a World, is come in contact with the lowest: the
Rascality of France beleaguering the Royalty of France; 'ironshod
batons' lifted round the diadem, not to guard it! With denunciations of
bloodthirsty Anti-national Bodyguards, are heard dark growlings against
a Queenly Name.
The Court sits tremulous, powerless; varies with the
varying temper of the Esplanade, with the varying colour of the rumours
from Paris. Thick-coming rumours; now of peace, now of war. Necker and
all the Ministers consult; with a blank issue. The Oeil-de-Boeuf is one
tempest of whispers:—We will fly to Metz; we will not fly. The royal
Carriages again attempt egress;—though for trial merely; they are again
driven in by Lecointre's Patrols. In six hours, nothing has been
resolved on; not even the Acceptance pure and simple.
In six hours? Alas, he who, in such circumstances, cannot
resolve in six minutes, may give up the enterprise: him Fate has already
resolved for. And Menadism, meanwhile, and Sansculottism takes counsel
with the National Assembly; grows more and more tumultuous there.
Mounier returns not; Authority nowhere shews itself: the Authority of
France lies, for the present, with Lecointre and Usher Maillard.—This
then is the abomination of desolation; come suddenly, though long
foreshadowed as inevitable! For, to the blind, all things are sudden.
Misery which, through long ages, had no spokesman, no helper, will now
be its own helper and speak for itself. The dialect, one of the rudest,
is, what it could be, this.
At eight o'clock there returns to our Assembly not the
Deputation; but Doctor Guillotin announcing that it will return; also
that there is hope of the Acceptance pure and simple. He himself has
brought a Royal Letter, authorising and commanding the freest
'circulation of grains.' Which Royal Letter Menadism with its whole
heart applauds. Conformably to which the Assembly forthwith passes a
Decree; also received with rapturous Menadic plaudits:—Only could not an
august Assembly contrive further to "fix the price of bread at eight
sous the half-quartern; butchers'-meat at six sous the pound;" which
seem fair rates? Such motion do 'a multitude of men and women,'
irrepressible by Usher Maillard, now make; does an august Assembly hear
made. Usher Maillard himself is not always perfectly measured in speech;
but if rebuked, he can justly excuse himself by the peculiarity of the
circumstances. (Moniteur (in Hist. Parl. ii. 105).)
But finally, this Decree well passed, and the disorder
continuing; and Members melting away, and no President Mounier
returning,—what can the Vice-President do but also melt away? The
Assembly melts, under such pressure, into deliquium; or, as it is
officially called, adjourns. Maillard is despatched to Paris, with the
'Decree concerning Grains' in his pocket; he and some women, in
carriages belonging to the King. Thitherward slim Louison Chabray has
already set forth, with that 'written answer,' which the Twelve
She-deputies returned in to seek. Slim sylph, she has set forth, through
the black muddy country: she has much to tell, her poor nerves so
flurried; and travels, as indeed to-day on this road all persons do,
with extreme slowness. President Mounier has not come, nor the
Acceptance pure and simple; though six hours with their events have
come; though courier on courier reports that Lafayette is coming.
Coming, with war or with peace? It is time that the Chateau also should
determine on one thing or another; that the Chateau also should show
itself alive, if it would continue living!
Victorious, joyful after such delay, Mounier does arrive
at last, and the hard-earned Acceptance with him; which now, alas, is of
small value. Fancy Mounier's surprise to find his Senate, whom he hoped
to charm by the Acceptance pure and simple,—all gone; and in its stead a
Senate of Menads! For as Erasmus's Ape mimicked, say with wooden splint,
Erasmus shaving, so do these Amazons hold, in mock majesty, some
confused parody of National Assembly. They make motions; deliver
speeches; pass enactments; productive at least of loud laughter. All
galleries and benches are filled; a strong Dame of the Market is in
Mounier's Chair. Not without difficulty, Mounier, by aid of macers, and
persuasive speaking, makes his way to the Female-President: the Strong
Dame before abdicating signifies that, for one thing, she and indeed her
whole senate male and female (for what was one roasted warhorse among
so many?) are suffering very considerably from hunger.
Experienced Mounier, in these circumstances, takes a
twofold resolution: To reconvoke his Assembly Members by sound of drum;
also to procure a supply of food. Swift messengers fly, to all bakers,
cooks, pastrycooks, vintners, restorers; drums beat, accompanied with
shrill vocal proclamation, through all streets. They come: the Assembly
Members come; what is still better, the provisions come. On tray and
barrow come these latter; loaves, wine, great store of sausages. The
nourishing baskets circulate harmoniously along the benches; nor,
according to the Father of Epics, did any soul lack a fair share of
victual ((Greek), an equal diet); highly desirable, at the
moment. (Deux Amis, iii. 208.)
Gradually some hundred or so of Assembly members get
edged in, Menadism making way a little, round Mounier's Chair; listen to
the Acceptance pure and simple; and begin, what is the order of the
night, 'discussion of the Penal Code.' All benches are crowded; in the
dusky galleries, duskier with unwashed heads, is a strange
'coruscation,'—of impromptu billhooks. (Courier de Provence (Mirabeau's
Newspaper), No. 50, p. 19.) It is exactly five months this day
since these same galleries were filled with high-plumed jewelled Beauty,
raining bright influences; and now? To such length have we got in
regenerating France. Methinks the travail-throes are of the
sharpest!—Menadism will not be restrained from occasional remarks; asks,
"What is use of the Penal Code? The thing we want is Bread." Mirabeau
turns round with lion-voiced rebuke; Menadism applauds him; but
recommences.
Thus they, chewing tough sausages, discussing the Penal
Code, make night hideous. What the issue will be? Lafayette with his
thirty thousand must arrive first: him, who cannot now be distant, all
men expect, as the messenger of Destiny.
Towards midnight lights flare on the hill; Lafayette's
lights! The roll of his drums comes up the Avenue de Versailles. With
peace, or with war? Patience, friends! With neither. Lafayette is come,
but not yet the catastrophe.
He has halted and harangued so often, on the march; spent
nine hours on four leagues of road. At Montreuil, close on Versailles,
the whole Host had to pause; and, with uplifted right hand, in the murk
of Night, to these pouring skies, swear solemnly to respect the King's
Dwelling; to be faithful to King and National Assembly. Rage is driven
down out of sight, by the laggard march; the thirst of vengeance slaked
in weariness and soaking clothes. Flandre is again drawn out under arms:
but Flandre, grown so patriotic, now needs no 'exterminating.' The
wayworn Batallions halt in the Avenue: they have, for the present, no
wish so pressing as that of shelter and rest.
Anxious sits President Mounier; anxious the Chateau.
There is a message coming from the Chateau, that M. Mounier would please
return thither with a fresh Deputation, swiftly; and so at least unite
our two anxieties. Anxious Mounier does of himself send, meanwhile, to
apprise the General that his Majesty has been so gracious as to grant us
the Acceptance pure and simple. The General, with a small advance
column, makes answer in passing; speaks vaguely some smooth words to the
National President,—glances, only with the eye, at that so mixtiform
National Assembly; then fares forward towards the Chateau. There are
with him two Paris Municipals; they were chosen from the Three Hundred
for that errand. He gets admittance through the locked and padlocked
Grates, through sentries and ushers, to the Royal Halls.
The Court, male and female, crowds on his passage, to
read their doom on his face; which exhibits, say Historians, a mixture
'of sorrow, of fervour and valour,' singular to behold. (Memoire de
M. le Comte de Lally-Tollendal (Janvier 1790), p. 161-165.)
The King, with Monsieur, with Ministers and Marshals, is waiting to
receive him: He "is come," in his highflown chivalrous way, "to offer
his head for the safety of his Majesty's." The two Municipals state the
wish of Paris: four things, of quite pacific tenor. First, that the
honour of Guarding his sacred person be conferred on patriot National
Guards;—say, the Centre Grenadiers, who as Gardes Francaises were wont
to have that privilege. Second, that provisions be got, if possible.
Third, that the Prisons, all crowded with political delinquents, may
have judges sent them. Fourth, that it would please his Majesty to come
and live in Paris. To all which four wishes, except the fourth, his
Majesty answers readily, Yes; or indeed may almost say that he has
already answered it. To the fourth he can answer only, Yes or No; would
so gladly answer, Yes and No!—But, in any case, are not their
dispositions, thank Heaven, so entirely pacific? There is time for
deliberation. The brunt of the danger seems past!
Lafayette and d'Estaing settle the watches; Centre
Grenadiers are to take the Guard-room they of old occupied as Gardes
Francaises;—for indeed the Gardes du Corps, its late ill-advised
occupants, are gone mostly to Rambouillet. That is the order of this
night; sufficient for the night is the evil thereof. Whereupon Lafayette
and the two Municipals, with highflown chivalry, take their leave.
So brief has the interview been, Mounier and his
Deputation were not yet got up. So brief and satisfactory. A stone is
rolled from every heart. The fair Palace Dames publicly declare that
this Lafayette, detestable though he be, is their saviour for once. Even
the ancient vinaigrous Tantes admit it; the King's Aunts, ancient
Graille and Sisterhood, known to us of old. Queen Marie-Antoinette has
been heard often say the like. She alone, among all women and all men,
wore a face of courage, of lofty calmness and resolve, this day. She
alone saw clearly what she meant to do; and Theresa's Daughter dares do
what she means, were all France threatening her: abide where her
children are, where her husband is.
Towards three in the morning all things are settled: the
watches set, the Centre Grenadiers put into their old Guard-room, and
harangued; the Swiss, and few remaining Bodyguards harangued. The
wayworn Paris Batallions, consigned to 'the hospitality of Versailles,'
lie dormant in spare-beds, spare-barracks, coffeehouses, empty churches.
A troop of them, on their way to the Church of Saint-Louis, awoke poor
Weber, dreaming troublous, in the Rue Sartory. Weber has had his
waistcoat-pocket full of balls all day; 'two hundred balls, and two
pears of powder!' For waistcoats were waistcoats then, and had flaps
down to mid-thigh. So many balls he has had all day; but no opportunity
of using them: he turns over now, execrating disloyal bandits; swears a
prayer or two, and straight to sleep again.
Finally, the National Assembly is harangued; which
thereupon, on motion of Mirabeau, discontinues the Penal Code, and
dismisses for this night. Menadism, Sansculottism has cowered into
guard-houses, barracks of Flandre, to the light of cheerful fire;
failing that, to churches, office-houses, sentry-boxes, wheresoever
wretchedness can find a lair. The troublous Day has brawled itself to
rest: no lives yet lost but that of one warhorse. Insurrectionary Chaos
lies slumbering round the Palace, like Ocean round a Diving-bell,—no
crevice yet disclosing itself.
Deep sleep has fallen promiscuously on the high and on
the low; suspending most things, even wrath and famine. Darkness covers
the Earth. But, far on the North-east, Paris flings up her great yellow
gleam; far into the wet black Night. For all is illuminated there, as in
the old July Nights; the streets deserted, for alarm of war; the
Municipals all wakeful; Patrols hailing, with their hoarse Who-goes.
There, as we discover, our poor slim Louison Chabray, her poor nerves
all fluttered, is arriving about this very hour. There Usher Maillard
will arrive, about an hour hence, 'towards four in the morning.' They
report, successively, to a wakeful Hotel-de-Ville what comfort they can
report; which again, with early dawn, large comfortable Placards, shall
impart to all men.
Lafayette, in the Hotel de Noailles, not far from the
Chateau, having now finished haranguing, sits with his Officers
consulting: at five o'clock the unanimous best counsel is, that a man so
tost and toiled for twenty-four hours and more, fling himself on a bed,
and seek some rest.
Thus, then, has ended the First Act of the Insurrection
of Women. How it will turn on the morrow? The morrow, as always, is with
the Fates! But his Majesty, one may hope, will consent to come
honourably to Paris; at all events, he can visit Paris. Anti-national
Bodyguards, here and elsewhere, must take the National Oath; make
reparation to the Tricolor; Flandre will swear. There may be much
swearing; much public speaking there will infallibly be: and so, with
harangues and vows, may the matter in some handsome way, wind itself up.
Or, alas, may it not be all otherwise, unhandsome: the
consent not honourable, but extorted, ignominious? Boundless Chaos of
Insurrection presses slumbering round the Palace, like Ocean round a
Diving-bell; and may penetrate at any crevice. Let but that accumulated
insurrectionary mass find entrance! Like the infinite inburst of water;
or say rather, of inflammable, self-igniting fluid; for example,
'turpentine-and-phosphorus oil,'—fluid known to Spinola Santerre!
Chapter 10.
The Grand Entries.
The dull dawn of a new morning, drizzly and chill, had
but broken over Versailles, when it pleased Destiny that a Bodyguard
should look out of window, on the right wing of the Chateau, to see what
prospect there was in Heaven and in Earth. Rascality male and female is
prowling in view of him. His fasting stomach is, with good cause, sour;
he perhaps cannot forbear a passing malison on them; least of all can he
forbear answering such.
Ill words breed worse: till the worst word came; and then
the ill deed. Did the maledicent Bodyguard, getting (as was too
inevitable) better malediction than he gave, load his musketoon, and
threaten to fire; and actually fire? Were wise who wist! It stands
asserted; to us not credibly. Be this as it may, menaced Rascality, in
whinnying scorn, is shaking at all Grates: the fastening of one (some
write, it was a chain merely) gives way; Rascality is in the Grand
Court, whinnying louder still.
The maledicent Bodyguard, more Bodyguards than he do now
give fire; a man's arm is shattered. Lecointre will depose (Deposition
de Lecointre in Hist. Parl. iii. 111-115.) that 'the Sieur Cardaine,
a National Guard without arms, was stabbed.' But see, sure enough, poor
Jerome l'Heritier, an unarmed National Guard he too, 'cabinet-maker, a
saddler's son, of Paris,' with the down of youthhood still on his
chin,—he reels death-stricken; rushes to the pavement, scattering it
with his blood and brains!—Allelew! Wilder than Irish wakes, rises the
howl: of pity; of infinite revenge. In few moments, the Grate of the
inner and inmost Court, which they name Court of Marble, this too is
forced, or surprised, and burst open: the Court of Marble too is
overflowed: up the Grand Staircase, up all stairs and entrances rushes
the living Deluge! Deshuttes and Varigny, the two sentry Bodyguards, are
trodden down, are massacred with a hundred pikes. Women snatch their
cutlasses, or any weapon, and storm-in Menadic:—other women lift the
corpse of shot Jerome; lay it down on the Marble steps; there shall the
livid face and smashed head, dumb for ever, speak.
Wo now to all Bodyguards, mercy is none for them!
Miomandre de Sainte-Marie pleads with soft words, on the Grand
Staircase, 'descending four steps:'—to the roaring tornado. His comrades
snatch him up, by the skirts and belts; literally, from the jaws of
Destruction; and slam-to their Door. This also will stand few instants;
the panels shivering in, like potsherds. Barricading serves not: fly
fast, ye Bodyguards; rabid Insurrection, like the hellhound Chase,
uproaring at your heels!
The terrorstruck Bodyguards fly, bolting and barricading;
it follows. Whitherward? Through hall on hall: wo, now! towards the
Queen's Suite of Rooms, in the furtherest room of which the Queen is now
asleep. Five sentinels rush through that long Suite; they are in the
Anteroom knocking loud: "Save the Queen!" Trembling women fall at their
feet with tears; are answered: "Yes, we will die; save ye the Queen!"
Tremble not, women, but haste: for, lo, another voice
shouts far through the outermost door, "Save the Queen!" and the door
shut. It is brave Miomandre's voice that shouts this second warning. He
has stormed across imminent death to do it; fronts imminent death,
having done it. Brave Tardivet du Repaire, bent on the same desperate
service, was borne down with pikes; his comrades hardly snatched him in
again alive. Miomandre and Tardivet: let the names of these two
Bodyguards, as the names of brave men should, live long.
Trembling Maids of Honour, one of whom from afar caught
glimpse of Miomandre as well as heard him, hastily wrap the Queen; not
in robes of State. She flies for her life, across the Oeil-de-Boeuf;
against the main door of which too Insurrection batters. She is in the
King's Apartment, in the King's arms; she clasps her children amid a
faithful few. The Imperial-hearted bursts into mother's tears: "O my
friends, save me and my children, O mes amis, sauvez moi et mes enfans!"
The battering of Insurrectionary axes clangs audible across the
Oeil-de-Boeuf. What an hour!
Yes, Friends: a hideous fearful hour; shameful alike to
Governed and Governor; wherein Governed and Governor ignominiously
testify that their relation is at an end. Rage, which had brewed itself
in twenty thousand hearts, for the last four-and-twenty hours, has taken
fire: Jerome's brained corpse lies there as live-coal. It is, as we
said, the infinite Element bursting in: wild-surging through all
corridors and conduits.
Meanwhile, the poor Bodyguards have got hunted mostly
into the Oeil-de-Boeuf. They may die there, at the King's threshhold;
they can do little to defend it. They are heaping tabourets (stools
of honour), benches and all moveables, against the door; at which
the axe of Insurrection thunders.—But did brave Miomandre perish, then,
at the Queen's door? No, he was fractured, slashed, lacerated, left for
dead; he has nevertheless crawled hither; and shall live, honoured of
loyal France. Remark also, in flat contradiction to much which has been
said and sung, that Insurrection did not burst that door he had
defended; but hurried elsewhither, seeking new bodyguards. (Campan,
ii. 75-87.)
Poor Bodyguards, with their Thyestes' Opera-Repast! Well
for them, that Insurrection has only pikes and axes; no right sieging
tools! It shakes and thunders. Must they all perish miserably, and
Royalty with them? Deshuttes and Varigny, massacred at the first
inbreak, have been beheaded in the Marble Court: a sacrifice to Jerome's
manes: Jourdan with the tile-beard did that duty willingly; and asked,
If there were no more? Another captive they are leading round the
corpse, with howl-chauntings: may not Jourdan again tuck up his sleeves?
And louder and louder rages Insurrection within,
plundering if it cannot kill; louder and louder it thunders at the
Oeil-de-Boeuf: what can now hinder its bursting in?—On a sudden it
ceases; the battering has ceased! Wild rushing: the cries grow fainter:
there is silence, or the tramp of regular steps; then a friendly
knocking: "We are the Centre Grenadiers, old Gardes Francaises: Open to
us, Messieurs of the Garde-du-Corps; we have not forgotten how you saved
us at Fontenoy!" (Toulongeon, i. 144.) The door is opened; enter
Captain Gondran and the Centre Grenadiers: there are military
embracings; there is sudden deliverance from death into life.
Strange Sons of Adam! It was to 'exterminate' these
Gardes-du-Corps that the Centre Grenadiers left home: and now they have
rushed to save them from extermination. The memory of common peril, of
old help, melts the rough heart; bosom is clasped to bosom, not in war.
The King shews himself, one moment, through the door of his Apartment,
with: "Do not hurt my Guards!"—"Soyons freres, Let us be brothers!"
cries Captain Gondran; and again dashes off, with levelled bayonets, to
sweep the Palace clear.
Now too Lafayette, suddenly roused, not from sleep (for
his eyes had not yet closed), arrives; with passionate popular
eloquence, with prompt military word of command. National Guards,
suddenly roused, by sound of trumpet and alarm-drum, are all arriving.
The death-melly ceases: the first sky-lambent blaze of Insurrection is
got damped down; it burns now, if unextinguished, yet flameless, as
charred coals do, and not inextinguishable. The King's Apartments are
safe. Ministers, Officials, and even some loyal National deputies are
assembling round their Majesties. The consternation will, with sobs and
confusion, settle down gradually, into plan and counsel, better or
worse.
But glance now, for a moment, from the royal windows! A
roaring sea of human heads, inundating both Courts; billowing against
all passages: Menadic women; infuriated men, mad with revenge, with love
of mischief, love of plunder! Rascality has slipped its muzzle; and now
bays, three-throated, like the Dog of Erebus. Fourteen Bodyguards are
wounded; two massacred, and as we saw, beheaded; Jourdan asking, "Was it
worth while to come so far for two?" Hapless Deshuttes and Varigny!
Their fate surely was sad. Whirled down so suddenly to the abyss; as men
are, suddenly, by the wide thunder of the Mountain Avalanche, awakened
not by them, awakened far off by others! When the Chateau Clock last
struck, they two were pacing languid, with poised musketoon; anxious
mainly that the next hour would strike. It has struck; to them
inaudible. Their trunks lie mangled: their heads parade, 'on pikes
twelve feet long,' through the streets of Versailles; and shall, about
noon reach the Barriers of Paris,—a too ghastly contradiction to the
large comfortable Placards that have been posted there!
The other captive Bodyguard is still circling the corpse
of Jerome, amid Indian war-whooping; bloody Tilebeard, with tucked
sleeves, brandishing his bloody axe; when Gondran and the Grenadiers
come in sight. "Comrades, will you see a man massacred in cold
blood?"—"Off, butchers!" answer they; and the poor Bodyguard is free.
Busy runs Gondran, busy run Guards and Captains; scouring at all
corridors; dispersing Rascality and Robbery; sweeping the Palace clear.
The mangled carnage is removed; Jerome's body to the Townhall, for
inquest: the fire of Insurrection gets damped, more and more, into
measurable, manageable heat.
Transcendent things of all sorts, as in the general
outburst of multitudinous Passion, are huddled together; the ludicrous,
nay the ridiculous, with the horrible. Far over the billowy sea of
heads, may be seen Rascality, caprioling on horses from the Royal Stud.
The Spoilers these; for Patriotism is always infected so, with a
proportion of mere thieves and scoundrels. Gondran snatched their prey
from them in the Chateau; whereupon they hurried to the Stables, and
took horse there. But the generous Diomedes' steeds, according to Weber,
disdained such scoundrel-burden; and, flinging up their royal heels, did
soon project most of it, in parabolic curves, to a distance, amid peals
of laughter: and were caught. Mounted National Guards secured the rest.
Now too is witnessed the touching last-flicker of
Etiquette; which sinks not here, in the Cimmerian World-wreckage,
without a sign, as the house-cricket might still chirp in the pealing of
a Trump of Doom. "Monsieur," said some Master of Ceremonies (one
hopes it might be de Breze), as Lafayette, in these fearful moments,
was rushing towards the inner Royal Apartments, "Monsieur, le Roi vous
accorde les grandes entrees, Monsieur, the King grants you the Grand
Entries,"—not finding it convenient to refuse them! (Toulongeon, 1
App. 120.)
However, the Paris National Guard, wholly under arms, has
cleared the Palace, and even occupies the nearer external spaces;
extruding miscellaneous Patriotism, for most part, into the Grand Court,
or even into the Forecourt.
The Bodyguards, you can observe, have now of a verity,
'hoisted the National Cockade:' for they step forward to the windows or
balconies, hat aloft in hand, on each hat a huge tricolor; and fling
over their bandoleers in sign of surrender; and shout Vive la Nation. To
which how can the generous heart respond but with, Vive le Roi; vivent
les Gardes-du-Corps? His Majesty himself has appeared with Lafayette on
the balcony, and again appears: Vive le Roi greets him from all throats;
but also from some one throat is heard "Le Roi a Paris, The King to
Paris!"
Her Majesty too, on demand, shows herself, though there
is peril in it: she steps out on the balcony, with her little boy and
girl. "No children, Point d'enfans!" cry the voices. She gently pushes
back her children; and stands alone, her hands serenely crossed on her
breast: "should I die," she had said, "I will do it." Such serenity of
heroism has its effect. Lafayette, with ready wit, in his highflown
chivalrous way, takes that fair queenly hand; and reverently kneeling,
kisses it: thereupon the people do shout Vive la Reine. Nevertheless,
poor Weber 'saw' (or even thought he saw; for hardly the third part
of poor Weber's experiences, in such hysterical days, will stand
scrutiny) 'one of these brigands level his musket at her
Majesty,'—with or without intention to shoot; for another of the
brigands 'angrily struck it down.'
So that all, and the Queen herself, nay the very Captain
of the Bodyguards, have grown National! The very Captain of the
Bodyguards steps out now with Lafayette. On the hat of the repentant man
is an enormous tricolor; large as a soup-platter, or sun-flower; visible
to the utmost Forecourt. He takes the National Oath with a loud voice,
elevating his hat; at which sight all the army raise their bonnets on
their bayonets, with shouts. Sweet is reconcilement to the heart of man.
Lafayette has sworn Flandre; he swears the remaining Bodyguards, down in
the Marble Court; the people clasp them in their arms:—O, my brothers,
why would ye force us to slay you? Behold there is joy over you, as over
returning prodigal sons!—The poor Bodyguards, now National and tricolor,
exchange bonnets, exchange arms; there shall be peace and fraternity.
And still "Vive le Roi;" and also "Le Roi a Paris," not now from one
throat, but from all throats as one, for it is the heart's wish of all
mortals.
Yes, The King to Paris: what else? Ministers may consult,
and National Deputies wag their heads: but there is now no other
possibility. You have forced him to go willingly. "At one o'clock!"
Lafayette gives audible assurance to that purpose; and universal
Insurrection, with immeasurable shout, and a discharge of all the
firearms, clear and rusty, great and small, that it has, returns him
acceptance. What a sound; heard for leagues: a doom peal!—That sound too
rolls away, into the Silence of Ages. And the Chateau of Versailles
stands ever since vacant, hushed still; its spacious Courts grassgrown,
responsive to the hoe of the weeder. Times and generations roll on, in
their confused Gulf-current; and buildings like builders have their
destiny.
Till one o'clock, then, there will be three parties,
National Assembly, National Rascality, National Royalty, all busy
enough. Rascality rejoices; women trim themselves with tricolor. Nay
motherly Paris has sent her Avengers sufficient 'cartloads of loaves;'
which are shouted over, which are gratefully consumed. The Avengers, in
return, are searching for grain-stores; loading them in fifty waggons;
that so a National King, probable harbinger of all blessings, may be the
evident bringer of plenty, for one.
And thus has Sansculottism made prisoner its King;
revoking his parole. The Monarchy has fallen; and not so much as
honourably: no, ignominiously; with struggle, indeed, oft repeated; but
then with unwise struggle; wasting its strength in fits and paroxysms;
at every new paroxysm, foiled more pitifully than before. Thus Broglie's
whiff of grapeshot, which might have been something, has dwindled to the
pot-valour of an Opera Repast, and O Richard, O mon Roi. Which again we
shall see dwindle to a Favras' Conspiracy, a thing to be settled by the
hanging of one Chevalier.
Poor Monarchy! But what save foulest defeat can await
that man, who wills, and yet wills not? Apparently the King either has a
right, assertible as such to the death, before God and man; or else he
has no right. Apparently, the one or the other; could he but know which!
May Heaven pity him! Were Louis wise he would this day abdicate.—Is it
not strange so few Kings abdicate; and none yet heard of has been known
to commit suicide? Fritz the First, of Prussia, alone tried it; and they
cut the rope.
As for the National Assembly, which decrees this morning
that it 'is inseparable from his Majesty,' and will follow him to Paris,
there may one thing be noted: its extreme want of bodily health. After
the Fourteenth of July there was a certain sickliness observable among
honourable Members; so many demanding passports, on account of infirm
health. But now, for these following days, there is a perfect murrian:
President Mounier, Lally Tollendal, Clermont Tonnere, and all
Constitutional Two-Chamber Royalists needing change of air; as most
No-Chamber Royalists had formerly done.
For, in truth, it is the second Emigration this that has
now come; most extensive among Commons Deputies, Noblesse, Clergy: so
that 'to Switzerland alone there go sixty thousand.' They will return in
the day of accounts! Yes, and have hot welcome.—But Emigration on
Emigration is the peculiarity of France. One Emigration follows another;
grounded on reasonable fear, unreasonable hope, largely also on childish
pet. The highflyers have gone first, now the lower flyers; and ever the
lower will go down to the crawlers. Whereby, however, cannot our
National Assembly so much the more commodiously make the Constitution;
your Two-Chamber Anglomaniacs being all safe, distant on foreign shores?
Abbe Maury is seized, and sent back again: he, tough as tanned leather,
with eloquent Captain Cazales and some others, will stand it out for
another year.
But here, meanwhile, the question arises: Was Philippe
d'Orleans seen, this day, 'in the Bois de Boulogne, in grey surtout;'
waiting under the wet sere foliage, what the day might bring forth?
Alas, yes, the Eidolon of him was,—in Weber's and other such brains. The
Chatelet shall make large inquisition into the matter, examining a
hundred and seventy witnesses, and Deputy Chabroud publish his Report;
but disclose nothing further. (Rapport de Chabroud (Moniteur, du
31 December, 1789).) What then has caused these two unparalleled
October Days? For surely such dramatic exhibition never yet enacted
itself without Dramatist and Machinist. Wooden Punch emerges not, with
his domestic sorrows, into the light of day, unless the wire be pulled:
how can human mobs? Was it not d'Orleans then, and Laclos, Marquis
Sillery, Mirabeau and the sons of confusion, hoping to drive the King to
Metz, and gather the spoil? Nay was it not, quite contrariwise, the
Oeil-de-Boeuf, Bodyguard Colonel de Guiche, Minister Saint-Priest and
highflying Loyalists; hoping also to drive him to Metz; and try it by
the sword of civil war? Good Marquis Toulongeon, the Historian and
Deputy, feels constrained to admit that it was both. (Toulongeon, i.
150.)
Alas, my Friends, credulous incredulity is a strange
matter. But when a whole Nation is smitten with Suspicion, and sees a
dramatic miracle in the very operation of the gastric juices, what help
is there? Such Nation is already a mere hypochondriac bundle of
diseases; as good as changed into glass; atrabiliar, decadent; and will
suffer crises. Is not Suspicion itself the one thing to be suspected, as
Montaigne feared only fear?
Now, however, the short hour has struck. His Majesty is
in his carriage, with his Queen, sister Elizabeth, and two royal
children. Not for another hour can the infinite Procession get
marshalled, and under way. The weather is dim drizzling; the mind
confused; and noise great.
Processional marches not a few our world has seen; Roman
triumphs and ovations, Cabiric cymbal-beatings, Royal progresses, Irish
funerals: but this of the French Monarchy marching to its bed remained
to be seen. Miles long, and of breadth losing itself in vagueness, for
all the neighbouring country crowds to see. Slow; stagnating along, like
shoreless Lake, yet with a noise like Niagara, like Babel and Bedlam. A
splashing and a tramping; a hurrahing, uproaring, musket-volleying;—the
truest segment of Chaos seen in these latter Ages! Till slowly it
disembogue itself, in the thickening dusk, into expectant Paris, through
a double row of faces all the way from Passy to the Hotel-de-Ville.
Consider this: Vanguard of National troops; with trains
of artillery; of pikemen and pikewomen, mounted on cannons, on carts,
hackney-coaches, or on foot;—tripudiating, in tricolor ribbons from head
to heel; loaves stuck on the points of bayonets, green boughs stuck in
gun barrels. ( |