|
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION: A HISTORY |
|
BOOK II. NANCI Dimly visible, at Metz on the North-Eastern frontier, a certain brave Bouille, last refuge of Royalty in all straits and meditations of flight, has for many months hovered occasionally in our eye; some name or shadow of a brave Bouille: let us now, for a little, look fixedly at him, till he become a substance and person for us. The man himself is worth a glance; his position and procedure there, in these days, will throw light on many things.
For it is with Bouille as with all French Commanding
Officers; only in a more emphatic degree. The grand National Federation,
we already guess, was but empty sound, or worse: a last loudest
universal Hep-hep-hurrah, with full bumpers, in that National Lapithae-feast
of Constitution-making; as in loud denial of the palpably existing; as
if, with hurrahings, you would shut out notice of the inevitable already
knocking at the gates! Which new National bumper, one may say, can but
deepen the drunkenness; and so, the louder it swears Brotherhood, will
the sooner and the more surely lead to Cannibalism. Ah, under that
fraternal shine and clangour, what a deep world of irreconcileable
discords lie momentarily assuaged, damped down for one moment!
Respectable military Federates have barely got home to their quarters;
and the inflammablest, 'dying, burnt up with liquors, and kindness,' has
not yet got extinct; the shine is hardly out of men's eyes, and still
blazes filling all men's memories,—when your discords burst forth again
very considerably darker than ever. Let us look at Bouille, and see how.
Bouille for the present commands in the Garrison of Metz,
and far and wide over the East and North; being indeed, by a late act of
Government with sanction of National Assembly, appointed one of our Four
supreme Generals. Rochambeau and Mailly, men and Marshals of note in
these days, though to us of small moment, are two of his colleagues;
tough old babbling Luckner, also of small moment for us, will probably
be the third. Marquis de Bouille is a determined Loyalist; not indeed
disinclined to moderate reform, but resolute against immoderate. A man
long suspect to Patriotism; who has more than once given the august
Assembly trouble; who would not, for example, take the National Oath, as
he was bound to do, but always put it off on this or the other pretext,
till an autograph of Majesty requested him to do it as a favour. There,
in this post if not of honour, yet of eminence and danger, he waits, in
a silent concentered manner; very dubious of the future. 'Alone,' as he
says, or almost alone, of all the old military Notabilities, he has not
emigrated; but thinks always, in atrabiliar moments, that there will be
nothing for him too but to cross the marches. He might cross, say, to
Treves or Coblentz where Exiled Princes will be one day ranking; or say,
over into Luxemburg where old Broglie loiters and languishes. Or is
there not the great dim Deep of European Diplomacy; where your Calonnes,
your Breteuils are beginning to hover, dimly discernible?
With immeasurable confused outlooks and purposes, with no
clear purpose but this of still trying to do His Majesty a service,
Bouille waits; struggling what he can to keep his district loyal, his
troops faithful, his garrisons furnished. He maintains, as yet, with his
Cousin Lafayette, some thin diplomatic correspondence, by letter and
messenger; chivalrous constitutional professions on the one side,
military gravity and brevity on the other; which thin correspondence one
can see growing ever the thinner and hollower, towards the verge of
entire vacuity. (Bouille, Memoires (London, 1797), i. c. 8.)
A quick, choleric, sharply discerning, stubbornly endeavouring man; with
suppressed-explosive resolution, with valour, nay headlong audacity: a
man who was more in his place, lionlike defending those Windward Isles,
or, as with military tiger-spring, clutching Nevis and Montserrat from
the English,—than here in this suppressed condition, muzzled and
fettered by diplomatic packthreads; looking out for a civil war, which
may never arrive. Few years ago Bouille was to have led a French
East-Indian Expedition, and reconquered or conquered Pondicherri and the
Kingdoms of the Sun: but the whole world is suddenly changed, and he
with it; Destiny willed it not in that way but in this.
Chapter 2.
Arrears and Aristocrats.
Indeed, as to the general outlook of things, Bouille
himself augurs not well of it. The French Army, ever since those old
Bastille days, and earlier, has been universally in the questionablest
state, and growing daily worse. Discipline, which is at all times a kind
of miracle, and works by faith, broke down then; one sees not with that
near prospect of recovering itself. The Gardes Francaises played a
deadly game; but how they won it, and wear the prizes of it, all men
know. In that general overturn, we saw the Hired Fighters refuse to
fight. The very Swiss of Chateau-Vieux, which indeed is a kind of French
Swiss, from Geneva and the Pays de Vaud, are understood to have
declined. Deserters glided over; Royal-Allemand itself looked
disconsolate, though stanch of purpose. In a word, we there saw Military
Rule, in the shape of poor Besenval with that convulsive unmanageable
Camp of his, pass two martyr days on the Champ-de-Mars; and then,
veiling itself, so to speak, 'under the cloud of night,' depart 'down
the left bank of the Seine,' to seek refuge elsewhere; this ground
having clearly become too hot for it.
But what new ground to seek, what remedy to try? Quarters
that were 'uninfected:' this doubtless, with judicious strictness of
drilling, were the plan. Alas, in all quarters and places, from Paris
onward to the remotest hamlet, is infection, is seditious contagion:
inhaled, propagated by contact and converse, till the dullest soldier
catch it! There is speech of men in uniform with men not in uniform; men
in uniform read journals, and even write in them. (See Newspapers of
July, 1789 (in Hist. Parl. ii. 35), &c.) There are public
petitions or remonstrances, private emissaries and associations; there
is discontent, jealousy, uncertainty, sullen suspicious humour. The
whole French Army, fermenting in dark heat, glooms ominous, boding good
to no one.
So that, in the general social dissolution and revolt, we
are to have this deepest and dismallest kind of it, a revolting
soldiery? Barren, desolate to look upon is this same business of revolt
under all its aspects; but how infinitely more so, when it takes the
aspect of military mutiny! The very implement of rule and restraint,
whereby all the rest was managed and held in order, has become precisely
the frightfullest immeasurable implement of misrule; like the element of
Fire, our indispensable all-ministering servant, when it gets the
mastery, and becomes conflagration. Discipline we called a kind of
miracle: in fact, is it not miraculous how one man moves hundreds of
thousands; each unit of whom it may be loves him not, and singly fears
him not, yet has to obey him, to go hither or go thither, to march and
halt, to give death, and even to receive it, as if a Fate had spoken;
and the word-of-command becomes, almost in the literal sense, a
magic-word?
Which magic-word, again, if it be once forgotten; the
spell of it once broken! The legions of assiduous ministering spirits
rise on you now as menacing fiends; your free orderly arena becomes a
tumult-place of the Nether Pit, and the hapless magician is rent limb
from limb. Military mobs are mobs with muskets in their hands; and also
with death hanging over their heads, for death is the penalty of
disobedience and they have disobeyed. And now if all mobs are properly
frenzies, and work frenetically with mad fits of hot and of cold, fierce
rage alternating so incoherently with panic terror, consider what your
military mob will be, with such a conflict of duties and penalties,
whirled between remorse and fury, and, for the hot fit, loaded fire-arms
in its hand! To the soldier himself, revolt is frightful, and oftenest
perhaps pitiable; and yet so dangerous, it can only be hated, cannot be
pitied. An anomalous class of mortals these poor Hired Killers! With a
frankness, which to the Moralist in these times seems surprising, they
have sworn to become machines; and nevertheless they are still partly
men. Let no prudent person in authority remind them of this latter fact;
but always let force, let injustice above all, stop short clearly on
this side of the rebounding-point! Soldiers, as we often say, do revolt:
were it not so, several things which are transient in this world might
be perennial.
Over and above the general quarrel which all sons of Adam
maintain with their lot here below, the grievances of the French
soldiery reduce themselves to two, First that their Officers are
Aristocrats; secondly that they cheat them of their Pay. Two grievances;
or rather we might say one, capable of becoming a hundred; for in that
single first proposition, that the Officers are Aristocrats, what a
multitude of corollaries lie ready! It is a bottomless ever-flowing
fountain of grievances this; what you may call a general raw-material of
grievance, wherefrom individual grievance after grievance will daily
body itself forth. Nay there will even be a kind of comfort in getting
it, from time to time, so embodied. Peculation of one's Pay! It is
embodied; made tangible, made denounceable; exhalable, if only in angry
words.
For unluckily that grand fountain of grievances does
exist: Aristocrats almost all our Officers necessarily are; they have it
in the blood and bone. By the law of the case, no man can pretend to be
the pitifullest lieutenant of militia, till he have first verified, to
the satisfaction of the Lion-King, a Nobility of four generations. Not
Nobility only, but four generations of it: this latter is the
improvement hit upon, in comparatively late years, by a certain
War-minister much pressed for commissions. (Dampmartin, Evenemens, i.
89.) An improvement which did relieve the over-pressed War-minister,
but which split France still further into yawning contrasts of
Commonalty and Nobility, nay of new Nobility and old; as if already with
your new and old, and then with your old, older and oldest, there were
not contrasts and discrepancies enough;—the general clash whereof men
now see and hear, and in the singular whirlpool, all contrasts gone
together to the bottom! Gone to the bottom or going; with uproar,
without return; going every where save in the Military section of
things; and there, it may be asked, can they hope to continue always at
the top? Apparently, not.
It is true, in a time of external Peace, when there is no
fighting but only drilling, this question, How you rise from the ranks,
may seem theoretical rather. But in reference to the Rights of Man it is
continually practical. The soldier has sworn to be faithful not to the
King only, but to the Law and the Nation. Do our commanders love the
Revolution? ask all soldiers. Unhappily no, they hate it, and love the
Counter-Revolution. Young epauletted men, with quality-blood in them,
poisoned with quality-pride, do sniff openly, with indignation
struggling to become contempt, at our Rights of Man, as at some
newfangled cobweb, which shall be brushed down again. Old officers, more
cautious, keep silent, with closed uncurled lips; but one guesses what
is passing within. Nay who knows, how, under the plausiblest word of
command, might lie Counter-Revolution itself, sale to Exiled Princes and
the Austrian Kaiser: treacherous Aristocrats hoodwinking the small
insight of us common men?—In such manner works that general raw-material
of grievance; disastrous; instead of trust and reverence, breeding hate,
endless suspicion, the impossibility of commanding and obeying. And now
when this second more tangible grievance has articulated itself
universally in the mind of the common man: Peculation of his Pay!
Peculation of the despicablest sort does exist, and has long existed;
but, unless the new-declared Rights of Man, and all rights whatsoever,
be a cobweb, it shall no longer exist.
The French Military System seems dying a sorrowful
suicidal death. Nay more, citizen, as is natural, ranks himself against
citizen in this cause. The soldier finds audience, of numbers and
sympathy unlimited, among the Patriot lower-classes. Nor are the higher
wanting to the officer. The officer still dresses and perfumes himself
for such sad unemigrated soiree as there may still be; and speaks his
woes,—which woes, are they not Majesty's and Nature's? Speaks, at the
same time, his gay defiance, his firm-set resolution. Citizens, still
more Citizenesses, see the right and the wrong; not the Military System
alone will die by suicide, but much along with it. As was said, there is
yet possible a deepest overturn than any yet witnessed: that deepest
upturn of the black-burning sulphurous stratum whereon all rests and
grows!
But how these things may act on the rude soldier-mind,
with its military pedantries, its inexperience of all that lies off the
parade-ground; inexperience as of a child, yet fierceness of a man and
vehemence of a Frenchman! It is long that secret communings in mess-room
and guard-room, sour looks, thousandfold petty vexations between
commander and commanded, measure every where the weary military day. Ask
Captain Dampmartin; an authentic, ingenious literary officer of horse;
who loves the Reign of Liberty, after a sort; yet has had his heart
grieved to the quick many times, in the hot South-Western region and
elsewhere; and has seen riot, civil battle by daylight and by
torchlight, and anarchy hatefuller than death. How insubordinate
Troopers, with drink in their heads, meet Captain Dampmartin and another
on the ramparts, where there is no escape or side-path; and make
military salute punctually, for we look calm on them; yet make it in a
snappish, almost insulting manner: how one morning they 'leave all their
chamois shirts' and superfluous buffs, which they are tired of, laid in
piles at the Captain's doors; whereat 'we laugh,' as the ass does,
eating thistles: nay how they 'knot two forage-cords together,' with
universal noisy cursing, with evident intent to hang the
Quarter-master:—all this the worthy Captain, looking on it through the
ruddy-and-sable of fond regretful memory, has flowingly written down. (Dampmartin,
Evenemens, i. 122-146.) Men growl in vague discontent; officers
fling up their commissions, and emigrate in disgust.
Or let us ask another literary Officer; not yet Captain;
Sublieutenant only, in the Artillery Regiment La Fere: a young man of
twenty-one; not unentitled to speak; the name of him is Napoleon
Buonaparte. To such height of Sublieutenancy has he now got promoted,
from Brienne School, five years ago; 'being found qualified in
mathematics by La Place.' He is lying at Auxonne, in the West, in these
months; not sumptuously lodged—'in the house of a Barber, to whose wife
he did not pay the customary degree of respect;' or even over at the
Pavilion, in a chamber with bare walls; the only furniture an
indifferent 'bed without curtains, two chairs, and in the recess of a
window a table covered with books and papers: his Brother Louis sleeps
on a coarse mattrass in an adjoining room.' However, he is doing
something great: writing his first Book or Pamphlet,—eloquent vehement
Letter to M. Matteo Buttafuoco, our Corsican Deputy, who is not a
Patriot but an Aristocrat, unworthy of Deputyship. Joly of Dole is
Publisher. The literary Sublieutenant corrects the proofs; 'sets out on
foot from Auxonne, every morning at four o'clock, for Dole: after
looking over the proofs, he partakes of an extremely frugal breakfast
with Joly, and immediately prepares for returning to his Garrison; where
he arrives before noon, having thus walked above twenty miles in the
course of the morning.'
This Sublieutenant can remark that, in drawing-rooms, on
streets, on highways, at inns, every where men's minds are ready to
kindle into a flame. That a Patriot, if he appear in the drawing-room,
or amid a group of officers, is liable enough to be discouraged, so
great is the majority against him: but no sooner does he get into the
street, or among the soldiers, than he feels again as if the whole
Nation were with him. That after the famous Oath, To the King, to the
Nation and Law, there was a great change; that before this, if ordered
to fire on the people, he for one would have done it in the King's name;
but that after this, in the Nation's name, he would not have done it.
Likewise that the Patriot officers, more numerous too in the Artillery
and Engineers than elsewhere, were few in number; yet that having the
soldiers on their side, they ruled the regiment; and did often deliver
the Aristocrat brother officer out of peril and strait. One day, for
example, 'a member of our own mess roused the mob, by singing, from the
windows of our dining-room, O Richard, O my King; and I had to snatch
him from their fury.' (Norvins, Histoire de Napoleon, i. 47; Las
Cases, Memoires translated into Hazlitt's Life of Napoleon, i. 23-31.)
All which let the reader multiply by ten thousand; and
spread it with slight variations over all the camps and garrisons of
France. The French Army seems on the verge of universal mutiny.
Universal mutiny! There is in that what may well make
Patriot Constitutionalism and an august Assembly shudder. Something
behoves to be done; yet what to do no man can tell. Mirabeau proposes
even that the Soldiery, having come to such a pass, be forthwith
disbanded, the whole Two Hundred and Eighty Thousands of them; and
organised anew. (Moniteur, 1790. No. 233.) Impossible this, in so
sudden a manner! cry all men. And yet literally, answer we, it is
inevitable, in one manner or another. Such an Army, with its
four-generation Nobles, its Peculated Pay, and men knotting forage cords
to hang their quartermaster, cannot subsist beside such a Revolution.
Your alternative is a slow-pining chronic dissolution and new
organization; or a swift decisive one; the agonies spread over years, or
concentrated into an hour. With a Mirabeau for Minister or Governor the
latter had been the choice; with no Mirabeau for Governor it will
naturally be the former.
To Bouille, in his North-Eastern circle, none of these
things are altogether hid. Many times flight over the marches gleams out
on him as a last guidance in such bewilderment: nevertheless he
continues here: struggling always to hope the best, not from new
organisation but from happy Counter-Revolution and return to the old.
For the rest it is clear to him that this same National Federation, and
universal swearing and fraternising of People and Soldiers, has done
'incalculable mischief.' So much that fermented secretly has hereby got
vent and become open: National Guards and Soldiers of the line, solemnly
embracing one another on all parade-fields, drinking, swearing patriotic
oaths, fall into disorderly street-processions, constitutional
unmilitary exclamations and hurrahings. On which account the Regiment
Picardie, for one, has to be drawn out in the square of the barracks,
here at Metz, and sharply harangued by the General himself; but
expresses penitence. (Bouille, Memoires, i. 113.)
Far and near, as accounts testify, insubordination has
begun grumbling louder and louder. Officers have been seen shut up in
their mess-rooms; assaulted with clamorous demands, not without menaces.
The insubordinate ringleader is dismissed with 'yellow furlough,' yellow
infamous thing they call cartouche jaune: but ten new ringleaders rise
in his stead, and the yellow cartouche ceases to be thought disgraceful.
'Within a fortnight,' or at furthest a month, of that sublime Feast of
Pikes, the whole French Army, demanding Arrears, forming Reading Clubs,
frequenting Popular Societies, is in a state which Bouille can call by
no name but that of mutiny. Bouille knows it as few do; and speaks by
dire experience. Take one instance instead of many.
It is still an early day of August, the precise date now
undiscoverable, when Bouille, about to set out for the waters of Aix la
Chapelle, is once more suddenly summoned to the barracks of Metz. The
soldiers stand ranked in fighting order, muskets loaded, the officers
all there on compulsion; and require, with many-voiced emphasis, to have
their arrears paid. Picardie was penitent; but we see it has relapsed:
the wide space bristles and lours with mere mutinous armed men. Brave
Bouille advances to the nearest Regiment, opens his commanding lips to
harangue; obtains nothing but querulous-indignant discordance, and the
sound of so many thousand livres legally due. The moment is trying;
there are some ten thousand soldiers now in Metz, and one spirit seems
to have spread among them.
Bouille is firm as the adamant; but what shall he do? A
German Regiment, named of Salm, is thought to be of better temper:
nevertheless Salm too may have heard of the precept, Thou shalt not
steal; Salm too may know that money is money. Bouille walks trustfully
towards the Regiment de Salm, speaks trustful words; but here again is
answered by the cry of forty-four thousand livres odd sous. A cry waxing
more and more vociferous, as Salm's humour mounts; which cry, as it will
produce no cash or promise of cash, ends in the wide simultaneous whirr
of shouldered muskets, and a determined quick-time march on the part of
Salm—towards its Colonel's house, in the next street, there to seize the
colours and military chest. Thus does Salm, for its part; strong in the
faith that meum is not tuum, that fair speeches are not forty-four
thousand livres odd sous.
Unrestrainable! Salm tramps to military time, quick
consuming the way. Bouille and the officers, drawing sword, have to dash
into double quick pas-de-charge, or unmilitary running; to get the
start; to station themselves on the outer staircase, and stand there
with what of death-defiance and sharp steel they have; Salm truculently
coiling itself up, rank after rank, opposite them, in such humour as we
can fancy, which happily has not yet mounted to the murder-pitch. There
will Bouille stand, certain at least of one man's purpose; in grim
calmness, awaiting the issue. What the intrepidest of men and generals
can do is done. Bouille, though there is a barricading picket at each
end of the street, and death under his eyes, contrives to send for a
Dragoon Regiment with orders to charge: the dragoon officers mount; the
dragoon men will not: hope is none there for him. The street, as we say,
barricaded; the Earth all shut out, only the indifferent heavenly Vault
overhead: perhaps here or there a timorous householder peering out of
window, with prayer for Bouille; copious Rascality, on the pavement,
with prayer for Salm: there do the two parties stand;—like chariots
locked in a narrow thoroughfare; like locked wrestlers at a dead-grip!
For two hours they stand; Bouille's sword glittering in his hand,
adamantine resolution clouding his brows: for two hours by the clocks of
Metz. Moody-silent stands Salm, with occasional clangour; but does not
fire. Rascality from time to time urges some grenadier to level his
musket at the General; who looks on it as a bronze General would; and
always some corporal or other strikes it up.
In such remarkable attitude, standing on that staircase
for two hours, does brave Bouille, long a shadow, dawn on us visibly out
of the dimness, and become a person. For the rest, since Salm has not
shot him at the first instant, and since in himself there is no
variableness, the danger will diminish. The Mayor, 'a man infinitely
respectable,' with his Municipals and tricolor sashes, finally gains
entrance; remonstrates, perorates, promises; gets Salm persuaded home to
its barracks. Next day, our respectable Mayor lending the money, the
officers pay down the half of the demand in ready cash. With which
liquidation Salm pacifies itself, and for the present all is hushed up,
as much as may be. (Bouille, i. 140-5.)
Such scenes as this of Metz, or preparations and
demonstrations towards such, are universal over France: Dampmartin, with
his knotted forage-cords and piled chamois jackets, is at Strasburg in
the South-East; in these same days or rather nights, Royal Champagne is
'shouting Vive la Nation, au diable les Aristocrates, with some thirty
lit candles,' at Hesdin, on the far North-West. "The garrison of
Bitche," Deputy Rewbell is sorry to state, "went out of the town, with
drums beating; deposed its officers; and then returned into the town,
sabre in hand." (Moniteur (in Hist. Parl. vii. 29).) Ought
not a National Assembly to occupy itself with these objects? Military
France is everywhere full of sour inflammatory humour, which exhales
itself fuliginously, this way or that: a whole continent of smoking
flax; which, blown on here or there by any angry wind, might so easily
start into a blaze, into a continent of fire!
Constitutional Patriotism is in deep natural alarm at
these things. The august Assembly sits diligently deliberating; dare
nowise resolve, with Mirabeau, on an instantaneous disbandment and
extinction; finds that a course of palliatives is easier. But at least
and lowest, this grievance of the Arrears shall be rectified. A plan,
much noised of in those days, under the name 'Decree of the Sixth of
August,' has been devised for that. Inspectors shall visit all armies;
and, with certain elected corporals and 'soldiers able to write,' verify
what arrears and peculations do lie due, and make them good. Well, if in
this way the smoky heat be cooled down; if it be not, as we say,
ventilated over-much, or, by sparks and collision somewhere, sent up!
We are to remark, however, that of all districts, this of
Bouille's seems the inflammablest. It was always to Bouille and Metz
that Royalty would fly: Austria lies near; here more than elsewhere must
the disunited People look over the borders, into a dim sea of Foreign
Politics and Diplomacies, with hope or apprehension, with mutual
exasperation.
It was but in these days that certain Austrian troops,
marching peaceably across an angle of this region, seemed an Invasion
realised; and there rushed towards Stenai, with musket on shoulder, from
all the winds, some thirty thousand National Guards, to inquire what the
matter was. (Moniteur, Seance du 9 Aout 1790.) A matter of mere
diplomacy it proved; the Austrian Kaiser, in haste to get to Belgium,
had bargained for this short cut. The infinite dim movement of European
Politics waved a skirt over these spaces, passing on its way; like the
passing shadow of a condor; and such a winged flight of thirty thousand,
with mixed cackling and crowing, rose in consequence! For, in addition
to all, this people, as we said, is much divided: Aristocrats abound;
Patriotism has both Aristocrats and Austrians to watch. It is Lorraine,
this region; not so illuminated as old France: it remembers ancient
Feudalisms; nay, within man's memory, it had a Court and King of its
own, or indeed the splendour of a Court and King, without the burden.
Then, contrariwise, the Mother Society, which sits in the Jacobins
Church at Paris, has Daughters in the Towns here; shrill-tongued, driven
acrid: consider how the memory of good King Stanislaus, and ages of
Imperial Feudalism, may comport with this New acrid Evangel, and what a
virulence of discord there may be! In all which, the Soldiery, officers
on one side, private men on the other, takes part, and now indeed
principal part; a Soldiery, moreover, all the hotter here as it lies the
denser, the frontier Province requiring more of it.
So stands Lorraine: but the capital City, more especially
so. The pleasant City of Nanci, which faded Feudalism loves, where King
Stanislaus personally dwelt and shone, has an Aristocrat Municipality,
and then also a Daughter Society: it has some forty thousand divided
souls of population; and three large Regiments, one of which is Swiss
Chateau-Vieux, dear to Patriotism ever since it refused fighting, or was
thought to refuse, in the Bastille days. Here unhappily all evil
influences seem to meet concentered; here, of all places, may jealousy
and heat evolve itself. These many months, accordingly, man has been set
against man, Washed against Unwashed; Patriot Soldier against Aristocrat
Captain, ever the more bitterly; and a long score of grudges has been
running up.
Nameable grudges, and likewise unnameable: for there is a
punctual nature in Wrath; and daily, were there but glances of the eye,
tones of the voice, and minutest commissions or omissions, it will jot
down somewhat, to account, under the head of sundries, which always
swells the sum-total. For example, in April last, in those times of
preliminary Federation, when National Guards and Soldiers were every
where swearing brotherhood, and all France was locally federating,
preparing for the grand National Feast of Pikes, it was observed that
these Nanci Officers threw cold water on the whole brotherly business;
that they first hung back from appearing at the Nanci Federation; then
did appear, but in mere redingote and undress, with scarcely a clean
shirt on; nay that one of them, as the National Colours flaunted by in
that solemn moment, did, without visible necessity, take occasion to
spit. (Deux Amis, v. 217.)
Small 'sundries as per journal,' but then incessant ones!
The Aristocrat Municipality, pretending to be Constitutional, keeps
mostly quiet; not so the Daughter Society, the five thousand adult male
Patriots of the place, still less the five thousand female: not so the
young, whiskered or whiskerless, four-generation Noblesse in epaulettes;
the grim Patriot Swiss of Chateau-Vieux, effervescent infantry of
Regiment du Roi, hot troopers of Mestre-de-Camp! Walled Nanci, which
stands so bright and trim, with its straight streets, spacious squares,
and Stanislaus' Architecture, on the fruitful alluvium of the Meurthe;
so bright, amid the yellow cornfields in these Reaper-Months,—is
inwardly but a den of discord, anxiety, inflammability, not far from
exploding. Let Bouille look to it. If that universal military heat,
which we liken to a vast continent of smoking flax, do any where take
fire, his beard, here in Lorraine and Nanci, may the most readily of all
get singed by it.
Bouille, for his part, is busy enough, but only with the
general superintendence; getting his pacified Salm, and all other still
tolerable Regiments, marched out of Metz, to southward towns and
villages; to rural Cantonments as at Vic, Marsal and thereabout, by the
still waters; where is plenty of horse-forage, sequestered
parade-ground, and the soldier's speculative faculty can be stilled by
drilling. Salm, as we said, received only half payment of arrears;
naturally not without grumbling. Nevertheless that scene of the drawn
sword may, after all, have raised Bouille in the mind of Salm; for men
and soldiers love intrepidity and swift inflexible decision, even when
they suffer by it. As indeed is not this fundamentally the quality of
qualities for a man? A quality which by itself is next to nothing, since
inferior animals, asses, dogs, even mules have it; yet, in due
combination, it is the indispensable basis of all.
Of Nanci and its heats, Bouille, commander of the whole,
knows nothing special; understands generally that the troops in that
City are perhaps the worst. (Bouille, i. c. 9.) The Officers
there have it all, as they have long had it, to themselves; and
unhappily seem to manage it ill. 'Fifty yellow furloughs,' given out in
one batch, do surely betoken difficulties. But what was Patriotism to
think of certain light-fencing Fusileers 'set on,' or supposed to be set
on, 'to insult the Grenadier-club,' considerate speculative Grenadiers,
and that reading-room of theirs? With shoutings, with hootings; till the
speculative Grenadier drew his side-arms too; and there ensued battery
and duels! Nay more, are not swashbucklers of the same stamp 'sent out'
visibly, or sent out presumably, now in the dress of Soldiers to pick
quarrels with the Citizens; now, disguised as Citizens, to pick quarrels
with the Soldiers? For a certain Roussiere, expert in fence, was taken
in the very fact; four Officers (presumably of tender years)
hounding him on, who thereupon fled precipitately! Fence-master
Roussiere, haled to the guardhouse, had sentence of three months'
imprisonment: but his comrades demanded 'yellow furlough' for him of all
persons; nay, thereafter they produced him on parade; capped him in
paper-helmet inscribed, Iscariot; marched him to the gate of City; and
there sternly commanded him to vanish for evermore.
On all which suspicions, accusations and noisy procedure,
and on enough of the like continually accumulating, the Officer could
not but look with disdainful indignation; perhaps disdainfully express
the same in words, and 'soon after fly over to the Austrians.'
So that when it here as elsewhere comes to the question
of Arrears, the humour and procedure is of the bitterest: Regiment
Mestre-de-Camp getting, amid loud clamour, some three gold louis
a-man,—which have, as usual, to be borrowed from the Municipality; Swiss
Chateau-Vieux applying for the like, but getting instead instantaneous
courrois, or cat-o'-nine-tails, with subsequent unsufferable hisses from
the women and children; Regiment du Roi, sick of hope deferred, at
length seizing its military chest, and marching it to quarters, but next
day marching it back again, through streets all struck silent:—unordered
paradings and clamours, not without strong liquor; objurgation,
insubordination; your military ranked Arrangement going all (as the
Typographers say of set types, in a similar case) rapidly to pie! (Deux
Amis, v. c. 8.) Such is Nanci in these early days of August; the
sublime Feast of Pikes not yet a month old.
Constitutional Patriotism, at Paris and elsewhere, may
well quake at the news. War-Minister Latour du Pin runs breathless to
the National Assembly, with a written message that 'all is burning, tout
brule, tout presse.' The National Assembly, on spur of the instant,
renders such Decret, and 'order to submit and repent,' as he requires;
if it will avail any thing. On the other hand, Journalism, through all
its throats, gives hoarse outcry, condemnatory, elegiac-applausive. The
Forty-eight Sections, lift up voices; sonorous Brewer, or call him now
Colonel Santerre, is not silent, in the Faubourg Saint-Antoine. For,
meanwhile, the Nanci Soldiers have sent a Deputation of Ten, furnished
with documents and proofs; who will tell another story than the
'all-is-burning' one. Which deputed Ten, before ever they reach the
Assembly Hall, assiduous Latour du Pin picks up, and on warrant of Mayor
Bailly, claps in prison! Most unconstitutionally; for they had officers'
furloughs. Whereupon Saint-Antoine, in indignant uncertainty of the
future, closes its shops. Is Bouille a traitor then, sold to Austria? In
that case, these poor private sentinels have revolted mainly out of
Patriotism?
New Deputation, Deputation of National Guardsmen now,
sets forth from Nanci to enlighten the Assembly. It meets the old
deputed Ten returning, quite unexpectedly unhanged; and proceeds
thereupon with better prospects; but effects nothing. Deputations,
Government Messengers, Orderlies at hand-gallops, Alarms,
thousand-voiced Rumours, go vibrating continually; backwards and
forwards,—scattering distraction. Not till the last week of August does
M. de Malseigne, selected as Inspector, get down to the scene of mutiny;
with Authority, with cash, and 'Decree of the Sixth of August.' He now
shall see these Arrears liquidated, justice done, or at least tumult
quashed.
Chapter 5.
Inspector Malseigne.
Of Inspector Malseigne we discern, by direct light, that
he is 'of Herculean stature;' and infer, with probability, that he is of
truculent moustachioed aspect,—for Royalist Officers now leave the upper
lip unshaven; that he is of indomitable bull-heart; and also,
unfortunately, of thick bull-head.
On Tuesday the 24th of August, 1790, he opens session as
Inspecting Commissioner; meets those 'elected corporals, and soldiers
that can write.' He finds the accounts of Chateau-Vieux to be complex;
to require delay and reference: he takes to haranguing, to reprimanding;
ends amid audible grumbling. Next morning, he resumes session, not at
the Townhall as prudent Municipals counselled, but once more at the
barracks. Unfortunately Chateau-Vieux, grumbling all night, will now
hear of no delay or reference; from reprimanding on his part, it goes to
bullying,—answered with continual cries of "Jugez tout de suite, Judge
it at once;" whereupon M. de Malseigne will off in a huff. But lo,
Chateau Vieux, swarming all about the barrack-court, has sentries at
every gate; M. de Malseigne, demanding egress, cannot get it, though
Commandant Denoue backs him; can get only "Jugez tout de suite." Here is
a nodus!
Bull-hearted M. de Malseigne draws his sword; and will
force egress. Confused splutter. M. de Malseigne's sword breaks; he
snatches Commandant Denoue's: the sentry is wounded. M. de Malseigne,
whom one is loath to kill, does force egress,—followed by Chateau-Vieux
all in disarray; a spectacle to Nanci. M. de Malseigne walks at a sharp
pace, yet never runs; wheeling from time to time, with menaces and
movements of fence; and so reaches Denoue's house, unhurt; which house
Chateau-Vieux, in an agitated manner, invests,—hindered as yet from
entering, by a crowd of officers formed on the staircase. M. de
Malseigne retreats by back ways to the Townhall, flustered though
undaunted; amid an escort of National Guards. From the Townhall he, on
the morrow, emits fresh orders, fresh plans of settlement with
Chateau-Vieux; to none of which will Chateau-Vieux listen: whereupon
finally he, amid noise enough, emits order that Chateau-Vieux shall
march on the morrow morning, and quarter at Sarre Louis. Chateau-Vieux
flatly refuses marching; M. de Malseigne 'takes act,' due notarial
protest, of such refusal,—if happily that may avail him.
This is end of Thursday; and, indeed, of M. de
Malseigne's Inspectorship, which has lasted some fifty hours. To such
length, in fifty hours, has he unfortunately brought it. Mestre-de-Camp
and Regiment du Roi hang, as it were, fluttering: Chateau-Vieux is clean
gone, in what way we see. Over night, an Aide-de-Camp of Lafayette's,
stationed here for such emergency, sends swift emissaries far and wide,
to summon National Guards. The slumber of the country is broken by
clattering hoofs, by loud fraternal knockings; every where the
Constitutional Patriot must clutch his fighting-gear, and take the road
for Nanci.
And thus the Herculean Inspector has sat all Thursday,
among terror-struck Municipals, a centre of confused noise: all
Thursday, Friday, and till Saturday towards noon. Chateau-Vieux, in
spite of the notarial protest, will not march a step. As many as four
thousand National Guards are dropping or pouring in; uncertain what is
expected of them, still more uncertain what will be obtained of them.
For all is uncertainty, commotion, and suspicion: there goes a word that
Bouille, beginning to bestir himself in the rural Cantonments eastward,
is but a Royalist traitor; that Chateau-Vieux and Patriotism are sold to
Austria, of which latter M. de Malseigne is probably some agent.
Mestre-de-Camp and Roi flutter still more questionably: Chateau-Vieux,
far from marching, 'waves red flags out of two carriages,' in a
passionate manner, along the streets; and next morning answers its
Officers: "Pay us, then; and we will march with you to the world's end!"
Under which circumstances, towards noon on Saturday, M.
de Malseigne thinks it were good perhaps to inspect the ramparts,—on
horseback. He mounts, accordingly, with escort of three troopers. At the
gate of the city, he bids two of them wait for his return; and with the
third, a trooper to be depended upon, he—gallops off for Luneville;
where lies a certain Carabineer Regiment not yet in a mutinous state!
The two left troopers soon get uneasy; discover how it is, and give the
alarm. Mestre-de-Camp, to the number of a hundred, saddles in frantic
haste, as if sold to Austria; gallops out pellmell in chase of its
Inspector. And so they spur, and the Inspector spurs; careering, with
noise and jingle, up the valley of the River Meurthe, towards Luneville
and the midday sun: through an astonished country; indeed almost their
own astonishment.
What a hunt, Actaeon-like;—which Actaeon de Malseigne
happily gains! To arms, ye Carabineers of Luneville: to chastise
mutinous men, insulting your General Officer, insulting your own
quarters;—above all things, fire soon, lest there be parleying and ye
refuse to fire! The Carabineers fire soon, exploding upon the first
stragglers of Mestre-de-Camp; who shrink at the very flash, and fall
back hastily on Nanci, in a state not far from distraction. Panic and
fury: sold to Austria without an if; so much per regiment, the very sums
can be specified; and traitorous Malseigne is fled! Help, O Heaven;
help, thou Earth,—ye unwashed Patriots; ye too are sold like us!
Effervescent Regiment du Roi primes its firelocks,
Mestre-de-Camp saddles wholly: Commandant Denoue is seized, is flung in
prison with a 'canvass shirt' (sarreau de toile) about him;
Chateau-Vieux bursts up the magazines; distributes 'three thousand
fusils' to a Patriot people: Austria shall have a hot bargain. Alas, the
unhappy hunting-dogs, as we said, have hunted away their huntsman; and
do now run howling and baying, on what trail they know not; nigh rabid!
And so there is tumultuous march of men, through the
night; with halt on the heights of Flinval, whence Luneville can be seen
all illuminated. Then there is parley, at four in the morning; and
reparley; finally there is agreement: the Carabineers give in; Malseigne
is surrendered, with apologies on all sides. After weary confused hours,
he is even got under way; the Lunevillers all turning out, in the idle
Sunday, to see such departure: home-going of mutinous Mestre-de-Camp
with its Inspector captive. Mestre-de-Camp accordingly marches; the
Lunevillers look. See! at the corner of the first street, our Inspector
bounds off again, bull-hearted as he is; amid the slash of sabres, the
crackle of musketry; and escapes, full gallop, with only a ball lodged
in his buff-jerkin. The Herculean man! And yet it is an escape to no
purpose. For the Carabineers, to whom after the hardest Sunday's ride on
record, he has come circling back, 'stand deliberating by their
nocturnal watch-fires;' deliberating of Austria, of traitors, and the
rage of Mestre-de-Camp. So that, on the whole, the next sight we have is
that of M. de Malseigne, on the Monday afternoon, faring bull-hearted
through the streets of Nanci; in open carriage, a soldier standing over
him with drawn sword; amid the 'furies of the women,' hedges of National
Guards, and confusion of Babel: to the Prison beside Commandant Denoue!
That finally is the lodging of Inspector Malseigne. (Deux Amis, v.
206-251; Newspapers and Documents in Hist. Parl. vii. 59-162.)
Surely it is time Bouille were drawing near. The Country
all round, alarmed with watchfires, illuminated towns, and marching and
rout, has been sleepless these several nights. Nanci, with its uncertain
National Guards, with its distributed fusils, mutinous soldiers, black
panic and redhot ire, is not a City but a Bedlam.
Haste with help, thou brave Bouille: if swift help come
not, all is now verily 'burning;' and may burn,—to what lengths and
breadths! Much, in these hours, depends on Bouille; as it shall now fare
with him, the whole Future may be this way or be that. If, for example,
he were to loiter dubitating, and not come: if he were to come, and
fail: the whole Soldiery of France to blaze into mutiny, National Guards
going some this way, some that; and Royalism to draw its rapier, and
Sansculottism to snatch its pike; and the Spirit if Jacobinism, as yet
young, girt with sun-rays, to grow instantaneously mature, girt with
hell-fire,—as mortals, in one night of deadly crisis, have had their
heads turned gray!
Brave Bouille is advancing fast, with the old
inflexibility; gathering himself, unhappily 'in small affluences,' from
East, from West and North; and now on Tuesday morning, the last day of
the month, he stands all concentred, unhappily still in small force, at
the village of Frouarde, within some few miles. Son of Adam with a more
dubious task before him is not in the world this Tuesday morning. A
weltering inflammable sea of doubt and peril, and Bouille sure of simply
one thing, his own determination. Which one thing, indeed, may be worth
many. He puts a most firm face on the matter: 'Submission, or unsparing
battle and destruction; twenty-four hours to make your choice:' this was
the tenor of his Proclamation; thirty copies of which he sent yesterday
to Nanci:—all which, we find, were intercepted and not posted. (Compare
Bouille, Memoires, i. 153-176; Deux Amis, v. 251-271; Hist. Parl. ubi
supra.)
Nevertheless, at half-past eleven, this morning,
seemingly by way of answer, there does wait on him at Frouarde, some
Deputation from the mutinous Regiments, from the Nanci Municipals, to
see what can be done. Bouille receives this Deputation, 'in a large open
court adjoining his lodging:' pacified Salm, and the rest, attend also,
being invited to do it,—all happily still in the right humour. The
Mutineers pronounce themselves with a decisiveness, which to Bouille
seems insolence; and happily to Salm also. Salm, forgetful of the Metz
staircase and sabre, demands that the scoundrels 'be hanged' there and
then. Bouille represses the hanging; but answers that mutinous Soldiers
have one course, and not more than one: To liberate, with heartfelt
contrition, Messieurs Denoue and de Malseigne; to get ready forthwith
for marching off, whither he shall order; and 'submit and repent,' as
the National Assembly has decreed, as he yesterday did in thirty printed
Placards proclaim. These are his terms, unalterable as the decrees of
Destiny. Which terms as they, the Mutineer deputies, seemingly do not
accept, it were good for them to vanish from this spot, and even
promptly; with him too, in few instants, the word will be, Forward! The
Mutineer deputies vanish, not unpromptly; the Municipal ones, anxious
beyond right for their own individualities, prefer abiding with Bouille.
Brave Bouille, though he puts a most firm face on the
matter, knows his position full well: how at Nanci, what with rebellious
soldiers, with uncertain National Guards, and so many distributed
fusils, there rage and roar some ten thousand fighting men; while with
himself is scarcely the third part of that number, in National Guards
also uncertain, in mere pacified Regiments,—for the present full of
rage, and clamour to march; but whose rage and clamour may next moment
take such a fatal new figure. On the top of one uncertain billow,
therewith to calm billows! Bouille must 'abandon himself to Fortune;'
who is said sometimes to favour the brave. At half-past twelve, the
Mutineer deputies having vanished, our drums beat; we march: for Nanci!
Let Nanci bethink itself, then; for Bouille has thought and determined.
And yet how shall Nanci think: not a City but a Bedlam!
Grim Chateau-Vieux is for defence to the death; forces the Municipality
to order, by tap of drum, all citizens acquainted with artillery to turn
out, and assist in managing the cannon. On the other hand, effervescent
Regiment du Roi, is drawn up in its barracks; quite disconsolate,
hearing the humour Salm is in; and ejaculates dolefully from its
thousand throats: "La loi, la loi, Law, law!" Mestre-de-Camp blusters,
with profane swearing, in mixed terror and furor; National Guards look
this way and that, not knowing what to do. What a Bedlam-City: as many
plans as heads; all ordering, none obeying: quiet none,—except the Dead,
who sleep underground, having done their fighting!
And, behold, Bouille proves as good as his word: 'at
half-past two' scouts report that he is within half a league of the
gates; rattling along, with cannon, and array; breathing nothing but
destruction. A new Deputation, Municipals, Mutineers, Officers, goes out
to meet him; with passionate entreaty for yet one other hour. Bouille
grants an hour. Then, at the end thereof, no Denoue or Malseigne
appearing as promised, he rolls his drums, and again takes the road.
Towards four o'clock, the terror-struck Townsmen may see him face to
face. His cannons rattle there, in their carriages; his vanguard is
within thirty paces of the Gate Stanislaus. Onward like a Planet, by
appointed times, by law of Nature! What next? Lo, flag of truce and
chamade; conjuration to halt: Malseigne and Denoue are on the street,
coming hither; the soldiers all repentant, ready to submit and march!
Adamantine Bouille's look alters not; yet the word Halt is given:
gladder moment he never saw. Joy of joys! Malseigne and Denoue do verily
issue; escorted by National Guards; from streets all frantic, with sale
to Austria and so forth: they salute Bouille, unscathed. Bouille steps
aside to speak with them, and with other heads of the Town there; having
already ordered by what Gates and Routes the mutineer Regiments shall
file out.
Such colloquy with these two General Officers and other
principal Townsmen, was natural enough; nevertheless one wishes Bouille
had postponed it, and not stepped aside. Such tumultuous inflammable
masses, tumbling along, making way for each other; this of keen nitrous
oxide, that of sulphurous fire-damp,—were it not well to stand between
them, keeping them well separate, till the space be cleared? Numerous
stragglers of Chateau-Vieux and the rest have not marched with their
main columns, which are filing out by the appointed Gates, taking
station in the open meadows. National Guards are in a state of nearly
distracted uncertainty; the populace, armed and unharmed, roll openly
delirious,—betrayed, sold to the Austrians, sold to the Aristocrats.
There are loaded cannon with lit matches among them, and Bouille's
vanguard is halted within thirty paces of the Gate. Command dwells not
in that mad inflammable mass; which smoulders and tumbles there, in
blind smoky rage; which will not open the Gate when summoned; says it
will open the cannon's throat sooner!—Cannonade not, O Friends, or be it
through my body! cries heroic young Desilles, young Captain of Roi,
clasping the murderous engine in his arms, and holding it. Chateau-Vieux
Swiss, by main force, with oaths and menaces, wrench off the heroic
youth; who undaunted, amid still louder oaths seats himself on the
touch-hole. Amid still louder oaths; with ever louder clangour,—and,
alas, with the loud crackle of first one, and then three other muskets;
which explode into his body; which roll it in the dust,—and do also, in
the loud madness of such moment, bring lit cannon-match to ready
priming; and so, with one thunderous belch of grapeshot, blast some
fifty of Bouille's vanguard into air!
Fatal! That sputter of the first musket-shot has kindled
such a cannon-shot, such a death-blaze; and all is now redhot madness,
conflagration as of Tophet. With demoniac rage, the Bouille vanguard
storms through that Gate Stanislaus; with fiery sweep, sweeps Mutiny
clear away, to death, or into shelters and cellars; from which latter,
again, Mutiny continues firing. The ranked Regiments hear it in their
meadow; they rush back again through the nearest Gates; Bouille gallops
in, distracted, inaudible;—and now has begun, in Nanci, as in that
doomed Hall of the Nibelungen, 'a murder grim and great.'
Miserable: such scene of dismal aimless madness as the
anger of Heaven but rarely permits among men! From cellar or from
garret, from open street in front, from successive corners of
cross-streets on each hand, Chateau-Vieux and Patriotism keep up the
murderous rolling-fire, on murderous not Unpatriotic fires. Your blue
National Captain, riddled with balls, one hardly knows on whose side
fighting, requests to be laid on the colours to die: the patriotic Woman
(name not given, deed surviving) screams to Chateau-Vieux that it
must not fire the other cannon; and even flings a pail of water on it,
since screaming avails not. (Deux Amis, v. 268.) Thou shalt
fight; thou shalt not fight; and with whom shalt thou fight! Could
tumult awaken the old Dead, Burgundian Charles the Bold might stir from
under that Rotunda of his: never since he, raging, sank in the ditches,
and lost Life and Diamond, was such a noise heard here.
Three thousand, as some count, lie mangled, gory; the
half of Chateau-Vieux has been shot, without need of Court Martial.
Cavalry, of Mestre-de-Camp or their foes, can do little. Regiment du Roi
was persuaded to its barracks; stands there palpitating. Bouille, armed
with the terrors of the Law, and favoured of Fortune, finally triumphs.
In two murderous hours he has penetrated to the grand Squares,
dauntless, though with loss of forty officers and five hundred men: the
shattered remnants of Chateau-Vieux are seeking covert. Regiment du Roi,
not effervescent now, alas no, but having effervesced, will offer to
ground its arms; will 'march in a quarter of an hour.' Nay these poor
effervesced require 'escort' to march with, and get it; though they are
thousands strong, and have thirty ball-cartridges a man! The Sun is not
yet down, when Peace, which might have come bloodless, has come bloody:
the mutinous Regiments are on march, doleful, on their three Routes; and
from Nanci rises wail of women and men, the voice of weeping and
desolation; the City weeping for its slain who awaken not. These streets
are empty but for victorious patrols.
Thus has Fortune, favouring the brave, dragged Bouille,
as himself says, out of such a frightful peril, 'by the hair of the
head.' An intrepid adamantine man this Bouille:—had he stood in old
Broglie's place, in those Bastille days, it might have been all
different! He has extinguished mutiny, and immeasurable civil war. Not
for nothing, as we see; yet at a rate which he and Constitutional
Patriotism considers cheap. Nay, as for Bouille, he, urged by subsequent
contradiction which arose, declares coldly, it was rather against his
own private mind, and more by public military rule of duty, that he did
extinguish it, (Bouille, i. 175.)—immeasurable civil war being
now the only chance. Urged, we say, by subsequent contradiction! Civil
war, indeed, is Chaos; and in all vital Chaos, there is new Order
shaping itself free: but what a faith this, that of all new Orders out
of Chaos and Possibility of Man and his Universe, Louis Sixteenth and
Two-Chamber Monarchy were precisely the one that would shape itself! It
is like undertaking to throw deuce-ace, say only five hundred successive
times, and any other throw to be fatal—for Bouille. Rather thank
Fortune, and Heaven, always, thou intrepid Bouille; and let
contradiction of its way! Civil war, conflagrating universally over
France at this moment, might have led to one thing or to another thing:
meanwhile, to quench conflagration, wheresoever one finds it,
wheresoever one can; this, in all times, is the rule for man and General
Officer.
But at Paris, so agitated and divided, fancy how it went,
when the continually vibrating Orderlies vibrated thither at hand
gallop, with such questionable news! High is the gratulation; and also
deep the indignation. An august Assembly, by overwhelming majorities,
passionately thanks Bouille; a King's autograph, the voices of all
Loyal, all Constitutional men run to the same tenor. A solemn National
funeral-service, for the Law-defenders slain at Nanci; is said and sung
in the Champ de Mars; Bailly, Lafayette and National Guards, all except
the few that protested, assist. With pomp and circumstance, with
episcopal Calicoes in tricolor girdles, Altar of Fatherland smoking with
cassolettes, or incense-kettles; the vast Champ-de-Mars wholly hung
round with black mortcloth,—which mortcloth and expenditure Marat thinks
had better have been laid out in bread, in these dear days, and given to
the hungry living Patriot. (Ami du Peuple in Hist. Parl., ubi supra.)
On the other hand, living Patriotism, and Saint-Antoine, which we have
seen noisily closing its shops and such like, assembles now 'to the
number of forty thousand;' and, with loud cries, under the very windows
of the thanking National Assembly, demands revenge for murdered
Brothers, judgment on Bouille, and instant dismissal of War-Minister
Latour du Pin.
At sound and sight of which things, if not War-Minister
Latour, yet 'Adored Minister' Necker, sees good on the 3d of September
1790, to withdraw softly almost privily,—with an eye to the 'recovery of
his health.' Home to native Switzerland; not as he last came; lucky to
reach it alive! Fifteen months ago, we saw him coming, with escort of
horse, with sound of clarion and trumpet: and now at Arcis-sur-Aube,
while he departs unescorted soundless, the Populace and Municipals stop
him as a fugitive, are not unlike massacring him as a traitor; the
National Assembly, consulted on the matter, gives him free egress as a
nullity. Such an unstable 'drift-mould of Accident' is the substance of
this lower world, for them that dwell in houses of clay; so, especially
in hot regions and times, do the proudest palaces we build of it take
wings, and become Sahara sand-palaces, spinning many pillared in the
whirlwind, and bury us under their sand!—
In spite of the forty thousand, the National Assembly
persists in its thanks; and Royalist Latour du Pin continues Minister.
The forty thousand assemble next day, as loud as ever; roll towards
Latour's Hotel; find cannon on the porch-steps with flambeau lit; and
have to retire elsewhither, and digest their spleen, or re-absorb it
into the blood.
Over in Lorraine, meanwhile, they of the distributed
fusils, ringleaders of Mestre-de-Camp, of Roi, have got marked out for
judgment;—yet shall never get judged. Briefer is the doom of
Chateau-Vieux. Chateau-Vieux is, by Swiss law, given up for instant
trial in Court-Martial of its own officers. Which Court-Martial, with
all brevity (in not many hours), has hanged some Twenty-three, on
conspicuous gibbets; marched some Three-score in chains to the Galleys;
and so, to appearance, finished the matter off. Hanged men do cease for
ever from this Earth; but out of chains and the Galleys there may be
resuscitation in triumph. Resuscitation for the chained Hero; and even
for the chained Scoundrel, or Semi-scoundrel! Scottish John Knox, such
World-Hero, as we know, sat once nevertheless pulling grim-taciturn at
the oar of French Galley, 'in the Water of Lore;' and even flung their
Virgin-Mary over, instead of kissing her,—as 'a pented bredd,' or timber
Virgin, who could naturally swim. (Knox's History of the Reformation,
b. i.) So, ye of Chateau-Vieux, tug patiently, not without hope!
But indeed at Nanci generally, Aristocracy rides
triumphant, rough. Bouille is gone again, the second day; an Aristocrat
Municipality, with free course, is as cruel as it had before been
cowardly. The Daughter Society, as the mother of the whole mischief,
lies ignominiously suppressed; the Prisons can hold no more; bereaved
down-beaten Patriotism murmurs, not loud but deep. Here and in the
neighbouring Towns, 'flattened balls' picked from the streets of Nanci
are worn at buttonholes: balls flattened in carrying death to
Patriotism; men wear them there, in perpetual memento of revenge.
Mutineer Deserters roam the woods; have to demand charity at the
musket's end. All is dissolution, mutual rancour, gloom and
despair:—till National-Assembly Commissioners arrive, with a steady
gentle flame of Constitutionalism in their hearts; who gently lift up
the down-trodden, gently pull down the too uplifted; reinstate the
Daughter Society, recall the Mutineer Deserter; gradually levelling,
strive in all wise ways to smooth and soothe. With such gradual mild
levelling on the one side; as with solemn funeral-service, Cassolettes,
Courts-Martial, National thanks,—all that Officiality can do is done.
The buttonhole will drop its flat ball; the black ashes, so far as may
be, get green again.
This is the 'Affair of Nanci;' by some called the
'Massacre of Nanci;'—properly speaking, the unsightly wrong-side of that
thrice glorious Feast of Pikes, the right-side of which formed a
spectacle for the very gods. Right-side and wrong lie always so near:
the one was in July, in August the other! Theatres, the theatres over in
London, are bright with their pasteboard simulacrum of that 'Federation
of the French People,' brought out as Drama: this of Nanci, we may say,
though not played in any pasteboard Theatre, did for many months enact
itself, and even walk spectrally—in all French heads. For the news of it
fly pealing through all France; awakening, in town and village, in
clubroom, messroom, to the utmost borders, some mimic reflex or
imaginative repetition of the business; always with the angry
questionable assertion: It was right; It was wrong. Whereby come
controversies, duels, embitterment, vain jargon; the hastening forward,
the augmenting and intensifying of whatever new explosions lie in store
for us.
Meanwhile, at this cost or at that, the mutiny, as we
say, is stilled. The French Army has neither burst up in universal
simultaneous delirium; nor been at once disbanded, put an end to, and
made new again. It must die in the chronic manner, through years, by
inches; with partial revolts, as of Brest Sailors or the like, which
dare not spread; with men unhappy, insubordinate; officers unhappier, in
Royalist moustachioes, taking horse, singly or in bodies, across the
Rhine: (See Dampmartin, i. 249, &c. &c.) sick dissatisfaction,
sick disgust on both sides; the Army moribund, fit for no duty:—till it
do, in that unexpected manner, Phoenix-like, with long throes, get both
dead and newborn; then start forth strong, nay stronger and even
strongest.
Thus much was the brave Bouille hitherto fated to do.
Wherewith let him again fade into dimness; and at Metz or the rural
Cantonments, assiduously drilling, mysteriously diplomatising, in scheme
within scheme, hover as formerly a faint shadow, the hope of Royalty.
|