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THE FRENCH REVOLUTION: A HISTORY |
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BOOK IV. VARENNES Chapter 1. Easter at Saint-Cloud. The French Monarchy may now therefore be considered as, in all human probability, lost; as struggling henceforth in blindness as well as weakness, the last light of reasonable guidance having gone out. What remains of resources their poor Majesties will waste still further, in uncertain loitering and wavering. Mirabeau himself had to complain that they only gave him half confidence, and always had some plan within his plan. Had they fled frankly with him, to Rouen or anywhither, long ago! They may fly now with chance immeasurably lessened; which will go on lessening towards absolute zero. Decide, O Queen; poor Louis can decide nothing: execute this Flight-project, or at least abandon it. Correspondence with Bouille there has been enough; what profits consulting, and hypothesis, while all around is in fierce activity of practice? The Rustic sits waiting till the river run dry: alas with you it is not a common river, but a Nile Inundation; snow melting in the unseen mountains; till all, and you where you sit, be submerged.
Many things invite to flight. The voice Journals invites;
Royalist Journals proudly hinting it as a threat, Patriot Journals
rabidly denouncing it as a terror. Mother Society, waxing more and more
emphatic, invites;—so emphatic that, as was prophesied, Lafayette and
your limited Patriots have ere long to branch off from her, and form
themselves into Feuillans; with infinite public controversy; the victory
in which, doubtful though it look, will remain with the unlimited
Mother. Moreover, ever since the Day of Poniards, we have seen unlimited
Patriotism openly equipping itself with arms. Citizens denied
'activity,' which is facetiously made to signify a certain weight of
purse, cannot buy blue uniforms, and be Guardsmen; but man is greater
than blue cloth; man can fight, if need be, in multiform cloth, or even
almost without cloth—as Sansculotte. So Pikes continued to be hammered,
whether those Dirks of improved structure with barbs be 'meant for the
West-India market,' or not meant. Men beat, the wrong way, their
ploughshares into swords. Is there not what we may call an 'Austrian
Committee,' Comite Autrichein, sitting daily and nightly in the
Tuileries? Patriotism, by vision and suspicion, knows it too well! If
the King fly, will there not be Aristocrat-Austrian Invasion; butchery,
replacement of Feudalism; wars more than civil? The hearts of men are
saddened and maddened.
Dissident Priests likewise give trouble enough. Expelled
from their Parish Churches, where Constitutional Priests, elected by the
Public, have replaced them, these unhappy persons resort to Convents of
Nuns, or other such receptacles; and there, on Sabbath, collecting
assemblages of Anti-Constitutional individuals, who have grown devout
all on a sudden, (Toulongeon, i. 262.) they worship or pretend to
worship in their strait-laced contumacious manner; to the scandal of
Patriotism. Dissident Priests, passing along with their sacred wafer for
the dying, seem wishful to be massacred in the streets; wherein
Patriotism will not gratify them. Slighter palm of martyrdom, however,
shall not be denied: martyrdom not of massacre, yet of fustigation. At
the refractory places of worship, Patriot men appear; Patriot women with
strong hazel wands, which they apply. Shut thy eyes, O Reader; see not
this misery, peculiar to these later times,—of martyrdom without
sincerity, with only cant and contumacy! A dead Catholic Church is not
allowed to lie dead; no, it is galvanised into the detestablest
death-life; whereat Humanity, we say, shuts its eyes. For the Patriot
women take their hazel wands, and fustigate, amid laughter of
bystanders, with alacrity: broad bottom of Priests; alas, Nuns too
reversed, and cotillons retrousses! The National Guard does what it can:
Municipality 'invokes the Principles of Toleration;' grants Dissident
worshippers the Church of the Theatins; promising protection. But it is
to no purpose: at the door of that Theatins Church, appears a Placard,
and suspended atop, like Plebeian Consular fasces,—a Bundle of Rods! The
Principles of Toleration must do the best they may: but no Dissident man
shall worship contumaciously; there is a Plebiscitum to that effect;
which, though unspoken, is like the laws of the Medes and Persians.
Dissident contumacious Priests ought not to be harboured, even in
private, by any man: the Club of the Cordeliers openly denounces Majesty
himself as doing it. (Newspapers of April and June, 1791 (in
Hist. Parl. ix. 449; x, 217).)
Many things invite to flight: but probably this thing
above all others, that it has become impossible! On the 15th of April,
notice is given that his Majesty, who has suffered much from catarrh
lately, will enjoy the Spring weather, for a few days, at Saint-Cloud.
Out at Saint-Cloud? Wishing to celebrate his Easter, his Paques, or
Pasch, there; with refractory Anti-Constitutional Dissidents?—Wishing
rather to make off for Compiegne, and thence to the Frontiers? As were,
in good sooth, perhaps feasible, or would once have been; nothing but
some two chasseurs attending you; chasseurs easily corrupted! It is a
pleasant possibility, execute it or not. Men say there are thirty
thousand Chevaliers of the Poniard lurking in the woods there: lurking
in the woods, and thirty thousand,—for the human Imagination is not
fettered. But now, how easily might these, dashing out on Lafayette,
snatch off the Hereditary Representative; and roll away with him, after
the manner of a whirlblast, whither they listed!—Enough, it were well
the King did not go. Lafayette is forewarned and forearmed: but, indeed,
is the risk his only; or his and all France's?
Monday the eighteenth of April is come; the Easter
Journey to Saint-Cloud shall take effect. National Guard has got its
orders; a First Division, as Advanced Guard, has even marched, and
probably arrived. His Majesty's Maison-bouche, they say, is all busy
stewing and frying at Saint-Cloud; the King's Dinner not far from ready
there. About one o'clock, the Royal Carriage, with its eight royal
blacks, shoots stately into the Place du Carrousel; draws up to receive
its royal burden. But hark! From the neighbouring Church of Saint-Roch,
the tocsin begins ding-donging. Is the King stolen then; he is going;
gone? Multitudes of persons crowd the Carrousel: the Royal Carriage
still stands there;—and, by Heaven's strength, shall stand!
Lafayette comes up, with aide-de-camps and oratory;
pervading the groups: "Taisez vous," answer the groups, "the King shall
not go." Monsieur appears, at an upper window: ten thousand voices bray
and shriek, "Nous ne voulons pas que le Roi parte." Their Majesties have
mounted. Crack go the whips; but twenty Patriot arms have seized each of
the eight bridles: there is rearing, rocking, vociferation; not the
smallest headway. In vain does Lafayette fret, indignant; and perorate
and strive: Patriots in the passion of terror, bellow round the Royal
Carriage; it is one bellowing sea of Patriot terror run frantic. Will
Royalty fly off towards Austria; like a lit rocket, towards endless
Conflagration of Civil War? Stop it, ye Patriots, in the name of Heaven!
Rude voices passionately apostrophise Royalty itself. Usher Campan, and
other the like official persons, pressing forward with help or advice,
are clutched by the sashes, and hurled and whirled, in a confused
perilous manner; so that her Majesty has to plead passionately from the
carriage-window.
Order cannot be heard, cannot be followed; National
Guards know not how to act. Centre Grenadiers, of the Observatoire
Battalion, are there; not on duty; alas, in quasi-mutiny; speaking rude
disobedient words; threatening the mounted Guards with sharp shot if
they hurt the people. Lafayette mounts and dismounts; runs haranguing,
panting; on the verge of despair. For an hour and three-quarters; 'seven
quarters of an hour,' by the Tuileries Clock! Desperate Lafayette will
open a passage, were it by the cannon's mouth, if his Majesty will
order. Their Majesties, counselled to it by Royalist friends, by Patriot
foes, dismount; and retire in, with heavy indignant heart; giving up the
enterprise. Maison-bouche may eat that cooked dinner themselves; his
Majesty shall not see Saint-Cloud this day,—or any day. (Deux Amis,
vi. c. 1; Hist. Parl. ix. 407-14.)
The pathetic fable of imprisonment in one's own Palace
has become a sad fact, then? Majesty complains to Assembly; Municipality
deliberates, proposes to petition or address; Sections respond with
sullen brevity of negation. Lafayette flings down his Commission;
appears in civic pepper-and-salt frock; and cannot be flattered back
again;—not in less than three days; and by unheard-of entreaty; National
Guards kneeling to him, and declaring that it is not sycophancy, that
they are free men kneeling here to the Statue of Liberty. For the rest,
those Centre Grenadiers of the Observatoire are disbanded,—yet indeed
are reinlisted, all but fourteen, under a new name, and with new
quarters. The King must keep his Easter in Paris: meditating much on
this singular posture of things: but as good as determined now to fly
from it, desire being whetted by difficulty.
For above a year, ever since March 1790, it would seem,
there has hovered a project of Flight before the royal mind; and ever
and anon has been condensing itself into something like a purpose; but
this or the other difficulty always vaporised it again. It seems so full
of risks, perhaps of civil war itself; above all, it cannot be done
without effort. Somnolent laziness will not serve: to fly, if not in a
leather vache, one must verily stir himself. Better to adopt that
Constitution of theirs; execute it so as to shew all men that it is
inexecutable? Better or not so good; surely it is easier. To all
difficulties you need only say, There is a lion in the path, behold your
Constitution will not act! For a somnolent person it requires no effort
to counterfeit death,—as Dame de Stael and Friends of Liberty can see
the King's Government long doing, faisant le mort.
Nay now, when desire whetted by difficulty has brought
the matter to a head, and the royal mind no longer halts between two,
what can come of it? Grant that poor Louis were safe with Bouille, what
on the whole could he look for there? Exasperated Tickets of Entry
answer, Much, all. But cold Reason answers, Little almost nothing. Is
not loyalty a law of Nature? ask the Tickets of Entry. Is not love of
your King, and even death for him, the glory of all Frenchmen,—except
these few Democrats? Let Democrat Constitution-builders see what they
will do without their Keystone; and France rend its hair, having lost
the Hereditary Representative!
Thus will King Louis fly; one sees not reasonably towards
what. As a maltreated Boy, shall we say, who, having a Stepmother,
rushes sulky into the wide world; and will wring the paternal
heart?—Poor Louis escapes from known unsupportable evils, to an unknown
mixture of good and evil, coloured by Hope. He goes, as Rabelais did
when dying, to seek a great May-be: je vais chercher un grand Peut-etre!
As not only the sulky Boy but the wise grown Man is obliged to do, so
often, in emergencies.
For the rest, there is still no lack of stimulants, and
stepdame maltreatments, to keep one's resolution at the due pitch.
Factious disturbance ceases not: as indeed how can they, unless
authoritatively conjured, in a Revolt which is by nature bottomless? If
the ceasing of faction be the price of the King's somnolence, he may
awake when he will, and take wing.
Remark, in any case, what somersets and contortions a
dead Catholicism is making,—skilfully galvanised: hideous, and even
piteous, to behold! Jurant and Dissident, with their shaved crowns,
argue frothing everywhere; or are ceasing to argue, and stripping for
battle. In Paris was scourging while need continued: contrariwise, in
the Morbihan of Brittany, without scourging, armed Peasants are up,
roused by pulpit-drum, they know not why. General Dumouriez, who has got
missioned thitherward, finds all in sour heat of darkness; finds also
that explanation and conciliation will still do much. (Deux Amis, v.
410-21; Dumouriez, ii. c. 5.)
But again, consider this: that his Holiness, Pius Sixth,
has seen good to excommunicate Bishop Talleyrand! Surely, we will say
then, considering it, there is no living or dead Church in the Earth
that has not the indubitablest right to excommunicate Talleyrand. Pope
Pius has right and might, in his way. But truly so likewise has Father
Adam, ci-devant Marquis Saint-Huruge, in his way. Behold, therefore, on
the Fourth of May, in the Palais-Royal, a mixed loud-sounding multitude;
in the middle of whom, Father Adam, bull-voiced Saint-Huruge, in white
hat, towers visible and audible. With him, it is said, walks Journalist
Gorsas, walk many others of the washed sort; for no authority will
interfere. Pius Sixth, with his plush and tiara, and power of the Keys,
they bear aloft: of natural size,—made of lath and combustible gum.
Royou, the King's Friend, is borne too in effigy; with a pile of
Newspaper King's-Friends, condemned numbers of the Ami-du-Roi; fit fuel
of the sacrifice. Speeches are spoken; a judgment is held, a doom
proclaimed, audible in bull-voice, towards the four winds. And thus,
amid great shouting, the holocaust is consummated, under the summer sky;
and our lath-and-gum Holiness, with the attendant victims, mounts up in
flame, and sinks down in ashes; a decomposed Pope: and right or might,
among all the parties, has better or worse accomplished itself, as it
could. (Hist. Parl. x. 99-102.) But, on the whole, reckoning from
Martin Luther in the Marketplace of Wittenberg to Marquis Saint-Huruge
in this Palais-Royal of Paris, what a journey have we gone; into what
strange territories has it carried us! No Authority can now interfere.
Nay Religion herself, mourning for such things, may after all ask, What
have I to do with them?
In such extraordinary manner does dead Catholicism
somerset and caper, skilfully galvanised. For, does the reader inquire
into the subject-matter of controversy in this case; what the difference
between Orthodoxy or My-doxy and Heterodoxy or Thy-doxy might here be?
My-doxy is that an august National Assembly can equalize the extent of
Bishopricks; that an equalized Bishop, his Creed and Formularies being
left quite as they were, can swear Fidelity to King, Law and Nation, and
so become a Constitutional Bishop. Thy-doxy, if thou be Dissident, is
that he cannot; but that he must become an accursed thing. Human
ill-nature needs but some Homoiousian iota, or even the pretence of one;
and will flow copiously through the eye of a needle: thus always must
mortals go jargoning and fuming,
And, like the ancient Stoics in their porches
With fierce dispute maintain their churches.
This Auto-da-fe of Saint-Huruge's was on the Fourth of
May, 1791. Royalty sees it; but says nothing.
Royalty, in fact, should, by this time, be far on with
its preparations. Unhappily much preparation is needful: could a
Hereditary Representative be carried in leather vache, how easy were it!
But it is not so.
New clothes are needed, as usual, in all Epic
transactions, were it in the grimmest iron ages; consider 'Queen
Chrimhilde, with her sixty semstresses,' in that iron Nibelungen Song!
No Queen can stir without new clothes. Therefore, now, Dame Campan
whisks assiduous to this mantua-maker and to that: and there is clipping
of frocks and gowns, upper clothes and under, great and small; such a
clipping and sewing, as might have been dispensed with. Moreover, her
Majesty cannot go a step anywhither without her Necessaire; dear
Necessaire, of inlaid ivory and rosewood; cunningly devised; which holds
perfumes, toilet-implements, infinite small queenlike furnitures:
Necessary to terrestrial life. Not without a cost of some five hundred
louis, of much precious time, and difficult hoodwinking which does not
blind, can this same Necessary of life be forwarded by the Flanders
Carriers,—never to get to hand. (Campan, ii. c. 18.) All which,
you would say, augurs ill for the prospering of the enterprise. But the
whims of women and queens must be humoured.
Bouille, on his side, is making a fortified Camp at
Montmedi; gathering Royal-Allemand, and all manner of other German and
true French Troops thither, 'to watch the Austrians.' His Majesty will
not cross the Frontiers, unless on compulsion. Neither shall the
Emigrants be much employed, hateful as they are to all people. (Bouille,
Memoires, ii. c. 10.) Nor shall old war-god Broglie have any hand in
the business; but solely our brave Bouille; to whom, on the day of
meeting, a Marshal's Baton shall be delivered, by a rescued King, amid
the shouting of all the troops. In the meanwhile, Paris being so
suspicious, were it not perhaps good to write your Foreign Ambassadors
an ostensible Constitutional Letter; desiring all Kings and men to take
heed that King Louis loves the Constitution, that he has voluntarily
sworn, and does again swear, to maintain the same, and will reckon those
his enemies who affect to say otherwise? Such a Constitutional circular
is despatched by Couriers, is communicated confidentially to the
Assembly, and printed in all Newspapers; with the finest effect. (Moniteur,
Seance du 23 Avril, 1791.) Simulation and dissimulation mingle
extensively in human affairs.
We observe, however, that Count Fersen is often using his
Ticket of Entry; which surely he has clear right to do. A gallant
Soldier and Swede, devoted to this fair Queen;—as indeed the Highest
Swede now is. Has not King Gustav, famed fiery Chevalier du Nord, sworn
himself, by the old laws of chivalry, her Knight? He will descend on
fire-wings, of Swedish musketry, and deliver her from these foul
dragons,—if, alas, the assassin's pistol intervene not!
But, in fact, Count Fersen does seem a likely young
soldier, of alert decisive ways: he circulates widely, seen, unseen; and
has business on hand. Also Colonel the Duke de Choiseul, nephew of
Choiseul the great, of Choiseul the now deceased; he and Engineer
Goguelat are passing and repassing between Metz and the Tuileries; and
Letters go in cipher,—one of them, a most important one, hard to
decipher; Fersen having ciphered it in haste. (Choiseul, Relation du
Depart de Louis XVI. (Paris, 1822), p. 39.) As for Duke de
Villequier, he is gone ever since the Day of Poniards; but his Apartment
is useful for her Majesty.
On the other side, poor Commandment Gouvion, watching at
the Tuileries, second in National Command, sees several things hard to
interpret. It is the same Gouvion who sat, long months ago, at the
Townhall, gazing helpless into that Insurrection of Women; motionless,
as the brave stabled steed when conflagration rises, till Usher Maillard
snatched his drum. Sincerer Patriot there is not; but many a shiftier.
He, if Dame Campan gossip credibly, is paying some similitude of
love-court to a certain false Chambermaid of the Palace, who betrays
much to him: the Necessaire, the clothes, the packing of the jewels, (Campan,
ii. 141.)—could he understand it when betrayed. Helpless Gouvion
gazes with sincere glassy eyes into it; stirs up his sentries to
vigilence; walks restless to and fro; and hopes the best.
But, on the whole, one finds that, in the second week of
June, Colonel de Choiseul is privately in Paris; having come 'to see his
children.' Also that Fersen has got a stupendous new Coach built, of the
kind named Berline; done by the first artists; according to a model:
they bring it home to him, in Choiseul's presence; the two friends take
a proof-drive in it, along the streets; in meditative mood; then send it
up to 'Madame Sullivan's, in the Rue de Clichy,' far North, to wait
there till wanted. Apparently a certain Russian Baroness de Korff, with
Waiting-woman, Valet, and two Children, will travel homewards with some
state: in whom these young military gentlemen take interest? A Passport
has been procured for her; and much assistance shewn, with
Coach-builders and such like;—so helpful polite are young military men.
Fersen has likewise purchased a Chaise fit for two, at least for two
waiting-maids; further, certain necessary horses: one would say, he is
himself quitting France, not without outlay? We observe finally that
their Majesties, Heaven willing, will assist at Corpus-Christi Day, this
blessed Summer Solstice, in Assumption Church, here at Paris, to the joy
of all the world. For which same day, moreover, brave Bouille, at Metz,
as we find, has invited a party of friends to dinner; but indeed is gone
from home, in the interim, over to Montmedi.
These are of the Phenomena, or visual Appearances, of
this wide-working terrestrial world: which truly is all phenomenal, what
they call spectral; and never rests at any moment; one never at any
moment can know why.
On Monday night, the Twentieth of June 1791, about eleven
o'clock, there is many a hackney-coach, and glass-coach (carrosse de
remise), still rumbling, or at rest, on the streets of Paris. But of
all Glass-coaches, we recommend this to thee, O Reader, which stands
drawn up, in the Rue de l'Echelle, hard by the Carrousel and outgate of
the Tuileries; in the Rue de l'Echelle that then was; 'opposite Ronsin
the saddler's door,' as if waiting for a fare there! Not long does it
wait: a hooded Dame, with two hooded Children has issued from
Villequier's door, where no sentry walks, into the Tuileries
Court-of-Princes; into the Carrousel; into the Rue de l'Echelle; where
the Glass-coachman readily admits them; and again waits. Not long;
another Dame, likewise hooded or shrouded, leaning on a servant, issues
in the same manner, by the Glass-coachman, cheerfully admitted. Whither
go, so many Dames? 'Tis His Majesty's Couchee, Majesty just gone to bed,
and all the Palace-world is retiring home. But the Glass-coachman still
waits; his fare seemingly incomplete.
By and by, we note a thickset Individual, in round hat
and peruke, arm-and-arm with some servant, seemingly of the Runner or
Courier sort; he also issues through Villequier's door; starts a
shoebuckle as he passes one of the sentries, stoops down to clasp it
again; is however, by the Glass-coachman, still more cheerfully
admitted. And now, is his fare complete? Not yet; the Glass-coachman
still waits.—Alas! and the false Chambermaid has warned Gouvion that she
thinks the Royal Family will fly this very night; and Gouvion
distrusting his own glazed eyes, has sent express for Lafayette; and
Lafayette's Carriage, flaring with lights, rolls this moment through the
inner Arch of the Carrousel,—where a Lady shaded in broad gypsy-hat, and
leaning on the arm of a servant, also of the Runner or Courier sort,
stands aside to let it pass, and has even the whim to touch a spoke of
it with her badine,—light little magic rod which she calls badine, such
as the Beautiful then wore. The flare of Lafayette's Carriage, rolls
past: all is found quiet in the Court-of-Princes; sentries at their
post; Majesties' Apartments closed in smooth rest. Your false
Chambermaid must have been mistaken? Watch thou, Gouvion, with Argus'
vigilance; for, of a truth, treachery is within these walls.
But where is the Lady that stood aside in gypsy hat, and
touched the wheel-spoke with her badine? O Reader, that Lady that
touched the wheel-spoke was the Queen of France! She has issued safe
through that inner Arch, into the Carrousel itself; but not into the Rue
de l'Echelle. Flurried by the rattle and rencounter, she took the right
hand not the left; neither she nor her Courier knows Paris; he indeed is
no Courier, but a loyal stupid ci-devant Bodyguard disguised as one.
They are off, quite wrong, over the Pont Royal and River; roaming
disconsolate in the Rue du Bac; far from the Glass-coachman, who still
waits. Waits, with flutter of heart; with thoughts—which he must button
close up, under his jarvie surtout!
Midnight clangs from all the City-steeples; one precious
hour has been spent so; most mortals are asleep. The Glass-coachman
waits; and what mood! A brother jarvie drives up, enters into
conversation; is answered cheerfully in jarvie dialect: the brothers of
the whip exchange a pinch of snuff; (Weber, ii. 340-2; Choiseul, p.
44-56.) decline drinking together; and part with good night. Be the
Heavens blest! here at length is the Queen-lady, in gypsy-hat; safe
after perils; who has had to inquire her way. She too is admitted; her
Courier jumps aloft, as the other, who is also a disguised Bodyguard,
has done: and now, O Glass-coachman of a thousand,—Count Fersen, for the
Reader sees it is thou,—drive!
Dust shall not stick to the hoofs of Fersen: crack!
crack! the Glass-coach rattles, and every soul breathes lighter. But is
Fersen on the right road? Northeastward, to the Barrier of Saint-Martin
and Metz Highway, thither were we bound: and lo, he drives right
Northward! The royal Individual, in round hat and peruke, sits
astonished; but right or wrong, there is no remedy. Crack, crack, we go
incessant, through the slumbering City. Seldom, since Paris rose out of
mud, or the Longhaired Kings went in Bullock-carts, was there such a
drive. Mortals on each hand of you, close by, stretched out horizontal,
dormant; and we alive and quaking! Crack, crack, through the Rue de
Grammont; across the Boulevard; up the Rue de la Chaussee d'Antin,—these
windows, all silent, of Number 42, were Mirabeau's. Towards the Barrier
not of Saint-Martin, but of Clichy on the utmost North! Patience, ye
royal Individuals; Fersen understands what he is about. Passing up the
Rue de Clichy, he alights for one moment at Madame Sullivan's: "Did
Count Fersen's Coachman get the Baroness de Korff's new Berline?"—"Gone
with it an hour-and-half ago," grumbles responsive the drowsy
Porter.—"C'est bien." Yes, it is well;—though had not such hour-and half
been lost, it were still better. Forth therefore, O Fersen, fast, by the
Barrier de Clichy; then Eastward along the Outward Boulevard, what
horses and whipcord can do!
Thus Fersen drives, through the ambrosial night. Sleeping
Paris is now all on the right hand of him; silent except for some
snoring hum; and now he is Eastward as far as the Barrier de
Saint-Martin; looking earnestly for Baroness de Korff's Berline. This
Heaven's Berline he at length does descry, drawn up with its six horses,
his own German Coachman waiting on the box. Right, thou good German: now
haste, whither thou knowest!—And as for us of the Glass-coach, haste
too, O haste; much time is already lost! The august Glass-coach fare,
six Insides, hastily packs itself into the new Berline; two Bodyguard
Couriers behind. The Glass-coach itself is turned adrift, its head
towards the City; to wander whither it lists,—and be found next morning
tumbled in a ditch. But Fersen is on the new box, with its brave new
hammer-cloths; flourishing his whip; he bolts forward towards Bondy.
There a third and final Bodyguard Courier of ours ought surely to be,
with post-horses ready-ordered. There likewise ought that purchased
Chaise, with the two Waiting-maids and their bandboxes to be; whom also
her Majesty could not travel without. Swift, thou deft Fersen, and may
the Heavens turn it well!
Once more, by Heaven's blessing, it is all well. Here is
the sleeping Hamlet of Bondy; Chaise with Waiting-women; horses all
ready, and postillions with their churn-boots, impatient in the dewy
dawn. Brief harnessing done, the postillions with their churn-boots
vault into the saddles; brandish circularly their little noisy whips.
Fersen, under his jarvie-surtout, bends in lowly silent reverence of
adieu; royal hands wave speechless in expressible response; Baroness de
Korff's Berline, with the Royalty of France, bounds off: for ever, as it
proved. Deft Fersen dashes obliquely Northward, through the country,
towards Bougret; gains Bougret, finds his German Coachman and chariot
waiting there; cracks off, and drives undiscovered into unknown space. A
deft active man, we say; what he undertook to do is nimbly and
successfully done.
A so the Royalty of France is actually fled? This
precious night, the shortest of the year, it flies and drives! Baroness
de Korff is, at bottom, Dame de Tourzel, Governess of the Royal
Children: she who came hooded with the two hooded little ones; little
Dauphin; little Madame Royale, known long afterwards as Duchess
d'Angouleme. Baroness de Korff's Waiting-maid is the Queen in gypsy-hat.
The royal Individual in round hat and peruke, he is Valet, for the time
being. That other hooded Dame, styled Travelling-companion, is kind
Sister Elizabeth; she had sworn, long since, when the Insurrection of
Women was, that only death should part her and them. And so they rush
there, not too impetuously, through the Wood of Bondy:—over a Rubicon in
their own and France's History.
Great; though the future is all vague! If we reach
Bouille? If we do not reach him? O Louis! and this all round thee is the
great slumbering Earth (and overhead, the great watchful Heaven);
the slumbering Wood of Bondy,—where Longhaired Childeric Donothing was
struck through with iron; (Henault, Abrege Chronologique, p. 36.)
not unreasonably. These peaked stone-towers are Raincy; towers of wicked
d'Orleans. All slumbers save the multiplex rustle of our new Berline.
Loose-skirted scarecrow of an Herb-merchant, with his ass and early
greens, toilsomely plodding, seems the only creature we meet. But right
ahead the great North-East sends up evermore his gray brindled dawn:
from dewy branch, birds here and there, with short deep warble, salute
the coming Sun. Stars fade out, and Galaxies; Street-lamps of the City
of God. The Universe, O my brothers, is flinging wide its portals for
the Levee of the GREAT HIGH KING. Thou, poor King Louis, farest
nevertheless, as mortals do, towards Orient lands of Hope; and the
Tuileries with its Levees, and France and the Earth itself, is but a
larger kind of doghutch,—occasionally going rabid.
But in Paris, at six in the morning; when some Patriot
Deputy, warned by a billet, awoke Lafayette, and they went to the
Tuileries?—Imagination may paint, but words cannot, the surprise of
Lafayette; or with what bewilderment helpless Gouvion rolled glassy
Argus's eyes, discerning now that his false Chambermaid told true!
However, it is to be recorded that Paris, thanks to an
august National Assembly, did, on this seeming doomsday, surpass itself.
Never, according to Historian eye-witnesses, was there seen such an
'imposing attitude.' (Deux Amis, vi. 67-178; Toulongeon, ii. 1-38;
Camille, Prudhomme and Editors in Hist. Parl. x. 240-4.) Sections
all 'in permanence;' our Townhall, too, having first, about ten o'clock,
fired three solemn alarm-cannons: above all, our National Assembly!
National Assembly, likewise permanent, decides what is needful; with
unanimous consent, for the Cote Droit sits dumb, afraid of the Lanterne.
Decides with a calm promptitude, which rises towards the sublime. One
must needs vote, for the thing is self-evident, that his Majesty has
been abducted, or spirited away, 'enleve,' by some person or persons
unknown: in which case, what will the Constitution have us do? Let us
return to first principles, as we always say; "revenons aux principes."
By first or by second principles, much is promptly
decided: Ministers are sent for, instructed how to continue their
functions; Lafayette is examined; and Gouvion, who gives a most helpless
account, the best he can. Letters are found written: one Letter, of
immense magnitude; all in his Majesty's hand, and evidently of his
Majesty's own composition; addressed to the National Assembly. It
details, with earnestness, with a childlike simplicity, what woes his
Majesty has suffered. Woes great and small: A Necker seen applauded, a
Majesty not; then insurrection; want of due cash in Civil List; general
want of cash, furniture and order; anarchy everywhere; Deficit never
yet, in the smallest, 'choked or comble:'—wherefore in brief His Majesty
has retired towards a Place of Liberty; and, leaving Sanctions,
Federation, and what Oaths there may be, to shift for themselves, does
now refer—to what, thinks an august Assembly? To that 'Declaration of
the Twenty-third of June,' with its "Seul il fera, He alone will make
his People happy." As if that were not buried, deep enough, under two
irrevocable Twelvemonths, and the wreck and rubbish of a whole Feudal
World! This strange autograph Letter the National Assembly decides on
printing; on transmitting to the Eighty-three Departments, with exegetic
commentary, short but pithy. Commissioners also shall go forth on all
sides; the People be exhorted; the Armies be increased; care taken that
the Commonweal suffer no damage.—And now, with a sublime air of
calmness, nay of indifference, we 'pass to the order of the day!'
By such sublime calmness, the terror of the People is
calmed. These gleaming Pike forests, which bristled fateful in the early
sun, disappear again; the far-sounding Street-orators cease, or spout
milder. We are to have a civil war; let us have it then. The King is
gone; but National Assembly, but France and we remain. The People also
takes a great attitude; the People also is calm; motionless as a
couchant lion. With but a few broolings, some waggings of the tail; to
shew what it will do! Cazales, for instance, was beset by street-groups,
and cries of Lanterne; but National Patrols easily delivered him.
Likewise all King's effigies and statues, at least stucco ones, get
abolished. Even King's names; the word Roi fades suddenly out of all
shop-signs; the Royal Bengal Tiger itself, on the Boulevards, becomes
the National Bengal one, Tigre National. (Walpoliana.)
How great is a calm couchant People! On the morrow, men
will say to one another: "We have no King, yet we slept sound enough."
On the morrow, fervent Achille de Chatelet, and Thomas Paine the
rebellious Needleman, shall have the walls of Paris profusely plastered
with their Placard; announcing that there must be a Republic! (Dumont,
c. 16.)—Need we add that Lafayette too, though at first menaced by
Pikes, has taken a great attitude, or indeed the greatest of all? Scouts
and Aides-de-camp fly forth, vague, in quest and pursuit; young Romoeuf
towards Valenciennes, though with small hope.
Thus Paris; sublimely calmed, in its bereavement. But
from the Messageries Royales, in all Mail-bags, radiates forth
far-darting the electric news: Our Hereditary Representative is flown.
Laugh, black Royalists: yet be it in your sleeve only; lest Patriotism
notice, and waxing frantic, lower the Lanterne! In Paris alone is a
sublime National Assembly with its calmness; truly, other places must
take it as they can: with open mouth and eyes; with panic cackling, with
wrath, with conjecture. How each one of those dull leathern Diligences,
with its leathern bag and 'The King is fled,' furrows up smooth France
as it goes; through town and hamlet, ruffles the smooth public mind into
quivering agitation of death-terror; then lumbers on, as if nothing had
happened! Along all highways; towards the utmost borders; till all
France is ruffled,—roughened up (metaphorically speaking) into
one enormous, desperate-minded, red-guggling Turkey Cock!
For example, it is under cloud of night that the leathern
Monster reaches Nantes; deep sunk in sleep. The word spoken rouses all
Patriot men: General Dumouriez, enveloped in roquelaures, has to descend
from his bedroom; finds the street covered with 'four or five thousand
citizens in their shirts.' (Dumouriez, Memoires, ii. 109.) Here
and there a faint farthing rushlight, hastily kindled; and so many
swart-featured haggard faces, with nightcaps pushed back; and the more
or less flowing drapery of night-shirt: open-mouthed till the General
say his word! And overhead, as always, the Great Bear is turning so
quiet round Bootes; steady, indifferent as the leathern Diligence
itself. Take comfort, ye men of Nantes: Bootes and the steady Bear are
turning; ancient Atlantic still sends his brine, loud-billowing, up your
Loire-stream; brandy shall be hot in the stomach: this is not the Last
of the Days, but one before the Last.—The fools! If they knew what was
doing, in these very instants, also by candle-light, in the far
North-East!
Perhaps we may say the most terrified man in Paris or
France is—who thinks the Reader?—seagreen Robespierre. Double paleness,
with the shadow of gibbets and halters, overcasts the seagreen features:
it is too clear to him that there is to be 'a Saint-Bartholomew of
Patriots,' that in four-and-twenty hours he will not be in life. These
horrid anticipations of the soul he is heard uttering at Petion's; by a
notable witness. By Madame Roland, namely; her whom we saw, last year,
radiant at the Lyons Federation! These four months, the Rolands have
been in Paris; arranging with Assembly Committees the Municipal affairs
of Lyons, affairs all sunk in debt;—communing, the while, as was most
natural, with the best Patriots to be found here, with our Brissots,
Petions, Buzots, Robespierres; who were wont to come to us, says the
fair Hostess, four evenings in the week. They, running about, busier
than ever this day, would fain have comforted the seagreen man: spake of
Achille du Chatelet's Placard; of a Journal to be called The Republican;
of preparing men's minds for a Republic. "A Republic?" said the
Seagreen, with one of his dry husky unsportful laughs, "What is that?" (Madame
Roland, ii. 70.) O seagreen Incorruptible, thou shalt see!
But scouts all this while and aide-de-camps, have flown
forth faster than the leathern Diligences. Young Romoeuf, as we said,
was off early towards Valenciennes: distracted Villagers seize him, as a
traitor with a finger of his own in the plot; drag him back to the
Townhall; to the National Assembly, which speedily grants a new
passport. Nay now, that same scarecrow of an Herb-merchant with his ass
has bethought him of the grand new Berline seen in the Wood of Bondy;
and delivered evidence of it: (Moniteur, &c. in Hist. Parl. x.
244-313.) Romoeuf, furnished with new passport, is sent forth with
double speed on a hopefuller track; by Bondy, Claye, and Chalons,
towards Metz, to track the new Berline; and gallops a franc etrier.
Miserable new Berline! Why could not Royalty go in some
old Berline similar to that of other men? Flying for life, one does not
stickle about his vehicle. Monsieur, in a commonplace
travelling-carriage is off Northwards; Madame, his Princess, in another,
with variation of route: they cross one another while changing horses,
without look of recognition; and reach Flanders, no man questioning
them. Precisely in the same manner, beautiful Princess de Lamballe set
off, about the same hour; and will reach England safe:—would she had
continued there! The beautiful, the good, but the unfortunate; reserved
for a frightful end!
All runs along, unmolested, speedy, except only the new
Berline. Huge leathern vehicle;—huge Argosy, let us say, or
Acapulco-ship; with its heavy stern-boat of Chaise-and-pair; with its
three yellow Pilot-boats of mounted Bodyguard Couriers, rocking aimless
round it and ahead of it, to bewilder, not to guide! It lumbers along,
lurchingly with stress, at a snail's pace; noted of all the world. The
Bodyguard Couriers, in their yellow liveries, go prancing and
clattering; loyal but stupid; unacquainted with all things. Stoppages
occur; and breakages to be repaired at Etoges. King Louis too will
dismount, will walk up hills, and enjoy the blessed sunshine:—with
eleven horses and double drink money, and all furtherances of Nature and
Art, it will be found that Royalty, flying for life, accomplishes
Sixty-nine miles in Twenty-two incessant hours. Slow Royalty! And yet
not a minute of these hours but is precious: on minutes hang the
destinies of Royalty now.
Readers, therefore, can judge in what humour Duke de
Choiseul might stand waiting, in the Village of Pont-de-Sommevelle, some
leagues beyond Chalons, hour after hour, now when the day bends visibly
westward. Choiseul drove out of Paris, in all privity, ten hours before
their Majesties' fixed time; his Hussars, led by Engineer Goguelat, are
here duly, come 'to escort a Treasure that is expected:' but, hour after
hour, is no Baroness de Korff's Berline. Indeed, over all that
North-east Region, on the skirts of Champagne and of Lorraine, where the
Great Road runs, the agitation is considerable. For all along, from this
Pont-de-Sommevelle Northeastward as far as Montmedi, at Post-villages
and Towns, escorts of Hussars and Dragoons do lounge waiting: a train or
chain of Military Escorts; at the Montmedi end of it our brave Bouille:
an electric thunder-chain; which the invisible Bouille, like a Father
Jove, holds in his hand—for wise purposes! Brave Bouille has done what
man could; has spread out his electric thunder-chain of Military
Escorts, onwards to the threshold of Chalons: it waits but for the new
Korff Berline; to receive it, escort it, and, if need be, bear it off in
whirlwind of military fire. They lie and lounge there, we say, these
fierce Troopers; from Montmedi and Stenai, through Clermont,
Sainte-Menehould to utmost Pont-de-Sommevelle, in all Post-villages; for
the route shall avoid Verdun and great Towns: they loiter impatient
'till the Treasure arrive.'
Judge what a day this is for brave Bouille: perhaps the
first day of a new glorious life; surely the last day of the old! Also,
and indeed still more, what a day, beautiful and terrible, for your
young full-blooded Captains: your Dandoins, Comte de Damas, Duke de
Choiseul, Engineer Goguelat, and the like; entrusted with the
secret!—Alas, the day bends ever more westward; and no Korff Berline
comes to sight. It is four hours beyond the time, and still no Berline.
In all Village-streets, Royalist Captains go lounging, looking often
Paris-ward; with face of unconcern, with heart full of black care:
rigorous Quartermasters can hardly keep the private dragoons from cafes
and dramshops. (Declaration du Sieur La Gache du Regiment
Royal-Dragoons in Choiseul, pp. 125-39.) Dawn on our bewilderment,
thou new Berline; dawn on us, thou Sun-chariot of a new Berline, with
the destinies of France!
It was of His Majesty's ordering, this military array of
Escorts: a thing solacing the Royal imagination with a look of security
and rescue; yet, in reality, creating only alarm, and where there was
otherwise no danger, danger without end. For each Patriot, in these
Post-villages, asks naturally: This clatter of cavalry, and marching and
lounging of troops, what means it? To escort a Treasure? Why escort,
when no Patriot will steal from the Nation; or where is your
Treasure?—There has been such marching and counter-marching: for it is
another fatality, that certain of these Military Escorts came out so
early as yesterday; the Nineteenth not the Twentieth of the month being
the day first appointed, which her Majesty, for some necessity or other,
saw good to alter. And now consider the suspicious nature of Patriotism;
suspicious, above all, of Bouille the Aristocrat; and how the sour
doubting humour has had leave to accumulate and exacerbate for
four-and-twenty hours!
At Pont-de-Sommevelle, these Forty foreign Hussars of
Goguelat and Duke Choiseul are becoming an unspeakable mystery to all
men. They lounged long enough, already, at Sainte-Menehould; lounged and
loitered till our National Volunteers there, all risen into hot wrath of
doubt, 'demanded three hundred fusils of their Townhall,' and got them.
At which same moment too, as it chanced, our Captain Dandoins was just
coming in, from Clermont with his troop, at the other end of the
Village. A fresh troop; alarming enough; though happily they are only
Dragoons and French! So that Goguelat with his Hussars had to ride, and
even to do it fast; till here at Pont-de-Sommevelle, where Choiseul lay
waiting, he found resting-place. Resting-place, as on burning marle. For
the rumour of him flies abroad; and men run to and fro in fright and
anger: Chalons sends forth exploratory pickets, coming from
Sainte-Menehould, on that. What is it, ye whiskered Hussars, men of
foreign guttural speech; in the name of Heaven, what is it that brings
you? A Treasure?—exploratory pickets shake their heads. The hungry
Peasants, however, know too well what Treasure it is: Military seizure
for rents, feudalities; which no Bailiff could make us pay! This they
know;—and set to jingling their Parish-bell by way of tocsin; with rapid
effect! Choiseul and Goguelat, if the whole country is not to take fire,
must needs, be there Berline, be there no Berline, saddle and ride.
They mount; and this Parish tocsin happily ceases. They
ride slowly Eastward, towards Sainte-Menehould; still hoping the
Sun-Chariot of a Berline may overtake them. Ah me, no Berline! And near
now is that Sainte-Menehould, which expelled us in the morning, with its
'three hundred National fusils;' which looks, belike, not too lovingly
on Captain Dandoins and his fresh Dragoons, though only French;—which,
in a word, one dare not enter the second time, under pain of explosion!
With rather heavy heart, our Hussar Party strikes off to the left;
through byways, through pathless hills and woods, they, avoiding
Sainte-Menehould and all places which have seen them heretofore, will
make direct for the distant Village of Varennes. It is probable they
will have a rough evening-ride.
This first military post, therefore, in the long
thunder-chain, has gone off with no effect; or with worse, and your
chain threatens to entangle itself!—The Great Road, however, is got
hushed again into a kind of quietude, though one of the wakefullest.
Indolent Dragoons cannot, by any Quartermaster, be kept altogether from
the dramshop; where Patriots drink, and will even treat, eager enough
for news. Captains, in a state near distraction, beat the dusky highway,
with a face of indifference; and no Sun-Chariot appears. Why lingers it?
Incredible, that with eleven horses and such yellow Couriers and
furtherances, its rate should be under the weightiest dray-rate, some
three miles an hour! Alas, one knows not whether it ever even got out of
Paris;—and yet also one knows not whether, this very moment, it is not
at the Village-end! One's heart flutters on the verge of
unutterabilities.
Chapter 6.
Old-Dragoon Drouet.
In this manner, however, has the Day bent downwards.
Wearied mortals are creeping home from their field-labour; the
village-artisan eats with relish his supper of herbs, or has strolled
forth to the village-street for a sweet mouthful of air and human news.
Still summer-eventide everywhere! The great Sun hangs flaming on the
utmost North-West; for it is his longest day this year. The hill-tops
rejoicing will ere long be at their ruddiest, and blush Good-night. The
thrush, in green dells, on long-shadowed leafy spray, pours gushing his
glad serenade, to the babble of brooks grown audibler; silence is
stealing over the Earth. Your dusty Mill of Valmy, as all other mills
and drudgeries, may furl its canvass, and cease swashing and circling.
The swenkt grinders in this Treadmill of an Earth have ground out
another Day; and lounge there, as we say, in village-groups; movable, or
ranked on social stone-seats; (Rapport de M. Remy in Choiseul, p.
143.) their children, mischievous imps, sporting about their feet.
Unnotable hum of sweet human gossip rises from this Village of
Sainte-Menehould, as from all other villages. Gossip mostly sweet,
unnotable; for the very Dragoons are French and gallant; nor as yet has
the Paris-and-Verdun Diligence, with its leathern bag, rumbled in, to
terrify the minds of men.
One figure nevertheless we do note at the last door of
the Village: that figure in loose-flowing nightgown, of Jean Baptiste
Drouet, Master of the Post here. An acrid choleric man, rather
dangerous-looking; still in the prime of life, though he has served, in
his time as a Conde Dragoon. This day from an early hour, Drouet got his
choler stirred, and has been kept fretting. Hussar Goguelat in the
morning saw good, by way of thrift, to bargain with his own Innkeeper,
not with Drouet regular Maitre de Poste, about some gig-horse for the
sending back of his gig; which thing Drouet perceiving came over in red
ire, menacing the Inn-keeper, and would not be appeased. Wholly an
unsatisfactory day. For Drouet is an acrid Patriot too, was at the Paris
Feast of Pikes: and what do these Bouille Soldiers mean? Hussars, with
their gig, and a vengeance to it!—have hardly been thrust out, when
Dandoins and his fresh Dragoons arrive from Clermont, and stroll. For
what purpose? Choleric Drouet steps out and steps in, with long-flowing
nightgown; looking abroad, with that sharpness of faculty which stirred
choler gives to man.
On the other hand, mark Captain Dandoins on the street of
that same Village; sauntering with a face of indifference, a heart eaten
of black care! For no Korff Berline makes its appearance. The great Sun
flames broader towards setting: one's heart flutters on the verge of
dread unutterabilities.
By Heaven! Here is the yellow Bodyguard Courier; spurring
fast, in the ruddy evening light! Steady, O Dandoins, stand with
inscrutable indifferent face; though the yellow blockhead spurs past the
Post-house; inquires to find it; and stirs the Village, all delighted
with his fine livery.—Lumbering along with its mountains of bandboxes,
and Chaise behind, the Korff Berline rolls in; huge Acapulco-ship with
its Cockboat, having got thus far. The eyes of the Villagers look
enlightened, as such eyes do when a coach-transit, which is an event,
occurs for them. Strolling Dragoons respectfully, so fine are the yellow
liveries, bring hand to helmet; and a lady in gipsy-hat responds with a
grace peculiar to her. (Declaration de la Gache in Choiseul ubi
supra.) Dandoins stands with folded arms, and what look of
indifference and disdainful garrison-air a man can, while the heart is
like leaping out of him. Curled disdainful moustachio; careless
glance,—which however surveys the Village-groups, and does not like
them. With his eye he bespeaks the yellow Courier. Be quick, be quick!
Thick-headed Yellow cannot understand the eye; comes up mumbling, to ask
in words: seen of the Village!
Nor is Post-master Drouet unobservant, all this while;
but steps out and steps in, with his long-flowing nightgown, in the
level sunlight; prying into several things. When a man's faculties, at
the right time, are sharpened by choler, it may lead to much. That Lady
in slouched gypsy-hat, though sitting back in the Carriage, does she not
resemble some one we have seen, some time;—at the Feast of Pikes, or
elsewhere? And this Grosse-Tete in round hat and peruke, which, looking
rearward, pokes itself out from time to time, methinks there are
features in it—? Quick, Sieur Guillaume, Clerk of the Directoire, bring
me a new Assignat! Drouet scans the new Assignat; compares the
Paper-money Picture with the Gross-Head in round hat there: by Day and
Night! you might say the one was an attempted Engraving of the other.
And this march of Troops; this sauntering and whispering,—I see it!
Drouet Post-master of this Village, hot Patriot, Old
Dragoon of Conde, consider, therefore, what thou wilt do. And fast: for
behold the new Berline, expeditiously yoked, cracks whipcord, and rolls
away!—Drouet dare not, on the spur of the instant, clutch the bridles in
his own two hands; Dandoins, with broadsword, might hew you off. Our
poor Nationals, not one of them here, have three hundred fusils but then
no powder; besides one is not sure, only morally-certain. Drouet, as an
adroit Old-Dragoon of Conde does what is advisablest: privily bespeaks
Clerk Guillaume, Old-Dragoon of Conde he too; privily, while Clerk
Guillaume is saddling two of the fleetest horses, slips over to the
Townhall to whisper a word; then mounts with Clerk Guillaume; and the
two bound eastward in pursuit, to see what can be done.
They bound eastward, in sharp trot; their moral-certainty
permeating the Village, from the Townhall outwards, in busy whispers.
Alas! Captain Dandoins orders his Dragoons to mount; but they,
complaining of long fast, demand bread-and-cheese first;—before which
brief repast can be eaten, the whole Village is permeated; not
whispering now, but blustering and shrieking! National Volunteers, in
hurried muster, shriek for gunpowder; Dragoons halt between Patriotism
and Rule of the Service, between bread and cheese and fixed bayonets:
Dandoins hands secretly his Pocket-book, with its secret despatches, to
the rigorous Quartermaster: the very Ostlers have stable-forks and
flails. The rigorous Quartermaster, half-saddled, cuts out his way with
the sword's edge, amid levelled bayonets, amid Patriot vociferations,
adjurations, flail-strokes; and rides frantic; (Declaration de La
Gache in Choiseul, p. 134.)—few or even none following him; the
rest, so sweetly constrained consenting to stay there.
And thus the new Berline rolls; and Drouet and Guillaume
gallop after it, and Dandoins's Troopers or Trooper gallops after them;
and Sainte-Menehould, with some leagues of the King's Highway, is in
explosion;—and your Military thunder-chain has gone off in a
self-destructive manner; one may fear with the frightfullest issues!
Chapter 7.
The Night of Spurs.
This comes of mysterious Escorts, and a new Berline with
eleven horses: 'he that has a secret should not only hide it, but hide
that he has it to hide.' Your first Military Escort has exploded
self-destructive; and all Military Escorts, and a suspicious Country
will now be up, explosive; comparable not to victorious thunder.
Comparable, say rather, to the first stirring of an Alpine Avalanche;
which, once stir it, as here at Sainte-Menehould, will spread,—all
round, and on and on, as far as Stenai; thundering with wild ruin, till
Patriot Villagers, Peasantry, Military Escorts, new Berline and Royalty
are down,—jumbling in the Abyss!
The thick shades of Night are falling. Postillions crack
the whip: the Royal Berline is through Clermont, where Colonel Comte de
Damas got a word whispered to it; is safe through, towards Varennes;
rushing at the rate of double drink-money: an Unknown 'Inconnu on
horseback' shrieks earnestly some hoarse whisper, not audible, into the
rushing Carriage-window, and vanishes, left in the night. (Campan,
ii. 159.) August Travellers palpitate; nevertheless overwearied
Nature sinks every one of them into a kind of sleep. Alas, and Drouet
and Clerk Guillaume spur; taking side-roads, for shortness, for safety;
scattering abroad that moral-certainty of theirs; which flies, a bird of
the air carrying it!
And your rigorous Quartermaster spurs; awakening hoarse
trumpet-tone, as here at Clermont, calling out Dragoons gone to bed.
Brave Colonel de Damas has them mounted, in part, these Clermont men;
young Cornet Remy dashes off with a few. But the Patriot Magistracy is
out here at Clermont too; National Guards shrieking for ball-cartridges;
and the Village 'illuminates itself;'—deft Patriots springing out of
bed; alertly, in shirt or shift, striking a light; sticking up each his
farthing candle, or penurious oil-cruise, till all glitters and
glimmers; so deft are they! A camisado, or shirt-tumult, every where:
stormbell set a-ringing; village-drum beating furious generale, as here
at Clermont, under illumination; distracted Patriots pleading and
menacing! Brave young Colonel de Damas, in that uproar of distracted
Patriotism, speaks some fire-sentences to what Troopers he has:
"Comrades insulted at Sainte-Menehould; King and Country calling on the
brave;" then gives the fire-word, Draw swords. Whereupon, alas, the
Troopers only smite their sword-handles, driving them further home! "To
me, whoever is for the King!" cries Damas in despair; and gallops, he
with some poor loyal Two, of the subaltern sort, into the bosom of the
Night. (Proces-verbal du Directoire de Clermont in Choiseul, p.
189-95.)
Night unexampled in the Clermontais; shortest of the
year; remarkablest of the century: Night deserving to be named of Spurs!
Cornet Remy, and those Few he dashed off with, has missed his road; is
galloping for hours towards Verdun; then, for hours, across hedged
country, through roused hamlets, towards Varennes. Unlucky Cornet Remy;
unluckier Colonel Damas, with whom there ride desperate only some loyal
Two! More ride not of that Clermont Escort: of other Escorts, in other
Villages, not even Two may ride; but only all curvet and prance,—impeded
by stormbell and your Village illuminating itself.
And Drouet rides and Clerk Guillaume; and the Country
runs.—Goguelat and Duke Choiseul are plunging through morasses, over
cliffs, over stock and stone, in the shaggy woods of the Clermontais; by
tracks; or trackless, with guides; Hussars tumbling into pitfalls, and
lying 'swooned three quarters of an hour,' the rest refusing to march
without them. What an evening-ride from Pont-de-Sommerville; what a
thirty hours, since Choiseul quitted Paris, with Queen's-valet Leonard
in the chaise by him! Black Care sits behind the rider. Thus go they
plunging; rustle the owlet from his branchy nest; champ the
sweet-scented forest-herb, queen-of-the-meadows spilling her spikenard;
and frighten the ear of Night. But hark! towards twelve o'clock, as one
guesses, for the very stars are gone out: sound of the tocsin from
Varennes? Checking bridle, the Hussar Officer listens: "Some fire
undoubtedly!"—yet rides on, with double breathlessness, to verify.
Yes, gallant friends that do your utmost, it is a certain
sort of fire: difficult to quench.—The Korff Berline, fairly ahead of
all this riding Avalanche, reached the little paltry Village of Varennes
about eleven o'clock; hopeful, in spite of that horse-whispering
Unknown. Do not all towns now lie behind us; Verdun avoided, on our
right? Within wind of Bouille himself, in a manner; and the darkest of
midsummer nights favouring us! And so we halt on the hill-top at the
South end of the Village; expecting our relay; which young Bouille,
Bouille's own son, with his Escort of Hussars, was to have ready; for in
this Village is no Post. Distracting to think of: neither horse nor
Hussar is here! Ah, and stout horses, a proper relay belonging to Duke
Choiseul, do stand at hay, but in the Upper Village over the Bridge; and
we know not of them. Hussars likewise do wait, but drinking in the
taverns. For indeed it is six hours beyond the time; young Bouille,
silly stripling, thinking the matter over for this night, has retired to
bed. And so our yellow Couriers, inexperienced, must rove, groping,
bungling, through a Village mostly asleep: Postillions will not, for any
money, go on with the tired horses; not at least without refreshment;
not they, let the Valet in round hat argue as he likes.
Miserable! 'For five-and-thirty minutes' by the King's
watch, the Berline is at a dead stand; Round-hat arguing with
Churnboots; tired horses slobbering their meal-and-water; yellow
Couriers groping, bungling;—young Bouille asleep, all the while, in the
Upper Village, and Choiseul's fine team standing there at hay. No help
for it; not with a King's ransom: the horses deliberately slobber,
Round-hat argues, Bouille sleeps. And mark now, in the thick night, do
not two Horsemen, with jaded trot, come clank-clanking; and start with
half-pause, if one noticed them, at sight of this dim mass of a Berline,
and its dull slobbering and arguing; then prick off faster, into the
Village? It is Drouet, he and Clerk Guillaume! Still ahead, they two, of
the whole riding hurlyburly; unshot, though some brag of having chased
them. Perilous is Drouet's errand also; but he is an Old-Dragoon, with
his wits shaken thoroughly awake.
The Village of Varennes lies dark and slumberous; a most
unlevel Village, of inverse saddle-shape, as men write. It sleeps; the
rushing of the River Aire singing lullaby to it. Nevertheless from the
Golden Arms, Bras d'Or Tavern, across that sloping marketplace, there
still comes shine of social light; comes voice of rude drovers, or the
like, who have not yet taken the stirrup-cup; Boniface Le Blanc, in
white apron, serving them: cheerful to behold. To this Bras d'Or, Drouet
enters, alacrity looking through his eyes: he nudges Boniface, in all
privacy, "Camarade, es tu bon Patriote, Art thou a good Patriot?"—"Si je
suis!" answers Boniface.—"In that case," eagerly whispers Drouet—what
whisper is needful, heard of Boniface alone. (Deux Amis, vi. 139-78.)
And now see Boniface Le Blanc bustling, as he never did
for the jolliest toper. See Drouet and Guillaume, dexterous
Old-Dragoons, instantly down blocking the Bridge, with a 'furniture
waggon they find there,' with whatever waggons, tumbrils, barrels,
barrows their hands can lay hold of;—till no carriage can pass. Then
swiftly, the Bridge once blocked, see them take station hard by, under
Varennes Archway: joined by Le Blanc, Le Blanc's Brother, and one or two
alert Patriots he has roused. Some half-dozen in all, with National
Muskets, they stand close, waiting under the Archway, till that same
Korff Berline rumble up.
It rumbles up: Alte la! lanterns flash out from under
coat-skirts, bridles chuck in strong fists, two National Muskets level
themselves fore and aft through the two Coach-doors: "Mesdames, your
Passports?"—Alas! Alas! Sieur Sausse, Procureur of the Township,
Tallow-chandler also and Grocer is there, with official
grocer-politeness; Drouet with fierce logic and ready wit:—The respected
Travelling Party, be it Baroness de Korff's, or persons of still higher
consequence, will perhaps please to rest itself in M. Sausse's till the
dawn strike up!
O Louis; O hapless Marie-Antoinette, fated to pass thy
life with such men! Phlegmatic Louis, art thou but lazy semi-animate
phlegm then, to the centre of thee? King, Captain-General, Sovereign
Frank! If thy heart ever formed, since it began beating under the name
of heart, any resolution at all, be it now then, or never in this world:
"Violent nocturnal individuals, and if it were persons of high
consequence? And if it were the King himself? Has the King not the
power, which all beggars have, of travelling unmolested on his own
Highway? Yes: it is the King; and tremble ye to know it! The King has
said, in this one small matter; and in France, or under God's Throne, is
no power that shall gainsay. Not the King shall ye stop here under this
your miserable Archway; but his dead body only, and answer it to Heaven
and Earth. To me, Bodyguards: Postillions, en avant!"—One fancies in
that case the pale paralysis of these two Le Blanc musketeers; the
drooping of Drouet's under-jaw; and how Procureur Sausse had melted like
tallow in furnace-heat: Louis faring on; in some few steps awakening
Young Bouille, awakening relays and hussars: triumphant entry, with
cavalcading high-brandishing Escort, and Escorts, into Montmedi; and the
whole course of French History different!
Alas, it was not in the poor phlegmatic man. Had it been
in him, French History had never come under this Varennes Archway to
decide itself.—He steps out; all step out. Procureur Sausse gives his
grocer-arms to the Queen and Sister Elizabeth; Majesty taking the two
children by the hand. And thus they walk, coolly back, over the
Marketplace, to Procureur Sausse's; mount into his small upper story;
where straightway his Majesty 'demands refreshments.' Demands
refreshments, as is written; gets bread-and-cheese with a bottle of
Burgundy; and remarks, that it is the best Burgundy he ever drank!
Meanwhile, the Varennes Notables, and all men, official,
and non-official, are hastily drawing on their breeches; getting their
fighting-gear. Mortals half-dressed tumble out barrels, lay felled
trees; scouts dart off to all the four winds,—the tocsin begins
clanging, 'the Village illuminates itself.' Very singular: how these
little Villages do manage, so adroit are they, when startled in midnight
alarm of war. Like little adroit municipal rattle-snakes, suddenly
awakened: for their stormbell rattles and rings; their eyes glisten
luminous (with tallow-light), as in rattle-snake ire; and the
Village will sting! Old-Dragoon Drouet is our engineer and
generalissimo; valiant as a Ruy Diaz:—Now or never, ye Patriots, for the
Soldiery is coming; massacre by Austrians, by Aristocrats, wars more
than civil, it all depends on you and the hour!—National Guards rank
themselves, half-buttoned: mortals, we say, still only in breeches, in
under-petticoat, tumble out barrels and lumber, lay felled trees for
barricades: the Village will sting. Rabid Democracy, it would seem, is
not confined to Paris, then? Ah no, whatsoever Courtiers might talk; too
clearly no. This of dying for one's King is grown into a dying for one's
self, against the King, if need be.
And so our riding and running Avalanche and Hurlyburly
has reached the Abyss, Korff Berline foremost; and may pour itself
thither, and jumble: endless! For the next six hours, need we ask if
there was a clattering far and wide? Clattering and tocsining and hot
tumult, over all the Clermontais, spreading through the Three
Bishopricks: Dragoon and Hussar Troops galloping on roads and no-roads;
National Guards arming and starting in the dead of night; tocsin after
tocsin transmitting the alarm. In some forty minutes, Goguelat and
Choiseul, with their wearied Hussars, reach Varennes. Ah, it is no fire
then; or a fire difficult to quench! They leap the tree-barricades, in
spite of National serjeant; they enter the village, Choiseul instructing
his Troopers how the matter really is; who respond interjectionally, in
their guttural dialect, "Der Konig; die Koniginn!" and seem stanch.
These now, in their stanch humour, will, for one thing, beset Procureur
Sausse's house. Most beneficial: had not Drouet stormfully ordered
otherwise; and even bellowed, in his extremity, "Cannoneers to your
guns!"—two old honey-combed Field-pieces, empty of all but cobwebs; the
rattle whereof, as the Cannoneers with assured countenance trundled them
up, did nevertheless abate the Hussar ardour, and produce a
respectfuller ranking further back. Jugs of wine, handed over the ranks,
for the German throat too has sensibility, will complete the business.
When Engineer Goguelat, some hour or so afterwards, steps forth, the
response to him is—a hiccuping Vive la Nation!
What boots it? Goguelat, Choiseul, now also Count Damas,
and all the Varennes Officiality are with the King; and the King can
give no order, form no opinion; but sits there, as he has ever done,
like clay on potter's wheel; perhaps the absurdest of all pitiable and
pardonable clay-figures that now circle under the Moon. He will go on,
next morning, and take the National Guard with him; Sausse permitting!
Hapless Queen: with her two children laid there on the mean bed, old
Mother Sausse kneeling to Heaven, with tears and an audible prayer, to
bless them; imperial Marie-Antoinette near kneeling to Son Sausse and
Wife Sausse, amid candle-boxes and treacle-barrels,—in vain! There are
Three-thousand National Guards got in; before long they will count
Ten-thousand; tocsins spreading like fire on dry heath, or far faster.
Young Bouille, roused by this Varennes tocsin, has taken
horse, and—fled towards his Father. Thitherward also rides, in an almost
hysterically desperate manner, a certain Sieur Aubriot, Choiseul's
Orderly; swimming dark rivers, our Bridge being blocked; spurring as if
the Hell-hunt were at his heels. (Rapport de M. Aubriot Choiseul, p.
150-7.) Through the village of Dun, he, galloping still on, scatters
the alarm; at Dun, brave Captain Deslons and his Escort of a Hundred,
saddle and ride. Deslons too gets into Varennes; leaving his Hundred
outside, at the tree-barricade; offers to cut King Louis out, if he will
order it: but unfortunately "the work will prove hot;" whereupon King
Louis has "no orders to give." (Extrait d'un Rapport de M. Deslons,
Choiseul, p. 164-7.)
And so the tocsin clangs, and Dragoons gallop; and can do
nothing, having gallopped: National Guards stream in like the gathering
of ravens: your exploding Thunder-chain, falling Avalanche, or what else
we liken it to, does play, with a vengeance,—up now as far as Stenai and
Bouille himself. (Bouille, ii. 74-6.) Brave Bouille, son of the
whirlwind, he saddles Royal Allemand; speaks fire-words, kindling heart
and eyes; distributes twenty-five gold-louis a company:—Ride,
Royal-Allemand, long-famed: no Tuileries Charge and Necker-Orleans
Bust-Procession; a very King made captive, and world all to win!—Such is
the Night deserving to be named of Spurs.
At six o'clock two things have happened. Lafayette's
Aide-de-camp, Romoeuf, riding a franc etrier, on that old
Herb-merchant's route, quickened during the last stages, has got to
Varennes; where the Ten thousand now furiously demand, with fury of
panic terror, that Royalty shall forthwith return Paris-ward, that there
be not infinite bloodshed. Also, on the other side, 'English Tom,'
Choiseul's jokei, flying with that Choiseul relay, has met Bouille on
the heights of Dun; the adamantine brow flushed with dark thunder;
thunderous rattle of Royal Allemand at his heels. English Tom answers as
he can the brief question, How it is at Varennes?—then asks in turn what
he, English Tom, with M. de Choiseul's horses, is to do, and whither to
ride?—To the Bottomless Pool! answers a thunder-voice; then again
speaking and spurring, orders Royal Allemand to the gallop; and
vanishes, swearing (en jurant). (Declaration du Sieur Thomas
in Choiseul, p. 188.) 'Tis the last of our brave Bouille. Within
sight of Varennes, he having drawn bridle, calls a council of officers;
finds that it is in vain. King Louis has departed, consenting: amid the
clangour of universal stormbell; amid the tramp of Ten thousand armed
men, already arrived; and say, of Sixty thousand flocking thither. Brave
Deslons, even without 'orders,' darted at the River Aire with his
Hundred! (Weber, ii. 386.) swam one branch of it, could not the
other; and stood there, dripping and panting, with inflated nostril; the
Ten thousand answering him with a shout of mockery, the new Berline
lumbering Paris-ward its weary inevitable way. No help, then in Earth;
nor in an age, not of miracles, in Heaven!
That night, 'Marquis de Bouille and twenty-one more of us
rode over the Frontiers; the Bernardine monks at Orval in Luxemburg gave
us supper and lodging.' (Aubriot, ut supra, p. 158.) With little
of speech, Bouille rides; with thoughts that do not brook speech.
Northward, towards uncertainty, and the Cimmerian Night: towards
West-Indian Isles, for with thin Emigrant delirium the son of the
whirlwind cannot act; towards England, towards premature Stoical death;
not towards France any more. Honour to the Brave; who, be it in this
quarrel or in that, is a substance and articulate-speaking piece of
Human Valour, not a fanfaronading hollow Spectrum and squeaking and
gibbering Shadow! One of the few Royalist Chief-actors this Bouille, of
whom so much can be said.
The brave Bouille too, then, vanishes from the tissue of
our Story. Story and tissue, faint ineffectual Emblem of that grand
Miraculous Tissue, and Living Tapestry named French Revolution, which
did weave itself then in very fact, 'on the loud-sounding 'LOOM OF
TIME!' The old Brave drop out from it, with their strivings; and new
acrid Drouets, of new strivings and colour, come in:—as is the manner of
that weaving.
So then our grand Royalist Plot, of Flight to Metz, has
executed itself. Long hovering in the background, as a dread royal
ultimatum, it has rushed forward in its terrors: verily to some purpose.
How many Royalist Plots and Projects, one after another,
cunningly-devised, that were to explode like powder-mines and
thunderclaps; not one solitary Plot of which has issued otherwise!
Powder-mine of a Seance Royale on the Twenty-third of June 1789, which
exploded as we then said, 'through the touchhole;' which next, your
wargod Broglie having reloaded it, brought a Bastille about your ears.
Then came fervent Opera-Repast, with flourishing of sabres, and O
Richard, O my King; which, aided by Hunger, produces Insurrection of
Women, and Pallas Athene in the shape of Demoiselle Theroigne. Valour
profits not; neither has fortune smiled on Fanfaronade. The Bouille
Armament ends as the Broglie one had done. Man after man spends himself
in this cause, only to work it quicker ruin; it seems a cause doomed,
forsaken of Earth and Heaven.
On the Sixth of October gone a year, King Louis, escorted
by Demoiselle Theroigne and some two hundred thousand, made a Royal
Progress and Entrance into Paris, such as man had never witnessed: we
prophesied him Two more such; and accordingly another of them, after
this Flight to Metz, is now coming to pass. Theroigne will not escort
here, neither does Mirabeau now 'sit in one of the accompanying
carriages.' Mirabeau lies dead, in the Pantheon of Great Men. Theroigne
lies living, in dark Austrian Prison; having gone to Liege,
professionally, and been seized there. Bemurmured now by the
hoarse-flowing Danube; the light of her Patriot Supper-Parties gone
quite out; so lies Theroigne: she shall speak with the Kaiser face to
face, and return. And France lies how! Fleeting Time shears down the
great and the little; and in two years alters many things.
But at all events, here, we say, is a second Ignominious
Royal Procession, though much altered; to be witnessed also by its
hundreds of thousands. Patience, ye Paris Patriots; the Royal Berline is
returning. Not till Saturday: for the Royal Berline travels by slow
stages; amid such loud-voiced confluent sea of National Guards, sixty
thousand as they count; amid such tumult of all people. Three
National-Assembly Commissioners, famed Barnave, famed Petion,
generally-respectable Latour-Maubourg, have gone to meet it; of whom the
two former ride in the Berline itself beside Majesty, day after day.
Latour, as a mere respectability, and man of whom all men speak well,
can ride in the rear, with Dame Tourzel and the Soubrettes.
So on Saturday evening, about seven o'clock, Paris by
hundreds of thousands is again drawn up: not now dancing the tricolor
joy-dance of hope; nor as yet dancing in fury-dance of hate and revenge;
but in silence, with vague look of conjecture and curiosity mostly
scientific. A Sainte-Antoine Placard has given notice this morning that
'whosoever insults Louis shall be caned, whosoever applauds him shall be
hanged.' Behold then, at last, that wonderful New Berline; encircled by
blue National sea with fixed bayonets, which flows slowly, floating it
on, through the silent assembled hundreds of thousands. Three yellow
Couriers sit atop bound with ropes; Petion, Barnave, their Majesties,
with Sister Elizabeth, and the Children of France, are within.
Smile of embarrassment, or cloud of dull sourness, is on
the broad phlegmatic face of his Majesty: who keeps declaring to the
successive Official-persons, what is evident, "Eh bien, me voila, Well,
here you have me;" and what is not evident, "I do assure you I did not
mean to pass the frontiers;" and so forth: speeches natural for that
poor Royal man; which Decency would veil. Silent is her Majesty, with a
look of grief and scorn; natural for that Royal Woman. Thus lumbers and
creeps the ignominious Royal Procession, through many streets, amid a
silent-gazing people: comparable, Mercier thinks, (Nouveau Paris,
iii. 22.) to some Procession de Roi de Bazoche; or say, Procession
of King Crispin, with his Dukes of Sutor-mania and royal blazonry of
Cordwainery. Except indeed that this is not comic; ah no, it is
comico-tragic; with bound Couriers, and a Doom hanging over it; most
fantastic, yet most miserably real. Miserablest flebile ludibrium of a
Pickleherring Tragedy! It sweeps along there, in most ungorgeous pall,
through many streets, in the dusty summer evening; gets itself at length
wriggled out of sight; vanishing in the Tuileries Palace—towards its
doom, of slow torture, peine forte et dure.
Populace, it is true, seizes the three rope-bound yellow
Couriers; will at least massacre them. But our august Assembly, which is
sitting at this great moment, sends out Deputation of rescue; and the
whole is got huddled up. Barnave, 'all dusty,' is already there, in the
National Hall; making brief discreet address and report. As indeed,
through the whole journey, this Barnave has been most discreet,
sympathetic; and has gained the Queen's trust, whose noble instinct
teaches her always who is to be trusted. Very different from heavy
Petion; who, if Campan speak truth, ate his luncheon, comfortably filled
his wine-glass, in the Royal Berline; flung out his chicken-bones past
the nose of Royalty itself; and, on the King's saying "France cannot be
a Republic," answered "No, it is not ripe yet." Barnave is henceforth a
Queen's adviser, if advice could profit: and her Majesty astonishes Dame
Campan by signifying almost a regard for Barnave: and that, in a day of
retribution and Royal triumph, Barnave shall not be executed. (Campan,
ii. c. 18.)
On Monday night Royalty went; on Saturday evening it
returns: so much, within one short week, has Royalty accomplished for
itself. The Pickleherring Tragedy has vanished in the Tuileries Palace,
towards 'pain strong and hard.' Watched, fettered, and humbled, as
Royalty never was. Watched even in its sleeping-apartments and inmost
recesses: for it has to sleep with door set ajar, blue National Argus
watching, his eye fixed on the Queen's curtains; nay, on one occasion,
as the Queen cannot sleep, he offers to sit by her pillow, and converse
a little! (Ibid. ii. 149.)
In regard to all which, this most pressing question
arises: What is to be done with it? "Depose it!" resolutely answer
Robespierre and the thoroughgoing few. For truly, with a King who runs
away, and needs to be watched in his very bedroom that he may stay and
govern you, what other reasonable thing can be done? Had Philippe
d'Orleans not been a caput mortuum! But of him, known as one defunct, no
man now dreams. "Depose it not; say that it is inviolable, that it was
spirited away, was enleve; at any cost of sophistry and solecism,
reestablish it!" so answer with loud vehemence all manner of
Constitutional Royalists; as all your Pure Royalists do naturally
likewise, with low vehemence, and rage compressed by fear, still more
passionately answer. Nay Barnave and the two Lameths, and what will
follow them, do likewise answer so. Answer, with their whole might:
terror-struck at the unknown Abysses on the verge of which, driven
thither by themselves mainly, all now reels, ready to plunge.
By mighty effort and combination this latter course, of
reestablish it, is the course fixed on; and it shall by the strong arm,
if not by the clearest logic, be made good. With the sacrifice of all
their hard-earned popularity, this notable Triumvirate, says Toulongeon,
'set the Throne up again, which they had so toiled to overturn: as one
might set up an overturned pyramid, on its vertex; to stand so long as
it is held.'
Unhappy France; unhappy in King, Queen, and Constitution;
one knows not in which unhappiest! Was the meaning of our so glorious
French Revolution this, and no other, That when Shams and Delusions,
long soul-killing, had become body-killing, and got the length of
Bankruptcy and Inanition, a great People rose and, with one voice, said,
in the Name of the Highest: Shams shall be no more? So many sorrows and
bloody horrors, endured, and to be yet endured through dismal coming
centuries, were they not the heavy price paid and payable for this same:
Total Destruction of Shams from among men? And now, O Barnave
Triumvirate! is it in such double-distilled Delusion, and Sham even of a
Sham, that an Effort of this kind will rest acquiescent? Messieurs of
the popular Triumvirate: Never! But, after all, what can poor popular
Triumvirates and fallible august Senators do? They can, when the Truth
is all too-horrible, stick their heads ostrich-like into what sheltering
Fallacy is nearest: and wait there, a posteriori!
Readers who saw the Clermontais and Three-Bishopricks
gallop, in the Night of Spurs; Diligences ruffling up all France into
one terrific terrified Cock of India; and the Town of Nantes in its
shirt,—may fancy what an affair to settle this was. Robespierre, on the
extreme Left, with perhaps Petion and lean old Goupil, for the very
Triumvirate has defalcated, are shrieking hoarse; drowned in
Constitutional clamour. But the debate and arguing of a whole Nation;
the bellowings through all Journals, for and against; the reverberant
voice of Danton; the Hyperion-shafts of Camille; the porcupine-quills of
implacable Marat:—conceive all this.
Constitutionalists in a body, as we often predicted, do
now recede from the Mother Society, and become Feuillans; threatening
her with inanition, the rank and respectability being mostly gone.
Petition after Petition, forwarded by Post, or borne in Deputation,
comes praying for Judgment and Decheance, which is our name for
Deposition; praying, at lowest, for Reference to the Eighty-three
Departments of France. Hot Marseillese Deputation comes declaring, among
other things: "Our Phocean Ancestors flung a Bar of Iron into the Bay at
their first landing; this Bar will float again on the Mediterranean
brine before we consent to be slaves." All this for four weeks or more,
while the matter still hangs doubtful; Emigration streaming with double
violence over the frontiers; (Bouille, ii. 101.) France seething
in fierce agitation of this question and prize-question: What is to be
done with the fugitive Hereditary Representative?
Finally, on Friday the 15th of July 1791, the National
Assembly decides; in what negatory manner we know. Whereupon the
Theatres all close, the Bourne-stones and Portable-chairs begin
spouting, Municipal Placards flaming on the walls, and Proclamations
published by sound of trumpet, 'invite to repose;' with small effect.
And so, on Sunday the 17th, there shall be a thing seen, worthy of
remembering. Scroll of a Petition, drawn up by Brissots, Dantons, by
Cordeliers, Jacobins; for the thing was infinitely shaken and
manipulated, and many had a hand in it: such Scroll lies now visible, on
the wooden framework of the Fatherland's Altar, for signature. Unworking
Paris, male and female, is crowding thither, all day, to sign or to see.
Our fair Roland herself the eye of History can discern there, 'in the
morning;' (Madame Roland, ii. 74.) not without interest. In few
weeks the fair Patriot will quit Paris; yet perhaps only to return.
But, what with sorrow of baulked Patriotism, what with
closed theatres, and Proclamations still publishing themselves by sound
of trumpet, the fervour of men's minds, this day, is great. Nay, over
and above, there has fallen out an incident, of the nature of
Farce-Tragedy and Riddle; enough to stimulate all creatures. Early in
the day, a Patriot (or some say, it was a Patriotess, and indeed
Truth is undiscoverable), while standing on the firm deal-board of
Fatherland's Altar, feels suddenly, with indescribable torpedo-shock of
amazement, his bootsole pricked through from below; he clutches up
suddenly this electrified bootsole and foot; discerns next instant—the
point of a gimlet or brad-awl playing up, through the firm deal-board,
and now hastily drawing itself back! Mystery, perhaps Treason? The
wooden frame-work is impetuously broken up; and behold, verily a
mystery; never explicable fully to the end of the world! Two human
individuals, of mean aspect, one of them with a wooden leg, lie
ensconced there, gimlet in hand: they must have come in overnight; they
have a supply of provisions,—no 'barrel of gunpowder' that one can see;
they affect to be asleep; look blank enough, and give the lamest account
of themselves. "Mere curiosity; they were boring up to get an eye-hole;
to see, perhaps 'with lubricity,' whatsoever, from that new point of
vision, could be seen:"—little that was edifying, one would think! But
indeed what stupidest thing may not human Dulness, Pruriency, Lubricity,
Chance and the Devil, choosing Two out of Half-a-million idle human
heads, tempt them to? (Hist. Parl. xi. 104-7.)
Sure enough, the two human individuals with their gimlet
are there. Ill-starred pair of individuals! For the result of it all is
that Patriotism, fretting itself, in this state of nervous excitability,
with hypotheses, suspicions and reports, keeps questioning these two
distracted human individuals, and again questioning them; claps them
into the nearest Guardhouse, clutches them out again; one hypothetic
group snatching them from another: till finally, in such extreme state
of nervous excitability, Patriotism hangs them as spies of Sieur Motier;
and the life and secret is choked out of them forevermore. Forevermore,
alas! Or is a day to be looked for when these two evidently mean
individuals, who are human nevertheless, will become Historical Riddles;
and, like him of the Iron Mask (also a human individual, and
evidently nothing more),—have their Dissertations? To us this only
is certain, that they had a gimlet, provisions and a wooden leg; and
have died there on the Lanterne, as the unluckiest fools might die.
And so the signature goes on, in a still more excited
manner. And Chaumette, for Antiquarians possess the very Paper to this
hour, (Ibid. xi. 113, &c.)—has signed himself 'in a flowing saucy
hand slightly leaned;' and Hebert, detestable Pere Duchene, as if 'an
inked spider had dropped on the paper;' Usher Maillard also has signed,
and many Crosses, which cannot write. And Paris, through its thousand
avenues, is welling to the Champ-de-Mars and from it, in the utmost
excitability of humour; central Fatherland's Altar quite heaped with
signing Patriots and Patriotesses; the Thirty-benches and whole internal
Space crowded with onlookers, with comers and goers; one regurgitating
whirlpool of men and women in their Sunday clothes. All which a
Constitutional Sieur Motier sees; and Bailly, looking into it with his
long visage made still longer. Auguring no good; perhaps Decheance and
Deposition after all! Stop it, ye Constitutional Patriots; fire itself
is quenchable, yet only quenchable at first!
Stop it, truly: but how stop it? Have not the first Free
People of the Universe a right to petition?—Happily, if also unhappily,
here is one proof of riot: these two human individuals, hanged at the
Lanterne. Proof, O treacherous Sieur Motier? Were they not two human
individuals sent thither by thee to be hanged; to be a pretext for thy
bloody Drapeau Rouge? This question shall many a Patriot, one day, ask;
and answer affirmatively, strong in Preternatural Suspicion.
Enough, towards half past seven in the evening, the mere
natural eye can behold this thing: Sieur Motier, with Municipals in
scarf, with blue National Patrollotism, rank after rank, to the clang of
drums; wending resolutely to the Champ-de-Mars; Mayor Bailly, with
elongated visage, bearing, as in sad duty bound, the Drapeau Rouge! Howl
of angry derision rises in treble and bass from a hundred thousand
throats, at the sight of Martial Law; which nevertheless waving its Red
sanguinary Flag, advances there, from the Gros-Caillou Entrance;
advances, drumming and waving, towards Altar of Fatherland. Amid still
wilder howls, with objurgation, obtestation; with flights of pebbles and
mud, saxa et faeces; with crackle of a pistol-shot;—finally with
volley-fire of Patrollotism; levelled muskets; roll of volley on volley!
Precisely after one year and three days, our sublime Federation Field is
wetted, in this manner, with French blood.
Some 'Twelve unfortunately shot,' reports Bailly,
counting by units; but Patriotism counts by tens and even by hundreds.
Not to be forgotten, nor forgiven! Patriotism flies, shrieking,
execrating. Camille ceases Journalising, this day; great Danton with
Camille and Freron have taken wing, for their life; Marat burrows deep
in the Earth, and is silent. Once more Patrollotism has triumphed: one
other time; but it is the last.
This was the Royal Flight to Varennes. Thus was the
Throne overturned thereby; but thus also was it victoriously set up
again—on its vertex; and will stand while it can be held.
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