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THE FRENCH REVOLUTION: A HISTORY |
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BOOK V. PARLIAMENT FIRST Chapter 1. Grande Acceptation. In the last nights of September, when the autumnal equinox is past, and grey September fades into brown October, why are the Champs Elysees illuminated; why is Paris dancing, and flinging fire-works? They are gala-nights, these last of September; Paris may well dance, and the Universe: the Edifice of the Constitution is completed! Completed; nay revised, to see that there was nothing insufficient in it; solemnly proferred to his Majesty; solemnly accepted by him, to the sound of cannon-salvoes, on the fourteenth of the month. And now by such illumination, jubilee, dancing and fire-working, do we joyously handsel the new Social Edifice, and first raise heat and reek there, in the name of Hope.
The Revision, especially with a throne standing on its
vertex, has been a work of difficulty, of delicacy. In the way of
propping and buttressing, so indispensable now, something could be done;
and yet, as is feared, not enough. A repentant Barnave Triumvirate, our
Rabauts, Duports, Thourets, and indeed all Constitutional Deputies did
strain every nerve: but the Extreme Left was so noisy; the People were
so suspicious, clamorous to have the work ended: and then the loyal
Right Side sat feeble petulant all the while, and as it were, pouting
and petting; unable to help, had they even been willing; the two Hundred
and Ninety had solemnly made scission, before that: and departed,
shaking the dust off their feet. To such transcendency of fret, and
desperate hope that worsening of the bad might the sooner end it and
bring back the good, had our unfortunate loyal Right Side now come! (Toulongeon,
ii. 56, 59.)
However, one finds that this and the other little prop
has been added, where possibility allowed. Civil-list and Privy-purse
were from of old well cared for. King's Constitutional Guard, Eighteen
hundred loyal men from the Eighty-three Departments, under a loyal Duke
de Brissac; this, with trustworthy Swiss besides, is of itself
something. The old loyal Bodyguards are indeed dissolved, in name as
well as in fact; and gone mostly towards Coblentz. But now also those
Sansculottic violent Gardes Francaises, or Centre Grenadiers, shall have
their mittimus: they do ere long, in the Journals, not without a hoarse
pathos, publish their Farewell; 'wishing all Aristocrats the graves in
Paris which to us are denied.' (Hist. Parl. xiii. 73.) They
depart, these first Soldiers of the Revolution; they hover very dimly in
the distance for about another year; till they can be remodelled,
new-named, and sent to fight the Austrians; and then History beholds
them no more. A most notable Corps of men; which has its place in
World-History;—though to us, so is History written, they remain mere
rubrics of men; nameless; a shaggy Grenadier Mass, crossed with
buff-belts. And yet might we not ask: What Argonauts, what Leonidas'
Spartans had done such a work? Think of their destiny: since that May
morning, some three years ago, when they, unparticipating, trundled off
d'Espremenil to the Calypso Isles; since that July evening, some two
years ago, when they, participating and sacreing with knit brows, poured
a volley into Besenval's Prince de Lambesc! History waves them her mute
adieu.
So that the Sovereign Power, these Sansculottic
Watchdogs, more like wolves, being leashed and led away from his
Tuileries, breathes freer. The Sovereign Power is guarded henceforth by
a loyal Eighteen hundred,—whom Contrivance, under various pretexts, may
gradually swell to Six thousand; who will hinder no Journey to
Saint-Cloud. The sad Varennes business has been soldered up; cemented,
even in the blood of the Champ-de-Mars, these two months and more; and
indeed ever since, as formerly, Majesty has had its privileges, its
'choice of residence,' though, for good reasons, the royal mind 'prefers
continuing in Paris.' Poor royal mind, poor Paris; that have to go
mumming; enveloped in speciosities, in falsehood which knows itself
false; and to enact mutually your sorrowful farce-tragedy, being bound
to it; and on the whole, to hope always, in spite of hope!
Nay, now that his Majesty has accepted the Constitution,
to the sound of cannon-salvoes, who would not hope? Our good King was
misguided but he meant well. Lafayette has moved for an Amnesty, for
universal forgiving and forgetting of Revolutionary faults; and now
surely the glorious Revolution cleared of its rubbish, is complete!
Strange enough, and touching in several ways, the old cry of Vive le Roi
once more rises round King Louis the Hereditary Representative. Their
Majesties went to the Opera; gave money to the Poor: the Queen herself,
now when the Constitution is accepted, hears voice of cheering. Bygone
shall be bygone; the New Era shall begin! To and fro, amid those
lamp-galaxies of the Elysian Fields, the Royal Carriage slowly wends and
rolls; every where with vivats, from a multitude striving to be glad.
Louis looks out, mainly on the variegated lamps and gay human groups,
with satisfaction enough for the hour. In her Majesty's face, 'under
that kind graceful smile a deep sadness is legible.' (De Stael,
Considerations, i. c. 23.) Brilliancies, of valour and of wit,
stroll here observant: a Dame de Stael, leaning most probably on the arm
of her Narbonne. She meets Deputies; who have built this Constitution;
who saunter here with vague communings,—not without thoughts whether it
will stand. But as yet melodious fiddlestrings twang and warble every
where, with the rhythm of light fantastic feet; long lamp-galaxies fling
their coloured radiance; and brass-lunged Hawkers elbow and bawl,
"Grande Acceptation, Constitution Monarchique:" it behoves the Son of
Adam to hope. Have not Lafayette, Barnave, and all Constitutionalists
set their shoulders handsomely to the inverted pyramid of a throne?
Feuillans, including almost the whole Constitutional Respectability of
France, perorate nightly from their tribune; correspond through all
Post-offices; denouncing unquiet Jacobinism; trusting well that its time
is nigh done. Much is uncertain, questionable: but if the Hereditary
Representative be wise and lucky, may one not, with a sanguine Gaelic
temper, hope that he will get in motion better or worse; that what is
wanting to him will gradually be gained and added?
For the rest, as we must repeat, in this building of the
Constitutional Fabric, especially in this Revision of it, nothing that
one could think of to give it new strength, especially to steady it, to
give it permanence, and even eternity, has been forgotten. Biennial
Parliament, to be called Legislative, Assemblee Legislative; with Seven
Hundred and Forty-five Members, chosen in a judicious manner by the
'active citizens' alone, and even by electing of electors still more
active: this, with privileges of Parliament shall meet, self-authorized
if need be, and self-dissolved; shall grant money-supplies and talk;
watch over the administration and authorities; discharge for ever the
functions of a Constitutional Great Council, Collective Wisdom, and
National Palaver,—as the Heavens will enable. Our First biennial
Parliament, which indeed has been a-choosing since early in August, is
now as good as chosen. Nay it has mostly got to Paris: it arrived
gradually;—not without pathetic greeting to its venerable Parent, the
now moribund Constituent; and sat there in the Galleries, reverently
listening; ready to begin, the instant the ground were clear.
Then as to changes in the Constitution itself? This,
impossible for any Legislative, or common biennial Parliament, and
possible solely for some resuscitated Constituent or National
Convention,—is evidently one of the most ticklish points. The august
moribund Assembly debated it for four entire days. Some thought a
change, or at least reviewal and new approval, might be admissible in
thirty years; some even went lower, down to twenty, nay to fifteen. The
august Assembly had once decided for thirty years; but it revoked that,
on better thoughts; and did not fix any date of time, but merely some
vague outline of a posture of circumstances, and on the whole left the
matter hanging. (Choix de Rapports, &c. (Paris, 1825), vi.
239-317.) Doubtless a National Convention can be assembled even
within the thirty years: yet one may hope, not; but that Legislatives,
biennial Parliaments of the common kind, with their limited faculty, and
perhaps quiet successive additions thereto, may suffice, for
generations, or indeed while computed Time runs.
Furthermore, be it noted that no member of this
Constituent has been, or could be, elected to the new Legislative. So
noble-minded were these Law-makers! cry some: and Solon-like would
banish themselves. So splenetic! cry more: each grudging the other, none
daring to be outdone in self-denial by the other. So unwise in either
case! answer all practical men. But consider this other self-denying
ordinance, That none of us can be King's Minister, or accept the
smallest Court Appointment, for the space of four, or at lowest (and
on long debate and Revision), for the space of two years! So moves
the incorruptible seagreen Robespierre; with cheap magnanimity he; and
none dare be outdone by him. It was such a law, not so superfluous then,
that sent Mirabeau to the Gardens of Saint-Cloud, under cloak of
darkness, to that colloquy of the gods; and thwarted many things.
Happily and unhappily there is no Mirabeau now to thwart.
Welcomer meanwhile, welcome surely to all right hearts,
is Lafayette's chivalrous Amnesty. Welcome too is that hard-wrung Union
of Avignon; which has cost us, first and last, 'thirty sessions of
debate,' and so much else: may it at length prove lucky! Rousseau's
statue is decreed: virtuous Jean-Jacques, Evangelist of the Contrat
Social. Not Drouet of Varennes; nor worthy Lataille, master of the old
world-famous Tennis Court in Versailles, is forgotten; but each has his
honourable mention, and due reward in money. (Moniteur in Hist. Parl.
xi. 473.) Whereupon, things being all so neatly winded up, and the
Deputations, and Messages, and royal and other Ceremonials having
rustled by; and the King having now affectionately perorated about peace
and tranquilisation, and members having answered "Oui! oui!" with
effusion, even with tears,—President Thouret, he of the Law Reforms,
rises, and, with a strong voice, utters these memorable last-words: "The
National Constituent Assembly declares that it has finished its mission;
and that its sittings are all ended." Incorruptible Robespierre,
virtuous Petion are borne home on the shoulders of the people; with
vivats heaven-high. The rest glide quietly to their respective places of
abode. It is the last afternoon of September, 1791; on the morrow
morning the new Legislative will begin.
So, amid glitter of illuminated streets and Champs
Elysees, and crackle of fireworks and glad deray, has the first National
Assembly vanished; dissolving, as they well say, into blank Time; and is
no more. National Assembly is gone, its work remaining; as all Bodies of
men go, and as man himself goes: it had its beginning, and must likewise
have its end. A Phantasm-Reality born of Time, as the rest of us are;
flitting ever backwards now on the tide of Time: to be long remembered
of men. Very strange Assemblages, Sanhedrims, Amphictyonics, Trades
Unions, Ecumenic Councils, Parliaments and Congresses, have met together
on this Planet, and dispersed again; but a stranger Assemblage than this
august Constituent, or with a stranger mission, perhaps never met there.
Seen from the distance, this also will be a miracle. Twelve Hundred
human individuals, with the Gospel of Jean-Jacques Rousseau in their
pocket, congregating in the name of Twenty-five Millions, with full
assurance of faith, to 'make the Constitution:' such sight, the acme and
main product of the Eighteenth Century, our World can witness once only.
For Time is rich in wonders, in monstrosities most rich; and is observed
never to repeat himself, or any of his Gospels:—surely least of all,
this Gospel according to Jean-Jacques. Once it was right and
indispensable, since such had become the Belief of men; but once also is
enough.
They have made the Constitution, these Twelve Hundred
Jean-Jacques Evangelists; not without result. Near twenty-nine months
they sat, with various fortune; in various capacity;—always, we may say,
in that capacity of carborne Caroccio, and miraculous Standard of the
Revolt of Men, as a Thing high and lifted up; whereon whosoever looked
might hope healing. They have seen much: cannons levelled on them; then
suddenly, by interposition of the Powers, the cannons drawn back; and a
war-god Broglie vanishing, in thunder not his own, amid the dust and
downrushing of a Bastille and Old Feudal France. They have suffered
somewhat: Royal Session, with rain and Oath of the Tennis-Court; Nights
of Pentecost; Insurrections of Women. Also have they not done somewhat?
Made the Constitution, and managed all things the while; passed, in
these twenty-nine months, 'twenty-five hundred Decrees,' which on the
average is some three for each day, including Sundays! Brevity, one
finds, is possible, at times: had not Moreau de St. Mery to give three
thousand orders before rising from his seat?—There was valour (or
value) in these men; and a kind of faith,—were it only faith in
this, That cobwebs are not cloth; that a Constitution could be made.
Cobwebs and chimeras ought verily to disappear; for a Reality there is.
Let formulas, soul-killing, and now grown body-killing, insupportable,
begone, in the name of Heaven and Earth!—Time, as we say, brought forth
these Twelve Hundred; Eternity was before them, Eternity behind: they
worked, as we all do, in the confluence of Two Eternities; what work was
given them. Say not that it was nothing they did. Consciously they did
somewhat; unconsciously how much! They had their giants and their
dwarfs, they accomplished their good and their evil; they are gone, and
return no more. Shall they not go with our blessing, in these
circumstances; with our mild farewell?
By post, by diligence, on saddle or sole; they are gone:
towards the four winds! Not a few over the marches, to rank at Coblentz.
Thither wended Maury, among others; but in the end towards Rome,—to be
clothed there in red Cardinal plush; in falsehood as in a garment; pet
son (her last-born?) of the Scarlet Woman. Talleyrand-Perigord,
excommunicated Constitutional Bishop, will make his way to London; to be
Ambassador, spite of the Self-denying Law; brisk young Marquis Chauvelin
acting as Ambassador's-Cloak. In London too, one finds Petion the
virtuous; harangued and haranguing, pledging the wine-cup with
Constitutional Reform Clubs, in solemn tavern-dinner. Incorruptible
Robespierre retires for a little to native Arras: seven short weeks of
quiet; the last appointed him in this world. Public Accuser in the Paris
Department, acknowledged highpriest of the Jacobins; the glass of
incorruptible thin Patriotism, for his narrow emphasis is loved of all
the narrow,—this man seems to be rising, somewhither? He sells his small
heritage at Arras; accompanied by a Brother and a Sister, he returns,
scheming out with resolute timidity a small sure destiny for himself and
them, to his old lodging, at the Cabinet-maker's, in the Rue St.
Honore:—O resolute-tremulous incorruptible seagreen man, towards what a
destiny!
Lafayette, for his part, will lay down the command. He
retires Cincinnatus-like to his hearth and farm; but soon leaves them
again. Our National Guard, however, shall henceforth have no one
Commandant; but all Colonels shall command in succession, month about.
Other Deputies we have met, or Dame de Stael has met, 'sauntering in a
thoughtful manner;' perhaps uncertain what to do. Some, as Barnave, the
Lameths, and their Duport, will continue here in Paris: watching the new
biennial Legislative, Parliament the First; teaching it to walk, if so
might be; and the Court to lead it.
Thus these: sauntering in a thoughtful manner; travelling
by post or diligence,—whither Fate beckons. Giant Mirabeau slumbers in
the Pantheon of Great Men: and France? and Europe?—The brass-lunged
Hawkers sing "Grand Acceptation, Monarchic Constitution" through these
gay crowds: the Morrow, grandson of Yesterday, must be what it can, as
To-day its father is. Our new biennial Legislative begins to constitute
itself on the first of October, 1791.
Chapter 2.
The Book of the Law.
If the august Constituent Assembly itself, fixing the
regards of the Universe, could, at the present distance of time and
place, gain comparatively small attention from us, how much less can
this poor Legislative! It has its Right Side and its Left; the less
Patriotic and the more, for Aristocrats exist not here or now: it spouts
and speaks: listens to Reports, reads Bills and Laws; works in its
vocation, for a season: but the history of France, one finds, is seldom
or never there. Unhappy Legislative, what can History do with it; if not
drop a tear over it, almost in silence? First of the two-year
Parliaments of France, which, if Paper Constitution and oft-repeated
National Oath could avail aught, were to follow in softly-strong
indissoluble sequence while Time ran,—it had to vanish dolefully within
one year; and there came no second like it. Alas! your biennial
Parliaments in endless indissoluble sequence; they, and all that
Constitutional Fabric, built with such explosive Federation Oaths, and
its top-stone brought out with dancing and variegated radiance, went to
pieces, like frail crockery, in the crash of things; and already, in
eleven short months, were in that Limbo near the Moon, with the ghosts
of other Chimeras. There, except for rare specific purposes, let them
rest, in melancholy peace.
On the whole, how unknown is a man to himself; or a
public Body of men to itself! Aesop's fly sat on the chariot-wheel,
exclaiming, What a dust I do raise! Great Governors, clad in purple with
fasces and insignia, are governed by their valets, by the pouting of
their women and children; or, in Constitutional countries, by the
paragraphs of their Able Editors. Say not, I am this or that; I am doing
this or that! For thou knowest it not, thou knowest only the name it as
yet goes by. A purple Nebuchadnezzar rejoices to feel himself now verily
Emperor of this great Babylon which he has builded; and is a nondescript
biped-quadruped, on the eve of a seven-years course of grazing! These
Seven Hundred and Forty-five elected individuals doubt not but they are
the First biennial Parliament, come to govern France by parliamentary
eloquence: and they are what? And they have come to do what? Things
foolish and not wise!
It is much lamented by many that this First Biennial had
no members of the old Constituent in it, with their experience of
parties and parliamentary tactics; that such was their foolish
Self-denying Law. Most surely, old members of the Constituent had been
welcome to us here. But, on the other hand, what old or what new members
of any Constituent under the Sun could have effectually profited? There
are First biennial Parliaments so postured as to be, in a sense, beyond
wisdom; where wisdom and folly differ only in degree, and wreckage and
dissolution are the appointed issue for both.
Old-Constituents, your Barnaves, Lameths and the like,
for whom a special Gallery has been set apart, where they may sit in
honour and listen, are in the habit of sneering at these new
Legislators; (Dumouriez, ii. 150, &c.) but let not us! The poor
Seven Hundred and Forty-five, sent together by the active citizens of
France, are what they could be; do what is fated them. That they are of
Patriot temper we can well understand. Aristocrat Noblesse had fled over
the marches, or sat brooding silent in their unburnt Chateaus; small
prospect had they in Primary Electoral Assemblies. What with Flights to
Varennes, what with Days of Poniards, with plot after plot, the People
are left to themselves; the People must needs choose Defenders of the
People, such as can be had. Choosing, as they also will ever do, 'if not
the ablest man, yet the man ablest to be chosen!' Fervour of character,
decided Patriot-Constitutional feeling; these are qualities: but free
utterance, mastership in tongue-fence; this is the quality of qualities.
Accordingly one finds, with little astonishment, in this First Biennial,
that as many as Four hundred Members are of the Advocate or Attorney
species. Men who can speak, if there be aught to speak: nay here are men
also who can think, and even act. Candour will say of this ill-fated
First French Parliament that it wanted not its modicum of talent, its
modicum of honesty; that it, neither in the one respect nor in the
other, sank below the average of Parliaments, but rose above the
average. Let average Parliaments, whom the world does not guillotine,
and cast forth to long infamy, be thankful not to themselves but to
their stars!
France, as we say, has once more done what it could:
fervid men have come together from wide separation; for strange issues.
Fiery Max Isnard is come, from the utmost South-East; fiery Claude
Fauchet, Te-Deum Fauchet Bishop of Calvados, from the utmost North-West.
No Mirabeau now sits here, who had swallowed formulas: our only Mirabeau
now is Danton, working as yet out of doors; whom some call 'Mirabeau of
the Sansculottes.'
Nevertheless we have our gifts,—especially of speech and
logic. An eloquent Vergniaud we have; most mellifluous yet most
impetuous of public speakers; from the region named Gironde, of the
Garonne: a man unfortunately of indolent habits; who will sit playing
with your children, when he ought to be scheming and perorating. Sharp
bustling Guadet; considerate grave Censonne; kind-sparkling mirthful
young Ducos; Valaze doomed to a sad end: all these likewise are of that
Gironde, or Bourdeaux region: men of fervid Constitutional principles;
of quick talent, irrefragable logic, clear respectability; who will have
the Reign of Liberty establish itself, but only by respectable methods.
Round whom others of like temper will gather; known by and by as
Girondins, to the sorrowing wonder of the world. Of which sort note
Condorcet, Marquis and Philosopher; who has worked at much, at Paris
Municipal Constitution, Differential Calculus, Newspaper Chronique de
Paris, Biography, Philosophy; and now sits here as two-years Senator: a
notable Condorcet, with stoical Roman face, and fiery heart; 'volcano
hid under snow;' styled likewise, in irreverent language, 'mouton
enrage,' peaceablest of creatures bitten rabid! Or note, lastly,
Jean-Pierre Brissot; whom Destiny, long working noisily with him, has
hurled hither, say, to have done with him. A biennial Senator he too;
nay, for the present, the king of such. Restless, scheming, scribbling
Brissot; who took to himself the style de Warville, heralds know not in
the least why;—unless it were that the father of him did, in an
unexceptionable manner, perform Cookery and Vintnery in the Village of
Ouarville? A man of the windmill species, that grinds always, turning
towards all winds; not in the steadiest manner.
In all these men there is talent, faculty to work; and
they will do it: working and shaping, not without effect, though alas
not in marble, only in quicksand!—But the highest faculty of them all
remains yet to be mentioned; or indeed has yet to unfold itself for
mention: Captain Hippolyte Carnot, sent hither from the Pas de Calais;
with his cold mathematical head, and silent stubbornness of will: iron
Carnot, far-planning, imperturbable, unconquerable; who, in the hour of
need, shall not be found wanting. His hair is yet black; and it shall
grow grey, under many kinds of fortune, bright and troublous; and with
iron aspect this man shall face them all.
Nor is Cote Droit, and band of King's friends, wanting:
Vaublanc, Dumas, Jaucourt the honoured Chevalier; who love Liberty, yet
with Monarchy over it; and speak fearlessly according to that
faith;—whom the thick-coming hurricanes will sweep away. With them, let
a new military Theodore Lameth be named;—were it only for his two
Brothers' sake, who look down on him, approvingly there, from the
Old-Constituents' Gallery. Frothy professing Pastorets, honey-mouthed
conciliatory Lamourettes, and speechless nameless individuals sit
plentiful, as Moderates, in the middle. Still less is a Cote Gauche
wanting: extreme Left; sitting on the topmost benches, as if aloft on
its speculatory Height or Mountain, which will become a practical
fulminatory Height, and make the name of Mountain famous-infamous to all
times and lands.
Honour waits not on this Mountain; nor as yet even loud
dishonour. Gifts it boasts not, nor graces, of speaking or of thinking;
solely this one gift of assured faith, of audacity that will defy the
Earth and the Heavens. Foremost here are the Cordelier Trio: hot Merlin
from Thionville, hot Bazire, Attorneys both; Chabot, disfrocked
Capuchin, skilful in agio. Lawyer Lacroix, who wore once as subaltern
the single epaulette, has loud lungs and a hungry heart. There too is
Couthon, little dreaming what he is;—whom a sad chance has paralysed in
the lower extremities. For, it seems, he sat once a whole night, not
warm in his true love's bower (who indeed was by law another's),
but sunken to the middle in a cold peat-bog, being hunted out; quaking
for his life, in the cold quaking morass; (Dumouriez, ii. 370.)
and goes now on crutches to the end. Cambon likewise, in whom slumbers
undeveloped such a finance-talent for printing of Assignats; Father of
Paper-money; who, in the hour of menace, shall utter this stern
sentence, 'War to the Manorhouse, peace to the Hut, Guerre aux Chateaux,
paix aux Chaumieres!' (Choix de Rapports, xi. 25.) Lecointre, the
intrepid Draper of Versailles, is welcome here; known since the
Opera-Repast and Insurrection of Women. Thuriot too; Elector Thuriot,
who stood in the embrasures of the Bastille, and saw Saint-Antoine
rising in mass; who has many other things to see. Last and grimmest of
all note old Ruhl, with his brown dusky face and long white hair; of
Alsatian Lutheran breed; a man whom age and book-learning have not
taught; who, haranguing the old men of Rheims, shall hold up the Sacred
Ampulla (Heaven-sent, wherefrom Clovis and all Kings have been
anointed) as a mere worthless oil-bottle, and dash it to sherds on
the pavement there; who, alas, shall dash much to sherds, and finally
his own wild head, by pistol-shot, and so end it.
Such lava welters redhot in the bowels of this Mountain;
unknown to the world and to itself! A mere commonplace Mountain
hitherto; distinguished from the Plain chiefly by its superior
barrenness, its baldness of look: at the utmost it may, to the most
observant, perceptibly smoke. For as yet all lies so solid, peaceable;
and doubts not, as was said, that it will endure while Time runs. Do not
all love Liberty and the Constitution? All heartily;—and yet with
degrees. Some, as Chevalier Jaucourt and his Right Side, may love
Liberty less than Royalty, were the trial made; others, as Brissot and
his Left Side, may love it more than Royalty. Nay again of these latter
some may love Liberty more than Law itself; others not more. Parties
will unfold themselves; no mortal as yet knows how. Forces work within
these men and without: dissidence grows opposition; ever widening;
waxing into incompatibility and internecine feud: till the strong is
abolished by a stronger; himself in his turn by a strongest! Who can
help it? Jaucourt and his Monarchists, Feuillans, or Moderates; Brissot
and his Brissotins, Jacobins, or Girondins; these, with the Cordelier
Trio, and all men, must work what is appointed them, and in the way
appointed them.
And to think what fate these poor Seven Hundred and
Forty-five are assembled, most unwittingly, to meet! Let no heart be so
hard as not to pity them. Their soul's wish was to live and work as the
First of the French Parliaments: and make the Constitution march. Did
they not, at their very instalment, go through the most affecting
Constitutional ceremony, almost with tears? The Twelve Eldest are sent
solemnly to fetch the Constitution itself, the printed book of the Law.
Archivist Camus, an Old-Constituent appointed Archivist, he and the
Ancient Twelve, amid blare of military pomp and clangour, enter, bearing
the divine Book: and President and all Legislative Senators, laying
their hand on the same, successively take the Oath, with cheers and
heart-effusion, universal three-times-three. (Moniteur, Seance du 4
Octobre 1791.) In this manner they begin their Session. Unhappy
mortals! For, that same day, his Majesty having received their
Deputation of welcome, as seemed, rather drily, the Deputation cannot
but feel slighted, cannot but lament such slight: and thereupon our
cheering swearing First Parliament sees itself, on the morrow, obliged
to explode into fierce retaliatory sputter, of anti-royal Enactment as
to how they, for their part, will receive Majesty; and how Majesty shall
not be called Sire any more, except they please: and then, on the
following day, to recal this Enactment of theirs, as too hasty, and a
mere sputter though not unprovoked.
An effervescent well-intentioned set of Senators; too
combustible, where continual sparks are flying! Their History is a
series of sputters and quarrels; true desire to do their function, fatal
impossibility to do it. Denunciations, reprimandings of King's
Ministers, of traitors supposed and real; hot rage and fulmination
against fulminating Emigrants; terror of Austrian Kaiser, of 'Austrian
Committee' in the Tuileries itself: rage and haunting terror, haste and
dim desperate bewilderment!—Haste, we say; and yet the Constitution had
provided against haste. No Bill can be passed till it have been printed,
till it have been thrice read, with intervals of eight days;—'unless the
Assembly shall beforehand decree that there is urgency.' Which,
accordingly, the Assembly, scrupulous of the Constitution, never omits
to do: Considering this, and also considering that, and then that other,
the Assembly decrees always 'qu'il y a urgence;' and thereupon 'the
Assembly, having decreed that there is urgence,' is free to decree—what
indispensable distracted thing seems best to it. Two thousand and odd
decrees, as men reckon, within Eleven months! (Montgaillard, iii. 1.
237.) The haste of the Constituent seemed great; but this is
treble-quick. For the time itself is rushing treble-quick; and they have
to keep pace with that. Unhappy Seven Hundred and Forty-five:
true-patriotic, but so combustible; being fired, they must needs fling
fire: Senate of touchwood and rockets, in a world of smoke-storm, with
sparks wind-driven continually flying!
Or think, on the other hand, looking forward some months,
of that scene they call Baiser de Lamourette! The dangers of the country
are now grown imminent, immeasurable; National Assembly, hope of France,
is divided against itself. In such extreme circumstances, honey-mouthed
Abbe Lamourette, new Bishop of Lyons, rises, whose name, l'amourette,
signifies the sweetheart, or Delilah doxy,—he rises, and, with pathetic
honied eloquence, calls on all august Senators to forget mutual griefs
and grudges, to swear a new oath, and unite as brothers. Whereupon they
all, with vivats, embrace and swear; Left Side confounding itself with
Right; barren Mountain rushing down to fruitful Plain, Pastoret into the
arms of Condorcet, injured to the breast of injurer, with tears; and all
swearing that whosoever wishes either Feuillant Two-Chamber Monarchy or
Extreme-Jacobin Republic, or any thing but the Constitution and that
only, shall be anathema marantha. (Moniteur, Seance du 6 Juillet
1792.) Touching to behold! For, literally on the morrow morning,
they must again quarrel, driven by Fate; and their sublime reconcilement
is called derisively Baiser de L'amourette, or Delilah Kiss.
Like fated Eteocles-Polynices Brothers, embracing, though
in vain; weeping that they must not love, that they must hate only, and
die by each other's hands! Or say, like doomed Familiar Spirits;
ordered, by Art Magic under penalties, to do a harder than twist ropes
of sand: 'to make the Constitution march.' If the Constitution would but
march! Alas, the Constitution will not stir. It falls on its face; they
tremblingly lift it on end again: march, thou gold Constitution! The
Constitution will not march.—"He shall march, by—!" said kind Uncle
Toby, and even swore. The Corporal answered mournfully: "He will never
march in this world."
A constitution, as we often say, will march when it
images, if not the old Habits and Beliefs of the Constituted; then
accurately their Rights, or better indeed, their Mights;—for these two,
well-understood, are they not one and the same? The old Habits of France
are gone: her new Rights and Mights are not yet ascertained, except in
Paper-theorem; nor can be, in any sort, till she have tried. Till she
have measured herself, in fell death-grip, and were it in utmost
preternatural spasm of madness, with Principalities and Powers, with the
upper and the under, internal and external; with the Earth and Tophet
and the very Heaven! Then will she know.—Three things bode ill for the
marching of this French Constitution: the French People; the French
King; thirdly the French Noblesse and an assembled European World.
But quitting generalities, what strange Fact is this, in
the far South-West, towards which the eyes of all men do now, in the end
of October, bend themselves? A tragical combustion, long smoking and
smouldering unluminous, has now burst into flame there.
Hot is that Southern Provencal blood: alas, collisions,
as was once said, must occur in a career of Freedom; different
directions will produce such; nay different velocities in the same
direction will! To much that went on there History, busied elsewhere,
would not specially give heed: to troubles of Uzez, troubles of Nismes,
Protestant and Catholic, Patriot and Aristocrat; to troubles of
Marseilles, Montpelier, Arles; to Aristocrat Camp of Jales, that
wondrous real-imaginary Entity, now fading pale-dim, then always again
glowing forth deep-hued (in the Imagination mainly);—ominous
magical, 'an Aristocrat picture of war done naturally!' All this was a
tragical deadly combustion, with plot and riot, tumult by night and by
day; but a dark combustion, not luminous, not noticed; which now,
however, one cannot help noticing.
Above all places, the unluminous combustion in Avignon
and the Comtat Venaissin was fierce. Papal Avignon, with its Castle
rising sheer over the Rhone-stream; beautifullest Town, with its purple
vines and gold-orange groves: why must foolish old rhyming Rene, the
last Sovereign of Provence, bequeath it to the Pope and Gold Tiara, not
rather to Louis Eleventh with the Leaden Virgin in his hatband? For good
and for evil! Popes, Anti-popes, with their pomp, have dwelt in that
Castle of Avignon rising sheer over the Rhone-stream: there Laura de
Sade went to hear mass; her Petrarch twanging and singing by the
Fountain of Vaucluse hard by, surely in a most melancholy manner. This
was in the old days.
And now in these new days, such issues do come from a
squirt of the pen by some foolish rhyming Rene, after centuries, this is
what we have: Jourdan Coupe-tete, leading to siege and warfare an Army,
from three to fifteen thousand strong, called the Brigands of Avignon;
which title they themselves accept, with the addition of an epithet,
'The brave Brigands of Avignon!' It is even so. Jourdan the Headsman
fled hither from that Chatelet Inquest, from that Insurrection of Women;
and began dealing in madder; but the scene was rife in other than
dye-stuffs; so Jourdan shut his madder shop, and has risen, for he was
the man to do it. The tile-beard of Jourdan is shaven off; his fat
visage has got coppered and studded with black carbuncles; the Silenus
trunk is swollen with drink and high living: he wears blue National
uniform with epaulettes, 'an enormous sabre, two horse-pistols crossed
in his belt, and other two smaller, sticking from his pockets;' styles
himself General, and is the tyrant of men. (Dampmartin, Evenemens, i.
267.) Consider this one fact, O Reader; and what sort of facts must
have preceded it, must accompany it! Such things come of old Rene; and
of the question which has risen, Whether Avignon cannot now cease wholly
to be Papal and become French and free?
For some twenty-five months the confusion has lasted. Say
three months of arguing; then seven of raging; then finally some fifteen
months now of fighting, and even of hanging. For already in February
1790, the Papal Aristocrats had set up four gibbets, for a sign; but the
People rose in June, in retributive frenzy; and, forcing the public
Hangman to act, hanged four Aristocrats, on each Papal gibbet a Papal
Haman. Then were Avignon Emigrations, Papal Aristocrats emigrating over
the Rhone River; demission of Papal Consul, flight, victory: re-entrance
of Papal Legate, truce, and new onslaught; and the various turns of war.
Petitions there were to National Assembly; Congresses of Townships;
three-score and odd Townships voting for French Reunion, and the
blessings of Liberty; while some twelve of the smaller, manipulated by
Aristocrats, gave vote the other way: with shrieks and discord! Township
against Township, Town against Town: Carpentras, long jealous of
Avignon, is now turned out in open war with it;—and Jourdan Coupe-tete,
your first General being killed in mutiny, closes his dye-shop; and does
there visibly, with siege-artillery, above all with bluster and tumult,
with the 'brave Brigands of Avignon,' beleaguer the rival Town, for two
months, in the face of the world!
Feats were done, doubt it not, far-famed in Parish
History; but to Universal History unknown. Gibbets we see rise, on the
one side and on the other; and wretched carcasses swinging there, a
dozen in the row; wretched Mayor of Vaison buried before dead. (Barbaroux,
Memoires, p. 26.) The fruitful seedfield, lie unreaped, the
vineyards trampled down; there is red cruelty, madness of universal
choler and gall. Havoc and anarchy everywhere; a combustion most fierce,
but unlucent, not to be noticed here!—Finally, as we saw, on the 14th of
September last, the National Constituent Assembly, having sent
Commissioners and heard them; (Lescene Desmaisons: Compte rendu a
l'Assemblee Nationale, 10 Septembre 1791 (Choix des Rapports, vii.
273-93).) having heard Petitions, held Debates, month after month
ever since August 1789; and on the whole 'spent thirty sittings' on this
matter, did solemnly decree that Avignon and the Comtat were
incorporated with France, and His Holiness the Pope should have what
indemnity was reasonable.
And so hereby all is amnestied and finished? Alas, when
madness of choler has gone through the blood of men, and gibbets have
swung on this side and on that, what will a parchment Decree and
Lafayette Amnesty do? Oblivious Lethe flows not above ground! Papal
Aristocrats and Patriot Brigands are still an eye-sorrow to each other;
suspected, suspicious, in what they do and forbear. The august
Constituent Assembly is gone but a fortnight, when, on Sunday the
Sixteenth morning of October 1791, the unquenched combustion suddenly
becomes luminous! For Anti-constitutional Placards are up, and the
Statue of the Virgin is said to have shed tears, and grown red. (Proces-verbal
de la Commune d'Avignon, &c. in Hist. Parl. xii. 419-23.) Wherefore,
on that morning, Patriot l'Escuyer, one of our 'six leading Patriots,'
having taken counsel with his brethren and General Jourdan, determines
on going to Church, in company with a friend or two: not to hear mass,
which he values little; but to meet all the Papalists there in a body,
nay to meet that same weeping Virgin, for it is the Cordeliers Church;
and give them a word of admonition. Adventurous errand; which has the
fatallest issue! What L'Escuyer's word of admonition might be no History
records; but the answer to it was a shrieking howl from the Aristocrat
Papal worshippers, many of them women. A thousand-voiced shriek and
menace; which as L'Escuyer did not fly, became a thousand-handed hustle
and jostle; a thousand-footed kick, with tumblings and tramplings, with
the pricking of semstresses stilettos, scissors, and female pointed
instruments. Horrible to behold; the ancient Dead, and Petrarchan Laura,
sleeping round it there; (Ugo Foscolo, Essay on Petrarch, p. 35.)
high Altar and burning tapers looking down on it; the Virgin quite
tearless, and of the natural stone-colour!—L'Escuyer's friend or two
rush off, like Job's Messengers, for Jourdan and the National Force. But
heavy Jourdan will seize the Town-Gates first; does not run treble-fast,
as he might: on arriving at the Cordeliers Church, the Church is silent,
vacant; L'Escuyer, all alone, lies there, swimming in his blood, at the
foot of the high Altar; pricked with scissors; trodden, massacred;—gives
one dumb sob, and gasps out his miserable life for evermore.
Sight to stir the heart of any man; much more of many
men, self-styled Brigands of Avignon! The corpse of L'Escuyer, stretched
on a bier, the ghastly head girt with laurel, is borne through the
streets; with many-voiced unmelodious Nenia; funeral-wail still deeper
than it is loud! The copper-face of Jourdan, of bereft Patriotism, has
grown black. Patriot Municipality despatches official Narrative and
tidings to Paris; orders numerous or innumerable arrestments for inquest
and perquisition. Aristocrats male and female are haled to the Castle;
lie crowded in subterranean dungeons there, bemoaned by the hoarse
rushing of the Rhone; cut out from help.
So lie they; waiting inquest and perquisition. Alas! with
a Jourdan Headsman for Generalissimo, with his copper-face grown black,
and armed Brigand Patriots chanting their Nenia, the inquest is likely
to be brief. On the next day and the next, let Municipality consent or
not, a Brigand Court-Martial establishes itself in the subterranean
stories of the Castle of Avignon; Brigand Executioners, with naked
sabre, waiting at the door, for a Brigand verdict. Short judgment, no
appeal! There is Brigand wrath and vengeance; not unrefreshed by brandy.
Close by is the Dungeon of the Glaciere, or Ice-Tower: there may be
deeds done—? For which language has no name!—Darkness and the shadow of
horrid cruelty envelopes these Castle Dungeons, that Glaciere Tower:
clear only that many have entered, that few have returned. Jourdan and
the Brigands, supreme now over Municipals, over all Authorities Patriot
or Papal, reign in Avignon, waited on by Terror and Silence.
The result of all which is that, on the 15th of November
1791, we behold Friend Dampmartin, and subalterns beneath him, and
General Choisi above him, with Infantry and Cavalry, and proper
cannon-carriages rattling in front, with spread banners, to the sound of
fife and drum, wend, in a deliberate formidable manner, towards that
sheer Castle Rock, towards those broad Gates of Avignon; three new
National-Assembly Commissioners following at safe distance in the rear.
(Dampmartin, i. 251-94.) Avignon, summoned in the name of
Assembly and Law, flings its Gates wide open; Choisi with the rest,
Dampmartin and the Bons Enfans, 'Good Boys of Baufremont,' so they name
these brave Constitutional Dragoons, known to them of old,—do enter,
amid shouts and scattered flowers. To the joy of all honest persons; to
the terror only of Jourdan Headsman and the Brigands. Nay next we behold
carbuncled swollen Jourdan himself shew copper-face, with sabre and four
pistols; affecting to talk high: engaging, meanwhile, to surrender the
Castle that instant. So the Choisi Grenadiers enter with him there. They
start and stop, passing that Glaciere, snuffing its horrible breath;
with wild yell, with cries of "Cut the Butcher down!"—and Jourdan has to
whisk himself through secret passages, and instantaneously vanish.
Be the mystery of iniquity laid bare then! A Hundred and
Thirty Corpses, of men, nay of women and even children (for the
trembling mother, hastily seized, could not leave her infant), lie
heaped in that Glaciere; putrid, under putridities: the horror of the
world. For three days there is mournful lifting out, and recognition;
amid the cries and movements of a passionate Southern people, now
kneeling in prayer, now storming in wild pity and rage: lastly there is
solemn sepulture, with muffled drums, religious requiem, and all the
people's wail and tears. Their Massacred rest now in holy ground; buried
in one grave.
And Jourdan Coupe-tete? Him also we behold again, after a
day or two: in flight, through the most romantic Petrarchan
hill-country; vehemently spurring his nag; young Ligonnet, a brisk youth
of Avignon, with Choisi Dragoons, close in his rear! With such swollen
mass of a rider no nag can run to advantage. The tired nag, spur-driven,
does take the River Sorgue; but sticks in the middle of it; firm on that
chiaro fondo di Sorga; and will proceed no further for spurring! Young
Ligonnet dashes up; the Copper-face menaces and bellows, draws pistol,
perhaps even snaps it; is nevertheless seized by the collar; is tied
firm, ancles under horse's belly, and ridden back to Avignon, hardly to
be saved from massacre on the streets there. (Dampmartin, ubi supra.)
Such is the combustion of Avignon and the South-West,
when it becomes luminous! Long loud debate is in the august Legislative,
in the Mother-Society as to what now shall be done with it. Amnesty, cry
eloquent Vergniaud and all Patriots: let there be mutual pardon and
repentance, restoration, pacification, and if so might any how be, an
end! Which vote ultimately prevails. So the South-West smoulders and
welters again in an 'Amnesty,' or Non-remembrance, which alas cannot but
remember, no Lethe flowing above ground! Jourdan himself remains
unchanged; gets loose again as one not yet gallows-ripe; nay, as we
transciently discern from the distance, is 'carried in triumph through
the cities of the South.' (Deux Amis vii. (Paris, 1797), pp.
59-71.) What things men carry!
With which transient glimpse, of a Copper-faced Portent
faring in this manner through the cities of the South, we must quit
these regions;—and let them smoulder. They want not their Aristocrats;
proud old Nobles, not yet emigrated. Arles has its 'Chiffonne,' so, in
symbolical cant, they name that Aristocrat Secret-Association; Arles has
its pavements piled up, by and by, into Aristocrat barricades. Against
which Rebecqui, the hot-clear Patriot, must lead Marseilles with cannon.
The Bar of Iron has not yet risen to the top in the Bay of Marseilles;
neither have these hot Sons of the Phoceans submitted to be slaves. By
clear management and hot instance, Rebecqui dissipates that Chiffonne,
without bloodshed; restores the pavement of Arles. He sails in
Coast-barks, this Rebecqui, scrutinising suspicious Martello-towers,
with the keen eye of Patriotism; marches overland with despatch, singly,
or in force; to City after City; dim scouring far and wide; (Barbaroux,
p. 21; Hist. Parl. xiii. 421-4.)—argues, and if it must be, fights.
For there is much to do; Jales itself is looking suspicious. So that
Legislator Fauchet, after debate on it, has to propose Commissioners and
a Camp on the Plain of Beaucaire: with or without result.
Of all which, and much else, let us note only this small
consequence, that young Barbaroux, Advocate, Town-Clerk of Marseilles,
being charged to have these things remedied, arrived at Paris in the
month of February 1792. The beautiful and brave: young Spartan, ripe in
energy, not ripe in wisdom; over whose black doom there shall flit
nevertheless a certain ruddy fervour, streaks of bright Southern tint,
not wholly swallowed of Death! Note also that the Rolands of Lyons are
again in Paris; for the second and final time. King's Inspectorship is
abrogated at Lyons, as elsewhere: Roland has his retiring-pension to
claim, if attainable; has Patriot friends to commune with; at lowest,
has a book to publish. That young Barbaroux and the Rolands came
together; that elderly Spartan Roland liked, or even loved the young
Spartan, and was loved by him, one can fancy: and Madame—? Breathe not,
thou poison-breath, Evil-speech! That soul is taintless, clear, as the
mirror-sea. And yet if they too did look into each other's eyes, and
each, in silence, in tragical renunciance, did find that the other was
all too lovely? Honi soit! She calls him 'beautiful as Antinous:' he
'will speak elsewhere of that astonishing woman.'—A Madame d'Udon (or
some such name, for Dumont does not recollect quite clearly) gives
copious Breakfast to the Brissotin Deputies and us Friends of Freedom,
at her house in the Place Vendome; with temporary celebrity, with graces
and wreathed smiles; not without cost. There, amid wide babble and
jingle, our plan of Legislative Debate is settled for the day, and much
counselling held. Strict Roland is seen there, but does not go often. (Dumont,
Souvenirs, p. 374.)
Such are our inward troubles; seen in the Cities of the
South; extant, seen or unseen, in all cities and districts, North as
well as South. For in all are Aristocrats, more or less malignant;
watched by Patriotism; which again, being of various shades, from light
Fayettist-Feuillant down to deep-sombre Jacobin, has to watch itself!
Directories of Departments, what we call County
Magistracies, being chosen by Citizens of a too 'active' class, are
found to pull one way; Municipalities, Town Magistracies, to pull the
other way. In all places too are Dissident Priests; whom the Legislative
will have to deal with: contumacious individuals, working on that
angriest of passions; plotting, enlisting for Coblentz; or suspected of
plotting: fuel of a universal unconstitutional heat. What to do with
them? They may be conscientious as well as contumacious: gently they
should be dealt with, and yet it must be speedily. In unilluminated La
Vendee the simple are like to be seduced by them; many a simple peasant,
a Cathelineau the wool-dealer wayfaring meditative with his wool-packs,
in these hamlets, dubiously shakes his head! Two Assembly Commissioners
went thither last Autumn; considerate Gensonne, not yet called to be a
Senator; Gallois, an editorial man. These Two, consulting with General
Dumouriez, spake and worked, softly, with judgment; they have hushed
down the irritation, and produced a soft Report,—for the time.
The General himself doubts not in the least but he can
keep peace there; being an able man. He passes these frosty months among
the pleasant people of Niort, occupies 'tolerably handsome apartments in
the Castle of Niort,' and tempers the minds of men. (Dumouriez, ii.
129.) Why is there but one Dumouriez? Elsewhere you find South or
North, nothing but untempered obscure jarring; which breaks forth ever
and anon into open clangour of riot. Southern Perpignan has its tocsin,
by torch light; with rushing and onslaught: Northern Caen not less, by
daylight; with Aristocrats ranged in arms at Places of Worship;
Departmental compromise proving impossible; breaking into musketry and a
Plot discovered! (Hist. Parl. xii. 131, 141; xiii. 114, 417.) Add
Hunger too: for Bread, always dear, is getting dearer: not so much as
Sugar can be had; for good reasons. Poor Simoneau, Mayor of Etampes, in
this Northern region, hanging out his Red Flag in some riot of grains,
is trampled to death by a hungry exasperated People. What a trade this
of Mayor, in these times! Mayor of Saint-Denis hung at the Lanterne, by
Suspicion and Dyspepsia, as we saw long since; Mayor of Vaison, as we
saw lately, buried before dead; and now this poor Simoneau, the Tanner,
of Etampes,—whom legal Constitutionalism will not forget.
With factions, suspicions, want of bread and sugar, it is
verily what they call dechire, torn asunder this poor country: France
and all that is French. For, over seas too come bad news. In black
Saint-Domingo, before that variegated Glitter in the Champs Elysees was
lit for an Accepted Constitution, there had risen, and was burning
contemporary with it, quite another variegated Glitter and nocturnal
Fulgor, had we known it: of molasses and ardent-spirits; of
sugar-boileries, plantations, furniture, cattle and men: skyhigh; the
Plain of Cap Francais one huge whirl of smoke and flame!
What a change here, in these two years; since that first
'Box of Tricolor Cockades' got through the Custom-house, and atrabiliar
Creoles too rejoiced that there was a levelling of Bastilles! Levelling
is comfortable, as we often say: levelling, yet only down to oneself.
Your pale-white Creoles, have their grievances:—and your yellow
Quarteroons? And your dark-yellow Mulattoes? And your Slaves soot-black?
Quarteroon Oge, Friend of our Parisian Brissotin Friends of the Blacks,
felt, for his share too, that Insurrection was the most sacred of
duties. So the tricolor Cockades had fluttered and swashed only some
three months on the Creole hat, when Oge's signal-conflagrations went
aloft; with the voice of rage and terror. Repressed, doomed to die, he
took black powder or seedgrains in the hollow of his hand, this Oge;
sprinkled a film of white ones on the top, and said to his Judges,
"Behold they are white;"—then shook his hand, and said "Where are the
Whites, Ou sont les Blancs?"
So now, in the Autumn of 1791, looking from the
sky-windows of Cap Francais, thick clouds of smoke girdle our horizon,
smoke in the day, in the night fire; preceded by fugitive shrieking
white women, by Terror and Rumour. Black demonised squadrons are
massacring and harrying, with nameless cruelty. They fight and fire
'from behind thickets and coverts,' for the Black man loves the Bush;
they rush to the attack, thousands strong, with brandished cutlasses and
fusils, with caperings, shoutings and vociferation,—which, if the White
Volunteer Company stands firm, dwindle into staggerings, into quick
gabblement, into panic flight at the first volley, perhaps before it. (Deux
Amis, x. 157.) Poor Oge could be broken on the wheel; this
fire-whirlwind too can be abated, driven up into the Mountains: but
Saint-Domingo is shaken, as Oge's seedgrains were; shaking, writhing in
long horrid death-throes, it is Black without remedy; and remains, as
African Haiti, a monition to the world.
O my Parisian Friends, is not this, as well as Regraters
and Feuillant Plotters, one cause of the astonishing dearth of Sugar!
The Grocer, palpitant, with drooping lip, sees his Sugar taxe; weighed
out by Female Patriotism, in instant retail, at the inadequate rate of
twenty-five sous, or thirteen pence a pound. "Abstain from it?" yes, ye
Patriot Sections, all ye Jacobins, abstain! Louvet and Collot-d'Herbois
so advise; resolute to make the sacrifice: though "how shall literary
men do without coffee?" Abstain, with an oath; that is the surest! (Debats
des Jacobins, &c. Hist. Parl. xiii. 171, 92-98.)
Also, for like reason, must not Brest and the Shipping
Interest languish? Poor Brest languishes, sorrowing, not without spleen;
denounces an Aristocrat Bertrand-Moleville traitorous Aristocrat
Marine-Minister. Do not her Ships and King's Ships lie rotting piecemeal
in harbour; Naval Officers mostly fled, and on furlough too, with pay?
Little stirring there; if it be not the Brest Gallies, whip-driven, with
their Galley-Slaves,—alas, with some Forty of our hapless Swiss Soldiers
of Chateau-Vieux, among others! These Forty Swiss, too mindful of Nanci,
do now, in their red wool caps, tug sorrowfully at the oar; looking into
the Atlantic brine, which reflects only their own sorrowful shaggy
faces; and seem forgotten of Hope.
But, on the whole, may we not say, in fugitive language,
that the French Constitution which shall march is very rheumatic, full
of shooting internal pains, in joint and muscle; and will not march
without difficulty?
Chapter 5.
Kings and Emigrants.
Extremely rheumatic Constitutions have been known to
march, and keep on their feet, though in a staggering sprawling manner,
for long periods, in virtue of one thing only: that the Head were
healthy. But this Head of the French Constitution! What King Louis is
and cannot help being, Readers already know. A King who cannot take the
Constitution, nor reject the Constitution: nor do anything at all, but
miserably ask, What shall I do? A King environed with endless
confusions; in whose own mind is no germ of order. Haughty implacable
remnants of Noblesse struggling with humiliated repentant
Barnave-Lameths: struggling in that obscure element of fetchers and
carriers, of Half-pay braggarts from the Cafe Valois, of Chambermaids,
whisperers, and subaltern officious persons; fierce Patriotism looking
on all the while, more and more suspicious, from without: what, in such
struggle, can they do? At best, cancel one another, and produce zero.
Poor King! Barnave and your Senatorial Jaucourts speak earnestly into
this ear; Bertrand-Moleville, and Messengers from Coblentz, speak
earnestly into that: the poor Royal head turns to the one side and to
the other side; can turn itself fixedly to no side. Let Decency drop a
veil over it: sorrier misery was seldom enacted in the world. This one
small fact, does it not throw the saddest light on much? The Queen is
lamenting to Madam Campan: "What am I to do? When they, these Barnaves,
get us advised to any step which the Noblesse do not like, then I am
pouted at; nobody comes to my card table; the King's Couchee is
solitary." (Campan, ii. 177-202.) In such a case of dubiety, what
is one to do? Go inevitably to the ground!
The King has accepted this Constitution, knowing
beforehand that it will not serve: he studies it, and executes it in the
hope mainly that it will be found inexecutable. King's Ships lie rotting
in harbour, their officers gone; the Armies disorganised; robbers scour
the highways, which wear down unrepaired; all Public Service lies slack
and waste: the Executive makes no effort, or an effort only to throw the
blame on the Constitution. Shamming death, 'faisant le mort!' What
Constitution, use it in this manner, can march? 'Grow to disgust the
Nation' it will truly, (Bertrand-Moleville, i. c. 4.)—unless you
first grow to disgust the Nation! It is Bertrand de Moleville's plan,
and his Majesty's; the best they can form.
Or if, after all, this best-plan proved too slow; proved
a failure? Provident of that too, the Queen, shrouded in deepest
mystery, 'writes all day, in cipher, day after day, to Coblentz;'
Engineer Goguelat, he of the Night of Spurs, whom the Lafayette Amnesty
has delivered from Prison, rides and runs. Now and then, on fit
occasion, a Royal familiar visit can be paid to that Salle de Manege, an
affecting encouraging Royal Speech (sincere, doubt it not, for the
moment) can be delivered there, and the Senators all cheer and
almost weep;—at the same time Mallet du Pan has visibly ceased editing,
and invisibly bears abroad a King's Autograph, soliciting help from the
Foreign Potentates. (Moleville, i. 370.) Unhappy Louis, do this
thing or else that other,—if thou couldst!
The thing which the King's Government did do was to
stagger distractedly from contradiction to contradiction; and wedding
Fire to Water, envelope itself in hissing, and ashy steam! Danton and
needy corruptible Patriots are sopped with presents of cash: they accept
the sop: they rise refreshed by it, and travel their own way. (Ibid.
i. c. 17.) Nay, the King's Government did likewise hire
Hand-clappers, or claqueurs, persons to applaud. Subterranean Rivarol
has Fifteen Hundred men in King's pay, at the rate of some ten thousand
pounds sterling, per month; what he calls 'a staff of genius:'
Paragraph-writers, Placard-Journalists; 'two hundred and eighty
Applauders, at three shillings a day:' one of the strangest Staffs ever
commanded by man. The muster-rolls and account-books of which still
exist. (Montgaillard, iii. 41.) Bertrand-Moleville himself, in a
way he thinks very dexterous, contrives to pack the Galleries of the
Legislative; gets Sansculottes hired to go thither, and applaud at a
signal given, they fancying it was Petion that bid them: a device which
was not detected for almost a week. Dexterous enough; as if a man
finding the Day fast decline should determine on altering the
Clockhands: that is a thing possible for him.
Here too let us note an unexpected apparition of Philippe
d'Orleans at Court: his last at the Levee of any King. D'Orleans,
sometime in the winter months seemingly, has been appointed to that old
first-coveted rank of Admiral,—though only over ships rotting in port.
The wished-for comes too late! However, he waits on Bertrand-Moleville
to give thanks: nay to state that he would willingly thank his Majesty
in person; that, in spite of all the horrible things men have said and
sung, he is far from being his Majesty's enemy; at bottom, how far!
Bertrand delivers the message, brings about the royal Interview, which
does pass to the satisfaction of his Majesty; d'Orleans seeming clearly
repentant, determined to turn over a new leaf. And yet, next Sunday,
what do we see? 'Next Sunday,' says Bertrand, 'he came to the King's
Levee; but the Courtiers ignorant of what had passed, the crowd of
Royalists who were accustomed to resort thither on that day specially to
pay their court, gave him the most humiliating reception. They came
pressing round him; managing, as if by mistake, to tread on his toes, to
elbow him towards the door, and not let him enter again. He went
downstairs to her Majesty's Apartments, where cover was laid; so soon as
he shewed face, sounds rose on all sides, "Messieurs, take care of the
dishes," as if he had carried poison in his pockets. The insults which
his presence every where excited forced him to retire without having
seen the Royal Family: the crowd followed him to the Queen's Staircase;
in descending, he received a spitting (crachat) on the head, and
some others, on his clothes. Rage and spite were seen visibly painted on
his face:' (Bertrand-Moleville, i. 177.) as indeed how could they
miss to be? He imputes it all to the King and Queen, who know nothing of
it, who are even much grieved at it; and so descends, to his Chaos
again. Bertrand was there at the Chateau that day himself, and an
eye-witness to these things.
For the rest, Non-jurant Priests, and the repression of
them, will distract the King's conscience; Emigrant Princes and Noblesse
will force him to double-dealing: there must be veto on veto; amid the
ever-waxing indignation of men. For Patriotism, as we said, looks on
from without, more and more suspicious. Waxing tempest, blast after
blast, of Patriot indignation, from without; dim inorganic whirl of
Intrigues, Fatuities, within! Inorganic, fatuous; from which the eye
turns away. De Stael intrigues for her so gallant Narbonne, to get him
made War-Minister; and ceases not, having got him made. The King shall
fly to Rouen; shall there, with the gallant Narbonne, properly 'modify
the Constitution.' This is the same brisk Narbonne, who, last year, cut
out from their entanglement, by force of dragoons, those poor fugitive
Royal Aunts: men say he is at bottom their Brother, or even more, so
scandalous is scandal. He drives now, with his de Stael, rapidly to the
Armies, to the Frontier Towns; produces rose-coloured Reports, not too
credible; perorates, gesticulates; wavers poising himself on the top,
for a moment, seen of men; then tumbles, dismissed, washed away by the
Time-flood.
Also the fair Princess de Lamballe intrigues, bosom
friend of her Majesty: to the angering of Patriotism. Beautiful
Unfortunate, why did she ever return from England? Her small
silver-voice, what can it profit in that piping of the black
World-tornado? Which will whirl her, poor fragile Bird of Paradise,
against grim rocks. Lamballe and de Stael intrigue visibly, apart or
together: but who shall reckon how many others, and in what infinite
ways, invisibly! Is there not what one may call an 'Austrian Committee,'
sitting invisible in the Tuileries; centre of an invisible Anti-National
Spiderweb, which, for we sleep among mysteries, stretches its threads to
the ends of the Earth? Journalist Carra has now the clearest certainty
of it: to Brissotin Patriotism, and France generally, it is growing more
and more probable.
O Reader, hast thou no pity for this Constitution?
Rheumatic shooting pains in its members; pressure of hydrocephale and
hysteric vapours on its Brain: a Constitution divided against itself;
which will never march, hardly even stagger? Why were not Drouet and
Procureur Sausse in their beds, that unblessed Varennes Night! Why did
they not, in the name of Heaven, let the Korff Berline go whither it
listed! Nameless incoherency, incompatibility, perhaps prodigies at
which the world still shudders, had been spared.
But now comes the third thing that bodes ill for the
marching of this French Constitution: besides the French People, and the
French King, there is thirdly—the assembled European world? it has
become necessary now to look at that also. Fair France is so luminous:
and round and round it, is troublous Cimmerian Night. Calonnes,
Breteuils hover dim, far-flown; overnetting Europe with intrigues. From
Turin to Vienna; to Berlin, and utmost Petersburg in the frozen North!
Great Burke has raised his great voice long ago; eloquently
demonstrating that the end of an Epoch is come, to all appearance the
end of Civilised Time. Him many answer: Camille Desmoulins, Clootz
Speaker of Mankind, Paine the rebellious Needleman, and honourable
Gallic Vindicators in that country and in this: but the great Burke
remains unanswerable; 'The Age of Chivalry is gone,' and could not but
go, having now produced the still more indomitable Age of Hunger. Altars
enough, of the Dubois-Rohan sort, changing to the Gobel-and-Talleyrand
sort, are faring by rapid transmutation to, shall we say, the right
Proprietor of them? French Game and French Game-Preservers did alight on
the Cliffs of Dover, with cries of distress. Who will say that the end
of much is not come? A set of mortals has risen, who believe that Truth
is not a printed Speculation, but a practical Fact; that Freedom and
Brotherhood are possible in this Earth, supposed always to be Belial's,
which 'the Supreme Quack' was to inherit! Who will say that Church,
State, Throne, Altar are not in danger; that the sacred Strong-box
itself, last Palladium of effete Humanity, may not be blasphemously
blown upon, and its padlocks undone?
The poor Constituent Assembly might act with what
delicacy and diplomacy it would; declare that it abjured meddling with
its neighbours, foreign conquest, and so forth; but from the first this
thing was to be predicted: that old Europe and new France could not
subsist together. A Glorious Revolution, oversetting State-Prisons and
Feudalism; publishing, with outburst of Federative Cannon, in face of
all the Earth, that Appearance is not Reality, how shall it subsist amid
Governments which, if Appearance is not Reality, are—one knows not what?
In death feud, and internecine wrestle and battle, it shall subsist with
them; not otherwise.
Rights of Man, printed on Cotton Handkerchiefs, in
various dialects of human speech, pass over to the Frankfort Fair. (Toulongeon,
i. 256.) What say we, Frankfort Fair? They have crossed Euphrates
and the fabulous Hydaspes; wafted themselves beyond the Ural, Altai,
Himmalayah: struck off from wood stereotypes, in angular
Picture-writing, they are jabbered and jingled of in China and Japan.
Where will it stop? Kien-Lung smells mischief; not the remotest
Dalai-Lama shall now knead his dough-pills in peace.—Hateful to us; as
is the Night! Bestir yourselves, ye Defenders of Order! They do bestir
themselves: all Kings and Kinglets, with their spiritual temporal array,
are astir; their brows clouded with menace. Diplomatic emissaries fly
swift; Conventions, privy Conclaves assemble; and wise wigs wag, taking
what counsel they can.
Also, as we said, the Pamphleteer draws pen, on this side
and that: zealous fists beat the Pulpit-drum. Not without issue! Did not
iron Birmingham, shouting 'Church and King,' itself knew not why, burst
out, last July, into rage, drunkenness, and fire; and your Priestleys,
and the like, dining there on that Bastille day, get the maddest
singeing: scandalous to consider! In which same days, as we can remark,
high Potentates, Austrian and Prussian, with Emigrants, were faring
towards Pilnitz in Saxony; there, on the 27th of August, they, keeping
to themselves what further 'secret Treaty' there might or might not be,
did publish their hopes and their threatenings, their Declaration that
it was 'the common cause of Kings.'
Where a will to quarrel is, there is a way. Our readers
remember that Pentecost-Night, Fourth of August 1789, when Feudalism
fell in a few hours? The National Assembly, in abolishing Feudalism,
promised that 'compensation' should be given; and did endeavour to give
it. Nevertheless the Austrian Kaiser answers that his German Princes,
for their part, cannot be unfeudalised; that they have Possessions in
French Alsace, and Feudal Rights secured to them, for which no
conceivable compensation will suffice. So this of the Possessioned
Princes, 'Princes Possessiones' is bandied from Court to Court; covers
acres of diplomatic paper at this day: a weariness to the world. Kaunitz
argues from Vienna; Delessart responds from Paris, though perhaps not
sharply enough. The Kaiser and his Possessioned Princes will too
evidently come and take compensation—so much as they can get. Nay might
one not partition France, as we have done Poland, and are doing; and so
pacify it with a vengeance?
From South to North! For actually it is 'the common cause
of Kings.' Swedish Gustav, sworn Knight of the Queen of France, will
lead Coalised Armies;—had not Ankarstrom treasonously shot him; for,
indeed, there were griefs nearer home. (30th March 1792 Annual
Register, p. 11). Austria and Prussia speak at Pilnitz; all men
intensely listening: Imperial Rescripts have gone out from Turin; there
will be secret Convention at Vienna. Catherine of Russia beckons
approvingly; will help, were she ready. Spanish Bourbon stirs amid his
pillows; from him too, even from him, shall there come help. Lean Pitt,
'the Minister of Preparatives,' looks out from his watch-tower in
Saint-James's, in a suspicious manner. Councillors plotting, Calonnes
dim-hovering;—alas, Serjeants rub-a-dubbing openly through all manner of
German market-towns, collecting ragged valour! (Toulongeon, ii.
100-117.) Look where you will, immeasurable Obscurantism is girdling
this fair France; which, again, will not be girdled by it. Europe is in
travail; pang after pang; what a shriek was that of Pilnitz! The birth
will be: WAR.
Nay the worst feature of the business is this last, still
to be named; the Emigrants at Coblentz, so many thousands ranking there,
in bitter hate and menace: King's Brothers, all Princes of the Blood
except wicked d'Orleans; your duelling de Castries, your eloquent
Cazales; bull-headed Malseignes, a wargod Broglie; Distaff Seigneurs,
insulted Officers, all that have ridden across the
Rhine-stream;—d'Artois welcoming Abbe Maury with a kiss, and clasping
him publicly to his own royal heart! Emigration, flowing over the
Frontiers, now in drops, now in streams, in various humours of fear, of
petulance, rage and hope, ever since those first Bastille days when
d'Artois went, 'to shame the citizens of Paris,'—has swollen to the size
of a Phenomenon of the world. Coblentz is become a small extra-national
Versailles; a Versailles in partibus: briguing, intriguing, favouritism,
strumpetocracy itself, they say, goes on there; all the old activities,
on a small scale, quickened by hungry Revenge.
Enthusiasm, of loyalty, of hatred and hope, has risen to
a high pitch; as, in any Coblentz tavern, you may hear, in speech, and
in singing. Maury assists in the interior Council; much is decided on;
for one thing, they keep lists of the dates of your emigrating; a month
sooner, or a month later determines your greater or your less right to
the coming Division of the Spoil. Cazales himself, because he had
occasionally spoken with a Constitutional tone, was looked on coldly at
first: so pure are our principles. (Montgaillard, iii. 517;
Toulongeon, (ubi supra).) And arms are a-hammering at Liege;
'three thousand horses' ambling hitherward from the Fairs of Germany:
Cavalry enrolling; likewise Foot-soldiers, 'in blue coat, red waistcoat,
and nankeen trousers!' (See Hist. Parl. xiii. 11-38, 41-61, 358, &c.)
They have their secret domestic correspondences, as their open foreign:
with disaffected Crypto-Aristocrats, with contumacious Priests, with
Austrian Committee in the Tuileries. Deserters are spirited over by
assiduous crimps; Royal-Allemand is gone almost wholly. Their route of
march, towards France and the Division of the Spoil, is marked out, were
the Kaiser once ready. "It is said, they mean to poison the sources;
but," adds Patriotism making Report of it, "they will not poison the
source of Liberty," whereat 'on applaudit,' we cannot but applaud. Also
they have manufactories of False Assignats; and men that circulate in
the interior distributing and disbursing the same; one of these we
denounce now to Legislative Patriotism: 'A man Lebrun by name; about
thirty years of age, with blonde hair and in quantity; has,' only for
the time being surely, 'a black-eye, oeil poche; goes in a wiski with a
black horse,' (Moniteur, Seance du 2 Novembre 1791 (Hist. Parl.
xii. 212).)—always keeping his Gig!
Unhappy Emigrants, it was their lot, and the lot of
France! They are ignorant of much that they should know: of themselves,
of what is around them. A Political Party that knows not when it is
beaten, may become one of the fatallist of things, to itself, and to
all. Nothing will convince these men that they cannot scatter the French
Revolution at the first blast of their war-trumpet; that the French
Revolution is other than a blustering Effervescence, of brawlers and
spouters, which, at the flash of chivalrous broadswords, at the rustle
of gallows-ropes, will burrow itself, in dens the deeper the welcomer.
But, alas, what man does know and measure himself, and the things that
are round him;—else where were the need of physical fighting at all?
Never, till they are cleft asunder, can these heads believe that a
Sansculottic arm has any vigour in it: cleft asunder, it will be too
late to believe.
One may say, without spleen against his poor erring
brothers of any side, that above all other mischiefs, this of the
Emigrant Nobles acted fatally on France. Could they have known, could
they have understood! In the beginning of 1789, a splendour and a terror
still surrounded them: the Conflagration of their Chateaus, kindled by
months of obstinacy, went out after the Fourth of August; and might have
continued out, had they at all known what to defend, what to relinquish
as indefensible. They were still a graduated Hierarchy of Authorities,
or the accredited Similitude of such: they sat there, uniting King with
Commonalty; transmitting and translating gradually, from degree to
degree, the command of the one into the obedience of the other;
rendering command and obedience still possible. Had they understood
their place, and what to do in it, this French Revolution, which went
forth explosively in years and in months, might have spread itself over
generations; and not a torture-death but a quiet euthanasia have been
provided for many things.
But they were proud and high, these men; they were not
wise to consider. They spurned all from them; in disdainful hate, they
drew the sword and flung away the scabbard. France has not only no
Hierarchy of Authorities, to translate command into obedience; its
Hierarchy of Authorities has fled to the enemies of France; calls loudly
on the enemies of France to interfere armed, who want but a pretext to
do that. Jealous Kings and Kaisers might have looked on long, meditating
interference, yet afraid and ashamed to interfere: but now do not the
King's Brothers, and all French Nobles, Dignitaries and Authorities that
are free to speak, which the King himself is not,—passionately invite
us, in the name of Right and of Might? Ranked at Coblentz, from Fifteen
to Twenty thousand stand now brandishing their weapons, with the cry:
On, on! Yes, Messieurs, you shall on;—and divide the spoil according to
your dates of emigrating.
Of all which things a poor Legislative Assembly, and
Patriot France, is informed: by denunciant friend, by triumphant foe.
Sulleau's Pamphlets, of the Rivarol Staff of Genius, circulate;
heralding supreme hope. Durosoy's Placards tapestry the walls; Chant du
Coq crows day, pecked at by Tallien's Ami des Citoyens. King's-Friend,
Royou, Ami du Roi, can name, in exact arithmetical ciphers, the
contingents of the various Invading Potentates; in all, Four hundred and
nineteen thousand Foreign fighting men, with Fifteen thousand Emigrants.
Not to reckon these your daily and hourly desertions, which an Editor
must daily record, of whole Companies, and even Regiments, crying Vive
le Roi, vive la Reine, and marching over with banners spread: (Ami du
Roi Newspaper in Hist. Parl. xiii. 175.)—lies all, and wind; yet to
Patriotism not wind; nor, alas, one day, to Royou! Patriotism,
therefore, may brawl and babble yet a little while: but its hours are
numbered: Europe is coming with Four hundred and nineteen thousand and
the Chivalry of France; the gallows, one may hope, will get its own.
Chapter 6.
Brigands and Jales.
We shall have War, then; and on what terms! With an
Executive 'pretending,' really with less and less deceptiveness now, 'to
be dead;' casting even a wishful eye towards the enemy: on such terms we
shall have War.
Public Functionary in vigorous action there is none; if
it be not Rivarol with his Staff of Genius and Two hundred and eighty
Applauders. The Public Service lies waste: the very tax-gatherer has
forgotten his cunning: in this and the other Provincial Board of
Management (Directoire de Departmente) it is found advisable to
retain what Taxes you can gather, to pay your own inevitable
expenditures. Our Revenue is Assignats; emission on emission of
Paper-money. And the Army; our Three grand Armies, of Rochambeau, of
Luckner, of Lafayette? Lean, disconsolate hover these Three grand
Armies, watching the Frontiers there; three Flights of long-necked
Cranes in moulting time;—wretched, disobedient, disorganised; who never
saw fire; the old Generals and Officers gone across the Rhine.
War-minister Narbonne, he of the rose-coloured Reports, solicits
recruitments, equipments, money, always money; threatens, since he can
get none,—to 'take his sword,' which belongs to himself, and go serve
his country with that. (Moniteur, Seance du 23 Janvier, 1792;
Biographie des Ministres para Narbonne.)
The question of questions is: What shall be done? Shall
we, with a desperate defiance which Fortune sometimes favours, draw the
sword at once, in the face of this in-rushing world of Emigration and
Obscurantism; or wait, and temporise and diplomatise, till, if possible,
our resources mature themselves a little? And yet again are our
resources growing towards maturity; or growing the other way? Dubious:
the ablest Patriots are divided; Brissot and his Brissotins, or
Girondins, in the Legislative, cry aloud for the former defiant plan;
Robespierre, in the Jacobins, pleads as loud for the latter dilatory
one: with responses, even with mutual reprimands; distracting the Mother
of Patriotism. Consider also what agitated Breakfasts there may be at
Madame d'Udon's in the Place Vendome! The alarm of all men is great.
Help, ye Patriots; and O at least agree; for the hour presses. Frost was
not yet gone, when in that 'tolerably handsome apartment of the Castle
of Niort,' there arrived a Letter: General Dumouriez must to Paris. It
is War-minister Narbonne that writes; the General shall give counsel
about many things. (Dumouriez, ii. c. 6.) In the month of
February 1792, Brissotin friends welcome their Dumouriez
Polymetis,—comparable really to an antique Ulysses in modern costume;
quick, elastic, shifty, insuppressible, a 'many-counselled man.'
Let the Reader fancy this fair France with a whole
Cimmerian Europe girdling her, rolling in on her; black, to burst in red
thunder of War; fair France herself hand-shackled and foot-shackled in
the weltering complexities of this Social Clothing, or Constitution,
which they have made for her; a France that, in such Constitution,
cannot march! And Hunger too; and plotting Aristocrats, and
excommunicating Dissident Priests: 'The man Lebrun by name' urging his
black wiski, visible to the eye: and, still more terrible in his
invisibility, Engineer Goguelat, with Queen's cipher, riding and
running!
The excommunicatory Priests give new trouble in the Maine
and Loire; La Vendee, nor Cathelineau the wool-dealer, has not ceased
grumbling and rumbling. Nay behold Jales itself once more: how often
does that real-imaginary Camp of the Fiend require to be extinguished!
For near two years now, it has waned faint and again waxed bright, in
the bewildered soul of Patriotism: actually, if Patriotism knew it, one
of the most surprising products of Nature working with Art. Royalist
Seigneurs, under this or the other pretext, assemble the simple people
of these Cevennes Mountains; men not unused to revolt, and with heart
for fighting, could their poor heads be got persuaded. The Royalist
Seigneur harangues; harping mainly on the religious string: "True
Priests maltreated, false Priests intruded, Protestants (once
dragooned) now triumphing, things sacred given to the dogs;" and so
produces, from the pious Mountaineer throat, rough growlings. "Shall we
not testify, then, ye brave hearts of the Cevennes; march to the rescue?
Holy Religion; duty to God and King?" "Si fait, si fait, Just so, just
so," answer the brave hearts always: "Mais il y a de bien bonnes choses
dans la Revolution, But there are many good things in the Revolution
too!"—And so the matter, cajole as we may, will only turn on its axis,
not stir from the spot, and remains theatrical merely. (Dampmartin,
i. 201.)
Nevertheless deepen your cajolery, harp quick and
quicker, ye Royalist Seigneurs; with a dead-lift effort you may bring it
to that. In the month of June next, this Camp of Jales will step forth
as a theatricality suddenly become real; Two thousand strong, and with
the boast that it is Seventy thousand: most strange to see; with flags
flying, bayonets fixed; with Proclamation, and d'Artois Commission of
civil war! Let some Rebecqui, or other the like hot-clear Patriot; let
some 'Lieutenant-Colonel Aubry,' if Rebecqui is busy elsewhere, raise
instantaneous National Guards, and disperse and dissolve it; and blow
the Old Castle asunder, (Moniteur, Seance du 15 Juillet 1792.)
that so, if possible, we hear of it no more!
In the Months of February and March, it is recorded, the
terror, especially of rural France, had risen even to the transcendental
pitch: not far from madness. In Town and Hamlet is rumour; of war,
massacre: that Austrians, Aristocrats, above all, that The Brigands are
close by. Men quit their houses and huts; rush fugitive, shrieking, with
wife and child, they know not whither. Such a terror, the eye-witnesses
say, never fell on a Nation; nor shall again fall, even in Reigns of
Terror expressly so-called. The Countries of the Loire, all the Central
and South-East regions, start up distracted, 'simultaneously as by an
electric shock;'—for indeed grain too gets scarcer and scarcer. 'The
people barricade the entrances of Towns, pile stones in the upper
stories, the women prepare boiling water; from moment to moment,
expecting the attack. In the Country, the alarm-bell rings incessant:
troops of peasants, gathered by it, scour the highways, seeking an
imaginary enemy. They are armed mostly with scythes stuck in wood; and,
arriving in wild troops at the barricaded Towns, are themselves
sometimes taken for Brigands.' (Newspapers, &c. in Hist. Parl. xiii.
325.)
So rushes old France: old France is rushing down. What
the end will be is known to no mortal; that the end is near all mortals
may know.
Chapter 7.
Constitution will not march.
To all which our poor Legislative, tied up by an
unmarching Constitution, can oppose nothing, by way of remedy, but mere
bursts of parliamentary eloquence! They go on, debating, denouncing,
objurgating: loud weltering Chaos, which devours itself.
But their two thousand and odd Decrees? Reader, these
happily concern not thee, nor me. Mere Occasional Decrees, foolish and
not foolish; sufficient for that day was its own evil! Of the whole two
thousand there are not, now half a score, and these mostly blighted in
the bud by royal Veto, that will profit or disprofit us. On the 17th of
January, the Legislative, for one thing, got its High Court, its Haute
Cour, set up at Orleans. The theory had been given by the Constituent,
in May last, but this is the reality: a Court for the trial of Political
Offences; a Court which cannot want work. To this it was decreed that
there needed no royal Acceptance, therefore that there could be no Veto.
Also Priests can now be married; ever since last October. A patriotic
adventurous Priest had made bold to marry himself then; and not thinking
this enough, came to the bar with his new spouse; that the whole world
might hold honey-moon with him, and a Law be obtained.
Less joyful are the Laws against Refractory Priests; and
yet no less needful! Decrees on Priests and Decrees on Emigrants: these
are the two brief Series of Decrees, worked out with endless debate, and
then cancelled by Veto, which mainly concern us here. For an august
National Assembly must needs conquer these Refractories, Clerical or
Laic, and thumbscrew them into obedience; yet, behold, always as you
turn your legislative thumbscrew, and will press and even crush till
Refractories give way,—King's Veto steps in, with magical paralysis; and
your thumbscrew, hardly squeezing, much less crushing, does not act!
Truly a melancholy Set of Decrees, a pair of Sets;
paralysed by Veto! First, under date the 28th of October 1791, we have
Legislative Proclamation, issued by herald and bill-sticker; inviting
Monsieur, the King's Brother to return within two months, under
penalties. To which invitation Monsieur replies nothing; or indeed
replies by Newspaper Parody, inviting the august Legislative 'to return
to common sense within two months,' under penalties. Whereupon the
Legislative must take stronger measures. So, on the 9th of November, we
declare all Emigrants to be 'suspect of conspiracy;' and, in brief, to
be 'outlawed,' if they have not returned at Newyear's-day:—Will the King
say Veto? That 'triple impost' shall be levied on these men's
Properties, or even their Properties be 'put in sequestration,' one can
understand. But further, on Newyear's-day itself, not an individual
having 'returned,' we declare, and with fresh emphasis some fortnight
later again declare, That Monsieur is dechu, forfeited of his eventual
Heirship to the Crown; nay more that Conde, Calonne, and a considerable
List of others are accused of high treason; and shall be judged by our
High Court of Orleans: Veto!—Then again as to Nonjurant Priests: it was
decreed, in November last, that they should forfeit what Pensions they
had; be 'put under inspection, under surveillance,' and, if need were,
be banished: Veto! A still sharper turn is coming; but to this also the
answer will be, Veto.
Veto after Veto; your thumbscrew paralysed! Gods and men
may see that the Legislative is in a false position. As, alas, who is in
a true one? Voices already murmur for a 'National Convention.' (December
1791 (Hist. Parl. xii. 257).) This poor Legislative, spurred
and stung into action by a whole France and a whole Europe, cannot act;
can only objurgate and perorate; with stormy 'motions,' and motion in
which is no way: with effervescence, with noise and fuliginous fury!
What scenes in that National Hall! President jingling his
inaudible bell; or, as utmost signal of distress, clapping on his hat;
'the tumult subsiding in twenty minutes,' and this or the other
indiscreet Member sent to the Abbaye Prison for three days! Suspected
Persons must be summoned and questioned; old M. de Sombreuil of the
Invalides has to give account of himself, and why he leaves his Gates
open. Unusual smoke rose from the Sevres Pottery, indicating conspiracy;
the Potters explained that it was Necklace-Lamotte's Memoirs, bought up
by her Majesty, which they were endeavouring to suppress by fire, (Moniteur,
Seance du 28 Mai 1792; Campan, ii. 196.)—which nevertheless he that
runs may still read.
Again, it would seem, Duke de Brissac and the King's
Constitutional-Guard are 'making cartridges secretly in the cellars;' a
set of Royalists, pure and impure; black cut-throats many of them,
picked out of gaming houses and sinks; in all Six thousand instead of
Eighteen hundred; who evidently gloom on us every time we enter the
Chateau. (Dumouriez, ii. 168.) Wherefore, with infinite debate,
let Brissac and King's Guard be disbanded. Disbanded accordingly they
are; after only two months of existence, for they did not get on foot
till March of this same year. So ends briefly the King's new
Constitutional Maison Militaire; he must now be guarded by mere Swiss
and blue Nationals again. It seems the lot of Constitutional things. New
Constitutional Maison Civile he would never even establish, much as
Barnave urged it; old resident Duchesses sniffed at it, and held aloof;
on the whole her Majesty thought it not worth while, the Noblesse would
so soon be back triumphant. (Campan, ii. c. 19.)
Or, looking still into this National Hall and its scenes,
behold Bishop Torne, a Constitutional Prelate, not of severe morals,
demanding that 'religious costumes and such caricatures' be abolished.
Bishop Torne warms, catches fire; finishes by untying, and indignantly
flinging on the table, as if for gage or bet, his own pontifical cross.
Which cross, at any rate, is instantly covered by the cross of Te-Deum
Fauchet, then by other crosses, and insignia, till all are stripped;
this clerical Senator clutching off his skull-cap, that other his
frill-collar,—lest Fanaticism return on us. (Moniteur, du 7 Avril
1792; Deux Amis, vii. 111.)
Quick is the movement here! And then so confused,
unsubstantial, you might call it almost spectral; pallid, dim, inane,
like the Kingdoms of Dis! Unruly Liguet, shrunk to a kind of spectre for
us, pleads here, some cause that he has: amid rumour and interruption,
which excel human patience; he 'tears his papers, and withdraws,' the
irascible adust little man. Nay honourable members will tear their
papers, being effervescent: Merlin of Thionville tears his papers,
crying: "So, the People cannot be saved by you!" Nor are Deputations
wanting: Deputations of Sections; generally with complaint and
denouncement, always with Patriot fervour of sentiment: Deputation of
Women, pleading that they also may be allowed to take Pikes, and
exercise in the Champ-de-Mars. Why not, ye Amazons, if it be in you?
Then occasionally, having done our message and got answer, we 'defile
through the Hall, singing ca-ira;' or rather roll and whirl through it,
'dancing our ronde patriotique the while,'—our new Carmagnole, or
Pyrrhic war-dance and liberty-dance. Patriot Huguenin, Ex-Advocate,
Ex-Carabineer, Ex-Clerk of the Barriers, comes deputed, with
Saint-Antoine at his heels; denouncing Anti-patriotism, Famine,
Forstalment and Man-eaters; asks an august Legislative: "Is there not a
tocsin in your hearts against these mangeurs d'hommes!" (See
Moniteur, Seances in Hist. Parl. xiii. xiv.)
But above all things, for this is a continual business,
the Legislative has to reprimand the King's Ministers. Of His Majesty's
Ministers we have said hitherto, and say, next to nothing. Still more
spectral these! Sorrowful; of no permanency any of them, none at least
since Montmorin vanished: the 'eldest of the King's Council' is
occasionally not ten days old! (Dumouriez, ii. 137.)
Feuillant-Constitutional, as your respectable Cahier de Gerville, as
your respectable unfortunate Delessarts; or Royalist-Constitutional, as
Montmorin last Friend of Necker; or Aristocrat as Bertrand-Moleville:
they flit there phantom-like, in the huge simmering confusion; poor
shadows, dashed in the racking winds; powerless, without meaning;—whom
the human memory need not charge itself with.
But how often, we say, are these poor Majesty's Ministers
summoned over; to be questioned, tutored; nay, threatened, almost
bullied! They answer what, with adroitest simulation and casuistry, they
can: of which a poor Legislative knows not what to make. One thing only
is clear, That Cimmerian Europe is girdling us in; that France (not
actually dead, surely?) cannot march. Have a care, ye Ministers!
Sharp Guadet transfixes you with cross-questions, with sudden
Advocate-conclusions; the sleeping tempest that is in Vergniaud can be
awakened. Restless Brissot brings up Reports, Accusations, endless thin
Logic; it is the man's highday even now. Condorcet redacts, with his
firm pen, our 'Address of the Legislative Assembly to the French
Nation.' (16th February 1792 (Choix des Rapports, viii. 375-92).)
Fiery Max Isnard, who, for the rest, will "carry not Fire and Sword" on
those Cimmerian Enemies "but Liberty,"—is for declaring "that we hold
Ministers responsible; and that by responsibility we mean death, nous
entendons la mort."
For verily it grows serious: the time presses, and
traitors there are. Bertrand-Moleville has a smooth tongue, the known
Aristocrat; gall in his heart. How his answers and explanations flow
ready; jesuitic, plausible to the ear! But perhaps the notablest is
this, which befel once when Bertrand had done answering and was
withdrawn. Scarcely had the august Assembly begun considering what was
to be done with him, when the Hall fills with smoke. Thick sour smoke:
no oratory, only wheezing and barking;—irremediable; so that the august
Assembly has to adjourn! (Courrier de Paris, 14 Janvier, 1792 (Gorsas's
Newspaper), in Hist. Parl. xiii. 83.) A miracle? Typical miracle?
One knows not: only this one seems to know, that 'the Keeper of the
Stoves was appointed by Bertrand' or by some underling of his!—O
fuliginous confused Kingdom of Dis, with thy Tantalus-Ixion toils, with
thy angry Fire-floods, and Streams named of Lamentation, why hast thou
not thy Lethe too, that so one might finish?
Nevertheless let not Patriotism despair. Have we not, in
Paris at least, a virtuous Petion, a wholly Patriotic Municipality?
Virtuous Petion, ever since November, is Mayor of Paris: in our
Municipality, the Public, for the Public is now admitted too, may behold
an energetic Danton; further, an epigrammatic slow-sure Manuel; a
resolute unrepentant Billaud-Varennes, of Jesuit breeding; Tallien
able-editor; and nothing but Patriots, better or worse. So ran the
November Elections: to the joy of most citizens; nay the very Court
supported Petion rather than Lafayette. And so Bailly and his
Feuillants, long waning like the Moon, had to withdraw then, making some
sorrowful obeisance, into extinction;—or indeed into worse, into lurid
half-light, grimmed by the shadow of that Red Flag of theirs, and bitter
memory of the Champ-de-Mars. How swift is the progress of things and
men! Not now does Lafayette, as on that Federation-day, when his noon
was, 'press his sword firmly on the Fatherland's Altar,' and swear in
sight of France: ah no; he, waning and setting ever since that hour,
hangs now, disastrous, on the edge of the horizon; commanding one of
those Three moulting Crane-flights of Armies, in a most suspected,
unfruitful, uncomfortable manner!
But, at most, cannot Patriotism, so many thousands strong
in this Metropolis of the Universe, help itself? Has it not right-hands,
pikes? Hammering of pikes, which was not to be prohibited by Mayor
Bailly, has been sanctioned by Mayor Petion; sanctioned by Legislative
Assembly. How not, when the King's so-called Constitutional Guard 'was
making cartridges in secret?' Changes are necessary for the National
Guard itself; this whole Feuillant-Aristocrat Staff of the Guard must be
disbanded. Likewise, citizens without uniform may surely rank in the
Guard, the pike beside the musket, in such a time: the 'active' citizen
and the passive who can fight for us, are they not both welcome?—O my
Patriot friends, indubitably Yes! Nay the truth is, Patriotism
throughout, were it never so white-frilled, logical, respectable, must
either lean itself heartily on Sansculottism, the black, bottomless; or
else vanish, in the frightfullest way, to Limbo! Thus some, with
upturned nose, will altogether sniff and disdain Sansculottism; others
will lean heartily on it; nay others again will lean what we call
heartlessly on it: three sorts; each sort with a destiny corresponding.
(Discours de Bailly, Reponse de Petion (Moniteur du 20 Novembre
1791).)
In such point of view, however, have we not for the
present a Volunteer Ally, stronger than all the rest: namely, Hunger?
Hunger; and what rushing of Panic Terror this and the sum-total of our
other miseries may bring! For Sansculottism grows by what all other
things die of. Stupid Peter Baille almost made an epigram, though
unconsciously, and with the Patriot world laughing not at it but at him,
when he wrote 'Tout va bien ici, le pain manque, All goes well here,
victuals not to be had.' (Barbaroux, p. 94.)
Neither, if you knew it, is Patriotism without her
Constitution that can march; her not impotent Parliament; or call it,
Ecumenic Council, and General-Assembly of the Jean-Jacques Churches: the
MOTHER-SOCIETY, namely! Mother-Society with her three hundred full-grown
Daughters; with what we can call little Granddaughters trying to walk,
in every village of France, numerable, as Burke thinks, by the hundred
thousand. This is the true Constitution; made not by Twelve-Hundred
august Senators, but by Nature herself; and has grown, unconsciously,
out of the wants and the efforts of these Twenty-five Millions of men.
They are 'Lords of the Articles,' our Jacobins; they originate debates
for the Legislative; discuss Peace and War; settle beforehand what the
Legislative is to do. Greatly to the scandal of philosophical men, and
of most Historians;—who do in that judge naturally, and yet not wisely.
A Governing power must exist: your other powers here are simulacra; this
power is it.
Great is the Mother-Society: She has had the honour to be
denounced by Austrian Kaunitz; (Moniteur, Seance du 29 Mars, 1792.)
and is all the dearer to Patriotism. By fortune and valour, she has
extinguished Feuillantism itself, at least the Feuillant Club. This
latter, high as it once carried its head, she, on the 18th of February,
has the satisfaction to see shut, extinct; Patriots having gone thither,
with tumult, to hiss it out of pain. The Mother Society has enlarged her
locality, stretches now over the whole nave of the Church. Let us glance
in, with the worthy Toulongeon, our old Ex-Constituent Friend, who
happily has eyes to see: 'The nave of the Jacobins Church,' says he, 'is
changed into a vast Circus, the seats of which mount up circularly like
an amphitheatre to the very groin of the domed roof. A high Pyramid of
black marble, built against one of the walls, which was formerly a
funeral monument, has alone been left standing: it serves now as back to
the Office-bearers' Bureau. Here on an elevated Platform sit President
and Secretaries, behind and above them the white Busts of Mirabeau, of
Franklin, and various others, nay finally of Marat. Facing this is the
Tribune, raised till it is midway between floor and groin of the dome,
so that the speaker's voice may be in the centre. From that point,
thunder the voices which shake all Europe: down below, in silence, are
forging the thunderbolts and the firebrands. Penetrating into this huge
circuit, where all is out of measure, gigantic, the mind cannot repress
some movement of terror and wonder; the imagination recals those dread
temples which Poetry, of old, had consecrated to the Avenging Deities.'
(Toulongeon, ii. 124.)
Scenes too are in this Jacobin Amphitheatre,—had History
time for them. Flags of the 'Three free Peoples of the Universe,' trinal
brotherly flags of England, America, France, have been waved here in
concert; by London Deputation, of Whigs or Wighs and their Club, on this
hand, and by young French Citizenesses on that; beautiful sweet-tongued
Female Citizens, who solemnly send over salutation and brotherhood, also
Tricolor stitched by their own needle, and finally Ears of Wheat; while
the dome rebellows with Vivent les trois peuples libres! from all
throats:—a most dramatic scene. Demoiselle Theroigne recites, from that
Tribune in mid air, her persecutions in Austria; comes leaning on the
arm of Joseph Chenier, Poet Chenier, to demand Liberty for the hapless
Swiss of Chateau-Vieux. (Debats des Jacobins (Hist. Parl. xiii.
259, &c.).) Be of hope, ye Forty Swiss; tugging there, in the
Brest waters; not forgotten!
Deputy Brissot perorates from that Tribune; Desmoulins,
our wicked Camille, interjecting audibly from below, "Coquin!" Here,
though oftener in the Cordeliers, reverberates the lion-voice of Danton;
grim Billaud-Varennes is here; Collot d'Herbois, pleading for the Forty
Swiss; tearing a passion to rags. Apophthegmatic Manuel winds up in this
pithy way: "A Minister must perish!"—to which the Amphitheatre responds:
"Tous, Tous, All, All!" But the Chief Priest and Speaker of this place,
as we said, is Robespierre, the long-winded incorruptible man. What
spirit of Patriotism dwelt in men in those times, this one fact, it
seems to us, will evince: that fifteen hundred human creatures, not
bound to it, sat quiet under the oratory of Robespierre; nay, listened
nightly, hour after hour, applausive; and gaped as for the word of life.
More insupportable individual, one would say, seldom opened his mouth in
any Tribune. Acrid, implacable-impotent; dull-drawling, barren as the
Harmattan-wind! He pleads, in endless earnest-shallow speech, against
immediate War, against Woollen Caps or Bonnets Rouges, against many
things; and is the Trismegistus and Dalai-Lama of Patriot men. Whom
nevertheless a shrill-voiced little man, yet with fine eyes, and a broad
beautifully sloping brow, rises respectfully to controvert: he is, say
the Newspaper Reporters, 'M. Louvet, Author of the charming Romance of
Faublas.' Steady, ye Patriots! Pull not yet two ways; with a France
rushing panic-stricken in the rural districts, and a Cimmerian Europe
storming in on you!
About the vernal equinox, however, one unexpected gleam
of hope does burst forth on Patriotism: the appointment of a thoroughly
Patriot Ministry. This also his Majesty, among his innumerable
experiments of wedding fire to water, will try. Quod bonum sit. Madame
d'Udon's Breakfasts have jingled with a new significance; not even
Genevese Dumont but had a word in it. Finally, on the 15th and onwards
to the 23d day of March, 1792, when all is negociated,—this is the
blessed issue; this Patriot Ministry that we see.
General Dumouriez, with the Foreign Portfolio shall ply
Kaunitz and the Kaiser, in another style than did poor Delessarts; whom
indeed we have sent to our High Court of Orleans for his sluggishness.
War-minister Narbonne is washed away by the Time-flood; poor Chevalier
de Grave, chosen by the Court, is fast washing away: then shall austere
Servan, able Engineer-Officer, mount suddenly to the War Department.
Genevese Claviere sees an old omen realized: passing the Finance Hotel,
long years ago, as a poor Genevese Exile, it was borne wondrously on his
mind that he was to be Finance Minister; and now he is it;—and his poor
Wife, given up by the Doctors, rises and walks, not the victim of nerves
but their vanquisher. (Dumont, c. 20, 21.) And above all, our
Minister of the Interior? Roland de la Platriere, he of Lyons! So have
the Brissotins, public or private Opinion, and Breakfasts in the Place
Vendome decided it. Strict Roland, compared to a Quaker endimanche, or
Sunday Quaker, goes to kiss hands at the Tuileries, in round hat and
sleek hair, his shoes tied with mere riband or ferrat! The Supreme Usher
twitches Dumouriez aside: "Quoi, Monsieur! No buckles to his
shoes?"—"Ah, Monsieur," answers Dumouriez, glancing towards the ferrat:
"All is lost, Tout est perdu." (Madame Roland, ii. 80-115.)
And so our fair Roland removes from her upper floor in
the Rue Saint-Jacques, to the sumptuous saloons once occupied by Madame
Necker. Nay still earlier, it was Calonne that did all this gilding; it
was he who ground these lustres, Venetian mirrors; who polished this
inlaying, this veneering and or-moulu; and made it, by rubbing of the
proper lamp, an Aladdin's Palace:—and now behold, he wanders
dim-flitting over Europe, half-drowned in the Rhine-stream, scarcely
saving his Papers! Vos non vobis.—The fair Roland, equal to either
fortune, has her public Dinner on Fridays, the Ministers all there in a
body: she withdraws to her desk (the cloth once removed), and
seems busy writing; nevertheless loses no word: if for example Deputy
Brissot and Minister Claviere get too hot in argument, she, not without
timidity, yet with a cunning gracefulness, will interpose. Deputy
Brissot's head, they say, is getting giddy, in this sudden height: as
feeble heads do.
Envious men insinuate that the Wife Roland is Minister,
and not the Husband: it is happily the worst they have to charge her
with. For the rest, let whose head soever be getting giddy, it is not
this brave woman's. Serene and queenly here, as she was of old in her
own hired garret of the Ursulines Convent! She who has quietly shelled
French-beans for her dinner; being led to that, as a young maiden, by
quiet insight and computation; and knowing what that was, and what she
was: such a one will also look quietly on or-moulu and veneering, not
ignorant of these either. Calonne did the veneering: he gave dinners
here, old Besenval diplomatically whispering to him; and was great: yet
Calonne we saw at last 'walk with long strides.' Necker next: and where
now is Necker? Us also a swift change has brought hither; a swift change
will send us hence. Not a Palace but a Caravansera!
So wags and wavers this unrestful World, day after day,
month after month. The Streets of Paris, and all Cities, roll daily
their oscillatory flood of men; which flood does, nightly, disappear,
and lie hidden horizontal in beds and trucklebeds; and awakes on the
morrow to new perpendicularity and movement. Men go their roads, foolish
or wise;—Engineer Goguelat to and fro, bearing Queen's cipher. A Madame
de Stael is busy; cannot clutch her Narbonne from the Time-flood: a
Princess de Lamballe is busy; cannot help her Queen. Barnave, seeing the
Feuillants dispersed, and Coblentz so brisk, begs by way of final
recompence to kiss her Majesty's hand; augurs not well of her new
course; and retires home to Grenoble, to wed an heiress there. The Cafe
Valois and Meot the Restaurateur's hear daily gasconade; loud babble of
Half-pay Royalists, with or without Poniards; remnants of Aristocrat
saloons call the new Ministry Ministere-Sansculotte. A Louvet, of the
Romance Faublas, is busy in the Jacobins. A Cazotte, of the Romance
Diable Amoureux, is busy elsewhere: better wert thou quiet, old Cazotte;
it is a world, this, of magic become real! All men are busy; doing they
only half guess what:—flinging seeds, of tares mostly, into the
"Seed-field of TIME" this, by and by, will declare wholly what.
But Social Explosions have in them something dread, and
as it were mad and magical: which indeed Life always secretly has; thus
the dumb Earth (says Fable), if you pull her mandrake-roots, will
give a daemonic mad-making moan. These Explosions and Revolts ripen,
break forth like dumb dread Forces of Nature; and yet they are Men's
forces; and yet we are part of them: the Daemonic that is in man's life
has burst out on us, will sweep us too away!—One day here is like
another, and yet it is not like but different. How much is growing,
silently resistless, at all moments! Thoughts are growing; forms of
Speech are growing, and Customs and even Costumes; still more visibly
are actions and transactions growing, and that doomed Strife, of France
with herself and with the whole world.
The word Liberty is never named now except in conjunction
with another; Liberty and Equality. In like manner, what, in a reign of
Liberty and Equality, can these words, 'Sir,' 'obedient Servant,'
'Honour to be,' and such like, signify? Tatters and fibres of old
Feudality; which, were it only in the Grammatical province, ought to be
rooted out! The Mother Society has long since had proposals to that
effect: these she could not entertain, not at the moment. Note too how
the Jacobin Brethren are mounting new symbolical headgear: the Woollen
Cap or Nightcap, bonnet de laine, better known as bonnet rouge, the
colour being red. A thing one wears not only by way of Phrygian
Cap-of-Liberty, but also for convenience' sake, and then also in
compliment to the Lower-class Patriots and Bastille-Heroes; for the Red
Nightcap combines all the three properties. Nay cockades themselves
begin to be made of wool, of tricolor yarn: the riband-cockade, as a
symptom of Feuillant Upper-class temper, is becoming suspicious. Signs
of the times.
Still more, note the travail-throes of Europe: or,
rather, note the birth she brings; for the successive throes and
shrieks, of Austrian and Prussian Alliance, of Kaunitz Anti-jacobin
Despatch, of French Ambassadors cast out, and so forth, were long to
note. Dumouriez corresponds with Kaunitz, Metternich, or Cobentzel, in
another style that Delessarts did. Strict becomes stricter; categorical
answer, as to this Coblentz work and much else, shall be given. Failing
which? Failing which, on the 20th day of April 1792, King and Ministers
step over to the Salle de Manege; promulgate how the matter stands; and
poor Louis, 'with tears in his eyes,' proposes that the Assembly do now
decree War. After due eloquence, War is decreed that night.
War, indeed! Paris came all crowding, full of expectancy,
to the morning, and still more to the evening session. D'Orleans with
his two sons, is there; looks on, wide-eyed, from the opposite Gallery.
(Deux Amis, vii. 146-66.) Thou canst look, O Philippe: it is a
War big with issues, for thee and for all men. Cimmerian Obscurantism
and this thrice glorious Revolution shall wrestle for it, then: some
Four-and-twenty years; in immeasurable Briareus' wrestle; trampling and
tearing; before they can come to any, not agreement, but compromise, and
approximate ascertainment each of what is in the other.
Let our Three Generals on the Frontiers look to it,
therefore; and poor Chevalier de Grave, the Warminister, consider what
he will do. What is in the three Generals and Armies we may guess. As
for poor Chevalier de Grave, he, in this whirl of things all coming to a
press and pinch upon him, loses head, and merely whirls with them, in a
totally distracted manner; signing himself at last, 'De Grave, Mayor of
Paris:' whereupon he demits, returns over the Channel, to walk in
Kensington Gardens; (Dumont, c. 19, 21.) and austere Servan, the
able Engineer-Officer, is elevated in his stead. To the post of Honour?
To that of Difficulty, at least.
Chapter 10.
Petion-National-Pique.
And yet, how, on dark bottomless Cataracts there plays
the foolishest fantastic-coloured spray and shadow; hiding the Abyss
under vapoury rainbows! Alongside of this discussion as to
Austrian-Prussian War, there goes on no less but more vehemently a
discussion, Whether the Forty or Two-and-forty Swiss of Chateau-Vieux
shall be liberated from the Brest Gallies? And then, Whether, being
liberated, they shall have a public Festival, or only private ones?
Theroigne, as we saw, spoke; and Collot took up the tale.
Has not Bouille's final display of himself, in that final Night of
Spurs, stamped your so-called 'Revolt of Nanci' into a 'Massacre of
Nanci,' for all Patriot judgments? Hateful is that massacre; hateful the
Lafayette-Feuillant 'public thanks' given for it! For indeed, Jacobin
Patriotism and dispersed Feuillantism are now at death-grips; and do
fight with all weapons, even with scenic shows. The walls of Paris,
accordingly, are covered with Placard and Counter-Placard, on the
subject of Forty Swiss blockheads. Journal responds to Journal; Player
Collot to Poetaster Roucher; Joseph Chenier the Jacobin, squire of
Theroigne, to his Brother Andre the Feuillant; Mayor Petion to Dupont de
Nemours: and for the space of two months, there is nowhere peace for the
thought of man,—till this thing be settled.
Gloria in excelsis! The Forty Swiss are at last got
'amnestied.' Rejoice ye Forty: doff your greasy wool Bonnets, which
shall become Caps of Liberty. The Brest Daughter-Society welcomes you
from on board, with kisses on each cheek: your iron Handcuffs are
disputed as Relics of Saints; the Brest Society indeed can have one
portion, which it will beat into Pikes, a sort of Sacred Pikes; but the
other portion must belong to Paris, and be suspended from the dome
there, along with the Flags of the Three Free Peoples! Such a goose is
man; and cackles over plush-velvet Grand Monarques and woollen
Galley-slaves; over everything and over nothing,—and will cackle with
his whole soul merely if others cackle!
On the ninth morning of April, these Forty Swiss
blockheads arrive. From Versailles; with vivats heaven-high; with the
affluence of men and women. To the Townhall we conduct them; nay to the
Legislative itself, though not without difficulty. They are harangued,
bedinnered, begifted,—the very Court, not for conscience' sake,
contributing something; and their Public Festival shall be next Sunday.
Next Sunday accordingly it is. (Newspapers of February, March, April,
1792; Iambe d'Andre Chenier sur la Fete des Suisses; &c., &c. in Hist.
Parl. xiii, xiv.) They are mounted into a 'triumphal Car resembling
a ship;' are carted over Paris, with the clang of cymbals and drums, all
mortals assisting applausive; carted to the Champ-de-Mars and
Fatherland's Altar; and finally carted, for Time always brings
deliverance,—into invisibility for evermore.
Whereupon dispersed Feuillantism, or that Party which
loves Liberty yet not more than Monarchy, will likewise have its
Festival: Festival of Simonneau, unfortunate Mayor of Etampes, who died
for the Law; most surely for the Law, though Jacobinism disputes; being
trampled down with his Red Flag in the riot about grains. At which
Festival the Public again assists, unapplausive: not we.
On the whole, Festivals are not wanting; beautiful
rainbow-spray when all is now rushing treble-quick towards its Niagara
Fall. National repasts there are; countenanced by Mayor Petion;
Saint-Antoine, and the Strong Ones of the Halles defiling through
Jacobin Club, "their felicity," according to Santerre, "not perfect
otherwise;" singing many-voiced their ca-ira, dancing their ronde
patriotique. Among whom one is glad to discern Saint-Huruge, expressly
'in white hat,' the Saint-Christopher of the Carmagnole. Nay a certain,
Tambour or National Drummer, having just been presented with a little
daughter, determines to have the new Frenchwoman christened on
Fatherland's Altar then and there. Repast once over, he accordingly has
her christened; Fauchet the Te-Deum Bishop acting in chief, Thuriot and
honourable persons standing gossips: by the name, Petion-National-Pique!
(Patriote-Francais (Brissot's Newspaper), in Hist. Parl. xiii.
451.) Does this remarkable Citizeness, now past the meridian of
life, still walk the Earth? Or did she die perhaps of teething?
Universal History is not indifferent.
Chapter 11.
The Hereditary Representative.
And yet it is not by carmagnole-dances and singing of
ca-ira, that the work can be done. Duke Brunswick is not dancing
carmagnoles, but has his drill serjeants busy.
On the Frontiers, our Armies, be it treason or not,
behave in the worst way. Troops badly commanded, shall we say? Or troops
intrinsically bad? Unappointed, undisciplined, mutinous; that, in a
thirty-years peace, have never seen fire? In any case, Lafayette's and
Rochambeau's little clutch, which they made at Austrian Flanders, has
prospered as badly as clutch need do: soldiers starting at their own
shadow; suddenly shrieking, "On nous trahit," and flying off in wild
panic, at or before the first shot;—managing only to hang some two or
three Prisoners they had picked up, and massacre their own Commander,
poor Theobald Dillon, driven into a granary by them in the Town of
Lille.
And poor Gouvion: he who sat shiftless in that
Insurrection of Women! Gouvion quitted the Legislative Hall and
Parliamentary duties, in disgust and despair, when those Galley-slaves
of Chateau-Vieux were admitted there. He said, "Between the Austrians
and the Jacobins there is nothing but a soldier's death for it;" (Toulongeon,
ii. 149.) and so, 'in the dark stormy night,' he has flung himself
into the throat of the Austrian cannon, and perished in the skirmish at
Maubeuge on the ninth of June. Whom Legislative Patriotism shall mourn,
with black mortcloths and melody in the Champ-de-Mars: many a Patriot
shiftier, truer none. Lafayette himself is looking altogether dubious;
in place of beating the Austrians, is about writing to denounce the
Jacobins. Rochambeau, all disconsolate, quits the service: there remains
only Luckner, the babbling old Prussian Grenadier.
Without Armies, without Generals! And the Cimmerian
Night, has gathered itself; Brunswick preparing his Proclamation; just
about to march! Let a Patriot Ministry and Legislative say, what in
these circumstances it will do? Suppress Internal Enemies, for one
thing, answers the Patriot Legislative; and proposes, on the 24th of
May, its Decree for the Banishment of Priests. Collect also some nucleus
of determined internal friends, adds War-minister Servan; and proposes,
on the 7th of June, his Camp of Twenty-thousand. Twenty-thousand
National Volunteers; Five out of each Canton; picked Patriots, for
Roland has charge of the Interior: they shall assemble here in Paris;
and be for a defence, cunningly devised, against foreign Austrians and
domestic Austrian Committee alike. So much can a Patriot Ministry and
Legislative do.
Reasonable and cunningly devised as such Camp may, to
Servan and Patriotism, appear, it appears not so to Feuillantism; to
that Feuillant-Aristocrat Staff of the Paris Guard; a Staff, one would
say again, which will need to be dissolved. These men see, in this
proposed Camp of Servan's, an offence; and even, as they pretend to say,
an insult. Petitions there come, in consequence, from blue Feuillants in
epaulettes; ill received. Nay, in the end, there comes one Petition,
called 'of the Eight Thousand National Guards:' so many names are on it;
including women and children. Which famed Petition of the Eight Thousand
is indeed received: and the Petitioners, all under arms, are admitted to
the honours of the sitting,—if honours or even if sitting there be; for
the instant their bayonets appear at the one door, the Assembly
'adjourns,' and begins to flow out at the other. (Moniteur, Seance du
10 Juin 1792.)
Also, in these same days, it is lamentable to see how
National Guards, escorting Fete Dieu or Corpus-Christi ceremonial, do
collar and smite down any Patriot that does not uncover as the Hostie
passes. They clap their bayonets to the breast of Cattle-butcher
Legendre, a known Patriot ever since the Bastille days; and threaten to
butcher him; though he sat quite respectfully, he says, in his Gig, at a
distance of fifty paces, waiting till the thing were by. Nay, orthodox
females were shrieking to have down the Lanterne on him. (Debats des
Jacobins in Hist. Parl. xiv. 429.)
To such height has Feuillantism gone in this Corps. For
indeed, are not their Officers creatures of the chief Feuillant,
Lafayette? The Court too has, very naturally, been tampering with them;
caressing them, ever since that dissolution of the so-called
Constitutional Guard. Some Battalions are altogether 'petris, kneaded
full' of Feuillantism, mere Aristocrats at bottom: for instance, the
Battalion of the Filles-Saint-Thomas, made up of your Bankers,
Stockbrokers, and other Full-purses of the Rue Vivienne. Our worthy old
Friend Weber, Queen's Foster-brother Weber, carries a musket in that
Battalion,—one may judge with what degree of Patriotic intention.
Heedless of all which, or rather heedful of all which,
the Legislative, backed by Patriot France and the feeling of Necessity,
decrees this Camp of Twenty thousand. Decisive though conditional
Banishment of malign Priests, it has already decreed.
It will now be seen, therefore, Whether the Hereditary
Representative is for us or against us? Whether or not, to all our other
woes, this intolerablest one is to be added; which renders us not a
menaced Nation in extreme jeopardy and need, but a paralytic Solecism of
a Nation; sitting wrapped as in dead cerements, of a
Constitutional-Vesture that were no other than a winding-sheet; our
right hand glued to our left: to wait there, writhing and wriggling,
unable to stir from the spot, till in Prussian rope we mount to the
gallows? Let the Hereditary Representative consider it well: The Decree
of Priests? The Camp of Twenty Thousand?—By Heaven, he answers, Veto!
Veto!—Strict Roland hands in his Letter to the King; or rather it was
Madame's Letter, who wrote it all at a sitting; one of the
plainest-spoken Letters ever handed in to any King. This plain-spoken
Letter King Louis has the benefit of reading overnight. He reads,
inwardly digests; and next morning, the whole Patriot Ministry finds
itself turned out. It is the 13th of June 1792. (Madame Roland, ii.
115.)
Dumouriez the many-counselled, he, with one Duranthon,
called Minister of Justice, does indeed linger for a day or two; in
rather suspicious circumstances; speaks with the Queen, almost weeps
with her: but in the end, he too sets off for the Army; leaving what
Un-Patriot or Semi-Patriot Ministry and Ministries can now accept the
helm, to accept it. Name them not: new quick-changing Phantasms, which
shift like magic-lantern figures; more spectral than ever!
Unhappy Queen, unhappy Louis! The two Vetos were so
natural: are not the Priests martyrs; also friends? This Camp of Twenty
Thousand, could it be other than of stormfullest Sansculottes? Natural;
and yet, to France, unendurable. Priests that co-operate with Coblentz
must go elsewhither with their martyrdom: stormful Sansculottes, these
and no other kind of creatures, will drive back the Austrians. If thou
prefer the Austrians, then for the love of Heaven go join them. If not,
join frankly with what will oppose them to the death. Middle course is
none.
Or alas, what extreme course was there left now, for a
man like Louis? Underhand Royalists, Ex-Minister Bertrand-Moleville,
Ex-Constituent Malouet, and all manner of unhelpful individuals, advise
and advise. With face of hope turned now on the Legislative Assembly,
and now on Austria and Coblentz, and round generally on the Chapter of
Chances, an ancient Kingship is reeling and spinning, one knows not
whitherward, on the flood of things.
Chapter 12.
Procession of the Black Breeches.
But is there a thinking man in France who, in these
circumstances, can persuade himself that the Constitution will march?
Brunswick is stirring; he, in few days now, will march. Shall France sit
still, wrapped in dead cerements and grave-clothes, its right hand glued
to its left, till the Brunswick Saint-Bartholomew arrive; till France be
as Poland, and its Rights of Man become a Prussian Gibbet?
Verily, it is a moment frightful for all men. National
Death; or else some preternatural convulsive outburst of National
Life;—that same, daemonic outburst! Patriots whose audacity has limits
had, in truth, better retire like Barnave; court private felicity at
Grenoble. Patriots, whose audacity has no limits must sink down into the
obscure; and, daring and defying all things, seek salvation in
stratagem, in Plot of Insurrection. Roland and young Barbaroux have
spread out the Map of France before them, Barbaroux says 'with tears:'
they consider what Rivers, what Mountain ranges are in it: they will
retire behind this Loire-stream, defend these Auvergne stone-labyrinths;
save some little sacred Territory of the Free; die at least in their
last ditch. Lafayette indites his emphatic Letter to the Legislative
against Jacobinism; (Moniteur, Seance du 18 Juin 1792.) which
emphatic Letter will not heal the unhealable.
Forward, ye Patriots whose audacity has no limits; it is
you now that must either do or die! The sections of Paris sit in deep
counsel; send out Deputation after Deputation to the Salle de Manege, to
petition and denounce. Great is their ire against tyrannous Veto,
Austrian Committee, and the combined Cimmerian Kings. What boots it?
Legislative listens to the 'tocsin in our hearts;' grants us honours of
the sitting, sees us defile with jingle and fanfaronade; but the Camp of
Twenty Thousand, the Priest-Decree, be-vetoed by Majesty, are become
impossible for Legislative. Fiery Isnard says, "We will have Equality,
should we descend for it to the tomb." Vergniaud utters, hypothetically,
his stern Ezekiel-visions of the fate of Anti-national Kings. But the
question is: Will hypothetic prophecies, will jingle and fanfaronade
demolish the Veto; or will the Veto, secure in its Tuileries Chateau,
remain undemolishable by these? Barbaroux, dashing away his tears,
writes to the Marseilles Municipality, that they must send him 'Six
hundred men who know how to die, qui savent mourir.' (Barbaroux, p.
40.) No wet-eyed message this, but a fire-eyed one;—which will be
obeyed!
Meanwhile the Twentieth of June is nigh, anniversary of
that world-famous Oath of the Tennis-Court: on which day, it is said,
certain citizens have in view to plant a Mai or Tree of Liberty, in the
Tuileries Terrace of the Feuillants; perhaps also to petition the
Legislative and Hereditary Representative about these Vetos;—with such
demonstration, jingle and evolution, as may seem profitable and
practicable. Sections have gone singly, and jingled and evolved: but if
they all went, or great part of them, and there, planting their Mai in
these alarming circumstances, sounded the tocsin in their hearts?
Among King's Friends there can be but one opinion as to
such a step: among Nation's Friends there may be two. On the one hand,
might it not by possibility scare away these unblessed Vetos? Private
Patriots and even Legislative Deputies may have each his own opinion, or
own no-opinion: but the hardest task falls evidently on Mayor Petion and
the Municipals, at once Patriots and Guardians of the public
Tranquillity. Hushing the matter down with the one hand; tickling it up
with the other! Mayor Petion and Municipality may lean this way;
Department-Directory with Procureur-Syndic Roederer having a Feuillant
tendency, may lean that. On the whole, each man must act according to
his one opinion or to his two opinions; and all manner of influences,
official representations cross one another in the foolishest way.
Perhaps after all, the Project, desirable and yet not desirable, will
dissipate itself, being run athwart by so many complexities; and coming
to nothing?
Not so: on the Twentieth morning of June, a large Tree of
Liberty, Lombardy Poplar by kind, lies visibly tied on its car, in the
Suburb-Antoine. Suburb Saint-Marceau too, in the uttermost South-East,
and all that remote Oriental region, Pikemen and Pikewomen, National
Guards, and the unarmed curious are gathering,—with the peaceablest
intentions in the world. A tricolor Municipal arrives; speaks. Tush, it
is all peaceable, we tell thee, in the way of Law: are not Petitions
allowable, and the Patriotism of Mais? The tricolor Municipal returns
without effect: your Sansculottic rills continue flowing, combining into
brooks: towards noontide, led by tall Santerre in blue uniform, by tall
Saint-Huruge in white hat, it moves Westward, a respectable river, or
complication of still-swelling rivers.
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