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THE FRENCH REVOLUTION: A HISTORY |
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BOOK III. THE GIRONDINS This huge Insurrectionary Movement, which we liken to a breaking out of Tophet and the Abyss, has swept away Royalty, Aristocracy, and a King's life. The question is, What will it next do; how will it henceforth shape itself? Settle down into a reign of Law and Liberty; according as the habits, persuasions and endeavours of the educated, monied, respectable class prescribe? That is to say: the volcanic lava-flood, bursting up in the manner described, will explode and flow according to Girondin Formula and pre-established rule of Philosophy? If so, for our Girondin friends it will be well.
Meanwhile were not the prophecy rather that as no
external force, Royal or other, now remains which could control this
Movement, the Movement will follow a course of its own; probably a very
original one? Further, that whatsoever man or men can best interpret the
inward tendencies it has, and give them voice and activity, will obtain
the lead of it? For the rest, that as a thing without order, a thing
proceeding from beyond and beneath the region of order, it must work and
welter, not as a Regularity but as a Chaos; destructive and
self-destructive; always till something that has order arise, strong
enough to bind it into subjection again? Which something, we may further
conjecture, will not be a Formula, with philosophical propositions and
forensic eloquence; but a Reality, probably with a sword in its hand!
As for the Girondin Formula, of a respectable Republic
for the Middle Classes, all manner of Aristocracies being now
sufficiently demolished, there seems little reason to expect that the
business will stop there. Liberty, Equality, Fraternity, these are the
words; enunciative and prophetic. Republic for the respectable washed
Middle Classes, how can that be the fulfilment thereof? Hunger and
nakedness, and nightmare oppression lying heavy on Twenty-five million
hearts; this, not the wounded vanities or contradicted philosophies of
philosophical Advocates, rich Shopkeepers, rural Noblesse, was the prime
mover in the French Revolution; as the like will be in all such
Revolutions, in all countries. Feudal Fleur-de-lys had become an
insupportably bad marching banner, and needed to be torn and trampled:
but Moneybag of Mammon (for that, in these times, is what the
respectable Republic for the Middle Classes will signify) is a still
worse, while it lasts. Properly, indeed, it is the worst and basest of
all banners, and symbols of dominion among men; and indeed is possible
only in a time of general Atheism, and Unbelief in any thing save in
brute Force and Sensualism; pride of birth, pride of office, any known
kind of pride being a degree better than purse-pride. Freedom, Equality,
Brotherhood: not in the Moneybag, but far elsewhere, will Sansculottism
seek these things.
We say therefore that an Insurrectionary France, loose of
control from without, destitute of supreme order from within, will form
one of the most tumultuous Activities ever seen on this Earth; such as
no Girondin Formula can regulate. An immeasurable force, made up of
forces manifold, heterogeneous, compatible and incompatible. In plainer
words, this France must needs split into Parties; each of which seeking
to make itself good, contradiction, exasperation will arise; and Parties
on Parties find that they cannot work together, cannot exist together.
As for the number of Parties, there will, strictly
counting, be as many Parties as there are Opinions. According to which
rule, in this National Convention itself, to say nothing of France
generally, the number of Parties ought to be Seven Hundred and
Forty-Nine; for every unit entertains his opinion. But now as every unit
has at once an individual nature, or necessity to follow his own road,
and a gregarious nature or necessity to see himself travelling by the
side of others,—what can there be but dissolutions, precipitations,
endless turbulence of attracting and repelling; till once the
master-element get evolved, and this wild alchemy arrange itself again?
To the length of Seven Hundred and Forty-nine Parties,
however, no Nation was ever yet seen to go. Nor indeed much beyond the
length of Two Parties; two at a time;—so invincible is man's tendency to
unite, with all the invincible divisiveness he has! Two Parties, we say,
are the usual number at one time: let these two fight it out, all minor
shades of party rallying under the shade likest them; when the one has
fought down the other, then it, in its turn, may divide,
self-destructive; and so the process continue, as far as needful. This
is the way of Revolutions, which spring up as the French one has done;
when the so-called Bonds of Society snap asunder; and all Laws that are
not Laws of Nature become naught and Formulas merely.
But quitting these somewhat abstract considerations, let
History note this concrete reality which the streets of Paris exhibit,
on Monday the 25th of February 1793. Long before daylight that morning,
these streets are noisy and angry. Petitioning enough there has been; a
Convention often solicited. It was but yesterday there came a Deputation
of Washerwomen with Petition; complaining that not so much as soap could
be had; to say nothing of bread, and condiments of bread. The cry of
women, round the Salle de Manege, was heard plaintive: "Du pain et du
savon, Bread and Soap." (Moniteur &c. Hist. Parl. xxiv. 332-348.)
And now from six o'clock, this Monday morning, one
perceives the Baker's Queues unusually expanded, angrily agitating
themselves. Not the Baker alone, but two Section Commissioners to help
him, manage with difficulty the daily distribution of loaves.
Soft-spoken assiduous, in the early candle-light, are Baker and
Commissioners: and yet the pale chill February sunrise discloses an
unpromising scene. Indignant Female Patriots, partly supplied with
bread, rush now to the shops, declaring that they will have groceries.
Groceries enough: sugar-barrels rolled forth into the street, Patriot
Citoyennes weighing it out at a just rate of eleven-pence a pound;
likewise coffee-chests, soap-chests, nay cinnamon and cloves-chests,
with aquavitae and other forms of alcohol,—at a just rate, which some do
not pay; the pale-faced Grocer silently wringing his hands! What help?
The distributive Citoyennes are of violent speech and gesture, their
long Eumenides' hair hanging out of curl; nay in their girdles pistols
are seen sticking: some, it is even said, have beards,—male Patriots in
petticoats and mob-cap. Thus, in the streets of Lombards, in the street
of Five-Diamonds, street of Pullies, in most streets of Paris does it
effervesce, the livelong day; no Municipality, no Mayor Pache, though he
was War-Minister lately, sends military against it, or aught against it
but persuasive-eloquence, till seven at night, or later.
On Monday gone five weeks, which was the twenty-first of
January, we saw Paris, beheading its King, stand silent, like a
petrified City of Enchantment: and now on this Monday it is so noisy,
selling sugar! Cities, especially Cities in Revolution, are subject to
these alternations; the secret courses of civic business and existence
effervescing and efflorescing, in this manner, as a concrete Phenomenon
to the eye. Of which Phenomenon, when secret existence becoming public
effloresces on the street, the philosophical cause-and-effect is not so
easy to find. What, for example, may be the accurate philosophical
meaning, and meanings, of this sale of sugar? These things that have
become visible in the street of Pullies and over Paris, whence are they,
we say; and whither?—
That Pitt has a hand in it, the gold of Pitt: so much, to
all reasonable Patriot men, may seem clear. But then, through what
agents of Pitt? Varlet, Apostle of Liberty, was discerned again of late,
with his pike and his red nightcap. Deputy Marat published in his
journal, this very day, complaining of the bitter scarcity, and
sufferings of the people, till he seemed to get wroth: 'If your Rights
of Man were anything but a piece of written paper, the plunder of a few
shops, and a forestaller or two hung up at the door-lintels, would put
an end to such things.' (Hist. Parl. xxiv. 353-356.) Are not
these, say the Girondins, pregnant indications? Pitt has bribed the
Anarchists; Marat is the agent of Pitt: hence this sale of sugar. To the
Mother Society, again, it is clear that the scarcity is factitious; is
the work of Girondins, and such like; a set of men sold partly to Pitt;
sold wholly to their own ambitions, and hard-hearted pedantries; who
will not fix the grain-prices, but prate pedantically of free-trade;
wishing to starve Paris into violence, and embroil it with the
Departments: hence this sale of sugar.
And, alas, if to these two notabilities, of a Phenomenon
and such Theories of a Phenomenon, we add this third notability, That
the French Nation has believed, for several years now, in the
possibility, nay certainty and near advent, of a universal Millennium,
or reign of Freedom, Equality, Fraternity, wherein man should be the
brother of man, and sorrow and sin flee away? Not bread to eat, nor soap
to wish with; and the reign of perfect Felicity ready to arrive, due
always since the Bastille fell! How did our hearts burn within us, at
that Feast of Pikes, when brother flung himself on brother's bosom; and
in sunny jubilee, Twenty-five millions burst forth into sound and
cannon-smoke! Bright was our Hope then, as sunlight; red-angry is our
Hope grown now, as consuming fire. But, O Heavens, what enchantment is
it, or devilish legerdemain, of such effect, that Perfect Felicity,
always within arm's length, could never be laid hold of, but only in her
stead Controversy and Scarcity? This set of traitors after that set!
Tremble, ye traitors; dread a People which calls itself patient,
long-suffering; but which cannot always submit to have its pocket
picked, in this way,—of a Millennium!
Yes, Reader, here is a miracle. Out of that putrescent
rubbish of Scepticism, Sensualism, Sentimentalism, hollow Machiavelism,
such a Faith has verily risen; flaming in the heart of a People. A whole
People, awakening as it were to consciousness in deep misery, believes
that it is within reach of a Fraternal Heaven-on-Earth. With longing
arms, it struggles to embrace the Unspeakable; cannot embrace it, owing
to certain causes.—Seldom do we find that a whole People can be said to
have any Faith at all; except in things which it can eat and handle.
Whensoever it gets any Faith, its history becomes spirit-stirring,
note-worthy. But since the time when steel Europe shook itself
simultaneously, at the word of Hermit Peter, and rushed towards the
Sepulchre where God had lain, there was no universal impulse of Faith
that one could note. Since Protestantism went silent, no Luther's voice,
no Zisca's drum any longer proclaiming that God's Truth was not the
Devil's Lie; and the last of the Cameronians (Renwick was the name of
him; honour to the name of the brave!) sank, shot, on the Castle
Hill of Edinburgh, there was no partial impulse of Faith among Nations.
Till now, behold, once more this French Nation believes! Herein, we say,
in that astonishing Faith of theirs, lies the miracle. It is a Faith
undoubtedly of the more prodigious sort, even among Faiths; and will
embody itself in prodigies. It is the soul of that world-prodigy named
French Revolution; whereat the world still gazes and shudders.
But, for the rest, let no man ask History to explain by
cause-and-effect how the business proceeded henceforth. This battle of
Mountain and Gironde, and what follows, is the battle of Fanaticisms and
Miracles; unsuitable for cause-and-effect. The sound of it, to the mind,
is as a hubbub of voices in distraction; little of articulate is to be
gathered by long listening and studying; only battle-tumult, shouts of
triumph, shrieks of despair. The Mountain has left no Memoirs; the
Girondins have left Memoirs, which are too often little other than
long-drawn Interjections, of Woe is me and Cursed be ye. So soon as
History can philosophically delineate the conflagration of a kindled
Fireship, she may try this other task. Here lay the bitumen-stratum,
there the brimstone one; so ran the vein of gunpowder, of nitre,
terebinth and foul grease: this, were she inquisitive enough, History
might partly know. But how they acted and reacted below decks, one
fire-stratum playing into the other, by its nature and the art of man,
now when all hands ran raging, and the flames lashed high over shrouds
and topmast: this let not History attempt.
The Fireship is old France, the old French Form of Life;
her creed a Generation of men. Wild are their cries and their ragings
there, like spirits tormented in that flame. But, on the whole, are they
not gone, O Reader? Their Fireship and they, frightening the world, have
sailed away; its flames and its thunders quite away, into the Deep of
Time. One thing therefore History will do: pity them all; for it went
hard with them all. Not even the seagreen Incorruptible but shall have
some pity, some human love, though it takes an effort. And now, so much
once thoroughly attained, the rest will become easier. To the eye of
equal brotherly pity, innumerable perversions dissipate themselves;
exaggerations and execrations fall off, of their own accord. Standing
wistfully on the safe shore, we will look, and see, what is of interest
to us, what is adapted to us.
Chapter 2.
Culottic and Sansculottic.
Gironde and Mountain are now in full quarrel; their
mutual rage, says Toulongeon, is growing a 'pale' rage. Curious,
lamentable: all these men have the word Republic on their lips; in the
heart of every one of them is a passionate wish for something which he
calls Republic: yet see their death-quarrel! So, however, are men made.
Creatures who live in confusion; who, once thrown together, can readily
fall into that confusion of confusions which quarrel is, simply because
their confusions differ from one another; still more because they seem
to differ! Men's words are a poor exponent of their thought; nay their
thought itself is a poor exponent of the inward unnamed Mystery,
wherefrom both thought and action have their birth. No man can explain
himself, can get himself explained; men see not one another but
distorted phantasms which they call one another; which they hate and go
to battle with: for all battle is well said to be misunderstanding.
But indeed that similitude of the Fireship; of our poor
French brethren, so fiery themselves, working also in an element of
fire, was not insignificant. Consider it well, there is a shade of the
truth in it. For a man, once committed headlong to republican or any
other Transcendentalism, and fighting and fanaticising amid a Nation of
his like, becomes as it were enveloped in an ambient atmosphere of
Transcendentalism and Delirium: his individual self is lost in something
that is not himself, but foreign though inseparable from him. Strange to
think of, the man's cloak still seems to hold the same man: and yet the
man is not there, his volition is not there; nor the source of what he
will do and devise; instead of the man and his volition there is a piece
of Fanaticism and Fatalism incarnated in the shape of him. He, the
hapless incarnated Fanaticism, goes his road; no man can help him, he
himself least of all. It is a wonderful tragical predicament;—such as
human language, unused to deal with these things, being contrived for
the uses of common life, struggles to shadow out in figures. The ambient
element of material fire is not wilder than this of Fanaticism; nor,
though visible to the eye, is it more real. Volition bursts forth
involuntary; rapt along; the movement of free human minds becomes a
raging tornado of fatalism, blind as the winds; and Mountain and
Gironde, when they recover themselves, are alike astounded to see where
it has flung and dropt them. To such height of miracle can men work on
men; the Conscious and the Unconscious blended inscrutably in this our
inscrutable Life; endless Necessity environing Freewill!
The weapons of the Girondins are Political Philosophy,
Respectability and Eloquence. Eloquence, or call it rhetoric, really of
a superior order; Vergniaud, for instance, turns a period as sweetly as
any man of that generation. The weapons of the Mountain are those of
mere nature: Audacity and Impetuosity which may become Ferocity, as of
men complete in their determination, in their conviction; nay of men, in
some cases, who as Septemberers must either prevail or perish. The
ground to be fought for is Popularity: further you may either seek
Popularity with the friends of Freedom and Order, or with the friends of
Freedom Simple; to seek it with both has unhappily become impossible.
With the former sort, and generally with the Authorities of the
Departments, and such as read Parliamentary Debates, and are of
Respectability, and of a peace-loving monied nature, the Girondins carry
it. With the extreme Patriot again, with the indigent millions,
especially with the Population of Paris who do not read so much as hear
and see, the Girondins altogether lose it, and the Mountain carries it.
Egoism, nor meanness of mind, is not wanting on either
side. Surely not on the Girondin side; where in fact the instinct of
self-preservation, too prominently unfolded by circumstances, cuts
almost a sorry figure; where also a certain finesse, to the length even
of shuffling and shamming, now and then shews itself. They are men
skilful in Advocate-fence. They have been called the Jesuits of the
Revolution; (Dumouriez, Memoires, iii. 314.) but that is too hard
a name. It must be owned likewise that this rude blustering Mountain has
a sense in it of what the Revolution means; which these eloquent
Girondins are totally void of. Was the Revolution made, and fought for,
against the world, these four weary years, that a Formula might be
substantiated; that Society might become methodic, demonstrable by
logic; and the old Noblesse with their pretensions vanish? Or ought it
not withal to bring some glimmering of light and alleviation to the
Twenty-five Millions, who sat in darkness, heavy-laden, till they rose
with pikes in their hands? At least and lowest, one would think, it
should bring them a proportion of bread to live on? There is in the
Mountain here and there; in Marat People's-friend; in the incorruptible
Seagreen himself, though otherwise so lean and formularly, a heartfelt
knowledge of this latter fact;—without which knowledge all other
knowledge here is naught, and the choicest forensic eloquence is as
sounding brass and a tinkling cymbal. Most cold, on the other hand, most
patronising, unsubstantial is the tone of the Girondins towards 'our
poorer brethren;'—those brethren whom one often hears of under the
collective name of 'the masses,' as if they were not persons at all, but
mounds of combustible explosive material, for blowing down Bastilles
with! In very truth, a Revolutionist of this kind, is he not a Solecism?
Disowned by Nature and Art; deserving only to be erased, and disappear!
Surely, to our poorer brethren of Paris, all this Girondin patronage
sounds deadening and killing: if fine-spoken and incontrovertible in
logic, then all the falser, all the hatefuller in fact.
Nay doubtless, pleading for Popularity, here among our
poorer brethren of Paris, the Girondin has a hard game to play. If he
gain the ear of the Respectable at a distance, it is by insisting on
September and such like; it is at the expense of this Paris where he
dwells and perorates. Hard to perorate in such an auditory! Wherefore
the question arises: Could we not get ourselves out of this Paris? Twice
or oftener such an attempt is made. If not we ourselves, thinks Guadet,
then at least our Suppleans might do it. For every Deputy has his
Suppleant, or Substitute, who will take his place if need be: might not
these assemble, say at Bourges, which is a quiet episcopal Town, in
quiet Berri, forty good leagues off? In that case, what profit were it
for the Paris Sansculottery to insult us; our Suppleans sitting quiet in
Bourges, to whom we could run? Nay even the Primary electoral
Assemblies, thinks Guadet, might be reconvoked, and a New Convention
got, with new orders from the Sovereign people; and right glad were
Lyons, were Bourdeaux, Rouen, Marseilles, as yet Provincial Towns, to
welcome us in their turn, and become a sort of Capital Towns; and teach
these Parisians reason.
Fond schemes; which all misgo! If decreed, in heat of
eloquent logic, to-day, they are repealed, by clamour, and passionate
wider considerations, on the morrow. (Moniteur, 1793, No. 140, &c.)
Will you, O Girondins, parcel us into separate Republics, then; like the
Swiss, like your Americans; so that there be no Metropolis or
indivisible French Nation any more? Your Departmental Guard seemed to
point that way! Federal Republic? Federalist? Men and Knitting-women
repeat Federaliste, with or without much Dictionary-meaning; but go on
repeating it, as is usual in such cases, till the meaning of it becomes
almost magical, fit to designate all mystery of Iniquity; and
Federaliste has grown a word of Exorcism and Apage-Satanas. But
furthermore, consider what 'poisoning of public opinion' in the
Departments, by these Brissot, Gorsas, Caritat-Condorcet Newspapers! And
then also what counter-poisoning, still feller in quality, by a Pere
Duchesne of Hebert, brutallest Newspaper yet published on Earth; by a
Rougiff of Guffroy; by the 'incendiary leaves of Marat!' More than once,
on complaint given and effervescence rising, it is decreed that a man
cannot both be Legislator and Editor; that he shall choose between the
one function and the other. (Hist. Parl. xxv. 25, &c.) But this
too, which indeed could help little, is revoked or eluded; remains a
pious wish mainly.
Meanwhile, as the sad fruit of such strife, behold, O ye
National Representatives, how between the friends of Law and the friends
of Freedom everywhere, mere heats and jealousies have arisen; fevering
the whole Republic! Department, Provincial Town is set against
Metropolis, Rich against Poor, Culottic against Sansculottic, man
against man. From the Southern Cities come Addresses of an almost
inculpatory character; for Paris has long suffered Newspaper calumny.
Bourdeaux demands a reign of Law and Respectability, meaning Girondism,
with emphasis. With emphasis Marseilles demands the like. Nay from
Marseilles there come two Addresses: one Girondin; one Jacobin
Sansculottic. Hot Rebecqui, sick of this Convention-work, has given
place to his Substitute, and gone home; where also, with such jarrings,
there is work to be sick of.
Lyons, a place of Capitalists and Aristocrats, is in
still worse state; almost in revolt. Chalier the Jacobin Town-Councillor
has got, too literally, to daggers-drawn with Nievre-Chol the Moderantin
Mayor; one of your Moderate, perhaps Aristocrat, Royalist or Federalist
Mayors! Chalier, who pilgrimed to Paris 'to behold Marat and the
Mountain,' has verily kindled himself at their sacred urn: for on the
6th of February last, History or Rumour has seen him haranguing his
Lyons Jacobins in a quite transcendental manner, with a drawn dagger in
his hand; recommending (they say) sheer September-methods,
patience being worn out; and that the Jacobin Brethren should,
impromptu, work the Guillotine themselves! One sees him still, in
Engravings: mounted on a table; foot advanced, body contorted; a bald,
rude, slope-browed, infuriated visage of the canine species, the eyes
starting from their sockets; in his puissant right-hand the brandished
dagger, or horse-pistol, as some give it; other dog-visages kindling
under him:—a man not likely to end well! However, the Guillotine was not
got together impromptu, that day, 'on the Pont Saint-Clair,' or
elsewhere; but indeed continued lying rusty in its loft: (Hist. Parl.
xxiv. 385-93; xxvi. 229, &c.) Nievre-Chol with military went about,
rumbling cannon, in the most confused manner; and the 'nine hundred
prisoners' received no hurt. So distracted is Lyons grown, with its
cannon rumbling. Convention Commissioners must be sent thither
forthwith: if even they can appease it, and keep the Guillotine in its
loft?
Consider finally if, on all these mad jarrings of the
Southern Cities, and of France generally, a traitorous Crypto-Royalist
class is not looking and watching; ready to strike in, at the right
season! Neither is there bread; neither is there soap: see the Patriot
women selling out sugar, at a just rate of twenty-two sous per pound!
Citizen Representatives, it were verily well that your quarrels
finished, and the reign of Perfect Felicity began.
On the whole, one cannot say that the Girondins are
wanting to themselves, so far as good-will might go. They prick
assiduously into the sore-places of the Mountain; from principle, and
also from jesuitism.
Besides September, of which there is now little to be
made except effervescence, we discern two sore-places where the Mountain
often suffers: Marat and Orleans Egalite. Squalid Marat, for his own
sake and for the Mountain's, is assaulted ever and anon; held up to
France, as a squalid bloodthirsty Portent, inciting to the pillage of
shops; of whom let the Mountain have the credit! The Mountain murmurs,
ill at ease: this 'Maximum of Patriotism,' how shall they either own him
or disown him? As for Marat personally, he, with his fixed-idea, remains
invulnerable to such things: nay the People's-friend is very evidently
rising in importance, as his befriended People rises. No shrieks now,
when he goes to speak; occasional applauses rather, furtherance which
breeds confidence. The day when the Girondins proposed to 'decree him
accused' (decreter d'accusation, as they phrase it) for that
February Paragraph, of 'hanging up a Forestaller or two at the
door-lintels,' Marat proposes to have them 'decreed insane;' and,
descending the Tribune-steps, is heard to articulate these most
unsenatorial ejaculations: "Les Cochons, les imbecilles, Pigs, idiots!"
Oftentimes he croaks harsh sarcasm, having really a rough rasping
tongue, and a very deep fund of contempt for fine outsides; and once or
twice, he even laughs, nay 'explodes into laughter, rit aux eclats,' at
the gentilities and superfine airs of these Girondin "men of
statesmanship," with their pedantries, plausibilities, pusillanimities:
"these two years," says he, "you have been whining about attacks, and
plots, and danger from Paris; and you have not a scratch to shew for
yourselves." (Moniteur, Seance du 20 Mai 1793.)—Danton gruffly
rebukes him, from time to time: a Maximum of Patriotism, whom one can
neither own nor disown!
But the second sore-place of the Mountain is this
anomalous Monseigneur Equality Prince d'Orleans. Behold these men, says
the Gironde; with a whilom Bourbon Prince among them: they are creatures
of the d'Orleans Faction; they will have Philippe made King; one King no
sooner guillotined than another made in his stead! Girondins have moved,
Buzot moved long ago, from principle and also from jesuitism, that the
whole race of Bourbons should be marched forth from the soil of France;
this Prince Egalite to bring up the rear. Motions which might produce
some effect on the public;—which the Mountain, ill at ease, knows not
what to do with.
And poor Orleans Egalite himself, for one begins to pity
even him, what does he do with them? The disowned of all parties, the
rejected and foolishly be-drifted hither and hither, to what corner of
Nature can he now drift with advantage? Feasible hope remains not for
him: unfeasible hope, in pallid doubtful glimmers, there may still come,
bewildering, not cheering or illuminating,—from the Dumouriez quarter;
and how, if not the timewasted Orleans Egalite, then perhaps the young
unworn Chartres Egalite might rise to be a kind of King? Sheltered, if
shelter it be, in the clefts of the Mountain, poor Egalite will wait:
one refuge in Jacobinism, one in Dumouriez and Counter-Revolution, are
there not two chances? However, the look of him, Dame Genlis says, is
grown gloomy; sad to see. Sillery also, the Genlis's Husband, who hovers
about the Mountain, not on it, is in a bad way. Dame Genlis has come to
Raincy, out of England and Bury St. Edmunds, in these days; being
summoned by Egalite, with her young charge, Mademoiselle Egalite, that
so Mademoiselle might not be counted among Emigrants and hardly dealt
with. But it proves a ravelled business: Genlis and charge find that
they must retire to the Netherlands; must wait on the Frontiers for a
week or two; till Monseigneur, by Jacobin help, get it wound up. 'Next
morning,' says Dame Genlis, 'Monseigneur, gloomier than ever, gave me
his arm, to lead me to the carriage. I was greatly troubled;
Mademoiselle burst into tears; her Father was pale and trembling. After
I had got seated, he stood immovable at the carriage-door, with his eyes
fixed on me; his mournful and painful look seemed to implore
pity;—"Adieu, Madame!" said he. The altered sound of his voice
completely overcame me; not able to utter a word, I held out my hand; he
grasped it close; then turning, and advancing sharply towards the
postillions, he gave them a sign, and we rolled away.' (Genlis,
Memoires (London, 1825), iv. 118.)
Nor are Peace-makers wanting; of whom likewise we mention
two; one fast on the crown of the Mountain, the other not yet alighted
anywhere: Danton and Barrere. Ingenious Barrere, Old-Constituent and
Editor from the slopes of the Pyrenees, is one of the usefullest men of
this Convention, in his way. Truth may lie on both sides, on either
side, or on neither side; my friends, ye must give and take: for the
rest, success to the winning side! This is the motto of Barrere.
Ingenious, almost genial; quick-sighted, supple, graceful; a man that
will prosper. Scarcely Belial in the assembled Pandemonium was
plausibler to ear and eye. An indispensable man: in the great Art of
Varnish he may be said to seek his fellow. Has there an explosion
arisen, as many do arise, a confusion, unsightliness, which no tongue
can speak of, nor eye look on; give it to Barrere; Barrere shall be
Committee-Reporter of it; you shall see it transmute itself into a
regularity, into the very beauty and improvement that was needed.
Without one such man, we say, how were this Convention bested? Call him
not, as exaggerative Mercier does, 'the greatest liar in France:' nay it
may be argued there is not truth enough in him to make a real lie of.
Call him, with Burke, Anacreon of the Guillotine, and a man serviceable
to this Convention.
The other Peace-maker whom we name is Danton. Peace, O
peace with one another! cries Danton often enough: Are we not alone
against the world; a little band of brothers? Broad Danton is loved by
all the Mountain; but they think him too easy-tempered, deficient in
suspicion: he has stood between Dumouriez and much censure, anxious not
to exasperate our only General: in the shrill tumult Danton's strong
voice reverberates, for union and pacification. Meetings there are;
dinings with the Girondins: it is so pressingly essential that there be
union. But the Girondins are haughty and respectable; this Titan Danton
is not a man of Formulas, and there rests on him a shadow of September.
"Your Girondins have no confidence in me:" this is the answer a
conciliatory Meillan gets from him; to all the arguments and pleadings
this conciliatory Meillan can bring, the repeated answer is, "Ils n'ont
point de confiance." (Memoires de Meillan, Representant du Peuple (Paris,
1823), p. 51.)—The tumult will get ever shriller; rage is growing
pale.
In fact, what a pang is it to the heart of a Girondin,
this first withering probability that the despicable unphilosophic
anarchic Mountain, after all, may triumph! Brutal Septemberers, a
fifth-floor Tallien, 'a Robespierre without an idea in his head,' as
Condorcet says, 'or a feeling in his heart:' and yet we, the flower of
France, cannot stand against them; behold the sceptre departs from us;
from us and goes to them! Eloquence, Philosophism, Respectability avail
not: 'against Stupidity the very gods fight to no purpose,
'Mit der Dummheit kampfen Gotter selbst vergebens!'
Shrill are the plaints of Louvet; his thin existence all
acidified into rage, and preternatural insight of suspicion. Wroth is
young Barbaroux; wroth and scornful. Silent, like a Queen with the aspic
on her bosom, sits the wife of Roland; Roland's Accounts never yet got
audited, his name become a byword. Such is the fortune of war,
especially of revolution. The great gulf of Tophet, and Tenth of August,
opened itself at the magic of your eloquent voice; and lo now, it will
not close at your voice! It is a dangerous thing such magic. The
Magician's Famulus got hold of the forbidden Book, and summoned a
goblin: Plait-il, What is your will? said the Goblin. The Famulus,
somewhat struck, bade him fetch water: the swift goblin fetched it, pail
in each hand; but lo, would not cease fetching it! Desperate, the
Famulus shrieks at him, smites at him, cuts him in two; lo, two goblin
water-carriers ply; and the house will be swum away in Deucalion
Deluges.
Chapter 4.
Fatherland in Danger.
Or rather we will say, this Senatorial war might have
lasted long; and Party tugging and throttling with Party might have
suppressed and smothered one another, in the ordinary bloodless
Parliamentary way; on one condition: that France had been at least able
to exist, all the while. But this Sovereign People has a digestive
faculty, and cannot do without bread. Also we are at war, and must have
victory; at war with Europe, with Fate and Famine: and behold, in the
spring of the year, all victory deserts us.
Dumouriez had his outposts stretched as far as
Aix-la-Chapelle, and the beautifullest plan for pouncing on Holland, by
stratagem, flat-bottomed boats and rapid intrepidity; wherein too he had
prospered so far; but unhappily could prosper no further.
Aix-la-Chapelle is lost; Maestricht will not surrender to mere smoke and
noise: the flat-bottomed boats must launch themselves again, and return
the way they came. Steady now, ye rapidly intrepid men; retreat with
firmness, Parthian-like! Alas, were it General Miranda's fault; were it
the War-minister's fault; or were it Dumouriez's own fault and that of
Fortune: enough, there is nothing for it but retreat,—well if it be not
even flight; for already terror-stricken cohorts and stragglers pour
off, not waiting for order; flow disastrous, as many as ten thousand of
them, without halt till they see France again. (Dumouriez, iv. 16-73.)
Nay worse: Dumouriez himself is perhaps secretly turning traitor? Very
sharp is the tone in which he writes to our Committees. Commissioners
and Jacobin Pillagers have done such incalculable mischief; Hassenfratz
sends neither cartridges nor clothing; shoes we have, deceptively 'soled
with wood and pasteboard.' Nothing in short is right. Danton and
Lacroix, when it was they that were Commissioners, would needs join
Belgium to France;—of which Dumouriez might have made the prettiest
little Duchy for his own secret behoof! With all these things the
General is wroth; and writes to us in a sharp tone. Who knows what this
hot little General is meditating? Dumouriez Duke of Belgium or Brabant;
and say, Egalite the Younger King of France: there were an end for our
Revolution!—Committee of Defence gazes, and shakes its head: who except
Danton, defective in suspicion, could still struggle to be of hope?
And General Custine is rolling back from the Rhine
Country; conquered Mentz will be reconquered, the Prussians gathering
round to bombard it with shot and shell. Mentz may resist, Commissioner
Merlin, the Thionviller, 'making sallies, at the head of the
besieged;'—resist to the death; but not longer than that. How sad a
reverse for Mentz! Brave Foster, brave Lux planted Liberty-trees, amid
ca-ira-ing music, in the snow-slush of last winter, there: and made
Jacobin Societies; and got the Territory incorporated with France: they
came hither to Paris, as Deputies or Delegates, and have their eighteen
francs a-day: but see, before once the Liberty-Tree is got rightly in
leaf, Mentz is changing into an explosive crater; vomiting fire,
bevomited with fire!
Neither of these men shall again see Mentz; they have
come hither only to die. Foster has been round the Globe; he saw Cook
perish under Owyhee clubs; but like this Paris he has yet seen or
suffered nothing. Poverty escorts him: from home there can nothing come,
except Job's-news; the eighteen daily francs, which we here as Deputy or
Delegate with difficulty 'touch,' are in paper assignats, and sink fast
in value. Poverty, disappointment, inaction, obloquy; the brave heart
slowly breaking! Such is Foster's lot. For the rest, Demoiselle
Theroigne smiles on you in the Soirees; 'a beautiful brownlocked face,'
of an exalted temper; and contrives to keep her carriage. Prussian
Trenck, the poor subterranean Baron, jargons and jangles in an
unmelodious manner. Thomas Paine's face is red-pustuled, 'but the eyes
uncommonly bright.' Convention Deputies ask you to dinner: very
courteous; and 'we all play at plumsack.' (Forster's Briefwechsel,
ii. 514, 460, 631.) 'It is the Explosion and New-creation of a
World,' says Foster; 'and the actors in it, such small mean objects,
buzzing round one like a handful of flies.'—
Likewise there is war with Spain. Spain will advance
through the gorges of the Pyrenees; rustling with Bourbon banners;
jingling with artillery and menace. And England has donned the red coat;
and marches, with Royal Highness of York,—whom some once spake of
inviting to be our King. Changed that humour now: and ever more
changing; till no hatefuller thing walk this Earth than a denizen of
that tyrannous Island; and Pitt be declared and decreed, with
effervescence, 'L'ennemi du genre humain, The enemy of mankind;' and,
very singular to say, you make an order that no Soldier of Liberty give
quarter to an Englishman. Which order however, the Soldier of Liberty
does but partially obey. We will take no Prisoners then, say the
Soldiers of Liberty; they shall all be 'Deserters' that we take. (See
Dampmartin, Evenemens, ii. 213-30.) It is a frantic order; and
attended with inconvenience. For surely, if you give no quarter, the
plain issue is that you will get none; and so the business become as
broad as it was long.—Our 'recruitment of Three Hundred Thousand men,'
which was the decreed force for this year, is like to have work enough
laid to its hand.
So many enemies come wending on; penetrating through
throats of Mountains, steering over the salt sea; towards all points of
our territory; rattling chains at us. Nay worst of all: there is an
enemy within our own territory itself. In the early days of March, the
Nantes Postbags do not arrive; there arrive only instead of them
Conjecture, Apprehension, bodeful wind of Rumour. The bodefullest proves
true! Those fanatic Peoples of La Vendee will no longer keep under:
their fire of insurrection, heretofore dissipated with difficulty,
blazes out anew, after the King's Death, as a wide conflagration; not
riot, but civil war. Your Cathelineaus, your Stofflets, Charettes, are
other men than was thought: behold how their Peasants, in mere russet
and hodden, with their rude arms, rude array, with their fanatic Gaelic
frenzy and wild-yelling battle-cry of God and the King, dash at us like
a dark whirlwind; and blow the best-disciplined Nationals we can get
into panic and sauve-qui-peut! Field after field is theirs; one sees not
where it will end. Commandant Santerre may be sent thither; but with
non-effect; he might as well have returned and brewed beer.
It has become peremptorily necessary that a National
Convention cease arguing, and begin acting. Yield one party of you to
the other, and do it swiftly. No theoretic outlook is here, but the
close certainty of ruin; the very day that is passing over must be
provided for.
It was Friday the eighth of March when this Job's-post
from Dumouriez, thickly preceded and escorted by so many other
Job's-posts, reached the National Convention. Blank enough are most
faces. Little will it avail whether our Septemberers be punished or go
unpunished; if Pitt and Cobourg are coming in, with one punishment for
us all; nothing now between Paris itself and the Tyrants but a doubtful
Dumouriez, and hosts in loose-flowing loud retreat!—Danton the Titan
rises in this hour, as always in the hour of need. Great is his voice,
reverberating from the domes:—Citizen-Representatives, shall we not, in
such crisis of Fate, lay aside discords? Reputation: O what is the
reputation of this man or of that? Que mon nom soit fletri, que la
France soit libre, Let my name be blighted; let France be free! It is
necessary now again that France rise, in swift vengeance, with her
million right-hands, with her heart as of one man. Instantaneous
recruitment in Paris; let every Section of Paris furnish its thousands;
every section of France! Ninety-six Commissioners of us, two for each
Section of the Forty-eight, they must go forthwith, and tell Paris what
the Country needs of her. Let Eighty more of us be sent, post-haste,
over France; to spread the fire-cross, to call forth the might of men.
Let the Eighty also be on the road, before this sitting rise. Let them
go, and think what their errand is. Speedy Camp of Fifty thousand
between Paris and the North Frontier; for Paris will pour forth her
volunteers! Shoulder to shoulder; one strong universal death-defiant
rising and rushing; we shall hurl back these Sons of Night yet again;
and France, in spite of the world, be free! (Moniteur in Hist. Parl.
xxv. 6.)—So sounds the Titan's voice: into all Section-houses; into
all French hearts. Sections sit in Permanence, for recruitment,
enrolment, that very night. Convention Commissioners, on swift wheels,
are carrying the fire-cross from Town to Town, till all France blaze.
And so there is Flag of Fatherland in Danger waving from
the Townhall, Black Flag from the top of Notre-Dame Cathedral; there is
Proclamation, hot eloquence; Paris rushing out once again to strike its
enemies down. That, in such circumstances, Paris was in no mild humour
can be conjectured. Agitated streets; still more agitated round the
Salle de Manege! Feuillans-Terrace crowds itself with angry Citizens,
angrier Citizenesses; Varlet perambulates with portable-chair:
ejaculations of no measured kind, as to perfidious fine-spoken Hommes
d'etat, friends of Dumouriez, secret-friends of Pitt and Cobourg, burst
from the hearts and lips of men. To fight the enemy? Yes, and even to
"freeze him with terror, glacer d'effroi;" but first to have domestic
Traitors punished! Who are they that, carping and quarrelling, in their
jesuitic most moderate way, seek to shackle the Patriotic movement? That
divide France against Paris, and poison public opinion in the
Departments? That when we ask for bread, and a Maximum fixed-price,
treat us with lectures on Free-trade in grains? Can the human stomach
satisfy itself with lectures on Free-trade; and are we to fight the
Austrians in a moderate manner, or in an immoderate? This Convention
must be purged.
"Set up a swift Tribunal for Traitors, a Maximum for
Grains:" thus speak with energy the Patriot Volunteers, as they defile
through the Convention Hall, just on the wing to the
Frontiers;—perorating in that heroical Cambyses' vein of theirs:
beshouted by the Galleries and Mountain; bemurmured by the Right-side
and Plain. Nor are prodigies wanting: lo, while a Captain of the Section
Poissonniere perorates with vehemence about Dumouriez, Maximum, and
Crypto-Royalist Traitors, and his troop beat chorus with him, waving
their Banner overhead, the eye of a Deputy discerns, in this same
Banner, that the cravates or streamers of it have Royal fleurs-de-lys!
The Section-Captain shrieks; his troop shriek, horror-struck, and
'trample the Banner under foot:' seemingly the work of some
Crypto-Royalist Plotter? Most probable; (Choix des Rapports, xi. 277.)—or
perhaps at bottom, only the old Banner of the Section, manufactured
prior to the Tenth of August, when such streamers were according to
rule! (Hist. Parl. xxv. 72.)
History, looking over the Girondin Memoirs, anxious to
disentangle the truth of them from the hysterics, finds these days of
March, especially this Sunday the Tenth of March, play a great part.
Plots, plots: a plot for murdering the Girondin Deputies; Anarchists and
Secret-Royalists plotting, in hellish concert, for that end! The far
greater part of which is hysterics. What we do find indisputable is that
Louvet and certain Girondins were apprehensive they might be murdered on
Saturday, and did not go to the evening sitting: but held council with
one another, each inciting his fellow to do something resolute, and end
these Anarchists: to which, however, Petion, opening the window, and
finding the night very wet, answered only, "Ils ne feront rien," and
'composedly resumed his violin,' says Louvet: (Louvet, Memoires, p.
72.) thereby, with soft Lydian tweedledeeing, to wrap himself
against eating cares. Also that Louvet felt especially liable to being
killed; that several Girondins went abroad to seek beds: liable to being
killed; but were not. Further that, in very truth, Journalist Deputy
Gorsas, poisoner of the Departments, he and his Printer had their houses
broken into (by a tumult of Patriots, among whom red-capped Varlet,
American Fournier loom forth, in the darkness of the rain and riot);
had their wives put in fear; their presses, types and circumjacent
equipments beaten to ruin; no Mayor interfering in time; Gorsas himself
escaping, pistol in hand, 'along the coping of the back wall.' Further
that Sunday, the morrow, was not a workday; and the streets were more
agitated than ever: Is it a new September, then, that these Anarchists
intend? Finally, that no September came;—and also that hysterics, not
unnaturally, had reached almost their acme. (Meillan, pp. 23, 24;
Louvet, pp. 71-80.)
Vergniaud denounces and deplores; in sweetly turned
periods. Section Bonconseil, Good-counsel so-named, not Mauconseil or
Ill-counsel as it once was,—does a far notabler thing: demands that
Vergniaud, Brissot, Guadet, and other denunciatory fine-spoken
Girondins, to the number of Twenty-two, be put under arrest! Section
Good-counsel, so named ever since the Tenth of August, is sharply
rebuked, like a Section of Ill-counsel; (Moniteur (Seance du 12
Mars), 15 Mars.) but its word is spoken, and will not fall to the
ground.
In fact, one thing strikes us in these poor Girondins;
their fatal shortness of vision; nay fatal poorness of character, for
that is the root of it. They are as strangers to the People they would
govern; to the thing they have come to work in. Formulas, Philosophies,
Respectabilities, what has been written in Books, and admitted by the
Cultivated Classes; this inadequate Scheme of Nature's working is all
that Nature, let her work as she will, can reveal to these men. So they
perorate and speculate; and call on the Friends of Law, when the
question is not Law or No-Law, but Life or No-Life. Pedants of the
Revolution, if not Jesuits of it! Their Formalism is great; great also
is their Egoism. France rising to fight Austria has been raised only by
Plot of the Tenth of March, to kill Twenty-two of them! This Revolution
Prodigy, unfolding itself into terrific stature and articulation, by its
own laws and Nature's, not by the laws of Formula, has become
unintelligible, incredible as an impossibility, the waste chaos of a
Dream.' A Republic founded on what they call the Virtues; on what we
call the Decencies and Respectabilities: this they will have, and
nothing but this. Whatsoever other Republic Nature and Reality send,
shall be considered as not sent; as a kind of Nightmare Vision, and
thing non-extant; disowned by the Laws of Nature, and of Formula. Alas!
Dim for the best eyes is this Reality; and as for these men, they will
not look at it with eyes at all, but only through 'facetted spectacles'
of Pedantry, wounded Vanity; which yield the most portentous fallacious
spectrum. Carping and complaining forever of Plots and Anarchy, they
will do one thing: prove, to demonstration, that the Reality will not
translate into their Formula; that they and their Formula are
incompatible with the Reality: and, in its dark wrath, the Reality will
extinguish it and them! What a man kens he cans. But the beginning of a
man's doom is that vision be withdrawn from him; that he see not the
reality, but a false spectrum of the reality; and, following that, step
darkly, with more or less velocity, downwards to the utter Dark; to
Ruin, which is the great Sea of Darkness, whither all falsehoods,
winding or direct, continually flow!
This Tenth of March we may mark as an epoch in the
Girondin destinies; the rage so exasperated itself, the misconception so
darkened itself. Many desert the sittings; many come to them armed. (Meillan,
Memoires, pp. 85, 24.) An honourable Deputy, setting out after
breakfast, must now, besides taking his Notes, see whether his Priming
is in order.
Meanwhile with Dumouriez in Belgium it fares ever worse.
Were it again General Miranda's fault, or some other's fault, there is
no doubt whatever but the 'Battle of Nerwinden,' on the 18th of March,
is lost; and our rapid retreat has become a far too rapid one.
Victorious Cobourg, with his Austrian prickers, hangs like a dark cloud
on the rear of us: Dumouriez never off horseback night or day;
engagement every three hours; our whole discomfited Host rolling rapidly
inwards, full of rage, suspicion, and sauve-qui-peut! And then Dumouriez
himself, what his intents may be? Wicked seemingly and not charitable!
His despatches to Committee openly denounce a factious Convention, for
the woes it has brought on France and him. And his speeches—for the
General has no reticence! The Execution of the Tyrant this Dumouriez
calls the Murder of the King. Danton and Lacroix, flying thither as
Commissioners once more, return very doubtful; even Danton now doubts.
Three Jacobin Missionaries, Proly, Dubuisson, Pereyra,
have flown forth; sped by a wakeful Mother Society: they are struck dumb
to hear the General speak. The Convention, according to this General,
consists of three hundred scoundrels and four hundred imbeciles: France
cannot do without a King. "But we have executed our King." "And what is
it to me," hastily cries Dumouriez, a General of no reticence, "whether
the King's name be Ludovicus or Jacobus?" "Or Philippus!" rejoins
Proly;—and hastens to report progress. Over the Frontiers such hope is
there.
Chapter 5.
Sansculottism Accoutred.
Let us look, however, at the grand internal Sansculottism
and Revolution Prodigy, whether it stirs and waxes: there and not
elsewhere hope may still be for France. The Revolution Prodigy, as
Decree after Decree issues from the Mountain, like creative fiats,
accordant with the nature of the Thing,—is shaping itself rapidly, in
these days, into terrific stature and articulation, limb after limb.
Last March, 1792, we saw all France flowing in blind terror; shutting
town-barriers, boiling pitch for Brigands: happier, this March, that it
is a seeing terror; that a creative Mountain exists, which can say fiat!
Recruitment proceeds with fierce celerity: nevertheless our Volunteers
hesitate to set out, till Treason be punished at home; they do not fly
to the frontiers; but only fly hither and thither, demanding and
denouncing. The Mountain must speak new fiat, and new fiats.
And does it not speak such? Take, as first example, those
Comites Revolutionnaires for the arrestment of Persons Suspect.
Revolutionary Committee, of Twelve chosen Patriots, sits in every
Township of France; examining the Suspect, seeking arms, making
domiciliary visits and arrestments;—caring, generally, that the Republic
suffer no detriment. Chosen by universal suffrage, each in its Section,
they are a kind of elixir of Jacobinism; some Forty-four Thousand of
them awake and alive over France! In Paris and all Towns, every
house-door must have the names of the inmates legibly printed on it, 'at
a height not exceeding five feet from the ground;' every Citizen must
produce his certificatory Carte de Civisme, signed by Section-President;
every man be ready to give account of the faith that is in him. Persons
Suspect had as well depart this soil of Liberty! And yet departure too
is bad: all Emigrants are declared Traitors, their property become
National; they are 'dead in Law,'—save indeed that for our behoof they
shall 'live yet fifty years in Law,' and what heritages may fall to them
in that time become National too! A mad vitality of Jacobinism, with
Forty-four Thousand centres of activity, circulates through all fibres
of France.
Very notable also is the Tribunal Extraordinaire: (Moniteur,
No. 70, (du 11 Mars), No. 76, &c.) decreed by the Mountain;
some Girondins dissenting, for surely such a Court contradicts every
formula;—other Girondins assenting, nay co-operating, for do not we all
hate Traitors, O ye people of Paris?—Tribunal of the Seventeenth in
Autumn last was swift; but this shall be swifter. Five Judges; a
standing Jury, which is named from Paris and the Neighbourhood, that
there be not delay in naming it: they are subject to no Appeal; to
hardly any Law-forms, but must 'get themselves convinced' in all
readiest ways; and for security are bound 'to vote audibly;' audibly, in
the hearing of a Paris Public. This is the Tribunal Extraordinaire;
which, in few months, getting into most lively action, shall be entitled
Tribunal Revolutionnaire, as indeed it from the very first has entitled
itself: with a Herman or a Dumas for Judge President, with a
Fouquier-Tinville for Attorney-General, and a Jury of such as Citizen
Leroi, who has surnamed himself Dix-Aout, 'Leroi August-Tenth,' it will
become the wonder of the world. Herein has Sansculottism fashioned for
itself a Sword of Sharpness: a weapon magical; tempered in the Stygian
hell-waters; to the edge of it all armour, and defence of strength or of
cunning shall be soft; it shall mow down Lives and Brazen-gates; and the
waving of it shed terror through the souls of men.
But speaking of an amorphous Sansculottism taking form,
ought we not above all things to specify how the Amorphous gets itself a
Head? Without metaphor, this Revolution Government continues hitherto in
a very anarchic state. Executive Council of Ministers, Six in number,
there is; but they, especially since Roland's retreat, have hardly known
whether they were Ministers or not. Convention Committees sit supreme
over them; but then each Committee as supreme as the others: Committee
of Twenty-one, of Defence, of General Surety; simultaneous or
successive, for specific purposes. The Convention alone is
all-powerful,—especially if the Commune go with it; but is too numerous
for an administrative body. Wherefore, in this perilous quick-whirling
condition of the Republic, before the end of March, we obtain our small
Comite de Salut Public; (Moniteur, No. 83 (du 24 Mars 1793)
Nos. 86, 98, 99, 100.) as it were, for miscellaneous accidental
purposes, requiring despatch;—as it proves, for a sort of universal
supervision, and universal subjection. They are to report weekly, these
new Committee-men; but to deliberate in secret. Their number is Nine,
firm Patriots all, Danton one of them: Renewable every month;—yet why
not reelect them if they turn out well? The flower of the matter is that
they are but nine; that they sit in secret. An insignificant-looking
thing at first, this Committee; but with a principle of growth in it!
Forwarded by fortune, by internal Jacobin energy, it will reduce all
Committees and the Convention itself to mute obedience, the Six
Ministers to Six assiduous Clerks; and work its will on the Earth and
under Heaven, for a season. 'A Committee of Public Salvation,' whereat
the world still shrieks and shudders.
If we call that Revolutionary Tribunal a Sword, which
Sansculottism has provided for itself, then let us call the 'Law of the
Maximum,' a Provender-scrip, or Haversack, wherein better or worse some
ration of bread may be found. It is true, Political Economy, Girondin
free-trade, and all law of supply and demand, are hereby hurled
topsyturvy: but what help? Patriotism must live; the 'cupidity of
farmers' seems to have no bowels. Wherefore this Law of the Maximum,
fixing the highest price of grains, is, with infinite effort, got
passed; (Moniteur, du 20 Avril, &c. to 20 Mai, 1793.) and shall
gradually extend itself into a Maximum for all manner of comestibles and
commodities: with such scrambling and topsyturvying as may be fancied!
For now, if, for example, the farmer will not sell? The farmer shall be
forced to sell. An accurate Account of what grain he has shall be
delivered in to the Constituted Authorities: let him see that he say not
too much; for in that case, his rents, taxes and contributions will rise
proportionally: let him see that he say not too little; for, on or
before a set day, we shall suppose in April, less than one-third of this
declared quantity, must remain in his barns, more than two-thirds of it
must have been thrashed and sold. One can denounce him, and raise
penalties.
By such inextricable overturning of all Commercial
relation will Sansculottism keep life in; since not otherwise. On the
whole, as Camille Desmoulins says once, "while the Sansculottes fight,
the Monsieurs must pay." So there come Impots Progressifs, Ascending
Taxes; which consume, with fast-increasing voracity, and
'superfluous-revenue' of men: beyond fifty-pounds a-year you are not
exempt; rising into the hundreds you bleed freely; into the thousands
and tens of thousands, you bleed gushing. Also there come Requisitions;
there comes 'Forced-Loan of a Milliard,' some Fifty-Millions Sterling;
which of course they that have must lend. Unexampled enough: it has
grown to be no country for the Rich, this; but a country for the Poor!
And then if one fly, what steads it? Dead in Law; nay kept alive fifty
years yet, for their accursed behoof! In this manner, therefore, it
goes; topsyturvying, ca-ira-ing;—and withal there is endless sale of
Emigrant National-Property, there is Cambon with endless cornucopia of
Assignats. The Trade and Finance of Sansculottism; and how, with Maximum
and Bakers'-queues, with Cupidity, Hunger, Denunciation and Paper-money,
it led its galvanic-life, and began and ended,—remains the most
interesting of all Chapters in Political Economy: still to be written.
All which things are they not clean against Formula? O
Girondin Friends, it is not a Republic of the Virtues we are getting;
but only a Republic of the Strengths, virtuous and other!
But Dumouriez, with his fugitive Host, with his King
Ludovicus or King Philippus? There lies the crisis; there hangs the
question: Revolution Prodigy, or Counter-Revolution?—One wide shriek
covers that North-East region. Soldiers, full of rage, suspicion and
terror, flock hither and thither; Dumouriez the many-counselled, never
off horseback, knows now no counsel that were not worse than none: the
counsel, namely, of joining himself with Cobourg; marching to Paris,
extinguishing Jacobinism, and, with some new King Ludovicus or King
Philippus, resting the Constitution of 1791! (Dumouriez, Memoires,
iv. c. 7-10.)
Is Wisdom quitting Dumouriez; the herald of Fortune
quitting him? Principle, faith political or other, beyond a certain
faith of mess-rooms, and honour of an officer, had him not to quit. At
any rate, his quarters in the Burgh of Saint-Amand; his headquarters in
the Village of Saint-Amand des Boues, a short way off,—have become a
Bedlam. National Representatives, Jacobin Missionaries are riding and
running: of the 'three Towns,' Lille, Valenciennes or even Conde, which
Dumouriez wanted to snatch for himself, not one can be snatched: your
Captain is admitted, but the Town-gate is closed on him, and then the
Prison gate, and 'his men wander about the ramparts.' Couriers gallop
breathless; men wait, or seem waiting, to assassinate, to be
assassinated; Battalions nigh frantic with such suspicion and
uncertainty, with Vive-la-Republique and Sauve-qui-peut, rush this way
and that;—Ruin and Desperation in the shape of Cobourg lying entrenched
close by.
Dame Genlis and her fair Princess d'Orleans find this
Burgh of Saint-Amand no fit place for them; Dumouriez's protection is
grown worse than none. Tough Genlis one of the toughest women; a woman,
as it were, with nine lives in her; whom nothing will beat: she packs
her bandboxes; clear for flight in a private manner. Her beloved
Princess she will—leave here, with the Prince Chartres Egalite her
Brother. In the cold grey of the April morning, we find her accordingly
established in her hired vehicle, on the street of Saint-Amand;
postilions just cracking their whips to go,—when behold the young
Princely Brother, struggling hitherward, hastily calling; bearing the
Princess in his arms! Hastily he has clutched the poor young lady up, in
her very night-gown, nothing saved of her goods except the watch from
the pillow: with brotherly despair he flings her in, among the
bandboxes, into Genlis's chaise, into Genlis's arms: Leave her not, in
the name of Mercy and Heaven! A shrill scene, but a brief one:—the
postilions crack and go. Ah, whither? Through by-roads and broken
hill-passes: seeking their way with lanterns after nightfall; through
perils, and Cobourg Austrians, and suspicious French Nationals; finally,
into Switzerland; safe though nigh moneyless. (Genlis, iv. 139.)
The brave young Egalite has a most wild Morrow to look for; but now only
himself to carry through it.
For indeed over at that Village named of the Mudbaths,
Saint-Amand des Boues, matters are still worse. About four o'clock on
Tuesday afternoon, the 2d of April 1793, two Couriers come galloping as
if for life: Mon General! Four National Representatives, War-Minister at
their head, are posting hitherward, from Valenciennes: are close at
hand,—with what intents one may guess! While the Couriers are yet
speaking, War-Minister and National Representatives, old Camus the
Archivist for chief speaker of them, arrive. Hardly has Mon General had
time to order out the Huzzar Regiment de Berchigny; that it take rank
and wait near by, in case of accident. And so, enter War-Minister
Beurnonville, with an embrace of friendship, for he is an old friend;
enter Archivist Camus and the other three, following him.
They produce Papers, invite the General to the bar of the
Convention: merely to give an explanation or two. The General finds it
unsuitable, not to say impossible, and that "the service will suffer."
Then comes reasoning; the voice of the old Archivist getting loud. Vain
to reason loud with this Dumouriez; he answers mere angry irreverences.
And so, amid plumed staff-officers, very gloomy-looking; in jeopardy and
uncertainty, these poor National messengers debate and consult, retire
and re-enter, for the space of some two hours: without effect. Whereupon
Archivist Camus, getting quite loud, proclaims, in the name of the
National Convention, for he has the power to do it, That General
Dumouriez is arrested: "Will you obey the National Mandate, General!"
"Pas dans ce moment-ci, Not at this particular moment," answers the
General also aloud; then glancing the other way, utters certain unknown
vocables, in a mandatory manner; seemingly a German word-of-command. (Dumouriez,
iv. 159, &c.) Hussars clutch the Four National Representatives, and
Beurnonville the War-minister; pack them out of the apartment; out of
the Village, over the lines to Cobourg, in two chaises that very
night,—as hostages, prisoners; to lie long in Maestricht and Austrian
strongholds! (Their Narrative, written by Camus in Toulongeon, iii.
app. 60-87.) Jacta est alea.
This night Dumouriez prints his 'Proclamation;' this
night and the morrow the Dumouriez Army, in such darkness visible, and
rage of semi-desperation as there is, shall meditate what the General is
doing, what they themselves will do in it. Judge whether this Wednesday
was of halcyon nature, for any one! But, on the Thursday morning, we
discern Dumouriez with small escort, with Chartres Egalite and a few
staff-officers, ambling along the Conde Highway: perhaps they are for
Conde, and trying to persuade the Garrison there; at all events, they
are for an interview with Cobourg, who waits in the woods by
appointment, in that quarter. Nigh the Village of Doumet, three National
Battalions, a set of men always full of Jacobinism, sweep past us;
marching rather swiftly,—seemingly in mistake, by a way we had not
ordered. The General dismounts, steps into a cottage, a little from the
wayside; will give them right order in writing. Hark! what strange
growling is heard: what barkings are heard, loud yells of "Traitors," of
"Arrest:" the National Battalions have wheeled round, are emitting shot!
Mount, Dumouriez, and spring for life! Dumouriez and Staff strike the
spurs in, deep; vault over ditches, into the fields, which prove to be
morasses; sprawl and plunge for life; bewhistled with curses and lead.
Sunk to the middle, with or without horses, several servants killed,
they escape out of shot-range, to General Mack the Austrian's quarters.
Nay they return on the morrow, to Saint-Amand and faithful foreign
Berchigny; but what boots it? The Artillery has all revolted, is
jingling off to Valenciennes: all have revolted, are revolting; except
only foreign Berchigny, to the extent of some poor fifteen hundred, none
will follow Dumouriez against France and Indivisible Republic:
Dumouriez's occupation's gone. (Memoires, iv. 162-180.)
Such an instinct of Frenehhood and Sansculottism dwells
in these men: they will follow no Dumouriez nor Lafayette, nor any
mortal on such errand. Shriek may be of Sauve-qui-peut, but will also be
of Vive-la-Republique. New National Representatives arrive; new General
Dampierre, soon killed in battle; new General Custine; the agitated
Hosts draw back to some Camp of Famars; make head against Cobourg as
they can.
And so Dumouriez is in the Austrian quarters; his drama
ended, in this rather sorry manner. A most shifty, wiry man; one of
Heaven's Swiss that wanted only work. Fifty years of unnoticed toil and
valour; one year of toil and valour, not unnoticed, but seen of all
countries and centuries; then thirty other years again unnoticed, of
Memoir-writing, English Pension, scheming and projecting to no purpose:
Adieu thou Swiss of Heaven, worthy to have been something else!
His Staff go different ways. Brave young Egalite reaches
Switzerland and the Genlis Cottage; with a strong crabstick in his hand,
a strong heart in his body: his Princedom in now reduced to that.
Egalite the Father sat playing whist, in his Palais Egalite, at Paris,
on the 6th day of this same month of April, when a catchpole entered:
Citoyen Egalite is wanted at the Convention Committee! (See
Montgaillard, iv. 144.) Examination, requiring Arrestment; finally
requiring Imprisonment, transference to Marseilles and the Castle of If!
Orleansdom has sunk in the black waters; Palais Egalite, which was
Palais Royal, is like to become Palais National.
Our Republic, by paper Decree, may be 'One and
Indivisible;' but what profits it while these things are? Federalists in
the Senate, renegadoes in the Army, traitors everywhere! France, all in
desperate recruitment since the Tenth of March, does not fly to the
frontier, but only flies hither and thither. This defection of
contemptuous diplomatic Dumouriez falls heavy on the fine-spoken
high-sniffing Hommes d'etat, whom he consorted with; forms a second
epoch in their destinies.
Or perhaps more strictly we might say, the second
Girondin epoch, though little noticed then, began on the day when, in
reference to this defection, the Girondins broke with Danton. It was the
first day of April; Dumouriez had not yet plunged across the morasses to
Cobourg, but was evidently meaning to do it, and our Commissioners were
off to arrest him; when what does the Girondin Lasource see good to do,
but rise, and jesuitically question and insinuate at great length,
whether a main accomplice of Dumouriez had not probably been—Danton?
Gironde grins sardonic assent; Mountain holds its breath. The figure of
Danton, Levasseur says, while this speech went on, was noteworthy. He
sat erect, with a kind of internal convulsion struggling to keep itself
motionless; his eye from time to time flashing wilder, his lip curling
in Titanic scorn. (Memoires de Rene Levasseur (Bruxelles, 1830),
i. 164.) Lasource, in a fine-spoken attorney-manner, proceeds: there
is this probability to his mind, and there is that; probabilities which
press painfully on him, which cast the Patriotism of Danton under a
painful shade; which painful shade he, Lasource, will hope that Danton
may find it not impossible to dispel.
"Les Scelerats!" cries Danton, starting up, with clenched
right-hand, Lasource having done: and descends from the Mountain, like a
lava-flood; his answer not unready. Lasource's probabilities fly like
idle dust; but leave a result behind them. "Ye were right, friends of
the Mountain," begins Danton, "and I was wrong: there is no peace
possible with these men. Let it be war then! They will not save the
Republic with us: it shall be saved without them; saved in spite of
them." Really a burst of rude Parliamentary eloquence this; which is
still worth reading, in the old Moniteur! With fire-words the
exasperated rude Titan rives and smites these Girondins; at every hit
the glad Mountain utters chorus: Marat, like a musical bis, repeating
the last phrase. (Seance du 1er Avril, 1793 in Hist. Parl. xxv.
24-35.) Lasource's probabilities are gone: but Danton's pledge of
battle remains lying.
A third epoch, or scene in the Girondin Drama, or rather
it is but the completion of this second epoch, we reckon from the day
when the patience of virtuous Petion finally boiled over; and the
Girondins, so to speak, took up this battle-pledge of Danton's and
decreed Marat accused. It was the eleventh of the same month of April,
on some effervescence rising, such as often rose; and President had
covered himself, mere Bedlam now ruling; and Mountain and Gironde were
rushing on one another with clenched right-hands, and even with pistols
in them; when, behold, the Girondin Duperret drew a sword! Shriek of
horror rose, instantly quenching all other effervescence, at sight of
the clear murderous steel; whereupon Duperret returned it to the leather
again;—confessing that he did indeed draw it, being instigated by a kind
of sacred madness, "sainte fureur," and pistols held at him; but that if
he parricidally had chanced to scratch the outmost skin of National
Representation with it, he too carried pistols, and would have blown his
brains out on the spot. (Hist. Parl. xv. 397.)
But now in such posture of affairs, virtuous Petion rose,
next morning, to lament these effervescences, this endless Anarchy
invading the Legislative Sanctuary itself; and here, being growled at
and howled at by the Mountain, his patience, long tried, did, as we say,
boil over; and he spake vehemently, in high key, with foam on his lips;
'whence,' says Marat, 'I concluded he had got 'la rage,' the rabidity,
or dog-madness. Rabidity smites others rabid: so there rises new
foam-lipped demand to have Anarchists extinguished; and specially to
have Marat put under Accusation. Send a Representative to the
Revolutionary Tribunal? Violate the inviolability of a Representative?
Have a care, O Friends! This poor Marat has faults enough; but against
Liberty or Equality, what fault? That he has loved and fought for it,
not wisely but too well. In dungeons and cellars, in pinching poverty,
under anathema of men; even so, in such fight, has he grown so dingy,
bleared; even so has his head become a Stylites one! Him you will fling
to your Sword of Sharpness; while Cobourg and Pitt advance on us,
fire-spitting?
The Mountain is loud, the Gironde is loud and deaf; all
lips are foamy. With 'Permanent-Session of twenty-four hours,' with vote
by rollcall, and a dead-lift effort, the Gironde carries it: Marat is
ordered to the Revolutionary Tribunal, to answer for that February
Paragraph of Forestallers at the door-lintel, with other offences; and,
after a little hesitation, he obeys. (Moniteur, du 16 Avril 1793, et
seqq.)
Thus is Danton's battle-pledge taken up: there is, as he
said there would be, 'war without truce or treaty, ni treve ni
composition.' Wherefore, close now with one another, Formula and
Reality, in death-grips, and wrestle it out; both of you cannot live,
but only one!
It proves what strength, were it only of inertia, there
is in established Formulas, what weakness in nascent Realities, and
illustrates several things, that this death-wrestle should still have
lasted some six weeks or more. National business, discussion of the
Constitutional Act, for our Constitution should decidedly be got ready,
proceeds along with it. We even change our Locality; we shift, on the
Tenth of May, from the old Salle de Manege, into our new Hall, in the
Palace, once a King's but now the Republic's, of the Tuileries. Hope and
ruth, flickering against despair and rage, still struggles in the minds
of men.
It is a most dark confused death-wrestle, this of the six
weeks. Formalist frenzy against Realist frenzy; Patriotism, Egoism,
Pride, Anger, Vanity, Hope and Despair, all raised to the frenetic
pitch: Frenzy meets Frenzy, like dark clashing whirlwinds; neither
understands the other; the weaker, one day, will understand that it is
verily swept down! Girondism is strong as established Formula and
Respectability: do not as many as Seventy-two of the Departments, or say
respectable Heads of Departments, declare for us? Calvados, which loves
its Buzot, will even rise in revolt, so hint the Addresses; Marseilles,
cradle of Patriotism, will rise; Bourdeaux will rise, and the Gironde
Department, as one man; in a word, who will not rise, were our
Representation Nationale to be insulted, or one hair of a Deputy's head
harmed! The Mountain, again, is strong as Reality and Audacity. To the
Reality of the Mountain are not all furthersome things possible? A new
Tenth of August, if needful; nay a new Second of September!—
But, on Wednesday afternoon, twenty-fourth day of April,
year 1793, what tumult as of fierce jubilee is this? It is Marat
returning from Revolutionary Tribunal! A week or more of death-peril:
and now there is triumphant acquittal; Revolutionary Tribunal can find
no accusation against this man. And so the eye of History beholds
Patriotism, which had gloomed unutterable things all week, break into
loud jubilee, embrace its Marat; lift him into a chair of triumph, bear
him shoulder-high through the streets. Shoulder-high is the injured
People's-friend, crowned with an oak-garland; amid the wavy sea of red
nightcaps, carmagnole jackets, grenadier bonnets and female mob-caps;
far-sounding like a sea! The injured People's-friend has here reached
his culminating-point; he too strikes the stars with his sublime head.
But the Reader can judge with what face President
Lasource, he of the 'painful probabilities,' who presides in this
Convention Hall, might welcome such jubilee-tide, when it got thither,
and the Decreed of Accusation floating on the top of it! A National
Sapper, spokesman on the occasion, says, the People know their Friend,
and love his life as their own; "whosoever wants Marat's head must get
the Sapper's first." (Seance in Moniteur, No. 116, du 26 Avril, An
1er.) Lasource answered with some vague painful mumblement,—which,
says Levasseur, one could not help tittering at. (Levasseur,
Memoires, i. c. 6.) Patriot Sections, Volunteers not yet gone to the
Frontiers, come demanding the "purgation of traitors from your own
bosom;" the expulsion, or even the trial and sentence, of a factious
Twenty-two.
Nevertheless the Gironde has got its Commission of
Twelve; a Commission specially appointed for investigating these
troubles of the Legislative Sanctuary: let Sansculottism say what it
will, Law shall triumph. Old-Constituent Rabaut Saint-Etienne presides
over this Commission: "it is the last plank whereon a wrecked Republic
may perhaps still save herself." Rabaut and they therefore sit, intent;
examining witnesses; launching arrestments; looking out into a waste dim
sea of troubles.—the womb of Formula, or perhaps her grave! Enter not
that sea, O Reader! There are dim desolation and confusion; raging women
and raging men. Sections come demanding Twenty-two; for the number first
given by Section Bonconseil still holds, though the names should even
vary. Other Sections, of the wealthier kind, come denouncing such
demand; nay the same Section will demand to-day, and denounce the demand
to-morrow, according as the wealthier sit, or the poorer. Wherefore,
indeed, the Girondins decree that all Sections shall close 'at ten in
the evening;' before the working people come: which Decree remains
without effect. And nightly the Mother of Patriotism wails doleful;
doleful, but her eye kindling! And Fournier l'Americain is busy, and the
two Banker Freys, and Varlet Apostle of Liberty; the bull-voice of
Marquis Saint-Huruge is heard. And shrill women vociferate from all
Galleries, the Convention ones and downwards. Nay a 'Central Committee'
of all the Forty-eight Sections, looms forth huge and dubious; sitting
dim in the Archeveche, sending Resolutions, receiving them: a Centre of
the Sections; in dread deliberation as to a New Tenth of August!
One thing we will specify to throw light on many: the
aspect under which, seen through the eyes of these Girondin Twelve, or
even seen through one's own eyes, the Patriotism of the softer sex
presents itself. There are Female Patriots, whom the Girondins call
Megaeras, and count to the extent of eight thousand; with serpent-hair,
all out of curl; who have changed the distaff for the dagger. They are
of 'the Society called Brotherly,' Fraternelle, say Sisterly, which
meets under the roof of the Jacobins. 'Two thousand daggers,' or so,
have been ordered,—doubtless, for them. They rush to Versailles, to
raise more women; but the Versailles women will not rise. (Buzot,
Memoires, pp. 69, 84; Meillan, Memoires, pp. 192, 195, 196. See
Commission des Douze in Choix des Rapports, xii. 69-131.)
Nay, behold, in National Garden of Tuileries,—Demoiselle
Theroigne herself is become as a brownlocked Diana (were that
possible) attacked by her own dogs, or she-dogs! The Demoiselle,
keeping her carriage, is for Liberty indeed, as she has full well shewn;
but then for Liberty with Respectability: whereupon these serpent-haired
Extreme She-Patriots now do fasten on her, tatter her, shamefully
fustigate her, in their shameful way; almost fling her into the
Garden-ponds, had not help intervened. Help, alas, to small purpose. The
poor Demoiselle's head and nervous-system, none of the soundest, is so
tattered and fluttered that it will never recover; but flutter worse and
worse, till it crack; and within year and day we hear of her in
madhouse, and straitwaistcoat, which proves permanent!—Such brownlocked
Figure did flutter, and inarticulately jabber and gesticulate, little
able to speak the obscure meaning it had, through some segment of that
Eighteenth Century of Time. She disappears here from the Revolution and
Public History, for evermore. (Deux Amis, vii. 77-80; Forster, i.
514; Moore, i. 70. She did not die till 1817; in the Salpetriere, in the
most abject state of insanity; see Esquirol, Des Maladies Mentales (Paris,
1838), i. 445-50.)
Another thing we will not again specify, yet again
beseech the Reader to imagine: the reign of Fraternity and Perfection.
Imagine, we say, O Reader, that the Millennium were struggling on the
threshold, and yet not so much as groceries could be had,—owing to
traitors. With what impetus would a man strike traitors, in that case?
Ah, thou canst not imagine it: thou hast thy groceries safe in the
shops, and little or no hope of a Millennium ever coming!—But, indeed,
as to the temper there was in men and women, does not this one fact say
enough: the height SUSPICION had risen to? Preternatural we often called
it; seemingly in the language of exaggeration: but listen to the cold
deposition of witnesses. Not a musical Patriot can blow himself a snatch
of melody from the French Horn, sitting mildly pensive on the housetop,
but Mercier will recognise it to be a signal which one Plotting
Committee is making to another. Distraction has possessed Harmony
herself; lurks in the sound of Marseillese and ca-ira. (Mercier,
Nouveau Paris, vi. 63.) Louvet, who can see as deep into a millstone
as the most, discerns that we shall be invited back to our old Hall of
the Manege, by a Deputation; and then the Anarchists will massacre
Twenty-two of us, as we walk over. It is Pitt and Cobourg; the gold of
Pitt.—Poor Pitt! They little know what work he has with his own Friends
of the People; getting them bespied, beheaded, their habeas-corpuses
suspended, and his own Social Order and strong-boxes kept tight,—to
fancy him raising mobs among his neighbours!
But the strangest fact connected with French or indeed
with human Suspicion, is perhaps this of Camille Desmoulins. Camille's
head, one of the clearest in France, has got itself so saturated through
every fibre with Preternaturalism of Suspicion, that looking back on
that Twelfth of July 1789, when the thousands rose round him, yelling
responsive at his word in the Palais Royal Garden, and took cockades, he
finds it explicable only on this hypothesis, That they were all hired to
do it, and set on by the Foreign and other Plotters. 'It was not for
nothing,' says Camille with insight, 'that this multitude burst up round
me when I spoke!' No, not for nothing. Behind, around, before, it is one
huge Preternatural Puppet-play of Plots; Pitt pulling the wires. (See
Histoire des Brissotins, par Camille Desmoulins, a Pamphlet of
Camille's, Paris, 1793.) Almost I conjecture that I Camille myself
am a Plot, and wooden with wires.—The force of insight could no further
go.
Be this as it will, History remarks that the Commission
of Twelve, now clear enough as to the Plots; and luckily having 'got the
threads of them all by the end,' as they say,—are launching Mandates of
Arrest rapidly in these May days; and carrying matters with a high hand;
resolute that the sea of troubles shall be restrained. What chief
Patriot, Section-President even, is safe? They can arrest him; tear him
from his warm bed, because he has made irregular Section Arrestments!
They arrest Varlet Apostle of Liberty. They arrest Procureur-Substitute
Hebert, Pere Duchesne; a Magistrate of the People, sitting in Townhall;
who, with high solemnity of martyrdom, takes leave of his colleagues;
prompt he, to obey the Law; and solemnly acquiescent, disappears into
prison.
The swifter fly the Sections, energetically demanding him
back; demanding not arrestment of Popular Magistrates, but of a
traitorous Twenty-two. Section comes flying after Section;—defiling
energetic, with their Cambyses' vein of oratory: nay the Commune itself
comes, with Mayor Pache at its head; and with question not of Hebert and
the Twenty-two alone, but with this ominous old question made new, "Can
you save the Republic, or must we do it?" To whom President Max Isnard
makes fiery answer: If by fatal chance, in any of those tumults which
since the Tenth of March are ever returning, Paris were to lift a
sacrilegious finger against the National Representation, France would
rise as one man, in never-imagined vengeance, and shortly "the traveller
would ask, on which side of the Seine Paris had stood!" (Moniteur,
Seance du 25 Mai, 1793.) Whereat the Mountain bellows only louder,
and every Gallery; Patriot Paris boiling round.
And Girondin Valaze has nightly conclaves at his house;
sends billets; 'Come punctually, and well armed, for there is to be
business.' And Megaera women perambulate the streets, with flags, with
lamentable alleleu. (Meillan, Memoires, p. 195; Buzot, pp. 69, 84.)
And the Convention-doors are obstructed by roaring multitudes:
find-spoken hommes d'etat are hustled, maltreated, as they pass; Marat
will apostrophise you, in such death-peril, and say, Thou too art of
them. If Roland ask leave to quit Paris, there is order of the day. What
help? Substitute Hebert, Apostle Varlet, must be given back; to be
crowned with oak-garlands. The Commission of Twelve, in a Convention
overwhelmed with roaring Sections, is broken; then on the morrow, in a
Convention of rallied Girondins, is reinstated. Dim Chaos, or the sea of
troubles, is struggling through all its elements; writhing and chafing
towards some creation.
Accordingly, on Friday, the Thirty-first of May 1793,
there comes forth into the summer sunlight one of the strangest scenes.
Mayor Pache with Municipality arrives at the Tuileries Hall of
Convention; sent for, Paris being in visible ferment; and gives the
strangest news.
How, in the grey of this morning, while we sat Permanent
in Townhall, watchful for the commonweal, there entered, precisely as on
a Tenth of August, some Ninety-six extraneous persons; who declared
themselves to be in a state of Insurrection; to be plenipotentiary
Commissioners from the Forty-eight Sections, sections or members of the
Sovereign People, all in a state of Insurrection; and further that we,
in the name of said Sovereign in Insurrection, were dismissed from
office. How we thereupon laid off our sashes, and withdrew into the
adjacent Saloon of Liberty. How in a moment or two, we were called back;
and reinstated; the Sovereign pleasing to think us still worthy of
confidence. Whereby, having taken new oath of office, we on a sudden
find ourselves Insurrectionary Magistrates, with extraneous Committee of
Ninety-six sitting by us; and a Citoyen Henriot, one whom some accuse of
Septemberism, is made Generalissimo of the National Guard; and, since
six o'clock, the tocsins ring and the drums beat:—Under which peculiar
circumstances, what would an august National Convention please to direct
us to do? (Compare Debats de la Convention (Paris, 1828), iv.
187-223; Moniteur, Nos. 152, 3, 4, An 1er.)
Yes, there is the question! "Break the Insurrectionary
Authorities," answers some with vehemence. Vergniaud at least will have
"the National Representatives all die at their post;" this is sworn to,
with ready loud acclaim. But as to breaking the Insurrectionary
Authorities,—alas, while we yet debate, what sound is that? Sound of the
Alarm-Cannon on the Pont Neuf; which it is death by the Law to fire
without order from us!
It does boom off there, nevertheless; sending a sound
through all hearts. And the tocsins discourse stern music; and Henriot
with his Armed Force has enveloped us! And Section succeeds Section, the
livelong day; demanding with Cambyses'-oratory, with the rattle of
muskets, That traitors, Twenty-two or more, be punished; that the
Commission of Twelve be irrecoverably broken. The heart of the Gironde
dies within it; distant are the Seventy-two respectable Departments,
this fiery Municipality is near! Barrere is for a middle course;
granting something. The Commission of Twelve declares that, not waiting
to be broken, it hereby breaks itself, and is no more. Fain would
Reporter Rabaut speak his and its last-words; but he is bellowed off.
Too happy that the Twenty-two are still left unviolated!—Vergniaud,
carrying the laws of refinement to a great length, moves, to the
amazement of some, that 'the Sections of Paris have deserved well of
their country.' Whereupon, at a late hour of the evening, the deserving
Sections retire to their respective places of abode. Barrere shall
report on it. With busy quill and brain he sits, secluded; for him no
sleep to-night. Friday the last of May has ended in this manner.
The Sections have deserved well: but ought they not to
deserve better? Faction and Girondism is struck down for the moment, and
consents to be a nullity; but will it not, at another favourabler moment
rise, still feller; and the Republic have to be saved in spite of it? So
reasons Patriotism, still Permanent; so reasons the Figure of Marat,
visible in the dim Section-world, on the morrow. To the conviction of
men!—And so at eventide of Saturday, when Barrere had just got it all
varnished in the course of the day, and his Report was setting off in
the evening mail-bags, tocsin peals out again! Generale is beating;
armed men taking station in the Place Vendome and elsewhere for the
night; supplied with provisions and liquor. There under the summer stars
will they wait, this night, what is to be seen and to be done, Henriot
and Townhall giving due signal.
The Convention, at sound of generale, hastens back to its
Hall; but to the number only of a Hundred; and does little business,
puts off business till the morrow. The Girondins do not stir out
thither, the Girondins are abroad seeking beds. Poor Rabaut, on the
morrow morning, returning to his post, with Louvet and some others,
through streets all in ferment, wrings his hands, ejaculating, "Illa
suprema dies!" (Louvet, Memoires, p. 89.) It has become Sunday,
the second day of June, year 1793, by the old style; by the new style,
year One of Liberty, Equality, Fraternity. We have got to the last scene
of all, that ends this history of the Girondin Senatorship.
It seems doubtful whether any terrestrial Convention had
ever met in such circumstances as this National one now does. Tocsin is
pealing; Barriers shut; all Paris is on the gaze, or under arms. As many
as a Hundred Thousand under arms they count: National Force; and the
Armed Volunteers, who should have flown to the Frontiers and La Vendee;
but would not, treason being unpunished; and only flew hither and
thither! So many, steady under arms, environ the National Tuileries and
Garden. There are horse, foot, artillery, sappers with beards: the
artillery one can see with their camp-furnaces in this National Garden,
heating bullets red, and their match is lighted. Henriot in plumes
rides, amid a plumed Staff: all posts and issues are safe; reserves lie
out, as far as the Wood of Boulogne; the choicest Patriots nearest the
scene. One other circumstance we will note: that a careful Municipality,
liberal of camp-furnaces, has not forgotten provision-carts. No member
of the Sovereign need now go home to dinner; but can keep
rank,—plentiful victual circulating unsought. Does not this People
understand Insurrection? Ye, not uninventive, Gualches!—
Therefore let a National Representation, 'mandatories of
the Sovereign,' take thought of it. Expulsion of your Twenty-two, and
your Commission of Twelve: we stand here till it be done! Deputation
after Deputation, in ever stronger language, comes with that message.
Barrere proposes a middle course:—Will not perhaps the inculpated
Deputies consent to withdraw voluntarily; to make a generous demission,
and self-sacrifice for the sake of one's country? Isnard, repentant of
that search on which river-bank Paris stood, declares himself ready to
demit. Ready also is Te-Deum Fauchet; old Dusaulx of the Bastille,
'vieux radoteur, old dotard,' as Marat calls him, is still readier. On
the contrary, Lanjuinais the Breton declares that there is one man who
never will demit voluntarily; but will protest to the uttermost, while a
voice is left him. And he accordingly goes on protesting; amid rage and
clangor; Legendre crying at last: "Lanjuinais, come down from the
Tribune, or I will fling thee down, ou je te jette en bas!" For matters
are come to extremity. Nay they do clutch hold of Lanjuinais, certain
zealous Mountain-men; but cannot fling him down, for he 'cramps himself
on the railing;' and 'his clothes get torn.' Brave Senator, worthy of
pity! Neither will Barbaroux demit; he "has sworn to die at his post,
and will keep that oath." Whereupon the Galleries all rise with
explosion; brandishing weapons, some of them; and rush out saying:
"Allons, then; we must save our country!" Such a Session is this of
Sunday the second of June.
Churches fill, over Christian Europe, and then empty
themselves; but this Convention empties not, the while: a day of
shrieking contention, of agony, humiliation and tearing of coatskirts;
illa suprema dies! Round stand Henriot and his Hundred Thousand,
copiously refreshed from tray and basket: nay he is 'distributing five
francs a-piece;' we Girondins saw it with our eyes; five francs to keep
them in heart! And distraction of armed riot encumbers our borders,
jangles at our Bar; we are prisoners in our own Hall: Bishop Gregoire
could not get out for a besoin actuel without four gendarmes to wait on
him! What is the character of a National Representative become? And now
the sunlight falls yellower on western windows, and the chimney-tops are
flinging longer shadows; the refreshed Hundred Thousand, nor their
shadows, stir not! What to resolve on? Motion rises, superfluous one
would think, That the Convention go forth in a body; ascertain with its
own eyes whether it is free or not. Lo, therefore, from the Eastern Gate
of the Tuileries, a distressed Convention issuing; handsome Herault
Sechelles at their head; he with hat on, in sign of public calamity, the
rest bareheaded,—towards the Gate of the Carrousel; wondrous to see:
towards Henriot and his plumed staff. "In the name of the National
Convention, make way!" Not an inch of the way does Henriot make: "I
receive no orders, till the Sovereign, yours and mine, has been obeyed."
The Convention presses on; Henriot prances back, with his staff, some
fifteen paces, "To arms! Cannoneers to your guns!"—flashes out his
puissant sword, as the Staff all do, and the Hussars all do. Cannoneers
brandish the lit match; Infantry present arms,—alas, in the level way,
as if for firing! Hatted Herault leads his distressed flock, through
their pinfold of a Tuileries again; across the Garden, to the Gate on
the opposite side. Here is Feuillans Terrace, alas, there is our old
Salle de Manege; but neither at this Gate of the Pont Tournant is there
egress. Try the other; and the other: no egress! We wander disconsolate
through armed ranks; who indeed salute with Live the Republic, but also
with Die the Gironde. Other such sight, in the year One of Liberty, the
westering sun never saw.
And now behold Marat meets us; for he lagged in this
Suppliant Procession of ours: he has got some hundred elect Patriots at
his heels: he orders us in the Sovereign's name to return to our place,
and do as we are bidden and bound. The Convention returns. "Does not the
Convention," says Couthon with a singular power of face, "see that it is
free?"—none but friends round it? The Convention, overflowing with
friends and armed Sectioners, proceeds to vote as bidden. Many will not
vote, but remain silent; some one or two protest, in words: the Mountain
has a clear unanimity. Commission of Twelve, and the denounced
Twenty-two, to whom we add Ex-Ministers Claviere and Lebrun: these, with
some slight extempore alterations (this or that orator proposing, but
Marat disposing), are voted to be under 'Arrestment in their own
houses.' Brissot, Buzot, Vergniaud, Guadet, Louvet, Gensonne, Barbaroux,
Lasource, Lanjuinais, Rabaut,—Thirty-two, by the tale; all that we have
known as Girondins, and more than we have known. They, 'under the
safeguard of the French People;' by and by, under the safeguard of two
Gendarmes each, shall dwell peaceably in their own houses; as
Non-Senators; till further order. Herewith ends Seance of Sunday the
second of June 1793.
At ten o'clock, under mild stars, the Hundred Thousand,
their work well finished, turn homewards. This same day, Central
Insurrection Committee has arrested Madame Roland; imprisoned her in the
Abbaye. Roland has fled, no one knows whither.
Thus fell the Girondins, by Insurrection; and became
extinct as a Party: not without a sigh from most Historians. The men
were men of parts, of Philosophic culture, decent behaviour; not
condemnable in that they were Pedants and had not better parts; not
condemnable, but most unfortunate. They wanted a Republic of the
Virtues, wherein themselves should be head; and they could only get a
Republic of the Strengths, wherein others than they were head.
For the rest, Barrere shall make Report of it. The night
concludes with a 'civic promenade by torchlight:' (Buzot, Memoires,
p. 310. See Pieces Justificatives, of Narratives, Commentaries, &c. in
Buzot, Louvet, Meillan: Documens Complementaires, in Hist. Parl. xxviii.
1-78.) surely the true reign of Fraternity is now not far?
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