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THE FRENCH REVOLUTION: A HISTORY |
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BOOK IV. TERROR In the leafy months of June and July, several French Departments germinate a set of rebellious paper-leaves, named Proclamations, Resolutions, Journals, or Diurnals 'of the Union for Resistance to Oppression.' In particular, the Town of Caen, in Calvados, sees its paper-leaf of Bulletin de Caen suddenly bud, suddenly establish itself as Newspaper there; under the Editorship of Girondin National Representatives!
For among the proscribed Girondins are certain of a more
desperate humour. Some, as Vergniaud, Valaze, Gensonne, 'arrested in
their own houses' will await with stoical resignation what the issue may
be. Some, as Brissot, Rabaut, will take to flight, to concealment;
which, as the Paris Barriers are opened again in a day or two, is not
yet difficult. But others there are who will rush, with Buzot, to
Calvados; or far over France, to Lyons, Toulon, Nantes and elsewhither,
and then rendezvous at Caen: to awaken as with war-trumpet the
respectable Departments; and strike down an anarchic Mountain Faction;
at least not yield without a stroke at it. Of this latter temper we
count some score or more, of the Arrested, and of the Not-yet-arrested;
a Buzot, a Barbaroux, Louvet, Guadet, Petion, who have escaped from
Arrestment in their own homes; a Salles, a Pythagorean Valady, a
Duchatel, the Duchatel that came in blanket and nightcap to vote for the
life of Louis, who have escaped from danger and likelihood of
Arrestment. These, to the number at one time of Twenty-seven, do
accordingly lodge here, at the 'Intendance, or Departmental Mansion,' of
the Town of Caen; welcomed by Persons in Authority; welcomed and
defrayed, having no money of their own. And the Bulletin de Caen comes
forth, with the most animating paragraphs: How the Bourdeaux Department,
the Lyons Department, this Department after the other is declaring
itself; sixty, or say sixty-nine, or seventy-two (Meillan, p. 72, 73;
Louvet, p. 129.) respectable Departments either declaring, or ready
to declare. Nay Marseilles, it seems, will march on Paris by itself, if
need be. So has Marseilles Town said, That she will march. But on the
other hand, that Montelimart Town has said, No thoroughfare; and means
even to 'bury herself' under her own stone and mortar first—of this be
no mention in Bulletin of Caen.
Such animating paragraphs we read in this Newspaper; and
fervours, and eloquent sarcasm: tirades against the Mountain, frame pen
of Deputy Salles; which resemble, say friends, Pascal's Provincials.
What is more to the purpose, these Girondins have got a General in
chief, one Wimpfen, formerly under Dumouriez; also a secondary
questionable General Puisaye, and others; and are doing their best to
raise a force for war. National Volunteers, whosoever is of right heart:
gather in, ye National Volunteers, friends of Liberty; from our Calvados
Townships, from the Eure, from Brittany, from far and near; forward to
Paris, and extinguish Anarchy! Thus at Caen, in the early July days,
there is a drumming and parading, a perorating and consulting: Staff and
Army; Council; Club of Carabots, Anti-jacobin friends of Freedom, to
denounce atrocious Marat. With all which, and the editing of Bulletins,
a National Representative has his hands full.
At Caen it is most animated; and, as one hopes, more or
less animated in the 'Seventy-two Departments that adhere to us.' And in
a France begirt with Cimmerian invading Coalitions, and torn with an
internal La Vendee, this is the conclusion we have arrived at: to put
down Anarchy by Civil War! Durum et durum, the Proverb says, non faciunt
murum. La Vendee burns: Santerre can do nothing there; he may return
home and brew beer. Cimmerian bombshells fly all along the North. That
Siege of Mentz is become famed;—lovers of the Picturesque (as Goethe
will testify), washed country-people of both sexes, stroll thither
on Sundays, to see the artillery work and counterwork; 'you only duck a
little while the shot whizzes past.' (Belagerung von Mainz, Goethe's
Werke, xxx. 278-334.) Conde is capitulating to the Austrians; Royal
Highness of York, these several weeks, fiercely batters Valenciennes.
For, alas, our fortified Camp of Famars was stormed; General Dampierre
was killed; General Custine was blamed,—and indeed is now come to Paris
to give 'explanations.'
Against all which the Mountain and atrocious Marat must
even make head as they can. They, anarchic Convention as they are,
publish Decrees, expostulatory, explanatory, yet not without severity;
they ray forth Commissioners, singly or in pairs, the olive-branch in
one hand, yet the sword in the other. Commissioners come even to Caen;
but without effect. Mathematical Romme, and Prieur named of the Cote
d'Or, venturing thither, with their olive and sword, are packed into
prison: there may Romme lie, under lock and key, 'for fifty days;' and
meditate his New Calendar, if he please. Cimmeria and Civil War! Never
was Republic One and Indivisible at a lower ebb.—
Amid which dim ferment of Caen and the World, History
specially notices one thing: in the lobby of the Mansion de
l'Intendance, where busy Deputies are coming and going, a young Lady
with an aged valet, taking grave graceful leave of Deputy Barbaroux. (Meillan,
p.75; Louvet, p. 114.) She is of stately Norman figure; in her
twenty-fifth year; of beautiful still countenance: her name is Charlotte
Corday, heretofore styled d'Armans, while Nobility still was. Barbaroux
has given her a Note to Deputy Duperret,—him who once drew his sword in
the effervescence. Apparently she will to Paris on some errand? 'She was
a Republican before the Revolution, and never wanted energy.' A
completeness, a decision is in this fair female Figure: 'by energy she
means the spirit that will prompt one to sacrifice himself for his
country.' What if she, this fair young Charlotte, had emerged from her
secluded stillness, suddenly like a Star; cruel-lovely, with
half-angelic, half-demonic splendour; to gleam for a moment, and in a
moment be extinguished: to be held in memory, so bright complete was
she, through long centuries!—Quitting Cimmerian Coalitions without, and
the dim-simmering Twenty-five millions within, History will look fixedly
at this one fair Apparition of a Charlotte Corday; will note whither
Charlotte moves, how the little Life burns forth so radiant, then
vanishes swallowed of the Night.
With Barbaroux's Note of Introduction, and slight stock
of luggage, we see Charlotte, on Tuesday the ninth of July, seated in
the Caen Diligence, with a place for Paris. None takes farewell of her,
wishes her Good-journey: her Father will find a line left, signifying
that she is gone to England, that he must pardon her and forget her. The
drowsy Diligence lumbers along; amid drowsy talk of Politics, and praise
of the Mountain; in which she mingles not; all night, all day, and again
all night. On Thursday, not long before none, we are at the Bridge of
Neuilly; here is Paris with her thousand black domes,—the goal and
purpose of thy journey! Arrived at the Inn de la Providence in the Rue
des Vieux Augustins, Charlotte demands a room; hastens to bed; sleeps
all afternoon and night, till the morrow morning.
On the morrow morning, she delivers her Note to Duperret.
It relates to certain Family Papers which are in the Minister of the
Interior's hand; which a Nun at Caen, an old Convent-friend of
Charlotte's, has need of; which Duperret shall assist her in getting:
this then was Charlotte's errand to Paris? She has finished this, in the
course of Friday;—yet says nothing of returning. She has seen and
silently investigated several things. The Convention, in bodily reality,
she has seen; what the Mountain is like. The living physiognomy of Marat
she could not see; he is sick at present, and confined to home.
About eight on the Saturday morning, she purchases a
large sheath-knife in the Palais Royal; then straightway, in the Place
des Victoires, takes a hackney-coach: "To the Rue de l'Ecole de
Medecine, No. 44." It is the residence of the Citoyen Marat!—The Citoyen
Marat is ill, and cannot be seen; which seems to disappoint her much.
Her business is with Marat, then? Hapless beautiful Charlotte; hapless
squalid Marat! From Caen in the utmost West, from Neuchatel in the
utmost East, they two are drawing nigh each other; they two have, very
strangely, business together.—Charlotte, returning to her Inn,
despatches a short Note to Marat; signifying that she is from Caen, the
seat of rebellion; that she desires earnestly to see him, and 'will put
it in his power to do France a great service.' No answer. Charlotte
writes another Note, still more pressing; sets out with it by coach,
about seven in the evening, herself. Tired day-labourers have again
finished their Week; huge Paris is circling and simmering, manifold,
according to its vague wont: this one fair Figure has decision in it;
drives straight,—towards a purpose.
It is yellow July evening, we say, the thirteenth of the
month; eve of the Bastille day,—when 'M. Marat,' four years ago, in the
crowd of the Pont Neuf, shrewdly required of that Besenval Hussar-party,
which had such friendly dispositions, "to dismount, and give up their
arms, then;" and became notable among Patriot men! Four years: what a
road he has travelled;—and sits now, about half-past seven of the clock,
stewing in slipper-bath; sore afflicted; ill of Revolution Fever,—of
what other malady this History had rather not name. Excessively sick and
worn, poor man: with precisely elevenpence-halfpenny of ready money, in
paper; with slipper-bath; strong three-footed stool for writing on, the
while; and a squalid—Washerwoman, one may call her: that is his civic
establishment in Medical-School Street; thither and not elsewhither has
his road led him. Not to the reign of Brotherhood and Perfect Felicity;
yet surely on the way towards that?—Hark, a rap again! A musical
woman's-voice, refusing to be rejected: it is the Citoyenne who would do
France a service. Marat, recognising from within, cries, Admit her.
Charlotte Corday is admitted.
Citoyen Marat, I am from Caen the seat of rebellion, and
wished to speak with you.—Be seated, mon enfant. Now what are the
Traitors doing at Caen? What Deputies are at Caen?—Charlotte names some
Deputies. "Their heads shall fall within a fortnight," croaks the eager
People's-Friend, clutching his tablets to write: Barbaroux, Petion,
writes he with bare shrunk arm, turning aside in the bath: Petion, and
Louvet, and—Charlotte has drawn her knife from the sheath; plunges it,
with one sure stroke, into the writer's heart. "A moi, chere amie, Help,
dear!" No more could the Death-choked say or shriek. The helpful
Washerwoman running in, there is no Friend of the People, or Friend of
the Washerwoman, left; but his life with a groan gushes out, indignant,
to the shades below. (Moniteur, Nos. 197, 198, 199; Hist. Parl.
xxviii. 301-5; Deux Amis, x. 368-374.)
And so Marat People's-Friend is ended; the lone Stylites
has got hurled down suddenly from his Pillar,—whither He that made him
does know. Patriot Paris may sound triple and tenfold, in dole and wail;
re-echoed by Patriot France; and the Convention, 'Chabot pale with
terror declaring that they are to be all assassinated,' may decree him
Pantheon Honours, Public Funeral, Mirabeau's dust making way for him;
and Jacobin Societies, in lamentable oratory, summing up his character,
parallel him to One, whom they think it honour to call 'the good
Sansculotte,'—whom we name not here. (See Eloge funebre de Jean-Paul
Marat, prononce a Strasbourg in Barbaroux, p. 125-131; Mercier, &c.)
Also a Chapel may be made, for the urn that holds his Heart, in the
Place du Carrousel; and new-born children be named Marat; and
Lago-de-Como Hawkers bake mountains of stucco into unbeautiful Busts;
and David paint his Picture, or Death-scene; and such other Apotheosis
take place as the human genius, in these circumstances, can devise: but
Marat returns no more to the light of this Sun. One sole circumstance we
have read with clear sympathy, in the old Moniteur Newspaper: how
Marat's brother comes from Neuchatel to ask of the Convention 'that the
deceased Jean-Paul Marat's musket be given him.' (Seance du 16
Septembre 1793.) For Marat too had a brother, and natural
affections; and was wrapt once in swaddling-clothes, and slept safe in a
cradle like the rest of us. Ye children of men!—A sister of his, they
say, lives still to this day in Paris.
As for Charlotte Corday her work is accomplished; the
recompense of it is near and sure. The chere amie, and neighbours of the
house, flying at her, she 'overturns some movables,' entrenches herself
till the gendarmes arrive; then quietly surrenders; goes quietly to the
Abbaye Prison: she alone quiet, all Paris sounding in wonder, in rage or
admiration, round her. Duperret is put in arrest, on account of her; his
Papers sealed,—which may lead to consequences. Fauchet, in like manner;
though Fauchet had not so much as heard of her. Charlotte, confronted
with these two Deputies, praises the grave firmness of Duperret,
censures the dejection of Fauchet.
On Wednesday morning, the thronged Palais de Justice and
Revolutionary Tribunal can see her face; beautiful and calm: she dates
it 'fourth day of the Preparation of Peace.' A strange murmur ran
through the Hall, at sight of her; you could not say of what character.
(Proces de Charlotte Corday, &c. Hist. Parl. xxviii. 311-338.)
Tinville has his indictments and tape-papers the cutler of the Palais
Royal will testify that he sold her the sheath-knife; "all these details
are needless," interrupted Charlotte; "it is I that killed Marat." By
whose instigation?—"By no one's." What tempted you, then? His crimes. "I
killed one man," added she, raising her voice extremely (extremement),
as they went on with their questions, "I killed one man to save a
hundred thousand; a villain to save innocents; a savage wild-beast to
give repose to my country. I was a Republican before the Revolution; I
never wanted energy." There is therefore nothing to be said. The public
gazes astonished: the hasty limners sketch her features, Charlotte not
disapproving; the men of law proceed with their formalities. The doom is
Death as a murderess. To her Advocate she gives thanks; in gentle
phrase, in high-flown classical spirit. To the Priest they send her she
gives thanks; but needs not any shriving, or ghostly or other aid from
him.
On this same evening, therefore, about half-past seven
o'clock, from the gate of the Conciergerie, to a City all on tiptoe, the
fatal Cart issues: seated on it a fair young creature, sheeted in red
smock of Murderess; so beautiful, serene, so full of life; journeying
towards death,—alone amid the world. Many take off their hats, saluting
reverently; for what heart but must be touched? (Deux Amis, x.
374-384.) Others growl and howl. Adam Lux, of Mentz, declares that
she is greater than Brutus; that it were beautiful to die with her: the
head of this young man seems turned. At the Place de la Revolution, the
countenance of Charlotte wears the same still smile. The executioners
proceed to bind her feet; she resists, thinking it meant as an insult;
on a word of explanation, she submits with cheerful apology. As the last
act, all being now ready, they take the neckerchief from her neck: a
blush of maidenly shame overspreads that fair face and neck; the cheeks
were still tinged with it, when the executioner lifted the severed head,
to shew it to the people. 'It is most true,' says Foster, 'that he
struck the cheek insultingly; for I saw it with my eyes: the Police
imprisoned him for it.' (Briefwechsel, i. 508.)
In this manner have the Beautifullest and the Squalidest
come in collision, and extinguished one another. Jean-Paul Marat and
Marie-Anne Charlotte Corday both, suddenly, are no more. 'Day of the
Preparation of Peace?' Alas, how were peace possible or preparable,
while, for example, the hearts of lovely Maidens, in their
convent-stillness, are dreaming not of Love-paradises, and the light of
Life; but of Codrus'-sacrifices, and death well earned? That Twenty-five
million hearts have got to such temper, this is the Anarchy; the soul of
it lies in this: whereof not peace can be the embodyment! The death of
Marat, whetting old animosities tenfold, will be worse than any life. O
ye hapless Two, mutually extinctive, the Beautiful and the Squalid,
sleep ye well,—in the Mother's bosom that bore you both!
This was the History of Charlotte Corday; most definite,
most complete; angelic-demonic: like a Star! Adam Lux goes home,
half-delirious; to pour forth his Apotheosis of her, in paper and print;
to propose that she have a statue with this inscription, Greater than
Brutus. Friends represent his danger; Lux is reckless; thinks it were
beautiful to die with her.
But during these same hours, another guillotine is at
work, on another: Charlotte, for the Girondins, dies at Paris to-day;
Chalier, by the Girondins, dies at Lyons to-morrow.
From rumbling of cannon along the streets of that City,
it has come to firing of them, to rabid fighting: Nievre-Chol and the
Girondins triumph;—behind whom there is, as everywhere, a Royalist
Faction waiting to strike in. Trouble enough at Lyons; and the dominant
party carrying it with a high hand! For indeed, the whole South is
astir; incarcerating Jacobins; arming for Girondins: wherefore we have
got a 'Congress of Lyons;' also a 'Revolutionary Tribunal of Lyons,' and
Anarchists shall tremble. So Chalier was soon found guilty, of
Jacobinism, of murderous Plot, 'address with drawn dagger on the sixth
of February last;' and, on the morrow, he also travels his final road,
along the streets of Lyons, 'by the side of an ecclesiastic, with whom
he seems to speak earnestly,'—the axe now glittering high. He could
weep, in old years, this man, and 'fall on his knees on the pavement,'
blessing Heaven at sight of Federation Programs or like; then he
pilgrimed to Paris, to worship Marat and the Mountain: now Marat and he
are both gone;—we said he could not end well. Jacobinism groans
inwardly, at Lyons; but dare not outwardly. Chalier, when the Tribunal
sentenced him, made answer: "My death will cost this City dear."
Montelimart Town is not buried under its ruins; yet
Marseilles is actually marching, under order of a 'Lyons Congress;' is
incarcerating Patriots; the very Royalists now shewing face. Against
which a General Cartaux fights, though in small force; and with him an
Artillery Major, of the name of—Napoleon Buonaparte. This Napoleon, to
prove that the Marseillese have no chance ultimately, not only fights
but writes; publishes his Supper of Beaucaire, a Dialogue which has
become curious. (See Hazlitt, ii. 529-41.) Unfortunate Cities,
with their actions and their reactions! Violence to be paid with
violence in geometrical ratio; Royalism and Anarchism both striking
in;—the final net-amount of which geometrical series, what man shall
sum?
The Bar of Iron has never yet floated in Marseilles
Harbour; but the Body of Rebecqui was found floating, self-drowned
there. Hot Rebecqui seeing how confusion deepened, and Respectability
grew poisoned with Royalism, felt that there was no refuge for a
Republican but death. Rebecqui disappeared: no one knew whither; till,
one morning, they found the empty case or body of him risen to the top,
tumbling on the salt waves; (Barbaroux, p. 29.) and perceived
that Rebecqui had withdrawn forever.—Toulon likewise is incarcerating
Patriots; sending delegates to Congress; intriguing, in case of
necessity, with the Royalists and English. Montpellier, Bourdeaux,
Nantes: all France, that is not under the swoop of Austria and Cimmeria,
seems rushing into madness, and suicidal ruin. The Mountain labours;
like a volcano in a burning volcanic Land. Convention Committees, of
Surety, of Salvation, are busy night and day: Convention Commissioners
whirl on all highways; bearing olive-branch and sword, or now perhaps
sword only. Chaumette and Municipals come daily to the Tuileries
demanding a Constitution: it is some weeks now since he resolved, in
Townhall, that a Deputation 'should go every day' and demand a
Constitution, till one were got; (Deux Amis, x. 345.) whereby
suicidal France might rally and pacify itself; a thing inexpressibly
desirable.
This then is the fruit your Anti-anarchic Girondins have
got from that Levying of War in Calvados? This fruit, we may say; and no
other whatsoever. For indeed, before either Charlotte's or Chalier's
head had fallen, the Calvados War itself had, as it were, vanished,
dreamlike, in a shriek! With 'seventy-two Departments' on one's side,
one might have hoped better things. But it turns out that
Respectabilities, though they will vote, will not fight. Possession is
always nine points in Law; but in Lawsuits of this kind, one may say, it
is ninety-and-nine points. Men do what they were wont to do; and have
immense irresolution and inertia: they obey him who has the symbols that
claim obedience. Consider what, in modern society, this one fact means:
the Metropolis is with our enemies! Metropolis, Mother-city; rightly so
named: all the rest are but as her children, her nurselings. Why, there
is not a leathern Diligence, with its post-bags and luggage-boots, that
lumbers out from her, but is as a huge life-pulse; she is the heart of
all. Cut short that one leathern Diligence, how much is cut
short!—General Wimpfen, looking practically into the matter, can see
nothing for it but that one should fall back on Royalism; get into
communication with Pitt! Dark innuendoes he flings out, to that effect:
whereat we Girondins start, horrorstruck. He produces as his Second in
command a certain 'Ci-devant,' one Comte Puisaye; entirely unknown to
Louvet; greatly suspected by him.
Few wars, accordingly, were ever levied of a more
insufficient character than this of Calvados. He that is curious in such
things may read the details of it in the Memoirs of that same Ci-devant
Puisaye, the much-enduring man and Royalist: How our Girondin National
Forces, marching off with plenty of wind-music, were drawn out about the
old Chateau of Brecourt, in the wood-country near Vernon, to meet the
Mountain National forces advancing from Paris. How on the fifteenth
afternoon of July, they did meet,—and, as it were, shrieked mutually,
and took mutually to flight without loss. How Puisaye thereafter, for
the Mountain Nationals fled first, and we thought ourselves the
victors,—was roused from his warm bed in the Castle of Brecourt; and had
to gallop without boots; our Nationals, in the night-watches, having
fallen unexpectedly into sauve qui peut:—and in brief the Calvados War
had burnt priming; and the only question now was, Whitherward to vanish,
in what hole to hide oneself! (Memoires de Puisaye (London, 1803),
ii. 142-67.)
The National Volunteers rush homewards, faster than they
came. The Seventy-two Respectable Departments, says Meillan, 'all turned
round, and forsook us, in the space of four-and-twenty hours.' Unhappy
those who, as at Lyons for instance, have gone too far for turning! 'One
morning,' we find placarded on our Intendance Mansion, the Decree of
Convention which casts us Hors la loi, into Outlawry: placarded by our
Caen Magistrates;—clear hint that we also are to vanish. Vanish, indeed:
but whitherward? Gorsas has friends in Rennes; he will hide
there,—unhappily will not lie hid. Guadet, Lanjuinais are on cross
roads; making for Bourdeaux. To Bourdeaux! cries the general voice, of
Valour alike and of Despair. Some flag of Respectability still floats
there, or is thought to float.
Thitherward therefore; each as he can! Eleven of these
ill-fated Deputies, among whom we may count, as twelfth, Friend Riouffe
the Man of Letters, do an original thing. Take the uniform of National
Volunteers, and retreat southward with the Breton Battalion, as private
soldiers of that corps. These brave Bretons had stood truer by us than
any other. Nevertheless, at the end of a day or two, they also do now
get dubious, self-divided; we must part from them; and, with some
half-dozen as convoy or guide, retreat by ourselves,—a solitary marching
detachment, through waste regions of the West. (Louvet, pp. 101-37;
Meillan, pp. 81, 241-70.)
Chapter 3.
Retreat of the Eleven.
It is one of the notablest Retreats, this of the Eleven,
that History presents: The handful of forlorn Legislators retreating
there, continually, with shouldered firelock and well-filled
cartridge-box, in the yellow autumn; long hundreds of miles between them
and Bourdeaux; the country all getting hostile, suspicious of the truth;
simmering and buzzing on all sides, more and more. Louvet has preserved
the Itinerary of it; a piece worth all the rest he ever wrote.
O virtuous Petion, with thy early-white head, O brave
young Barbaroux, has it come to this? Weary ways, worn shoes, light
purse;—encompassed with perils as with a sea! Revolutionary Committees
are in every Township; of Jacobin temper; our friends all cowed, our
cause the losing one. In the Borough of Moncontour, by ill chance, it is
market-day: to the gaping public such transit of a solitary Marching
Detachment is suspicious; we have need of energy, of promptitude and
luck, to be allowed to march through. Hasten, ye weary pilgrims! The
country is getting up; noise of you is bruited day after day, a solitary
Twelve retreating in this mysterious manner: with every new day, a wider
wave of inquisitive pursuing tumult is stirred up till the whole West
will be in motion. 'Cussy is tormented with gout, Buzot is too fat for
marching.' Riouffe, blistered, bleeding, marching only on tiptoe;
Barbaroux limps with sprained ancle, yet ever cheery, full of hope and
valour. Light Louvet glances hare-eyed, not hare-hearted: only virtuous
Petion's serenity 'was but once seen ruffled.' (Meillan, pp. 119-137.)
They lie in straw-lofts, in woody brakes; rudest paillasse on the floor
of a secret friend is luxury. They are seized in the dead of night by
Jacobin mayors and tap of drum; get off by firm countenance, rattle of
muskets, and ready wit.
Of Bourdeaux, through fiery La Vendee and the long
geographical spaces that remain, it were madness to think: well, if you
can get to Quimper on the sea-coast, and take shipping there. Faster,
ever faster! Before the end of the march, so hot has the country grown,
it is found advisable to march all night. They do it; under the still
night-canopy they plod along;—and yet behold, Rumour has outplodded
them. In the paltry Village of Carhaix (be its thatched huts, and
bottomless peat-bogs, long notable to the Traveller), one is
astonished to find light still glimmering: citizens are awake, with
rush-lights burning, in that nook of the terrestrial Planet; as we
traverse swiftly the one poor street, a voice is heard saying, "There
they are, Les voila qui passent!" (Louvet, pp. 138-164.) Swifter,
ye doomed lame Twelve: speed ere they can arm; gain the Woods of Quimper
before day, and lie squatted there!
The doomed Twelve do it; though with difficulty, with
loss of road, with peril, and the mistakes of a night. In Quimper are
Girondin friends, who perhaps will harbour the homeless, till a
Bourdeaux ship weigh. Wayworn, heartworn, in agony of suspense, till
Quimper friendship get warning, they lie there, squatted under the thick
wet boscage; suspicious of the face of man. Some pity to the brave; to
the unhappy! Unhappiest of all Legislators, O when ye packed your
luggage, some score, or two-score months ago; and mounted this or the
other leathern vehicle, to be Conscript Fathers of a regenerated France,
and reap deathless laurels,—did ye think your journey was to lead
hither? The Quimper Samaritans find them squatted; lift them up to help
and comfort; will hide them in sure places. Thence let them dissipate
gradually; or there they can lie quiet, and write Memoirs, till a
Bourdeaux ship sail.
And thus, in Calvados all is dissipated; Romme is out of
prison, meditating his Calendar; ringleaders are locked in his room. At
Caen the Corday family mourns in silence; Buzot's House is a heap of
dust and demolition; and amid the rubbish sticks a Gallows, with this
inscription, Here dwelt the Traitor Buzot who conspired against the
Republic. Buzot and the other vanished Deputies are hors la loi, as we
saw; their lives free to take where they can be found. The worse fares
it with the poor Arrested visible Deputies at Paris. 'Arrestment at
home' threatens to become 'Confinement in the Luxembourg;' to end:
where? For example, what pale-visaged thin man is this, journeying
towards Switzerland as a Merchant of Neuchatel, whom they arrest in the
town of Moulins? To Revolutionary Committee he is suspect. To
Revolutionary Committee, on probing the matter, he is evidently: Deputy
Brissot! Back to thy Arrestment, poor Brissot; or indeed to strait
confinement,—whither others are fared to follow. Rabaut has built
himself a false-partition, in a friend's house; lives, in invisible
darkness, between two walls. It will end, this same Arrestment business,
in Prison, and the Revolutionary Tribunal.
Nor must we forget Duperret, and the seal put on his
papers by reason of Charlotte. One Paper is there, fit to breed woe
enough: A secret solemn Protest against that suprema dies of the Second
of June! This Secret Protest our poor Duperret had drawn up, the same
week, in all plainness of speech; waiting the time for publishing it: to
which Secret Protest his signature, and that of other honourable
Deputies not a few, stands legibly appended. And now, if the seals were
once broken, the Mountain still victorious? Such Protestors, your
Merciers, Bailleuls, Seventy-three by the tale, what yet remains of
Respectable Girondism in the Convention, may tremble to think!—These are
the fruits of levying civil war.
Also we find, that, in these last days of July, the famed
Siege of Mentz is finished; the Garrison to march out with honours of
war; not to serve against the Coalition for a year! Lovers of the
Picturesque, and Goethe standing on the Chaussee of Mentz, saw, with due
interest, the Procession issuing forth, in all solemnity:
'Escorted by Prussian horse came first the French
Garrison. Nothing could look stranger than this latter: a column of
Marseillese, slight, swarthy, party-coloured, in patched clothes, came
tripping on;—as if King Edwin had opened the Dwarf Hill, and sent out
his nimble Host of Dwarfs. Next followed regular troops; serious,
sullen; not as if downcast or ashamed. But the remarkablest appearance,
which struck every one, was that of the Chasers (Chasseurs)
coming out mounted: they had advanced quite silent to where we stood,
when their Band struck up the Marseillaise. This Revolutionary Te-Deum
has in itself something mournful and bodeful, however briskly played;
but at present they gave it in altogether slow time, proportionate to
the creeping step they rode at. It was piercing and fearful, and a most
serious-looking thing, as these cavaliers, long, lean men, of a certain
age, with mien suitable to the music, came pacing on: singly you might
have likened them to Don Quixote; in mass, they were highly dignified.
'But now a single troop became notable: that of the
Commissioners or Representans. Merlin of Thionville, in hussar uniform,
distinguishing himself by wild beard and look, had another person in
similar costume on his left; the crowd shouted out, with rage, at sight
of this latter, the name of a Jacobin Townsman and Clubbist; and shook
itself to seize him. Merlin drew bridle; referred to his dignity as
French Representative, to the vengeance that should follow any injury
done; he would advise every one to compose himself, for this was not the
last time they would see him here. (Belagerung von Maintz, Goethe's
Werke, xxx. 315.) Thus rode Merlin; threatening in defeat. But what
now shall stem that tide of Prussians setting in through the open
North-East?' Lucky, if fortified Lines of Weissembourg, and
impassibilities of Vosges Mountains, confine it to French Alsace, keep
it from submerging the very heart of the country!
Furthermore, precisely in the same days, Valenciennes
Siege is finished, in the North-West:—fallen, under the red hail of
York! Conde fell some fortnight since. Cimmerian Coalition presses on.
What seems very notable too, on all these captured French Towns there
flies not the Royalist fleur-de-lys, in the name of a new Louis the
Pretender; but the Austrian flag flies; as if Austria meant to keep them
for herself! Perhaps General Custines, still in Paris, can give some
explanation of the fall of these strong-places? Mother Society, from
tribune and gallery, growls loud that he ought to do it;—remarks,
however, in a splenetic manner that 'the Monsieurs of the Palais Royal'
are calling, Long-life to this General.
The Mother Society, purged now, by successive 'scrutinies
or epurations,' from all taint of Girondism, has become a great
Authority: what we can call shield-bearer, or bottle-holder, nay call it
fugleman, to the purged National Convention itself. The Jacobins Debates
are reported in the Moniteur, like Parliamentary ones.
But looking more specially into Paris City, what is this
that History, on the 10th of August, Year One of Liberty, 'by old-style,
year 1793,' discerns there? Praised be the Heavens, a new Feast of
Pikes!
For Chaumette's 'Deputation every day' has worked out its
result: a Constitution. It was one of the rapidest Constitutions ever
put together; made, some say in eight days, by Herault Sechelles and
others: probably a workmanlike, roadworthy Constitution enough;—on which
point, however, we are, for some reasons, little called to form a
judgment. Workmanlike or not, the Forty-four Thousand Communes of
France, by overwhelming majorities, did hasten to accept it; glad of any
Constitution whatsoever. Nay Departmental Deputies have come, the
venerablest Republicans of each Department, with solemn message of
Acceptance; and now what remains but that our new Final Constitution be
proclaimed, and sworn to, in Feast of Pikes? The Departmental Deputies,
we say, are come some time ago;—Chaumette very anxious about them, lest
Girondin Monsieurs, Agio-jobbers, or were it even Filles de joie of a
Girondin temper, corrupt their morals. (Deux Amis, xi. 73.) Tenth
of August, immortal Anniversary, greater almost than Bastille July, is
the Day.
Painter David has not been idle. Thanks to David and the
French genius, there steps forth into the sunlight, this day, a Scenic
Phantasmagory unexampled:—whereof History, so occupied with
Real-Phantasmagories, will say but little.
For one thing, History can notice with satisfaction, on
the ruins of the Bastille, a Statue of Nature; gigantic, spouting water
from her two mammelles. Not a Dream this; but a Fact, palpable visible.
There she spouts, great Nature; dim, before daybreak. But as the coming
Sun ruddies the East, come countless Multitudes, regulated and
unregulated; come Departmental Deputies, come Mother Society and
Daughters; comes National Convention, led on by handsome Herault; soft
wind-music breathing note of expectation. Lo, as great Sol scatters his
first fire-handful, tipping the hills and chimney-heads with gold,
Herault is at great Nature's feet (she is Plaster of Paris merely);
Herault lifts, in an iron saucer, water spouted from the sacred breasts;
drinks of it, with an eloquent Pagan Prayer, beginning, "O Nature!" and
all the Departmental Deputies drink, each with what best suitable
ejaculation or prophetic-utterance is in him;—amid breathings, which
become blasts, of wind-music; and the roar of artillery and human
throats: finishing well the first act of this solemnity.
Next are processionings along the Boulevards: Deputies or
Officials bound together by long indivisible tricolor riband; general
'members of the Sovereign' walking pellmell, with pikes, with hammers,
with the tools and emblems of their crafts; among which we notice a
Plough, and ancient Baucis and Philemon seated on it, drawn by their
children. Many-voiced harmony and dissonance filling the air. Through
Triumphal Arches enough: at the basis of the first of which, we
descry—whom thinkest thou?—the Heroines of the Insurrection of Women.
Strong Dames of the Market, they sit there (Theroigne too ill to
attend, one fears), with oak-branches, tricolor bedizenment;
firm-seated on their Cannons. To whom handsome Herault, making pause of
admiration, addresses soothing eloquence; whereupon they rise and fall
into the march.
And now mark, in the Place de la Revolution, what other
August Statue may this be; veiled in canvas,—which swiftly we shear off
by pulley and cord? The Statue of Liberty! She too is of plaster, hoping
to become of metal; stands where a Tyrant Louis Quinze once stood.
'Three thousand birds' are let loose, into the whole world, with labels
round their neck, We are free; imitate us. Holocaust of Royalist and
ci-devant trumpery, such as one could still gather, is burnt; pontifical
eloquence must be uttered, by handsome Herault, and Pagan orisons
offered up.
And then forward across the River; where is new enormous
Statuary; enormous plaster Mountain; Hercules-Peuple, with uplifted
all-conquering club; 'many-headed Dragon of Girondin Federalism rising
from fetid marsh;'—needing new eloquence from Herault. To say nothing of
Champ-de-Mars, and Fatherland's Altar there; with urn of slain
Defenders, Carpenter's-level of the Law; and such exploding,
gesticulating and perorating, that Herault's lips must be growing white,
and his tongue cleaving to the roof of his mouth. (Choix des
Rapports, xii. 432-42.)
Towards six-o'clock let the wearied President, let Paris
Patriotism generally sit down to what repast, and social repasts, can be
had; and with flowing tankard or light-mantling glass, usher in this New
and Newest Era. In fact, is not Romme's New Calendar getting ready? On
all housetops flicker little tricolor Flags, their flagstaff a Pike and
Liberty-Cap. On all house-walls, for no Patriot, not suspect, will be
behind another, there stand printed these words: Republic one and
indivisible, Liberty, Equality, Fraternity, or Death.
As to the New Calendar, we may say here rather than
elsewhere that speculative men have long been struck with the
inequalities and incongruities of the Old Calendar; that a New one has
long been as good as determined on. Marechal the Atheist, almost ten
years ago, proposed a New Calendar, free at least from superstition:
this the Paris Municipality would now adopt, in defect of a better; at
all events, let us have either this of Marechal's or a better,—the New
Era being come. Petitions, more than once, have been sent to that
effect; and indeed, for a year past, all Public Bodies, Journalists, and
Patriots in general, have dated First Year of the Republic. It is a
subject not without difficulties. But the Convention has taken it up;
and Romme, as we say, has been meditating it; not Marechal's New
Calendar, but a better New one of Romme's and our own. Romme, aided by a
Monge, a Lagrange and others, furnishes mathematics; Fabre d'Eglantine
furnishes poetic nomenclature: and so, on the 5th of October 1793, after
trouble enough, they bring forth this New Republican Calendar of theirs,
in a complete state; and by Law, get it put in action.
Four equal Seasons, Twelve equal Months of thirty days
each: this makes three hundred and sixty days; and five odd days remain
to be disposed of. The five odd days we will make Festivals, and name
the five Sansculottides, or Days without Breeches. Festival of Genius;
Festival of Labour; of Actions; of Rewards; of Opinion: these are the
five Sansculottides. Whereby the great Circle, or Year, is made
complete: solely every fourth year, whilom called Leap-year, we
introduce a sixth Sansculottide; and name it Festival of the Revolution.
Now as to the day of commencement, which offers difficulties, is it not
one of the luckiest coincidences that the Republic herself commenced on
the 21st of September; close on the Vernal Equinox? Vernal Equinox, at
midnight for the meridian of Paris, in the year whilom Christian 1792,
from that moment shall the New Era reckon itself to begin. Vendemiaire,
Brumaire, Frimaire; or as one might say, in mixed English,
Vintagearious, Fogarious, Frostarious: these are our three Autumn
months. Nivose, Pluviose, Ventose, or say Snowous, Rainous, Windous,
make our Winter season. Germinal, Floreal, Prairial, or Buddal,
Floweral, Meadowal, are our Spring season. Messidor, Thermidor,
Fructidor, that is to say (dor being Greek for gift) Reapidor,
Heatidor, Fruitidor, are Republican Summer. These Twelve, in a singular
manner, divide the Republican Year. Then as to minuter subdivisions, let
us venture at once on a bold stroke: adopt your decimal subdivision; and
instead of world-old Week, or Se'ennight, make it a Tennight or
Decade;—not without results. There are three Decades, then, in each of
the months; which is very regular; and the Decadi, or Tenth-day, shall
always be 'the Day of Rest.' And the Christian Sabbath, in that case?
Shall shift for itself!
This, in brief, in this New Calendar of Romme and the
Convention; calculated for the meridian of Paris, and Gospel of
Jean-Jacques: not one of the least afflicting occurrences for the actual
British reader of French History;—confusing the soul with Messidors,
Meadowals; till at last, in self-defence, one is forced to construct
some ground-scheme, or rule of Commutation from New-style to Old-style,
and have it lying by him. Such ground-scheme, almost worn out in our
service, but still legible and printable, we shall now, in a Note,
present to the reader. For the Romme Calendar, in so many Newspapers,
Memoirs, Public Acts, has stamped itself deep into that section of Time:
a New Era that lasts some Twelve years and odd is not to be despised.
Let the reader, therefore, with such ground-scheme, help himself, where
needful, out of New-style into Old-style, called also 'slave-style,
stile-esclave;'—whereof we, in these pages, shall as much as possible
use the latter only.
September 22nd of 1792 is Vendemiaire 1st of Year One,
and the new months are all of 30 days each; therefore:
To the number of the day in
Prairial
Add
19
We have the number of the day in
Days
The New Calendar ceased on the 1st of January 1806. (See
Choix des Rapports, xiii. 83-99; xix. 199.)
Thus with new Feast of Pikes, and New Era or New
Calendar, did France accept her New Constitution: the most Democratic
Constitution ever committed to paper. How it will work in practice?
Patriot Deputations from time to time solicit fruition of it; that it be
set a-going. Always, however, this seems questionable; for the moment,
unsuitable. Till, in some weeks, Salut Public, through the organ of
Saint-Just, makes report, that, in the present alarming circumstances,
the state of France is Revolutionary; that her 'Government must be
Revolutionary till the Peace!' Solely as Paper, then, and as a Hope,
must this poor New Constitution exist;—in which shape we may conceive it
lying; even now, with an infinity of other things, in that Limbo near
the Moon. Further than paper it never got, nor ever will get.
Chapter 5.
Sword of Sharpness.
In fact it is something quite other than paper theorems,
it is iron and audacity that France now needs.
Is not La Vendee still blazing;—alas too literally; rogue
Rossignol burning the very corn-mills? General Santerre could do nothing
there; General Rossignol, in blind fury, often in liquor, can do less
than nothing. Rebellion spreads, grows ever madder. Happily those lean
Quixote-figures, whom we saw retreating out of Mentz, 'bound not to
serve against the Coalition for a year,' have got to Paris. National
Convention packs them into post-vehicles and conveyances; sends them
swiftly, by post, into La Vendee! There valiantly struggling, in obscure
battle and skirmish, under rogue Rossignol, let them, unlaurelled, save
the Republic, and 'be cut down gradually to the last man.' (Deux
Amis, xi. 147; xiii. 160-92, &c.)
Does not the Coalition, like a fire-tide, pour in;
Prussia through the opened North-East; Austria, England through the
North-West? General Houchard prospers no better there than General
Custine did: let him look to it! Through the Eastern and the Western
Pyrenees Spain has deployed itself; spreads, rustling with Bourbon
banners, over the face of the South. Ashes and embers of confused
Girondin civil war covered that region already. Marseilles is damped
down, not quenched; to be quenched in blood. Toulon, terrorstruck, too
far gone for turning, has flung itself, ye righteous Powers,—into the
hands of the English! On Toulon Arsenal there flies a Flag,—nay not even
the Fleur-de-lys of a Louis Pretender; there flies that accursed St.
George's Cross of the English and Admiral Hood! What remnants of
sea-craft, arsenals, roperies, war-navy France had, has given itself to
these enemies of human nature, 'ennemis du genre humain.' Beleaguer it,
bombard it, ye Commissioners Barras, Freron, Robespierre Junior; thou
General Cartaux, General Dugommier; above all, thou remarkable
Artillery-Major, Napoleon Buonaparte! Hood is fortifying himself,
victualling himself; means, apparently, to make a new Gibraltar of it.
But lo, in the Autumn night, late night, among the last
of August, what sudden red sunblaze is this that has risen over Lyons
City; with a noise to deafen the world? It is the Powder-tower of Lyons,
nay the Arsenal with four Powder-towers, which has caught fire in the
Bombardment; and sprung into the air, carrying 'a hundred and seventeen
houses' after it. With a light, one fancies, as of the noon sun; with a
roar second only to the Last Trumpet! All living sleepers far and wide
it has awakened. What a sight was that, which the eye of History saw, in
the sudden nocturnal sunblaze! The roofs of hapless Lyons, and all its
domes and steeples made momentarily clear; Rhone and Saone streams
flashing suddenly visible; and height and hollow, hamlet and smooth
stubblefield, and all the region round;—heights, alas, all scarped and
counterscarped, into trenches, curtains, redouts; blue Artillery-men,
little Powder-devilkins, plying their hell-trade there, through the not
ambrosial night! Let the darkness cover it again; for it pains the eye.
Of a truth, Chalier's death is costing this City dear. Convention
Commissioners, Lyons Congresses have come and gone; and action there was
and reaction; bad ever growing worse; till it has come to this:
Commissioner Dubois-Crance, 'with seventy thousand men, and all the
Artillery of several Provinces,' bombarding Lyons day and night.
Worse things still are in store. Famine is in Lyons, and
ruin, and fire. Desperate are the sallies of the besieged; brave Precy,
their National Colonel and Commandant, doing what is in man: desperate
but ineffectual. Provisions cut off; nothing entering our city but shot
and shells! The Arsenal has roared aloft; the very Hospital will be
battered down, and the sick buried alive. A Black Flag hung on this
latter noble Edifice, appealing to the pity of the beseigers; for though
maddened, were they not still our brethren? In their blind wrath, they
took it for a flag of defiance, and aimed thitherward the more. Bad is
growing ever worse here: and how will the worse stop, till it have grown
worst of all? Commissioner Dubois will listen to no pleading, to no
speech, save this only, 'We surrender at discretion.' Lyons contains in
it subdued Jacobins; dominant Girondins; secret Royalists. And now, mere
deaf madness and cannon-shot enveloping them, will not the desperate
Municipality fly, at last, into the arms of Royalism itself? Majesty of
Sardinia was to bring help, but it failed. Emigrant Autichamp, in name
of the Two Pretender Royal Highnesses, is coming through Switzerland
with help; coming, not yet come: Precy hoists the Fleur-de-lys!
At sight of which, all true Girondins sorrowfully fling
down their arms:—Let our Tricolor brethren storm us, then, and slay us
in their wrath: with you we conquer not. The famishing women and
children are sent forth: deaf Dubois sends them back;—rains in mere fire
and madness. Our 'redouts of cotton-bags' are taken, retaken; Precy
under his Fleur-de-lys is valiant as Despair. What will become of Lyons?
It is a siege of seventy days. (Deux Amis, xi. 80-143.)
Or see, in these same weeks, far in the Western waters:
breasting through the Bay of Biscay, a greasy dingy little Merchantship,
with Scotch skipper; under hatches whereof sit, disconsolate,—the last
forlorn nucleus of Girondism, the Deputies from Quimper! Several have
dissipated themselves, whithersoever they could. Poor Riouffe fell into
the talons of Revolutionary Committee, and Paris Prison. The rest sit
here under hatches; reverend Petion with his grey hair, angry Buzot,
suspicious Louvet, brave young Barbaroux, and others. They have escaped
from Quimper, in this sad craft; are now tacking and struggling; in
danger from the waves, in danger from the English, in still worse danger
from the French;—banished by Heaven and Earth to the greasy belly of
this Scotch skipper's Merchant-vessel, unfruitful Atlantic raving round.
They are for Bourdeaux, if peradventure hope yet linger there. Enter not
Bourdeaux, O Friends! Bloody Convention Representatives, Tallien and
such like, with their Edicts, with their Guillotine, have arrived there;
Respectability is driven under ground; Jacobinism lords it on high. From
that Reole landingplace, or Beak of Ambes, as it were, Pale Death,
waving his Revolutionary Sword of sharpness, waves you elsewhither!
On one side or the other of that Bec d'Ambes, the Scotch
Skipper with difficulty moors, a dexterous greasy man; with difficulty
lands his Girondins;—who, after reconnoitring, must rapidly burrow in
the Earth; and so, in subterranean ways, in friends' back-closets, in
cellars, barn-lofts, in Caves of Saint-Emilion and Libourne, stave off
cruel Death. (Louvet, p. 180-199.) Unhappiest of all Senators!
Chapter 6.
Risen against Tyrants.
Against all which incalculable impediments, horrors and
disasters, what can a Jacobin Convention oppose? The uncalculating
Spirit of Jacobinism, and Sansculottic sans-formulistic Frenzy! Our
Enemies press in on us, says Danton, but they shall not conquer us, "we
will burn France to ashes rather, nous brulerons la France."
Committees, of Surete or Salut, have raised themselves 'a
la hauteur, to the height of circumstances.' Let all mortals raise
themselves a la hauteur. Let the Forty-four thousand Sections and their
Revolutionary Committees stir every fibre of the Republic; and every
Frenchman feel that he is to do or die. They are the life-circulation of
Jacobinism, these Sections and Committees: Danton, through the organ of
Barrere and Salut Public, gets decreed, That there be in Paris, by law,
two meetings of Section weekly; also, that the Poorer Citizen be paid
for attending, and have his day's-wages of Forty Sous. (Moniteur,
Seance du 5 Septembre, 1793.) This is the celebrated 'Law of the
Forty Sous;' fiercely stimulant to Sansculottism, to the
life-circulation of Jacobinism.
On the twenty-third of August, Committee of Public
Salvation, as usual through Barrere, had promulgated, in words not
unworthy of remembering, their Report, which is soon made into a Law, of
Levy in Mass. 'All France, and whatsoever it contains of men or
resources, is put under requisition,' says Barrere; really in Tyrtaean
words, the best we know of his. 'The Republic is one vast besieged
city.' Two hundred and fifty Forges shall, in these days, be set up in
the Luxembourg Garden, and round the outer wall of the Tuileries; to
make gun-barrels; in sight of Earth and Heaven! From all hamlets,
towards their Departmental Town; from all their Departmental Towns,
towards the appointed Camp and seat of war, the Sons of Freedom shall
march; their banner is to bear: 'Le Peuple Francais debout contres les
Tyrans, The French People risen against Tyrants.' 'The young men shall
go to the battle; it is their task to conquer: the married men shall
forge arms, transport baggage and artillery; provide subsistence: the
women shall work at soldiers' clothes, make tents; serve in the
hospitals. The children shall scrape old-linen into surgeon's-lint: the
aged men shall have themselves carried into public places; and there, by
their words, excite the courage of the young; preach hatred to Kings and
unity to the Republic.' (Debats, Seance du 23 Aout 1793.)
Tyrtaean words, which tingle through all French hearts.
In this humour, then, since no other serves, will France
rush against its enemies. Headlong, reckoning no cost or consequence;
heeding no law or rule but that supreme law, Salvation of the People!
The weapons are all the iron that is in France; the strength is that of
all the men, women and children that are in France. There, in their two
hundred and fifty shed-smithies, in Garden of Luxembourg or Tuileries,
let them forge gun-barrels, in sight of Heaven and Earth.
Nor with heroic daring against the Foreign foe, can black
vengeance against the Domestic be wanting. Life-circulation of the
Revolutionary Committees being quickened by that Law of the Forty Sous,
Deputy Merlin, not the Thionviller, whom we saw ride out of Mentz, but
Merlin of Douai, named subsequently Merlin Suspect,—comes, about a week
after, with his world-famous Law of the Suspect: ordering all Sections,
by their Committees, instantly to arrest all Persons Suspect; and
explaining withal who the Arrestable and Suspect specially are. "Are
Suspect," says he, "all who by their actions, by their connexions,
speakings, writings have"—in short become Suspect. (Moniteur, Seance
du 17 Septembre 1793.) Nay Chaumette, illuminating the matter still
further, in his Municipal Placards and Proclamations, will bring it
about that you may almost recognise a Suspect on the streets, and clutch
him there,—off to Committee, and Prison. Watch well your words, watch
well your looks: if Suspect of nothing else, you may grow, as came to be
a saying, 'Suspect of being Suspect!' For are we not in a State of
Revolution?
No frightfuller Law ever ruled in a Nation of men. All
Prisons and Houses of Arrest in French land are getting crowded to the
ridge-tile: Forty-four thousand Committees, like as many companies of
reapers or gleaners, gleaning France, are gathering their harvest, and
storing it in these Houses. Harvest of Aristocrat tares! Nay, lest the
Forty-four thousand, each on its own harvest-field, prove insufficient,
we are to have an ambulant 'Revolutionary Army:' six thousand strong,
under right captains, this shall perambulate the country at large, and
strike in wherever it finds such harvest-work slack. So have
Municipality and Mother Society petitioned; so has Convention decreed. (Ibid.
Seances du 5, 9, 11 Septembre.) Let Aristocrats, Federalists,
Monsieurs vanish, and all men tremble: 'The Soil of Liberty shall be
purged,'—with a vengeance!
Neither hitherto has the Revolutionary Tribunal been
keeping holyday. Blanchelande, for losing Saint-Domingo; 'Conspirators
of Orleans,' for 'assassinating,' for assaulting the sacred Deputy
Leonard-Bourdon: these with many Nameless, to whom life was sweet, have
died. Daily the great Guillotine has its due. Like a black Spectre,
daily at eventide, glides the Death-tumbril through the variegated
throng of things. The variegated street shudders at it, for the moment;
next moment forgets it: The Aristocrats! They were guilty against the
Republic; their death, were it only that their goods are confiscated,
will be useful to the Republic; Vive la Republique!
In the last days of August, fell a notabler head: General
Custine's. Custine was accused of harshness, of unskilfulness,
perfidiousness; accused of many things: found guilty, we may say, of one
thing, unsuccessfulness. Hearing his unexpected Sentence, 'Custine fell
down before the Crucifix,' silent for the space of two hours: he fared,
with moist eyes and a book of prayer, towards the Place de la
Revolution; glanced upwards at the clear suspended axe; then mounted
swiftly aloft, (Deux Amis, xi. 148-188.) swiftly was struck away
from the lists of the Living. He had fought in America; he was a proud,
brave man; and his fortune led him hither.
On the 2nd of this same month, at three in the morning, a
vehicle rolled off, with closed blinds, from the Temple to the
Conciergerie. Within it were two Municipals; and Marie-Antoinette, once
Queen of France! There in that Conciergerie, in ignominious dreary cell,
she, cut off from children, kindred, friend and hope, sits long weeks;
expecting when the end will be. (See Memoires particuliers de la
Captivite a la Tour du Temple, by the Duchesse d'Angouleme, Paris, 21
Janvier 1817.)
The Guillotine, we find, gets always a quicker motion, as
other things are quickening. The Guillotine, by its speed of going, will
give index of the general velocity of the Republic. The clanking of its
huge axe, rising and falling there, in horrid systole-diastole, is
portion of the whole enormous Life-movement and pulsation of the
Sansculottic System!—'Orleans Conspirators' and Assaulters had to die,
in spite of much weeping and entreating; so sacred is the person of a
Deputy. Yet the sacred can become desecrated: your very Deputy is not
greater than the Guillotine. Poor Deputy Journalist Gorsas: we saw him
hide at Rennes, when the Calvados War burnt priming. He stole
afterwards, in August, to Paris; lurked several weeks about the Palais
ci-devant Royal; was seen there, one day; was clutched, identified, and
without ceremony, being already 'out of the Law,' was sent to the Place
de la Revolution. He died, recommending his wife and children to the
pity of the Republic. It is the ninth day of October 1793. Gorsas is the
first Deputy that dies on the scaffold; he will not be the last.
Ex-Mayor Bailly is in prison; Ex-Procureur Manuel.
Brissot and our poor Arrested Girondins have become Incarcerated
Indicted Girondins; universal Jacobinism clamouring for their
punishment. Duperret's Seals are broken! Those Seventy-three Secret
Protesters, suddenly one day, are reported upon, are decreed accused;
the Convention-doors being 'previously shut,' that none implicated might
escape. They were marched, in a very rough manner, to Prison that
evening. Happy those of them who chanced to be absent! Condorcet has
vanished into darkness; perhaps, like Rabaut, sits between two walls, in
the house of a friend.
On Monday the Fourteenth of October, 1793, a Cause is
pending in the Palais de Justice, in the new Revolutionary Court, such
as these old stone-walls never witnessed: the Trial of Marie-Antoinette.
The once brightest of Queens, now tarnished, defaced, forsaken, stands
here at Fouquier Tinville's Judgment-bar; answering for her life! The
Indictment was delivered her last night. (Proces de la Reine, Deux
Amis, xi. 251-381.) To such changes of human fortune what words are
adequate? Silence alone is adequate.
There are few Printed things one meets with, of such
tragic almost ghastly significance as those bald Pages of the Bulletin
du Tribunal Revolutionnaire, which bear title, Trial of the Widow Capet.
Dim, dim, as if in disastrous eclipse; like the pale kingdoms of Dis!
Plutonic Judges, Plutonic Tinville; encircled, nine times, with Styx and
Lethe, with Fire-Phlegethon and Cocytus named of Lamentation! The very
witnesses summoned are like Ghosts: exculpatory, inculpatory, they
themselves are all hovering over death and doom; they are known, in our
imagination, as the prey of the Guillotine. Tall ci-devant Count
d'Estaing, anxious to shew himself Patriot, cannot escape; nor Bailly,
who, when asked If he knows the Accused, answers with a reverent
inclination towards her, "Ah, yes, I know Madame." Ex-Patriots are here,
sharply dealt with, as Procureur Manuel; Ex-Ministers, shorn of their
splendour. We have cold Aristocratic impassivity, faithful to itself
even in Tartarus; rabid stupidity, of Patriot Corporals, Patriot
Washerwomen, who have much to say of Plots, Treasons, August Tenth, old
Insurrection of Women. For all now has become a crime, in her who has
lost.
Marie-Antoinette, in this her utter abandonment and hour
of extreme need, is not wanting to herself, the imperial woman. Her
look, they say, as that hideous Indictment was reading, continued calm;
'she was sometimes observed moving her fingers, as when one plays on the
Piano.' You discern, not without interest, across that dim Revolutionary
Bulletin itself, how she bears herself queenlike. Her answers are
prompt, clear, often of Laconic brevity; resolution, which has grown
contemptuous without ceasing to be dignified, veils itself in calm
words. "You persist then in denial?"—"My plan is not denial: it is the
truth I have said, and I persist in that." Scandalous Hebert has borne
his testimony as to many things: as to one thing, concerning
Marie-Antoinette and her little Son,—wherewith Human Speech had better
not further be soiled. She has answered Hebert; a Juryman begs to
observe that she has not answered as to this. "I have not answered," she
exclaims with noble emotion, "because Nature refuses to answer such a
charge brought against a Mother. I appeal to all the Mothers that are
here." Robespierre, when he heard of it, broke out into something almost
like swearing at the brutish blockheadism of this Hebert; (Vilate,
Causes secretes de la Revolution de Thermidor (Paris, 1825), p.
179.) on whose foul head his foul lie has recoiled. At four o'clock
on Wednesday morning, after two days and two nights of interrogating,
jury-charging, and other darkening of counsel, the result comes out:
Sentence of Death. "Have you anything to say?" The Accused shook her
head, without speech. Night's candles are burning out; and with her too
Time is finishing, and it will be Eternity and Day. This Hall of
Tinville's is dark, ill-lighted except where she stands. Silently she
withdraws from it, to die.
Two Processions, or Royal Progresses, three-and-twenty
years apart, have often struck us with a strange feeling of contrast.
The first is of a beautiful Archduchess and Dauphiness, quitting her
Mother's City, at the age of Fifteen; towards hopes such as no other
Daughter of Eve then had: 'On the morrow,' says Weber an eye witness,
'the Dauphiness left Vienna. The whole City crowded out; at first with a
sorrow which was silent. She appeared: you saw her sunk back into her
carriage; her face bathed in tears; hiding her eyes now with her
handkerchief, now with her hands; several times putting out her head to
see yet again this Palace of her Fathers, whither she was to return no
more. She motioned her regret, her gratitude to the good Nation, which
was crowding here to bid her farewell. Then arose not only tears; but
piercing cries, on all sides. Men and women alike abandoned themselves
to such expression of their sorrow. It was an audible sound of wail, in
the streets and avenues of Vienna. The last Courier that followed her
disappeared, and the crowd melted away.' (Weber, i. 6.)
The young imperial Maiden of Fifteen has now become a
worn discrowned Widow of Thirty-eight; grey before her time: this is the
last Procession: 'Few minutes after the Trial ended, the drums were
beating to arms in all Sections; at sunrise the armed force was on foot,
cannons getting placed at the extremities of the Bridges, in the
Squares, Crossways, all along from the Palais de Justice to the Place de
la Revolution. By ten o'clock, numerous patrols were circulating in the
Streets; thirty thousand foot and horse drawn up under arms. At eleven,
Marie-Antoinette was brought out. She had on an undress of pique blanc:
she was led to the place of execution, in the same manner as an ordinary
criminal; bound, on a Cart; accompanied by a Constitutional Priest in
Lay dress; escorted by numerous detachments of infantry and cavalry.
These, and the double row of troops all along her road, she appeared to
regard with indifference. On her countenance there was visible neither
abashment nor pride. To the cries of Vive la Republique and Down with
Tyranny, which attended her all the way, she seemed to pay no heed. She
spoke little to her Confessor. The tricolor Streamers on the housetops
occupied her attention, in the Streets du Roule and Saint-Honore; she
also noticed the Inscriptions on the house-fronts. On reaching the Place
de la Revolution, her looks turned towards the Jardin National, whilom
Tuileries; her face at that moment gave signs of lively emotion. She
mounted the Scaffold with courage enough; at a quarter past Twelve, her
head fell; the Executioner shewed it to the people, amid universal
long-continued cries of 'Vive la Republique.' (Deux Amis, xi. 301.)
Whom next, O Tinville? The next are of a different
colour: our poor Arrested Girondin Deputies. What of them could still be
laid hold of; our Vergniaud, Brissot, Fauchet, Valaze, Gensonne; the
once flower of French Patriotism, Twenty-two by the tale: hither, at
Tinville's Bar, onward from 'safeguard of the French People,' from
confinement in the Luxembourg, imprisonment in the Conciergerie, have
they now, by the course of things, arrived. Fouquier Tinville must give
what account of them he can.
Undoubtedly this Trial of the Girondins is the greatest
that Fouquier has yet had to do. Twenty-two, all chief Republicans,
ranged in a line there; the most eloquent in France; Lawyers too; not
without friends in the auditory. How will Tinville prove these men
guilty of Royalism, Federalism, Conspiracy against the Republic?
Vergniaud's eloquence awakes once more; 'draws tears,' they say. And
Journalists report, and the Trial lengthens itself out day after day;
'threatens to become eternal,' murmur many. Jacobinism and Municipality
rise to the aid of Fouquier. On the 28th of the month, Hebert and others
come in deputation to inform a Patriot Convention that the Revolutionary
Tribunal is quite 'shackled by forms of Law;' that a Patriot Jury ought
to have 'the power of cutting short, of terminer les debats, when they
feel themselves convinced.' Which pregnant suggestion, of cutting short,
passes itself, with all despatch, into a Decree.
Accordingly, at ten o'clock on the night of the 30th of
October, the Twenty-two, summoned back once more, receive this
information, That the Jury feeling themselves convinced have cut short,
have brought in their verdict; that the Accused are found guilty, and
the Sentence on one and all of them is Death with confiscation of goods.
Loud natural clamour rises among the poor Girondins;
tumult; which can only be repressed by the gendarmes. Valaze stabs
himself; falls down dead on the spot. The rest, amid loud clamour and
confusion, are driven back to their Conciergerie; Lasource exclaiming,
"I die on the day when the People have lost their reason; ye will die
when they recover it." (Greek,—Plut. Opp. t. iv. p. 310. ed. Reiske,
1776.) No help! Yielding to violence, the Doomed uplift the Hymn of
the Marseillese; return singing to their dungeon.
Riouffe, who was their Prison-mate in these last days,
has lovingly recorded what death they made. To our notions, it is not an
edifying death. Gay satirical Pot-pourri by Ducos; rhymed Scenes of
Tragedy, wherein Barrere and Robespierre discourse with Satan; death's
eve spent in 'singing' and 'sallies of gaiety,' with 'discourses on the
happiness of peoples:' these things, and the like of these, we have to
accept for what they are worth. It is the manner in which the Girondins
make their Last Supper. Valaze, with bloody breast, sleeps cold in
death; hears not their singing. Vergniaud has his dose of poison; but it
is not enough for his friends, it is enough only for himself; wherefore
he flings it from him; presides at this Last Supper of the Girondins,
with wild coruscations of eloquence, with song and mirth. Poor human
Will struggles to assert itself; if not in this way, then in that. (Memoires
de Riouffe in Memoires sur les Prisons, Paris, 1823, p. 48-55.)
But on the morrow morning all Paris is out; such a crowd
as no man had seen. The Death-carts, Valaze's cold corpse stretched
among the yet living Twenty-one, roll along. Bareheaded, hands bound; in
their shirt-sleeves, coat flung loosely round the neck: so fare the
eloquent of France; bemurmured, beshouted. To the shouts of Vive la
Republique, some of them keep answering with counter-shouts of Vive la
Republique. Others, as Brissot, sit sunk in silence. At the foot of the
scaffold they again strike up, with appropriate variations, the Hymn of
the Marseillese. Such an act of music; conceive it well! The yet Living
chant there; the chorus so rapidly wearing weak! Samson's axe is rapid;
one head per minute, or little less. The chorus is worn out; farewell
for evermore ye Girondins. Te-Deum Fauchet has become silent; Valaze's
dead head is lopped: the sickle of the Guillotine has reaped the
Girondins all away. 'The eloquent, the young, the beautiful and brave!'
exclaims Riouffe. O Death, what feast is toward in thy ghastly Halls?
Nor alas, in the far Bourdeaux region, will Girondism
fare better. In caves of Saint-Emilion, in loft and cellar, the weariest
months, roll on; apparel worn, purse empty; wintry November come; under
Tallien and his Guillotine, all hope now gone. Danger drawing ever
nigher, difficulty pressing ever straiter, they determine to separate.
Not unpathetic the farewell; tall Barbaroux, cheeriest of brave men,
stoops to clasp his Louvet: "In what place soever thou findest my
mother," cries he, "try to be instead of a son to her: no resource of
mine but I will share with thy Wife, should chance ever lead me where
she is." (Louvet, p. 213.)
Louvet went with Guadet, with Salles and Valady;
Barbaroux with Buzot and Petion. Valady soon went southward, on a way of
his own. The two friends and Louvet had a miserable day and night; the
14th of November month, 1793. Sunk in wet, weariness and hunger, they
knock, on the morrow, for help, at a friend's country-house; the
fainthearted friend refuses to admit them. They stood therefore under
trees, in the pouring rain. Flying desperate, Louvet thereupon will to
Paris. He sets forth, there and then, splashing the mud on each side of
him, with a fresh strength gathered from fury or frenzy. He passes
villages, finding 'the sentry asleep in his box in the thick rain;' he
is gone, before the man can call after him. He bilks Revolutionary
Committees; rides in carriers' carts, covered carts and open; lies
hidden in one, under knapsacks and cloaks of soldiers' wives on the
Street of Orleans, while men search for him: has hairbreadth escapes
that would fill three romances: finally he gets to Paris to his fair
Helpmate; gets to Switzerland, and waits better days.
Poor Guadet and Salles were both taken, ere long; they
died by the Guillotine in Bourdeaux; drums beating to drown their voice.
Valady also is caught, and guillotined. Barbaroux and his two comrades
weathered it longer, into the summer of 1794; but not long enough. One
July morning, changing their hiding place, as they have often to do,
'about a league from Saint-Emilion, they observe a great crowd of
country-people;' doubtless Jacobins come to take them? Barbaroux draws a
pistol, shoots himself dead. Alas, and it was not Jacobins; it was
harmless villagers going to a village wake. Two days afterwards, Buzot
and Petion were found in a Cornfield, their bodies half-eaten with dogs.
(Recherches Historiques sur les Girondins in Memoires de Buzot, p.
107.)
Such was the end of Girondism. They arose to regenerate
France, these men; and have accomplished this. Alas, whatever quarrel we
had with them, has not their cruel fate abolished it? Pity only
survives. So many excellent souls of heroes sent down to Hades; they
themselves given as a prey of dogs and all manner of birds! But, here
too, the will of the Supreme Power was accomplished. As Vergniaud said:
'The Revolution, like Saturn, is devouring its own children.'
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