|
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION: A HISTORY |
|
BOOK VI. THERMIDOR Chapter 1. The Gods are athirst. What then is this Thing, called La Revolution, which, like an Angel of Death, hangs over France, noyading, fusillading, fighting, gun-boring, tanning human skins? La Revolution is but so many Alphabetic Letters; a thing nowhere to be laid hands on, to be clapt under lock and key: where is it? what is it? It is the Madness that dwells in the hearts of men. In this man it is, and in that man; as a rage or as a terror, it is in all men. Invisible, impalpable; and yet no black Azrael, with wings spread over half a continent, with sword sweeping from sea to sea, could be a truer Reality.
To explain, what is called explaining, the march of this
Revolutionary Government, be no task of ours. Men cannot explain it. A
paralytic Couthon, asking in the Jacobins, 'what hast thou done to be
hanged if the Counter-Revolution should arrive;' a sombre Saint-Just,
not yet six-and-twenty, declaring that 'for Revolutionists there is no
rest but in the tomb;' a seagreen Robespierre converted into vinegar and
gall; much more an Amar and Vadier, a Collot and Billaud: to inquire
what thoughts, predetermination or prevision, might be in the head of
these men! Record of their thought remains not; Death and Darkness have
swept it out utterly. Nay if we even had their thought, all they could
have articulately spoken to us, how insignificant a fraction were that
of the Thing which realised itself, which decreed itself, on signal
given by them! As has been said more than once, this Revolutionary
Government is not a self-conscious but a blind fatal one. Each man,
enveloped in his ambient-atmosphere of revolutionary fanatic Madness,
rushes on, impelled and impelling; and has become a blind brute Force;
no rest for him but in the grave! Darkness and the mystery of horrid
cruelty cover it for us, in History; as they did in Nature. The chaotic
Thunder-cloud, with its pitchy black, and its tumult of dazzling jagged
fire, in a world all electric: thou wilt not undertake to shew how that
comported itself,—what the secrets of its dark womb were; from what
sources, with what specialities, the lightning it held did, in confused
brightness of terror, strike forth, destructive and self-destructive,
till it ended? Like a Blackness naturally of Erebus, which by will of
Providence had for once mounted itself into dominion and the Azure: is
not this properly the nature of Sansculottism consummating itself? Of
which Erebus Blackness be it enough to discern that this and the other
dazzling fire-bolt, dazzling fire-torrent, does by small Volition and
great Necessity, verily issue,—in such and such succession; destructive
so and so, self-destructive so and so: till it end.
Royalism is extinct, 'sunk,' as they say, 'in the mud of
the Loire;' Republicanism dominates without and within: what, therefore,
on the 15th day of March, 1794, is this? Arrestment, sudden really as a
bolt out of the Blue, has hit strange victims: Hebert Pere Duchene,
Bibliopolist Momoro, Clerk Vincent, General Ronsin; high Cordelier
Patriots, redcapped Magistrates of Paris, Worshippers of Reason,
Commanders of Revolutionary Army! Eight short days ago, their Cordelier
Club was loud, and louder than ever, with Patriot denunciations. Hebert
Pere Duchene had "held his tongue and his heart these two months, at
sight of Moderates, Crypto-Aristocrats, Camilles, Scelerats in the
Convention itself: but could not do it any longer; would, if other
remedy were not, invoke the Sacred right of Insurrection." So spake
Hebert in Cordelier Session; with vivats, till the roofs rang again. (Moniteur,
du 17 Ventose (7th March) 1794.) Eight short days ago; and
now already! They rub their eyes: it is no dream; they find themselves
in the Luxembourg. Goose Gobel too; and they that burnt Churches!
Chaumette himself, potent Procureur, Agent National as they now call it,
who could 'recognise the Suspect by the very face of them,' he lingers
but three days; on the third day he too is hurled in. Most chopfallen,
blue, enters the National Agent this Limbo whither he has sent so many.
Prisoners crowd round, jibing and jeering: "Sublime National Agent,"
says one, "in virtue of thy immortal Proclamation, lo there! I am
suspect, thou art suspect, he is suspect, we are suspect, ye are
suspect, they are suspect!"
The meaning of these things? Meaning! It is a Plot; Plot
of the most extensive ramifications; which, however, Barrere holds the
threads of. Such Church-burning and scandalous masquerades of Atheism,
fit to make the Revolution odious: where indeed could they originate but
in the gold of Pitt? Pitt indubitably, as Preternatural Insight will
teach one, did hire this Faction of Enrages, to play their fantastic
tricks; to roar in their Cordeliers Club about Moderatism; to print
their Pere Duchene; worship skyblue Reason in red nightcap; rob all
Altars,—and bring the spoil to us!—
Still more indubitable, visible to the mere bodily sight,
is this: that the Cordeliers Club sits pale, with anger and terror; and
has 'veiled the Rights of Man,'—without effect. Likewise that the
Jacobins are in considerable confusion; busy 'purging themselves,
's'epurant,' as, in times of Plot and public Calamity, they have
repeatedly had to do. Not even Camille Desmoulins but has given offence:
nay there have risen murmurs against Danton himself; though he bellowed
them down, and Robespierre finished the matter by 'embracing him in the
Tribune.'
Whom shall the Republic and a jealous Mother Society
trust? In these times of temptation, of Preternatural Insight! For there
are Factions of the Stranger, 'de l'etranger,' Factions of Moderates, of
Enraged; all manner of Factions: we walk in a world of Plots; strings,
universally spread, of deadly gins and falltraps, baited by the gold of
Pitt! Clootz, Speaker of Mankind so-called, with his Evidences of
Mahometan Religion, and babble of Universal Republic, him an
incorruptible Robespierre has purged away. Baron Clootz, and Paine
rebellious Needleman lie, these two months, in the Luxembourg; limbs of
the Faction de l'etranger. Representative Phelippeaux is purged out: he
came back from La Vendee with an ill report in his mouth against rogue
Rossignol, and our method of warfare there. Recant it, O Phelippeaux, we
entreat thee! Phelippeaux will not recant; and is purged out.
Representative Fabre d'Eglantine, famed Nomenclator of Romme's Calendar,
is purged out; nay, is cast into the Luxembourg: accused of Legislative
Swindling 'in regard to monies of the India Company.' There with his
Chabots, Bazires, guilty of the like, let Fabre wait his destiny. And
Westermann friend of Danton, he who led the Marseillese on the Tenth of
August, and fought well in La Vendee, but spoke not well of rogue
Rossignol, is purged out. Lucky, if he too go not to the Luxembourg. And
your Prolys, Guzmans, of the Faction of the Stranger, they have gone;
Peyreyra, though he fled is gone, 'taken in the disguise of a Tavern
Cook.' I am suspect, thou art suspect, he is suspect!—
The great heart of Danton is weary of it. Danton is gone
to native Arcis, for a little breathing time of peace: Away, black
Arachne-webs, thou world of Fury, Terror, and Suspicion; welcome, thou
everlasting Mother, with thy spring greenness, thy kind household loves
and memories; true art thou, were all else untrue! The great Titan walks
silent, by the banks of the murmuring Aube, in young native haunts that
knew him when a boy; wonders what the end of these things may be.
But strangest of all, Camille Desmoulins is purged out.
Couthon gave as a test in regard to Jacobin purgation the question,
'What hast thou done to be hanged if Counter-Revolution should arrive?'
Yet Camille, who could so well answer this question, is purged out! The
truth is, Camille, early in December last, began publishing a new
Journal, or Series of Pamphlets, entitled the Vieux Cordelier, Old
Cordelier. Camille, not afraid at one time to 'embrace Liberty on a heap
of dead bodies,' begins to ask now, Whether among so many arresting and
punishing Committees there ought not to be a 'Committee of Mercy?'
Saint-Just, he observes, is an extremely solemn young Republican, who
'carries his head as if it were a Saint-Sacrement; adorable Hostie, or
divine Real-Presence! Sharply enough, this old Cordelier, Danton and he
were of the earliest primary Cordeliers,—shoots his glittering
war-shafts into your new Cordeliers, your Heberts, Momoros, with their
brawling brutalities and despicabilities: say, as the Sun-god (for
poor Camille is a Poet) shot into that Python Serpent sprung of mud.
Whereat, as was natural, the Hebertist Python did hiss
and writhe amazingly; and threaten 'sacred right of Insurrection;'—and,
as we saw, get cast into Prison. Nay, with all the old wit, dexterity,
and light graceful poignancy, Camille, translating 'out of Tacitus, from
the Reign of Tiberius,' pricks into the Law of the Suspect itself;
making it odious! Twice, in the Decade, his wild Leaves issue; full of
wit, nay of humour, of harmonious ingenuity and insight,—one of the
strangest phenomenon of that dark time; and smite, in their
wild-sparkling way, at various monstrosities, Saint-Sacrament heads, and
Juggernaut idols, in a rather reckless manner. To the great joy of
Josephine Beauharnais, and the other Five Thousand and odd Suspect, who
fill the Twelve Houses of Arrest; on whom a ray of hope dawns!
Robespierre, at first approbatory, knew not at last what to think; then
thought, with his Jacobins, that Camille must be expelled. A man of true
Revolutionary spirit, this Camille; but with the unwisest sallies; whom
Aristocrats and Moderates have the art to corrupt! Jacobinism is in
uttermost crisis and struggle: enmeshed wholly in plots,
corruptibilities, neck-gins and baited falltraps of Pitt Ennemi du Genre
Humain. Camille's First Number begins with 'O Pitt!'—his last is dated
15 Pluviose Year 2, 3d February 1794; and ends with these words of
Montezuma's, 'Les dieux ont soif, The gods are athirst.'
Be this as it may, the Hebertists lie in Prison only some
nine days. On the 24th of March, therefore, the Revolution Tumbrils
carry through that Life-tumult a new cargo: Hebert, Vincent, Momoro,
Ronsin, Nineteen of them in all; with whom, curious enough, sits Clootz
Speaker of Mankind. They have been massed swiftly into a lump, this
miscellany of Nondescripts; and travel now their last road. No help.
They too must 'look through the little window;' they too 'must sneeze
into the sack,' eternuer dans le sac; as they have done to others so is
it done to them. Sainte-Guillotine, meseems, is worse than the old
Saints of Superstition; a man-devouring Saint? Clootz, still with an air
of polished sarcasm, endeavours to jest, to offer cheering 'arguments of
Materialism;' he requested to be executed last, 'in order to establish
certain principles,'—which Philosophy has not retained. General Ronsin
too, he still looks forth with some air of defiance, eye of command: the
rest are sunk in a stony paleness of despair. Momoro, poor Bibliopolist,
no Agrarian Law yet realised,—they might as well have hanged thee at
Evreux, twenty months ago, when Girondin Buzot hindered them. Hebert
Pere Duchene shall never in this world rise in sacred right of
insurrection; he sits there low enough, head sunk on breast; Red
Nightcaps shouting round him, in frightful parody of his Newspaper
Articles, "Grand choler of the Pere Duchene!" Thus perish they; the sack
receives all their heads. Through some section of History, Nineteen
spectre-chimeras shall flit, speaking and gibbering; till Oblivion
swallow them.
In the course of a week, the Revolutionary Army itself is
disbanded; the General having become spectral. This Faction of Rabids,
therefore, is also purged from the Republican soil; here also the baited
falltraps of that Pitt have been wrenched up harmless; and anew there is
joy over a Plot Discovered. The Revolution then is verily devouring its
own children. All Anarchy, by the nature of it, is not only destructive
but self-destructive.
Chapter 2.
Danton, No weakness.
Danton, meanwhile, has been pressingly sent for from
Arcis: he must return instantly, cried Camille, cried Phelippeaux and
Friends, who scented danger in the wind. Danger enough! A Danton, a
Robespierre, chief-products of a victorious Revolution, are now arrived
in immediate front of one another; must ascertain how they will live
together, rule together. One conceives easily the deep mutual
incompatibility that divided these two: with what terror of feminine
hatred the poor seagreen Formula looked at the monstrous colossal
Reality, and grew greener to behold him;—the Reality, again, struggling
to think no ill of a chief-product of the Revolution; yet feeling at
bottom that such chief-product was little other than a chief wind-bag,
blown large by Popular air; not a man with the heart of a man, but a
poor spasmodic incorruptible pedant, with a logic-formula instead of
heart; of Jesuit or Methodist-Parson nature; full of sincere-cant,
incorruptibility, of virulence, poltroonery; barren as the east-wind!
Two such chief-products are too much for one Revolution.
Friends, trembling at the results of a quarrel on their
part, brought them to meet. "It is right," said Danton, swallowing much
indignation, "to repress the Royalists: but we should not strike except
where it is useful to the Republic; we should not confound the innocent
and the guilty."—"And who told you," replied Robespierre with a
poisonous look, "that one innocent person had perished?"—"Quoi," said
Danton, turning round to Friend Paris self-named Fabricius, Juryman in
the Revolutionary Tribunal: "Quoi, not one innocent? What sayest thou of
it, Fabricius!" (Biographie de Ministres, para Danton.)—Friends,
Westermann, this Paris and others urged him to shew himself, to ascend
the Tribune and act. The man Danton was not prone to shew himself; to
act, or uproar for his own safety. A man of careless, large, hoping
nature; a large nature that could rest: he would sit whole hours, they
say, hearing Camille talk, and liked nothing so well. Friends urged him
to fly; his Wife urged him: "Whither fly?" answered he: "If freed France
cast me out, there are only dungeons for me elsewhere. One carries not
his country with him at the sole of his shoe!" The man Danton sat still.
Not even the arrestment of Friend Herault, a member of Salut, yet
arrested by Salut, can rouse Danton.—On the night of the 30th of March,
Juryman Paris came rushing in; haste looking through his eyes: A clerk
of the Salut Committee had told him Danton's warrant was made out, he is
to be arrested this very night! Entreaties there are and trepidation, of
poor Wife, of Paris and Friends: Danton sat silent for a while; then
answered, "Ils n'oseraient, They dare not;" and would take no measures.
Murmuring "They dare not," he goes to sleep as usual.
And yet, on the morrow morning, strange rumour spreads
over Paris City: Danton, Camille, Phelippeaux, Lacroix have been
arrested overnight! It is verily so: the corridors of the Luxembourg
were all crowded, Prisoners crowding forth to see this giant of the
Revolution among them. "Messieurs," said Danton politely, "I hoped soon
to have got you all out of this: but here I am myself; and one sees not
where it will end."—Rumour may spread over Paris: the Convention
clusters itself into groups; wide-eyed, whispering, "Danton arrested!"
Who then is safe? Legendre, mounting the Tribune, utters, at his own
peril, a feeble word for him; moving that he be heard at that Bar before
indictment; but Robespierre frowns him down: "Did you hear Chabot, or
Bazire? Would you have two weights and measures?" Legendre cowers low;
Danton, like the others, must take his doom.
Danton's Prison-thoughts were curious to have; but are
not given in any quantity: indeed few such remarkable men have been left
so obscure to us as this Titan of the Revolution. He was heard to
ejaculate: "This time twelvemonth, I was moving the creation of that
same Revolutionary Tribunal. I crave pardon for it of God and man. They
are all Brothers Cain: Brissot would have had me guillotined as
Robespierre now will. I leave the whole business in a frightful welter (gachis
epouvantable): not one of them understands anything of government.
Robespierre will follow me; I drag down Robespierre. O, it were better
to be a poor fisherman than to meddle with governing of men."—Camille's
young beautiful Wife, who had made him rich not in money alone, hovers
round the Luxembourg, like a disembodied spirit, day and night.
Camille's stolen letters to her still exist; stained with the mark of
his tears. (Apercus sur Camille Desmoulins in Vieux Cordelier, Paris,
1825, pp. 1-29.) "I carry my head like a Saint-Sacrament?" so
Saint-Just was heard to mutter: "Perhaps he will carry his like a
Saint-Dennis."
Unhappy Danton, thou still unhappier light Camille, once
light Procureur de la Lanterne, ye also have arrived, then, at the
Bourne of Creation, where, like Ulysses Polytlas at the limit and utmost
Gades of his voyage, gazing into that dim Waste beyond Creation, a man
does see the Shade of his Mother, pale, ineffectual;—and days when his
Mother nursed and wrapped him are all-too sternly contrasted with this
day! Danton, Camille, Herault, Westermann, and the others, very
strangely massed up with Bazires, Swindler Chabots, Fabre d'Eglantines,
Banker Freys, a most motley Batch, 'Fournee' as such things will be
called, stand ranked at the Bar of Tinville. It is the 2d of April 1794.
Danton has had but three days to lie in Prison; for the time presses.
What is your name? place of abode? and the like, Fouquier
asks; according to formality. "My name is Danton," answers he; "a name
tolerably known in the Revolution: my abode will soon be Annihilation (dans
le Neant); but I shall live in the Pantheon of History." A man will
endeavour to say something forcible, be it by nature or not! Herault
mentions epigrammatically that he "sat in this Hall, and was detested of
Parlementeers." Camille makes answer, "My age is that of the bon
Sansculotte Jesus; an age fatal to Revolutionists." O Camille, Camille!
And yet in that Divine Transaction, let us say, there did lie, among
other things, the fatallest Reproof ever uttered here below to Worldly
Right-honourableness; 'the highest Fact,' so devout Novalis calls it,
'in the Rights of Man.' Camille's real age, it would seem, is
thirty-four. Danton is one year older.
Some five months ago, the Trial of the Twenty-two
Girondins was the greatest that Fouquier had then done. But here is a
still greater to do; a thing which tasks the whole faculty of Fouquier;
which makes the very heart of him waver. For it is the voice of Danton
that reverberates now from these domes; in passionate words, piercing
with their wild sincerity, winged with wrath. Your best Witnesses he
shivers into ruin at one stroke. He demands that the Committee-men
themselves come as Witnesses, as Accusers; he "will cover them with
ignominy." He raises his huge stature, he shakes his huge black head,
fire flashes from the eyes of him,—piercing to all Republican hearts: so
that the very Galleries, though we filled them by ticket, murmur
sympathy; and are like to burst down, and raise the People, and deliver
him! He complains loudly that he is classed with Chabots, with swindling
Stockjobbers; that his Indictment is a list of platitudes and horrors.
"Danton hidden on the Tenth of August?" reverberates he, with the roar
of a lion in the toils: "Where are the men that had to press Danton to
shew himself, that day? Where are these high-gifted souls of whom he
borrowed energy? Let them appear, these Accusers of mine: I have all the
clearness of my self-possession when I demand them. I will unmask the
three shallow scoundrels," les trois plats coquins, Saint-Just, Couthon,
Lebas, "who fawn on Robespierre, and lead him towards his destruction.
Let them produce themselves here; I will plunge them into Nothingness,
out of which they ought never to have risen." The agitated President
agitates his bell; enjoins calmness, in a vehement manner: "What is it
to thee how I defend myself?" cries the other: "the right of dooming me
is thine always. The voice of a man speaking for his honour and his life
may well drown the jingling of thy bell!" Thus Danton, higher and
higher; till the lion voice of him 'dies away in his throat:' speech
will not utter what is in that man. The Galleries murmur ominously; the
first day's Session is over.
O Tinville, President Herman, what will ye do? They have
two days more of it, by strictest Revolutionary Law. The Galleries
already murmur. If this Danton were to burst your mesh-work!—Very
curious indeed to consider. It turns on a hair: and what a Hoitytoity
were there, Justice and Culprit changing places; and the whole History
of France running changed! For in France there is this Danton only that
could still try to govern France. He only, the wild amorphous Titan;—and
perhaps that other olive-complexioned individual, the Artillery Officer
at Toulon, whom we left pushing his fortune in the South?
On the evening of the second day, matters looking not
better but worse and worse, Fouquier and Herman, distraction in their
aspect, rush over to Salut Public. What is to be done? Salut Public
rapidly concocts a new Decree; whereby if men 'insult Justice,' they may
be 'thrown out of the Debates.' For indeed, withal, is there not 'a Plot
in the Luxembourg Prison?' Ci-devant General Dillon, and others of the
Suspect, plotting with Camille's Wife to distribute assignats; to force
the Prisons, overset the Republic? Citizen Laflotte, himself Suspect but
desiring enfranchisement, has reported said Plot for us:—a report that
may bear fruit! Enough, on the morrow morning, an obedient Convention
passes this Decree. Salut rushes off with it to the aid of Tinville,
reduced now almost to extremities. And so, Hors des Debats, Out of the
Debates, ye insolents! Policemen do your duty! In such manner, with a
deadlift effort, Salut, Tinville Herman, Leroi Dix-Aout, and all stanch
jurymen setting heart and shoulder to it, the Jury becomes 'sufficiently
instructed;' Sentence is passed, is sent by an Official, and torn and
trampled on: Death this day. It is the 5th of April, 1794. Camille's
poor Wife may cease hovering about this Prison. Nay let her kiss her
poor children; and prepare to enter it, and to follow!—
Danton carried a high look in the Death-cart. Not so
Camille: it is but one week, and all is so topsy-turvied; angel Wife
left weeping; love, riches, Revolutionary fame, left all at the
Prison-gate; carnivorous Rabble now howling round. Palpable, and yet
incredible; like a madman's dream! Camille struggles and writhes; his
shoulders shuffle the loose coat off them, which hangs knotted, the
hands tied: "Calm my friend," said Danton; "heed not that vile canaille
(laissez la cette vile canaille)." At the foot of the Scaffold,
Danton was heard to ejaculate: "O my Wife, my well-beloved, I shall
never see thee more then!"—but, interrupting himself: "Danton, no
weakness!" He said to Herault-Sechelles stepping forward to embrace him:
"Our heads will meet there," in the Headsman's sack. His last words were
to Samson the Headsman himself: "Thou wilt shew my head to the people;
it is worth shewing."
So passes, like a gigantic mass, of valour, ostentation,
fury, affection and wild revolutionary manhood, this Danton, to his
unknown home. He was of Arcis-sur-Aube; born of 'good farmer-people'
there. He had many sins; but one worst sin he had not, that of Cant. No
hollow Formalist, deceptive and self-deceptive, ghastly to the natural
sense, was this; but a very Man: with all his dross he was a Man;
fiery-real, from the great fire-bosom of Nature herself. He saved France
from Brunswick; he walked straight his own wild road, whither it led
him. He may live for some generations in the memory of men.
Next week, it is still but the 10th of April, there comes
a new Nineteen; Chaumette, Gobel, Hebert's Widow, the Widow of Camille:
these also roll their fated journey; black Death devours them. Mean
Hebert's Widow was weeping, Camille's Widow tried to speak comfort to
her. O ye kind Heavens, azure, beautiful, eternal behind your tempests
and Time-clouds, is there not pity for all! Gobel, it seems, was
repentant; he begged absolution of a Priest; did as a Gobel best could.
For Anaxagoras Chaumette, the sleek head now stript of its bonnet rouge,
what hope is there? Unless Death were 'an eternal sleep?' Wretched
Anaxagoras, God shall judge thee, not I.
Hebert, therefore, is gone, and the Hebertists; they that
robbed Churches, and adored blue Reason in red nightcap. Great Danton,
and the Dantonists; they also are gone. Down to the catacombs; they are
become silent men! Let no Paris Municipality, no Sect or Party of this
hue or that, resist the will of Robespierre and Salut. Mayor Pache, not
prompt enough in denouncing these Pitts Plots, may congratulate about
them now. Never so heartily; it skills not! His course likewise is to
the Luxembourg. We appoint one Fleuriot-Lescot Interim-Mayor in his
stead: an 'architect from Belgium,' they say, this Fleuriot; he is a man
one can depend on. Our new Agent-National is Payan, lately Juryman;
whose cynosure also is Robespierre.
Thus then, we perceive, this confusedly electric
Erebus-cloud of Revolutionary Government has altered its shape somewhat.
Two masses, or wings, belonging to it; an over-electric mass of
Cordelier Rabids, and an under-electric of Dantonist Moderates and
Clemency-men,—these two masses, shooting bolts at one another, so to
speak, have annihilated one another. For the Erebus-cloud, as we often
remark, is of suicidal nature; and, in jagged irregularity, darts its
lightning withal into itself. But now these two discrepant masses being
mutually annihilated, it is as if the Erebus-cloud had got to internal
composure; and did only pour its hellfire lightning on the World that
lay under it. In plain words, Terror of the Guillotine was never
terrible till now. Systole, diastole, swift and ever swifter goes the
Axe of Samson. Indictments cease by degrees to have so much as
plausibility: Fouquier chooses from the Twelve houses of Arrest what he
calls Batches, 'Fournees,' a score or more at a time; his Jurymen are
charged to make feu de file, fire-filing till the ground be clear.
Citizen Laflotte's report of Plot in the Luxembourg is verily bearing
fruit! If no speakable charge exist against a man, or Batch of men,
Fouquier has always this: a Plot in the Prison. Swift and ever swifter
goes Samson; up, finally, to three score and more at a Batch! It is the
highday of Death: none but the Dead return not.
O dusky d'Espremenil, what a day is this, the 22d of
April, thy last day! The Palais Hall here is the same stone Hall, where
thou, five years ago, stoodest perorating, amid endless pathos of
rebellious Parlement, in the grey of the morning; bound to march with
d'Agoust to the Isles of Hieres. The stones are the same stones: but the
rest, Men, Rebellion, Pathos, Peroration, see! it has all fled, like a
gibbering troop of ghosts, like the phantasms of a dying brain! With
d'Espremenil, in the same line of Tumbrils, goes the mournfullest
medley. Chapelier goes, ci-devant popular President of the Constituent;
whom the Menads and Maillard met in his carriage, on the Versailles
Road. Thouret likewise, ci-devant President, father of Constitutional
Law-acts; he whom we heard saying, long since, with a loud voice, "The
Constituent Assembly has fulfilled its mission!" And the noble old
Malesherbes, who defended Louis and could not speak, like a grey old
rock dissolving into sudden water: he journeys here now, with his
kindred, daughters, sons and grandsons, his Lamoignons, Chateaubriands;
silent, towards Death.—One young Chateaubriand alone is wandering amid
the Natchez, by the roar of Niagara Falls, the moan of endless forests:
Welcome thou great Nature, savage, but not false, not unkind,
unmotherly; no Formula thou, or rapid jangle of Hypothesis,
Parliamentary Eloquence, Constitution-building and the Guillotine; speak
thou to me, O Mother, and sing my sick heart thy mystic everlasting
lullaby-song, and let all the rest be far!—
Another row of Tumbrils we must notice: that which holds
Elizabeth, the Sister of Louis. Her Trial was like the rest; for Plots,
for Plots. She was among the kindliest, most innocent of women. There
sat with her, amid four-and-twenty others, a once timorous Marchioness
de Crussol; courageous now; expressing towards her the liveliest
loyalty. At the foot of the Scaffold, Elizabeth with tears in her eyes,
thanked this Marchioness; said she was grieved she could not reward her.
"Ah, Madame, would your Royal Highness deign to embrace me, my wishes
were complete!"—"Right willingly, Marquise de Crussol, and with my whole
heart." (Montgaillard, iv. 200.) Thus they: at the foot of the
Scaffold. The Royal Family is now reduced to two: a girl and a little
boy. The boy, once named Dauphin, was taken from his Mother while she
yet lived; and given to one Simon, by trade a Cordwainer, on service
then about the Temple-Prison, to bring him up in principles of
Sansculottism. Simon taught him to drink, to swear, to sing the
carmagnole. Simon is now gone to the Municipality: and the poor boy,
hidden in a tower of the Temple, from which in his fright and
bewilderment and early decrepitude he wishes not to stir out, lies
perishing, 'his shirt not changed for six months;' amid squalor and
darkness, lamentably, (Duchesse d'Angouleme, Captivite a la Tour du
Temple, pp. 37-71.)—so as none but poor Factory Children and the
like are wont to perish, unlamented!
The Spring sends its green leaves and bright weather,
bright May brighter than ever: Death pauses not. Lavoisier famed
Chemist, shall die and not live: Chemist Lavoisier was Farmer-General
Lavoisier too, and now 'all the Farmers-General are arrested;' all, and
shall give an account of their monies and incomings; and die for
'putting water in the tobacco' they sold. (Tribunal Revolutionnaire,
du 8 Mai 1794, Moniteur, No. 231.) Lavoisier begged a fortnight more
of life, to finish some experiments: but "the Republic does not need
such;" the axe must do its work. Cynic Chamfort, reading these
Inscriptions of Brotherhood or Death, says "it is a Brotherhood of
Cain:" arrested, then liberated; then about to be arrested again, this
Chamfort cuts and slashes himself with frantic uncertain hand; gains,
not without difficulty, the refuge of death. Condorcet has lurked deep,
these many months; Argus-eyes watching and searching for him. His
concealment is become dangerous to others and himself; he has to fly
again, to skulk, round Paris, in thickets and stone-quarries. And so at
the Village of Clamars, one bleared May morning, there enters a Figure,
ragged, rough-bearded, hunger-stricken; asks breakfast in the tavern
there. Suspect, by the look of him! "Servant out of place, sayest thou?"
Committee-President of Forty-Sous finds a Latin Horace on him: "Art thou
not one of those Ci-devants that were wont to keep servants? Suspect!"
He is haled forthwith, breakfast unfinished, towards Bourg-la-Reine, on
foot: he faints with exhaustion; is set on a peasant's horse; is flung
into his damp prison-cell: on the morrow, recollecting him, you enter;
Condorcet lies dead on the floor. They die fast, and disappear: the
Notabilities of France disappear, one after one, like lights in a
Theatre, which you are snuffing out.
Under which circumstances, is it not singular, and almost
touching, to see Paris City drawn out, in the meek May nights, in civic
ceremony, which they call 'Souper Fraternel, Brotherly Supper?
Spontaneous, or partially spontaneous, in the twelfth, thirteenth,
fourteenth nights of this May month, it is seen. Along the Rue
Saint-Honore, and main Streets and Spaces, each Citoyen brings forth
what of supper the stingy Maximum has yielded him, to the open air;
joins it to his neighbour's supper; and with common table, cheerful
light burning frequent, and what due modicum of cut-glasses and other
garnish and relish is convenient, they eat frugally together, under the
kind stars. (Tableaux de la Revolution, para Soupers Fraternels;
Mercier, ii. 150.) See it O Night! With cheerfully pledged wine-cup,
hobnobbing to the Reign of Liberty, Equality, Brotherhood, with their
wives in best ribands, with their little ones romping round, the
Citoyens, in frugal Love-feast, sit there. Night in her wide empire sees
nothing similar. O my brothers, why is the reign of Brotherhood not
come! It is come, it shall come, say the Citoyens frugally
hobnobbing.—Ah me! these everlasting stars, do they not look down 'like
glistening eyes, bright with immortal pity, over the lot of man!'—
One lamentable thing, however, is, that individuals will
attempt assassination—of Representatives of the People. Representative
Collot, Member even of Salut, returning home, 'about one in the
morning,' probably touched with liquor, as he is apt to be, meets on the
stairs, the cry "Scelerat!" and also the snap of a pistol: which latter
flashes in the pan; disclosing to him, momentarily, a pair of truculent
saucer-eyes, swart grim-clenched countenance; recognisable as that of
our little fellow-lodger, Citoyen Amiral, formerly 'a clerk in the
Lotteries!; Collot shouts Murder, with lungs fit to awaken all the Rue
Favart; Amiral snaps a second time; a second time flashes in the pan;
then darts up into his apartment; and, after there firing, still with
inadequate effect, one musket at himself and another at his captor, is
clutched and locked in Prison. (Riouffe, p. 73; Deux Amis, xii.
298-302.) An indignant little man this Amiral, of Southern temper
and complexion, of 'considerable muscular force.' He denies not that he
meant to "purge France of a tyrant;" nay avows that he had an eye to the
Incorruptible himself, but took Collot as more convenient!
Rumour enough hereupon; heaven-high congratulation of
Collot, fraternal embracing, at the Jacobins, and elsewhere. And yet, it
would seem the assassin-mood proves catching. Two days more, it is still
but the 23d of May, and towards nine in the evening, Cecile Renault,
Paper-dealer's daughter, a young woman of soft blooming look, presents
herself at the Cabinet-maker's in the Rue Saint-Honore; desires to see
Robespierre. Robespierre cannot be seen: she grumbles irreverently. They
lay hold of her. She has left a basket in a shop hard by: in the basket
are female change of raiment and two knives! Poor Cecile, examined by
Committee, declares she "wanted to see what a tyrant was like:" the
change of raiment was "for my own use in the place I am surely going
to."—"What place?"—"Prison; and then the Guillotine," answered she.—Such
things come of Charlotte Corday; in a people prone to imitation, and
monomania! Swart choleric men try Charlotte's feat, and their pistols
miss fire; soft blooming young women try it, and, only half-resolute,
leave their knives in a shop.
O Pitt, and ye Faction of the Stranger, shall the
Republic never have rest; but be torn continually by baited springs, by
wires of explosive spring-guns? Swart Amiral, fair young Cecile, and all
that knew them, and many that did not know them, lie locked, waiting the
scrutiny of Tinville.
But on the day they call Decadi, New-Sabbath, 20
Prairial, 8th June by old style, what thing is this going forward, in
the Jardin National, whilom Tuileries Garden?
All the world is there, in holydays clothes: (Vilate,
Causes Secretes de la Revolution de 9 Thermidor.) foul linen went
out with the Hebertists; nay Robespierre, for one, would never once
countenance that; but went always elegant and frizzled, not without
vanity even,—and had his room hung round with seagreen Portraits and
Busts. In holyday clothes, we say, are the innumerable Citoyens and
Citoyennes: the weather is of the brightest; cheerful expectation lights
all countenances. Juryman Vilate gives breakfast to many a Deputy, in
his official Apartment, in the Pavillon ci-devant of Flora; rejoices in
the bright-looking multitudes, in the brightness of leafy June, in the
auspicious Decadi, or New-Sabbath. This day, if it please Heaven, we are
to have, on improved Anti-Chaumette principles: a New Religion.
Catholicism being burned out, and Reason-worship
guillotined, was there not need of one? Incorruptible Robespierre, not
unlike the Ancients, as Legislator of a free people will now also be
Priest and Prophet. He has donned his sky-blue coat, made for the
occasion; white silk waistcoat broidered with silver, black silk
breeches, white stockings, shoe-buckles of gold. He is President of the
Convention; he has made the Convention decree, so they name it, decreter
the 'Existence of the Supreme Being,' and likewise 'ce principe
consolateur of the Immortality of the Soul.' These consolatory
principles, the basis of rational Republican Religion, are getting
decreed; and here, on this blessed Decadi, by help of Heaven and Painter
David, is to be our first act of worship.
See, accordingly, how after Decree passed, and what has
been called 'the scraggiest Prophetic Discourse ever uttered by
man,'—Mahomet Robespierre, in sky-blue coat and black breeches, frizzled
and powdered to perfection, bearing in his hand a bouquet of flowers and
wheat-ears, issues proudly from the Convention Hall; Convention
following him, yet, as is remarked, with an interval. Amphitheatre has
been raised, or at least Monticule or Elevation; hideous Statues of
Atheism, Anarchy and such like, thanks to Heaven and Painter David,
strike abhorrence into the heart. Unluckily however, our Monticule is
too small. On the top of it not half of us can stand; wherefore there
arises indecent shoving, nay treasonous irreverent growling. Peace, thou
Bourdon de l'Oise; peace, or it may be worse for thee!
The seagreen Pontiff takes a torch, Painter David handing
it; mouths some other froth-rant of vocables, which happily one cannot
hear; strides resolutely forward, in sight of expectant France; sets his
torch to Atheism and Company, which are but made of pasteboard steeped
in turpentine. They burn up rapidly; and, from within, there rises 'by
machinery' an incombustible Statue of Wisdom, which, by ill hap, gets
besmoked a little; but does stand there visible in as serene attitude as
it can.
And then? Why, then, there is other Processioning,
scraggy Discoursing, and—this is our Feast of the Etre Supreme; our new
Religion, better or worse, is come!—Look at it one moment, O Reader, not
two. The Shabbiest page of Human Annals: or is there, that thou wottest
of, one shabbier? Mumbo-Jumbo of the African woods to me seems venerable
beside this new Deity of Robespierre; for this is a conscious
Mumbo-Jumbo, and knows that he is machinery. O seagreen Prophet,
unhappiest of windbags blown nigh to bursting, what distracted Chimera
among realities are thou growing to! This then, this common pitch-link
for artificial fireworks of turpentine and pasteboard; this is the
miraculous Aaron's Rod thou wilt stretch over a hag-ridden hell-ridden
France, and bid her plagues cease? Vanish, thou and it!—"Avec ton Etre
Supreme," said Billaud, "tu commences m'embeter: With thy Etre Supreme
thou beginnest to be a bore to me." (See Vilate, Causes Secretes.
Vilate's Narrative is very curious; but is not to be taken as true,
without sifting; being, at bottom, in spite of its title, not a
Narrative but a Pleading.)
Catherine Theot, on the other hand, 'an ancient
serving-maid seventy-nine years of age,' inured to Prophecy and the
Bastille from of old, sits, in an upper room in the Rue-de-Contrescarpe,
poring over the Book of Revelations, with an eye to Robespierre; finds
that this astonishing thrice-potent Maximilien really is the Man spoken
of by Prophets, who is to make the Earth young again. With her sit
devout old Marchionesses, ci-devant honourable women; among whom
Old-Constituent Dom Gerle, with his addle head, cannot be wanting. They
sit there, in the Rue-de-Contrescarpe; in mysterious adoration: Mumbo is
Mumbo, and Robespierre is his Prophet. A conspicuous man this
Robespierre. He has his volunteer Bodyguard of Tappe-durs, let us say
Strike-sharps, fierce Patriots with feruled sticks; and Jacobins kissing
the hem of his garment. He enjoys the admiration of many, the worship of
some; and is well worth the wonder of one and all.
The grand question and hope, however, is: Will not this
Feast of the Tuileries Mumbo-Jumbo be a sign perhaps that the Guillotine
is to abate? Far enough from that! Precisely on the second day after it,
Couthon, one of the 'three shallow scoundrels,' gets himself lifted into
the Tribune; produces a bundle of papers. Couthon proposes that, as
Plots still abound, the Law of the Suspect shall have extension, and
Arrestment new vigour and facility. Further that, as in such case
business is like to be heavy, our Revolutionary Tribunal too shall have
extension; be divided, say, into Four Tribunals, each with its
President, each with its Fouquier or Substitute of Fouquier, all
labouring at once, and any remnant of shackle or dilatory formality be
struck off: in this way it may perhaps still overtake the work. Such is
Couthon's Decree of the Twenty-second Prairial, famed in those times. At
hearing of which Decree the very Mountain gasped, awestruck; and one
Ruamps ventured to say that if it passed without adjournment and
discussion, he, as one Representative, "would blow his brains out." Vain
saying! The Incorruptible knit his brows; spoke a prophetic fateful word
or two: the Law of Prairial is Law; Ruamps glad to leave his rash brains
where they are. Death, then, and always Death! Even so. Fouquier is
enlarging his borders; making room for Batches of a Hundred and fifty at
once;—getting a Guillotine set up, of improved velocity, and to work
under cover, in the apartment close by. So that Salut itself has to
intervene, and forbid him: "Wilt thou demoralise the Guillotine," asks
Collot, reproachfully, "demoraliser le supplice!"
There is indeed danger of that; were not the Republican
faith great, it were already done. See, for example, on the 17th of
June, what a Batch, Fifty-four at once! Swart Amiral is here, he of the
pistol that missed fire; young Cecile Renault, with her father, family,
entire kith and kin; the widow of d'Espremenil; old M. de Sombreuil of
the Invalides, with his Son,—poor old Sombreuil, seventy-three years
old, his Daughter saved him in September, and it was but for this.
Faction of the Stranger, fifty-four of them! In red shirts and smocks,
as Assassins and Faction of the Stranger, they flit along there; red
baleful Phantasmagory, towards the land of Phantoms.
Meanwhile will not the people of the Place de la
Revolution, the inhabitants along the Rue Saint-Honore, as these
continual Tumbrils pass, begin to look gloomy? Republicans too have
bowels. The Guillotine is shifted, then again shifted; finally set up at
the remote extremity of the South-East: (Montgaillard, iv. 237.)
Suburbs Saint-Antoine and Saint-Marceau it is to be hoped, if they have
bowels, have very tough ones.
It is time now, however, to cast a glance into the
Prisons. When Desmoulins moved for his Committee of Mercy, these Twelve
Houses of Arrest held five thousand persons. Continually arriving since
then, there have now accumulated twelve thousand. They are Ci-devants,
Royalists; in far greater part, they are Republicans, of various
Girondin, Fayettish, Un-Jacobin colour. Perhaps no human Habitation or
Prison ever equalled in squalor, in noisome horror, these Twelve Houses
of Arrest. There exist records of personal experience in them Memoires
sur les Prisons; one of the strangest Chapters in the Biography of Man.
Very singular to look into it: how a kind of order rises
up in all conditions of human existence; and wherever two or three are
gathered together, there are formed modes of existing together,
habitudes, observances, nay gracefulnesses, joys! Citoyen Coitant will
explain fully how our lean dinner, of herbs and carrion, was consumed
not without politeness and place-aux-dames: how Seigneur and Shoeblack,
Duchess and Doll-Tearsheet, flung pellmell into a heap, ranked
themselves according to method: at what hour 'the Citoyennes took to
their needlework;' and we, yielding the chairs to them, endeavoured to
talk gallantly in a standing posture, or even to sing and harp more or
less. Jealousies, enmities are not wanting; nor flirtations, of an
effective character.
Alas, by degrees, even needlework must cease: Plot in the
Prison rises, by Citoyen Laflotte and Preternatural Suspicion.
Suspicious Municipality snatches from us all implements; all money and
possession, of means or metal, is ruthlessly searched for, in pocket, in
pillow and paillasse, and snatched away; red-capped Commissaries
entering every cell! Indignation, temporary desperation, at robbery of
its very thimble, fills the gentle heart. Old Nuns shriek shrill
discord; demand to be killed forthwith. No help from shrieking! Better
was that of the two shifty male Citizens, who, eager to preserve an
implement or two, were it but a pipe-picker, or needle to darn hose
with, determined to defend themselves: by tobacco. Swift then, as your
fell Red Caps are heard in the Corridor rummaging and slamming, the two
Citoyens light their pipes and begin smoking. Thick darkness envelops
them. The Red Nightcaps, opening the cell, breathe but one mouthful;
burst forth into chorus of barking and coughing. "Quoi, Messieurs," cry
the two Citoyens, "You don't smoke? Is the pipe disagreeable! Est-ce que
vous ne fumez pas?" But the Red Nightcaps have fled, with slight search:
"Vous n'aimez pas la pipe?" cry the Citoyens, as their door slams-to
again. (Maison d'Arret de Port-Libre, par Coittant, &c. Memoires sur
les Prisons, ii.) My poor brother Citoyens, O surely, in a reign of
Brotherhood, you are not the two I would guillotine!
Rigour grows, stiffens into horrid tyranny; Plot in the
Prison getting ever riper. This Plot in the Prison, as we said, is now
the stereotype formula of Tinville: against whomsoever he knows no
crime, this is a ready-made crime. His Judgment-bar has become
unspeakable; a recognised mockery; known only as the wicket one passes
through, towards Death. His Indictments are drawn out in blank; you
insert the Names after. He has his moutons, detestable traitor jackalls,
who report and bear witness; that they themselves may be allowed to
live,—for a time. His Fournees, says the reproachful Collot, 'shall in
no case exceed three-score;' that is his maximum. Nightly come his
Tumbrils to the Luxembourg, with the fatal Roll-call; list of the
Fournee of to-morrow. Men rush towards the Grate; listen, if their name
be in it? One deep-drawn breath, when the name is not in: we live still
one day! And yet some score or scores of names were in. Quick these;
they clasp their loved ones to their heart, one last time; with brief
adieu, wet-eyed or dry-eyed, they mount, and are away. This night to the
Conciergerie; through the Palais misnamed of Justice, to the Guillotine
to-morrow.
Recklessness, defiant levity, the Stoicism if not of
strength yet of weakness, has possessed all hearts. Weak women and
Ci-devants, their locks not yet made into blond perukes, their skins not
yet tanned into breeches, are accustomed to 'act the Guillotine' by way
of pastime. In fantastic mummery, with towel-turbans, blanket-ermine, a
mock Sanhedrim of Judges sits, a mock Tinville pleads; a culprit is
doomed, is guillotined by the oversetting of two chairs. Sometimes we
carry it farther: Tinville himself, in his turn, is doomed, and not to
the Guillotine alone. With blackened face, hirsute, horned, a shaggy
Satan snatches him not unshrieking; shews him, with outstretched arm and
voice, the fire that is not quenched, the worm that dies not; the
monotony of Hell-pain, and the What hour? answered by, It is Eternity! (Montgaillard,
iv. 218; Riouffe, p. 273.)
And still the Prisons fill fuller, and still the
Guillotine goes faster. On all high roads march flights of Prisoners,
wending towards Paris. Not Ci-devants now; they, the noisy of them, are
mown down; it is Republicans now. Chained two and two they march; in
exasperated moments, singing their Marseillaise. A hundred and
thirty-two men of Nantes for instance, march towards Paris, in these
same days: Republicans, or say even Jacobins to the marrow of the bone;
but Jacobins who had not approved Noyading. (Voyage de Cent
Trente-deux Nantais, Prisons, ii. 288-335.) Vive la Republique rises
from them in all streets of towns: they rest by night, in unutterable
noisome dens, crowded to choking; one or two dead on the morrow. They
are wayworn, weary of heart; can only shout: Live the Republic; we, as
under horrid enchantment, dying in this way for it!
Some Four Hundred Priests, of whom also there is record,
ride at anchor, 'in the roads of the Isle of Aix,' long months; looking
out on misery, vacuity, waste Sands of Oleron and the ever-moaning
brine. Ragged, sordid, hungry; wasted to shadows: eating their unclean
ration on deck, circularly, in parties of a dozen, with finger and
thumb; beating their scandalous clothes between two stones; choked in
horrible miasmata, closed under hatches, seventy of them in a berth,
through night; so that the 'aged Priest is found lying dead in the
morning, in the attitude of prayer!' (Relation de ce qu'ont souffert
pour la Religion les Pretres deportes en 1794, dans la rade de l'ile
d'Aix, Prisons, ii. 387-485.)—How long, O Lord!
Not forever; no. All Anarchy, all Evil, Injustice, is, by
the nature of it, dragon's-teeth; suicidal, and cannot endure.
Chapter 6.
To finish the Terror.
It is very remarkable, indeed, that since the
Etre-Supreme Feast, and the sublime continued harangues on it, which
Billaud feared would become a bore to him, Robespierre has gone little
to Committee; but held himself apart, as if in a kind of pet. Nay they
have made a Report on that old Catherine Theot, and her Regenerative Man
spoken of by the Prophets; not in the best spirit. This Theot mystery
they affect to regard as a Plot; but have evidently introduced a vein of
satire, of irreverent banter, not against the Spinster alone, but
obliquely against her Regenerative Man! Barrere's light pen was perhaps
at the bottom of it: read through the solemn snuffling organs of old
Vadier of the Surete Generale, the Theot Report had its effect;
wrinkling the general Republican visage into an iron grin. Ought these
things to be?
We note further that among the Prisoners in the Twelve
Houses of Arrest, there is one whom we have seen before. Senhora
Fontenai, born Cabarus, the fair Proserpine whom Representative Tallien
Pluto-like did gather at Bourdeaux, not without effect on himself!
Tallien is home, by recall, long since, from Bourdeaux; and in the most
alarming position. Vain that he sounded, louder even than ever, the note
of Jacobinism, to hide past shortcomings: the Jacobins purged him out;
two times has Robespierre growled at him words of omen from the
Convention Tribune. And now his fair Cabarus, hit by denunciation, lies
Arrested, Suspect, in spite of all he could do!—Shut in horrid pinfold
of death, the Senhora smuggles out to her red-gloomy Tallien the most
pressing entreaties and conjurings: Save me; save thyself. Seest thou
not that thy own head is doomed; thou with a too fiery audacity; a
Dantonist withal; against whom lie grudges? Are ye not all doomed, as in
the Polyphemus Cavern; the fawningest slave of you will be but eaten
last!—Tallien feels with a shudder that it is true. Tallien has had
words of omen, Bourdon has had words, Freron is hated and Barras: each
man 'feels his head if it yet stick on his shoulders.'
Meanwhile Robespierre, we still observe, goes little to
Convention, not at all to Committee; speaks nothing except to his
Jacobin House of Lords, amid his bodyguard of Tappe-durs. These
'forty-days,' for we are now far in July, he has not shewed face in
Committee; could only work there by his three shallow scoundrels, and
the terror there was of him. The Incorruptible himself sits apart; or is
seen stalking in solitary places in the fields, with an intensely
meditative air; some say, 'with eyes red-spotted,' (Deux Amis, xii.
347-73.) fruit of extreme bile: the lamentablest seagreen Chimera
that walks the Earth that July! O hapless Chimera; for thou too hadst a
life, and a heart of flesh,—what is this the stern gods, seeming to
smile all the way, have led and let thee to! Art not thou he who, few
years ago, was a young Advocate of promise; and gave up the Arras
Judgeship rather than sentence one man to die?—
What his thoughts might be? His plans for finishing the
Terror? One knows not. Dim vestiges there flit of Agrarian Law; a
victorious Sansculottism become Landed Proprietor; old Soldiers sitting
in National Mansions, in Hospital Palaces of Chambord and Chantilly;
peace bought by victory; breaches healed by Feast of Etre Supreme;—and
so, through seas of blood, to Equality, Frugality, worksome Blessedness,
Fraternity, and Republic of the virtues! Blessed shore, of such a sea of
Aristocrat blood: but how to land on it? Through one last wave: blood of
corrupt Sansculottists; traitorous or semi-traitorous Conventionals,
rebellious Talliens, Billauds, to whom with my Etre Supreme I have
become a bore; with my Apocalyptic Old Woman a laughing-stock!—So stalks
he, this poor Robespierre, like a seagreen ghost through the blooming
July. Vestiges of schemes flit dim. But what his schemes or his thoughts
were will never be known to man.
New Catacombs, some say, are digging for a huge
simultaneous butchery. Convention to be butchered, down to the right
pitch, by General Henriot and Company: Jacobin House of Lords made
dominant; and Robespierre Dictator. (Deux Amis, xii. 350-8.)
There is actually, or else there is not actually, a List made out; which
the Hairdresser has got eye on, as he frizzled the Incorruptible locks.
Each man asks himself, Is it I?
Nay, as Tradition and rumour of Anecdote still convey it,
there was a remarkable bachelor's dinner one hot day at Barrere's. For
doubt not, O Reader, this Barrere and others of them gave dinners; had
'country-house at Clichy,' with elegant enough sumptuosities, and
pleasures high-rouged! (See Vilate.) But at this dinner we speak
of, the day being so hot, it is said, the guests all stript their coats,
and left them in the drawing-room: whereupon Carnot glided out; groped
in Robespierre's pocket; found a list of Forty, his own name among them;
and tarried not at the wine-cup that day!—Ye must bestir yourselves, O
Friends; ye dull Frogs of the Marsh, mute ever since Girondism sank
under, even ye now must croak or die! Councils are held, with word and
beck; nocturnal, mysterious as death. Does not a feline Maximilien stalk
there; voiceless as yet; his green eyes red-spotted; back bent, and hair
up? Rash Tallien, with his rash temper and audacity of tongue; he shall
bell the cat. Fix a day; and be it soon, lest never!
Lo, before the fixed day, on the day which they call
Eighth of Thermidor, 26th July 1794, Robespierre himself reappears in
Convention; mounts to the Tribune! The biliary face seems clouded with
new gloom; judge whether your Talliens, Bourdons listened with interest.
It is a voice bodeful of death or of life. Long-winded, unmelodious as
the screech-owl's, sounds that prophetic voice: Degenerate condition of
Republican spirit; corrupt moderatism; Surete, Salut Committees
themselves infected; back-sliding on this hand and on that; I,
Maximilien, alone left incorruptible, ready to die at a moment's
warning. For all which what remedy is there? The Guillotine; new vigour
to the all-healing Guillotine: death to traitors of every hue! So sings
the prophetic voice; into its Convention sounding-board. The old song
this: but to-day, O Heavens! has the sounding-board ceased to act? There
is not resonance in this Convention; there is, so to speak, a gasp of
silence; nay a certain grating of one knows not what!—Lecointre, our old
Draper of Versailles, in these questionable circumstances, sees nothing
he can do so safe as rise, 'insidiously' or not insidiously, and move,
according to established wont, that the Robespierre Speech be 'printed
and sent to the Departments.' Hark: gratings, even of dissonance!
Honourable Members hint dissonance; Committee-Members, inculpated in the
Speech, utter dissonance; demand 'delay in printing.' Ever higher rises
the note of dissonance; inquiry is even made by Editor Freron: "What has
become of the Liberty of Opinions in this Convention?" The Order to
print and transmit, which had got passed, is rescinded. Robespierre,
greener than ever before, has to retire, foiled; discerning that it is
mutiny, that evil is nigh.
Mutiny is a thing of the fatallest nature in all
enterprises whatsoever; a thing so incalculable, swift-frightful; not to
be dealt with in fright. But mutiny in a Robespierre Convention, above
all,—it is like fire seen sputtering in the ship's powder-room! One
death-defiant plunge at it, this moment, and you may still tread it out:
hesitate till next moment,—ship and ship's captain, crew and cargo are
shivered far; the ship's voyage has suddenly ended between sea and sky.
If Robespierre can, to-night, produce his Henriot and Company, and get
his work done by them, he and Sansculottism may still subsist some time;
if not, probably not. Oliver Cromwell, when that Agitator Serjeant stept
forth from the ranks, with plea of grievances, and began gesticulating
and demonstrating, as the mouthpiece of Thousands expectant
there,—discerned, with those truculent eyes of his, how the matter lay;
plucked a pistol from his holsters; blew Agitator and Agitation
instantly out. Noll was a man fit for such things.
Robespierre, for his part, glides over at evening to his
Jacobin House of Lords; unfolds there, instead of some adequate
resolution, his woes, his uncommon virtues, incorruptibilities; then,
secondly, his rejected screech-owl Oration;—reads this latter over
again; and declares that he is ready to die at a moment's warning. Thou
shalt not die! shouts Jacobinism from its thousand throats.
"Robespierre, I will drink the hemlock with thee," cries Painter David,
"Je boirai la cigue avec toi;"—a thing not essential to do, but which,
in the fire of the moment, can be said.
Our Jacobin sounding-board, therefore, does act!
Applauses heaven-high cover the rejected Oration; fire-eyed fury lights
all Jacobin features: Insurrection a sacred duty; the Convention to be
purged; Sovereign People under Henriot and Municipality; we will make a
new June-Second of it: to your tents, O Israel! In this key pipes
Jacobinism; in sheer tumult of revolt. Let Tallien and all Opposition
men make off. Collot d'Herbois, though of the supreme Salut, and so
lately near shot, is elbowed, bullied; is glad to escape alive. Entering
Committee-room of Salut, all dishevelled, he finds sleek sombre
Saint-Just there, among the rest; who in his sleek way asks, "What is
passing at the Jacobins?"—"What is passing?" repeats Collot, in the
unhistrionic Cambyses' vein: "What is passing? Nothing but revolt and
horrors are passing. Ye want our lives; ye shall not have them."
Saint-Just stutters at such Cambyses'-oratory; takes his hat to
withdraw. That report he had been speaking of, Report on Republican
Things in General we may say, which is to be read in Convention on the
morrow, he cannot shew it them this moment: a friend has it; he,
Saint-Just, will get it, and send it, were he once home. Once home, he
sends not it, but an answer that he will not send it; that they will
hear it from the Tribune to-morrow.
Let every man, therefore, according to a well-known
good-advice, 'pray to Heaven, and keep his powder dry!' Paris, on the
morrow, will see a thing. Swift scouts fly dim or invisible, all night,
from Surete and Salut; from conclave to conclave; from Mother Society to
Townhall. Sleep, can it fall on the eyes of Talliens, Frerons, Collots?
Puissant Henriot, Mayor Fleuriot, Judge Coffinhal, Procureur Payan,
Robespierre and all the Jacobins are getting ready.
Tallien's eyes beamed bright, on the morrow, Ninth of
Thermidor 'about nine o'clock,' to see that the Convention had actually
met. Paris is in rumour: but at least we are met, in Legal Convention
here; we have not been snatched seriatim; treated with a Pride's Purge
at the door. "Allons, brave men of the Plain," late Frogs of the Marsh!
cried Tallien with a squeeze of the hand, as he passed in; Saint-Just's
sonorous organ being now audible from the Tribune, and the game of games
begun.
Saint-Just is verily reading that Report of his; green
Vengeance, in the shape of Robespierre, watching nigh. Behold, however,
Saint-Just has read but few sentences, when interruption rises, rapid
crescendo; when Tallien starts to his feet, and Billaud, and this man
starts and that,—and Tallien, a second time, with his: "Citoyens, at the
Jacobins last night, I trembled for the Republic. I said to myself, if
the Convention dare not strike the Tyrant, then I myself dare; and with
this I will do it, if need be," said he, whisking out a clear-gleaming
Dagger, and brandishing it there: the Steel of Brutus, as we call it.
Whereat we all bellow, and brandish, impetuous acclaim. "Tyranny;
Dictatorship! Triumvirat!" And the Salut Committee-men accuse, and all
men accuse, and uproar, and impetuously acclaim. And Saint-Just is
standing motionless, pale of face; Couthon ejaculating, "Triumvir?" with
a look at his paralytic legs. And Robespierre is struggling to speak,
but President Thuriot is jingling the bell against him, but the Hall is
sounding against him like an Aeolus-Hall: and Robespierre is mounting
the Tribune-steps and descending again; going and coming, like to choke
with rage, terror, desperation:—and mutiny is the order of the day! (Moniteur,
Nos. 311, 312; Debats, iv. 421-42; Deux Amis, xii. 390-411.)
O President Thuriot, thou that wert Elector Thuriot, and
from the Bastille battlements sawest Saint-Antoine rising like the
Ocean-tide, and hast seen much since, sawest thou ever the like of this?
Jingle of bell, which thou jinglest against Robespierre, is hardly
audible amid the Bedlam-storm; and men rage for life. "President of
Assassins," shrieks Robespierre, "I demand speech of thee for the last
time!" It cannot be had. "To you, O virtuous men of the Plain," cries
he, finding audience one moment, "I appeal to you!" The virtuous men of
the Plain sit silent as stones. And Thuriot's bell jingles, and the Hall
sounds like Aeolus's Hall. Robespierre's frothing lips are grown 'blue;'
his tongue dry, cleaving to the roof of his mouth. "The blood of Danton
chokes him," cry they. "Accusation! Decree of Accusation!" Thuriot
swiftly puts that question. Accusation passes; the incorruptible
Maximilien is decreed Accused.
"I demand to share my Brother's fate, as I have striven
to share his virtues," cries Augustin, the Younger Robespierre: Augustin
also is decreed. And Couthon, and Saint-Just, and Lebas, they are all
decreed; and packed forth,—not without difficulty, the Ushers almost
trembling to obey. Triumvirat and Company are packed forth, into Salut
Committee-room; their tongue cleaving to the roof of their mouth. You
have but to summon the Municipality; to cashier Commandant Henriot, and
launch Arrest at him; to regular formalities; hand Tinville his victims.
It is noon: the Aeolus-Hall has delivered itself; blows now victorious,
harmonious, as one irresistible wind.
And so the work is finished? One thinks so; and yet it is
not so. Alas, there is yet but the first-act finished; three or four
other acts still to come; and an uncertain catastrophe! A huge City
holds in it so many confusions: seven hundred thousand human heads; not
one of which knows what its neighbour is doing, nay not what itself is
doing.—See, accordingly, about three in the afternoon, Commandant
Henriot, how instead of sitting cashiered, arrested, he gallops along
the Quais, followed by Municipal Gendarmes, 'trampling down several
persons!' For the Townhall sits deliberating, openly insurgent: Barriers
to be shut; no Gaoler to admit any Prisoner this day;—and Henriot is
galloping towards the Tuileries, to deliver Robespierre. On the Quai de
la Ferraillerie, a young Citoyen, walking with his wife, says aloud:
"Gendarmes, that man is not your Commandant; he is under arrest." The
Gendarmes strike down the young Citoyen with the flat of their swords. (Precis
des evenemens du Neuf Thermidor, par C.A. Meda, ancien Gendarme, Paris,
1825.)
Representatives themselves (as Merlin the Thionviller)
who accost him, this puissant Henriot flings into guardhouses. He bursts
towards the Tuileries Committee-room, "to speak with Robespierre:" with
difficulty, the Ushers and Tuileries Gendarmes, earnestly pleading and
drawing sabre, seize this Henriot; get the Henriot Gendarmes persuaded
not to fight; get Robespierre and Company packed into hackney-coaches,
sent off under escort, to the Luxembourg and other Prisons. This then is
the end? May not an exhausted Convention adjourn now, for a little
repose and sustenance, 'at five o'clock?'
An exhausted Convention did it; and repented it. The end
was not come; only the end of the second-act. Hark, while exhausted
Representatives sit at victuals,—tocsin bursting from all steeples,
drums rolling, in the summer evening: Judge Coffinhal is galloping with
new Gendarmes to deliver Henriot from Tuileries Committee-room; and does
deliver him! Puissant Henriot vaults on horseback; sets to haranguing
the Tuileries Gendarmes; corrupts the Tuileries Gendarmes too; trots off
with them to Townhall. Alas, and Robespierre is not in Prison: the
Gaoler shewed his Municipal order, durst not on pain of his life, admit
any Prisoner; the Robespierre Hackney-coaches, in confused jangle and
whirl of uncertain Gendarmes, have floated safe—into the Townhall! There
sit Robespierre and Company, embraced by Municipals and Jacobins, in
sacred right of Insurrection; redacting Proclamations; sounding tocsins;
corresponding with Sections and Mother Society. Is not here a pretty
enough third-act of a natural Greek Drama; catastrophe more uncertain
than ever?
The hasty Convention rushes together again, in the
ominous nightfall: President Collot, for the chair is his, enters with
long strides, paleness on his face; claps on his hat; says with solemn
tone: "Citoyens, armed Villains have beset the Committee-rooms, and got
possession of them. The hour is come, to die at our post!" "Oui," answer
one and all: "We swear it!" It is no rhodomontade, this time, but a sad
fact and necessity; unless we do at our posts, we must verily die! Swift
therefore, Robespierre, Henriot, the Municipality, are declared Rebels;
put Hors la Loi, Out of Law. Better still, we appoint Barras Commandant
of what Armed-Force is to be had; send Missionary Representatives to all
Sections and quarters, to preach, and raise force; will die at least
with harness on our back.
What a distracted City; men riding and running, reporting
and hearsaying; the Hour clearly in travail,—child not to be named till
born! The poor Prisoners in the Luxembourg hear the rumour; tremble for
a new September. They see men making signals to them, on skylights and
roofs, apparently signals of hope; cannot in the least make out what it
is. (Memoires sur les Prisons, ii. 277.) We observe however, in
the eventide, as usual, the Death-tumbrils faring South-eastward,
through Saint-Antoine, towards their Barrier du Trone. Saint-Antoine's
tough bowels melt; Saint-Antoine surrounds the Tumbrils; says, It shall
not be. O Heavens, why should it! Henriot and Gendarmes, scouring the
streets that way, bellow, with waved sabres, that it must. Quit hope, ye
poor Doomed! The Tumbrils move on.
But in this set of Tumbrils there are two other things
notable: one notable person; and one want of a notable person. The
notable person is Lieutenant-General Loiserolles, a nobleman by birth,
and by nature; laying down his life here for his son. In the Prison of
Saint-Lazare, the night before last, hurrying to the Grate to hear the
Death-list read, he caught the name of his son. The son was asleep at
the moment. "I am Loiserolles," cried the old man: at Tinville's bar, an
error in the Christian name is little; small objection was made. The
want of the notable person, again, is that of Deputy Paine! Paine has
sat in the Luxembourg since January; and seemed forgotten; but Fouquier
had pricked him at last. The Turnkey, List in hand, is marking with
chalk the outer doors of to-morrow's Fournee. Paine's outer door
happened to be open, turned back on the wall; the Turnkey marked it on
the side next him, and hurried on: another Turnkey came, and shut it; no
chalk-mark now visible, the Fournee went without Paine. Paine's life lay
not there.—
Our fifth-act, of this natural Greek Drama, with its
natural unities, can only be painted in gross; somewhat as that antique
Painter, driven desperate, did the foam! For through this blessed July
night, there is clangour, confusion very great, of marching troops; of
Sections going this way, Sections going that; of Missionary
Representatives reading Proclamations by torchlight; Missionary
Legendre, who has raised force somewhere, emptying out the Jacobins, and
flinging their key on the Convention table: "I have locked their door;
it shall be Virtue that re-opens it." Paris, we say, is set against
itself, rushing confused, as Ocean-currents do; a huge Mahlstrom,
sounding there, under cloud of night. Convention sits permanent on this
hand; Municipality most permanent on that. The poor Prisoners hear
tocsin and rumour; strive to bethink them of the signals apparently of
hope. Meek continual Twilight streaming up, which will be Dawn and a
To-morrow, silvers the Northern hem of Night; it wends and wends there,
that meek brightness, like a silent prophecy, along the great Ring-Dial
of the Heaven. So still, eternal! And on Earth all is confused shadow
and conflict; dissidence, tumultuous gloom and glare; and Destiny as yet
shakes her doubtful urn.
About three in the morning, the dissident Armed-Forces
have met. Henriot's Armed Force stood ranked in the Place de Greve; and
now Barras's, which he has recruited, arrives there; and they front each
other, cannon bristling against cannon. Citoyens! cries the voice of
Discretion, loudly enough, Before coming to bloodshed, to endless
civil-war, hear the Convention Decree read: 'Robespierre and all rebels
Out of Law!'—Out of Law? There is terror in the sound: unarmed Citoyens
disperse rapidly home; Municipal Cannoneers range themselves on the
Convention side, with shouting. At which shout, Henriot descends from
his upper room, far gone in drink as some say; finds his Place de Greve
empty; the cannons' mouth turned towards him; and, on the whole,—that it
is now the catastrophe!
Stumbling in again, the wretched drunk-sobered Henriot
announces: "All is lost!" "Miserable! it is thou that hast lost it," cry
they: and fling him, or else he flings himself, out of window: far
enough down; into masonwork and horror of cesspool; not into death but
worse. Augustin Robespierre follows him; with the like fate. Saint-Just
called on Lebas to kill him: who would not. Couthon crept under a table;
attempting to kill himself; not doing it.—On entering that Sanhedrim of
Insurrection, we find all as good as extinct; undone, ready for seizure.
Robespierre was sitting on a chair, with pistol shot blown through, not
his head, but his under jaw; the suicidal hand had failed. (Meda. p.
384.) Meda asserts that it was he who, with infinite courage, though
in a lefthanded manner, shot Robespierre. Meda got promoted for his
services of this night; and died General and Baron. Few credited Meda (in
what was otherwise incredible.) With prompt zeal, not without
trouble, we gather these wretched Conspirators; fish up even Henriot and
Augustin, bleeding and foul; pack them all, rudely enough, into carts;
and shall, before sunrise, have them safe under lock and key. Amid
shoutings and embracings.
Robespierre lay in an anteroom of the Convention Hall,
while his Prison-escort was getting ready; the mangled jaw bound up
rudely with bloody linen: a spectacle to men. He lies stretched on a
table, a deal-box his pillow; the sheath of the pistol is still clenched
convulsively in his hand. Men bully him, insult him: his eyes still
indicate intelligence; he speaks no word. 'He had on the sky-blue coat
he had got made for the Feast of the Etre Supreme'—O reader, can thy
hard heart hold out against that? His trousers were nankeen; the
stockings had fallen down over the ankles. He spake no word more in this
world.
And so, at six in the morning, a victorious Convention
adjourns. Report flies over Paris as on golden wings; penetrates the
Prisons; irradiates the faces of those that were ready to perish:
turnkeys and moutons, fallen from their high estate, look mute and blue.
It is the 28th day of July, called 10th of Thermidor, year 1794.
Fouquier had but to identify; his Prisoners being already
Out of Law. At four in the afternoon, never before were the streets of
Paris seen so crowded. From the Palais de Justice to the Place de la
Revolution, for thither again go the Tumbrils this time, it is one dense
stirring mass; all windows crammed; the very roofs and ridge-tiles
budding forth human Curiosity, in strange gladness. The Death-tumbrils,
with their motley Batch of Outlaws, some Twenty-three or so, from
Maximilien to Mayor Fleuriot and Simon the Cordwainer, roll on. All eyes
are on Robespierre's Tumbril, where he, his jaw bound in dirty linen,
with his half-dead Brother, and half-dead Henriot, lie shattered; their
'seventeen hours' of agony about to end. The Gendarmes point their
swords at him, to shew the people which is he. A woman springs on the
Tumbril; clutching the side of it with one hand; waving the other
Sibyl-like; and exclaims: "The death of thee gladdens my very heart,
m'enivre de joie;" Robespierre opened his eyes; "Scelerat, go down to
Hell, with the curses of all wives and mothers!"—At the foot of the
scaffold, they stretched him on the ground till his turn came. Lifted
aloft, his eyes again opened; caught the bloody axe. Samson wrenched the
coat off him; wrenched the dirty linen from his jaw: the jaw fell
powerless, there burst from him a cry;—hideous to hear and see. Samson,
thou canst not be too quick!
Samson's work done, there burst forth shout on shout of
applause. Shout, which prolongs itself not only over Paris, but over
France, but over Europe, and down to this Generation. Deservedly, and
also undeservedly. O unhappiest Advocate of Arras, wert thou worse than
other Advocates? Stricter man, according to his Formula, to his Credo
and his Cant, of probities, benevolences, pleasures-of-virtue, and such
like, lived not in that age. A man fitted, in some luckier settled age,
to have become one of those incorruptible barren Pattern-Figures, and
have had marble-tablets and funeral-sermons! His poor landlord, the
Cabinetmaker in the Rue Saint-Honore, loved him; his Brother died for
him. May God be merciful to him, and to us.
This is end of the Reign of Terror; new glorious
Revolution named of Thermidor; of Thermidor 9th, year 2; which being
interpreted into old slave-style means 27th of July, 1794. Terror is
ended; and death in the Place de la Revolution, were the 'Tail of
Robespierre' once executed; which service Fouquier in large Batches is
swiftly managing. |