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THE FRENCH REVOLUTION: A HISTORY |
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VOLUME II. THE CONSTITUTION BOOK I. THE FEAST OF PIKES The victim having once got his stroke-of-grace, the catastrophe can be considered as almost come. There is small interest now in watching his long low moans: notable only are his sharper agonies, what convulsive struggles he may take to cast the torture off from him; and then finally the last departure of life itself, and how he lies extinct and ended, either wrapt like Caesar in decorous mantle-folds, or unseemly sunk together, like one that had not the force even to die.
Was French Royalty, when wrenched forth from its
tapestries in that fashion, on that Sixth of October 1789, such a
victim? Universal France, and Royal Proclamation to all the Provinces,
answers anxiously, No; nevertheless one may fear the worst. Royalty was
beforehand so decrepit, moribund, there is little life in it to heal an
injury. How much of its strength, which was of the imagination merely,
has fled; Rascality having looked plainly in the King's face, and not
died! When the assembled crows can pluck up their scarecrow, and say to
it, Here shalt thou stand and not there; and can treat with it, and make
it, from an infinite, a quite finite Constitutional scarecrow,—what is
to be looked for? Not in the finite Constitutional scarecrow, but in
what still unmeasured, infinite-seeming force may rally round it, is
there thenceforth any hope. For it is most true that all available
Authority is mystic in its conditions, and comes 'by the grace of God.'
Cheerfuller than watching the death-struggles of Royalism
will it be to watch the growth and gambollings of Sansculottism; for, in
human things, especially in human society, all death is but a
death-birth: thus if the sceptre is departing from Louis, it is only
that, in other forms, other sceptres, were it even pike-sceptres, may
bear sway. In a prurient element, rich with nutritive influences, we
shall find that Sansculottism grows lustily, and even frisks in not
ungraceful sport: as indeed most young creatures are sportful; nay, may
it not be noted further, that as the grown cat, and cat-species
generally, is the cruellest thing known, so the merriest is precisely
the kitten, or growing cat?
But fancy the Royal Family risen from its truckle-beds on
the morrow of that mad day: fancy the Municipal inquiry, "How would your
Majesty please to lodge?"—and then that the King's rough answer, "Each
may lodge as he can, I am well enough," is congeed and bowed away, in
expressive grins, by the Townhall Functionaries, with obsequious
upholsterers at their back; and how the Chateau of the Tuileries is
repainted, regarnished into a golden Royal Residence; and Lafayette with
his blue National Guards lies encompassing it, as blue Neptune (in
the language of poets) does an island, wooingly. Thither may the
wrecks of rehabilitated Loyalty gather; if it will become
Constitutional; for Constitutionalism thinks no evil; Sansculottism
itself rejoices in the King's countenance. The rubbish of a Menadic
Insurrection, as in this ever-kindly world all rubbish can and must be,
is swept aside; and so again, on clear arena, under new conditions, with
something even of a new stateliness, we begin a new course of action.
Arthur Young has witnessed the strangest scene: Majesty
walking unattended in the Tuileries Gardens; and miscellaneous tricolor
crowds, who cheer it, and reverently make way for it: the very Queen
commands at lowest respectful silence, regretful avoidance. (Arthur
Young's Travels, i. 264-280.) Simple ducks, in those royal waters,
quackle for crumbs from young royal fingers: the little Dauphin has a
little railed garden, where he is seen delving, with ruddy cheeks and
flaxen curled hair; also a little hutch to put his tools in, and screen
himself against showers. What peaceable simplicity! Is it peace of a
Father restored to his children? Or of a Taskmaster who has lost his
whip? Lafayette and the Municipality and universal Constitutionalism
assert the former, and do what is in them to realise it. Such Patriotism
as snarls dangerously, and shows teeth, Patrollotism shall suppress; or
far better, Royalty shall soothe down the angry hair of it, by gentle
pattings; and, most effectual of all, by fuller diet. Yes, not only
shall Paris be fed, but the King's hand be seen in that work. The
household goods of the Poor shall, up to a certain amount, by royal
bounty, be disengaged from pawn, and that insatiable Mont de Piete
disgorge: rides in the city with their vive-le-roi need not fail; and so
by substance and show, shall Royalty, if man's art can popularise it, be
popularised. (Deux Amis, iii. c. 10.)
Or, alas, is it neither restored Father nor diswhipped
Taskmaster that walks there; but an anomalous complex of both these, and
of innumerable other heterogeneities; reducible to no rubric, if not to
this newly devised one: King Louis Restorer of French Liberty? Man
indeed, and King Louis like other men, lives in this world to make rule
out of the ruleless; by his living energy, he shall force the absurd
itself to become less absurd. But then if there be no living energy;
living passivity only? King Serpent, hurled into his unexpected watery
dominion, did at least bite, and assert credibly that he was there: but
as for the poor King Log, tumbled hither and thither as thousandfold
chance and other will than his might direct, how happy for him that he
was indeed wooden; and, doing nothing, could also see and suffer
nothing! It is a distracted business.
For his French Majesty, meanwhile, one of the worst
things is that he can get no hunting. Alas, no hunting henceforth; only
a fatal being-hunted! Scarcely, in the next June weeks, shall he taste
again the joys of the game-destroyer; in next June, and never more. He
sends for his smith-tools; gives, in the course of the day, official or
ceremonial business being ended, 'a few strokes of the file, quelques
coups de lime. (Le Chateau des Tuileries, ou recit, &c., par Roussel
(in Hist. Parl. iv. 195-219).) Innocent brother mortal, why
wert thou not an obscure substantial maker of locks; but doomed in that
other far-seen craft, to be a maker only of world-follies, unrealities;
things self destructive, which no mortal hammering could rivet into
coherence!
Poor Louis is not without insight, nor even without the
elements of will; some sharpness of temper, spurting at times from a
stagnating character. If harmless inertness could save him, it were
well; but he will slumber and painfully dream, and to do aught is not
given him. Royalist Antiquarians still shew the rooms where Majesty and
suite, in these extraordinary circumstances, had their lodging. Here sat
the Queen; reading,—for she had her library brought hither, though the
King refused his; taking vehement counsel of the vehement uncounselled;
sorrowing over altered times; yet with sure hope of better: in her young
rosy Boy, has she not the living emblem of hope! It is a murky, working
sky; yet with golden gleams—of dawn, or of deeper meteoric night? Here
again this chamber, on the other side of the main entrance, was the
King's: here his Majesty breakfasted, and did official work; here daily
after breakfast he received the Queen; sometimes in pathetic
friendliness; sometimes in human sulkiness, for flesh is weak; and, when
questioned about business would answer: "Madame, your business is with
the children." Nay, Sire, were it not better you, your Majesty's self,
took the children? So asks impartial History; scornful that the thicker
vessel was not also the stronger; pity-struck for the porcelain-clay of
humanity rather than for the tile-clay,—though indeed both were broken!
So, however, in this Medicean Tuileries, shall the French
King and Queen now sit, for one-and-forty months; and see a
wild-fermenting France work out its own destiny, and theirs. Months
bleak, ungenial, of rapid vicissitude; yet with a mild pale splendour,
here and there: as of an April that were leading to leafiest Summer; as
of an October that led only to everlasting Frost. Medicean Tuileries,
how changed since it was a peaceful Tile field! Or is the ground itself
fate-stricken, accursed: an Atreus' Palace; for that Louvre window is
still nigh, out of which a Capet, whipt of the Furies, fired his signal
of the Saint Bartholomew! Dark is the way of the Eternal as mirrored in
this world of Time: God's way is in the sea, and His path in the great
deep.
Chapter 2.
In the Salle de Manege.
To believing Patriots, however, it is now clear, that the
Constitution will march, marcher,—had it once legs to stand on. Quick,
then, ye Patriots, bestir yourselves, and make it; shape legs for it! In
the Archeveche, or Archbishop's Palace, his Grace himself having fled;
and afterwards in the Riding-hall, named Manege, close on the Tuileries:
there does a National Assembly apply itself to the miraculous work.
Successfully, had there been any heaven-scaling Prometheus among them;
not successfully since there was none! There, in noisy debate, for the
sessions are occasionally 'scandalous,' and as many as three speakers
have been seen in the Tribune at once,—let us continue to fancy it
wearing the slow months.
Tough, dogmatic, long of wind is Abbe Maury; Ciceronian
pathetic is Cazales. Keen-trenchant, on the other side, glitters a young
Barnave; abhorrent of sophistry; sheering, like keen Damascus sabre, all
sophistry asunder,—reckless what else he sheer with it. Simple seemest
thou, O solid Dutch-built Petion; if solid, surely dull. Nor lifegiving
in that tone of thine, livelier polemical Rabaut. With ineffable
serenity sniffs great Sieyes, aloft, alone; his Constitution ye may
babble over, ye may mar, but can by no possibility mend: is not Polity a
science he has exhausted? Cool, slow, two military Lameths are visible,
with their quality sneer, or demi-sneer; they shall gallantly refund
their Mother's Pension, when the Red Book is produced; gallantly be
wounded in duels. A Marquis Toulongeon, whose Pen we yet thank, sits
there; in stoical meditative humour, oftenest silent, accepts what
destiny will send. Thouret and Parlementary Duport produce mountains of
Reformed Law; liberal, Anglomaniac, available and unavailable. Mortals
rise and fall. Shall goose Gobel, for example,—or Go(with an umlaut)bel,
for he is of Strasburg German breed, be a Constitutional Archbishop?
Alone of all men there, Mirabeau may begin to discern
clearly whither all this is tending. Patriotism, accordingly, regrets
that his zeal seems to be getting cool. In that famed Pentecost-Night of
the Fourth of August, when new Faith rose suddenly into miraculous fire,
and old Feudality was burnt up, men remarked that Mirabeau took no hand
in it; that, in fact, he luckily happened to be absent. But did he not
defend the Veto, nay Veto Absolu; and tell vehement Barnave that six
hundred irresponsible senators would make of all tyrannies the
insupportablest? Again, how anxious was he that the King's Ministers
should have seat and voice in the National Assembly;—doubtless with an
eye to being Minister himself! Whereupon the National Assembly decides,
what is very momentous, that no Deputy shall be Minister; he, in his
haughty stormful manner, advising us to make it, 'no Deputy called
Mirabeau.' (Moniteur, Nos. 65, 86 (29th September, 7th November,
1789).) A man of perhaps inveterate Feudalisms; of stratagems;
too often visible leanings towards the Royalist side: a man suspect;
whom Patriotism will unmask! Thus, in these June days, when the question
Who shall have right to declare war? comes on, you hear hoarse Hawkers
sound dolefully through the streets, "Grand Treason of Count Mirabeau,
price only one sou;"—because he pleads that it shall be not the Assembly
but the King! Pleads; nay prevails: for in spite of the hoarse Hawkers,
and an endless Populace raised by them to the pitch even of 'Lanterne,'
he mounts the Tribune next day; grim-resolute; murmuring aside to his
friends that speak of danger: "I know it: I must come hence either in
triumph, or else torn in fragments;" and it was in triumph that he came.
A man of stout heart; whose popularity is not of the
populace, 'pas populaciere;' whom no clamour of unwashed mobs without
doors, or of washed mobs within, can scarce from his way! Dumont
remembers hearing him deliver a Report on Marseilles; 'every word was
interrupted on the part of the Cote Droit by abusive epithets;
calumniator, liar, assassin, scoundrel (scelerat): Mirabeau
pauses a moment, and, in a honeyed tone, addressing the most furious,
says: "I wait, Messieurs, till these amenities be exhausted."' (Dumont,
Souvenirs, p. 278.) A man enigmatic, difficult to unmask! For
example, whence comes his money? Can the profit of a Newspaper, sorely
eaten into by Dame Le Jay; can this, and the eighteen francs a-day your
National Deputy has, be supposed equal to this expenditure? House in the
Chaussee d'Antin; Country-house at Argenteuil; splendours,
sumptuosities, orgies;—living as if he had a mint! All saloons barred
against Adventurer Mirabeau, are flung wide open to King Mirabeau, the
cynosure of Europe, whom female France flutters to behold,—though the
Man Mirabeau is one and the same. As for money, one may conjecture that
Royalism furnishes it; which if Royalism do, will not the same be
welcome, as money always is to him?
'Sold,' whatever Patriotism thinks, he cannot readily be:
the spiritual fire which is in that man; which shining through such
confusions is nevertheless Conviction, and makes him strong, and without
which he had no strength,—is not buyable nor saleable; in such
transference of barter, it would vanish and not be. Perhaps 'paid and
not sold, paye pas vendu:' as poor Rivarol, in the unhappier converse
way, calls himself 'sold and not paid!' A man travelling, comet-like, in
splendour and nebulosity, his wild way; whom telescopic Patriotism may
long watch, but, without higher mathematics, will not make out. A
questionable most blameable man; yet to us the far notablest of all.
With rich munificence, as we often say, in a most blinkard,
bespectacled, logic-chopping generation, Nature has gifted this man with
an eye. Welcome is his word, there where he speaks and works; and
growing ever welcomer; for it alone goes to the heart of the business:
logical cobwebbery shrinks itself together; and thou seest a thing, how
it is, how is may be worked with.
Unhappily our National Assembly has much to do: a France
to regenerate; and France is short of so many requisites; short even of
cash! These same Finances give trouble enough; no choking of the
Deficit; which gapes ever, Give, give! To appease the Deficit we venture
on a hazardous step, sale of the Clergy's Lands and superfluous
Edifices; most hazardous. Nay, given the sale, who is to buy them,
ready-money having fled? Wherefore, on the 19th day of December, a
paper-money of 'Assignats,' of Bonds secured, or assigned, on that
Clerico-National Property, and unquestionable at least in payment of
that,—is decreed: the first of a long series of like financial
performances, which shall astonish mankind. So that now, while old rags
last, there shall be no lack of circulating medium; whether of
commodities to circulate thereon is another question. But, after all,
does not this Assignat business speak volumes for modern science?
Bankruptcy, we may say, was come, as the end of all Delusions needs must
come: yet how gently, in softening diffusion, in mild succession, was it
hereby made to fall;—like no all-destroying avalanche; like gentle
showers of a powdery impalpable snow, shower after shower, till all was
indeed buried, and yet little was destroyed that could not be replaced,
be dispensed with! To such length has modern machinery reached.
Bankruptcy, we said, was great; but indeed Money itself is a standing
miracle.
On the whole, it is a matter of endless difficulty, that
of the Clergy. Clerical property may be made the Nation's, and the
Clergy hired servants of the State; but if so, is it not an altered
Church? Adjustment enough, of the most confused sort, has become
unavoidable. Old landmarks, in any sense, avail not in a new France. Nay
literally, the very Ground is new divided; your old party-coloured
Provinces become new uniform Departments, Eighty-three in
number;—whereby, as in some sudden shifting of the Earth's axis, no
mortal knows his new latitude at once. The Twelve old Parlements too,
what is to be done with them? The old Parlements are declared to be all
'in permanent vacation,'—till once the new equal-justice, of
Departmental Courts, National Appeal-Court, of elective Justices,
Justices of Peace, and other Thouret-and-Duport apparatus be got ready.
They have to sit there, these old Parlements, uneasily waiting; as it
were, with the rope round their neck; crying as they can, Is there none
to deliver us? But happily the answer being, None, none, they are a
manageable class, these Parlements. They can be bullied, even into
silence; the Paris Parliament, wiser than most, has never whimpered.
They will and must sit there; in such vacation as is fit; their Chamber
of Vacation distributes in the interim what little justice is going.
With the rope round their neck, their destiny may be succinct! On the
13th of November 1790, Mayor Bailly shall walk to the Palais de Justice,
few even heeding him; and with municipal seal-stamp and a little hot
wax, seal up the Parlementary Paper-rooms,—and the dread Parlement of
Paris pass away, into Chaos, gently as does a Dream! So shall the
Parlements perish, succinctly; and innumerable eyes be dry.
Not so the Clergy. For granting even that Religion were
dead; that it had died, half-centuries ago, with unutterable Dubois; or
emigrated lately, to Alsace, with Necklace-Cardinal Rohan; or that it
now walked as goblin revenant with Bishop Talleyrand of Autun; yet does
not the Shadow of Religion, the Cant of Religion, still linger? The
Clergy have means and material: means, of number, organization, social
weight; a material, at lowest, of public ignorance, known to be the
mother of devotion. Nay, withal, is it incredible that there might, in
simple hearts, latent here and there like gold grains in the mud-beach,
still dwell some real Faith in God, of so singular and tenacious a sort
that even a Maury or a Talleyrand, could still be the symbol for
it?—Enough, and Clergy has strength, the Clergy has craft and
indignation. It is a most fatal business this of the Clergy. A weltering
hydra-coil, which the National Assembly has stirred up about its ears;
hissing, stinging; which cannot be appeased, alive; which cannot be
trampled dead! Fatal, from first to last! Scarcely after fifteen months'
debating, can a Civil Constitution of the Clergy be so much as got to
paper; and then for getting it into reality? Alas, such Civil
Constitution is but an agreement to disagree. It divides France from end
to end, with a new split, infinitely complicating all the other
splits;—Catholicism, what of it there is left, with the Cant of
Catholicism, raging on the one side, and sceptic Heathenism on the
other; both, by contradiction , waxing fanatic. What endless jarring, of
Refractory hated Priests, and Constitutional despised ones; of tender
consciences, like the King's, and consciences hot-seared, like certain
of his People's: the whole to end in Feasts of Reason and a War of La
Vendee! So deep-seated is Religion in the heart of man, and holds of all
infinite passions. If the dead echo of it still did so much, what could
not the living voice of it once do?
Finance and Constitution, Law and Gospel: this surely
were work enough; yet this is not all. In fact, the Ministry, and Necker
himself whom a brass inscription 'fastened by the people over his
door-lintel' testifies to be the 'Ministre adore,' are dwindling into
clearer and clearer nullity. Execution or legislation, arrangement or
detail, from their nerveless fingers all drops undone; all lights at
last on the toiled shoulders of an august Representative Body.
Heavy-laden National Assembly! It has to hear of innumerable fresh
revolts, Brigand expeditions; of Chateaus in the West, especially of
Charter-chests, Chartiers, set on fire; for there too the overloaded Ass
frightfully recalcitrates. Of Cities in the South full of heats and
jealousies; which will end in crossed sabres, Marseilles against Toulon,
and Carpentras beleaguered by Avignon;—such Royalist collision in a
career of Freedom; nay Patriot collision, which a mere difference of
velocity will bring about! Of a Jourdan Coup-tete, who has skulked
thitherward, from the claws of the Chatelet; and will raise whole
scoundrel-regiments.
Also it has to hear of Royalist Camp of Jales: Jales
mountain-girdled Plain, amid the rocks of the Cevennes; whence Royalism,
as is feared and hoped, may dash down like a mountain deluge, and
submerge France! A singular thing this camp of Jales; existing mostly on
paper. For the Soldiers at Jales, being peasants or National Guards,
were in heart sworn Sansculottes; and all that the Royalist Captains
could do was, with false words, to keep them, or rather keep the report
of them, drawn up there, visible to all imaginations, for a terror and a
sign,—if peradventure France might be reconquered by theatrical
machinery, by the picture of a Royalist Army done to the life! (Dampmartin,
Evenemens, i. 208.) Not till the third summer was this portent,
burning out by fits and then fading, got finally extinguished; was the
old Castle of Jales, no Camp being visible to the bodily eye, got blown
asunder by some National Guards.
Also it has to hear not only of Brissot and his Friends
of the Blacks, but by and by of a whole St. Domingo blazing skyward;
blazing in literal fire, and in far worse metaphorical; beaconing the
nightly main. Also of the shipping interest, and the landed-interest,
and all manner of interests, reduced to distress. Of Industry every
where manacled, bewildered; and only Rebellion thriving. Of
sub-officers, soldiers and sailors in mutiny by land and water. Of
soldiers, at Nanci, as we shall see, needing to be cannonaded by a brave
Bouille. Of sailors, nay the very galley-slaves, at Brest, needing also
to be cannonaded; but with no Bouille to do it. For indeed, to say it in
a word, in those days there was no King in Israel, and every man did
that which was right in his own eyes. (See Deux Amis, iii. c. 14; iv.
c. 2, 3, 4, 7, 9, 14. Expedition des Volontaires de Brest sur Lannion;
Les Lyonnais Sauveurs des Dauphinois; Massacre au Mans; Troubles du
Maine (Pamphlets and Excerpts, in Hist. Parl. iii. 251; iv. 162-168),
&c.)
Such things has an august National Assembly to hear of,
as it goes on regenerating France. Sad and stern: but what remedy? Get
the Constitution ready; and all men will swear to it: for do not
'Addresses of adhesion' arrive by the cartload? In this manner, by
Heaven's blessing, and a Constitution got ready, shall the bottomless
fire-gulf be vaulted in, with rag-paper; and Order will wed Freedom, and
live with her there,—till it grow too hot for them. O Cote Gauche,
worthy are ye, as the adhesive Addresses generally say, to 'fix the
regards of the Universe;' the regards of this one poor Planet, at
lowest!—
Nay, it must be owned, the Cote Droit makes a still
madder figure. An irrational generation; irrational, imbecile, and with
the vehement obstinacy characteristic of that; a generation which will
not learn. Falling Bastilles, Insurrections of Women, thousands of
smoking Manorhouses, a country bristling with no crop but that of
Sansculottic steel: these were tolerably didactic lessons; but them they
have not taught. There are still men, of whom it was of old written,
Bray them in a mortar! Or, in milder language, They have wedded their
delusions: fire nor steel, nor any sharpness of Experience, shall sever
the bond; till death do us part! Of such may the Heavens have mercy; for
the Earth, with her rigorous Necessity, will have none.
Admit, at the same time, that it was most natural. Man
lives by Hope: Pandora when her box of gods'-gifts flew all out, and
became gods'-curses, still retained Hope. How shall an irrational
mortal, when his high-place is never so evidently pulled down, and he,
being irrational, is left resourceless,—part with the belief that it
will be rebuilt? It would make all so straight again; it seems so
unspeakably desirable; so reasonable,—would you but look at it aright!
For, must not the thing which was continue to be; or else the solid
World dissolve? Yes, persist, O infatuated Sansculottes of France!
Revolt against constituted Authorities; hunt out your rightful
Seigneurs, who at bottom so loved you, and readily shed their blood for
you,—in country's battles as at Rossbach and elsewhere; and, even in
preserving game, were preserving you, could ye but have understood it:
hunt them out, as if they were wild wolves; set fire to their Chateaus
and Chartiers as to wolf-dens; and what then? Why, then turn every man
his hand against his fellow! In confusion, famine, desolation, regret
the days that are gone; rueful recall them, recall us with them. To
repentant prayers we will not be deaf.
So, with dimmer or clearer consciousness, must the Right
Side reason and act. An inevitable position perhaps; but a most false
one for them. Evil, be thou our good: this henceforth must virtually be
their prayer. The fiercer the effervescence grows, the sooner will it
pass; for after all it is but some mad effervescence; the World is
solid, and cannot dissolve.
For the rest, if they have any positive industry, it is
that of plots, and backstairs conclaves. Plots which cannot be executed;
which are mostly theoretic on their part;—for which nevertheless this
and the other practical Sieur Augeard, Sieur Maillebois, Sieur Bonne
Savardin, gets into trouble, gets imprisoned, and escapes with
difficulty. Nay there is a poor practical Chevalier Favras who, not
without some passing reflex on Monsieur himself, gets hanged for them,
amid loud uproar of the world. Poor Favras, he keeps dictating his last
will at the 'Hotel-de-Ville, through the whole remainder of the day,' a
weary February day; offers to reveal secrets, if they will save him;
handsomely declines since they will not; then dies, in the flare of
torchlight, with politest composure; remarking, rather than exclaiming,
with outspread hands: "People, I die innocent; pray for me." (See
Deux Amis, iv. c. 14, 7; Hist. Parl. vi. 384.) Poor Favras;—type of
so much that has prowled indefatigable over France, in days now ending;
and, in freer field, might have earned instead of prowling,—to thee it
is no theory!
In the Senate-house again, the attitude of the Right Side
is that of calm unbelief. Let an august National Assembly make a
Fourth-of-August Abolition of Feudality; declare the Clergy
State-servants who shall have wages; vote Suspensive Vetos, new
Law-Courts; vote or decree what contested thing it will; have it
responded to from the four corners of France, nay get King's Sanction,
and what other Acceptance were conceivable,—the Right Side, as we find,
persists, with imperturbablest tenacity, in considering, and ever and
anon shews that it still considers, all these so-called Decrees as mere
temporary whims, which indeed stand on paper, but in practice and fact
are not, and cannot be. Figure the brass head of an Abbe Maury flooding
forth Jesuitic eloquence in this strain; dusky d'Espremenil, Barrel
Mirabeau (probably in liquor), and enough of others, cheering him
from the Right; and, for example, with what visage a seagreen
Robespierre eyes him from the Left. And how Sieyes ineffably sniffs on
him, or does not deign to sniff; and how the Galleries groan in spirit,
or bark rabid on him: so that to escape the Lanterne, on stepping forth,
he needs presence of mind, and a pair of pistols in his girdle! For he
is one of the toughest of men.
Here indeed becomes notable one great difference between
our two kinds of civil war; between the modern lingual or
Parliamentary-logical kind, and the ancient, or manual kind, in the
steel battle-field;—much to the disadvantage of the former. In the
manual kind, where you front your foe with drawn weapon, one right
stroke is final; for, physically speaking, when the brains are out the
man does honestly die, and trouble you no more. But how different when
it is with arguments you fight! Here no victory yet definable can be
considered as final. Beat him down, with Parliamentary invective, till
sense be fled; cut him in two, hanging one half in this dilemma-horn,
the other on that; blow the brains or thinking-faculty quite out of him
for the time: it skills not; he rallies and revives on the morrow;
to-morrow he repairs his golden fires! The think that will logically
extinguish him is perhaps still a desideratum in Constitutional
civilisation. For how, till a man know, in some measure, at what point
he becomes logically defunct, can Parliamentary Business be carried on,
and Talk cease or slake?
Doubtless it was some feeling of this difficulty; and the
clear insight how little such knowledge yet existed in the French
Nation, new in the Constitutional career, and how defunct Aristocrats
would continue to walk for unlimited periods, as Partridge the
Alamanack-maker did,—that had sunk into the deep mind of People's-friend
Marat, an eminently practical mind; and had grown there, in that richest
putrescent soil, into the most original plan of action ever submitted to
a People. Not yet has it grown; but it has germinated, it is growing;
rooting itself into Tartarus, branching towards Heaven: the second
season hence, we shall see it risen out of the bottomless Darkness,
full-grown, into disastrous Twilight,—a Hemlock-tree, great as the
world; on or under whose boughs all the People's-friends of the world
may lodge. 'Two hundred and sixty thousand Aristocrat heads:' that is
the precisest calculation, though one would not stand on a few hundreds;
yet we never rise as high as the round three hundred thousand. Shudder
at it, O People; but it is as true as that ye yourselves, and your
People's-friend, are alive. These prating Senators of yours hover
ineffectual on the barren letter, and will never save the Revolution. A
Cassandra-Marat cannot do it, with his single shrunk arm; but with a few
determined men it were possible. "Give me," said the People's-friend, in
his cold way, when young Barbaroux, once his pupil in a course of what
was called Optics, went to see him, "Give me two hundred Naples Bravoes,
armed each with a good dirk, and a muff on his left arm by way of
shield: with them I will traverse France, and accomplish the
Revolution." (Memoires de Barbaroux (Paris, 1822), p. 57.)
Nay, be brave, young Barbaroux; for thou seest, there is no jesting in
those rheumy eyes; in that soot-bleared figure, most earnest of created
things; neither indeed is there madness, of the strait-waistcoat sort.
Such produce shall the Time ripen in cavernous Marat, the
man forbid; living in Paris cellars, lone as fanatic Anchorite in his
Thebaid; say, as far-seen Simon on his Pillar,—taking peculiar views
therefrom. Patriots may smile; and, using him as bandog now to be
muzzled, now to be let bark, name him, as Desmoulins does, 'Maximum of
Patriotism' and 'Cassandra-Marat:' but were it not singular if this
dirk-and-muff plan of his (with superficial modifications) proved
to be precisely the plan adopted?
After this manner, in these circumstances, do august
Senators regenerate France. Nay, they are, in very deed, believed to be
regenerating it; on account of which great fact, main fact of their
history, the wearied eye can never be permitted wholly to ignore them.
But looking away now from these precincts of the
Tuileries, where Constitutional Royalty, let Lafayette water it as he
will, languishes too like a cut branch; and august Senators are perhaps
at bottom only perfecting their 'theory of defective verbs,'—how does
the young Reality, young Sansculottism thrive? The attentive observer
can answer: It thrives bravely; putting forth new buds; expanding the
old buds into leaves, into boughs. Is not French Existence, as before,
most prurient, all loosened, most nutrient for it? Sansculottism has the
property of growing by what other things die of: by agitation,
contention, disarrangement; nay in a word, by what is the symbol and
fruit of all these: Hunger.
In such a France as this, Hunger, as we have remarked,
can hardly fail. The Provinces, the Southern Cities feel it in their
turn; and what it brings: Exasperation, preternatural Suspicion. In
Paris some halcyon days of abundance followed the Menadic Insurrection,
with its Versailles grain-carts, and recovered Restorer of Liberty; but
they could not continue. The month is still October when famishing
Saint-Antoine, in a moment of passion, seizes a poor Baker, innocent
'Francois the Baker;' (21st October, 1789 (Moniteur, No. 76).)
and hangs him, in Constantinople wise;—but even this, singular as it my
seem, does not cheapen bread! Too clear it is, no Royal bounty, no
Municipal dexterity can adequately feed a Bastille-destroying Paris.
Wherefore, on view of the hanged Baker, Constitutionalism in sorrow and
anger demands 'Loi Martiale,' a kind of Riot Act;—and indeed gets it,
most readily, almost before the sun goes down.
This is that famed Martial law, with its Red Flag, its
'Drapeau Rouge:' in virtue of which Mayor Bailly, or any Mayor, has but
henceforth to hang out that new Oriflamme of his; then to read or mumble
something about the King's peace; and, after certain pauses, serve any
undispersing Assemblage with musket-shot, or whatever shot will disperse
it. A decisive Law; and most just on one proviso: that all Patrollotism
be of God, and all mob-assembling be of the Devil;—otherwise not so
just. Mayor Bailly be unwilling to use it! Hang not out that new
Oriflamme, flame not of gold but of the want of gold! The thrice-blessed
Revolution is done, thou thinkest? If so it will be well with thee.
But now let no mortal say henceforth that an august
National Assembly wants riot: all it ever wanted was riot enough to
balance Court-plotting; all it now wants, of Heaven or of Earth, is to
get its theory of defective verbs perfected.
With famine and a Constitutional theory of defective
verbs going on, all other excitement is conceivable. A universal shaking
and sifting of French Existence this is: in the course of which, for one
thing, what a multitude of low-lying figures are sifted to the top, and
set busily to work there!
Dogleech Marat, now for-seen as Simon Stylites, we
already know; him and others, raised aloft. The mere sample, these, of
what is coming, of what continues coming, upwards from the realm of
Night!—Chaumette, by and by Anaxagoras Chaumette, one already descries:
mellifluous in street-groups; not now a sea-boy on the high and giddy
mast: a mellifluous tribune of the common people, with long curling
locks, on bourne-stone of the thoroughfares; able sub-editor too; who
shall rise—to the very gallows. Clerk Tallien, he also is become
sub-editor; shall become able editor; and more. Bibliopolic Momoro,
Typographic Pruhomme see new trades opening. Collot d'Herbois, tearing a
passion to rags, pauses on the Thespian boards; listens, with that black
bushy head, to the sound of the world's drama: shall the Mimetic become
Real? Did ye hiss him, O men of Lyons? (Buzot, Memoires (Paris,
1823), p. 90.) Better had ye clapped!
Happy now, indeed, for all manner of mimetic,
half-original men! Tumid blustering, with more or less of sincerity,
which need not be entirely sincere, yet the sincerer the better, is like
to go far. Shall we say, the Revolution-element works itself rarer and
rarer; so that only lighter and lighter bodies will float in it; till at
last the mere blown-bladder is your only swimmer? Limitation of mind,
then vehemence, promptitude, audacity, shall all be available; to which
add only these two: cunning and good lungs. Good fortune must be
presupposed. Accordingly, of all classes the rising one, we observe, is
now the Attorney class: witness Bazires, Carriers, Fouquier-Tinvilles,
Bazoche-Captain Bourdons: more than enough. Such figures shall Night,
from her wonder-bearing bosom, emit; swarm after swarm. Of another
deeper and deepest swarm, not yet dawned on the astonished eye; of
pilfering Candle-snuffers, Thief-valets, disfrocked Capuchins, and so
many Heberts, Henriots, Ronsins, Rossignols, let us, as long as
possible, forbear speaking.
Thus, over France, all stirs that has what the
Physiologists call irritability in it: how much more all wherein
irritability has perfected itself into vitality; into actual vision, and
force that can will! All stirs; and if not in Paris, flocks thither.
Great and greater waxes President Danton in his Cordeliers Section; his
rhetorical tropes are all 'gigantic:' energy flashes from his black
brows, menaces in his athletic figure, rolls in the sound of his voice
'reverberating from the domes;' this man also, like Mirabeau, has a
natural eye, and begins to see whither Constitutionalism is tending,
though with a wish in it different from Mirabeau's.
Remark, on the other hand, how General Dumouriez has
quitted Normandy and the Cherbourg Breakwater, to come—whither we may
guess. It is his second or even third trial at Paris, since this New Era
began; but now it is in right earnest, for he has quitted all else.
Wiry, elastic unwearied man; whose life was but a battle and a march!
No, not a creature of Choiseul's; "the creature of God and of my
sword,"—he fiercely answered in old days. Overfalling Corsican
batteries, in the deadly fire-hail; wriggling invincible from under his
horse, at Closterkamp of the Netherlands, though tethered with 'crushed
stirrup-iron and nineteen wounds;' tough, minatory, standing at bay, as
forlorn hope, on the skirts of Poland; intriguing, battling in cabinet
and field; roaming far out, obscure, as King's spial, or sitting sealed
up, enchanted in Bastille; fencing, pamphleteering, scheming and
struggling from the very birth of him, (Dumouriez, Memoires, i. 28,
&c.)—the man has come thus far. How repressed, how irrepressible!
Like some incarnate spirit in prison, which indeed he was; hewing on
granite walls for deliverance; striking fire flashes from them. And now
has the general earthquake rent his cavern too? Twenty years younger,
what might he not have done! But his hair has a shade of gray: his way
of thought is all fixed, military. He can grow no further, and the new
world is in such growth. We will name him, on the whole, one of Heaven's
Swiss; without faith; wanting above all things work, work on any side.
Work also is appointed him; and he will do it.
Not from over France only are the unrestful flocking
towards Paris; but from all sides of Europe. Where the carcase is,
thither will the eagles gather. Think how many a Spanish Guzman,
Martinico Fournier named 'Fournier l'Americain,' Engineer Miranda from
the very Andes, were flocking or had flocked! Walloon Pereyra might
boast of the strangest parentage: him, they say, Prince Kaunitz the
Diplomatist heedlessly dropped;' like ostrich-egg, to be hatched of
Chance—into an ostrich-eater! Jewish or German Freys do business in the
great Cesspool of Agio; which Cesspool this Assignat-fiat has quickened,
into a Mother of dead dogs. Swiss Claviere could found no Socinian
Genevese Colony in Ireland; but he paused, years ago, prophetic before
the Minister's Hotel at Paris; and said, it was borne on his mind that
he one day was to be Minister, and laughed. (Dumont, Souvenirs sur
Mirabeau, p. 399.) Swiss Pachc, on the other hand, sits sleekheaded,
frugal; the wonder of his own alley, and even of neighbouring ones, for
humility of mind, and a thought deeper than most men's: sit there,
Tartuffe, till wanted! Ye Italian Dufournys, Flemish Prolys, flit hither
all ye bipeds of prey! Come whosesoever head is hot; thou of mind
ungoverned, be it chaos as of undevelopment or chaos as of ruin; the man
who cannot get known, the man who is too well known; if thou have any
vendible faculty, nay if thou have but edacity and loquacity, come! They
come; with hot unutterabilities in their heart; as Pilgrims towards a
miraculous shrine. Nay how many come as vacant Strollers, aimless, of
whom Europe is full merely towards something! For benighted fowls, when
you beat their bushes, rush towards any light. Thus Frederick Baron
Trenck too is here; mazed, purblind, from the cells of Magdeburg;
Minotauric cells, and his Ariadne lost! Singular to say, Trenck, in
these years, sells wine; not indeed in bottle, but in wood.
Nor is our England without her missionaries. She has her
live-saving Needham; to whom was solemnly presented a 'civic
sword,'—long since rusted into nothingness. Her Paine: rebellious
Staymaker; unkempt; who feels that he, a single Needleman, did by his
'Common Sense' Pamphlet, free America;—that he can and will free all
this World; perhaps even the other. Price-Stanhope Constitutional
Association sends over to congratulate; (Moniteur, 10 Novembre, 7
Decembre, 1789.) welcomed by National Assembly, though they are but
a London Club; whom Burke and Toryism eye askance.
On thee too, for country's sake, O Chevalier John Paul,
be a word spent, or misspent! In faded naval uniform, Paul Jones lingers
visible here; like a wine-skin from which the wine is all drawn. Like
the ghost of himself! Low is his once loud bruit; scarcely audible,
save, with extreme tedium in ministerial ante-chambers; in this or the
other charitable dining-room, mindful of the past. What changes;
culminatings and declinings! Not now, poor Paul, thou lookest wistful
over the Solway brine, by the foot of native Criffel, into blue
mountainous Cumberland, into blue Infinitude; environed with thrift,
with humble friendliness; thyself, young fool, longing to be aloft from
it, or even to be away from it. Yes, beyond that sapphire Promontory,
which men name St. Bees, which is not sapphire either, but dull
sandstone, when one gets close to it, there is a world. Which world thou
too shalt taste of!—From yonder White Haven rise his smoke-clouds;
ominous though ineffectual. Proud Forth quakes at his bellying sails;
had not the wind suddenly shifted. Flamborough reapers, homegoing, pause
on the hill-side: for what sulphur-cloud is that that defaces the sleek
sea; sulphur-cloud spitting streaks of fire? A sea cockfight it is, and
of the hottest; where British Serapis and French-American Bon Homme
Richard do lash and throttle each other, in their fashion; and lo the
desperate valour has suffocated the deliberate, and Paul Jones too is of
the Kings of the Sea!
The Euxine, the Meotian waters felt thee next, and
long-skirted Turks, O Paul; and thy fiery soul has wasted itself in
thousand contradictions;—to no purpose. For, in far lands, with scarlet
Nassau-Siegens, with sinful Imperial Catherines, is not the
heart-broken, even as at home with the mean? Poor Paul! hunger and
dispiritment track thy sinking footsteps: once or at most twice, in this
Revolution-tumult the figure of thee emerges; mute, ghost-like, as 'with
stars dim-twinkling through.' And then, when the light is gone quite
out, a National Legislature grants 'ceremonial funeral!' As good had
been the natural Presbyterian Kirk-bell, and six feet of Scottish earth,
among the dust of thy loved ones.—Such world lay beyond the Promontory
of St. Bees. Such is the life of sinful mankind here below.
But of all strangers, far the notablest for us is Baron
Jean Baptiste de Clootz;—or, dropping baptisms and feudalisms,
World-Citizen Anacharsis Clootz, from Cleves. Him mark, judicious
Reader. Thou hast known his Uncle, sharp-sighted thorough-going
Cornelius de Pauw, who mercilessly cuts down cherished illusions; and of
the finest antique Spartans, will make mere modern cutthroat Mainots. (De
Pauw, Recherches sur les Grecs, &c.) The like stuff is in
Anacharsis: hot metal; full of scoriae, which should and could have been
smelted out, but which will not. He has wandered over this terraqueous
Planet; seeking, one may say, the Paradise we lost long ago. He has seen
English Burke; has been seen of the Portugal Inquisition; has roamed,
and fought, and written; is writing, among other things, 'Evidences of
the Mahometan Religion.' But now, like his Scythian adoptive godfather,
he finds himself in the Paris Athens; surely, at last, the haven of his
soul. A dashing man, beloved at Patriotic dinner-tables; with gaiety,
nay with humour; headlong, trenchant, of free purse; in suitable
costume; though what mortal ever more despised costumes? Under all
costumes Anacharsis seeks the man; not Stylites Marat will more freely
trample costumes, if they hold no man. This is the faith of Anacharsis:
That there is a Paradise discoverable; that all costumes ought to hold
men. O Anacharsis, it is a headlong, swift-going faith. Mounted thereon,
meseems, thou art bound hastily for the City of Nowhere; and wilt
arrive! At best, we may say, arrive in good riding attitude; which
indeed is something.
So many new persons, and new things, have come to occupy
this France. Her old Speech and Thought, and Activity which springs from
those, are all changing; fermenting towards unknown issues. To the
dullest peasant, as he sits sluggish, overtoiled, by his evening hearth,
one idea has come: that of Chateaus burnt; of Chateaus combustible. How
altered all Coffeehouses, in Province or Capital! The Antre de Procope
has now other questions than the Three Stagyrite Unities to settle; not
theatre-controversies, but a world-controversy: there, in the ancient
pigtail mode, or with modern Brutus' heads, do well-frizzed logicians
hold hubbub, and Chaos umpire sits. The ever-enduring Melody of Paris
Saloons has got a new ground-tone: ever-enduring; which has been heard,
and by the listening Heaven too, since Julian the Apostate's time and
earlier; mad now as formerly.
Ex-Censor Suard, Ex-Censor, for we have freedom of the
Press; he may be seen there; impartial, even neutral. Tyrant Grimm rolls
large eyes, over a questionable coming Time. Atheist Naigeon, beloved
disciple of Diderot, crows, in his small difficult way, heralding glad
dawn. (Naigeon: Addresse a l'Assemblee Nationale (Paris, 1790)
sur la liberte des opinions.) But, on the other hand, how many
Morellets, Marmontels, who had sat all their life hatching Philosophe
eggs, cackle now, in a state bordering on distraction, at the brood they
have brought out! (See Marmontel, Memoires, passim; Morellet,
Memoires, &c.) It was so delightful to have one's Philosophe Theorem
demonstrated, crowned in the saloons: and now an infatuated people will
not continue speculative, but have Practice?
There also observe Preceptress Genlis, or Sillery, or
Sillery-Genlis,—for our husband is both Count and Marquis, and we have
more than one title. Pretentious, frothy; a puritan yet creedless;
darkening counsel by words without wisdom! For, it is in that thin
element of the Sentimentalist and Distinguished-Female that
Sillery-Genlis works; she would gladly be sincere, yet can grow no
sincerer than sincere-cant: sincere-cant of many forms, ending in the
devotional form. For the present, on a neck still of moderate whiteness,
she wears as jewel a miniature Bastille, cut on mere sandstone, but then
actual Bastille sandstone. M. le Marquis is one of d'Orleans's
errandmen; in National Assembly, and elsewhere. Madame, for her part,
trains up a youthful d'Orleans generation in what superfinest morality
one can; gives meanwhile rather enigmatic account of fair Mademoiselle
Pamela, the Daughter whom she has adopted. Thus she, in Palais Royal
saloon;—whither, we remark, d'Orleans himself, spite of Lafayette, has
returned from that English 'mission' of his: surely no pleasant mission:
for the English would not speak to him; and Saint Hannah More of
England, so unlike Saint Sillery-Genlis of France, saw him shunned, in
Vauxhall Gardens, like one pest-struck, (Hannah More's Life and
Correspondence, ii. c. 5.) and his red-blue impassive visage waxing
hardly a shade bluer.
As for Constitutionalism, with its National Guards, it is
doing what it can; and has enough to do: it must, as ever, with one hand
wave persuasively, repressing Patriotism; and keep the other clenched to
menace Royalty plotters. A most delicate task; requiring tact.
Thus, if People's-friend Marat has to-day his writ of
'prise de corps, or seizure of body,' served on him, and dives out of
sight, tomorrow he is left at large; or is even encouraged, as a sort of
bandog whose baying may be useful. President Danton, in open Hall, with
reverberating voice, declares that, in a case like Marat's, "force may
be resisted by force." Whereupon the Chatelet serves Danton also with a
writ;—which, however, as the whole Cordeliers District responds to it,
what Constable will be prompt to execute? Twice more, on new occasions,
does the Chatelet launch its writ; and twice more in vain: the body of
Danton cannot be seized by Chatelet; he unseized, should he even fly for
a season, shall behold the Chatelet itself flung into limbo.
Municipality and Brissot, meanwhile, are far on with
their Municipal Constitution. The Sixty Districts shall become
Forty-eight Sections; much shall be adjusted, and Paris have its
Constitution. A Constitution wholly Elective; as indeed all French
Government shall and must be. And yet, one fatal element has been
introduced: that of citoyen actif. No man who does not pay the marc
d'argent, or yearly tax equal to three days' labour, shall be other than
a passive citizen: not the slightest vote for him; were he acting, all
the year round, with sledge hammer, with forest-levelling axe! Unheard
of! cry Patriot Journals. Yes truly, my Patriot Friends, if Liberty, the
passion and prayer of all men's souls, means Liberty to send your
fifty-thousandth part of a new Tongue-fencer into National
Debating-club, then, be the gods witness, ye are hardly entreated. Oh,
if in National Palaver (as the Africans name it), such
blessedness is verily found, what tyrant would deny it to Son of Adam!
Nay, might there not be a Female Parliament too, with 'screams from the
Opposition benches,' and 'the honourable Member borne out in hysterics?'
To a Children's Parliament would I gladly consent; or even lower if ye
wished it. Beloved Brothers! Liberty, one might fear, is actually, as
the ancient wise men said, of Heaven. On this Earth, where, thinks the
enlightened public, did a brave little Dame de Staal (not Necker's
Daughter, but a far shrewder than she) find the nearest approach to
Liberty? After mature computation, cool as Dilworth's, her answer is, In
the Bastille. (See De Staal: Memoires (Paris, 1821), i.
169-280.) "Of Heaven?" answer many, asking. Wo that they should ask;
for that is the very misery! "Of Heaven" means much; share in the
National Palaver it may, or may as probably not mean.
One Sansculottic bough that cannot fail to flourish is
Journalism. The voice of the People being the voice of God, shall not
such divine voice make itself heard? To the ends of France; and in as
many dialects as when the first great Babel was to be built! Some loud
as the lion; some small as the sucking dove. Mirabeau himself has his
instructive Journal or Journals, with Geneva hodmen working in them; and
withal has quarrels enough with Dame le Jay, his Female Bookseller, so
ultra-compliant otherwise. (See Dumont: Souvenirs, 6.)
King's-friend Royou still prints himself. Barrere sheds
tears of loyal sensibility in Break of Day Journal, though with
declining sale. But why is Freron so hot, democratic; Freron, the
King's-friend's Nephew? He has it by kind, that heat of his: wasp Freron
begot him; Voltaire's Frelon; who fought stinging, while sting and
poison-bag were left, were it only as Reviewer, and over Printed
Waste-paper. Constant, illuminative, as the nightly lamplighter, issues
the useful Moniteur, for it is now become diurnal: with facts and few
commentaries; official, safe in the middle:—its able Editors sunk long
since, recoverably or irrecoverably, in deep darkness. Acid Loustalot,
with his 'vigour,' as of young sloes, shall never ripen, but die
untimely: his Prudhomme, however, will not let that Revolutions de Paris
die; but edit it himself, with much else,—dull-blustering Printer though
he be.
Of Cassandra-Marat we have spoken often; yet the most
surprising truth remains to be spoken: that he actually does not want
sense; but, with croaking gelid throat, croaks out masses of the truth,
on several things. Nay sometimes, one might almost fancy he had a
perception of humour, and were laughing a little, far down in his inner
man. Camille is wittier than ever, and more outspoken, cynical; yet
sunny as ever. A light melodious creature; 'born,' as he shall yet say
with bitter tears, 'to write verses;' light Apollo, so clear,
soft-lucent, in this war of the Titans, wherein he shall not conquer!
Folded and hawked Newspapers exist in all countries; but,
in such a Journalistic element as this of France, other and stranger
sorts are to be anticipated. What says the English reader to a
Journal-Affiche, Placard Journal; legible to him that has no halfpenny;
in bright prismatic colours, calling the eye from afar? Such, in the
coming months, as Patriot Associations, public and private, advance, and
can subscribe funds, shall plenteously hang themselves out: leaves,
limed leaves, to catch what they can! The very Government shall have its
Pasted Journal; Louvet, busy yet with a new 'charming romance,' shall
write Sentinelles, and post them with effect; nay Bertrand de Moleville,
in his extremity, shall still more cunningly try it. (See
Bertrand-Moleville: Memoires, ii. 100, &c.) Great is Journalism. Is
not every Able Editor a Ruler of the World, being a persuader of it;
though self-elected, yet sanctioned, by the sale of his Numbers? Whom
indeed the world has the readiest method of deposing, should need be:
that of merely doing nothing to him; which ends in starvation!
Nor esteem it small what those Bill-stickers had to do in
Paris: above Three Score of them: all with their crosspoles, haversacks,
pastepots; nay with leaden badges, for the Municipality licenses them. A
Sacred College, properly of World-rulers' Heralds, though not respected
as such, in an Era still incipient and raw. They made the walls of Paris
didactic, suasive, with an ever fresh Periodical Literature, wherein he
that ran might read: Placard Journals, Placard Lampoons, Municipal
Ordinances, Royal Proclamations; the whole other or vulgar
Placard-department super-added,—or omitted from contempt! What
unutterable things the stone-walls spoke, during these five years! But
it is all gone; To-day swallowing Yesterday, and then being in its turn
swallowed of To-morrow, even as Speech ever is. Nay what, O thou
immortal Man of Letters, is Writing itself but Speech conserved for a
time? The Placard Journal conserved it for one day; some Books conserve
it for the matter of ten years; nay some for three thousand: but what
then? Why, then, the years being all run, it also dies, and the world is
rid of it. Oh, were there not a spirit in the word of man, as in man
himself, that survived the audible bodied word, and tended either
Godward, or else Devilward for evermore, why should he trouble himself
much with the truth of it, or the falsehood of it, except for commercial
purposes? His immortality indeed, and whether it shall last half a
lifetime, or a lifetime and half; is not that a very considerable thing?
As mortality, was to the runaway, whom Great Fritz bullied back into the
battle with a: "R—, wollt ihr ewig leben, Unprintable Off-scouring of
Scoundrels, would ye live for ever!"
This is the Communication of Thought: how happy when
there is any Thought to communicate! Neither let the simpler old methods
be neglected, in their sphere. The Palais-Royal Tent, a tyrannous
Patrollotism has removed; but can it remove the lungs of man? Anaxagoras
Chaumette we saw mounted on bourne-stones, while Tallien worked
sedentary at the subeditorial desk. In any corner of the civilised
world, a tub can be inverted, and an articulate-speaking biped mount
thereon. Nay, with contrivance, a portable trestle, or folding-stool,
can be procured, for love or money; this the peripatetic Orator can take
in his hand, and, driven out here, set it up again there; saying mildly,
with a Sage Bias, Omnia mea mecum porto.
Such is Journalism, hawked, pasted, spoken. How changed
since One old Metra walked this same Tuileries Garden, in gilt cocked
hat, with Journal at his nose, or held loose-folded behind his back; and
was a notability of Paris, 'Metra the Newsman;' (Dulaure, Histoire de
Paris, viii. 483; Mercier, Nouveau Paris, &c.) and Louis himself was
wont to say: Qu'en dit Metra? Since the first Venetian News-sheet was
sold for a gazza, or farthing, and named Gazette! We live in a fertile
world.
Where the heart is full, it seeks, for a thousand
reasons, in a thousand ways, to impart itself. How sweet, indispensable,
in such cases, is fellowship; soul mystically strengthening soul! The
meditative Germans, some think, have been of opinion that Enthusiasm in
the general means simply excessive Congregating—Schwarmerey, or
Swarming. At any rate, do we not see glimmering half-red embers, if laid
together, get into the brightest white glow?
In such a France, gregarious Reunions will needs
multiply, intensify; French Life will step out of doors, and, from
domestic, become a public Club Life. Old Clubs, which already
germinated, grow and flourish; new every where bud forth. It is the sure
symptom of Social Unrest: in such way, most infallibly of all, does
Social Unrest exhibit itself; find solacement, and also nutriment. In
every French head there hangs now, whether for terror or for hope, some
prophetic picture of a New France: prophecy which brings, nay which
almost is, its own fulfilment; and in all ways, consciously and
unconsciously, works towards that.
Observe, moreover, how the Aggregative Principle, let it
be but deep enough, goes on aggregating, and this even in a geometrical
progression: how when the whole world, in such a plastic time, is
forming itself into Clubs, some One Club, the strongest or luckiest,
shall, by friendly attracting, by victorious compelling, grow ever
stronger, till it become immeasurably strong; and all the others, with
their strength, be either lovingly absorbed into it, or hostilely
abolished by it! This if the Club-spirit is universal; if the time is
plastic. Plastic enough is the time, universal the Club-spirit: such an
all absorbing, paramount One Club cannot be wanting.
What a progress, since the first salient-point of the
Breton Committee! It worked long in secret, not languidly; it has come
with the National Assembly to Paris; calls itself Club; calls itself in
imitation, as is thought, of those generous Price-Stanhope English,
French Revolution Club; but soon, with more originality, Club of Friends
of the Constitution. Moreover it has leased, for itself, at a fair rent,
the Hall of the Jacobin's Convent, one of our 'superfluous edifices;'
and does therefrom now, in these spring months, begin shining out on an
admiring Paris. And so, by degrees, under the shorter popular title of
Jacobins' Club, it shall become memorable to all times and lands. Glance
into the interior: strongly yet modestly benched and seated; as many as
Thirteen Hundred chosen Patriots; Assembly Members not a few. Barnave,
the two Lameths are seen there; occasionally Mirabeau, perpetually
Robespierre; also the ferret-visage of Fouquier-Tinville with other
attorneys; Anacharsis of Prussian Scythia, and miscellaneous
Patriots,—though all is yet in the most perfectly clean-washed state;
decent, nay dignified. President on platform, President's bell are not
wanting; oratorical Tribune high-raised; nor strangers' galleries,
wherein also sit women. Has any French Antiquarian Society preserved
that written Lease of the Jacobins Convent Hall? Or was it, unluckier
even than Magna Charta, clipt by sacrilegious Tailors? Universal History
is not indifferent to it.
These Friends of the Constitution have met mainly, as
their name may foreshadow, to look after Elections when an Election
comes, and procure fit men; but likewise to consult generally that the
Commonweal take no damage; one as yet sees not how. For indeed let two
or three gather together any where, if it be not in Church, where all
are bound to the passive state; no mortal can say accurately, themselves
as little as any, for what they are gathered. How often has the broached
barrel proved not to be for joy and heart effusion, but for duel and
head-breakage; and the promised feast become a Feast of the Lapithae!
This Jacobins Club, which at first shone resplendent, and was thought to
be a new celestial Sun for enlightening the Nations, had, as things all
have, to work through its appointed phases: it burned unfortunately more
and more lurid, more sulphurous, distracted;—and swam at last, through
the astonished Heaven, like a Tartarean Portent, and lurid-burning
Prison of Spirits in Pain.
Its style of eloquence? Rejoice, Reader, that thou
knowest it not, that thou canst never perfectly know. The Jacobins
published a Journal of Debates, where they that have the heart may
examine: Impassioned, full-droning Patriotic-eloquence; implacable,
unfertile—save for Destruction, which was indeed its work: most
wearisome, though most deadly. Be thankful that Oblivion covers so much;
that all carrion is by and by buried in the green Earth's bosom, and
even makes her grow the greener. The Jacobins are buried; but their work
is not; it continues 'making the tour of the world,' as it can. It might
be seen lately, for instance, with bared bosom and death-defiant eye, as
far on as Greek Missolonghi; and, strange enough, old slumbering Hellas
was resuscitated, into somnambulism which will become clear wakefulness,
by a voice from the Rue St. Honore! All dies, as we often say; except
the spirit of man, of what man does. Thus has not the very House of the
Jacobins vanished; scarcely lingering in a few old men's memories? The
St. Honore Market has brushed it away, and now where dull-droning
eloquence, like a Trump of Doom, once shook the world, there is pacific
chaffering for poultry and greens. The sacred National Assembly Hall
itself has become common ground; President's platform permeable to wain
and dustcart; for the Rue de Rivoli runs there. Verily, at Cockcrow (of
this Cock or the other), all Apparitions do melt and dissolve in
space.
The Paris Jacobins became 'the Mother-Society,
Societe-Mere;' and had as many as 'three hundred' shrill-tongued
daughters in 'direct correspondence' with her. Of indirectly
corresponding, what we may call grand-daughters and minute progeny, she
counted 'forty-four thousand!'—But for the present we note only two
things: the first of them a mere anecdote. One night, a couple of
brother Jacobins are doorkeepers; for the members take this post of duty
and honour in rotation, and admit none that have not tickets: one
doorkeeper was the worthy Sieur Lais, a patriotic Opera-singer, stricken
in years, whose windpipe is long since closed without result; the other,
young, and named Louis Philippe, d'Orleans's firstborn, has in this
latter time, after unheard-of destinies, become Citizen-King, and
struggles to rule for a season. All-flesh is grass; higher reedgrass or
creeping herb.
The second thing we have to note is historical: that the
Mother-Society, even in this its effulgent period, cannot content all
Patriots. Already it must throw off, so to speak, two dissatisfied
swarms; a swarm to the right, a swarm to the left. One party, which
thinks the Jacobins lukewarm, constitutes itself into Club of the
Cordeliers; a hotter Club: it is Danton's element: with whom goes
Desmoulins. The other party, again, which thinks the Jacobins
scalding-hot, flies off to the right, and becomes 'Club of 1789, Friends
of the Monarchic Constitution.' They are afterwards named 'Feuillans
Club;' their place of meeting being the Feuillans Convent. Lafayette is,
or becomes, their chief-man; supported by the respectable Patriot
everywhere, by the mass of Property and Intelligence,—with the most
flourishing prospects. They, in these June days of 1790, do, in the
Palais Royal, dine solemnly with open windows; to the cheers of the
people; with toasts, with inspiriting songs,—with one song at least,
among the feeblest ever sung. (Hist. Parl. vi. 334.) They shall,
in due time be hooted forth, over the borders, into Cimmerian Night.
Another expressly Monarchic or Royalist Club, 'Club des
Monarchiens,' though a Club of ample funds, and all sitting in damask
sofas, cannot realise the smallest momentary cheer; realises only scoffs
and groans;—till, ere long, certain Patriots in disorderly sufficient
number, proceed thither, for a night or for nights, and groan it out of
pain. Vivacious alone shall the Mother-Society and her family be. The
very Cordeliers may, as it were, return into her bosom, which will have
grown warm enough.
Fatal-looking! Are not such Societies an incipient New
Order of Society itself? The Aggregative Principle anew at work in a
Society grown obsolete, cracked asunder, dissolving into rubbish and
primary atoms?
With these signs of the times, is it not surprising that
the dominant feeling all over France was still continually Hope? O
blessed Hope, sole boon of man; whereby, on his strait prison walls, are
painted beautiful far-stretching landscapes; and into the night of very
Death is shed holiest dawn! Thou art to all an indefeasible possession
in this God's-world: to the wise a sacred Constantine's-banner, written
on the eternal skies; under which they shall conquer, for the battle
itself is victory: to the foolish some secular mirage, or shadow of
still waters, painted on the parched Earth; whereby at least their dusty
pilgrimage, if devious, becomes cheerfuller, becomes possible.
In the death-tumults of a sinking Society, French Hope
sees only the birth-struggles of a new unspeakably better Society; and
sings, with full assurance of faith, her brisk Melody, which some
inspired fiddler has in these very days composed for her,—the
world-famous ca-ira. Yes; 'that will go:' and then there will come—? All
men hope: even Marat hopes—that Patriotism will take muff and dirk. King
Louis is not without hope: in the chapter of chances; in a flight to
some Bouille; in getting popularized at Paris. But what a hoping People
he had, judge by the fact, and series of facts, now to be noted.
Poor Louis, meaning the best, with little insight and
even less determination of his own, has to follow, in that dim wayfaring
of his, such signal as may be given him; by backstairs Royalism, by
official or backstairs Constitutionalism, whichever for the month may
have convinced the royal mind. If flight to Bouille, and (horrible to
think!) a drawing of the civil sword do hang as theory, portentous
in the background, much nearer is this fact of these Twelve Hundred
Kings, who sit in the Salle de Manege. Kings uncontrollable by him, not
yet irreverent to him. Could kind management of these but prosper, how
much better were it than armed Emigrants, Turin-intrigues, and the help
of Austria! Nay, are the two hopes inconsistent? Rides in the suburbs,
we have found, cost little; yet they always brought vivats. (See
Bertrand-Moleville, i. 241, &c.) Still cheaper is a soft word; such
as has many times turned away wrath. In these rapid days, while France
is all getting divided into Departments, Clergy about to be remodelled,
Popular Societies rising, and Feudalism and so much ever is ready to be
hurled into the melting-pot,—might one not try?
On the 4th of February, accordingly, M. le President
reads to his National Assembly a short autograph, announcing that his
Majesty will step over, quite in an unceremonious way, probably about
noon. Think, therefore, Messieurs, what it may mean; especially, how ye
will get the Hall decorated a little. The Secretaries' Bureau can be
shifted down from the platform; on the President's chair be slipped this
cover of velvet, 'of a violet colour sprigged with gold
fleur-de-lys;'—for indeed M. le President has had previous notice
underhand, and taken counsel with Doctor Guillotin. Then some fraction
of 'velvet carpet,' of like texture and colour, cannot that be spread in
front of the chair, where the Secretaries usually sit? So has judicious
Guillotin advised: and the effect is found satisfactory. Moreover, as it
is probable that his Majesty, in spite of the fleur-de-lys-velvet, will
stand and not sit at all, the President himself, in the interim,
presides standing. And so, while some honourable Member is discussing,
say, the division of a Department, Ushers announce: "His Majesty!" In
person, with small suite, enter Majesty: the honourable Member stops
short; the Assembly starts to its feet; the Twelve Hundred Kings 'almost
all,' and the Galleries no less, do welcome the Restorer of French
Liberty with loyal shouts. His Majesty's Speech, in diluted conventional
phraseology, expresses this mainly: That he, most of all Frenchmen,
rejoices to see France getting regenerated; is sure, at the same time,
that they will deal gently with her in the process, and not regenerate
her roughly. Such was his Majesty's Speech: the feat he performed was
coming to speak it, and going back again.
Surely, except to a very hoping People, there was not
much here to build upon. Yet what did they not build! The fact that the
King has spoken, that he has voluntarily come to speak, how
inexpressibly encouraging! Did not the glance of his royal countenance,
like concentrated sunbeams, kindle all hearts in an august Assembly; nay
thereby in an inflammable enthusiastic France? To move 'Deputation of
thanks' can be the happy lot of but one man; to go in such Deputation
the lot of not many. The Deputed have gone, and returned with what
highest-flown compliment they could; whom also the Queen met, Dauphin in
hand. And still do not our hearts burn with insatiable gratitude; and to
one other man a still higher blessedness suggests itself: To move that
we all renew the National Oath.
Happiest honourable Member, with his word so in season as
word seldom was; magic Fugleman of a whole National Assembly, which sat
there bursting to do somewhat; Fugleman of a whole onlooking France! The
President swears; declares that every one shall swear, in distinct je le
jure. Nay the very Gallery sends him down a written slip signed, with
their Oath on it; and as the Assembly now casts an eye that way, the
Gallery all stands up and swears again. And then out of doors, consider
at the Hotel-de-Ville how Bailly, the great Tennis-Court swearer, again
swears, towards nightful, with all the Municipals, and Heads of
Districts assembled there. And 'M. Danton suggests that the public would
like to partake:' whereupon Bailly, with escort of Twelve, steps forth
to the great outer staircase; sways the ebullient multitude with
stretched hand: takes their oath, with a thunder of 'rolling drums,'
with shouts that rend the welkin. And on all streets the glad people,
with moisture and fire in their eyes, 'spontaneously formed groups, and
swore one another,' (Newspapers in Hist. Parl. iv. 445.)—and the
whole City was illuminated. This was the Fourth of February 1790: a day
to be marked white in Constitutional annals.
Nor is the illumination for a night only, but partially
or totally it lasts a series of nights. For each District, the Electors
of each District, will swear specially; and always as the District
swears; it illuminates itself. Behold them, District after District, in
some open square, where the Non-Electing People can all see and join:
with their uplifted right hands, and je le jure: with rolling drums,
with embracings, and that infinite hurrah of the enfranchised,—which any
tyrant that there may be can consider! Faithful to the King, to the Law,
to the Constitution which the National Assembly shall make.
Fancy, for example, the Professors of Universities
parading the streets with their young France, and swearing, in an
enthusiastic manner, not without tumult. By a larger exercise of fancy,
expand duly this little word: The like was repeated in every Town and
District of France! Nay one Patriot Mother, in Lagnon of Brittany,
assembles her ten children; and, with her own aged hand, swears them all
herself, the highsouled venerable woman. Of all which, moreover, a
National Assembly must be eloquently apprised. Such three weeks of
swearing! Saw the sun ever such a swearing people? Have they been bit by
a swearing tarantula? No: but they are men and Frenchmen; they have
Hope; and, singular to say, they have Faith, were it only in the Gospel
according to Jean Jacques. O my Brothers! would to Heaven it were even
as ye think and have sworn! But there are Lovers' Oaths, which, had they
been true as love itself, cannot be kept; not to speak of Dicers' Oaths,
also a known sort.
To such length had the Contrat Social brought it, in
believing hearts. Man, as is well said, lives by faith; each generation
has its own faith, more or less; and laughs at the faith of its
predecessor,—most unwisely. Grant indeed that this faith in the Social
Contract belongs to the stranger sorts; that an unborn generation may
very wisely, if not laugh, yet stare at it, and piously consider. For,
alas, what is Contrat? If all men were such that a mere spoken or sworn
Contract would bind them, all men were then true men, and Government a
superfluity. Not what thou and I have promised to each other, but what
the balance of our forces can make us perform to each other: that, in so
sinful a world as ours, is the thing to be counted on. But above all, a
People and a Sovereign promising to one another; as if a whole People,
changing from generation to generation, nay from hour to hour, could
ever by any method be made to speak or promise; and to speak mere
solecisms: "We, be the Heavens witness, which Heavens however do no
miracles now; we, ever-changing Millions, will allow thee, changeful
Unit, to force us or govern us!" The world has perhaps seen few faiths
comparable to that.
So nevertheless had the world then construed the matter.
Had they not so construed it, how different had their hopes been, their
attempts, their results! But so and not otherwise did the Upper Powers
will it to be. Freedom by Social Contract: such was verily the Gospel of
that Era. And all men had believed in it, as in a Heaven's Glad-tidings
men should; and with overflowing heart and uplifted voice clave to it,
and stood fronting Time and Eternity on it. Nay smile not; or only with
a smile sadder than tears! This too was a better faith than the one it
had replaced: than faith merely in the Everlasting Nothing and man's
Digestive Power; lower than which no faith can go.
Not that such universally prevalent, universally jurant,
feeling of Hope, could be a unanimous one. Far from that! The time was
ominous: social dissolution near and certain; social renovation still a
problem, difficult and distant even though sure. But if ominous to some
clearest onlooker, whose faith stood not with one side or with the
other, nor in the ever-vexed jarring of Greek with Greek at all,—how
unspeakably ominous to dim Royalist participators; for whom Royalism was
Mankind's palladium; for whom, with the abolition of Most-Christian
Kingship and Most-Talleyrand Bishopship, all loyal obedience, all
religious faith was to expire, and final Night envelope the Destinies of
Man! On serious hearts, of that persuasion, the matter sinks down deep;
prompting, as we have seen, to backstairs Plots, to Emigration with
pledge of war, to Monarchic Clubs; nay to still madder things.
The Spirit of Prophecy, for instance, had been considered
extinct for some centuries: nevertheless these last-times, as indeed is
the tendency of last-times, do revive it; that so, of French mad things,
we might have sample also of the maddest. In remote rural districts,
whither Philosophism has not yet radiated, where a heterodox
Constitution of the Clergy is bringing strife round the altar itself,
and the very Church-bells are getting melted into small money-coin, it
appears probable that the End of the World cannot be far off.
Deep-musing atrabiliar old men, especially old women, hint in an obscure
way that they know what they know. The Holy Virgin, silent so long, has
not gone dumb;—and truly now, if ever more in this world, were the time
for her to speak. One Prophetess, though careless Historians have
omitted her name, condition, and whereabout, becomes audible to the
general ear; credible to not a few: credible to Friar Gerle, poor
Patriot Chartreux, in the National Assembly itself! She, in Pythoness'
recitative, with wildstaring eye, sings that there shall be a Sign; that
the heavenly Sun himself will hang out a Sign, or Mock-Sun,—which, many
say, shall be stamped with the Head of hanged Favras. List, Dom Gerle,
with that poor addled poll of thine; list, O list;—and hear nothing. (Deux
Amis, v. c. 7.)
Notable however was that 'magnetic vellum, velin
magnetique,' of the Sieurs d'Hozier and Petit-Jean, Parlementeers of Rouen.
Sweet young d'Hozier, 'bred in the faith of his Missal, and of parchment
genealogies,' and of parchment generally: adust, melancholic,
middle-aged Petit-Jean: why came these two to Saint-Cloud, where his
Majesty was hunting, on the festival of St. Peter and St. Paul; and
waited there, in antechambers, a wonder to whispering Swiss, the
livelong day; and even waited without the Grates, when turned out; and
had dismissed their valets to Paris, as with purpose of endless waiting?
They have a magnetic vellum, these two; whereon the Virgin, wonderfully
clothing herself in Mesmerean Cagliostric Occult-Philosophy, has
inspired them to jot down instructions and predictions for a
much-straitened King. To whom, by Higher Order, they will this day
present it; and save the Monarchy and World. Unaccountable pair of
visual-objects! Ye should be men, and of the Eighteenth Century; but
your magnetic vellum forbids us so to interpret. Say, are ye aught? Thus
ask the Guardhouse Captains, the Mayor of St. Cloud; nay, at great
length, thus asks the Committee of Researches, and not the Municipal,
but the National Assembly one. No distinct answer, for weeks. At last it
becomes plain that the right answer is negative. Go, ye Chimeras, with
your magnetic vellum; sweet young Chimera, adust middle-aged one! The
Prison-doors are open. Hardly again shall ye preside the Rouen Chamber
of Accounts; but vanish obscurely into Limbo. (See Deux Amis, v. 199.)
Chapter 8.
Solemn League and Covenant.
Such dim masses, and specks of even deepest black, work
in that white-hot glow of the French mind, now wholly in fusion, and
confusion. Old women here swearing their ten children on the new Evangel
of Jean Jacques; old women there looking up for Favras' Heads in the
celestial Luminary: these are preternatural signs, prefiguring somewhat.
In fact, to the Patriot children of Hope themselves, it
is undeniable that difficulties exist: emigrating Seigneurs; Parlements
in sneaking but most malicious mutiny (though the rope is round their
neck); above all, the most decided 'deficiency of grains.'
Sorrowful: but, to a Nation that hopes, not irremediable. To a Nation
which is in fusion and ardent communion of thought; which, for example,
on signal of one Fugleman, will lift its right hand like a drilled
regiment, and swear and illuminate, till every village from Ardennes to
the Pyrenees has rolled its village-drum, and sent up its little oath,
and glimmer of tallow-illumination some fathoms into the reign of Night!
If grains are defective, the fault is not of Nature or
National Assembly, but of Art and Antinational Intriguers. Such malign
individuals, of the scoundrel species, have power to vex us, while the
Constitution is a-making. Endure it, ye heroic Patriots: nay rather, why
not cure it? Grains do grow, they lie extant there in sheaf or sack;
only that regraters and Royalist plotters, to provoke the people into
illegality, obstruct the transport of grains. Quick, ye organised
Patriot Authorities, armed National Guards, meet together; unite your
goodwill; in union is tenfold strength: let the concentred flash of your
Patriotism strike stealthy Scoundrelism blind, paralytic, as with a coup
de soleil.
Under which hat or nightcap of the Twenty-five millions,
this pregnant Idea first rose, for in some one head it did rise, no man
can now say. A most small idea, near at hand for the whole world: but a
living one, fit; and which waxed, whether into greatness or not, into
immeasurable size. When a Nation is in this state that the Fugleman can
operate on it, what will the word in season, the act in season, not do!
It will grow verily, like the Boy's Bean in the Fairy-Tale, heaven-high,
with habitations and adventures on it, in one night. It is nevertheless
unfortunately still a Bean (for your long-lived Oak grows not so);
and, the next night, it may lie felled, horizontal, trodden into common
mud.—But remark, at least, how natural to any agitated Nation, which has
Faith, this business of Covenanting is. The Scotch, believing in a
righteous Heaven above them, and also in a Gospel, far other than the
Jean-Jacques one, swore, in their extreme need, a Solemn League and
Covenant,—as Brothers on the forlorn-hope, and imminence of battle, who
embrace looking Godward; and got the whole Isle to swear it; and even,
in their tough Old-Saxon Hebrew-Presbyterian way, to keep it more or
less;—for the thing, as such things are, was heard in Heaven, and
partially ratified there; neither is it yet dead, if thou wilt look, nor
like to die. The French too, with their Gallic-Ethnic excitability and
effervescence, have, as we have seen, real Faith, of a sort; they are
hard bestead, though in the middle of Hope: a National Solemn League and
Covenant there may be in France too; under how different conditions;
with how different developement and issue!
Note, accordingly, the small commencement; first spark of
a mighty firework: for if the particular hat cannot be fixed upon, the
particular District can. On the 29th day of last November, were National
Guards by the thousand seen filing, from far and near, with military
music, with Municipal officers in tricolor sashes, towards and along the
Rhone-stream, to the little town of Etoile. There with ceremonial
evolution and manoeuvre, with fanfaronading, musketry-salvoes, and what
else the Patriot genius could devise, they made oath and obtestation to
stand faithfully by one another, under Law and King; in particular, to
have all manner of grains, while grains there were, freely circulated,
in spite both of robber and regrater. This was the meeting of Etoile, in
the mild end of November 1789.
But now, if a mere empty Review, followed by
Review-dinner, ball, and such gesticulation and flirtation as there may
be, interests the happy County-town, and makes it the envy of
surrounding County-towns, how much more might this! In a fortnight,
larger Montelimart, half ashamed of itself, will do as good, and better.
On the Plain of Montelimart, or what is equally sonorous, 'under the
Walls of Montelimart,' the thirteenth of December sees new gathering and
obtestation; six thousand strong; and now indeed, with these three
remarkable improvements, as unanimously resolved on there. First that
the men of Montelimart do federate with the already federated men of
Etoile. Second, that, implying not expressing the circulation of grain,
they 'swear in the face of God and their Country' with much more
emphasis and comprehensiveness, 'to obey all decrees of the National
Assembly, and see them obeyed, till death, jusqu'a la mort.' Third, and
most important, that official record of all this be solemnly delivered
in to the National Assembly, to M. de Lafayette, and 'to the Restorer of
French Liberty;' who shall all take what comfort from it they can. Thus
does larger Montelimart vindicate its Patriot importance, and maintain
its rank in the municipal scale. (Hist. Parl. vii. 4.)
And so, with the New-year, the signal is hoisted; for is
not a National Assembly, and solemn deliverance there, at lowest a
National Telegraph? Not only grain shall circulate, while there is
grain, on highways or the Rhone-waters, over all that South-Eastern
region,—where also if Monseigneur d'Artois saw good to break in from
Turin, hot welcome might wait him; but whatsoever Province of France is
straitened for grain, or vexed with a mutinous Parlement,
unconstitutional plotters, Monarchic Clubs, or any other Patriot
ailment,—can go and do likewise, or even do better. And now, especially,
when the February swearing has set them all agog! From Brittany to
Burgundy, on most plains of France, under most City-walls, it is a
blaring of trumpets, waving of banners, a constitutional manoeuvring:
under the vernal skies, while Nature too is putting forth her green
Hopes, under bright sunshine defaced by the stormful East; like
Patriotism victorious, though with difficulty, over Aristocracy and
defect of grain! There march and constitutionally wheel, to the
ca-ira-ing mood of fife and drum, under their tricolor Municipals, our
clear-gleaming Phalanxes; or halt, with uplifted right-hand, and
artillery-salvoes that imitate Jove's thunder; and all the Country, and
metaphorically all 'the Universe,' is looking on. Wholly, in their best
apparel, brave men, and beautifully dizened women, most of whom have
lovers there; swearing, by the eternal Heavens and this green-growing
all-nutritive Earth, that France is free!
Sweetest days, when (astonishing to say) mortals
have actually met together in communion and fellowship; and man, were it
only once through long despicable centuries, is for moments verily the
brother of man!—And then the Deputations to the National Assembly, with
highflown descriptive harangue; to M. de Lafayette, and the Restorer;
very frequently moreover to the Mother of Patriotism sitting on her
stout benches in that Hall of the Jacobins! The general ear is filled
with Federation. New names of Patriots emerge, which shall one day
become familiar: Boyer-Fonfrede eloquent denunciator of a rebellious
Bourdeaux Parlement; Max Isnard eloquent reporter of the Federation of
Draguignan; eloquent pair, separated by the whole breadth of France, who
are nevertheless to meet. Ever wider burns the flame of Federation; ever
wider and also brighter. Thus the Brittany and Anjou brethren mention a
Fraternity of all true Frenchmen; and go the length of invoking
'perdition and death' on any renegade: moreover, if in their
National-Assembly harangue, they glance plaintively at the marc d'argent
which makes so many citizens passive, they, over in the Mother-Society,
ask, being henceforth themselves 'neither Bretons nor Angevins but
French,' Why all France has not one Federation, and universal Oath of
Brotherhood, once for all? (Reports, &c. (in Hist. Parl. ix.
122-147).) A most pertinent suggestion; dating from the end of
March. Which pertinent suggestion the whole Patriot world cannot but
catch, and reverberate and agitate till it become loud;—which, in that
case, the Townhall Municipals had better take up, and meditate.
Some universal Federation seems inevitable: the Where is
given; clearly Paris: only the When, the How? These also productive Time
will give; is already giving. For always as the Federative work goes on,
it perfects itself, and Patriot genius adds contribution after
contribution. Thus, at Lyons, in the end of the May month, we behold as
many as fifty, or some say sixty thousand, met to federate; and a
multitude looking on, which it would be difficult to number. From dawn
to dusk! For our Lyons Guardsmen took rank, at five in the bright dewy
morning; came pouring in, bright-gleaming, to the Quai de Rhone, to
march thence to the Federation-field; amid wavings of hats and
lady-handkerchiefs; glad shoutings of some two hundred thousand Patriot
voices and hearts; the beautiful and brave! Among whom, courting no
notice, and yet the notablest of all, what queenlike Figure is this;
with her escort of house-friends and Champagneux the Patriot Editor;
come abroad with the earliest? Radiant with enthusiasm are those dark
eyes, is that strong Minerva-face, looking dignity and earnest joy;
joyfullest she where all are joyful. It is Roland de la Platriere's
Wife! (Madame Roland, Memoires, i. (Discours Preliminaire, p. 23).)
Strict elderly Roland, King's Inspector of Manufactures here; and now
likewise, by popular choice, the strictest of our new Lyons Municipals:
a man who has gained much, if worth and faculty be gain; but above all
things, has gained to wife Phlipon the Paris Engraver's daughter.
Reader, mark that queenlike burgher-woman: beautiful, Amazonian-graceful
to the eye; more so to the mind. Unconscious of her worth (as all
worth is), of her greatness, of her crystal clearness; genuine, the
creature of Sincerity and Nature, in an age of Artificiality, Pollution
and Cant; there, in her still completeness, in her still invincibility,
she, if thou knew it, is the noblest of all living Frenchwomen,—and will
be seen, one day. O blessed rather while unseen, even of herself! For
the present she gazes, nothing doubting, into this grand theatricality;
and thinks her young dreams are to be fulfilled.
From dawn to dusk, as we said, it lasts; and truly a
sight like few. Flourishes of drums and trumpets are something: but
think of an 'artificial Rock fifty feet high,' all cut into crag-steps,
not without the similitude of 'shrubs!' The interior cavity, for in
sooth it is made of deal,—stands solemn, a 'Temple of Concord:' on the
outer summit rises 'a Statue of Liberty,' colossal, seen for miles, with
her Pike and Phrygian Cap, and civic column; at her feet a Country's
Altar, 'Autel de la Patrie:'—on all which neither deal-timber nor lath
and plaster, with paint of various colours, have been spared. But fancy
then the banners all placed on the steps of the Rock; high-mass
chaunted; and the civic oath of fifty thousand: with what volcanic
outburst of sound from iron and other throats, enough to frighten back
the very Saone and Rhone; and how the brightest fireworks, and balls,
and even repasts closed in that night of the gods! (Hist. Parl. xii.
274.) And so the Lyons Federation vanishes too, swallowed of
darkness;—and yet not wholly, for our brave fair Roland was there; also
she, though in the deepest privacy, writes her Narrative of it in
Champagneux's Courier de Lyons; a piece which 'circulates to the extent
of sixty thousand;' which one would like now to read.
But on the whole, Paris, we may see, will have little to
devise; will only have to borrow and apply. And then as to the day, what
day of all the calendar is fit, if the Bastille Anniversary be not? The
particular spot too, it is easy to see, must be the Champ-de-Mars; where
many a Julian the Apostate has been lifted on bucklers, to France's or
the world's sovereignty; and iron Franks, loud-clanging, have responded
to the voice of a Charlemagne; and from of old mere sublimities have
been familiar.
How natural, in all decisive circumstances, is Symbolic
Representation to all kinds of men! Nay, what is man's whole terrestrial
Life but a Symbolic Representation, and making visible, of the Celestial
invisible Force that is in him? By act and world he strives to do it;
with sincerity, if possible; failing that, with theatricality, which
latter also may have its meaning. An Almack's Masquerade is not nothing;
in more genial ages, your Christmas Guisings, Feasts of the Ass, Abbots
of Unreason, were a considerable something: since sport they were; as
Almacks may still be sincere wish for sport. But what, on the other
hand, must not sincere earnest have been: say, a Hebrew Feast of
Tabernacles have been! A whole Nation gathered, in the name of the
Highest, under the eye of the Highest; imagination herself flagging
under the reality; and all noblest Ceremony as yet not grown ceremonial,
but solemn, significant to the outmost fringe! Neither, in modern
private life, are theatrical scenes, of tearful women wetting whole ells
of cambric in concert, of impassioned bushy-whiskered youth threatening
suicide, and such like, to be so entirely detested: drop thou a tear
over them thyself rather.
At any rate, one can remark that no Nation will throw-by
its work, and deliberately go out to make a scene, without meaning
something thereby. For indeed no scenic individual, with knavish
hypocritical views, will take the trouble to soliloquise a scene: and
now consider, is not a scenic Nation placed precisely in that
predicament of soliloquising; for its own behoof alone; to solace its
own sensibilities, maudlin or other?—Yet in this respect, of readiness
for scenes, the difference of Nations, as of men, is very great. If our
Saxon-Puritanic friends, for example, swore and signed their National
Covenant, without discharge of gunpowder, or the beating of any drum, in
a dingy Covenant-Close of the Edinburgh High-street, in a mean room,
where men now drink mean liquor, it was consistent with their ways so to
swear it. Our Gallic-Encyclopedic friends, again, must have a
Champ-de-Mars, seen of all the world, or universe; and such a Scenic
Exhibition, to which the Coliseum Amphitheatre was but a stroller's
barn, as this old Globe of ours had never or hardly ever beheld. Which
method also we reckon natural, then and there. Nor perhaps was the
respective keeping of these two Oaths far out of due proportion to such
respective display in taking them: inverse proportion, namely. For the
theatricality of a People goes in a compound-ratio: ratio indeed of
their trustfulness, sociability, fervency; but then also of their
excitability, of their porosity, not continent; or say, of their
explosiveness, hot-flashing, but which does not last.
How true also, once more, is it that no man or Nation of
men, conscious of doing a great thing, was ever, in that thing, doing
other than a small one! O Champ-de-Mars Federation, with three hundred
drummers, twelve hundred wind-musicians, and artillery planted on height
after height to boom the tidings of it all over France, in few minutes!
Could no Atheist-Naigeon contrive to discern, eighteen centuries off,
those Thirteen most poor mean-dressed men, at frugal Supper, in a mean
Jewish dwelling, with no symbol but hearts god-initiated into the
'Divine depth of Sorrow,' and a Do this in remembrance of me;—and so
cease that small difficult crowing of his, if he were not doomed to it?
Pardonable are human theatricalities; nay perhaps
touching, like the passionate utterance of a tongue which with sincerity
stammers; of a head which with insincerity babbles,—having gone
distracted. Yet, in comparison with unpremeditated outbursts of Nature,
such as an Insurrection of Women, how foisonless, unedifying,
undelightful; like small ale palled, like an effervescence that has
effervesced! Such scenes, coming of forethought, were they world-great,
and never so cunningly devised, are at bottom mainly pasteboard and
paint. But the others are original; emitted from the great everliving
heart of Nature herself: what figure they will assume is unspeakably
significant. To us, therefore, let the French National Solemn League,
and Federation, be the highest recorded triumph of the Thespian Art;
triumphant surely, since the whole Pit, which was of Twenty-five
Millions, not only claps hands, but does itself spring on the boards and
passionately set to playing there. And being such, be it treated as
such: with sincere cursory admiration; with wonder from afar. A whole
Nation gone mumming deserves so much; but deserves not that loving
minuteness a Menadic Insurrection did. Much more let prior, and as it
were, rehearsal scenes of Federation come and go, henceforward, as they
list; and, on Plains and under City-walls, innumerable regimental bands
blare off into the Inane, without note from us.
One scene, however, the hastiest reader will momentarily
pause on: that of Anacharsis Clootz and the Collective sinful Posterity
of Adam.—For a Patriot Municipality has now, on the 4th of June, got its
plan concocted, and got it sanctioned by National Assembly; a Patriot
King assenting; to whom, were he even free to dissent, Federative
harangues, overflowing with loyalty, have doubtless a transient
sweetness. There shall come Deputed National Guards, so many in the
hundred, from each of the Eighty-three Departments of France. Likewise
from all Naval and Military King's Forces, shall Deputed quotas come;
such Federation of National with Royal Soldier has, taking place
spontaneously, been already seen and sanctioned. For the rest, it is
hoped, as many as forty thousand may arrive: expenses to be borne by the
Deputing District; of all which let District and Department take
thought, and elect fit men,—whom the Paris brethren will fly to meet and
welcome.
Now, therefore, judge if our Patriot Artists are busy;
taking deep counsel how to make the Scene worthy of a look from the
Universe! As many as fifteen thousand men, spade-men, barrow-men,
stone-builders, rammers, with their engineers, are at work on the
Champ-de-Mars; hollowing it out into a natural Amphitheatre, fit for
such solemnity. For one may hope it will be annual and perennial; a
'Feast of Pikes, Fete des Piques,' notablest among the high-tides of the
year: in any case ought not a Scenic free Nation to have some permanent
National Amphitheatre? The Champ-de-Mars is getting hollowed out; and
the daily talk and the nightly dream in most Parisian heads is of
Federation, and that only. Federate Deputies are already under way.
National Assembly, what with its natural work, what with hearing and
answering harangues of Federates, of this Federation, will have enough
to do! Harangue of 'American Committee,' among whom is that faint figure
of Paul Jones 'as with the stars dim-twinkling through it,'—come to
congratulate us on the prospect of such auspicious day. Harangue of
Bastille Conquerors, come to 'renounce' any special recompense, any
peculiar place at the solemnity;—since the Centre Grenadiers rather
grumble. Harangue of 'Tennis-Court Club,' who enter with far-gleaming
Brass-plate, aloft on a pole, and the Tennis-Court Oath engraved
thereon; which far gleaming Brass-plate they purpose to affix solemnly
in the Versailles original locality, on the 20th of this month, which is
the anniversary, as a deathless memorial, for some years: they will then
dine, as they come back, in the Bois de Boulogne; (See Deux Amis, v.
122; Hist. Parl. &c.)—cannot, however, do it without apprising the
world. To such things does the august National Assembly ever and anon
cheerfully listen, suspending its regenerative labours; and with some
touch of impromptu eloquence, make friendly reply;—as indeed the wont
has long been; for it is a gesticulating, sympathetic People, and has a
heart, and wears it on its sleeve.
In which circumstances, it occurred to the mind of
Anacharsis Clootz that while so much was embodying itself into Club or
Committee, and perorating applauded, there yet remained a greater and
greatest; of which, if it also took body and perorated, what might not
the effect be: Humankind namely, le Genre Humain itself! In what rapt
creative moment the Thought rose in Anacharsis's soul; all his throes,
while he went about giving shape and birth to it; how he was sneered at
by cold worldlings; but did sneer again, being a man of polished
sarcasm; and moved to and fro persuasive in coffeehouse and soiree, and
dived down assiduous-obscure in the great deep of Paris, making his
Thought a Fact: of all this the spiritual biographies of that period say
nothing. Enough that on the 19th evening of June 1790, the Sun's slant
rays lighted a spectacle such as our foolish little Planet has not often
had to show: Anacharsis Clootz entering the august Salle de Manege, with
the Human Species at his heels. Swedes, Spaniards, Polacks; Turks,
Chaldeans, Greeks, dwellers in Mesopotamia: behold them all; they have
come to claim place in the grand Federation, having an undoubted
interest in it.
"Our ambassador titles," said the fervid Clootz, "are not
written on parchment, but on the living hearts of all men." These
whiskered Polacks, long-flowing turbaned Ishmaelites, astrological
Chaldeans, who stand so mute here, let them plead with you, august
Senators, more eloquently than eloquence could. They are the mute
representatives of their tongue-tied, befettered, heavy-laden Nations;
who from out of that dark bewilderment gaze wistful, amazed, with
half-incredulous hope, towards you, and this your bright light of a
French Federation: bright particular day-star, the herald of universal
day. We claim to stand there, as mute monuments, pathetically
adumbrative of much.—From bench and gallery comes 'repeated applause;'
for what august Senator but is flattered even by the very shadow of
Human Species depending on him? From President Sieyes, who presides this
remarkable fortnight, in spite of his small voice, there comes eloquent
though shrill reply. Anacharsis and the 'Foreigners Committee' shall
have place at the Federation; on condition of telling their respective
Peoples what they see there. In the mean time, we invite them to the
'honours of the sitting, honneur de la seance.' A long-flowing Turk, for
rejoinder, bows with Eastern solemnity, and utters articulate sounds:
but owing to his imperfect knowledge of the French dialect, (Moniteur,
&c. (in Hist. Parl. xii. 283).) his words are like spilt
water; the thought he had in him remains conjectural to this day.
Anacharsis and Mankind accept the honours of the sitting;
and have forthwith, as the old Newspapers still testify, the
satisfaction to see several things. First and chief, on the motion of
Lameth, Lafayette, Saint-Fargeau and other Patriot Nobles, let the
others repugn as they will: all Titles of Nobility, from Duke to
Esquire, or lower, are henceforth abolished. Then, in like manner,
Livery Servants, or rather the Livery of Servants. Neither, for the
future, shall any man or woman, self-styled noble, be
'incensed,'—foolishly fumigated with incense, in Church; as the wont has
been. In a word, Feudalism being dead these ten months, why should her
empty trappings and scutcheons survive? The very Coats-of-arms will
require to be obliterated;—and yet Cassandra Marat on this and the other
coach-panel notices that they 'are but painted-over,' and threaten to
peer through again.
So that henceforth de Lafayette is but the Sieur Motier,
and Saint-Fargeau is plain Michel Lepelletier; and Mirabeau soon after
has to say huffingly, "With your Riquetti you have set Europe at
cross-purposes for three days." For his Counthood is not indifferent to
this man; which indeed the admiring People treat him with to the last.
But let extreme Patriotism rejoice, and chiefly Anacharsis and Mankind;
for now it seems to be taken for granted that one Adam is Father of us
all!—
Such was, in historical accuracy, the famed feat of
Anacharsis. Thus did the most extensive of Public Bodies find a sort of
spokesman. Whereby at least we may judge of one thing: what a humour the
once sniffing mocking City of Paris and Baron Clootz had got into; when
such exhibition could appear a propriety, next door to a sublimity. It
is true, Envy did in after times, pervert this success of Anacharsis;
making him, from incidental 'Speaker of the Foreign-Nations Committee,'
claim to be official permanent 'Speaker, Orateur, of the Human Species,'
which he only deserved to be; and alleging, calumniously, that his
astrological Chaldeans, and the rest, were a mere French
tag-rag-and-bobtail disguised for the nonce; and, in short, sneering and
fleering at him in her cold barren way; all which, however, he, the man
he was, could receive on thick enough panoply, or even rebound
therefrom, and also go his way.
Most extensive of Public Bodies, we may call it; and also
the most unexpected: for who could have thought to see All Nations in
the Tuileries Riding-Hall? But so it is; and truly as strange things may
happen when a whole People goes mumming and miming. Hast not thou
thyself perchance seen diademed Cleopatra, daughter of the Ptolemies,
pleading, almost with bended knee, in unheroic tea-parlour, or dimlit
retail-shop, to inflexible gross Burghal Dignitary, for leave to reign
and die; being dressed for it, and moneyless, with small children;—while
suddenly Constables have shut the Thespian barn, and her Antony pleaded
in vain? Such visual spectra flit across this Earth, if the Thespian
Stage be rudely interfered with: but much more, when, as was said, Pit
jumps on Stage, then is it verily, as in Herr Tieck's Drama, a Verkehrte
Welt, of World Topsyturvied!
Having seen the Human Species itself, to have seen the
'Dean of the Human Species,' ceased now to be a miracle. Such 'Doyen du
Genre Humain, Eldest of Men,' had shewn himself there, in these weeks:
Jean Claude Jacob, a born Serf, deputed from his native Jura Mountains
to thank the National Assembly for enfranchising them. On his bleached
worn face are ploughed the furrowings of one hundred and twenty years.
He has heard dim patois-talk, of immortal Grand-Monarch victories; of a
burnt Palatinate, as he toiled and moiled to make a little speck of this
Earth greener; of Cevennes Dragoonings; of Marlborough going to the war.
Four generations have bloomed out, and loved and hated, and rustled off:
he was forty-six when Louis Fourteenth died. The Assembly, as one man,
spontaneously rose, and did reverence to the Eldest of the World; old
Jean is to take seance among them, honourably, with covered head. He
gazes feebly there, with his old eyes, on that new wonder-scene;
dreamlike to him, and uncertain, wavering amid fragments of old memories
and dreams. For Time is all growing unsubstantial, dreamlike; Jean's
eyes and mind are weary, and about to close,—and open on a far other
wonder-scene, which shall be real. Patriot Subscription, Royal Pension
was got for him, and he returned home glad; but in two months more he
left it all, and went on his unknown way. (Deux Amis, iv. iii.)
Chapter 11.
As in the Age of Gold.
Meanwhile to Paris, ever going and returning, day after
day, and all day long, towards that Field of Mars, it becomes painfully
apparent that the spadework there cannot be got done in time. There is
such an area of it; three hundred thousand square feet: for from the
Ecole militaire (which will need to be done up in wood with balconies
and galleries) westward to the Gate by the river (where also
shall be wood, in triumphal arches), we count same thousand yards of
length; and for breadth, from this umbrageous Avenue of eight rows, on
the South side, to that corresponding one on the North, some thousand
feet, more or less. All this to be scooped out, and wheeled up in slope
along the sides; high enough; for it must be rammed down there, and
shaped stair-wise into as many as 'thirty ranges of convenient seats,'
firm-trimmed with turf, covered with enduring timber;—and then our huge
pyramidal Fatherland's-Altar, Autel de la Patrie, in the centre, also to
be raised and stair-stepped! Force-work with a vengeance; it is a
World's Amphitheatre! There are but fifteen days good; and at this
languid rate, it might take half as many weeks. What is singular too,
the spademen seem to work lazily; they will not work double-tides, even
for offer of more wages, though their tide is but seven hours; they
declare angrily that the human tabernacle requires occasional rest!
Is it Aristocrats secretly bribing? Aristocrats were
capable of that. Only six months since, did not evidence get afloat that
subterranean Paris, for we stand over quarries and catacombs,
dangerously, as it were midway between Heaven and the Abyss, and are
hollow underground,—was charged with gunpowder, which should make us
'leap?' Till a Cordelier's Deputation actually went to examine, and
found it—carried off again! (23rd December, 1789 (Newspapers in
Hist. Parl. iv. 44).) An accursed, incurable brood; all asking
for 'passports,' in these sacred days. Trouble, of rioting,
chateau-burning, is in the Limousin and elsewhere; for they are busy!
Between the best of Peoples and the best of Restorer-Kings, they would
sow grudges; with what a fiend's-grin would they see this Federation,
looked for by the Universe, fail!
Fail for want of spadework, however, it shall not. He
that has four limbs, and a French heart, can do spadework; and will! On
the first July Monday, scarcely has the signal-cannon boomed; scarcely
have the languescent mercenary Fifteen Thousand laid down their tools,
and the eyes of onlookers turned sorrowfully of the still high Sun; when
this and the other Patriot, fire in his eye, snatches barrow and
mattock, and himself begins indignantly wheeling. Whom scores and then
hundreds follow; and soon a volunteer Fifteen Thousand are shovelling
and trundling; with the heart of giants; and all in right order, with
that extemporaneous adroitness of theirs: whereby such a lift has been
given, worth three mercenary ones;—which may end when the late twilight
thickens, in triumph shouts, heard or heard of beyond Montmartre!
A sympathetic population will wait, next day, with
eagerness, till the tools are free. Or why wait? Spades elsewhere exist!
And so now bursts forth that effulgence of Parisian enthusiasm,
good-heartedness and brotherly love; such, if Chroniclers are
trustworthy, as was not witnessed since the Age of Gold. Paris, male and
female, precipitates itself towards its South-west extremity, spade on
shoulder. Streams of men, without order; or in order, as ranked
fellow-craftsmen, as natural or accidental reunions, march towards the
Field of Mars. Three-deep these march; to the sound of stringed music;
preceded by young girls with green boughs, and tricolor streamers: they
have shouldered, soldier-wise, their shovels and picks; and with one
throat are singing ca-ira. Yes, pardieu ca-ira, cry the passengers on
the streets. All corporate Guilds, and public and private Bodies of
Citizens, from the highest to the lowest, march; the very Hawkers, one
finds, have ceased bawling for one day. The neighbouring Villages turn
out: their able men come marching, to village fiddle or tambourine and
triangle, under their Mayor, or Mayor and Curate, who also walk
bespaded, and in tricolor sash. As many as one hundred and fifty
thousand workers: nay at certain seasons, as some count, two hundred and
fifty thousand; for, in the afternoon especially, what mortal but,
finishing his hasty day's work, would run! A stirring city: from the
time you reach the Place Louis Quinze, southward over the River, by all
Avenues, it is one living throng. So many workers; and no mercenary
mock-workers, but real ones that lie freely to it: each Patriot
stretches himself against the stubborn glebe; hews and wheels with the
whole weight that is in him.
Amiable infants, aimables enfans! They do the 'police des
l'atelier' too, the guidance and governance, themselves; with that ready
will of theirs, with that extemporaneous adroitness. It is a true
brethren's work; all distinctions confounded, abolished; as it was in
the beginning, when Adam himself delved. Longfrocked tonsured Monks,
with short-skirted Water-carriers, with swallow-tailed well-frizzled
Incroyables of a Patriot turn; dark Charcoalmen, meal-white
Peruke-makers; or Peruke-wearers, for Advocate and Judge are there, and
all Heads of Districts: sober Nuns sisterlike with flaunting Nymphs of
the Opera, and females in common circumstances named unfortunate: the
patriot Rag-picker, and perfumed dweller in palaces; for Patriotism like
New-birth, and also like Death, levels all. The Printers have come
marching, Prudhomme's all in Paper-caps with Revolutions de Paris
printed on them; as Camille notes; wishing that in these great days
there should be a Pacte des Ecrivains too, or Federation of Able
Editors. (See Newspapers, &c. (in Hist. Parl. vi. 381-406).)
Beautiful to see! The snowy linen and delicate pantaloon alternates with
the soiled check-shirt and bushel-breeches; for both have cast their
coats, and under both are four limbs and a set of Patriot muscles. There
do they pick and shovel; or bend forward, yoked in long strings to
box-barrow or overloaded tumbril; joyous, with one mind. Abbe Sieyes is
seen pulling, wiry, vehement, if too light for draught; by the side of
Beauharnais, who shall get Kings though he be none. Abbe Maury did not
pull; but the Charcoalmen brought a mummer guised like him, so he had to
pull in effigy. Let no august Senator disdain the work: Mayor Bailly,
Generalissimo Lafayette are there;—and, alas, shall be there again
another day! The King himself comes to see: sky-rending Vive-le-Roi;
'and suddenly with shouldered spades they form a guard of honour round
him.' Whosoever can come comes, to work, or to look, and bless the work.
Whole families have come. One whole family we see
clearly, of three generations: the father picking, the mother
shovelling, the young ones wheeling assiduous; old grandfather, hoary
with ninety-three years, holds in his arms the youngest of all: (Mercier.
ii. 76, &c.) frisky, not helpful this one; who nevertheless may tell
it to his grandchildren; and how the Future and the Past alike looked
on, and with failing or with half-formed voice, faltered their ca-ira. A
vintner has wheeled in, on Patriot truck, beverage of wine: "Drink not,
my brothers, if ye are not dry; that your cask may last the longer;"
neither did any drink, but men 'evidently exhausted.' A dapper Abbe
looks on, sneering. "To the barrow!" cry several; whom he, lest a worse
thing befal him, obeys: nevertheless one wiser Patriot barrowman,
arriving now, interposes his "arretez;" setting down his own barrow, he
snatches the Abbe's; trundles it fast, like an infected thing; forth of
the Champ-de-Mars circuit, and discharges it there. Thus too a certain
person (of some quality, or private capital, to appearance),
entering hastily, flings down his coat, waistcoat and two watches, and
is rushing to the thick of the work: "But your watches?" cries the
general voice.—"Does one distrust his brothers?" answers he; nor were
the watches stolen. How beautiful is noble-sentiment: like gossamer
gauze, beautiful and cheap; which will stand no tear and wear! Beautiful
cheap gossamer gauze, thou film-shadow of a raw-material of Virtue,
which art not woven, nor likely to be, into Duty; thou art better than
nothing, and also worse!
Young Boarding-school Boys, College Students, shout Vive
la Nation, and regret that they have yet 'only their sweat to give.'
What say we of Boys? Beautifullest Hebes; the loveliest of Paris, in
their light air-robes, with riband-girdle of tricolor, are there;
shovelling and wheeling with the rest; their Hebe eyes brighter with
enthusiasm, and long hair in beautiful dishevelment: hard-pressed are
their small fingers; but they make the patriot barrow go, and even force
it to the summit of the slope (with a little tracing, which what
man's arm were not too happy to lend?)—then bound down with it
again, and go for more; with their long locks and tricolors blown back:
graceful as the rosy Hours. O, as that evening Sun fell over the
Champ-de-Mars, and tinted with fire the thick umbrageous boscage that
shelters it on this hand and on that, and struck direct on those Domes
and two-and-forty Windows of the Ecole Militaire, and made them all of
burnished gold,—saw he on his wide zodiac road other such sight? A
living garden spotted and dotted with such flowerage; all colours of the
prism; the beautifullest blent friendly with the usefullest; all growing
and working brotherlike there, under one warm feeling, were it but for
days; once and no second time! But Night is sinking; these Nights too,
into Eternity. The hastiest Traveller Versailles-ward has drawn bridle
on the heights of Chaillot: and looked for moments over the River;
reporting at Versailles what he saw, not without tears. (Mercier, ii.
81.)
Meanwhile, from all points of the compass, Federates are
arriving: fervid children of the South, 'who glory in their Mirabeau;'
considerate North-blooded Mountaineers of Jura; sharp Bretons, with
their Gaelic suddenness; Normans not to be overreached in bargain: all
now animated with one noblest fire of Patriotism. Whom the Paris
brethren march forth to receive; with military solemnities, with
fraternal embracing, and a hospitality worthy of the heroic ages. They
assist at the Assembly's Debates, these Federates: the Galleries are
reserved for them. They assist in the toils of the Champ-de-Mars; each
new troop will put its hand to the spade; lift a hod of earth on the
Altar of the Fatherland. But the flourishes of rhetoric, for it is a
gesticulating People; the moral-sublime of those Addresses to an august
Assembly, to a Patriot Restorer! Our Breton Captain of Federates kneels
even, in a fit of enthusiasm, and gives up his sword; he wet-eyed to a
King wet-eyed. Poor Louis! These, as he said afterwards, were among the
bright days of his life.
Reviews also there must be; royal Federate-reviews, with
King, Queen and tricolor Court looking on: at lowest, if, as is too
common, it rains, our Federate Volunteers will file through the inner
gateways, Royalty standing dry. Nay there, should some stop occur, the
beautifullest fingers in France may take you softly by the lapelle, and,
in mild flute-voice, ask: "Monsieur, of what Province are you?" Happy he
who can reply, chivalrously lowering his sword's point, "Madame, from
the Province your ancestors reigned over." He that happy 'Provincial
Advocate,' now Provincial Federate, shall be rewarded by a sun-smile,
and such melodious glad words addressed to a King: "Sire, these are your
faithful Lorrainers." Cheerier verily, in these holidays, is this
'skyblue faced with red' of a National Guardsman, than the dull black
and gray of a Provincial Advocate, which in workdays one was used to.
For the same thrice-blessed Lorrainer shall, this evening, stand sentry
at a Queen's door; and feel that he could die a thousand deaths for her:
then again, at the outer gate, and even a third time, she shall see him;
nay he will make her do it; presenting arms with emphasis, 'making his
musket jingle again': and in her salute there shall again be a
sun-smile, and that little blonde-locked too hasty Dauphin shall be
admonished, "Salute then, Monsieur, don't be unpolite;" and therewith
she, like a bright Sky-wanderer or Planet with her little Moon, issues
forth peculiar. (Narrative by a Lorraine Federate (given in Hist.
Parl. vi. 389-91).)
But at night, when Patriot spadework is over, figure the
sacred rights of hospitality! Lepelletier Saint-Fargeau, a mere private
senator, but with great possessions, has daily his 'hundred
dinner-guests;' the table of Generalissimo Lafayette may double that
number. In lowly parlour, as in lofty saloon, the wine-cup passes round;
crowned by the smiles of Beauty; be it of lightly-tripping Grisette, or
of high-sailing Dame, for both equally have beauty, and smiles precious
to the brave.
And so now, in spite of plotting Aristocrats, lazy hired
spademen, and almost of Destiny itself (for there has been much rain),
the Champ-de-Mars, on the 13th of the month is fairly ready; trimmed,
rammed, buttressed with firm masonry; and Patriotism can stroll over it
admiring; and as it were rehearsing, for in every head is some
unutterable image of the morrow. Pray Heaven there be not clouds. Nay
what far worse cloud is this, of a misguided Municipality that talks of
admitting Patriotism, to the solemnity, by tickets! Was it by tickets we
were admitted to the work; and to what brought the work? Did we take the
Bastille by tickets? A misguided Municipality sees the error; at late
midnight, rolling drums announce to Patriotism starting half out of its
bed-clothes, that it is to be ticketless. Pull down thy night-cap
therefore; and, with demi-articulate grumble, significant of several
things, go pacified to sleep again. Tomorrow is Wednesday morning;
unforgetable among the fasti of the world.
The morning comes, cold for a July one; but such a
festivity would make Greenland smile. Through every inlet of that
National Amphitheatre (for it is a league in circuit, cut with
openings at due intervals), floods-in the living throng; covers
without tumult space after space. The Ecole Militaire has galleries and
overvaulting canopies, where Carpentry and Painting have vied, for the
upper Authorities; triumphal arches, at the Gate by the River, bear
inscriptions, if weak, yet well-meant, and orthodox. Far aloft, over the
Altar of the Fatherland, on their tall crane standards of iron, swing
pensile our antique Cassolettes or pans of incense; dispensing sweet
incense-fumes,—unless for the Heathen Mythology, one sees not for whom.
Two hundred thousand Patriotic Men; and, twice as good, one hundred
thousand Patriotic Women, all decked and glorified as one can fancy, sit
waiting in this Champ-de-Mars.
What a picture: that circle of bright-eyed Life, spread
up there, on its thirty-seated Slope; leaning, one would say, on the
thick umbrage of those Avenue-Trees, for the stems of them are hidden by
the height; and all beyond it mere greenness of Summer Earth, with the
gleams of waters, or white sparklings of stone-edifices: little circular
enamel-picture in the centre of such a vase—of emerald! A vase not
empty: the Invalides Cupolas want not their population, nor the distant
Windmills of Montmartre; on remotest steeple and invisible village
belfry, stand men with spy-glasses. On the heights of Chaillot are
many-coloured undulating groups; round and far on, over all the circling
heights that embosom Paris, it is as one more or less peopled
Amphitheatre; which the eye grows dim with measuring. Nay heights, as
was before hinted, have cannon; and a floating-battery of cannon is on
the Seine. When eye fails, ear shall serve; and all France properly is
but one Amphitheatre: for in paved town and unpaved hamlet, men walk
listening; till the muffled thunder sound audible on their horizon, that
they too may begin swearing and firing! (Deux Amis, v. 168.) But
now, to streams of music, come Federates enough,—for they have assembled
on the Boulevard Saint-Antoine or thereby, and come marching through the
City, with their Eighty-three Department Banners, and blessings not loud
but deep; comes National Assembly, and takes seat under its Canopy;
comes Royalty, and takes seat on a throne beside it. And Lafayette, on
white charger, is here, and all the civic Functionaries; and the
Federates form dances, till their strictly military evolutions and
manoeuvres can begin.
Evolutions and manoeuvres? Task not the pen of mortal to
describe them: truant imagination droops;—declares that it is not worth
while. There is wheeling and sweeping, to slow, to quick, and double
quick-time: Sieur Motier, or Generalissimo Lafayette, for they are one
and the same, and he is General of France, in the King's stead, for
four-and-twenty hours; Sieur Motier must step forth, with that sublime
chivalrous gait of his; solemnly ascend the steps of the Fatherland's
Altar, in sight of Heaven and of the scarcely breathing Earth; and,
under the creak of those swinging Cassolettes, 'pressing his sword's
point firmly there,' pronounce the Oath, To King, to Law, and Nation (not
to mention 'grains' with their circulating), in his own name and
that of armed France. Whereat there is waving of banners and acclaim
sufficient. The National Assembly must swear, standing in its place; the
King himself audibly. The King swears; and now be the welkin split with
vivats; let citizens enfranchised embrace, each smiting heartily his
palm into his fellow's; and armed Federates clang their arms; above all,
that floating battery speak! It has spoken,—to the four corners of
France. From eminence to eminence, bursts the thunder; faint-heard,
loud-repeated. What a stone, cast into what a lake; in circles that do
not grow fainter. From Arras to Avignon; from Metz to Bayonne! Over
Orleans and Blois it rolls, in cannon-recitative; Puy bellows of it amid
his granite mountains; Pau where is the shell-cradle of Great Henri. At
far Marseilles, one can think, the ruddy evening witnesses it; over the
deep-blue Mediterranean waters, the Castle of If ruddy-tinted darts
forth, from every cannon's mouth, its tongue of fire; and all the people
shout: Yes, France is free. O glorious France that has burst out so;
into universal sound and smoke; and attained—the Phrygian Cap of
Liberty! In all Towns, Trees of Liberty also may be planted; with or
without advantage. Said we not, it is the highest stretch attained by
the Thespian Art on this Planet, or perhaps attainable?
The Thespian Art, unfortunately, one must still call it;
for behold there, on this Field of Mars, the National Banners, before
there could be any swearing, were to be all blessed. A most proper
operation; since surely without Heaven's blessing bestowed, say even,
audibly or inaudibly sought, no Earthly banner or contrivance can prove
victorious: but now the means of doing it? By what thrice-divine
Franklin thunder-rod shall miraculous fire be drawn out of Heaven; and
descend gently, life-giving, with health to the souls of men? Alas, by
the simplest: by Two Hundred shaven-crowned Individuals, 'in snow-white
albs, with tricolor girdles,' arranged on the steps of Fatherland's
Altar; and, at their head for spokesman, Soul's Overseer
Talleyrand-Perigord! These shall act as miraculous thunder-rod,—to such
length as they can. O ye deep azure Heavens, and thou green all-nursing
Earth; ye Streams ever-flowing; deciduous Forests that die and are born
again, continually, like the sons of men; stone Mountains that die daily
with every rain-shower, yet are not dead and levelled for ages of ages,
nor born again (it seems) but with new world-explosions, and such
tumultuous seething and tumbling, steam half way to the Moon; O thou
unfathomable mystic All, garment and dwellingplace of the UNNAMED; O
spirit, lastly, of Man, who mouldest and modellest that Unfathomable
Unnameable even as we see,—is not there a miracle: That some French
mortal should, we say not have believed, but pretended to imagine that
he believed that Talleyrand and Two Hundred pieces of white Calico could
do it!
Here, however, we are to remark with the sorrowing
Historians of that day, that suddenly, while Episcopus Talleyrand,
long-stoled, with mitre and tricolor belt, was yet but hitching up the
Altar-steps, to do his miracle, the material Heaven grew black; a
north-wind, moaning cold moisture, began to sing; and there descended a
very deluge of rain. Sad to see! The thirty-staired Seats, all round our
Amphitheatre, get instantaneously slated with mere umbrellas, fallacious
when so thick set: our antique Cassolettes become Water-pots; their
incense-smoke gone hissing, in a whiff of muddy vapour. Alas, instead of
vivats, there is nothing now but the furious peppering and rattling.
From three to four hundred thousand human individuals feel that they
have a skin; happily impervious. The General's sash runs water: how all
military banners droop; and will not wave, but lazily flap, as if
metamorphosed into painted tin-banners! Worse, far worse, these hundred
thousand, such is the Historian's testimony, of the fairest of France!
Their snowy muslins all splashed and draggled; the ostrich feather
shrunk shamefully to the backbone of a feather: all caps are ruined;
innermost pasteboard molten into its original pap: Beauty no longer
swims decorated in her garniture, like Love-goddess hidden-revealed in
her Paphian clouds, but struggles in disastrous imprisonment in it, for
'the shape was noticeable;' and now only sympathetic interjections,
titterings, teeheeings, and resolute good-humour will avail. A deluge;
an incessant sheet or fluid-column of rain;—such that our Overseer's
very mitre must be filled; not a mitre, but a filled and leaky
fire-bucket on his reverend head!—Regardless of which, Overseer
Talleyrand performs his miracle: the Blessing of Talleyrand, another
than that of Jacob, is on all the Eighty-three departmental flags of
France; which wave or flap, with such thankfulness as needs. Towards
three o'clock, the sun beams out again: the remaining evolutions can be
transacted under bright heavens, though with decorations much damaged. (Deux
Amis, v. 143-179.)
On Wednesday our Federation is consummated: but the
festivities last out the week, and over into the next. Festivities such
as no Bagdad Caliph, or Aladdin with the Lamp, could have equalled.
There is a Jousting on the River; with its water-somersets, splashing
and haha-ing: Abbe Fauchet, Te-Deum Fauchet, preaches, for his part, in
'the rotunda of the Corn-market,' a Harangue on Franklin; for whom the
National Assembly has lately gone three days in black. The Motier and
Lepelletier tables still groan with viands; roofs ringing with patriotic
toasts. On the fifth evening, which is the Christian Sabbath, there is a
universal Ball. Paris, out of doors and in, man, woman and child, is
jigging it, to the sound of harp and four-stringed fiddle. The
hoariest-headed man will tread one other measure, under this nether
Moon; speechless nurselings, infants as we call them, (Greek),
crow in arms; and sprawl out numb-plump little limbs,—impatient for
muscularity, they know not why. The stiffest balk bends more or less;
all joists creak.
Or out, on the Earth's breast itself, behold the Ruins of
the Bastille. All lamplit, allegorically decorated: a Tree of Liberty
sixty feet high; and Phrygian Cap on it, of size enormous, under which
King Arthur and his round-table might have dined! In the depths of the
background, is a single lugubrious lamp, rendering dim-visible one of
your iron cages, half-buried, and some Prison stones,—Tyranny vanishing
downwards, all gone but the skirt: the rest wholly lamp-festoons, trees
real or of pasteboard; in the similitude of a fairy grove; with this
inscription, readable to runner: 'Ici l'on danse, Dancing Here.' As
indeed had been obscurely foreshadowed by Cagliostro (See his Lettre
au Peuple Francais, London, 1786.) prophetic Quack of Quacks, when
he, four years ago, quitted the grim durance;—to fall into a grimmer, of
the Roman Inquisition, and not quit it.
But, after all, what is this Bastille business to that of
the Champs Elysees! Thither, to these Fields well named Elysian, all
feet tend. It is radiant as day with festooned lamps; little oil-cups,
like variegated fire-flies, daintily illumine the highest leaves: trees
there are all sheeted with variegated fire, shedding far a glimmer into
the dubious wood. There, under the free sky, do tight-limbed Federates,
with fairest newfound sweethearts, elastic as Diana, and not of that
coyness and tart humour of Diana, thread their jocund mazes, all through
the ambrosial night; and hearts were touched and fired; and seldom
surely had our old Planet, in that huge conic Shadow of hers 'which goes
beyond the Moon, and is named Night,' curtained such a Ball-room. O if,
according to Seneca, the very gods look down on a good man struggling
with adversity, and smile; what must they think of Five-and-twenty
million indifferent ones victorious over it,—for eight days and more?
In this way, and in such ways, however, has the Feast of
Pikes danced itself off; gallant Federates wending homewards, towards
every point of the compass, with feverish nerves, heart and head much
heated; some of them, indeed, as Dampmartin's elderly respectable
friend, from Strasbourg, quite 'burnt out with liquors,' and flickering
towards extinction. (Dampmartin, Evenemens, i. 144-184.) The
Feast of Pikes has danced itself off, and become defunct, and the ghost
of a Feast;—nothing of it now remaining but this vision in men's memory;
and the place that knew it (for the slope of that Champ-de-Mars is
crumbled to half the original height (Dulaure, Histoire de Paris,
viii. 25).) now knowing it no more. Undoubtedly one of the
memorablest National Hightides. Never or hardly ever, as we said, was
Oath sworn with such heart-effusion, emphasis and expenditure of
joyance; and then it was broken irremediably within year and day. Ah,
why? When the swearing of it was so heavenly-joyful, bosom clasped to
bosom, and Five-and-twenty million hearts all burning together: O ye
inexorable Destinies, why?—Partly because it was sworn with such
over-joyance; but chiefly, indeed, for an older reason: that Sin had
come into the world and Misery by Sin! These Five-and-twenty millions,
if we will consider it, have now henceforth, with that Phrygian Cap of
theirs, no force over them, to bind and guide; neither in them, more
than heretofore, is guiding force, or rule of just living: how then,
while they all go rushing at such a pace, on unknown ways, with no
bridle, towards no aim, can hurlyburly unutterable fail? For verily not
Federation-rosepink is the colour of this Earth and her work: not by
outbursts of noble-sentiment, but with far other ammunition, shall a man
front the world.
But how wise, in all cases, to 'husband your fire;' to
keep it deep down, rather, as genial radical-heat! Explosions, the
forciblest, and never so well directed, are questionable; far oftenest
futile, always frightfully wasteful: but think of a man, of a Nation of
men, spending its whole stock of fire in one artificial Firework! So
have we seen fond weddings (for individuals, like Nations, have their
Hightides) celebrated with an outburst of triumph and deray, at
which the elderly shook their heads. Better had a serious cheerfulness
been; for the enterprise was great. Fond pair! the more triumphant ye
feel, and victorious over terrestrial evil, which seems all abolished,
the wider-eyed will your disappointment be to find terrestrial evil
still extant. "And why extant?" will each of you cry: "Because my false
mate has played the traitor: evil was abolished; I meant faithfully, and
did, or would have done." Whereby the oversweet moon of honey changes
itself into long years of vinegar; perhaps divulsive vinegar, like
Hannibal's.
Shall we say then, the French Nation has led Royalty, or
wooed and teased poor Royalty to lead her, to the hymeneal Fatherland's
Altar, in such oversweet manner; and has, most thoughtlessly, to
celebrate the nuptials with due shine and demonstration,—burnt her bed?
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