The French Revolution eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,095 pages of information about The French Revolution.

The French Revolution eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,095 pages of information about The French Revolution.

And yet if the wide Avenue is too strait, what will the Street de Surintendance be, at leaving of the same?  At the corner of Surintendance Street, the compressed yelpings became a continuous yell:  savage figures spring on the tumbril-shafts; first spray of an endless coming tide!  The Mayor pleads, pushes, half-desperate; is pushed, carried off in men’s arms:  the savage tide has entrance, has mastery.  Amid horrid noise, and tumult as of fierce wolves, the Prisoners sink massacred,—­all but some eleven, who escaped into houses, and found mercy.  The Prisons, and what other Prisoners they held, were with difficulty saved.  The stript clothes are burnt in bonfire; the corpses lie heaped in the ditch on the morrow morning. (Pieces officielles relatives au massacre des Prisonniers a Versailles in Hist.  Parl. xviii. 236-249.) All France, except it be the Ten Men of the Circular and their people, moans and rages, inarticulately shrieking; all Europe rings.

But neither did Danton shriek; though, as Minister of Justice, it was more his part to do so.  Brawny Danton is in the breach, as of stormed Cities and Nations; amid the Sweep of Tenth-of-August cannon, the rustle of Prussian gallows-ropes, the smiting of September sabres; destruction all round him, and the rushing-down of worlds:  Minister of Justice is his name; but Titan of the Forlorn Hope, and Enfant Perdu of the Revolution, is his quality,—­and the man acts according to that.  “We must put our enemies in fear!” Deep fear, is it not, as of its own accord, falling on our enemies?  The Titan of the Forlorn Hope, he is not the man that would swiftest of all prevent its so falling.  Forward, thou lost Titan of an Enfant Perdu; thou must dare, and again dare, and without end dare; there is nothing left for thee but that!  “Que mon nom soit fletri, Let my name be blighted:”  what am I?  The Cause alone is great; and shall live, and not perish.—­So, on the whole, here too is a swallower of Formulas; of still wider gulp than Mirabeau:  this Danton, Mirabeau of the Sansculottes.  In the September days, this Minister was not heard of as co-operating with strict Roland; his business might lie elsewhere,—­with Brunswick and the Hotel-de-Ville.  When applied to by an official person, about the Orleans Prisoners, and the risks they ran, he answered gloomily, twice over, “Are not these men guilty?”—­When pressed, he ‘answered in a terrible voice,’ and turned his back.  (Biographie des Ministres, p. 97.) Two Thousand slain in the Prisons; horrible if you will:  but Brunswick is within a day’s journey of us; and there are Five-and twenty Millions yet, to slay or to save.  Some men have tasks,—­frightfuller than ours!  It seems strange, but is not strange, that this Minister of Moloch-Justice, when any suppliant for a friend’s life got access to him, was found to have human compassion; and yielded and granted ‘always;’ ’neither did one personal enemy of Danton perish in these days.’ (Ibid. p. 103.)

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The French Revolution from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.