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.

As for this Parlement of Paris, now turned out to the street, we will without reluctance leave it there.  The Beds of Justice it had to undergo, in the coming fortnight, at Versailles, in registering, or rather refusing to register, those new-hatched Edicts; and how it assembled in taverns and tap-rooms there, for the purpose of Protesting, (Weber, i. 299-303.) or hovered disconsolate, with outspread skirts, not knowing where to assemble; and was reduced to lodge Protest ’with a Notary;’ and in the end, to sit still (in a state of forced ’vacation’), and do nothing; all this, natural now, as the burying of the dead after battle, shall not concern us.  The Parlement of Paris has as good as performed its part; doing and misdoing, so far, but hardly further, could it stir the world.

Lomenie has removed the evil then?  Not at all:  not so much as the symptom of the evil; scarcely the twelfth part of the symptom, and exasperated the other eleven!  The Intendants of Provinces, the Military Commandants are at their posts, on the appointed 8th of May:  but in no Parlement, if not in the single one of Douai, can these new Edicts get registered.  Not peaceable signing with ink; but browbeating, bloodshedding, appeal to primary club-law!  Against these Bailliages, against this Plenary Court, exasperated Themis everywhere shows face of battle; the Provincial Noblesse are of her party, and whoever hates Lomenie and the evil time; with her attorneys and Tipstaves, she enlists and operates down even to the populace.  At Rennes in Brittany, where the historical Bertrand de Moleville is Intendant, it has passed from fatal continual duelling, between the military and gentry, to street-fighting; to stone-volleys and musket-shot:  and still the Edicts remained unregistered.  The afflicted Bretons send remonstrance to Lomenie, by a Deputation of Twelve; whom, however, Lomenie, having heard them, shuts up in the Bastille.  A second larger deputation he meets, by his scouts, on the road, and persuades or frightens back.  But now a third largest Deputation is indignantly sent by many roads:  refused audience on arriving, it meets to take council; invites Lafayette and all Patriot Bretons in Paris to assist; agitates itself; becomes the Breton Club, first germ of—­the Jacobins’ Society. (A.  F. de Bertrand-Moleville, Memoires Particuliers (Paris, 1816), I. ch. i.  Marmontel, Memoires, iv. 27.)

So many as eight Parlements get exiled:  (Montgaillard, i. 308.) others might need that remedy, but it is one not always easy of appliance.  At Grenoble, for instance, where a Mounier, a Barnave have not been idle, the Parlement had due order (by Lettres-de-Cachet) to depart, and exile itself:  but on the morrow, instead of coaches getting yoked, the alarm-bell bursts forth, ominous; and peals and booms all day:  crowds of mountaineers rush down, with axes, even with firelocks,—­whom (most ominous of all!) the soldiery shows no eagerness to deal with.  ’Axe over head,’ the

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The French Revolution from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.