2647 (return)
[ Taine is describing a
basic trait of human nature, something we see again and again whether our
ancestors attacked small, harmless neighboring nations, witches,
renegades, Jews, or religious people of another faith.(SR).]
2648 (return)
[ Buchez et Roux, XIX
93, session of Sept. 23, 1792. Speech by Panis: "Many worthy citizens
would like to have judicial proof; but political proofs satisfy us"—Towards
the end of July the Minister of the Interior had invited Pétion to send
two municipal officers to examine the Tuileries; but this the council
refused to do, so as to keep up the excitement.]
2649 (return)
[ Mallet du Pan,
"Mémoires," 303. Letter of Malouet, June 29.—Bertrand de Molleville,
"Mémoires," II. 301.—Hua, 148.—Weber, II. 208.—Madame
Campan, "Mémoires," II. 188. Already, at the end of 1791, the king was
told that he was liable to be poisoned by the pastry-cook of the palace, a
Jacobin. For three or four months the bread and pastry he ate were
secretly purchased in other places. On the 14th of July, 1792, his
attendants, on account of the threats against his life, put a breastplate
on him under his coat.]
2650 (return)
[ member of the 1789
Constituent Assembly. (SR).]
2651 (return)
[ Moniteur, VIII. 271,
278. A deputy, excusing his assailants, pretends that d'Ésprémesnil urged
the people to enter the Tuileries garden. It is scarcely necessary to
state that during the Constituent Assembly d'Espréménil was one of the
most conspicuous members of the extreme "Right."—Duc de Gaëte,
"Mémoires," I. 18.]
2652 (return)
[ Lafayette,
"Mémoires," I. 465.]
2653 (return)
[ Moniteur, XIII. 327,—Mortimer-Ternaux,
II. 176.]
2654 (return)
[ Moniteur, XIII. 340.—The
style of these petitions is highly instructive. We see in them the state
of mind and degree of education of the petitioners: sometimes a
half-educated writer attempting to reason in the vein of the Contrat
Social; sometimes, a schoolboy spouting the tirades of Raynal; and
sometimes, the corner letter-writer putting together the expressions
forming his stock in trade.]
2655 (return)
[ Carra, "Précis
historique sur l'origine et les véritables auteurs de l'insurrection du 10
Août."—Barbaroux, "Mémoires, 49. The executive directory, appointed
by the central committee of the confederates, held its first meeting in a
wine-shop, the Soleil d'or, on the square of the Bastille; the second at
the Cadran bleu, on the boulevard; the third in Antoine's room, who then
lodged in the same house with Robespierre. Camille Desmoulins was present
at this latter meeting. Santerre, Westermann, Fournier the American, and
Lazowski were the principal members of this Directory. Another
insurrectionary plan was drawn up on the 30th of July in a wine-shop at
Charenton by Barbaroux, Rebecqui, Pierre Bayle, Heron, and Fournier the
American.—Cf. J. Claretie, "Camille Desmoulins," p. 192. Desmoulins
wrote, a little before the 10th of August: "If the National Assembly
thinks that it cannot save the country, let it declare then, that,
according to the Constitution, and like the Romans, it hands this over to
each citizen. Let the tocsin be rung forthwith, the whole nation
assembled, and every man, as at Rome, be invested with the power of
putting to death all well-known conspirators!"]
2656 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux, II.
182. Decision of the Quinze-Vingt Section, Aug. 4.—Buchez et Roux,
XVI. 402-410. History of Quinze-Vingt Section.]
2657 (return)
[ Moniteur. XIII. 367,
session of Aug. 8.—Ibid., 369 and following pages. Session of Aug.
9. Letters and speeches of maltreated deputies.]
2658 (return)
[ Moniteur, 371. Speech
of M. Girardin: "I am convinced that most of those who insulted me were
foreigners."—Ibid., 370. Letter of M. Frouvières: "Many of the
citizens, coming out of their shops, exclaimed: How can they insult the
deputies in this way? Run away! run off!"—M. Jolivet, that evening
attending a meeting of the Jacobin Club, states "that the Jacobin tribunes
were far from sharing in this frenzy." He heard "one individual in these
tribunes exclaim, on the proposal to put the dwellings of the deputies on
the list, that it was outrageous."—Countless other details show the
small number and character of the factions.—Ibid., 374. Speech of
Aubert-Dubacet: "I saw men dressed in the coats of the national guard,
with countenances betraying everything that is most vile in wickedness."
There are "a great many evil-disposed persons among the federates."]
2659 (return)
[ Moniteur, XIII. 170
(letter of M. de Joly, Minister of Justice).—Ibid., 371, declaration
of M. Jolivet.—Buchez et Roux, XVI. 370 (session of the Jacobin
Club, Aug. 8, at evening). Speech by Goupilleau.]
2660 (return)
[ One may imagine with
what satisfaction Lenin, must have read this description agreeing: "Yes,
open voting by a named and identified count, that is how a leader best can
control any assembly." (SR).]
2661 (return)
[ Moniteur, XIII. 370.—Cf.
Ibid., the letter of M. Chapron.—Ibid., 372. Speech by M. A.
Vaublanc.—Moore, "Journal during a Residence in France," I. 25 (Aug.
10). The impudence of the people in the galleries was intolerable. There
was "a loud and universal peal of laughter from all the galleries" on the
reading of a letter, in which a deputy wrote that he was threatened with
decapitation.—" Fifty members were shouting at the same time; the
most boisterous night I ever was witness to in the House of Commons was
calmness itself alongside of this."]
2662 (return)
[ Moniteur, Ibid., p.
371.—Lafayette, I. 467. "On the 9th of August, as can be seen in the
unmutilated editions of the Logographe, the Assembly, almost to a man,
arose and declared that it was not free." Ibid., 478. "On the 9th of
August the Assembly had passed a decree declaring that it was not free.
This decree was torn up on the 10th. But it is no that it was passed."]
2663 (return)
[ Moniteur, XIII. 370,
374, 375. Speech by Roederer, letter of M. de Joly, and speech by Pétion.]
2664 (return)
[ Mathieu Dumas,
"Mémoires," II. 461.]
2665 (return)
[ "Chronique des
cinquante jours," by Roederer.—Mortimer-Ternaux, II. 260.—Buchez
et Roux, XVI. 458.—Towards half-past seven in the morning there were
only from sixty to eighty members present. (Testimony of two of the
Ministers who leave the Assembly.)]
2666 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux, II.
205. At the ballot of July 12, not counting members on leave of absence or
delegated elsewhere, and the dead not replaced, there were already
twenty-seven not answering the call, while after that date three others
resigned.—Buchez et Roux, XVII. 340 (session of Sept. 2, 1792).
Hérault de Séchelles is elected president by 248 out of 257 voters.—Hua,
164 (after Aug. 10). "We attended the meetings of the House simply to show
that we had not given them up. We took no part in the discussions, and on
the vote being taken, standing or sitting, we remained in our seats. This
was the only protest we could make."]
2667 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux, II.
229, 233, 417 and following pages. M. Mortimer-Ternaux is the first to
expose, with documents to support him and critical discussion, the
formation of the revolutionary commune.—The six sections referred to
are the Lombards, Gravilliers, Mauconseil, Gobelins, Théatre-Français, and
Faubourg Poissonnière.]
2668 (return)
[ For instance, the
Enfants Rouges, Louvre, Observatoire, Fontaine-Grenelle, Faubourg
Saint-Denis, and Thermes de Julien..]
2669 (return)
[ For example, at the
sections of Montreuil, Popincourt, and Roi de Sicile..]
2670 (return)
[ For example, Ponceau,
Invalides, Sainte-Geneviève.]
2671 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux, II.
240.]
2672 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux, 446
(list of the commissioners who took their seats before 9 o'clock in the
morning). "Le Tableau général des Commisaires des 48 sections qui ont
composé le conseil général de la Commune de Paris, le 10 Août, 1792," it
must be noted, was not published until three or four months later, with
all the essential falsifications. It may be found in Buchez et Roux, XVI.
450.—"Relation de l'abbé Sicard." "At that time a lot of scoundrels,
after the general meeting of the sections was over, passed acts in the
name of the whole assemblage and had them executed, utterly unknown to
those who had done this, or by those who were the unfortunate victims of
these proceedings." (supported by documents).]
2673 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux, II.
270, 273. (The official report of Mandat's examination contains five false
statements, either through omission or substitution.)]
2674 (return)
[ Claretie, "Camille
Desmoulins," p.467 (notes of Topino-Lebrun on Danton's trial). Danton, in
the pleadings, says: "I left at 1 o'clock in the morning. I was at the
revolutionary commune and pronounced sentence of death on Mandet, who had
orders to fire op the people." Danton in the same place says: "I had
planned the 10th of August." It is very certain that from 1 to 7 o'clock
in the morning (when Mandat was killed) he was the principal leader of the
insurrectional commune. Nobody was so potent, so overbearing, so well
endowed physically for the control of such a conventicle as Danton.
Besides, among the new-comers he was the best known and with the most
influence through his position as deputy of the syndic-attorney. Hence his
prestige after the victory and appointment as Minister of Justice. His
hierarchical superior, the syndic-attorney Manuel, who was there also and
signed his name, showed himself undoubtedly the pitiful fellow he was, an
affected, crazy, ridiculous loud-talker. For this reason he was allowed to
remain syndic-attorney as a tool and servant.—Beaulieu, "Essais sur
la Révolution Française," III. 454. "Rossignal boasted of having committed
this assassination himself."]
2675 (return)
[ "Pièces intéressantes
pour l'histoire," by Pétion, 1793. "I desired the insurrection, but I
trembled for fear that it might not succeed. My position was a critical
one. I had to do my duty as a citizen without sacrificing that of a
magistrate; externals had to be preserved without derogating from forms.
The plan was to confine me in my own house; but they forgot or delayed to
carry this out. Who do you think repeatedly sent to urge the execution of
this measure? Myself; yes, myself!"]
2676 (return)
[ In "Histoire de la
Révolution Française" by Ferrand & Lamarque, Cavaillés, Paris 1851,
vol. II. Page 225 we may read the following footnote: "This very evening,
a young artillery lieutenant observed, from a window of a house in the rue
de l'Echelle, the preparations which were being undertaken in the château
des Tuileries: that was Napoleon Bonaparte.—Well, right, asked the
deputy Pozze di Borgo, his compatriot, what do you think of what is going
on? This evening they will attack the château. Do you think the people
will succeed?—I don't know, answered the future emperor, but what I
can assure you is that if they gave me the command of two Swiss battalions
and one hundred good horsemen, I should repel the insurgents in a manner
which would for ever rid them of any desire to return." (SR)]
2677 (return)
[ Napoleon, at this
moment, was at the Carrousel, in the house of Bourrienne's brother. "I
could see conveniently," he says, "all that took place during the day...
The king had at least as many troops in his defense as the Convention
since had on the 13th Vendémaire, while the enemies of the latter were
much more formidable and better disciplined. The greater part of the
national guard showed that they favored the king; this justice must be
done to it." (It might be helpful to some readers to know that when
Napoleon refers to the 13th Vendémaire, (5th Oct. 1795) that was when he,
as a young officer was given the task to defend the Convention against a
royalist uprising. He was quick-witted and got hold of some guns in time,
loaded them with grape-shot, placed them in front of the Parisian church
of Saint-Roch and completely eliminated the superior royalist force. SR.)]
2678 (return)
[ Official report of
Leroux. On the side of the garden, along the terrace by the river, and
then on the return were "a few shouts of Vive le roi! many for Vive la
nation! Vivent les sans-culottes! Down with the king! Down with the veto!
Down with the old porker! etc.—But I can certify that these insults
were all uttered between the Pont-Turnant and the parterre, and by about a
dozen men, among which were five or six gunners following the king, the
same as flies follow an animal they are bent on tormenting."]
2679 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux,
III. 223, 273—Letter of Bonnaud, chief of the Sainte-Marguerite
battalion: "I cannot avoid marching at their head under any pretext...
Never will I violate the Constitution unless I am forced to."—The
Gravilliers section and that of the Faubourg Poissonnière cashiered their
officers and elected others.]
2680 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux, IV.
342. Speech of Fabre d'Eglantine at the Jacobin Club, Nov. 5, 1792. "Let
it be loudly proclaimed that these are the same men who captured the
Tuileries, broke into the prisons of the Abbaye, of Orleans and of
Versailles."]
2681 (return)
[ In this respect the
riot of the Champ-de-Mars (July 17, 1791), the only one that was
suppressed, is very instructive: "As the militia would not as usual ground
their arms on receiving the word of command from the mob, this last began,
according to custom, to pelt them with stones. To be deprived of their
Sunday recreational activities, to be marching through the streets under a
scorching sun, and then be remain standing like fools on a public holiday,
to be knocked out with bricks, was a little more than they had patience to
bear so that, without waiting for an order, they fired and killed a dozen
or two of the raggamuffins. The rest of the brave chaps bolted. If the
militia had waited for orders they might, I fancy, have been all knocked
down before they received any... Lafayette was very near being killed in
the morning; but the pistol failed to go off at his breast. The assassin
was immediately secured, but he arranged to be let free" (Gouverneur
Morris, letter of July 20, 1791). Likewise, on the 29th of August, 1792,
at Rouen, the national guard, defending the Hôtel-de-ville, is pelted with
stones more than an hour while many are wounded. The magistrates make
every concession and try every expedient, the mayor reading the riot act
five or six times. Finally the national guard, forced into it, exclaim:
"If you do not allow us to repel force with force we shall leave." They
fire and four persons are killed and two wounded, and the crowd breaks up.
("Archives Nationales," F7, 2265, official report of the Rouen
municipality, Aug. 29; addresses of the municipality, Aug. 28; letter of
the lieutenant-colonel of the gendarmerie, Aug. 30, etc.).]
2682 (return)
[ Official report of
Leroux.—"Chronique des cinquante jours," by Roederer.—"Détails
particuliers sur la journée du 10 Aout," by a bourgeois of Paris, an
eye-witness (1822).]
2683 (return)
[ Barbaroux,
"Mémoires," 69. "Everything betokened victory for the court if the king
had never left his post... If he had shown himself, if he had mounted on
horseback the battalions of Paris would have declared for him."]
2684 (return)
[ "Révolution de
Paris," number for Aug. 11, 1792. "The 10th of August, 1792, is still more
horrible than the 24th of August, 1572, and Louis XVI. a greater monster
than Charles IX. "—"Thousands of torches were found in cellars,
apparently placed there to burn down Paris at a signal from this modern
Nero." In the number for Aug.18: "The place for Louis Nero and for Medicis
Antoinette is not in the towers of the Temple; their heads should have
fallen from the guillotine on the night of the 10th of August." (Special
details of a plan of the king to massacre all patriot deputies, and
intimidate Paris with a grand pillaging and by keeping the guillotine
constantly at work.) "That crowned ogre and his Austrian panther."]
2685 (return)
[ Narrative of the
Minister Joly (written four days after the event). The king departs about
half-past eight.—Cf. Madame Campan, "Mémoires," and Moniteur, XIII.
378.]
2686 (return)
[ "Révolution de
Paris," number for Aug. 18. On his way a sans-culotte steps out in front
of the rows and tries to prevent the king from proceeding. The officer of
the guard argues with him, upon which he extends his hand to the king,
exclaiming: "Touch that hand, bastard, and you have shaken the hand of an
honest man! But I have no intention that your bitch of a wife goes with
you to the Assembly; we don't want that whore."—"Louis XVI," says
Prudhomme, "kept on his way without being upset by the with this noble
impulse."—I regard this as a masterpiece of Jacobin interpretation.]
2687 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux, II.
311, 325. The king, at the foot of the staircase, had asked Roederer:
"what will become of the persons remaining above?" "Sire," he replies,
"they seem to be in plain dress. Those who have swords have merely to take
them off, follow you and leave by the garden." A certain number of
gentlemen, indeed, do so, and thus depart while others escape by the
opposite side through the gallery of the Louvre.]
2688 (return)
[ Mathon de la Varenne,
"Histoire particulière," etc., 108. (Testimony of the valet-de-chambre
Lorimier de Chamilly, with whom Mathon was imprisoned in the prison of La
Force.]
2689 (return)
[ De Lavalette,
"Mémoires," I. 81. "We there found the grand staircase barred by a sort of
beam placed across it, and defended by several Swiss officers, who were
civilly disputing its passage with about fifty mad fellows, whose odd
dress very much resembled that of the brigands in our melodramas. They
were intoxicated, while their coarse language and queer imprecations
indicated the town of Marseilles, which had belched them forth."]
2690 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux, II.
314, 317 (questioning of M. de Diesbach). "Their orders were not to fire
until the word was given, and not before the national guard had set the
example."]
2691 (return)
[ Buchez et Roux, XVI,
443. Narration by Pétion.—Peltier, "Histoire du 10 août."]
2692 (return)
[ M. de Nicolay wrote
the following day, the 11th of August: "The federates fired first, which
was followed by a sharp volley from the château windows." (Le Comte de
Fersen et la cour de France. II. 347.)]
2693 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux, II.
491. The abandonment of the Tuileries is proved by the small loss of the
assailants. (List of the wounded belonging to the Marseilles corps and of
the killed and wounded of the Brest corps, drawn up Oct. 16, 1792.—Statement
of the aid granted to wounded Parisians, to widows, to orphans, and to the
aged, October, 1792, and then 1794.)—The total amounts to 74 dead
and 54 severely wounded The two corps in the hottest of the fight were the
Marseilles band, which lost 22 dead and 14 wounded, and the Bretons, who
lost 2 dead and 5 wounded. The sections that suffered the most were the
Quinze-Vingts (4 dead and 4 wounded), the Faubourg-Montmartre (3 dead),
the Lombards (4 wounded), and the Gravilliers (3 wounded).—Out of
twenty-one sections reported, seven declare that they did not lose a man.—The
Swiss regiment, on the contrary, lost 760 men and 26 officers.]
2694 (return)
[ Napoleon's
narrative.]
2695 (return)
[ Pétion's account.]
2696 (return)
[ Prudhomme's
"Révolution de Paris," XIII. 236 and 237.—Barbaroux, 73.—Madame
Campan, II. 250.]
2697 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux, II.
258.—Moore, I. 59. Some of the robbers are killed. Moore saw one of
them thrown down the grand staircase.]
2698 (return)
[ Michelet, III. 289.]
2699 (return)
[ Mercier, "Le Nouveau
Paris," II. 108.—"The Comte de Fersen et la Cour de France," II.
348. (Letter of Sainte-Foix, Aug. 11). "The cellars were broken open and
more than 10,000 bottles of wine of which I saw the fragments in the
court, so intoxicated the people that I made haste to put an end to an
investigation imprudently begun amidst 2,000 sots with naked swords,
handled by them very carelessly."]
26100 (return)
[ Napoleon's
narrative.—Memoirs of Barbaroux.]
26101 (return)
[ Moniteur, XIII.
387.—Mortimer-Ternaux, II. 340.]
26102 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux,
II. 303. Words of the president Vergniaud on receiving Louis XVI.—Ibid.
340, 342, 350.]
26103 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux,
356, 357.]
26104 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux,
337. Speech of Huguenin, president of the Commune, at the bar of the
National Assembly: "The people by whom we are sent to you have instructed
us to declare to you that they invest you anew with its confidence; but
they at the same time instruct us to declare to you that, as judge of the
extraordinary measures to which they have been driven by necessity and
resistance to oppression, they k now no other authority than the French
people, your sovereign and ours, assembled in its primary meetings."]
26105 (return)
[ Duvergier,
"Collection des lois et décrets," (between Aug. 10 and Sept. 20).]
26106 (return)
[ Duvergier,
"Collection des lois et décrets," Aug. 11-12. "The National Assembly
considering that it has not the right to subject sovereignty in the
formation of a national Convention to imperative regulations,... invites
citizens to conform to the following rules."]
26107 (return)
[ August 11 (article
8)]
26108 (return)
[ Aug. 10-12 and Aug.
28.]
26109 (return)
[ Ibid., Aug. 10,
Aug. 13.—Cf. Moniteur, XIII. 399 (session of Aug. 12).]
26110 (return)
[ Ibid., Aug. 18.]
26111 (return)
[ Aug. 23 and Sep. 3.
After the 11th of August the Assembly passes a decree releasing
Saint-Huruge and annulling the warrant against Antoine.]
26112 (return)
[ Ibid., Aug. 14.]
26113 (return)
[ Ibid., Aug. 14.
Decree for dividing the property of the émigrés into lots of from two to
four arpents, in order to "multiply small proprietors."—Ibid., Sept.
2. Other decrees against the émigrés and their relations, Aug. 14, 23, 30,
and Sept. 5 and 9.]
26114 (return)
[ Ibid., Aug. 26.
Other decrees against the ecclesiastics or the property of the church,
Aug. 17, 18, 19, and Sept. 9 and 19.]
26115 (return)
[ Ibid., Sept. 20.]
26116 (return)
[ Imagine the
impression these last lines may have upon any ardent, ambitious and
arrogant young man who, like Lenin in 1907, would have read this between
1893 and 1962, date of the last English reprinting of Taine's once widely
know work. They summed up both what had to be done and who would be the
primary beneficiaries of the revolution. Lenin, Hitler, Mussolini and
countless other young hopeful political men. Read it once more and ask
yourself if much of this program has not been more or less surreptitiously
carried out in most western countries after the second world war? (SR).]
26117 (return)
[ Malouet, II. 241.]
26118 (return)
[ Mercure de France,
July 21, 1792.]
26119 (return)
[ "Révolutions de
Paris," XIII. 137.]
26120 (return)
[ Mallet du Pan.
"Mémoires," I. 322. Letters to Mallet du Pan. Aug. 4 and following days.]
26121 (return)
[ Buchez et Roux,
XVI. 446. Pétion's narrative.—Arnault, "Souvenirs d'un sexagénaire,"
I. 342. (An eye-witness on the 10th of August.) "The massacre extended but
little beyond the Carrousel, and did not cross the Seine. Everywhere else
I found a population as quiet as if nothing had happened. Inside the city
the people scarcely manifested any surprise; dancing went on in the public
gardens. In the Marais, where I lived then, there was only a suspicion of
the occurrence, the same as at Saint-Germain; it was said that something
was going on in Paris, and the evening newspaper was impatiently looked
for to know what it was."]
26122 (return)
[ Moore, I. 122.—The
same thing is observable at other crises in the Revolution. On the 6th of
October, 1789 (Sainte-Beuve, "Causeries du Lundi," XII. 461), Sénac de
Meilhan at an evening reception hears the following conversations: "'Did
you see the king pass?' asks one. 'No, I was at the theater.' 'Did Molé
play?'—'As for myself; I was obliged to stay in the Tuileries; there
was no way of getting out before 9 o'clock.' 'You saw the king pass then?'
'I could not see very well; it was dark.'—Another says: 'It must
have taken six hours for him to come from Versailles.'—Others coolly
add a few details.—To continue: 'Will you take a hand at whist?' 'I
will play after supper, which is just ready.' Cannon are heard, and then a
few whisperings, and a transient moment of depression,. 'The king is
leaving the Hôtel-de-ville. They must be very tired.' Supper is taken and
there are snatches of conversation. They play trente et quarante and while
walking about watching the game and their cards they do some talking:
'What a horrid affair!' while some speak together briefly and in a low
tone of voice. The clock strikes two and they all leave or go to bed.—These
people seem to you insensible. Very well; there is not one of them who
would not accept death at the king's feet."—On the 23d of June,
1791, at the news of the king's arrest at Varennes, "the Bois de Boulogne
and the Champs Elysées were filled with people talking in a frivolous way
about the most serious matters, while young men are seen, pronouncing
sentences of death in their frolics with courtesans." (Mercure de France,
July 9, 1791. It begins with a little piece entitled Dépit d'un Amant.)—See
ch. XI. for the sentiment of the population in May and June, 1793.]
26123 (return)
[ Moniteur, XIII. 290
(July 29) and 278 (July 30).]
26124 (return)
[ "Archives
Nationales," F7, 145. Letter of Santerre to the Minister of the Interior,
Sept. 16, 1792, with the daily list of all the men that have left Paris
between the3rd and 15th of September, the total amounting to 18,635, of
which 15,504 are volunteers. Other letters from the same, indicating
subsequent departures: Sept. 17, 1,071 men; none the following days until
Sept. 21, 243; 22nd 150; up to the 26th, 813; on Oct. 1st, 113; 2nd and
3rd, 1,088; 4th, 1620; 16th, 196, etc.—I believe that amongst those
who leave, some are passing through Paris coming from the provinces; this
prevents an exact calculation of the number of Parisian volunteers. M. de
Lavalette, himself a volunteer, says 60,000; but he furnishes not proofs
of this.]
26125 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux,
II. 362.]
26126 (return)
[ Soulavie, "Vie
privée du Maréchal duc de Richelieu," IX. 384.——"One can
scarcely comprehend," says Lafayette, ("Mémoires," I. 454), "how the
Jacobin minority and a gang of pretended Marseilles men could render
themselves masters of Paris, while almost the whole of the 40,000 citizens
forming the national guard desired the Constitution."]
26127 (return)
[ Hua, 169.]
26128 (return)
[ Moniteur, XIII.
437. (session of Aug. 16, the applause reiterated and the speech ordered
to be printed).]
26129 (return)
[ These words should
cause society to change resulting in a leveling of incomes through
proportional taxation and aids of all kinds throughout the industrialized
world. Nobody could ever imagine the immense wealth which was to be
produced by the efficient industry of the 20th century. (SR).]
26130 (return)
[ Roederer, "oeuvres
Complètes." VIII 477. "The club orators displayed France to the
proletariat as a sure prey if they would seize hold of it."]
26131 (return)
[ This manifesto, was
drafted for the Duke of Brunswick-Lunebourg, the general commanding the
combined Prussian and Austrian forces, by the French émigré Marquis de
Limon. It threatened the French and especially the Paris population with
unspecified "rigors of war" should it have the temerity to resist or to
harm the King and his family. It was signed in Koblenz, Germany on 25
August 1792 and published in royalist newspapers 3 days later in
Paris.(SR).]
26132 (return)
[ "Moore's Journal,"
I. 303-309.]
26133 (return)
[ "Archives
Nationales," 474, 426. Section of Gravilliers, letter of Charles Chemin,
commissary, to Santerre, and deposition of Ilingray, cavalryman of the
national gendarmerie, Aug. 11.]
26134 (return)
[ Beaumarchais,
"oeuvres complètes," letter of Aug. 12, 1792.—This very interesting
letter shows how mobs are composed at this epoch. A small gang of regular
brigands and thieves plot together some enterprise, to which is added a
frightened, infatuated crowd, which may become ferocious, but which
remains honest.]
26135 (return)
[ The words of Hobbes
applied by Roederer to the democracy of 1792: "In democratia tot possent
esse Nerones quot sunt oratores qui populo adulantur; simul et plures sunt
in democratia, et quotidie novi suboriuntur."]
26136 (return)
[ Lucas de Montigny,
"Mémoires de Mirabeau," II. 231 and following pages.—The preface
affixed by Manuel to his edition (of Mirabeau's letters) is a masterpiece
of nonsense and impertinence.—Peltier, "Histoire du 10 Aout," II.
205.—Manuel "came out of a little shop at Montargis and hawked about
obscene tracts in the upper stories of Paris. He got hold of Mirabeau's
letters in the drawers of the public department and sold them for 2,000
crowns." (testimony of Boquillon, juge-de la paix).]
26137 (return)
[ Lafayette,
"Mémoires," I. 467, 471. "The queen had 50,000 crowns put into Danton's
hands a short time before these terrible days."—" The court had
Danton under pay for two years, employing him as a spy on the Jacobins."—"
Correspondance de Mirabeau et du Comte de la Marck," III. 82. Letter from
Mirabeau, March 10, 1791: "Danton received yesterday 30,000 livres".—Other
testimony, Bertrand de Molleville, I. 354, II. 288.—Brissot, IV. 193—.
Miot de Melito, "Mémoires," I. 40, 42. Miot was present at the
conversations which took place between Danton, Legendre, etc., at the
table of Desforges, Minister of Foreign Affairs. "Danton made no
concealment of his love of pleasure and money, and laughed at all
conscientious and delicate scruples."—" Legendre could not say
enough in praise of Danton in speaking of his talents as a public man; but
he loudly censured his habits and cxpensive tastes, and never joined him
in any of his odious speculations."—The opposite thesis has been
maintained by Robinet and Bougeart in their articles on Danton. The
discussion would require too much space. The important points are as
follows: Danton, a barrister in the royal council in March, 1787, loses
about 10,000 francs on the refund of his charge. In his marriage-contract
dated June, 1787, he admits 12,000 francs patrimony in lands and houses,
while his wife brings him only 20,000 francs dowry. From 1787 to 1791 he
could not earn much, being in constant attendance at the Cordeliers club
and devoted to politics; Lacretelle saw him in the riots of 1788. He left
at his death about 85,000 francs in national property bought in 1791.
Besides, he probably held property and valuables under third parties, who
kept them after his death. (De Martel, "Types Révolutionnaires," 2d part,
p.139. Investigations of Blache at Choisy-sur-Seine, where a certain
Fauvel seems to have been Danton's assumed name.)—See on this
question, "Avocats aux conseils du Roi," by Emil Bos, pp.513-520.
According to accounts proved by M. Bos, it follows that Danton, at the end
of 1791, was in debt to the amount of 53,000 francs; this is the hole
stopped by the court. On the other side, Danton before the Revolution
signs himself Danton even in authentic writing, which is an usurpation of
nobility and at that time subject to the penalty of the galleys.—The
double-faced infidelity in question must have been frequent, for their
leaders were anything else but sensitive. On the 7th of August Madame
Elizabeth tells M. de Montmorin that the insurrection would not take
place; that Pétion and Santerre were concerned in it, and that they had
received 750,000 francs to prevent it and bring over the Marseilles troop
to the king's side (Malouet, II. 223).—There is no doubt that
Santerre, in using the king's money against the king, thought he was
acting patriotically. Money is at the bottom of every riot, to pay for
drink and to stimulate subordinate agents.]
26138 (return)
[ Buchez et Roux,
XXVIII. 92. Letter of Gadolle to Roland, October, 1792, according to a
narrative by one of the teachers in the college d'Harcourt, in which
Varlet was placed.]
26139 (return)
[ Buchez et Roux,
XIII. 254.]
26140 (return)
[ "C. Desmoulins," by
Claretie, 238 (in 1786 and in 1775). "The inquest still exists,
unfortunately it is convincing."—Westermann was accused of these
acts in December, 1792, by the section of the Lombards, "proofs in hand."—Gouverneur
Morris, so well informed, writes to Washington, Jan. 10, 1793: The retreat
of the King of Prussia "was worth to Westermann about 10,000 pounds... The
council ... exerted against him a prosecution for old affairs of no higher
rank than petty larceny."]
26141 (return)
[ "Archives
Nationales," F7, 4434 (papers of the committee of general safety). Note on
Panis, with full details and references to the occurrence.]
26142 (return)
[ "Révolutions de
Paris," No.177 (session of the council-general at the Hotel-de-ville, Nov.
8, 1792, report of the committee of surveillance). "Sergent admits, except
as to one of the watches, that he intended to pay for the said object the
price they would have brought. It was noticed, as he said this, that he
had on his finger the agate ring that was claimed."]
26143 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux,
II. 638; III. 500 and following pages; IV. 132.—Cf. II. 451.]
26144 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux,
II. 456.]
26145 (return)
[ Buchez et Roux,
XVI. 138, 140 (testimony of Mathon de la Varenne, who was engaged in the
case).]
26146 (return)
[ "Dictionnaire
biographique," by Eymery (Leipsic, 1807), article HÉBERT.]
26147 (return)
[ Mortimer-Ternaux,
III. 484, 601. Cf. letter of the representative Cavaignac, Ibid., 399.]
26148 (return)
[ "Dictionnaire
biographique," article HENRIOT.-The lives of many of these subordinate
leaders are well done. Cf. "Stanislas Maillard," by AL Sorel; "Le Patriote
Palloy," by V Fournel.]
26149 (return)
[ Granier de
Cassagnac, "Histoire des Girondins," 409.—"Archives Nationales," F7
3196. Letters of de Sades on the sacking of his house near Apt, with
supporting document and proofs of his civism; among others a petition
drawn up by him in the name of the Pique section and read at the
Convention year II. brumaire 25. "Legislators, the reign of philosophy has
at last annihilated that of imposture... The worship of a Jewish slave of
the Romans is not adapted to the descendants of Scoevola. The general
prosperity which is certain to proceed from individual happiness will
spread to the farthest regions of the universe and everywhere the dreaded
hydra of ultramontane superstition, chased by the combined lights of
reason and virtue, no longer finding a refuge in the hateful haunts of a
dying aristocracy, will perish at her side in despair at finally beholding
on this earth the triumph of philosophy!"]
26150 (return)
[ Barbaroux,
"Mémoires," 57, 59. The latter months of the legislative assembly.]