3358 (return)
[ Lagros: "La
Révolution telle qu'elle est." (Unpublished correspondence of the
committee of Public Safety, I., 366. Letter of Prieur de la Marne.) "In
general, the towns are patriotic; but the rural districts are a hundred
leagues removed from the Revolution.. .. Great efforts will be necessary
to bring them up to the level of the Revolution."]
3359 (return)
[ According to the
statistics of 1866 (published in 1869) a district of one thousand square
kilometres contains on an average, thirty-three communes above five
hundred souls, twenty-three from five hundred to one thousand, seventeen
bourgs and small towns from one thousand to five thousand, and one average
town, or very large one, about five thousand. Taking into account the
changes that have taken place in seventy years, one may judge from these
figures of the distribution of the population in 1793. This distribution
explains why, instead of forty-five thousand revolutionary committees,
there were only twenty-one thousand five hundred.]
3360 (return)
[ "Souvenirs des M.
Hua," 179. "This country (Coucy-le-Chateau) protected by its bad roads and
still more by its nullity, belonged to that small number in which the
revolutionary turmoil was least felt."]
3361 (return)
[ Among other documents
of use in composing this picture I must cite, as first in importance, the
five files containing all the documents referring to the mission of the
representative Albert, in Aisne and Marne. (Ventôse and Germinal, year
III.) Nowhere do we find more precise details of the sentiments of the
peasant, of the common laborer and of the lower bourgeois from 1792 to
1795. (Archives Nationales, D. PP 2 to 5.)]
3362 (return)
[ Daubari, "La
Demagogie en 1793," XII. (The expression of an old peasant, near
Saint-Émilion, to M. Vatel engaged in collecting information on the last
days of Petion, Guadet and Buzot.)]
3363 (return)
[ Archives Nationales,
D. p I., 5. (Petition of Claude Defert, miller, and national agent of
Turgy.) Numbers of mayors, municipal officers, national agents,
administrators and notables of districts and departments solicit
successors, and Albert compels many of them to remain in office.—(Joint
letter of the entire municipality of Landreville; letter of Charles,
stone-cutter, mayor of Trannes; Claude Defert, miller, national agent of
Turgy; of Elegny, meat-dealer; of a wine-grower; municipal official at
Merrex, etc.) The latter writes: "The Republic is great and generous; it
does not desire that its children should ruin themselves in attending to
its affairs; on the contrary, its object is to give salaried
(emolumentaires) places to those who have nothing to live on."—Another,
Mageure, appointed mayor of Bar-sur-Seine writes, Pluviôse 29, year III.:
"I learned yesterday that some persons of this community would like to
procure for me the insidious gift of the mayoralty," and he begs Albert to
turn aside this cup.]
3364 (return)
[ "Souvenirs de M.
Hua," 178-205. "M. P..., mayor of Crépy-au-Mont, knew how to restrain some
low fellows who would have been only too glad to revolutionize his
village.... And yet he was a republican.... One day, speaking of the
revolutionary system, he said: 'They always say that it will not hold on;
meanwhile, it sticks like lice.' "—"A general assembly of the
inhabitants of Coucy and its outskirts was held, in which everybody was
obliged to undergo an examination, stating his name, residence,
birth-place, present occupation, and what he had done during the
Revolution." Hua avoids telling that he had been a representative in the
Legislative Assembly, a recognized fact in the neighborhood: "Not a voice
was raised to compromise me."—Ibid., 183. (Reply of the Coucy
Revolutionary Committee to that of Meaux.)]
3365 (return)
[ "Frochot," by Louis
Passy, 175. (Letter of Pajot, member of the Revolutionary committee of
Troyes, Vendémiaire, year III.)—Archives Nationales, F.7, 4421.
(Register of the Revolutionary committee of Troyes.) Brumaire 27, year II.
Incarceration of various suspects, among others of "Lerouge, former
lawyer, under suspicion of having constantly and obstinately refused
revolutionary offices." Also, a person named Corps, for "having refused
the presidency of the district tribunal at the time of its organization,
under the pretext of consulting the Chambre des Comptes; also for being
the friend of suspects, and for having accepted office only after the
Revolution had assumed an imposing character."]
3366 (return)
[ Marcelin Boudet, "Les
conventionnels d'Auvergne," 161. (Justification of Etienne Bonarmé, the
last months of 1794.)]
3367 (return)
[ Pans, "Histoire de
Joseph Lebon," II., 92. (Declaration by Guérard, lawyer, appointed judge
at Cambrai, by the Cambrai Revolutionary committee.)—Ibid., 54.
(Declaration by Lemerre, appointed juryman without his knowledge, in the
Cambrai court.) "What was my surprise, I, who never was on a jury in my
life! The summons was brought to me at a quarter to eleven (à onze heur
moin un car—specimen of the orthography) and I had to go at eleven
without having time to say good-by to my family."]
3368 (return)
[ Report by Courtois on
the papers found in Robespierre's domicile, 370. (Letter of Maignet to
Payan, administrator of the department of Drôme, Germinal 20, year II.)
"You know the dearth of subjects here. .. Give me the names of a dozen
outspoken republicans... . If you cannot find them in this department
(Vaucluse) hunt for them either in the Drôme or the Isère, or in any
other. I should like those adapted to a revolutionary tribunal. I should
even like, in case of necessity, to have some that are qualified to act as
national agents."]
3369 (return)
[ Archives des Affaires
étrangères, vols. 322 to 334, and 1409 to 1411.—These agents reside
in Nîmes, Marseilles, Toulouse, Tarbes, Bordeaux, Auch, Rochefort, Brest,
Bergues, Givet, Metz, Thionville, Strasbourg, Colmar, Belfort and
Grenoble, and often betake themselves to towns in the vicinity.—The
fullest reports are those of Chepy, at Grenoble, whose correspondence is
worthy of publication; although an ultra Jacobin, he was brought before
the revolutionary Tribunal as a moderate, in Ventôse, year II. Having
survived (the Revolution) he became under the Empire a general commissary
of Police at Brest. Almost all of them are veritable Jacobins, absolutist
at bottom, and they became excellent despotic tools.]
3370 (return)
[ Buchez et Roux, XXX.,
425.—Twenty-four commissioners, drawn by lot from the Jacobins of
Paris, are associated with Collot d'Herbois. One of them, Marino, becomes
president of the temporary Committee of Surveillance, at Lyons. Another,
Parrien, is made president of the Revolutionary Committee.—Archives
Nationales, AF., II., 59. (Deliberations in the Paris Jacobin club,
appointing three of their number to go to Tonnerre and request the
Committee of Public Safety "to give them the necessary power, to use it as
circumstances may require, for the best good of the Republic." Frimaire 6,
year II.)—"Order of the Committee of Public Safety, allowing two
thousand francs to the said parties for their traveling expenses."—Archives
des Affaires Étrangères, vol. 333. The agents sent to Marseilles affix
their signatures, "sans-culottes, of Paris," and one of them, Brutus,
becomes president of the Marseilles revolutionary tribunal.]
3371 (return)
[ Archives Nationales,
AF., II., 49. Papers relating to the revolutionary tax of Belfort, giving
all the amounts and names. (Brumaire 30, year II.) Here is the formula:
"citizen X... (male or female) will pay in one hour the sum of—,
under penalty of being considered suspect and treated as such."—"Recueil
des Pièces Authentiques concernant la Révolution à Strasbourg," I., 128,
187. (Expressions of the representative Baudot in a letter dated Brumaire
29, year II.)]
3372 (return)
[ Archives Nationales:
the acts and letters of the representatives on mission are classed by
departments.—On the delegates of the representatives on mission, I
will cite but one text. (Archives des Affaires étrangères, vol. 333,
letter of Garrigues, Auch, Pluviôse 24, year II.): "A delegate of
Dartigoyte goes to l'Isle and, in the popular club, wants the curé of the
place to get rid of his priestly attributes. The man answers, so they tell
me, that he would cheerfully abstain from his duties, but that, if, in
addition to this, they used force he would appeal to the convention, which
had no idea of interfering with freedom of opinion. 'Very well,' replied
Dartigoyte emissary, 'I appeal to a gendarme,' and he at once ordered his
arrest."]
3373 (return)
[ Lallier, "Une
commission D'énquete et de Propagande," p.7. (It is composed of twelve
members, selected by the club of Nantes, who overrun the district of
Ancenis, six thousand francs of fees being allowed it.)—Babeau, II.,
280. (Dispatch of sixty commissioners, each at six francs a day by the
Troyes administration, to ascertain the state of the supplies on hand,
Prairial, year II.)]
3374 (return)
[ For example, at
Bordeaux and at Troyes.—Archives Nationales F7, 4421. Register of
the Revolutionary committee of Troyes, fol. 164. Two members of the
committee travel to the commune of Lusigny, dismiss the mayor and justice,
and appoint in the place of the latter "the former curé of the country,
who, some time ago, abjured sacerdotal fanaticism."—Archives des
Affaires étrangères, vol.332. (Letter of Desgranges, Bordeaux, Brumaire
15, year II.) The representatives have just instituted "a revolutionary
committee of surveillance composed of twelve members, selected with the
greatest circumspection. All the committees established in the department
are obliged to correspond with it, and fulfill its requisitions."]
3375 (return)
[ Archives Nationales,
AF., II, 58. (Letter of Javogues to Collot d'Herbois, Brumaire 28, year
II.)]
3376 (return)
[ "Recueil des Pièces
Authentiques," etc., I., 195. (Acts passed Jan.21, 1793.)]
3377 (return)
[ Archives des Affaires
étrangères, vol. 326. (Letters from Brutus, September 24; from
Topino-Lebrun, jr., September 25 and October 6, 1793.—Vol. 330.
Letters from Brutus, Nivôse 6, year II.) The character of the agent is
often indicated orthographically. For example, vol.334, letter from
Galon-Boyer, Brumaire 18, year II. "The public spirit is generally bad.
Those who claim to be patriots know no restraint. The rest are lethargic
and federalism appears innate."]
3378 (return)
[ Archives des Affaires
étrangères, vol.1411. (Letter of Haupt, Brumaire 26, year II.)—Vol.
333. (Letter of Blessman and Haüser, Pluviôse 4, year II.)]
3379 (return)
[ Archives des Affaires
étrangères, vol. 333. (Letter of Chartres and of Caillard, Cornmune
Aifranchie, Nivôse 21.)—Vol. 331. (Letters of Desgranges, at
Bordeaux, Brumaire 8 and Frimaire 3.) "The offerings in plate and coin
multiply indefinitely; all goes right. The court-martial has condemned
Dudon to death, son of the ex-procureur-général in the former parliament
at Bordeaux, Roullat, procureur-syndic of the department, Sallenave,
merchant. These executions excite sympathy, but nobody murmurs."]
3380 (return)
[ Ibid., vol. 333.
(Letter of Cuny, sr., Nivôse 20.) Vols. 331, 332. (Letters of Chepy,
passim, and especially those dated Frimaire II.)—Vol. 329. (Letter
of Chépy, August 24, 1793.) "At Annecy, the women have cut down the
liberty-pole and burnt the archives of the club and of the commune. At
Chambéry, the people wanted to do the same thing."—Ibid. (September
18, 1793.) "The inhabitants around Mont Blanc show neither spirit nor
courage; the truth is, an anti-revolutionary spirit animates all minds."—Ibid.
(Letter of August 8, 1793.) "Not only have the citizens of Grenoble, who
were drawn by lot, not set out on the expedition to Lyons, but, even of
those who have obeyed the laws, several have returned with their arms and
baggage. No commune between St. Laurent and Lyons would march. The rural
municipalities, badly tainted with the federal malady, ventured to give
the troops very bad quarters, especially those who had been drafted."]
3381 (return)
[ Ibid. (Letter of
Cuny, jr., Brest, Brumaire 6.) "There are, in general, very few patriots
at Brest; the inhabitants are nearly all moderates."—(Letter of
Gadolle, Dunkirk, July 26, 1793.)—(Letter of Simon, Metz, Nivôse,
year II.) "Yesterday, on the news of the capture of Toulon being announced
in the theatre,... I noticed that only about one-third of the spectators
gave way to patriotic enthusiasm; the other two-thirds remained cold, or
put on a long face."]
3382 (return)
[ Ibid. (Letter of
Haupt, Belfort, September 1, 1793.)]
3383 (return)
[ Report by Courtois on
the papers found in Robespierre's domicile, p. 274. (Letter of Darthé,
Ventôse 29, year II.)]
3384 (return)
[ "Tableau des Prisons
de Toulouse," by citizen Pescayre (published in year III.), p.101.]
3385 (return)
[ Archives Nationales,
F.7, 4421. (Register of the Revolutionary Committee, established at
Troyes, Brumaire II, year II.)—Albert Babeau, vol. II., passim.—Archives
des Affaires étrangères, vol. 332, Chépy (letter, Brumaire 6, Grenoble).
"The sections had appointed seven committees of surveillance. Although
weeded out by the club, they nevertheless alarmed the sans-culottes....
Representative Petit-Jean has issued an order, directing that there shall
be but one committee at Grenoble composed of twenty-one members. This
measure is excellent and ensures the triumph of sans-culotteism."—Archives
Nationales, F.7, 4434. (Letter of Pérrieu to Brissot, Bordeaux, March 9,
1793.) Before June 2, the national club "of Bordeaux, composed of
Maratists, did not comprise more than eight or ten individuals at most."—Moniteur,
XXII., 133. (Speech by Thibeaudeau on the popular club of Poitiers,
Vendémiaire II, year III.)—Ibid. (Session of Brumaire 5, year III.,
letter of Calès, and session of Brumaire 17, year III., report by Calès.)
"The popular club of Dijon made all neighboring administrative bodies,
citizens and districts tremble. All were subject to its laws, and three or
four men in it made them. This club and the municipality were one body."
"The Terror party does not exist here, or, if it does exist, it does not
amount to much: out of twenty thousand inhabitants there are not six who
can legitimately be suspected of belonging to it."]
3386 (return)
[ Baroly, "Les Jacobins
Demasqués," (IV. 8vo., of 8pp., year II). "The Jacobin club, with its four
hundred active members at Paris, and the four thousand others in the
provinces, not less devoted, represent the living force of the
Revolution."]
3387 (return)
[ Archives Nationales,
D. P I., 10. (Orders of representatives Delacroix, Louchet, and Legendre,
Nivôse 12, year II.) "On the petition of the Committee of Surveillance of
Evreux, which sets forth that all its members are without means, and that
it will be impossible for them to continue their duties since they are
without resources for supporting their families," the representatives
allow three of them two hundred and seventy francs each, and a fourth one
hundred and eighty francs, as a gratuity (outside of the three francs a
day.)]
3388 (return)
[ Ibid. AF., II., 111.
(Order of Albitte and La Porte, Prairial 18, year II.)]
3389 (return)
[ Albert Babeau, II.,
154-157.—Moniteur, XXII. 425. (Session of Brumaire 13, year III.
Speech by Cambon.) "A government was organized in which surveillance alone
cost 591 millions per annum. Every man who tilled the ground or worked in
a shop, at once abandoned his pursuit for a place on the Revolutionary
Committees... where he got five francs a day."]
3390 (return)
[ "Tableau des Prisons
de Toulouse," by citizen Pescare, 162, 166, 435.]
3391 (return)
[ Berryat Saint-Prix,
"La Justice Révolutionaire," (second edition) p. XIX.—Ibid., XIV. At
Rochefort there is on the revolutionary tribunal a mason, a shoemaker, a
caulker, and a cook; at Bordeaux, on the military commission, an actor, a
wine-clerk, a druggist, a baker, a journeyman-gilder, and later, a cooper
and a leather-dresser.]
3392 (return)
[ I heard these
expressions during my conversations with old peasants.—Archives
Nationales, AF.,II., 111. (Order of the Representative Ichon, Messidor 18,
year II.) "The popular club of Chinon will be immediately regenerated.
Citizens (I omit their names), the following showing their occupations:
shoemaker, policeman. sabot-maker, cooper, carter, shoemaker, joiner,
butcher carpenter and mason, will form the committee which is to do the
weeding-out and choose successors among those that offer to become members
of the club."? Ibid., D., PI, 10. (Orders of the Representatives
Delacroix, Louchet and Legendre, on mission in the department of
Seine-Inférieure for the purpose of removing, at Conchez, the entire
administration, and for forming there a new revolutionary committee, with
full powers, Frimaire 9, year II.) The members of the committee, the
nature of which is indicated, are two coopers, one gardener, two
carpenters, one merchant, a coach-driver and a tailor. (One finds in the
archives, in the correspondence of the representatives, plenty of orders
appointing authorities of the same sort.)]
3393 (return)
[ Albert Babeau, II.,
296.]
3394 (return)
[ The French text
reads: "Sa profession est fame de Paillot-Montabert; son revenu est vivre
de ses revenus; ces relation son d'une fame nous ny portons point
d'atantion; ces opignons nous les présumons semblable à ceux de son
mary."]
3395 (return)
[ Archives Nationales,
F7, 4421. Order of the Committee of Surveillance of the third section of
Troyes, refusing civic certificates to seventy-two persons, or sending
them before the central committee as "marchands d'argant, aristocrate,
douteux, modére, intrigant, egoiste fanatique. Fait et areté par nous,
membre du Comité."—Ib., Mémoire des Commissaires de la 5e seiscion
dite de la liberté nommé par le citoyen de Baris (Paris) pour faire les
visite de l'argenteri ché les citoyens de la liste fait par les citoyens
Diot et Bailly et Jaquin savoir depence du 13 et 14 et 15 Frimaire pour
leur nouriture du troyes jour monte à 24 fr.]
3396 (return)
[ Albert Babeau, II.,
154.]
3397 (return)
[ Archives Nationales,
D., PI, 5. (Mission of Representative Albert, in Aube and in Marne.)—These
notes are made on the spot, with a thorough knowledge of the situation, by
zealous republicans who are not without common-sense and of average
honesty, (chiefly in Pluviôse and Ventôse, year III).—Letter of
Albert to the directories of the two departments, Prairial 3, year II. "I
am satisfied, during the course of my mission, of the necessity of
reorganizing the municipalities throughout both departments."]
3398 (return)
[ Ibid. Orders of
Albert, Ventôse 5, and Pluviôse 29, year III., reorganizing the courts and
administrations in the districts of Ervy, Arcis and Nogent-sur-Seine, with
a tabular statement of the names of those removed and the reasons for so
doing.]
3399 (return)
[ Petition of Jean
Nicolas Antoine, former member of the Directory of the district of Troyes
for twenty-eight months. (Ventose 9, year II I.) Shut up in Troyes, he
asks permission to go to Paris, "I have a small lot of goods which it is
necessary for me to sell in Paris. It is my native town and I know more
people there than anywhere else."-Ibid. Information furnished on Antoine
by the Conseil-general of the Commune of Troyes.]
33100 (return)
[ Archives
Nationales, AF., II., 59. (Memorials dated Messidor 28, year II., by an
emissary of the Committee of Public Safety, sent to Troyes, Prairial 29,
to report on the situation of things and on the troubles in Troyes.)—Albert
Babeau, II., 203, 205 and 112, 122.—Cf. 179. "Gachez, intoxicated,
about eleven o'clock at night, with several women as drunk as himself,
compelled the keeper of the Temple of Reason to open the doors,
threatening him with the guillotine."—Ibid., 166. He addressed the
sans-culottes in the popular club: "Now is the time to put yourselves in
the place of the rich. Strike, and don't put it off!"—Ibid., 165."
42,633 livres were placed in the hands of Gachez and the committee, as
secret revolutionary service money.... Between December 4 and 10 Gachez
received 20,000 livres, in three orders, for revolutionary expenses and
provisional aid.... The leaders of the party disposed of these sums
without control and, it may be added, without scruple; Gachez hands over
only four thousand livres to the sectional poor-committee. On Nivôse 12,
there remains in the treasury of the poor fund only 3738 livres, 12 000
having been diverted or squandered."]
33101 (return)
[ "Frochot," by Louis
Passy, 172. (Letter of Pajot, member of the revolutionary committee of
Aignay-le-Duc.) "Denunciations occupied most of the time at our meetings,
and it is there that one could see the hatreds and vengeance of the
colleagues who ruled us."]
33102 (return)
[ Archives
Nationales, D., P I, No.4. The following is a sample among others of the
impositions of the revolutionary committees. (Complaint of Mariotte,
proprietor, former mayor of Chatillon-sur-Seine, Floréal 27, year II.) "On
Brumaire 23, year II., I was stopped just as I was taking post at Mussy,
travelling on business for the Republic, and provided with a commission
and passport from the Minister of war.... I was searched in the most
shameful manner; citizen Ménétrier, member of the committee, used towards
me the foulest language.... I was confined in a tavern; instead of two
gendarmes which would have been quite sufficient to guard me, I had the
whole brigade, who passed that night and the next day drinking, until, in
wine and brandy the charge against me in the tavern amounted to sixty
francs. And worse still, two members of the same committee passed a night
guarding me and made me pay for it. Add to this, they said openly before
me that I was a good pigeon to pluck. ... They gave me the escort of a
state criminal of the highest importance, three national gendarmes,
mounted, six National Guards, and even to the Commandant of the National
Guard; citizen Mièdan, member of the revolutionary committee, put himself
at the head of the cortege, ten men to conduct one!.... I was obliged to
pay my torturers, fifty francs to the commandant, and sixty to his men."]
33103 (return)
[ Moniteur, XXI.,
261. (Speech by an inhabitant of Troyes in the Jacobin Club, Paris,
Messidor 26, year II.)]
33104 (return)
[ Albert Babeau, II.,
164. (Depositions of the tavern-keeper and of the commissioner, Garnier.)]
33105 (return)
[ "Frochot," by Louis
Passy, 170, 172. (Letter by Pajot and petition of the Aignay municipality,
March 10, 1795.)—Bibliotheque Nationale, L., 41. No.1802.
(Denunciation by six sections of the commune of Dijon to the National
Convention.)]
33106 (return)
[ "Recueil de Pièces
Authentiques sur la Révolution de Strasbourg," I., 187, and letter of
Burger, Thermidor 25, year II.]
33107 (return)
[ Archives
Nationales, D., P I, 6 (file 37)—Letter of the members of the
Strasbourg revolutionary committee, Ventôse 13, year III., indicating to
the mayor and municipal officers of Chalons-sur-Marne certain Jacobins of
the town as suitable members of the Propaganda at Strasbourg.]
33108 (return)
[ "Recueil de Pièces
Authentiques concernant la Révolution à Strasbourg," I.,71. Deposition of
the recorder Weis on the circuit of the Revolutionary Tribunal, composed
of Schneider, Clavel and Taffin. "The judges never left the table without
having become intoxicated with everything of the finest, and, in this
state, they gathered in the tribunal and condemned the accused to death."—Free
living and "extravagant expenditure" were common even "among the employees
of the government." "I encountered," says Meissner, "government carters
served with chickens, pastry and game, whilst at the traveler's table
there was simply an old leg of mutton and a few poor side-dishes."
("Voyage en France," toward the end of 1795, p.371.)]
33109 (return)
[ Some of them,
nevertheless, are not ugly, but merely sots. The following is a specimen.
A certain Velu, a born vagabond, formerly in the alms-house and brought up
there, then a shoemaker or a cobbler, afterwards teaching school in the
faubourg de Vienne, and at last a haranguer and proposer of tyrannicide
motions, short, stout and as rubicund as his cap, is made President of the
Popular club at Blois, then delegate for domiciliary visits, and,
throughout the reign of Terror, he is a principal personage in the town,
district and department. (Dufort de Cheverney, "Mémoires," (MS.) March 21,
1793 and June, 1793.) In June, 1793, this Velu is ordered to visit the
chateau de Cheverney, to verify the surrender of all feudal documents. He
arrives unexpectedly, meets the steward, Bambinet, enters the mayor's
house, who keeps an inn, and drinks copiously, which gives Bambinet time
to warn M. Dufort de Cheverney and have the suspicious registers
concealed.—This done, "Velu is obliged to leave his bottle and march
to the chateau.—He assumed haughtiness and aimed at familiarity; he
would put his hand on his breast and, taking yours, address you: "Good
day, brother."—He came there at nine o'clock in the morning,
advanced, took my hand and said: "Good-day, brother, how are you?" "Very
well, citizen, and how are you?" "You do not tutoyer—you are not up
to the Revolution?"We'll see—will you step in the parlor?" "Yes,
brother, I'll follow you."—We enter; he sees my wife who, I may say,
has an imposing air. He boldly embraces her and, repeating his gesture on
the breast, takes her hand and says: "Good-day, sister." "Come," I
interpose, "let us take breakfast, and, if you please, you shall dine with
me." "Yes, but on one condition, that tu me tutoie." "I will try, but I am
not in the habit of it." After warming up his intellect and heart with a
bottle of wine, we get rid of him by sending him to inspect the
archives-room, along with my son and Bambinet. It is amusing, for he can
only read print... Bambinet, and the procureur, read the titles aloud, and
pass over the feudalisms. Velu does not notice this and always tells them
to go on.—After an hour, tired out, he comes back: "All right," he
says, "now let me see your chateau, which is a fine one." He had heard
about a room where there were fantocini, in the attic. He goes up, opens
some play-books, and, seeing on the lists of characters the name of King
and Prince, he, says to me: "You must scratch those out, and play only
republican pieces." The descent is by a back-stairs. On the way down he
encounters a maid of my wife's, who is very pretty; he stops and,
regarding my son, says: "You must as a good Republican, sleep with that
girl and marry her." I look at him and reply: "Monsieur Velu, listen; we
are well behaved here, and such language cannot be allowed. You must
respect the young people in my house." A little disconcerted, he tames
down and is quite deferential to Madame de Cheverney.—"You have pen
and ink on your table," he says, "bring them here." "What for," I ask, "to
take my inventory?" "No, but I must make a procès-verbal. You help me; it
will be better for you, as you can fix it to suit you" This was not badly
done, to conceal his want of knowledge.—We go in to dinner. My
servants waited on the table; I had not yielded to the system of a general
table for all of us, which would not have pleased my servants any more
than myself. Curiosity led them all to come in and see us dining together.—"Brother,"
says Velu to me, "don't these people eat with you?" (He saw the table set
for only four persons.) I reply: "Brother, that would not be any more
agreeable to them than to myself. Ask them."—He ate little, drank
like an ogre, and was talkative about his amours; getting carried away he
got so close to being naughty that he upset my wife, without actually
going to far. Apropos of the Revolution, and the danger we incurred, he
said innocently: "Don't I run as much risk as anybody? It is my opinion
that, in three months, I shall have my head off! But we must all take our
chance!"—Now and then, he indulged in sans-culottisms. He seized the
servant's hand, who changed his plate: "Brother, I beg you to take my
place, and let me wait on you in my turn "—He drank the cordials,
and finally left, pleased with his reception.—Returning to the inn,
he stays until nine o'clock at night and stuffs himself, but is not
intoxicated. One bottle had no effect on him; he could empty a cask and
show no signs of it.]
33110 (return)
[ Moniteur, XXII.,
425. (Session of Brumaire 13, year III.) Cambon, in relation to the
revolutionary committees, says: "I would observe to the Assembly that they
were never paid." A member replies: "They took their pay themselves."
("Yes, yes."—Applause.)]
33111 (return)
[ Moniteu, XXII.,
711. (Report by Cambon, Frimaire 6, year III.)—Cambon stated,
indeed, Frimaire 26, year II., (Moniteur, XVIII., 680), concerning these
taxes "Not one word, not one sou has yet reached the Treasury; they want
to override the Convention which made the Revolution."]
33112 (return)
[ Ibid., 720. "The
balances reported, of which the largest portion is already paid into the
vaults of the National Treasury, amount to twenty millions one hundred and
sixty-six thousand three hundred and thirty livres."—At Paris,
Marseilles, and Bordeaux, in the large towns where tens of millions were
raised in three-quarters of the districts, Cambon, three months after
Thermidor, could not yet obtain, I will not say the returns, but a
statement of the sums raised. The national agents either did not reply to
him, or did it vaguely, or stated that in their districts there was
neither civic donation nor revolutionary tax, and particularly at
Marseilles, where a forced loan had been made of four millions.—Cf.
De Martel, "Fouché," P.245. (Memorial of the central administration of
Nièvre, Prairial 19, year III.) "The account returned by the city of
Nevers amounts to eighty thousand francs, the use of which has never been
verified.... This tax, in part payment of the war subsidy, was simply a
trap laid by the political actors in order to levy a contribution on
honest, credulous citizens."—Ibid., 217. On voluntary gifts and
forced taxation cf. at Nantes, the use made of revolutionary taxes,
brought out on the trial of the revolutionary committee.]
33113 (return)
[ Ludovic Sciout,
IV., 19. Report of Representative Becker. (Journal des Débats et Décrets,
p.743, Prairial, year III.) He returns from a mission to Landau and
renders an account of the executions committed by the Jacobin agents in
the Rhenish provinces. They levied taxes, sword in hand, and threatened
the refractory with the guillotine at Strasbourg. The receipts which
passed under the reporter's eyes "presented the sum of three millions
three hundred and forty-five thousand seven hundred and eighty-five
livres, two deniers, whilst our colleague, Cambon, reports only one
hundred and thirty-eight thousand paid in."]
33114 (return)
[ Moniteur, XXII.,
754. (Report of Grégoire, Frimaire 24, year III.) "Rascallery—this
word recalls the old revolutionary committees, most of which formed the
scum of society and which showed so many aptitudes for the double function
of robber and persecutor."]
33115 (return)
[ Archives
Nationales, AF., II., 107. (Orders of Representatives Ysabeau and Tallien,
Bordeaux, Brumaire 11 and 17, year II.)—Third order, promulgated by
the same parties, Frimaire 2, year II., replacing this committee by
another of twelve members and six deputies, each at two hundred francs a
month. Fourth order, Pluviôse 16, year II., dismissing the members of the
foregoing committee, as exagérés and disobedient. It is because they
regard their local royalty in quite a serious light.-Ibid., AF., II., 46.
("Extracts from the minutes of the meetings of the revolutionary committee
of Bordeaux," Prairial, year II.) This extract, consisting of eighteen
pages, shows in detail the inside workings of a revolutionary committee
the number of arrested goes on increasing; on the 27th of Prairial there
are 1524. The committee is essentially a police office; it delivers
certificates of civism, issues warrants of arrest, corresponds with other
committees, even very remote, at Limoges, and Clermont-Ferrand, delegates
any of its members to make investigations or domicialiary searches, to
affix seals, and it receives and transmits denunciations, summons the
denounced to appear before it, reads interrogations, writes to the
Committee of Public Safety, etc. The following are samples of its warrants
of arrest: "Muller, a riding-master, will be confined in the former Petit
Seminaire, under suspicion of aristocracy, according to public opinion."—Another
example, (Archives Nationales, F.7, 2475. Register of the procès-verbaux
of the revolutionary committee of the Piques section, Paris, June 3,
1793.) Warrant of arrest against Boucher, grocer, rue Neuve du Luxembourg,
"suspect" of incivisme and "having cherished wicked and perfidious
intentions against his wife." Boucher, arrested, declares that, "what he
said and did in his own house, concerned nobody but himself." On which he
was led to prison.]
33116 (return)
[ Archives
Nationales, AF., II., 30 (No.105). Examination of Jean Davilliers, and
other ransomed parties.]
33117 (return)
[ Berryat Saint-Prix,
313. (Trial of Lacombe and his accomplices after Thermidor.)]
33118 (return)
[ Archives
Nationales, AF., II., 46. (Letter of Julien to the Committee of Public
Safety, Bordeaux, Messidor 12, year II.)—Moniteur, XXII., 713.
(Report by Cambon, Frimaire 6, year III.) At Verins, citizens were
imprisoned and then set at liberty "on consideration of a fee."—Albert
Babeau, II., 164, 165, 206. (Report by Cambon, Frimaire 6, year II.)
"Citoyenne (madame) Deguerrois, having come to procure the release of her
husband, a public functionary demanded of her ten thousand livres, which
he reduced to six thousand for doing what she desired."—"One
document attests that Massey paid two thousand livres, and widow Delaporte
six hundred livres, to get out of prison."]
33119 (return)
[ Mallet-Dupan,
"First letter to a Genoa merchant," (March I, 1796), pp.33-35. "One of the
wonders of the reign of Terror is the slight attention given to the
trafficking in life and death, characteristic of terrorism.... We scarcely
find a word on the countless bargains through which 'suspect' citizens
bought themselves out of captivity, and imprisoned citizens bought off the
guillotine. ... Dungeons and executions were as much matters of trade as
the purchase of cattle at a fair." This traffic "was carried on in all the
towns, bourgs and departments surrendered to the Convention and
Revolutionary Committees.".... "It has been established since the 10th of
August." "I will only cite among a multitude of instances the unfortunate
Duc du Châtelet: never did anybody pay more for his execution!"—Wallon,
"Histoire du Tribunal Revolutionnaire de Paris," VI., 88. (Denunciation of
Fouquier-Tinville, signed Saulnie.) According to Saulnie he dined
regularly twice a week at No 6 rue Serpente, with one Demay, calling
himself a lawyer and living with a woman named Martin. In this death-trap,
in the middle of orgies, the freedom or death of those in prison was
bargained for in money with impunity. One head alone, belonging to the
house of Boufflers, escaping the scaffold through the intrigues of these
vampires, was worth to them thirty thousand livres, of which one thousand
were paid down and a bond given for the rest, payable on being set at
liberty.—Morellet, "Memoires," II., 32. The agent of Mesdames de
Bouffiers was Abbé Chevalier, who had formerly known Fouquier-Tinville in
the office of a procureur an Parliament and who, renewing the
acquaintance, came and drank with Fouquier. "He succeeded in having the
papers of the ladies Bouffiers, which were ready to be sent to the
Tribunal, placed at the bottom of the file."—Mallet-Dupan, "
Memoires," II., 495. "Fouquier-Tinville received a pension of one thousand
crowns a month from Mesdames de Bouffiers; the ransom increased one
quarter each month on account of the atrocity of the circumstances. This
method saved these ladies, whilst those who paid a sum in gross lost their
lives... It was Du Vaucel, fermier-general, who saved the Princess of
Tarente....for five hundred louis, after having saved two other ladies for
three hundred louis, given to one of the Jacobin leaders."]
33120 (return)
[ "Tableau des
Prisons de Toulouse," 324. Coudert, of the Municipal Council, shoemaker,
charged with the duty of taking silver-plate from the accused, did not
know how, or was unwilling, to draw up any other than an irregular and
valueless procès-verbal. On this, an accused party objected and refused to
sign. "Take care, you," exclaims Coudert in a rage, "with your damned
cleverness, you are playing the stubborn. You are nothing but a bloody
fool! You are getting into a bad box! If you don't sign, I'll have you
guillotined." Frequently, there are no papers at all. (De Martel,
"Fouché," p.236. Memorial by the authorities of Allier, addressed to the
Convention, document 9.) October 30, 1793. Order of the revolutionary
committee enjoining nocturnal visits in all "suspect" houses in Moulins,
to remove all gold, silver and copper. "Eleven parties are made up.. ..
each to visit eight or ten houses. Each band is headed by one of the
committee, with one municipal officer, accompanied by locksmiths and a
revolutionary guard. The dwellings of the accused and other private
individuals are searched. They force secretaries and wardrobes of which
they do not find the keys. They pillage the gold and silver coin. They
carry off plate, jewels, copper utensils and other effects, bed-clothes,
docks, vehicles, etc. No receipt is given. No statement is made of what is
carried off. They rest content by at the end of the month, reporting, in a
sort of procès-verbal drawn up at a meeting of the committee, that,
according to returns of the visits made, very little plate was found, and
only a little money in gold and silver, all without any calculation or
enumeration."—"Souvenirs et Journal d'un Bourgeois d'Evreux," p.93.
(February 25, 1795.) The meetings of the popular club "were largely
devoted to reading the infamous doings and robberies of the revolutionary
committee.... The members who designated 'suspects' often arrested them
themselves, and drew up a procès-verbal in which they omitted to state the
jewels and gold they found."]
33121 (return)
[ Ibid., 461.
(Vendemaire 24, year III. Visit of Representative Malarmé.) The former Duc
de Narbonne-Lorra aged eighty-four, says to Malarmé: "Citizen
representative, excuse me if I keep my cap on; I lost my hair in that
prison, without having been able to get permission to have a wig made; it
is worse than being robbed on the road." "Did they steal anything from
you?" "They stole one hundred and forty five louis d'or and paid me with
an acquittance for a tax for the sans-culottes, which is another robbery
done to the citizens of this commune where I have neither home nor
possessions." "Who committed this robbery?" "It was Citizen Berger, of the
municipal council." "Was nothing else taken from you?" "They took a silver
coffee-pot, two soap-cases and a silver shaving-dish" "Who took those
articles?" "It was Citizen Miot (a notable of the council)." Miot
confesses to having kept these objects and not taken them to the
Mint.-Ibid., 178. (Ventôse 20, year II.) Prisoners all have their shoes
taken, even those who had but one pair, a promise being made that they
should have sabots in exchange, which they never got. Their cloaks also
were taken with a promise to pay for them, which was never done.—"Souvenirs
et Journal d'un Bourgeois d'Evreux," p.92. (February 25, 1795.) "The
sessions of the popular club were largely devoted to reading the infamies
and robberies of the revolutionary committee. Its members, who designated
the suspects, often arrested them themselves; they made levies and reports
of these in which they omitted the gold and jewels found."]
33122 (return)
[ Moniteur, XXII.
133. (Session of Vendémiaire II, year III.) Report by Thibaudeau. "These
seven individuals are reprobates who were dismissed by the people's
representatives for having stolen the effects of persons arrested. A
document is on record in which they make a declaration that, not
remembering the value of the effects embezzled, they agree to pay damages
to the nation of twenty-two francs each."]
33123 (return)
[ Berryat Saint-Prix,
447. Judge Ragot was formerly a joiner at Lyons, and Viot, the public
prosecutor, a former deserter from the Penthièvre regiment. "Other accused
persons were despoiled. Little was left them other than their clothes,
which were in a bad state. Nappier, the bailiff, was, later, (Messidor,
year III.), condemned to irons for having appropriated a part of the
effects, jewels and assignats belonging to persons under accusation."]
33124 (return)
[ The words of
Camille Desmoulins in "La France Libre," (August, 1782).]
33125 (return)
[ De Martel,
"Fouché," 362.-Ibid.,, 132, 162, 179, 427, 443.—Lecarpentier, in La
Manche, constantly stated: "Those who do not like the Revolution, must pay
those who make it."]
33126 (return)
[ Marcelin Boudet,
175. (Address of Monestier to the popular clubs of Puy-de-Dome, February
23, 1793.)]
33127 (return)
[ Alexandrine des
Echerolles, "Une famille noble sous la Terreur."]
33128 (return)
[ Archives
Nationales, AF., II., 65. (Letter of General Kermorvan to the president of
the committee of Public Safety, Valenciennes, Fructidor 12, year III.)]
33129 (return)
[ Report by Courtois,
"Sur les papiers de Robespierre," (Pieces justificatives, pp. 312-324),
Letters of Reverchon, Germinal 29, Floréal 7 and 23, and by La Porte,
Germinal 24, year II.]
33130 (return)
[ Ibid. Letter by La
Porte "I do not know what fatality induces patriots here not to tolerate
their brethren whom they call strangers ... They have declared to us that
they would not suffer any of them to hold office." The representatives
dared arrest but two robbers and despoilers, who are now free and
declaiming against them at Paris. "Countless grave and even atrocious
circumstances are daily presented to us on which we hesitate to act, lest
we should strike patriots, or those who call themselves such... Horrible
depredations are committed."]
33131 (return)
[ Ibid. Letter by
Reverchon: "These fanatics all want the Republic simply for
themselves."... "They call themselves patriots only to cut the throats of
their brethren and get rich."—Guillon de Montléon, "Histoire de la
ville de Lyons Pendant la Révolution III.", 166. (Report by Fouché, April,
1794.) "Innocent persons, acquitted by the terrible tribunal of the
Revolutionary committee, were again consigned to the dungeons of criminals
through the despotic orders of the thirty-two committees, because they
were so unfortunate as to complain that, on returning home, they could not
find the strictly necessary objects they had left there."]
33132 (return)
[ Meissner, "Voyage
en France dans les Derniers Mois de 1795," p.343. "A certain domain was
handed over to one of their creatures by the revolutionary departments for
almost nothing, less than the proceeds of the first cut of wood."—Moniteur,
XXIII., 397. (Speech by Bourdon de l'Oise, May 6, 1795.) "A certain farmer
paid for his farm worth five thousand francs by the sale of one horse."]
33133 (return)
[ Moniteur, XXII.,
82. (Report by Grégoire, Fructidor 14, year II.) Ibid., 775. (Report by
Grégoire, Frimaire 24, year III.)]
33134 (return)
[ "Recueil de Pièces
Authentiques sur la Révolution à Strasbourg," II., p. I. (Procès-verbal,
drawn up in the presence of the elder Mouet and signed by him.)]
33135 (return)
[ Moniteur, XXII.,
775. (Report of Grégoire, Frimaire 24, year III.)—Ibid., 711.
(Report by Cambon, Frimaire 6, year III.)—Archives Nationales, AF.,
II., 65. (Letter of General Kermorvan, Valenciennes, Fructidor 12, year
III.)]
33136 (return)
[ "Tableau des
Prisons de Toulouse," 184. (Visit of Ventôse 27, year II.)]
33137 (return)
[ Archives
Nationales, F.7, 7164. (Department of Var "Ideé générale et appréciation
avec détails sur chaque canton," year V.)]
33138 (return)
[ Ibid., F.7, 7171
(No. 7915).—(Department of Bouches-du-Rhône, "Ideé générale," year
V.)—(Letters of Miollis, commissioner of the Directory in the
department, Ventôse 14 and 16, year V. Letter of Gen. Willot to the
Minister, Ventôse 10, and of Gen. Merle to Gen. Willot, Ventôse 17, year
V.) "Several sections of anarchists travel from one commune to another
exciting weak citizens to riots and getting them to take part in the
horrors they are meditating."—Ibid., F 7, 7164. Letter of Gen.
Willot to the Minister, Aries, Pluviôse 12, year V., with supporting
documents, and especially a letter of the director of the jury, on the
violence committed by, and the reign of, the Jacobins in Aries.) Their
party "is composed of the vilest artisans and nearly all the sailors." The
municipality recruited amongst former terrorists, "has enforced for a year
back the agrarian law, devastation of the forests, pillage of the
wheat-crops, by bands of armed men under pretext of the right of gleaning,
the robbery of animals at the plough as well as of the flocks," etc.]
33139 (return)
[ Ibid., F.7, 7171.
"These commissioners (of the quarter) notify the exclusives, and even
swindlers, when warrants are out against them.... The same measures
carried out in the primary assemblies on the 1st of Thermidor last, in the
selection of municipal officers, have been successfully revived in the
organization of the National Guard—threats, insults, shouting,
assaults, compulsory ejection from meetings then governed by the
amnestied, finally, the appointment of the latter to the principal
offices. In effect, all, beginning with the places of battalion leaders
and reaching to those of corporals, are exclusively filled by their
partisans. The result is that the honest, to whom serving with men
regarded by them with aversion is repugnant, employ substitutes instead of
mounting guard themselves, the security of the town being in the hands of
those who themselves ought to be watched."]
33140 (return)
[ Archives
Nationales, F.7, 3273. (Letter of Mérard, former administrator and judge
in 1790 and 1791, in years III., IV. and V., to the Minister, Apt,
Pluviôse 15, year III., with personal references and documentary
evidence.) "I can no longer refrain at the sight of so many horrors....
The justices of the peace and the director of the jury excuse themselves
on the ground that no denunciations or witnesses are brought forward. Who
would dare appear against men arrogating to themselves the title of
superior patriots, foremost in every revolutionary crisis, and with
friends in every commune and protectors in all high places? The favor they
enjoyed was such that the commune of Gordes was free of any levy of
conscripts and from all requisitions. People thus disposed, they said, to
second civic and administrative views, could not be humored too much.....
This discouraging state of things simply results from the weakness,
inexperience, ignorance, apathy and immorality of the public functionaries
who, since the 18th of Fructidor, year V., swarm, with a few exceptions
only, among the constituted authorities. Whatever is most foul and
incompetent is in office, every good citizen being frightened to death."—Ibid.
(Letter of Montauban, director of the registry since 1793 to the Minister
of the Interior, a compatriot, Avignon, Pluviôse 7, year VII.) "Honest
folks are constantly annoyed and put down by the authors and managers of
the 'Glaciere'.... . by the tools of the bloody tribunal of Orange and the
incendiaries of Bedouim." He enjoins secrecy on this letter, which, "if
known to the Glacièrists, or Orangeists, would cost him his life."]
33141 (return)
[ Ibid., F.7, 7164.
(Department of Var, year V., "Ideé Générale.") "National character is
gone; it is even demoralized: an office-holder who has not made his
fortune quickly is regarded as a fool."]
33142 (return)
[ Moniteur, XXII.,
240. (Indictment of the fourteen members of the Revolutionary committee of
Nantes, and the summing-up of the examination, Vendémiaire 23, year II.)
When there is no special information concerning the other committees the
verdict, on the whole, is nearly always as overwhe1ming.-Ibid. (Session of
Vendémiaire 12, year III. complaint of a deputation from Ferney-Voltaire.)
"The Gex district was, for over a year, a prey to five or six scoundrels
who took refuge there. Under the mask of patriotism they succeeded in
getting possession of all the offices. Vexations of every kind, robberies
of private houses, squandering of public money, were committed by these
monsters." (The Ferney deputies brought with them the testimony of
witnesses.)—Ibid., 290. (Letters of Representative Goupilleau,
Beziers, Vendémiaire 28, year III. on the terrorists of Vaucluse.) "These
carnivorous fellows, regretting the times when they could rob and massacre
with impunity.... Who, six months ago, were starving and who now live in
the most scandalous opulence... Squanderers of the public funds, robbers
of private fortunes... Guilty of rapine, of forced contributions, of
extortions," etc.—Prudhomme, "Les crimes de la Révolution," VI., 79.
(On the Revolutionary committee installed by Fouché at Nevers.) The local
investigation shows that the eleven leaders were men of vile character,
unfrocked and disreputable priests, lawyers and notaries driven out of
their professional bodies, and even from the popular clubs, on account of
their dishonesty, penniless actors, surgeons without patients, depraved,
ruined, incapable men, and two jail-birds.]
33143 (return)
[ Beaulieu, III.,
754.—Cf. "The Revolution," vol. II., ch. I., P 9.]
33144 (return)
[ "Recueil de pièces
authentiques sur la Révolution à Strasbourg," I., 21.—Archives
Nationales D., I., P 6. (Orders by Rousselin, Frimaire II, year II.)]
33145 (return)
[ "Un Sejour en
France de 1792 à 1795," p.409.]
33146 (return)
[ I have not found a
complete list of the towns and departments which had a revolutionary army.
The correspondence of representatives on mission and published documents
verify the presence of revolutionary armies in the towns mentioned.]
33147 (return)
[ De Martel,
"Fouché," 338. (Text of the orders of the commissioners of Public Safety.)
The detachment sent to Lyons comprises twelve hundred fusiliers, six
hundred gunners, one hundred and fifty horses. Three hundred thousand
livres are remitted as traveling expenses to the commissary, fifty
thousand to Collot d'Herbois, and nineteen thousand two hundred to the
Jacobin civilians accompanying them.]
33148 (return)
[ Moniteur. (Session
of Brumaire 17 year III.) Letter of Representative Calès to the
Convention. "Under the pretext of guarding the prisons, the municipality
(of Dijon) had a revolutionary army which I broke up two days ago, as it
cost six thousand francs a month, and would not obey the commander of the
armed force, and served as a support to intriguers. These soldiers, who
were all workmen out of employment, do nothing but post themselves in the
tribunes of the clubs, where they, with the women they bring along with
them, applaud the leaders, and so threaten citizens who are disposed to
combat them, and force these to keep their mouths shut."??De Martel,
"Fouché," 425. "Javogues, to elude a decree of the Convention (Frimaire
14) suppressing the revolutionary army in the departments, converted the
twelve hundred men he had embodied in it in the Loire into paid
soldiers."? Ibid., 132. (Letter of Goulin, Bourg, Frimaire 23.)
"Yesterday, at Bourg-Régeriéré, I found Javogues with about four hundred
men of the revolutionary army whom he had brought with him on the 20th
instant."]