THE A I S T 0 R Y OFo THE FRENCH REVOLUTION BY MI. A'. THIFRS, LATE PRIME MINISTER OF FRANCE. TRANSLATED, WITH NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS FROM THE MOST AUTHENTIC SOURCES, BY F REIDE RICK SHOBERL.'THIRD AMERICAN EDITION. COMPLETE IN FOUR VOLUMES, WITI ENGRAVINGS. VOL. 1. PHILADELPHIA: A. HIART, LATE CAREY & HART. No. 126 CHESTNUT STREET. 1850. Printed by TK.c. & P. G. Collins. CHRON OL O GY OF TIE FRENCH REVOLUTION. 1789. Mlay 5. Opening of the, States-general at Versailles-The tiers -tat, 661 deputies; nobles, 285; clergy, 308; total, 1254. 6. Division between the different orders respecting the mode of verifying their powers. 10. The electors of Paris declare themselves in permanent session. 23. Notwithstanding the remonstrances of the tiers-6tat, the different orders meet seJytrately. The clergy and nobility communicate to the tiers-6tat the renunciation of their privileges, and submit to pay their proportion of the public burdens. June 17. The deputies of the tiers-ktat, already joined by some of the clergy, declare their assembly to be the only legal one, and constitute themselves as The National Assermbly. The Assembly declares all the taxes illegally imposed, but it authorizes the levy ~)f them provisionally, only till the day of ils Jfst separation, from whatever cause that separation may proceed. 20. The Oath of the Tennis Court. 23. Royal Session of the States-general. 27. The union of the several Orders in the National Assembly. 30. The Parisians set at liberty the French guards imprisoned in the Abbaye. July 2-9. A great number of troops collected around Paris. 11. Change of the ministry-Dismissal of Necker. 12. Riots in Paris. The Prince de Lambesc, at the head of the German dragoons, charges the populace in the Tuileries. Camille-Desmoulins, in the garden of the Palais-Royal, recommends an appeal to arms. The green cockade is assumed. Conflict between the French Guards and a detachment of the Royal German regiment. 13. First organization of the militia of Paris. The barriers attacked and burnt. 14. Storming of the Bastille. Massacre of the governor De Launay and Flesselles,prdrot des marchands. The red and blue cockade (the city colours) substituted for the green cockade. 15. The King and his brothers repair to the National Assembly. The troops collected round Paris dismissed. Approval of the institutions of the national guard. The electors nominate Bailly, mayor of Paris, and Lafayette, general-in-chief of the national guard. 16. Recall of Necker-Count d'Artois and the Prince de Condo emigrate. 17. The King proceeds to the Hotel de Ville of Paris. Bailly thus addresses him: " Sire, I bring you the keys of the city of Paris; they are the same which were presented to Henry IV. He had reconquered his people; the people have reconquered their King." The assembled multitude applauded this address: the King assumed the red and blue, cockade. His presence quiets the tumult. 22. Fresh disturbances on account of the dearness of corn. Massacre of Foulan and of Berthier de Sauvigny. 26. The tricoloured cockade adopted. On presenting it to the electois, Lafayette predict. that it will nmake the tour of the world. trug. 1. The cannon of Chantilly, and of the IIe-Adam, taken possession of arid brought to Paris. 4. The National Assenbly decrees that the constitution shall be [receded by the declaration of the rights of man and of the citizen. Spontaneous abolition of the feudal system., and of all privileges in France. 18. Democratic insurrection at Liege. iv CHRONOLOGY OF THE Aug. 23. Decree proclaiming liberty of opinions, religious as well as political. 31. Suppression and dissolution of the French guards. Sept. 9. The National Assembly declares itself to be permanently assembled. 10. It adopts as a principle that the legislative body shall consist of only one chamber Oct. 1. Declaration of the Rights of Man in society. 2. Entertainment given by the Life-guards, at Versailles. 5, 6. The populace at Versailles. The King and all his family are brought to Paris. 14. The Duke of Orleans quits Paris for a time and goes to England. 19. The first sitting of the National Assembly at the archbishop's palace. 21. Decree conferring upon the tribunal of the Chltelet the cognizance of the crime of high treasonZ against the nation. Martial law introduced. Nov. 2. Ecclesiastical property declared national property. The Abbe Maury, being threatened with death d la lanterne, escapes, by saying to those who have come to attack him, n "Well, and shall you see any the clearer for that, do you think?" 6. Institution of the society of " The Friends of the Constitution," which subsequently became " The Society of the Jacobins." The National Assembly transfers its place of meeting to the Riding-house of the Tuileries. Dec. 19. Creation of territorial assignats. 24. Decree declaring Frenchmen who are not Catholics admissible to all offices, both civil and military. 1790. Jan. 15. Division of France into eighty-three departments. 21. Equality of punishments enacted, whatever the rank of the culprits. 26. The Assembly forbids its members to accept any office under government. Feb. 13. Abolition of monastic vows. Suppression of the religious orders. 19. Execution of the Marquis de Favras, declared guilty of high treason. 20. Lafayette proclaims in the National Assembly, that, when oppression renders a revo hltion necessary, IN.SURRECTION IS THE 3IOST SACRED OF DUTIES. March 16. Abolition of " Lettres de Cachet." 17. Appropriation of ecclesiastical property to the repayment of the assignats. 28. Suppression of the salt-tax. April 1. Publication of the 1" Red Book." The secret expenses of the court had annually been at the lowest, in 1787, 82,000,000 livres; at the highest, in 1783, 145,000,000 livres. 29. Free trade in corn. 30. Institution of the jury. May 10. Massacre of the patriots at Montauban. 12. Institution, by Lafayette and Bailly, of the Society of 1789, (afterwards the club of the Feuillans,) to counterbalance the influence of the Jacobin club. 22. The Assembly decrees that the right of declaring war and making peace belongs to the nation. June 3. Insurrection of the blacks at Martinique. 9, 10. The civil list fixed at 25,000,000 livres. 19. Abolition of nobility. July 10. Decree restoring to the heirs of Dissentersiexpelled by the edict of Nantes their confiscated property not yet sold. 14. First National Federation. Aug. 6. Abolition of the droits d'aubairrne (seizing the property of Aliens). 16. Justices of the peace instituted. 31. Revolt of the Swiss soldiers at Chateau-Yieux. Sept. 4. Dismissal and Retreat of Necker. 6. Suppression of the parliaments. 10. Funding of the public debt. 29. Creation of 800,000,000 of forced assignats. Oct. 9. Insurrection of the mulattoes in St. Domingo. Nov. 4. Insurrection in the Isle of France. 27. Civil constitution of the clergy. Institution of the Tribunal of Cassation, Dec. 30. Institution of the patents for inventions. 1791. Jan. 28. The French army is increased to the war establishment Feb. t2. Abolition of the monopoly for the cultivation of tobacco FRENCIT RtEVOLUTION. V Feb. 19. Monsieur (afterwards Louis XVIII.) gratifies the populace who surround his palace, by assuring them that he will never emigrate. 28. The leaders of the populace proceed to Vincennes and attempt to massacre the prisoners. The day of the Daggers. The nobles with concealed arms assemble at the Tuileries. The King, in order to prevent a conflict between them and the national guards, commands them to lay down their arms. They obey; and are afterwards insulted and ill-used. April 2, 4. Death and funeral of Mirabeau. 23. Louis apprizes the foreign courts that he has taken the oath to observe the future constitution. May 4. Annexation of Avignon and of the Comtat Venaissin to France. 15. Admission of the free people of colour to an equality of political rights with the whites. June 2. Louis XVI., being intimidated, gives his consent to many decrees from which he had previously withheld it. 5. The decree passed, wresting from the King the privilege of pardoning criminals. 10. Louis XVI. secretly protests against the sanctions which he has given to decrees, and also against those which he may hereafter give. 19. Robespierre is elected public accuser for the tribunal of the Seine. 21-25. Flight to and return from Varennes. The emigration of Monsieur. 26. The Life-guards disbanded. July 6. Appeal of the Emperor Leopold to the sovereigns of Europe to unite for the deliverance of Louis XVI. 7. Louis XVI. disavows the armaments equipping by the emigrants. 11. Petition for the King's dethronement. The remains of Voltaire transferred to the Pantheon. 17. The unfurling of the red flag. 21. Institution for the deaf and dumb established. 25. Treaty of Berlin against France between Prussia and Austria. 30. Suppression of decorations and orders of knighthood. Aug. 17. Decree enjoining emigrants to return to France. 27. Treaty of Pilnitz intended to consolidate the coalition. Sept. 3. 3-13. Completion and presentation of the constitution to the King. 14. Louis XVI. accepts the constitution and swears to maintain it. 29. Decree relati /e to the national guard.?0. Last sitting of the Constituent Assembly. This Assembly during the three years of its existence, enacted 1309 laws and decrees relative to legislation or to the general administration of the state. Oct. 1. First sitting of the Legislative Assembly. 5. Commencement of the famine. The farmers refuse to take assignats in payment for corn. Decree taking from the King the titles of Sire and Your Majesty. 14. The Kiing issues a proclamation to the emigrants exhorting them to rally round the constitution. 16. He writes to his brothers to induce them to return to France. All the men of talent in Europe are invited by the Assembly to communicate their opinions on the civil code. The minister of war announces that 1900 officers have left their regiments and emigrated. 28. Decree requiring Monsieur to return to France within two Imonths, upon the penalty of being deprived of his right to the regency. 30. Massacres at Avignon. The slaughtered prisoners are thrown into an ice-pit. Nov. 12. The King refuses to sanction the decree against the emigrants. 17. Petion is elected mayor of Paris. 22. Port-au-Prince (St. Domingo) burnt. 26. Chabot enters the King's presence with his hat on. 29. The Assembly requires the King to call upon the princes of the empire not to allow the assermbling of emigrants in their territories. Dec. 2. Manuel elected procureur-syndic of the commune. 14. Tihe King announces to the Assembly that he will declare war, if the foreign courts disregard his declarations in favour of the Revolution. 19. The King puts his veto to the decrees relative to priests who refuse to take the civic oath. 20. Notification, in the name of the King, to the Elector of Treves to disperse the emigrants collected in his states. 31. The Assembly suppresses the ceremony usual on New Year's Day. a2 tvJ CHRONOLOGY OF THE 1792. Jan. 1. The King's brothers, as emigrants, are decreed under accusation. 23, 24. First pillage of the grocers of Paris. Feb. 7. Treaty between Austria and Prussia to quell the disturbances in France. 9. The property of emigrants sequestrated. March 1. Death of Leopold II. His son Francis succeeds him. 2. Institution of the King's constitutional guard. 3. Murder of the mayor of Etampes in the execution of his duty. 1 9. Amnesty granted to the assassins of Avignon. 28. Decree admitting men of colour and free negroes to the exercise of political rights. 29. Assassination of Gustavus III., King of Sweden. 30. Appropriation of the property of emigrants to defray the expenses of the war. April 6. Suppression of religious communities. Prohibition of ecclesiastical costumes.::20. Declaration of war against Austria. 28. First hostilities and reverses in Belgium. General Theobald Dillon murdered by his soldiers. Maly 3. Decrees of accusation passed against Boyou, author of l'Ami du Roi and Marat, author of, l'Anmi dts Peuple. 29. The King's paid guard disbanded. The National Assembly constitutes itself in permanent session. June 8. Decree ordaining the formation of a camp of 20,000 men near Paris. Opposed by the King. 12, 13. Dismissal of the ministers, Servan, Roland, and Clavieres. 20. The populace at the Tuileries. 26. First continental coalition against France. 28. Lafayette appears at the bar to demand, in the name of his army, the punishment of the authors of the outrage of the 20th. July 7. Francis IT. elected Emperor of Germany. 6. All the ministers of Louis XVI. resign. 11. Decree declaring the country in danger. 14. Third Federation. 30. Arrival of the Marseillais in Paris. Aug. 10. The Tuileries attacked and stormed. i 1 Suspension of theKing —Formation of an executive council. 13. Imprisonment of the King and the royal family in the Temple. 13- -21.''he foreign ambassadors leave Paris. 14. Decree directing the sale of the property of the emigrants. 1S. Flight of Lafayette, after attempting in vain to induce his army to rise in favour of Louis XVI. and the constitution. 28, 29. Law ordaining domiciliary visits. 8ept. 2. Confiscation of the property of the emigrants. 2-6. Massacres in the prisons of Paris. 9. Massacre of the prisoners from Orleans at Versailles. 16. The Garde-slTeuble robbed of the jewels and precious stones belonging to the crown. 20. Battle of Valmy. 21. Closing of the Legislative Assembly, after passing, between the 1st of October, 179 1, and the present day, 2140 decrees relative to administration or legislation-Opening of thie National Convention-Abolition of royalty-Proclamation of the republic. 22. Commencement of the republican era-Decree ordaining the renewal of all the administrative, municipal, and judicial bodies, as szsepected of being gangrened with royalism, 23. Entry of the French into Chambery-Conquest of Savoy. 28. Nice taken. 29. Louis XVI. separated from his family and removed to the great tower of the Temple. Oct. S. The siege of Lille raised, after an heroic defence by its inhabitants. 9. Law ordaining the immediate death of every emigrant taken in arms. 10. The titles of citoyen and citoyenne adopted instead of monsieur and madame. 15. Suppression of the order of St. Louis. 22. Entire evacuation of the French territory bry the allies. 23. Law banishing the emigrants in mass and for ever, and decreeing the penalty of death, against all, without distinction of age or sex, who shall return to France. Nov. (;. Victory of Jemappes. 7. Decree for putting Louis XVI. upon his trial. FRENCH REVOLUTION. Vii Nov. 19. The Convention, by a decree, promises aid and succour to all those nations which may desire to overthrow their governments. 20. Discovery of the iron chest. Dec. 4. Decree pronouncing the penalty of death against all who shall propose or attempt to restore royalty in France. 11. First examination of Louis XVT. 16. Decree banishing the Bourbons, with the exception of the prisoners in the Temple and Philip Egalite (the Duke of Orleans,) respecting whom the Convention reserves to itself the right of deciding hereafter-Philip Egalit6 continues to sit in the Convention. 25. Louis XVI. writes his will. 26. Defence of Louis XVI. delivered by Deseze. 27. Commencement of the debates in the National Convention. 31. England refuses to recognise the minister of the French republic. 1793. Jan. 13. Basseville murdered at Rome. 14. End of the debates in the Convention relative to Louis XVI. 15-20. Votes and scrutinies for the sentence on Louis XVI., the appeal to the people, the reprieve, &c. 20. Notification to Louis XVI. of the sentence of death pronounced upon him-Last intera view of the King with his family-Murder of Lepelletier St. Fargeau. 21. Execution of Louis XVI. 24. The Convention, in a body, attends the funeral of Lepelletier, to whose remains are awarded the honours of the Pantheon. 28. Louis Xavier (Monsieur) assumes the title of Regent of France, and proclaims Louis XVII. King. 31. Incorporation of the county of Nice with France. Feb. 1. The Convention declares war against England and: Holland. 24. Decree ordaining the levy of 300,000 men. 25, 26. Plunder of the grocers' shops in Paris. March 5. The colonies declared in a state of siege. 7. The Convention declares war against Spain. 9. Commissioners of the Convention sent with unlimited powers into the departmentsAbolition of imprisonment for debt-First coalition against France formed by England, Austria, Prussia, Holland, Spain, Portugal, the Two Sicilies, the Roman States, Sardinia, and Piedmont. 10, 11. Institution of the' revolutionary tribunal. 12. Committees of surveillance established in Paris. 11-15. Insurrection in La Vendee-Cholet taken by the insurgents. 18. Battle of Neerwinden. 21. Decree ordaining the punishment of death against all who shall propose an agrarian lavrw. 25. Institution of the committee of general safety. 28. lThe emigrants banished for ever-Confiscation of their property. April. 1. Defection of Dumouriez. 6. t'he committee of public welfare instituted by'a law. Apprehension of the Duke of Orleans (Egalite), and'imprisonment at Marseilles of all the members of the family of the Bourbons not confined in the Temple-Representatives of the people sent to the republican armies. 13. Marat decreed under accusation by the Convention. 14. The Spaniards overrun Roussillon. 24. Marat acquitted and carried in triumph to the hall of the Convention. May 4. A maximzum fixed for the price of corn and flour. 10. First meeting of the Convention at the Tuileries. 18. The Girondins obtain the institution of the commission of the twelve, to watch the motions of agitators. 20. Forced loan of 1000 millions imposed upon the rich. 26. Insurrection in Corsica. 29. Insurrection in Lyons against the Jacobins. u30, 31. }Revolution of May 31. Downfall of the Girondins. June 1, 2, 5. Federalist insurrection at Marseilles and Caen. 8. Blockade of the ports of France by England. viii CIIRONOLOGY OF THE June 9. Protest of 73 deputies against the acts of the Convention on the 31st of May, and the 2d of June. 10. Saumur taken by the Vendeans-A decree that absolute necessaries shall not be taxed. 21-24. Insurrection in St. Domingo-The Cape burned. 23. Martial law repealed. 29. The constitution submitted to the primary assemblies. 28, 29. Nantes attacked by the Vendeans. July 3. Decree commanding the siege of Lyons. 4. Foundlings named the children of the country. 13. Marat assassinated by Charlotte Corday. 24. Capitulation of Mayence. 26. Establishment of telegraphs. 27. Robespierre nominated a member of the committee of public welfare. 28. Capitulation of Valenciennes. Aug. 1. Marie Antoinette removed to the Conciergerie. 7. Decree declaring Pitt an enemy of mankind. 8. Suppression of all academies and literary societies. 10. The constitution of 1793 accepted by the deputies of 44,000 communes of republic. 15. Institution of the great book of the public debt. 22. Adoption of the first eight heads of the civil code. 23. Law ordaining the levy en masse. Sep. 5. Decree enacting that a revolutionary army shall travel over the departments with artillery and a guillotine. 7, 8. Victory gained over the English at Hondschoote. 11. Establishment of the maximurm for corn and flour. 15. Investment and siege of Toulon. 17. Law of the suspected. Oct. 10. Lyons taken by the army of the Convention-The government declared revolution. ary till a peace. 15, 16. Victory of Wattignies-The blockade of Maubeuge raised. 16. Marie Antoinette condemned and executed. 1 7-19. Defeat of the Vendeans at Cholet-Passage of the Loire. 31. The Girondins executed. Nov. 6. The Duke of Orleans (Philip Egalit6) executed. 10. The Catholic worship superseded by that of Reason-Revolutionary massacres at Lyons, 11. Bailly executed. 16. Lotteries suppressed. Dec. 4. Organization of the Revolutionary government. 12, 13. The Vendeans defeated at Mans. 20. Toulon retaken. 22. The Vendeans defeated at Savenay. 26, 27. The lines of VWeissenburg retaken-The blockade of Landau raised. I794. Jan. 1. Decree enacting that every condemned general shall be executed at the head of his army, 4. Noirmoutiers taken-D'Elbfe executed. 16. Marseilles declared rebellious and to have lost its name. 21. Decree enacting that the anniversary of the execution of Louis XVI. shall be celebrated as a national festival-Drownings (no yades) at Nantes. Feb. 4. Decree abolishing slavery in the colonies. The negroes declared French citizensDecree enacting that sentences upon ecclesiastics shall be executed without appeal. 15. The Cohvention determines that the national flag shall be composed of three vertical stripes of equal breadth-red, white, and blue. 22. A mraxinzzu fixed fo(r articles of ordinary consumption. 24-. Decree qualifying denouncers to be heard as witnesses. March 5. Danton, Camille-Desmoulins, &c., executed. 22. Decree proclaiming justice and integrity the order of the day. April 1. The executive counsel suppressed and succeeded by twelve commissions composed of members of the Convention, and subordinate to the committee of public welfare. 4. Decree enacting that accused persons brought before the revolutionary tribunal who resist the national justice, shall not be allowed to plead, and sentenced forthwith. 5. Decree that every member of the Convention shall give an account of his conduct. moral and political, and of his circumstances. FR ENCHI REVOLU'ION. iX April 14. Decree that the remlains of.. J. Rousseau shall be removed to the Pantheon. 16. Decree that a4l those who live without doing anything, and complain of the Revolution, shall be transported to Guiana. May 7. The Convention acknowledges the existence of the Supreme Being. 10. Madarne Elizabeth, sister of Louis XVI., executed. May 18. Victory of Turcoing. 02. Execution of young females at Verdun. 26. Decree that no quarter be given to the English and Hanoverians-Collioure, St. Elmne, and Port-Vendres retaken. June 1. Establishment of the School of Mars in the plain of Sablons-Sea-fight of the 13th of Prairial-Heroism of the crew of the Vengeur.;,8. Festival of the Supreme Being. 10. Decree that any moral document may be used as evidence against a person accused before the revolutionary tribunal; arid that there shall be in future no official defenders. 23. Battle of Croix-des-Bouquets. 25. Charleroi taken. 26. Decree that corn and forage of this year's growth be put in requisition-Victory of Fleurus. 27. Institution of a police legion for the city of Paris. July 4. Decree that the foreign garrisons in French fortresses, which refuse to surrender within twenty-four hours after the first summons, shall be put to the sword. 6. Landrecies retaken. 26. (8th of Thermidor.) Robespierre at the Jacobin club. 27, 28. (9th and 10th of Thermidor.) Downfall of Robespierre. 29. Execution of eighty-three members of the general council of the commune outla-wed on the 27th. Aug. 1. Fouquier-Tinville apprehended. 12. A new revolutionary tribunal installed. 16. Quesnoy retaken. 23. All persons of seventy in confinement set at liberty. 24. Decree limiting the powers of the committee of public welfare. 27- 30. Valenciennes and Cond6 retaken. 31. Explosion of the powder-magazine at Grenelle, by which fifteen hundred persons lose their lives-Decree for checking the progress of Vandalism-The monuments of the arts and sciences placed under the care of the authorities. Sept. 1. Barrdre, Billaud-Varennes, and Collot-d'Herbois, turned out of the committee of public welfare-That committee had been prorogued and re-elected fourteen times successively., 10. Attempt to assassinate'Pallien. 24. Destruction of the English settlements at Sierra-Leone. Oct. 2. Victory of Aldenhoven. 7. Lyons resumes its name. 10. Institution of the Conservatory of Arts and Trades. 12. The Convention forbids all political correspondence between popular societies in their collective name. 20. The Normal School instituted. 23. The School of Mars suppressed. Nkiov. 1. Great dearth. The inhabitants of Paris receive but two ounces of bread per day. The busts of Marat and Lepelletier destroyed.-The body of Marat dragged from the Pantheon and thrown into a sewer. 9. The Jacobins attacked by the Gilded Youth. 12. Decree suspending the meetings and closing the hall of the Jacobin club. 17-20. Battle of Montague Noire, in which the two commanders-in-chief, Dugommsei and La Union are slain.,ec. 2. Armnesty offered to the Vendeans and Chouans, who shall lay down their arms within a month. 8. The deputies proscribe( on the 31st of May, 1793, readmitted Into the Convention. 9. Decree that in fittu'-e Lhe screcy of letters shall not be violated In the interior. 16, 17. Carrier condemned and executed. 24. The laws of the masinmsss repealed. 30. The decree enacting that no quarter shall be given to the English and Harnoverians repealed. voL. I.-(2) X CIHRONOLOGY OF THE 1795. Jan. 19. Declaration of Russia that " there is no longer either a kingdom or republic of Pcland"-The French enter Amsterdam-Conquest of Holland. 20. A Dutch fleet taken by French Cavalry. Feb. 2. Repeal of the penal laws issued against Lyons. 6. Holland abolishes the' stadtholdership, and constitutes itself a republic. 9. Treaty of peace between France and Tuscany. 15. First pacification of La Vendee, called the pacification of La Jaunaie. Mar. 2. The late members of the committee of public welfare placed under accusation. 8. The outlawed deputies readmitted into the Convention. 15. Decree that each inhabitant of Paris shall be allowed but one pound of bread per day' labouring people only to have a pound and a half; 21. Institution of the Central School of Public Works (afterwards the Polytechnic School) -Law against seditious assemblies. April 1. Transportation of the late memnbers of the committee of public welfare (12th Germinal.) 5. Treaty of peace between the French Republic and the King of Prussia. 7. Establishment of the uniformity of weights, measures, and coins, upon the decimal system. 24. Massacres in the prisons of Lyons. May 7. Execution of Fouquier-Tinville and fifteen jurors of the revolutionary tribunal 16. Alliance between the French and the Batavian republics. 17-19. Jacobin insurrection at Toulon. 20. Disturbances of the Ist of Prairial. 22. Insurrection of the fauxbourg St. Antoine. 24. Disarming of the fauxbourg St. Antoine and the sections of Paris.:30.'he public exercise of the Catholic religion authorized. 31. The extraordinary revolutionary criminal tribunal suppressed. June 1-5. Insurrection at Toulon quelled. 2. Funeral honours paid to Fdraud, the deputy, murdered on the 1st of Prairial. 8. Death of the Dauphin, son of Louis XVI. 17. Death of Romme, Goujon, Soubrani, &c. 24. Charette again takes up arm.ls in La Vendee. 27. Institution of a police legion for the safeguard of Paris. July 21. The emigrants lay down their arms at Quiberon. 22. Treaty of peace between France and Spain signed at Basle. Allug. 3. Institution of the Conservatory of Music. 22. The new constitution, called the constitution of the year If, adopted. 23. Decree definitely dissolving the popular societies. 30. Decree enacting that two-thirds of the members of the new legislative assemblies shall be, for the first time only, exclusively chosen from the National Convention. Sept. 23. Proclamation of the acceptance of the constitution of the year III by the people. Oct. 1. Belgium and all the conquered countries on the left bank of the Rhine incorporated with the Republic. 2. Landing of Count d'Artois in le-Dieu. 5. Insurrection of the 13th Vendemiaire. 2,5. Formation of the Institute decreed. 26. End of the National Convention, after passing 8370 decrees. 28. First meeting of the Council of the Ancients and the Council of the Five Hundred. Nov. 1. Formation of the Directory-Lardveillere-Lepa2ux, Le Tourneur, Rewbel, Barras, and Carnot, chosen directors. 4. The Directory establishes itself at the Luxembourg. 17. Evacuation of the lle-Dieu. 23-27. Battle and victory of Loano. Dec. 26. The daughter of Louis XVI. exchanged for, 1, the representatives ana General Beurnonville, delivered up to the Austrians by Dunmouriez; 2, Mlaret and Semonville, diplomatic envoys, seized by the Austrians in 1793: 3, Drouet, the ex-conventionalist, made prisoner in 1792. 1796. Jan. 1. Institution of the ministry of the police. Feb. 2. The twelve municipalities of Paris installed. FRENCH REVOLUTION,. xi Feb. 24. Stofflet, again in aruns at La Vendee, taken and shot. Mar. 29. Charette shot at Nantes. April 2-9. Insurrection in Berry, which is quelled immediately. 11, 12. Battle of Montenotte. 13, 14. Battle of Millesiamo. 22. Battle of Mondovi. May 10. Battle of the bridge of Lodi. 15. Treaty of peace between the French Republic and the King of Sardinia-The French enter Milan. June 4. Battle of Altenkirchen gained by Jourdan. 21. Armistice granted to the Pope, by Bonaparte. 23. Morea crosses the Rhine at Kehl. 29. The castle of Milan taken. July 9. Battle of Ettlingen gained by Moreau. Aug..5. Victory of Castiglione. 15. Definitive pacification of La Vendee. 18. Offensive and defensive alliance between France and Spain. Sept. 5. The French enter Trent. 8. Battle of' Bassano. 15. Battle of St. George-Wurmser blockaded in Mantua. ect. 2. Battle of Biberach, gained by Moreau. 8. Spain declares war against England. 10. Treaty of peace between the Republic and the King of the Two Sicilies. 22. Corsica retaken from the English. Nov. 15-17. Victory of Arcole. Dlec. 20. Rupture of the conferences opened at Paris with Lord Malmesbury. 24-27. Expedition to Ireland; productive of no result. 1797. Jan. 9. Capitulation of Kehl, after the trenches had been opened forty-eight hours. 14, 15. Battle of Rivoli. 16. Battle of La Favorita-Capitulation of Provera. Feb. 2. Mantua taken. 5. Surrender of the tfte cle ponte of Huninguen. 19. Treaty of peace of Tolentino, between the French Republic and the Pope. Mar. 16. Passage of the Tagliamento. April 15. Preliminaries of peace between France and Austria, signed at Leoben. 18. Battle of Neuwied gained by Hoche. 20, 21. Passage of the Rhine at Diersheim, by Moreau. May 16. The French enter Venice-Overthrow of the old Venetian government. 31. Revolution at Genoa-Creation of the Ligurian republic. June 28. Occupation of Corfu. July 9. Establishment of the Cisalpine Republic. Aug. 24. Repeal of all the laws relative to the exile or confinement of priests refusing to take the oath. Sept. 4. Violent proceedings of the 18th of Fructidor. 17. Rupture of the conferences at Lille opened for peace with England. 19. Death of General Hoche. 30. Law for dividing the public debt into three thirds, of which one only is consolidated. Oct. 17. Treaty of peace signed at Campo Formio, between France and Austria. Dec. 9. Opening of the congress of Rastadt. 10. Solemn reception of General Bonaparte by the Directory. 28. Riot at Rome-Murder of General Duphot-The French legation leaves the Pap,ai territories. 1798. Jan. 1. Law concerning the constitutional organization of the Colonies. 5. Forced loan of eighty millions to defray the expenses of the preparations for an invaason of England. 27. Invasion of Switzerland. Feb. 10. The French enter Rome. 15. Abolition of the Papal government-The Roman republic proclaimed. Xi] CHRONOLOGY OF THE Mar. 1. The Rhine acknowledged by the congress of Rastadt as the boundary of the French Republic. 5. Berne taken. April 17. Organization of the national gendarmerie. 19. Landing of the English near Ostend: all killed or taken. 26. Incorporation of Geneva with France. May 1. Holland reconstitutes itself by the name of the Batavian republic. 9. The English evacuate St. Domingo. 19. Sailing of the expedition for Egypt. June 10-13. Taking of Malta. July 1-3. Landing in Egypt. 21. Battle of the Pyramids. 27. Suspension of commercial relations between France and America. Aug. 1, 2. Sea-fight at Aboukir. 21. Creation of the Institute of Egypt. 22. Landing in Ireland of 1150 French, under the command of Humbert. Sept. 5. Establishment of the conscription. 8. Humbert, attacked by 25,000 English, is forced to surrender. 12. The Porte declares war against France. Oct. 8. Battle of Sedyman. 22-24. Insurrection at Cairo. Nov. 24. Imposition of a tax on doors and windows. Dec. 5. Battle of Civita Castellana-Defeat of 40,000 Neapolitans under General Mack, by 6000 French, under Macdonald. 6. Declaration of war against the Kings of Naples and Sardinia. 9. Ratification of the treaty of peace between the French and Helvetic republics. 8-10. Occupation of Turin by General Joubert-The King of Sardinia cedes Piedmont to France. 14. Reoccupation of Rome by Championnet. 18. Treaty of alliance between England and Russia against France. 1799. Jan. 23. Naples taken by Championnet. March 1-4. Hostile movements of the French and Austrian armies on the Rhine. 7. Coire taken-Conquest of the country of the Grisons by the French. 10. Expedition to Syria-Jaffa taken. 25. Defeat of the French at Stockach. 27. Seizure of Pope Pius VI., who is carried to France. 16. Victory of Mount Tabor. April 27. Defeat of the French at Cassano. 28. Murder of the French plenipotentiaries at Rastadt. May 21. The army of the East raises the siege of Acre. 24. The citadel of Milan taken by Suwarrow. June 8. Zurich taken by the archduke Charles. 17, 18. Events of the 30th of Prairial-Three of the directors are turned out by the legis. lative body. 17-19. Defeat of the French at Trebbia. July 12. Law authorizing the relatives of emigrants and nobles to be seized as hostages. 25. Victory of the French at Aboukir. 30. Mantua taken by the Austrians. Aug. 15. Defeat of the French at Novi. 22. General Bonaparte quits Egypt. 29. Death of Pope Pius VII. detained a captive at Valence. Sept. 19 Defeat of the Anglo-Russian army at Bergen, in Holland. 25-29. Battle of Zurich. Defeat of the united Austrians and Russians. t)ct. 16. Arrival of Bonaparte in Paris. 18. Capitulation of Anglo-Russians at Alkmaer. Nov. 9, 10. Revolution of the 18th Brumaire-Bonaparte proclaimed provisional Consul. Dec. 16. Law organizing the Polytechnic School. 26. Constitution of the year VIII-Bonaparte nominated First Consul, Cambac&res and Lebrim associated with him as second and third Consuls. INTRODUCTION B Y T HEE E D'I TR 0 R (O;u' all the native historians-and their name is Legionl-who have witrten on tile sulject of the French Revolution, the two most distingtsislietd are decidedly Messrs. Thiers and Mignet. Both these emitient mtnen are remrarkable for the impartial tone of their narratives, (;,tsideritig how recent are the stirring events of which they treat; t;lr the accuracy of their details; for the skill with which they comiLtare anld sift conflicting evidence, and the general justness of their c:,tcl(uusions; and for the luminous and succinct manner in which they tirnce, -step by step, the progress of the most awful moral convulsion t.iat the world tlas yet known. They do not mix themselves-up with tllh strife, or take part in the feverish emotions of the chief-combatantsa I,tl. stanld aloof, Las shrewd and cool lookers-on. They enlist neither under tle Ibanner of the Gironde, nor of the: Mountain; they swear neitlter by the sovereignty of Louis, nor by that of the People; they are ltither Orleanists, nor Septembrizers, nor Terrorists; but act upon tel broad, endntlrir.g principle of giving fair play. to all parties.. Uut; though both possess these important historical requisites nearly (eltqually in commlon, there are points in which they differ widely from each other. T'hliers shows more of the journalist-Mignet; more.of tie philosopher in his work, The former, when once he is fairly embarked on his. task, after a fewintroductory observations of no great pith or noment, moves righlt on, narrating events as they occur, frank-: ly and minutely, without much troubling himself with investigating causes; the -lattr is frequently halting, for the purpose of indulging ial speculations, which although correct and pertinent in the main, are vol. I.-I. 1 lu INTRODUCTION. occasionally somewhat too subtile and refined:fo ttie taste of the general reader. In their various delineations of chairactelr, Thiers exhibits the most worldly tact-Mignet the most metaphysical acuteness, especially where he has to draw such a portrait as that of the Abb6 Sieyes, whom, because he was like himself, a lover of abstract speculation, and addicted to considering the theory rather than the practice of Government, M. Mignet has painted con amore, and in his brightest colours. We cannot help thinking, however, that Burke and Napoleon were nearer the mark, when they pronounced this well-intentioi ed but somewhat crotchetty Abb6 to be little better than a mere visionary. To the general reader Thiers's work will always present more at, tractions than that of M. Miignet-for this plain reason, that although it contains less of what has been called, "6 the philosophy of history," it is of a far more animated, practical, and dramatic character. There is a shrewd, business-like air about it-although here and there the author would evidently desire to be thought a profounder reasoner than he is-that all can understand and appreciate. Hence the secret of the great success that it has met with on the continent. In a word, Thiers the historian is a perfect fac-simile of Thiers the statesmanan adroit, keen, clear-headed man of the world, with no strong passions or prejudices to warp or lead astray his jiudgment.k It is to be regretted that an author so well versed in the annals of his country as-M. Thiers, has not thought it worth his while to enter more into detail ontthe subject of the numerous secondary causes which helped to bring about the French Revolution. It will be observed that, after a few brief introductory paragraphs, of a didactic rather than an historical character, he comes at once to his subject, as if he took for granted that all his readers were as well acquainted as himself with the remote, as well as with the immediate, origin of that memorable event His history may be sail to commence with the derangement of the national finances after the death of Maurepas; but the seeds of the revolution were sown long before his time. The immediately propelling cause was no doubt financial, but the struggle had become ne cessary-it may almost be said- from the day of the decease of the Grand Monarque. After the cessation; of the wars of the Fronde and the death of Mazarin, Colbert, whose knowledge of finance llad introduced him to the notice of that wily minister, succeeded to power. This great statesP For a brief but well-written character of TIhiers as an historian, the reader is'eferred to a review of Mr. Carlyle's French Revolution, which appeared in the "Times" newspaper a few weeks ago INTRODUCTON. 111 man, who was far in advance of his age, was every way calculated to make France happy and flourishing. Accordingly, under hlis beneficent auspices, she made rapid strides towards prosperity. Commerce was encouraged —domestic dissensions were healed, as if by magic-navies equipped-colonies founded-the fine arts and literature patronised —the authority of the law respected-and the duty of toleration enforced in religious matters, Colbert was essentially a peace Minister; and, had he been permitted to retain his authority, and to put in force his projected reforms, the majority of which were of a grand and comprehensive character, it is not impossible that the constant struggles which ultimately terminated in revolution might have been avoided, or at any rate retarded for years; but unfortunately all his patriotic efforts were thwarted by the intrigues of his sworn foe, the war minister, Louvois, who, by flattering the humours and panderilg to the ambition of Louis, plunged France into a destructive and extravagant war with Europe, the effects of which, felt heavily during this showy monarch's reign, were felt with still more severity by his feeble and thoughtless successors. It was at this disastrous period that absolute monarchy was definitively established. The crown arrogated the right to dispose alike of person and of property without the slightest regard to law or equity. The nation, though divided into three orders, which were again subdivided into several classes, may yet be said to have consisted of but two distinct parties-the privileged and the unprivileged. The latter of course conlstituted the great mass of the community. On them fell tle clhief burdens of the state; fio the noblesse were, to a great degree, exempt firom imposts; and the clergy had the convenient privilege of taxiing tlhemselves. "' This order," says M5. Mignet, " was divided into two classes, one of which was destined for the bishoprics, abbacies, and their rich revenues; the other, to apostolic labours, and to poverty. The Tiers-6tat, borne down by the Court, and harassed by the noblesse, was itself separated into corporations, which'etaliated upon each other the evils ald oppressions tllat they suffered from their superiors. They possessed scarcely a third part of the soil, upon which they were compelled to pay feudal services to their lords, tithes to their priests, and imnposts to tile King. In compensation for so many sacrifices they elljoyed no riglhts; had no share in the adminis tration; and were admitted to no putblic enmployments." Suchl was tlte condition of France at the most imposing period of Louis XIV.'s reigl. Colbert would have gone far to remedy this state of things —for lie was as bold and determined as he was sagacious; but lie had passed from the theatre of action, and henceforth there btt~iv INTRODUCTION. was ncne to interfere with the monarch's will. The noblesse coul: not, even had they desired it-for they were reduced to a state of perfeet dependence, which, however, they bore with equanimity, receiving its price in pleasures and in royal favour; and still less could the: parliament, for it had no longer a will-not even a voice of its own, Nevertheless, though manacled in every limb, France bore with this state of affairs during the life of the Grand Monarque, for its innate vanity was gratified by his military glories, by the splendour of his court, and, above all, by the intellectual triumphs of the age. On a superficial view, the country-would never have appeared so prosperous as at this splendid epoch. But though all on the surface looked plausible enough; though pleasure and festivity were the order of the day; though the military and literary glories of France were known and respected throughout Europe, and she herself held the first rank among nations; the- earthquake was at work beneath, destinedsoon to explode with terrific energy. Despite the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, which added so greatly to the discontent of the most industrious and intelligent portion of the commiunity, and the subjection in which he held all classes, the highest equally with the lowest of his people, Louis was by no means a tyrant in the ordinary acceptation: of the term. He was simply a selfish and ambitious man. His youth had been wholly neglected; he was never taught the duties which a sovereign owes to his subjects, but held it as an axiom not to be controverted, that the many were made for the one. Passionately fond of excitement, and incapable of self-restraint, these factitious, unhealthy feelings made him in his meridian manhood a lover of war, as in his age they converted him into a bigot. Of the real condition of France, and of the irreparable injuries which his reckless extravagance was yearly inflicting on her, he knew nothing. Surrounded by sycophants-hailed by grave divines and renowned wits as the pride and saviour of his countryhe had little difficulty in persuading himself that he was all, and more than all, that he was said to be. It was his leading defect throughout life to be ever mistaking the show for the substance of national pros.: (perity. The exertions which this monarch made to encourage a taste:for literature, and to diffuse intelligence among his people, conduced, even more than his own improvident system of government, to sow the seeds of revolution. By creating a habit of reflection among those who up to this time were, comparatively speaking, immersed in ignorance, he went far, without meaning to do so, to establish public, epinion; and every one knows that the spirit of inquiry once set in INTRODUCTION. v'motion cannot be stopped; for it is like the rising tide, which, however it may seem to recede, gains ground with every wave. Accordmngly, the impulse given to intellect by Louis, went on ilcreasing, quietly and insidiously, year by year. The Tiers-Utat began to look about them, to discuss the causes of the evils under which they had so long groanled, and to specullate on the nature of the remedy. While the popular mind was thus rousing itself from the torpor of ages, a sect of philosophers and sophists arose, who gave it precisely that sort of impetus which it was so well fitted to receive. From the period when these men obtained notoriety by their writings, a revolution became inevitable.'They dispelled, as with an enchanter's wand, the Cimmerian gloom of centuries. Not a question in religion, jurisprudence, legislation, finance, or social polity, escaped their searching scrutiny. They exposed the wrongs, and pointed out the rights of their countrymen; but while they did this, they at the same 1time advocated doctrines wholly incompatible with the well-doing of civilized society. Mr. Alison, alluding to the startling effects produced by these men, observes that they s" took place under the feeble successors of the Grand M3onarque. In the philosophical speculations of the eighteenth century, in the writings of Voltaire, Rousseau, Raynal, and the Encyclopaedists, the most free and unreserved discussion took place on political subjects. By a singular blindness the const.tuted authorities, how despotic soever, made no attempt to curb these inquiries,'which, being all couched in general terms, or made in reference to other states, appeared to have no bearing on the tranquillity of the kingdom. Strong in the support of the nobility and the protection of the army, they deemed their power beyond the reach of attack; and anticipated no danger ficom dreams on the social contract, or the manners and spirit of nations. A direct attack on the monarchy would have been followed by an immediate place in the Bastile; but general disquisitions excited no alarm either among the nobility, or in the government. So universal was this delusion, that the young nobility amused themselves with visionary speculations concerning the original equality and pristine state of man: deeming such speculations as inapplicable to their case as the license of Otaheite or the.:equality of Tartary." Foremost among those whose writings tended to inflame and pervert:: the; public mind were Voltaire and Rousseau. The former of:;these had every possible requisite for such a task. Shrewd, calculating, and cunning as a fox; a wit without heart, an innovator without principle; an expert sophist, the light thin soil of whose mind'could not nouirish the:tree of knowledge; acquainted with society iv vi IN rRODUCTION. all its grades, from the highest to the lowest; a contemner, less from sound conviction, than firom the instincts of overweening self-conceit, of all systems of religion, government, and morals —this " brilliant Frencllman," as Cowper justly calls Ilim, was just the man to precipitate the grand crisis of the Revolution. All who read, could understalld him. There was no affected mysticism in his manner, no power of deep reflection, for his thoughts lay on the surface; he was unis fornlliy concise, lucid, and plausible; and set off his style by all the graces of the most sparkling wit and cutting sarcasm. Hiis favourite mode of dealing with the most momenteous matters, was by insinuation. He sneers away a moral principle in a sentence, and disturbs, one's faith ijn religio6n and humanity, by a terse and sparkling allegory. That he effected some good in his generation, is unquestionable. He denounced thle avarice and negligrence of the privileged priesthood; lashed the insane rage for war, then so general. on the continent; exposed the vices and imbecility of the noblesse; and did not spare even the throne itself. Had he stopped here, it had been. well; but his restless intellect spurned all decent restraints, perversely conlfbanded the distinctions between truth and falsehood-sophistry and common sense. Like an Irishman in a row, he laid about bim with his club without the slightest regard to consequences. Cynll ical by nature, the crimes and utter callousness that he observed among th e hghler classes made him a sceptic to all generous emotions; as the corruption of the privileged clergy made him reject all belief in Christianity. Hiazlitt, who of all men in the world was the least likely to underrate him, has well observed that "6 the poisoned wound he inflicted was so fine as scarcely to be felt, until it rankled and fes-ered in its mortal consequences; and that he loved to reduce things below their level, making them all alike seem worthless and hollow!'9 Of a far different order of intellect, but in his way equally influential, was Voltaire's great rival, Rousseau. The object of this insidi. ous sentimentalist was-in politics, to bring about republicantism; in ethics, to subvert the entire frame-work of society, and introduce universal license; in religion, to do away with faith grounded on the convictions of reason, and to substitute in its stead the cant of instinct and sensibility. His specious, shallow, tinsel eloquence, which was mistaken for the sterling ore of thought, turned the brain of all France. Because his ideas were eccentric, they were accounted profound; and his studied lewdness was received as the prompting of a healthy and impassioned temperament. We who live in more en lightened times, when the public mind is able to detect the true from the false, and, if crazy for a season by some pet crotchet, never fails INTROD UCT''.ON. ii soon to right itself, can scarcely imatgine the effect which Voltaire and Rousseau, assisted by the Encyclopuedists, produced in their day. That a convulsion would have taken place, even without their aid, is unquestionable; but equally certain is it that they greatly contributed to hurry on the crisis. The effects of their writings may easily be traced in the sophistical speculations of the unworldly Girolldins-the republican cant of the Dantonists-and the sentimental infidelity of the worshippers of the Goddess of Reason. The radical defect of all Rousseau's writing was the substitution of sentiment for principle. Never was man so glaringly deficient in what may be called the moral sense. His mind "' wore motley," and was made up of inconsistencies. While he professed to inculcate a system of the purest ethics, he lived in avowed adultery with a woman old enough to be his mother; and wrote upon the duties owing by parents to their children, while he sent his own to the F'oundling Hospital I That lie was actuated throughout his literary career by no better feeling than a mere morbid craving for notoriety is evident from one of his published conversations with Burke, wherein he observes that, fiadn ing that the ordinary vehicle of literature was worn out, hle took upon himsdlf the task of renewing the springs, repaintilg the panels, and gilding the whole machine afresh. It other words, he was solely anxious to create a sensation, no miatter how eccentric were tle means which lie employed for that purpose. It vas the fashion of the day, even among the court circles-where the spirit was utterly unknown-to praise this man as the apostle of liberty. This is certainly a saving clause in his favour-or at least would be so, were it not altogether fallacious. Rousseau's love of independence was purely a factitious feeling, else wherefore happened it that he was the slave of his own diseased imagination? To be the true apostle of freedom the man himself must be fiee. No mean distrusts-no maudlin misanthrophy-no sensual, prurient fancies-must interfere with, or influence, his opinions. He must tower above the ordinary level of mankind as much in conduct as in intellect; for by the union of worth and genius alone is the world's conviction ensured. Yet it has been urged by those, who, seduced by their talents, would fain, make excuses for their sophistries, that Rousseau and Voltaire acted from the best intentions. This is pure cant —the plea urged by every knave for his offences against society. The bar of the Old Bailey is filled every session with the best intentions; they figure unequivocally in the police-offices; people the vast pasturages of Australia, and form-says the quaint old Spanish proverb-the pavement of hell itself I F11 TMINTRODUCTION. WhileVoltaire and Rousseau, in conjunction with the Encycl]opedists, were thus striking at the roots of social order, under the pretence of invigorating them, the court and the noblesse-frantic suicides!-were assisting them by every means in their power, first, by their applause, and secondly by their vices. Louis XV., an imbecile, sensual prince, without vigour, principle, or consistency of character, set an example of gross licentiousness,which his courtiers were not slow to follow, and which furnished the sophists with ample food for sarcasm and declamation. Under the disastrous reign of this monarch, justice was bought and sold like any other commodity. A liberal present, the promise of promotion, the smiles of a beautiful wife or mistress, could, in seven cases out of ten, sway the decision. of a, judge. Criminal commissions, the members of which were nominated by the crown, were frequently appointed, thus rendering personal liberty as ilnsecure as real property. Warrants of imprisonment, too, without either accusation or trial, might consign obnoxious individuals to a dungeon for life. Moreover, enormous debts were contracted without national authority; and the public creditors were kept wholly in the dtark as to the state of the national finances. Another predisposing cause to revolution was the preposterous salaries of the civil servants of the crown, and of the aristocratic officers of the army, who, though paid at a rate which would now appear incredible, yet made a point of neglecting their duties, or bribing others to perform them. Every where Corruption stalked abroad with unblushing front. It wore the general's uniform-the judge's robe —the bishop's hood. It had the privilege of the entr6 at court, and sate next the monarch at the royal banquet. The most important functions of government were carried on in the boudoirs of mistresses; the petticoat decided questions o war or peace; and he would have been deemed a most incompetent Minister indeed, who would have dared to controvert the opinions of a Pompadour or a Du Barri. Pope has admirably described this state of things in his magnificent epilogue to the satires: "In soldier, churchman, patriot, man in power,'Tis avarice all, ambition is no more; See all our nobles begging-to be slaves! See all our fools aspiring to be knaves! All, all look up with reverential awe At crimes that'scape or triumph o'er the law, While truth,worth, wisdom,' daily they decry,.'Nothing is sacred now but villany!" [.he Tiers-tcat were become quite intelligent enough to appreciate INTRODUCTION. ix the condition of France at this critical period; but as yet they: stifled their. indignation, or only gave vent to it in occasional remonstrance. The stream still flowed on smooth, and the Court, because they: heard not the thunder of the cataract, imagined that they were far removed from danger. Infatuated men! They were already within the Rapids! The spirit of discontent that prevailed among the middle classes, prevailed: still more strongly:among the peasantry; and with good cause, for their - local burdens, and the services due by them to their feudal superiors, were vexatious and oppressive in the extreme. "T' he most important operations of agriculture," says an; historian who has been already quoted, "were, fettered or prevented by the game laws, and the restrictions intended for their support. -Game of the most destructive kind, such as wild boars and herds of deer, were permitted to go at large through spacious districts, without any enclosure to protect the crops. Numerous edicts existed, Nwrhich prohibited hoeing and weeding, lest the young partridges should be disturbed; mowing hay, lest the eggs should be destroyed; taking away the stubble lest the birds should be deprived of shelter; manuring with night soil, lest their.flavour should be injured. Complaints for the infraction of these edicts were all carried before the manorial courts, where every species of oppression, chicanery, and fraud was prevalent. Fines were imposed at every change of property in the direct and collateral line; at every sale to purchasers; the people were bound to grind their corn at the landlord's mill, press their grapes at his piess, and bake their bread at his oven. Obligations to repair the roads, founded on custom, decrees,;and servitude, were enforced with the most rigorous severity; in many places the use even of handmills was not free, and the. seigneurs were invested with the power of selling to the peasants the right of bruising buckwheat or barley between two stones. It is vain to attempt a description of the feudal services which pressed with so much severity in every part of France." Mr. Young, who travelled through France about this period, bears equal testimony to the wretched condition of the peasantry. ":With a very few excep. tions," he observes, " they were in the most indigent state-their houses, dark, comfortless, and almost destitute of furniture —their dress ragged and miserable-their food the coarsest and most humble fare. They were oppressed by their feudal superiors with a variety of the most galling burdens." No wonder that when the Revolution at length broke out, these slaves of ages rose enthusiastically at the the first summons of the demagogues and anarchists! Another just cause of discontent was the intolerable pride and inso vlO.e..-2 I xjg INTRODUCTION. letnce of the old aristocratic families. These men were spell-bound by the charm of caste-the veriest slaves toconventional etiquette. They built up a wall of demarcation between themselves and the rest of the community, as if they were fashioned of more "' precious porcelain;" held all the useful arts of life in lofty contempt; and were;ealous of even the slightest whisper of opposition to their caprices. While the mind of the whole Tiers-6tat was on the stir, they stood stock still. The most unequivocal signs of the times they either perverted to their own advantage, or treated as portents of no account Inordinately attached to freedom in theory-a passion engendered by the writings of the philosophers-they repudiated the bare idea in practice. As for any thing like a middle class, they scorned to recognise the existence of such a vulgarity-an insult which the men of that class felt so keenly, that, by way of avoiding it, they used, when they had the means of doing so, to purchase a patent of nobility. But this only made matters worse, for the old families became so jealous of these Parvenus, as they called them, that even when the Revolution threatened to sweep away all orders of nobility into one common grave, they could not be prevailed on to combine for their mutual safety. In every stage of the grand crisis, up to the period of their emigration, their motto was 6' no surrender." They were resolved rather to perish than degrade themselves by even a temporary alliance with the nobles of mere yesterday! Extremes, it is said, meet; but this was not the case as respects the highest and lowest classes in France. The, former held no kindly intercourse with the latter; and though possessing, in conjunction with the clergy, two-thirds of the whole estates of the kingdom, yet they were for the most part non-residents on their property, wasting in the dissipation of Paris those means rwhich should have been employed in ministering to the comforts and happiness of their dependants. Having thus contrived to alienate the affections of the peasantry, equally with the esteem and confidence of the middle classes, who can be surprised that the nobility foundered, like a leaky vessel, in the very first hurricane of the Revolution? The ecclesiastical establishment of France was in the same diseased state. All persons of plebeian birth were diligently excluded from its dignities. However splendid might be their talents, and unsullied their character, they were yet doomed to labour at the oar for life. They withered-to quote the emphatic expression of Colonel Napierin his history of the Peninsular War-" beneath the cold shade of Aristocracy." Hence, when the great explosion took place, it had the syMpathies of all the humbler clergy, who supported the cause of INTRODUCTIONo. freedom with the weight of their moral influence, and did not withdraw from it, till it evinced symptoms of degenerating into anarchy. - In the army things were little better ordered. The abuses in the distribution of the pay and the accoutrements of the different regiments were notorious; and while the spirit of innovation was making rapid headway among the soldiers, the higher officers were enthusiastic in their admiration of the starch Prussian discipline. As if this hobby were not sufficiently hazardous, these aristocratic martinets procured the adoption of a regulation, which even Louvois would never have dreamed of sanctioning, that a hundred years of nobility was necessary to qualify an officer! True, this order was rescinded shortly after its promulgation, but it did not tend the less to inflame the discontents of the untitled military. The French guards, in particular, who being in constant intercourse with the citizens of Paris, soon caught the prevalent fever of innovation, warmly resented such arbitrary conduct on the part of the heads of the army, and at the breaking out of the Revolution were the very first to set the example of defection. While all these malign influences were at work, the grand struggle for independence took place in America. This event startled France like a thunder-clap. Adieu now to all hope of escape from Revolution! The heather is on fire, and nothing can cheek thie progress of the conflagration. Within the precincts of the palace, in the saloons of fashion, and universally among the Tiers-Utat, nothing is talked of but the gallantry of the transatlantic patrots. Washington is the hero — Franklin the philosopher of the day. Carried away by the general enthusiasm, and glad no doubt of such an opportunity of humbling the pride, and increasing the difficulties of England —although his private correspondence would seem to show otherwise-Louis XVL took the desperate resolution of supplying the insurgent colonies with funds and troops. It was the misfortune of this prince, who possessed many excellent private and public qualities, to do every thing with the best intentions, and to succeed in nothing.'" As for the King" —says Mr. Carlyle in his eloquent analytical history of the Revolution —" he, as usual, will go wavering cameleon-like, changing colour and purpose with the colour of his environment-good for no kingly use."' This is well observed of Louis. Ele was as "" infirm of purpose" as Macbeth, swayed now by the counsels of the Queen, now by those of the Assembly, and giving in a bold adhesion to neither. In assisting the American rebels he took the most suicidal step that it was possible for a monarch, situated as he was, to take; for, when his troops returned home —and they constituted the flower of the young noblesse ' INTRODUCTION. and the army-they brought back with themn opinions and feeling until then proscribed in France; talked loudly of the duty of resistance to despotic authority; and thus gave an irreparable shock to the tottering throne of Louis.;The grand final shock, however, was given by the derangement of the national finances, whose annual deficit,. amounting- to above seven - millions sterling, compelled the reluctant'monarch to summon lthe States-General, and thus admit the necessity of a radical change in the Government-in other words, to sanction -those innovations which could not terminate otherwise than in' Revolution. It is at this period that -M Thiers's history commences. The opening portions of this- work present a dramatic picture of the most striking character, We see in:the foreground groups of rejoicing, constitutional patriots; Mirabeau is there, with the eloquent leaders of the Gironde, whomn Dunmouriez has styled, and not without justice, the "-Jesuits of the revolution;" there, too, are Lafayette and Bailly, men in whom a sincere monarch may have confidence; but grimly scowling in the baok-ground —for the republican pear is not yet fully -ripe-lurk the frightful figures of Robespierre and the Hebertists, biding their time to turn this scene of national exultation, into one of tears and blood, despair and raging madness. But enough of this. — Ring the bell-draw up the curtain-and let the drama begin. BY TIlE AUTHOR l I PURPOSE writing the history of a memorable revolution, which has profoundly agitated the minds of men, and which still continues to divide them. I disguise not from myself the difficulties of the undertaking; for passions, which were supposed to have been stifled under the sway of military despotism, have recently revrvedo All at once men bowed down by age amnd toil have felt resentments, which, according to appearance were appeased, awaken within them, and they have communicated them to us, their sons and heirs. But if we have to uphold the same cause, we have not to defend their conduct, for we can separate liberty from those who have rendered it service or disservice; whilst we possess the advantage of having observed those veterans, who, still full of their recollections, still agitated by their impressions, reveal to us the spirit and the character of parties, and teach us to comprehend them.# Perhaps the moment when the actors are about to expire is the most proper for writing this history - we can collect their evidence without participating in all their passions. Be this as it may, I have endeavoured to stifle within my own bosom every feeling of animosity: I alternately figured to mlyself that, born in a cottage, animated with a just ambition, I was resolved to ae* "The people never revolt from fickleness, or the mere desire of change. 1. is the impatience of suffering which alone has this effecPt.-Sulg's Memoirs. E, XiV PREFACE quire what the pride of the higher classes had unjustly refused me; or that, bred in palaces, the heir to ancient privileges, it was painful to me to renounce a possession which I regarded as a legitimate property. Thenceforward I could not harbour enmity against either party; I pitied the combatants, and I indemnified myself by admiring generous deeds wherever I found them. HII STORY OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. EVERY BODY iS acquainted with the revolutions of the French mo. narchy. It is well known that the Greeks, and afterwards the Ronlllsllls, introduced their arms and their civilization amonlg thle half sava;ge Gauls; that subsequently the Barbarians establislle(d heir lllitlll'y hierarchy among them; that this hierarchy, transferred fio'tm iel}rsls to lands, struck root, as it were, and grew up iiito tile feudal systeln.. Authority was divided between the feudal chllief called king, alnd tlle secondary chiefs called vassals, who in their turn were killgs oveI tlaiir own dependants. In our times, when the necessity for )letferrilir 1111rtual accusations has caused search to be made for reciprocal fiulats, abundant pains have been taken to teach us tllat the supllemc aulliitity was at first disputed by the vassals, which is always do(lle by tIlose who are nearest to it; that this authority was afterw-ards d(ivi{ded amonog them, which constituted feudal atnarchy; an] tltat at lengtlh it reverted to the throne, where it colncentrated itself into despotismil, under Louis XI., Richelieu, and Louis XIV. The French population had progressively enfianchised itself by in dustry, the primary source of wealth and liberty. Thougllh origitl;lly agricultural, it soon devoted its attention to commerce and maJlulltctures, and acquired an importance that affected the entire nation. Introduced as a supplicant into the States-General, it appeared tlhere in no other posture than on its knees, in order to be grievollsly abused. In process of time, even Louis XIV. declared that he would lhave,t more of these cringing assemblies; and this lie declared to the;parilaments, booted and whip in hand. Thenceforth were seen, at tile hlead of the state, a king clothed with a power ill defined in theory, but ab 1.6 HISTORY OF THf solute in practice; grandees who had relinquished their feudal dignity for the favour of the monarch, and who disputed by intrigue what was granted to them out of the substance of the people; beneath them an immense population, having no other relation to the court and the aristocracy than habitual submission and the payment of taxes. Between the court and the people were parliaments invested with the power of administering justice and registering the royal decrees. Authority is always disputed. If not in the legitimate assemblies of the nation, it is contested in the very palace of the prince. it is well known that the parlianments, by -refusing -to register the royal edicts, rendered them ineffective: this terminated in' a bed of justice' and a concession when the king was weak, but in entire submission when the king was powerful. Louis XIV. had no need to make concessions, for in his reign no parliament durst remonstrate; he drew the nation along in his train, and it glorified him with the prodigies which itself achieved in war and in the arts and sciences. The subjects and t.lhe motnarch were unanimous, and:theirl actions tended towardsi one and the same point. But no sooner had Louis XIV. expired, than the Regent afforded the parliaments occasion to revenge themselves for their long nullity. The will of the monarch, so profoundly respected ila his life-time, was violated after his death, and his last testament was cancelled. Authority was then thrown into litigation, and a long struggle commenced between the parliaments, the clergy, and the court, in sight of a nation worn out with long wars and exhausted by supplying the extravagance of its rulers, who gave themselves up alternately to a fondness.for pleasure and for arms. Till then it had displayed no skill but for the service and the gratification of the monarch: it now began to apply its intelligence to its own benefit and the examination of its interests. The human mind is incessantly passing from one object to another. From the theatre and the pulpit, French genius turned to the moral and political sciences: all then became changed. Figure to yourself, during a whole century, the usurpers of all the national rights quarrelling about a worn-out authority; the parliaments persecuting the clergy, the clergy persecuting the parliaments; the latter disputing the authority of the court; the court, careless and calm amid this struggle, squandering the substance of the people in the most profligate debauchery; the nation, enriched and roused, watching these disputes, arming itself with the allegations of one party against the other, deprived of all political action, dogmatizing boldly and ignorantly, because it was confined to theories; aspiring, above all, to recover its rank in Europe, and offering in vain its treasure and its blood to regain a place which it had lost through the weakness of its rulers. Such was the eighteenth century.* 4" Since the reign of the Roman emperors profligacy had never been conducted in so open and undisguised a manner, as under Louis XV. and the Regent Orleans. The- reign of Louis XV. is the most deplorable in French history. If we seek for the:characters who governed the age, we must search the antechambers of the Duke de Choiseul, or the boudoirs of Madame Pompadour or Du Barri. The whole frame of society seemed to be discomposed. Statesmen were ambitious to figure as FRENCH REVOLUTION. 17 The scandal had been carried to its height when Louis XVI., an equitable prince, moderate in his propensities, carelessly educated, but naturally of a good disposition, ascended the throne at a very early age. He called to his side an old courtier, and consigned to him tie care of his kingdom; and divided his c'onfidence between Maurepas and the Queen, an Austrian princess, young, lively, and amiable,n- who possessed a complete ascendency over him. Maurepas and the Queen were not good friends. The King, sometimcs giving way to his minister, at others to his consort, began at an early period the long career of his vacillations. Aware of the state of his kingdom, he believed the reports of the philosophers on that subject; but, brought up in the most CItristian sentiments, he felt the utmost aversion for them. The putblic voice, which was ioudly expressed, called for Turgot, one of the class of' economists, an honest, virtuous man, endowed with firme5ess of clharacter, a slow genius, but obstinate and profound. Convinced of his probity, delighted with his plans of reform, Louis XYVL fi'eltqently repeated:' There are none besides myself and Turgot who arle f'iends of the people.T" Turgot's reforms were thwarted by the oppolsition of' thle highest orders in the state, who were interested ill maititaiinglll all kinds of abuses, which the austere minister proI)sedi to e sllpress. Louis XVI. dismissed him with regret. During lis wltole lieu, vwhich was only a long martyrdom, he had the mortifi. c;.tioll to diseill what was right, to wish it sincerely, but to lack the l.tlelrgy i site fir carrying, it into execution.t Tlle'Killtg, placed between the court, the parlianments, and the peoplfe, extpOsed to intrigues and to suggestions of all sorts, repeatedly ctanrged his rnil-isters. Yielding once more to the public voice, and to tlle nte(ce ssity tir reform, lie, summoned to the finance department Necke, ttI tia;ie of' Geneva, who had amassed wealth as a banker, a it)trtistll -tllttl disciple of Colbert, as Turgot vas of Sully; an econoI11ical and oprigth t financierl but a vain man, fond of setting himself up t,;o arItitrttolr in every thing-philosophy, religion, liberty; arind, misled by tilt priaises of his fiiends and the public, flattering himself tlhlat le cmillld tuiclde and fix the nminds of others at that point at which his owtn lii.d st)opped4o maen of laette.sq, men of letters as statesmen; the great seigneurs as bankers the farttrs-grener al as great seignllers. The fashions were as ridiculous as the arts were t, I;l)la('e(l." —.'lison'n French 1Revolumtion. E. "t is nqow sixteen or seventeen years since I saw the Queen of France at Vet sailles. aitd s rely never lirghted on this orb, which sle hardly seemed to touch, a mniore (Iflhltfitll vision! I saw herjust above the horizon, decoratingand cheering the ele valtm splere shle julst began to move in, glittering like the morning star, fall of life, aul( silerl(otlr, and joy."-Burke's Reflections. E. t "'i'argiot, o(f wilo Malesherbes said,'He has the head of Bacon and the heart or I' Hlopitel,' aimed at extensive ref'orms, and laboured to effect that which the revottnoon utltimately completed, the suppression of every species of servitude and ex ctlisive privil.ge. But he had excited the jealousy of the courtiers by his reforms, of the parliamllelnts by the abolition of the corv6es, and of Maurepas by his ascendency over the tmlonlalrh."-AMignet. E. t "J. Necker was the son of a tutor in the college of Geneva. He began life as a clerk to M. Thellusson, a banker at Paris, whose partner he afterwards became, an(d in the colurse of twelve or fourteen years his fortune surpassed that of the firat batlkers. He then thought of obtaining some place under government, but he at VOL. 1. 3. 1 HISTORY OF THE Necker re-established order in lthe finances, aid fbolund ieans to de.'ray the heavy expenses of the American war. Wltith a mind niore comprehensive, but less-flexible, than that of Turgot, possessing more particularly the confidence of capitalists, he found, for the moment, unexpected resources, aind revived public credit. But it required something more than financial artifices to put an end to the embarrassments of the exchequer, and he had recourse to reformn. He found the higher orders not less adverse to hinmi than they had been to Turgot; the parliaments, apprised of his plans, combined against him; and obliged him to retire. The conviction of the existence of abuses was universal; every body admitted it; the King knew and was deeply grieved at it. The courtiers, who derived advantage from these abuses, would have been glad to see an end put to the embarras-ments of the exchequer, but without its costing them a single sacrifice. They descanted at court on the state of affairs, and there retailed philosophical maxiims; they deplored, whilst hunting, the oppressions inflicted upon the farmer; nay, they were even seen to applaud the enfranchisement of the Americans, and to receive with honour the young Frenchmen who returned fromn the New WorldA. The parliaments also talked of the interests of the first aimed only at the office of first commissioner of finance, to attain which he endeavoured to acquire a literary reputation, and published a panegyric on Colbert. Necker was beginning to enjoy some degree of reputation when Turgot was disgraced, and anxious to profit by the dissipation in which the new minister, Clugny, lived, he presented statements to 1M. de Maurepas in which he exaggerated the resour. ces ofthe state. The rapid fortune of Necker induced a favourable opinion of his capacity, and after Cluglny died he was united with his successor, M. Taboarean de. Reaux, an appointment which he obtained partly by the assistance of the Marquis de Pezay. After eight months' administration, Necker, on the 2d of July, 17'77, compelled his colleague to resign, and presented his accounts in 1781. Shortly after, he endeavoured to take advantage of the public favour, and aspired to a place in the council. HIle insisted on it, and threatened to resign; but he was the dupe of his own presumption, and was suffered to retire. In 1787 he returned to'rance, and wrote against Calonne, who had accused him as the cause of the deficiency in the finances; this.dispute ended in the exile of Necker; but, in 1788, when the general displeasure against Brienne terrified the court, he was again appointed controller-general, but, feeling himself supported by the people, he refused to accept the post, unless on the condition of not labouring in conjunction with the prime minister. Eager for popular applause, Necker hoped to govern every thing by leading the King to hope for an increase of power, and the people for a speedy democracy, by the debasement of, the higher orders and the parliaments. The report which he made to the council on the 27th of December, 1788, respecting the formation of the States-General, proved the first spark which lighted the combustible matter that had long been prepared. On the 11th of July, when the court thought fit to declare againist the factions, Necker, who had become absolutely their sentinel in the very council of the King, was dismissed: but on the 16th the assembly wrote him a letter, expressing their regret at his withdrawal, and informed him that they had obtained his recal. His return from Basle to Paris was one continued triumph. During the remainder of the year he was constantly presenting new statements on the resources of the revenue; but he soon perceived that his influence was daily diminishing. At last, the famous Red Book appeared, and completely put an end to his popularity; so that in the month of December lie determined to fly, after having seen the populace tear from the gate of his house, the inscription,' To the adored minister.' He died at Geneva on the 9th of April, 1804, after a short but painful illness."-From a Memoir of Necker in the Biograplhie 2lloderne. E. *' The American war was the great change which blew into a flame the embers, of innovation. Such was the universal enthusiasm which seized upon Franice at its FRENCH REVOLUTION. 19 people, loutdly insisted on the suffierings of the poor, and yet opposed the equalization of the taxes, as well as the abolition of the remains of feudal barbarism. All talled of the public weal, few desired it and the people, not yet knowing who were its true friends, applauded all those who reslsted power, its most obvious enemy. By the removal of Turgot and leelker, tthe state of affairs was not changed' the distress of the treasury remained the same. Those in power would have been willinig to lispense, for a long time to come, with the intervention of the nation, but it was absolutely necessary to subsist-it was absolutely necessary to supply the profusion of the court. The difficulty, removed for a moment by the dismissal of a minister, by a loan, or by the forced imposition of a tax, appeared again in an aggravated Iorrn, like every evil injudiciously neglected. The court hesitated, just as a man does who is comlpelled to take a dreaded tbut an indispensable step. An intrigue brought forward M. de Calonne, who was not in good odour with the public, because he had contributed to the persecution of La Chalotais. Calonne, clever, brilliant, fertile in resources, relied upon his genius, upon brtune, and upon mena, and awaited'the future with the most cxtraordinary apathly. It was his opinion that one ought not to be alarmed beforehand, or to discover an evil till the day before that on which one intends to set about repairing it. I-le seduced the court by his manners, touched it by his eagerness to grant all that it required, afforded the IKing and every body else some hlappier moments, and dispelled the most gloomy presages by a gleami of prosperity and blind confidence.'t* That future which had been counted upon now approached: it became necessary at length to adopt decisive mneasures. It was impossible to burden the people with fresh imposts, adcl yet the coffers were empty. There was but one remedy which could be applied; that was'to reduce the expenses by -the suppression of grants; and if this expedient shouald not su-nice, to exTtend the taxes to a greater number of contributors, that is, to the nobility and clergy. These plans, attempted successively by by Turgot and Necker, and resumed by Calonne, appeared to the latter not at all likely to succeed, unless the consent of the privileged classes themselves could be obtained. Calonne, therefore, proposed to coilect them together in an assembly, to be called the Assembly of the NIotables, in order -to lay his plans before them, and to gain their consent either by address or by conviction. The assembly was composed of distinguished members of the nobility, clergy, and magistracy, of a great number of masters of requests and some commencement, that nobles of the highest rank, princes, dukes, and marquises, solicited with imhpatient zeal commissions in the regiments destined to aid the insurgents. The passion for republican ifistitutions increased with the successes of the American war, and at length rose to such a height as to infect even the courtiers of the palace. The philosophers of France used every method of flattery to bring over the yotng nobles to their side; and the profession of liberal opinions became as indispensable a passport to the saloons of fashion as to the favour of the people " — lison's Frezch Revolution. E. T ": To all the requests of the Queen, M. Calonne would answer,' If what yomr majesty asks is possible, the thing is done; if it is impossible, it shall be done.' *' — Weoer, Memoirs. E 20 HISTORY OF THE magistrates of the provinces. By means of this composition, and still more by the aid of the chief popular gentry and philosophers, whom he had taken care to introduce into this assembly, Calonne flattered himself that he should be able to carry his point. The too confident minister was mistaken. Public opinion bore him a grudge for occupying the place of Turgot and Necker. Delighted in particular that the minister was obliged to render an account, it supported the resistance of the Notables. Very warm discussions ensued. Calonne did wrong in throwing upon his predecessors, and partly on Necker, the existing state of the exchequer. Necker replied, was exiled, and the opposition became the more obstinate. Calonne met it with presence of mind and composure.. He caused MI. de Miromenil, keeper of the seals, who was conspiring with the parliaments, to be dismissed. But his triumph lasted only two days. The King, who was attached to him, had, in engaging to support him, promised more than he c6uld perform. He was shaken by the representations of the Notables, who promised to sanction the plans of Calonne, but on condition that a minister more moral and more deserving of confidence should be appointed to carry them into execution. The Queen, at the suggestion of the Abb6 de Vermont, proposed to the King and prevailed on him to accept a new minister, M. de Brienne, Archbishop of Toulouse, and one of the Notables who had contri. outed most to the ruin of Calonne, in hopes of succeeding him. The Archbishop of Toulouse, a man of weak mind and obstinate disposition, had from boyhood set his heart upon becoming minister, and availed himself of all possible mneans in pursuing this object of his wishes. Ale relied principally on the influence of women, whom he strove to please, and in which he succeeded. He caused his administration of Languedoc to be every where extolled. If, on attaining the post of minister, he did not obtain the favour which Necker had enjoyed, he had at least, in the eyes of the public, the merit of surperseding Calonne. At first, he was not prime minister, but he soon became so. Seconded by M. de Lamoignono keeper of the seals, an inverte.rate enemy to the parliaments, he comlmenced his career with considerable advantages. The Notables, bound by the promises which they had made, readily consented to all that they had at first refutsed: land-tax, stamp-duty, suppression of the gratuitous services of vassals, (corv6es) provincial assemblies, were all cheerfully granted. OIt was not these measures themselves, but their author, whom they pretended to have resisted. Public opinion triumphed. Calonne was loaded with execrations; and the Notables, supported by the public suffrage, nevertheless regretted an honour gained at the cost of the greatest sacrifices. Had M. de Brienne known how to profit by the advantages of his position; had he actively proceeded with the execution of the measures assented to by the Notables; had he submitted them all at once and without delay to the parliament, at the instant when the adhesion of the higher orders seemed to be wrung from them; all would probably have been over: the parliament, pressed on all sides, would have consented to every thing, and this conces FRENCH REVOLUTION. 21 sion, though partial and forced, would probably have retairded fbr a long time the struggle which afterwards took place. Nothing of the kind, however, was done. By imprudent delays occasion was furnished for relapses; the edicts were submitted only one after another; the parliament had time to discuss, to gain courage, and to recover from the sort of surprise by which the Notables had been taken. It registered, after long discussions, the edict enacting the second abolition of the corv6es, and another permitting the free exportation of corn. Its animosity was particularly directed against the land-tax; but it feared lest by a refusal it should enlighten the public, and show that its opposition was entirely selfish. It hesitated, when it was spared this embarrassment by the simultaneous presentation of the edict on the stamp-duty and the land-tax, and especially by opening the deliberations with the former. The parliament had thus an opportunity of refusing the first without entering into explanations res. pecting the second; and, in attacking the stamp-duty, which affected the majority of the payers of taxes, it seemed to defend the interest of the public. At a sitting which was attended by the peers, it denounced the abuses, the profligacy, and the prodigality of the court, and demanded statements of expenditure. A councillor, punning upon the 6tats, (statements,) exclaimed, " Ce ne sontpas des Rtats mais des Rtatsg6n6raux qu'il nousfaut" —" It is not statements, but States-General that we want." This unexpected demand struck every one with astonishment. Hitherto people had resisted because they suffered; they had seconded all sorts of opposition, favourable or not to the popular cause, provided they were directed against the court, which was blamed for every evil. At the same time they did not well know what they ought to demand: they had always been so far from possessing any influence over the government, they had been so habituated to confine themselves to complaints, that they complained witlhout conceiving the idea of acting, or of bringing about a revolution. The utterance of a single word presented an unexpected direction to the public mind: it was repeated by eveiy mouth, and States-General were loudly demanded. D'Espremenil, a young councillor, a vehement orator, an agitator without object, a demagogue in the parliaments, an aristocrat in the States-General, and who was declared insane by a decree of the Constituent Assembly-d'Espremenil showed himself bn this occasion one of the most violent parliamentary declaimers. But the opposition was secretly conducted by Dupont, a young man of extraordinary abilities, and of a firm and persevering character, the only one, perhaps, who, amid these disturbances, had a specific object in view, and was solicitous to lead his company, the court, and the nation, to a very different, goal from that of a parliamentary aristocracy. The parliament was divided into old and young councillors. The first aimed at forming a counterpoise to the royal authority, in order to give consequence to their company. The latter, more ardent and more sincere, were desirous of introducing liberty into the state, yet without overturning the political system under which they were born. The parliament made an important admission: it declared that it had not the power to grant imposts, and that to the States-General alone 2z2 HISTO~tRY oF HTE belonged the right of establishing them;, and it required the King to communicate to it statements of the revenues and the expenditure. This acknowledgment of incompetence and usurpation,'for the parliament had till then arrogated to itself the right of sanctioning taxes, could not but excite astonishment. The prelate minister, irritated at this opposition, instantly summoned the parliament to Versailles, and caused the two edicts to be registered in' a bed of justice.' The parliament, on its return to Paris, remonstrated, and ordered an inquiry into the pr6digalities of Calonne. A decision in council instantly annulled its decrees, and exiled it to Troyes. Such was the state of affairs on the 15th of August, 1787. The King's two brothers, Monsieur and the Count d'Artois, were sent, the one to the Court of Accounts, and the other to the Court of Aids, to have the edicts registered there. The former, who had become popular on account of the opinions which he had expressed in the Assembly of the Notables, was hailed with acclamationis by an immense multitude, and conducted back to the Luxembourg aimidst universal plaudits. The C*ount d'Artois, who was known to Ilave supported Calonne, was received with murmurs; his attendants were attacked, and it was found necessary to have recourse to the armed force. The parliaments had around them numnerous dependants, composed of lawyers, persons holding situations in the palace, clerks, and students; an active bustling class, ever ready to bestir themselves in their behalf. With these natural allies of the parliaments were united the capitalists, who dreaded a bankruptcy; the enlightened classes, who were devoted to all the opposers of power; and lastly, the multitude, which always sides with agitators. Serious disturbances took place, and the supreme authority had great difficulty to suppress them. The parliament sitting at Troyes met every day and called causesc Neither advocates nor solicitors appeared, and justice was suspended, as it had been so many times during the preceding century. Mean. while the magistrates became weary of their exile, and M1I. de Brienne was without money. He boldly maintained that he did not want any, and tranquillized the court, uneasy on this single point; but, destitute of supplies, and incapable of putting an end to his difficulties by an energetic resolution, he entered into negotiation with some of the memn bers of the parlialent. CHis conditions were a loan of four hundred and forty millions (of livres,) payable by instalments, in four years, at the expiration of which the States-General should be convoked. At this rate Brienne was willing to renoulce the two imposts, the objects: of so much discord. Having made sure of some members, he imaginel that he was sure of the whole company, and the parliament was recalled on the 10th of September. A royal sitting was held on the 20th of the same month. The King rent in person to present the edict enacting the creation of the successive loan and the convocation of the States-G eneral in five years. No explanation had been given respecting the nature of this sitting, and it was not known whether it wa.s a bed of justice' or not. The looks of the members were gloonmy, and a profound silence prevailed, when the Duke of Orleans rose rith agitated countenance and all the FRENCH REVOLUTION 23 signs of strong emotion; he addressed the King:, and asked him if this sitting were'a bed of justice,' or a free deliberation. " It is a royal sitting,"' replied the King. The councillors Freteau, Sabatier, and d'Espremenil, spoke after the Duke of Orleans, and declaimed with their usual violence. The registration was immediately enforced: Freteau and Sabatier were exiled to the Hieres Islands, and the Duke of Orleans to Villers-Cotterets. The States-General were postponed for five years. Such were the principal events of the year 1787. The year 1788 commenced with fresh hostilities. On.the fourth of January the parliament passed a decree against lettres de cachet, and for the recal of exiled persons. The King cancelled this decree; the: parliament confirmed it anew. Meanwhile the Duke of Orleans, banished to Villers-Cotterets, could not endure his exile. This prince, in quarrelling with the court, had reconciled himself with public opinion, which was at first unfavourable to him. Destitute alike of the dignity of a prince and the firmness of a tribune,? he was incapable of enduring so slight a pun" ouis-Philippe-Joseph, Duke of Orleans, one of the French princes of the blood, was born at St. Cloud on the 13th of April, 1747, and rendered the title of Duc de Chartres, which he bore till his father's death, celebrated byhis depravity. He was in stature below the middle size, but very well made, and his features were regular and pleasing, till libertinism and debauchery covered them with red, inflamed pustules. He was very early bald; was skilled in all bodily exercises; kind and compassionate in his domestic relations, and. endowed with good natural abilities, though ignorant and credllous. As he was to succeed the Duc de Penthievre in the office of high admiral, he thought fit, in 1778, to make a naval campaign, and commanded the rear guard of M. d'Orvilliers' fleet in the battle off Ushant, in which he was on board an 84-gun ship. It was then assiduously rumoured that the Duc de Chartres had concealed himself in the hold of the ship; which seems improbable, as the vessel in which he was, was never within reach of the cannon. The court, however, took up this iniurious anecdote, and, when he appeared, overwhelmed him with epigrams; the King too, instead of making him high admiral, appointed him colonel-general of the hussars-a singular and contemptuous reward for sea-service, which is said to have partly laid the foundation of his hatred for Louis. Some time afterwards he ascended in a balloon; and as a few years beforehe had gone down into a mnine, where he was said to have shown but little self-possession, it was stated that he had thoughtproper to show all the elements his cowardice. On the death of the Comte de Clermont he got himself appointed master of allthe masonic lodges in. France. In 1787 his father died, and he then took the title of Duke of Orleans, and sought to render himself popular. By the advice of his creatures e opposed the King in the royal meeting on the 19th of' November, 1787, andwas ex,..'d to Villers-Cotterets; but in return for the. sumss he lavished on the journalists, he soon became the idol of the populace. Another method which he successfully put. in practice. to obtain the favour bf: the people, was to buy up corn, and then relieve those who were languishing under the artifi* cial scarcity. In 1788-9, public tables were spread. and fires lighted, by his order, for the paupers of the metropolis, and sums of money were likewise distributed among; them. In the very earliest meetings, he protested against the proceedings of his. chamber, and joined that of the tiers-6tat, with the dissentient members of his order. From this period he divided his time between the meetings. of the national assembly and those of his own advisers, who assembled first at the Palais Royal, and afterwardsi at Passy. On the 3d of Jily he was nominated president. of the national assembly!;: but he refused the post, and busied himself in corrupting the regiment of French. guards, and in, preparing the events of July the 14th. Lafayette having menaced him with'the tribunals if he did not leave France, he went over to England,; but at the end of eight months returned, and was received with transport by the Jacobins- In 1791 M.. Thevenard, before he resigned the adrministration-of the marine, caused tlh 24 HISTORY OF THE ishment, and, in order to obtain his recal, he descended to solicitationa even to the Queen, his personal enemy. Brienne was exasperated by obstacles without possessing energy to to overcome them. Feeble in Europe against Prussia, to which he sacrificed Holland-feeble in France against the parliament and the grandees of the state-he had now no supporter but the Queen, and, moreover, was frequently checked in his operations by ill healthl He neither knew how to suppress insurrection nor how to enforce the retrenchments decreed by the King; and, notwithstanding the rapidly approaching exhaustion of the exchequer, lie affected an inconceivable security. Meanwhile, amidst all these difficulties, he did not neglect to obtain new benefices for himself, and to heap new dignities upon his family. Lamoignon, the keeper of the seals, a man of a stronger mind but possessing less influence than the Archbishop of Toulouse, concerted with him a new plan for accomplishing the principal object, that of destroying the political power of the parliaments. It was of importance to keep it secret. Every thing was prepared in silence: private letters were sent to the commandants of the provinces; the office where the edicts were printed was surrounded with guards. It was intended that the plan should not be known till the moment of its communication to the parliaments. rhat moment. approached, and it was rumoured that an important political act was in preparation. D'Espremenil, the councillor, contrived to procure a copy of the edicts, by bribing one of the printer's mien; he then repaired to the palace, summoned his colleagues to assemble, and boldly denounced the plans of the minister. According to this plan, the too extensive authority of the parliament of Paris was to be abridged, by the establishment of six great baillages dufke to be appointed admiral of France, for which the latter went to thank the King in person, and to assure him how grossly he had been misrepresented. WVhen, however, he appeared at the levee, all the courtiers insulted him in the most outrageous manner, to which he would never be persuaded that their majesties were not privy, and this excited his irreconcilable enmity against them. On the 15th of September, 1792, the commune of Paris authorized him to assume the name of Egalit6 for himself and his descendants, and deputed him to the national convention. When the King's'trial took place, the Duke of Orleans voted for the death of his cousin with a degree of coolness which irritated the majority of the Jacobins themselves, and excited murmurs throughout the assembly. On the fatal day he came to the Place de Louis XV., and was present during the execution in an open carriage; as soon as the body was removed, he returned to the Palais Royal, and went in a carriage drawn by six horses to revel at Raincy with his accomplices. It was then said that the Prince of Wales, having been informed of his conduct on this occasion, tore in pieces his portrait, which he had left him. Towards the end of April, Robespierre caused his name to be erased from the list of Jacobins, though Egalite' had sworn to the Convention, on the 4th of the same month, that if his son, (the present King of France,) who had just fled with Dumouriez, was guilty, the image of Brutus, which was before his eyes, would remind him of his duty. Soon afterwards a warrant was is.sued for his arrest; he was removed to the prison of Marseilles, and, after six months' captivity, sent to take his trial at Paris. As a matter of course, the revolutionary tribunal. found him guilty, and he was guillotined on the 6th of November, 1793, when he was forty-six years of age. EHe shrugged his shoulders on hearing the people hiss and curse him as he was led to death, and cried out,' They used to applaud me''~ From an article in the Biographie Moderne. E. FRENCH REVOLUTION. 25 in its jurisdiction. The power of judging- without appeal, and of registering the laws and edicts, was to be transferred to a plenary court, composed of peers, prelates, magistrates, and mi!itary officers; all appointed by the king. Even the captain of the guard was to have a deliberative voice in it. This plan attacked the judicial authority of the parliament, and utterly annihilated its political power. Trhe company, struck with consternation, knew not what course to pursue. It could not deliberate upon a plan which had not been submitted to it; at the same time it was of importance that it should not suffer itself to be taken by surprise. In this embarrassment it had recourse to an expedient at once firm and adroit, —that of recapitulating and confirming in a decree all that it called constitutional laws of the monarchy, taking care to include in the number its own existence and rights. By this general measure it by no means forestalled the supposed projects of the government, and secured all that it wished to secure. In consequence, it was declared, on the 5th of May, by the parliament of Paris:'" That France was a monarchy governed by a king, according to the laws; and that among these laws, several, which were fundamental, embraced and consecrated: 1. The right of the reigning house to the throne, from male to male, in the order of primogeniture; 2. The right of the nation to grant subsidies freely through the organ of the States-General, regularly convoked and composed; 3. The customs and capitulations of the provinces; 4. The irremoveability of the magistrates; 5. The right of-the courts to verify in each province the edicts of the king, and not to order the registration of them, unless'they were conformable to the constitutive laws of the province, as well as to the fundamental laws of the state; 6. The right of each citizen not to be tried in any manner by other than his natural judges, who were those appointed by the law; and, 7. The right, without which all the others were useless, of not being arrested by any order whatever, unless to be delivered without delay into the hands of competent judges. The said court protested against all attacks which might be made upon the principles above expressed." To this energetic resolution the minister replied in the usual way, always injudicious and ineffectual-he adopted violent measures against some of the members of the parliament. D'Espremenil and Goislart de Monsaibert, being apprized that they were threatened, sought refuge amidst the assembled parliament. An officer, Vincent d'Agoult, repaired thither at the head of a company; and, not knowing the persons of the magistrates designated, he called them by their names. The deepest silence at first pervaded the assembly: all the councillors then cried out that they were d'Espremenil. At length the real d'Espremenil declared who he was, and followed the officer ordered to arrest him. The tumult was then at its height; the populace accompanied the magistrates, hailing them with shouts of applause. Three days afterwards, the King, in a bed of justice, caused the edicts to be registered, and the assembled princes and peers exhibited an image of that plenary court which was to succeed the parliaments. VOL. I.-4. 2 26 }HISTORPY OF THE The Chatelet immediately issued a decree against the edicts. The parliament of Rennes declared all who should belong to the plenary court infamous. At Grenoble, the inhabitants defended their magistrates against two regiments. The troops themselves, excited to disobedience by the military noblesse, soon refused to act. When the comemandant of Dauphine assembled his colonels, to inquire if their soldiers were to be relied, upon, all of them kept silence. The youngest, who was to speak first, replied that no reliance was to be placed on his, firom the colonel downwards. To this resistance the minister opposed decrees of the great council, which cancelled the decisions of the sovereign courts, and he punished eight of them with exile. The court, annoyed by the higherorders, which made war upon itin espousing the interests of the people and calling for their interference, had recourse, on its part, to the same means. It resolved to summon the tiers-6tat (the third estate) to its aid, as the kings of France had formerly done to break up the feudal system. It then urged, with all its might, the convocation of the States-General. It ordered investigations respecting the maode of their assembling; it called upon writers and learned bodies to give their opinions; and, whilst the assembled clergy declared on its part that a speedy convocation was desirable, the court, accepting the challenge, suspended at the same time the neeting of the plenary court, and fixed the opening of the StatesGeneral for the first of Ma y, 1789. Then followed the retirement of the Archbishop of Toulouse, who, by bold plans feebly executed, had provoked a resistance, which he ought either not to have excited or to have overcome. And on quitting office he left the exchequer in distress-the payment of the rentes of the Hotel de Ville suspended-all the authorities in hostility-all the provinces in arms. As for himself, possessing an income of eight hundred thousand francs from bene., flces, the archbishopric of Sens, and a cardinal's hat, if he did not; uake the public fortune, he at least made his own. By his last piece of advice he recommended to the King to recal Necker to the ministry of the-finances, that he might fortify himself with his popularity against oppositions which had become unconquerable. It was during the two years 1787 and 1788 that the French were desirous to pass from vain theories to practice. The struggle between the highest authorities excited the wish, and furnished the occasion, to do so. During the whole course of the century, the parliament had attacked the clergy, and exposed its ultramontane predilections. After the clergy, it had attacked the court, condemned its abuses of power, and denounced its extravagance.'Threatened with reprisals, and attacked, in its turn, in its existence, it had at length just restored to the nation prerogatives which the court would have wrested from it for the purpose of transferring them to an extraordinary tribunal. After having thus apprized the nation of its rights, it had exerted its energies in exciting and protecting insurrection. On the other hand, the high clergy in delivering their charges, the nobility in fomenting the disobedience of the troops, had joined their efforts to those of the magistracy, and summoned the people to arms in behalf of their pri ileges. FRENCH REVOLUTTION. 27 The court, pressed by these various einemnies, had made but a feeble resistance. Aware of the necessity of acting, yet always deferring the moment for doing so, it had at times abolished some abuses, rather for the benefit of the exchequer than of the people, and then sank again into inactivity. At length, finding itself attacked on all sides, observing that the higher orders were calling the people into the lists, it resolved to introduce them there itself by convoking the StatesGeneral. Hostile during the whole of the century to the philosophic spirit, it now appealed to the latter, and submitted the constitutions of the kingdom to its investigation. Thus the first authorities of the state exhibited the singular spectacle oaf usurpers disputing the possession of an object before the face of the rightful owner, and at last even calling upon him to act as judge between theim. Such was the state of affairs when Necker returned to the ministry. Confidence followved him; credit was instantly restored; the most ur1 gent difficulties were removed. He provided, by means of expedients, for indispensable expenses, till the meeting of the States-General, the remedy thlat was universally called for. The great questions relative to their organization began to be discussed. it was asked what part the tiers.-tat would have to act there whether it would appear as an equal or a supplicant; whether it would obtain a representation equal in number to that of the two higher orders; whether the discussions would be carried on by indivi. duals or by orders; and whether the tiers would not have merely a sin. gle voice against the two voices of the nobility and clergy. The first question discussed was that relative to the number of the deputies. Never had philosophic controversy of the eighteenth century excited such agitation. People's minds became warmed by the positive importance of the question. A keen, concise, energetic writer, took, in this discussion, that place which the greatest geniuses of the age had occupied in the philosophical discissions. The Abbe Sieyes, in a book which gave a powerful impulse to the public mind, asked this question: " What is the tiers-.tat? And he answered: "L Nothing." -' What ought it to be?"-" Every thing."n' The states of Dauphin6 assembled in spite of the court. The two higher orders, more adroit and more popular in that country than any where else, decided that the representation of the third estate should be ", Bonaparte said to me one day,' That fool Sieyes is as credulous as a Cassaudra.' In the intercourse, not very frequent certainly, which I had with him, he appeared to be far beneath the reputation which he had acquired. He reposed a blind confidence in a multitude of agents, whom he had sent into all parts of France. Sieyes had written in his countenance,' Give me money.' I recollect that I one day alluded to this expression in the anxious face of Sieyes to the first consul.' You are right,' observed he to me, smiling,' when money is in question, Sieyes is quite a matter-of-fact man. He sends his ideology to the right about, and thus becomes easily manageable. He readily abandons his constitutional dreams for a good round sum, and that is -very convenient.' M. de Talleyrand, who is so capable of estimating men, andd whose admirable sayings well deserve to occupy a place in history, had long entertained an indifferent opinion of Sieyes. One day, when he wasconversing: with the second consul concerning him, Cambac6res said:' Sieyes, however, is a very profound man.'' Profound!' said Talleyrand,' yes, he is a cavity, a perfeet cav:ityj a~s you would say., "-Bourrienne's Memoirsqof Napoleon. E. 40l>i HISTORY OF THE equal to that of the nobility and the clergy. The parliament of Paris, foreseeing already the consequence of its iiniprovident provocations, perceived plainly that the tiers-6tat was not coming in as auxiliary, but as master; and, in registering the edict of convocation, it enjoined, as an express clause, the maintenance of the forms of 1614, which reduced the third order to a mere cipher. Having already rendered itself unpopular by the difficulties which it had thrown in the way of the edict that restored civil rights to Prostestants, it was on that day completely unmasked, and the court fully revenged. It was the first to experience the instability of popular favour; but, if at a later period the nation might appear ungrateful towards chiefs whom it forsook one after another, on this occasion it had good reason to turn its back on the parliament, for that body stopped short before the nation had recovered any of its rights. " The court not daring to decide these important questions itself, or rather desirous of depriving the two higher orders of their popularity f:or its own benefit, asked their opinion, with the intention of not adopt.. ing it, if, as it was probable, that opinion should be unfavourable to the tiers-Rt at. It summoned therefore a new Assembly of Notables, in which all the questions relative to the holding of States-General were brought forward, The discussions were warm: on the one hand, great stress was laid on ancient traditions; on the other, on natural rights and reason. Even in going back to traditions, the cause of the tiers-etat still had the advantage; for, in opposition to the forms of 1614 demanded by the higher orders, forms y'et more ancient were adduced. Thus, in certain assemblies, and on certain points, the members had voted individually; sometimes they had deliberated by provinces, not by orders; frequently the deputies of the tiers had equalled in number the deputies of the nobility and clergy. Why then refer to ancient usages? Had not the powers of the state been in a continual revolution? The royal authority, at first sovereign, then vanquished and despoiled, raising itself again with the aid of the people, and again uniting all the powers in its own hands, exhibited a perpetual conflict and an ever-changing position. The clergy were told, that if they were to take ancient times for their standard, they would cease to be an order; the nobles, that the possessors of fiefs only were qualified to be elected, and that thus most of them would be excluded from the deputation; the parliaments themselves, that they were but unfaithful officers of royalty; lastly, all were assured that the French constitution had been but one long revolution, during which each power had successively predominated; that every thing had been innovation, and that amid this vast conflict it was for reason alone to decide. The tiers-Rtat comprehended nearly the whole nation, all the useful, industrious, enlightened classes. If it possessed but a portion of the lands, at least it wrought them all; and according to reason, it was not too much to allow to it a number of deputies equal to that of the two other orders. The Assembly of Notables declared itself against what was called tihe doubling of the third estate. One of the government offices, that FRENCH REVOLUTION. 29 over which Monsieur, the king's brother, presided, voted for this doubling.* The court, then, taking, as it said, into consideration the opinion of the minority, the sentiments expressed by several princes of the blood, the wishes of the three orders of Dauphine, the demand of the provincial assemblies, the example of several countries of the kingdom, the opinion of various public writers, and the recommendations contained in a great number of addresses-the court ordained, that the total number of the deputies should be at least a thousand; that it should be formed in a ratio composed of the population and the amount of taxes paid by each baillage, and that the number of the deputies of the tiers-6tat should be equal to that of the other twro orders united. This declaration excited universal elnthusiasmo As it was attributed to Nckelr, it raised him iii the favour of the nation, and gained him the increased enmaity of the great.t S;till it decided nothing as to the vote by individuals or by orders, but it included it by implication; for it was useless to augmient thle number of votes if they were not to be counted; and it left tlhe tiers-tlat to seize by main force what was refused to it at tle moment. It tl-erlefore conveyed an idea oftlie weakness of the court, and of Necker himself. Thxat court included an assemlblage of inclinations wllich rendered an:y decisive result impossible. ThFe King was mloderate, equitable, studious, and.too distrustful of his own abilities; lhovinl',the people, and readily listening to their comlplaints. He was nevertheless seized at times wihh superstitious terrors, and fancied tlat hte beheld anarchy and impiety marching hand in hand with liberty and toleration. The philosophic spirit in its first flights could not but commit extravagances, and a timid and religious king could not help being alarmed at them. Overcome, at every step, by weaklness, terror, and uncertainty, the unfortunate Louis XVI. resolved for hlis own part to make every sacrifice. Not knowing how to impose such conduct on others, the victim of his indulgence for the court, of his condescension to the Queen, he expiated all the faults which lhe had not committed, but wthich became his own because he winked at their commission. The Queen, engrossed by pleasure, dazzling all around her by her charms, was desirous that her husband should enjoy tranquillity, that the exchequer should be full, that the court and her subjects should adore her.. Sometimes " This resolution was carried by the singe ing easting vote of Monsieur, who was afterwards Louis XVIII. When it was reported to Louis XVI., he observed, " Iet them add mine, I give it willingly.' "-Labaume. E. t "The concessions of Necker were those of a man ignorant of the first principles of the government of mankind. It was he who overturned the monarchy, and brought Louis XVI. to the scaflold. Marat, Danton, Robespierre himself, did less mischief to France. Necker was the author of all the evils which desolated France during the Revolution; all the blood that was shed rests on his head."-Bourrienns's Memoirs of Napoleon. E. t Madame le Brun, the celebrated painter, in her Memoirs, written-by herself, draws the following picture of this princess: " It was in the year 1779 that I painted for the first time the portrait of the Queen, then in the flower of her youth andl beauty. Marie Antoinette was tail esquisitely well made, sufficiently plllrmp without beingl too much so. Her arnus veite superb, her hands small, perfect in form, arld her feet charming. Her gait was rore graceo ful than that of any woman in France; she held her head very erect, with a majesty 30 HI STORY R? -l'i. 3she concurlred with the, ing for th-I:e rp'triose of e-fecting reforms, when the necessity for themn appeared urgt. At othlers, on the co1ntrary, when she conceived the supre.me authority to be thnreatened, and her court friends despoiled, she stopped ilie itUng, removed thie popular ministers, and destroyed at once tie etLns and lopes of improvement. She yielded:more especially to the influence of a portion.' of'the nobility who lived around the hironie, i ttteninrg on. favours nd abuses. T'his court nobility was solicitous, to doubt, like thle LQueen herself, that the King should have wherewvit-al -to supply a lavish profusion; and from this motive it was inimical to the parlialslents when they refused taxes, but became their ally whefn they defended its privileges, by refusing, under specious pretexts, the territorial impost'.Amidst these contrary influences, thle King, not daring to f.ce difiiculties, to condemn abuses, or to suppress them authoritatively, gave way by turns to the court anrd to public opi-nion, Without satisfying either. If, during the course of the eighteen.th century, when the philosophers, assembled in an alley of the Tuileries, wished success to tFrederick and the Amnericans, to Turgot and N Tecker-if, when' they did not yet aspire to govern the state, but ma erely to enlighten princes, and foresaw at most the distant revolutions which the signs of disquietude and the absurdity of existing institi-tons fully authorized thaem to expect-if the king had spontaneously established some equality in the official appointments, and given some guarantees, all discontent would have been appeased for a long timle, and Louis XVI. would have been as much adored as was Marcus Aurelius.*~ But when all tie authorities had been debased by a long struggle, and all the abuses unveiled by an Assembly of Notables; weln the nation, called into the quarrel, had conceived the hope and the wiall to )e something, that will bewhich enabled you to distiniguish the sovereign amidst all her court, and yet that majesty did not in the least detract from the extreme kiniless and benevolence of her look. In short, it is extremely difficult to convey to any one who has not seen the nueen, any idea of all the graces and all the dignity that were combined in her. Her features were not regular; she derived firom bter fa-nily tlat long, narrow oval, peculiar to the Austrian nation. Her eyes were not large; their colour was nearly blue, and they htid an intellectual and mild espression; her n.ose was thin and'handsome, her mouth not too large, thoughl the lips were rather thick. But the most remarkable thing about her face was the brilliancy of her complexion. I never saw any so brilliant-yes, brilliant is the wordsfor her stkin was so transparent that it took no shade. Hence I never could render its effect so as to please myself; I lacked colours to represent that fieshness, those delicate tones, which belonged exclusively to that fascinating fthee, and which I never observed in any other woman. As for her con. versation, it would be difficult for me to describe all its grace, all its benevolence. I do not think that the Queen Marie Antoinette ever missed an occasionto say an agreeable thing to those who had the honour to approach her. During the first sitting that i had of her majesty on her return from Fontainebleau, I ventured to remark to the OQueen how much the erectness of her head heightened the dignity of her look. She answered, in a tone of pleasantry,' If I were not a Qtueen,people would say that I havean insolent look-would they not?'" E. * "The life of Marcus Aurelius was the noblest commentary on the precepts of Zeno. He was severe to himself, indulgent to the imperfection of others, just and beneficent to all mankind. War he detested,. as the disgrace and calamity of human nature. His memory was revered by a grateful posterity, and, above a century. after nls death, many persons preserved his image among those of their household gods." Gibbon's Rome. E. FRENCH REVOLUTION. 31 came imperative. The States-General was promised to the natlon; it demanded that an early tine should be fixed for their convocation; whllen that time was near at hand, it insisted on the preponderance in them: this was refused, but, in the doubling of the representation, it was furnished with the mleans of conquering that preponderance. Thus the government never yielded but partially, and when it could no longer resist; but then the strength of the nation had increased, it was aware of its power, and required all that it conceived itself capable of accomplishing. A continual resistance, irritating its amibition, munst soon have the effect of rendering it insatiable. But even then, if a great minister, communicating somewhat of energy to the King, conciliating the Queen, bridling the privileged classes, had anticipated and satisfied at once the national expectations by giving of his own accord a free constitution; if he had gratified the impulse to act which the nation then felt, by summoning it immlllediately, not to reform the state, but to discuss its annual interests in a ready constituted state —perhaps the conflict would not have taken place. But it would have been absolutely necessary to mneet the difficulty instead of give ing way to it, and above all to sacrifice numerous pretensions. It would have required a iman of strong conviction, and possessing a resolution equal to his conviction; and this mlan, no doubt, bold, energetic, perhaps passionate, would have alarmed the court, which desired no such person. In order to spare at one and the same time the public opinion and the old interests, the king had recourse to half neasures. He selected, as we have seen, a half-philosophic, hialf-energetic uinister, and who possessed immense popularity, because, at that time, denmi-popular intentions in an agent of' power surpassed all hopes, and excited the enthusiasm of a people, whom the demagogue spirit of its leaders was very soon afterwards incapable of satisfying. Men's minids were in a universal ferment. Assemblies were formed throughout France, like those of England, and called by the sanme name,: that of clubs. Nothing was discussed in them but the abuses to be abolished, the reforms to be effected, and the constitution to be established. A rigid inquiry into the state of the country produced irritation. Its state, political and economical, was in truth intolerable.'There vas nothing but privileges belonging to individuals, classes, townls, provinces, and to trades themselves; nothing but shackles upon the industry and genius of man. Civil, ecclesiastical, and military dignities, were exclusively reserved:for certain classes, and in those classes for certain individuals. A man could not embrace a profession unless upon certain titles and certain pecuniary conditions. The towns possessed their privileges for the apportioning the assessment, and the levying of taxes, and for the choice of magistrates. The very pensions converted by the survivors into family properties, scarcely allowed the monarch to show any preferences. He had nothing left to his disposal but a few pecuniary gifts, -and le had even been obliged to quarrel with the Dukle Ide Coigny about the abolitlor of' a -useless place.* All was therefore monopolizek.by a few -hands, S cee BouiHllf's.'Imoires. 32 HISTORY OF THE and the burdens bore upon a single class. The nobility and the clergy possessed nearly two thirds of the landed property. The other third, belonging to the people, paid taxes to the king, a multitude of feudal dues to the nobility, the tithe to the clergy, and was, moreover, liable to the devastations of noble sportsmen and their game. The taxes on consumption weighed heavily on the great mass, and consequently on the people. The mode in which they were levied was vexatious: the gentry might be in arrear with impunity; the people, on the other hand, ill treated and imprisoned, were doomed to suffer in body in default of goods. It subsisted, therefore, by the sweat of the brow; it defended with its blood the upper classe~ of so. ciety, without being able to subsist itself. The bourgeoisie, industrious, enlightened, less miserable certainly than the peasantry, but enriching the kingdom by its industry, reflecting lustre upon it by its talents, obtained none of the advantages to which it had a right. Justice, administered in some of the provinces by the genti-y, in the royal jurisdictions by magistrates who purchased their offices, was slow, frequently partial, always ruinous, and particularly atrocious in criminal cases. Individual liberty was violated by lettres de cachet, and the liberty of the press by the royal censors. Lastly, the state, ill-defended abroad, betrayed by the mistresses of Louis XV., cOlmU promised by the weakness of the ministers of Louis XVI., had recently been dishonoured in Europe by the disgraceful sacrifice of Holland and Poland. The popular masses began already to put themselves in motion; disturbances had several times broken out during the struggle of the parliaments, and especially on the retireme nt of the Archbishop of Toulouse. That minister had been burned in effigy; the armed force had been insulted, and even attacked; the magistracy bad been backward in prosecuting the rioters, who supported their cause. The pub. lie mind, agitated by these events, full of the confused idea of a speedy revolution, was in a continual ferment. The parliaments and the higher orders already saw the arms which they had given to the people directed against themselves. in Bretagne, the nobility had opposed the doubling of the third estate, and had refused to elect deputies; the bourgeoisie, who had so powerfully served against the court, then turned against them, and sanguinary conflicts ensued. The court, conceiving itself not sufficiently revenged on the Breton nobility,* refused them its aid, and, on the contrary, imprisoned some of their number who came to Paris for the purpose of remonstrating. The elements themselves seemed to be let loose. A hailstorm, on the 13th of July, had made havoc among the crops, and was likely to increase the difficulty of supplying Paris, especially amidst the troubles that were preparing. All the activity of commerce was scarcely sufficient to collect the quantity of provisions necessary for that great capki tal; and it might naturally be expected that it would soon be very' difficult to subsist it, when confidence should be shaken and the comn munications interrupted by political disturbances. Ever since the *See Bouill's Memoires. FRENCH REVYOLUTION. 3 cruel winter which had succeeded thle disasters of Louis XIV., and immortalized the charity of Fenelon, so severe a season had not been known as that of 1788-1789. The beneficence which was then displayed in the most affecting manner was not sufficient to alleviate the wretchedness of the people. A great number of vagabonds, without profession and without resources, thronged firom all parts of France, and paraded their indigence and their nakedness from Versailles to Paris. At the slightest rumour, they eagerly came forward to profit by chances, which are always favourable to those who have every thing to gaih, even to the subsistence for the passing day.Thus every thing concurred to produce a revolution. An entire century had contributed to unveil abuses, and to carry them to excess; two years to stir utp insurrection and to exasperate the popular masses by making them interfere in the quarrel of the privileged orders. In short, natural disasters, and a fortuitous concurrence of various circumstances, brought on the catastrophe, the epoch of which might have been deferred, but which was sure to happen sooner or later. It was amidst these circulmstances that the elections took place. They were tumultuous in some provinces, active every where, and very quiet in Paris, where great unanimity prevailed. Lists were distributed, and people strove to promote concord and a good understanding. Tradesmen, lawyers, literary men, astonished to find themselves assembled together for the firsttime, raised themselves up by degrees to liberty. In Paris, they reappointed themselves the bureaux formed by the King, and, without changing the persons, asserted their power by confirming them. The learned Bailly quitted his retreat at Chaillot; a stranger to intrigues, and deeply impressed with his noble mission, he, proceeded alone and on foot to the assenmbly. He paused by the way on the terrace of the Feuillans. A young man, whom he did not know, respectfully accosted him. Y lou will be returned," said he. I! cannot tell," replied Bailly; 6 that honour ought neither to be soE licited nor refused." The modest academician resumed his walk,:epaired to the assembly, and was chosen successively elector and deputy. The election of the Count de Mirabeau was stormy; rejected by the nobility, supported by the tiers-&tat, he agitated Provence, his native country, and it was not long before he showed himself at Versailles. The court had no wish to influence the elections, It was not displeased to see a great number of cur&s returned, reckoning upon their opposition to the high ecclesiastical dignitaries, and at tMle same time "The charity of Fenelon, which immortalized the disastrous epoch of' Louis XIV., was now equalled by the humane beneficence of the clergy of Paris; but all their efforts could not keep pace with the immense mass of indigence, which was swelled by the confluence of dissolute and abandoned characters from every part of' France. These wretches assembled round the throne, like the sea-birds round the wreck, which are the harbingers of death to the sinking mariner, and already appear. ed in fearful numbers in the streets on occasion of the slightest tuinult. They were all in a state of destitution, and for the most part owed their life to the charity of the ecclesiastics, whom they afterwards massacred in cold blood in the prison of Carmele " — Alison's French Revolution. E. VO. I. —-5 2 34 HISTORY OF THE upon their respect for the throne. It is tlrte that it did not foresee all that was to happen; and in the deputies of the tiers it perceived rather adversaries to the nobility than to itself. The Duke of Orleans was accused of taking active steps to procure the nomination of himself and his partisans. Already numbered among the enemies of the court, the ally of the parliamlents, and called for as leader, with or witjout his consent, by the popular party, he was accused of various underhand practices. A deplorable scene took place in the Fauxbourg S3t. Antoine, and, as people are fond of giving an author to all events, it was laid to his charge. Reveillon, a manufacturer of stained paper, who had an extensive manufactory, improving our industry and furnishing employment to three hundred workmen, was accused of an intention to redluce their wages to one half. The populace threatened to burn his house. Means were found to disperse them, but they returned on the following day; thehouse was broken into, set on fie, and destroyed~ Notwithstanding the threats held out on the first day by the assailants, notwithstanding the meeting agreed upon for the second, the authorities were very late before they began to act, and then they acted with extrelme severity. They waited till the people had made themselves masters of the house, they then attaclked them with fury, and were obliged to slaugllter a great number of those ferocious and intrepid men, who afterwards showed themselves on all occasions, and received the name of brigands. All the parties hliich were already forimed accused each other; the court was reproached with its first tardy and afterwards cruel proceedings; it was supposed that it wished to leave the people tinme to act that it m-night make an example and exercise its troops.'he money found on the destroyers of Reveillon's house, and lthe expressions that dropped from some of them, led to the conjecture that they were urged on by a secret hand. The enemnies of the )('ulilar party accused the Duke of Orleans of a wish to try his revolutioCnary bands That prince had been endowed with excellent qualities. He hiad inherited immense wealth; but, addicting himself to dissolute hablits, he had abused allthese gifts of nature and offortune. Witlout consistency of character, alternately regardless of public opilnion and grecdy of popularity, he was bold and ambitious one day, docile and absenlt on the morrow. Havingquarrelled with the Queen, he had become an enemy to the court. When parties began to form themselves, lhe bhad slffered his name to be employed, and it is said, his weealth also. Flattered with the vague prospect before him, he was active enough to ]draw accusation on himself, though not to ensure success; and his partisans, if they entertained any serious p;lns, must have been driven to despair by his inconstant ambition. The moment of the convocation at length arrived. In thiS conmmon danger, the higher orders, creeping close to the colurt, had grouped themselves around the princes of the blood and the Quleen. They strove by flattery to gain the country gentlemen, and in their absence'they ridiculed their clownishness. The clergy endeavoured to gain over the plebeians of its order, and the military noblesse those belongIng to tile same class with itself. The parliaments, which had expect FtRENhCH 1REVOLUTION. 35 ed-to play the principal part in the States-General, began to appreheni that their ambition had miscalculated. I'he deputies of the tiers-Stat, strong in the superiority of their talents, in the energetic eloquence of their speeches, encouraged by continual intercommunication, nay, spurred on by the doubts which tmany had conceived respecting the success of their efforts, had taken the firm resolution not to yield. The King alone, who had not enjoyed a moment's repose since the commenceiment of his reign, regarded the States-CGeneral as the ter minationl of his embarrassments. Jealous Lof his authority, rather for the sake of his children, to whom he deemed it his duty to transmit this patrimony entire, than for his own, he was not displeased to restore a portion of it to the nation, and to throw upon it the difficulties of the government. Accordingly, it was awith joy that he made preparations for this grand cnssemblage. A hall had been hastily got ready; the costumes were determined upon, and a humiliating badge had been imposed on the tiers-Utat. MVen are not less jealous of their dignity than of their rights: with a very just pride, the instructions forbade the deputies to condescend to any degrading ceremonial. This new fault of the court originated,'ike many others, in the desire to preserve at least the symbols when the realities had ceased to exist. It could not but produce a deep irritation at a moment when, before attacking, the parties began to measure one another with their eyes. On the 4th of May, the day of the opening, a solemn procession took place. The'King, the three orders, all the great dignitaries of the state, repaired to the church of Notre-Daime. The court had displayed extraordinary maglnificence. The two higher orders were splendidly dressed. Princes, dukes and peers, gentlemen, prelates, were clad in purple, and wore hats with plumes of feathers. The deputies of the tiers-etat, covered with plain black cloaks, came next; and, notwitlhstanding their modest exterior, they seemed strong in their number and their prospects. It was remarked that the Duke (f Orleans, placed in the rear of the nobility, chose rather to lag behind, and to mingle with the foremost deputies of the third estate. This national, military, and religious pomp-those pious chantsthose martial instrulments-and, above all, the inlportanee of the event — deeply moved all hearts. The discourse delivered by the Bishop of Nanci, full of generous sentiments, was enthusiastically applauded, notwithstanding the sacredness of the place and the presence of the King. Great assemblages elevate us. They detach us firom ourselves and attach us to others. A general intoxication was diffused, and all at once many a heart felt its animosities subside, and became filled for a moment with humanity and patriotism.-' I should not quote the following passage fi'om the 3Mmoires of Ferrieres, it base detractors had not ventured to carp at every thing in the scenes of the French Revolution. The passage which I arm about to extract will enable the reader to judge of the effect produced upon the least plebeian hearts by the national solemnities of this grand epoch. " I yield to the pleasure of recording here the impression made upon me by this augustand touching ceremony; I shall transcribe the account of it which I then wrote down, whilst still full of what I had felt. If this passage is not historical, it will perhaps have a stronger interest for some readers 36 HISTORY OF THE The opening of the States-General took place on the following day, May, 5 1789. The King was seated on an elevated throne, the Queen beside him, the court in stalls, the two higher orders on both sides, the tiers-,'tat at the farther end of the hall, and on lower seats. "The nobility in black coats, the other garments of cloth of gold, silk cloak, lace cravat, plumed hat turned up alt Heni IV.; the clergy insurplice, wide mlantle, square cap: the bishops in their purple robes, with their rochets; the tiers dressed in black. with silk mantle, and cambric cravat. The King placed himself on a platform richly decorated; Monsieur, the Count d' Artois, the princes, the ministers, the great officers of the crown, were seated below the King; the Queen placed herself opposite to the Kinlg; Madarme, the Countess d' Artois, the princesses, the ladies of the court, superbly dressed and covered with diamonds, composed a magnificent retinue for her. The streets were hunlg with tapestry belonging to the crown; the regiments of the French anld Swiss guards formed a line from nNotre-Dame to St. Louis; an immense concourse of people looked on, as we passed, in respectful silence; the balconies were adorned with costly stuffs, the windows filled with spectators of all ages, of both sexes, lovely women elegantly attired: every face bespoke kindly emotion, every eye sparkled with joy; clapping of hands, expressions of the warmest interest, the looks that met us and that still followed after we were out of sight.aptusrous, enchanting scene, to which I should vainly strive to do justice! Bands of' music, placed at intervals, reont the air with melodious sounds; niilitary marches, the rolling of drums, the clang of trumpets, the noble chants of tlhe priests, alternately heard, without discordance, without confusion, enlivened this triumphal procession to the temple of the Almighty. "Plunged anto the imost delicious ecstacy, sublime but melancholy thoughts soon presented thlet:;elves to my mind. I beheld that France, my country, supported by Religion, saying to us, Desist from your puerile qujarrels; this is the decisive umomeint which shall either give me new life or annihilate mse for ever! Love of costunry, thol spakest to my heart!.... Vhat! shall a handful of anibitious madmen, base intrigueres, seek by tortulous ways to dissllsite my country?-shall they found their destructive syvtenas on insidiosus advantages?-shall they say to thee, Thou lhast two interests; alnd all thy glory and all t oly power, of which thy nei arhbours are so jealous, shall vanish like a light smoke driven sby the soiuthersn blast? No, I swear to thee, that mny parched tongue shall cleave to miy palate, if' ever I forget thy grandeurs and thy solerlnities.' What splendotr this religious display shed over that wholly humais pom-r.p! With out thee, venIerable Ieligion, it would have been but an empty parade of pride; but thou parifiest and santiifiest, thou heighteneest grandeur itself; the kings, the mighlty of the age, they too, by at least a show of reverence, pay honmage to the Killg of kings..... Yes, to God alone belong honosur, empire, glory! Those sacred ceremonies, those hymnes, those priests clothed in the dress of sacrifice, those perfumes, that canopy, thalt sun resplendent with gold and jewels..... on called to mnind the words of' the prophet:' Dalughters of Jerusalem, your King corneth; put on your nuptial robes, and hasten to meet him.' Tears of joy trickled firon my eyes. My God, my country, my fbllow-citizenis, had become identified with myself. " aOn their arrival at St. Louis, the three orders seatetl themselves on benches placed in the nave. The King and Olueen took their places beneath a canopy of purple velvet, sprinkled with golden flemrs-de-lis; the princes, the princesses, the great officers of the crown, and the ladies of the palace, occupied the space reserved for their majesties. The host was carried to the altar to the sound of the most impressive music. It was an 0 salutaris Hostia! This natural, but true and melodious vocal performance, unencumbered by the din of instruments which drown the expression; this mass of voices, rising in well-regulated accord to heaven, convinced me that the simple is always beautiful, always grand, alweays sublime..... Men are idiots, in their vain wisdom, to treat as puerile the worship that is paid to the Almighty. With what indiff'erence do they view that moral chain which binds man to God, which renders him visible to the eye, sensilble to the touch!.... M. de.a Fare, Bishop of Nanci, delivered the discourse. Religion constitutes the strength of empires; religion constitutes the prosperity of nations. This truth, which nc wise man ever doubted for a single moment, was not the important question to he FRENCH REVOLUTION. 37 A movement arose at the sight of the Count de Mirabeau; but his look, his step, awed the assembly.? The tiers-etat remained covered like the other orders, notwithstanding the established custom. The King delivered an address, in which he recommended disinterestedness to -some, prudence to others, and professed to all his love for his people. Barentin, the keeper of the seals, then spoke, and was followed by Necker, who read a memorial on the state of the kingdom, in which he treated at great length of the finances, admitted a deficit of fifty-six millions, and wearied by his prolixity those whom he did not offend by his lessons. On the next day, the deputies of each order were directed to the place allotted to them. Besides the common hall, which was sufficiently spacious to hold the three orders united, two other halls had been erected for the nobility and the clergy. The common hall was assigned to the tiers; and it thus had the advantage, whilst in its own place of meeting, of being in that of the States. The first business was the verification of the powers of the members. It became treated in the august assembly; the place, the circumstance, opened a wider field: the Bishop of Nanci durst not, or could not, traverse it. " On the following day, the deputies met in the hall of the Menus. The assembly was neither less imposing, nor the sight less magnificent, than the preceding day."Mmoires du Marquis de Ferrieres, tom. i. i " Excluded from the rank to which his birth entitled himl, Mirabeau determined to recover it at any price. He vowed vengeance against his enemies, and with this bitterness of feeling did Mirabeau take his seat in the assembly of the States-General. As he entered the hall, he cast a threatening glance on the ranks which he was not allowed to approach. A bitter smile played on his lips, which were habitually contracted by an ironical and scornful expression. He proceeded across the hall, and seated himself on those benches from which he was to hurl the thunderbolts which shook the throne. A gentleman strongly attached to the court, but likewise a friend of Mirabeau, who had observed the rancorous look which he darted round him when he took his seat, entered into conversation with him, and pointed out to him that his peculiar position in the world closed against him the door of every saloon in Paris.'Consider,' said he,' that society, when once wounded, is not easily conciliated. If you wish to be pardoned, you must ask pardon.' Mirabeau listened with impatience, but when his friend used the word' pardon,' he could contain himself no longer, but started up and stamped with violence on the floor. His bushy hair seemed to stand on end, his little piercing eyes flashed fire, and his lips turned pale and quivered. This was always the way with Mirabeau when he was strongly excited.' I am come hither,' cried he, in a voice of thunder,' to be asked, not to ask pardon."'Memoirs of the Duchess d'Abrantes. E. " Hardly any of the deputies had hitherto acquired great popular reputation. One alone attracted general attention. Born of noble parents, he had warmly espoused the popular side, without losing the pride of aristocratic connexion. His talents universally known, and his integrity generally suspected, rendered him the object of painful anxiety; harsh and disagreeable features, a profusion of black hair, and a commanding air, attr-acted the curiosity even of those who were unacquainted with his reputation. His name was MxaABEsAU, future leader of the Assembly! Two ladies of rank, from a gallery, with very different feelings, beheld the spectacle. The one was Madame de Montmorin, wifle of' the minister of foreign affairs; the other, the illustrious daughter of M. Necker, Madame de Stahl. The latter exulted in the bounclles; prospect of national felicity which seemed to be opening under the auspi ces of her father.'You are wrong to rejoice,' said Madame de Montmorin;'this event forebodes much misery to France and to ourselves.' Her presentiment turned out too well founded; she hlerself perished on the scaffold with one of her sons; ano ther was drowned; her husband was massacred in the prisons on September2di her eldest daughter was cut off in goal; her youngest died of a broken heart before she tlrd attaitled tile age of thirty y'ears.' —Alison's French Revolution. E. 38 HISTORY OF THE a question whether this should take place in common or iy separate orders. The deputies of the tiers, alleging that it was of importance to each portion of the States-General to satisfy itself of the legitimacy of the two others, insisted on the verification in comtnon.'The nobility and the clergy, desirous of keeping up the division of orders, maintained that each ought to constitute itself apart. This question hlad nothing to do with that of individual votes, for they might verify their powers in common and afterwards vote separately, but it nearly resembled it; and on the very first day it produced a division, which it was easy to foresee, and which might have been as easily prevented by putting an end to the dispute beforehand. But the court never had the courage either to deny or to grant what was just, and, besides, it hoped to reign by dividing. The deputies of the tiers-Rtat remained assembled in the general hall, abstaining from any measure, and waiting, as they said, to be joined by their colleagues. The nobility and the clergy, retiring to their respective halls, proceeded to deliberate on the verification. The clergy voted tlhe separate verificAtion by a majority of 133 to 114, and the nobility by a majority of 188 to 114. The tiers-Rtat persisting in its inaction, pursued, on the morrow, the same course as on the preceding day. It made a point of avoiding any measure which could cause it to be considered as constituting a separate order. For this reason, in sending a deputation of its members to the other two chambers, it abstained from giving then any express mission. These members were sent to the nobility and clergy to iinform them that the tiers-etan was waiting for them in the common hall. The nobility were not sitting at the moment; the clergy were assembled, and offered to appoint commissioners to settle the differences that had arisen. They actually appointed them, and invited the nobility to do the same. In this contest, the clergy manifested a very different spirit from the nobility. Among all the privileged classes, it had suffered most from the attacks of the eighteenth century. Its political existence had been disputed; it was divided, owing to the great number of its cures; besides, its professional character was that of moderation and the spirit of peace. Accordingly, as we have just seen,it offered a sort of mediation. The nobility, >on the contrary, declined it, by refusing to appoint commissioners. Less prudent than the clergy, more confident in its rights, conceivinlg itself not bound to moderation but to valour, it vented itself in refusals and threats. These men, who never excused any passion in others, gave the reins to all their own passions, and, like all assemblies, they yielded to the domination of the most violent spirits. Casal7s and d'Espremenil, recently ennobled, made the most indiscreet motions, and, after preparing them in a private meeting, procured their adoption in general assembly. In vain did a minority, composed of men more prudent or more prudently ambitious, strive to enlighten these nobles. They would not listen to any thing. They talked of fighting and dying, and they added, for the laws and justice. The tzers-6tat, immoveable, endured with patience every insult Thougl irritated, it was silent, conducted itself with the prudence and firmness of all powers which are commencing their career, and receiv FRENCH REVOLUTION: 39 ed the applause of the tribunes, originally destined for the court, but soon taken possession of by the public. Several days had already elapsed: the clergy had laid snares for the tiers-etat by inciting it to certain acts which would have given it the character of a constituted order. It had, however, constantly refused to comply; and, taking only indispensable measures of internal police, it had confined itself to the election of a dean and assistants for the purpose of collecting opinions. It refused to open the letters addressed to it, and it declared that it formed not an order, but a meeting of citizens assembled by a legitimate authority to wait for other citizens. The nobility, after refusing to appoint conciliatory commissioners, at length consented to send deputies to arrange matters with the other orders. But their mission was rendered useless, since it charged them at the same time to declare that it persisted in its decision of the 6th of May, which enjoined the separate verification. The clergy, on the contrary, adhlering to its part, had suspended the verification which it had at first commenced in its own chamber, and declared itself not constituted, awaiting the conferences of the conciliatory commissioners. The conferences were opened: the clergy was silent; the deputies of the cotnmmons argued their point with calmness, those of the nobility with warmth. Both parties returned soured by the dispute; and the tiers-etat, determined not to give way, was doubtless not displeased to learn that all compromise was impossible. The nobility was assured every day by its commissioners that they had the advantage, and this served to heighten its exaltation, By a transient gleam of prudence, the first two orders declared that they renounced their pecuniary privileges. T"he tiers- tat accepted the concession, but persisted in its refusal to proceed to business, still requiring the comnmon verification. Tile conferences yet continued, when it was at length proposed, by way of accoinmmodating the matter, that the powers should be verified by commissioners chosen from the three orders. The deputies of the nobility declared in its name its dissent from this arrangement, and retired without appointing any new conference. Thus the negociation was broken off The same day the nobility passed a resolution, by which it declared anew that for this session the verification should take place separately, and that it should be left for the States to determinls upon some other mode in future. This resolution was communicated to the commons on the 27th of May. They had been assembled ever since the 5th; twenty-two days had consequently elapsed, during which nothing had been done. It was high time to come to a determination. Mirabeau, who gave the impulse to the popular party,* observed that it was time to decide upon " onor6 Gabriel Riquetti, Cointe de Mirabeau, was born in 1749. Youthful. impetuosity and ungoverned passions made the early part of his life a scene of disorder and misery. After having been some time in the army, he married Mademoiselle de Marignane, a rich heiress in the city of Aix; but the union was not fortunate, and his extravagant expenses deranging his affairs, he contracted debts to fne amount of 300,000 livres, in consequence of which his father obtained from the Chfitelet an act of 1llnacy against him. Enraged at this, he went to settleat Manosque X)40 HISTORY OF THE something, and to commence their labours for the public welfare, which had been too long delayed. Hle proposed, therefore, in consesequence of the resolution passed by the nobility, to send a message to the clergy, in order to obtain an immediate explanation from it, and whence he was, on account of a private quarrel, some time afterwards removed, and shut up in the castle of If; he was then conveyed to that of Joux, in Franche Comt6, and obtained permission to go occasionally to Pontarlier, where he met Sophia de IRuffey, Marchioness of Monmlir, wife of a president in the parliament of Besancon. Her wit and beauty inspired Mirabeau with a most violent passion, and he soon escaped to Holland with her, but was for this outrage condemned to lose his head, and would probably have ended his days far from his country, had not an agent of police seized him in 1777, and carried him to the castle of Vincennes, where he remained till December, 1780, when he recovered his liberty. The French revolution soon presented a vast field for his activity; and, being rejected at the time of the elections by the nobility of Provence, he hired a warehouse, put up this inscription,' Mirabeau, woollen-draper," and was elected deputy from the tiers-.tat of Aix; from that time the court of Versailles, to whom he was beginning to be formidable, called him the Plebeian Count. On the day when the States opened, he looked at the monarch, who was covered with the crown jewels, and said to those near him, " Behold the victim already adorned!" He soon took possession of the triblne, and there discussed the most important matters in the organization of society. He had never at that time conceived the possibility of establishing a democracy in so immense a state as France. His motive for seeking popularity was solely that he might regulate a court which he caused to tremble, but the court committed the fault of not seeking to seduce his ambition. He then connected himnself with the Duke of Orleans, from whomhe obtained certain sums thathe wanted; butsoon perceiving that it was impossible to make any thing of such a clod, he broke off the intimacy in October, 1789. If he was not one of the principal causes of the events which took place on the 5th and 6th of that month, the words he made use of before and during that time, give reason to suppose he was no stranger to them. The next day he made the King new overtures, and repeated them shortly after, but they were invariably rejected; and he then considered how he should, by new blows, compel the sovereign and his council to have recourse to himn. Not, however, till the end of the session did this take place; and then, by the intervention of Madame de Mercy and M[. de Montmorin, his debts were paid, and a pension was granted him. From that time he devoted himself to strengthening the monarchy, and addressed to the King a statement on the causes of the revolution, and the methods of putting astop to it. It may be doubted whether he could have succeeded in this undertaking; butit is now certain, that, at the moment of his sudden death, lie was busied in a project for dissolving an assembly which he could no longer direct. On the 16th of January, 1791, he was appointed a member of the department of Paris, and on the 31st, president of the National Assembly. This being the period of his closest connexion with the court, he wished as president to acquire new celebrity, and show himself capable of directing the assembly; a design which he executed with a degree of address admired even by his enemies. On the 28th of March he was taken ill, and died on the 2d of April, at half-past eight in the morning, aged forty-two. So short an illness excited a suspicion at first that he had been poisoned, and all parties mutually accused each other of the crime; but when his body was opened, there appeared, as the physicians asserted, no marks of violence. When on his death-bed, he said openly to his friends,' I shall carry the monarchy with me, and a few factious spirits will shape what is left.' At the moment of his death he retained all his fortitude and self-possession; on the very morning, he wrote these words: " It is not so difficult to die;" and at the instant when his eyes were closing, he wrote, " to sleep." His loss seemed to be considered as a publie calamity, and it is remarkable that all parties believing him to be in their interests, joinedin regretting him. His obsequies were celebrated with great pomp; all the theatres were shut; the deputies, the ministers, the members of all the authoritative assemblies, formed a procession which extended above a league, and which was tour hours marching; and his body was placed in the Pantheon beside that of Descartes. In November. 1793, his ashes were, by order of the Convention, removed thence, and scattered abroad by the people, who at the same time burned his bust in FRENCH REVOLU'TION. 41 to ascertain whether it would or would not meet the commons. The proposal was immediately adopted. Target, the deputy, proceeded at the head of a numerous deputation, to the hall of the1X cergy. "T The gentlemen of the commons," said lihe, " invite the gentlemen of the clergy, IN TIHE NAME OF rHE GOD OF PEACE, alld fo' the national interest, to meet them in the hall of the assembly, to consult upon the means of effecting the concord so necessary at this morment for the public welfare." The clergy was struck with these solelnn words. A great number of its members answered them with acclalnations, and would have instantly complied with this invitation, had they not been prevented; and the reply given to the deputies of the commons was, that it would deliberate on the subject. On the return of the deputation, the inexorable tiers-6tat;determined to await, without breaking up, the answer of the clergy. As this answer did not arrive, a message was sent that the commons were waiting for it. The clergy complained of being hurried, and requested to be allowed the necessary time. The tiers-6tat replied with moderation, that the clergy mzight take its own time, and that the commons would wait, if requisite, the whole day and the whole night. The situation was difficult. The clergy knew that after its answer the commons would fall to work,. and adopt a decisive course. It wished to temporize, in order to concert with the court. It required time till the following day, which was granted with regret. Next day, the King resolved, in accordance with the wishes of the higher orders, to interfere. At this moment, all the animosities between the court and the higher orders began to be forgotten, at the sight of that popular power which rose with such rapidity. The King at length appeared, and invited the three ordersto resume their conferences in the presence of his keeper of the seals. The tiers-dtat, notwithstanding all that has been said of its projects, upon judglments formed after the events, did not extend its wishes beyond moderate monarchy. Knowing the intentions of Louis XVI,, it was full of respect for him: and, unwilling to injure its cause by any wrong step, it replied that, out of deference to the King, it consented to renew the conferences, thiough, in consequence of the declaration of the nobility, it could not but consider them as useless. To this reply it annexed the Place de Grhve, as an enemy to the republic, and one who had corresponaet with the royal family. Thus did Mirabeau verify what he had himself said,' that the Capitol was close to the Tarpeian rock, and that the same people who flattered him would have had equal pleasure in seeing him hanged.' Mirabeau was of middle stature; his face was disfigured by the marks of the smallpox; and the enormous quantity of hair on his head gave him some resemblance to a lion. He was of a lofty character, and had talents which were extraordinary, and some which were sublime; his felicity of diction was unrivalled, and his lknowledge of the human heart profound; but he was essentially a despot, and, had he governed an empire, he would have surpassed Richelieu in pride, and Mazarin in policy. Naturally violent, the least resistance inflamed him; when he appeared most irritated, his expression had most elo quence; and being a consummate actor, his voice and gestures lent a new interest to all he said. His chief passion was pride; and though his love of intrigue was unbounded, it can be ascribed only to his pecuniary necessities. In the last year of his; life he paid immense debts, bought estates, furniture, the valuable library of Buffon, and lived in a splendid style."'-From the article "MLIRaBEBU," in the Biographie Moderme. E. VOL. X.-6 2 -42 KISTORY OF THE an address, which it charged its dean to deliver to the prince. This dean was Bailly, a simple and virtuous man, an illustrious and modest cultivator of the sciences, who had been suddenly transported from the quiet studies of his closet into the midst of civil broils. Elected to the presidency over a great assembly, he had been alarmed at his new office, had deemed himself unworthy to fill it, and undertaken it solely from a sense of duty. But, raised all at once to liberty, he found within him an unexpected presence of mind and firmness. Amid so many conflicts, he caused the majesty of the assembly to be respected, and represented it with all the dignity of virtue and of reason. Bailly had the greatest difficulty to penetrate to the King. As he insisted on being introduced, the courtiers reported that he had not even paid respect to grief of the monarch, affiicted by the death of the dauphin. He was at length presented, contrived to avoid every humiliating ceremonial, and displayed equal firmness and respect. The King received him graciously, but without entering into any explanation of his intentions. The government, having decided on making some sacrifices to obtain money, designed, by opposing the orders, to become their umpires to wrest fiom the nobility its pecuniary privileges with the assistance of the tiers-Rtat, and to check the ambition of the latter by means of the nobility. As for the nobility, having no need to concern itself about the embarrassments of the administration, caring only for the sacrifices which were likely to be wrung from it, it hoped to bring about a dissolution of the States-General, and thus to frustrate the object of their convocation. The commons, whom the court and the higher orders would not recognize by that title, were incessantly acquiring fresh strength, and, being resolved to brave all dangers, were anxious not to let slip an opportunity which might never recur. The conferences demanded by the King took place. The commissioners of the nobility raised all sorts of difficulties about the title of commons which the tiers-6tat had assumed, and about the form and signature of the minutes (procs-verbal). At length they entered upon discussion, and they were almost reduced to silence by the reasons urged against them, when Necker, in the name of the King, proposed a new mode of conciliation. Each order was to -examine the powers separately, and to communicate them to the others. In case difficulties should arise, commissioners should report upon them to each chamber, and if the decision of the different orders disagreed, the King was to judge definitively. Thus the court would settle the dispute to its own advantage. The conferences were immediately suspended to obtain the adhesion of the orders. The clergy accepted the plan purely and simply. The nobility at first received it favourably; but, urged by its usual instigators, it rejected the advice of its most discreet members, and modified the project of conciliation. From that day must be dated all its disasters. The commons, apprized of this resolution, waited till it should be communicated to them in order to explain themselves in their turn; but the clergy, with its ordinary cunning, desirous of bringing them into bad odour with the nation sent them a deputation to invite them to FRENCH REVOLUTION. 43 take into consideration, along with it, the distress of the people, which was daily increasing, that they might lose no time in providing together against the dearth and high price of provisions. The commons, who would have exposed themlselves to the popular odium if they had appeared indifferent to such a proposal, opposed craft with craft, and replied that, deeply impressed with the same duties, they awaited the clergy in the great hall, in order to deliberate with it on this important subject. The nobility thlen arrived, and solemnly communicated its resolution to the conmmons. It adopted, it said, the plan of conciliation, persisting, however, in the separate verification, and referring to the united orders, and to the supreme jurisdiction of the King, such difficulties only as might arise respecting the entire deputations of a whole province. This resolution put an end to all the emnbarrassmnents of the comnions. Obliged either to yield or to declare war single-handed against the higher orders and the throne, if the plan of conciliation had been adopted, they were relieved froni the necessity of explanation, as the plan hlad been accepted only with important alterations. The moment was decisive. To give way on the separate verification was not, indeed, giving way on the vote by order; but to betray weakness once was to be weak for ever. T'hey must submlit to act nearly the part of a cipher, give money to power, be content with the abolition of a few abuses, when they saw the possibility of regenerating the state, or take a strong resolution, and seize by force a portion of the legislative power. This was the first revolutionary act, but the assembly did not hesitate. In consequence, all the minutes (procs verbaux) being signed, and the conferences finished, Mirabeau rose: 6 Any plan of conciliation rejected by one party," said he, "6 can no longer be examined by the other. A month is past; it is time to take a decisive step a deputy of Paris has an important motion to make-let us hear him." Mirabeau, having opened the deliberation by his audacity, introduced to the tribune Sieyes, a mlan of a comprehensive mind, systematic and rigorous in his deductions. Sieyes in a few words recapitulated and explained the motives of the conduct of the commons. They had waited and had acceded to all the conciliations proposed; their long condescension was unavailing; they could delay no longer without failing in their duty; they ought consequently to send a last invitation to the other two orders, to join them for the purpose of commencing the verification. This proposition, based on sufficient motives,*I think it right to state here'the motives on which the assembly of the commons founded.the resolution which it was about to take. This first act, which commences the revolution, being of high importance, it is essential to justify the necessity for it, and I think this cannot be done better, than by the considerations which preceded the resolution (arretd) of the commons. These considerations, as well as the arretd itself, belong to the Abbe Sieyes. " The assemnbly of the commons deliberating ona the overture of conciliation proposed by the commissioners of the King, has deemed it incumbent on it to take at the same time into consideration the resolution (arrete) which the nobility have hastened to adopt respecting the same overture. "It has seen that the nobility, notwithstanding the acquiescence at first professed, soon introduced a modification which retracts it almost entirely. and that consequent 44 HISTORY OF THE was received with enthusiasm; it was even in contemplation to summon the orders to attend within an hour. The period, however, was prorogued. The following day, Thursday, being devoted to religious solemnities, it was postponed till:Friday. On Friday, the last invitation was communicated.'TIhe two orders replied that they would consider of it, and the King that he would make known his intentions. The call of the baillages began: on the first day, three curds attended and were hailed with applause; on the second, six arrived; and on the third and fourth ten, among whom was the abb6 Gregoire. During the call of the baillages and the verification of the powers, a serious dispute arose concerning the title which the assembly was to assume. Mirabeau proposed that of Representatives of the French ly their resolution (a rrtd) on this subject cannot be considered as any other than a positive refusal. "' From this consideration, and because the nobility have not desisted from their preceding deliberations, in opposition to every plan of reunion, the deputies of the commons conceive that it has become absolutely useless to bestow any further attention on an expedient which can no longer be called conciliatory, since it has been rejected by one of the parties to be conciliated. " In this state of things, which replaces the deputies of the commons in their original position, the assembly judges that it can no longer wait inactive for the privileged classes without sinning against the nation, which has doubtless a right to require a better use of its time. " It is of opinion that it is an urgent duty for the representatives of the nation, to whatever class of citizens they belong, to form themselves, without further delay, into an active assembly, capable of commencing and fulfilling the object of their mission. " The assembly directs the commissioners who attended the various conferences, called conciliatory, to draw up a report of the long and vain efforts of the deputies of the commons to bring back the classes of the privileged to true principles; it takes upon itself the exposition of the motives which oblige it to pass from a state of expectation to a state of action; finally, it resolves, that this report and these motives shall be'printed at the head of the present deliberation.' But, since it is not possible to form themselves into an active assembly, without previously recognising those who have a right to compose it,-that is to say, those who are qualified to vote as representatives of the nation,-the same deputies of the commons deem it their duty to make a last trial with the clergy and the nobility, who claim the same quality, but have nevertheless refused up to the present moment to make themselves recognised. M' oreover, the assembly, having an interest in certifying the refusal of these two slasses of deputies, in case they should persist in their determinationto remain unknown, deems it indispensable to send a last invitation, which shall be conveyed to them by deputies charged to read it before them, and to leave them a copy of it in the following terms: "'' Gentlemen, we are commissioned by the deputies of the commons of France to apprize you that they can no longer delay the fulfilment of the obligation imposed on all the representatives of the nation. It is assuredly time that those who claim this quality should make themselves known by a common verification of their powers, and begin at length to attend to the national interest. which alone, and to the exclusion of all private interests, presents itself as the grand aim to which all the deputies ought to tend by one general effort. In consequence, and from the necessity which the representatives of the nation are under to proceed to business, the deputies of the commons entreat you anew, gentlemen, and their duty enjoins them to address to you, as well individually as collectively, a last summons to come to the hall of the states, to attend, concur in, and submit, like themselves, to the common verification of powers. We are at the same time directed to inform you, that the general call of all the bailliages convoked will take place in an hour, that the assembly will imme diately procss.md to the verification, land that such as do not appear will: be declared defaulters.' FRENCH REVOLUTION. 45 People;. Mounier that of Deliberative Majority in the absence of the Minority; Legrand that of National Assembly. This last was adopted, after a very long discussion, which lasted till the night of the 16th of June. It was one o'clock in the morning, and it became a question whether the assembly should constitute itself before it broke up, or should defer that business till the following day. One portion of the deputies wished that not a moment should be lost, that they might acquire a legal character which should command the respect of the court. A small number, wishing to impede the operations of the assembly, became extremely violent and uttered furious cries. The two parties, ranged on the two sides of a long table, reciprocal2l threatened each other. Bailly, placed at the centre, was called upon by the one to adjourn the assembly, by the other to put the motion for constituting themselves to the vote. Unshaken amidst shouts and abuse, he continued for more than an hour motionless and silent. The weather was tempestuous; the wind blew with violence into the hall, and added to the tumult. At length the brawlers withdrew. Bailly, then addressing the assembly, which had recovered its tranquillity on the retirement of those by whom it had been disturbed, recommended it to defer till daylight the important act which was proposed. His advice was adopted, and the assembly broke up, applauding his firmness and prudence. Accordingly, on the 17th, the proposition was taken into consideration, and, by a majority of 491 votes against 90, the commions constituted themselves the National Assembly. Sicyes, again charged to report the motives of this determination, did it with his accustomed precision. "The assembly, deliberating after the verificationn of the powers, ascertain that it is already composed of representatives sent directly by ninety-six hundredths, at least, of the nation. Such a mlass of deputation could not remain inactive on account of the deputies of certain baillages, or of certain classes of citizens; for the absenlt who have been called, cannot prevent the present from exercising the plenitude of their righlts, especially when the exercise of those rights is an urgent, an imperative duty. l'.Moreover, as it belonlg only to the verified representatives to concur in the national will, and as all the verified representatives are to be admitted into this assembly, it is further indispensable to conclude that it belongs to it, and to it alone, to interpret and to represent the general will of the nation. " There cannot exist any veto, any negative power, between the throne and the assembly. " The assembly therefore declares that the general labour of the national restoration can and ought to be begun by the deputies present, and that they ought to prosecute it without interruption and without impediment. "6 The denomination of National Assembly is the only one suitable to-the assembly in the present state of things, as well because the members who compose it are the only representatives legitimately and publicly known and verified, as because they are sent by nearly the 46 tHISTOP:Y OF T'HE whole of the nation; ands lastly, because, the representation being one and indivisible, none of the deputies, for whatever order or class he has been elected, has a right to exercise those functions separately from this assembly. "' The assembly will never relinquish the hope of collecting in its bosom all the deputies that are now absent; it will not cease to call them to fulfil the obligation imposed upon themn to concur in the holding of the States-General. At whatever mroment the absent deputies present themselves durinlg the session that is about to be opened, it declares beforehand, that it will be ready Lo receive them, and to share with them, after the verification of their powers, the series of important labours which are to accomrlpish the regeneration of France." Imlmedintely after passing this resolution (arre'te'), the assembly, desirinlg at once to perforlm an act of its power, and to prove that it had no intention to irnmpede the course of the administration, legalized the levy of the taxes, though imnposed without the national consent. With a presentiment of its separation, it added that they should cease to be levied friol the daly on which it shouldc be broken u-p; foreseeing, moreover, a bankruptcy, the expedient left to power for putting an eld to the financial embarrassments, and dispensinig with the national conculrrellce it satisfied prudence and honour by placing the creditors of the state under the safeguiard of French integrity. Lastly, it announced that it should iiummeditately direct its attention to the causes of the deartht and of the public distress. These measures, which displayed equal courage and ability, produced a deep impression. The court and the higher orders were alarmed at such courlage and energy. MIeanwhile, the clergy was timlnultuously deliberatifg whether it should join the coinmons. T'he multitude lawaited outside the hall the result of its deliberation; tle czures at lengith carried the point, and it as learnt that the union hadl been votedt by a maiority of I49 votes to 15. -Those who had voted for the junction were received with transports of applause; the others were lbused tned insulted by the populaee. This moment was destil-ed to bring about a reconciliation between the court and the aristocracy. The danger was equal fior both. The last revolution was as prejudical to the King as to the two higher orders themselves, w1hol1 tile conmmons declared that they could dispense with. Tle aristocracy immediately threw itself at the feet of the King. The Duke of Luxembourlg, the Cardinal de Larochefoucauld, the Arclhbisllop of Paris, ilnplored him to repress the audacity of the tiers-ftat, and to support their rigllts, which were attacked. The parliament proposed to him to do witlout the States, promising to assent to all the taxes. The King was surrounded by the princes and the Queen; this was more than was requlisite for his weakness: they hurried him off to Marly in order to extort from him a vigorous measure. ]Necker, the minister, attached to the popular cause, confined himself to useless remonstrances, which the King thought just when his mind was left free, but the effect'of which the court soon took good care to destroy. As soon as he perceived the necessity for the interference of FRENCH REVOLUTION. -7 tile royal atthority, he formed a plan which, to his coura-g,, a-pf, va3,xl very bold. He proposed that the monarch, in a royal sitting, shou.id command the union of the orders, bhut only for measures of general interest; that he should assume to himself the sanction of all resolutions adopted by the States-General; that he should condemn beforehand every institution hostile to moderate monarchy, such as that of a single assembly; lastly, that he should promise the abolition of privileges, the equal admission of all Frenchmen to civil and military appointments, &c. As Necker had not had the energy to outstrip time for such a plan, so likewise he had not sufficient to ensure its execution. The council had followed the King to MIarly. There Necker's plan, at first approved, was subjected to discussion; all at once a note was delivered to the King; the council was suspended, resumed, and adjourned till the following day, in spite of the necessity for the utmost despatch. On the morrow, fresh members were added to the council; the King's brothers were of the number. Necker's plan was modified; he resisted, made some concessions, but finding himself vanquished, returned to Versailles. A page came three times bringing him notes containing new modifications; his plan was wholly disfigured, and the royal sitting was fixed fobr the 22d of June. It was as yet but the 20th, and already the hall of the States was shut up, under the pretext that preparations were requisite for the presence of the King. These preparations might have been made in half a day; but the clergy had deliberated the day before upon joining the commons, and it was desirable to prevent this junction. An order from the King instantly adjourned the sittings till the 22d. Bailly, conceiving that lie was bound to obey the assembly, which, on Friday, the 19th, had adjourned to the next day, Saturday, repaired to the door of the hail. It was surrounded by soldiers of the French guard, who had orders to refuse admittance to every one. The officer on duty received Bailly with respect, and allowed him access to a court for the purpose of drawing up a protest. Some young hotheaded deputies would have forced their way through the sentries; Bailly hastened to the spot, appeased them, and took them with himn, that thle generous officer, who executed the orders of authority with such moderation, might not be compromised. The deputies collected tumultuously; they persisted in assembling; some proposed to hold a sitting under the very windows of the King, others proposed the Tennis-Court. To the latter they instantly repaired; the master cheerfully gave it up to them. The hall was spacious, but the walls were dark and bare. There were no seats. An arm-chair was offered to the president, who refused it, and chose rather to stand with the assembly; a bench served for a desk:l two deputies were stationed at the door as door-keepers, and were soon relieved by the keeper of the place, who came and offered his services. The populace thronged around, and the deliberation commenced. Coinplaints were raised on all sides against this suspensiomn of the sittings, and various expedients were proposed to prevent it in future The agitation increased, and the extreme parties 48 HISTOlRY OF' THE began to work upon the imaginations of their hearers. It was proposed to repair to Paris: this motion, hailed with enthusiasm, was warmly supported; and they began to talk. of proceeding thither in:a b)ody and on foot. Bailly was apprehensive that violence might be offered to the assembly by the way: dreading, moreover, a rupture, h.e opposed the scheme. Mounier then proposed to the deputies to bind themselves by oath not to separate before the establishment of a constitution. This proposal was received' with transport; the f'orm of the oath was soon agreed upon. Bailly claimed the honour of being the first to take it, and read the form, which was as follows - Y" 01o take a solemnn oath never to separate, and to assemble where. ever circumstances shall require, till the constitution of the kingdom is established and founded on a solid basis." This form, pronounced I.a a loud and intelligible voice, was heard outside the building. All lips ilstantly repeated the oath; all hands were outstretched towards Bailly, who, standing and motionless, received this solemn engagement to ensure by laws the exercise of the national rights. The crowd instantly raised loud shouts of Vive l'Assemble! vive le Roi! as if to prove that, without any feeling of anger or animosity, but fromt duty, it reclaimed what was its due. The deputies thten procoeded to sign the declaration wlhich they had just maade. One only, iaar.tini d'Auch, added to hlis name the word opposer. A. great tumult took place around him. Bailly, in order to be heard, mounted upon a table, addressed the deputy with moderation, and represented to him that lhe had a right to refuse his signature, but not to form an opposition. The deputy persisted; and the assembly, out of respect for its liberty, allowed the Word to stand, and to be inserted in the This new act of energy excited the apprehensions of the nobility, who weLnt on the followiung day to lay their lanlentations at the IKing's feet, to excuse themselves in some maeasure for the restrictions which they had introduced inrto the plan of conciliation, and to solicit his assistance.'lThe fnoble minority protested against this step, mnaintainll ing with reason that it was no longer timle to solicit the royal interference, after hvilng so unseasonably reflsed it. This minority, too little attended to, was composed of forty-seven members, among whom were enlightened military officers and magistrates-the Duke de Liancourt, a generous friend to his King and to liberty; the Duke de la Rocehefoucauld, distinguished for inflexible virtue and great abilities; Lally-Tollendal, already celebrated for his father's misfortunes and his eloquent reclamations; Clermont-Tonnerre, remarkable for his eloquence; the brothers Lameth, young colonels, known for their intelligence and their bravery; Duport, already noticed for his extraordinary capacity and firmness of character; and lastly, the Marquis de La Fayette, the defender of American freedom, and combining with French vivacity the perseverance and the simplicity of Washington. Intrigues retarded all the operations of the court. The sitting, at first fixed for Monday the 22d, was postponed till the 23d. A note written very late to Bailly, and at the termination of the great council FRENCH REVOLUTION. 49 acquainted him with this postponement, and proved the agitation which pervaded all minds. Necker had resolved not to attend the sitting, that he might not sanction by his presence plans which lhe disapproved. Petty imeans, the ordinary resource of a feeble authority, were emlployed to prevent the meeting of Monday the 22d. Th'e prinlces hired the T1'enais-Court for the purpose of playing on. thlat day. T'he assembly repaired to tIhe church of St. Louis, wllere it received the majority of the clergy, with the Archbishop of Vielnne at its hlead. This junction, marked by the utmost digitity, excited thle greatest joy. The clergy camne, it was said, to siubmit to thle consiuo, verification. The following day, the 23d, was that fixed for tle royal sitting. The deputies of the colmmlons were to enter by a side door, a tifierent one from that reserved for tile nobility anld cler'gy. f violence could not be employed, they were not spared Itumliliations.'I hey waited a long time exposed to the rain the preside nt was obliged tc knock at the door; it was not opened. He knocked repet.tedly, and was told it was not yet time. The depulties were aiout to retire, whern Bailly again knocked. The door was ate neirtli oelled; tlhe deputies entered, and found the two hbiglther orders.in t)possessionll of their seats, which thley had been desirous to secure by oceii})yiiil tlhemn beforehand. The sitting was niot, like tihat of thie 5Ith of' l nay, aIt (ice majestic and touching, from a certain effusion of sentisient: s attld itl o)es. A nuimerous soldiery, a sullen silence, distillguisled it friln tile forilmer solemnity. Tlhe deputies of the comnmotis lhad resolvedt to 1ke(-e tle most profound silence. The King addressed the assernbtly, iml betrayed Iris weakness by using expressions fai' too energetic foi' his eliaracter. He was made to launch re)proaclIes, and to issnle colnitnaiilds. l-e enjoined the separation into orders; annullled thle i)r'cc~dtitl resolutions (arretes) of the tiers.-etaf, proElisigt to salltti(ill tlhe alllication of the pecuniary privileges when lthey shoauld be relinqtliislied Iby thle bolders. He maintained all thle feniaal ri'lts, boilh I.ustil alsld Inllorary, as itnviolable property. I-e d(lil not o(rder tle nlcetig )f' tle tlhree estates onl mratters of' general itterlit, bitt held out In,lIs (t' it from tle moderation of thle higler orders.'r'llts lie eati l(-etl the obedience of the commons, and content1ed llnlseltf wittl piestl liilng tlat of tile aristocracy. le left the llobility ltdl cleriy.i jtll'.S of what specially concerned tlem, aicdl coticluildetl wvit sayvill,, tiat if' le met with friesh obstacles lie w(ould siingly estael)isht tile wellitire of' lis people, and that lie considered imself' ~as its sole reprseatetutltive.'lt'is tone, this language, deeply intcetised tile rminds of' tie coiiniois, ilOt against tile King, who had feebly reprlesettedl p)ssiions not hlis own, but against the aristocracy, whose instrumetnt lie was. As soon as lie had finished this address, lie ordered tlle assenmbly to separate immediately. ThCle nobility followved him, togetler witlh part of the clergy. The major;ity of the ecclesiastical d(leutics renall;ied; tlhe deputies of the commons, without n(movinl, preservetl protoubtid s,lence. Mirabheau, who put himself forward on all occasiotils, tlhen rose. "s Gentlemen," said lhe, "6 I admit that what you hiave just heard might be the salvation of the country, if the gifts of despotism VOL.. —7 3 X50 HISTORY OF THE were not always danlgerous..... The ostentatious display of arms, the violation of the national temple... to command you to be lhappy!...a Where are the enermies of the nation? Is Catiline at our doors? I demand that, covering yourselves with your dignity, your legislative power, you adhere religiously to your oath: it f~orbids you to separate before you have firamed the constitution." The Marquis de Br6ze, grand-master of the ceremonies, then returned. " You have heard the orders of the King," said he, addressing Bailly. Bailly replied, " I am going to take thlose of the assenmbly." IMirabeau stepped forward. "Yes, sir," lhe exclaimed, "we have heard the intentions that have been suggested to the King; but you have neither voice, nor place, nor right to speak, here. However, to avoid all delay, go and tell your master that we are here by the power of the people, and tlhat nothing but the power of bayonets shall drive us away." Ml. de Br6ze retired. Sieyes then said: " We are to-day what we were yesterday; let us deliberate." The assembly collected itself to deliberate on the maintenance of its preceding resolutions (arretts). T' The first of these resolutions," said Barnave, t6 has declared what you are; the second relates to the taxes, which you alone have a right to grant; the third is the oath to do your dutyO None of these measures needs the royal sanction. The King cannot prevent that to which his assent is not required."' At this moment workmen arrived to take away the benches; armed soldiers crossed the hall; others surrounded the outside; the life-guard advanced to the very door. The assembly continued its proceedings without interuption; the members kept their seats, and the votes were collected. They were unanimous for upholding the preceding resolutions. That was not all: amidst the royal town, surrounded by the servants of the court, witholt the aid of that populace since so formidable, the asseminbly was liable to be threatened. Mirabeau repatired to + e tribune, and proposed to decree the inviolability of every deputy. The assembly, opposing to force but one majestic will, immediately declared each of its members inviolable, and proclaimed every one who should offer thema violence a traitor, infamous, and guilty of a capital crime. iMkeanwvhile, the nqbility, who looked upon the state as saved by this "' bed of just'ce," presented its congratulations to the prince who had fur nished the idea of it, and carried them from the prince to the Queen. The Queen, holding her son in her arms, and showhing him to these devoted servants, received their oaths, and unfortulnately abandoned herself to a blind confidence. At this very moment shouts were heard: every one ran to inquire the meaningof them, and learned that the people, assembling in crowds, were applauding Necker because he had not attended the royal sitting. Alarm instantly took the pace of joy; the King and Queen sent for Necker, and those august. personages were obliged to entreat him to retain his portfolio. The minister complied, and transferred to the court a part of that popularity which he -had acquired by absenting himself from that fatal sitting. Thus was eftected the first Revolution. The tiers-6tat had recovered the legislative power, anLd its adversaries had lost it by attempt FRENCH REVOLUT'ION. 51 ing to keep it entirely to themselves. In a few days, this legislative revolution was completely consummated. RPecourse was still had to petty annoyances, such as interruptig -the internal communications in the halls of the States; but they were u-nsuccessful. On the 24th, tile mlljority of the clergy proceeded to the assembly, and demanded the verification in common, in order to deliberate afterwards on the proposals made by the King in the sitting of the 23d of June. The minority of the'clergy continued to deliberate in its own chamber. Juigane', rchlbishop of Paris, a virtuous prelate and a benefactor of the people, but a stickler for privileges, was pursued, and forced to promise to join the assembly. -He accordingly repaired to the National Asselmbly, acconmpanied by the Archbishop of Bordeaux, a popular prelate, who was afterwards minister. The nobility was in a state of the greatest agitation. its ordinary instigators infl amed its passions: d'Espremenil proposed to prosecute the tiers-Rtat, and to direct proceedings to be instituted against it by thie attorney-general: Jtle m-inority proposed the reunion. This motion was re jected amidst tumult. The Duke of Orleans supported the motion, after hlaving, on the preceding day, given a promise to the contrary to the Polignacs. Forty-seven mnembers, having determined to join the general assembly, in spite of the decision of the majority, repaired to it in a body, and were received with demonstrations of public joy. But, -notwithstanding the rejoicing caused by their presence, their looks were sad. "' We yield to our conscience," said Clermo-nt-Tronnerre, "6 but it is with pain that we separate ourselves friom our colleagues. We have come to concur in the public regeneratilon; each of us will let you know the degree of activity which i1is mission allows him." Every day brought fresh accessions, and the assembly saw the number of its members increase. Addresses poured in firom all parts, exspressing the good wishes and the approbation of the towns and provinces. Mlounier prompted those of Dauphine; Paris sent one, and even the Pakais Royal despatched a deputation, which the assembly, as yet encompassed with dangers, received, that it might not alienate the multitude. At that time it did not foresee the excesses of tle populace; it has need, on the contrary, to presume its energy, and to hope for its support: ranny, however, doubted the courage of the people, which wvas as yet but a pleasing dream. Thus the plaudits of the tribuntes, fiequently annoying to the assembly, had nevertheless supported it, and the assembly durst'not prevent them. Bailly would have complained, but his voice, and his -motion were drowned by thundering applause. T'lh majority of the nobility continued its sittings, amidst tumuil and the most violent animosities. Terior seized those who directed it, land the signal for reunion was made by those very persons who had pieviously preached resistance. But its passions, already too much ejxcited, were not easily guided. The King was obliged to write a letter; the court, the grandees, were humbled to entreaties. "The junction will be transient," it was said to the most obstinate; 6troops are approaching; gice way to save the King." Consent wam 5240 HISTORY OF THE extorted amidst uproar, and the majority of the nobility, accompainied by the minority of the clergy, proceeded,'on the 27th of June, to the general assembly. The Duke of Luxembourg, speaking in the name of all, said that they were come to pay a mark of respect to the King, and to give a proof of patriotism to the nation. " The family is complete," replied 3ailly. Supposing that the assemblage was entire, and that the question was not to verify but to deliberate in common, lie added: " We can now attend withlout intermission and without distraction to lthe regeoermation of the kingdom and of the public weall." Many petty artifices xwere still employed to avoid the appearance of hlavinrl done wiat necessity imperatively required. The new colners allways entered after the opening of the sittings, all in a body, so as to give thenmselves thle look of an order. They affected to stand behlind thle p resident, or, at least, not to appear to sit. Bailly, with great nlioderation and firmness, at length overcame all resistance, and priev(aLiel on them to be seated. Attempts were also made to displace hiln firo(i the presidency, not by main force, but sometimes by secret onegpciation, at others by stratagem. Bailly retained it, not out of arllitimll but out of duty; and a plain citizen, known only by his t'irltils and h1s talents, was seen presiding over all the grandees of tlhe kiigdoni anid the, chuc'th. It t;as too evident that the legislative revolution was accomplished.'llo,,uml')h ithle s1subject of the first dispute was solely the mode of verificati(ont, and not the mannner of voting; though some had declared thilat thly joined iriril y for the commonll verification, and others in obedienlce to tln. royull iltentions as expressed on the 23d of June; it was cert;ai tiaa tlhet vortito, by individuals had become inevitable: all m'etmno>latralace t)lerfiro was useless and impblitic. The Cardinal de, iLmrn'omel*cnuld ever, evertlieless, protested, in the name of the miunonity, tnid declared flit t he llad joined solely to deliberate on general siml),t.(t; still r'etaoi.i!g tlle riglt to fOrim an order..lThe Archlbishlop of' ViriElm r'eaplied witB warintith, that the minority had not had thle ), )vw-: ".tnD Ad~;.- ia aI y tJillug in tie absence of the majority of the clergy, aiil:)lat it (d] Ito Ig'llt. to speali in the namle of thle olrderl Mirabeau veliig1(ed strong. fy a'a-inst tllis pretension, obse'rving, that it was stranlo' o lt lV' Ollie s lud u'o(}It.st i thle Lssenmbly against tile assembly. "1 Yot llist,9's;il!e, l eitlhert recocnlize its sovereignty or retire."'T'lme (ile.stion oi ill})er'aLtive illstl'uctions as next brought forward. AjI c)t (ft til? instrcictions e.pressed the wishes of the electors respectillg thl: rnfi)rl'ms to be effected, and rendered these wislies obligatory ton tIte deputies. Befoire they stirred, it was necessary to ascertain to wvl}lt piiit they could go: this question, therefore, could not but be tlh: first. It was taken up, and resumled several times. Some were Ci.r ret-'trlinog to their constituents; others were of opinion that they cou1lld tnOt receive from the constituents any other mission than that if vitimmg for tlhem after subjects slould have been discussed by the repl r;semitatives of tlme wvloile nation, but tlhey were not of opinion thlat delputies could receive iilstructions ready made beforehand. If we tssullue, in fat. that we hlave no power to make laws but in a general FRENCH REVOLb rON. 53 council, either because we meet with more intelligence tle higlher we rise, or because we cannot come to any decision but when all tlhe parts of the nation have reciprocally understood one another, tliei, iltdleed, it is true that the deputies ought to be free and unsllackled by obligatory instructions. Mirabeau, sharpening reasoning by irony, observed, that "' those who considered the instructions as imperative, had dolle wrong to come; they had but to leave instructions on their belnchles, and those papers would fill their seats as well as they." Sieyes, with his usual sagacity, foreseeing that, notwithstandillg the perfectly just decision of the assembly, a great number of members would fall back upon their oaths, and that by taking refilge in their consciences thley would render themselves unassailable, moved the order of tie day, upon the ground that each was the best judge of the validity of tile oath which he had taken. " Those," said he, b' who deem themselves bound by their instructions, shall be considered as absenlt, jilst the same as those who refused to verify their powers in general asselllbly." This judicious opinion was adopted. The assenlbly, by ha;vinl recourse to constraint, would have furnished the opposers with pretexts; whereas, by leaving therm free, it was sure to bring themr over to its own way of thinking: for thenceforth its victory was certain. The object of the new convocation was the reformn of the state, thlat is, the establishment of a constitution, which France as yet had nlot, whatever may be said to the contrary. If any kitnd of relations between the governed and the government are to be so called, then indeed France possessed a constitution; a king had commanded, and subjects obeyed; ministers had arbitrarily imprisoned; contractors had wrung the last denier from tile people; parliaiments had sentenced unforttunate wretches to the wheel. The most barbarous nations have such kinds of constitutions. There had been States-General" in France, but without precise powers, without fixed times for meeting again, and always without results. There had been a royal authlority, alternately null or absolute. There had been sovereign tribunals or courts, which frequently combined the legislative with the judicial power. But there was no law to ellsure the responsibility of the agents of power, the liberty of the press, individual. liberty; in short, all the guarantees which, in the social state, make amends for the:fiction of natural liberty.f I Philippe le Bel was the first French monarch who convoked the States-General, in 1303. Jean le Bon, in 1355, also called together the national assemblies, or "' les Champs de'Mars;" and these assemblies have since that period always retained the title of States-General. The clergy had as their president the Archbishop of Rheilms; Gauthier de Brienne was chosen by the nobles; and Marcel, the Mayor of Paris, was at the head of the tiers-6tat. t 1 support with notes and quotations only such passages as are susceptible of being disputed. The question, whether we had a constitution, seems to me one of the most important of the revolution; for it is the absence of a fundamental law that justi fies our having deterimined to give ourselves one. On this point, I think it imposslble to quote an authority more respectable and less suspicious than that of M. LallyTollendal. On the 15th of July, 1789, that excellent citizen delivered a speech in the chamber of the nobility, the greater part of which is subjoined. "Long reproaches, tinctured moreover with considerable acrimony, have been made, gentlemen, against members of this assembly, who, with equal pain and ro serve, have expressed doubts on what is called our constitution. This subject has 54 HISTORY OF TITE The want of a constitution was acknowledged and generally felt~ all the instructions had energetically expressed it, and entered into a formal explanation of the fundamental principles of that constitution. They had unanimously prescribed the monarchical government, herenot perhaps a very direct connexion with that at present under discussion; but since it has afibrded ground for accusation, let it also furnish one for defence; and permit me to address a few words to the authors of these reproaches. "You have assuredly no law which enacts that the States-General are an integral part of' the sovereignty, for you are deinanding one; and, up to tizis day, somlletimles a decree of council forbade thern to deliberate, at others a decree of parliament annulled their deliberations. "You have no law that fixes the periodical return of your States-General, for you are demanding one; and it is one hundred and seventy-five years since they were assembled. " You have no law to protect your individual safety and liberty from arbitrary attacks, for you are demanding one; and, during the reign of a King whose justice is known and whose probity is respected by all Europe, ministers have caused your magistrates to be torn from the sanctuary of the laws by arme(l satellites. II[ the preceding reign, all the magistrates in the kingdom were dragged from their seats firon their homes, and scattered, by exile, some on the tops of mountains, others in the slough of marshes, all in situations more obnoxious than the mnost horrible of prisons. Go back still farther, and you will find a hundred thousand lettres de cachd issued on account of paltry theological squabbles; and farther still, and you see as many sanguinary comimissions as arbitrary imprisonments; nay, you will find no spot on which you can repose till you come to the reign of your good Henry. " You have no law which establishes the liberty of the press, for you are demanding one; and up to this time your thoughts have been enslaved, your wishes chained; the cry of your' hearts under oppression has been stifled, sometimes by the despotism of individuals, at others by the still more terrible despotism of bodies. " You have not, or at least you no longer have, a law requiring your consent to taxes, for you are demlanding one; and, for two centuries past, you have been burdened with more than three or four hundred mlillions of taxes without having consented to a single one. "You have no law which establishes the responsibility of all the ministers of the executive power, for you are demanding one; and the creators of those sanguinary commissions, the issuers ofthose arbitrary orders, the dilapidators of the public exchequer, the violators of the sanctuary of public justice, those who have imposed upon the virtues of one king, those who flattered the passions of another, those who brought disasters upon the nation, have been called to no account-have undergone no punishment. " Lastly, you have no general, positive, written law, no diploma at once royal and national, no great charter, upon which rests a fixed and invariable order, from which each learns how much of' his liberty and property he ought to sacrifice for the sake of preserving the rest, which ensures all rights, which defines all powers. Onl the contrary, the system of your government has varied fronm reign to reign, frequently from ministry to ministry; it has depended on the age and the character of one man. II minorities, under a weak prince, the royal authority, which is of importance to the prosperity and the dignity of the nation, has been indecently degraded, either by the great, who with one hand shook the throne and with the other crushed the peoo ple, or by bodies which at one time seized with temerity what at another they had defended with courage. Under haughty princes who had flattered, under virtuous princes who were deluded, this same authority has been carried beyond all bounds. Your secondary powers, your intermediate powers, as you call thieta, have not beenl either better defined or more fixed. Sometimes the parliaments have laid it down as a principle that they could not interfere in affairs of state; at others, they have insisted that it was their prerogative to discuss them as representatives of the nation. On the one hand were seen proclamations making known the will of the king, on the other decrees, in which the king's officers forbade, in the king's name, the execution of the king's orders. Among the courts the like discord prevails, they quarrel about their or.in, their functions; they mutually launch anathemas at each other by their' decrees FRENCH REVOLUTIOD1. 55 ditary succession from miale to male, the exclusive attribution of the executive power to the King, the responsibility of all agents, the con. currence of the nation and the King in the making of laws, the voting of the taxes,'and individual liberty. But they were divided on the creation of one or two legislative chambers, on the permanence, the periods for the meeting, and the dissolution of the legislative body; on the political existence of the clergy and the parliaments; on the extent of the liberty of the press. All these questions, either solved or proposed inA the instructions, plainly show to what a degree the pub. lic mind was at that time awakened in all parts of the kingdom, and how generally and decisively the wish for liberty was expressed in }France.? But the founding of an entire constitution amid the rubbish " set limits to these details, which I could extend ad infinitum; but if all these are incontestable facts, if you have none of these laws which I have just enumerated and which you demand, or if, having them-and pay particular attention to this point-if, having them, you have not that which enforces their execution, that which guarantees theiraccomplishlment and maintains their stability, explain to us what you understand by the word constitution, and admit at least that some indulgence is due to those who cannot help entertaining some doubts of the existence of ours. You are told continually to rally round this constitution: let us rather lose sight of that phantom to substitute a reality in its stead. And as for the term inznovations, as for the appellation of innovators, which is constantly levelled at us, let us admit that the first inn1111 vators are in our hands, that the first innovators are our instructions; let us respect7 let us bless this happy innovation, which must put every thing in its place, which must render all rights inviolable, all the authorities beneficent, and all the subjects happy. " It is this constitution, gentlemen, that I wish for; it is this constitution that is the object for whichi we were sent hither, and which ought to be the aim of all our labours; it is this constitution which is shocked at the mere idea of the address that is proposed to us-an address which would compromise the King as well as the nation-an address, in short, which appears to me so dangerous that not only will I oppose it to the utmost, but that, were it possible it could be adopted, I should feel myself reduced to the painfll necessity of protesting solemnly against it." I It may not be amiss to introduce here the summary of the instructions submitted to the National Assembly by hM. de Clermont-Tonnerre. It is a good sketch of the state of opinions at this period, throughout France. In this point of view the sum mary is extremely important; anld, though Paris exercised an influence upo:n the drawing utip of these instructions, it is not the less true that the provinces had the greatest share in them. Rleport of the Committee of Constitution, containing a Summary of thEe Instru.ctions rela. tive to this subject, sead to the National Assembly by M. the Count de Clermont- Tonnerre, in the sitting of July 27, 1789. " Gentlemen-You. are called to regenerate the French empire: to this great work you bring both your own wisdom and the wisdom of your constituents. " We have thought it right first to collect and present to you the suggestions scat. tered over the greater number of your instructions; we shall then submit to you the particular views of your committee, and those which it has been, or shall be, ens abled to collect from the different plans, and the different observations, which have been, or which shall be, communicated or transmitted to it by the mnembers of this august assembly. "It is of the first part of this labour, gentlemen, that we are about to render you an account. " Our constituents, gentlemen, are -all agreed upon one point: they desire the re generation of the state; but some have expected it from the mere reform of abut ses, and from the re-establishment of a constitution existing for fourteen centuries past, and which appeared to them capable of being yet revived, if the injuries which it has suffered from time, and the numerous insurrections of:private interest against the public interest, were to:be repaired. "Others have considered the existing. social system as so faulty, that-they shave d~ t;6 ~3HISTORY OF THE of an ancient legislation, in spite of all opposition and the wild flights of many minds, was a great and difficult work. Besides the disagreements which diversity of interests could not fail to produce, the natural divergence of opinions was also to be dreaded. Anl entire legislamanded a new constitution, and that, with the exception of the monarchical govern. ment and forms, which it is atn innate feeling of every Frenchman to love and to respect, and which they have ordered you to maintain, they have given to you all the powers necessary for creating a constitution, and for founding the prosperity of the Frenich empire on sure principles, and on the distinction and regular constitution of all the powers. These latter, gentlemen, have thought that the first chapter of the constitution ought to contain a declaration of the rights of man, of those imprescriptible rights fobr the maintenance of which society was established. " The demand of this declaration of the rights of man, so constantly misconceived, may be said to be the only difference that exists between the instructions which desire a new constitution, and those which demand only the re-establishment of that which they regard as the existing constitution. " Both the one and the other have alike fixed their ideas upon the principles of monarchical govermnment, upon the existence of the power and the organization ofthe legislative body, upon the necessity of the national assent to taxes, upon the organization of the administrative bodies, and upon the rights of the citizens. " We shall advert, gentlemen, to these different subjects, and submit to you on each, as decision, the uniborm results, and, as questions, tile differing or contradictb>ry results, presented by such of your instructions as it has been in our power to analyze, or to procure the substance of. "' 1. The lmonarchical government, the inviolability of thle sacred person of the king, and the hereditary descent of the crown from male to male, are alike acknowledged and sanctioned by the great majority of the instructions, and are not called in qluestion by any. " 2. The king is, in like manner, acknowledged as the depositary of the exe.nutive power in all its plenitude. " 3. The responsibility of all the agents of authority is generally demanded. "4. Some of the instructions assign to the king the legislative power, limited by the constitutional and fundamental laws of the kingdom; others admit that the king, in the interval between one session of the States-General and another, can, singly, make laws of police and administration, which shall be but provisional, and for which they require free registration in the sovereign courts; one baillage has even required that the registration shall not take place without the consent of two thirds of the intermediate commissions of the district assemblies. The greater number of the instructions acknowledge the necessity of the royal sanction for the promulgation of the laws.' With respect to the legislative power, most of the instructions recognise it as residing in the national representation, on condition of the royal santction; and it appears that this ancient maxim of the capitularies, Lexfit consensupopuli et constitutions regis, is almost generally adopted by your constituents. "As to the organization of' the national representation, the questions on which you have to lecide relate to the convocation,'or to the duration, or to the composition, of the national representation, or to the mode'of deliberation proposed to it by your constitlents. "'As to the convocation, some have declared that the States-General cannot be dissolved but by themselves; others, that the right of convoking, proroguing, and dissolving, belongs to the king, on the sole condition, in case of dissolution, that he shall irmmediately issue a fresh convocation. "As to the duration, some have required that the sessions of the states shall be periodical, and insisted that the periodical recurrence should notdepend either on the will or the interest of the depositories of authority: others, but in sumaller number, have demanded the permanence of the States-General, so that the separation of' the members'should not involve the dissolution of the states. ":The system of periodical sessions has given rise to a second question: Shall there or shall there not be an intermediate commission in the intervals between the sessions? The majority of your constituents have considered the establishment of an intermediate commission as a dangerous expedient. FRENCH REVOLUTION, 57 tion, to be given to a great people, excites their minds so powerfully, inspires them with plans so vast and hopes so chimerical, that measures either vague or exaggerated, and frequently hostile, are naturally to be expected from them. In order to give regularity to the "As to the composition, some have insisted on the separation of the three orders; but, in regard to this point, the extension of the powers which several representations have already obtained, leaves, no doubt, a gieater latitude for the solution of this question. 1 iSome baillages have demanded the junction of the two higher orders in one and the same chamber; others, the suppression of the clergy, and the division of its meinbers between the othertwo orders; others, that the representation of the nobility should be double that of the clergy, and that both together should be equal to that of the commons. " One baillage, in demanding the junction of the two higher orders, has demanded the establishment of a third, to be entitled the order of' the farmers (ordre des campaoagnes). It has likewise been proposed, that any person holding office, el!ploy, or place at court, shall be disqualified to be a deputy to the States-General. Lastly, the inviolability of the persons of the deputies is recognised by the greater number of the baillages, and not contested by any. As to the mode of deliberation, the question of opinion by individuals, and of' opinion by orders, is solved: some bailluges require two thirds of the opinions to form a resolution. " The necessity of the national consent to taxes is generally admitted by your constituents, and established by all your instructions: all limit the duration of a tax to the period which you shall have fixed, a period which shall in no case extend further than from one convocation to another; and this imperative clause has appeared to all your constituents the surest guarantee of the perpetuity of your national assemblies. "Loans being but an indirect tax, they have deemed it right that they should be subjected to the same principles. " Some baillages have excepted from imposts for a term such as should be destined for the liquidation of the national debt, and have expressed their opinion that these ought to be levied until its entire extinction. "As to the administrative bodies, or provincial states, all the instructions demand of you their establishment, and most of them leave their organization to your wisdom. "Lastly, the rights of the citizens, liberty, property, are claimed witn energy by the whole French nation. It claims for each of its members the inviolability of private property, as it claims for itself the inviolability of' the public property; it claims in all its extent individual liberty, as it lhas just established for ever the national liberty; it claims the liberty of the press, or the free communication of thought; it inveighs with indignation against lettres de cachet, which dispose in an arbitrary manner of persons, and against the violation of the secrecy of' the post, one of the most absurd and most infamnous inventions of despotism. " Amidst this concurrence of claims, we have remarked, gentlemen, some particular modifications relative to lettres de cachet and the liberty of the press. Yru will weigh them in your wisdom; you will no doubt cheer up that sentiment of French honour, which in its horror of disgrace, has sometimes mnisconceived justice, and which will no doubt be as eager to submit to the law when it shall command the strong, as it was to withdraw itself from its control when it pressed only upon the weak; you will calm the uneasiness of religion, so fiequently assailed by libels in the time of the prohibitory system; and the clergy, recollecting that licentiousness was long the companion of slavery, will itself acknowledge that the first and the natural effect of liberty is the return of order, of decency, and of respect for the objects of the public veneration. " Such, gentlemen, is the account which your committee has conceived itself bound to render of that part of your instructions which treats of the constitution You will there find, no doubt, all the foundation-stones of the edifice which you are charged to raise to its full height; but you will perhaps miss in them that order, that unity of political combination, without which the social system will always exhibit numerous defects: the powers are there indicated, but they are not yet distinguished with the necessary precision; the organization of the national representation is not VOL. I.-8. 3 HISTORY OF THE proceedings, a committee was appointed to measure their extent, and to arrange their distribution. r'his committee was composed of the most moderate members of the Assembly. Mouniei', a cool-headed9 but obstinate man, was its most laborious and influential member; it was he who drew up the order of the proceedings. This difficulty of giving a constitution was not the only one that sufficiently established, the principles of eligibility are not laid in them: it is from your labours that those results are to spring. The nation has insisted on being free, and it is you whom it has charged with its enfranchisement: the genius of France has hurried, as it were, the march of the public mind. It has accumulated for you in a few hours the experience which could scarcely be expected from many centuriese You have it in your power, gentlemen, to give a constitution to France: the cling and the people demand one; both the one and the other have deserved it. " Result of the Analysis of the Instructions. " AVOWED PRINCIPLES. " Art. 1. The French government is a monarchical government. " 2. The person of the King is iinviolable and sacred. " 3. His crown is hereditary from male to male. " 4. T'he King is the depositary of the executive power. "5. The agents of authority are responsible. "6 6. The royal sanction is necessary for the promulgation of the lawso 1" 7. The nation makes laws with the royal sanction. " 8. The national consent is necessary for loans and taxes. " 9. Taxes can be granted only for tile period from one convocation of the Stated General to another. " 10. Property shall be sacred. "'. individual liberty shall be sacred. " Questions on which the whole of the fnstructions have not explained themselves in a un{7 form manner. "Art. 1. Does the King possess the legislative power, limited by the constitu tional laws of the kingdom? "' 2. Can the King, singly, make provisional laws of police and administration in the interval between the holding of the States-General? "3. Shall these laws be svbject to free registration in the sovereign courts? " 4. Can the States-General be dissolved only by themselves? "5. EHas the King alone the power to convoke, prorogue, and dissolve, the StatesGeneral? " 6. In case of dissolution, is not the King obliged immediately to issue a new conr vocation? " 7. Shall the States-General be permanent or periodical? "8. If they are periodical, shall there or shall there not be an intermediate comn mission? "9. Shall the two first orders meet together in one and the same chamber? "10. Shall the two chambers be formed without distinction of orders? "11. Shall the members of the order of the clergy be divided between the other two orders? " 12. Shall the: representation of the clergy, nobility, and commons, be in the pro portion of one, two, and three? "13. Shall there be established a third order, with the title of order of the farmers? "14. Can persons holding offices, employments, or places at court, be elected deputies to the States-General? " 15. Shall two thirds of the votes be necessary in order to form a resolution? "16. Shall taxes having fortheir object the liquidation of the national debt be levied. till its entire extinction? " 17. Shall lettres de cachet be abolished or modified? "1t8.: Shall: the liberty of the press be indefinite or modified?" FRENCH REVOLUTION. 59 the Assembly had to surmount. Between an ill-disposed government and a starving populace, which'required speedy relief, it was difficult for it to avoid interfering in the administration. Distrusting the supreme authority, and urged to assist the, Jple, it could not help, even without ambition, encroaching by degrceL, on the executive power. The clergy had already set it the example, by making to the tiers-6tat the insidious proposal to direct its immediate attention to the subject of the public subsistence. The Assembly, as soon as it was formed, appointed a committee of subsistence, applied to the ministry for information on the subject, proposed to favour the circulation of provisions from province to province, to convey them officially to the places where they were needed, and to defray the expense by loans and charitable contributions. The ministry communicated the efficacious measures which it had taken, and which Louis XVo., a careful administrator, had favoured to the utmost of his power. Lally-Tollendal proposed to issue decrees relative to free circulation; upon which Mounier objected that such decrees would require the royal sanction, and this sanction, being not yet regulated, would be attended with serious difficulties. Thus all sorts of obstacles combined together. It was requisite to make laws, though the legislative forms were not fixed; to superintend the administration without encroaching on the executive authority; and to provide against so many difficulties, in spite of the ill-will of power, the opposition of interests, the jarring of opinions, and the urgency of a populace recently awakened and rousing itself, a few leagues from the Assembly, in the bosom of ar immense capital. A very small distance separates Paris from Versailles, and a person may traverse it several times in one day. All the disturbances in Paris were, therefore, immediately known at Versailles, both to the court and to the Assembly. Paris then exhibited a new and extraordinary spectacle. The electors, assembled in sixty districts, refused to separate after the elections, and they remained assembled either to give instructions to their deputies, or from that fondness for agitation which is always to be found in the human heart, and which bursts forth with the greater violence the longer it has been repressed. They had fared just the same as the National Assembly: being shut out of their place of meeting, they had repaired to another; they had finally obtained admittance into the HWtel de Ville, and there they continued to assemble and to correspond with their deputies. There were yet no public prints that gave an account of the sittings of the National Assembly; people therefore felt it necessary to meet for the purpose of learning and conversing upon events. The garden of the Palais Royal was the theatre of the most numerous assemblages. This magnificent garden, surrounded by the richest shops in Europe, and forming an appurtenance to the palace of the Duke of Orleans, was the rendezvous of foreigners, of debauchees, of loungers, and, above all, of the most vehement agitators. The boldest harangues were delivered in the coffee-houses, or in the garden itself. There'might be seen an orator mounted upon a table, collecting a crowd around. him, and exciting them by the most furious language-language al 60 HISTORY OF THE ways unpunished-for there the mob reigned as sovereign. Here men, supposed to be the tools of the Duke of Orleans, displayed the greatest violence. The wealth of that prince, his well-known prodigality, the enormous sums which he borrowed, his residence on the spot, his ambition, though vague, all served to point accusation against him l. History, without mentioning any name, is authorized, at least, to declare that money was profusely distributed. If the sound part of the nation was ardently desirous of liberty, if the restless and suffering multitude resorted to agitation for the purpose of bettering its condition, there were instigators who sometimes excited that multitude, and perhaps directed some of its blows. In other respects, this influence is not to be reckoned among the causes of the revolution, for it is not with a little money and with secret manceuvres that you can convulse a nation of twenty-five millions of souls.,+ An occasion for disturbance soon occurred. The French guards, picked men, destined to compose the King's guard, were at Paris; four companies were detached by turns to do duty at Versailles. Besides the barbarity of the new discipline, these troops had reason to complain also of that of their new colonel. At the pillage of Reveilion's house they had certainly shlown some animosity against the populace; but they had subsequently been sorry for it, and, mingling daily with the mob, they had yielded to its seductions. Moreover, both privates and subalterns were aware that the door to promotion was closed against them: they were mortified to see their young officers do scarcely any duty, showing themselves only on parade-days, and after reviews not even accompanying the regiment to the barracks. Here, as elsewhere, there had been a tiers-6tat, which had to do all the work without receiving any share of the profit. Symptoms of insubordination manifested theamselves, and some of the privates were confined in the Abbaye.f " At this period, a report, which had long been circulated, assumed a semblance of truth. The Duke of Orleans had been accused of being at the head of a party, and the newspapers of the day employed his name in the hints which they daily set forth, that France should follow the example of England. The Duke of Orleans was fixed upon, because, in the English revolution, the direct line of the royal family had been expelled in favour of the Prince of Orange. The thing was so often repeated, that the Duke of Orleans began at last to believe that he might place himself at the head of a party, and become the leader of a faction, without the qualification for such an office."-Memoirs of the Duchess d'Abrantes. E. f" The regiment of the French guards, consisting of 3600 men, in the highest state of discipline and equipment, had for some time given alarming symptoms of disaffection. Their colonel had ordered them, in consequence, to be confined to their barracks, when three hundred of them broke out of their bounds, and repaired instantly to the Palais Royal. They were received with enthusiasm, and liberally plied with money, by the Orleans party; and to such a height did the transport rise, that, how incredible soever it may appear, it is proved by the testimony of numerous witnesses above all suspicion, that women of family and distinction openly embraced the soldiers as they walked in the gardens with their mistresses. After these disorders had continued for some time, eleven of the ringleaders in the mutiny were seized and thrown in the prison of the Abbey; a mob of 6000 men immediately assembled, f.orced the gates of the prison, and brought them back in triumph to the Palais Royal. The King, upon the petition of the Assembly, pardoned the prisoners, and on the following day they were walking in triumph through the streets of Paris."-Alison's French Revolution. E. FR!ENCH. QIEVI LT[r"ON. 61 The men assembled at the P;lais Royal, shouting "6 To the Abbaye!" the mob instantly ran thither.'The doors were broken open, and the soldiers brought out, and carried away in triumph. Whilst the populace guarded them at the Palais RoyaI, a letter was written to the Assembly, demanding their liberation. Placed between the people on the one hand and thle government on the other, which was suspected, since it was about to act in its own behalf, the Assembly could not help interfering and committing an encroachment, by mieddling with the public police. Taking a resolution, at once prudent and adroit, it assured the Parisians of its desire for the moaintenalce of good order, exhorted them not to disturb it, and at the same time sent a deputation to the Kiing to implore his clemency, as an. irfallible mode of restoring peace and concord. The King, touched by its moderation, promised his clemency when order should be re-esta-bfished. The French guards were immediately sent back to prison, from which they were as imnmed;ately released by a pardon from the King. So far all was well; but the nobility, in joining the other two orders, had yielded with regret, and only upon a promise that its union with them should be of short duration. It still continuled to assemble every day, and protested against the proceedilngs,.f the 1,ational Assembly; its meetings gradually became less numerous on the 3d of July, 138 members attended; on the 10tl 93, and on the 1 lth but 89. The most obstinate, however, lhad persisted, and on the 11th they determined upon a protest, which suceedinirg events prevented them from drawing up. The court, on its part, had not yielded without regret and without plan. On recovering from its alarm, lafter the sitting of the 23d, it had approved the general union of the three esttes, in order to imnpede the march of the Assembly by means of the nobles, and in the hope of soon dissolving it by main force Necker llad been retained merely to mask, by his presence, the secret plots that were lhatching. Excepting a certain awitation, andl a degree of reserve that was employed towards him, he had no reason to stispect any grand machination. The King himself was not applried of all, and there were persons who proposed, no doubt, to go furltler than lie vished. Necker, who conceived that the whole activity of a statesman ouglzht to confine itself to reasoning, and who possesse(l just so much energy as wwas necessary to remonstrate, did so without efiecto Conjointly wvith Mounier, Lally-Tollendal, and Clermont-Tonnerre, 11e meditated the establishmlent of the English constitution. Tile court was meianwhile carrying on its secret preparations. The noble deputies having manifested an intention to withdraw, they were detained by hints thrown out to them of an event that would speedily happen. Trroops were approaching; old Marshal de Broglie had been appointed to the chief command of them, and tLe Baron de Besenval to the particular command of those which were around Palis. Fifteen regiments, mostly foreign, were in the environs of the capital. The exultation of the courtiers revealed the danger: and these conspirators, too prompt to threaten, thus compromised their projects. 6HISTORY OF THE The popular deputies apprized, not of all the particulars of a plan which is not yet entirely known, with which the King himself was but partially acquainted, but which certainly tended to emlploy violence, were irritated, and tirned their attention to the:means of resistance. We are ignorant, and shall probably ever remain so, of the share which secret means had in the insurrcction of tie 1ith of July, but this is of no consequence. The aristocrtacy was consp'illngthe popular party could conspire too. The means employed were eqial, setting aside the justice of the cause, anld justice was nlot on their side who would fain have broken up the union of the three orders, dissolved the national representation, and wreaked their vengeance upon its most courageous deputies. Milrabeau vwas of opinion that thle surest way of intimidating power was to force it to discuss, publiely, the measures which it was seen to take. To this end it was necessary to denounce it openly. if it hesitated to reply, if it had recourse to evasion, it would be condemnled; the nation would be warned and roused. On the motion of Miirabeau, the discussionl of the constitution was susp)ended, and he proposed to solicit the iKing to renmove the troops. In his language, lhe cormbined respect for the monarch with the severest reproaches of the government. He stated that friesh troops were daily advanacing; that al the communications were intercepted; that the bridges, the promenades, were converted into military posts; that circumstences, public and secret, hasty orders and countLter-orders, mnet all eyes, and were the heralds of war: to these facts he added bitter reproaches. "' iMore threatening soldiers," said lie, "' are sh)ow to the nation, than h6stile invaders would perhaps find to encounter, and a thousand times more, at least, than could be brought togetherlto succtour friends, the martyrs of their fidelity, and above all, to preserve that alliance of the Dutch, so valuable, so dearly bought, and so disgracefully lost." His speech was received with applause; and the address which he proposed was adopted, with the exception of one article, in which, wihile invoking the removal of the troops, he demlanded that they should be replaced by the civic guard: this article was suppressed.'lhe address was voted, with only four dissentient voices. In thlis celebrated address, which, as it is said, was not written by Mirabeau, but all the ideas of which he had communicated to one of his fiields, he foreboded alhnost every thing that was about to happen: the explosion of the multitude, and the defection of the troops from their intermingling with the citizens. NiJot less acute than bold, lie ventured to assure the King that his promises should not be vain. "' You have summoned us," said he,;' to regenerate the kingdom; your wishes shall be accomplished, in spite of snares, difficulties, dangers," &c. Tile address was presented by a deputation of twenty-four inemlbers. The King, having resolved not to enter into explanations, repiled that:the assemlblage of troops was for no other purpose than. the:maintenance of the public tranquillity, and the protection due to the Assembly; that, moreover, if the latter still felt any appreheun FRENCH REVOLUTION. 63 sions, lie would remove it to Soissons or Noyon, and that he would himself repair to Comnpiegne, The Assembly could not be satisfied with such an answer,l and especially with the proposal to withdraw from3 the capital, and to place itself between two camps. The Count de Crillon proposed that they should trust to the word of a King, who was an honest man. "l The W01d of a King,), who is an honest man," replied Mirabeanu, is a bad security for the conduct of his ministers; our blind confideance in outr kings has undone us: we demanded the withdrawal of the troops, and not permission to flee before them. We must insist again and again.' This opinion was not supported. Mlirabeau insisted so strongly upon open means, that lie may be forgiven any secret rnachinationls, if it be t rue that he actually resorted to them. Thle 11 th of July had now arrived. Necker had several times told tihe Kiing that, if his services were not acceptable, he would retire with submission.'" I take you at your word," replied the King. On the H th, in the evening, Necker received a note in which Louis XVI. required Ifili to keep his word, and urged him to set out, adding that he h}ad sufficient confidence in him to hope that lie would keep ihis departure a profounld secret. Necker, justifying the honourable confidence of the monarch, set out without apprizing his fiiends or even his darlghter, and in a few hours was at a considerable distance froni Versailles. The following day, July 12th, was Sunday. A report vas now circulated at Paris that Necker had been dismissed, as well as AMessrs. de Mo-ntmorin, de la Luzerne, de Puisegur, and de St. Priest. As their successors, Messrs, de Breteuil, de la Vaugfuyon, de Broglie, Foulon, canld Damnicourt, were mentioned, almost all known for their opplosition to the popular cause. The alarrm spread throughout Paris. Thie people hurried to the Palais Royal. A young -man, since ceelebrated Ti)r his republican enthusiasm, endowed with a tender heart but an inipetuols spirit, mounted a table, held up a pair of pistols, and shoutingo "5 To ars!"1 plucked a leaf firom a tree, of which lie made a ock(ade, and exhorted thde crowds to follow his example. The trees were lnsitantly stripped. The people then repaired to a nmuseuam containingi1 busts in wax. They seized thlose of Necker and the Duke of Orle-ans, who was threatened, it was said, with exile, and then sprecad themselves in the various quarters of Paris. T1his mob was passing thrl'olh the Rue St. -onor6, when it was met, near the Place Vend8nie, by a detachment of the Royal German regiment, lwhich rushed upon it and wounded several persons, among wVhom was a soldier of the French gluards. The latter, predisposed in favour of the people and against the Royal Germans, with whomn they had a few days before had a qla)1'rel, werle in barrlacks near the Place Louias XV.'They fired upon the Royal.Gernia:ls. The Prince de Lamnbese, who conimanded this regriment, instantly fell back upon the garden of the Tuilleries, charged the people who were quietly walkingthere, killed an old lmanl imridst thle confusion, and clealed the garden. MJeanwhile, the troops surrounllding Paris formed in the ChGamp de Mars and the Place -Louis XV; Terror, before! unbounded, was-now changed into fury. People 64 HISTORY OF THE ran into the city, shouting " To armns!" The mob hurried to the H8tel de Ville to demand weapons. The electors composing the general assembly were there met. They delivered out the arms, which they could no longer refuse, and which, at the instant when they determined to grant them, the people had already begun to seize. These electors composed at the moment tile only established authority. Deprived of all active powers, they assumed such as the occasion required, and ordered the districts to be convoked. All the citizens instantly assemlbled, to consult upon the means of protecting themselves at one and the same time against the rabble and the attack of the royal troops. During the nigfht, the populace, always ready for excitement, forced and burned the barriers, dispersed the gate-keepers, and afforded free access by all the avenues to the city. The gunsmiths' shops were plundered. Those brigands who had already signalized themnselves at Reveillon's, and who on all occasions are seen springing up, as it were, out of the ground, again appeared, armed with pikes and bludgeons, spreading consternation. These events took place on Sultlday, the 12tlr of July, and in the night between Sunday and Mon(lay, the 13th. On Monday morning, the electors, still assembled at the 11atel de Ville, thought it incumbent on them to give a more legal form to their authority: they accordingly summoned the attendance of the provost of tile trades (pr6vdt des marchands), the ordinary administrator of the city. The latter refused to comply unless upon a formnal requisition. A requisition was in consequence issued; a certain number of electors were appointed as his assistants, and thus was composed a municipality invested with all necessary powers. This munllicipality sent for the lieutenant of police, and drew up in a few hours a p)lan for arming the civic militia. This militia was to consist of forty-eight thousand maen, furnished by thIe districts. The distinctive sign was to be the Parisian cockade, red and blue, instead of the green cockade. Every man found in arms and wearing this cockiade, without having been enrolled by his district in the civic guard, was to be apprellended, disarmned, and punished. Such was the primary origin of thle national guards. This plan was adopted by all the districts, which hastened to carry it into execlution. In the course of tile same morning, the people had plundered the house of St. Lazare in search of grain; they had forced the armoury to oltain arms, and had rummaged out the ancient armour and put it on. The rabble, wearing helmets afnd carrying pikes, were seen inundating the city. The populace now showed itself hostile to pil lage; with its uslual fickleness, it affected to be disinterested; it spared money, took nothing but arms, and itself apprehended the brigands. The French guards and the night-watch had offered their services, and they had been enrolled in the civic guard. Arms were still demanded with loud shouts. Flesselles, the provost, who had at first resisted his fellow-citizens, now manifested great zeal, and pronmised twelve thousand muskets on that very day, and more on the following days. He pretended that he had made a contract with an unknown gunsmith. The thing appeared difficult, considering the short time that had elapsed. Meanwhile, evening drew on; FRENCH REVOLUTION. {} the chests of aims announced by Flesselles were carried to the H8tel de Ville; they.Yere opened, and found to be full of old linen At this sight'the multitude was fired with indignation against the provost, who declared that he had been deceived. To appease them, he directed theml to go to the Carthusians, with the assurance that arms would there be found. The astonished Carthusians admitted the furious mob, conducted them into their retreat, and finally convinced them that they possessed nothing of the sort mentioned by the provost. The rabble, more exasperated than ever, returned with shouts of 6 Treachery!" To satisfy them, orders were issued for the manufactlre of fifty thousand pikes. Vessels with gunpowder were descending the Seine, on their way to Versailles; these were stopped, and an elector distributed the powder amidst the most imminent dang'er. A tremendous confusion now prevailed at the HIltel de Ville, the seat of the authorities, the head-quarters of the militia, and the centre of all operations. It was necessary to provide at once for the safety of the town. which was threatened by the court, and its internal safety endangered by the brigands; it was requisite every moment to allay the suspicions of the people, whvo believed that they were betrayed, and to save from their fury those who excited their distrust. About this place were to be seen carriages stopped, wagvons intercepted, travellers awaiting permission to proceed on their journey. During the night, the 1H:tel de Ville was once more mtenaced by the brigands. An elector, the courageous Moreau de St. Miery, to whose care it had been committed, caused barrels of powder to be brought, and threatened to blow it up. At this sight the brigands retired. Meanwhile the citizens, who had gone to thleir homes, held themselves in readiness for every kilnd of attack: they had unpa.ved the streets, opened the trelches, and taken all possible measures for resisting a siege. During these disturbances in the capital, consternation pervaded the Assembly. It had met on the morningl of the 13th, alarnmed by the events that were in preparation, and still ignorant of' what was passing in Paris. Mounier, the deputy, first rose and censured the dismissal of the ministers. Lally-Tollendal, wlho took his place in the tribune, pronounced a splendid panegylic on Necker, and.both joined in proposing an address, for the purpolse of soliciting the King to recal his disgraced ministers. M. de Virieu, a deputy of the nobility, even proposed to confirm the resolutions of the 17th of,June by a new oath. M. de Clermont-Tonnerre opposed this motion as useless; and, referring to the engagements by which the Assembly had already bound itself, he exclaimed, 6" The constitution shall be, or we will perish!'" The discussion had lasted some time, when news arrived of the disturbances in Paris during the morning of the 13th, and the calamities with which the capital was threatened between undisciplined Frenchmen, who, according to the expression of the Dukte de La Rochefoucault, were not in any one's hand, and disciplined foreigners, who were in the hand of despotism. It was instaltly reue,ved to send a deputation to the King, for the purpose of submitting VOL. L.-9 3 ;60 HISTORY OF THE to him a picture of'the desolation of the capital, and beseeching him to order the removal of the troops, and the establishment of thle civic guards. Thle King returned a cold, dry answer, which was far from according with his disposition, and alleged that Paris was not capable of gu.arding itself. The Assembly then, exalting itself to the noblest courage, passed a memorable resolution, in which it insisted onl the removal of the troops and the establishment of the civic guards; declared the ministers and all the agents of power responsible; threw upon the conlsellors of the King, of whatever rank they migllt be, the responsibility of the calamities that were impending, consolidated the public debt, forbade the mention of the infamolus term bankruptcy, persisted in its preceding resolutions, and directed the president to exo press its regret to M. iNecker and to the other ministers. After these measures, frauoght alike with energy and prudence, the Assembly, ill order to preserve its members from all persoral violence, declared itself permanent, and appointed MI. de Lafayette vice-president, to relieve the worthy Archbishop of Vienne, whose age did not permnit hlim to sit day and night. Thus passed the ilight between the 13th and 14th in agitation and alarm. Fearful tidings were every moment brought and contradicted. All the plans of the court were not known; but it was ascertained that several deputies were threatened, and that violence was, to be employed against Paris and the most distinguished members of the Assembly.' Having ad journed for a short time, the Assembly again met, at five in the morning of the 14th of July: with imposing calmness, it resumed the consideration of the constitution, and discutssed with great propriety the means of accelerating its execution, and of conducting it with prudence. A committee was appointed to prepare the questions; it was composed of the Bishop of Autun, the Archbishop of Bordeaux, Messrs. Lally, Clermont-Tonnerre, Aloin ier, Sieyes, Cllapelier, and Bergasse. The mprning passed away. Intelligence more and more alarmning continued to arrive. The Kinlg, it was said, was to set off in the night, and the Assembly would be left exposed to several foreign regiments. At this moment the princes, the Duchess de Polignac, and the Queen, were seen walking in the orangery, flattering tile officers and the soldiers, and causing refreshments to be distributed amon, them. It appears that a grand plan had been devised for the night between the 14th and 15th; that Paris was to be attacked on seven points, the Palais Royal surrounded, the Assembly dissolved, the declaration of the 23d of June submitted to the parlia. ment, and finally, that the wants of the exchequer were to be supplied by bankruptcy and paper money. So much is certain, that the comman dants of the troops had received orders to advance in the night between the 14th and 15th, that the paper money had been prepared, that tle barracks of the Swiss were full of ammunition, and that the governor of the Bastille had disfurnished the fortress, with the exception of some indispensable articles. In the afternoon, the terrors of the Assembly redoubled. The Prince de Lambese was seen passing at fill gallop. The report of cannon was heard, and people clapped their ears to tile ground to catch the slightest sounds. Mirabeau then proposed to sus FtEmNCiI R.lErVOLUTION. 67 pend tile discussions, and to se-nd another deputation to the King T'he deputation set out immediately, to make friesl. remonstrances. At this moment, two members of the Assembly, who had come from IParis3 in the utmost haste, declared that the people there were slaulhterinog one another; one of them affirmed that he had seen the headless body of a man dressed in black. It began to grow dark. Tle arrival of two electors was announced. The most profound silenlce pervaded the hail; the sound of their foiotalls was heard amid tie dtarkness; and the Assembly learned from their lips that the Bastille was attacked, that cannon had been fired, that blood had been spilt, and that the city was threatened with tile direst calamities. A iresh deputation wasinstantly despatched before the return of the prezeding one. Just as it was about to depart, the first arrived, and brought the answer of tle King. It reported that tle King had ordered the troops encamped in the Chamnps de Mars to be withdrawvn, and, lhaving been apprized of the formation of the civic guard, had appointed officers to commrand it. On tie arrival of' the second deputation, the King, more agitated thali ever, saidl, " Gentlemen, you rend my heart more and more by thle account you give of the calamities of Paris. It is not possible that the orders given to the troops can be the cause of tllei." Notlliag uhad yet been obtained but the removal of the army. It was now two in tle morning. The answer returned to the city of Paris was, " thlat two delUtal;tion3s had been sent, and that tile applications should be renewed that day, unltil they had obtained the success whichl might justly be expected fi'om the heart of the King, when extraneous impiressions did tnot counteract its impulses." The sitting was suspended for a slior't time, and in the evening intelligence of the events of the 14th allrrived. The populace, ever since the night of the 13th, had tlhroned about the 3atstille. Solne nusket-slhots hlad been fired, and it appears tllat rinM:leeaders had repeatedly shouted " To tile Bastille [' The wish for its destruction l1had been expressed in the instructions given to some of the depulties; thus the ideas of the public lad befomrehand taken that ldirection. A cry for arms was still kept up. A report was spread that t.le t-6tel des Invalides contained a conlsiilderable quantity. Thlle niob ilstantly relpatired tlihlier. M. de Sombreuil, thIe governor, ordered admittanlce to be denied, sayingi, tlhat lie must senid for orders to Versailles. T:'le populace, turninrg a deaf eal to all expostulation, l'slled inlto the lhitel, and carried off tie cannon and a great quantity of!' umiskets. A lar,,e concourse of people were already besieging the Ba:stille. Thlle declared thlat the giuns of the fortress were pointed at e ity, and that cithey ust take care to prevent ke cre to prevet their fiing upon tlhein. i'lle deputy of a district solicited admlission into the place, and obtatimed it of thle commandant. In goinig over it, he found thirty-two Swiss amid eiglhty-two invalids, and received a promise if'om the alarrisoll not to fire unless it should be attacked. During this parle'y, the people, not seeing tile leputy return, began to be exasperated, and the latter was obliged to show himself in order to appease the multitude, At length ha retired, about eleven o'clock in the forenoon Half an 68 HISTORY OF THE hour had scarcely elapsed, before a fresh mob arrived with arms, shouting, " Let us storm the Bastille!" The garrison summoned the assail ants to retire, but they persisted. Two men, with great intrepidity mounted the roof of the guard-house, and broke with axes the chains of the bridge, which fell down. The rabble rushed upon it, and' ran to a second bridge, pulposing to pass it in like manner. At this moment a discharge of musketry brought it to a stand; it fell back, but firingL at the same time. The conflict lasted for a few moments. The electors, assembled at the H8tel de Ville, hearing the report of musketry, becamue more and more alarmed, and sent two deputations, one on the heels of the other, to require the commandant to admit into the fortress a detachment of the Paris militia, on the ground that all the military force in the capital ought to be at the disposal of the city authorities. These two deputations arrived in succession. Amidst this siege by the populace, it was with great difficulty that they could make themselves heard. The sound of the drum, the sight of a flag, for a time suspended the firing. The deputies advanced; the garrison awaited them, but it was difficult to understand each other. Musketsliots were fired, froml some unknown quarter. The mob, persuaded tlhat it was betrayed, then rushed forward to set fire to the building; (,ll this the garrison fired with grape. The French guards thereupon came tup with cannon, and commenced an attack in form.~ All morning, since nine, there has been a cry every where:'To the Bastille!' Rtepea.ted deputations of citizens' have been here, passionate for arms; whom de Laullaty has got dismissed by soft speeches through port-holes. Towards noon, Elector Thuriot de la Rosi&1re gains admittance: finds Delaunay indisposed for sureIlder; lnay, disposed for blowing up the place rather. Thuriot mounts with him to the battleneitls: heaps of paving-stones, old iron, and missiles, lie piled: cannon all utlly leve{lled in every embrasure a cannon,-only drawn back a little But outwards, behold, O Tlhuriot, how the multitude flows on, welling throug h every street; toc:siii fuirionsly pealing, all drums beating the gdn6r2ale: the suburb Sainte-Antoine,ollinllg litherward wholly, as one man! Such vision (spectral yet real) thou, 0 Titirio)t, asi, olll thy Mount of Vision, beholdest in this moment: prophetic of other phIanlt;l:iaories, anid lold-gibbering spectral realities which thou yet beholdest not, bllt:lhalt! " l~ae voulez-vous?" said Delaunay turning pale at the sight, with an air of reproach, almost of menace.' Monsieur,' said Thuriot, rising into the moral snlilille, i what mean yuu? Consider if I could not precipitate both of us from this hei-lll,' —say only a hundred feet, exclusive of the walled ditch! Whereupon Delariiay fell silent. " WVo to thee, Delaunay, in such an hour, if thou canst not, taking some one firmn decision, irule circumstances! Soft speeches will not serve; hard grape-shot is.questiotiable; but hovering between the two is un-questionable. Ever wilder swells the title ofi rniel; their infiiite hulm waxing ever louder, into imprecations, perhaps into crackle of' stray 1iusketry-which latter, on walls nine feet thick, cannot do execution. The oulter drawbridge has been lowered for Thuriot; new deputation of citi zens (it is the third, and noisiest of all) penetrates that way into the outer court: soit pleechies producing no clearance of these, Delaunay gives fire; pulls up his drawbridg-re. A slight sputter;-which has kindled the too combustible chaos; made it a roaringi fire-chaos! Bursts forth insurrection, at sight of its own blood, (for there were deaths by that sputter of fire,) into endless rolling explosion of musketry, distractioli. execration;-and over head, from the fortress, let one great gun, with its grap;e-shot. go booming, to show what we could do. The Bastille is besieged " l11, then, all Frenchmen that have hearts in their bodies! Roar with all your throats of' cartilage and metal, ye sons of liberty; stir spasmodically whatsoever of itmlloiit fitculty is in you, soul, body, or spirit; for it is the hour! Smite, thou Louis Tourna;y, cartwright of the Marais, old-soldier of the regiment Dauphin6; smito at FRENCH REVOLU'TION. 69 During these proceedings, a note addressed by tie Baron de Besenval to Delaunay, governor of the Bastille, was intercepted and read at the HMtel de Ville. Besenval exhorted Delaunay to resist, assuring him that he should soon receive succour. It was in fact in the evening of that day that the plans of the court were to be carried into execution. Meanwhile, Delaunay seeing the desperation of the mob, and no succours having arrived, seized a lighted match with the intention of blowing up the fortress. The garrison opposed it, and obliged him to surrender: the signals were made, and a bridge lowered. TIhe besiegers approached, promising not to do any mischief. The crowd, however, rushed in, and took possession of all the courts. The Swiss found means to escape. The invalids, attacked by the populace, were saved from their fury solely by the zealous interference of the French guards. At this moment, a female, beautiful, young, and trembling, came forward; she was supposed to be the daughter of Delaunay; she was seized and about to be burned, when a brave soldier rushed to the spot, wrested her from the hands of the enraged rabble, conducted her to a place of safety, and hurried back to the affray. It was now half past five o'clock. The electors were in the most painful anxiety, when they heard a dull and continuous murmur. A crowd approached, shouting " Victory!" They poured into the hall: a French guardsman, covered with wounds and crowned with laurels, was borne in triumph by the mob. The regulations and the keys of the Bastille were carried on the point of a bayonet: a bloody hand raised above the mob exhibited a bunch of hair; it was the queue of Delaunay, the governor, whose head had just been stricken off. Two French guards, Elie and Hullin, had defended hinm to the last extremity. Other victims had fallen, though heroically defended against the ferocity of the mob. A strong animosity began to be expressed against Flesselles, the provost of the trades; he was accused of treason. It was alleged that he had deceived the people by repeatedly promising them arms which he never meant to give them. The hall was. soon full of men heated with a long combat, and backed by a hlundred thousand more outside the hotel, all eager to enter in their turln. The electors strove to justify Flesselles to the mob. His assurance began to forsake him, and, already quite pale, he exclaimed, " Since I anm suspected, I will retire."-" No," was the reply made co him, " come to the Palais Royal to be tried." Accordingly, he descended to repair thither. The agitated multitude surrounded and pressed upon him. On reaching tile Quai Pelletier, he was struck to the grounu by a that outer drawbridge chain, though the fiery hail whistles round thee! Never, over nave or felloe, did thy axe strike such a stroke. Down with it, man; down with it to Orcus: let the whole accursed edifice sink thither, and tyranny be swallowed up for ever! Mounted some say on the roof of the guard room, some' on bayonets stuck into joints of the wall,' Louis Tournay smites, brave Aubin Bonnemere (also an old soldier) seconding him: the chain yields, breaks; the huge drawbridge slamls down, thundering (ctvrecfracas.) Glorious: and, yet, alas, it is still bhut the outworks The:eight grim towers with their Invalides' musketry, their paving stones and cannon-mn;otths still soar aloft intact;-ditch yawning impassable, stone-faced; the inner dranwbridge, with its back towards us: the Bastille is still to take!"-Carlyle's " French Revolhtion. " L. 70 HISTORY OF THE pAstol-shot, fired by a person unknown. It is asserted that a letter had been found upon Delaunay, in which Flesselles thus wrote to himm:. Hold out, while I amuse the Parisians with cockades." Such were the disastrous events of that day. A feeling of terror speedily followed the intoxication of victory. The conquerors of the Bastille, astonished at their audacity, and expecting-to find the hand of authority formidable on the following day, durst not make themselves known. Every moment, rumours were spread that the troops were approaching to storm Paris. Moreau de St. Mery, the same person who on the preceding day had threatened the brigands to blow up the Hfftel de Ville,, remained unshaken, and issued upwards of three thousand orders in a few hours. As soon as the capture of the Bastille was known at the WHtel de Ville, the electors had sent the intelligence to the Assembly, which received it about midnight. The sitting was suspended, and the tidings spread with rapidity. The court, up to this moment, conceiving no notion of the energy of the people, laughing at the efforts of a blind rabble to take a fortress which the gre-t Conde had besieged in vain, was calmly cracking its jokes oh the subject. Thle King, nevertheless, began to be uneasy: his last answers had betrayed his grief. He had retired to bed. The Duke de Liancourt, so well known for his generous sentiments, was the particular friend of Louis XVI., and, by'virtue of his office of grandmaster of the wardrobe, he always had access to the King. On learning the occurrences in Paris, he repaired in all haste to the apart4 ment of the monarch, awoke him in spite of the ministers, and informned him of wlhat had happened.'" What, rebellion!" exclaimed the prinGee. " Sire," replied the duke,' rather say revolution." The King, enlightened by his representations, consented to go the next morning to the Assembly. The court yielded also, and this act of confidence was resolved upon. During this interval, the Assembly had resumed its sitting. Unacquainted with the new dispositions imparted to the Kilmg, it determined to send a last deputation, to try to move him, and to obtain from him what he had not yet been prevailed upon to grant. This deputation was the fifth since the commencement of those calamitous events. It was composed of twenty-four members, and was just setting out when Mirabeau, more vehement than ever, stopped'it. " Tell the King," cried he,-"' be sure to tell him, that the foreign hordes by which we are invested were yesterday invited by the princes, the princesses, the he-favourites, and the she-favourites, and received their caresses, and their exhortations, and their presents. Tell him that the livelong night these foreign satellites, gorged with money and with wine, have been predicting, in their impious songs, the subjugation of France, and that their brutal wishes invoked the destruction of the National Assembly. Tell him that, in his very palacee the courtiers mingled with their dances the sound of that barbarous music, and that such was the prelude to the massacre of St. Bartho lomew. Tell him that that Henry, whose memory the whole world blesses, that one of his ancestors whom he meant to take for his pattern, allowed provisions to be conveyed into rebellious Paris, which he was besieging in person; whereas, his ferocious councillors are FRENCH REVOLUTION. 71 turning back the flour that commerce is sending to faithful and faimished Paris." Thile deputation was just about to proceed to the King, when news arrived that he was coming, of his own accord, without guards and without escort. The hall rang with applause. " Wait," cried Miral beau gravely, "6 till tile King has made us acquainted with his good dispositions. Let a sullen respect be the first welcome paid to the monarch in this moment of grief. The silence of nations is a lPsson fo1r k ilngs." I.ouis XVI. then entered, accompanied by his two brothers. His simple and touching address excited the warmest enthusiasm. iJe spoke cheeringly to the Assembly, which he called for the first time, the National Assembly. He mildly complained of the suspicions that lhad been conceived of hinm. " You have been afraid of me," said lhe;' "now, for my part, I put my trust in you." These words were hailed with applause. The deputies immediately rose, surrounded the monarch, and escorted him back on foot to the palace. The throng pressed around him; tears started from every eye; and he could scarcely open himself a passage through this numerous retinue. The Queen, stationed at that moment with the court in a balcony, co-temnplated froin a distance this affecting scene. Her son was in her arms: her daughter, standing beside her, was sportively playing with her brother's hair. The princess, deeply moved, appeared to be delighted by this expression of the love of the French. Ah! how often has a reciprocal emotion reconciled hearts during these fatal dissensions! For a moment all seemed to be forgotten; but, on the morrow, nay, perhaps the very same day, the court had resumed its pride, the people their distrust, and implacable hatred recommenced its course. Peace was made with the assembly, but it had yet to be made with Paris. The Assembly first sent a deputation to the HMtel de Ville to convey the tidings of the happy reconciliation brought about with the King. Bailly, Lafayette, and Lally-Tollendal, were among its members. Their presence diffused the liveliest joy. The speech of Lally excited such transport, that he was carried in triumph to a window of the H8tel de Ville to be shown to the people. A wreath of flowers was placed on his head, and these honours were paid him facing the very spot where his father expired with a gag in his mouth. The death of the unfortunate Flesselles, the head of the municipality, and the refusal of the Duke d'Aumont to accept the command of the civic militia, left the appointments of provost and commandant-general to be filled up. Bailly was proposed, and amidst the loudest acclamations he was nominated successor to Flesselles, with the title of mayor of Paris. The wreath which had been placed on the head of Lally was transferred to that of the new mayor; he would have taken it off, but the Archbishop of Paris held it whe're it was lil opposition to his wishes. The virtuous old man could not repress his tears, and he resigned himself to his new functions. A worthy representative of a great assembly, in presence of the majesty of the throne, lie was less capable of withstanding the storms of a commonalty, where the HISTORY O~F THE multitude struggled tumultuously against its magaistrates. With exemplary self-denial, however, he prepared to undertake the difficult task of providing subsistence and feeding a populace who repaid him. in the sequel with such base ingratitude. A commandant of the militia yet remained to be appointed. There was in the hall a bust sent by enfranchised America to the city of Paris: Moreau de St. Mery pointed to it with his finger; all eyes were directed towards it. It was the bust of the Marquis de Lafayette. A general cry proclaimed him commandant. A Te Deum was inistantly voted, and the assembly proceeded in a body to Notre-Dame. The new magistrates, the Archbishop of Paris, s.tle electors, mingled with French guards and soldiers of the militia, walking arm in arm, repaired to the ancient cathedral, in a species of intoxication, By the way, the Foundlings threw themselves at the feet of Bailly, who had laboured zealously in behalf of the hospitals, and called him their father. Bailly clasped them in his arms, and called them his children. On reaching the church, the ceremony was performed, and the congregation then dispersed in the City, where a delirious joy had succeeded the terrors of the preceding day. At this moment the people were flocking to see the den so long dreaded, to which there was now free access. They visited the Bastille with an eager curiosity, and with a sort of terror. They sought for the instruments of torture, for the deep dungeons. They went thither more particularly to see an enormous stone, placed in the middle of a dark and damp prison, to the centre of which was fixed a ponderous chain. The court, as blind in its apprehensions as it had been in its confidence, felt such a dread of the populace, that it imagined every moment that a Parisia'n army was marching to Versailles. The Count d'Artois, and the Polignac family, so dear to the Queen, quitted France at that time, and were the first emigrants. Bailly came to cheer the King, and persuaded him to return to Paris, which he resolved to do, in spite of the resistance of the Queen and the court.* The King prepared to set out. Two hundred deputies were directed to accompany him. The Queen took leave of him with profound grief. The body-guard escorted him to Sevres, where they stopped to await his return. Bailly, at the head of the municipality, received him at the gates of Paris, and presented to him the keys formerly offered to Henry IV. "That good King," said Bailly to him, "had conquered his people; at present, it is the people who have re-conquered their King." The nation, legislating at Versailles, was armed " "The day of the King's entry into Paris was the first of the emigration of the noblesse. The violent aristocratical party, finding all their coercive measures overturned, and dreading the effects of popular resentment, left the kingdom. The Count d'Artois, the Prince of Cond6, the Prince of Conti, Marshall Broglio, and the whole family of the Polignacs, set off in haste, and arrived in safety at Brussels-a fatal example of defection, which, being speedily followed by the Inferior nobility, pro duced the most disastrous consequences. But it was the same in all the subsequent changes of the Revolution. The leaders of the royalist party, always the first to propose violent measures, were at the same time unable to support them when furiously opposed: they diminished the sympathy of the world at their fall from so high a rank, by showing that they were unworthy of it."-Alison's French Revolution. E. FRtENCH REVOLUT1ON. 73 at Paris. Louis XVI., on entering, found himself surrounded by a silent multitude, arrayed in military order. He arrived at the H6tel de Ville, passing under an arch of swords crossed over his head, as a mark of honour. His address was simple and touching. The people, unable to contain themselves, at length burst forth, and lavished upon thile King their accustomed applause. These acclamations somewhat soothed the heart of the prince; nevertheless, he could not disguise a feeling of joy on perceiving the body-guard stationed on the heights of Sevres; and, at his return, the Queen,,hrowing herself into his arms, embraced him as though she had been afraid that she should never see him again. Louis XVI., in order to satisfy completely the public wish, ordered the dismissal of the new ministers, and the reinstatement of Necker. IM. de Liancourt, the friend of the King, and his most useful adviser, was elected president by the Assembly. The noble deputies, who, though they attended the deliberations, still refused to take any part in them, at length yielded and gave their votes. Thus was consum mated the amalgamation of the orders. From that moment the Revolution might be looked upon as accomplished. The nation, possessed of the legislative power through the Assembly, and of the public force through itself, could henceforward carry into effect whatever was beneficial to its interest. It was by refusing the equality of imposts that the government had rendered the States-General necessary; it was by refusing a just division of authority among those states that it had lost all influence over them; finally, it was in attempting to recover that influence that it had driven Paris to insurrection, and provoked the whole nation to appropriate to itself the public force. At this moment all was agitation in that immense capital, where a new authority had just been established. The same movement which had impelled the electors to set themselves in action, urged all classes to do the same. The Assembly had been imitated by the HWtel de'Ville, lthe EI-6tel de Ville by the districts, and the districts by all the corporations. Tailors, shoemakers, bakers, domestic servants, meeting at the Louvre, in the Place Louis XV., in the Champs Elys6es, deliberated in form, notwithstanding the repeated prohibitions of the municipality. Amidst these contrary movements, the Hotel de Ville, opposed by the districts, and annoyed by the Palais Royal, was encompassed with obstacles, and was scarcely adequate to the duties of its immense administration. It combinea in itself alone the civil, judicial, and military authority. The head-quarters of the militia were established there. The judges, at first, uncertain respecting their powers, sent thither accused persons. It possessed even the legislative power, for it was charged to form a constitution for itself. For this purpose, Bailly had demanded two commissioners for each district, who, by the name of representatives of the commune, were to draw up its constitution. The electors, in order that they might be able to attend to all these duties, had divided themselves into several committees. One, called the committee of research, superintended the police; another, called the committee of subsistence, directed its attention to the supply of provisions-the most difficult and dangerVOL. I. —-10 4 74 HISTORY OF THE ous task of all. It was in the latter that Bailly was himself obliged to labour night and day. It was necessary to make continual purr chases of corn, then to get it ground, and afterwards carried to Paris through the famished country. The convoys were frequently stopped, and it required numerous detachments to prevent pillage by tile way and in the markets. Though the state sold corn at a loss, that the bakers might keep down the price of bread, the multitude was not satisfied: it was found expedient to reduce tile price still more, aind the dearth of Paris was increased by this very diminution, because the country people flocked thither to supply themselves. Fears for the morrow caused all who could to lay in an abundant stock, and thus what was accumulated in some hands left nothing for others. It is confidence that accelerates the operations of commerce, that pro0duces an abundant supply of articles of consumption, and that renders their distribution equal and easy. But when confidence disappears, commercial activity ceases; articles of consumption no longer arriving in sufficient quantity to meet the wants, those wants becolrle importunate, add confusion to dearth, and prevent the proper distribution of the little that is left. The supply of subsistence was therefore the most arduous duty of all. Bailly and the committee were a prey to painful anxieties. FThe whole labour of the day scarcely sufficed for the wants of the day, and they had to begin again on the morrow with the same perplexities. Lafayette, commandant of the civic militia, had as many troubles to encounter as Bailly. HIe had incorporated into this militia the French guards devoted to the cause of the revolution, a certain number of Swiss, and a great quantity of soldiers who had deserted fronm their regiments in the hope of higher pay. The King had himself authorized this proceeding. These troops, collectively, formed what were called the companies of the centre. The militia assumed the name of the national guard, adopted a uniform, and added to the two colours of the Parisian cockade, red and blue, the white colour, which was that of the King. This was the tricoloured cockade, whose destinies Lafayette predicted, when he declared that it would malke the tour of the world. It was at the head of these troops that Lafayette strove, for two consecutive years, to maintain the public tranquillity, and to enforce the execution of the laws which the Assembly daily enacted. Lafayette, the offspring of an ancient family which had remained uncontaminated amidst the corruption of the great, endowed with a firm and upright mind, and fond of true glory, had become weary of the frivolities of the court and of the pedantic discipline of our armies. As his own country offered nothing noble to be attempted, he decided in favour of the most generous enterprise of the age, and embarked for America, the day after that on which a report reached Europe that it was subdued. He there fought by the side of Washington, and decided the enfranchisement of the New World by the alliance of France. Returning to his own country with a European renown, welcomed at court as a novelty, he showed himself there, simple and free as an Americ.an. When philosophy, which had been but a pastime for noble idlers, FRENCH REVOLUTION. 75 required sacrifices from them, Lafayette persisted almost alone inl his opinions, demanded the States-General, contributed powerfully to the junction of the orders, and, by way of recompense, was appointed commlnandant-general of the National Guard. Lafayette had not the passions and the genius which frequently lead to the abuse of power,: with an equable mind, a sound understanding, and a system of invariable disinterestedness, he was peculiarly fitted for the part which circumistances had allotted to him-that of superintending the execution of the laws. Adored by his troops, though he had not captivated them by victory, ever calm and full of resources, amidst the ebullitions of the mulltitude lie preserved order with indefatigable vigilance. The parties which had found him incorruptible, depreciated his abilities, because they could not attack his character. lIe formed, however, no false estimate of men and events, appreciated the court and the party leaders at no more than their real value, and protected them at the peril of his life without esteeming them; struggled, frequently without hope, against the factions, but with the perseverance of a man who is determined never to forsake the public weal, even when he deerms it hopeless. Lafayette, notrithstandirg his indefatigable vigilance, was not always successful in his endeavours to check the popular fury. For, let a force be ever so active, it cannot show itself every where against a populace that is every where in agitation, and looks upon every Mnan as an enemy. Every moment, the most absurd reports were circulated and credited. Sometimses it was said that the soldiers of the French guards had been poisoned; at others, that the flour had been wilfullly adulterated, or that its arrival had been prevented; and those who took the greatest pains to bring it to the capital, were obliged to appear before an ignorant mob, who overwhelmed them with abuse or covered them with applause, according to the hamour of the moment. Whether it was, however, that men were paid for aggravating the disturbances by instigating the rabble, or that they had still more detestable motives, so much is certain, that they directed the fury of the people, who knew not either how to select or to seek long for their victirns. Foulon and Berthier were pursued and apprehended at a distance from Paris. This was done with evident design. There was nothing spontaneous in the proceedings, except the fury of the mob by whom they were murdered. Foulon, formerly an intendant, a harsh and rapacious mnan, had co mmitted horrible extortions, and had been one of the ministers appointed to succeed Necker and his colleagues. He was apprehended at Virey, though he had spread a report of his death. He was conveyed to Paris, and reproached by the way with lhaving said that the people ought to be made to eat hay. A collar of nettles was put round his neck, a bunch of thistles in his hand, and a truss of hay at his back. In this state he was dragged to the Hf8tel de Ville. At the same instant, his son-in-law, Berthier de Sauvigny, was apprehended at Compi/gne, by an order, as it was alleged, of the commune of Paris, which had never issued any such order. The commune instantly wrote, directing that he should be released; but this injunction was not executed. lHe was brought to Paris at the very moment 76 HISTORY OF THE that Foulon was exposed at the H8tel de Ville to the ragge iJ, tl,, fhurious rabble. They were for putting him to death. Thie remonstrance of'Lafayette had pacified them for a moment, and they consented that Foulon should be tried; but they insisted that sentence should be passed forthwith, that they might be gratified by its.immediate execution. So-me electors had been chosen to act as judges; but they had on various pretexts refused the terrible office. At length Bailly and Lafayette were designated for it; and they were already reduced to the cruel extremity of devoting themselves to the rage of the populace or sacrificing a victim. Lafayette, however, continued to temporize with great art and firmness: he had several times addressed the crowd with success. The unfortunate Foulon, placed on a seat by his side, had the imprudence to applaud his concluding words. "; Look you," said a bystander, c" how they play into each other's hands." At this expression the crowd became agitated, and rushed upon Foulon. Lafayette made incredible efforts to save him, from the murderers; again the unfortunate old man was dragged from him, and hanged to a lamp. His head was cut off, stuck on a pike, and paraded through Paris. At this moment Berthier arrived in a cabriolet, escorted the guards, and followed by'the multitude. The bleeding head was shown to him, without his suspecting that it was the head of his father-in-law. He was conducted to the H- tel de Ville, where he uttered a few words, fall of courage and indignation. Seized anew by the mob, he disengaged himself for a moment, snatched a weapon, made a desperate defence, and soon perished like the unhappy Foulon. These murders had been conducted by enemies either to Foulon or to the public welfare; for the apprehension of the victims was the result of contrivance, though the fury of the rabble at sight of them had been spontaneous, like most of its movements. Lafayette, full of grief and indiglnation, r esolved to resign. Bailly and the municipality, alarmed at this intention, were anxious to divert him from it. It was then agreed that he should announce his resignation, to show his dissatisfaction with the people, but that he should suffer himself to be persuaded to retain his command by the entreaties that would not fail to be addressed to him. The people and the militia did actually throng around him, and promised the utmost obedience in future. On this condition he resumed the command; and, subsequently, he had the satisfaction of preventing many disturbances by his own energy and the zeal of his troops. Meanwhile Necker had received at Basle the commands of the King and the solicitations of the Assembly. It was the Polignacs, whom he had left triumphant at Versailles, and whom he encountered as fugitives at Basle, that first apprized him of the misfortunes of the throne, and the sudden return to favour that awaited him. He set out and traversed France, drawn in triumph by the people, to whom, according to his custom, he recommended peace and good order. Though an,enemy of the Baron de JBesenva], he went to his succour, and promised to demand his pardon from the Parisians. The King received him with embarrassment, the Assembly with enthusissm; -and he resolved to proceed to Paris, where he too mi'ght expect FRENCH REVOLUTION, 77 to have his day of triumph. Necker's intention was to sohicit of the electors the pardonl and liberation of the Baron de Beseuval,. In vain did Bailly, not less an enemy than himself to rigorous measures, but a more just appreciator of circumstances, represent to him the danger of such a step, and observe that this favour, obtained in a moment of excitement, would be revoked next day as illegal, because an administrative body could neither condemn! nor pardon; Necker persisted, and made a trial of his influence over the capital I He repaired to tile H8tel de Ville on the 29th of July. His hopes were surpassed, and he could not help believing himself omnipotent on beholding the transports of the multitude. Deeply affected, his eyes filled with tears, he demanded a general aimnesty, which was instantly granted by acclamation. The two assemblies of the electors and representatives, manifested equal enthusiasm: the electors decreed a general amnesty; the representatives of the commune ordered the liberation of BesenvaL Necker retired intoxicated, taking to himself thle plaudits that were addressed to his dismissal from office. But that very day lhe was destined to be undeceived. Mirabean prepared for him a cruel reverse. In the Assembly, in the districts, a general outcry was raised against the sensibility of the minister, very excusable, it was said, but mistaken. The district of' the Oratoire, instigated, as we are assured, by Mirabeau, was the first to find fault. It was maintained on all sides that an administrative body could neither condemn nor absolve. The illegal measure of the H8tel de Ville was annulled, and the detention of the Baron de Besenval confirmed. So soon was verified the opi-:rlon of the sagacious Bailly, which Necker could not be persuaded to follow. At this moment parties began to speak out more decidedly. The parliaments, the nobility, the clergy, the court, all threatened with tle same ruin, had united their interests, and acted in concert. Neither the Count d'Artois nor the Polignacs were any longer at the court. Consternation mingled with despair pervaded the aristocracy. Having been unable to prevent what it termed the evil, it ans naow desirous that the people should commit as much evil as possible, in order to bring about good by the very excess of that evil. TihiS system, compounded of spite and perfidy, which is called political pessinmism, begins among parties as soon as they have suffered sufficient losses to make them renounce what they have left in the hope of regaitning the whole. The aristocracy began from, this time to adopt this system, and it was firequently seen voting with the most violent members of the popular party. Circumstances draw forth men. The danger which threatened the nobility, produced a champion for it. Younlg Cazalts, captain in the Queen's Dragoons, had found in himself an unlooked-for energy of mind and facility of expression. Precise and simple, he said promptly and suitably what he had to say; and it is to be regretted that hlis upright mind was devoted to a cause which had no valid reasons to urge till it had been persecuted. The clergy had found its dlefelnder in the Abbe Maury. That abb6, a practised and inexhaustible sophist, had many happv sallies and great coolness: he could courageouskly HISTORY OF THE withstand tumult and audaciously oppose evidence. Such were the ineans and the dispositions of the aristocracy. The ministry was without views and without plans. iYecker, hated by the court, which endured him fiom compulsion, —Necker alone had, not a plan, but a wish. He had always a longing after the English constitution; the best no doubt that can be adopted, as an accoimmodation between the throne, the aristocracy, ald the peolple; bult this constitution, proposed by tile Bishop of Langres, befbre tlle establishment of a sinagle assembly, and refused by thle first orders, had become impracticable. The high nobility would not adlmit of two chambers, because that would be a compromise; the inferior nobility, because it could not have access to the upper chamlber; the populLar party, because, still filled with apprelensions of the aristocracy, it was unwilling to leave any influence to the latter. At few deputies on ly, some firom moderation,-eotlers because that idea wav theill cswl, lislled for English institutions, and formed thle whole party.of the minlister — a weak party, because it held forth only conciliatory views to exatsperated passions, and opposed to its adversaries arguments alone, without any means of action. The popular party began to disagree, because it began to conquer. Lally-Tollendal, MIounier, Malouet, and otlher partisains of N ecke r, approved of all that had been done tihus far, because all tlhat had beent done had brought over tile government to their ideas, that is to say, to the Engllish constitution.'hlley now judged tlhat tlis was sufficienit; recoinciled with power, they wislled to stop there. Thlie popular )ilprty, on the contrary, conceived thtat it was not yet time to stop. It wtsI in the Breton club that the question was discussed wvith tle greatest veltemence. A sincere conviction was the motive of the m:ajilority; Itersonal pretensions began nevertheless to I'manifest tlhemselves, at(ld t.ie movements of private interest to succeed tlIe first fligllts of a1l tiotislll. Barnave, a youngr advocate of G~renoblet, eildowed vitl a cl(tar atlltl ready rmind, nnd possessingl, in the higlhest degree, the talents relllisite for a good speaker, frmied with thle two Lalnetlhs a triumvirattc,'whicll interested by its youth, and soon ifialeniced by its iactivity anlld its abilities. Duport, tile young enou nsellor to tIle parliamrient, wlho we whave already seen distinguislhing limlsel; belong ed to their associationI. It was said at the time that Duport coinceived all that oughIt to be donle, that IBarlnave expressed it, and that the Lamneths executed it. IHowever, thlese young deputies were the fiiends of one another, without being yet declared enemies to any on0e. Trlme most couragoeous of' the popular leaders, lie who, ever in the van, opened the boldest discussions, was Mirabea;lu. Tie ahsllrd Iistituttionsof the old monarchy had shocked just mlinds, and excited tlie indignation of upright hearts; but it was i-npossible tihat thley slmotld not hlave galled sofne ardent spilit, and infllamed stroing passions. T'llis spirit was that of Mirabeau, wlhu, encountering firom his birtll every kind of tyralny, that of his flther, ofthle government, atnd of tlme tribunalls, spent his youth in combating and in hatilg them. lie was horn beneath the sun of Provence, the offspring of a noble ftnrily. Ule lad early made himself notorious by his dissolute manners. his FRENCH REVOLUTION. 79 quarrelr and an impetuous eloquence. His travels, observation, and imlnense reading, had taught him much, and his memory had retained it all. But extravagant, eccentric, nay, even a sophist, without the aid of passion, he beclame by its aid quite a different man. No sooner wais le excited by the tribune and the presence of his opponients than Jis millnd took fire l: tis first ideas were confused, his words incoherent, llis whole fi'ame agfitated, but presently the light burlst forth. His.mind tlhen performed in a moment the labour of years; and in the very tribune all was to him new discovery, sudden and energetic expressionl. If again crossed, he returned, still more forcible al1d more clear, anId presented the truth in imnages either striking or terrible. /Were thle circumstances difficult, were minds fatigued by a long discoission, or intimidated by danger, an ejaculation, a decisive word, droppled fi'om llis lips, his countenance looking terrific with ugliness and genllius, and the Assembly, enlightened or encouraged, enacted las or I,;passed magnanimous resolutions. -r'oud of lls lliigh qualities, jesting over his vices, by turns haughlty or supp)le, he won sonme by his flattery, awed others by his sarcasils, anltd led all in his train lby the extraordinary influence wlich lie possessedt. l1 is party was every where, iamollg the people, in tile Assenlbly, ill thle very court, with all those, in short, to whom lie wvas at the.nollelit addlressinlg limself. AMingling flmiliarly witl men,just w-llen it was reqlulisite to do so, lie had applauded tile rising talent of Barn;Ive, tlltough lie disliked hlis young friends; le appreciated the profiiiinl 1]i(lderstandigio- of Sieyes, and humoured his wild disposition; lie dreadled too pore a life in Lafayette; ill Necker lhe detested an extrellle riglour, t}le pride of reason, and tile pretension of directingl a rev oliltionv wincli lie klnewto be attributable to him. He was not ifriendly t. tile l)te iile of Orleans and miis unsteady ambition, and, as ve shall soil see, lie leever lltd any interest ill commiion witl Iinm.'Tinus, unaitdled except by hIis genius, lie attacke d despotism, wllhicl lie hlad s\nii' to destr y. It, lhowever, lie wvas a fbe to the vanities of'olllolrcliy, lie w;s still inore -adverse to the ostracism of repllblics; but, not b-ii).' stifhcieiitly reveiiged oil the great aild on power, lie still coitilittl.d to dlestlroy. ilarassed( inolcover by straighltened circumstalnces, diss:i:tiited xvitlli thle present, lie wavs advancino towards an uilkilowlVl ti'ltllre; hby lnis talents, is atiibition, ]his vices, his pecuniary enlbarIr;isslieits, lie gave rise to all sorts of conjectures, and by his cynicai ltai'l.aage lie atilllorized all suspiicions and all calumnies.'.Linle, were Frallce aiid tile parties divided. The first differences [ewtweeni tle poputlar depiuties arose on occasion of the excesses coiiiiittetd by tlie nmtiltitude. Motlnier and Lally-Tollendal proplosed a solcniii pocIlnlmation to tle prielle, to reprobate their outrages. The Aiseniihll, scisible of thle uselessness of this mIeasure, atnd thle necessity totr irleservinlg the good-will of thie populace wl!o had supported it, at first relected this prol)osal, but, afterwvards, yielding to the solicitations.,f' stom)ne of its menibers, it at length issued a proclamtation, whlicih pnrved, as it hlad been foreseen, utterly useless, tor it is not vy words thIl;t an excited popullce can be pacified. Thl'le agitation was general. A sudden terror hlsd spread itselfeverv 80 HISTORY OF THE where. The name of those brigands who had been seen starting up in the different commotions was inl all mouths, and their image in all minds. The court threw the blame of their outrages on the popular party, and the popular party on the court. All at once, couriers traversing France in all directions, brought tidings that the brigands were coming, and that they were cutting the corn before it was ripe. People assembled from all quarters, and in a few days all France was in arms, awaiting the brigands, who never made their appearances. This stratagem, which extended the revolution of the 14th of July to every part of the kingdom, by causing the whole nation to take up arms, was attributed to all the parties, and has since been imputed to the popular party, which benefitted by its results. It is surprising that a stratagem, more ingenious than culpable, should be bandied about friom one to the other. It has been ascribed to Mirabeau, who boasted of being its author, and who nevertheless has disavowed it. It was not unlike a contrivance by Sieyes, and some have imagined that it was he who suggested it to the Duke of Orleans. Lastly, it was imputed by others to the court. Such persons argue, that those couriers would have been apprehended at every step had they not been authorized by the government; that the court, never having supposed the revolution to be general, and looking upon it as a mere riot of the Parisians, wished to arm the provinces for the purpose of opposing them to the capital. Be this as it may, the expedient proved beneficial to the nation, by arming and enabling it to protect itself and its rights. The people of the towns had shaken off their fetters; the country people also determined to shake off theirs. They refused to pay the feudal dues; they attacked such of the landholders as had oppressed them; they set fire to their mansions, burned their title-deeds, and, Jm some parts of the country, committed atrocious acts of revenge. A deplorable accident had greatly contributed to excite this universal effervescence. A Sieur de Mesmai, seigneur of Quincey, gave an entertainment in the grounds about his mansion. All the country people were assembled there, and indulging in various amusements, when a barrel of gunpowder, suddenly taking fire, produced a murderous explosion. This accident, since ascertained to have been the effect of imprudence and not of design, was imputed as a crime to the Sieur de Mesmai. The report of it soon spread, and every where provoked the barbarity of those peasants, hardened by misery, and rendered cruel by long sufferings. The ministers came in a body to submit to the Assembly a picture of the deplorable state of France, and to demand from it the means of restoring order. These disasters of all kinds had occurred since the 14th of July. The month of August was beginning, and it became indispensable to re-establish the action of the government and of the laws. But, to attempt this with success, it was necessary to commence the regeneration of the state, with the reform of the institutions which were most obnoxious to the people, and had the greatest tendency to excite them to insurrection. One part of the nation, subject to the other, was burdened with a number of what were termed feudal dues. Some, called useful, compelled the peasants FRENCH REVOLUTION. 81 to make ruinous advances; others, named honorary, required them to pay humiliating marks of respect and services to their lords. These were relics of the feudal barbarism, the abolition of which was due to humanity. These privileg9, considered as property, and even called so by the King in the declaration of the 23d of June, could not be abolished by a discussion. It was requisite, by a sudden movement, to excite the possessors to resign them of their own accord. The Assembly was then discussing the famous declaration of the rights of man. It had at first been debated whether there should be such a declaration or not, and it had been decided, on the morninl of the 4th of Au gust, that it should be made and placed at the head of the constitution,. n the evening of the same day, the committee made its report on the disturbances and the means of putting an end to them. The Viscount de Noailles and the Duke d'Ai^guillon, both memlbers of the nobility, tllen ascended the tribune, and represented that it would be silly to employ force to quiet the people; that the right way would l)e to destroy the cause of their sufferings, and then the agitation. which was the effect of tlhem ould instantly cease. Exolanino; themselves more fully, they proposed to abolish all the vexatious 1igllths wlhicl, by the name of feudal rights, oppressed the country people. M. Leguen de Kerengal, a landholder of Bretagne, appeared in tle tribune in the dress of a farmer, and drew a frightful picture of the feudal system. Presently the generosity of some was excited, andrl the pride of others wroulght upon to su-rch a degree, as to produce a sudden paroxysm of disinterestedness; every one }hurried to tie tribu nee to renounce his privileges. The nobility set tile first examtplke, x lich was as cheerfully followed by the clergy. A sort of i ntoxication s'i i the Assembly. Setting aside a sulperfiuous discussion, and wh}ich} cco.tainly was not required to dennonstrate the justice of sucl sacrifices, all orders, all classes, all the possessors of prerogatives of eve'ly kinud, hastened to renounce thema. After the deputies of the first orderis, tlo(se of the commnons caine also to ofber their sacrifiees. H-aving' no persollal privileges to give up, they relinquished tllose of the proviilces;1and tire towns. The equality otlrig'lts, eStablislhed between ildividuals, w:as thiIs establislled also betwvee1n all tle parts oftlhe Frenclh territory. Some oti fered aeensions, and a member of parliamient, lhavinlg notiing else to give, promised his zeal in behlalf of the public wvelftare.'li Ste1I) Oft' the office were covered with deputies whlo came to deliver the acts of tliheir reenunciation. Tley were content for the moment to enumerltte the sacrifices, and deferred till the following day thle drawing up of tlhe articles. The imlpulse was general, but amiildst this entlhusiasm, it was easy to perceive tlat certain of the privileged persons, so far fiio'ml being sincere, were desirous only of llaltiltg matters worse. Every tIling was to be feared from the effect of tihat nigtilt and the impulse given, when Lally-Tollendal, perceiving tie danger, caused a n ote to thllis effect to be handed to the president:'" Every thling is to i)e;il,)eilended from the enthusiasm of the Asseml)ly; break up the sitting,." At the same instant, a deputy ran tup to him, and, grasping htis hand with emotion, said to him, " Procure ttus tie royal sanction, and we are fiiends." Lally-Tollendal, sensible of the necessity of attaching ihe VOL. I.-1l 4 8-2 ~HISTORY OF THE revolution to the King, then proposed to proclaim aim t;le restorer of French liberty. The motion was hailed with enthusiasm; it was re-.olved that Te Deumn should be performed, and the Assembly at length broke up about midnight. During this memorable night the Assembly had decreed: The abolition of the quality of serf; The right of compounding for the seignorial dues; The abolition of the seignorial jurisdictions; The suppression of the exclusive rights to hunt, to keep dovecotes, warrens, &c.; The redemption of tithes; The equality of taxes; The admission of all the citizens to civil and military employments; The abolition of the sale of offices; The suppression of all the privileges of the towns and provinces; The reformation of thejurandes; And the suppression of pensions obtained without claims. These resolutions had been passed in a general form, and they still remained to be embodied in decrees; and then, the first fervour of generosity having subsided, some strove to extend, others to contract, the concessions obtained. The discussion grew warm, and a late and injudicious resistance did away with all claim to gratitude. The abolition of feudal rights had been agreed upon; but it was necessary to make a distinction between such of these rights as were to be abolished, and those that were to be redeemed. The conquerors, the first creators of the nobility, when of old they subdued the coun try, imposed services upon the inhabitants, and a tribute upon the land They had even seized part of the latter, and had gradually restored it to the cultivators only on the condition of being paid perpetual rents. A long possession, followed by numerous transfers, constituting property, all the charges imposed upon the inhabitants and the lands had acquired the same character. The Constituent Assembly was therefore compelled to attack property. In this situation, it was not as more or less acquired, but as being more or less burdensome to society, that the Assembly had to deal with it. It abolished personal services; and, several of these services having been changed into quitrents, it abolished these quit-rents. Among the tributes imposed upon land, it abolished those which were evidently the relics of servitude, as the fines imposed upon transfer; and it declared redeemable all the perpetual rents, that were the price for which the nobility had formerly ceded part of the lands to the cultivators. Nothing, therefore, is more absurd, than to accuse the Constituent Assembly of having violated property, since every thing had become such; and it is strange that the nobility, having so long violated it, either by imposing tributes or by not paying taxes, should become all at once so tenacious of principles, when its own prerogatives werc at stake. The seignorial courts were also called property, because they had for ages been transmitted from heir to heir: but the Assembly, disregarding;this plea, aboilsbed FRENCH REVOLUTION. 83 them; directing, however, that they should be kept up till a substitute should be provided for them. The exclusive right of the chase was also a subject of warm dis cussion. Notwithstanding the vain objection, that the whole population would soon be in arms if the right of sporting were made general, it,was conferred oil every one within the limits of his own lands. The privileged dovecotes were in like manner defended. The Assembly decided that every body might keep them, but that in harvest-time pigeons might be killed like ordinary game, upon the lands which they might be visiting. All the captainships were abolished, but it was added, that provision should be made for the private pleasures of the King by means compatible with liberty and property. One article gave rise to discussions of peculiar violence, on account of the more important questions to which it was the prelude, andl the interests which it attacked-this was an article relative to tithes. On the night of the 4th of August, the Assembly had declared that tithes might be redeemed. At the moment of drawing up the decree, it determined to abolish them -without redemption, taking care to add that the state should provide for the maintenance of the clergy. There was no doubt an informality in this decision, because it interfered with a resolution already adopted. But to this objection, Garat answered that this would be a bond fide redemption, since the state actually redeemed the tithes to the relief of the contributor, by undertaking to make a provision for the clergy. The Abb6 Sieyes, who was seen with surprise among the defenders of the tithes, and who was nriot supposed to be a disinterested defender of that impost, admitted in fact that the state really redeemed the tithes, but that it committed a robbery on the mass of the. nation, by throwing upon its shoulders a debt which ought to be borne by the landed proprietors alone. This objection, urged in a striking manner, was accompanied with this keen and since frequently repeated expression: " You want to be free, and you know not how to be just." Tlhough Sieyes thought this objection unanswerable, the answer to it was easy. The debt incurred for the support of religion is the debt of all; whether it should be paid by the landed proprietors rather than by the, whole of the tenants, is a point for the state to decide. It robbs nobody by dividing the burden in such a manner as it deems most proper. Tithes, by oppressing the little proprietors, destroyed agriculture; the state had therefore a right to provide a substitute for that impost; and this Mirabeau proved to demonstration. The clergy, which preferred tithes, because it foresaw that the salary adjudged by the state would be measured according to its real necessities, claimed a property in tithes by immemorial concessions; it renewed that oft-repeated argument of long possession, which proves nothing; otherwise every thing, not except'ng tyranny itself, would be rendered legitimate by possession. It was answered, that tithe was only a life-interest, that it was not trans ferable, and had not the principal characters of property; that it was evidently a tax imposed in favour of the clergy; and that the state undertook to change this tax into another. The pride of the clergy revolted at the idea of its receiving a salary; on this subject it comrn 84.: HISTORY OF THE bined with vehemence: and Mirabeau, who was particularly dexterous in launching the shafts of reason and irony, replied to the complainants that lie knew of but three ways of existing in society-by robbing, begg-ing, or being paid a salary. The clergy felt that it behooved it to give up what it was no longer able to defend. The curas in particular, knowving that they had every thing to gain fiom the spirit of justice, whlich pervaded the Assembly, and that it was the opulence of the prelates wilich was tle especial object of attack, were the first to desist. The entire abolition of tithes was therefore decreed; it was added that the state wo uid take upon itself the expense of providing for the ministers of religioni, and that meanwhile the tithe should continue to be levied, Tltis hitter clause, firaught with respect, proved indeed useless. The people would nro longer pay, but' that they would not do even before the [psIsing of the decree; and, when the Assembly abolished the fei lzdal system, it was already in fact overthrown. On the 11th, all the articles weree presented to the monarch, who accepted the title of the "estorer of French liberty, and was present at the Te TDeunz, having thle president at his right hand, and all the deputies in his train. T'lhus was consummated the most importatnt reform of the revolua tiol. The Assembly had manifested equal energy and moderation. Unforltus ately, a nation never knows how to resume with moderation thle exercise of its rigllhts. Atrocious outrages were committed throughl out tile wlhole kingdom. The mnansions of the gentry continued to be set on fire, and the country was inundated by sportsmen eager to avail thetmselves of their newly acquired right., They spread over the hlii(tls C(nnrerly reserved for the exclusive pleasure of their oppressors, tld c rmitted friahlltfil devastations. Every usurpation meets with a cruiel retribtition, and lhe who usurps ought at least to consider his cllilIlIren', who almost always Ilave to pay the penalty. Numerous accidetlnts Uceurred. h3o early as the 7th of August, the ministers again attendl(-: thie A ssembly for the purpose of laying before it a report on tlhte st;ate o the kinlagd(om. The keeper of the seals announced the alairltmiin disturbances which hiad talen place; Necker revealed the dL.1.lora-hl si: