Read The Chevalier De Maison Rouge Online
Authors: Alexandre Dumas
CHAPTER I.
THE ENROLLED VOLUNTEERS.
IT was on the evening of the 10th of March, 1793 ; ten
o'clock was striking from Notre Dame, and each stroke
sounding, emitted a sad and monotonous vibration.
Night had fallen on Paris, not boisterous and stormy,
but cold, damp, and foggy. Paris itself at that time was
not the Paris of our day ; glittering at night with thou-
sands of reflected lights, the Paris of busy promenades,
of lively chat, with its riotous suburbs, the scene of
audacious quarrels and daring crime, but a fearful, timid,
busy city, whose few and scattered inhabitants, even in
crossing from one street to another, ran concealing them-
selves in the darkness of the alleys, and ensconcing them-
selves behind their porte-cocheres, like wild beasts tracked by the hunters to their lair.
As we have previously said, it was the evening of the
10th of March, 1703. A few remarks upon the extreme
situation, which had produced the changed aspect of the
capital before we commence stating the events, the re-
cital of which form the subject of this history. France,
by the death of Louis XVI. , had become at variance with
all Europe.
To the three enemies she had first combated, that is to
say, Prussia, the Empire, and Piedmont, were now joined
England, Holland, and Spain. Sweden and Denmark
alone preserved their old neutrality occupied as they
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A DUMAS VOL XI.
2 THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE.
were besides in beholding Catherine II. devastating
Poland.
The state of affairs was truly frightful. France, more
respected as a physical power but less esteemed as a moral
one, since the massacres of September and the execution
of the 21st of January, was literally blockaded, like a
simple town, by entire Europe. England was on our
coasts, Spain upon the Pyrenees, Piedmont and Austria
on the Alps, Holland and Prussia to the north of the
Pays Bas, and with one accord, from Upper Ehine to
Escant, two hundred and fifty thousand combatants
marched against the Republic. Our generals were re-
pulsed in every direction. Miacriuski had been obliged
to abandon Aix-la-Chapelle, and draw back upon Liege ;
Steingel and Neuilly were driven back upon Limbourg ;
while Miranda, who besieged Maestricht, fell back upon
Tongres. Valence and Dampierre, reduced to beat a
retreat, did so with a loss of half their number. More
than ten thousand deserters had already abandoned the
army, and cleverly scattered themselves in the interior.
At last, the Convention, having no hope except in
Dumouriez, despatched courier after courier, commanding
him to quit the borders of Bribos (where he was prepar-
ing to embark for Holland), and return to take the com-
mand of the Army of the Meuse.
Sensible at heart, like an animated body, France felt
at Paris that is to say, at its heart's core each and every blow leveled at it by invasion, revolt, or treason, even
from quarters the most distant. Each victory was a riot
of joy ; every defeat an insurrection of terror. It is
therefore easy to comprehend what tumult was produced
by the news of these successive losses, which we are now
about to explain.
On the preceding evening, the 9th of March, they had
had at the Convention a sitting more stormy than usual ;
all the officers had received orders to join their regiments at the same time, and Danton, that audacious proposer of
improbable things (but which nevertheless were accom-
plished), Dantou, mounting the tribune, cried out ;
THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE. 3
" The soldiers fail, say you ? Offer Paris an opportu-
nity of saving France ; demand from her thirty thousand
men, send them to Dumouriez, and not only is France
saved, but Belgium is reassured, and Holland is con-
quered."
This proposition had been received with shouts of
enthusiasm ; registers had been opened in all the sections, inviting them to reunite in the evening. Places of public
amusement were closed, to avoid all distraction, and the
black flag was hoisted at the Hotel de Ville, in token
of distress. Before midnight five-and-thirty thousand
names were inscribed on the registers ; only this evening,
as it had before occurred in September, in every section,
while inscribing their names the enrolled volunteers had
demanded that before their departure the traitors might
be punished. The traitors were, in fact, the " contre-
revolutionists " who secretly menaced the Revolution.
But, as may be easily understood, the secret extended to
all those who wished to give themselves to the extreme
parties who at this period tore France. The traitors were
the weaker party, as the Girondins were the weakest. The
Montagnards decided that the Girondins must be the
traitors. On the next day, which was the 10th of March,
all the Montagnard deputies were present at the sitting.
The Jacobins, armed, filled the tribunes, after having
turned out the women ; the mayor presented himself
with the Council of the Commune, confirming the report
of the Commissioners of the Convention respecting the
devotedness of the citizens, but repeating the wish,
unanimously expressed the preceding evening, for a Tri-
bunal Extraordinary appointed to judge the traitors.
The report of the committee was instantly demanded
with loud vociferations. The committee reunited im-
mediately, and in a few minutes afterward they were in-
formed by Robert Lindet that a tribunal would be formed,
composed of nine judges (independent of all forms, and
acquiring proof by every means), divided into two per-
manent sections, and prosecuting, directly by order of
the Convention, all those who were found guilty in any
4 THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE.
way of either tempting or misleading the people. This
was a sweeping clause, and the Girondins, comprehend-
ing it would cause their arrest, rose en masse. Death,
cried they, rather than submit to the establishment of
this threatened imposition.
The Montagnards, in reply to this apostrophe, de-
manded the vote in a loud tone.
" Yes," replied Ferrand, " let us vote to make known to the world men who are willing to assassinate innocence
under the mask of the law."
They voted to this effect ; and, against all expectation,
the majority decided first, they would have juries ;
second, that these juries should be of equal numbers in
each department ; third, they should be nominated by the
Convention. At the moment these three propositions re-
ceived admission, loud cries were heard ; but the Conven-
tion, accustomed to receive occasional visits from the
populace, inquired their wishes, and were informed, in
reply :
" It was merely a deputation of enrolled volunteers,
who, having dined at the Halle-au-Ble, demanded to be
permitted to display their military tactics before the Con-
vention."
The doors were opened immediately, and six hundred
men, armed with swords, pistols, and pikes, apparently
half intoxicated, filed off amid shouts of applause, and
loudly demanded the death of the traitors.
" Yes," replied Collot d'Herbois, addressing them,
" yes, my friends, we will save you you and liberty, notwithstanding these intrigues."
These words were followed by an angry glance toward
the Girondins, which plainly intimated they were not yet
beyond reach of danger. In short, the sitting of the
Convention terminated, the Montagnards scattered them-
selves among other clubs, running first to the Cordeliers
and then to the Jacobins, proposing to place the traitors
beyond the reach of the law, by cutting their throats the
samenigh*
The wife of Louvet resided in the Rue St. Honore, near
THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE. 5
the Jacobins. She, hearing these vociferations, descended,
entered the club, and heard this proposition ; then quickly retraced her steps, and warned her husband of the impending danger. Louvet, hastily arming himself, ran
from door to door to alarm his friends, but found them
all absent ; then fortunately ascertaining from one of the
servants they had gone to Petion's house, he followed
them there. He found them quietly deliberating over a
decree, which ought to be presented on the morrow, and
which, by a chance majority, they hoped to pass. He re-
lated what had occurred, communicated his fears, in-
formed them of the plot devised against them by the
Cordeliers and Jacobins, and concluded by urging them,
on their side, to pursue some active and energetic
measure.
Then Petion rose, calm and self-possessed as usual,
walked to the window, opened it, and then extended his
hand, which he drew in covered with moisture.
" It rains," he said ; " there will be nothing to-night."
"Through this half-opened window the last vibration
of the clock was heard striking ten.
Such were the occurrences of the 10th of March, and
the evening preceding it occurrences which, in this
gloomy obscurity and menacing silence, rendered the
abodes destined to shelter the living like sepulchers
peopled by the dead. In fact, long patrols of the Na-
tional Guard, preceded by men marching with fixed
bayonets, troops of citizens, armed at hazard, pushing
against one another, gendarmes closely examining each
doorway, and strictly scrutinizing every narrow alley
those wore the sole inhabitants who ventured to expose
themselves in the streets. Every one instinctively under-
stood something unusual and terrible was taking place.
The cold and drizzling rain, which hud tended so much
to reassure Potion, hud considerably augmented the ill-
humor and trouble of these inspectors, whose every meet-
ing resembled preparation for combat, and who, after
recognizing one another with looks of defiance, exchanged
the word of command slowly and with a very bud grace.
6 THE CHEVALIER DE MAISON ROUGE.
Indeed, it was said, seeing one and the other returning
after their separation, that they mutually feared an attack from behind. On the same evening, when Paris was a
prey to one of those panics (so often renewed that they
ought, in some measure, to have become habitual), this
evening the massacre of the lukewarm revolutionists was
secretly debated who, after having voted (with restriction
for the most part) the death of the king, recoiled to-day
before the death of the queen, a prisoner in the temple
with her sister-in-law and her children. A woman, en-
veloped in a mantle of lilac printed cotton, with black
spots, her head covered and almost buried in the hood,
glided along the houses in La Eue St. Honore, seeking
concealment under a door-porch, or in the angle of a
wall, every time a patrol appeared, remaining motionless
as a statue, and holding her breath till he had passed, and then again pursuing her anxious course with increasing
rapidity, till some danger of a similar nature again com-
pelled her to seek refuge in silence and immobility.
She had already, thanks to the precautions she had
taken, traveled over with impunity part of La Rue St.
Honore, when she suddenly encountered, not a body of
patrol, but a small troop of our brave enrolled volunteers, who, having dined at La Halle-au-Ble, found their patriotism considerably increased by the numerous toasts they
had drunk to their future victories. The poor woman
uttered a cry, and made a futile attempt to escape by La
Rue du Coq.
" Ah, all ! citoyenne," cried the chief of the volunteers (for already, with the need of command, natural to man,
those worthy patriots had elected their chief). "Ah!
where are you going ? "
The fugitive made no reply, but continued her rapid
movement.
" What sport," said the chief ; " it is a man disguised, an aristocrat, who thinks to save himself."
The sound of two or three guns escaping from hands
rather too unsteady to be depended upon announced to