It was in the time of the Second Empire.
To be exact, it was the night of the 18th of June,
1868; I remember the date, because, contrary to the
astronomical theory of short nights at this season,
this was the longest night I ever saw. It was
the loveliest time of the year in Paris, when one
was tempted to lounge all day in the gardens and to
give to sleep none of the balmy nights in this gay
capital, where the night was illuminated like the
day, and some new pleasure or delight always led along
the sparkling hours. Any day the Garden of the
Tuileries was a microcosm repaying study. There
idle Paris sunned itself; through it the promenaders
flowed from the Rue de Rivoli gate by the palace to
the entrance on the Place de la Concorde, out to the
Champs-Elysees and back again; here in the north grove
gathered thousands to hear the regimental band in
the afternoon; children chased butterflies about the
flower-beds and amid the tubs of orange-trees; travelers,
guide-book in hand, stood resolutely and incredulously
before the groups of statuary, wondering what that
Infant was doing with, the snakes and why the recumbent
figure of the Nile should have so many children climbing
over him; or watched the long façade of the palace
hour after hour, in the hope of catching at some window
the flutter of a royal robe; and swarthy, turbaned
Zouaves, erect, lithe, insouciant, with the firm,
springy step of the tiger, lounged along the allees.
Napoleon was at home a
fact attested by a reversal of the hospitable rule
of democracy, no visitors being admitted to the palace
when he was at home. The private garden, close
to the imperial residence, was also closed to the
public, who in vain looked across the sunken fence
to the parterres, fountains, and statues, in
the hope that the mysterious man would come out there
and publicly enjoy himself. But he never came,
though I have no doubt that he looked out of the windows
upon the beautiful garden and his happy Parisians,
upon the groves of horse-chestnuts, the needle-like
fountain beyond, the Column of Luxor, up the famous
and shining vista terminated by the Arch of the Star,
and reflected with Christian complacency upon the
greatness of a monarch who was the lord of such splendors
and the goodness of a ruler who opened them all to
his children. Especially when the western sunshine
streamed down over it all, turning even the dust of
the atmosphere into gold and emblazoning the windows
of the Tuileries with a sort of historic glory, his
heart must have swelled within him in throbs of imperial
exaltation. It is the fashion nowadays not to
consider him a great man, but no one pretends to measure
his goodness.
The public garden of the Tuileries
was closed at dusk, no one being permitted to remain
in it after dark. I suppose it was not safe to
trust the Parisians in the covert of its shades after
nightfall, and no one could tell what foreign fanatics
and assassins might do if they were permitted to pass
the night so near the imperial residence. At any
rate, everybody was drummed out before the twilight
fairly began, and at the most fascinating hour for
dreaming in the ancient garden. After sundown
the great door of the Pavilion de l’Horloge swung
open and there issued from it a drum-corps, which
marched across the private garden and down the broad
allée of the public garden, drumming as if the
judgment-day were at hand, straight to the great gate
of the Place de la Concorde, and returning by a side
allée, beating up every covert and filling all
the air with clamor until it disappeared, still thumping,
into the court of the palace; and all the square seemed
to ache with the sound. Never was there such
pounding since Thackeray’s old Pierre, who, “just
to keep up his drumming, one day drummed down the
Bastile”:
At midnight I beat the
tattoo,
And woke up the Pikemen
of Paris
To follow the bold Barbaroux.
On the waves of this drumming the
people poured out from every gate of the garden, until
the last loiterer passed and the gendarmes closed
the portals for the night. Before the lamps were
lighted along the Rue de Rivoli and in the great square
of the Revolution, the garden was left to the silence
of its statues and its thousand memories. I often
used to wonder, as I looked through the iron railing
at nightfall, what might go on there and whether historic
shades might not flit about in the ghostly walks.
Late in the afternoon of the 18th
of June, after a long walk through the galleries of
the Louvre, and excessively weary, I sat down to rest
on a secluded bench in the southern grove of the garden;
hidden from view by the tree-trunks. Where I
sat I could see the old men and children in that sunny
flower-garden, La Petite Provence, and I could see
the great fountain-basin facing the Porte du Pont-Tournant.
I must have heard the evening drumming, which was
the signal for me to quit the garden; for I suppose
even the dead in Paris hear that and are sensitive
to the throb of the glory-calling drum. But if
I did hear it, it was only like an echo
of the past, and I did not heed it any more than Napoleon
in his tomb at the Invalides heeds, through the
drawn curtain, the chanting of the daily mass.
Overcome with fatigue, I must have slept soundly.
When I awoke it was dark under the
trees. I started up and went into the broad promenade.
The garden was deserted; I could hear the plash of
the fountains, but no other sound therein. Lights
were gleaming from the windows of the Tuileries, lights
blazed along the Rue de Rivoli, dotted the great Square,
and glowed for miles up the Champs Elysees. There
were the steady roar of wheels and the tramping of
feet without, but within was the stillness of death.
What should I do? I am not naturally
nervous, but to be caught lurking in the Tuileries
Garden in the night would involve me in the gravest
peril. The simple way would have been to have
gone to the gate nearest the Pavillon de
Marsan, and said to the policeman on duty there that
I had inadvertently fallen asleep, that I was usually
a wide-awake citizen of the land that Lafayette went
to save, that I wanted my dinner, and would like to
get out. I walked down near enough to the gate
to see the policeman, but my courage failed.
Before I could stammer out half that explanation to
him in his trifling language (which foreigners are
mockingly told is the best in the world for conversation),
he would either have slipped his hateful rapier through
my body, or have raised an alarm and called out the
guards of the palace to hunt me down like a rabbit.
A man in the Tuileries Garden at night!
an assassin! a conspirator! one of the Carbonari,
perhaps a dozen of them who knows? Orsini
bombs, gunpowder, Greek-fire, Polish refugees, murder,
émeutes, revolution!
No, I’m not going to speak to
that person in the cocked hat and dress-coat under
these circumstances. Conversation with him out
of the best phrase-books would be uninteresting.
Diplomatic row between the two countries would be
the least dreaded result of it. A suspected conspirator
against the life of Napoleon, without a chance for
explanation, I saw myself clubbed, gagged, bound, searched
(my minute notes of the Tuileries confiscated), and
trundled off to the Conciergerie, and hung up
to the ceiling in an iron cage there, like Ravaillac.
I drew back into the shade and rapidly
walked to the western gate. It was closed, of
course. On the gate-piers stand the winged steeds
of Marly, never less admired than by me at that moment.
They interested me less than a group of the Corps
d’Afrique, who lounged outside, guarding the
entrance from the square, and unsuspicious that any
assassin was trying to get out. I could see the
gleam of the lamps on their bayonets and hear their
soft tread. Ask them to let me out? How nimbly
they would have scaled the fence and transfixed me!
They like to do such things. No, no whatever
I do, I must keep away from the clutches of these cats
of Africa.
And enough there was to do, if I had
been in a mind to do it. All the seats to sit
in, all the statuary to inspect, all the flowers to
smell. The southern terrace overlooking the Seine
was closed, or I might have amused myself with the
toy railway of the Prince Imperial that ran nearly
the whole length of it, with its switches and turnouts
and houses; or I might have passed delightful hours
there watching the lights along the river and the
blazing illumination on the amusement halls. But
I ascended the familiar northern terrace and wandered
amid its bowers, in company with Hercules, Meleager,
and other worthies I knew only by sight, smelling
the orange-blossoms, and trying to fix the site of
the old riding-school where the National Assembly
sat in 1789.
It must have been eleven o’clock
when I found myself down by the private garden next
the palace. Many of the lights in the offices
of the household had been extinguished, but the private
apartments of the Emperor in the wing south of the
central pavilion were still illuminated. The
Emperor evidently had not so much desire to go to bed
as I had. I knew the windows of his petits appartements as
what good American did not? and I wondered
if he was just then taking a little supper, if he
had bidden good-night to Eugenie, if he was alone in
his room, reflecting upon his grandeur and thinking
what suit he should wear on the morrow in his ride
to the Bois. Perhaps he was dictating an editorial
for the official journal; perhaps he was according
an interview to the correspondent of the London Glorifier;
perhaps one of the Abbotts was with him. Or was
he composing one of those important love-letters of
state to Madame Blank which have since delighted the
lovers of literature? I am not a spy, and I scorn
to look into people’s windows late at night,
but I was lonesome and hungry, and all that square
round about swarmed with imperial guards, policemen,
keen-scented Zouaves, and nobody knows what other
suspicious folk. If Napoleon had known that there
was a
Manin the garden!
I suppose he would have called up
his family, waked the drum-corps, sent for the Prefect
of Police, put on the alert the ‘sergents
de ville,’ ordered under arms a regiment
of the Imperial Guards, and made it unpleasant for
the Man.
All these thoughts passed through
my mind, not with the rapidity of lightning, as is
usual in such cases, but with the slowness of conviction.
If I should be discovered, death would only stare me
in the face about a minute. If he waited five
minutes, who would believe my story of going to sleep
and not hearing the drums? And if it were true,
why didn’t I go at once to the gate, and not
lurk round there all night like another Clement?
And then I wondered if it was not the disagreeable
habit of some night-patrol or other to beat round the
garden before the Sire went to bed for good, to find
just such characters as I was gradually getting to
feel myself to be.
But nobody came. Twelve o’clock,
one o’clock sounded from the tower of the church
of St. Germain l’Auxerrois, from whose belfry
the signal was given for the beginning of the Massacre
of St. Bartholomew the same bells that
tolled all that dreadful night while the slaughter
went on, while the effeminate Charles IX fired from
the windows of the Louvre upon stray fugitives on
the quay bells the reminiscent sound of
which, a legend (which I fear is not true) says, at
length drove Catharine de Medici from the Tuileries.
One o’clock! The lights
were going out in the Tuileries, had nearly all gone
out. I wondered if the suspicious and timid and
wasteful Emperor would keep the gas burning all night
in his room. The night-roar of Paris still went
on, sounding always to foreign ears like the beginning
of a revolution. As I stood there, looking at
the window that interested me most, the curtains were
drawn, the window was opened, and a form appeared
in a white robe. I had never seen the Emperor
before in a night-gown, but I should have known him
among a thousand. The Man of Destiny had on a
white cotton night-cap, with a peaked top and no tassel.
It was the most natural thing in the land; he was
taking a last look over his restless Paris before
he turned in. What if he should see me! I
respected that last look and withdrew into the shadow.
Tired and hungry, I sat down to reflect upon the pleasures
of the gay capital.
One o’clock and a half!
I had presence of mind enough to wind my watch; indeed,
I was not likely to forget that, for time hung heavily
on my hands. It was a gay capital. Would
it never put out its lights, and cease its uproar,
and leave me to my reflections? In less than an
hour the country legions would invade the city, the
market-wagons would rumble down the streets, the vegetable-man
and the strawberry-woman, the fishmongers and the
greens-venders would begin their melodious cries, and
there would be no repose for a man even in a public
garden. It is secluded enough, with the gates
locked, and there is plenty of room to turn over and
change position; but it is a wakeful situation at the
best, a haunting sort of place, and I was not sure
it was not haunted.
I had often wondered as I strolled
about the place in the daytime or peered through the
iron fence at dusk, if strange things did not go on
here at night, with this crowd of effigies of
persons historical and more or less mythological,
in this garden peopled with the representatives of
the dead, and no doubt by the shades of kings and queens
and courtiers, ‘intrigantes’ and
panders, priests and soldiers, who live once in this
old pile real shades, which are always invisible
in the sunlight. They have local attachments,
I suppose. Can science tell when they depart
forever from the scenes of their objective intrusion
into the affairs of this world, or how long they are
permitted to revisit them? Is it true that in
certain spiritual states, say of isolation or intense
nervous alertness, we can see them as they can see
each other? There was I the I catalogued
in the police description present in that
garden, yet so earnestly longing to be somewhere else
that would it be wonderful if my ‘eidolon’
was somewhere else and could be seen? though
not by a policeman, for policemen have no spiritual
vision.
There were no policemen in the garden,
that I was certain of; but a little after half-past
one I saw a Man, not a man I had ever seen before,
clad in doublet and hose, with a short cloak and a
felt cap with a white plume, come out of the Pavillon
de Flore and turn down the quay towards
the house I had seen that afternoon where it stood of
the beautiful Gabrielle d’Estrees. I might
have been mistaken but for the fact that, just at
this moment, a window opened in the wing of the same
pavilion, and an effeminate, boyish face, weak and
cruel, with a crown on its head, appeared and looked
down into the shadow of the building as if its owner
saw what I had seen. And there was nothing remarkable
in this, except that nowadays kings do not wear crowns
at night. It occurred to me that there was a
masquerade going on in the Tuileries, though I heard
no music, except the tinkle of, it might be, a harp,
or “the lascivious pleasing of a lute,”
and I walked along down towards the central pavilion.
I was just in time to see two ladies emerge from it
and disappear, whispering together, in the shrubbery;
the one old, tall, and dark, with the Italian complexion,
in a black robe, and the other young, petite, extraordinarily
handsome, and clad in light and bridal stuffs, yet
both with the same wily look that set me thinking on
poisons, and with a grace and a subtle carriage of
deceit that could be common only to mother and daughter.
I didn’t choose to walk any farther in the part
of the garden they had chosen for a night promenade,
and turned off abruptly.
What?
There, on the bench of the marble
hemicycle in the north grove, sat a row of graybeards,
old men in the costume of the first Revolution, a sort
of serene and benignant Areopagus. In the cleared
space before them were a crowd of youths and maidens,
spectators and participants in the Floral Games which
were about to commence; behind the old men stood attendants
who bore chaplets of flowers, the prizes in the games.
The young men wore short red tunics with copper belts,
formerly worn by Roman lads at the ludi, and
the girls tunics of white with loosened girdles, leaving
their limbs unrestrained for dancing, leaping, or
running; their hair was confined only by a fillet
about the head. The pipers began to play and
the dancers to move in rhythmic measures, with the
slow and languid grace of those full of sweet wine
and the new joy of the Spring, according to the habits
of the Golden Age, which had come again by decree in
Paris. This was the beginning of the classic
sports, but it is not possible for a modern pen to
describe particularly the Floral Games. I remember
that the Convention ordered the placing of these
hémicycles in the garden, and they were executed
from Robespierre’s designs; but I suppose I am
the only person who ever saw the games played that
were expected to be played before them. It was
a curious coincidence that the little livid-green man
was also there, leaning against a tree and looking
on with a half sneer. It seemed to me an odd
classic revival, but then Paris has spasms of that,
at the old Theatre Francais and elsewhere.
Pipes in the garden, lutes in the
palace, paganism, Revolution the situation
was becoming mixed, and I should not have been surprised
at a ghostly procession from the Place de la Concorde,
through the western gates, of the thousands of headless
nobility, victims of the axe and the basket; but,
thank Heaven, nothing of that sort appeared to add
to the wonders of the night; yet, as I turned a moment
from the dancers, I thought I saw something move in
the shrubbery. The Laocoon? It could not
be. The arms moving? Yes. As I drew
nearer the arms distinctly moved, putting away at
length the coiling serpent, and pushing from the pedestal
the old-men boys, his comrades in agony. Laocoon
shut his mouth, which had been stretched open for
about eighteen centuries, untwisted the last coil
of the snake, and stepped down, a free man. After
this it did not surprise me to see Spartacus also
step down and approach him, and the two ancients square
off for fisticuffs, as if they had done it often before,
enjoying at night the release from the everlasting
pillory of art. It was the hour of releases,
and I found myself in a moment in the midst of a “classic
revival,” whimsical beyond description.
Aeneas hastened to deposit his aged father in a heap
on the gravel and ran after the Sylvan Nymphs; Theseus
gave the Minotaur a respite; Themistocles was bending
over the dying Spartan, who was coming to life; Venus
Pudica was waltzing about the diagonal basin
with Antinous; Ascanius was playing marbles with the
infant Hercules. In this unreal phantasmagoria
it was a relief to me to see walking in the area of
the private garden two men: the one a stately
person with a kingly air, a handsome face, his head
covered with a huge wig that fell upon his shoulders;
the other a farmer-like man, stout and ungracious,
the counterpart of the pictures of the intendant Colbert.
He was pointing up to the palace, and seemed to be
speaking of some alterations, to which talk the other
listened impatiently. I wondered what Napoleon,
who by this time was probably dreaming of Mexico,
would have said if he had looked out and seen, not
one man in the garden, but dozens of men, and all
the stir that I saw; if he had known, indeed, that
the Great Monarch was walking under his windows.
I said it was a relief to me to see
two real men, but I had no reason to complain of solitude
thereafter till daybreak. That any one saw or
noticed me I doubt, and I soon became so reassured
that I had more delight than fear in watching the
coming and going of personages I had supposed dead
a hundred years and more; the appearance at windows
of faces lovely, faces sad, faces terror-stricken;
the opening of casements and the dropping of billets
into the garden; the flutter of disappearing robes;
the faint sounds of revels from the interior of the
palace; the hurrying of feet, the flashing of lights,
the clink of steel, that told of partings and sudden
armings, and the presence of a king that will be denied
at no doors. I saw through the windows of the
long Galerie de Diane the roues
of the Regency at supper, and at table with them a
dark, semi-barbarian little man in a coat of Russian
sable, the coolest head in Europe at a drinking-bout.
I saw enter the south pavilion a tall lady in black,
with the air of a royal procuress; and presently crossed
the garden and disappeared in the pavilion a young
Parisian girl, and then another and another, a flock
of innocents, and I thought instantly of the dreadful
Parc aux Cerfs at Versailles.
So wrought upon was I by the sight
of this infamy that I scarcely noticed the incoming
of a royal train at the southern end of the palace,
and notably in it a lady with light hair and noble
mien, and the look in her face of a hunted lioness
at bay. I say scarcely, for hardly had the royal
cortege passed within, when there arose a great clamor
in the inner court, like the roar of an angry multitude,
a scuffling of many feet, firing of guns, thrusting
of pikes, followed by yells of defiance in mingled
French and German, the pitching of Swiss Guards from
doorways and windows, and the flashing of flambeaux
that ran hither and thither. “Oh!”
I said, “Paris has come to call upon its sovereign;
the pikemen of Paris, led by the bold Barbaroux.”
The tumult subsided as suddenly as
it had risen, hushed, I imagined, by the jarring of
cannon from the direction of St. Roch; and in the quiet
I saw a little soldier alight at the Rue de Rivoli
gate a little man whom you might mistake
for a corporal of the guard with a wild,
coarse-featured Corsican (say, rather, Basque) face,
his disordered chestnut hair darkened to black locks
by the use of pomatum a face selfish and
false, but determined as fate. So this was the
beginning of the Napoleon “legend”; and
by-and-by this coarse head will be idealized into
the Roman Emperor type, in which I myself might have
believed but for the revelations of the night of strange
adventure.
What is history? What is this
drama and spectacle, that has been put forth as history,
but a cover for petty intrigue, and deceit, and selfishness,
and cruelty? A man shut into the Tuileries Garden
begins to think that it is all an illusion, the trick
of a disordered fancy. Who was Grand, who was
Well-Beloved, who was Desired, who was the Idol of
the French, who was worthy to be called a King of
the Citizens? Oh, for the light of day!
And it came, faint and tremulous,
touching the terraces of the palace and the Column
of Luxor. But what procession was that moving
along the southern terrace? A squad of the National
Guard on horseback, a score or so of King’s
officers, a King on foot, walking with uncertain step,
a Queen leaning on his arm, both habited in black,
moved out of the western gate. The King and the
Queen paused a moment on the very spot where Louis
XVI. was beheaded, and then got into a carriage drawn
by one horse and were driven rapidly along the quays
in the direction of St. Cloud. And again Revolution,
on the heels of the fugitives, poured into the old
palace and filled it with its tatterdemalions.
Enough for me that daylight began
to broaden. “Sleep on,” I said, “O
real President, real Emperor (by the grace of coup
d’etat) at last, in the midst of the most virtuous
court in Europe, loved of good Americans, eternally
established in the hearts of your devoted Parisians!
Peace to the palace and peace to its lovely garden,
of both of which I have had quite enough for one night!”
The sun came up, and, as I looked
about, all the shades and concourse of the night had
vanished. Day had begun in the vast city, with
all its roar and tumult; but the garden gates would
not open till seven, and I must not be seen before
the early stragglers should enter and give me a chance
of escape. In my circumstances I would rather
be the first to enter than the first to go out in
the morning, past those lynx-eyed gendarmes.
From my covert I eagerly watched for my coming deliverers.
The first to appear was a ‘chiffonnier,’
who threw his sack and pick down by the basin, bathed
his face, and drank from his hand. It seemed to
me almost like an act of worship, and I would have
embraced that rag-picker as a brother. But I
knew that such a proceeding, in the name even of égalité
and fraternité would have been misinterpreted;
and I waited till two and three and a dozen entered
by this gate and that, and I was at full liberty to
stretch my limbs and walk out upon the quay as nonchalant
as if I had been taking a morning stroll.
I have reason to believe that the
police of Paris never knew where I spent the night
of the 18th of June. It must have mystified them.