I. THE EXECUTION OF LOUIS XVI.
There were certain characteristic
details connected with the execution of Louis XVI.
that are not recorded in history. They were recounted
to me by an eye-witness and are here published for
the first time.
This eye witness was one Leboucher,
who arrived in Paris from Bourges in December,
1792, and was present at the execution of Louis
XVI. In 1840 he recounted to Victor Hugo most
of these details which, as can easily be imagined,
had impressed themselves deeply upon his mind.
The scaffold was not, as is generally
believed, erected in the very centre of the Place,
on the spot where the obelisk now stands, but on a
spot which the decree of the Provisional Executive
Council designates in these precise terms: “between
the pied d’estal and the Champs-Elysees.”
What was this pedestal? Present
generations who have seen so many things happen, so
many statues crumble and so many pedestals overthrown
do not quite know what meaning to give to this very
vague designation, and would be embarrassed to tell
for what monument the mysterious stone which the Executive
Council of the Revolution laconically calls the “pied
d’estal” served as a base. This stone
had borne the statue of Louis XV.
Let it be noted en passant
that this strange Place which had been called successively
the Place Louis XV., Place de la Revolution, Place
de la Concorde, Place Louis XVI., Place du
Garde-Meuble and Place des Champs-Elysees,
and which could not retain any name, could not keep
any monument either. It has had the statue of
Louis XV., which disappeared; an expiatory fountain
which was to have laved the bloody centre of the Place
was projected, but not even the first stone was laid;
a rough model of a monument to the Charter was made:
we have never seen anything but the socle of this
monument. Just when a bronze figure representing
the Charter of 1814 was about to be erected, the Revolution
of July arrived with the Charter of 1830. The
pedestal of Louis XVIII. vanished, as fell the pedestal
of Louis XV. Now on this same spot we have placed
the obelisk of Sesostris. It required thirty centuries
for the great Desert to engulf half of it; how many
years will the Place de la Revolution require to swallow
it up altogether?
In the Year II of the Republic, what
the Executive Council called the “pied d’estal”
was nought but a shapeless and hideous block.
It was a sort of sinister symbol of the royalty itself.
Its ornaments of marble and bronze had been wrenched
off, the bare stone was everywhere split and cracked.
On the four sides were large square gaps showing the
places where the destroyed bas reliefs had been.
Scarcely could a remnant of the entablature still
be distinguished at the summit of the pedestal, and
beneath the cornice a string of óvolos, defaced
and worn, was surmounted by what architects call a
“chaplet of paternósters.” On
the table of the pedestal one could perceive a heap
of debris of all kinds, in which tufts of grass were
growing here and there. This pile of nameless
things had replaced the royal statue.
The scaffold was raised a few steps
distant from this ruin, a little in rear of it.
It was covered with long planks, laid transversely,
that masked the framework. A ladder without banisters
or balustrade was at the back, and what they venture
to call the head of this horrible construction was
turned towards the Garde-Meuble. A basket
of cylindrical shape, covered with leather, was placed
at the spot where the head of the King was to fall,
to receive it; and at one of the angles of the entablature,
to the right of the ladder, could be discerned a long
wicker basket prepared for the body, and on which one
of the executioners, while waiting for the King, had
laid his hat.
Imagine, now, in the middle of the
Place, these two lugubrious things, a few paces from
each other: the pedestal of Louis XV. and the
scaffold of Louis XVI.; that is to say, the ruins
of royalty dead and the martyrdom of royalty living;
around these two things four formidable lines of armed
men, preserving a great empty square in the midst of
an immense crowd; to the left of the scaffold, the
Champs-Elysees, to the right the Tuileries, which,
neglected and left at the mercy of the public had
become an unsightly waste of dirt heaps and trenches;
and over these melancholy edifices, over these black,
leafless trees, over this gloomy multitude, the bleak,
sombre sky of a winter morning, and one will have
an idea of the aspect which the Place de la Revolution
presented at the moment when Louis XVI., in the carriage
of the Mayor of Paris, dressed in white, the Book
of Psalms clasped in his hands, arrived there to die
at a few minutes after ten o’clock on January
21, 1793.
Strange excess of abasement and misery:
the son of so many kings, bound and sacred like the
kings of Egypt, was to be consumed between two layers
of quicklime, and to this French royalty, which at
Versailles had had a throne of gold and at St. Denis
sixty sarcophagi of granite, there remained but
a platform of pine and a wicker coffin.
Here are some unknown details.
The executioners numbered four; two only performed
the execution; the third stayed at the foot of the
ladder, and the fourth was on the waggon which was
to convey the King’s body to the Madeleine Cemetery
and which was waiting a few feet from the scaffold.
The executioners wore breeches, coats
in the French style as the Revolution had modified
it, and three-cornered hats with enormous tri-colour
cockades.
They executed the King with their
hats on, and it was without taking his hat off that
Samson, seizing by the hair the severed head of Louis
XVI., showed it to the people, and for a few moments
let the blood from it trickle upon the scaffold.
At the same time his valet or assistant
undid what were called “les sangles” (straps);
and, while the crowd gazed alternately upon the King’s
body, dressed entirely in white, as I have said, and
still attached, with the hands bound behind the back,
to the swing board, and upon that head whose kind
and gentle profile stood out against the misty, sombre
trees of the Tuileries, two priests, commissaries of
the Commune, instructed to be present, as Municipal
officials, at the execution of the King, sat in the
Mayor’s carriage, laughing and conversing in
loud tones. One of them, Jacques Roux, derisively
drew the other’s attention to Capet’s
fat calves and abdomen.
The armed men who surrounded the scaffold
had only swords and pikes; there were very few muskets.
Most of them wore large round hats or red caps.
A few platoons of mounted dragoons in uniform were
mingled with these troops at intervals. A whole
squadron of dragoons was ranged in battle array beneath
the terraces of the Tuileries. What was called
the Battalion of Marseilles formed one of the sides
of the square.
The guillotine it is always
with repugnance that one writes this hideous word would
appear to the craftsmen of to-day to be very badly
constructed. The knife was simply suspended to
a pulley fixed in the centre of the upper beam.
This pulley and a rope the thickness of a man’s
thumb constituted the whole apparatus. The knife,
which was not very heavily weighted, was of small
dimensions and had a curved edge, which gave it the
form of a reversed Phrygian cap. No hood was placed
to shelter the King’s head and at the same time
to hide and circumscribe its fall. All that crowd
could see the head of Louis XVI. drop, and it was
thanks to chance, thanks perhaps to the smallness of
the knife which diminished the violence of the shock,
that it did not bound beyond the basket to the pavement.
Terrible incident, which often occurred at executions
during the Terror. Nowadays assassins and poisoners
are decapitated more decently. Many improvements
in the guillotine have been made.
At the spot where the King’s
head fell, a long rivulet of blood streamed down the
planks of the scaffold to the pavement. When the
execution was over, Samson threw to the people the
King’s coat, which was of white molleton,
and in an instant it disappeared, torn by a thousand
hands.
At the moment when the head of Louis
XVI. fell, the Abbe Edgeworth was still near the King.
The blood spirted upon him. He hastily donned
a brown overcoat, descended from the scaffold and
was lost in the crowd. The first row of spectators
opened before him with a sort of wonder mingled with
respect; but after he had gone a few steps, the attention
of everybody was still so concentrated upon the centre
of the Place where the event had just been accomplished,
that nobody took any further notice of Abbe Edgeworth.
The poor priest, enveloped in his
thick coat which concealed the blood with which he
was covered, fled in bewilderment, walking as one in
a dream and scarcely knowing where he was going.
However, with that sort of instinct which preserves
somnambulists he crossed the river, took the Rue
du Bac, then the Rue du Regard and thus managed
to reach the house of Mme. de Lezardiere, near
the Barriere du Maine.
Arrived there he divested himself
of his soiled clothing and remained for several hours,
in a state of collapse, without being able to collect
a thought or utter a word.
Some Royalists who rejoined him, and
who had witnessed the execution, surrounded the Abbe
Edgeworth and reminded him of the adieu he had addressed
to the King: “Son of St. Louis, ascend to
heaven!” These words, however, memorable though
they were, had left no trace on the mind of him who
had uttered them. “We heard them,”
said the witnesses of the catastrophe, still moved
and thrilled. “It is possible,” he
replied, “but I do not remember having said
such a thing.”
Abbe Edgeworth lived a long life without
ever being able to remember whether he really did
pronounce these words.
Mme. de Lezardiere, who had been
seriously ill for more than a month, was unable to
support the shock of the death of Louis XVI. She
died on the very night of January 21.
II. ARRIVAL OF NAPOLEON IN PARIS. March 20, 1815.
History and contemporaneous memoirs
have truncated, or badly related, or even omitted
altogether, certain details of the arrival of the Emperor
in Paris on March 20, 1815. But living witnesses
are to be met with who saw them and who rectify or
complete them.
During the night of the 19th, the
Emperor left Sens. He arrived at three o’clock
in the morning at Fontainebleau. Towards five
o’clock, as day was breaking, he reviewed the
few troops he had taken with him and those who had
rallied to him at Fontainebleau itself. They were
of every corps, of every regiment, of all arms, a
little of the Grand Army, a little of the Guard.
At six o’clock, the review being over, one hundred
and twenty lancers mounted their horses and went on
ahead to wait for him at Essonnes. These lancers
were commanded by Colonel Galbois, now lieutenant
general, and who has recently distinguished himself
at Constantine.
They had been at Essonnes scarcely
three-quarters of an hour, resting their horses, when
the carriage of the Emperor arrived. The escort
of lancers were in their saddles in the twinkling
of an eye and surrounded the carriage, which immediately
started off again without having changed horses.
The Emperor stopped on the way at the large villages
to receive petitions from the inhabitants and the
submission of the authorities, and sometimes to listen
to harangues. He was on the rear seat of the
carriage, with General Bertrand in full uniform seated
on his left. Colonel Galbois galloped beside
the door on the Emperor’s side; the door on
Bertrand’s side was guarded by a quartermaster
of lancers named Ferres, to-day a wineshop keeper
at Puteaux, a former and very brave hussar whom the
Emperor knew personally and addressed by name.
No one on the road approached the Emperor. Everything
that was intended for him passed through General Bertrand’s
hands.
Three or four leagues beyond Essonnes
the imperial cortege found the road suddenly barred
by General Colbert, at the head of two squadrons and
three regiments echelonned towards Paris.
General Colbert had been the colonel
of the regiment of lancers from which the detachment
that escorted the Emperor had been drawn. He
recognised his lancers and his lancers recognised him.
They cried: “General, come over to us!”
The General answered: “My children, do your
duty, I am doing mine.” Then he turned rein
and went off to the right across country with a few
mounted men who followed him. He could not have
resisted; the regiments behind him were shouting:
“Long live the Emperor!”
This meeting only delayed Napoleon
a few minutes. He continued on his way.
The Emperor, surrounded only by his one hundred and
twenty lancers, thus reached Paris. He entered
by the Barriere de Fontainebleau, took the large avenue
of trees which is on the left, the Boulevard dim Mont-Parnasse,
the other boulevards to the Invalides, then the
Pont do la Concorde, the quay along the river and
the gate of the Louvre.
At a quarter past eight o’clock
in the evening he was at the Tuileries.