The Battle of the Strong. Gilbert Parker
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the sword. Of twenty nobles of the court I alone escaped. France
is become a slaughter-house. The people cried out for more liberty,
and their liberators gave them the freedom of death. A fortnight
ago, Danton, the incomparable fiend, let loose his assassins upon
the priests of God. Now Paris is made a theatre where the people
whom Louis and his nobles would have died to save have turned every
street into a stable of carnage, every prison and hospital into a
vast charnel-house. One last revolting thing alone remains to be
done—the murder of the King; then this France that we have loved
will have no name and no place in our generation. She will rise
again, but we shall not see her, for our eyes have been blinded with
blood, for ever darkened by disaster. Like a mistress upon whom we
have lavished the days of our youth and the strength of our days,
she has deceived us; she has stricken us while we slept. Behold a
Caliban now for her paramour!
“Weep with me, for France despoils me. One by one my friends have
fallen beneath the axe. Of my four sons but one remains. Henri was
stabbed by Danton’s ruffians at the Hotel de Ville; Gaston fought
and died with the Swiss Guard, whose hacked and severed limbs were
broiled and eaten in the streets by these monsters who mutilate the
land. Isidore, the youngest, defied a hundred of Robespierre’s
cowards on the steps of the Assembly, and was torn to pieces by the
mob. Etienne alone is left. But for him and for the honour of my
house I too would find a place beside the King and die with him.
Etienne is with de la Rochejaquelein in Brittany. I am here at
Rouen.
“Brittany and Normandy still stand for the King. In these two
provinces begins the regeneration of France: we call it the War of
the Vendee. On that Isle of Jersey there you should almost hear the
voice of de la Rochejaquelein and the marching cries of our loyal
legions. If there be justice in God we shall conquer. But there
will be joy no more for such as you or me, nor hope, nor any peace.
We live only for those who come after. Our duty remains, all else
is dead. You did well to go, and I do well to stay.
“By all these piteous relations you shall know the importance of the
request I now set forth.
“My cousin by marriage of the House of Vaufontaine has lost all his
sons. With the death of the Prince of Vaufontaine, there is in
France no direct heir to the house, nor can it, by the law, revert
to my house or my heirs. Now of late the Prince hath urged me to
write to you—for he is here in seclusion with me—and to unfold to
you what has hitherto been secret. Eleven years ago the only nephew
of the Prince, after some naughty escapades, fled from the Court
with Rullecour the adventurer, who invaded the Isle of Jersey. From
that hour he has been lost to France. Some of his companions in
arms returned after a number of years. All with one exception
declared that he was killed in the battle at St. Heliers. One,
however, maintains that he was still living and in the prison
hospital when his comrades were set free.
“It is of him I write to you. He is—as you will perchance
remember—the Comte de Tournay. He was then not more than seventeen
years of age, slight of build, with brownish hair, dark grey eyes,
and had over the right shoulder a scar from a sword thrust. It
seemeth little possible that, if living, he should still remain in
that Isle of Jersey. He may rather have returned to obscurity in
France or have gone to England to be lost to name and remembrance
—or even indeed beyond the seas.
“That you may perchance give me word of him is the object of my
letter, written in no more hope than I live; and you can well guess
how faint that is. One young nobleman preserved to France may yet
be the great unit that will save her.
“Greet my poor countrymen yonder in the name of one who still waits
at a desecrated altar; and for myself you must take me as I am, with
the remembrance of what I was, even
“Your faithful friend and loving kinsman,
“CHANIER.”
“All this, though in the chances of war you read it not till
wintertide, was told you at Rouen this first day of September 1792.”
During the reading, broken by feeling and reflective pauses on the chevalier’s part, the listeners showed emotion after the nature of each. The Sieur de Mauprat’s fingers clasped and unclasped on the top of his cane, little explosions of breath came from his compressed lips, his eyebrows beetled over till the eyes themselves seemed like two glints of flame. Delagarde dropped a fist heavily upon the table, and held it there clinched, while his heel beat a tattoo of excitement upon the floor. Guida’s breath came quick and fast—as Ranulph said afterwards, she was “blanc comme un linge.” She shuddered painfully when the slaughter and burning of the Swiss Guards was read. Her brain was so swimming with the horrors of anarchy that the latter part of the letter dealing with the vanished Count of Tournay passed by almost unheeded.
But this particular matter greatly interested Ranulph and de Mauprat. They leaned forward eagerly, seizing every word, and both instinctively turned