The Historical Nights' Entertainment by Rafael Sabatini (mini ebook reader .TXT) đź“•
My narrative in "The Night of Hate" is admittedly a purely theoretical account of the crime. But it is closely based upon all the known facts of incidence and of character; and if there is nothing in the surviving records that will absolutely support it, neither is there anything that can absolutely refute it.
In "The Night of Masquerade" I am guilty of quite arbitrarily discovering a reason to explain the mystery of Baron Bjelke's sudden change from the devoted friend and servant of Gustavus III of Sweden into his most bitter enemy. That speculation is quite indefensible, although affording a possible explanation of that mystery. In the case of "The Night of Kirk o' Field," on the other hand, I do not think any apology is necessary for my reconstruction of the precise manner in which Darnley met his death. The event has long been looked upon as one of the mysteries of history - the mystery lying in the fact that whilst the house at Kirk o' Field was destroyed by an e
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you have made this manifest, there is no reason why the machine
should not work effectively. The evils of which you speak exist,
alas! But they are not so deeply rooted that, working under your
guidance and advice, we cannot uproot them, rendering the soil
fertile once more of good under the beneficent fertilizing showers
of liberty.”
Mollified, Carrier grunted approval.
“That is well said, Citizen Goullin. The fertilizer needed by
the soil is blood - the bad blood of aristocrats and federalists,
and I can promise you, in the name of the august people, that it
shall be abundantly provided.”
The assembly broke into applause, and his vanity melted to it. He
stood up, expressed his gratification at being so completely
understood, opened his arms, and invited the departmental president,
Minee, to come down and receive the kiss of brotherhood.
Thereafter they passed to the consideration of measures of
improvement, of measures to combat famine and disease. In Carrier’s
view there was only one way of accomplishing this - the number of
mouths to be fed must be reduced, the diseased must be eliminated.
It was the direct, the radical, the heroic method.
That very day six prisoners in Le Bouffay had been sentenced to
death for attempting to escape.
“How do we know,” he asked, “that those six include all the guilty?
How do we know that all in Le Bouffay do not share the guilt? The
prisoners are riddled with disease, which spreads to the good
patriots of Nantes; they eat bread, which is scarce, whilst good
patriots starve. We must have the heads off all those blasted
swine!” He took fire at his own suggestion. “Aye, that would be
a useful measure. We’ll deal with it at once. Let some one fetch
the President of the Revolutionary Tribunal.”
He was fetched - a man of good family and a lawyer, named Francois
Phelippes.
“Citizen President,” Carrier greeted him, “the administration of
Nantes has been considering an important measure. To-day you
sentenced to death six prisoners in Le Bouffay for attempting to
escape. You are to postpone execution so as to include all the
Bouffay prisoners in the sentence.”
Although an ardent revolutionary, Phelippes was a logically minded
man with a lawyer’s reverence for the sacredness of legal form.
This command, issued with such cynical coldness, and repudiated by
none of those present, seemed to him as grotesque and ridiculous
as it was horrible.
“But that is impossible, Citizen Representative,” said he.
“Impossible!” snarled Carrier. “A fool’s word. The administration
desires you to understand that it is not impossible. The sacred
will of the august people - “
Phelippes interrupted him without ceremony.
“There is no power in France that can countermand the execution of
a sentence of the law.”
“No - no power!”
Carrier’s loose mouth fell open. He was too amazed to be angry.
“Moreover,” Phelippes pursued calmly, “there is the fact that all
the other prisoners in Le Bouffay are innocent of the offence for
which the six are to die.”
“What has that to do with it?” roared Carrier. “Last year I rode
a she-ass that could argue better than you! In the name of —, what
has that to do with it?”
But there were members of the assembly who thought with Phelippes,
and who, whilst lacking the courage to express themselves, yet
found courage to support another who so boldly expressed them.
Carrier sprang up quivering with rage before that opposition. “It
seems to me,” he snarled, “that there are more than the scoundrels
in Le Bouffay who need to be shortened by a head for the good of
the nation. I tell you that you are slaying the commonweal by your
slowness and circumspection. Let all the scoundrels perish!”
A handsome, vicious youngster named Robin made chorus.
“Patriots are without bread! It is fitting that the scoundrels
should die, and not eat the bread of starving patriots.”
Carrier shook his fist at the assembly.
“You hear, you —! I cannot pardon whom the law condemns.”
It was an unfortunate word, and Phelippes fastened on it.
“That is the truth, Citizen Representative,” said Phelippes. “And
as for the prisoners in Le Bouffay, you will wait until the law
condemns them.”
And without staying to hear more, he departed as firmly as he had
come, indifferent to the sudden uproar.
When he had gone, the Representative flung himself into his chair
again, biting his lip.
“There goes a fellow who will find his way to the guillotine in
time,” he growled.
But he was glad to be rid of him, and would not have him brought
back. He saw how the opposition of Phelippes had stiffened the
weaker opposition of some of those in the assembly. If he was to
have his way he would contrive better without the legal-minded
President of the Revolutionary Tribunal. And his way he had in
the end, though not until he had stormed and cursed and reviled the
few who dared to offer remonstrances to his plan of wholesale
slaughter.
When at last he took his departure, it was agreed that the assembly
should proceed to elect a jury which was to undertake the duty of
drawing up immediately a list of those confined in the prisons of
Nantes. This list they were to deliver when ready to the committee,
which would know how to proceed, for Carrier had made his meaning
perfectly clear. The first salutary measure necessary to combat
the evils besetting the city was to wipe out at once the inmates of
all the prisons in Nantes.
In the chill December dawn of the next day the committee - which
had sat all night under the presidency of Goullin forwarded a list
of some five hundred prisoners to General Boivin, the commandant
of the city of Nantes, together with an order to collect them
without a moment’s delay, take them to L’Eperonniere, and there
have them shot.
But Boivin was a soldier, and a soldier is not a sans-culotte. He
took the order to Phelippes, with the announcement that he had no
intention of obeying it. Phelippes, to Boivin’s amazement, agreed
with him. He sent the order back to the committee, denouncing it
as flagrantly illegal, and reminding them that it was illegal to
remove any prisoner, no matter by whose order, without such an order
as might follow upon a decision of the Tribunal.
The committee, intimidated by this firmness on the part of the
President of the Revolutionary Tribunal, dared not insist, and
there the matter remained.
When Carrier learnt of it the things he said were less than ever
fit for publication. He raved like a madman at the very thought
that a quibbling lawyer should stand in the very path of him, the
august representative of the Sacred People.
It had happened that fifty-three priests, who had been brought to
Nantes a few days before, were waiting in the sheds of the entrepot
for prison accommodation, so that their names did not yet appear
upon any of the prison registers. As a solatium to his wounded
feelings, he ordered his friends of the Marat Company to get rid
of them.
Lamberty, the leader of the Marats, asked him how it should be done.
“How?” he croaked. “Not so much mystery, my friend. Fling the
swine into the water, and so let’s be rid of them. There will be
plenty of their kind left in France.”
But he seems to have explained himself further, and what precisely
were his orders, and how they were obeyed, transpires from a letter
which he wrote to the Convention, stating that those fifty-three
wretched priests, “being confined in a boat on the Loire, were last
night swallowed up by the river.” And he added the apostrophe,
“What a revolutionary torrent is the Loire!”
The Convention had no illusions as to his real meaning; and when
Carrier heard that his letter had been applauded by the National
Assembly, he felt himself encouraged to break down all barriers of
mere legality that might obstruct his path. And, after all, what
the Revolutionary Committee as a body - intimidated by Phelippes
- dared not do could be done by his faithful and less punctilious
friends of the Marat Company.
This Marat Company, the police of the Revolutionary Committee,
enrolled from the scourings of Nantes’ sans-culottism, and
captained by a ruffian named Fleury, had been called into being by
Carrier himself with the assistance of Goullin.
On the night of the 24th Frimaire of the year III (December 14, 1793,
old style), which was a Saturday, Fleury mustered some thirty of his
men, and took them to the Cour des Comptes, where they were awaited
by Goullin, Bachelier, Grandmaison, and some other members of the
committee entirely devoted to Carrier. From these the Marats
received their formal instructions.
“Plague,” Goullin informed them, “is raging in the gaols, and its
ravages must be arrested. You will therefore proceed this evening
to the prison of Le Bouffay in order to take over the prisoners
whom you will march up to the Quay La Fosse, whence they will be
shipped to Belle Isle.”
In a cell of that sordid old building known as Le Bouffay lay a
cocassier, an egg and poultry dealer, arrested some three years
before upon a charge of having stolen a horse, and since forgotten.
His own version was that a person of whom he knew very little had
entrusted him with the sale of the stolen animal in possession of
which he was discovered.
The story sounds familiar; it is the sort of story that must have
done duty many times; and it is probable that the cocassier was no
better than he should have been. Nevertheless Fate selected him
to be one of her unconscious instruments. His name was Leroy, and
we have his own word for it that he was a staunch patriot. The
horse business was certainly in the best vein of sans-culottism.
Leroy was awakened about ten o’clock that night by sounds that were
very unusual in that sombre, sepulchral prison. They were sounds
of unbridled revelry - snatches of ribald song, bursts of coarse,
reverberating laughter and they proceeded, as it seemed to him,
from the courtyard and the porter’s lodge.
He crawled from the dank straw which served him for a bed, and
approached the door to listen. Clearly the porter Laqueze was
entertaining friends and making unusually merry. It was also to be
gathered that Laqueze’s friends were getting very drunk. What the
devil did it mean?
His curiosity was soon to be very fully gratified. Came heavy steps
up the stone staircase, the clatter of sabots, the clank of weapons,
and through the grille of his door an increasing light began to beat.
Some one was singing the “Carmagnole” in drunken, discordant tones.
Keys rattled, bolts were drawn; doors were being flung open. The
noise increased. Above the general din he heard the detestable
voice of the turnkey.
“Come and see my birds in their cages. Come and see my pretty birds.”
Leroy began to have an uneasy premonition that the merrymaking
portended sinister things.
“Get up, all of you!” bawled the turnkey. “Up and pack your traps.
You’re to go on a voyage. No laggards, now. Up with you!”
The door of Leroy’s cell was thrown open in its turn, and he found
himself confronting a group of drunken ruffians. One of these - a
red-capped giant with long, black mustaches and a bundle of ropes
over one arm suddenly pounced upon him. The cocassier was an active,
vigorous young
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