DC CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY FROM Tile JJstate of Bessie -Beahan Date Due Cornell University Library DC 39.026 History of France from the earliest time 3 1924 028 232 910 p w Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in tlie Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924028232910 A HISTORY OF FRANCE FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES NAPOLEON I A HISTORY OF FRANCE FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES BY WILLIAM STEARNS DAVIS, Ph.D. Profasor of Hiatory in the University of Minnesota WITH MAPS AND IIXDSTEATIONS BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY WILLIAM STEARNS DAVGft ALL RIGHTS RESERVED CAMBRIDGE > MASSACHUSETTS PRINTED IN THE U. S. A. TO THE MEMORY OF HARRY DEIMAN CHAPLAIN 354th UNITED STATES INFANTRY KILLED IN ACTION IN FRANCE FIGHTING FOR THE CAUSE OF LIBERTY SEPTEMBER 29, 1918 PREFACE This book was originally intended for members of the American army who naturally would desire to know something of the past of the great French nation on whose soil they expected to do battle for Liberty. The happy but abrupt close of the war viti- ated this purpose, but the volmne was continued and was ex- tended on a somewhat more ambitious scale to assist in making intelligent Americans in general acquainted with the history of a country with which we have established an ever-deepen- ing friendship. During the war period, when this task was begun, it seemed possible at first to take some elementary history of France in the French language, translate the same, and present it to new readers in a suitable American dress. This soon appeared im- practicable, but certain PVench manuals were extremely helpful in preparing this work. This is true of the well-known Histoire de la civilisation frangaise by M. Alfred Rambaud, and even more particularly of the three admirable volumes of M. Albert Malet's Histoire de France, which, taken consecutively, form a national history for use in secondary schools superior possibly to any similar books wherein English or American students learn the story of their own respective countries. Very specific acknowledgment must be made of M. Malet's work for ma- terial used in Chapters ix, xm, and xviii, which utilization in some cases almost amoimts to a free translation. The same is true also of the supplemental matter on the acquisition of the French Colonies (Chapter xxv). Of course every competent scholar of French history will recognize the well-known books in the English language which have been frequently laid under contribution. They are listed with other important volumes in viii PREFACE the bibKography of works on French history in English, given in the appendix. Certain sections relating to the Fiankish kings, and to hfe in the Middle Ages, have also been adapted from the present author's own short History of Medioeeal and Mod- em Europe (Boston, 1914). i To readers interested in the present-day problems of Em-ope (and what Americans are not?) the reforms of Napoleon are likely to seem more important than those of Charlemagne, and the policy of Thiers and Gambetta than that of Philip Augustus. The story of France is an extremely long one, and inevitably the narrative is obliged to begin with only a jejune outline, but this has been gradually allowed to broaden and deepen, so that the major fraction of the entire book is devoted to the period since 1789; and the story of the "New Regime," of its sorrows, re- verses, and final vindication and victory in 1918, is told with considerable detail, and one may hope with corresponding clarity and helpfulness. One Hmitation must be stated very frankly. No other one nation of Europe has touched so many outside factors as France. A complete history of France would make an almost equally complete history of nearly aJl the great wars and major diplo- matic intrigues that have agitated Europe. To write a short history, therefore, that was not simply to degenerate into a dry epitome, military and diplomatic annals have perforce been cut to the bone. The story has been the story of the French people, its progress, setbacks, trials, and victories, and only so far as for- eign or military events have contributed to that story have they been mentioned. Very hearty recognition and thanks are due to my assistant. Miss Gertrude A. Jacobsen, A.M., Fellow in History in the University of Minnesota, who redacted the entire text of this volume, prepared the maps, compiled the chronological and bibliographical tables as well as the appendix on the "States General," and also did a large amount of the necessary trans- lating. Without her faithful and highly scholarly and efficient PREFACE ix aid, the successful completion of the book would have been well- nigh impossible. Warm thanks also are due to my colleagues Dean Guy S. Ford and Professors M. W. Tyler and A. C. Krey, of the History Department of this university, for careful reading of the manuscript, and for many valuable suggestions and corrections. W. S. D. The University of Minnesota Minneapolis, Minn. CONTENTS I. The Land of the Gauls and the French 1 II. The Roman Province and the Frankish Kingdom 9 III. From Franks to Frenchmen 29 IV. The Golden Age of Feudalism (996-1270) 42 V. Life in the Feudal Ages 64 VI. The Dawn of the Modern Era (1270-1483) 81 VII. The Turbulent Sixteenth Century (1483-1610) 107 VIII. The Great Cardinal and his Successor 132 IX. Louis XIV, the Sun King: His Work in France 152 X. Louis XIV, Dominator of Europe 170 XL The Wane of the Old Monarchy 196 XII. France, the Homeland of New Ideas 214 XIII. Old France on the Eve of the Revolution 243 XIV. The Fiery Coming of the New Regime (1789-92) 268 XV. The Years of Blood and Wrath (1792-95) 299 XVI. Napoleon Bonaparte, as Master of Europe 330 XVII. The Napoleonic Regime in France: The Consulate and the Empire 349 XVIII. "Glory and Madness" — Moscow, Leipzig, and Waterloo 381 XIX. The Restored Bourbons and their Exit 395 xii CONTENTS XX. The "Citizen-King "and the Rule of the Bourgeois 418 Aspects of French Life under the Restored Mon- archy (1814-48) 439 XXI. Radical Outbreaks and the Reaction to Csesarism: The Second Republic (1848-51) 453 XXII. Napoleon the Little: His Prosperity and Decadence 472 XXIII. The Crucifixion by Prussia (1870-71) 496 XXIV. The Painful Birth of the Third Republic 520 XXV. The Years of Peace (1879-1914) 540 The Extension of the Colonial Empire of France imder the Third RepubHc 567 XXVI. France Herself Again 579 Appendix A. Outline Chronology of French History 605 B. The States General (1302-1789): compiled by Gertrude A. Jacobsen, A.M. 611 Select Bibliography 617 Index 633 nXUSTRATIONS Napoleon I Frontispiece Merovingian Manor House 24 From Gamier and Ammann's Histoire de VEcMtation humaine The Louvre of Philip Augustus 58 After Hoffbauer's restoration Castle of Coucy (restored) : Erected a.d. 1225-1230 64 This castle, one of the great historic monuments of France, was completely destroyed by the Germans in their retreat to the "Hin- denburg Line" in March, 1917 A Battle in the Fifteenth Century 92 After a drawing in a fifteenth-century manuscript of the Chro- niques ie Froissart. The battle portrayed is that of Auray (1364) but the armament is that of the fifteenth century and the landscape entirely conventional Attack and Defense of a City in the Fifteenth Century 92 After a drawing in a fifteenth-century manuscript of the Chro- niques de Froissart. It figures the siege of Aubenton by the Comte de Hainault in 1340, with the equipment and architecture of the fif- teenth centiury The Tournament at which Henry H was Mortally Wounded, June 19, 1559 114 After an engraving in the collection of Perdrissin and Tortorel, published in 1570 Louis XI 118 Catherine de' Medici 118 Henry IV 118 Maximilien, Duke of Sully 118 xiv ILLUSTEATIONS Consecration of Louis XIV at Reims 146 After an engraving on copper by Lepautre Louis XIV 152 Cardinal Richelieu 152 Jean-Baptiste Colbert 152 Mme. de Pompadour 152 The Chateau of Versailles before the End of the Seven- teenth Century 184 After an engraving on copper by G. Perelle Voltaire 228 Jean-Jacques Rousseau Mirabeau Louis XVI 228 The Constituent Assembly at Versailles on the Night of August 4, 1789 276 From an engraving on copper by Helman after a design by Monnet Marie Antoinette 288 Robespierre 288 Marat 288 Danton 288 Napoleon in Bivouac in the Valley of the Grand-Saint- ' Bernard 334 After a design by Thevenin in the Museum of Versailles Louis-Philippe 424 Napoleon III 424 Adolphe Thiers 424 ILLUSTRATIONS xv Leon Gambetta 424 Marshal Foch saluting the Statue of General Kleber after the Entry of the French into Strasbourg in 1918 600 From a photograph copyrighted by Underwood & Underwood, New York With the exception of the portraits and the view of Marshal Foch at Stras- bourg, the illustrations are reproduced from cuts in A. Parmentier's Album His- iorique, published in four volumes in Paris, 1896-1907. MAPS France, showing Provinces as existing in 1789 (colored) France, showing Places and Geographical Features men- tioned in Chapter I 2 The Monarchy of the Franks 18 Charlemagne's Empire 34 France at the Accession of Philip Augustus, 1180 54 France about 1453 98 France, 1461-1492, under Louis XI and Charles of Bur- gundy 104 France, 1610-1715 132 Europe in 1810, showing Napoleon's Power at its Height 346 The French Empire in Africa, 1914 568 Indo-China and the French Possessions, 1914 574 France in Departments, 1871-1914 (colored) 602 FRANCE showing Provinces as existing in 1789 Lon(;itudc \\'oKt Longitude East 4 from Greenwich A HISTORY OF FRANCE CHAPTER I THE LAND OF THE GAULS AND THE FRENCH In 1869 a distinguished Frenchman, an ex-prime minister, began a long history of his nation with these words, "France inhabits a country, long ago civilized and Christianized, where despite much imperfection and much social misery, thirty-eight millions of men Uve in security and peace, under laws equal for all and efficiently upheld. " ' This statement was all the more true on the eve of the Great War in 1914. To understand the history of any coimtry, however, it is absolutely necessary to under- stand something of its geography, and geographical factors have influenced the history of France certainly as much as that of any great nation of the Old World save possibly in the case of England. Of the larger or more famous countries of Europe, Russia, the Scandinavian lands, Germany, Holland, and Belgium assuredly belong to the North, with its severe winters and the changes in civiUzation inevitable in a severe climate. Great Britain and Ireland are also Northern lands, but with their national life pro- foundly modified through encirclement by the sea. Greece, Italy, and Spain look out upon the blue Mediterranean. They are Southern lands — of the ohve, the vine, and the luxurious for- ests. They receive the hot winds of Africa, and they have en- joyed direct contact with the older civilizations of the East, There is one land, however, that is both Southern and Northern, both of Southern wine and Northern corn; and whose southern shores have been trodden by the old Greeks and Phoenicians, while from her northern headlands can be seen the cliffs of 1 Guizot. 2 A HISTORY OF FRANCE southern England. That country is France, " the mediating land " (as has been well said) between ancient and modern civilization, and between southern and northern Europe. Prance thus lies most decidedly in the cross-roads of world events. It is better to study her annals than those of any other (me country in Europe, if the reader would get a general view of universal history. France has been a participant in, or interested spectator of, nearly every great war or diplomatic contest for over a thousand years; and a very great proportion of all the religious, intellectual, social, and economic movements which have affected the world either began in France or were speedily caught up and acted upon by Frenchmen soon after they had commenced their worldng elsewhere. Nevertheless, geographically France is a highly separate and an economically independent nation. In 1914 she was probably less dependent on imported commodities and foreign commerce for her prosperous life than any other coimtry in western Eiu-ope. She came far nearer to feeding herself than either England or Germany. Better than any other great power, saving the United States, she could have endured complete isolation and blockade provided she could have held intact her boundaries.' France is decidedly separated from her neighbors by great natural barriers. Her coast-line is longer than her land frontiers : there being 395 miles of water along the Mediterranean shores, 572 on the North Sea and the British Channel, and 584 on the open Atlantic and the stormy Bay of Biscay. To the south, the lofty Pyrenees form a barrier against Spain, which permitted Prdnce to feel very secure even in the days when Spain was formidable. To- wards Italy and Switzerland, the Alps and their cousins the Jura are a still more reliable bulwark. Before 1870 the Rhine was a protection against Germany and, after the loss of Alsace- Lorraine, the Vosges Mountains were still a difficult problem for ' Of course very early in the war of 1914 the Germans seized the district of coal and iron mines in the northeast 'of France, thus putting the latter under a heavy handicap until relieved by England and America. FRANCE showing places and geographical features mentioned in Chapter I. Long. W. "^'' / :::J^ Jlarseiltf MEDITEnRANEAN KIP.A SEA [, OUTLETS UPON THE SEA . 3 armies. Only towards the northwest, the Belgian boundary ran across fields arbitrarily marked off without natural limits, and here alone neither mountains nor rivers could come to the aid of French generals defending their homeland. It is not surpris- ing, therefore, that it was across Belgium that in 1914 Prussian militarism attempted to "hack its way" to Paris, discarding neutral rights and plighted word. As Old- World countries go, France has a large territory. Only Russia is essentially larger. As the crow flies it is 606 miles from north to south, 675 miles from northwest to southwest (the longest diagonal), and 556 miles from west to east. The total area in 1914 (before the recovery of Alsace-Lorraine) was about 200,700 square miles, now restored by the victory over Germany to about 206,300. Corsica, which is Italian in location though completely French in loyalty, added about 3375 more. France is thus somewhat smaller than Texas, the largest American fed- eral state. She is much larger than California, the second in size. Her boundaries are ample to contain great diversities in customs, products, and scenery. Although Prance does not possess the deeply indented coast of Britain, Greece, and Norway, she is provided with ample outlets for a great commerce and easy intercourse with distant nations. On the Mediterranean lie Marseilles, the most active harbor upon that "Great Sea," and Toulon, the chief French naval post. On Biscay are Bordeaux, La Rochelle, and Saint-Nazaire, the harbor-town for Nantes. On the Breton and Channel Coasts are Brest, Cherbourg, and especially Le Havre (which is pecu- liarly the port of Paris), and also Boulogne, Calais, and Dunkirk — the last three mainly important for their communications with England. When one turns away from the seacoast, the whole bulk of French territory roughly distributes itself into three great sections — the Highlands, the Great Plateau, and the River Systems. The Highlands are, of course, in the south and southeast only. 4 A HISTORY OF FRANCE where the national boundaries run up to the summits of the Pyrenees and the Alps. These districts are picturesque and inter- esting, but not large enough to contribute much to the general life of the nation. The Great Central Plateau covers nearly half of the southern section of France, but it is cut off from the Alps by the broad, deep valley of the Rhone. Many parts of this plateau are com- paratively level and without striking scenery: but nearly one seventh of the entire area of France is embraced in the great "Massif Central" radiating around Auvergne, which rises some- times to a height of 3300 to 4000 feet, throwing up sharp moun- tains to over 6000 feet high. The upper parts of this plateau are rather barren, and raise only scanty crops for a correspondingly sparse population. On the southern side of the Plateau, cutting off warm Languedoc and the plains of the lower Rhone from the more barren plains of Rouergue, the Cevennes rise, as very respectable mountains, to over 5000 feet. Other parts of the Great Plateau are Limousin and Marche, where heights of 3300 feet are reached. On the northeast towards Germany, the Ardennes (between the Meuse and the Moselle) form another plateau 1600 to 2400 feet high in places, covered with forests, and broken by many marshy depressions, ravines, and fertile valleys. Since the Ardennes lie very directly on the route of armies passing between France and Germany, their position has served to determine the lines of march and location of many famous campaigns and battles. But more Frenchmen by far live in the long river valleys than on the Great Central Plateau. There are over 4300 miles of navigable rivers in the country, besides nearly 200 miles more that have been converted into canals. The coimtry also has adapted itself easily to the building of ordinary canals, of which there are more than 2000 miles. The rivers and the canals com» bined make inland navigation far more important in France than in almost any other European nation. Long before the days of railroads, the canal and river systems rendered it relatively easy THE LOIRE SYSTEM 5 to move heavy freight from one end to the other of the country, giving a great impetus toward national unity not enjoyed by lands more dependent for communications on carts and pack- horses: and even now in the days of railroads the river barge has been a serious competitor to the freight train. Making the circuit of the French coasts one finds a succession of important rivers, and along the banks of each thereof lie num- erous famous cities and millions of prosperous people. Without the men of the river valleys there would be no France. Beginning in the southwest there is the Garonne. It really begins in the Spanish Pyrenees, but it receives many affluents from the Massif Central. Its 346 miles of current drain an area of 22,080 square miles before it is joined by the shghtly weaker Dordogne (305 miles) which rises in the height of land in Auvergne. The Dordogne digs its course into the plateau and wanders through a beautiful vineyard country, which is con- tinued when this river (blending with the Garonne) continues as the more famous Gironde. This last is really a maritime estu- ary: fifteen miles from its mouth lies Bordeaux, one of the great ports of France, and its banks are lined with some of the most famous wine-lands in the world, producing the renowned vintage of Medoc. From the mouth of the Gironde northward for some distance no stream of importance enters the Bay of Biscay; then is dis- covered the capital river of the nation, the Loire, undoubtedly the chief artery of France: 670 miles long, it winds from the mountains well over to the eastern side of the country. It drains 46,750 square miles and in this large area Uve 7,000,000 French- men. It starts in the uplands a little to the west of the lower course of its chief rival, the Rhone. It swings northward and comes within 70 miles of Paris, then takes a great bend westward near Orleans. Whereupon, rapid and strong, fed by dozens of rich affluents, it sets out unwearyingly for the Atlantic. Along its banks lie the regions which are the real heart of France : the Orleannais, Touraine, Anjou, and in confines of its wider valley 6 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Berri, Maine, and Poitou — names graven upon French annals. In its wide valley lies a bright, thriving corn and wine country- dotted with famous chateaux — Blois, Amboise, Chinon, Loches, to name only a very few: and among the equally famous cities touched by its swift current it is enough to name Orleans, Tours, Saumur, Angers, and Nantes. North of the Loire flows the second river peculiarly dear to Frenchmen. The Seine is undoubtedly the smaller stream. It is only 485 miles long, draining 30,030 square miles. But it has been favored hke the Tiber, the Thames, and the Hudson by the fame and historical greatness of the cities upon its banks. On its affluent, the Marne (its own name stamped upon history), lies Chalons where the hordes of Attila were turned away: and upon the Vesle lies Reims of immortal and melancholy memory. The Seine flows directly across Normandy and there on its banks stands Rouen, the stately Norman capital: while at its mouth is Le Havre, the thriving seaport: but of course the chief dis- tinction of the Seine is that it is the river of Paris, where so often has seemed to throb the life of France. In the extreme north of the country, the land tapers off towards Flanders and is very httle above the level of the sea. The rivers are unimportant, sluggish, and frequently are made over into canals. This land of Picardy, Artois, and French Flanders is fertile, if somewhat monotonous, and contains the most important coal-fields in the nation, while Lille and Amiens are important and enterprising cities; but there is little distinc- tive in this region which belongs neither to the Great Plateau nor the Great Valleys. There is still another mighty river in France, although it has played a less part in the national history than the Seine, the Loire, or even the Garonne-Gironde. The Rhone is 507 miles long and drains 38,180 square miles, but one tenth of this area is in Switzerland. It rises really in the St. Gothard Alps and issues from Lake Geneva. At Lyons (the second city of France) it is joined by the long and powerful Saone coming down from the FERTILITY OF THE COUNTRY 7 north; then the united current advances southward through another rich vineyard-hned valley until, after a long course, at Avignon its banks suddenly become far less fertile and attrac- tive, and the end of a stream, that has rushed down from the clear Alpine glaciers, is a muddy, sandy delta beside the Medi- terranean. The cHmate of the large country served by these great rivers obviously is extremely varied. On the whole it is one of the best climates in the world, "not so continental as Central Europe, and not so maritime as that of England." The coldest region is natm-aUy the Great Central Plateau where the winters are fre- quently severe, although followed (American fashion) by decid- edly hot summers. The northeast parts of the Plateau, Cham- pagne, Lorraine, and the Vosges region, have a "continental" climate much like that of Germany and Austria. The frosts average 85 days per winter, although there is seldom much snow lingering upon the plains. The river valleys are milder. In Paris the frosts average only 56 days per year. The rains indeed aver- age no less than 154 days per year, but the rainy spells are sel- dom extremely long, and the total rainfall is only 20 inches per annum. Brittany, a great buttress thrown out into the tumbling Atlantic, has a moist maritime climate very like that of the southwest of England. The Biscay-Garonne region is decidedly warm and' dry. As for the southeastern region south of the mountains, Languedoc-Provence, this would have a really torrid climate except for the terrible and frequent mistral, a powerful wind which, rushing down from the Cevennes, purifies the air and throws back the moistiu-e upon the sea, leaving these prov- inces so dry that Marseilles has only 55 rainy days per year. Such a country is bound to have an abundant natural flora and fauna with corresponding cultivated products. Southern France is the land of the olive, the vine, and the mulberry. Northern France raises corn, and orchard and garden products like England and Germany. There are wide stretches of the open country which, except for the architecture of the farms and vU- 8 A HISTORY OF FRANCE lages, look decidedly familiar to citizens of the Eastern States of America. There is still (considering the length of human habita- tion in the region) a sm'prising amount of forest land, carefully tended, but of unspoiled natural beauty. On the eve of the Great War, the state of the local communes owned over 10,000 square miles of forest land, and wide stretches beyond this were private property. These forests not merely added to the pubHc wealth, but served to keep France an unartificialized nation, with ver- dant nature not too severely thrust into the background by "civilization." To conclude this glance at the physical home of the ancient Gaul and the modern Frenchman — France is a region which, by geographical location and size, by the majesty of her rivers, and by the diversity of her scenery and mountains, is admirably fitted to be the home of a mighty nation. CHAPTER II THE ROMAN PROVINCE AND THE FRANKISH KINGDOM In some year about 600 b.c. a small fleet of galleys from the Asiatic Greek city of Phocsea ploughed its way boldly into the western Mediterranean, effected a landing at the harbor now known as Marseilles, coerced or cajoled the native chiefs into allowing the shipmen to make a settlement, "to found a colony " as the Greeks said, and presently the newcomers established a town with the temples, market-place, walls, magistrates, and general customs of a genuine Hellenic city. These bold settlers were far indeed from their old home by the ^gean "under the blue Ionian weather," but those were the days of Greek maritime enterprise, when its mariners were exploring all the nooks of the Mediterranean just as later the Spaniards searched out the Golden Indies. The Phoenicians, already commercial monopo- lists in these seas, frowned on the intruders and did their best to fight them away. This opposition was vain. The settlement be- came rooted, prospered, and defied its foes, although it was the most distant of all the Greek colonies. With this foundation of "Massalia" begins the history of the coimtry later ages were to call "France." Hitherto it had been merely the home of savage tribes. Now it becomes linked to civiUzation. The tribesmen with whom the Greeks of MassaUa chaffered and bartered are ordinarily named "Gauls." They had probably been in the region a considerable time, having ousted some older and still more primitive folk. These Gauls were mainly Celts, members of a great race that was spreading over most of west- ern Europe save only southern and central Italy, Their kinsfolk were penetrating into Spain and Britain, and even to-day there are many pure-blooded Celts in Scotland, Wales, and Ireland. '^ ^ And of course the pronounced Celtic element in French Brittany is very noticeable. 10 A HISTORY OF FRANCE When the Greeks first met them, they were decidedly im- tamed savages, red-headed, heavy-fisted, and with many of the general customs, virtues, and vices of Iroquois Indians. Contact with the Greeks, however, taught them much. They improved their weapons, learned to live more or less in towns, and con- solidated their petty clans into greater tribes imder kings or an oligarchy of chieftains. They also developed a peculiar type of worship. We know very httle about the precise religious beliefs taught by the famous "Druids," for they served their imcouth gods with strictly mysterious rites when they met under their "sacred oaks," probably to o£Per human sacrifices; but we do know that they constituted an arrogant priestly caste something like the Hindoo Brahmins and the Egyptian priesthoods, and that they exercised a formidable political power over their awe- stricken laity. As for the rest of the Gauls, they were gradually struggling upward from savagery to barbarism. Usually they dwelt in tribes each under its elected or hereditary chief, with his Druids for advisers or spiritual masters, and his body of warriors who chose or confirmed him and then fought his battles. Below the warriors was a less honorable company of the servile men and of the women who performed the inglorious works of peace, tilled the fields, pounded the grain, and reared the chil- dren, while their lords lolled on their bearskins, drank much home-brewed Uquor or choicer wines from Greek traders, gam- bled, quarreled, hunted, and waited a summons to battle. Each clan had ordinarily its own central "town" of circular wattled huts, and if the clan were powerful it probably occupied a hilltop enclosed by rude but often formidable timber and earthworks; or perhaps entrenched itself in a hold amid the dark recesses of wood and marsh. Before the Romans entered the land there were already signs of a higher order of things. Clans were merging into confederacies covering considerable districts. Certain chiefs and tribes were striking coins with crude legends in the Greek alphabet. Traders from MassaHa or from Italy were bringing in various Southern CESAR'S CONQUEST OF GAUL 11 hardwares and fabrics as well as liquors to exchange for furs, skins, and other crude natural products. Left to themselves, in other words, these "Gallic" sections of the Celts might have evolved a real civilization in a few himdred years longer — if they had been let alone. They were not to be let alone. Already by about 122 b.c. the Romans in their resistless expansion had occupied the extreme southeast of the country along the Mediterranean, the later Provence (that is, the Roman "Province" as contrasted with the rest of Gaul) ; but this was not a very large district, and for two generations the great Italian conquerors contented themselves with what was httle more than a series of forts to command the important and strategic highroad from Italy into Spain. Still, Roman influence crept imperceptibly northward. In nearly every clan and tribal confederacy there would be a pro-Roman party among the chiefs, which held that Roman advance was inevit- able and had better be welcomed and not resisted, and an anti- Roman "patriotic" party, crying out against southern encroach- ments, and almost always stoutly supported in its views by the Druids. Then, in 58 B.C., Gaul was entered by the greatest secu- lar figure in ancient history: possibly by the greatest secular figure in aU history — Gains Julius Caesar himself. Csesar wished to conquer Gaul, partly because he needed the glory and wealth flowing from such a victory to increase his chances of becoming monarch of Rome on the ruins of the totter- ing Roman Republic, partly because the security of the ancient world genuinely demanded that Gaul should be plucked from barbarian turbulence and set in an orderly place in civilization. He had plenty of excuses for intervention. Formidable Ger- man tribes (more barbarous and warhke than the Gauls them- selves) were threatening to cross the Rhine and conquer the whole land. Many Gallic chieftains and factions, growing anx- ious, were ready to call in the Romans. Other chieftains were promptly won over by the master-politician's ready tact and persuasiveness. Csesar had seldom the use of more than 50,000 13 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Italian troops at any time during his nine years of campaigning, but they were legionaries of the best Roman discipline and led by an incomparable commander. The invaders thus were able to overrun and to subjugate nearly the whole land before the Gauls, realizing slowly that the Romans had come to stay, could begin to drop their feuds and organize resistance. Then it was too late. Caesar had grasped the points of vantage and pene- trated deep into the country. The Gauls found indeed an able and inspiring chief in Vercingetorix, who rose to the level of a true national hero. He fired nearly the whole land so that it blazed up against Csesar in desperate revolt, but his himdreds of thousands of ill-disciplined levies were no match for the legion- aries' javeUns and short swords. Csesar presently drove him into the stronghold of Alesia (not far from Dijon), beat back all at- tempts to throw in succor and starved him into surrender. That act practically ended the story of pre-Roman Gaul. By 50 B.C. the country was completely submissive, so submissive in fact that a little later Csesar could call off nearly all his troops to follow him over the Rubicon for his march into Italy to found the Roman Empire. X The conqueror had been ruthless in his slaughter of enemies and his confiscations of their wealth. But when the brutal work had once been done, it was followed by an era of benevolence and conciliation. First, the Gauls were taught that it was hope- less to resist Rome; then, secondly, that it was not at all dis- agreeable to be her subjects. Taxes were reasonable. Law and order took the place of outrageous tribal oppressions. The Druids with their human sacrifices were suppressed. Gallic nobles were flattered with Roman citizenship. If they were really prominent nobles they might presently hope to become Roman senators. The recruiting masters for the legions enrolled thousands of Gallic youth, promising them all the pay, booty, privileges, and hopes of promotion which were ordinarily offered in the imperial armies. Since the Gauls were themselves without a well-developed THE ROMANIZING OF GAUL 13 civilization, they, like most barbarians under similar pressm-e, easily adopted the superior usages of their masters. It was easy to rename their crude gods "Jupiter" or "Merciuy " or "Juno." The provincial governors took the young chieftains into their palaces at once as guests and hostages and not merely taught them Latin, but also gave them a taste for Virgil and Cicero, as well as a great delight in Roman clothes, Roman social cus- toms, and Roman institutions. Especially did the imperial gov- ernment favor the founding and building of cities. The old Grseco-Roman civiUzation was essentiaUy a city civihzation, as contrasted with a society based upon rural settlements. The Romans therefore promoted the building of cities as a prime step to Latinization. Sometimes old Celtic commimities were recast in a Roman mould. More often new "colonies" or "mimi- cipia" were created outright, and the natives induced to settle therein. Very many of the most famous cities of France are thus of a direct Roman foundation. Among these (to name a few from many) are Limoges, Tours, and Soissons.^ Each of these cities had its own special charter (often from the Emperor direct) authorizing its citizens to elect their own magistrates, pass local laws, and enjoy very large autonomy so long as the taxes went in promptly to the imperial "fiscus." Each city also would have its temples to the usual Roman gods, its public baths, its amphi- theater for the wild-beast fights and gladiators quite in Italian fashion, its circus for the horse-races, its forum for trade and public meetings, its "curia" for the gatherings of the local sen- ate, its theater for Latin comedies, its schools for Latin oratory — in short, all the paraphernalia of a "little Rome " wherein the citizens called themselves Julius and Fabius and Claudius, wore long togas and tried hard to forget that their grandfathers had carried their spears behind Vercingetorix. ' Paris (oldest name Lutetia) was a very insignificant stronghold on an island in the Seine when the Romans took it in 52 a.d. By 100 a.d. under Roman rule it had begun to develop as a sizable provincial town, and was started on its advance to greatness. 14 A HISTORY OF FRANCE As for the general administration of the land, Gaul was for a long time divided into six rather large Roman provinces/ with the proconsuls mainly occupied with checking up the tax ac- counts of the various cities and acting as judges on appeal in important litigation. So submissive was the whole coimtry that the imperial government seldom found it necessary to station a single large garrison in many very wide regions. The decrees of the Csesars could usually be enforced by mere constables, al- though all men knew that close to the Rhine there always lay several reliable legions, whose prime business indeed was to keep the Germanic tribes from penetrating westward into the Empire, but which could be readily ordered about to snuff out any dis- order in Gaul, should insurrection threaten. The Gallic provinces thus became one of the most prosperous, peaceful, and important parts of the Roman Empire. Thanks to their possession the Csesars were able to estabUsh contact with more distant lands: with Britain (which they conquered in the first century of our era) and with Germany, which they indeed failed to conquer, but which they repeatedly invaded. The Romans even gave to the Gauls a national capital. Lugdu- num (modern Lyons) became an elegant city with magnificent pubhc buildings comparable to those by the Tiber. Here, once a year, assembled the deputies of all the Gallic cities to celebrate elaborate sacrifices in honor of the "Sacred Emperor" to whom they owed their prosperity, and also (an important political privilege) to petition the Ceesars for redress of grievances, espe- cially against evil governors. The results of all this Romaniza- tion were manifold. The Gauls became among the most loyal '■ These provinces were : I. Narbonensis (the old province before Csesar). II. Aquitania. III. Lugdunensis. IV. Belgica. V. Lower Germany. VI. Upper Germany. The last three included considerable territories not ordinarily reckoned now as part of France. CHRISTIANITY ENTERS GAUL 15 and devoted subjects of the Empire. Their old Celtic tongue was largely lost, at least by the upper classes, and the old tribal laws and customs equally perished. Some of the most distin- guished poets and orators of the later Latin hterature were born in the land we now call France. The Rhone, the Loire, and especially the Moselle were lined with cities and splendid villas that barely differed from those in Italy. Rome had made here one of her fairest conquests. First she had conquered by the sword: then more worthily by her superior civilization. For nearly three himdred years after the days of Julius Caesar the Gallic lands have no important history save as a part of the great Roman Empire. After the edict of Caracalla (213 a.d.?) all their free inhabitants had become Roman citizens — legally the equals of the original rvding race. As the Empire declined, thanks to gross mismanagement by the Caesars, the degeneracy of the army and the fundamental defects of the ancient social system which rested in slavery, the Gauls of course had their share of the world's sorrow. Beginning about 250 a.d. and for the next forty-odd years this part of the Empire was exposed to devastating raids by the Germanic tribes from across the Rhine, raids which the now demoralized legionaries failed to repel. Many Gallic cities were thus desolated. The survivors protected themselves with new walls, often erected in frantic haste, as existing archaeological remains often testify. The old Roman society was apparently drifting on the rocks, but by about 300 A.D. the catastrophe seemed averted when a new succession of able emperors seized the helm of state, and by drastic reforms insmed temporary safety. The Roman Empire, and Gaul with it, received another hundred years' respite. During these silent years a new force was penetrating Gaul as everywhere else in the Empire. Soon after 100 a.d. Christianity begins to show itself in these provinces. About 170 a.d. there were enough Christians in Lyons to warrant a wholesale persecu- tion by the pagan priests and governor. Presently we hear of 16 A HISTORY OF FRANCE churches in Autun, Dijon, and Besangon. About 251 one meets traces of Christianity in Limoges, Tours, and even Paris (still a second-class city). The early annals of the Gallic Church are not very clear. Probably here, as elsewhere, the cities were Chris- tianized long before the rural communities ceased their supersti- tious worship of the old gods: and the pagans were probably in a decided majority everywhere until after about 350 a.d., when a great apostle of the Western Church, St. Martin of Tours, went up and down the land converting whole districts to the new faith. Still it is certain that when Constantine the Great (306- 337) and his successors showed Christianity indulgence and then made it the official religion of the Roman Empire, the Gallic lands accepted the change fairly readily. By 400 a.d. Gaul was officially "Christian." What is more it was "CathoUc" and "Orthodox" Christian: that is to say, the bulk of its people accepted the famous Nicene Creed and the forms of beUef sup- ported by the Church of Rome and the other great centers of theological leadership. The formidable un-orthodox "Arian" (Unitarian) heresy, although it had followers in the region, had gained no general footing. This was a very important fact, for it prevented Gaul from being isolated from the rest of the world's thought at the moment the Roman Empire was dissolving before the Goths and Vandals. About 375 A.D. the Germanic tribes began to penetrate again into the decadent Empire, and the legions soon proved too feeble to turn them out. But the first barbarian attacks were mainly upon the Balkan lands, and not till about 400 a.d. were the Rhine barriers forced and the "Romans" (as the Gauls now gladly called themselves) trembled at the sight of their burning villages while the invaders drew nigh. Rome had not been built in a day, Roman Gaul was not con- quered in a day. Some parts were quickly overrun by the bar- barians; some resisted stoutly; some temporarily expelled the first conquerors; some compounded with the invaders on terms COLLAPSE OF THE WESTERN EMPIRE 17 that allowed German and Gallo-Roman to settle down rather comfortably together. It was of course a miserable time, when the old civilization was painfully dying, and when the newer civilization was anything but safely bom. The liberal arts seemed sterile or dead. Cities were decaying, if they were not devastated outright by the invader; the magnificent Roman road system, which had covered Gaul like a network of modern railways, was degenerating; commerce and all but the most necessary indus- tries were nigh perishing. The only reliable law was that of the strongest. Alone in the Church and especially in the monks' and nuns' cloisters seemed there any sure refuge for peace-loving men and delicate women. Nevertheless, the age of the Germanic invasions was not one of unmitigated destruction and misery. The invaders were well aware that the invaded were their superiors in everything but warfare. The barbarian chiefs were prompt to adopt not merely Roman dresses, table manners, and court ceremonial, but also to make Gallo-Roman noblemen their ministers and officials to control the great population of provin- cials which the Germans knew how to conquer, but afterward did not know how to govern. Much of the old Roman law sur- vived, along with many features of the old tax system. It was an era of twilight, but not of absolute darkness. When the Roman Empire of the West finally went under, in 476 A.D., the greater part of Gaul was already in German hands. Since 412 the formidable Visigoths had held sway in nearly all of the south with their capital at Bordeaux. Nearer the Rhine, in the east center, the Burgundians were in control. In the north (quite isolated from Italy, curiously enough) the Roman power was making its last stand, under the "Patrician" Syagrius. The Visigoths and Burgimdians had gone through the forms of pro- fessing Christianity, but it was of the unorthodox Arian type — hence they were in very bad odor with the native clergy and native population, which were mostly Cathohcs devoted to the Nicene Creed. Conditions therefore were anything but static, when a new 18 A HISTORY OF FRANCE power began asserting itself in the north and speedily overshad- owed all Gaul. The Franks had been a loose confederacy of Germanic tribes on the right bank of the Rhine since the third century. They had occasionally fought against the Romans; more often they had been their well-paid allies and had sent their warriors into the Caesars' armies. For a long time they showed no great wish to invade Gaul. Then in the fifth centiuy they gradu- ally followed the example of their fellow Germans and began to spread iilto what is now the extreme north of France. It was a slow, somewhat hesitant invasion, for the Franks were sadly disunited. Salians, Ripuarians, and other tribes of their confed- eracy whetted their weapons to fight against one another even more than against Syagrius. They were fierce, untamed warriors in any case — not even Arians, but downright heathen: cruel in customs and very willing to settle all issues by appeal to their "franciskas" — their great battle-axes, which possibly gave them their tribal name. In 481 the chief of the SaUan Franks, Hilderic, died, and passed on his stormy authority to his fifteen- year-old son Clovis. A bad man, but a mighty ruler, had thrust himself into history. Clovis was of execrable morality even in an age of perfidy and blood. The most that can be said is that the evils of the times demanded sharp surgery if civilization was not to end in anarchy, and Clovis assuredly never declined to use the scalpel. A man of daring courage, indomitable energy, and inexhaustible resoiurce as well as completely lacking pity or scruple, he must have won the absolute devotion of his host of hardy warriors from the day when they hfted him on their shields as their king, and thundered their deep "Aye! Aye!" while he flourished his sword and an- noimced he would rule over them. In 486 near Soissons he de- feated and completely overthrew Syagrius, the last champion of the Roman power. Northern Gaul was in his hands — at least as soon as he could conquer or assassinate all the other lesser Frankish chiefs who might try to defy his mandates. His methods smote the imaginations as well as the fears of THE MONAKCHT OF THE FRANKS CLOVIS AND CHRISTIANITY 19 the bands which followed him. The King had once claimed as his booty a beautiful bowl, when a certain unruly soldier, jealous of an attempt to take apparently more than the royal share, deliberately shivered the vessel with his battle-axe, crying, "Naught shalt thou have, beyond whatever the [customary] lot may give thee!" The King dissembled. He had overstepped his technical rights : but a year later at a review of his men-at-arms he found the offending warrior standing with his weapons for inspection. "No man has arms so ill cared for as thou!" declared the King, and contemptuously flung the man's hatchet on the ground. As the other stooped to pick it up, Clovis instantly raised his own axe and buried it in the wretch's skull — "Thus didst thou," he announced, "to that bowl!" Such methods are admirably calculated to wia the implicit obedience of a certain type of warriors, the more so as nearly all such robust deeds justified themselves by their complete success. Clovis, as intimated, had been a pagan. Probably for long he had been impressed by the splendid Uturgy and ceremonial of the Gallo-Roman churches as well as by the poUtical advantages of being in religious adjustment with his new non-Germanic subjects. That he ever understood the least thing about the spiritual teachings of Christianity we cannot imagine. What did appeal to him, however, was that the "White Christ" of the priests seemed to be a very powerful god with "good magic," and quite hkely, if respectfully treated, to help against the King's enemies. Clovis presently married a Burgundian princess, Clotilda, who was a Catholic Christian, although most of her family were Arians. The King did not at once embrace his wife's rehgion, but he listened to her arguments with deepening cour- tesy. At last, in 496, he found himself in mortal battle with a rival tribe, the Alemanni. The fight was going sore against Clovis. His stoutest axemen were giving way. The old Prankish pagan gods proffered no help. It was time for desperate expedi- ents. "O Lord Jesus Christ," prayed the King, "whom Clotilda worships; if Thou wilt now grant me victory, I will believe in 20 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Thee, and be baptized with Thy name." And lo ! the tide of battle turned: the Alemanni fled: Clovis marched home victorious. The King had every reason for keeping his bargain and vow. Such a God was certainly the one for him to champion. Clovis was baptized with magnificent ceremony at Reims (doubtless in the church that preceded the later famous Gothic cathedral) by the venerable Bishop St. Remigius, who devised a great pro- cession and rehgious festival when Clovis and three thousand of his mighty men all marched up to the font together. "Bow thy head meekly," commanded the bishop when the fierce young warrior approached for baptism; "adore what thou hast once burned: burn that which thou once adored!" It was a happy day for the bishop. The King of all North Gaul had been won for Christianity, and that, too, luckily enough, the highly orthodox type of Cathohcism. He was thus placed on extremely friendly relations with the powerful and numerous Gallo-Roman clergy. He had aU the zeal of a new convert: and in the rest of Gaul the Catholic Gallo-Romans were ready to welcome his sway, in place of that of the Arian kings of the other Germanic invaders. Clovis the Christian soon proved himself even more of a con- queror than Clovis the Pagan. In 500 a.d. he subjugated the Burgundians. In 507 a.d. he said to his lords, "It goes much against my grain that these Arian heretics [the Visigoths] should hold any part of Gaul. Let us go forth \dth the help of the Lord and overthrow them and make their land our own " ! — and once more the Saints blessed his lancers and his axemen. Nearly the whole of southern Gaul was conquered, barring only a strip close to the Pyrenees. At last in 511 a.d. this treacherous and blood- thirsty king died after having smitten down practically every foe — foreign or domestic — who opposed him. He had displayed one enormous virtue, however, in the eyes of the churchmen who wrote our chronicles — he had been the unrelenting champion of orthodoxy from the day of his conversion. "Therefore," it was written by the pious historian Gregory of Tours, "every day God cast down his enemies and added increase to his kingdom. SUBDIVISIONS OF FRANEXAND 21 because he walked before Him with upright heart, and did that which was pleasing in His eyes." Clovis left his heirs a fairly well-compacted dominion, em- bracing nearly all of modem France and a considerable sUce also of western Germany. FranMsh law, however, made it hard to keep a kingdom together. There was no right of primogeniture. Each of Clovis's four sons claimed his share of the kingdom, and soon the process of division and subdivision brought on a whole devil's dance of civil wars between bloody and self-seeking men. There was no guiding principle in these wars of the "Merovin- gian" kings (so called from Merovius, an ancestor of Clovis). The subject population was the helpless victim of the devastat- ' ing conflicts of rival kings and of their equally turbulent warriors. Sometimes the realm, which we can now call "Frankland," was divided into more than four imhappy contending kingdoms, divided and subdivided like so many farms between litigious heirs. Sometimes a single masterful scion of Clovis was lucky enough to eliminate all his brothers or nephews and reign for a few years alone. Clovis's sons had inherited a really formidable royal power from their great if evil father. Under the grandsons, however, the kingly authority was obviously shrinking before that of the leudes, the Frankish upper-warriors, who were demanding offices, honors, and lands in payment for support through the incessant wars. Under the great-grandsons, although the country some- times again was nominally imited under one king, it was evident the monarchs were becoming more and more the puppets of cer- tain great ministers, especially of that very arrogant official who called himself the "Mayor of the Palace" (Major Domus). Frankland also showed signs of spUtting up into three great units along somewhat natural and therefore fairly enduring lines — Neustria (virtually most of northern France), Austrasia (east of Neustria and including the extreme east of present-day France and the west of modern Germany), and Aquitania (the bulk of 22 A HISTORY OF FRANCE France south of the Loire). Dagobert (628-38) was the last Merovmgian king who exercised any real personal authority. After him the main power in Frankland lay really with the masterful Major Domus, who continually waxed as his royal "sovereign" waned. Unf ortimately for the peace of the realm there was no orderly line of succession to this position of supreme uncrowned ruler of Frankland. To become Major Domus implied conciliating the interests of whatever was the dominant faction of Frankish leudes (mighty men) supplemented as these usually were by the old landed aristocracy which claimed descent from the GaUo- Romans. The Church, with its puissant and often very "secu- lar" bishops, had also to be propitiated. All this meant a new series of schisms, conspiracies and wars frequently very bloody and very personal. The Mayor (Major Domus) of Austrasia fought against his rival of Neustria; while Aquitaine under a semi-independent Duke ( = Dux, in origin simply "leader") would defy them both. Meantime in the seventh, even as in the sixth century, civilization seemed ever more steadily on the defensive. Then at last came a turn for the better. A great official family came forward. After various vicissitudes his dynasty, later famous as the " Carolingian " (from Charlemagne, its most distinguished member), began to supply Mayors of the Palace who ruled both Neustria and Austrasia simultaneously in a kind of hereditary succession. Rivals were put down: disorderly ele- ments quelled by a heavy hand. It was the rare good fortune of this dynasty to supply four rulers in direct sequence from father to great-grandson who were all men of first-class ability, neither tyrants nor weaklings, neither sordid politicians nor reckless ideahsts, men who knew how to fight and how to spare, how to regulate and how to let alone: — four men, in short, who did very much to shape the entire history of Europe. s, The story of the Carolingian house involves much more than the history of France. It is the story of early mediaeval Germany, and the same of Italy. It touches deeply on the history of the THE MOSLEM INVASION 23 rise of the Papacy, and even affects the annals of Spain. To us, whose main interest is in France, it is sufficient to state certain prime facts, but to ignore most of the non-French elements in these great rulers' annals. We may outline the careers of these four princes thus. Pepin of Heristal was the first of the family who exercised what may be called systematic and solidly founded authority. He was in power from 679 to 714. In his days pubUc affairs were in such chaos that successful fighting was practically all that could be asked of him. Pepin discharged his full duty in this matter. Most of his rivals perished and the rest submitted. There was again something like law and order in the land. The great Mayor not merely won victories over rebels, but reorgan- ized the Prankish army so that it became again a real fighting machine, formidable to its foreign enemies. There was soon to be need for this army. Pepin was followed by his illegitimate son Charles Martel (714-41), who only gained power after another period of bloody confusion, but who then showed himself alike as heavy-handed and as worldly-wise as his father. His first exploits were against the various German tribes to the east of Austrasia — only half Christianized as yet and stUl utterly barbarous. Saxons, Bava- rians, and Alemans all alike fled before him. He also made head against the malcontent Dukes of Aquitaine who, ruling over a population of almost strictly "Roman" descent, were ill-dis- posed to brook Northern authority. The issue with Aquitaine had been by no means settled when its Duke Odo suddenly changed from a defiant enemy to trem- bling suppliant. A terrible danger was threatening not merely Aquitaine but Frankland itself and indeed all Christendom. Over a hundred years had elapsed since Mohammed the Arabian had founded his religion of Islam — of the One Allah and his prophet, with the choice of accepting the same or the sword. In the interval the fanatical Moslems had overrun Persia, Syria, Egypt, and all North Africa, sweeping the native populations 24 A HISTORY OF FRANCE away from their old faiths and accumulating belligerent con- verts as a rolling snowball gathers size. Early in the eighth cen- tury their hosts had crossed into Spain, snuffed out the decadent Visigothic dynasts, and rendered nearly the entire peninsula the mere emirate of the distant Kalif of Damascus. But the conquer- ing hordes of Arabs, Moors, and Greek and Spanish renegades had no intention of stopping in Spain. Had not Allah promised the whole world to the disciples of the Koran? In 730, after some earlier reverses, the Moslem bands began pouring through the passes of the Pyrenees and into smiling Aquitania. The Moorish riders, on their wiry desert steeds, worked rapidly upward, pil- laging, carrying captive, and ruthlessly burning churches and convents. Duke Odo strove to fight them off. His strength was vain. After a brave resistance the Arab Emir Abd-Rahman took Bordeaux, the richest city possibly then in old Gaul, and dis- tributed an enormous booty among his greedy followers. Bordeaux was not the last Christian city to suffer. The Mos- lem horsemen were forcing their way northward and eastward into the Loire valley and ravaging clear into Burgundy as far as Autun and Sens. Odo cried lustily to Charles for aid, and it could not be denied. If Aquitaine was conquered to-day, Frank- land proper would be in flames to-morrow. The great Mayor called out his full levy of Northern axemen. In September or October, 732, Charles led his host to face the Arab Emir in one of the plains near Tours on the Loire. ^ Probably neither Christians nor Moslems realized that here was to be fought out one of the world's decisive battles, which, according to many later opinions, was to settle whether the civilized world was to read the Bible or the Koran. One thing is certain. If Charles the Frank had been badly defeated, there was no other Christian leader in all western Europe with military power enough to curb i the Islamites.^ ^ The exact position of the battle is uncertain, possibly it was nearer Poitiers than Tours. 2 Of course Leo the Isaurian, Emperor of Constantinople, had inflicted a great defeat on the Arabs when they attacked his capital in 717, but that would not have saved Western Christendom. H tc P O w o :? <: O > o P3 H _u t-l '. o ected. There were three prime reasons for this time of disappointment and even reaction. In the first place under any real monarchy much always depends on the person of the monarch. The Caf>etian line had provided several very able princes; now the quality of the royal stock was to degenerate. Several of the kings of this period were very unfit rulers iudeed. France paid for their inefficiency. Again, although the old feudal aristocracy was waning, a new Toycd aristocracy was coming to the front. It was composed of younger scions and kinsmen of the royal house. In theory these princes believed in the unity of France and the greatness of the dynasty. In practice they often quarreled outrageously for the high places at court, the royal governorships, the control (if the king were a weakling) of the monarch's person; and they often sought "app)anages"; that is, parts of the royal dominion, which they could govern for themselves as semi-independent viceroys. Some of the worst foes of French monarchy were thus to be in its own household. Finally against France was to come a great foreign peril. The 82 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Norman Kings of England, losing their old duchy, but becoming identified with their new island peoples, were to build up a for- midable military power, and to direct systematic attacks upon the Continent, which attacks almost ended in nothing less than the conquest of France. From 1314 (the death of PhiHp IV, the grandson of St. Louis) to 1483 (the death of Louis XI) was to be a time of grievous testing for the entire French nation. At least once the entire realm seemed lost. Several times it was in grievous danger of being permanently dismembered and crippled. In the end, the genius of the people enabled them to shake off the foreign peril and to thrust the recalcitrant royal princes into their proper place. The dawn of "modern times" saw France again rich, progressive, and powerful. It is difficult to characterize this long and troubled period without becoming swamped amid a mass of names and details. Some of the main incidents were these : Philip III, "the Bold," son of St. Louis, had a somewhat brief and undistinguished reign (1270-85), but his son Philip IV, "the Fair," ruled longer and also wrought mightier deeds (1285- 1314). No man can praise the character of this grandson of the Saint, but Philip IV falls into the catalogue of those grasping, unscrupulous men, who in a wholly uncommendable way really advance the world's progress. A large part of his reign centered around his famous quarrel with Pope Boniface VIII, himself one of the most self-seeking and imperious pontiffs who ever ruled the Church from Rome. The immediate issue was whether the King had the right, which he asserted, to tax the wealthy French clergy. Boniface denied this right, and Philip of course was not anxious to have the wealth of at least one fifth of the lands of France escape per- manently from his treasurers. Actually behind this contention lay the greater issue whether in secular matters the Pope could override the authority of kings, and constitute himself a kind of THE FIRST STATES GENERAL 8S super-monarch, merely deputing the temporal government of the world to such princes as would serve faithfully as his crowned viceregents. It was substantially over this issue that there had been bloody wars between the Papacy and the Emperors of Germany, and the Papacy on the whole had seemed the victor. But the Capetian kings had now a much firmer grasp upon their realm than ever the Saxon or Hohenstaufen Emperors had had upon Germany, and Frenchmen were entirely unwilling to have an Italian prince (as Boniface certainly was) intermingle in their own distinctly secular affairs. When after preliminary negotia- tions and compromises, the Pope came to open threats of putting Philip under the ban of the Church, the King countered by a dramatic stroke. In 1302 he convoked the States General of France at Paris. Philip was an utter despot in his aims and methods, but in facing so great a power as the Papacy he understood the need of securing the loyal support of all elements of his people. It had been fairly common, long ere this, for the kings to consult about public affairs with Councils of their nobles and their higher clergy. Now, for the first time, the representatives of the " city dwellers" (bourgeois) were invited to be present and to give their support and wisdom to their liege lord. Needless to say, the men from the "Third Estate" were immensely flattered at this asso- ciation with the secular and clerical nobility. They readily voted their approval of all the royal policy and joined with the upper orders in advising the King to take an uncompromising attitude toward the Pope. From this time onward we have occasional meetings of this States General — the representatives of the three great orders of French society — to aid the king in national issues, although thanks to a multitude of reasons this extraor- dinary body was never able to develop into a regular legisla- ture with periodic meetings like the English Parliament.'- ' The chief reasons why this seemingly promising attempt at representative government came to nothing were, first, because the "three orders" met sepa- rately, had very diverse interests, and thus, without unanimity, almost nothing 84 A HISTORY OF FRANCE France thus stood stoutly behind Philip, and all the threats and anathemas of Rome could not put his throne in danger. The King even sent armed agents into Italy and actually arrested Boniface as a pretender to the Papacy (1303) ; ^ and although the Pope was soon rescued from prison by his friends, the shock and humiliation of the affair were so great that he soon died utterly discredited. His successors (timid and pliable men) made haste to be reconciled with a monarch who could read them so terrible a lesson. In 1309 they actually withdrew their residence from Rome to Avignon in southern France, there to remain till 1376. During this long "Babylonish Captivity," the Papacy was to be under the very shadow of the formidable "Eldest Son of the Church" who reigned at Paris, and the whole Papal policy was often directed in the secular interests of France: — a matter of terrible ecclesiastical scandal, but something which of course increased the influence of the French kingship in every part of Christendom.^ could be done; and secondly, because the States General never obtained un- doubted control of the treasury, and could not coerce the king by refusing to vote taxes. See Appendix. ' This was the famous " Assault of Anagni," a small city near Rome, where the Pope was sojourning. ' An infamous episode in the reign of Philip IV was the persecution and downfall of the Knight Templars. This powerful military order of monks, sworn to show their religion by fighting the Infidel instead of by the usual austerities of the convent, had waxed extremely powerful and correspondingly wealthy. It owned great properties in France, as well as in other European countries, and in 1306 its "grand master" is said to have come back to France from the Levant with 150,000 gold florins and ten horse-loads of silver. The Templars were be- coming the object of grave suspicion on account of their secret conventicles, and stories were circulated as to immoral practices at such meetings. The arrogance and covetousness of the order gave point and currency to these sinister reports. Such a wealthy, semi-secret, suspected organization made an excellent victim for a covetous and unscrupulous King like Philip IV. In 1307 he suddenly ar- rested De Molay, the grand master, and sixty of the leading brethren. A little later nearly all the other Templars in France were accused. Broken by threats and torture, De Molay and his companions confessed to "denying Christ and spitting on the cross," though they still would not admit the charges of gross immorality. Pope Clement V was wholly at Philip's mercy. After vain protests, he ordered THE SALIC LAW 85 Philip IV was survived by three sons. None of them, however, in his turn left sons to succeed him. When, after a colorless reign of two years, Louis X (1314-16) died leaving only a daughter, his next brother came promptly forward with the claim that women could not inherit the crown of France. A weak, female rule was not popular with responsible men; it opened the possibilities of all kinds of confusion. The crown lawyers and the States General therefore confirmed, or rather invented, the so- called "Salic Law" (alleged to be derived from the Salian Franks) that no woman could be a reigning queen over France.^ Philip V (1316-22) accordingly reigned in his brother's stead, but after another short, uneventful government he also died without a son, and in his place came the third brother, Charles IV (1322-28). No better fortune attended him. Like the rest he died. in his prime without male heirs. Pious folk wagged their heads, and said that a curse was resting on the Capetian line for the insult offered Pope Boniface VIII. In any case Charles was the last ruler of the direct Capetian line. The crown passed to his cousin, Philip of Valois, the son of a younger brother of Philip IV. With this change in the dynasty evil days were to come to France. Philip VI "of Valois" (1328-50) was not an entirely inca- pable prince, but he was inconsistent, reckless, and anything but an ideal ruler for guiding the nation in a time of dangerous attack the Templars suppressed throughout all Christendom. As for Philip, he pro- ceeded to have his wretched prisoners tried for heresy, blasphemy, and various vUe crimes, and between 1310 and 1314 the greater part of them died at the stake. De Molay perished (1314) summoning both the tyrannous King and the pliant Pope to appear promptly with him at the judgment seat of God — a summons that, as men later recalled, was soon followed by the deaths of both potentates. The consensus of opinion is that the Templars were largely innocent of the charges brought against them. Their confessions were extracted by coercion or torture. Philip wished for their vast property, and stuck at no measure which could enable him to confiscate it. ' This law seems the more curious as in few kingdoms have women exerted more real influence in political life than in France. 86 A HISTORY OF FRANCE from abroad. He was not tactful in dealing with his great nobles, and, in particular, he soon quarreled with Robert of Artois, a prince of the blood, who presently fled to the court of Edward IH of England and stirred up mischief. The King also became em- broiled in Flemish affairs. The freedom-loving Flemish cities had resisted their local prince, and Philip took sides with his vassal, the Count of Flanders, against them. The wealthy and powerful burghers, "the most industrious, the richest and the freest people in Europe," promptly began negotiating with Edward III, who was impelled to help them because Flanders was the great market for the English raw-wool exports. Edward was the less disinchned to dip in French affairs because he had colorable claim to the crown of Philip himself. If there had been no Salic Law, Edward would possibly have reigned in Paris as well as in London, thanks to the rights of his mother Isabella, daughter of Philip IV. The English King was a thor- oughly capable monarch, a skillful captain, and he possessed (as Europe was soon to know) a military weapon in his "long-bow archers" that was to make him a great power in Europe. Fighting began in a desultory way in 1337, at first in an at- tempt of the English to detach Flanders from French control. Nothing decisive eventuated. Then in 1341 the strife deepened, when two claimants struggled for the ducal crown of Brittany. ' Philip upheld the claims of one faction; the other naturally turned to Edward, who, to give color to his intervention in France, made more or less bold pretensions to the French crown itself. However, the Breton war, although not decisive, in the main favored the French party. It was not until 1346 that Edward found his hands sufficiently free to cross the Channel in considerable force. In July of that year he landed at Cape la Hogue, with 32,000 men: a decidedly large army for mediaeval times. '■ Brittany, surrounded by the ocean on three sides, was the last of the great feudal states to pass under the French crown. Its dependence upon France re- mained very nominal indeed, until its annexation in 1491. BATTLE OF CRECY 87 Up to this point, the contest had considerably favored Philip. The English had failed to master either Flanders or Brittany. But now Edward trusted no longer to local risings to help him, but to the strength of his good right arm. He quickly captured Caen, swept across Normandy almost to the gates of Paris, then turned north- — burning and pillaging the open country but seldom stopping to besiege the cities. If Philip had trusted to Fabian tactics the English must have presently retreated from the devastated land with little really accomplished. But it was intolerable for a king of France to see his country devastated like the fields of a petty baron. He called out the entire levy of the realm. The French nobles responded with alacrity. A great force of Itahan cross-bowmen were hired to ofiEset the English archers. At Crecy, near Abbeville in Picardy, on the 26th of August, 1346, the French at last brought their foes to bay and forced a great battle. Then all the world was to learn that a new factor had come in warfare. Hitherto upon any kind of a fair field, the feudal knights on their great war-horses and clothed in ponderous armor, had been able almost always to ride down even the best and bravest footmen. Edward, however, used his English archers with con- summate skill. These long-bowmen with their great yew bows and "cloth-yard" arrows could shoot many scores of paces with remarkable speed and accuracy, and with force enough to pene- trate all but the very best armor. The long-bow was in fact more powerful than the later musket, until generations after the com- ing of gunpowder. All day long, with mad and disastrously brave valor, the French knights strove to charge home through the deadly volleys of the bowmen. In the evening the remnants of the assailants drifted in rout from the field. Never had Frenchmen met so terrible a defeat. The King of Bohemia (Philip's ally) lay slain, and with him eleven princes, eighty knight-bannerets, twelve hundred knights, and, it is alleged, thirty thousand of the rank and file. France was stunned for the moment by the loss. 88 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Edward made hard-headed use of his victory. He laid siege to Calais, the chief door into France from across the EngUsh Chan- nel, and starved the town out (1347) despite a very brave de- fense and vain efforts of Philip to send in succor. Henceforth the English had a most convenient sally-port from which to invade France, whenever they hsted. Calais was to remain in EngUsh hands until 1558. Philip of Valois died in 1350. He had been saved from further defeats and losses more by the advent of the Black Death, a terrible plague which swept over Europe in 1348, destroying French and English impartially, and for the nonce suspending all wars along with almost all peaceful forms of Ufe, than by any forbearance on the part of Edward. In his stead reigned his son John, a brave, impetuous, but entirely light-headed and extravagant prince, who soon emptied the treasury by his luxu- ries and his careless generosity to his courtiers, and then almost ruined the economic life of the land by his equally reckless de- basement of the coinage in a vain attempt to make money out of nothing. Such a king was no leader to confront a second great English attack. In 1356 Edward, the Prince of Wales, often called the "Black Prince " to distinguish him from his father, commenced another invasion. This time the English started in from Bordeaux and Guienne (a fragment of which they had always retained out of the wreck of the old possessions of Henry of Anjou) and worked northward, headed possibly for Calais. It was an exceedingly risky venture, even if the Black Prince were at least as able a general as his father. His force barely exceeded eight thousand men, and he was in danger of being swallowed up in a hostile land. King John again called out all his liegemen and again the French chivalry loyally responded. With over fifty thousand men, he hemmed in the English upon a hill near Poitiers. The odds seemed so uneven that if the King had only held his Unes in a tight blockade the invaders must have been starved into sur- render. But no such tame victory would content John and his ANARCHY 89 adventurous counselors. The shame of Crecy must be effaced in a fair battle, therefore battle there was; but it did not efface Crecy. The French horsemen with indescribable folly charged up a narrow lane whereof the hedges on either side were lined with English archers who shot down their foes at ease. When the attacking host reeled back in confusion, the Black Prince counter-attacked. The King's divisions failed to cooperate : they were cut up piecemeal. In the end John, after showing much personal valor, was taken prisoner along with his yoxmgest son, thirteen counts, an archbishop, seventy barons, and some thou- sands of lesser warriors. It was really a far greater disaster than at Crecy. France was not merely defeated but deprived of her head. The next few years were little better than anarchy. The King was prisoner in London. The nominal regent was the Crown Prince, the " Dauphin," ^ Charles, as yet inexperienced, weak, and cowardly. Charles the Bad, King of the little country of Navarre,^ apd a great French noble to boot, contested the gov- ernment in an unscrupulous manner, and added to the terrors of foreign invasion all the miseries of civil war. The Dauphin convened the States General, but no real help came from this gathering of the estates of the realm. A radical party led by llltienne Marcel, provost of the merchants of Paris, seized the opportunity to try to cut down the royal authority, and to set up a kind of government by the representatives of the Third Estate. Moderns will sympathize with this bold move towards democracy; but in truth it was no time for rash political experi- ments. The radical party soon indulged in deeds of bloody violence. Marcel was presently murdered while trying to sur- render Paris to Charles the Bad. A desperate revolt of the demoralized and starving peasants (the Jacquerie) was quenched '■ So called from Dauphiny over which he was supposed to rule, just as the English heir was " Prince of Wales." The last feudal Prince of Dauphiny resigned his power to the king in 1349. ' Navarre lay in the Pyrenees wedged in between Prance and Spain. 90 A HISTORY OF FRANCE in blood, and something like peace returned to the land when John was set free following the treaty of Bretigny (1360). It was not a pleasant treaty for France. Edward did not, in- deed, press home his very dubious claim for the French crown, but otherwise his demands were galling. John had to pay a ran- som of three million gold crowns (an enormous sum for that age) and cede an absolute sovereignty not merely Calais, but practi- cally the whole of old Aquitaine. The French monarchy thus lost fully half of the South Country, and the Black Prince set up a viceregal court for his father at Bordeaux. The best that could be said was that at last there was peace, and a chance for reha- bilitation. No real improvement could be expected under John, however, but that headlong, pleasure-loving King died in 1364. The Dauphin now took the crown as King Charles V (1364- 80). His experience and record as crown prince had assuredly been unlucky, but he had learned by adversity. There was nothing heroic about him, but also nothing rash. His physical weakness gave him the aspect of a recluse and student. He was destined to go into history as "Charles the Sage," one of the cleverest monarchs of the whole French line. The English menace was waning. After all, Edward III dis- posed of a realm as yet relatively poor and imable to send a succession of new armies year by year to the Continent — the only proceeding that could really endanger France. The Black Prince was presently induced to march from Bordeaux into Spain to reinstate a very evil king of Castile, Pedro the Cruel, whose subjects had justly banished him. The Black Prince was victo- rious (1367). Pedro was temporarily put back upon his throne, but he proved an ungrateful protege. The English leader had exhausted the strength of his army, and had weakened the fealty of his new Aquitainian dominions by the heavy taxes he forced upon them. The Southern malcontents soon appealed to Paris, and Charles gave them a ready ear. He had quietly reorganized his army, filled up his treasury, and was ready to throw over the Treaty of Bretigny. In 1370 the war was renewed. CHARLES VI 91 Charles was fortunate in finding a very able captain — Ber- trand du Guesclin, a valiant Breton knight, who never shunned battle when it promised advantage, but who understood clearly the folly of trying to ride down the English archers by serried lines of horsemen. The Black Prince marched again through the land, but everywhere he met cities with barred gates and with no chance for open fighting. These guerrilla tactics presently wore down the small English armies. "Never was there a king of France who fought less," spoke Edward III angrily, "and yet never one that gave me so much trouble." The Black Prince sickened and returned to England to die (1376). The leaders left in his place were no match for du Guesclin. Troubles at home prevented the coming of English reinforcements. By 1380 the islanders held only the coast towns of Calais, Cherbourg, and Brest in the North, and Bordeaux and Bayonne in the South. The first great English attack on France was over. Charles the Sage died at the age of only forty-three. His pass- ing was a national calamity. His eldest son Charles VI (1380- 1422) was only twelve years old, and never developed any great clearness of intellect. In 1392 he became insane, although pos- sessed of recurring lucid intervals which made it impossible actually to depose him and to appoint a regent. His nominal reign was one long misery for his people. First his covetous and incapable uncles quarreled over the possession of his person and of the reins of government: then their place was taken by fac- tions of younger nobles, with the immoral and unprincipled queen-consort Isabella of Bavaria as the guiding spirit in many of their intrigues. Presently the contending parties passed from plottings to assassination. In 1407 the powerful Duke of Orleans was stabbed at the direct instigation of the Duke of Burgundy, his rival. This made the quarrel unhealable. The "Burgundian" party, notwithstanding this crime, lost possession of the kings' person, which fell to the rival "Armagnac" ' faction of the "■ So named from a Count of Armagnac, who became a leader in the Anti- Burgundian party. 92 A HISTORY OF FRANCE nobility that soon became the stronger because the young Dauphin had joined them. John the Fearless, Duke of Burgimdy, was able, however, to embroil almost all the kingdom in civil war, when suddenly a new terror descended — the English under Henry V (Shakespeare's winsome "Prince Hal") renewed their invasions. It is difficult to withhold personal admiration for Henry V, but the fact cannot be disguised that he was reviving a worth- less claim to the throne of France, and that his coming produced nothing but misery for that already distracted kingdom. He landed at Harfleur in Normandy (1415), took that town, and then began a difficult march across the country to Calais. His army numbered barely fifteen thousand efiEective men. If the French Armagnac, princes who claimed to represent the royal government, had known how to handle their forces, they ought to have cut him off, as surely as John might have cut off the Black Prince at Poitiers. But these turbulent leaders had learned nothing from the past sixty years. The mounted knight, with la-nce couched at full charge, was still their only idea of warfare. With fifty thousand men, under the nominal leadership of the Dauphin, the French attacked Henry at Agincourt near Calais. It was the story of the old battles over again. The wet, slippery ground made quick movements impossible. The closely packed formation of the men-at-arms merely improved the targets for the English archers, when the French strove recklessly to ad- vance. The battle ended almost with a massacre when the long- bows had finished their work, and the English charged out upon their demoralized enemies. The Dauphin fled leaving ten thou- sand men slain on the field, and very many great noblemen captive with Henry. The whole royal power of France was shaken. Henry used his victory well. He let Armagnac and Burgundian rend one another in the interior, while in 1418 and 1419 he gath- ered in Caen and Rouen and other strongholds in Normandy. In 1419 the Armagnacs retaliated for the murder of the Duke of A BATTLE IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTUEY ATTACK AND DEFENSE OF A CITY IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY CHARLES VII 93 Orleans by assassinating, under circumstances of great treachery, John the Fearless, Duke of Burgundy. The Dauphin was mixed in the plot,i and the deed threw PhiHp of Burgundy, John's son and heir, into the very arms of the English. Burgundy was already a great principality; many of its do- mains lay outside of France in "the Empire." Philip was more formidable than many kings of his day, and to him had joined the unnatural Queen Isabella, who hated her own son the Dauphin so much that she plotted to dethrone him in favor of Henry. Burgundy and Isabella negotiated in the name of the helpless Charles VI the shameful Treaty of Troyes (1420) whereby the Dauphin was to be disinherited, Henry was to marry Catherine the daughter of King Charles, and on. the death of Charles was to become king both of France and of Eng- land. The Dauphin was still holding out south of the Loire; nevertheless the grip of the English on all of North France seemed tightening. Paris was in their hands and a great block of the old Capetian lands to boot, when in 1422 Henry V died, followed in a few weeks by the crazed old Charles VI. The latter had had one of the most calamitous reigns in all French annals. Henry V left by Catherine a ten-months son, the unfortunate Henry VI of England. This child's regents were in actual posses- sion of practically all France north of the Loire, also of the country around Bordeaux. He was recognized as "king" by the Duke of Burgundy and by the Parlement of Paris, the supreme legal body of France. South of the Loire, most districts now ac- knowledged the Dauphin as Charles VII (1422-61). He was "a young man of nineteen, of engaging manners, but weak in body, pale in countenance, and deficient in courage." He was charged with being engrossed in ignoble pleasures. The taint of '■ The Dauphin was still a boy, but he let depraved courtiers induce him to invite the Duke of Burgundy to an interview at the bridge of Montereau. There, while the latter knelt at the Prince's feet, he was foully massacred by Tanneguy- Duchatel, one of the chiefs of the Armagnac faction. 94 A HISTORY OF FRANCE the murder of John of Burgundy clung foully to him. No one could deny that he seemed to lack energy, and was all too con- tent while the aggressive English regent — the Duke of Bedford — seemed plucking away his kiagdom. Most of the French governors and nobles of the South Coun- try adhered to Charles. The prejudice against an English king was violent. The Duke of Bedford's armies were small if very efficient, and it was clear enough that Henry was acknowl- edged as king in the North only because of constant acts of coercion. Nevertheless the case of France seemed almost des- perate. Charles's government was so weak that he was usually known as the "Dauphin" not the "King," or was sarcastically called "the King of Bourges," his residence city, the one place he held in fairly sure possession. His captains and noblemen were constantly at odds. His treasury was empty and the taxes were nigh uncoUectable. The South Country was regularly harried and terrorized by "free companies" of roving mercenary sol- diers, who, when they were not fighting for the pay of some prince, were wandering hither and yon, eating up the land and plundering impartially on every side. Alike in North France and the South commerce and orderly economic and cultural life appeared to be perishing. Under those circumstances, it seemed to Bedford as if one bold, fierce stroke would win the undisputed crown for his nephew Henry. In October, 1428, the English laid siege to Orleans, one of the chief cities still held by Charles, and the greatest obstacle to the penetration of the invaders southward from the Loire. By May, 1429, the position of Orleans was very serious. The defense had been brave; but efforts at succor had failed, and provisions were running low. The fall of Orleans would probably have seen the English marching victoriously down into Aquitaine. Already for years there had been a keen sense of national humiliation passing through all thoughtful Frenchmen. The English had been often tactless and brutal in their dealings with CAREER OF JEANNE DARC 95 the conquered. The terrible miseries of the land, economic pros- tration, famine, pestilence, massacre, were all traceable to one cause — the invader. Yet the case seemed so hopeless, the Dauphin's government so inert, that, even while men ground their teeth and gripped their sword hilts, they said there was no help possible "save from God." Then came what many have called a miracle, what all must call a heaven-sent leader. It is very hard to exclude the personal story when dealing with Jeanne Darc;^ but this is a sketch of French history, not a study of even its most important and interesting characters. In bald, matter-of-fact language, what happened was this : 1. Jeanne Dare was born a peasant girl in 1409 in the village of Domremy, on the borders of Champagne. The region was one of the few eastern districts still held by Charles. As she grew up as a pious village maid she began to have elaborate visions of a France redeemed from the yoke of the English, and the Virgin kept telling her, "Jeanne, go and deliver the King of France, and restore him to his kingdom." Psychologists may determine of what these visions, her "voices," consisted. There is no doubt she honestly believed that she had them. 3. In 1429, when Orleans was at its last gasp, she appeared at the court of the Dauphin at the castle of Chinon, near Tours. She convinced even the skeptical court and the prince that hers was a divine commission and that she should be entrusted with an army to rescue Orleans. The force placed under her command she handled with considerable military skill, conducted it through the English lines into the city, and then directed a suc- cessful sortie. The French fought boldly, confident in being under the orders of a saint. The English archers broke in terror, being pitted (so they swore) against a diabolical "sorceress." "All things prospered," wrote Bedford angrily to England, "until a disciple and limb of the Fiende called the Pucelle [maid] used ^ It seems wholly unscientific to say Jeanne (or Joan) " of Arc." There was no village named " Arc " near her birthplace, and her people were humble peasants with no claim to the nobleman's " de." " Dare" was simply an ordinary surname. 96 A HISTORY OF FRANCE false enchantment and sorcery." Orleans was completely re- lieved. 3. Jeanne now successfully conducted Charles across a coun- try partly held by the enemy to Reims. Here he was crowned King of France in the great cathedral, and was "Dauphin" no longer. At the coronation ceremony Jeanne stood proudly by the altar holding the royal standard. 4. Jeanne had now fulfilled her original mission. She is said to have stated "she would be glad to be sent back to her father and mother, that she might tend their sheep and oxen as she was accustomed." But the English still held Paris and a great block of northern France, and she felt bound to attack them. Her warfare was now less successful. At the court, jealous captains and selfish coimselors began to intrigue against her. The sup- port of the King grew cold. Was it dignified for a King of France to owe his throne and power to a peasant maiden? 5. In 1430 Jeanne was taken prisoner by the Burgundians when she led a sortie from Compiegne. Duke Philip deliberately sold his captive to the English who were greedy for vengeance. The disloyal and subservient Bishop of Beauvais undertook to serve them by acting as her judge and trying her in the Church courts on the charge of "witchcraft." If Charles could be proved to have owed his recent success to an emissary of the Devil, it of course would be a great blow to his prestige ! Every art, coer- cion, and some of the milder forms of torture were used to trap Jeanne into a confession of guilt. At last (although resisting her questioners with great adroitness) she went through the forms of a recantation. It was easy then by a little trickery ^ to allege that she had lapsed back to her former "damnable practices." On May 30, 1431, she was burned alive in the great square at Rouen as an incorrigible sorceress. Her bearing at the stake, ' Jeanne had worn male clothing. In prison she had been promised pardon, if among other things she should resume female attire. One night the woman's clothes were taken away, and the old male garments substituted. Having nothing else to wear, Jeanne put them on. She was at once declared a " relapsed " heretic. THE FRENCH REGAIN PARIS 97 however, was heroic and devout, her executioners trembled, and brutal English archers were filled with terror. "We are lost," cried one of King Henry's secretaries, as he turned away; "we have burned a saint!" The guilt of her destruction was shared by many: by the venal Burgundians, by the infamous bishop, by the terrified and pitiless English, and last but not least by Charles VII himself, who callously let the woman who had probably rescued his crown be done to death, and yet never stirred, although he could readily have saved her by the threat of retaliation upon several great English noblemen he held as prisoners. Even at the moment, not many took the charge of "sorcery" against Jeanne very seriously. The English gained nothing by her murder. In 1456 the Pope solemnly annulled the decision against her and declared her blameless. In 1908 she was enrolled at Rome among the "Blessed," as an immediate preliminary to canonization by the Church. The English were still in the land for some time after the mar- tyrdom of Jeanne, but her work was accomplished. The French patriotism had been roused, the invaders thrust upon the defen- sive, and finally a new spirit seemed to possess King Charles. He fell under the influence of a mistress, Agnes Sorel, who (however irregular their connection) seems to have been a contributing cause to his improvement. He discovered wise counselors and skillful captains. The Duke Philip of Burgundy was wearying of the English alliance, and began to quarrel with his old associates. In 1435 the Duke of Bedford, a great friend of Burgundy, died. The English thus lost their best leader and Duke Philip openly went over to the French. Charles made solemn avowals of sor- row at the murder of the Duke's father, and as a more material consideration, ceded considerable territory. The results of this shift in allegiance came quickly. In 1436 Paris opened its gates to the King, and the English garrison filed gloomily forth, de- parting under a capitulation. After that the war lagged. The French won back Normandy 98 A HISTORY OF FRANCE and the other occupied countries bit by bit. There were inter- mittent truces. England was now becoming involved in home difficulties, thanks to the feeble reign of Henry VI. She no longer had archers and men-at-arms available to pour across the Chan- nel. In 1453 came the last important battle. It was in the South Country near Bordeaux. There at Castillon Charles's troops defeated a last English army sent over under the old Earl of Talbot. The English were roundly beaten. Bordeaux was be- sieged and surrendered (1453). For the first time, therefore, since the days of Louis VII the English kings held not a single fortress in the South Country. Nothing now was left of all the conquests of Edward III, the Black Prince, and Henry V, but Calais and two adjacent villages in the extreme North. The "Himdred Years' War" was over.^ It left France terribly scourged and desolated. Misgovernment, outrageous taxation, the devastations of hostile armies, the demoralization of trade and commerce, the exactions of the hosts of mercenaries em- ployed by all the combatants had almost ruined many once flourishing districts. Probably France was a less populous, civil- ized, progressive land in 1453 than in 1328, the year of the first Valois King. But in any case, the nation had been welded to- gether, as were then few mediaeval kingdoms, by this awful visitation of constant war. The necessary common effort to expel the alien naturally redounded to the advantage of the royal power. One direct and important consequence was that it became recognized that for the defense of the realm, the King might continue to levy taxes (beyond the recognized "feudal dues") without the consent of the States General. The other, of equal consequence, was that royalty became possessed of a permanent standing army entirely apart from any feudal levies. These new forces, "lances" ^ of cavalry, "free archers," etc., could be used 1 Of course it really lasted longer, 1337 to 1453, but there were long periods of truces and of nominal "peace." ^ A "lance" consisted of six men: a first-class man-at-arms, his page, three archers, and a soldier armed with a dagger — all mounted. Charles VII had 1500 lances — 9000 cavalry; also 16,000 "free archers," — royal footmen. FRANCE about 1453 Kojral DomalD Appanages of Valota Prlncea Other fiefe held of the Oown English possesBions left in t4G3 Limits of the territory held by Eng'Iaad or subject to British influeaco in 1429 Longitude W. g SEA LoTigttudfl E. 6° from Greenwich LOUIS XI 99 by the King without any essential outside control, noble or demo- cratic. An irresponsible use of the public purse and an obedient standing army have rightly been counted as corner-stones of autocracy. Charles VII, after so feeble a beginning to his reign, died in a blaze of glory. His son Louis XI (1461-83) had lived on very bad terms with his father, and was actually in exile at Duke Philip of Burgundy's court when Charles died. It was generally expected the new King would prove merely the adjunct of his formidable vassal, but within two months after Philip had aided in crowning Louis at Reims, the twain quarreled. As a matter of fact the greater part of Louis's reign was to be taken up in a struggle with Burgundy, the swelling greatness whereof had become a standing menace to the safety of France. Louis XI has made an interesting place for himself in French annals. "A bad man but a good king" is a phrase that describes his policy and deeds not inexactly. Majestic in his person he certainly was not. "Ungainly with rickety legs, eyes keen and piercing, but with a long hooked nose which lent grotesqueness to a face marked with cunning rather than dignity," such was his aspect. We are told also that he delighted in wearing mean gray clothes, that he would travel on a mule with only five or six servants, and that he invariably wore an old felt hat, orna- mented with the leaden saint's figure, whereon he superstitiously set much store. He was wont to wander about incognito, and to select as his associates men of the middle or even the lowest stations of life, who were delighted to find themselves on familiar terms with "their lord the King." He distrusted (not unjustly) the loyalty of many of the higher nobility; by contrast therefore many of his councillors and even ministers of state were menials or little better. To be the King's barber meant probably to have more influence than to be a prince of the blood. This King, too, was superstitious, pouring out money on gifts to the shrines of influential saints, worshiping holy relics of dubious authenticity. 100 A HISTORY OF FRANCE and surrounding himself with astrologers and quack doctors. He was careless of human life and suffering. His dungeons were usually full, his hangman close at his hand and always busy. His most solemn promise was likely to prove unreliable. And yet — and herein lies the antithesis to all the above statements — his deeds in the end greatly redoiinded to the weal of France. Most of his victims deserved few tears; and as has been well written of him, "Louis was one of the few men destined to do really great things, and yet not himself be great." Louis did indeed many things, but the most important of his deeds was this — he blasted the attempt of the House of Bur- gundy to found a "Middle Kingdom" between Germany and France, hemming in France and tearing away from her many essential provinces. In 1467 Duke Philip, "the Good," died. His son and heir was Charles the Bold. Charles's "ducal" crown was worth far more than the "royal" crowns of Scotland, Portugal, or Denmark as those kingdoms then went. Probably he seemed richer and more powerful than the King of England, now that the latter was driven back to his island. Thanks to inheritance, conquest, marriage treaties and the like, the Burgundian dukes, besides their old French duchy, held a great scattering of terri- tories from the North Sea to the Alps. They were Counts of Holland and of Flanders, controUing the lion's share of the Bel- gium and Holland of to-day, and drew enormous revenues from all the teeming industrious Flemish cities. They had a consider- able sprinkling of territories going into modern Alsace. The Holy Roman (German) Empire was now becoming very weak and its Emperor, Frederick III, was no stronger than the Empire. Charles confidently expected to be able to bribe or browbeat him into giving him a royal crown. Then he could write as an equal to his. one-time suzerain and soon-to-be "brother" at Paris. There were still obstacles in the way of Burgundian greatness. CKarles's territories were large, but very scattered and hetero- igeneous. The weavers of Ghent and the peasants near the Swiss GENERAL ATTACK ON LOUIS 101 cantons had little in common. Charles's title to some of his dominions also was not beyond fair dispute. But the new Duke was a man of much ability as well as ambition. His resources were vast, he was brother-in-law to Edward IV, the new King of England, and his energy was too great rather than too little. Charles the Bold has indeed gone into many histories as Charles "the Rash." His project on the whole seemed very feasible. He would take advantage of all the disaffection of many great French nobles against their niggardly, uncourtly king; he would egg on the English to renew their invasions to recover their lost provinces; then he would strike home hard for himself. The blow at the future of France might have been almost as deadly in the end as that which Jeanne Dare averted. It was averted now by a very different character: by Louis XI, one of the most skillful human foxes who ever knew when to run and when to bite. Charles was of course greatly assisted by the fact that Louis had bitter foes in his own household. Especially did his own brother, the Duke of Berri, systematically conspire with the common enemy of France in order to wring money and governor- ships out of the King. Louis fought back with all the subtle weapons at his command. He is alleged never to have met his enemies face to face in fair battle. No man was ever the incarna- tion of the word "policy" more than this son of Charles VII. A contemporary likened him to a spider who quietly spun his web, then calmly waited for the unlucky gnats. There was much force in the simile. In 1465 Louis had to confront a general uprising of the French nobility headed by the Duke of Berri and boldly championed by the Burgundians. The insurgents hypocritically called them- selves "The League of the Public Weal," and made cynical pro- fessions of anxiety for the oppressed bourgeoisie and peasants (who were indeed being very sorely taxed), but there had actu- ally never been a movement more selfish. Louis's armies seemed overmatched. He unhesitatingly made peace with his rebellious 103 A HISTORY OF FRANCE subjects, giving concessions right and left to their leaders; espe- cially Berri was given the great government of Normandy, and to Burgundy was awarded various towns, especially Boulogne and Peronne.' Louis had only done this to make his foes quiet down, that he might divide them and ruin them piecemeal. It took him some years to do this. There were more combin- ations and re-combinations against him. Presently the Duke of Berri was induced to exchange Normandy for Guienne, a pleas- ' The PfeoNNE Incident A famous and humiliating incident in the career of Louis XI was when his intriguing nature over-tripped itself at Peronne in 1468. Wishing to conclude his bargain with Charles the Bold', the King visited the Duke in person, coming with only a very small escort, and trusting to his powers of cajolery and persuasion to induce the haughty Burgundian to give in to the royal claims. Charles issued a safe-conduct to the King, and received his guest with apparent friendliness, although surrounding him with over-many "guards of honor." Very soon, however, was verified the saying of the contemporary historian, Commines, "Great is the folly of a prince who places himself in the power of another ! ' ' While Louis talked smoothly at Peronne, the news suddenly came that his own agents, sent by him some time earlier and not headed off, had stirred up the citizens of Liege to revolt against their prince-bishop, Charles's ally, and that the bishop had been brutally slain in an uprising. The Duke's fury knew no bounds. For three days he held Louis practically as a prisoner, almost threaten- ing his life. Presently he cooled enough to agree to release the King provided he would consent to a treaty very disadvantageous to France, and then, as a crowning humiliation, ride with his own troops along with Charles's to punish the Liege rebels. Louis, in fear for his skin, abjectly assented to all this, and swore "oh the true cross which St. Charlemagne wore" to keep his word. The King therefore appeared with a contingent among the Burgundians at the siege of Liege. The wretched citizens vainly displayed the royal standard upon their walls and shouted "Vive la France!" They were soon overcome, their town was brutally sacked, and many of the men whom Louis had egged on to rebel, were executed almost before his very eyes — with never a plea from him in their behalf. According to the stories of the day, the King (on returning home) had to issue a proclamation to punish the uttering of "songs, rondeaux, and ballads reflecting on his conduct," and to send out his officers to seize "all caged pies, jays, and owls," lest they had been taught to cry in derision "Peronne!" — And yet this King was permitted to do a far greater work for France than many rela- tively worthy and honorable sovereigns. The "Peronne incident," of course, forms the basis for Scott's excellent ro- mance Qucntin Durward. CHARLES DEFEATED BY THE SWISS 103 ant principality, but one that put him at a greater distance from his ally in Burgundy. Charles the Bold was alternately fought with and cozened. In a lucky moment for Louis, his brother Berri died (1472),' and Charles could now be treated more roundly. War was renewed (1472), and the Burgundian with a great army forced his way down from the North towards Paris. The Duke penetrated as far as Beauvais. He had sworn to teach Louis a lesson by putting all his subjects and lands to the fire or sword; and the country along the Somme was ravaged almost as pitilessly as ia a greater war in more recent times. At Nesle the Burgundians slaughtered a multitude of men, women, and chil- dren who had taken refuge in the village church. Such "fright- fulness" usually brings its own punishment. When Charles appeared before Beauvais the inhabitants nerved themselves up to a desperate defense. A stalwart young woman, Jeanne Hachette, distinguished herself by leading on the fighting men. The Burgundians lost fifteen hundred men in their assaults and then had to decamp discomfited. The result was a truce, which was really equivalent to a great defeat for Charles. The King was coercing or buying off his French allies one by one, and the Burgundian would have to face his nominal suzerain without their help. Charles had still great hopes from the English alliance. In 1475 Edward IV crossed to Calais with a fine army, but Louis promptly sought an interview with the invader, convinced him there was little to gain by playing the selfish game of Burgundy, and sweetened his arguments by seventy-five thousand crowns cash in hand, and the promise of a pension of fifty thousand more each year. Edward rather ingloriously went home. Charles found himself most decidedly left in the lurch. He had still brave prospects and a great power, but he believed he could gain more by attacking the weak principalities near * So lucky, indeed, that Louis's enemies charged him with making use of poison. This is not proved, though this king was anything but squeamish. There is not the least doubt, however, as to his joy over the death of Berri. 104 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Germany than by another attack on Louis. In 1475 he seized the Duchy of Lorraine, and then in an evil hour he decided to sub- due the free Swiss cantons. For many years now the Swiss moun- taineers had defied the military power of Austria, but Charles had learned no lessons from the old stories of Mortgarten and Sempach, and other Swiss victories. Louis sat back quietly, al- lowed Charles to march his pretentious armies into difficult mountain country where his formidable cavalry and artillery ^ were useless against the rush of the Swiss pike and halberd men, and shrewdly waited the results. The King had calculated very correctly. Charles was disgracefully routed at Granson, and fled for his life (1476). With furious energy he assembled another army and invaded Switzerland again. This time the highlanders caught him at Morat, on the verge of a lake, and slew eight thousand to ten thousand Burgundians besides those who were drowned. The exiled Duke of Lorraine now came on the scene to reclaim his heritage, and seized his old capital of Nancy. Charles had strength enough to collect still another army to retake it, but now Louis sent active help to his rival and urged on the Swiss to take the ofEensive. In January, 1477, Charles the Bold fought his last battle imder the walls of Nancy. His army was scattered or slain, and the prince who had almost founded a new independent kingdom in Europe was among the fallen. Louis did not conceal his joy. Charles the Bold left only a daughter, Mary, eight years old. Louis promptly seized the greater part of her father's possessions in eastern and northern France. He did not have the power or hardihood to make a stroke for the great domains in the Low Countries which were eventually to pass under the influence of Hapsburg Austria. In 1482, by a treaty with Mary's guardians, France acquired Picardy, Artois, the Duchy of Burgimdy — all with many dependent lands. Louis had also gained territory ' Field artillery by this time was developed enough to be of some use in open warfare, but only under very favorable conditions. DUAL CHARACTER OF LOUIS'S REIGN 105 toward Spain, and absorbed many of the provinces held as gov- ernments by the great nobles. Since the expulsion of the English no French king had added such territories to the realm as did he. Louis did not spend all of his reign either in intrigue or in battle. Unable to trust the loyalty of the nobles, he not merely filled many of his great oflBces with members of the bourgeoisie ("city-folk") or even low-born peasants, but he did not a little to elevate the whole lot of the lower classes, to better their legal condition, and to extend the rights of self-government in their towns. We find him improving highways, summoning to his court expert merchants to advise on the means of promoting French commerce and industries, creating new fairs and public markets, and encouraging Italian craftsmen to settle in France to manufacture glass. His interests ranged as widely as from the promotion of mining to considering schemes for the scientific codification of the royal laws; and last but not least we find him founding new universities and schools of law and medicine, and giving his patronage to the young invention of printing. Louis XI thus deserves exceedingly high praise for having been able to fend off the Burgundian danger, and actually to turn it to the enlargement and strengthening of France, for, reverting to Philip IV's usage, introducing the non-noble classes into a share in the government offices, and for once more putting the great lords in their proper place. He "contributed more than any one else to establish the French monarchy, and is in certain respects the representative of the new spirit in politics." Never- theless, when we return to the personality of this sordid King, a sense of his repulsiveness returns also. He won necessary battles with despicable weapons. He not merely kept high-bom conspirators and rebels in needful custody; he held them for years in noisome "cages" and dungeons with all the refinements of mediaeval cruelty. To this day the crypts and dark cells of his grim castle of Loches are a potent reminder of how cruel were the mercies of this wicked King; and if he was pitiless to the great lords who defied his power, he was equally pitiless to such of the 106 A HISTORY OF FRANCE wretched bourgeoisie as resisted his grinding taxation. On one occasion when these revolted, we hear of the leading insurgents being hanged on trees all along the roadsides, or being flung into a river, sewed in sacks, whereon was written, "Let the King's justice pass ! " His superstition continued to the end. In 1482 the Flemish envoys came to him to get his oath to the treaty of peace with Mary of Burgundy. The King lay dying of paralysis: he caused the Gospel to be brought, upon which he was to swear to the pact. "If I swear with my left hand," spoke he, "I pray you excuse it, my right is a little weak." But then, fearful a treaty sworn with the left hand might seem invalid, by a painful effort he touched the Holy Book with his right elbow! — He duly ex- hausted every possible appeal to the saints and to saints' relics to prolong his life, but the end came in August, 1483. It is well written that "there was nothing noble about Louis XI but his aims, and nothing great but the results he attained," yet, however different he might have been, he could not have done more, for what he achieved was the making of France. In 1483, at the end of the Middle Ages, France was the most populous, the richest, most consolidated country in Europe, and probably the best governed. Thanks to the marvelous recupera- tive power of the French people, so often displayed, the ravages of the Hundred Years' War had been completely eliminated. A great future seemed about to open before the nation. CHAPTER Vn THE TURBULENT SIXTEENTH CENTURY: 1483-1610 Lotris XI died in 1483. The Turks had taken Constantinople in 1453. At almost exactly that same time Gutenberg at Mainz had produced the first printed book. Columbus was to discover America in 1492. Luther was to nail up his famous theses and to commence the Protestant Reformation in 1517. Manifestly, therefore, Europe, and with Europe of course France, was on the eve of that great transition in men's activities and ideas which we call the beginning of "Modern Times." In this first "modern" movement, France was not to be pre- cisely a leader. The reasons for this were several. She had re- covered from the Hundred Years' War amply in the sense that the burned hamlets and cities had been rebuilt, but the progress of French culture had been stunted. French architects, poets, sculptors, troubadours, philosophers, and churchmen were no longer giving the example to the artistic and intellectual life of Europe as they had done in the thirteenth century. Another and very serious reason was that another great mon- archy had arisen on the Continent. At first it did not openly threaten to destroy France, as had the English peril, but for a long time it certainly overshadowed France, humiliated her, and mingled most ruinously in her affairs. This power was Spain, for a long time a congeries of weak, turbulent small kingdoms, now at last united in a powerful military monarchy under the famous Ferdinand and Isabella; and then (following 1516) under the power of the Austrian Hapsburg dynasty, which had come into the old Burgundian heritage of the Low Countries along with the Austrian lands in Grermany; and likewise for much of the time into possession of the crown of the "Holy Roman Empire" itself. From the days of Hugh Capet, France had never 108 A HISTORY OF FRANCE had such a dangerous foreign rival to her east and south. All this, of course, meant that her destinies were clouded until the Hapsburg-Spanish menace waned. In addition to this must be restated the obvious fact that under a real monarchy, the prosperity of the country depends to a perilous extent upon the character of the monarch. Charles VII, in his later days, and Louis XI had been highly efficient kings, and their country had reaped the reward, but from 1483 to 1589 it is not too much to say that not one of the monarchs of France deserves more than very stinted praise, and the major- ity can only be condemned as weaklings or tyrants. The kingdom was to pay the full penalty for the worthlessness of every king; this fact constituting, of course, one of the standard miseries of autocracy. The years between 1483 and 1610 constitute a very well- defined chapter in French history. At the beginning of this epoch France had lived down the dangers of the Hundred Years' War, but was hardly strong enough as yet. to adventure herself in schemes to dominate Europe; at the end of this time the Spanish menace was fading, and if only France could have great kings or great ministers she was certainly well able to play the part of the first power in Western civilization. Within the long period there are three well-defined divisions: (1) from 1483 to 1559, the time of so-called "Italian Wars," when the French kings vainly and foolishly strove to annex at least a large portion of Italy; (2) from 1559 to 1589, while all France was racked by religious wars between Protestant and Catholic; (3) from 1589 to 1610, when a great king, Henry lY (the famous "Henry of Navarre"), terminated the religious wars, repelled Spanish intervention, healed the domestic griefs, and put his kingdom again on the road to prosperity. Barring this last sovereign, all the monarchs of France during this time are mediocrities or worse. There is often no need of dwelling on their particular "reigns" because they usually THE ITALIAN WARS 109 were the creatures of forces more powerful than themselves. It is much clearer to dwell upon the different issues of this age without overmuch reference to the royal actors. Louis XI left a full treasury, an obedient kingdom, and a powerful army. It was too much to ask that his successors should remain peacefully at home, busy themselves with internal im- provements, and not proceed forthwith to fish in the very troubled international waters of their day. The condition of Italy at the end of the fifteenth century was a constant invita- tion to an invader. The Italian people were now enjoying the apogee of their wonderful Renaissance — that revival of the Grseco-Roman art, letters, and learning, which had begun not long after 1300. Florence, Milan, Rome, Venice, Perugia, Siena, and dozens of smaller cities were the centers of a progress in painting, archi- tecture, and sculpture as well as in all varieties of literature and erudition with which France had little to compare. The southern peninsula, too, was very wealthy. Italian craftsmen were the most skilled technically in the world. Their cities were full of refinements and luxuries unknown north of the Alps. Along with all this magnificence, however, went a lack of poUtical unity that was lamentable. Milan had its own independent prince, or better, "despot." Venice was an aristocratic republic. Florence was a nominal republic controlled by the great Medici family. The Popes dominated central Italy as extremely "secular" princes. The south was held by the King of Naples. There were a number of smaller and weaker states. These petty govern- ments were constantly at war, and were perfectly willing to invite the foreigner to help them crush their unfriendly neigh- bors. Italy was thus liable to prompt conquest by any great out- side power. The only real question was whether it would be by France or Spain. It is difficult not to express moral detestation for these "Italian Wars." They were entirely without serious provoca- tion, and they were conducted almost exclusively for the 110 A HISTORY OF FRANCE "glory" of the various contending monarchs: but the ethics of 1500 were not those of twentieth-century America. Charles VIII (1483-98), the light-headed and impolitic son of Louis XI, invaded Italy with a splendidly equipped army in 1495. He had been invited in by a usurper over the Duchy of Milan, and he had also vague claims to inherit the crown of Naples. During the first advance of his magnificent army, Charles easily conquered Naples, but he soon found that the North Italian powers were arming against him. His retreat and return to France were even more precipitate than his advance. The native princes and Ferdinand, the canny King of Spain, who soon intervened, drove out the last French garrisons beyond the Alps. Charles died of an accident in 1498.' Nothing seemed left of his startling campaign save a memory, but the indirect results were considerable. The effects of the Itahan Renaissance were now brought home to Charles's subjects. The French had been brought in direct contact with a civilization far more advanced and artificial than their own. Italian architects, artists, cooks, tailors, mountebanks, Greek and Latin pro- fessors — all alike streamed north of the Alps, in far greater numbers than before, to receive a warm welcome at the King's court, at the great noblemen's chateaux, at the University of Paris, and almost everywhere else. The culture of France was profoundly modernized.^ Louis XII (1498-1515), the next king,' was a much worthier person, but not much wiser in his foreign policy. Considered merely as a ruler at home he was one of the best monarchs France ever enjoyed. Taxes were lightened, honest measures taken to increase the prosperity of the lower classes, and the '■ While passing down a dark gallery, in the chateau of Amboise, he struck his head on the top of a low doorway, with such violence that he soon died. " In 1491 Charles VIII married the Duchess of Brittany and thus brought that great semi-independent principality into a "personal union" with France. Complete incorporation only came some years later. ' He was not the son of Charles VIII, who died without direct heirs, but the grandson of a brother of Charles VI. With Charles VIII the original Valois line ran out. LOUIS'S FATUOUS ITALIAN POLICY 111 expenses of the court were largely confined to the income of the King's private estates. There was a general cutting-down of needless pensions and of other extravagances. "I would rather," proclaimed the King, "see the courtiers laughing at my avarice than the people weeping at my extravagance"; and in 1513 he declared in an ordinance, "On no account will we lay further burdens upon our poor people, knowing the hardships of their life and the heavy burdens, whether in the shape of tailles [direct taxes] or otherwise, which they have hitherto borne and still bear, to our great regret and grief." There is also excellent testi- mony that this benevolent home policy had its proper reward. "For one rich and prosperous merchant [it was written] that you could find in the days of Louis XI at Paris, Rouen, Lyons, or any other of the great cities of the realm, you may find in this reign more than fifty." Indeed, the national prosperity was so great that the royal income nearly doubled, even when the taxes were abated. The general wealth of France thus made Louis XII the envy of other kings. Unfortunately he threw away all this just glory by his fatuous Italian policy. His whole reign was one succession of treacherous intrigues, alliances, counter-alliances, wars, truces, and renewed wars to gain possessions in Italy, especially the Duchy of Milan. He fought with the Pope, with Ferdinand of Spain, with Maxi- milian the Emperor, with Venice, and finally with Henry VIII of England, who had made alliance with Spain. More by bad luck and by the incapacity of his generals than because of the feebleness of his armies, Louis XII failed all along the line. For a time he held Milan, then was ousted from it, and finally, to fend off an English attack, he had to promise Henry VIII the city of Tournai and one hundred thousand crowns to boot (1514). When he died France had no more footing in Italy than it pos- sessed after the unlucky Charles VIII. Louis's undertakings had devoured vast sums of money, and cost the lives of tens of thou- sands of Frenchmen, while his foes, especially Spain, seemed stronger than ever. 112 A HISTORY OF FRANCE The next monarch was a distant cousin of Louis, Francis I (1515-47). His foreign pohcy was on the whole no better, and his internal policy was much worse. Francis was a showy, preten- tious man who, by his patronage of artists, architects, and poets trained in the Italian school, did much to advance French cul- ture. He was also ready to dip into the treasury for ambitious building schemes, and he encouraged his rich nobles to do like- wise. This was therefore the epoch for the erection of many ele- gant chateaux — stately residences and palaces, not mere com- fortless, frowning castles as in the now departed "Middle Ages." The region around Tours is to this day dotted with the magnifi- cent buildings which recall a stately and luxurious age. Cham- bord, Chenonceaux, and Blois are merely random examples of the famous chateaux which were either erected or remodeled in the days of this splendor-loving king. For wise heed for the weal of his subjects, however, it was useless to look toward Francis. He was immoral, extravagant, and selfish in his person, and the riches of France, so far as they were not squandered on a court full of glittering parasites, were spent still more uselessly on a series of wars for power in Italy; wars which in the end brought little more than defeat and desolation. Early in Francis's reign the Hapsburg-Austrian House saw its heart's desire when the venerable crown of the German Empire, and the more valuable personal lordship over the Aus- trian lands, the Low Countries, and the entire Kingdom of Spain, all passed to the single prince who is known in history as Charles V (of Germany). ^ This ruler was a far steadier and more adroit man than Francis ; he also wielded much greater resources if they had been concentrated. Practically the whole of Francis's reign was taken up with a great duel with Charles, directly for the domination of Italy, less immediately to settle the question whether Austrian or French royalty was to seize the leadership 1 His power was of course soon to be increased further when by the conquests in America of Cortez and Pizarro, his captains, he became possessed of the vast riches of Mejdco and Peru. HENRY II 113 of Europe. There followed a weary succession of invasions of Italy by Francis or his generals, leagues and treaties with the Pope or against the Pope, as the secular interest of the Holy See was now pro-French and now pro-Spanish, occasional vic- tories for Francis, but on the whole far more of defeats. There were in all four set wars between Francis and Charles. In the first war, Francis invaded Italy, but was defeated and taken prisoner at the battle of Pavia (1525). "All is lost save honor," he wrote back to his mother, the Queen Regent. The King purchased his freedom by a very disadvantageous treaty of peace, which he made haste to repudiate as soon as he was at liberty. The later three wars were less disastrous. Whenever Charles tried to throw his Spanish and German armies across the French frontiers, they were roundly repulsed. Henry VIII of England sometimes appeared as Charles's ally, but he was on the point of breaking with the Catholic Church (which Charles stoutly championed) and did not prove a very steady foe to France. Charles was handicapped also by the constant hostility of the then formidable Turks, and by the extreme disaffec- tion of the new party of "Protestant" princes of Germany who bitterly resisted his efforts to restore the old Church. When Francis I died (1547) the great debate between Valois-Capetian and Hapsburg was not ended, but the map greatly favored the latter. Spanish viceroys were ruling firmly in both Naples and Milan, while there was hardly a French garrison left beyond the Alps. Under Henry II (1547-59), the son of Francis, although the King was no whit better personally than his father, the struggle with the Hapsburgs took a turn for the better. Taking advantage of the civil wars in Germany between the Emperor and the Prot- estant princes, the French seized the three great frontier cities of Toul, Metz, and Verdun (1552). Charles made a desperate effort to recover them, and besieged Metz with sixty thousand men. The Duke of Guise, Henry's governor, however, made a gallant and skillful defense. Forty thousand cannon-shot (an unprece- 114. A HISTORY OF FRANCE dented number for the old-style artillery) were fired into the town in the course of a two months' investment; but still the city held out, and Charles, having lost two thirds of his army, was fain to raise the siege. "I see plainly," he cried bitterly, "Fortune is a woman. She favors a young king more than an old emperor!" In 1556, Charles V abdicated in favor of his son Philip II of Spain. Philip had married Mary the Catholic, daughter of Henry VIII, and thus brought England again into colHsion with France. In 1558, by a very sudden attack the Duke of Guise caught the small English garrison in Calais quite off its guard, and easily took this gateway to France. Peace was made in 1559. The Span- iards had won a considerable battle near St. Quentin, but Philip was anxious to have his hands free to crush Protestantism wher- ever it lifted its head. He therefore made easy terms with Henry, who retained alike Verdun, Toul, and Metz, likewise Calais — notwithstanding the humiliated rage of the English. Henry II hardly survived the treaty. At a court tournament he was accidentally wounded by the broken lance of his guard captain, the Scottish knight, Montgomery. The great religious wars were about to rack and harry all France, but there is not the least evidence that Henry II had any abilities to cope with the situation. The Reformation movement in France is harder to analyze than that of Germany, England, or elsewhere. It began assuredly as a sincere protest against the usages and dogmas of the- Catholic Church, but before it gathered full strength a political element intruded, perhaps more markedly than in any other country that was touched by those great convulsions which began with the posting of Martin Luther's "Ninety-five theses" at Wittenberg, Saxony, in 1517. At that time the French Church was being subjected to the same general criticism of worldliness, degeneracy, and false doc- trine which Catholicism had to face almost everywhere outside SPREAD OF THE NEW DOCTRINES 115 of its strongholds in Italy and Spain; and with probably about the same degree of justice or injustice. As early as 1520 there was a group of radical theologians at Meaux, a small city on the Marne, near Paris, which translated the New Testament and taught unsettling doctrines. The strong arm of the Government heresy -hunters soon made malcontents to scatter. But the great- est of French Reformers did his work elsewhere: Jean Calvin, born in 1509 in Noyon, the quiet little Picard city which was to see so much bloody history in 1917-18. He spent most of his life as the pastor, public prophet, and uncrowned ruler of the Swiss city-republic of Geneva, on the confines of France, but not under the King's control. His was assuredly one of the mightiest intel- lects that ever came out of France. To-day his "Institutes of the Christian Religion" may seem cold, nay, repyellent enough, as a theological document, but in its generation this famous book, clever in its appeal and irresistible in its logic, was to send armies to battle, to make men die cheerfully on the scafiEold, and to array kingdom against kingdom. Between 1541 and 1565, Calvin lived in Geneva, sending thence a perfect host of eloquent dis- ciples, trained in the most robust and aggressive type of Prot- estantism, and able (thanks to their French connection) to ob- tain much more acceptance in France than the followers of Luther's strictly German type of propaganda. Under such stimulus Protestantism grew rapidly during the reigns of Francis I and Henry II. Both kings, especially the lat- ter, furbished up the old heresy laws, and did not spare with the rack, fagots and stake. There were a considerable number of executions for religious belief, and a prominent member of the High Court (Parlement of Paris), Anne Dubourg, who ventured to plead the cause of the persecuted to Henry II, was himself put to death. Nevertheless, the number of dissidents multiplied far beyond the ordinary means of repression. Great numbers of the lesser nobility joined the "Reformed Religion," and they were presently reinforced by some of the greatest princes of the blood — especially the powerful Prince of Conde, by Coligny the High 116 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Admiral of France, * and other magnates on the very footsteps of the throne. By 1560 matters were quite ready to come to a chmax. From the outset the French Protestants, however, labored under a heavy handicap. All sides admit that both in Germany and in England the desire of the local princes or king to get con- trol of the church offices and particularly of the church wealth was a very moving factor in inducing many rulers to listen fa- vorably to the Protestant theologians. In France this was never the case. In 1516, Francis I had signed at Bologna with Pope Leo X a famous concordat (treaty with the Papacy) whereby in return for an assurance to the Pope of a considerable share of the income of the French clergy, the appointment and general con- trol of that clergy, including large financial claims on the same, were remitted to the King. The King thus disposed of both the great offices and much of the wealth of the French Church like so much secular patronage — of course a matter of incalculable advantage to the royal power. This concordat reflected little credit on Pope Leo, who thus sacrificed much of the spiritual freedom of the French Church for a mess of financial pottage sent directly to Rome; but the King on his part now had such a firm grasp upon the Church that there was nothing in the temporal way for him to gain by risking his soul and embracing a new religion! The "Wars of Religion" began in France in 1562 and cannot be said to have ended until 1598. They form a period troubled, confused, and one which brought misery to many parts of the na- tion; on the other hand, there were always considerable districts which remained in comparative peace. The Protestant party speedily gained the name of "Huguenots, " alleged to have been a corruption of the German term Eidgenossen (" Confederates"). Its main strength was in the South Country, but the new religion had also scattered strongholds in the North. Particularly the ' The French "Admiral" served at that time almost exclusively as a land general. THE WAES OF RELIGION 117 Huguenots gained and kept La Rochelle, an important seaport town on the Bay of Biscay. This harbor sometimes enabled them to get reinforcements from the Protestants in England and Hol- land. They also (when they had money) were able to hire mer- cenaries in the Lutheran parts of Germany. Their great strength, however, was in their dashing cavalry supplied by the swarms of j)etty nobles who had embraced the new religion. Their standing weakness was the fact that, besides being continually at odds with the King, court, and of course the whole formidable organiza- tion of the Churcli, especially with the admirably directed Jesuit order, the Huguenots were not able as a whole to make a deep impression on the peasantry and bourgeoisie of France. In some few districts the lower jwpulation accepted the new religion, but only a few. The city of Paris also remained fanatically loyal to Catholicism. A Protestant service, even in times of legal tolera- tion, could not be held openly within its walls. Under these circumstances it was plain the chances of Protes- tant victory were at best dubious. After 1560 the new religion made few new converts. The question was whether it could win reasonable toleration alongside of the Catholic majority. Whether if it had continued as a strictly religious movement it could thus \ have secured a legal place is uncertain : the fact is, however, that \ the Huguenot nobles soon began mixing with their religious zeal J a distinct animus against the royal authority. Sympathy with / their religious cause or admiration for the high character of some of their leaders should not prevent moderns from realizing that the Huguenots often represented a movement for strictly politi- cal disintegration which menaced the strength and happiness of France. It was all too frequently another part of the long duel be- / tween central authority and expiring feudalism. If the Huguenots I could have won over the King and the lower population well and good; if not, they certainly added a political to a religious schism in the nation. Between 1559 and 1589 the Kings of France were successively three sons of Henry II. Each of these rulers died without leav- 118 A HISTORY OF FRANCE ing a son himself. All three were selfish men of luxurious and debauched habits, without the least pretense to statesmanship or even to ordinary political intelligence. The true ruler of France was more frequently their mother, the Italian Princess, Cath- erine de' Medici, a woman of no morals, but of considerable low shrewdness, who now lied, now conceded, now was clement, now was cruel or perfidious, all to keep the royal power intact in a time of infinite peril to the same.^ The reign of Francis II extended only from 1559 to 1560; that of Charles IX, his brother, from 1560 to 1574; that of Henry III, a third brother and probably the worst of the trio, from 1574 to 1589. During this time there were no less than eight civil wars, all nominally between the King and the Protestants, but often under conditions that made the royal family almost as dissatisfied with victory as with defeat. The facts were that, thanks to the weakness of the kings, two great princely houses were putting forth their hands toward the ' Henry IV (who had no reason to love her) spoke thus of Catherine, after he had come to power following her sons : "What could a poor woman have done, with her husband dead and five small children on her hands and two families, who were scheming to seize the throne, our own and the Guises? I am astonished that she did not do worse!" These three kings, sons of Catherine, are the most shadowy of all the rulers of France since the revival of the monarchy in the twelfth century. It is impos- sible to think of them as solid personalities. They are only important historically because various things were done by others for or against their "royal" authority. Francis II was only sixteen when he became king. His wife was the brilliant and beautiful Mary Stuart, the famous Mary, Queen of Scots, just now at the beginning of a troublous and ultimately tragic career. Had he lived (he was from the first sickly) his energetic wife might have made his reign noteworthy, but he died after barely a year upon the throne. Charles IX was only thirteen when he succeeded his brother. He was "tall, graceful, dignified, sensitive, and intelligent " ; he was, however, entirely unsteady in his likes and prejudices, and very subject to evil counsel. Despite the massacre of St. Bartholomew's, he was. however, probably the best of these three last Valois kings. Henry III was of mature years when he received the crown, but he was be- yond a doubt the worst of these three royal brothers. " Scandalous and effeminate in his life, his palace was the home of bloodshed and intrigue, of love and murder, of the worst passions in fullest license." Such a king was, of course, defied by the Protestants and bullied by the great Catholic nobles. LOUIS XI CATHERINE DE' MEDICI HENRY IV MAXIMILIEN, DUKE OF SULLY SPASMODIC AND CONFUSED WARFARE 119 throne. On the Protestant side was the powerful House of Bour- bon and Conde. Antoine of Bourbon married Queen Jeanne of the httle Kingdom of Navarre. He was thus something more than an ordinary "Prince of the Blood"; but the most important item was that his son, " Henry of Navarre, " would by right of inheri- tance be heir to the throne of France if the reigning Valois dy- nasty ran out — as there was every chance it might do. Young Henry was being brought up a Protestant, to the infinite horror and anxiety, of course, of many pious Catholics. On the other side were the formidable Dukes of Guise. They had not the same direct expectations of the crown, but as time went on their ambi- tions very clearly pointed toward the supreme oflEice. They were ultra-Catholic. The weak Valois kings (who really were often more interested in preventing ruinous civil wars than in suppress- ing heresy) were seldom orthodox enough for them. The Guises put themselves at the head of the extreme Church party, backed, of course, by the indefatigable Jesuits, and presently, as the movement spread, by the money and influence of the King of Spain. The Guises in fact deliberately traded on their orthodoxy. Their relations with their royal "masters," in whose alleged be- half they fought and won many battles, were often the worst. They aimed to put the kings in complete leading-strings, and even the feeble Valois were acute enough to realize this fact. Finally, in the later period of these wars, the Guises organized the ultra-Catholics into a Holy League, under the patronage of Philip n of Spain, for the avowed purpose of annihilating the ^Protestants, and for the hardly concealed purpose of setting a Gxiise on the throne of Hugh Capet. The details of these wars are confused and very uninteresting. The fighting was now here, now there, in almost any part of France where the Huguenots chanced to have some strongholds. There were vain attempts by moderate men to promote tolera- tion and conciliation. The Chancellor L'Hopital, one of the few real statesmen of his time, in 1560 made a noble appeal at the States General at Blois for tolerance. "Let us attack heresy," he 120 A HISTORY OF FRANCE urged, "with the arms of charity, prayer, persuasion, and the words of God that apply to such a contest. Kindness will do more than severity. . . . Let us drop the wicked names of [our] factions. Let us content ourselves with the title of Christians." Such high-souled words were lost on the contending passions of the day. The wars ran their course, broken by ill-kept truces. The Huguenots lost most of the pitched battles, but, until 1572, they had in Admiral de Coligny a leader of admirable firmness in adversity and skill in averting the worst consequences of a de- feat. Repeatedly the Queen-Mother Catherine granted them a "peace" which permitted large elements of toleration, mainly because the final defeat of the Huguenots would have left the royal power at the complete mercy of the Guises. In 1572 came one of the most melancholy incidents in French history, and one that has left an abiding stain upon the names of Valois and Guise. In that year not merely was there again a tem- porary "peace," but the Royalists and the Huguenots were show- ing marked signs of reconciliation, at least in political matters. Coligny was in Paris and seemed to have won great influence over the unsteady King, Charles IX. Many Protestant noblemen had flocked to the capital in the train of their leader. Great schemes were on foot for the healing of home quarrels by a gen- eral attack on the national foe. King Philip of Spain. But at the last moment the Queen-Mother Catherine seems to have recoiled. She dreaded a decisive struggle with Spain. She dreaded still more having Coligny take the place of Guise as the dominator of /the royal counsels. By a curious reaction she swung temporarily back to the party of Guise, convinced the young King that he must escape from Protestant tutelage, and joined in the most sanguinary advice. The Huguenots, it was urged, must be re- moved by a general massacre. Charles IX, weakling that he was, hesitated at the proposed crime. ' At last he gave way, saying 1 To this day the precise motives and lines of reasoning which induced Catherine to urge this revolutionary change in the royal policy remain consid- erably obscure. QUARRELS WITH THE ULTRA-CATHOLICS 121 angrily: " If you must kill them, kill them all, that no one may be left to reproach me." On the night of August 23-24, 1572 (the ill-fated St. Bar- tholomew's Night), a general massacre took place of the Prot- estants in Paris. Coligny was stabbed in his bed. The city was full of fanatics who were delighted to execute the commands of Guise. " Comrades," announced the Duke joyously, "continue your work, the King orders it!" The slaughter continued sys- tematically for three days in Paris. At least two thousand Huguenots were slain there in cold blood; then the massacre extended to the provinces, where, by the lowest estimate eight thousand Protestants also perished.' The Huguenots were, of course, staggered by the blow, but they were not exterminated. On the contrary, they soon made such desperate resistance that they again gained temporary edicts of toleration. But no lasting settlement was possible while the question of the royal succession was open, and while the Guises and the Holy League were demanding the physical extermina- tion of every heretic. In 1584 died the last Valois prince who might be expected to follow upon the throne, and by every law of France the heir was Henry of Navarre, a Huguenot. The Holy ^ League and its adherents, who absolutely controlled Paris, were I frantic. The Guises brought extreme pressure upon the feeble/ Henry III (probably the worst and weakest as well as last of his Une) to make him submit to their disloyal policy, and they even schemed at last to dethrone him outright on the ground that he could not be relied upon to resist the claims of "Navarre." Henry III, however, after many humiliations, turned like a beast at bay. At Blois in 1588 he caused the Duke of Guise and his brother the Cardinal Louis to be brutally assassinated. He then made alliance with the nominal rebel, Navarre, and marched to besiege Paris. The fanatics of the League soon struck back in true sixteenth- century fashion, and avenged their champions. A young friar, ' Other fairly careful estimates carry the numbers to three thousand and thirty thousand in Paris and the provinces respectively. 122 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Jacques Clement, made his way into the King's presence, pre- tending he had "secret matters of great importance to commu- nicate, " and drove a dagger into Henry Ill's abdomen. All was over with the last of the degenerate Valois. Catherine de' Medici, the old Queen-Mother, the center of much intrigue and much evil, had died a little earlier. The House of Bourbon now was to grasp the crown of France. Henry IV (1589-1610), or "Henry of Navarre," as he was familiarly called long after his accession even, is one of the most sympathetic as well as most honored figures in all the long list of French royalty. His had been a most turbulent youth. His posi- tion as Prince of the Blood had made him the chief of the Hugue- nots' party, and his years had been spent in almost incessant war- fare. The petty Kingdom of Navarre had given him little more than a royal title and a standing above ordinary uncrowned princes. His mother had been a devout Protestant, and had had him educated in the religion of Calvin, but surely there was little enough real devotion on his part to the abstract principles of that iron theologian. Henry IV has been characterized as "affa- ble to the point of familiarity, quick-witted, a true Gascon [South- lander], good-hearted, indulgent, yet skilled in reading the characters of those around him, " and, when the need came, se- vere and unyielding. In battle he was personally brave to rash- t ness. He was not a great strategist, but assuredly he was an ad- \ mirable field captain. He knew how to draw competent advisers i around him, to command their affectionate loyalty, and to profit by their counsels. As for his private morals, they were anything but "Calvinistic." The story of his irregular love-affairs is more interesting than edifying; and he had several bastard children by his principal mistress, the famous Gabrielle d'Estrees. Such pec- cadilloes did not count seriously against a king in the sixteenth century. The Parisians were horrified, not at his morals, but only at his theology ! The day after Henry III died, Henry IV proclaimed that he would not attempt to use his power to undermine Catholicism in ANOTHER CIVIL WAR 128 favor of Protestantism ; but no such simple announcement satis- fied the frantic nobles and Jesuits of the League. They made haste to proclaim a sup^erannuated old ecclesiastic Cardinal Bourbon as "Charles X." The Cardinal was childless and obvi- ously would soon die; by that time the Leaguers, headed now by i another member of the Guise family, the Duke of Mayenne,/ hoped to upset the line of succession altogether. Philip II of Spainf gave them steady support with men and money, although not entirely because he was everywhere the avowed champion of Cathohcism. Philip had himself arguable claims of inheritance to the French crown, if the Bourbon hue could be eliminated, and he was biding his time to press them. In fact, had the hated "Navarre" once been ruined or slain, Mayenne 's candidacy and the hopes of PhiUp might have clashed in open battle. Thus the extreme Catholic party was divided in ultimate aims, yet their power was great enough to make the position of Henry IV al- most desperate. At first he held only about one sixth of France, a city here and a district there. Not all the remainder sided with the League. A good many provinces and powerful nobles remained studiously neutral, trying to keep the ravages of war at arm's length and waiting to see how the issues would presently lie. Of course, Henry could reckon on the Huguenots, but they were probably less than ten i)er cent of the nation. He also received certain succor from Elizabeth, the Protestant Queen of England, but his best hope was in his own sound legal title to the throne (which j fact presently brought many moderate Catholics over to his side) | and in his good right arm which had never failed him. At the be- ginning his forces were heavily outnumbered by those of May- enne, who for three weeks long attacked him at Arques in Nor- mandy, striving to break his fortified lines, but the Leaguers were roundly repulsed. Henry delighted in the mere joy of manly battle. "Go hang yourself, brave CrUlon, " he wrote to an absent general; "we fought at Arques, and you were not there ! " Mayenne had to shrink back into Picardy discomfited. 124 A HISTORY OF FRANCE In 1590, Henry had gathered an army large enough to march eastward, and at Ivry, about fifty miles west of Paris, he eon- fronted the host of the League. The insurgents had fully fifteen thousand men against his eleven thousand, but the King was never daunted. His followers were maddened at the sight of Spanish auxiliaries ranged under the rebel banner. "My friends," ordered the King, "keep your ranks in good order. If you lose your ensigns, the white plume that you see in my helmet will lead you always on the road to honor and glory." There was bloody fighting, lance against lance, between the horsemen, but finally Henry's gallant cavaby forced the line, and the Leaguers broke in flight. "Quarter for the French," ordered the King, "but death to all the foreigners!" The road to Paris was now open, and he advanced straight to the walls of his capital. The Jesuit preachers had worked the Parisians up to the last pitch of enthusiasm to resist the heretic. The city-folk were told that he who died opposing Henry was worthy of the martyr's palm. For four months Paris held out, the King ever drawing his blockading lines tighter, while within horses, asses, and all manner of unclean animals were devoured, and the tale ran that starving soldiers were stealing children for the barrack kettles. At last, when the famine had almost passed the point of endurance, the Spanish Governor of Belgium, the Duke of Parma, appeared with a relieving army, and skillfully forced his way through the royal lines, throwing in provisions and compelling Henry to raise the siege. In 1591, Henry in turn besieged Rouen, but again in the nick of time Parma, who was possibly the first strategist of his age, succeeded in saving that city. The King's prospects accordingly seemed again very discourag- ing. He had won open battles, but he could not take great towns, and his army of mercenaries and Huguenot volunteers was very hard to keep together. His enemies, however, were quarreling among themselves. Philip clearly wished to have the Salic Law set aside and to have the States General elect his daughter Isa- bella as Queen of France. Many violent Catholic leaders never* THE SUBMISSION OF PARIS 125 theless repudiated the idea of thus humbhug the country before the foreigners. Mayenne also made enemies by his high-handed government in Paris, where he committed many bloody acts of tyranny in the name of religion. The moderate Catholic party, the Politiques, as their name ran, grew ever more powerful, and presently they were greatly strengthened by the King's change in religion. Henry had never been a consistent practicer of Huguenot mo- rality. Probably on general principles he preferred Protestantism to Catholicism, but what irked him most of all was that he should seem to change his religion under obvious compulsion. However, many even of his Huguenot advisers told him that it was his duty to give f)eace to the land, by conforming to the faith of the great majority of his subjects. In 1593 he announced that he was will- ing to be "instructed" by the Catholic doctors assembled at Nantes. He then announced himself "converted," knelt at the door of the church at St. Denis, and professed himself a Catholic and in 1594 was duly crowned king at the great Cathedral of Chartres.^ Henry had cynically remarked that " Paris was well worth a mass!" He was entirely right. The extreme Leaguers still cried "hypocrisy," and urged the Parisians to resist a prince who had "once been" a heretic, but all the more reasonable Catholics promptly went over, especially as Henry showered their leaders with promises of pensions and favor. On March 21, 1594, the gates of Paris were opened to him, and he was greeted with cries of "Hurrah for Peace ! Long live the King ! " The Spanish garrison quietly capitulated. " Grentlemen," said Henry to its officers, "commend me to your master, and never come back!" It was not till 1598, after considerable hard fighting, that the King made a reasonably satisfactory treaty of peace with Spain, but already, for four years, he had been lord of his own kingdom. The "Wars of Religion" were at an end, and Henry IV was in a position to apply himself to the works of healing. ' Reims, the usual place for coronatiou, was then held by the enemy. 126 A HISTORY OF FRANCE At last the genial, hard-hitting " King of Navarre," the heir of desperate fortunes, was the very powerful King of France. He needed all his ppwer for his task. Since 1580 alone it was esti- mated that 800,000 persons had perished by war or its accom- paniments, nine cities had been razed, 250 villages burned, and 128,000 houses destroyed. Commerce and industry were of course prostrated, as well as, in many regions, all agriculture. Between the civil wars and the sheer inefficiency of the last three Valois monarchs the royal finances were naturally in ter- rible disorder. The public debt amounted to the then astonishing sum of about $60,000,000. This was merely one symptom of the general upheaval. Thirty -eight years of warfare, usually of a devastating guerrilla nature, had destroyed the ordinary processes of administering justice in many districts. Not merely were certain great nobles, the Montmorencys, Guises, Birons, and D'fipernons, treating their governorships like hereditary kingdoms; the petty nobles, each in his chateau, were ruling like feudal lords before the days of Philip Augustus, and playing the part of irresponsible prince- lets. Downright brigandage had multiplied. Roads were unsafe. Merchant caravans were often plundered. In the towns indus- tries were prostrated. All this called for wise handling, and in many instances for stern and unswerving justice. It was not until 1605 that the turbulent nobles were taught to obey the King's law and not their own. In that year Henry made a progress through the South Country dealing out Roman justice and ab- ruptly "shortening" (with the axe!) various great trouble-mak- ers. In Limousin alone, it was pithily written, " some ten or twelve heads flew." The unruly Duke of Bouillon was chased over the border into exile in Germany. All this was much-needed work and quite to the King's hand. Much earlier, however, he had accomplished a capital act of healing. For the sake of jjeace and Paris, he had "taken the plunge" (as he himself put it) from Calvinism to Catholicism, but he did not forget his old Huguenot supporters, who were ADMIRABLE REFORMS OF SULLY 127 now very distrustful. In 1598 he proclaimed the "irrevocable" Edict of Nantes, giving the Huguenots more ample toleration than was then permitted to religious dissenters in any other country of Europe, and putting France far ahead of its bigoted age. The Huguenots were given liberty of worship within their own castles, in all towns where they had already established the practice, and in at least one city or town in each bailliage (dis- trict). They were given access to the universities and other seats of learning, and to public offices. Every three years they were per- mitted to hold general synods to present complaints to the Gov-, emment. They were likewise given a share of the judges of the high courts (parlements) of Paris, Toulouse, Grenoble, and Bor- deaux, for all cases where Protestants were concerned. Finally they were given the right to hold several towns with their own garrisons, as "guarantees" for their liberties, and especially to hold their beloved La Rochelle. The edict was, of course, too tolerant to please extremists. The ultra-Catholic party railed violently against it, and cast innuendoes at the sincerity of the "conversion" of the King, but Henry forced its general accept- ance as a part of the law of the land. It remained a fundamental statute of France until 1685, when, in an evil hour, the great King's grandson was to repeal it to the capital detriment of his realm. It was the glory of Henry IV and of his chief Minister and per- sonal friend, the Duke of SuUy, that, after having been con- stantly in harness since almost their early youth, they now, un- like so many victorious captains, were able to conduct genuine and far-reaching pacific reforms. In truth, so great have always been the recuperative powers of France, such were the personal energy, thrift, and intelligence of the run of the French people, that given ordinary conditions of mere peace, they were reasona- bly sure to revive and prosper. But Henry IV and Sully went far beyond this minimum. Their reforms and innovations were not spectacular, and it is far easier to summarize the result of a great battle than to describe clearly but briefly a whole series of some- 128 A HISTORY OF FRANCE what minor administrative and economic measures, each incon- siderable in itself, but in the aggregate producing national happi- ness. The best thing that Sully probably did, in fact, was to in- troduce common honesty and efficient business methods into the royal administration. A hard-working, strictly upright man him- self, who shrank from no detail, he gradually cleared up all the mass of "graft" (to use a significant American expression), ex- travagance, and downright peculation which had begun in the court and spread its foul tentacles out to almost every petty treasury officer. It was estimated that the "leakage" in the collection of taxes was such that when the people paid out 200,000,000 livres ' per year, the State barely received* 50,000,000. All this iniquity Sully attacked, punished, and abolished. He did not abolish various institutions derived from the Middle Ages — for example, the pea- sants' taille (direct tax) — which were inherently bad, and easily opened themselves to abuses; but at least for the time he abol- ished most of the abuses. His economies were rigid. After twelve years as "Superintendent of the Finances" he could see the pub- lic debt reduced by one third, the needful expenses of the State honestly discharged, and in the cellars of the Bastile, the King's castle in Paris, lay a reserve of 40,000,000 livres against the day of need. Such drastic economies and the cutting off of fine perquisites or spoils of course awakened violent outcry in powerful quarters, but Henry IV stood by his Minister. King and lieutenant alike seem to have had a real desire to benefit the lower classes, not merely because a rich peasantry would add to the royal income, but because of a genuine benevolence toward their people. French- men loved to repeat the wish of the King "that soon there might ^ The French livre ("pound") at that time seems to have been worth about 38 cents in silver. Of course its purchasing power was then much higher, say $1. The value of the livre gradually sank to about 19.5 cents at the time of the Revolution, when it was renamed the "franc." The above estimate for " leakage " in taxation may be exaggerated, but the waste undoubtedly was outrageous. PROMOTION OF INDUSTRIES 129 be a fowl in the pot of every peasant on Sunday " ; and Sully with more practical energy, used the royal precept and treasure not to maintain an extravagant court, but to build roads, to make ca- uals, and esjjecially to introduce better methods of agriculture, asserting that fertile fields and pastures of fat cattle were "the real mines and treasures of Peru" for France. The one point wherein he betrayed the prejudice of an aristo- crat and a soldier was when he opposed efforts to promote more extensive manufacturing in the country, declaring that the handi- crafts "did not produce men fit for soldier work." But here the Minister collided with the King. Henry seconded all that Sully did to promote agriculture,^ but he was fain to advance French industries also. Thanks to Henry silk-culture was introduced into the kingdom — the beginning of that silk industry which was to bring such wealth and credit to France. Other industries favored and introduced by the King were those of fine textiles, of gold thread so much in demand for the country's wardrobes, of high- warp tapestries, of gilt-leather, of glass and of mirrors — articles hitherto almost monopolized by the workshops of Italy. The King also found time to improve and beautify Paris. The capital still had great quantities of squalid houses and filthy streets with here and there an elegant palace or church. Thanks largely to Henry IV the royal city now began to develop into the best-built, most refined, and presently the most magnificent capital in Europe, and he made considerable additions to the already huge palace of the Louvre. All these things seemed to indicate that Henry IV had ceased to remember the plumed knight of Ivry, but such was in no wise the case. Through Sully's economies the King was able to assem- ble a formidable army without overtaxing his subjects. In 1595 there had been only four regular regiments in the French army. ' Henry IV showed his Interest in agriculture by causing a very sensible book by a Languedoc gentleman, Olivier de Serres, on The Management of Farms, to be read to him ever day after his dinner. Thanks to the royal example the book had wide circulation and decidedly benefited French agricultural methods. 130 A HISTORY OF FRANCE In 1610 there were eleven. The artillery was greatly improved and increased, and the royal arsenals well stocked and multiplied. Large bodies of foreign mercenaries were hired. '^ Henry con- fidently looked forward to the time when he could, with all the resources of a wealthy and loyal kingdom behind him, strike another blow at the old national enemy — the Hapsburg dynasts in Austria and Spain. In 1610 that time seemed to have come. The Protestants and Catholics in Germany were already involved in those bitter disputes which were soon to lead to the Thirty Years' War (1618-48). Henry prepared actively to intervene on the anti-Hapsburg (Protestant) side. The issue was a decidedly secular one over the succession to the lands of the Duke of Cleves and Julich, but the mere fact that the King was mobilizing a great army to strike on the side of the Lutheran heretics was enough to alarm many extreme Catholics. They had never accepted his conversion for more than its face value and the favors he had shown to the Jesuits had been more than offset by the execrated Edict of Nantes. Now malignant spirits began to work upon a convenient tool for their purposes. In 1610 it was said that the King was gloomy and impressed with dire forebodings, although he was seemingly at the height of his power and prosperity. On May 14 he drove in his coach to visit his old friend Sully, who was ill. In five days Henry was to join his great army on the march to Germany. The postillions had neg- lected to clear the way in a narrow street. The lumbering royal car stopped an instant, when a man scrambled up by one of the hind wheels, reached into the coach, and stabbed the King twice. Henry was driven at full speed to the Louvre, but he died before any aid could be rendered. The murderer, one Francis Ravaillac, was a weak-brained fanatic, who declared "the King was going to make war on the Pope, and therefore to kill him was a good ' The French nobility regarded it as degrading to serve on foot, and tradition and policy were against arming the common peasantry too freely; consequently to get sufficient infantry recourse was often had to foreigners, mostly Swiss and Germans. THE HIGH PLACE IN HISTORY OF HENRY IV 131 deed!" It is needless to say the wretch was executed with every refinement of post-mediseval tortures. Henry IV was by all odds one of the worthiest kings in the whole French line, probably the worthiest since St. Louis. Looked at as a private individual one cannot, of course, commend his social morality : following the death in 1599 of his favorite mis- tress Gabrielle d'Estrees, "his court showed little more resp>ect for monogamy than that of the Sultan of Turkey." He cared lit- tle enough for his lawful consort, the stupid Marie de Medici of Tuscany. But the seventeenth century judged lightly the vices of a monarch, and considered as a ruler and builder of France, Henry IV must be ranked very high, indeed. The results of his wise policy were to show themselves in the days of his grandson Louis XIV. CHAPTER VIII THE GREAT CARDINAL AND HIS SUCCESSOR When the news that the dagger of Ravaillac had ended the life of Henry IV was brought to the Duke of Sully, the latter cried out in distress, "France is about to fall into foreign hands!" He was not wrong. The new King, Louis XIII (1610- 43), whose nominal reign began the instant his father died, was only a helpless minor. The government passed to his mother Queen Marie de' Medici, an Italian lady, "heavy and lethargic," of very mediocre ability and quite willing to let her- self be controlled by unworthy favorites. Sully quitted ofiBce in disgrace, and for seven years the true ruler of France was an Italian, Concini, "who had been made a marshal without ever having been under fire." Needless to say his domination, foreign birth, and arrogance made him utterly unpopular among the high-spirited French noblemen, and in 1617 he was assassi- nated in a bold and successful plot; being shot down at the very gates of the Louvre, by high-born conspirators who alleged that he was "resisting the orders" the young King had given them for his arrest. Louis XIII was now old enough to assert himself, although not to rule intelligently. He replaced the favor- ite of his mother with his own favorite, the clever, supple, and unprincipled De Luynes, who was practically Prime Minister until he died in 1621. Under such a government, one faction of selfish nobles con- tending against another, and the interests of the nation being recklessly sacrificed, it is needless to say there was lamentable decadence from the brave policies of Henry, IV. That redoubt- able monarch had seen a foe in every Hapsburg, and had counted Austria the dearest rival of France; but Marie de' Medici and her custodians deliberately played up to the Hapsburgs, and N^B* NoDunally independent prindpality of Lorraiae was peacefully azmexed under Louis -XV: 1766 RICHELIEU 133 caused the young King to marry the Princess Anne of Austria. A government that could not sustain the interests of France abroad was not likely to be strong at home. The great nobles began to follow their lawless whims in the good old feudal manner. The Protestants and Catholics resumed quarreling over political issues. In 1614 the weak administration tried to calm public sentiment by convening the already antiquated and discredited States General, that ineflBcient parliamentary body wherein the Nobility, Clergy, and "Third Estate" met in three separate bodies to petition the King, ventilate their grievances, contend, and then to disband. The meeting of 1614 was even more contentious than usual. Practically no effective measures for bettering the realm were suggested to the Govern- ment, and the worthlessness of the States General as a helper to the King was so advertised, that the body was never recon- vened until the eve of the great Revolution in 1789.' Then, just as the feeble government seemed cracking, as France seemed about to lapse, if not into feudal anarchy, at least into a long period of weakness and misrule, a firm hand took the helm of state. Louis XIII was a man of very ordinary abilities, but he was a far more fortunate monarch than many a more capable king; he had found a truly great Prime Minister and he had the firmness and common sense to keep him in office. We thus come to one of the genuine builders of the splendor of France — Richelieu. Armand Jean du Plessis, Due de Richelieu, was bom near Chi- non in 1585. Like that of many another famous man, his family was "poor but noble. " His first education was for the army, but young Richelieu soon found that for him at least the quill pen was a far better weapon than the sword. He entered the Church, and family influence was sufficient to get him the bishopric of ' Of course there were very powerful influences in 1614 which prevented any democratic tendencies in the States General from becoming formidable and efficient; nevertheless the very nature of the body made it almost worthless as an instrument for the liberalizing and regeneration of France. 134 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Luson, "the most wretched and disagreeable bishopric in France," as he afterwards testily stated. The young prelate was doubtless a sincere Catholic, but no one claimed that he ever looked on the Church as anything but a means to worldly ad- vancement. He seems to have spent as little time in the ruling of his clergy as possible, and devoted his main energies to pushing his fortunes at coflrt where his immense practical and social talents soon carried him far. In 1614, Richelieu was a member of the States General, and became disgusted at the selfishness and political inefficiency of its members. In 1616 for a short time he was a minister of state, but so long as Concini or De Luynes lorded it, there was no real scope for his talents in the government. Richelieu steadily grew, however, as a power at the court. In 1622 he received the red hat of a cardinal, and in 1624, Louis XIII had the intelli- gence to realize that in this Churchman was a "First Minister" who could order his land for him. For the next eighteen years it may be fairly said that Louis XIII reigned, but that Richelieu governed. The monarch only shone by the light reflected from his mighty vicegerent. Richelieu had a very genuine devotion to the weal of France, but he saw that weal coming from her glory in war, not from her quiet economic prosperity. He was determined to eliminate all opposition to the royal power at home, and to advance the boundaries of the kingdom by fair means or foul. He did not shrink from harsh and utterly unscientific methods of taxation. He had only scorn for the relics of "popular liberties " surviving from mediaeval times. The experience of the States General of 1614 had convinced him that the best government was an intelli- gent autocracy. He was drastic and unscrupulous in his methods, but it may at least be said he never descended to Wanton cruelty, and some of the opponents he crushed assuredly de- served their fate. Early in his career it had been written of him, "His is an intellect to which God has set no limits," and his deeds went far to justify the saying. 3 RICHELIEU AND THE PROTESTANTS 135 Richelieu's performances may be summed up in three sen- / tences : He robbed the Protestants of pohtical importance. He reduced the nobility to genuine dependence on the Crown. " He created a formidable army and launched it in victorious war against Austria. In simpler words, he consolidated the royal power at home and he made it terrible abroad. Richelieu's quarrel with the Protestants was political and not religious. He did not attempt to tamper with their consciences or their right to hold religious gatherings; but ever since the Edict of Nantes it had become plain enough that the privilege therein granted them of garrisoning sundry fortified towns and of holding meetings for political purposes, were so many oppor- I tunities for unruly noblemen wherewith to undermine the royal 1 authority and to breed civil wars. Twice Richelieu, in the/ King's name, drew the sword against the Protestant nobles. The second time the war was on a really large and bloody scale. La Rochelle, the Huguenot stronghold by the sea, made a desperate defense (1637-28) and resisted Richelieu's blockade until the children died of famine in the streets. The Protestants hoped for succor from their fellow religionists of England, but the incapable Charles I could not find admirals valiant enough to force their vessels through Richelieu's dikes across the har- bor. When the English ships retired. La Rochelle surrendered, having held out until the srurvivors were "so wasted they re- sembled in looks the dead." Thus ended the Huguenots as a political party. They had failed, but they had gone down with j honor. Richelieu (wiser than Louis XIV afterwards) left them their religious privileges, and for fifty years thereafter French Protestant lived with Catholic in a peace and harmony seldom seen elsewhere in any part of Europe save in Holland, because (in the Cardinal's own sagacious words) "we must trust to Providence, and bring no force to bear against [the Reformed doctrines] except the force of a good life and a good example." This was Richelieu's first hard task: but the curbing of the high nobility was even more essential and much more difficult. 136 A HISTORY OF FRANCE The haughty malcontents were able to carry on intrigues against the hated minister in aU. the closets of the palace. At any moment Louis XIII might succumb to some backstairs influence, yield to the Cardinal's enemies, and fling him out of office. But it was absolutely required that the aristocratic dis- sidents should be taught their place if France was to be great France, and the Prime Minister did not flinch from the ordeal. "The four corners of the King's cabinet," he declared, "are harder for me to conquer than all the battles fought in Europe." The Cardinal had not merely to fight against subtile intrigues and ordinary conspiracies, but against wholesale lawlessness on the part of the majority of the entire nobility. The practice of dueling among the French aristocracy had risen to a national evil. A competent writer affirmed that more gentlemen had perished in these private combats than in the entire " Wars of Religion." Duels took place on the most trifling possible provo- cation : because two "men of honor " would not step aside on the street, because one chanced to look at another coldly or arro- gantly, because he would not look at all, because the two had touched one another in passing, etc. Each adversary had his witnesses; the "witnesses," who in no wise shared the original provocation, did not content themselves merely with seeing fair play, they fought personally, possibly without in the least knowing what the dispute was supposedly about. The quarrel of a nobleman thus sometimes involved all his near friends. The combats were frequently waged in deadly earnest, and not one, but five or six persons might perish in the sword- play. There were royal ordinances against all this, but the French aristocracy were as accustomed to laugh at such enact- ments of the King as at very many other laws. These seven- teenth-century duels were therefore becoming really more de- structive to life than the old mediaeval tourneys and ordeals by battle! Of course under all this blood-letting rested the ancient feudal notion that it was discreditable for a true nobleman to RICHELIEU AND THE NOBILITY 137 let his quarrels be determined by any means save his good right arm. Richelieu set himself stubbornly against this whole- sale dueling, probably quite as much because it implied defiance of royal authority as because it was morally outrageous. In 1626 the Cardinal applied the anti-dueling edicts with a severity which soon alarmed the malcontents. A certain gentleman, the Count of Bouteville, a scion of the great House of Montmo- rency, had been exiled to Brussels for having had part in twenty- two duels. After pardon had been refused him by the Government, he had the boldness to beard the lion, by delib- erately coming back to Paris and fighting a combat at high noon in the Place Royale (1627). The hand of the Cardinal was instantly upon him. Bouteville and his second, the Count de ChapeUe, were promptly arrested, tried, and condemned to die. The protest from the high nobUity against this "cruelty" was tremendous. Every kind of influence, social and pohtical, open and backstairs, was invoked to induce Louis XIII to par- don the offenders. But the King, though probably not without sympathy for the "high sense of honor" of the victims, dared not discredit his great minister by an act of pardon. The offend- ers died, and as Richelieu observed, "Nothing serves better to keep the laws in full vigor than the punishment of persons whose great rank is equal to their crime." Dueling was not indeed completely swept away by acts like these. It long con- tinued to curse the French nobility, but its worst features disappeared, and in any case a vigorous lesson had been taught the lawless. About this same time Richelieu struck another and far more effective blow at the bold spirits who might feel tempted to defy the King. There were stiU many venerable castles over France, strong enough to defy anything but a regular siege vnth heavy artillery. Their mere existence was a suggestion to their noble owners of schemes for insurrection. The Cardinal ordered the wholesale dismantlement or downright destruction of these castles. To the French middle classes and peasantry, long the 138 A HISTORY OF FRANCE victims of fendal insolence or even of wholesale oppression, tHs was the most popular edict imaginable. Thousands of wilHng hands aided the royal officers to throw down battlements or to demolish entire donjons. As a consequence, a great number of once magnificent castles sank into ivy-clad ruins: the remain- der would be made over into elegant, but undefendable open chateaux. Antiquarians of a later day might regret this destruc- tion of the stately relics of feudalism, but the p>eace of the land was infinitely the gainer. Hereafter if there were to be soldiers or strongholds, they were to be ever increasingly at the sole service of the King. So long as Richelieu was dealing only with the seigneurs of petty or average rank, his position was secure enough. It was different when his policies collided with the King's own kins- folk. In truth, the Cardinal was so masterful a ruler that no dignitaiy could be very comfortable in his presence, and even the King himself dreaded and somewhat disliked him, at the very time when he told himself that his redoubtable "servant" was indispensable. In 16£6 several very formidable personages combined against Richelieu. Gastpn of Orleans, the brother of the King himself, and heir to the throne, was nominally the center of the conspiracy, but he was a decidedly stupid man and the brains of the undertaking were really with Marshal d'Qrnano, whom Richeh'eu had earlier favored and promoted. Nearly all the other French princes seem to have known some- thing of the plot. Their object seems to have been to depose the Cardinal by force, since the King refused to dismiss him, and to substitute some more pliable and obsequious minister. These high-born gentlemen speedily learned, however, the "dangers of plotting against one who admirably combined the fox and the lion. Richelieu got wind of their schemes: let them drift along, then suddenly began arresting the leaders right and left. Omano was clapped into the fortress of Vincennes and in a few months died in custody. The Count of Chalais, another leading spirit, had to die on the scaffold. The cowardly royal princes were let RICHELIEU AND THE QUEEN-MOTHER 139 off easily, mostly with a term of exile, and Gaston of Orleans, after a fit of helpless rage, went through the forms of reconcilia- tion with the King and his Minister. The Cardinal had wisely refrained from touching the blood royal, and for a time his credit was higher than ever. The King granted him a bodyguard of a hundred men, as if he too were a royal personage, while the great offices of "Constable" and "Admiral of France" (posts that had hitherto given two great nobles a considerable control respectively over the army and the navy) were suppressed, thus bringing the armed forces more completely under the monarch's authority. So Richeheu met and flung back the first personal danger which confronted him. But he had now won for himself the standing enmity of the two queens. The Queen-Mother, Marie de' Medici "had turned against her 'ungrateful 'minister with a hatred intensified, it is said, by unrequited jjassion." Anne of Austria, Louis's consort, had been on very bad terms with her mother-in-law; her dislike of Richeheu, however, had presently led to a reconciliation with the older princess. In September, 1630, Louis lay very ill at Lyons, and the Queens, working upon him, won his tentative promise to dismiss the Cardinal. The King declared, however, nothing could be done until peace should be made with Spain. When tidiogs of the truce of Regensburg reached the court, Marie hastened to recall the promise. If she had been more tactful and less violent, probably she would have had her way. On November 10, 1630, when the court had returned to the Luxembourg Palace in Paris and the King had recovered, the Queen-Mother created a scene before her son, denouncing Richelieu and his favorite niece, Madame de Combalet, "in language that would have disgraced a fish- wife," and driving the Cardinal, who did not venture to defend himself, from the room. It was one of those moments when, as is possible in monarch-ridden cotmtries, a violent domestic quar- rel can make or mar the fortunes of empires. Richelieu, and, it is not unfair to say, the immediate hopes of France were lost if 140 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Louis wavered. The King, however, though loath to quarrel, and listening to his mother in silence, was still more loath to dismiss a minister whose chief fault obviously consisted in be- ing more devoted to the Sovereign's interests than to those of the Queen Dowager. After Marie had left him, Louis did noth- ing, and certain of Richeheu's friends confirmed him in his reso- lution not to jeopardize the weal of France by succumbing to female tantrums. Meantime the Queen Dowager had swept out of her son's cabinet conveying the impression of triumph. The courtiers crowded around her with time-serving congratulations. The rumor spread that the Cardinal was packing his valuables for flight. This was hardly true, but Richelieu was in genuine fear lest the King had deserted him, as indeed had almost all others; but while he desponded, and while all the toadying Parisian world waited for the name of the new "First Minister," there came the messenger of the King announcing that his master had no intention of displacing his great vicegerent. "Continue to serve me," said Louis, "as you have done; and I will sustain you against all who have sworn to destroy you." This "Day of Dupes" (November 11, 1630) was therefore to become famous in French annals. Many pompous magnates who had shown their joy at the Queen-Mother's alleged triumph were promptly stripped of their dignities. Marie de' Medici vainly attempted a reconciliation with the Cardinal, but her humilia- tion was too great — in 1631 she fled to Brussels and never again entered France, dying in gilded exile. If the Queen-Mother could not displace Richelieu, no lesser worthy surely could turn the trick, although there were other conspiracies. In 1632, indeed, Henry, Duke of Montmorency, undertook an open revolt in Languedoc — a blunder which promptly cost him his head. In 1642 a young favorite of the King, Cinq-Mars, a vain and futile courtier, dabbled also in treason, and perished in turn upon the scaffold. On the whole, however, from 1630 onward Richelieu was the uncontested THE STRUGGLE WITH THE HAPSBURGS 141 master of France. He could devote himself to greater things than nipping closet intrigues and boudoir conspiracies. Richelieu was by no means a skillful civil administrator. Tax- ation meant to him simply the means of raising huge armies, without respect to the miseries of the taxpayer. The taille (the main tax on the peasantry) was doubled to meet the cost of the wars with Spain. The distress of the rural population was often extreme. In 1634, in the South Country, and in 1639 in Normandy, there were serious insurrections of the peasants, and the name of the Cardinal became execrated by all the lower classes even as by the great nobles. But the Cardinal surpassed as a master diplomat and organ- izer of wars and coahtions. Probably no statesman, in the days when diplomacy was said to consist of "lying for one's country," ever handled the sinister weapons of intrigue, private corre- spondence, and underhanded bargain more adroitly than he. Besides his accredited ambassadors and open agents, he made incomparable use of confidential representatives and downright spies. A certain Father Joseph, a supple and sanctimonious ec- clesiastic, was his special private deputy at various important conferences, and probably had a large part in the making of much significant history. The aim of Richelieu's foreign policy was very simple: to humble the House of Hapsburg and to make France recognized as the first power in Europe. The Hapsburgs were a divided \ dynasty: one branch was reigning in Austria, another in Spain, j but the family alliance was fairly well maintained. Spain was i still theoretically a great monarchy, with vast dominions and a redoubtable army, but already there were plenty of signs of that dry-rot within her fabric which was to bring her low with- out any one crushing disaster. In 1618 the Emperor of Austria (or more ofl5cially the "Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire") had become engaged in a life-and-death war, at first largely over religious issues, with the German Protestant States. By the time Richelieu grasped power, however, in 1624, it was evident 142 A HISTORY OF FRANCE enough that the question was partly this — Could Austria, with the aid of Spain, subjugate and consolidate under her centraliz- ing sway all the lesser princes of Germany, especially those of the North? The Protestants were being steadily defeated, thanks to Spanish gold and Spanish pikemen. For several years it seemed likely they would go under. In that case a huge Haps- burg dominion would hem in France from the East, with a ter- ritory running clear down from the Baltic to the Adriatic. Against such a disaster to France, Richelieu struggled with all his might. For years, however, this very belligerent and secular-minded Cardinal could hardly draw the sword along the Rhine. He was too busy at home crushing rebellious Huguenots and malcon- tent noblemen. But the same warrior-prelate who pressed the siege of La Rochelle against the French heretics was busy pull- ing wires and sending money in behalf of the German heretics who were the foes of his hated Austria. The inconsistency of this policy troubled Richelieu not a whit, even if his enemies de- nounced him as "The Pope of the Huguenots, and the Patriarch of atheists." Finally, in 1631, Richelieu made a direct treaty with Gustavus Adolphus, the Lutheran King of Sweden, paying that great captain a heavy subsidy if he would invade Germany and humble Austria. Gustavus, of course (as Central Eiu-o- pean history duly records), fulfilled his entire share of the bar- gain. He broke the power of the Hapsburgs over the North German Protestants by his famous victory at Breitenfeld (1631), and although he fell himself in battle in 1632, there was no longer any serious danger of the extermination of German Protestantism. Richelieu, however, was interested, not in the safety of Teutonic heresy, but in the prestige of French mon- archy. His hands were now becoming untied at home. He could therefore devote his main energies to organizing France for foreign war. Hitherto, despite the vast resources and martial population sustaining them, French campaigns had been conducted most VICTORIES OVER AUSTRIA 143 unscientifically. The standing army had been very small. There were plenty of country gentlemen to make a dashing militia- cavalry, provided the term of service was short and the disci- pline lax. A good many of the infantry regiments had been made up of mercenaries — German, Swiss, Scotch, Irish, etc., who found the King a steady paymaster. The generals had often been royal courtiers and favorites, but by no means always men of military ability or even of decent training. All in all, the French armies up to 1630 could not be compared in organized effectiveness with the best of those of Spain. Richelieu deserves the honor of being the first real builder of the modem French war-machine, later so terrible to every ad- versary. He made grievous mistakes. He too often mistook mere numbers of men for disciplined armies. He sometimes selected very incompetent generals; but he profited by his own blunders; repaired defeat and disaster with dauntless energy; and before his death he began to reap his reward. The history of the foreign wars of Richelieu is largely a his- tory of the later phases of the miserable Thirty Years' War in Germany (1618-48); a war which began as a struggle over religion, and which, after 1632, continued almost exclusively over the sordid question whether Austria on one side or France allied with Sweden on the other should reap the greatest material advantage at the expense of the helpless, devastated lesser states of Germany. In 1635, France actively intervened in the war, beginning active hostilities against Spain and Austria. Richelieu had gathered very large armies, but they were still only partially trained, and in 1636 the Spaniards were thrusting down from the Belgian provinces and were even threatening Paris, only halting at Corbine-on-the-Somme. By courageous efforts Richelieu turned this stroke aside, and soon the tide flowed steadily in his favor. In 1638 the German leader Bernard of Saxe-Weimar, fighting, however, in the French pay and interest, took the greater part of Alsace (excluding Strassburg), and on his death in 1639 this coveted territory was turned 144 A HISTORY OF FRANCE directly over to France. By this time Richelieu's armies were everywhere on the offensive, and before the great Cardinal died in 1642, they were striking at the Hapsburgs and their allies across the Pyrenees, in Italy, in Flanders, and across the Rhine. The older Spanish Monarchy was being pushed at every point upon the defensive. A year after Richelieu departed, the forces which he had organized under the generals he had commissioned won a smashing and decisive pitched battle at Rocroi in Champagne (1643), when the stout squares of Spanish pikemen crumbled and collapsed under the charges of the French cavalry, and 7000 Spaniards fell and 6000 were taken prisoners. "The victory of Rocroi marked the end of the military preponderance of Spain, and the beginning of the military preponderance of France." It was won by the superior intelligence of the French leaders and soldiers as stimulated and organized by Richelieu, though the Cardinal never heard with mortal ears the tale of his greatest triimiph. However, Richelieu died a happy and fortunate man, even if he did not live till the day of Rocroi. Everywhere the power of his royal master had been consolidated; and victories were being already reported from every frontier. In 1621, Louis XIII had p>ossessed an army of 12,000 men. In 1638, it had risen to 150,000. In 1642, it was still greater. Above all, Richelieu had fostered the training of two young generals — the masters of war, who were to enable France almost to dominate the world — generals known to history as Conde and Turenne. The House of Hapsburg was already very hard-pressed in Germany. In six years it would have to sign the humiliating Peace of West- phalia; and already French standards were floating over the Alsatian fortresses beside the Rhine. Richelieu died late in 1642. His life had been one of inces- sant intrigues and wars. Probably if a more peaceful exist- ence had been granted him, he would have proved a lavish patron of art and letters. As it was he dabbled in literature him- RICHELIEU'S CHARACTER 145 self, left some interesting and significant memoirs, gave legiti- mate patronage to the poet CorneiUe, and in 1635 found time amid his martial cares to fomid the famous French "Academy," which was to have so important an influence upon the life of the nation. It was fortunate, of course, for the Cardinal, that his royal "master" was not a man of suflBcient sensitiveness and energy to feel his dignity hurt by the princely state affected by this overpowering "First Minister." Richelieu built for himself the great "Palais Cardinal" at Paris, later the well-known "Palais Royal." He was never modest in appropriatmg his share of the royal revenues. In 1617 as a "poor bishop" his income had been 25,000 livres. In his later years it was 3,000,000. His table cost him 1000 crowns per day, and he delighted in sumptuous fetes. His nephews and nieces ranked almost as " Children of the Blood," and great nobles were compelled to lacquey this om- nipotent ruler of the King. Richelieu is described to us as having looked his stately part, despite a sickly frame and a drawn face. Before his stern, august presence all France quailed, including Louis himself. Cunning, unscrupulous, and sinuous in all his ways, and adamantine to every foe, the Cardinal was nevertheless capable of acts of high courage and even of generosity. His interpretation of the "public weal" was pitifully narrow, and excluded a thousand acts which governments now count needful to make the gov- erned happy; but at least he was never swerved from what he considered his duty to France and her King, by reason of threats, danger, or desire to win popularity and applause. More than any other great Frenchman he can be likened to another famous Prime Minister of a later day — Otto von Bismarck. Their moralities and ambitions were very much the same; but with this extenuation for Richelieu — he lived in the fetid atmosphere of the courts of the seventeenth century. Bismarck lived in the later nineteenth — an ample time for the standards of the world to change. 146 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Louis XIII died seven months after his great minister (May 14, 1643). He had been, to say the least, a very inconspicuous king, but he deserves a place in history for one crowning virtue — in the face of infinite opposition he had kept Richelieu for eighteen years in p>ower. Those eighteen years were to prove decisive in the history of France. Under the successors of Louis XIII and of Richelieu, France was in a p>osition to advance from strength to strength. That the nejct decade, following the death of Richelieu, was not one in which the full power of France was brought to bear upon Europe, is largely due to the fact that the great Cardinal's nominal master left only a boy of five years to be his heir. Once more the kingdom had to undergo the sorrows and weakening of a regency. Anne of Austria, mother of Louis XIV (whose official reign was to extend for the extraordinary term of seventy-three years, from 1643 to 1715), was no woman to play the part of Blanche of Castile, the regent for an earlier Louis. She was perhaps a shade more capable than her mother-in-law, the unlamented Marie de' Medici, but in any case she was ab- solutely imder the influence of the new First Minister, Cardinal Mazarin, around whose policies and destinies the next eighteen years were largely to revolve. Mazarin was a smooth, shrewd, supple, and extraordinarily calculating Italian ecclesiastic, who had come to France in 1634 and had become an invaluable lieutenant to Richelieu. That magnate had promoted him, secured him the Cardinal's hat, and doubtless would have been pleased could he have known he was to be his successor. Mazarin was certainly a lesser man than Richelieu, less original, daring, or willing to use courageous methods; but he was nevertheless a statesman of genuine ability who faced great difficulties and skillfully over- came them, albeit not always by heroic methods. The fact that he was an Italian naturally made the native aristocracy hate him; the other fact, that the King was a minor and that the CONSECRATION OF LOUIS XIV AT REIMS THE LAST NOBLE CONSPIRACIES 147 grasp of the Regent and her Minister on the government was none too strong, of course made these same lords also feel that the time had come to throw off some of the humiliating re- straints cast upon them by Richelieu. When that master of men at length vanished, for the last time France was racked by an aristocratic reaction. The days were long departed when the great feudal vassals I had dreamed of dismembering the kingdom. What the noble [ counts, marquises, dukes, and "Princes of the Blood" now' really wanted was to be allowed to have their full share of the royal offices, patronage, and treasury receipts. The idle, frivo- lous life of a seventeenth-century court put a premium on boudoir plottings and parlor conspiracies, merely as a means of escaping ennui.'- No higher motives than these stated led certain lace-collared monseigneurs and mesdames into hatching schemes against "the Italian"; but it must be said there were other more legitimate causes of discontent with the Government. Richelieu had been an abominable financial manager. Mazarin was little better. The superintendent of the treasury was an Italian, Emeri, who shared his patron's impopularity. Taxes were being collected with merciless rigor. Public offices were being sold to eke out the exchequer. Money was being borrowed at twenty- five per cent, yet the Thirty Years' War was still dragging to its expensive as well as its painful close, and Mazarin was charged, not unjustly, with feathering his own private nest at the cost of the State. Such conditions enabled the high-bom conspirators to obtain considerable popular sympathy, especially in the city of Paris, when they talked much of drawing the sword to rescue the young King from "his evil ministers." In addition to that, the high ' The irresponsible spirit of the Fronde leaders is well summed up in this description of the Duchesse de Longueville, the most prominent of the noble ladies who fanned the revolt: " She was impelled by vanity and ennui in to re- bellion to her king, treason to her country, and infidelity to her husband, until at length a penitential retirement to Port Royal rescued her from the intoxi- cating grandeurs, cares, and pleasures of the world." (Stephen.) 148 A HISTORY OF FRANCE /judicial court of France, the Parlement of Paris, was quite. I willing to assert its power. The members of this court were all [of them noblemen, holding office as a matter of hereditary I right, and they had long claimed the privilege of a practical veto upon the royal decrees by refusing to "register" them — j that is, enroll them as legally binding.^ They had also under ' their eye the example of the much more powerful legislative "Parliament" of England, which was just then gainiag the mastery over Charles I in the Puritan Revolution. These three elements, therefore -jf discontented nobles, dif satisfied taxpayers, and a self-assertive judiciarjJ) — came ti , gether in a series of insxirrections which made young Louis XIV sit very uneasily upon his throne. La 1648 began the wars known as the "Fronde" (1648-53), the detailed history whereof j is not important, although it forms the basis for numerous racy j and romantic court memoirs. For some time the two great royal generals, Cond6 and Turenne, were the mainsprings of the action. Both had their grievances against Mazarin, both were for a whUe in revolt against the Government, although not always simultaneously, and both (though more particularly Conde) struck hands with the Spanish enemy against their own King. The battles in these wars were sometimes bloody, but seldom were very decisive. The Parlement, and presently the Parisian city-folk, came to realize that the lofty aristocrats, who professed such zeal for the woes of the lower classes and for the /respect due the laws, were themselves fighting mainly for pen- I sions, patronage, and high commands. When the tempest was at its height, Mazarin had sagaciously withdrawn from court, but the moment the royal armies gained the advantage he was back (1653) and more powerful than ever. In that year Paris surrendered to Tuxerme, who was now again firmly on the King's ' The King could indeed overcome this veto by holding a solemn session (a "bed of justice"), at which he declared the proposed law binding without the consent of the Parlement. This method, however, was cumbersome and highly unpopular. .T] /kl DEFEAT OF SPAIN 149 side. The Parlement and the citizens made their peace with the young King, and Conde fled into exile among the Spaniards. The old aristocracy, which had been a thorn in the side of every king since the crowning of Hugh Capet, had fought its last battle. Peace did not come instantly with the collapse of the Fronde commotions. Spain had not shared in the pact of 1648, when the Treaty of Westphalia, with the German Powers, had awarded the bulk of Alsace to France. The proud Castilians had been very loath to confess that their dream of world domination was forever ended, and that north of the Pyrenees had risen a power mightier than they. When Conde fled his native land, he was welcomed at Brussels by its courtly governors, and they gladly gave the famous general the command of their armies. But Conde probably misliked the part of a rebel. In any case his new Spanish troops were not equal to his old French regiments. He won few successes over his one-time comrade and now opponent Turenne. In 1657, since the war dragged, Mazarin put his pride as a Catholic into his pocket, and made alliance with Cromwell, the redoubtable Puritan "Protector" of Eng- land. The latter sent over to the Continent a division of his stoutest, psalm-singing "Ironsides." In 1658, Frenchmen and English fought shoulder to shoulder against the Spaniard in the once famous Battle of the Dunes, on the sands near Dunkirk. The Spaniards were routed. Their power was near its end; and the proud Philip IV submitted to the terms dictated by the two nations which Philip II, his ancestor, had hoped to conquer. Dunkirk was ceded to England.^ France received parts of Artois, Roussillon (in the Pyrenees), and also various districts in Lor- raine, whose unlucky Duke had sided with Spain. It was also agreed that Louis XIV should marry the Infanta Maria Theresa. The Princess was to bring a dowry of 300,000 gold crowns, in consideration of which she was to waive all claims to her father's throne. ^ ' It was sold by the venal Charles II to France in 1662. 'The non-payment of this dowry was to have very serious consequences. (See p. 189.) 150 A HISTORY OF FRANCE This Peace of the Pyrenees (1659) definitely settled the ques- tion whether Spain or France was the first power in Europe. The only issue remaining was whether France would push her ambitions further. Mazarin's foreign administration thus wound up in a blaze of glory. The young King was seemingly his obedient pupil, content to imitate his father and let a ca- pable minister steer the ship of state for him. The last powers of resistance had been squeezed out of the great nobles. Hence- forth they were to be merely gilded, obsequious ornaments of a splendid court, or at most the faithful commanders of the royal armies. In Richelieu's time (or possibly earlier) there had, however, developed a new type of royal administrator in districts roughly corresponding to the various provinces. These new adminis- trators, intendants, were men of humble origin who owed every- thing to the King, and expected everything from him; and although they did not formally replace the old royal governors, who were still great nobles, they speedily stripped them of most of their functions. The intendants by 1660 were becoming indispensable agents of monarchy, and were enabling the royal ministers to centralize the government at Paris, so that never since the fall of the Roman Empire was any pretentious mon- arch to have a more complete grasp upon the persons and property of his subjects than did Louis XIV. In 1661, Mazarin died. He had completed the work of Riche- lieu, and he left his master the most splendid and powerful monarch in the world. If he had let the public debt accumulate, and otherwise proved himself a worse civil administrator than he was diplomat and court intriguer, he had at least looked well to his private fortune. He bequeathed an estate valued at 100,000,000 livres, had married his numerous nieces to great Italian or French noblemen or princes, had made his nephew a duke, and his brother (once a p)oor Italian monk) a cardinal. To crown his success, he had found in the young King a docile ward and admirer, and he had tried diligently to implant in LOUIS XIV GOVERNS IN PERSON 151 him all those devious methods of statecraft which the age accomited the highest worldly wisdom. f Louis XIV was twenty-two years old when this minister and mentor left him. Hitherto the young King had seemed content to lead a life of courtly pleasure. It was expected he would immediately name a new First Minister and resume his royal vanities, but when after Mazarin's death the lower ministers came to him asking to whom they should report for orders they received an astonishing answer. "To me!" replied the young King. Louis XIV had determined not merely to reign, but also to govern. CHAPTER IX LOUIS XIV, THE SUN KING — HIS WORK IN FRANCE We come now to the most important reign in French annals save possibly that of Philip Augustus. Louis XIV was a very imperfect ruler, but no one can deny that in a limited but genu- ine sense of the word he was "great" — that is, he exercised a profound influence over the lives, actions, and imaginations not merely of all Frenchmen, but of all Em^opeans. For at least four decades in his reign it seemed possible that France might become not merely the most powerful, but the overwhelmingly dominant power of Europe, ambitious to make Paris another Imperial Rome. To understand the circumstances which en- abled this king to occupy the very center of the world's thoughts it is needful to study his personality, the principles of his govern- ment, the achievements of his ministers, the discipline of his armies, the ceremonial of his court. Only then can we see how he was able to make France the cynosure of Europe. On the day after the death of Mazarin, Louis XIV, as nar- rated in the last chapter, assembled his Secretaries of State. "Hitherto," he announced, "I have let others transact my business. For the future I will be my own First Minister. I will be glad of your advice when I request it. I request you to seal nothing without my orders and to sign nothing without my consent." The Monarch thus indicated his will to be really king. He was then twenty-two years old. He died at the age of seventy-seven. In this period of fifty-five years (1661 to 1715) the wish which he had manifested on the first day of his actual government never left him for an instant. He never had a First Minister. He was constantly the King. Louis XIV was of moderate height, but he imposed himself on all beholders, thanks to an air of nobility and of majesty LOUIS XIV CARDINAL RICHELIEU JEAN-BAPTISTE COLBERT Mmb. de pompadour LOUIS XIV'S AUTHORITY IS UNCONTESTED 153 without arrogance, which expressed itself in his least gestures, and which, as said his contemporary, the Duke of Saint-Simon, "in his dressing-gown even as at the f^tes," at the billiard table even as at the head of his troops, caused him to appear "the master of the world." He had only moderate intellectual acute- ness; but he had much good sense, and he seldom decided a matter until he had been~v^ell informed by those supposed to know. He was naturally inclined to the right. "He loved truth, equity, order, and leaSGnT^ He"Ead also much moral courage and ia firmness of character which apj>eared especially in his dis- astrous later years, when he saw his armies beaten, his country invaded, and nearly all his family carried away by death. This King had few personal ideas. He had one, however, that from his youth had become embedded in his intellect and which dominated his whole life. From infancy he had been told that /he was a "visible divinity," a "Vice-God." The Gist copy-book I set for him to learn writing read, "Homage is due to kings. They do that which they please." He was penetrated with this dogma — that he was a being set apart, holding his crown by the divine will. King by the grace of God, His lieutenant upon the earth. To God, but to God alone, he must some day render account for his deeds. ' Practically all the French world then admitted the validity of this idea. One of his subjects. La Bruyere, wrote bluntly: "He who considers that the face of the monarch causes the felicity of the courtier, whose life is occupied with the desire of seeing him and being seen by him, may understand how the sight of God suffices for the glory and the bliss of the saints." For Louis XIV such views had two very important consequences. ' Louis XIV ■wrote in his own historical memoirs, or " Instructions for his Son " : " The worst calamity which can befall any one of our rank is to be re- duced to that subjection in which the monach is obliged to receive the law from his people. ... It is the essential vice of the English monarchy [contrasted with the French] that the King can make no extraordinary levies of men or money without the consent of ParUament, nor convene Parliament without impairing his own authority." 154 A HISTORY OF FRANCE In the &st place, as lieutenant of God he had to be the abso- lute master — free to dispose of the goods, liberties, and even the lives of his subjects, who owed him implicit obedience, "without discernment." In the second place, he had the obliga- tion upon his conscience to discharge, to use his own expression, "his profession as king." He ought to "do everything for the weal of the State " and only to employ his power "to labor more efficaciously for the prosperity of his subjects." Louis XIV did not always provide this prosperity, but at least he was a faithful worker. "It is only by labor that one may reign," he wrote for his son; "and it is ingratitude and defiance toward God and injustice and tyranny toward man to wish for the one thing without the other." As a consequence a ] certain proportion of every morning and afternoon was devoted I by the King to public business, either working alone or with his I Secretaries of State. Every day and hour was arranged accord- ing to a rigid schedule, so that, as Saint-Simon writes, "with an almanack and a watch, though you were three hundred leagues away, you could tell exactly what the King was doing." The idea that he was the lieutenant of God had filled Louis XIV with indescribable pride. He rejoiced in the name the "Sun King." He almost allowed his obsequious courtiers to "adore" him after the manner of a saint or a demi-god. His dependents, if traversing his empty chamber, when they came before the royal bed or the chest in which was kept the royal napkins, made a profound reverence as they might before the high-altar in a church. They organized "the cult of the royal majesty," and each of the King's ordinary acts of daily life, arising, dining, taking a walk, hunting, having supper, going to bed, became a public ceremony with minutely regulated details — all known as the "royal etiquette." ^ ' Students of antiquity will take cynical interest in noticing how intelligent Frenchmen of the seventeenth century were thus allowing their conduct to revert to the elaborate ceremonial which made the Egyptian Pharaohs the first slaves of their own "divinity." THE ROYAL ETIQUETTE 155 , The "Sun King" rose at eight. The courtiers were intro- duced into the bedchamber by groups, known as entrees. For the lever there were six entries, and after the last of these some hundred persons at length found themselves in the royal presence. The most favored were those admitted at the moment when His Majesty arose from bed and assumed the royal dress- ing-gown. The least fortimate were those who entered only when he wiped his hands with a napkin moistened in alco- hol and finished putting on his garments. The "etiquette" in- dicated what persons should present each separate garment: for example, the "day-shirt" wrapped in an envelope of white silk had to be presented by a son of the King, a Prince of the Blood, or, failing them, by the Grand Chamberlain. The right glove had to be presented by the First Valet of the Chamber; the left glove by the First Valet of the Wardrobe. The Master of the Wardrobe passed the lieutenant of God his breeches and assisted him to button' fast the same. Having thus been clothed, the King entered his cabinet, gave his orders for the day, and then went to mass. Quitting the chapel he held council with his ministers until one o'clock. At that time he dined, alone, in his chamber. The " etiquette " then was no less minute than for the lever. Each plate was borne in by a gentleman, preceded by an usher and by a maitre d'hotel and escorted by three life-guardsmen, musket on shoulder. Five gentlemen stood regularly behind the King. If he wished to drink, it required three gentlemen to provide him with a glass of water or wine. This was the "etiquette" for ordinary days. On gala days, and days of the grand convert, usually Sundays, the King, although stiU alone at table, had aroimd him some thirty persons, about half of them armed guardsmen. On those days the public was permitted to come in and contemplate the grand monarqne eating. After dinner the King would go outdoors; either for a walk or more often for a trot on horseback, and frequently for a hunt. A regular multitude would foUow him. On return he changed his 156 A HISTORY OF FRANCE dress with all the morning ceremonial; then shut himself again in his cabinet to read the reports of the State Secretaries or ' to write his own letters. Thus he would work one or two hours. At ten o'clock he supped with his family, again with great cere- mony. After supper came a game of cards; then finally came the solemn coucher — going to bed, a process as public and com- plicated as the lever. The French court had become elaborate and brilliant in the days of Francis I. During the " Wars of Religion " it had been entirely disorganized. Under Henry IV it had become extremely simple and even severely military. Now, under his far from simple grandson, it received an astonishing extension. It con- sisted of the military household, some ten thousand men in magnificent uniforms, a guard corps worthy of the most formid- able monarch in Christendom; and of a civil household, con- taining at least four thousand. The service of the " Kitchen of the King " (la bouche du roi) — that is, the group of individuals employed for the royal table and the royal table alone, — contained 498 persons. But besides the King's household there were those of the Queen, Dauphin, Dauphiness, and those of their children. A daughter of the Dauphin, when aged two years, had for herself a "household" (maison) of 22 persons, includ- ing three governesses and eight waiting maids. The chiefs of these "services" were drawn from the highest nobility. The "Grand Master of France," chief of the service of the royal table, was none other than the first Prince of the Blood, the Prince of Conde himself, who might also be the selfsame terrible general whose victories smote fear into all Europe. Usually these functions were actually discharged in person, and were not handed over to deputies. It was a coveted honor to pass the King his shirt or to hand him a dish. There were plenty of inferior noblemen who merely waited around in the royal presence, hoping that after the evening game of cards the King might make them happy above their fellows by asking them to carry a candle to light him to bed. THE GREAT STATE OFFICIALS 157 The King thus had the once arrogant and self-sufficient nobihty of France completely tamed. He wished to see the noblesse always dancing attendance upon him in the huge royal residence at Paris, or, after he built it, at the still vaster Versailles. Daily he passed in review his courtiers as he went along his galleries, or the alleys of his great parks. Whoever did not come to court could hope nothing from the royal favor. "He is a man I have not seen," the King would say, when asked a boon for some one absent. "/ do not know him" — which was the most terrible possible criticism. All the nobility of Prance, therefore, which could find the means drifted to the royal court. The country chateaux were deserted by all save the poverty-stricken, the disgraced, or the scandalously unambitious. The nobility, to live in state, built their own elegant "hdtels" around the royal residence, and consequently, when Louis XIV moved to Versailles, they aided to create a regular city. Although the nobility thus became really his nobility, Louis XIV only gave to it very meager opportunities for a career. A nobleman could serve in the King's army or navy; he could enter the "civil household" to pass a napkin or to uncover a, dish; he could hang around the palace as an obsequious courtier without definite functions. But the King almost never em- ployed the nobles in the ordinary civil government and adminis- tration. "It is not in my interest," he once wrote, "to choose men of the highest eminence. It is important that the pubhc should know, by the rank of those who serve me, that I will never share my authority consciously with them." The regular agents of the Central Government were the Chancellor, the Controller-General of the Finances, four "Secretaries of State," various "Ministers of State," and also "Councillors of State." These functionaries for the most part had existed in earlier reigns. The Chancellor, the Controller- General, and the Secretaries formed what would be called to-day in France the "Council of the Ministers." The Chancellor was 158 A HISTORY OF FRANCE the head of the administration of justice; he was likewise president of all the royal councils in the absence of the King. The Controller, of course, had charge of the treasury and all its problems. The four Secretaries were those of the "Royal Household," of "Foreign Aflfairs," of "War," and of the "Marine," but each of them, in addition to these designated functions, was entrusted (following a rather old usage) with the charge of the general civil administration of an assigned portion of the country. Theoretically these secretaries were mere record- ing agents for the pleasure of the King, to whom they were bound to report everything, and then to execute his commands "without rejoinder." In fact, of course, they had large powers and much personal leeway. Under these high officials were four great councils made up of "ministers" (who were really only high councilors), and ordi- nary "councilors." The King himself, if he wished, presided over these councils. They were the "High Council" for many major affairs, but especially for war and diplomacy; another of "Finance"; another of "Dispatches" (that is, from local offi- cials, to handle interior administration); and finally that of "Parties" which conducted all important legal business in which the Govei^nment was interested. This was a decidedly simple machinery for governing a great autocratic state, where all kinds of public business was being concentrated ever more firmly at the King's court. Obviously everything depended on the abilities of the Sovereign, the Chancellor, the Controller, and the four State Secretaries. Their grasp upon the realm was maintained by the all-important intendants. There were still, indeed, provincial "governors," each set over an old province, — for example, Toulouse, Normandy, — and appointed from the highest noblesse. But the once vice- regal governor had had his powers so sadly curtailed that his was now little more than a pretentious honor. Usually in any case his royal lord kept him in residence at court far from his "government." The actual working administrator was the non- COLBERT 159 noble intendant, set over a gSneralitS (a district often consider- ably smaller than an average province). ^ Unless the King's ministers stopped him there seemed little an active intendant might not do. If he wished he could sit as presiding judge in the covu-ts. He supervised and controlled the local finances, the administration of the cities, and all the public works. He levied and led the militia of the district if there were disturbances and handled any military situation which did not demand a regular royal general and elaborate warfare. In short, as was then said of him, "The intendant is the King present in the province." Thus he remained until the Revolution of 1789. For the first and by far the most prosperous portion of the reign of Louis XIV, the most important Royal Minister was Jean Baptiste Colbert. Sumultaneously he was Controller- General, Secretary of the Marine, and Secretary of the Royal Household. He was the most powerful of all the King's subjects, and without him his master could hardly have risen to the wealth and power which made him overshadow Europe. Colbert (1619-83) was the son of a dry-goods dealer ("draper") of Reims. In his youth he went to Paris, and be- came the manager of the private estate of Mazarin. That clutch- ing ecclestiastic was quick to recognize the financial talent which conserved and increased his property. At his death he formally commended Colbert to Louis in his will as being "very faithful." At this time the future Controller was forty- two years old. When Mazarin died the finances had been in the hands of a certain Fouquet, a man of great abilities and ambitions, who seemed so intrenched in his position that he could enrich him- self with impunity and use his vast wealth as a basis for schemes ' For practical purposes "provinces" and gMralitis may be considered the same from this time down to the abolition of both in 1789; there were, how- ever, important differences often in their precise boundaries, and their names were by no means always identical. 160 A HISTORY OF FRANCE to win permanent political power. One of Louis's first acts of personal authority was to depose this overweening minister, strip him of his dubiously acquired wealth, and condemn him to per- petual imprisonment (1661). In his place was set Colbert, a man whom the King discovered would never abuse his authority. Colbert had a genuine mania for work. He was heard to declare that "he could not live six years if condenmed to idle- ness." At half-past five in the morning he would enter his cabi- net, and if he saw there his desk loaded with dispatches he would rub his hands as a gourmand before a feast. His regular working hours were sixteen per day. To disturb him at his labor was an unpardonable offense, and his icy habits gained him the epithet "The North." The tale runs that once a lady fell on her knees before him while soliciting a favor. Colbert promptly fell also on his own knees facing her, saying, "I beseech you to let me alone!" The activities of Colbert can best be understood by stating that for twenty-two years he united in his person official posi- tions that are to-day shared in France by no less than nine cabinet ministers. He has been styled the "work ox" of Louis XIV. He toiled, however, not merely out of personal inclina- tion, but because of genuine patriotism. His devotion to his King and to France was unlimited, and he labored for them because he wished them to be the first king and the first king- dom in the world. To them he dedicated all his unbounded talents. Colbert's leading idea was very simply to make France rich. For this end he used every possible means to attract money to the kingdom, and also to reduce the wealth of rival states;' and very specifically he strove to reorganize the public finances, to develop industry, and to promote commerce. In handling the finances he first of all dealt rigorously with all ' Those, of course, were the days of the crude economic theory that to make a country prosper and grow wealthy, it was necessary to impoverish its neigh- bors. COLBERT BUILDS UP FRENCH INDUSTRY 161 who, under Mazarin's lax regime, had plundered the treasury. Some hundreds of wealthy magnates were prosecuted and com- pelled to disgorge the equivalent of over $85,000,000. At the same time the general disorders of the finances were abated. The exchequer management was always the weakest point in the French royal regime down to the great crash in 1789, but things went better under Colbert than ever before or after. He enforced a rare thing then in Government financial circles — a strict accounting for every sou; and also a genuine attempt to keep expenditures inside of receipts. He had, indeed, something like a very elementary budget. From 1661 to 1672 it may be said that France was kept away from the threat of a deficit. Then, following 1672, the incessant wars and the endless ex- penses of building the royal chateau at Versailles brought back the evil days. Colbert lived to see the public finances sinking again into deplorable disorder. His real achievement was in developing the manufactures of France in a way which made her a great industrial power — a position-- from which she has never permanently declined. He took up the lines of development dropped too long since the days of Henry IV. Thus he put the energies of the Government behind the older industries which already existed — cloths, tapestries, and silks; and then went on to introduce and pro- mote industries hitherto almost unknown in France, such as glass, porcelain, laces, and iron-work. It is from his day that dates, for example, the steady output of admirable silks from Lyons, porcelain from Sevres, lace from Chantilly, etc. — arti- cles or objects of elegance which made the name of Prance honorably famous wherever there were persons of taste. Colbert secured this progress partly by means of large money prizes to successful artisans, partly by granting privileges to foreign craftsmen who would settle in France, but especially by ad- vancing funds for the purchase of raw material and for the erection of factories of a size remarkable for that age. In place of the "family work-room" where a master-craftsman and a 162 A HISTORY OF PRANCE few apprentices labored on a very small scale, there were developed really large manufacturing plants such as are familiar to the present age. Thus certain of Colbert's industrial founda- tions employed hundreds of workers each, and at least one — a cloth-works at Abbeville, in Picardy — employed sixty-five hundred "hands" — a number not unworthy to be ranked with the largest type of factories of the present day. Colbert was, therefore, not remotely, one of the fathers of the modern factory system. The great Minister's ambitions, however, went beyond merely making France economically independent. He intended to have foreign lands economically dependent upon France. For that end he desired that French products should be the most reliable, durable, and «legant of their kind in the world. Accordingly all the processes of manufacture were carefully prescribed by law. There were no less than thirty -two sets of regulations and one hundred and fifty edicts issued on the subject. For example, the length and width of pieces of cloth were carefully regulated and the number of threads in the warp and woof. Every craftsman had to put his distinguishing mark upon his products. These were carefully inspected, and in case of defective workmanship the offending articles were seized, exposed publicly upon a post "with the name of their manufacturer, and then deliberately torn to pieces and burned. If the offense was repeated, the man- ufacturer himself was exposed upon the post for two hours along with his dishonest wares. Colbert defended these severi- ties by saying pithily, "I have always found manufacturers very obstinate in sticking to their errors!" Colbert achieved his end by these measures. French-made articles speedily gained a reputation of being the very best in the entire market. "Such is the vogue of these products that orders flow in for them from every quarter," wrote a Venetian ambassador. It is thus to Colbert that French industry owed its reputation for the high quality of its articles — a reputation which has remained one of its best assets even to this day. GREAT COMMERCIAL COMPANIES 163 To promote the sale of these products Colbert made a corre- sponding effort to promote French commerce in general. His attempts to improve the conditions of interior trade were, indeed, not entirely fortunate, but he certainly gave the foreign trade of France a marked impetus. Within the kingdom each French province was almost an independent state economically. It had its own customs, bar- riers, and special weights and measures. A merchant of Auvergne paid a tax for the privilege of introducing his goods into Langue- doc, those of Champagne to enter Burgundy. This, of course, was one of the evil remnants of feudalism. The roads were also few and very bad. Colbert could not sweep away many evil conditions which were to defy reform until 1789; but he greatly improved and multiplied the roads, and particularly he developed the river and canal system already exploited by Henry IV. From his day onward the inland waterway system became a decisive fact in the economic life of the country and even a passing substitute for railroads. la foreign commerce the great Minister could accomplish more. This had the greater importance in his eyes, for it enabled France to extend her power among the nations. To grasp at the valuable "spice" trade with the Orient, which had brought such wealth first to Venice and later to Holland, he created several elaborate "Companies for Ocean Commerce" whereof the most important was naturally the "East India Company " — a formidable rival to similar English and Dutch corporations. As an inevitable part of this undertaking he de- voted himself to fostering an efficient French merchant marine. The existing taxes levied on foreign ships (especially Dutch) that entered French harbors were carefully maintained, and simultaneously a system of bonuses for the building and main- tenance of merchantmen was introduced- As a consequence French cargo-carriers began to compete with the Dutch and the English on all the oceans of the world. Behind a great merchant fleet, however, Colbert realized 164 A HISTORY OF FRANCE there must be a great war navy. Richelieu had undertaken to make his king formidable upon the seas, but Mazarin had less advisedly allowed the royal navy to dwindle. In 1660, Louis XIV was master of only 18 very inferior men-of-war. In 1683, when Colbert died, the King had 276 vessels of greatly im- proved types — galleys, useful indeed only on the Mediter- ranean, ships-of-the-line carrying up to 130 guns, and frigates for scouting and cruising. Instead of using the outrageous "press gang" in the port towns, a barbarous method which kidnaped French seamen at haphazard intervals into a regular slavery, Colbert substituted a regular method of naval recruit- ing among the seafaring population. Qualified persons were obliged to serve one year in four in the royal navy between the ages of twenty to sixty. In recompense they were assured a pension in their old age. The King thus disposed of 60,000 reliable seamen. Thanks to Colbert's efforts Louis XIV, during the first twenty-five years of his reign, was almost as powerful on the ocean as he was upon land. Colbert thus put his quickening hand on French finance, industry, commerce, merchant marine, and navy. In him we see the solid, constructive qualities of the great bourgeois class given a real cpportimity to show what they could accomplish for the nation. Far more than any other minister he was the builder of the glories of his King. Yet before he died he saw much of his work in ruins. The King's head had been turned by pride, victories, and "glory." The treasury was again showing a deficit. Louis was no longer trusting a minister who forever preached peace, economy, and the promotion of very prosaic and workaday industrial projects. Colbert died in 1683 with France already embarked on a series of disastrous wars which were to blast her prosperity. The aggressive military policy of Louis XIV brought about a complete transformation of the military system of France; earlier, in fact, than in the other great states, and this in large LOUVOIS 165 measure accounts for the success of French arms up to 1700. Richelieu had, indeed, paved the way by his energetic innova- tions, but the war machine of the Bourbon Monarchy did not see perfection until the next generation. The fundamental alteration was, of course, the substitution of a regular standing army for armies improvised from war to war. The leader in all the innovations was Louvois. Without the genius of Colbert, France could not have been rich enough to sustain the grandiose projects of Louis XIV; without the genius of Louvois, it would have been impossible, in a military sense, to have attempted them. Louvois was the son of one of Mazarin's Secretaries of State, In 1666 he succeeded his father in the great position of Chancel- lor. He was much younger than Colbert, but had a large share of that great man's unemotional character, zeal for hard work, and love of order. Unlike Colbert he never risked his royal master's favor by contending against the extravagances of the court, and especially against the waste of public money in building Versailles. On the contrary, he was a systematic flatterer and presently he gained much greater influence over Louis than was possessed by the Finance Minister. We find him brutal, violent, and harsh, and to him are attributed the idea of the dragonnades of the Protestants, and of the devasta- tion of the Palatinate — two of the foulest blots on the history of the Sun King. No one can deny, however, Louvois's ability as a secretary of war. Hitherto it had been usual, even in a great monarchy like France, to disband the bulk of the armies the moment peace was declared. When a new war began, its first stages were consumed, not in fighting, but in painfully muster- ing troops, hunting out competent oflScers, and improvising a new organization, etc. In case of a sudden attack by a better prepared foe, the situation was soon desperate. Also since Gustavus Adolphus the Swede had demonstrated in his German campaigns that the art of war could be put on practically a scientific basis, the time required to train competent oflScers 166 A HISTORY OF FRANCE and men had been greatly increased. The inevitable conse- quences were: (1) the preparations for war had to be made in times of peace, and (2) the royal army had to become a strictly permanent force. Louis XIV had already in 1661 a body of regular troops which other kings duly envied: especially the Household Troops {maison du roi), an excellent guard-corps; and twelve standing regiments of infantry. Around this basis Louvois built a great military organization. In 1670 there were some sixty infantry regiments; about 1690, ninety-eight; and, when the War of the Spanish Succession broke out (1701) Louis had the then almost incredible number of two hundred, although some of these, indeed, were certainly created for the emergency. But even in peace times the "Grand Monarch" issued his daily orders to 47,000 cavalry and 127,000 foot; all properly barracked and armed, and supplied on a well-matured system. No other king in Europe had anything equal to this peace establishment. Unlike other armies of the day this French army had also a uniform dress, discipline, and system of tactics, in great con- trast to the previous age when every regiment had been a distinct law unto itself. It was, for example, a great gain when all the ordinary field guns in the army could use the same cannon balls interchangeably. The troops were recruited by private enlistment, for conscription in our sense of the term was un- known, though the plausible recruiting sergeants made a practice of visiting famine-stricken or otherwise unhappy dis- tricts and inducing the despairing peasants to enlist by lying tales of the luxury, fine quarters, and lax discipline of the King's service, when actually on reaching the barracks the re- cruit found that "one bed for three men, some bad bread, and five sous per day for sustenance " was the real life before him. Discipline in seventeenth-century armies had been often so slack as to compromise decisive battles. Louvois's forces were held down by martinets. Floggings were the lot of disobedient privates; but the War Minister insisted upon equal obedience NEW WEAPONS 167 from officers also. No longer could irresponsible young noble- men lead a gay life around the camps. Breach of orders brought them quickly to the guard-room. Vainly the high-born lords protested that Louvois was insisting on their "learning to obey before they could command " — which was precisely what he had intended. The changes introduced in arms and tactics were not radical, but it is worth noticing that with this age armor practically disappears from the soldiery, except in certain elite corps of cavalry, where it remained more for splendor than for defense, and with the armor went also the pike, practically the last sur- viving form of the venerable spear of antiquity. Hitherto it had been absolutely needful to keep a certain number of pikemen in every regiment to avoid its being ridden down by a bold charge of cavalry against its files of slow-firing musketeers. But well before 1700 there appeared the now familiar bayonet, which transformed every musket into a pike in an emergency, and made special pikemen unnecessary. The first bayonets had, indeed, the great drawback that when fixed they covered the muzzle of the musket so that it could not be fired, but about 1701 means were found to attach them so the firearm could still remain in full play. This invention, therefore, not merely re- tired the old spear to practical oblivion, but went far to give the infantryman a great advantage in resisting the charges of cavalry. He could shoot down the onrushing horsemen, even while maintaining a hedge of steel points against the charge. This army would, of course, have been worthless had there not been ability and often even genius in the higher command. In Conde and Turenne, Louis XIV inherited from Mazarin's regime probably the two best generals in Europe. Conde, indeed, was more a dashing tactician than a great strategist; Turenne was certainly the best soldier seen in Europe between the days of Gustavus Adolphus and Frederick the Great, and possibly was the peer of either. In 1660, Louis had made this modest, well-poised man "Marshal General of the Camps and Armies 168 A HISTORY OF FRANCE of France." He possibly lacked Napoleonic inspiration, but he could execute with magnificent audacity the schemes which he had previously worked out with scientific precision.' His movements were of lightning rapidity compared to the average general of the day, whose maneuvers would be so slow that whole campaigning seasons would be wasted while working up to a single siege or unimportant battle. "Our father" his de- voted men nevertheless called him on account of his long calcu- lations to avoid needless sacrifices. When Turenne died in 1675, Louis XTV had no captain really equal to taking his place. He had still two more than ordinarily competent generals, how- ever, the Duke of Vendome and Marshal Villars. But in the King's later days he seems to have run through his first-class leaders, and he was unable to find successors to any but their high titles. French generalship experienced a great decline after 1700, and king and kingdom alike suffered. Turenne also surpassed most of his contemporary generals in his willingness to force and to accept battles. Considering the amount of campaigning in the period, this time, like the height of the feudal era, saw comparatively few great pitched engage- ments. The ideal campaign was one in which an invader out- maneuvered the defending army and forced it to watch help- lessly while one fortress after another was besieged and taken. It was almost reckoned as something wrong in a general that he should get caught in a situation which made a regular battle unavoidable. He might win the battle and yet fall slightly short of playing the best military game. Louis XIV in his wars took peculiar delight in sieges. Repeatedly he would let his generals arrange for the investment of a Flemish or German city, and then appear in person at camp to watch at safe range the advance of the trenches, and finally to receive the sword of the commandant on surrender. The "Grand Monarch" took just pride in "his" sieges, for ^ It is not unfair to say that in his scientific military methods Turenne was the intellectual father of Von Moltke (the elder) and of Foch. VAUBAN, THE GREAT ENGINEER 169 the art of attacking and defending towns had been brought to an even higher perfection by his Commissioner-General of Fortifications, Vauban, than had ordinary strategy and tactics by Turenne. Vauban in fact was possibly a greater military asset to Louis than even his more famous contemporary. Con- sidering the short-range artillery of the day, his schemes of attack by parallels, "ricochet" fire, "batteries of approach," etc., seem marvels of ingenuity. When once a town was taken, Vauban would devote all his superb genius to remodeling its defenses so as to render them impregnable. It was boasted that "no city which Vauban fairly attacked was ever saved: no city he had once fortified was ever taken." In a word, to this officer, whom Louvois and Louis discovered as a simple captain and honored as a Marshal of France, is due the system of siege war- fare and fortification which lasted clear up to the present age, when changes were forced by the coming of long-range artillery and extra high explosives.' Thanks to the genius, therefore, of Colbert, of Louvois, of Turenne, of Vauban, and last but not least of Lionne, a remark- ably adroit and effective Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Louis XIV not merely possessed a great realm, but one in which the full economic and military resources lay completely under the King's hand, and with highly capable public servants and generals ready to do their master's bidding. Considering the education, ideas, and ambitions of Louis, there is therefore no difficulty in seeing how he was able soon to spread his name to every corner of Europe. ' Vauban was more than merely an engineer and soldier. He was a man of high general intelligence and wide humanity. Before he died in 1707 he had fallen somewhat into disgrace because he had dared to make very keen criticisms upon some of the worst abuses of his master's reign; to plead the cause of the down-trodden peasantry and to make pertinent but unwelcome suggestions for reforms. CHAPTER X LOUIS XIV DOMINATOR OF EUROPE The nature of the monarchy and power of Louis XIV have been set forth in the preceding chapter. It remains to be told what use this king made of an opportunity hitherto unparalleled in French annals. It was not merely that Louis's own power was great. The old rivals of his dynasty were falling away. Spain was sinking into hopeless lethargy caused by disastrous wars, an utterly unenlightened government, and the intellectual numbness inflicted by the Inquisition. The Thirty Years' War had left Germany rent into some hundreds of weak, poverty- stricken principalities, with their nominal leader, Austria, shaken and discredited. Italy was, of course, as divided and as helpless as ever. In England the mighty Cromwell was dead, and in his place was coming the profligate Charles II, a prince so absolutely without royal self-respect that he was presently willing to become his cousin Louis's actual pensioner. Holland seemed strong upon the seas, but the Dutch Republic, as events were to show, lacked the population and physical resources to make successful head by land against the first monarch of his age. The remoter Powers, such as Sweden and Poland, hardly counted, although the matchless French diplomatic service often arrayed them upon its master's side. As for Turkey, stiU a pre- tentious empire of beUigerent infidels, her Padishah was very willing to strike hands with "The Very Christian King" so long as the object was alike a war against Austria, their common enemy. The whole situation in Europe was thus most favorable to grandiose schemes on the part of France. Louis, nevertheless, did not engage in warfare for quite a few years after he assumed the personal government. This was the happy time when Colbert was allowed to give his reforming QUARREL WITH THE POPE 171 genius full scope, and when the treasury figures steadily re- flected the growing prosperity of the kingdom. Louis gave speedy evidence, however, that he intended to claim the leader- ship among all monarchs. In. 1661 the Spanish Ambassador in England, ia an evil moment, ventured to claim precedence at a court function over his French colleague. A curious armed brawl took place in London between the Spaniards and French there resident, as to the rights of their respective envoys to prece- dence in Charles II's court processions, with the English watch- ing the fray with grinning neutrality. The Spanish party won and killed the horses to the French Envoy's coach, while the Spanish Envoy's coach drove away triumphantly after the coach of King Charles. The news of this insult had no sooner flown to Paris than Louis thundered for revenge and made ready for war. Conscious of its weakness, the Spanish court made abject apologies, disgraced its over-zealous London Envoy, and formally ordered its ministers in all the courts of Europe never to claim precedence over the representatives of France. Such a diplomatic triumph over what had been hitherto the proudest monarchy in the world was a proclamation to the four winds of the prestige of the "Sun King." In 1662 Pope Alexander VII was also to feel the breath of his anger. The then Pope bad been on bad personal terms with Mazarin. When, in an afliray, the Papal Corsican Guard fired into the palace of the French Ambassador to the Vatican, and killed several of the suite, no serious punishment was inflicted on the rioters. Louis was a sincere CathoUc, but he never hesi- tated to bully the Holy Father in any matter of secular interest. Now he hastily ordered an army of 24,000 men to enter the Papal States,' while the University of Paris learnedly con- demned the doctrine of Papal authority over kings. Alexander ' Louis took pains to show that this was a strictly "Catholic" army, dealing with purely temporal matters. The soldiers were ordered to pay special atten- tion to fast days, and the commissary was to serve nothing but fish and cheese on Fridays in lieu of meat. 172 A HISTORY OF FRANCE vainly looked for help to Austria and Spain, and a few days before the French army penetrated to Rome he had to present profound apologies and indemnity, and to send his own nephew Cardinal Chigi to Paris as special envoy to convey the pro- found regrets of His Holiness. Louis could, therefore, boast of having humbled the Pope, no less than the heir of the terrible Phihp II. A great awe of the King of France and of those whom he protected fell on all the potentates and peoples of Europe. In 1662 Louis also added a fair city to his dominions. Dun- kirk, on the edge of Flanders, had been wrested from the Spaniards by Cromwell; but Charles II now needed money and had no pride in keeping a second Calais for England. He promptly sold this important place to France for 5,000,000 livres. Louis thus at a relatively trifliag expense obtained a city which might have been a perfect thorn in the side of his realm if held by a more aggressive English Goverrunent. In this manner, down to 1668, the King continued to increase the prestige of his monarchy without any serious fighting. Colbert was winning bloodless economic victories every day. The old nobility had ceased intriguing and conspiring — it was becoming content with its position as gorgeous butterflies in the splendid court. The industrial and commercial genius of the French middle and lower classes was receiving unhindered encouragement. The Huguenot minority was livir.g at j)eace with the Catholic majority. If the King was an autocrat, in these years autocracy was showing its fairest and most efficient side. Never for a very long period, earlier or later, was France to seem more prosperous, tranquil, and happy than in this golden epoch of 1661 to 1668. Not imnaturally this orderly government and wide material prosperity were accompanied by a literary and intellectual movement worthy of a truly "great" age. Comeille, the founder of modem French tragedy, did not die till 1684, al- though perhaps his greatest works had been produced before Louis XIV began his direct reign; but to the Sim King's own ELEGANCE OF ART AND PRIVATE LIFE 173 brilliant day belonged Racine (1639-99) whose tragedies deserve almost equal fame with Corneille's, and above all Moliere (1622-73), that prince of comedians, the Galilean Aristophanes, whose characters have become immortal literary types, and whose genius would possibly be reckoned equal to that of Shakespeare if only he could have added the tragic to his comic muse. These are only three names out of very many contemporaries enrolled among the Olympians, such as La Fontaine, whose fables became a classic; Bossuet, the eloquent court preacher whose sermons and discourses expressed all that was best in Catholic Christianity; Fenelon, that other literary ecclesiastic of hardly lesser renown ; Pascal, the mathe- matician and philosopher ; and, to select a quite different type of genius, Madame de Sevigne, whose "Letters" give us an inimitable picture of the life and intellectual horizon of the court and noblesse of the age. The literary life was not unnaturally accompanied by a development of the fine arts, architecture, painting, sculpture, esf)ecially such as was calculated to minister to the magnificence of costly palaces and noble "hotels." The art was formal, heavy, over-elaborate: but none might deny its elegance or the genius that often breathed through the florid fagades, or the ingen- iously wrought battle-pieces and galleries of portraits. Had he determined to pose as a purely pacific king, Louis could have justly argued that the rapid development of his people in every kind of peaceful endeavor and conquest would speedily give to France the cultural mastery of the world without the need of firing one cannon shot. Considering, however, the nature of his education, his own inherent bents and talents, and the temptation set for him by the distracted state of Europe, such renunciation of martial schemes lay in the land of the impossible. Louis XIV was to make his attempt to become military master of Europe. Four times since the end of the Middle Ages has a great military power made a distinct and formidable bid for some- 174 A HISTORY OF FRANCE ' thing that may be fairly called "world-empire," and UE.til that soaring project has been firmly thwarted, there has been no peace for the world. The first attempt thus to imitate ancient Rome was made by Philip II of Spain, and was defeated by the combined valor and skill of Elizabeth of England, William of Orange, and Henry IV of France. The second attempt was made by Louis XIV in the name of Bourbon France. The third attempt was by Napoleon, also (albeit under very different auspices) in the name of France. The fourth was to be made by Germany in 1914 when the hosts of William of HohenzoUern marched forth to "world-power or downfall." Louis XIV did not, of course, consciously announce, perhaps even to himself, an intention of conquering the entire world. He simply started his monarchy along lines of least resistance which, since one conquest invariably leads to another, would have brought about such a colossal expansion of PVance that the planet could hardly have contained another power which might be treated as a free equal. The King's more obvious and avowed ambition was to execute a formula attributed to Riche- lieu: "Extend France to every place where once was Gaul." Such a project, of course, implied immediately very consider- able territorial expansion ; the conquest of all the Low Countries, at least as far as the Rhine, and perhaps beyond it; the annexa- tion of all the small German States west of the Rhine; and finally the absorption of those relics of the "debatable lands" east of France, such as Lorraine and the "Free County of Burgundy." This last was a part of the old dominions of Charles the Bold, not permanently annexed by France when that potentate came to griei, and which had been long held in a very uncertain grasp by Spain. By 1668 Louis had thoroughly imposed himself upon the imaginations of all Europe. "Each morning the princes of the [German] Empire, the grandees of Spain, the merchants of Holland, and the cardinals of Rome asked eagerly for the latest news of the King of France. The dangers to be feared from his NATURE OF LOUIS'S WARS 175 ambition, and the magnificence which characterized his life were discussed in every council chamber, in every coffee-house, in every barber-shop in Europe." In 1668, Louis, hitherto (his position considered) a remarkably pacific prince, began a series of four wars which at first added immeasurably to his "glory," but ended by leaving that glory tarnished and the prosperity of his kingdom absolutely destroyed. These wars fan until 1714, one year before the King's death. Between them there were conditions of truce and of uneasy quiet rather than of genuine peace. They were nearly always waged against the same set of inveterate antagonists, and upon nearly the same fields for campaigning. All civilized Europe participated in them or preserved at best a very uneasy neutrality. These contests, therefore, constitute a long and important period in general world-history. These wars, however, are extremely uninteresting. Down to the last and decisive struggle they are marked (as has been already indicated) by few great pitched battles, by very few in fact which decided the fate of a campaign. In almost every case they consist of advances by one side or the other against the enemy's fortresses, the siege of the same, and the efforts of the defending side to raise the investment. In the earlier wars the French are nearly always on the offensive. They are the besiegers; their foes are happy if by delaying tactics they can prevent too many fortresses from being taken. In the later struggles the fates begin to turn, and finally we see France defending her national boundaries with the courage of despair. This monotony and lack of exciting incidents in Louis's wars make it needless to do more than state in a few words their main events and decisions, and to explain a little of the diplomatic setting which led to each renewal of the protracted struggle. In this attempt to secure dominion over Europe there was not a Salamis nor a Waterloo nor a Marne. In 1667 Louis laid claim to a considerable part of the Spanish Low Countries (Belgium) on the strength of certain 176 A HISTORY OF FRANCE terms (defensible only by very special pleading) in the Flemish law. The King alleged that his wife, a Spanish princess, was entitled to inherit these lands rather than her half-brother, the feeble-minded Charles II of Spain. Turenne easily overran a great fraction of Flanders and Hainault. It was clear enough that left to herself Spain could only take the decision from her great northern neighbor. However, this threat to the territories that had been a barrier betwixt themselves and France smote fear into the then rich and influential Hollanders. The Dutch made hasty alliance with England and Sweden to halt the French advance by their united threats and pressure. Such was the power of Louis that he might have rushed ahead, defying the whole alliance, but prudent counsels for once prevailed, and he signed the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle (1668), whereby Spain was let off by the cession of certain Flemish towns, especially Lille and Tournay. The great King was merely biding his time. \^^len next Louis struck it was not directly at Spain. The ter- ritories of that vast ramshackle empire would be his far more promptly when once he had disposed of certain less pretentious but more solid opponents who had vexed him sorely. France and Holland had long been friends and allies, but Louis hated the Dutch, not merely because they had checked his schemes for the conquest of Belgium, but because they were Republicans, whose system of government ran counter to his whole idea of lawful authority; because they were Protestants; and finally because in commercial relations they had proved themselves very shrewd dealers with France. He took first of all the pre- caution to make close friendship with Charles II of England, that base monarch who welcomed a foreign pension to render himself free from dependency upon the money grants of his Parliament. In 1670, this heir of Edward III and Henry V deliberately sold himself by the formal though secret Treaty of Dov6r to the heir of Philip of Valois. English foreign policy was to be subservient to that of France and in return the "Merry Monarch " was to receive £200,000 per year while the projected SECOND WAR: ATTACK ON HOLLAND 177 war lasted and 6000 French troops to repress any insurrection in England when Charles declared himself a Catholic — as he solemnly agreed now to do. "Charles told the French Minister that he wished to treat with Louis ' as one gentleman with an- other,' and on this basis of easy courtesy he proceeded to sell himself and his people." Louis was now confident of the help and not the hindrance of English sea power and he could deal roundly with Holland, having aheady secured (as he thought) the neutrality of the various German States by wholesale money gifts to their several princes. Louis had no genuine grievances against Holland, but, as he wrote in 1674, "the origin of present war may be charged to the ingratitude and the unsupportable vanity of the Dutch ! " As he also more candidly wrote of himself at another time, "When a man can do what he wishes, it is hard for him to wish only what is right." He therefore attacked the Dutch in 1673 with all his incomparable forces. Holland then possessed what was possibly the first navy in Europe, but her land defenses had fallen sadly into decay, and her chief statesmen, the brothers De Witt, up to almost the last were fatuously unconvinced of the evil designs of the King. Turenne easily conducted his sovereign and 100,000 men across the Rhine, took the few Dutch fortresses that attempted resist- ance, and seemed on the point of seizing Amsterdam. The terri- fied Hollanders in vain offered large concessions for peace. Carried away by a belief in his omnipotence, Louis demanded such terms as would have strippied the Dutch of a large fraction of their lands and left the remainder in abject vassalage to Prance. He forgot he was dealing with the descendants of men who had proved too much for Philip II of Spain. A great popular revolution at Amsterdam swept the Francophile De Witts from power. The young Prince William of Orange, a direct descendant of the famous William the Silent, was proclaimed Stadholder (captain-general). The Dutch armies rallied with the courage of despair, and while Louis waited in his camp for the trembling delegation to come to announce submission to his terms, he was 178 A HISTORY OF FRANCE informed that the defiant Republicans had cut the dikes, letting the sea flow in as an impenetrable rampart before Amsterdam. There was nothing for it but for the Sun King to retrace his march rather ingloriously, and settle down to a long, grueling war with the various powers that were now hastening to the aid of the Dutch. The conquest of Holland would have been a direct prelimi- nary to the conquest of Belgium from Spain and to unlimited aggressions in Germany. Now that the first rush of attack was past, Austria, Spain, and various German princes, especially the powerful Elector of Prussia-Brandenburg, intervened actively in the war. Seemingly France was fighting nearly all Europe, save only England, which, despite Charles II's promises, proved only a very halting ally. But so great were Louis's resources, so excellent the war-machine which Louvois had built for him, that he not merely held his own, but made steady gains at the expense of his enemies — mainly at the cost of Spain. The coalition against him had, indeed, no general who seemed a fair match for Turenne, or even for Luxembourg, after Turenne was killed in 1675. William of Orange, for all this, proved himself a resourceful and indefatigable leader. It was, indeed, spitefully alleged by the French that "no other 'great captain' had lost so many battles, or been forced to raise so many sieges as he"; but though William was often defeated, he was never disastrously defeated; he never lost courage when the situation was dark, and what is more, he never let his associates and followers lose courage for themselves. His distrust and detestation of Louis were extreme. He consecrated all his matchless talents as a diplomatist to building up against France one great coalition after another; and in the end this cold, unsympathetic, iron-tempered man was to go far in pulling down the whole power of his mighty rival. In 1678, however, both sides had wearied of the war. France had made great gains, but had not "knocked out ' the hostile coalition. The coalition had been utterly unable to disable THE HUGUENOTS UNDER LOUIS XIV 179 France. The Treaty of Nimwegen (near The Hague) restored to Holland her territories intact; Spain, however, had been forced to cede still another slice of Flanders including Valen- ciennes and Cambrai, also the whole of Franche-Comte, and various small concessions were made by Austria along the Rhine. Louis had not ruined Holland as he had designed in 1672, but his acquisitions from this war had been large enough to send the court poets and historians into ecstasies. He had fought almost all Eujope and come away the gainer. There were abeady signs, however, that his wars were undermining griev- ously the general prosperity of France. Between 1678 and 1688, the formal beginning of the next great war, Louis was to see his positi6n seriously compromised. Colbert died in 1683. The finances of France were already in disorder. The great minister had preached economies, and had been nearly repudiated and disgraced by his master as a conse- quence. After his death, however, Louis had good reason to regret him. Never again was the King to see the civil adminis- tration entrusted to ministers of more than very mediocre capacity. The fine company of able civil servants which Mazarin had bequeathed to the Government was running out. It is doubtful if Colbert could have dissuaded the King from what a liberal Cathohc (Duruy) has called "the greatest mis- take in his reign" — the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. Since 1630 the Protestants had ceased to be the slightest menace to the peace of the State. They had been loyally quiet during all the turbulent years of the Fronde. Very many of the great noble houses which had once supported the Huguenot cause, the Condes, Colignys, and the like, had drifted back to Catholi- cism now that early reforming fervor had cooled, and court favor had been clearly for the friends of the old religion. But the bourgeois and peasant elements of the Protestants had stood fast — thrifty trades-people and artisans for the most part, respected for their industry, sobriety, and honesty. Colbert had 180 A HISTORY OF FRANCE found them very useful in his schemes and employed them fre- quently in his new factories or commercial ventures. Duquesne, one of the greatest seamen of France, and Van Robais, the chief manufacturer of Abbeville, had been Protestants. These harmless, self-respecting, and highly valuable people were now decidedly less than ten per cent of the whole popula- tion. Worldly-wise Catholics decidedly favored letting them alone. "This little flock feeds on poisonous herbs," said Mazarin the Cardinal, "but it does not wander from the fold." When Louis XIV took over the government he distinctly declared that while he would show the Protestants no favor, he would respect the rights the laws secured to them. He was himself a bigoted Catholic who had little room for liberal theological opinions, but it was not until after 1678, when peace existed and the King felt his hands free, that serious moves were attempted against the Huguenots. Louis was probably sincere in his detestation of heresy, but he had at least two extra-religious motives. In the first place, he was on chronically bad terms with the Papacy over questions of secular interest, and was anxious to prove to the world that he was still "The Eldest Son of the Church" even if he wrangled with the Pope over the right of his embassy at Rome to give asylum to outlawed cut-throats, or over the question of the election of a pro-French candidate as Prince-Bishop of Cologne. Secondly, it probably irked him sore that in a realm where he claimed plenary authority, and considered his own autocratic decrees as the law for all his sub- jects, a considerable body of Frenchmen should declare that in one very important matter their ways were not the ways of the King. At Louis's elbow were many powerful elements which urged him to play the persecutor. Great courtiers, ladies of irregular morals but unblemished orthodoxy, and eloquent and eager bishops and leaders of the Church, brought constant pressure upon Louis to undertake the conversion of his dissenting sub- jects. The first step was to cut off all privileges from the Protes- THE, HUGUENOTS UNDER LOUIS XIV 181 tants not carefully secured to them by the existing law; they were excluded from the teaching and medical professions and from all public offices. The next step was to send preachers into Huguenot communities to attempt by eloquence, cajoleries, and threats to sow the good seed. The next, and far more sinister, was to enact that at the age of seven a child could select its own religion. If a boy or girl could be tricked into making some statement indicating that he or she wished to be a Catholic, the child could be taken from its unbelieving parents and placed in some kind of non-heretical custody, although the parents had still to pay a pension for its upkeep. The next stage — beginning especially in 1681 — was the deliberate process of "dragoon- ing"; billeting soldiers in the houses of peaceful Protestants who did not encourage "instruction," and allowing or even inciting barrack topers to insult the women and to carouse all night like beasts. "They entered an orderly and religious household, and existence there became like life in a brothel or dramshop." Under these circumstances tens of thousand of Protestants professed themselves convinced of the tenets of Catholicism. The Archbishop of Aix "confessed that the fear of the dragoons persuaded many more than either his money or his eloquence," but although it was admitted that many "conversions" were rotten or debatable, it was also boasted that at least the chil- dren would be brought up in the true faith. The court was delighted at exaggerated tidings of the numbers of the converts. "Every bulletin," writes Madame de Maintenon, "tells the King of thousands of conversions "; while Te Deums were sung, guns fired, and the palace grounds illuminated at each victory of true religion. In 1685 Louis was honestly convinced that practically all the French Protestants were converted, and that the Edict of Nantes could be repealed, as having become needless for the present, and merely a blot upon the statutes of "The Very Christian King." The Royal Council voted unanimously for revocation. On the 18th of October, 1685, the King signed 182 A HISTORY OF FRANCE the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, and ordered all Protestant forms of worship forthwith to cease and all Protestant chapels and "temples" to be immediately destroyed. The Catholic population of France received the mandate with unconcealed joy. The aged Chancellor Le Tellier exclaimed, "Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace!" as he put the great seal on the document abolishing heresy. Bossuet, the enlightened and humane court preacher, was delighted. "The work is worthy of your reign and of yourself," he told the King: "heresy is no more. May the King of Heaven preserve the King of earth," while Madame de Sevigne, a mild and estimable noblewoman, wrote ecstatically in a letter, "Nothing could be finer : no king ever did, or ever will do, anything so memorable." Hardly were the rejoicings over before it became clear that a great mischief had been wrought to France. Thousands of Protestants had turned imder coercion, but thousands more had kept their faith. There seemed no alternative to the most brutal type of persecution. Under the terms of the new law all the Huguenot pastors were to be banished from Prance, but none of their laity were to be permiitted to quit the realm under extraordinarily heavy penalties. Protestants who refused promptly to conform were subject to more brutal dragooning than ever. "His Majesty decrees," wrote Louvois, who highly approved of the persecu- tion, "that every means shall be used to make it clear that no rest or mercy is to be expected by those who persist in a religion which displeases the King." The prisons and galleys were soon full of Protestants convicted of various offenses against the new edict, or of trying to save themselves by sham conversions and then of lapsing from the Catholic faith. But despite threats, brutal soldiery, bonds, and gibbet the consequences of the persecution were almost instantly disastrous for Louis. By tens of thousands the Protestants smuggled themselves across the frontiers. They filled England, Holland, and Lutheran Germany with their outcries. Themselves among the best EVIL RESULTS OF THE PERSECUTION 183 artisans and merchants of France, they transferred their com- mercial abilities and industries to her most bitter national rivals. In all, over two hundred thousand Huguenots seem to have emigrated, giving thus of the very life of Prance to Eng- land, Holland, and Brandenburg, and also to the English and Dutch colonies, notably to South Carolina and to the Cape of Good Hope. The p»ersecution had thus been one of the most suicidal acts by any French king. Not merely had Louis's enemies been strengthened economically, but the revocation, coming just at the moment when the great war costs of the Government were already undermining the wealth of France, produced an eco- nomic crisis by ruining a great fraction of the thriftiest citizens. Some years later, Vauban, who was a careful student of public problems as well as a great military engineer, formally charged that the emigrants carried an enormous amount of wealth out of the country; that many arts and manufactures were utterly destroyed; that French commerce was prostrated; that eight to nine thousand of the King's best sailors had gone over to the enemy, and with them some twelve thousand soldiers and over five hundred admirable officers. Certain it is that in the next war one of William of Orange's ablest generals, Schomberg, was a Huguenot exile, and several of his doughtiest regiments were made up of these outcast Frenchmen, who had forsaken native land, though only at the call of conscience. Even the persecution within France did not succeed. The Huguenots lost over half of their numbers, but in the South Country a sturdy remnant held out and maintained their wor- ship "in the desert," in the open air among the hills, with scouts watching to give warning of a raid by the soldiery. In 1703 in the Cevennes district there was the serious armed insurrection of the Camisards.i A royal army had to be sent against the rebels at a time when all the regular troops were sorely needed else- ' So called from the habit of the insurgents putting their shirts on over their clothes, to identify one another in a night attack. 184 A HISTORY OF FRANCE where. Even then the Government had to make terms with the malcontents and offer pardon to those who submitted. After that all men realized that the Huguenots of France could not be exterminated. They continued despised, maltreated, under heavy legal handicaps and without formal toleration for their rehgion until shortly before 1789, but their mere existence was a proclamation that here was a task too hard for "Louis the Great." Then with the Revolution came full religious toleration and the Church of the Huguenots remains a potent factor in French life unto this day.^ While Louis was thus committing a blunder which tarnished his splendor and cost France dear, he was also drifting into lines of extravagance which added grievously to the economic bur- dens of the kingdom. What he did not spend on wars and upon a super-magnificent court he spent on colossal building projects. The King disliked Paris. It had memories of the disloyal Fronde of his boyhood. Its palaces also reminded men of earlier princes before his own blaze of glory. The Tuileries were, indeed, en- larged, and more structures piled upon the abeady colossal Louvre, but the King was deliberately resolved to build a residence city. Unconsciously he was perhaps determined to imitate other mighty despots, as the rulers of old Egypt and Assyria, or Alexander the Macedonian who scattered his new "Alexandrias" over a conquered world. As early as 1664 Louis authorized the architect Mansard to undertake a royal settle- ment at Versailles, then an insignificant hunting ch&teau of Louis XIII, some ten miles southwest of Paris. ^ Here the Sun King created an enormous palace and all the lesser buildings, parks, recreation grounds, and other necessary impedimenta for the most pretentious court in Europe. Thirty thousand soldiers were needed to work upon the aqueducts and other channels 1 Many Protestants were lost to France when Alsace was seized by Ger- many in 1871. These, of course, reverted to reinforce French Protestantism in 1918. '^ The royal residence was not ready for occupancy until 1682, and not actu- ally completed until 1695. « n H o W EH 13 H H H > H tC H M O Q H H M H H M O fc< H n m H ►J hH ■< cc K H > O & H « O a EH LOUIS'S MISTRESSES 185 which brought the water from a great distance to this low, flat, sandy locality. The building of the palace and residence city went on steadily despite the groans and protests of Colbert. "Who cares to gain a just conception of what manner of man Louis XIV was, cannot do better than to stroll through the vast and tasteless gardens of Versailles, where even Nature ceases to be beautiful, and look upon the great row of monstrous build- ings which close the view. The palace resembles its master. It is grandiose, commonplace, and dull. It was the place which, of all the world, Louis XIV most loved ."^ On this great mass of structures and gardens was expended the sum of about $20,000,000, or the equivalent of twice that sum to-day. Colbert so long as he lived saw that the work was at least done honestly, and that contractors were not allowed to batten on the treasury; but the Sun King, who wished to build a Versailles, could not afford the second luxvu-y of preventable wars. This was precisely what Louis XIV refused to avoid. Of course no worldly-wise man in the seventeenth century asked Louis to set an example of morality as well as of economy. The King treated his Queen, a Spanish princess, "with friend- ship if not with affection," but he openly flaunted his connec- tions with other women. Great prelates who incited the Chris- tian King to stamp out heresy dared breathe not a word against this same pious monarch's adulteries. Louise de la VaUiere was the first to obtain the proud honor of being the acknowledged mistress of the "first gentleman of Evu-ope." She was presently replaced by the haughty Madame de Montespan, a coarse and self-seeking woman who had nothing but her physical lures to commend her. Then she in turn was supplanted by a far superior rival — the famous Madame de Maintenon, a clever widow, who presently exercised an ejrtraordinary ascendancy over the King, affected to be virtuous, urged him to acts of piety, and in 1684 (after the Queen was dead) was actually married to Louis privately. She was henceforth the most powerful woman ' Perkins. 186 A HISTORY OF FRANCE in France, although she never was openly put forward as the royal consort, and exercised her great influence very discreetly behind the scenes. Thanks to her tactful efforts there is little doubt that Louis became less luxurious and immoral, and that an atmosphere of religion, if not of genuine decency, overspread the court in the last two decades of the reign. There were other reasons, however, for this quieting change. France had been plunged into two very unhappy wars. After the peace of Nimwegen, Louis had gone to no pains to conciliate his rivals, la 1681, in a time of international quiet, he had seized the "free-city" of Strasbourg, to the no great anguish of the inhabitants, it is true, but to the enraging of its nominal overlord, the Emperor of Austria. Li 1688 he quarreled so bit- terly with Pope Innocent XI over various issues, but especially over the Pope's right to "invest " the Prince-Bishop of Cologne, that the Holy Father was willing to wish fair fortune to William of Orange, the champion of Protestantism, when that potentate went from Holland to England, overthrew the Catholic James II (Louis's ally and co-worker for tyranny), and became William III of England. In this year another great war blazed up. Louis's ambitions seemed to know no bounds. He had enraged every Protestant Power by his treatment of the Huguenots. He had almost equally offended the Catholic States by his bullying treatment of Innocent XL Austria, with most of the lesser German States, Holland, Spain, England (now under William), and Savoy (Northwestern Italy), all joined in a mighty coali- tion against the common danger. This war, waged against Louis by the "League of Augs- burg," was even less interesting than the one that preceded it. England was now definitely against France. Her navy, plus that of Holland, gave the coalition the control of the seas, but Louis tried to strike back at his rivals by giving his unwilling guest, the exiled James II, an armament and an army, with which to reduce Ireland as a preliminary to recovering England. THE PEACE OF RYSWICK 187 James landed in Ireland and seized the greater part of that oft- afflicted island, but in 1690 all his hopes were blasted by a crushing defeat at the hands of William in the battle of the Boyne. Soon James was back in France, thrusting himself again upon the hospitality of Louis. On the Continent the war was bloody and indecisive. Most of the fighting was in luckless Belgium, for all the centuries the battle-ground of Frenchman and German. Louis's general, Luxembourg, as a rule proved more than a match for WUliam who led the armies of the coalition, and in 1693 the French King himself joined his own host and confronted his great rival close to Louvain. William had barely fifty thousand men and the French nearly one hundred thousand. It was in their pwDwer to force a decisive battle. Luxembotu-g is said to have gone down on his knees while begging the King to strike a great blow, but Louis declared himself contented with the results of the campaign and returned to Versailles. Various reasons could be given for his decision, but the real fact seems to have been that the Grand Monarch feared, despite the apparent odds in his favor, that something might slip and his splendor be compro- mised by a defeat. He seems never to have played the general again, but a similar opportunity for a great victory was never given to his various lieutenants. Peace came in 1697. Louis had had the advantage in perhaps a majority of the sieges and battles on the Continent, although he had been defeated in Ireland and on the sea.^ French military prestige had not been shaken, although it was now evident that the King could not carry ofp so many successes as in the days of Turenne. But two factors disposed Louis strongly to peace. His ministers coidd not conceal from him that France was now suffering terribly from taxation and commercial prostration and must not fight on indefinitely. Also every day increased the likelihood of the wretched Charles II of Spain dying without ' Particularly the French lost a decisive naval battle off Cape La Hogue (on the Breton coast) in 1692. 188 A HISTORY OF PRANCE direct heirs. It was very needful for Louis to clear up all his former disputes in order that he might be free to protect what he considered the interests of his dynasty, in case the huge, lumber- ing Spanish Empire were suddenly dissolved. The war was therefore wound up by the Treaty of Ryswick. Louis XIV was very conciliatory. He recognized William III as King of Eng- land, thus leaving the exiled James II in the cold. He restored nearly all the Belgian and German cities he had seized since 1678, although retaining Strasbourg. He made various conces- sions to Holland. It was, in short, by no means the kind of a treaty the Great Monarch might have been expected to make, but the facts were that he was intensely interested in the fate of the Spanish Empire, and expected to win for his family at least several rich provinces if not the throne of Philip II itself. Peace thus came in 1697. France sorely needed a long rest, with an economical government by a Sully or a Colbert. She was to have fitful quiet for four years, and then twelve years of a new grueling, exhausting, and utterly disastrous war. Few matters are less easy to explain briefly and clearly than how Louis XIV had a discussable claim for his sons to the throne of that selfsame Spanish kingdom with which he had spent so much of his reign in hostilities. It is one of the miseries of monarchy, that under the principles of hereditary succession empires can be handed about or split up and parceled out, like an estate of farms or dwellings among a number of distant and quarreling heirs. In all the bloody debate which was to rack Europe the obvious question, "Which ruler was capable of doing the most good to the Spanish people?" seems never to have been discussed. The Spaniards themselves appear to have been so despot-ridden that at first they hardly expressed a wish in the matter; their only national desire apparently was to have the great dominions of Charles V and Philip II kept intact and undivided. What manner of man might be their personal master hardly troubled the most intelligent grandee. RIVAX HEIRS TO THE SPANISH THRONE 189 Out of the great snarl of diplomacy preceding this execrable "War of the Spanish Succession," the follovsing bare facts emerge : 1. Charles II of Spain, a prince feeble alike in body and intel- lect, was without children, and his nearest direct heirs were the sons of Castilian princesses, especially Louis XIV and the Emperor Leopold of Austria, each of whom in their turn had married a Spanish infanta. Each of these ambitious rival poten- tates had thus a good chance of doubling his realm, if only the other Powers would stand aloof. 2. For either France or Austria to get such a vast increase of power as would be implied by taking over all the Spanish dominions was sure to be resisted to the death by all the rest of Europe. Schemes were therefore entertained for a parceling-out of Charles's dominions; for example, another less formidable claimant, a Prince of Bavaria, was to have Spain, but the Milanese province in Italy was to go to Austria, and Naples and Sicily to the Dauphin, the son of Louis XIV, etc. This was (according to the notions of the day) a fair division of the inheri- tance. Unfortunately in 1699 the Bavarian Prince died, and all the ambassadors at the rival courts had to resume their long interviews and hurried correspondence. 3. Louis still hesitated to claim all of Spain's dominions for his sons (pressing for their mother's alleged rights). "^ He had the good sense to realize that France could ill afford a great war to the death, and he therefore negotiated with his old rival William III of England. It was agreed that Spain itself was to go to an Austrian archduke, but that other territories, somewhat larger than previously agreed upon, especially including Lor- raine, were to be assigned to the Dauphin of France. 4. Charles was terribly angered, fool and weakling that he was, to hear that his dominions were being thus portioned out while he was still living. His Spanish pride demanded that his vast ' The non-payment of her dowry was alleged to have cancelled her renunci' atiou of rights to ths throne. See p. 149. 190 A HISTORY OF FRANCE territories should still be kept intact. Acting as if the empire that embraced Spain, Belgium, much of Italy, the Philippine Islands, and most of South America, could be treated like a private country-seat, he determined to make a will. There was a great contest and infinite intriguing between the Austrian and French Ambassadors at Madrid. The French Envoy was far more clever. He won over the dying king's confessor and other powerful ecclesiastics, who worked on their superstitious master. In 1700, Charles II made a will giving his entire domin- ions to Philip, Duke of Anjou, Louis's second grandson.^ In less than a month this utterly incompetent king was dead, leaving a heritage of disasters for all Europe. 5. Louis was faced with an overwhelming temptation. He had feared that if Charles made a will, it would be in favor of Austria, hence his willingness to compromise. Lo! the whole Spanish Empire was proffered to his own grandson. The King called a solemn privy council at Versailles. Should the treaty just made with the other Powers be kept? There were various considerations, of course, suggested to palliate the charge of bad faith against Prance. On November 16, 1700, a great levee was held at Versailles. The courtiers gathered eagerly when the great doors of the King's chambers were thrown open, and the now aged monarch emerged leaning on Philip, his second grand- son : "Gentlemen," spoke Louis, "behold the King of Spain !" Philip was promptly received by his new Spanish subjects who were glad to have the young monarch's mighty grandsire guarantee to him the integrity of his dominions. There was, of course, one cry of rage from Austria, from Holland, and pres- ently from England. It was firmly believed, erroneously as it turned out, that Spain was about to become hopelessly subject to France, thanks now to the kinship of the neighboring mon- archs. A great war was from the outset inevitable. ' The Spanish Empire was not given to the Dauphin, or to the elder grand- son, because the Spaniards did not wish the same man to be king both of France and of Spain. It was generally believed, however, that Spain would become completely subservient to French influences. WAR OF THE SPANISH SUCCESSION 191 Louis may have consulted his own greatness when he thus treated a solemn treaty as a "scrap of paper." He certainly ignored with studied deliberation the happiness of France. The French nation had not the slightest interest as to who might reign at Madrid, provided Spain continued a weak, un- aggressive power — as under any ruler she was very sure to do. For the glory of Louis's family and the interest of one of his grandsons, Frenchmen were called upon to engage in an utterly exhausting general war. The Spaniards were now, indeed, their nominal allies, but were allies who demanded much and who gave little. The main burden fell on France alone. In 1701 began the war of the "Grand Alliance" (England, Holland, Austria, the German States, and Portugal) against Prance and Spain. The Elector of Bavaria was on Louis's side, his only important ally, indeed, except his own grandson. WiUiam III, the King's old and implacable foe, died in 1702, but Queen Anne, his sister-in-law, continued the war for Eng- land. And now it was that the numbing effects of the Grand Monarch's despotism began to be painfully evident. The finances, aheady in a slough of despond, were abandoned to very incompetent ministers. The army absolutely lacked first- class generals. Turenne had left no real successor. On the other hand, the enemies of France for the first time found two really great leaders, the Duke of Marlborough, a man of despicable per- sonality, but possibly the ablest Briton who ever commanded an army,' and Prince Eugene, the highly capable chieftain of the hosts of Austria. Marlborough and Eugene, unlike many "allied" generals, usually worked together in confidence and harmony. Before their united attack France was destined to go doTvn to humiliation. The annals of this long War of the Spanish Succession (1701- 13) are needless to trace. There was fighting in Italy and much ' Of course Cromwell was an infinitely greater as well as better statesman than Marlborough, but it may be doubted if he was quite equal to the wily Duke considered merely as a, military leader. In any case Marlborough was in command of much larger masses of troops in battle. 192 A HISTORY OP FRANCE fighting In Spain, but once more the main collisions were in Germany and Belgium. In 1704 Marlborough and Eugene, hav- ing skillfully united their forces, gave battle to the French and Bavarians xmder Marshal Tallard and the Bavarian Elector at Blenheim in South Germany near Augsburg. The French fought bravely, but Marlborough's cavalry broke their line, and pres- ently all was lost. Tallard himself was taken prisoner, and all Germany east of the Rhine was lost to Louis. There had not been such an utter disaster to France since the battle of Pa via.' Campaigning was still very deliberate, even when it was not immercifuUy slow. The next decisive stroke came in 1706. Marlborough here forced a pitched battle on Marshal Villeroi at Ramillies, near Namur, in Belgium. The French were not merely beaten, but routed. They were then cleared out of nearly all of Belgium, and only great exertions saved French soil itself from invasion. The humiliation of Louis was extreme. So far from winning the war, he was now hopelessly on the defensive. The King, however, held his ground manfully even when every day brought new tidings of ill. He had no word of re- proach for brave if unsuccessful generals. "Monsieur le mare- chal," said he to the elderly Villeroi, when the latter appeared at court after Ramillies, " at our age one is no longer fortunate ! " In 1708 the French lost another great battle at Oudenarde; the kingdom itself was invaded. Louis doffed his pride, and for the sake of his people, of whose miseries he was at length becoming conscious, he asked for peace. Had his foes been reasonable the war would have ended speedily, but although Louis was willing to leave Philip in Spain to fight for himself, he refused to send a French army to drive him from a throne where the Spaniards were anxious to keep him. "Since I must make war," declared I>ouis, " I would rather fight my enemies than my children." For the first time in his reign Louis condescended to make a > See p. 113. THE TREATY OF UTRECHT 193 public appeal to rally to save sovereign and native land from humiliation and invasion. The appeal was not in vain. Volun- teers streamed into the army. In 1709, at Malplaquet, although the allies won a technical victory, the battle was practically a draw. There was no longer danger of a general collapse of the French armies; and in the meantime events were working some- what in Louis's favor. It was becoming very evident that the Spaniards would never endure the Austrian Archduke whom the allies were trying to thrust upon them. In England also Queen Anne was falling out with the Whig (pro-war) faction which had been Marlborough's mainstay, and was going over to his pacifistic Tory enemies. Englishmen also realized that if Philip remained in Spain, he was not likely to be subservient to France, and they were not anxious to continue fighting merely to aggrandize Austria. Negotiations began in 1711, but the main treaty was not signed at Utrecht xmtil 1713, and that with Austria at Rastadt until 1714. Considering his great defeats Louis did not lose aa much as might have been expected. He retained Strasbourg, which earlier in the war he had seemed likely to lose, although he had to cede Newfoundland and Acadia (Nova Scotia) in America to England, and to grant the English also a favorable commercial treaty. What the war really effected was the break- up of the European dominions of Spain. Belgium, Milan, and Naples, all passed for the moment to Austria, and Sicily to the Prince of Savoy; while Gibraltar, seized in this war by the Enghsh, was duly retained by them. So ended a struggle that by a little good faith and tactful policy on the part of Louis could have been readily avoided. The finances of France were in utter confusion. In 1683 her indirect taxes had brought in 118,000,000 livres : in 1714 they had fallen to 46,000,000. All this told a story of commercial and industrial prostration, and of widespread hardship and famine for the lower classes. The glory of the Grand Monarch had been sadly dimmed by these long sufferings inflicted upon his people. 194 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Louis XrV, it must be said, bore his disasters more nobly than he had his prosperity. He met ill-fortune with dignity and without complaining. His last years were personally very sad. All the great administrators who had contributed to the splendors of his early reign were dead. His grandeur had left him without true friends. In 1711 the Dauphin died; then one member after another of the royal family was stricken as if by some relentless curse upon the dynasty. In 1715 the King found himself nearing his end with his nearest heir his great-grandson, the Duke of Anjou, a child of only fiv« years. The unavoidable regency would have to go to the King's nephew, the Duke of Orleans, a man for whom Louis had profound personal dislike. On September 1, 1715, the Sun King, no longer dazzling . Europe as of old, departed forever. In his last moments he seems to have realized many of his errors, and his dying words were not without grandeur. "Why weep?" he said to his do- mestics in tears; "do you think me immortal?" And then he commanded that his little great-grandson, the boy about to become Louis XV, should be brought to the bedside. "You are soon to be King of a great realm," spoke the dying monarch. "What I commend most earnestly to you is never to forget the obligations you owe to God. Remember that to Him you owe all that you are. Try to keep peace with yotir neighbors. I have been too fond of war: do not imitate me in that, or in my too great expenditure." Loms XIY died at the age of seventy-seven, having reigned seventy-two years. There were in Prance many white-haired men who had never known any other king. His passing seemed to be the withdrawal of one of the hitherto immutable things hi the Universe. "God ohm is great, my brothers," Massillon, the famous court preacher, had need to say at the beginning of his funeral oration. Louis had raised his realm at one time to a pinnacle of glory, but all he had in the end added to France, in return for the treasure and blood poured out in his behalf, were a part H s H 0! H \D (r^ B CO o o H W RIOTS IN PAEIS 277 shouts of the officers. The health of the royal family was drunk amid the waving and flashing of swords, while the orchestra crashed out the royahst song, "Oh, Richard! Oh, my King, all the world abandons thee . . . hut not I." Then it is said that the tricolor cockade was spitefully trampled under foot, while white cockades, the color of Bourbon royalty, were distributed; and lovely ladies mingled with the officers to confirm their loyalty and pin on the white ribbons. It was a foolish demonstration, worthy of the intelligence of the Old Regime. The men whom the court party needed to make sure of were not the officers, but the rank and file of their regi- ments. The tale of these doings, of course, spread to Paris with due exaggerations. Again the capital boiled. The new liberty had not brought cheap bread. Very many were hungry. On October 4 a riotous demonstration took place before the City Hall. Coarse, strong-armed market-women and, it would seem, men masquerading in dresses, led the demonstration. The new National Guard confronted them, but could hardly be relied upon to take stern action. "You'll not fire on women!" rang the cry. Then, probably to divert them from a riot in Paris, some one began pounding a drum, and shouted, "To Versailles ! " Off the whole throng swept, headed by the women yeUing for "bread." Lafayette, commander of the National Guard, un- certain of his men and in sore perplexity as to the whole affair, followed them with most of his force. The King at Versailles was parleying with a delegation of the Assembly over accepting the newly drafted "Rights of Man" when the motley host swept up from Paris. At first the gates of the chiteau were closed, and when Lafayette arrived the danger seemed over. But as the next day broke the watch relaxed. Some of the mob (the worse for liquor) forced their way into the residence, and killed several of the royal bodyguard while they were defending the chambers of the Queen. Lafayette at length rallied enough reliable men to stop the rioting, but the whole temper of the multitude (including the National Guard) was 878 A HISTORY OF FRANCE such that there could be no assurance of safety until the King consented to depart with all his family for Paris. Thither he went, escorted by Lafayette, but also by the wild throng of viragoes, tossing their arms around the royal coach and howling in glee, "We have got the baker and the baker's wife and the baker's little boy! — Now we shall have bread." (October 5.) The King was lodged in the old palace of the Tuileries. The Assembly (probably not sorry to see the court thus humiliated) made haste to follow to Paris and resumed its debates in a great riding-school near the palace. Once more the Revolution had been saved from a Royalist reaction. But it had been saved at a price. The court had been constrained by no orderly process of law, but by sheer mob violence. King and Assembly alike were now in Paris, the city of a thousand passions. They were always subject, in case they resisted the gusts of popular opinion, to physical coercion by unkempt rioters. Henceforth, more and more, the extremists of the Paris faubourgs came to take the will of their own narrow circles for the will of entire France; to assume to speak for the entire nation, and, if resisted, in the name of the nation to justify every deed of blood. These sinister elements, however, were not at first pre- dominant. There was abundant good-will and patriotism in the Assembly, and it now at length devoted itself to the great task of reorganizing France. For two years there was relative calm, and it could even be argued plausibly that the Revolution had been accomplished with, all things considered, a commendably small amount of bloodshed. There is still great difference of opinion as to the excellence of the new institutions which the Assembly now gave to France. On the whole it may be said that considering the absolute lack of political experience hitherto per- mitted to Frenchmen, the blunders were by no means greater than might be expected.^ Many of the enactments of 1789-91 remain the law of France to this day, and many of the others ^ Comparisons of Revolutionary France with Revolutionary Russia will leave modern students very lenient in their judgments on Frenchmen of 1789-95. WHOLESALE REFOflMS 279 probably did not deserve to perish. Nevertheless the melancholy spectacle remained of a great constitutional edifice being labori- ously erected, next proclaimed as being substantially perpetual — and then vanishing in smoke and blood within a year after it had been changed from proposals to practice. It is better to state the principal enactments of the Assembly in these years than to hint at the reasons for each particular change. There was still in France no serious movement to estab- lish a republic. The men who drafted the Constitution of 1791 were, however, profoundly under the influence of the dogmas of Rousseau and Montesquieu. They wished to vest all the power in the people, yet they did not abolish hereditary kingship. They wished an efficient executive, but they feared Still more lest the executive should encroach upon the popular rights. They were also in great dread lest the King should somehow ruin the new liberties by corrupting or cozening the national legislature. The result was a constitution which, despite much that was excellent, failed to function properly the minute it was put in practice and thereby exposed to inevitable criticism and opposition. If liberal intentions could make a great nation prosper, the Assembly could easily have put France upon the highroad to happiness. All the old restraints on commerce and industry were swept away. The Huguenots and Jews were given complete toleration. Primogeniture and such other rights of inheritance as tended to perpetuate an aristocratic society were abolished. All titles of nobility were also abolished, and priests were re- duced to the mere status of public functionaries. The death penalties for many crimes were removed. All Frenchmen were declared equal in legal privileges, in liability to taxation accord- ing to their ability, and in their rights to public employments. The old provinces had been serious promoters of isolation and particularism and local pettiness. They were now done away. In their place France was divided into eighty-three "depart-' 280 A HISTORY OF FRANCE ments," about equal in size, and named after their rivers, mountains, etc. The departments were subdivided into "dis- tricts," these into "cantons," and these in turn into still smaller "communes," the primary units of the country, 44,828 in all. France thus became a highly articulated nation organized upon a uniform plan, with everything radiating from the nerve centers of government at Paris. The inefficient old law courts were likewise abolished. A supreme Court of Cassation for the entire country was set up, with a system of local courts tapering down to the justices of the peace in the cantons. The magistrates were to be elected by their fellow citizens for ten years, and the great safeguard of jury trials was instituted for the more serious criminal cases. The Assembly also voted that a uniform civil code of laws should be compiled — a great task only to be executed by Napoleon. The ancient abuses in taxation were cancelled in their turn. The provincial customs barriers perished with the old provinces. The other taxes were simplified and put on a reasonably scien- tific basis. Schemes were set on foot for a general system of education. In short, the Assembly was entitled to high credit for much eminently successful or promising legislation along social, economic, or administrative lines, and a great fraction of what it accomplished in these directions was destined to endure — and to endure because it was worthy. Probably the members took the highest pride (and very rightly) in their solemn pronunciament, "The Declaration of the Rights of Man," the seventeen articles of which became the veritable Credo of the Revolution. Although couched in terms instantly reminiscent of Rousseau and Montesquieu, few genu- ine Americans will quarrel with its main principles. "Men are born and remain free and equal in rights," ran Article I. "Social distinctions may be founded only upon the general good." 1 ^ This Declaration was very far from being a radical document. It expressed the moderate good sense of the bourgeoisie. Article XVII expressly said, THE KING AND THE REVOLUTION 281 It was in devising the political machinery which was to insure the smooth working of all these desirable laws or theories that the Assembly made its most serious blunders. Truth to tell the situation would have been immensely improved could the legislators have had to deal with a different type of king. Louis XVI did not frankly reject the Revolution and trust himself to the risks of a civil war, nor did he with dignity abdicate. He never, however, clearly and unfeignedly accepted the New Order which took away from him all rights to make laws and merely left him the honor of being the chief fimctionary in the State. He made concession after concession, but never in a manner that convinced his contemporaries that he was glad to pass from the giddy honors of autocracy to the safer life of a hereditary presi- dent. He was simply a well-meaning, much-bewildered man driven from point to point by an overwhelming situation. Worst of all, he never gained the courage to silence his wife in her openly reactionary counsels. He gained the ill-will of many powerful leaders he should have conciliated, and he could not conceal his disgust at many innovations he was powerless to prevent. From his great nobles and even from his own brothers he gained little enough of support and sage promptings. They were openly angry at his unwillingness to resist with force the popular demands. The best chance for Louis would have been to have taken the lead openly in championing the New Order, to have constituted himself a real "Citizen-King," champion and "tribune" of the people. All elements would then probably have rallied to him and his personal position would have been secure. But no such boldness was possible for the dull, kind- hearted individual who had inherited the titles of Louis XIV. However, in any case the Assembly prepared a constitution for France whereof the working would have been hard, even for a very able King-President. There was to be only one cham- "Property is an inviolable and sacred right," and not to be tampered with except the owner be "previously and equitably indemnified." Ultra-radicals could hardly accept this doctrine to-day. 282 A HISTORY OF FRANCE ber in the Legislature, partly out of real detestation of a House of Lords, and partly it would seem because of a deliberate desire not to seem to imitate England. This united body was to be elected for a term of two years by the votes of all citizens aged twenty-five who paid a direct local tax equal to three days' work.' The King could not dissolve it or coerce it in any way. As first proposed, the King was not to be allowed to have any effective veto. On the other hand, he was supposed to choo.se the ministers to execute all the laws and to be responsible for the smooth working of the government. It was directly for- bidden the King to take his ministers from among the members of the new "Legislative Assembly." Even under the circum- stances, it is amazing that the majority of the constitution- makers did not see how such an arrangement was adapted to promote endless discord between executive and legislature, with no way out of the difficulty save a new revolution. Mira- beau did, indeed, understand matters clearly and uttered his warnings, but the radicals were already counting him "too moderate." They marched onward to disaster. But the heaviest handicap for the New Order came by the gratuitous act of the Assembly in picking a quarrel with the Church. The deficit had not been met. Necker was more desper- ate than ever in seeking funds. Without counting all the inevit- able cost, in 1790 the Assembly ordered the "nationalizing" (that is, the practical confiscation) of the ample Church lands. The clergy were, indeed, promised remuneration for the incomes they thus lost, but the immediate effect was to enable the Assembly to embark on the issuance of assignais (paper money secured by the expected sale of the Church lands), at first in moderate amounts, but then more and more until France was involved in all the perplexities and sorrows of an extremely depreciated paper currency. ' The sum involved would vary according to local custom. This discrimina- tion against the very poor ("passive citizens") was bitterly resented, and helped to make the new constitution unpopular. CHURCHMEN RESIST THE CONSTITUTION 283 This act, of course, made every churchman amdous. It was speedily followed by something worse. The "Civil Constitution of the Clergy" was enacted. All priests were obliged to take oath to obey it. The Assembly undertook to reorganize the French Church as if it had been directly authorized to do so by the Pope. Instead of one hundred and thirty-five bishops there were to be only eighty-three (one for each department), and these and the parish cures were to be chosen by the same elec- tors that chose the secular officials. The number of convents was reduced; the taking of monastic vows made difficult. No attempt was made to define points in theology, but the whole effect of the law was to make the "Cathohcism in France different from that in Rome, at least in respect to discipline, canonical institu- tions, and spiritual jurisdiction." The result of this unhappy law was soon evident. The Assembly surely had enough secular problems to settle without embroiling itself with the Catholic Church. Hitherto most of the curSs and some of the worthier bishops had sided with the New Order. Now nearly all who were not worldly time-servers obeyed the Pope when he forbade the taking of the required oath (1791). They quitted their bishoprics and parishes, ejected by the less worthy remainder who, as "sworn" or "constitu- tional priests," usurped rectories and churches. The ejected clinics became instantly a dangerous dissenting element, vener- ated by the pious laity and a standing source of great danger to the whole work of the Revolution. Above all, the King (a very pious Catholic) was outraged and angered almost beyond recon- ciliation. The "Civil Constitution of the Clergy" was the greatest single blunder of the Constituent Assembly. In April, 1791, Mirabeau died, the sanest leader of the Revo- lution, and one who, in 1790, had vainly tried to hold back the extremists and come to a fair understanding with the King. With him passed the only prominent man who understood just whither France was drifting. Louis XVI was now desperate. He had consented to the new Church laws only because he con- 284 A HISTORY OF FRANCE sidered himself coerced and unable to resist. His brother, the Count of Artois, and many "emigrant" nobles had already fled abroad and were stirring up the rulers of Austria, Prussia, Spain, and Savoy to intervene in behalf of a brother monarch whose subjects were teaching to all the peoples of Europe daily lessons in disloyalty. Louis and Marie Antoinette were ahke in a mood to call in foreign armies to prop up the throne of the once arrogant Bourbons. What a throne maintained by such humili- ating means would have been worth, neither King nor Queen seemed in^a mood to answer. On June 21, 1791, Louis XVI and the Queen escaped from Paris, Marie Antoinette disguised as a Russian lady and her husband as her valet. They were headed toward Lorraine where there was supposed to be a loyal general and army, and whence in any case they could easily flee over the border. The whole flight was one series of blunders. The royal party delayed mat- ters by insisting on traveling with considerable state in a lum- bering coach with much impedimenta including the Queen's bathtub. Had they been willing to fly post-haste, they could doubtless have got away safely. As it was the alarm was given. At Varennes the party was halted and arrested, held prisoner ignominiously over a grocery shop, and then driven back with every humiliation to Paris. The flight had failed. The true senti- ments of the King had been revealed. He stood branded before all the world as being out of sympathy with his people. The capital received him back with "reproachful silence" as ominous as open threatenings, while the Assembly suspended him from oflBce. The situation was such that nothing but abdication or down- right deposition ought to have awaited Louis XVI. But the Assembly was very loath to turn the power over to his brother, the reactionary Comte de Provence, himself an "emigrant" who would logically have become regent for the very young Dauphin. It was still far from willing to proclaim a republic.' ' An agitation to remove Louis was actually conducted by Danton, already CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY ADJOURNS 285 Intelligent men realized that Louis's position deserved sympa- thy as well as blame. The King on his part, in a very chastened mood, showed himself willing to ratify the new Constitution. At last a solemn truce was arranged. On September 14, 1791, Louis XVI wrote to the Assembly: "I accept the Constitution. I engage to maintain it at home, to defend it from all attacks from abroad, and to cause its execution by all the means it places at my disposal." Under these circumstances the King was reinstated in power. On the 29th of September, he closed the Assembly amid congratulations, expressions of good-will and applause, after a friendly speech "worthy of Henry IV," as a voice cried across the hall. It was an enthusiasm which events were not to justify. "The Revolution," announced Robespierre, of whom the world was to hear more hereafter — "the Revolution is fin- ished!" These words were spoken September 29, 1791. The next day amid great rejoicings the Constituent Assembly broke up. Its members had redeemed the Oath of the Tennis Court. They had given a constitution to France. Some of their work was admirable, some was very faulty. Much of it was to crumble instantly. Intentions had been of the very best, but the subse- quent history has justified the verdict of a sane and clear- minded Frenchman: "The Constituent Assembly would have done better to have suppressed royalty outright, and to have made a republican constitution. Unfortunately, despite its de- fiance of Louis XVI, it was profoundly monarchical in many of its tendencies. The men of 1791 thought they were creating a monarchical constitution. They actually made one that was neither monarchical nor republican. It was not even a parlia- mentary constitution." ^ The "Constituent" Assembly dissolved. Its creation and becoming a power in Paris; but it was suppressed. The bourgeois National Guard was still opposed to a republic, and Danton and his fellow radicals were temporarily silenced. ' Malet. 286 A HISTORY OF FRANCE child, the "Legislative" Assembly, which was to enact the ordinary working legislation of France, met immediately. The earlier body had committed one crowning blunder. Despite much of error and mediocrity, the "Constituent" had come to contain many men well experienced now in public affairs. These members should have undertaken to govern the coun- try, but on the unhappy proposal of Robespierre the "Con- stituent" had passed a self-denying ordinance. None of its members were to be eligible to the new "Legislative." The latter body, when it convened, therefore, October 1, 1791, was made up entirely of untried men who knew little of the legal instrument they were expected to work. This blunder was equivalent to a lost battle for French liberty. In October, 1791, however, what the men of 1789 had fought for appeared to have been won. The grievances of the Old Regime were vanished. A constitution that seemed to satisfy the national demand had been granted. The average French- man, tired of the unfamihar excitement and confusion of politics, desired nothing better than to return to his civil occu- pations. Despite the flight to Varennes, the great majority of the people still desired to keep Louis XVI, and they certainly did not desire the bloody adventure of a great foreign war; but the foreign war came in April; the King was a helpless prisoner in August; and France was formally proclaimed a republic in September. Seldom had there been such a rush of capital events. The Legislative Assembly met immediately after its parent, the Constituent, disbanded. It was a lumbering, over-large body of 745 members — very inexperienced, as has just been stated. In the election many moderate, substantial citizens, who might have taken a leading part, had become weary of the scramble of politics, and stood back to let inferior men be chosen. It is also charged that the radicals in many districts resorted to various forms of coercion to get extremist members elected. In any case the "Legislative," along with not a few honest patriots, contained many small-caliber adventurers who THE MOUNTAIN AND THE GIRONDISTS 287 were quite willing to urge "change" merely for the sake of self- advertising. Soon well-defined parties showed themselves. There was the respectable party of "Constitutionalists," friends of the New Order, but who desired to go no farther. They might have held their own had they been heartily supported by the old court element. The Royalists were impotent to defend themselves, but they were quite able to dream of a reaction, and to undermine the influence of any party that stood for the hated compromise of 1791. A considerable body of deputies had come to Paris frankly without a fixed programme; they were amiable oppor- tunists willing to let things drift. But there was a still more formidable body of radicals, who (thanks to the very numbness and genteel inertia of their opponents) were soon able to domi- nate the "Legislative." These radicals fell roughly into the groups of the "Girondists" and of the "Mountain." ' The "Mountaineers" were the true ultra-radicals, whose leaders were presently to dominate France. The Girondists, who took their name from the Department of the Gironde whence came their most prominent leaders, were hot-blooded, clever, generous-hearted young lawyers, full of Plutarch and Rousseau, very ready to imagine that what was good for Athens was necessarily good for France, and frankly anxious to substitute a moderate republic for even the denatured Monarchy left in power. Some of their members — for example, Vergniaud, Brissot, etc. — were persons of remarkable eloquence and equally lofty ideals, but one of their chief guiding spirits could not sit in the "Legislative"; she was Madame Roland, "a bright ambitious woman, with a touch of genius, a taste for clubs, and a great fondness for attending to her elderly hus- band's business." These nimble-witted persons were not, however, the extreme men of action. Already we meet the influence of the famous ' So called from the location of the high tiers of seats which they occupied in the hall of the "Legislative." 288 A HISTORY OF FRANCE "Jacobin" ChiW which had begun in Paris in 1789 as a legiti- mate debating society with many very conservative members, but which, by 1791, had become the center for all the radicalism of the capital, with a very great influence upon the unwashed masses of the great city. From the pulpit of the Jacobin Club endless daring theories could be ventilated that would be sup- pressed in the Assembly or the "Legislative," and under the stimulus of this irresponsible theorizing, it was easy for one proposition to lead, with stern fanatical logic, onwards to an- other. The Jacobin Club, therefore, in time became the center for the propaganda of the extreme Rousseau doctrines, with the genuine propagandist's corollary, that since the doctrines were true, all means were lawful in giving them effect. Three men of historic fame were the soul of this Jacobin agitation — Marat, Danton, Robespierre. Marat was a physician and scientific man of some attain- ments. In 1789 he began an agitation of the utmost virulence, not merely against the King, but against all the more moderate Liberals like Lafayette. He constituted himself the champion of the lowest classes — the "proletariat," to use a recent phrase, as opposed to the bourgeoisie. His paper, "The Friend of the People," became the oracle and the inspiration of all the lewd, loose spirits in Paris. He excelled in coarse invective, and seemed to delight in appealing to the most sinister passions. Against all constituted authority he had the animosity of a tiger. It would not be fair to call him an anarchist. He seems to have had his dreams of an orderly elysium — but only after the ruthless destruction of nearly everything which men had hitherto hon- ored or called lawful. Danton was a far less repellent figure. He was a young Paris advocate of remarkable eloquence and no shght practical ability. He had at first welcomed the Revolution of 1789, but its changes had not been radical enough to please him. Soon the Jacobin ' The name came from the old convent of the "Jacobin" monks (Monks of St. James) in which the meetings of the club were held. MARIE ANTOINETTE HOBESPIEBEE MABAT DANTON ROBESPIERRE 289 Club was accustomed to ring with the great voice of this tall, brawny man, of harsh and daring countenance, and beetling black brows, as he thundered against "the aristocrats." Danton exercised extraordinary power over what may be called the more respectable elements in the Paris mob, even as Marat was the darling of the basest. Danton wished to establish a republic and he was ready for very drastic means to gain his ends, but as events were to prove he was no friend either of needless blood- letting or of anarchy. He was by all odds the worthiest leader of the Jacobins. Robespierre was another advocate, not however from Paris but Artois. He had served in the "Constituent," and then, when that body disbanded, he shared with Danton the honors of chief orator at the Jacobin Club. He was a "precise, austere, intense, mediocre little man whose hfe had been passed in poverty and study." No other leader of the Revolution ever accepted the teachings of Rousseau more implicitly than he. Probably with perfect sincerity he claimed and boasted himself to be "virtuous and incorruptible." The multitude believed him, and he gained all the prestige and following that always comes to a leader widely accepted as being unselfish and good. Robes- pierre was, indeed, more a man of talk than of action. Very likely from the first he was being thrust forward by others who arranged the deeds and needed a mouthpiece. He was destined, however, to become the most notable single figure in all the fiery second stage of the Revolution. The Girondists, in short, were amiable theorists willing to see the King overthrown and a republic established, but they were incapable of fierce action and willing to let matters somewhat drift. The Jacobins were equally theorists, but they were not so amiable. They were ready and willing for action, and did not intend to let matters drift. No prophet was needed to tell with which faction lay the future. With such members it did not take the Legislative Assembly long to pass first to pin-pricks and then to drawn daggers with 290 A HISTORY OF FRANCE the King. The deputies abolished the use of the terms "Sire" and "Your Majesty" in addressing royalty. There were other small matters of friction, but the first real issue came when the "Legislative" undertook to consider the foreign dangers now confronting the nation. Ever since 1789, now singly, now in scores, the great nobles of France had been packing their jewels and fleeing the reahn. Both of Louis's brothers by this time were across the frontier; and at Treves and Mayence in Germany a small army of these highborn "emigrants" had been collecting. The noble exiles were loud in their boasts and threats of bloody return and vengeance. They were using all their per- sonal influence to get the Emperor of Austria and the King of Prussia to intervene in arms. In August, 1791, these two mon- archs had issued the non-committal "Declaration of Pilnitz," announcing that they considered the cause of Louis XVI the cause of all the crowned heads of Europe. Nothing had followed, but how soon might not a foreign army strike? In view of the flight to Varennes how far were the French King and Queen to be trusted not to welcome an invader? To all the privileged classes of despot-ridden Europe, the Revolution was coming to be simply an outrageous thing, a menace to every man of wealth and coat-armor. If the nation that had posed as the intellectual leader of civilization could reduce its king to a position of little more than hereditary high-sheriff, could destroy all the rights of the nobility, could put a bargeman politically on a level with a Prince of the Blood, what would be the effect of the example upon the peasants of Prussia, Bohemia, Tuscany, and a dozen regions more? The undeniable excesses of some of the Revolu- tionists, of course, kindled hotter the flames of indignation. There was genuine sympathy for the plight of the beautiful Queen held prisoner in the Tuileries. There was anger, especially in Germany, over the abolition of feudal dues In certain parts of Alsace, the financial claims upon which had been retained by various German princes when they had relaxed their political dominion. THE TWO WAR PARTIES 291 Tlie situation was full of menace, especially as it was well " known that tte discipline of the French army and navy had been utterly shaken by recent events. Matters came to a climax in the spring of 1792. The attitude of the Austrian Government had seemed so equivocal that the "Legislative" had addressed it a formal demand to state its intentions. The answer came from the young Emperor Francis II, the nephew of Marie Antoinette,' who sent a flat demand for indemnity to the offended German princes (who claimed certain feudal rights in Alsace) and for a reestabhshment of the Old Regime, on tibe basis proposed by Louis before the fall of the Bastile. After that, indeed, there was only one answer for France to make, unless she was to confess that her domestic broils had removed her from the list of the great nations of Europe. On April 20, 1792, Louis XVI appeared before the deputies and asked for a declaration of war on Austria, and it was at once voted with only seven voices opposing; and so began a struggle that was to last, with short intervals of truce rather than of peace, three and twenty years till Waterloo. There had been two French parties in favor of the war — from very different motives. Marie Antoinette and the court party seem to have been reckoning that either the public enemy would march to Paris — in which case the Revolution would collapse — or at least a victorious war would bring such prestige to the King that his position would become more endurable. The Girondists also favored the war. They believed, and rightly, that the foreign struggle would bring about such a domestic reaction sls to sweep away the Monarchy. Only the extreme Jacobins had argued for peace. A war was likely to give the King a kind of dictatorship, and the burdens would all fall Upon th« lowly. "' Who is it that suffers in a war? " wrote Marat; "not the rich, but the poor; not the high-born officer, but the poor peasant." ' He was genuinely concerned for his aunt, and anxious to save her from a tnost humiliating and dangerous position, but he took the worst possible means to accomplish his end. 292 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Already there were abundant signs of a complete schism between the King and his legislature. The "Legislative" passed a bill ordering banishment for priests who refused to take oath of allegiance to the New Order. The King had vetoed this act — as under the Constitution he had the right to do.' The proposed law had certainly been harsh, possibly cruel; but popular belief made the "non-juring" priests so many agents of sedition. The Queen was accused of stopping the legislation, and loud were the curses in Paris against "the Austrian" and "Madame Veto." Louis also struggled vainly, in an effort to find ministers who would be acceptable to the dominant fac- tions in the "Legislative" and could at the same time give France orderly and firm government. Such men were not to be found. If they were agreeable to the majority of the deputies, they could not really sustain the Constitution. If they failed to sustain the Constitution, they of course were intolerable to the King and let the land drift ofip into misrule. The treasury was in a worse plight than ever. Necker had long since retired hope- lessly discredited. Probably there would have been an explosion in any case; but the foreign war assuredly hastened it. Prussia had made prompt alliance with her old foe Austria. Truth to tell, though there was much cursing of the Revolution in Vienna and Berhn, and many commiserations for Marie Antoinette, there was also a keen appreciation that France, the nation which had once dominated the Continent, was in such grievous agony that a smart military blow might end the menace to her rivals forever. The French army was in an utterly de- plorable state. In all 300,000 men had been reckoned for it on paper, but the bands of discipline had been loosed. Many officers had been cashiered or had fled the country. The men were sorely out of hand. Not more than 82,000 men were avail- 1 By the Constitution of 1791 the King had finally been given the "suspens- ive" veto; the right to halt the enactment of a proposed law until it had been passed again by two successive Legislative Assemblies — that is, to delay the measure for four years. THE DRIFT TOWARDS A NEW REVOLUTION 293 able as mobile field armies. Against these the Duke of Brunswick (reputed an able general of Frederick the Great) prepared to move a considerably larger force of excellent troops. Fortunately for the French, the AUies advanced very slowly, and instead of striking boldly at Paris, they were anxious to reduce the frontier fortresses, but in practically every engagement the French were worsted. In some cases they were not merely defeated, but fled in disgraceful panic. Everywhere, in the army, in the provinces, in Paris, spread the desperate cry, "We are betrayed!" The Jacobins roundly declared that the courtiers in the Tuileries were praying to see the Allies enter Paris, bringing back all the "emigrant" npbles with their schemes of vengeance, and freely it was suggested that these disloyal monarchists were not con- fining their treasons to wishes and prayers. This military failure destroyed the last real chance for preserving the Monarchy and the Constitution of 1791. The story of the last days of the Monarchy need not halt us long. As the military situation grew worse, the position of Louis XVI grew increasingly impossible. His Queen, at least, was a traitress. In March, 1792, she had sent to the Austrian court a memorandum of the French plan of campaign. As the news of disaster drifted into Paris the excitement of the city increased. On June 20 there was a riotous demonstration before the palace. It ended in a mob of the most sordid elements forc- ing their way into the royal apartments, thrusting the red "hberty cap" upon Louis's head, and offering gross familiarities to the Queen and Dauphin. The royal couple carried themselves with courage and dignity, and so averted deeds which might have ended with a lynching. There was a momentary reaction among the better elements in favor of the King. Honorable and moderate men realized that the whole country was in danger of anarchy if its rulers could thus be insulted. Lafayette came back from the army and demanded punishment of the Jacobin agi- tators. But Marie Antoinette and the court nobles were appar- ently anxious to hasten their own way to the scaffold — they 294 A HISTORY OF FRANCE could not forgive Lafayette and his fellow Liberals for assisting in the original Revolution of 1789. His offers of assistance were haughtily waved aside. Lafayette thus was left a discredited, nigh powerless man, hated by the Jacobins and rejected by the Royalists. He returned sorrowfully to his army and let matters take their course.^ The Girondists were now thundering in the "Legislative" that the King ought to abdicate. Why were the Austro-Prussians advancing? "Because," cried Brissot from the tribune, "a man ■ — one man — the man whom the Constitution has made its chief, and whom perfidious advisers have made its foe [has para- lyzed it!] . . . You are told to fear the kings of Hungary and Prussia: I say, the chief force of these kings is at the court, and there it is that we must conquer first ! . . . This is the secret of our position. This is the source of the evil, and here the remedy must be applied." Under such promptings, on the 11th of July, the "Legislative " solemnly voted the declaration — "Citizens — the country is in danger!" and attempts were made at a levy en masse, to hold back the invader. There were also clear indications of organiz- ing armed action in Paris, for fighting foes much nearer to the King's residence than were the foreign armies. But the deadliest stab against the Monarchy came from a nominal friend. On July 28 the Prussian army began its advance from Coblenz. In a moment of utter folly, its leader, the Duke of Brunswick, pubhshed a manifesto in the name of Austria and Prussia.^ He announced that he was entering France to rescue its King from captivity; that the inhabitants of towns who "dared to stand on the defensive" should be instantly punished as rebels and their houses burned; that martial punishment would be meted ' When the Monarchy was overthrown on August 10, 1792, Lafayette was at Sedan. He attempted to rally his army to uphold the Constitution of 1791 and to fight the Jacobins. When his attempt failed, he endeavored to flee to America, but was captured by the Austrians and held prisoner several years. 2 It is alleged that the document was really by a French "emigrant" noble, but Brunswick signed and published it, possibly against his better judgment. THE MARSEILLAISE 295 out to all members of the National Guard if the city of Paris did not restore to the King full hberty; and finally that if the King's palace were attacked the invading princes would make an example by "deUvering Paris over to military execution and total destruction." Such a manifesto was enough to drive every Frenchman to desperation. As was written by a historian whose parents lived through these days of wrath: "There was but one wish, one cry of resistance from one end of France to the other: and who- ever had not joined in it, would have been looked on as guilty of impiety toward his country and the sacred cause of inde- pendence." ' From the moment that copies of this woeful dec- laration reached the capital the only question was — how would the Monarchy fall? Some of the Girondists were probably still willing to trust to "moral suasion" to induce Louis to abdicate, but not so the more ardent of their faction, and not so the robust Jacobins. On July 30 there swung into Paris a swart, grimy column, five hundred and thirteen men "who knew how to die," tug- ging two guns. They were the "men of Marseilles," volunteers of the National Guard from the southern seaport, who had in four weeks trudged up to the capital to save the nation and end the rule of "the Austrian woman." They were singing a hymn that had really been composed in Strasbourg as the "Song of the Army of the Rhine," by Rouget de Lisle, but which now was caught up by these stark, determined men as their battle- song. Soon all Paris, then all France, was singing this "Marseil- laise" — the most passionate, soul-stirring of all national anthems, the best of all fighting songs to make strong men march onward to win or to die. Before this arrival the "Legis- lative" had been tossing about the question of some peaceful means to end the Monarchy. Now the radicals forced the issue. The Marseilles volunteers made the nucleus for a fighting force. Danton and his friends were indefatigable in the lower * Mignet. A HISTORY OF FRANCE quarters of Paris. A large part of the National Guard had been won over. Petion, Mayor of the capital, was on the insurgents' side. There were still very many respectable men who wished the King well; who preferred in fact that he should be kept in power; but very few of these worthy people were anxious to die in behalf of a very discredited Monarchy. They were paralyzed also by the rumors (not unfounded) that there was treason within the palace, and the clearer knowledge that the foreign foe might soon be marching upon Paris. Against them were the radicals, sure of their goal and without fear or scruple. On the 10th of August the plot was sprung. The city govern- ment (commune) of Paris was in the hands of the Revolutionists. The commander of the palace, Mandat, was a loyal defender of the King, but outside of the royal Swiss body-guardsmen (some 800), he had very few troops on whom he could rely. Just as matters were coming to a climax, Mandat was first kidnapped by the insurgents, then brutally murdered. The King's weak forces were left thus without a commander. Soon after dawn a threatening crowd was before the Tuileries. For safety's sake the King and royal family took refuge in the hall of the Legis- lative Assembly and spent a most unhappy day in the small "reporters'" room. Then, in his absence, the Marseilles bat- talion forced its way into the palace court, followed by the other insurgent elements. The Swiss Guards were foreigners, without interest in French disputes, but honorably loyal to their good paymaster the King. Soon a volley rang out. The Swiss were trained infantry. They cleared the palace courtyard, and then maintained a deadly fire from the windows. A young officer was spectator of the fighting. His judgment was that if the Swiss had been properly led and allowed to keep up their resistance, they would have snuffed out the whole insurrection — at least for the instant. His judgment was worth heeding, for his name was Napoleon Bonaparte. But the sound of the firing was terrifying to Louis. He had no confidence that the Swiss could resist, and his heart was torn at the thought of shooting down his fellow THE NEW SITUATION 297 countrymen. He sent orders to the guardsmen to stop firing. Some of the Swiss made a safe retreat. Some were separated from their comrades and massacred as the exultant Revolution- aries swarmed back into the palace. So fell the Bourbon mon- archy. It did not even honor its end by an heroic resistance to the last cartridge. All through the firing, the royal family and the Legislative Assembly had shivered together. Might not the unpent insur- gents involve King, Queen, and deputies in one common massacre? Now, as the musketry ceased, deputations of angry, imperious men came thrusting into the great hall with demands rather than petitions. The Paris Commune required the instant deposition of the King. The deputies hesitated to take so heavy a responsibility, but Vergniaud, leader of the Girondists, mounted the tribune. "I am to propose to you," spoke he, "a very vigorous measure. I appeal to the affliction of our hearts to judge how needful it is to adopt it immediately." His motion, which was unanimously carried, was to dismiss all the royal ministers, to suspend the King in office, and to convoke a new national convention which was to give yet another constitution to France. So ended this memorable 10th of August, 1792. Louis XVI ("Louis Capet" as they were already beginning to call him) was transferred to the Luxembourg Palace, where at first he was treated with decent consideration. ^ Feudalism had seemed to go in 1789. Monarchy had gone in 1792. The question now was were the respectable bourgeois, the men of education, honest substance, and moderation, who had overthrown the Old Regime, to be themselves enguKed by the rising spirit of the lower classes, the sans-culottes, the "men without short breeches," who did not dress as gentlemen, whose hands were grimy and horny, whose heads were fuU of wild passions and equally wild dreams of happiness supphed them by Danton and Marat? Twentieth-century Americans who have ' He was kter removed to more prison-like quarters in the "Temple" on the pretext that at the Luxembourg he might be attacked by the mob. 298 A HISTORY OF FRANCE witnessed the fate of Russia after the collapse of czardom, know the modem equivalent of Jacobinism — Bolshevism : the turn- ing of all political and economic power over to the unkempt proletariat with no preliminary attempt to make the new master worthy by careful education. The sequel was to show how much more heroic before a Teutonic peril, were the follow- ers of Danton than the followers of Lenine. Be that as it may, the overthrow of the Monarchy was to cut the last lashings holding France to her historic past. The "Sovereign People," extolled for their natural simplicity and innocency by Rousseau, had at last come fairly into their own. Wild scenes there were in the narrow streets and in the wine- shops of Paris those days in 1792; excited men and brawny women joining in headlong demonstrations. "Dance we the Carmagnole I" ran their song. "Hurrah for the roar of the cannon ! " The cannon were to roar in France all that year, and the next, and the next. We reach the second: the more lurid stage of the Revolution. CHAPTER XV THE YEARS OF BLOOD AND WRATH: 1792-95 France, as already observed, was a highly centralized state. Seven hundred thousand Parisians, affecting to speak for the entire nation, had accomplished a new revolution without pre- tending to consult the wishes of their 24,000,000 fellow citizens in the departments. When the news spread of the downfall of the King, the rest of France received it dumbly. Many of the more radical were, of course, glad to have Louis go, out of mere hatred of monarchy. The bulk of the peasantry would doubtless have been pleased to have matters quiet down, so that they might live peaceably on their little farms. But the foreign foe was advancing. Would not the feudal dues and the hated taxes return if the Prussians took Paris? Would any of the newly won personal liberties then be secure? With the nation in tumult, with the foe advancing, with everything, public or personal, that was precious at stake, what was there left but to accept a republic and to arm for the great emergency? That was the spirit of France in August and September, 1792. It was practi- cally impossible to refuse to be a radical, because the radicals were the only people that had a programme which promised safety for the nation. While the election to the new "Convention" was taking place, the old "Legislative" continued nominally in power- ruUng France by means of an Executive Council of Five, but it was si)eedily evident that the real disposing power lay with the Commune of Paris,' men of ultra- Jacob in stamp, that speedily 'These "representatives'' of the twenty-eight sections of the city had forced the original legal representatives to resign, and thrust themselves into theii places without the slightest warrant save that of mob rule. 300 A HISTORY OF FRANCE showed intense jealousy of the more moderate Girondists who seemed to represent the departments rather than the turbid capital. There was no time for petty bickerings, however. At the mouth of the Loire the pious peasantry in the Vendee district had taken arms, mainly because of the laws against the non-juring priests. The Prussians were pressing forward. Longwy was taken; then came the fell tidings that Verdun, already one of the keys to an advance on Paris, had surrendered. The news stirred the capital to frantic energy. There were hasty levies and military preparations, but the Jacobins feared an attack from the rear no less than from the front. The King and Queen were helpless, but not so the thousands of Royalists and upper bourgeoisie who might be praying for reaction. Late in August the gates of Paris were closed, and the whole city searched by detachments of the National Guard for suspects and sympathizers with the fallen regime. Soon three thousand- odd persons were in the overflowing prisons, but Danton at least was not satisfied. "To stop the enemy," he said bluntly, "we must make the Royalists fear." Danton in fact was working himself and his followers up into that heroic condition of mind which presages great vic- tories or overwhelming defeat. Even across the century sounds his voice, as it trumpeted in the "Legislative" on September 2. "The signal-gun thunders! It sounds the charge upon the ene- mies of France ! Conquer them ! Boldness, and more boldness, and ever more boldness, and France is saved!" This was an appeal which sent the blood of his countrymen tingling, and caused the "Legislative" to vote that every man who could not march to the frontier should give his weapons to one who could, or be branded forever as infamous. But Danton and Marat (then his coadjutor) knew well how "to make the Royalists fear." Possibly the actual deed of blood was without Danton's instigation. Marat was certainly more able to manage such a project. We do not know just how the acts which followed were organized. The fact is that between DUMOURIEZ 301 September 2 and 7, a band of three hundred assassins, the scum of humanity, directed and paid six francs per day by the Commune, proceeded from prison to prison. They dragged out the pohtical prisoners, gave them the barest travesty of a trial, or no trial at all, and then slaughtered the victims in cold blood. A very few prisoners were spared by some caprice or a flash of mercy, but eleven hundred persons thus perished in Paris. The rage of the murderers went out particularly against the priests. Two hundred and fifty of them were slaughtered. Moderate men in the "Legislative" wrung their hands, but were helpless. The soldiers would not defend the prisons when the band of assassins drew nigh. The Jacobins had ended the danger of a Royalist uprising in Paris for a surety! The slaughter ceased on September 7. On September 20 was fought a battle which terminated the last hope of rescue and vengeance for the shivering survivors of the Old Regime. It was not a mighty battle as battles went, even in the eighteenth century, but its importance was to outlast that of scores of other more extensive passages-at-arms. The new Repubhcan rulers of France had found a fairly ca- pable general — Dumouriez. He hastened to the front and held council with the officers of the nigh demoralized army that was trying to halt the Prussian advance from Verdun. Many opinions favored a hasty retreat to Reims, north of the Marne. This would have saved the army, but it would have uncovered- the road to Paris. Dumouriez was resolved to risk a battle, and saw the great possibihties of the Argonne Forest in checking an attack from Verdun. With thirteen thousand men he took his stand at Grand-Pre where one hundred and twenty-six years later other Republicans were to grapple with other Prussians. He sent a grandiloquent dispatch to the War Minister at the Capitol: "Verdun is taken: I await the Prussians. The camp of Grand-Pre is the Thermopylae of France, but I will be more fortunate than Leonidas!" The Duke of Brunswick, however, presently pushed forward 302 A HISTORY OF FRANCE and turned his flank, and Dumouriez fell back rather inglori- ously from Grand-Pre without a battle. His poUcy, neverthe- less, was not an absolute failure. The Prussians had believed that they had only to advance and enter Paris without resist- ance. They had brought very scanty provisions. It was raining incessantly. The bad roads were knee-deep in mud. Dysentery was ravaging their files. Besides, all was not well between Prus- sia and her "dear ally" Austria. There was grievous friction in the East over the spoils of unhappy Poland.' The Duke and King Frederick Wilham II his master had not the least desire to be chivalrously rescuing Marie Antoinette, while Francis II was taking a firm grip on Warsaw. Catherine, the mighty Czarina of Russia, was also making every sign of willingness to take advantage of the fact that Prussia might be tied up in a serious war with France. Every day, therefore, that the French blocked the road diminished the chance of getting to Paris. So it came to pass that, on the 20th of September, Brunswick tried out the French lines to see if there would really be serious resistance — and learned to his satisfaction. About six miles east of Sainte-Menehould on the present railway from Reims, going to Verdun, there is the small village of Valmy. Here Brunswick found the heights lined with the battalions of Kellermann, Dumouriez's most efficient lieutenant. There was a brisk cannonade with the old-style six- and nine- •pounders. Then the Prussian infantry swung forward with the rhythmic step and discipline made famous by Frederick the Great. Kellermann's men waited their coming steadily, never answering the musket-fire until, when close at hand, they charged forth with the bayonet, and for perhaps the first time upon a stricken field rang out the battle-cry of the revolution- ' The final dismemberment of Poland was largely connected with the French Revolution. France had been friendly to Poland. The minute it was evident that France was too distracted to intervene in Poland's behalf, schemes were pushed for the "second" and then the "third" and final partition of that unhappy country between Russia, Austria, and Germany. TJje "second" partition took place in 1793, the "third" in 1795. PRUSSIANS RETREAT 803 ary, militant France — "Vive la nation!" The Prussian lines recoiled. Brunswick hesitated to press home a second do-or-die charge. The cannon boomed till dusk, but the infantry fighting was over. An indecisive repulse for the Prussians: that seemed the whole of the matter. But in fact the Duke had found the answer to his question. The French had not fled. To get to Paris he must fight a great decisive battle, which, if lost, might leave the Prussian army so shaken that the Austrians could strangle their hated rival.* Brunswick halted, negotiated. The French "emigrants" vainly urged another advance, but he had learned how they could lie to him in saying that Paris could be reached without a desperate effort. He vainly offered to retire if the French would restore Louis on the basis of the wrecked Constitution; but the stern word came back from Paris, "that the French Republic [just officially proclaimed] could listen to no proposition until the Prussian troops had entirely evacuated French territory." And the Prussian promptly bowed to the order! Truth was he was only too anxious to quit a losing game. On September 30, the formidable army that was to have "restored the Bourbons" was in full retreat. It did not even try to hold Verdun and Longwy. The frontiers were cleared of the enemy — and so the Republic won its first great triumph. As might be imagined, considering the time when the elections were held, the balloting (open to practically all Frenchmen over twenty-five years of age) sent to the Convention an even greater number of radicals than those in the "Legislative." ^ The new body that was "to give happiness to France" con- tained 782 members. Of these, 75 had been in the "Constitu- ' The alliance of Austria and Prussia was ejctremely unnatural, and sure to break down. "Oil and vinegar: fire and water: Prussians and Austrians are united to carry war among 26 millions of men!" So wrote Arthur Young sar- castically in 1792. ' It was claimed that owing to the turbulence of the times, intimidation, etc., only a small fraction of the total niunber of voters (but that of the most radical) got to the ballot boxes. S04 A HISTORY OF FRANCE ent" and 183 in the "Legislative." Among the members were not lacking a decidedly large nunfber of men of moderate views and with no cast-iron theories for exploitation, but these depu- ties were not organized and therefore they were at the mercy of a compact, aggressive minority. Besides, the members from the departments were frequently weakened and intimidated by the atmosphere of Paris — the eagerness of the leaders of the capital for a regime of "thorough" and their equal wilhngness to carry their end by very brutish physical means. The Girondists numbered about 120. They were full of zeal for a Republic, but it was to be a well-poised, reasonable Republic, restrained from flying off into social and economic vagaries. The Jacobins could not count on more than 50 reliable members, whereof 24, however, came from Paris. They desired a far more complete overturning of the world and "breaking of fet- ters" than did the Girondists. Had passions been less deep, and blood been cooler, the Girondists and Jacobins would have dis- covered that they did not differ so violently in theories but that they could reach a fair compromise. The gulf betwixt them was really personal and temperamental. The Girondists were amiable idealists. The Jacobins, with all their sins, never left the earth for the clouds. While Vergniaud was saying, "I would conquer the world by love," Robespierre was expediting schemes for the prompter use of the guillotine. ' The Girondists, however, far outnumbered the Jacobins. They could also make the better appeal to the unattached majority of moderates; but the Con- vention, for its sorrow, met in Paris, and the Commune and mob of Paris, affecting to speak for the masses of France, could give the Jacobins the persuasive support of muskets and pikes when their projects needed a majority. This great fact explains much which followed. "^ This famous instrument for execution was invented (or rather revived from mediaeval models) by a "Dr. Guillotin," who suggested it to the govern- ment in 1789 as a more merciful way of ending criminals than the old hangman's rope or headman's axe. There is no doubt that it was swift and practically painless. THE TRIAL OF THE KING 305 The Convention met on September 21, 1792. It at once con- firmed the proclamation of the Repubhc. It then devoted its whole energies to the great project for rebuilding France on a completely democratic basis. "To make the people" was the phrase of Camille Desmoulins, Danton's clever friend. When, however, the crude theories of Rousseau were rigidly and mercilessly applied by inexperienced men, what could follow but a heinous form of despotism.'' The Girondists at first seemed to have the upper hand. They had the habits of gentlemen, preferred clean linen, and did not appreciate Marat's sordid rags or the obscenity of Hebert, darling though the latter was of the dregs of the Paris populace. They were soon at odds with the Jacobins before whose savage attacks their power drifted away, although for a while they kept control of the public ministries. The " Mountain " (that is, the Jacobins and their allies) now determined to press for the trial of the King. The Girondists reaUzed that Louis was largely the victim of his rank and of circumstances, and that the Republic would gain by a show of mercy, but Saint-Just, Robespierre's especial admirer, and a very ardent Jacobin, spoke thus for his party: "The death of the tyrant is necessary to reassure those who fear that one day they will be punished for their daring, and also to terrify those who have not yet renounced monarchy." And Robespierre him- self uttered the accepted philosophy on the case: "When a nation has been forced into insurrection, it returns to a state of nature with regard to the tyrant. There is no longer any law hut the safety of the people." The unfortunate King was therefore tried before the whole Convention. He was charged with "conspiring against the pub- lic liberty and an attempt against the general safety." In other words, he had not faithfully accepted the Constitution- of 1791, and had not done his best to resist the Austrian. Probably these charges were true; but wise statesmen would have said that to have punished Louis XVI for swerving from the path of tech- 306 A HISTORY OF FRANCE nical duty in 1792 was cruelty merely disguised as legal justice. The Jacobins were determined to have his blood, both because they hated him and still more because they wished to discredit the Girondists. The latter knew that the King ought to be acquitted, but they made only ineffective efforts to save him. The Jacobin shouters and rabble packed the gallery of the Convention, cheered the prosecution, howled and threatened when words were said in defense. Nevertheless Louis was given the forms of a fair trial.' He was skillfully defended by his old minister Malesherbes. There is httle doubt that the Convention rendered a legally just verdict when it unanimously declared Louis "guilty." The real question came on the penalty. The Jacobins clamored for blood. The Girondists made frantic appeals for moderation, but could not set themselves effectively against the shoutings and coercion. On January 20, 1793, Louis was ordered immediately to the scaffold by a majority of (me vote. The clamor of the galleries had affected the nerves of enough Girondists to decide the issue. The King was guillotined pubhcly on January 21, dying bravely, and spending his last hours in a manner worthy of a monarch and a Christian — thus effacing much of the evil impression he had given the world during the last troubled years of his reign. The Jacobins openly rejoiced at the tragedy. "Your party is ruined!" Danton told the Girondists, and more openly he defied the hostile Powers of Europe, proclaiming, "Let us fling down to the kings the head of a king as gage of battle"; while Marat exulted because "We have burned our ships behind us." Already, before this tragedy, the actions of France had driven the old monarchies of Europe to a frenzy. The Conven- tion openly advocated carrying the blessings of Republican freedom to every other nation. On November 19, 1792, Danton ' He was treated much more fairly and was executed with far more attention to the outward forms of justice than the unfortunate Nicholas II of Russia seems to have been dealt with before his reported execution in 1918. DANTON'S SUMMONS TO ACTION 307 had persuaded it to decree that France would grant "assistance and fraternity" to all peoples who wished to recover their liber- ties. What was that but a direct invitation to the subjects of every king to revolt? It had been issued at the very minute when, by a reversal of previous fortune, the valiant young armies of the Republic were driving the Austrians out of Bel- gium, following an amazing victory at Jemappes near Mons. The seizure of Antwerp, a city which England could never tolerate in the possession of a powerful maritime rival, forced Britain into war (February 1, 1793). The order-loving Enghsh people and ministers were already horrified at the steady trend of the tidings from across the Channel. Spain, Holland, and all the lesser States of the German Empire now made haste to imitate the greater Powers, and by their hostile attitude forced the Convention to declare war upon them. By the middle of March, 1793, France was at war with prac- tically every important state in Western Europe. While the RepubUc was thus ringed around with foreign enemies, the peasants of the Vendee were Hkewise in dangerous insurrection. Promptly on the heels of these serious tidings came actual reports of disaster. The French army, that had penetrated into Belgium, was driven thence with heavy loss. Mayence, which had also fallen into French hands, was retaken by the Germans. Worst of all, Dumouriez, the best general of the Republic, turned traitor and went over to the Austrians. The situation was in some respects more serious than just before Vahny. Once more it was Danton who rose to the crisis. No demagogic leader ever carried himself more dauntlessly than did he in the face of the crowding perils. His opponents had made bitter attacks upon his character. Disdainfully he swept all these aside. "What matters my reputation," said he on March 10. "May France be free, and my name forever sullied. . . . We must break the situation by a great effort. Let us conquer Holland. Let us reanimate the Republican party in England. Let us make France march forward, and we shall go down 308 A HISTORY OF FRANCE glorious to posterity. Fulfill your great destiny. No more de- bates! No more quarrels — and the nation is saved!" To meet the emergency Danton and his fellow Jacobins forged a terrible weapon — a multi-headed dictatorship. It was the famous "Committee of Pubhc Safety," at first of nine, then of twelve members, clothed with almost autocratic power to crush all foes of the Republic without and within. Marat summed up its theory in a word: "We must establish the despot- ism of hberty to crush the despotism of kings." "^ The Girondists were still nominally in power, appointing the ministers and otherwise conducting the Government. The Com- mittee was now set over regular ministers, and was allowed to send commissioners to each of the armies to supervise and spur to activity the generals, and summarily to remove and punish the inefficient and treacherous. Once a week the Committee was supposed to report to the Convention, but its own delibera- tions were secret. The checks upon it were very slight. "The Convention soon became the slave of the Committee. As for the Ministry, it was left with a mere shadow of authority." Working with this all-powerful executive committee was its counterpart the "Committee of General Security," a secret body which controlled the police, drew up lists of suspects, and sent the accused before the terrible "Revolutionary Tribunal." This was a standing court martial, whose judges and juries dealt out wholesale penalties to practically all the unfortunate Royal- ist aristocrats and reactionaries, or even "moderates," haled to its judgment bar. Soon the public executioner began to work with increasing frequency. "France," ran the saying, "was be- coming Republican to the strokes of the guillotine." The Committee of Public Safety and its adjunct committed crimes the record whereof abides through all history, but this ^ Modern readers will not fail to note the similarity of this sentiment to those used by the Russian Bolsheviki in 1917-19 to justify their class tyranny. The Jacobins of 1793 seem, however, men of much greater physical courage than the doctrinaires who cringed before Germany in 1918 in the Treaty of Brest-Li to vsk. FALL OF THE GIRONDISTS 309 awful body can plead at least one great merit — it saved France. With astounding energy the new dictators plunged into their work. Danton had done much to get the Committee initiated, but he declined a position upon it. He was a master agitator rather than a great executive. The Jacobins forced the Conven- tion to choose persons of practical abihty rather than glib talkers. Robespierre was elected, but he and his devoted fol- lower, Saint-Just, were the only members who can be put down as steady orators in the Convention, except possibly the slippery Barere. Only one of twelve could claim anything like genius, but he was of sufficient ability to make up for much patriotic mediocrity — Carnot, who took over the special charge of the army, and who was to become the "Organizer of Victory" and a real savior of France. But while the Committee summoned the nation to arms and bade every Frenchman brace himself for the national emergency, the Jacobins had their grim reckoning with the Girondists. These clever idealists were still talking much and doing little. They denounced the September massacres and the politicians who were responsible for them; but they let the King be done to death, though they knew that the act was one of cruelty, and they were unable to enforce any steps whereby new massacres might become impossible. The majority of the Convention was still under the spell of their oratory, but coming as they did nearly all from the Southern Departments, they had little influence over the Commune of Paris and its mob. On June 2, 1793, the Jacobins and the Commune deliberately surrounded the hall of the Convention with a pack of hired ruffians, and held all the deputies prisoner until they would consent to order the arrest of thirty-one members, for the most part prominent Girondists. "You see, gentlemen," announced the radicals' spokesman ironically, "that you are respected and obeyed by the people, and that you can vote on the question which is sub- mitted to you. Lose no time, then, in complying with their wishes ! " The Convention was helpless. It had no armed force to 310 A HISTORY OF FRANCE rescue it from the mob. The thirty-one were ordered suspended, and by this one stroke the Jacobins had completed their triumph. All the other deputies understood now who were the masters of the situation. So in Paris, but not in France. In some respects the contest was one of the departments against the capital. Already not merely in the Vendee, but elsewhere, were the Royalists showing their heads. There was grave discontent at the proceedings in Paris. Many Girondist deputies now fled to their home districts and endeavored to commence an insurrection against the capital and its despots of the Commune. Had there been a common organization and rallying-place for the insurgents, they might well have succeeded; probably they commanded much more than half of the population and good-will of France. But they were scattered, ill-organized, and lacked all first-class leader- ship. The Jacobins accused them of coquetting with the Royal- ists, or with a scheme to make the regions of France into a loose "federation" as opposed to "the Republic, one and indivisible," and in view of the crowding foreign peril many patriotic men, naturally merciful and reasonable, saw nothing to do but to sustain the Paris dictators. The Jacobin Committee crushed this spasmodic insurrection which flared up in many districts, with all the ruthlessness of fear and anger. Lyons which had risen, mainly at the Girondists' behest, was captured by the Republican army, and a solemn decree of the Convention ordered, in the words of Barere, "Lyons warred against liberty. Lyons exists no more." It was directed that the city should be actually destroyed. In practice only about forty houses were demolished, but a great number of the unfortunate inhabitants were put to death, not by the guillotine, but by grapeshot. At Nantes, where the Royalist Vendeans had had sympathizers, the notorious Carrier rejoiced in wholesale executions of the well-born and bourgeoisie, as well as of less genteel victims. Some hundreds were shipped to Paris for trial before the Revolutionary Tribunal, but at least GREAT ARMIES RAISED 311 eighteen hundred prisoners were shot by firing squads without any trial; and then to complete the work Carrier ordered whole- sale "drownings" in the Loire, "RepubUcan marriages" — men and women bound together and sunk in the current. This was an extreme case. But there were hideous scenes at Mar- seilles, Bordeaux, Toulon, and other cities that had dared to show favor to the Girondists. The whole attempt to defy the Paris Government was thus stifled in blood. While the Committee was thus handling a desperate internal situation, it was performing an even greater work upon the frontier. The war had become almost a death-grapple between all the old monarchies of Europe and the young Republicanism of France. Hitherto armies had almost invariably consisted of professional soldiers, slowly enhsted, slowly drilled, and their numbers strictly limited to those which a given king could conveniently pay, outfit, and ration. A general levy of the masses would have been abhorrent to the average monarch. It would have taught his peasants the use of arms which they might speedily turn against authority. No such scruples held back the Jacobins. A levy en masse was decreed at first of 300,000, then of more, until by the end of 1793 France had at least 750,000 men under arms — a prodigious number consid- ering the difficulties then of transport, commissariat, and mu- nitions. Church bells were cast into cannon, every available workshop became a weapon factory. Camot, the war minister, displayed an amazing genius in overcoming all the practical difficulties in maintaining so great a host. The new levies were often very ill-trained, but they had a passionate courage, a willingness to die for France and the "Rights of Man" beneath their beloved tricolor, which made them terrible foes to the mechanically disciplined mercenaries sent up against them. In the days before machine guns and barbed wire there were few battle-lines that could be held against a bayonet charge of reckless enthusiasts who cared not if they fell providedtheir comrades behind could carry on the 312 A HISTORY OP FRANCE flag to victory. It was this dashing ardor of a people Just learn- ing to be free that decided many a stricken field. Another very decisive factor was the admirable, tough physique and the sustained marching qualities of the French peasants, who, man for man, probably constituted far better fighting material than part at least of the larger, bonier Northern soldiery pitted against them — even as the poilus of France were to teach the world again in 1914. Bravery, enthusiasm, and stamina could not do everything; above all they could not give the French generals skill in the technique of war. This was the weakest link at first in the na- tional armor. The old officers from the noblesse were dead or in exile. The new officers — traders, tapsters, and ploughman's sons perhaps — had yet to learn a great deal. But under the whip and spur of circumstance this corps of new and very young officers developed rapidly. The Central Committee was ruthless in weeding out mediocrity and in punishing incompetence. With every army went at least two "deputies on mission" from the Convention, to see everything, to report everything, above all to suspend the commanding general if he showed any signs of incapacity. "The generals of the raw levies knew that they must win if they must live. Failure was interpreted by the deputies and the Revolutionary Tribunal to mean treason, and not a few officers, like Westermann and Gustine, expiated their defeats on the scaffold." The effort of this army of liberated France, the most intelli- gent, devoted national army which the modern world up to that time had ever seen, was bound to produce enormous results. The kings and the comfortable military bureaucrats of Europe were confounded at this advent of a new force, as much moral as it was material, which met their well-trained but rather apathetic "regulars" in battle after battle. During the greater part of 1793 the French held their frontiers only by the most desperate exertions, but in the autumn the struggle definitely shifted in their favor. The English and Hanoverians were forced INTERNAL CONDITIONS IN FRANCE 313 to raise the siege of Dunkirk, the Austrians were defeated at Wattignies (near Maubeuge) by Jourdan, one of the most com- petent leaders discovered by Carnot,^ and at Weissenburg in northern Alsace the Austrians were hurled back beyond the confines of France. Likewise in December, Toulon, the great southern naval port, which had gone over to the English, rather than submit to the Jacobins, was retaken — thanks to the skill of a young artillery officer named Bonaparte. "Better that 25,000,000 human beings should perish than the Republic, One and Indivisible!" had been the saying during these months of crisis — and the Republic had not perished. While thus the spirit of a great ideal, the ideal of a world emancipated from slavery and dedicated to liberty, fraternity, and human happiness, was animating the youth of France to fight and suffer on the frontier, their masters, the Jacobins, were more grimly holding their own and trying to execute their programme at Paris. The Revolution had, of course, been accompanied by widespread economic prostration. Factories lacked alike customers, raw material, and workmen. Peasants were hesitating to till their farms and to dispatch their grain to market. Paris grew increasingly hungry and therefore danger- ous. The assignats were depreciating to a point almost equal to that of the Confederate currency in America in 1865. The Convention and the Committee fought against this crisis with weapons condemned by every modern economist, but they were used not wholly in vain. Speculators in corn and assignats found themselves often and very suddenly before the dread Revolutionary Tribunal. A drastic "Law of the Maximum" regulated the price for grain and flour, and fixed the death penalty for transgressors. Farmers and dealers who refused to open their stores at legal prices were arrested wholesale. Owing to the good fortune which sent a very fair harvest in 1793, and to the inherent ingenuity of the French lower classes in ' Jourdan, it is interesting to observe, seems to have served, when he was only sixteen, in the French forces sent to help Washington in America. 314 A HISTORY OF FRANCE meeting trying conditions as well as to these Draconian edicts, this year was tided over without unbearable suffering. Eco- nomic conditions continued bad until well after 1795, but they were by no means so intolerable as in Russia in 1917 and 1918. The French bourgeoisie and peasants (even the most doctri- naire of their leaders) were to prove far more practical and in- telligent than the Russian Soviets, bolshevists, and mujiks in the first two years of their national reconstruction and agony. Paris, therefore, lived her life, while the Convention Ustened to endless speeches, while the Committee and the Tribunal met for their grim work, and while Carnot organized his fourteen armies. The theaters were open, there were innumerable news- papers, mostly devoted to violent personal politics; and all the little wine-shops buzzed and sometimes thundered. But the entire time the fear of the "Repubhcan razor" lurked in the heart of every man. After this epoch was over, it was asked of a prominent member of the Convention, Sieyes, what he did dur- ing those years.? "Z lived," came back the brief but sufficient reply. For these were the years of "The Terror." Even despite the clangor without and the tension within, the Convention found time to give serious attention to permanent questions of reform. By no means was all the legislation then enacted bad. A new system of weights and measures was introduced — the famous metric system — so excellent that presently it was to be adopted by nearly all civilization outside of the EngUsh-speaking lands. A special committee worked bravely on a sagacious scheme for national education, with primary schools, central schools, and a normal school to equip competent teachers. A second committee wrestled with the question of a codification of the Civil Law — a problem not to be solved till the days of Napoleon. Less commendable was the attack of the old established "slave style" calendar, with its names and divisions recalling Roman despotism ("July," "August") and Christian holy-days and festivals. In its place ATTACK ON CHRISTIANITY S15 came a "natural" calendar conceived in the very spirit of Rousseau. The new era was made to date from the establishment of the Republic, September 21, 1792. Then began the "Year I." Within the reformed year were twelve months, with new names, ^ and divided, not into weeks, but into "decades" of ten days each. The initial day of each decade was a holiday for the cele- bration of the "Republic virtues," to the complete abandon- ment of Sunday with its reminiscences of "superstition." Everything else connected with the Old Regime seemed on the point of being consigned to the rubbish heap. It was no longer patriotic (or therefore safe) to address a person as other than "Citizen" or "Citizeness." The royal tombs in Saint-Denis were violated; the dust of the kings who had made France great was flung into a ditch. The Christian religion was not formally proscribed, but only the services of the time-serving schismatic clergy, who would take the oath of obedience to the "civil constitution " for the Church, were permissible — a fact which put all the more upright and devout of the priesthood under the ban. The piety of the "constitutional" priests may be judged by the fact that in November, 1793, Gobel, the Bishop of Paris, and other prominent churchmen came before the Convention and seem to have openly disavowed Christianity. The churches, in most parts of France at least, were being changed into "civil temples," their altars pillaged, their glorious stained-glass windows smashed to bits^ as reminiscent of superstitions and slavery which Republican enlightenment had abolished. As to what was to be put in place of the Church, which was become almost as objectionable now as the Monarchy, good Republicans were divided. Robespierre and the more consistent followers of Rousseau's theories were quite sure there ought to ' These months began with September 22. They were named for their char- acteristic climate; for example, Nivose (snow month), FlorSat (flower month), etc. The five extra days in the year were holidays. ^ As a consequence, only here and there was the fine old stained glass to be found in French cathedrals; for example, in Reims until the new Barbariaa invasion of 1914. 316 A HISTORY OF FRANCE be a "pure" cult of the "Supreme Being." The grosser Jacobins of the Commune of Paris, led by their chief spirit Hebert, wanted only an atheistical worship of "Reason"; and on November 10, 1793, the Convention declared this last to be the official cult, marching as a body in red hberty caps to Notre Dame, while an unprudish actress sat upon the altar as "The Goddess of Reason," and even coarser women danced the carmagnole under the gray vaulting of the nave. Elsewhere in France there were even less edifying spectacles — at Lyons a donkey was adorned with a miter, made to drink from the sacred chalice, with a crucifix and Bible tied to his tail. All this disgusted Robespierre, who wished to be anti-Christian without being atheistic, and some of these viler outrages were presently suppressed; but not till after 1795 was it to be altogether safe to hold Catholic worship publicly without fear of molestation. All this, however, was mere detail compared with the great task of reorganizing France on a new basis as laid down by Rousseau's doctrine. The controlling Jacobins had perforce to divide up the management of the problems of the hour between themselves; and the main energies of Carnot, and to a certain extent of Danton, were devoted to flinging back the invader. To lesser men they left the task of making the home front safe, and insuring the coming of the longed-for Utopia. This was the prosperous hour of Robespierre. The foreign danger, the do- mestic peril, the fear of a Royalist reaction (which under the circumstances could not be other than vengeful and bloody), all these were reasons for hideous action, for silencing every possible dissident under the falling knife. Robespierre, with every quality of a fanatic, — intense conviction of the justice of his philosophy, equally intense conviction of the criminaUty of every person who could not accept its logic and dicta, — was thus to have his way; until men really abler and more power- ful than himself came to feel in peril for their own lives. Then suddenly the whole bloody Terror stopped. The earUer months of the Republic had not been stained by EXECUTION OF THE QUEEN 317 many executions despite the tragedy of the King. Now, while 1793 advanced, the Revolutionary Tribunal was divided into two sections to double its speed and its victims began to multi- ply. The property of the condemned was confiscated to the State, which income helped to meet the deficit. " We coin money by the guillotine," said Barere cynically in the Convention. In September was voted the terrible "Law of Suspects" subjecting to arrest not merely the courtiers of the Old Regime and others who had probably a motive in halting the Revolution, but all others who were detected "speaking of the misfortunes of the Republic and the shortcomings of the authorities." This sinister change produced instant results. The prisons, already fuU, now were soon overflowing. In October, 1793, twenty-two of the luckless Girondists were sent to the scaffold, the heroic Madame Roland making her famous saying, as she stood before the guillotine, "O Liberty, how many crimes are committed in thy name!" Her male comrades went also to their fate with like serene courage. "I die at a time when the people have lost their senses," said Lasource to his judges. "You will die when they recover them." And the whole band sang with perfect steadiness the "Marseillaise" while they waited their turn before the executioner. Already a more remarkable victim had been the widowed Queen herself. Had Marie Antoinette been prosecuted for treason immediately following the downfall of the Monarchy, there would certainly have been more justice in condemning her than her imfortunate husband. It was now little less than bloodthirstiness to send her to death. A good legal charge of aiding the Austrians might have been made out, but her trial was only a farce. Like the King, Marie Antoinette died bravely and nobly, as became the daughter of the great Maria Theresa, obliterating by her courage as a condemned prisoner the memory of many of the blunders and worse things chargeable against her as a queen. From November, 1793, onward (Barere had cheerfully put it 318 A HISTORY OF FRANCE as early as September), "Terror became the order of the day." The Revolutionary Tribunal became increasingly busy, and the guillotine seldom missed a prisoner once he was placed before the dread judge, prosecutor, and jury. For a man once a "sus- pect" practically the only escape was a satisfactory answer to the question, " What have you done worthy of death if the Royal- ists come back to power?" After the recapture of Toulon every citizen who failed to show signs of joy fell under suspicion. It was enough merely to prove that a defendant had not been an enthusiastic supporter of the latest ukase from the Jacobin Club. There were even victims sent under the knife for being "moderates " The cold statistics of the executions in Paris in 1793-94 tell the story of increasing recklessness and fanaticism. In December, 69 perished; in January, 1794, 71; in February, 73; in March, 127; in April, 257; in May, 353; and in June and July together 1376. ^ "This sudden increase in the number of executions," it is well written, "was due to the efforts of Robes- pierre to estabhsh his Utopia." There is a difference of opinion among modern specialists as to how far Robespierre personally was responsible for the deeds which have rendered his name execrable to every honest man, and sacred to every anarchist.^ Certainly other members of the Committee of Public Safety — for example, Billaud-Varenne and CoUot d'Herbois — were no less bloodthirsty than he. However, Robespierre in any case was often their spokesman in their conventions, covered their most drastic propositions with elegant phrases about securing the public "happiness" and "liberty," and probably toward the end he was, indeed, little less than an uncrowned dictator, possessed by the horrible gos- pel that since he understood the sole means of securing justice and prosperity for France, whosoever failed to applaud his 1 Some of this great increase may have been due to the closing of certain provincial tribunals and the sending of their victims for final judgment to Paris. 2 In 1918 the Bolsheviki were charged with setting up statues in his honor in Petrograd and Moscow. DANTON ATTACKED 319 extreme doctrines was worthy of death; and he certainly was inflexible in carrying out this theory. Robespierre rapidly divested himself of possible rivals. One coadjutor, and it might have been competitor for popular influence, had already passed away. Marat, the "People's Friend," had been murdered in July, 1793, by the heroic Char- lotte Corday, striking her dagger in behalf of the outlawed Girondists. There remained two other presumptive adversaries : Hebert the brutal, obscene leader of the Paris Commune and champion of the most stalwart atheism, and the redoubtable Danton. Robespierre hated Hebert because the latter was dis- gracing the Revolution by his "Festivals to Reason" and also his travesty of Rousseau's naturalism by his sheer bestiality. Hebert was powerful in the Paris Commune and among the dregs of the populace, and it strained Robespierre's influence to get him at last sent before the Tribunal. Nevertheless, on March 24, 1794, Hebert, the roaring blasphemer, perished.' Had Robespierre stopped here, some things might have been for- given him. But the "dictator" turned next on Danton himself. Of all men who should have been immune before the Tribunal, Danton ought to have been the first. For the overthrow of Monarchy, the September massacres, the execution of the King, the drastic measures to beat back the foreigner, the defiance of Europe, nay, for the setting-up of the Committee of Public Safety and the Revolutionary Tribunal itself, Danton was more responsible than any other single mortal. But Danton, despite all these things, was committing a deadly crime against the "beneficial and good" theories of the Jacobins; he was becoming a "moder- ate." Danton could probably have scattered all his assailants by one resolute charge had he but willed to do so; but he remained singularly passive. He was a man of spasmodic achievement, not '■ Hebert had carried his antipathy to Christianity so far as to incite his fol- loweis to destroy all church steeples as "an insult to equality." 320 A HISTORY OF FRANCE of continuous action. He had declined a place in the secret Committees and for a time had withdrawn partially into private life. At length he and his friends had begun to hint plainly that since the national crisis, caused by foreign foes and by rebels, was largely past, there was no need for continuing the wholesale executions. If this meant anything it meant that Robespierre was not to bring to pass immediately his Elysium, into which he evidently intended to drive all Frenchmen at the point of the sword. That was enough to settle the fate of the greatest of the Jacobins. When told he was threatened, Danton refused to use revolu- tionary means (which he might have invoked) to confound his adversaries. "I would rather," he said contemptuously, "be guillotined than be a guillotiner; besides, my life is not worth the trouble, and I am sick of the world." Nevertheless, when he was arrested and placed before the Tribunal, the prosecution dared not allow him to make even the limited defense allowed to ordi- nary victims. He was silenced as "wanting in respect to justice" and condemned practically without a hearing on charges so ridiculous and insignificant that his condemnation sinks to the level of a common murder. With him was sentenced his friend, Camille Desmoulins, the first to raise Paris in arms before the taking of the Bastile. "Show my head to the people," ordered Danton haughtily to the executioner; "they do not see the like thereof every day." And so he passed (April 5, 1794). It was well said that the French Revolution, like the god Sat- urn of ancient mythology, "devoured its own children." Marat was gone, Hebert was gone; and now Danton also. Of the great idealists whose Bible was the "Social Contract," and who had dreamed of making a new universe according to the gospel of Rousseau, who save Robespierre and his immediate sateUites remained? The dictator (it is fair now to call Robes- pierre that) had destroyed the Hebertists as "impure men of faction"; the Dantonists as "indulgents and men of immoral- THE TERROR AT ITS APEX 321 ity." Now surely there was nothing to hinder the regime of "thorough"! By this time probably only a minor fraction of Parisians and a much smaller fraction of Frenchmen at large had anything but abhorrence for the Terrorists, yet so absolute had been the suppression of every act of resistance, so prompt the punishment even for "incivism" (that is, the least suggestion of lukewarmness) that the entire nation seemed hypnotized and helpless before an aggressive, organized, and perfectly unscrupu- lous minority. Robespierre's real reign dates from the 5th of April to the 27th of July, 1794. During that time he seemingly exercised a power of life and death over Frenchmen incalculably greater than that of Louis XIV. He might have continued his power longer had he possessed the wisdom not to smite terror for their own lives into men who had either been his cowardly tools or his bloody accomplices. During April, May, and June, Robespierre and his ever- narrowing band of prime counselors drove straight toward their mark by decree after decree calculated to silence dissenters from "the Doctrine," and to concentrate all power in Paris where "the pure" could control all public acts. All the Parisian clubs were closed except the Jacobin Club, that the others might not become centers for insurrection. All the extraordinary tribunals in the departments were ordered to stop working, and to send their cases to the greater and more pitiless central assize in Paris. When Robespierre rose to move a decree in the Conven- tion, opposition for the nonce seemed absolutely hushed. No man knew better than he how to proclaim a policy of ruthless- ness and to cover it with words dripping with philanthropy and idealistic benevolence. The Terror was blandly advocated as a necessary expedient to introduce the reign of "virtue"; the guillotine was for "the amehoration of souls." His coadjutors were more frank. "The dead alone do not return," said Barere, while Collot d'Herbois cynically declared, "The more freely the social body perspires the more healthy it becomes." Robespierre himself was now, of course, the subject of the 822 A HISTORY OF FRANCE grossest flattery. "The great Incorruptible" was everywhere praised for his virtue, his genius, and his eloquence. The apogee of his career came on June 8, 1794, when, at his instigation, an enormous festival was held "in honor of the Supreme Being," on which day the Convention proceeded in high procession to the garden of the Tuileries, with Robespierre walking fifteen feet ahead of his insignificant colleagues, attired in aU the brave dress of a dandy of the period, and carrying an offering to the Deity of flowers and ears of corn. Then, after burning three huge effigies of "Atheism," "Discord," and "Selfishness," this high-priest of the new Deism delivered a pompous speech, con- taining the ominous words: "People! Let us to-day surrender ourselves to the transports of pure deUght. To-morrow we will renew our struggle against vices and against tyrants ! " Two days later Couthon (one of the dictator's spokesmen) imparted to the Convention what Robespierre had had in mind. The Revolutionary Tribunal was not working fast enough. There was still some small loophole for the defense. Hereafter the court was to sit daily, and the process of bringing indict- ments was greatly expedited. No counsel was to be allowed the accused, and "moral proofs" could suffice for a conviction. All "enemies of the people" (a frightfully indefinite phrase) were liable to prosecution, and the jurors need not follow the law, but "only their own consciences" when they voted. Possibly the Convention would have authorized all this without a whimper, but hitherto, to get the arrest of an accused deputy, it had been needful to ask the consent of a majority of his fellow members. This had been a considerable safeguard. Now the deputies themselves could be put on trial on a mere order from the terrible Committee. In substance this was asking every member to look to the safety of his own neck. The weakest animals will turn at bay. Such a request was therefore a grievous blunder. Robespierre committed a second great blunder when (chal- lenged in the Convention) he refused to name the deputies / OPPOSITION TO THE DICTATOR presumably to be accused. " I will name them when it is neces- sary," he announced loftily: words which set every member who had ever crossed his path to trembhng. In "profound silence" the new decree was passed. From this time the "Terror within the Terror" became more direful than ever. Executions took place in large batches. Often fifty wretches were sent under the knife per day. But the end was drawing nigh. . With all his fanaticism, the dictator hated corruption, im- morality, and such forms of cruelty as he had not himself authorized. Powerful and wicked men, high in the Government, who had misused their opportunities had come to fear him. At least three members of the great Committee, including the mighty Camot, were beginning to oppose him. His attempt to manufacture a new religion was laughed at by presumable sup- porters. "Your Supreme Being begins to hore me!" sneered Billaud-Varennes. Robespierre had still a great following among the Parisian lower classes, and the reorganized Commune of the capital was devoted to him, but things were obviously moving to a straining point. Late in July the cord, long imder tension, snapped. As things neared a climax the dictator became morose and distrustful. Sturdy Jacobins with clubs accompanied him as a bodyguard. His denunciations became ever more ominous. "^ "All corrupt men," he declared, "must be expelled from the Convention." Who were these corrupt men? Out of despair for their hves, the members who felt themselves threatened made ready to pull the tyrant down. Robespierre knew that there were murmurs and combinations against him, but on July 26 he harangued the Convention in his usual mood: "There exists a conspiracy against the public liberty, that owes its strength to a criminal intrigue within the very heart of the Convention. ' The battle of Fleurus (June 26), a great French victory over the Austrians in Belgium, really cut the ground from under the dictator's feet. Why any need now of the Terror? Robespierre realized this, and is charged with giving orders to suppress or minimize the glad news of the military success as much as pos- sible. 324 A HISTORY OF FRANCE . . . Punish the traitors! Purify the Committee! Crush every faction, and establish upon their ruins the power of justice and liberty!" Instead of applause he met flat opposition. Cambon (a brave man) said openly: "It is time to speak the whole truth. One man paralyzed the resolution of the assembly. That man is Robespierre." The debate ended with a flat rebuff for the dictator. The next day each side having mustered its partisans, he endeavored tq face the rising storm, but he was howled off of the tribune by the yells not merely of the moderates, but by most of his old Jacobins. "Let the veil [of restraint] be wholly torn aside!" thundered Tallien. "Down with the tyrant!" reechoed from the members. Robespierre tried vainly to get a hearing. "Pure and virtuous men!" he pleaded, holding out his arms to his one-time laudators — and was met with stony looks or shrill hootings. "Wretch," some one called from an upper bench, "the blood of Danton chokes thee!" With an approving shout the Convention voted the motion that Robespierre, his brother, and three ad- herents, notably the wild and eloquent young Saint-Just, should be put under arrest. "The Republic is lost, the brigands triumph!" groaned the deposed leader as they dragged him out. But all was not quite over. The Commune was still on Robes- pierre's side and controlled the Paris prisons. None of the jailers would receive him. A band of municipal officers took him from his guards and brought him in triumph to the City Hall. "Long live Robespierre!" rang in the streets. A band of armed men, l.ed by the notorious desperado and agitator Henriot, put them- selves at his disposal. For some hours the Convention was in agony. Was it not about to be attacked by the mob and all its members massacred? However, the National Guard, after some wavering, decided to support the Convention and not the Commune. The Government's troops, therefore, closed around the City Hall, and seized the band that had already been de- \clared "outlaws." Robespierre shattered his jaw with a pistol while trying to commit suicide. He was still alive, when on the RETURN TO DECENCY 325 famous "lOth of Thermidor" (July 28, 1794) at 5 p.m. he rumbled in the death-cart along the streets, through a crowd that cheered, raved, and screamed for his blood. Twenty-two of his friends mounted the scaffold and then the dread "dictator." When his head fell, the air shook with the applause.' The Terror was ended. The men who had pulled down Robespierre were many of them no more pitiful or scrupulous than their enemy; but they had gained immense popularity by seeming to stop the Terror, and they dared not endanger their position by renewing it. The long intimidated Convention reasserted its hberty of action. The surviving Girondist deputies returned from exile. The Jacobin Club was closed. The worst abusers of justice in the Revolutionary Tribunal were executed themselves. A great many political prisoners were released; the remainder were in no danger of death without fair trial. France, and particularly Paris, shook off the incubus of fear that had brooded over it. Not merely was there a reaction toward moderation; there was even a reaction in favor of Monarchy, especially as it was believed that the kings could be brought back upon conditions that would insure the preservation of the great liberties won in 1789. The Royalists were weakened, indeed, by the report that in 1795 the unlucky Dauphin, son of Louis XVI (a frail boy bereft of parents or decent guardians), had died in prison, ap- parently by the sheer neglect or worse of his brutal keepers. ^ The heir to the Bourbon claims was now the late King's brother, the Comte de Provence, in exile and notorious as a reactionary. However, the Royalist feeling grew. The bourgeois elements in Paris had reasserted themselves, and supported the reaction. ' There is a story that just as the fallen tyrant was bound to the plank, a voice from the crowd shouted, "Yes, Robespierre, there is a Supreme Being." ^ This is no place to discuss the stories that the Dauphin really escaped was taken to America, and there lived and died in an obscure private statior These reports cannot be set aside, however, as nothing more than improbabk fabrications. They deserve serious consideration. 326 A HISTORY OF FRANCE In 1795 there was even a Royalist outbreak that came close to succeeding. In 1793 the Convention had adopted a constitution of an ultra-democratic nature, strongly tinctured with Jacobin views. It had never actually been put in force and the moment Robe- spierre fell it was disregarded altogether. In 1795 the deputies produced another constitution which was an honest, if not wholly successful, attempt to avoid the mistakes of the 1791 arrangement, and to set up a Republican Government which should alike steer clear of ultra-radicalism and of Monarchy. There was a much-needed list of the "duties" as well as the "rights" of citizens, and a more debatable effort to exclude the lowest classes, by giving the vote only to men who had lived a year in one place and paid a tax. Such voters could choose "electors," who in turn chose a legislature of two houses, a "Council of Five Hundred" to initiate laws, and a "Council of Ancients" (two hundred and fifty older members) to revise and accept them. For executive the Convention set up neither Presi- dent nor King, but a five-headed commission. Five "Directors," controlling the ministers, the diplomatic policy, and the army and administrative officers, were to be chosen by the Coimcils for terms of five years, ^ with one Director retiring annually. Three Directors could speak for the whole. In this way it was hoped that a firm executive was to be created without fear of a dictatorship. Such a system was in fact too artificial to work well even in peaceful times and with a friendly and submissive citizen body, but the Convention now passed a measure sure to make the new scheme unpopular. The members, especially those who had voted for the death of Loiiis XVI, were in mortal fear lest the elections should give the Royalists a majority in the newly con- stituted legislatures. So great was the disgust at the Terror, so great the desires of Frenchmen to settle down in peace after the ' At the beginning, of course, all five Directors were chosen and it was the'> determined by lot in what order they should retire. ROYALISTS ATTACK THE CONVENTION 327 years of confusion, that such a reaction was extremely probable. The Convention, therefore, in self -protection decided that two thirds of the new legislatures must be elected from among the members of the retiring Convention, thus making sure that the Royalists, at least for a few years, should not be more than a minority. The respectable element in Paris had now completely gained the upper hand over the Jacobin lower classes, and it was driven to fury by this plain undertaking of the hated radicals to per- petuate their power under a new guise. The National Guard, as reorganized, was at the disposal erf the reactionaries, and on October 5, 1795 ("13th of Vendemiaire"), some 40,000 armed Royalists were marching on the hall of the Convention to attempt by violence a change in the Government, thus using a method well taught them by Danton and Marat. The position of the Convention was serious. It had now decidedly few friends in the city, but the regular army (d- votedly Republican) was on its side, and the rather sma*.. garrison present was enraged at the idea of recalling the hated Bourbons. The deputies appointed as their leader the energetic Barras, who in turn selected as chief lieutenant a young artillery officer who had won success at the siege of Toulon and who was now waiting idly in Paris — one Napoleon Bonaparte. The latter promptly seized all the artillery at the Sablons camp, and posted it with his 6000 to 7000 men to good advantage around the Tuileries where the Convention was in session. The Royal- ists marched up to the old palace boldly, expecting to prosper even as had the Dantonists in 1792; but Bonaparte and his artillerymen were not as Louis XVI and his Swiss Guards. The Royalists were met by a deadly cannon fire, which raked the quays by the Seine, and their columns were Uterally mowed down by the "whiff of grapeshot." After a vain attempt to rally, the insurgents broke, fled, and the battle was over. The Convention was nominally the victor. The real victor was the army. Bonaparte had arbitrated between legislators 328 A HISTORY OF FRANCE and citizens with his cannon. From this time onward until 1815 the army is the true disposing body in France. It was to remain loyal the longest to the Republic, and when its allegiance changed, it was not to be to the Old Monarchy, but to a new Cffisarism. In October, 1795, the new directors took over the Govern- ment. The "Directory" lasted until November, 1799. It is not needful to trace its annals. The real history of France from 1796 onward was to be written in great battles in Italy and then in Egypt by the young officer who had aided Barras. As for the Directors, nearly all of them were mediocre men, however often their personnel changed: they could wrangle much, though accompUsh relatively little. Law and order returned in a toler- able extent to France in 1795, although there was still much persecution of the old nobility and of the Catholic clergy. The admirable practical talents of the French people brought back a fair degree of economic prosperity. As early as April, 1795, Prussia had withdrawn from the war in disgust at her Austrian ally, and her HohenzoUern king had made peace by the Treaty of Basel with the radical Republic. The decrepit despotism of Spain had made peace the same year. England, Austria, and Sardinia still continued the war, but they could not really threaten the integrity of France or the fruits of the Revolution. As might have been expected, the five directors (chosen without the slightest attempt to select persons likely to work together) presently quarreled among themselves. They also wrangled with the legislature, whose relations to the executive had been very poorly adjusted by the new Constitution. In 1797 three Directors combined against two, -charging them with "reaction," and with the aid of the army they drove the minor- ity from power. In 1798 and 1799 Bonaparte, who had already overshadowed completely the five httle men in Paris, was fight- ing in Egypt. In his absence the Directors mismanaged affairs outrageously. By the valor of Bonaparte, France had made a victorious peace with Austria in 1797 (Treaty of Campo- FRANCE RETURNS TO MONARCHY 329 Formio). The Directors now became involved in a second war with the Austrian Emperor, and when Bonaparte returned from Egypt in 1799, they had little to report to him but defeats in Italy and Switzerland and even a renewed danger to the fron- tiers. Under these circumstances it was perfectly easy for the scheming and ambitious "Little Corporal," already the darling of the army, to pull down the luckless Constitution of 1795. On November 9, 1799 ("18th of Brumaire"), by a bold stroke of state, aided by the soldiery and by three of the Directors, • Bonaparte chased the other two Directors from office, and dis- persed the Coimcil of Five Hundred. At the roll of the drum the grenadiers marched into the building of the legislature, and "advancing slowly across the wide width of the hall, presented their bayonets." What Louis XVI dared not accomplish following the defiance of Mirabeau after the "royal sitting" in 1789, had been dared and done by the man from Corsica. France had again a mon- arch, albeit a very different kind of a monarch from Louis XVI. Bonaparte proposed to reorganize the government with a very firm executive of three "consuls." His colleagues, provisionally, were to be the supple politician Sieyes and another ex-Director, Ducos. When the trio then gathered for their first session, Sieyes asked mildly, "Who will preside?" "Don't you see," answered Ducos, ' ' the general is in the chair ! ' ' There was nothing more to be said. From this time onward, even more than from 1796, the his- tory of France and the biography of Napoleon Bonaparte are absolutely intermingled until the greatest of aU adventurers crashed down at Waterloo. CHAPTER XVI NAPOLEON BONAPAETE, AS MASTER OF EUROPE This volume is a history of France. It is not a biography of Napoleon. It is not a history of the wars and diplomacy of Europe between 1796 and 1815. To write the first without the other two things is, however, a matter of extreme diflSculty. The wisest policy is to state a few threadbare facts about the life and personality of the Corsican, then to give a very thin outUne of his more important wars and international policies. In more detail we can next explain what he did for France, and show that his restless genius by no means confined itself solely to mihtary achievements. Finally we can trace over the story of his last years of power and of downfall, when, as a result of his personal catastrophe, France was obliged to remould her constitution and to take back for a while the outcast Bourbons. It is useless to try to write anything new about Napoleon Bonaparte. It is unavoidable also not to restate facts contained in the most meager work of reference. The future confounder of Europe was born at Ajaccio, Cor- sica, in 1769, the son of a "typically poor but noble family." His father, Charles, was of Italian extraction and was by pro- fession an assessor for the local royal court. The young Napoleon must therefore be thought of as an Italian in birth and early breeding. His genius, virtues, vices are nearly all of them Southern. If he became a Frenchman, it is only one by adoption, however completely for a time he dominated the sympathies and enthusiasms of the entire Gallic race. In 1779 he was sent to the Continent to the military school at Brienne. In 1784 he went to the military academy at Paris. In 1785 he was commis- sioned sub-lieutenant in the artillery. A shy, ill-dressed lad, who YOUTH OF BONAPARTE 331 did not speak French over-well, he was not particularly popular with his comrades or his teachers; although one of the latter at Paris made a note that "He will go far if circumstances favor him." He was only the forty-second in his class when he received his commission. During the Revolution he presently became possessed with an honest or affected enthusiasm for Jacobin theories and was made a captain in 1793. He achieved his first reputation at the siege of Toulon by his skill in planting a battery which drove the British fleet from the harbor. He was made brigadier-general when he was only twenty-four, but was practically dismissed from the army after he refused to com- mand an infantry brigade against the insurgents in the Vendee. Then by a turn of Fortune's wheel, in 1795, Barras suddenly summoned him to defend the Convention against the RoyaUsts. His well-aimed cannon-shots alike crushed the chances of a reaction and put his superiors under a heavy obUgation to him. He was given command of the "Army of Italy," the most im- portant force at the disposal of the Directory, always excepting the great armies on the Rhine. He was at once hailed as one of the rising men of the hour, and before he left Paris he was able to marry the beautiful creole widow Josephine de Beauharnais, one of the central spirits of fashionable life in the capital. Ten days after the wedding (March 11, 1796), he left his bride to assume his new command in the South, and within a month after his arrival with the Army of Italy, he was able to report very important victories. A new era had dawned not for France only, but for all Europe. The young man who was now to send terror down the spines of all the Highnesses, Serenities, and Majesties in Christendom has of course become a familiar figure, thanks to hundreds of authentic portraits. When he began his career we may think of him as distinctly "Southern" in aspect, an Italian rather than a Frenchman, "small, of poor physique, with long, lanky, dark hair, but with deep-set eyes and a pale, impressive face, set over a shabby uniform." Later he was to become stouter, and his 332 A HISTORY OF FRANCE valet was to provide him sometimes with a costume befitting his rank, but he was never to develop an imposing stage presence.* Upon his appearance with the Army of Italy he was not enthusiastically welcomed. Many of the under-generals were men of longer service and of much greater years than he. They treated him with half-concealed sneers and almost latent insub- ordination. It took him an amazingly short time, however, to fascinate them all by the magnetism of his presence. "I'm afraid of him," confessed Augereau, one of his chief lieutenants, "and I don't understand his ascendancy over me, so that I feel struck down just by the flash of his eye!" In a word, Bonaparte in 1796 took a discouraged, poorly disciplined, and miserably equipped and provisioned army of 37,000 men, flung it over the Alps, and in a few weeks' time began to report back to Paris a series of victories such as no general had ever reported to Louis XIV. "The First ItaUan Campaign" (if he had fought no other) was sufficient to establish Bonaparte among the world's great captains. When after the desperate charge over the bridge of Lodi (May 10, 1796), a deputation of sergeants of the grena- diers waited on their general in his tent and informed him that he had been elected a "corporal" in their corps, they were simply anticipating the opinion of every student of military history. "The Little Corporal" was to make a name beside those of Alexander and JuUus Caesar. And yet Bonaparte was no magician who with a stroke of a wand called up for himself obedient and irresistible armies. On the contrary, he could never have gone far had not the Revolu- tion presented him with one of the most formidable fighting machines in the world. The machine was nearly ready. It needed only the master-engineer to perfect and direct it. The force that had cast back the Prussians and Austrians after Valmy, that had justified Danton's caU for "boldness," that had already wrested the whole western bank of the Rhine from the then » See p. 368. VALOR OF THE NEW FRENCH TROOPS 333 tottering German Empire and taken Belgium from Austria, had been one of the fairest products of the Revolution. In the "Army of the Republic" genuine patriotism and love for the new-found liberty had burned the keenest, along with a passionate wiUing- ness to die for France or to conquer, as well as to convey the blessings of the "Rights of Man" to less fortunate nations. In the army there had been as a rule little opening for the sangui- nary contentions between Girondist and Jacobin, Dantonist and Robespierrean. The one thing the army was resolved upon was that the Bourbons should not return — and it had therefore been the bulwark of the Directory in the days of Royalist re- action. It was to desert the Directory in 1799 and overthrow it because of the widespread feeling that the inefficiency of that five-headed executive was ruining France and thereby insuring the return of the hated kings. The soldiery in that year honestly believed that their idolized general would reestablish in some better form their beloved Republic. They were mere wax in the Corsican's astute Southern hands. But the Republican army was more than intensely anti- royalist. It was a magnificent fighting force. It was composed, or at least dominated, by men who were not professional mer- cenaries earning the pay of a king, but devoted patriots battling for an ideal. Hitherto, in the average battle, two long lines of carefully deployed infantry approached each other slowly; when within easy musket-shot they fired on one another till the weaker side — perhaps after hours of this exchange — broke under the volleys and let its enemies march deliberately for- ward. This traditional battle order was cast to the four winds by the new armies of France. The superior courage of their volunteers enabled their generals to form them in headlong columns and fling a regiment like a solid battering-ram against the enemy. The van of the column might perish. The rest would charge through to victory. In general also the new French armies were in no wise hampered by the traditions and rule-of- thumb methods which were the delight of the mediocre old- 334 A HISTORY OF FRANCE school martinets. 1 We are told that the French battalions often were in rags, that they marched with a long, slouching step — unlike the smart movements of the Austrians; that even their officers sometimes lacked boots — that their generals failed to carry themselves with top-lofty dignity. But the great fact remained that repeatedly on decisive fields they had defeated these same mechanical Austrians, and men remarked on "the fierce, swaggering spirit and patriotism that went far to explain their success." The Revolution, under whip and spur, had produced several very competent generals; for example, Hoche (whose early death in 1797 rid Bonaparte of a dangerous rival), and Moreau, who was to win Hohenlinden in 1800 and next to win Bona- parte's deadly jealousy; but now this splendid fighting instru- ment was to fall into the hands of an incomparable military genius. No wonder he was to go far! Bonaparte's military methods were extraordinarily simple when stated: it was their just application which made him a giant among the captains. He took advantage of the admirable physiques and marching qualities of the French peasants, and drove his men to the limit. The movements of his columns were infinitely more rapid as a rule than those of his foes. He de- pended on requisitions upon the country, and was not tied to a distant base by an uncertain supply train. When it came to battle, his invariable principle was to leave small forces con- taining or hindering the minor detachments of his enemy, then, by a swift concentration of his full fighting strength, to fall suddenly on that division of the foe which he had selected as his prey. Infinite study of the maps told him when to strike where the enemy would be most divided, and the French the most concentrated; and also where, with a victory once won it ' It is said, too, that partly because of the experience of some of their officers in America under Washington, the French adopted sharpshooter tactics, the use of trees, rocks, hedges, etc., as shelters, and other devices which scandalized the old-school tacticians — and won many victories! Q A H fq I H !? I-I < I Q < A O S B &i O H > W O O o H ►J O BONAPARTE'S EXCELLENT LIEUTENANTS 835 could be exploited to best advantage. This principle of rapid concentration, rapid attack, and making everything bend to catching the enemy piecemeal, marked all his campaigns from 1796 to 1814, Bonaparte was, of course, greatly aided by most efficient lieutenants. Like Julius Caesar his personality was so dominant, his presence so ubiquitous, that even his most capable generals had their faculties for initiative somewhat numbed, and were at a loss when offered independent commands far froro their great taskmaster's eye. But given his presence within the range of a fast courier, and not a few of the Corsican's subalterns could show themselves tacticians of a very high order. Augereau, the son of a Paris fruit-vender; Davout, Bonaparte's fellow pupil at Brienne; Lannes, the gallant son of a provincial stable- keeper; Ney, the son of a poor cooper of Saarlouis; Soult, the son of a Southland notary; and finally Murat, the son of the Cahors innkeeper — such were the leaders whom their chief was to make marshals, "dukes," and "princes," or even "kings" 1 in the days of his prosperity, and who, by their rise to glory, proved the saying that in the new army "every private carried a marshal's baton in his knapsack." They were nearly all of them great captains, who have written their names with honor into military history. Bonaparte also was extremely for- tunate in possessing a very competent chief-of-staff almost down to the time of his downfall — Berthier; an officer whose keen intelligence and great precision in preparing orders reUeved his superior of infinite vexatious detail. But in the last analysis it was the rank and file which was to give the Corsican his glory. How the poilu could fight was to be rediscovered by Europe in 1914; and the men of the Mame were after all the great-grandsons of the men of Lodi, of B,ivoli, and of Austerlitz. Even with a less gifted generaUssimo great vic- tories were possible with such divisions as Massena's in the ^ Murat, Napoleon's brother-iB-kw, was made King of Naples in 1808 — "King Joachim I." 336 A HISTORY OF FRANCE 1797 campaign, when the troops fought a pitched battle on the 13th of January at Verona; marched over snow-cumbered roads all the following night — twenty full miles — till the next morn- ing they were on the plateau of Rivoli; fought again victoriously the same day (14th); set forth again that night; marched all the next day (15th), covering then nearly forty-three miles in thirty hours; and on the 16th came up in time to decide the battle of La Favorita. Sixty-eight miles of marching and three battles in four days! While the "Army of the Republic" and its traditions lasted, what wonder that its beloved general went forth con- quering and to conquer? That the continuity of events may not be forgotten, the military annals of Napoleon Bonaparte must be stated thus very succinctly. When he took command at Nice in 1796, the French held all Belgium and the western bank of the Rhine, but they were still at war with England by sea and at war by land with all the minor States of Italy and with Austria. On the German battle-line the contest with Austria had practically reached a deadlock; but in Northern Italy there opened un- limited prospects of attack and manoeuver once the initial ad- vantages were gained by the French. Bonaparte began his attack on the allied Austrian and Sardinian forces in April. Almost immediately he won his first victory at Millesimo. Two weeks later the terrified King of Sardinia desired an armistice. Bonaparte then invaded the Austrian province of the Milanese. He won the notable battle of Lodi in May and entered Milan, and soon began the siege of Mantua — the key fortress to all Northern Italy. Four times the Austrians strove to relieve that stronghold. Four times they were utterly repulsed. The last battle of Rivoli (January 14, 1797) was decisive. Mantua sur- rendered, and Bonaparte was threatening to cross the Alps and enter Vienna, when the Hapsburg government hurriedly ne- gotiated for peace. In April, 1797, it signed the humiliating treaty of Campo-Formio, by which it was agreed that France BONAPARTE IN EGYPT 337 should keep Belgium and the western bank of the Rhine, and also that the "Cisalpine Repubhc" (under French protection) should be set up in Northern Italy. Austria herself was allowed to annex the neutral and decrepit RepubUc of Venice — an act of sheer spoliation in which the old Hapsburg Monarchy and the new French Republic alike iniquitously joined. Bonaparte was now the darling of the French people. The Directors could not honor him too highly, but, small men that they were, they felt oppressed at his popularity and his influ- ence in Paris. They were relieved, therefore, when he undertook to defeat England by winning the back door to India — Egypt. In 1798 Bonaparte sailed away on a prodigious Oriental adven- ture — with an armament carrying 35,000 seasoned French troops, headed for Alexandria. He took Malta en rovie. He landed safely in Egypt, routed the Mameluke armies, ruled in Cairo like a Moslem emir, but had his schemes nearly paralyzed by the destruction of his fleet at Aboukir Bay ' by the EngUsh Admiral Nelson. Bonaparte, however, made a bold incursion into Palestine and defeated the Turks there, though not deci- sively. The loss of his fleet in any case made his whole position precarious. He feared to be cut off in the East while great things were happening in Europe. When he learned that Austria, Russia, and various lesser states had renewed their alUance with England and were again attacking France, he deserted his army in Egypt. None too magnanimously, he loaded with the pick of his officers one of the frigates he had left, and escaped through the British cruisers.^ The poUtical situation in France was such that so far from blaming him for deserting his men, all the numerous critics of the Directory rejoiced at his coming. As already stated,' he promptly overthrew the Directors and 1 "Battle of the Nile," August 1, 1798. ^ The French force in Egypt, thus left isolated and without reinforcements, was presently attacked by an English expedition and forced to surrender. Speculation exhausts itself over the question of what would have been the history of Etttope if Bonaparte's frigate had been taken by the British and he had spent the next few years in a prison camp. » See p. 329. 338 A HISTORY OF FRANCE became "First Consul" just thirty-two days after his arrival in France. 1 Bonaparte now became practically a dictator. The new "Constitution of the Year VIII" is described elsewhere.^ It was not much more than a clever method for concealing the return of Monarchy. The Corsican always contended that the French were not really profoundly devoted to a Republic and "liberty" so much as to the essence of "equality"; they wanted chiefly a firm, efficient administration, economic prosperity, a chance for men of talent to rise on their merits, a scope for the daring and ambitious, and above all "glory" and a flattering of their national pride. All these things Bonaparte felt well able to give. The Directors had bequeathed him a new war with Austria and Russia. In 1800 he was again in Northern Italy and won the battle of Marengo. A little later his general Moreau won the very decisive battle of Hohenlinden in Bavaria.' Austria again made peace* by which the Campo-Formio arrangements were in the main confirmed, French domination over the minor Italian States was extended, and the old "Holy Roman Empire" (that is, the loose federation of Germany under the presidency of Austria) was formally put in liquidation. The dissolution of mediaeval Germany was to be substantially completed in 1803, and in 1806 the Hapsburg Monarch was to drop his claims to being the successor of Csesar and Charlemagne, and to call him- self simply "Emperor of Austria." If Bonaparte had perished at this time, he would probably have died followed by the blessings of subsequent historians. He had destroyed much that was rotten and had rendered an improved organization of Europe inevitable. He had not yet begun, to any large extent, ' " Coup d'fitat of the 18th Brumaire" — November 9, 1799. 2 See p. 350. ' Bonaparte did not enjoy this victory by a subordinate. Moreau became the victim of his master's jealousy, was charged with conspiracy, and was banished to America. After a residence in New Jersey, in 1813, he entered the Russian service against Napoleon and was killed in the battle of Dresden. * Treaty of Lun^ville, 1801. THE STRUGGLE WITH ENGLAND 339 to violate strictly national rights or to play the insatiable aggressor. But henceforth "glory" led him on. England still held out doggedly. Her blockade was cramping the economic life of France and was cutting off the French colonies. But deserted by her allies England made the Peace of Amiens in 1802, on terms which practically left France dominant on the Continent while her rival retained her vast sea-power. It was really a truce, however, between two irreconcilable forces — free Britain and a restless Southern despot. In 1803 there were new quarrels, nominally over the questions of Malta and Hanover which had been seized by the English and French respectively. The "peace" ended in a little less than a year, and the war was renewed with full energy on both sides. The English fleet could cripple the economic life of France, and the "Grand Army" of the First Consul seemed helpless. In 1803, indeed, Bonaparte concentrated a great force of veter- ans at Boulogne, ready for a great scheme to cross the Channel in flatboats when for a few days the British armadas had been chased away. But that moment never came. The "wooden walls" of England were too formidable to be Stormed by the many times conqueror. In 1804 came the political change which any keen observer might well have predicted as inevitable since 1799 — Napoleon Bonaparte, the son of the poor attorney of Ajaccio, became Napoleon I, Emperor of the French. There was a certain amount of grumbling among sundry generals who had not forgotten 1793, but the more vehement were silenced with punishments, and the more reasonable were stifled with honors. The real fact, of course, appeared patent, that Napoleon had founded a despotism, albeit an infinitely more efficient, intelligent, and therefore tolerable despotism than that, say, of Louis XV. However, the avowed theory of this despotism was that France had chosen out the best of its citizens, as a great tribune of the people, to embody in his person the championship of her honor 340 A HISTORY OF FRANCE and the advancement of her prosperity. The Emperor's nephew, destined himself to sit upon an uneasy throne as Napoleon III, was to describe his uncle in a book as "the testamentary execu- tor of the Revolution" who had hastened the reign of Liberty; and then next was to state, "Now the nature of democracy is to personify itself in one man." Views like these were doubtless what Napoleon I desired Frenchmen to hold of his power. Yet he had too firm a grasp on the realities not to know that nothing in this world succeeds like success. If he could give prosperity, glory, and honor to France, there would be plenty of his sub- jects ready to explain that they were "free" albeit under a Caesarian despotism. The precise nature of this new "Empire" and of its glittering officials and court is recounted in another chapter.' The thing to notice now is that on December 2, 1804, "the new Charle- magne" was consecrated with imposing ceremonies at Paris, by none other than Pope Pius VII himself, although to prove that he held his power by no priestly authority. Napoleon ostenta- tiously set the crown with his own hands upon his head. Hardly was this ceremony completed before the Emperor was resuming the congenial task of marshaling his legions to war. His assumption of the crown, a crown won for him solely by the sword, sent new terror into all the old-line hereditary monarchs of Europe. What manner of man was this who had risen from nothing and who was now overshadowing them? Eng- land had been long ready with her subsidies; Russia, Austria, and Sweden had now joined in another great coalition. Only Prussia (among the great Powers) held equivocally aloof. The Emperor Napoleon made haste to teach the world that the touch of the crown had not spoiled the professional cunning of the one-time General Bonaparte. The great camp at Boulogne was broken up, and the army streamed away toward Southern Germany. Of all Napoleon's campaigns this of 1805 perhaps won him the most satisfaction. His "Grand Army" was now completely > See pp. 364, 369. ULM AND AUSTERLITZ 841 developed as a war-machine. It had not yet suflFered such terrible losses of veterans as to lose efficiency by dilution with raw levies. In several converging columns the great masses of French swept into Southern Germany. In October, the Austrian General Mack, a very ordinary drill-master pitted against a great cap- tain, surrendered at Ulm with 30,000 men. Napoleon marched straight onward over the mountains, and led his hosts in triumph through Vienna. On December 2, 1805, he won the most famous of his victories at Austerlitz in Moravia, when with 65,000 men he met some 85,000 allied Austrians and Russians, and drove the survivors of them in rout from the battle-field. Twenty-four days later Francis II, the terrified Hapsburg, signed the peace of Pressburg, by which Austria practically resigned all her claims in Italy, leaving the French to reorganize that peninsula as they listed; ceded likewise to France Istria and Dahnatia — the old Venetian lands along the Adriatic — handed over the Tyrol and many adjacent districts to Bavaria, Napoleon's ally, and finally recognized Bavaria and Wiirtemberg as independent kingdoms. For practical purposes Austria was henceforth obliged to wash her hands of both Germany and Italy and to let the terrible Corsican mould them as he willed. The famous "Third Coalition" against France had been smashed to pieces. Russia still continued nominally in the war; but young Czar Alexander I was very far away from Central Europe and could hardly send an army against Napoleon without crossing neutral territory. No wonder the cathedrals of France were ordered to reecho with Te Deums! There was a fly in this ointment of happiness. Four days after Mack surrendered at Ulm, the Enghsh Admiral Nelson had caught the allied French and Spanish' fleets at Trafalgar off the Spanish coast. Twenty-seven British ships-of-the-line were ar- rayed against thirty-three enemies. However, the Spanish con- tingent had been very ill-found. The French were brave, but the ' During most of this period Spain had been in half-hearted alliance with Ranee, giving her little aid save for some blundering attempts with her navy. 342 A HISTORY OF FRANCE best blood and intelligence of France in that day was going into the army, not into the marine. Nelson fell, but not before his dying ears caught the shouts of the victory. The Franco-Spanish fleet was practically destroyed. Henceforth the tricolor was hardly met upon the seas flying from any save light cruisers and privateers bent on commerce-destroying. The British blockade closed down upon the ports of France and her allies tighter than ever. Napoleon could dictate terms of peace to the Haps- burg, but so long as he was nigh helpless upon the ocean what real hope of reaUzing his grandiose schemes of world dominion? Against the almost intangible influence of British sea-power the Corsican was to beat himself quite as furiously and ineffec- tively as did the HohenzoUern in 1914-18. Hardly was the ink dry upon the Treaty of Pressburg be- fore the Prussian monarchy came close to committing suicide. That kingdom had stood ingloriously neutral since 1795. Na- poleon had cozened its ruler, Frederick William III, into refrain- ing from joining the Third Coalition, holding out vague hopes of great reward if the King would keep the peace at a time when one more potent ally for Austria might have ruined France. Now, when Austria was beaten and helpless, in a spirit of utter folly Frederick William took umbrage at various diplomatic insults and declared war, with hardly an ally save distant and ineffective Russia. Prussia's provocation was great, for the moment the need of cajolery had passed Napoleon dropped th3 mask and showed himself ready to outrage the HohenzoUern's dearest interests. But the military odds were now so heavy against Prussia that her action seemed very reckless. Few men, however, realized how feeble could be her fight, and how com- pletely the famous army of Frederick the Great had been worm- eaten by traditional methods and the senile inefficiency of its generals.' In the double battle of Jena-Auerstadt, October 14, ' One of these superannuated worthies is alleged to have boasted, "His Majesty the King [of Prussia] has several generals far superior to Monsiewr Bonapaite." THE CONTINENTAL BLOCKADE 343 1806, the Prussian war-machine was not merely defeated — it was smashed to fragments. The great Prussian fortresses made indecent haste to surrender at first summons. By 1807 Frederick William was a refugee at Memel in the extreme northeastern corner of his dominions. Czar Alexander I tried, indeed, to come to his rescue. The Russians fought an indecisive battle with the French at Eyiau — and an indecisive battle against Napoleon was ranked by his foes as a victory. A httle later, however (June 14, 1807), the French defeated the Russians unequivocally at Friedland. Alexander was near the end of his fighting strength. On a raft in the river Niemen he held a conference with Napoleon. The Corsican's stronger personality easily cast its influence over the impressionable and none too steadfast Czar. Russia and France were to make close alliance, and divide the empire of the world. Alexander was to adopt Napoleon's scheme for a "Continental Blockade" of the English and to allow Prussia to be reduced to a third-class power; in return he was given great, if vague, pros- pects of conquests in the East. As for Napoleon, he was now free to deprive Prussia of nearly half of her territory; lay on her a crushing indemnity, and force out of her a pledge to keep an army of only 42,000 men. Austria seemed already helpless. Prussia was now helpless. Russia was an ally. Nowhere on the Continent could Napoleon meet a rival. This Treaty of Tilsit, concluded in July, 1807, in many respects marks the apogee of his career. Only England with bull-dog tenacity defied him. The eco- nomic strain of the war upon the Britons was great; the taxes were heavy, the chances of winning a peace which did not leave Napoleon the dominator of the entire Continent seemed sUght enough, but the islanders held grimly on. Helpless to scat- ter their blockading squadrons, the Corsican struck back by his famous "Continental Blockade." By his "Decree of Berlin," issued in that conquered city in November, 1806, he declared the British Isles under blockade, and prohibited the least 344 A HISTORY OF FRANCE commerce between them and France and all the latte'i's allies. To refuse to accept the blockade, to allow the least intercourse with Britain, to decline to declare British goods confiscate and subject to destruction, was practically to invite war with Napoleon. What Continental prince dared risk it? "I desire," announced the Emperor, "to conquer the sea by the power of the land!"' To enforce such a drastic decree was, however, impossible even for the victor of Austerlitz and Jena. A great fraction of aU" Oriental wares and of all manufactured goods had come into Europe either by way of England or direct from English looms and forges. The profit from smuggling was enormous. Indeed, Napoleon's own high officers sometimes connived at it and took bribes for looking the other way.^ The docks of the great com- mercial cities were idle. Powerful mercantile classes were alien- ated. Factories stood silent for want of raw material. Despite the impopularity of the decree. Napoleon adhered to it and sharpened it. Russia, Austria, Prussia, and Denmark all kissed the rod, and joined the "blockade" of Britain. When Napoleon's own brother Louis Bonaparte (whom he had made King of Holland) refused to ruin his subjects by a strict application of the system, the Emperor forced him off his puppet throne and annexed Holland to the already swollen Empire of France (1810). Earlier he had laid a like hand on Italy, and in 1807 had over- run Portugal, because that weak kingdom had vainly talked of "neutrality." By 1808, however, there had begun to be signs that the clear, hard intellect which had carried the sublieutenant of * The Corsican, in his efforts to circumvent the pressure of sea-power by means of irregular and unusual devices, was only anticipating the more desper- ate expedients of Germany (1915-18) with her "unlimited" submarine policy. It is fair to assume, however, that Napoleon would never have embarked on such a policy unless he had been far more assured of the practical eflBciency of the submarines than were the Germans. Napoleon was seldom cruel unless he was very sure his cruelty would win success. ^ It is alleged that even the Emperor himself had to wink at certain forms of smuggling. SPANISH RESISTANCE 345 artillery up to a new throne of the Caesars, had begun to be warped by unbroken successes. Spain was now a crazy and utterly decrepit monarchy that for some years had been trailing along in helpless alliance with France. She seemed an easy prey. Her great American colonies had not yet become independent — they might serve a lofty purpose once under the power of France! With absolute lack of scruple and with not the slightest real pretext. Napoleon took advantage of a family squabble in the Spanish royal house; buUied the execrable old Charles IV into abdicating; extracted a second abdication out of the Crown Prince Ferdinand, and then openly sent a French army into Spain to put in his own brother, Joseph Bonaparte, as the crowned successor of Ferdinand and Isabella. Hitherto Napoleon had had to fight only against kings. He had found them very easy prey. Now to his amazement he had to coUide with peoples. The results were not as he expected. The proud Spanish nation rose almost as one man against the aggres- sor. It was not difficult for the disciphned French troops to defeat the hasty levies of the Spanish patriots, but Napoleon was soon to learn the truth of the saying, "Spain is an easy country to overrun; a hard country to conquer." The Spaniards were past-masters in guerrilla warfare : skirmishes, raids, attacks on convoys, petty sieges. A vast number of French troops were immobilized holding down the peninsula — and yet "King Joseph" had never a comfortable minute on his throne. An English army under Sir Arthur Wellesley (later the Viscount, then Duke of WelUngton) came to the Spaniards' aid. At first it was barely able to save itself from being driven into the sea by the superior hosts of the French, but, for all that, the drain upon Napoleon's resources caused by this unhappy Spanish venture continued. He could not subdue the entire country. He could not withdraw from Spain without great loss of prestige. And at this juncture he had yet another war with Austria. The Hapsburgs had reorganized their army. They now (1809) called on all the German people to imitate the Spaniards and to 346 A HISTORY OF FRANCE rise against the oppressor. The attempt was premature. Prussia was helpless and only stirred ineffectively. The South-German kinglets cheerfully followed their French master. Only in the Tyrol was there a brave but abortive uprising under Andreas Hofer, the innkeeper. Napoleon promptly invaded Austria, took Vienna a second time, but at Aspern, on the Danube near the capital, he had an astonishing experience : he met with an unde- niable defeat. It was not a decisive disaster, however. The excel- lent French war-machine was still functioning. The Emperor declined to retire from Vienna, held his ground, and on July 6, 1809, retrieved his tarnished glory by an old-form victory at Wagram. Austria had not been badly worsted. But no allies had joined her; she could endure the strain of the war no longer. In 1809 Francis II again consented to peace. By the Treaty of Vienna Austria ceded fully 32,000 square miles, mostly to Napoleon's ally Bavaria; and gave up the last districts which connected her with the sea. She meekly reentered the Conti- nental System. The prestige of the Corsican seemed higher than ever. In 1809 Napoleon had divorced Josephine.' She had borne him no children, and his position would be strengthened if he had a son to succeed to his power. After vain negotiations for a Rus- sian princess, the diplomats arranged an alliance with Maria Louisa, daughter of Francis the Hapsburg himself. The Arch- duchess was sent with due ceremony from Vienna to Paris, and on the 1st of April, 1810, the Emperor and she were married in Notre Dame. The train of the cloak of the new Empress was borne by jive queens. In March, 1811, Napoleon seemed more fortunate still — he became the father of a son, the ill-starred "Napoleon II," never destined to reign, who, in his very cradle, was given the soaring title of the "King of Rome." ' There is no doubt that the putting aside of .Josephine was a cold-blooded act of state policy. Nevertheless her conduct when her husband had been absent in Egypt (1798-99) had been so scandalous as to give good grounds for a divorce At that time, however, Bonaparte consented to a reconciliation. This fact mit- igates the blame for his later conduct, but does not excuse it. Longltudo WoBt 10° trota Qreenirioh 0° France in 1 709 |;:':Jf-:"i;VJ French additions under Naooteon | ll II II II III States dependent on Napoleon EUROPE IN 1810, SHOWING NAPOLEON's POWEE AT ITS HEIGHT HEIGHT OF THE EMPIRE 347 The year 1811 seemed to present Napoleon still at the summit of his prosperity. If there were murmurs in France at his auto- cratic government, if Te Deums were becoming wearisome in the churches, if the Continental blockade seemed ruining French commerce but not coercing England into peace, if the remorse- less conscription for the army was awakening deep resentment throughout the nation, the fact nevertheless remained that the Corsican's power seemed more imposing than ever. One of his brothers, Jerome, was King of Westphalia in Northwestern Germany; Joseph was King of Spain, thanks to French bayonets; Louis had, indeed, refused to play the puppet in Holland and had just renounced his regal honors, but that simply meant that his brother had annexed the old "Dutch Repubhc" to France itself. In Naples, Murat, the Emperor's brother-in-law, and his most dashing cavalry general, was reigning in the room of the exiled Bourbon dynasts. The minor States of Germany were organized into the "Confederation of the Rhine," helpless under the "protection" of the Emperor. Prussia appeared crushed and passive. Russia seemed still to be an ally. The Emperor of Austria was now the Corsican's father-in-law. As for France herself, her boundaries grew monthly by ever fresh decrees of annexation. Besides Holland and the western Rhine- lands and Belgium,' new " departments " were now being organ- ized clear across the northern coast of Germany, including Bremen and Hamburg, even to the Trave. In Italy a portion of the northeastern regions had been organized into the new "Kingdom of Italy" with Napoleon himself as "king," al- though ruling through a viceroy. Murat, of course, kept his Neapolitan kingdom in the South. But Piedmont, Genoa, most of Tuscany, and a strip of western coast including even Rome itslef was annexed outright to the "Empire" — governed by French prefects and taking the law direct from Paris. The Pope in person was a political prisoner in France.^ ' The Rhinelands and Belgium, of course, had been annexed under the Republic. 2 See p. 375. 348 A HISTORY OF FRANCE The army still appeared the perfect war-engine of ten years earlier, although the battle of Friedland had cost Napoleon a pitifully great number of veterans, and the ceaseless Spanish campaigns were a constant drain upon the military reserves and budget. Despite all his court ceremonial at Paris, when Napoleon was with his troops he often seemed the "Little Corporal" again, able to catch their imaginations by his fiery proclamations, and to command their implicit loyalty by such acts as mingling among the grenadiers in their bivouacs, tasting their soup, calling out by name and decorating brave privates with his own hand, and manifesting intense interest in the wel- fare of "his comrades." Each soldier, in short, believed himself in the confidence of the Emperor, and that the Emperor's eye was personally upon him in all that he did. To the veterans who had followed him all through his wars, loyalty to the Emperor had passed from a duty to a religion. "I cannot tell Your Majesty," wrote a marshal in 1813, "how much my men love you; and never was one more devoted to his wife than are they to your person." As for the "Old Guard" that surrounded the Emperor in all his campaigns, in 1815, after Waterloo, when all was over, one of the officers was to lament openly, "You see that we have not had the good fortune to die in your service." Such seemed the position of Napoleon and of his Empire at its height. After such successes it is not unreasonable to say that he might not merely have consolidated all his vast domin- ions, but have added others also, even to the establishment of a new Roman Empire, had he learned moderation in the hour of greatest triumph. Unfortunately for him, however, even in 1811 his ruthless aggressions were enkindling so much resent- ment from outraged nations — Spain, Prussia, etc. — that the Emperor's position was probably less secure than it seemed. Before, however, stating very briefly how "glory and mad- ness" ted to his abject downfall, it is needful to examine with some care the less dramatic, but more lasting, work of civil reformation which he brought to France. CHAPTER XVII THE NAPOLEONIC REGIME IN FRANCE THE CONSULATE AND THE EMPIRE Napoleon Bonapakte is usually thought of solely as the resist- less "man on horseback" who for nineteen years hypnotized France and intimidated all the world by military achievements Which probably surpass those of Alexander, Hannibal, or Julius Caesar. Or if not as the master of armies, he is studied as the supreme disposer of thrones throughout Europe, the creator and re-creator of all boundaries, the wizard at whose summons kingdoms appeared and as quickly vanished. His permanent work is sometimes imagined to be solely that of the "De- stroyer," who shattered so completely the effigies of medisevalism on the Continent, that not all the mahgn genius of Metternich, and of his fellow reactionaries who watched the Corsican's downfall, could halt the march of mankind toward relative efficiency, happiness, and liberty. All these things concerning Napoleon's foreign activities are true, but when we look solely at France it is important to realize that his universal genius allowed him to be a great civil inno- vator at home as well as a conqueror abroad. To Napoleon, France owes many peaceful institutions which were to endure a century after his victories and blood-stained "glory" had van- ished into the cupboards of history. The "Kingdom of West- phalia" and the "Confederation of the Rhine" are dead forever. The Code Napoleon is still the law for many milUons of enUght- ened Frenchmen. Therefore we devote this chapter, not to the details of military achievement, but to an examination of the Napoleonic Regime in France under the Consulate and the Empire. There is the more excuse for this because relatively few popular histories dwell on the achievements of the Corsican as a civil ruler. 350 A HISTORY OF FRANCE The Consulate, established after the revolution November 9, 1799, lasted until the 18th of May, 1804. In this period Bona- parte, as "First Consul," gave to France her fourth constitu- tion, the "Constitution of the Year VIII," and followed this with a complete administrative, judicial, and financial reorgan- ization of the nation. The Constitution then adopted, and partially modified in 1802 and again in 1804, lasted only to the downfall of the Empire in 1814; but the administrative, judicial, and financial organization exists to-day in France at least in its essential characteristics: its details are therefore far from possessing merely antiquarian interest. Such achievements and creations were of far greater moment than many of the Corsi- can's famous battles. France at the time of the coup d'Stat of 1799 was again, thanks to the unrepaired mischief wrought by Revolutionary violence and the inefficiency of the Directors, partly submerged in anarchy. In appearance, she presented, according to reUable witnesses, "the aspect of a country devasted by a long war or abandoned after a number of years by its inhabitants." In the south the districts, painfully redeemed from the marshes, were again covered by water. In the east the port of Rochefort was blocked up with sand. In the north the dike which at Ostend protected a part of Flanders (then annexed) from the sea threatened to collapse. Everywhere the roads were practically impassable for want of repairs. In the environs of towns and villages the pavements even had been torn up by the inhabi- tants, who used the stones to repair their walls. In the open country the roads were also cut up by bogs where carriages were engulfed and sometimes ran the risk of disappearing. Bridges were collapsing everywhere. The lack of public security and the general lawlessness was even more deplorable. Bands of brigands, particularly in the east, the center, and the southeast (where they were recruited from deserters), succeeded in rendering traveling nigh impossi- ble. They pillaged the government strong boxes and halted the ANAECHY AND WRETCHEDNESS 351 stage-coaches. The public coach from Nantes to Angers was once held up five times in a single journey in a distance of forty miles. The bandits robbed the travelers, kidnapped well-to-do peasants, whom they held to ransom, and attempted to storm isolated houses. In the east the brigands — the chauffeurs (fire- men) — singed the feet of their prisoners to force them to reveal the hiding-place of their silver plate. At certain points, for example, in the Dordogne districts, even as more recently in Albania and Macedonia, travelers bought a safe-conduct in cash from the chiefs of the band. In the departments of Var, of the Lower-Alps, of the Mouths of the Rhone, and elsewhere the Directory, again like the Turkish Sultan, had to furnish to important travelers armed escorts in order to guarantee their safety. Industry and commerce seemed practically ruined despite a certain recuperation. At Paris there could not be found in the workshops one eighth of the workmen employed before 1789. At Lyons the number of weavers in silk had decreased from eight thousand to fifteen hundred. At Marseilles the number of commercial transactions did not equal in one year the number of like exchanges in six weeks before the Revolution. The power of the State was anything but respected. Taxes were not paid or were paid very slowly. On the day Napoleon seized power there were only 187,000 francs ($37,000) in the public treasury. Two years' arrears were owed to the national ^]K*ndholders and pensioners. Patients died of hunger in some of the hospitals; in the hospital at Toulouse there were only seven pounds of food a day for eighty patients. The soldiers were re- ceiving neither proper food, clothes, nor pay; they deserted by the thousands, or, while still in France, conducted themselves as in conquered territory. In the newly created departments of Belgium and in the borders of the Rhine they treated the inhabi- tants, according to an official report, "not as their fellow citi- zens, but as enemies disarmed or as prisoners." In these regions, too, the population, in all its prayers invoked its "liber- 352 A HISTORY OF FRANCE ators," that is, the Austrians. In a large number of the depart- ments the conscripts refused to join their regiments. The Vendee and Brittany were again urged to insurrection in the name of Louis XVIII, and in Central France insurgent "Chouans," grouped into small armies under regular leaders, seemed vir- tually the masters. Among the majority of the population there was a universal sense of weariness, of disgust for politics and the turbulence thereof, and of indifference even to startling news coming across the frontier. "It seems that in reading the account of our own battles we are reading the history of another people," an oflScial report states. "The changes in our internal situation did not arouse much emotion." After ten years of convulsion the French, beyond anything else, felt the need of order, security, and repose. This disposition on the part of the public mind rendered more easy, however, the unescapably difficult task which the three provisional Consuls, Bonaparte, Sieyes, Roger Ducos, had assumed — a task in which Bonaparte, a man of genius in war, revealed himself a great statesman and a powerful civil organizer. The Consuls and the parliamentary Commission appointed on the evening of the last coup d'etat to draft a new Constitu- tion set about their work without delay. Their deUberations lasted a little more than a month, and the Constitution was in the last analysis the personal work of Bonaparte. At the begin- ning it was thought that Sieyes had a project all in readiness. But he produced only two drafts which were decidedly confused, or, according to Bonaparte, he contributed "only shadows, the shadow of legislative, of judicial, of executive power." Bona- parte rejected them. He did the same with the two projects prepared by the assisting Commission because these seemed to him embarrassing to his ambition. In the end he himself dictated the principal clauses of the draft to which the commissioners were forced to acquiesce, and which became the "Constitution of the Year VIII." This Constitution was published Decemlyj VEILED ABSOLUTISM 353 24, 1799, and was immediately put into effect, without awaiting the results of the plebiscite — that is, the vote of the people, prescribed by the Constitution. This plebiscite only took place February 7, 1800. Less than sixteen hundred voters in all France voted "No," while the new Constitution was accepted (so it was announced) by more than three miUion votes. For the moment there could be no doubt of its success. This "Constitution" was a document all in favor of the com- ing autocrat. The difference between avowed monarchy and "liberty" became faint, indeed, but the time was not quite ripe to cry "Vive rEmpereur !" and Bonaparte prudently waited. Under this new type of "Republic" there was an executive of three "Consuls," but only the "First Consul" had genuine power. He, indeed, practically controlled the entire govern- ment and appointed and dismissed all important officials. The "Second" and "Third Consuls" were to be merely consulted by him in important matters : final decision lay with him alone. All three held office for ten years and then could be reelected by popular vote. Under this uncrowned autocrat there was a three-headed legislature — Council of State, "Tribunate" and "Legislative" body — pretentious assemblies, but with highly conflicting prerogatives and unable really to handle a single question not first submitted by the First Consul. There was, too, a pompous "Senate" to be the "Guardian of the Constitution." The French people did not have even the privilege of electing this weak and cumbersome legislature. The voters could only choose, by indirect and clumsy processes, a hierarchy of "notables." From this decidedly large number of "notables" (of various grades and distinctions) the First Consul selected, virtually at his own sweet will, the members for the legislative bodies, the Senate, and for the numerous government offices. Thus Bonaparte practically chose his own legislature. And yet Robespierre was barely six years dead! The "constitutional power" of the First Consul hardly fell short of the "divine power" of a Louis XIV. 354 A HISTORY OF FRANCE This resemblance to the days of royalty was made clearer by the reorganization of the local administration of France in 1800. The local elective officers of 1790 were replaced by appointive officers named by the Central Government. Over the depart- ment was now set the ubiquitous prefect, with the sub-prefects and communal mayors beneath him. Even the local councils were named by the central power. Thus was created a vast swarm of functionaries — agents and creations of the Paris Government, instantly removable by it, and completely sub- servient to its wishes. Prefects and sub-prefects had replaced the submissive intendants and sub-delegates of the Old Regime, their direct heirs in authority, allegiance, and servility. The Consulate thus restored the highly centralized form of govern- ment which the reformers of 1789 had labored to destroy. This bureaucratic, ministerial-controlled system has been maintained by all the Governments which have succeeded the Consulate. Amended somewhat after 1870 and under the Third Republic it still exists even in our own day.i For no shght reason, there- fore, we have dwelt on this great administrative change by Napoleon Bonaparte. The reorganization of the judiciary closely followed the administrative reform (March 18, 1800). There, too, the elec- toral system was abohshed except in the case of the justices of the peace. All other judges were named either by the First Consul or by the Senate. To assure their independence and self- respect, however, in the face of the Government, there was established in the beginning the just rule that they were irre- movable, except for crime. Like the administrative machinery, this judicial system substantially exists to-day. Again the Corsican was building something more permanent than many of his ephemeral kingdoms. It was the same with the financial organization and the system ' There is very bitter criticism of this centralization by Frenchmen; the reorganization of the administration of the Third Republic, involving the grantini; of greater local liberties, was one of the problems confronting the Republic at the end of the Great War in 1918. SUCCESS OF THE NEW SYSTEM 355 for the collection of taxes. Here Bonaparte's quick intelligence produced prompt results even before the new Constitution had been drafted. He knew how wretched had been the financial plight of the Convention and the Directory and that this dis- tress had been caused not only by the enormous expenses of the war and the depreciation of the paper assignats, but also by the poor system for the collection of the taxes. The task of assessing and of collecting these had\been entrusted by the Constituent Assembly to the administrators of the communes and of the departments, who had utterly neglected their tasks. Here, as everywhere, Bonaparte substituted for these feeble bodies, elected by the citizens, agents named by himself. His power gained and also the comfort of all honest Frenchmen. Thanks to the reforms of the Consulate the national finances were put on a firm foundation and the taxes collected in a way to be no menace to the country's prosperity. The Constitution, the administrative reorganization, the judicial and the financial reforms were the labor of the first four months of the Consulate. These permitted the prompt reestab- lishment of order throughout the entire country and, therefore, the rapid revival of France. All these things were put in force under the constant and active direction of Bonaparte with his selected officials. The civil officials the First Consul had re- cruited without concerning himself with their political theories, present or past, or whether even they had been Royalists or Republicans, considering only the services which they were capable of rendering the State; his ambition, as he stated muc? later, being only to impel into the service of the country all it talents. Two other measures of great consequence mark the later history of the Consulate : the signing of the Concordat with the Pope and the drawing up of the Civil Code. Since he was anxious to restore internal peace to France, Napoleon could not neglect to terminate the religious crisis so 356 A HISTORY OF FRANCE unfortunately provoked by the "Civil Constitution of the Clergy." In spite of the persecutions, which were brutally venewed by the Directory after the year 1796, the majority of the people were probably still attached to the "non-jur- ing" clergy and to Roman CathoUcism. Therefore, one of the first acts of the Consul was to revoke the decrees of banish- ment against the priests and to assure them entire freedom of worship. But more than this, Bonaparte was convinced that religion was the most valuable element of order. Concrete theological beliefs of his own, he hardly possessed; unless it were a blind faith in his destiny. He is alleged to have spoken respectfully at times of Jesus Christ, and it is not proper to call him an atheist. But as the ruler of France he went at the religious problem from a strictly utilitarian standpoint. The Church properly handled would serve to strengthen the new autocracy he was founding; therefore he must patronize and control it. "A society without religion is like a vase without a bottom," he said. "It is only that which gives to a state a firm and lasting support." The clergy, preaching love for all that is good and hatred for all evU in the name of the God of eternal justice, seemed to his mind the safest guardian of the public peace. He therefore under- took to order about priests just as he ordered about gendarmes. To achieve this it was necessary to treat with the Pope, since the attempted organization of a national Church by the Revo- lutionists had failed disastrously. Pope Pius VII, a man of conciliatory spirit, favored rapprochement on his own side. The negotiations were commenced immediately after the sign- ing of the Peace of Luneville (February, 1801) through the mediation of Abbe Bernier, a Vendean priest who before, at the beginning of the Consulate, had already negotiated and procured the submission of the insurgents of the Vendee and Brittany (January, 1800). These negotiations were carried on laboriously at Paris and finally ended on July 15, 1801, with the signing of the Concordat. THE APPOINTMENT OF BISHOPS 357 By this treaty "the Government of the Republic recognized that Catholicism was the religion of the majority of the French people." It promised to insure its free and public exercise. On the other hand, the Church agreed to the reduction of the dio- ceses, which the Constituent Assembly had claimed the right of enforcing on its own authority. These were now set at only sixty, including ten archbishoprics. The Pope also consented, "for the sake of peace," to recognize the "assumption" by the State in 1789 of the property of the Church. In return the French Government promised, as it already had solemnly done through the Constituent Assembly, to assure adequate salaries to the bishops and the cures, and to authorize an endowment for the benefit of the Church. As for the nomination of the bishops, this would be done jointly by the French Government and by the Pope. The Gov- ernment would appoint them, the Pope would then "invest" them with their spiritual power, without which they had no authority in the eyes of the Church. They would be obliged to take an oath of allegiance to the head of the State. They could in turn nominate the cures of the canton without the assent of the Government. The nomination by the State, the salaries, and the oath transformed the bishops into pubUc functionaries and practically placed them in the hands of the Government. So long as a Napoleon Bonaparte ruled France, the Papal con- trol of the French Church, whatever the letter of the treaty, was almost insignificant. The Concordat went into effect in April, 1802. It was destined to govern the relations between Church and State for more than a century, up to 1905. It was received with real satisfaction by the majority of France, and met with disfavor only among the old politicians of the Revolution and in a part of the army, where the prejudices and passions of 1793 were still strong. Immediately after he had thus reorganized the State, the First Consul turned his attention to completing and soUdifying 358 A HISTORY OF FRANCE the social work of the Revolution, by embodying its entire achievements into a single great "Code"; that is, a collection of the laws which governed the relations of individuals in the new society. The preparation of a code had, indeed, been ordained in 1790 by the Constituent Assembly and by the Convention, while the Council of the Five Hundred under the Directory had prepared several plans, none of which had materialized. But in August, 1800, Bonaparte appointed a commission of six mem- bers with Tronchet, the President of the Court of Cassation, as its chairman. In four months the Commission decided on a new project. This was first submitted to the legal bodies for examina- tion and later was reviewed by the Council of State, where, according to Cambaceres, the First Consul took the most active part in the discussion and often amazed the jurists by his strictly juridical viewpoints and by his real understanding of law. The various parts of the Code were then successively sub- mitted to the Tribunate and voted on by the Legislative Chamber. The "Civil Code," inspired by Roman law and the royal ordinances as well as by the enactments of the Revolu- tionaries, was concluded on March 21, 1804. It later received, and the title was regularly applied to it abroad, the name, "the Napoleonic Code." It is in force in France to-day, and has been imitated or at least has had an important influence upon the legal systems of the majority of European States. The political and administrative institutions, the Concordat, the Code, were only a part of the work accomplished from 1800 to 1804. No government, in fact, has abounded in more activi- ties than that of the Consulate; and no other period in French history has been marked by so many lasting achievements. To mould future civil officials the First Consul went on to reorgan- ize secondary education in the lyeees (or high schools), providing them with numerous foundations for the maintenance of poor scholars. As a means of rewarding public services he instituted the Legion of Honor (1802), organized in military fashion and divided into cohorts with a hierarchy of knights, officers, com- BONAPARTE STIFFENS HIS POWER 359 manders, and grand officers. To aid in the reconstruction of industry and commerce, a group of bankers, yet again on the initiative of the First Consul, founded the Bank of France (1800) whose bank notes were soon on a par with gold and silver money, and which later became, save possibly the Bank of England, the most powerful financial estabhshment in the world. These were not all of the First Consul's schemes and projects; he was tossing about great plans for pubhc works and the en- couragement of industry and commerce when the renewal of the wars diverted all the energies of France. At the time of his seizure of power the Royalists fondly imagined that Napoleon, would work for the return of the Monarchy and would be glad to play the part of Monk who reestabhshed Charles II in England. "Louis XVIII," at the time a refugee in Poland, had also written to the First Consul asking his support and offering to let him fix his own reward (1800). Far from dreaining, however, of restoring the Bourbons, Bonaparte was already aiming to perpetuate his own power and to create a dynasty in his own name. He reached this goal in two stages; in August, 1802, he succeeded in having himself ap- pointed Consul for life; in May, 1804, he was named Emperor of France. After being elected "Consul for life," by a plebiscite of all French voters (3,600,000 "yes" against only 9000 "no," said the official announcement), the Constitution was immediately modified. To the former powers of the First Consul was now added the right to sign treaties with no other counter-sanction than that of a Privy Council named by himself. The hsts of "notables" were abolished and replaced by^qually dependable "electoral colleges"; supposed to be elected by cumbersome indirect processes by the citizens. The legislative bodies (espe- cially the "Tribunate") were shorn of part of their already very limited powers. On the contrary, the numbers of Senators and their influence were increased. The Senate henceforth had the 360 A HISTORY OF FRANCE right to "interpret" the Constitution and to govern by decrees called, according to the old Roman expression, "Senatus consultum." This increase of power was bound, of course, to profit the First Consul, especially as he received the right to nominate directly one third of the members of the Senate, and could in any case count on a devoted majority of this pretentious body. The estabUshment of the Life Consulate ruined the hopes of the Royalists. Already, after Napoleon Bonaparte had refused to assist them in the restoration, certain "emigrants" had essayed to slay the usurper. One evening in December, 1800, at the time when he was on his way to the Comedie Frangaise, they had attempted his life by means of a barrel of powder concealed under a hand cart and thrust in the way of his car- riage. The recollection of that attempt did not prevent the First Consul, however, from attempting to win over those of the old nobility who were in Paris. He went farther; he abrogated the Revolutionary decrees against the "emigrants." They were per- mitted to return to France on the condition that they take an oath of fidelity to the Repubhc, and the Consul caused such of their property as had not already been sold to be restored to them (April 26, 1802). All this could not conciliate the extremists, however. In August, 1803, a group of "emigrants" Uving in England, among whom was the notorious Pohgnac, formed an elaborate con- spiracy; the English Government furnished the funds for the execution of the plot. An old leader of the Royalist insurgents (Chouans), George Cadoudal, at the head of a resolute band, was to attack and kill the First Consul in the very midst of his bodyguard. Undei*cover of the disturbance caused by the death of the Consul, General Pichegru, who had gone over to the side of the Royalists in the days of the Directory, was prepared to restore the Bourbons by a military revolution. To accomplish this, Pichegru invited the cooperation of , Moreau, another distinguished general who was at personal variance with the EXECUTION OF D'ENGHIEN 361 First Consul. Moreau declared himself ready to assist in the overthrow of Napoleon; but he refused to work for the resto- ration of Louis XVIII, preferring to play somehow for his own hand. The plot was uncovered in January, 1804. Moreau, Pichegru, and afterwards Cadoudal, who concealed themselves in Paris for several months, were successively arrested (February 15, March 7, 1804). Cadoudal confessed that he had been awaiting, before attempting his crime, for the arrival in France of a Prince of the royal family who was to be promptly on hand as soon as the First Consul had been disposed of. A fatal concurrence of circumstances, a report of the police pointing out the mysterious journeys of the Duke d'Enghien (which reached the ears of Bonaparte at the same time as the confessions of Cadoudal), led the Consul to imagine that the Prince whom Cadoudal had expected was the selfsame Duke d'Enghien, son of the Prince of Conde. This exiled nobleman lived just across the Rhine from Strasbourg, at Ettenheim, in the Duchy of Baden. The Corsican's rage was furious. "Am I then a dog whom one can beat to death in the street.''" he exclaimed. "I shall not allow myself to be killed without resist- ance. Verily I will cause those people to tremble and teach them how to hold their peace!" In spite of the remonstrances of Cambaceres and Lebrun, he had the Duke d'Enghien kidnapped from Badenese territory by a detachment of dragoons. The prisoner was transferred to a fort at Vincennes, where he was immediately brought before a court martial for having borne arms against France — a fact in which he gloried. He was condemned to die at midnight and was shot immediately in the moat of the citadel. His execution naturally terrified the Royalists and snuffed out the entire con- spiracy. A Httle later Cadoudal was guillotined; Pichegru was strangled in prison; Moreau was banished. But the 'scutcheon of the conqueror was eternally stained by the death of d'Enghien who was nothing less than murdered, 362 A HISTORY OF FRANCE The conspiracy of Cadoudal hastened the transformation of the Consulate into an hereditary Monarchy. Several days after the arrest of the conspirators, the Senate at the suggestion of an old Jacobin Terrorist, Fouche, now the obsequious tool of the new "Csesar," had requested that Napoleon, le grand homme, "should complete his work by rendering it as immortal as his glory!" A tribune put this request into more intelligible lan- guage; he demanded that Napoleon Bonaparte be proclaimed the "Emperor of the French" and that this imperial dignity be declared hereditary. Camot, the old Terrorist war-chief, alone had the courage to resist this motion. It was adopted by the Senate that issued a "Senatus consultum" on the 18th of May, 1804, by virtue of which "the government of the Republic was entrusted to the Emperor Napoleon." The imperial title was hereditary, from father to son in the order of primogeniture in the Bonaparte family. In default of direct descendants, the brothers of Napoleon, Joseph and Louis, were named to suc- ceed him. This new modification of the "Constitution of the Year VIII" was submitted to a plebiscite and was ratified by more than three and one half milhon votes; while not three thousand were officially counted as opposing it. France was, indeed, then completely hypnotized by the adventurer from Corsica. It was in a mood to vote him anything. And so the wheel of fortune had completely turned. After the Old Monarchy, the Limited Monarchy of 1791 ; then the Radi- cal Repubhc of 1793; then the Conservative Republic under the Directors of 1795; then the Dictatorship (for such the Consulate was) of 1799; and now a Monarchy again, with a ruler more masterful and powerful than Louis XIV. Surely in the Under- World the shades of the Bourbon monarchs must have indulged in ghostly laughter! It was a monarchy very different, however, from that of the Sun King which Napoleon I was founding. The Empire lasted ten years — from May 18, 1804, to April 6, 1814. In so far as foreign affairs were concerned, they were ten years of continuous warfare. They opened with the French THE IMPERIAL RfiGIME 363 armies occupying the majority of the European capitals, they closed with the defeat of France and with the abdication of Napoleon, vanquished by Europe, at the castle of Fontaine- bleau. At home Napoleon, who had retained the institutions of the Consulate, completed the centralization of his absolutist government. He created, however, a few new institutions, whereof the most important and the most characteristic was the "University," founded in 1808. The suppression of all political liberty and of all forms of popular control, and the return to the arbitrary rule of the Old Regime detached from Napoleon the support of the wealthy educated bourgeoisie. The violence of his measures against the Pope, caused by foreign political factors, added to the religious complications within France and detached from the Imperial Government the support of the clergy and the Catholics. The ceaseless levying of conscripts at last alienated even the masses of people, the artisans and the peasants, who had, nevertheless, remained faithful for a long time, because Napoleon maintained civil liberty and equality and assured them of the tranquil possession of their farms — in their eyes the most important acquisitions of the Revolution. By the time this internal revolu- tion in public opinion was completed, the disaster of 1814 was of course near at hand. Napoleon was at length defeated because France had reached the limit of her wiUingness to make sacri- fices for him. The transformation of the Consulate for life into an hereditary Empire necessitated modifications and amendments to the "Constitution of the Year VIII." These changes had for their goal the surrounding of the new autocracy with all the external pomp and ceremony of the Ancient Monarchy, as well as that of increasing still more the powers of the sovereign. The Consti- tution, nevertheless, continued to be called the "Constitution of the Year VIII," albeit all its "Republican" reminiscences had almost vanished. The Emperor, like Louis XVI, received a civil list of twenty- 364 A HISTORY OF FRANCE five million francs ($5,000,000). The Constitution created an imperial family and gave the title of French princes and prin- cesses to the brothers and sisters of the Emperor. The Emperor, like the vanished kings, was surrounded by a hierarchy of august personages whose titles had been for the most part bor- rowed from the old court: the grand dignitaries, the marshals of France, the colonels-general, the grand officers of the Crown, etc. There were six "grand dignitaries": the Grand Elector, the Arch-Chancellor of the Empire, the Arch-Chancellor of the State, the Arch-Treasurer, the High Constable, the High Admiral — all these enjoyed glittering distinction. The mar- shals and the colonels-general were chosen by the Emperor from among the most illustrious generals of the Revolution. The grand officers of the Crown were known as the Grand Chaplain, the Grand Chamberlain, the Master of the Hounds, the Master of the Horse, the Grand Master of Ceremonies, and the Grand Marshal of the Palace. The royal residence under Louis XIV had not been more complete or more brilliant. Several of the grand officials were in fact men of the old court; the Grand Chamberlain was the former Bishop of Autun, Count Talley- rand, already Minister of Foreign Affairs; while the Grand Master of Ceremonies was the Count of Segur, former Ambas- sador of Louis XVI to the court of Catherine II of Russia. The Senate under the Empire lost the most important of its prerogatives, the right to pronounce on the constitutionality of laws. Its decisions in other like matters were only vahd after ratification by the Emperor. As a result the Emperor hence- forth had as much legislative as executive power: "Csesar" would do everything! All things considered. Napoleon has been the most formidable and commanding figure of Christian times. Outside of Julius Caesar, there is almost none to be reckoned his compeer in all human history; whatever be the estimate put upon his character, "A man of mammoth proportions, fashioned in a mould apart;" NAPOLEON'S DREAMS AND AMBITIONS 366 according to the description of Taine, "he could not be de- scribed, according to the remark of one of his enemies [Madame de Stael], in the words which have been accustomed to serve our purposes." At the time of his taking the throne he was thirty-one years of age; and his genius and character had attained their full development. His striking characteristics were power of intel- lect and imagination, a passion for glory and power, combined with an extraordinary capacity for work. His prodigious intellect, as spontaneous and lucid as it seems possible for a mortal to possess, was regulated and disciplined in a remarkable fashion. "Various matters," he said candidly, "are arranged in my head as in a cupboard. When I leave oflE one affair, I close its drawer and open up that of another. These do not become confused one with another and they never bother nor tire me." The intense objectivity of his spirit, always predominant, could not endure mere theories or theory-makers; such men he heartily detested, calling them, "Ideologues — a mere rabble!" Nevertheless, his imagination was as remarkable as his intel- lect. " I never see more than two years ahead," he remarked, but it is evident enough that he had plenty of dreams and cherished visions. His reign was in large part consecrated — his enemies furnishing the pretexts and occasion — to the task of giving life to these children of his imagination. These dreams, revealed by him in various conversations, were to make of the French Empire "the mother country of other sovereignties." Napoleon, the heir of Charlemagne, the supreme ruler of Europe, was to distribute kingdoms among his generals, and he would even condescend to retain the Pope as his spiritual lieutenant. Paris was to become "the one and only city" (la mile unique), where the chief works of science and art and all those things which had rendered preceding centuries illustrious were to be treas- ured; she was to become the capital of capitals and "each king of Europe was to be forced to build a great palace," where 366 A HISTORY OF FRANCE he was to dwell on the coronation day of the Emperor of the French. To this inordinate imagination was added the passion for glory and power, a passion so inordinate that it caused Napo- leon to regard Europe as a "molehill" where nothing could be accomphshed on a large scale. He openly regretted that "he had come too late" and that he had not lived in ancient times when "Alexander, after he had conquered Asia, announced to his people that he was the son of Jove, and was proclaimed to be such by the entire Orient." This power, which he desired in its entirety, was incapable of division; Napoleon never dreamed of having a colleague, or even a junior regent to share his vast responsibilities; everything must be done by him, even as all the nations must be bent under him. This passion for omnipo- tence increased ceaselessly up to the final catastrophe. More- over, notwithstanding the fact that in the earliest stages of his career he had endeavored to surround himself entirely with men of merit and had solicited their counsel, from 1801 onward, he would allow no real advisers. In all of their activities he desired his subordinates to be simply his submissive servants, incapable of initiative, blind executioners of his wishes; as a result, he gathered all too many men of mean talent, and toward the close of his reign in the truest sense he was governing alone over half of Europe. He performed this colossal task gracefully, as a result of that capacity for work such as has never perhaps been equaled by any other man, Colbert excepted. Louis XIV, the industrious king, when compared to Napoleon, seems almost a dilettante. "Work is my element," the Emperor remarked, and added that be had never realized "the hmit of his capacity." He rarely labored less than eighteen hours a day, nearly always without any relaxation. He toiled everywhere and anywhere; while dining, during the fifteen minutes which he allowed for his meal, while walking, at the theater. He had the singular faculty of awaking and sleeping at will, and at night he would often NAPOLEON'S ENORMOUS CORRESPONDENCE 367 interrupt the three or four hours which he devoted to slumber, by rising and resuming the endless reading and answering of dispatches. The task which occupied him for the moment absorbed him completely, to a point where he could forget everything else and render himself during such hours quite insensible to fatigue. Only he could have made the time suffice for all the multifarious things which he had to do; yet that he knew remarkably well how to distribute the precious hours was the testimony of those who worked with him. One of these helpers confessed admiringly that the Emperor could "accom- plish more at governing in three years than the old kings in a hundred!" Once a week on a fixed day Napoleon assembled all of his ministers. Each one gave an account of the affairs of his own department. No one could come to a decision on his own author- ity. Likewise all of the correspondence of these ten ministers was submitted daily to the Emperor. In fact, the ministers were reduced to the role of mere bureau chiefs, expected simply to present questions and to transmit commands. The Emperor dictated his orders in a conversational tone, while pacing to and fro in his cabinet, without ever repeating a word, and talking so swiftly that the expert secretaries — for he dictated several orders at the same time — sometimes had trouble in copying down one half of what he said. One can understand what a prodigious amount of labor Napoleon accomplished by merely considering that twenty-three thousand articles of correspond- ence in thirty volumes have been published, and that neverthe- less there still remain, scattered about in the archives, nearly fifty thousand letters of his dictation. The character of Napoleon explains alike the institutions and the collection of governmental measures which constitute the Imperial Regime. His powerful imagination and, on the other hand, his convic- tion which laid hold on men, especially in France, by reason of personal vanity, urged "His Imperial Majesty" to surround 368 A HISTORY OF FRANCE himself with pomp and magnificence; therefore, he reconstt tuted the court and created a new nobility. Jealous despot that he was. Napoleon would support nothing in the present which could threaten to become an obstacle in the future. He suppressed the Tribunate, developed the police system on a tremendous scale, reestablished the state prisons, and abolished the freedom of the press. Henceforth he wished to be master of men's minds as well as their bodies, and there- fore to mould their intellects to suit his own convenience. It was to this end that he created the "University."' The Emperor personally was very simple in his tastes. He lived like a high-rank officer, whose thousand miUtary duties did not allow much personal nonsense. He was always in a imi- form. usually the somber costume of a colonel of the light cavalry {colonel de chasseurs) — a green coat with white trou- sers. The soldiers saw him go about as one of the most shabbily dressed officers in the army. But those around him, the officers and members of the court, were decked out with plumes and bedizened with gold and embroideries. At the Tuileries, the ordinary residence of Napoleon, to a large extent, there had been reestablished around the Empress Josephine, the cere- mony of Versailles. The costume of the ancient court, the coat, the trousers, the sword, the shoes with buckles, the long-trained robes, were again in vogue. And, just as in 1789 there had ex- isted in addition to the palace of the King, the palaces of the Queen and of the King's brother, so now in 1804 besides the Imperial palace there were those of the Empress, of the mother of Napoleon, and of the brothers and sisters of the Emperor, the Imperial Princes and Princesses. Nevertheless, there was no genuine return to the worst abuses of the Ancient Regime. Most vital fact of all, there was this profound difference between the royal and the imperial courts — the latter did not have any political importance and neither women nor mistresses had the slightest influence over the Government. ' See p. 372. GREAT DIGNITARIES S6S After the triumphs at Austerlitz, Jena, and Friedland, and the defeat of the Austro-Russian and Russo-Prussian coalitions (1805-07), Napoleon in 1807 established an imperial nobility. The origins of this new noblesse often, indeed, could ill bear peevish scrutiny. We have seen^ the humble birth of some of Napoleon's most distinguished generals who now stood on the very footsteps of the throne. Of course many of the old nobility, who accepted the new regime, were welcomed to places of dig- nity; none the less the new court was really a court of parvenus. But these parvenus, as so often elsewhere, stood stiffly for their prerogatives and honors. It takes little time to create a pre- tentious "aristocracy" under an efficient and rewarding auto- crat. This nobility was one made up of officials. Just as in the famous tchin established by Peter the Great in Russia, there was a hierarchy of titles corresponding to the hierarchy of offices. The ministers, the Senators, the Councilors of State, the arch- bishops, various members of the Institute, and certain favored generals-of -division received the title of "count." The presidents of the High Court of Cassation, and of the various courts of appeal, the bishops, the presidents of the electoral colleges, and certain mayors rejoiced as "barons"; while the members of the Legion of Honor were made "knights." The titles of count and baron could under certain conditions be rendered hereditary in favor of the eldest sons of the original holders — thus perpetuat- ing an aristocracy. In the same manner the Emperor bestowed the titles of "dukes" and "princes" on many of the marshals and certain of the grand civil dignitaries. These titles awaited the marshals as a reward for their most illustrious services under the Republic and the Empire. Thus Kellermann, the old sword of the Jaco- bins, was made the "Duke of Valmy"; Augereau, the "Duke of Castiglione"; Lannes, "Duke of Montebello"; Ney, "Duke of Elchingen," and later "Prince of Moscow"; Davout, "Duke > See p. 335. 370 A HISTORY OF FRANCE of Auerstadt," later "Prince of Eckmuhl," etc. Among the ci- vilians, Talleyrand, Minister of Foreign Affairs, received the title of "Prince of Benevento " ; Fouche, the adroit and utterly- unscrupulous Minister of the Police, that of the "Duke of Otranto." To each of these hereditary titles the Emperor added pensions, often decidedly large; Davout, for example, re- ceived nearly one million francs ($200,000) a year. Some of these pensions were still paid by the French Government to the heirs of the original holders until comparatively recently. At the same time that he created an imperial nobility, the Emperor suppressed the unlucky "Tribunate" because in that assembly. Napoleon said, there were still evidences of "that restless and democratic spirit which so long had agitated France!" The fifty tribunes were seated in the Legislative Chamber. Later that Assembly too was practically destroyed; the duration of its sessions was reduced to a certain number of weeks, and there were even certain years in which the Legis- lative Chamber was not convoked. Napoleon then illegally demanded of the Senate, which was very subservient, the rati- fication of various acts, such as the levying of conscripts, the establishment of a budget, etc., for which, according to the Constitution, the vote of the legislative deputies had been indis- pensable. The Emperor also proceeded, in 1813, to draw up the budget himself and to establish new taxes on his own authority, in the precise manner of Louis XIV. Thus disappeared the most important of the political liberties acquired in 1789; the right of the people to determine for themselves their expenses and receipts. It would have been better to have abolished the pre- tense of a constitution altogether. Under such a system, individual liberty was of course no longer respected. An enormous police system, so numerous and so active that a special minister had been instituted to direct it, held Paris and the departments in its clutch. The official agents, the "commissioners," in all the villages, and the "secret agents" everywhere, inspected, spied upon, denounced to the courts, and CONTROL OF THE PRESS 371 arrested luckless folk suspected of being hostile to the Empire. The state prisons were therefore reestablished and citizens were interned without regular trial, "as a measure of safety," on a mere order of the Emperor, executed by the police, just as the subjects of the King before 1789 had been flung into the Bastile by virtue of a "lettre de cachet." In 1808, Napoleon issued an order to the Minister of Police, Fouche, to prepare for the send- ing of a certain number of young boys "whom their parents, former emigrants, maintained in vexatious idleness," to the military school of Saint-Cyr. " If any one makes objection," the Emperor added, he should make no other response than "this is His Majesty's good pleasure." That was almost exactly the formula of Louis XIV and the Absolute Monarchy. The same "good pleasure" suppressed the freedom of the press, just as it had suppressed the men of the Terror and of the Directory. Many newspapers had been seized at the beginning of the Consulate. Over seventy-three political journals were appearing in Paris in 1799; sixty were immediately silenced. Of the thirteen others, four alone, in 1811, were authorized to con- tinue their issues. Moreover, their editors-in-chief were named by the Emperor, and no article could be published without first having been submitted to a censor named by the Minister of Police. Outside of Paris, journals could be published in only eighty cities, and only one in each place. This solitary journal, likewise, was published under the surveillance of the prefect of the department and could insert only oflicial announcements, various harmless items of news, accidents, fires, etc. Free dis- cussion, even in a perfectly loyal spirit, was rigidly discouraged. Books and printers were treated no better than newspapers and editors, and here again the Emperor restored the usages of the Absolute Monarchy. He established a censorship (1810) which even prohibited the publication of a translation of the Psalms of David, because, the censors said, "certain passages could be found in them which contained prophetic allusions to the conflict between Napoleon and the Pope." As for the 372 A HISTORY OF FRANCE printers, their number was limited. No one could become a printer without a license, that is, an imperial authorization. The Press, Napoleon frankly declared, is "an arsenal which must not descend to the level of the whole world, but only to those who are in the confidence of the Government." This was again going back to the days preceding Voltaire. Napoleon desired above all things, however, that in the future the Government should have the confidence of the ma- jority of Frenchmen. To accomplish this the Government must needs have control of their intellects, and must mould the same to its own good pleasure, taking charge of its citizens from their infancy by means of an elaborate system of education.' This was a new idea which Napoleon had borrowed from the Assemblies of the Revolution. Under the Ancient Regime, in fact, the King had not interested himself in the education of his subjects. Practically all education worthy of the name was in the hands of ecclesiastics, frequently Jesuits; and a great frac- tion of the lower classes had been pitifully illiterate. The men of the Revolution and their leaders occupied themselves with pre- paring a scheme for instruction by the State. Napoleon built upon their work and attached the utmost importance to the development of this type of instruction, because "he wished to form," he declared, "a block of granite on which to build the strata of the new society." As Consul he had organized the high schools (lycSes). As Emperor he established the "University." The Imperial University was founded (March 17, 1808), in order, the decree stated, "to assure uniformity of instruction and to mould for the State citizens devoted to their religion, their prince, their fatherland, and their families." It was to teach "faithfulness to the Emperor and to the Imperial Monarchy, the guardian of the prosperity of the people." Under the direction of a "Grand Master," who ranked among- ' A somewhat similar idea seems to have actuated the German Government in its control of education during the generation preceding 1914. EDUCATION A STATE MONOPOLY 373 the principal dignitaries of the Empire, and who later became the Minister of Public Instruction, the University comprised a graded system with three types of instruction — primary, sec- ondary, and higher. For the sake of administration it was divided into academies, each supervised by a Rector. This hierarchy of instruction and administrative organization exist to-day just as they were established by Napoleon. Primary education was not, indeed, organized by the State. The Emperor entrusted it to the care of the "Brothers of the Christian Faith." They received an annual subsidy of only 4250 francs. This was the entire budget for primary instruction ! All this meant that elementary instruction, too elementary to convey any political knowledge, was turned over to the Church and its charities. So far as Napoleon was involved, it did not greatly matter if ploughmen and vine-dressers remained illit- erate. Secondary instruction, however, was organized with great care, because it was to mould the future military and civil officials through whom the Emperor was to control France. This instruction was given in the colleges and high schools (lycSes). The programmes were stripped almost completely of all those studies which might tend to create or develop the criti- cal spirit: philosophy and history, etc. The professors and pupils were subjected to military discipline. The ordinary high schools were governed by a imiform regulation, where their entire pro- gramme was carried out to the tap from the drum, and had all the aspect of military schools. Higher education was given in the "Faculties" (Facultis) — the faculties of theology, law, medicine, sciences, and literature. In all of these the instruction was of a purely practical charac- ter. The aim was to fashion not only men of science, capable of contributing to the progress of human knowledge, but also specialists — magistrates, advocates, physicians, professors — fitted to carry on their professions. The specialized estab- lishments reorganized or created by the Revolution (the College 374 A HISTORY OF FRANCE de France, the ficole Normale) for the preparation of professors of the sciences and literature were also skillfully woven into this great centralized system. It is idle to deny that, whatever Napoleon's motives, many of these arrangements for the high- est learning were to prove of great utility to France and to all civilization. Secondary and higher education thus became the monopoly of the State; they could be given only in government establish- ments taught by government professors. The pupils of the lower "free schools" were constrained to follow the course of study of the high school if they hoped to continue their programme. This monopoly by the University was to be maintained for almost half a century, clear up to the Second Republic and the Law of Falloux (1850). It greatly affected the life and thought of France, but of course military disasters had toppled down the Empire long before all educated Frenchmen had been drilled to believe that "Napoleon the Great" was their only possible ruler. ' Napoleon essayed to make the Church as useful to him as the University for controlling the minds of the younger generation. The catechism, alongside of the " duties owed to God," enumer- ated those also due to the Emperor, and stated them to be: "love, respect, obedience, fidelity, military service, and the taxes imposed for the preservation and the defense of the Empire." " Those who disregarded these duties to our Emperor," the catechism stated, invoking the authority of St. Paul, "re- sisted the order established by God himself and rendered them- selves liable to eternal damnation." The doctrine was plain that the conscript who refused to join his regiment, the merchant who would not pay for his license, exposed themselves forever to the torments of hell! However, it was not merely the French clergy ("his clergy" according to Napoleon's own expression), but the Pope himself, whom the Emperor endeavored to harness into the service of THE POPE IMPRISONED 375 his statecraft. As a result there was a conflict between Pius VII and Napoleon which commenced in 1806 and lasted down to the end of the Empire and which reveals with remarkable viv- idness the despotic instincts of the Emperor and the brutality of his character. When the war against England recommenced, Napoleon treated the Pope, an independent sovereign, as he treated his own prefects. He enjoined him at first to expel the English who were living in the Papal States, and later he ordered him to close his ports to all forms of English merchandise (November, 1806). To justify himself for this high-handed procedure. Na- poleon referred to Charlemagne, "his august predecessor," the donor of the patrimony of St. Peter, and supreme master of Rome. "Your Holiness is the Pope of Rome, but, as for me, I am the Emperor," he wrote to the Pope. Pius VII affected to remain neutral, whereupon Napoleon first occupied the Pontif- ical States (1807) ; later he annexed them outright to the Empire (May, 1809). The Pope excommunicated him, upon which act the Pontiff was immediately arrested and transferred to Savona. He was there treated as a criminal; he was deprived of every- thing with which to write and a police officer posted to guard him day and night. These events had their reaction on France. The Pope, while prisoner, refused to give spiritual investiture to the bishops appointed by Napoleon and twenty-seven dioceses were there- fore vacant. The Emperor attempted to induce the French bishops to forego their Papal investiture. In spite of his threats, however, and the imprisonment of several bishops in the dun- geon at Vincennes, they all, even the most devoted and obedient to Napoleon, announced that their highest allegiance was to the Pope. Napoleon attempted to break that allegiance by a great struggle. In 1812 he transferred Pius VII, then in very frail health, to Fontainebleau. Through deception he wrested from him a new Concordat (1813) which reduced the authority of the Pope to nothing and made him, now formally dom- 376 A HISTORY OF FRANCE iciled in France, merely a kind of spiritual lieutenant of the Emperor. But the aged Pius VII recovered his physical strength enough to disavow the signature which had been forced from him during his illness. As for the rest, successive military defeats shortly forced Napoleon to restore the Pope to liberty (1814) and Pius VII promptly retook possession of Rome. In 1815 he magnani- mously offered an asylum to the Bonapartes who had been forced to flee from France, and a little later he intervened among the allied sovereigns to obtain a mitigation of the sentence which banished Napoleon to St. Helena. This was a Christian ven- geance worthy of the heir of St. Peter. This religious struggle had its political consequences. The clergy and the Catholics who were favorable to "Napoleon, Restorer of the Faith," speedily became hostile to "Napoleon, the Persecutor of the Pope." The fear which the Corsican inspired to the very last of his reign prevented that hostility from manifesting itself in public acts. But the clergy were already reconciled to the recall of the Bourbons, and the royal restoration in 1814-15 found among its ranks most devoted partisans. The Imperial Government ended at last with discontent spreading widely among the majority of the French people. About 1809, scarcely five years after the establishment of the Empire, practically all classes of society began to detach them- selves from the selfsame Napoleon, who had been so popular during the time of his Consulate. This disaffection lasted pretty generally up to his actual overthrow in 1814. The suppression of all political liberty, the elaborate system of inquisition by the police, the despotism which claimed the right to rule even the thoughts of men, encountered the intense dissatisfaction of the educated bourgeoisie. The Continental Blockade paralyzed commerce on a large scale, and if it favored the development of industry, it also favored immoral speculation. As a result in CONSCRIPTION 377 ISll there was a terrible economic crisis, numerous bankrupt- cies, with general dissatisfaction in all circles, especially of manufacturers, shipowners, and merchants. On the other hand, the Government of the Empire never ceased its aggrandizements and ended by comprising one hun- dred and thirty departments with sixty million inhabitants, until by constant annexations of very alien lands it stretched from Rome to Hamburg, from Brest to Ragusa on the eastern Adriatic. The cost of maintaining the Empire was enormous even though expenditures were very carefully regulated. Like- wise, although the immediate costs of the wars were largely imposed upon the vanquished, the cost of constantly equipping new armies could not but react terribly upon the imperial budget. The amount which direct taxes yielded speedily proved insufficient, and the Government sought new resources. As a result a system of indirect taxes was established; in 1805 France found herself under heavy imposts on liquor, on cards, and on vehicles; in 1806 appeared an impost on salt, and in 1811, a monopoly on tobacco. The revival of these taxes abolished by the Revolution, the return to the old "aides," and especially to the salt tax, the very memory of which was odious, irritated all those who were put under the burden. But the principal and most general cause of the dissatisfaction was the continual levying of conscripts, made necessary by the incessant wars. Conscription was unpopular from the begin- ning, because all danger of invasion appeared now to be very remote, and consequently the necessity for military service was not understood in France. At the time of the Consulate, Na- poleon had attempted to make the burden lighter by not levy- ing more than a small part of the entire contingent, some 30,000 men from a total of 200,000 or 250,000 nominally avail- able. He established a lottery system under which all those con- scripts drawing the "lucky numbers" — that is, the highest numbers — were freed from service. Presently, too, he author- ized substitutions; that is, he permitted a wealthy conscript to 378 A HISTORY OF FRANCE "buy a man" to serve in his place. But at the beginning of 1805 the disadvantages of this system were evident. The contingents which had already been levied were increasing annually and the levies became more frequent. The Emperor decided not only to take men by entire groups, but also to recall conscripts previ- ously discharged and to levy the various classes one and even two years in advance of the legal age. The levies in 1813 amounted to very nearly twelve hundred thousand men. As early as the beginning of 1808 young men by the thousands at- tempted to escape service either by mutilating themselves or by fleeing into the mountains or the forests. Quite futilely Napoleon endeavored to make kinsmen responsible for desert- ers; he fined them severely — in a single year 170,000,000 francs ($34,000,000) — or he quartered soldiers among them who were to be maintained at their expense, billeting the gendarmes and bailiffs upon the offenders, even as Louis XIV had coerced the Protestants. In spite of all this, there were 160,- 000 refractory conscripts in 1810, and 55,000 men, organized into small columns, were employed to chase them down. In 1813 in Paris, while Napoleon was walking along in the suburb Saint- Antoine, a conscript insulted him; and women attacked the agents of the police who arrested the offender. Complaints were arising on all sides, and everywhere the antipathy had penetrated. Men flung at the Emperor the epithet of "The Ogre." It took the cruelties committed by the Allies when they invaded France in 1814, the national humiliation of the first Treaty of Paris, and the blunders of the Bourbons after the first Restoration to make Frenchmen forget their hatred and to restore Napoleon to his former popularity. The Emperor, however, was at no time entirely the despot. He continued very energetically the reorganization of France which he had projected during the Consulate. In the matter of legislation he added to the Civil Code a Code of Civil Procedure (1805-07), a Commercial Code (1807), a Code of Criminal GREAT PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS 37& Cases (1808), and a Penal Code (1810), all of which, in their essential character, are still in force. Likewise, even more than under the Consulate, he now prof- fered encouragements to industry in the form of bonuses to in- ventors and to manufacturers, or of profitable orders to stimulate them, or even at times of direct financial assistance. For exam- ple, he lent a million and a half francs ($300,000) to Richard Lenoir, who established the cotton industry in France; and dur- ing the commercial crisis of 1811 he secretly advanced the sal- aries of their workmen to the master weavers of Amiens. The Continental Blockade, as a matter of fact, created a need for such benevolence; the entrance of English products into France was prohibited, and France was forced to provide herself all kinds of manufactured articles, a good share of which she had for- merly bought in England. The old woolen and silk manufactures as well as the new cotton, iron, and beet sugar industries, in particular, were aided by the Government. Napoleon not only desired France to be self-supporting, but he wanted her to pro- vide all the manufactured articles required by Europe. It was all part of his scheme for world empire. Lastly the Emperor carried on the great public works which he had inaugurated during the Consulate. At Paris there was, for example, the opening up of the Rue de Rivoli, the construc- tion of many noble bridges over the Seine, the building of the "Temple of Victory" — to-day the church of the Madeleine — of the Bourse, of the Arch of Triumph, the completion of the passage from the Louvre to the Tuileries, and the erection of the Vend6me Column made from the bronze of the cannon captured at Austerlitz. In the departments there could be reck- oned the embellishing of Lyons, the completion of the Canal de Saint-Quentin, and also of the canal from Nantes to Brest, and from the Rhone to the Rhine; likewise the large additions to the ports of Brest and Cherbourg, and other great havens. To the public works in France were added the public enterprises in Italy: in Milan, Venice, and Rome and on the Adriatic even 380 A HISTORY OF FRANCE beyond Dalmatia. Nor can any deny that wherever the French rule spread it brought with it good roads, elegant public build- ings, the sweeping away of feudal abuses and inefficiency, and the advent of law and order. The methods of Napoleon's proconsuls and generals were not always nice, but they did not come solely as plunderers and. destroyers. To many regions of wretched Italian or Germanic peasants French administration often meant the first just and efficient rule the subject population had ever known. All these were the achievements of less than ten years; enterprises, too, that were undertaken amid constant wars, when the Emperor was spending his major energies in violent campaigning and preoccupying diplomacy. Consequently these great public works, more than anything one can write, are the tangible proofs of the Corsican's prodigious activity and of the abounding versatility of his genius. When touching upon Napoleon, whether for praise or for blame, almost perforce one must write in superlatives. CHAPTER XVIII "GLORY AND MADNESS " — MOSCOW, LEIPZIG, AND WATERLOO In 1811, thanks to his ruthless poHcy of aggression. Napoleon was towering above the common rulers of Europe, terrible as the Miltonic Fiend. He had never lost a campaign, very seldom had he lost a battle. He stiU kept his grip on struggling Spain. There were signs that, thanks to the Continental Blockade, England was suffering economically and was becoming very weary. Had the Emperor merely kept the peace upon the main- land and maintained a resolute front toward England, he might presently have forced the latter into a compromise treaty which would really have been a victory for France. Wisdom in any case dictated that he take on no new enemies. As just stated, his autocracy was becoming very unpopular at home; the Conti- nental Blockade was proving even more severe economically upon France than upon England; the blood tax of conscription was setting every mother of a growing son against the Emperor: and even some of his stanchest lieutenants were growing weary of war. They had been well fed with rewards, and wished quiet and leisure wherein to digest their honors and pensions. In short, there had been a surfeit of "glory" for all France, save only for its never-resting master. The most serious situation of all was really in the imperial armies. There were still an abundance of competent officers, but the rank and file, the veterans of the old Republican vic- tories, of the First Italian campaign, of Austerlitz, and of Jena, had left their bones on a score of battle-fields. The young con- scripts were not their equals. Napoleon was, indeed, using his vassal allies wherever possible — Italians, Bavarians, Holland- ers, Westphalians; even Prussians marched now in great num- bers under his standards. These troops were not unfaithful so 382 A HISTORY OF FRANCE long as things went well with him, but they would make no great sacrifices for the French cause, and a few defeats would be sure to shake their loyalty. Napoleon simply could not continue flinging the youth of Western Europe, like tinder into the fur- nace of his incessant wars, and expect his supply of man-power to remain unexhausted. Neither could he expect France and her dependencies to undergo unnecessary agonies merely to gratify his restless ambition. Probably it is true that his position at home would have become an uneasy one, had he frankly said " Enough ! " when urged to new conquests, and had settled down as the peaceful regenerator of France. The demand for civil liberties would have been instantaneous the moment the pres- sure of war conditions had been removed, and although one can imagine Napoleon doing many things, it is hard to imagine him for any length of time as the strictly constitutional sovereign of a limited monarchy, conscious of his people's rights and respectful toward opposition. After Tilsit the Emperor had for some time worked in real harmony with Czar Alexander I; but the friendship had pres- ently cooled. Napoleon thwarted the Russian schemes for the conquest of Turkey — already he had marked Constantinople as his prospective prey. He had also angered the Czar by de- throning the German Duke of Oldenburg, to whom Alexander was related. The Russians again saw their commerce being ruined by Napoleon's insistence upon their enforcement of the Continental System. In 1812 the two great Empires of Eastern and Western Europe exchanged defiances, and Napoleon led forth again the " Grand Army " — its van headed toward Moscow. There is little doubt that the Emperor was showing himself the spoiled child of fortune. His campaigns were not being planned with the same concentration upon all-important details. He was trusting too much to spontaneous strokes of genius. He was too willing to assume that because his intuitions had been right in the past they would therefore always be right in the THE DISASTROUS MOSCOW CAMPAIGN 383 future. It is probably not true that he was suffering from a disease that weakened his faculties, but he possibly had lost much of that physical alertness which made men marvel during the first campaign in Italy. But all these things were only to be appreciated after the great event. What Europe knew in June, 1812, was that with over 553,000 men — very many of them Italians, Poles, and Germans as well as Frenchmen - — he was marching into the heart of Russia. What followed taught the nations that the Corsican was a man, and not a perfectly functioning and pitilessly intelligent mechanism. The story of the Russian campaign is one of the most familiar in all history. In June Napoleon had crossed the Niemen with the " Grand Army " and was headed for the heart of Muscovy. On September 7 he had won the battle of Borodino, the most sanguinary struggle in all his wars.^ Seven days later he marched into Moscow, and made his headquarters upon the deserted Kremlin. But his main army had already shrunken to 95,000 men. Not all the rest had perished, of course, but his numbers had been terribly drawn upon by the need of keeping open a perilously long line of communication. From September 15 to 19, Moscow was burning, it is needless to question now whether by accident or by deliberate Russian design. Napoleon's position was obviously uncomfortable. He expected the Czar to sue for peace, but Alexander sued not. The imminence of the Russian winter was ignored, until by October 19 the situation was so critical that the Emperor evacuated Moscow, and gave the unfamiliar orders to retreat. Early in November the terrible Northern cold settled down. One disaster followed another as the starving, freezing " Grand Army" trailed its way toward Poland. At the crossing of the Berezina, the French were nearly cut off, and were only saved by the valor of Ney and Oudinot. From that time the retreat of ' The French lost 32,000 and the Russians 47,000. These casualties, great as they of course are, have lost part of their grimness since it has been possible to compare them with the hecatombs of 1914-18. 384 A HISTORY OF FRANCE the invaders degenerated into what was little better than a rout. Had the Czar's Cossacks been ordered to push their attacks more resolutely, probably the entire host of their enemies would have been taken or perished; but toward the end the victory seemed so complete that they let Napoleon and his last remnants escape. At last, near the Prussian frontier, the Emperor "decided to leave the army for Paris, where his pres- ence was urgently demanded." A great calamity could not be concealed or denied, but by the famous "Bulletin No. 29" the main blame was cast upon the severity of the winter. About 20,000 men straggled over the frontier in an organization some- what resembling an army. Of the remainder of the invading host many were prisoners in Russia, others had made their escape in small detachments; but a conservative estimate is that to France and her allies the lives of 300,000 able-bodied young men had been lost. When before had there been a like military disaster? It was a great misfortune for his foes, however, that the Cossacks had not pressed Napoleon harder. He had lost nearly all his rank and file, but the remnant of the French that escaped included a very large proportion of his best officers; men whose professional abilities made them worth their weight in gold. Given time and raw material he could thus hope to rebuild new armies. Time he could scarcely have; for the instant the news of the great defeat was spread, Prussia made haste to throw oflf her chains and to rally not merely her own people, but many other North Germans to arms, also to make prompt alliance with the victorious and advancing Russians. England would again furnish subsidies to maintain a great coalition against her arch-enemy. Austria still talked "neutrality," but was not to be relied upon by Napoleon — she was merely waiting her chance. The Emperor returned to Paris, however, in anything but a crestfallen mood. For the first time the dice had fallen against him, but he had still plenty of stakes to lay against Fate. Once more by a remorseless conscription, levies of almost every able- PYRRHIC VICTORIES AND THE ARMISTICE 385 bodied man and boy in France were hurried to the colors. The Emperor accomplished prodigies in securing the arming and uniforming of these new forces. The conscripts were brave and although their parents cursed the relentless policy that dragged their sons away, the yomig troops acquitted themselves loyally like Frenchmen in the ensuing battles. But no good-will could make them into hard-bodied, experienced veterans. Napoleon entered his last campaign in Germany with infinitely poorer human material sustaining him than in any previous adventure with Destiny. He committed also the serious blunder of trying to hold too many of the North-German fortresses — Danzig, Stettin, Kustrin, Hamburg, etc. — placing in them some of his best troops. These garrisons were presently blockaded by groups of Prussian local militia, and thereby immobilized and rendered useless in the open campaign. With their numbers added to his field army Napoleon had a chance of victory; without them, it turned out that he had none. So the campaign of 1813 began with one arm of the Corsican tied behind his back. He was weaker than before and his foes, as he ruefully confessed, had learned much of his own military art. In May he defeated the allied Prussians and Russians at Liitzen (near Leipzig), then again at Bautzen. But these were anything but decisive victories. Then in June he committed another grievous blunder. He granted an armistice (June 4 to August 10, 1813) nominally to let Austria mediate and patch up a peace; actually to allow both sides to secure reinforcements. Austrian "mediation," however, was very insincere, and the Emperor had fewer reinforcements to bring up than his enemies. Napoleon's marshals were becoming very anxious that the war should cease. If the Empire went down, where would be their own fine principalities and emoluments? But their moderating counsels weighed little with their master. Up to the last he pro- tested that the French would never endure him if he once made public confession of defeat by consenting (as his foes now de- manded) to relinquish a large share of his former conquests: 386 A HISTORY OF FRANCE and he kept a dogged confidence that by some lightning military stroke he could still recover everything. The crisis came at Dresden, June 26, when Metternich, the astute Austrian prime minister, had his famous interview with the Emperor, vainly urging a spirit of reasonableness. Napoleon was in an entirely arrogant mood. He had learned nothing from adversity. "So you want war," were his words: "well, you shall have it. I have beaten the Russians at Bautzen: now you wish your turn to come ! Be it so, the rendezvous shall be in Vienna." Vainly Metternich reminded him that his army was depleted; that his troops were not men, but boys; to which the great egoist tossed back: "You do not know what goes on in the mind of a soldier : a man such as I does not take much heed of the lives of a million men" — and he threw aside his hat. Metternich did not pick it up. Thus the interview ended stormily. When the Austrian minister went out, the French generals in the anteroom crowded up eagerly, hoping for a report of real peace negotia- tions. "Were you satisfied with the Emperor?" anxiously asked Berthier. "Yes," came back from Metternich. "He has ex- plained everything to me : it is all over with the man." Manifestly for the safety of the world, this colossal vampire, who despite a thousand admirable qualities was literally sucking away the best blood of France no less than of all Europe, must be flung from power. In August, 1813, the war was renewed, after Napoleon had proved utterly unconciliatory. Austria joined his other foes. For the first time since 1795, Prussia, Russia, Austria, and England were all at war with France, and all fighting heartily in alliance: the struggle was now for life and death. The old cunning had not deserted Napoleon. He held out for more than two months in Central Germany, de- fending the line of the Elbe. He repulsed the first attacks, and even won a great battle at Dresden (August 26) ; but the num- bers against him were too great.* Sweden was joining the coali- ' Napoleon's blunder in making his generals almost completely dependent upon his direct orders now cost him dearly. They lacked proper initiative when DESPERATE SITUATION 387 tion, and on October 16, 17, and 18, the Allies at last bayed the terrible lion at Leipzig. Here in a three days' battle ("The Battle of the Nations" the Germans called it) 150,000 French stood against 300,000 Russians, Austrians, Prussians, and Swedes. The young conscripts fought bravely, but they were being asked to achieve the impossible. On the 19th Napoleon was obliged to order a general retreat toward France. The losses in the battle and in the subsequent hasty flight across Germany were terrible. With barely 70,000 men, none too well organized, the Corsican found himself again behind the Rhine. The situation was now, from a military standpoint, all but hopeless. The veteran field army was gone; the new conscript field army was almost gone. The garrisons were being starved out one by one, in the now distant and isolated German fort- resses. The good-will of France had been alienated by the Continental Blockade and the blood tax. The English were sweeping Napoleon's generals out of Spain and crossing the Pyrenees. The South-German vassal states were all making their peace with the victors. Nevertheless the Allies would probably have left Napoleon his throne and a territory much larger than that of Louis XVI in 1792, had he promptly and sincerely treated for peace. He would not do so. Even when the Allies were crossing the Rhine in great force, he fought against the inevitable. He sent delegates, indeed, to a Peace Conference at Chatillon (on the Seine), but allowed his representatives only to play for time. And so he went on to the end. Napoleon's campaign of 1814 was in some respects his best — considered merely from a military standpoint. He had barely 50,000 mobile troops left. The French nation would not rise against the invader. The old fires of 1792-93 had burned out. There was, of course, some anger at the cruelties inflicted by the conquering Allies, but, compared with 1914, the invaders of 1814 seem to have been fairly humane and loath to stimulate he was absent. The French were now beaten almost everywhere, save for long at the point where the Emperor led in person. 888 A HISTORY OF FRANCE French patriotism by a policy of schrecklichkeit. With all these handicaps, with odds three and four to one against him, the Corsican fought brilliantly; hurling himseK now against one, now another of the columns advancing on Paris, and repeatedly he won temporary victories which brought the whole Austro- Prusso-Russian advance to a stand. But in the end the attempt was impossible. The army became weary of its hopeless struggle. The masses of the invader were too great. On March 31, in the absence of Napoleon — after the Allies had stormed their way to the very gates of Paris — Marshal Marmont, commandant of the capital, capitulated and the victors marched in triumph into the city from which, after Valmy, Brunswick had turned back twenty-two years before. Napoleon could still muster 50,000 men around him at Fon- tainebleau. Many of the privates and lower officers seem to have been willing to keep up the struggle, such was their devotion to the leader who would have sacrificed them with scarcely a sigh. But the marshals and upper officers recognized that the game was up; to fight longer meant their personal ruin, and they de- sired neither poverty nor exile. In Paris, the Allies were forming a provisional government presided over by an ex-minister of Napoleon's, the supple, immoral, and infinitely clever Talley- rand, who now cheerfully deserted his master, proclaimed that the Emperor had forfeited his throne, and who hastily prepared for the restoration of the Bourbons. Under the pressure of his old comrades, on April 4,i Napoleon signed a formal act of abdica- tion. The Allies, with a magnanimity they doubtless regretted a year later, consented to assign hini the small island of Elba in the Mediterranean as a "sovereign principality," and per- mitted him to keep the poor consolation of the formal title of "Emperor." Napoleon was very unpopular at this time in France. The nation longed for peace, and his ambition had seemed alone to ' Napoleon then abdicated in favor of his son. That compromise being re* jected, in a few days he abdicated unconditionally. THE, BOURBONS ARE RESTORED 389 stand in the way of checking the public ruin. When he traveled through Languedoc and Provence he was cursed to his face and stones were flung at his carriage, while mobs howled after the "Hateful tyrant, punished at last!" and at Orange and Avignon there were even fears of a lynching. The fallen despot, much cowed possibly for the moment, was taken to Elba, and there he was to wait ten uneasy months — while many things hap- pened in France. Louis XVIII, the eldest of the brothers of Louis XVI, had been placed on the throne by the Allies, not because they had any great love for him personally, but because they were resolved to have an end to "Bonaparte" and his family, and they objected heartily to a Republic. To recall the old dynasty then was really the only thing possible. The conquerors assigned to France shghtly larger boundaries than she had in 1790, before the be- ginning of the great wars, and they imposed no indemnity upon her. They also compelled Louis XVIII to give his subjects a kind of a constitution and to guarantee that the great social and personal liberties won in 1789 should not be abolished. This was worldly wisdom — the Allies feared to drive the French people to desperation. Then the main interest of the world shifted from Paris to the Congress of Vienna. At the Austrian capital, under Metternich's artful presidency, the diplomats met in the famous peace congress to quarrel, threaten one another, but presently to agree on the territorial and other arrangements which, it was fondly hoped, would last for many generations; and which were, indeed, to cast their shadow over Europe till 1914. Meantime France, chastened, economically smitten, invaded, cut short, bereft of the flower of her youth, was flung back very unhappily upon herself. The character of the new King, and the Restoration, and its political institutions will be stated later, it is enough to say here that the new Government was soon extremely unpopular with influential classes. When the peace was made, all the captive oflScers and veterans of course cams back from Russia and Germany. They were outraged at finding 390 A HISTORY OF FRANCE a new and unwelcome King in Paris, and the Bourbon white flag with its hhes flying in the place of the beloved tricolor of Lodi and Marengo. Instead of public thanks and triumphs, they received black looks and distrust from the new masters of. the Tuileries, and no better material rewards than being put on the retired list on half -pay. The professional army, in short, speedily became intensely dissatisfied at the whole situation, and the bulk of the people were soon displeased enough with many acts of the new dynasty to lose much of their recent hatred for the Corsican' — all of which facts competent agents promptly brought to Napoleon in Elba.^ On March 1, 1815, the Emperor landed at Cannes with fifteen hundred troops he had been allowed to take with him into exile. On March 20 he entered Paris, while King Louis XVIII had made a hasty exit to Ghent. "I shall reach Paris without firing a shot," Napoleon had said, as his small vessel approached the French coast. Near Grenoble a battalion of the now "royal army" had been drawn up to halt his advance. The Corsican had come forward in the face of the leveled muskets. "Soldiers," said the well-known voice, "if there is one among you who wishes to kill his Emperor he can do so. — Here I am." "Long live the Emperor!" burst from the ranks, and the whole force went over to the returning leader. Marshal Ney, who had turned against Napoleon in 1814 with peculiar bitterness, marched out with six thousand troops from Besangon to "bring him back in an iron cage." His troops began to desert. Ney's loyalty for the Bourbons oozed out, and he called his officers around him and again proclaimed the ' A very serious factor was the fear of the peasantry, lest the Bourbons disturb the titles to the real estate confiscated from the Church and the noblesse in 1789-93, and give the property back to its former owners. ^ He was also greatly encouraged by report of the serious discords between his late foes now at the Congress of Vienna. Russia and Prussia seemed on the point of crossing swords with England and Austria. The discords were, indeed, violent, but they were not quite serious enough to prevent all four Powers from uniting to attack him the minute he returned from Elba. ATTEMPT TO RESTORE LIBERALISM 391 Emperor. It was amid vast rejoicings by the army and all the jubilant half-pay officers that the returned exile swept into the Tuileries. For an instant it seemed as if the whole effect of the disasters of Moscow and Leipzig had been undone. But Napoleon did not conceal from himself the fact that while the army was delighted to have him return, the rest of the nation was more or less indifferent to his prospects, although without the least enthusiasm for Louis XVIII. "My dear fel- low," said the Emperor to an intimate, "people have let me come just as they have let the Bourbons go." Probably, other things being equal, the bulk of Frenchmen greatly preferred Napoleon to the restored Royalists, but other things were not equal. Frenchmen were terribly anxious for peace, and the Emperor announced (perhaps with sincerity) that he intended to try to keep the peace and not to make any attempt to restore the swollen boundaries of France in 1812. But no sooner had the news of his landing in France reached Vienna, than the allied diplomats dropped their serious squabblings and united in a general decree of outlawry. Russia, Austria, Prussia, and Eng- land joined in declaring that "Bonaparte" had broken the compact which established him at Elba, and "placed himself outside the bounds of civil and social relation" and was to be punished as "an enemy and disturber of the peace of the world." So the Emperor stood again with all the other great Powers embattled against him, and not a single aUy. His only chance lay in the enthusiastic support of the entire French nation. He endeavored to concihate public opinion by announcing Uberaliz- ing changes, technically known as "The Additional Act," in the former "Constitution of the Empire." These changes on analysis, however, did nothing to weaken the Emperor's auto- cratic disposal of the entire State. Intelligent Frenchmen were angered at being obliged thus to continue under the absolutist regime; and all Frenchmen, outside the army, were aghast at the prosjject of the renewal of desperate war. It is not surprising 392 A HISTORY OF FRANCE then that almost the whole of Napoleon's famous "Hundred Days" were spent in hurried preparations and m mtense anxiety. Attempts to get the great Powers to keep the peace having completely failed, the Corsiean once more threw dice for the supreme stakes in war. He had, indeed, an admirable army — so far as it went: 180,000 veteran troops devoted to him; men who had been shut up in German fortresses in 1813 or had sub- mitted unwillingly in 1814. His foes were concentrating infi- nitely greater numbers, but he had the bare chance of crushing their armies piecemeal before they could effect a junction. To this end he flung his main forces into Belgium in June, 1815, to strike the Prussian Bliicher and the English Wellington before the Austrians and Russians could bring up their myriads. The master of legions had not lost his old-time cunning. On June 15-16 he fell on the Prussian army of Bliicher at Ligny and he roundly defeated it. The first misfortune came when the Emperor was led to believe that Blucher was much more badly beaten than was actually the case, and that the victors were free to turn elsewnere. As a matter of fact the Prussians, though worsted, were able soon to halt their retreat, while Grouchy, the French general ordered to pursue, lost touch with them. On June 18 Napoleon then smote against the Duke of Wellington with his mixed English, Dutch, and North-German force at Waterloo. The French had about 70,000 men, Wellington rather less. What Napoleon did not know, however, was that Bliicher was drawing nigh with 30,000 men to reinforce Wellington. The battle that followed almost resulted in a French victory, thanks to the splendid charges of the imperial cavaliy; but the Emperor, who had never really fought against the English before, was astonished at the stubborn resistance of the hostile squares. Outnumbered, and the non-British part of his troops of very mediocre quality, Wellington hung grimly on, praying for "Night or Blucher!" And at length, when the fight was practi- cally at a deadlock, Bliicher came. A last charge by the imperial NAPOLEON'S FLIGHT 39S "Old Guard" was driven home heroically, but broke down with sanguinary losses. Then the whole English line advanced, and realizing the hopelessness of their situation, the bulk of the French army scattered in rout. One or two squares of the Guard made off the field in the semblance of order, but there was no chance to stay the panic. Never was there an overthrow more complete than Waterloo. Seven times the fugitives paused to make their bivouac. Seven times they were driven on by the pursuing cavalry. "Cowards! Have you forgotten how to die?" Ney is said to have called to his men. The taunt was unjust. The French army had done for the Corsican more, perhaps, than any other army had ever done for a leader. His restless ambition had created a situation in Europe by which there could be no peace for the world nor for France if he were to keep the throne. Even had he won Waterloo, the Russiari and Austrian hosts were drawing nigh. The only result would have been a new vista of great wars. The French leader himself did not court a soldier's death. Dazed by the rout, he fled with the foremost fugitives. When he reached Paris on June 20 he found his case was hopeless. No one would fight for him. A provisional government, headed by his old minister Fouche, provided a kind of order until the Allies arrived to restore the Bourbons. Once more Napoleon abdicated "in favor of his son." He fled to Rochefort on the seacoast hoping to get ship for America,' but the English cruisers were blockading him, and the case being hopeless he went on board a British man-of-war and cast himself on the magnanimity of his oldest and most constant foes. What was then done with him has been often criticized for its severity, but it must be realized that this fugitive and pris- oner had caused nigh twenty years of capital warfare and the ' Speculation easily exhausts itself considering what the Corsican might have done had he reached America. His fascinating personality might easily have won a following, and he would speedily have compromised oiu^ relations with all Europe. 394 A HISTORY OF FRANCE death therein of some millions of human beings.* After the escape from Elba the statesmen of the day felt it to be criminal negli- gence to risk allowing this firebrand to enkindle the world again. As all men know, he was sent by the British on the ship- of-the-line Bellerophon to the island of St. Helena in the South Atlantic; and there he remained an unhappy and quarrel- seeking prisoner until his death by cancer in 1821. When the news of his passing spread, many Frenchmen mourned, but all over the world there was a general relief that the arch-destroyer could threaten the nations' happiness no more. After reviewing the deeds of Napoleon Bonaparte, it is im- possible to resist the conclusion that had Heaven given him a modicum of unmixed humanity and patriotism and of real unselfishness, he could have approached the very limits of human achievement. As it was, despite the service he rendered mankind in destroying the decrepit institutions all over Europe, and in creating various admirable civil institutions for France, the latter part of his career was calamitous to the world, and most calamitous of all to the great nation of which he boasted himself to be Emperor.^ The Corsican could fascinate the planet by his brilliance, but it was the brilliance of Satan arrayed as an angel of light. ' Readers of the present age, familiar with the problem of the disposition of the German Kaiser William II, after his downfall in 1918, and with the gen- eral exasperation of the world against him, will be lenient in their judgments upon the statesmen of 1815 in their treatment of Napoleon. " Of course it is possible to credit Napoleon with many charming acts of geniality, comradery, or even of magnanimity: but hardly with one whidi, on close analysis, seemed to involve the unselfish sacrifice of a. keen personal ambition. CHAPTER XIX THE RESTORED BOURBONS AND THEIR EXIT Louis XVIII returned to Paris in 1815, not because the French nation wanted him, but because the bayonets of the victors of Waterloo imposed him on his not very willing subjects. A second time foreign armies marched into the great city by the Seine. Nevertheless France was not grievously depressed. There had been no anxiety to make costly sacrifices for Na- poleon. The enthusiasm to carry "liberty, fraternity, and equality" to the ends of the earth, the ardor that had kindled the young armies of the Republic, had been burned away on a hundred battle-fields. A new generation had grown up which knew not Rousseau, and which was very anxious for peace and for solid bodily comfort. The great estates of the Church and of the old noblesse had been redistributed, and their new owners, men of short pedigrees but often of large fortunes, desired static conditions. The mothers of tall sons rejoiced at the end of con- scriptions; and men who had been Jacobins in their youth were willing to shudder at the excesses of the past five and twenty years and thank Providence that they had emerged from them all safe and much wiser. After the great days, great passions, great crimes of the Revolution, after the colossal Csesarism of the Empire, it is a more pptty and infinitely more prosaic France which we en- counter. Most of the heroes of 1789-93 were dead. Lafayette, indeed, was still alive; we shall meet him again, but the guillo- tine, as it worked up to 1795, and after that date the blood tax of the Napoleonic wars, had robbed the nation of a great pro- portion of all the keenest intellects which might have built for the future. The terrific drain of the battles is even said to have pulled down the physical stamina of the country. It is alleged 396 A HISTORY OF FRANCE that the physique of the average young Frenchman of 1815 was poorer, his stature shorter, than that of his father in 1789. In any case, France was a terribly disillusioned nation. From being apparently on the point of founding an empire greater than the Roman, she had beheld her soil twice overrun, her capital occupied, her ruler dethroned by foreign armies. True, the very circumstances of the defeat were somewhat flattering to French pride. To overcome her all the rest of Europe had had to form a common league against her; it had almost been France against the world. But that did not obliterate the great fact that the end of all the Napoleonic "glory" had been a smashing military defeat. The Allies had treated France with comparative generosity in 1814. In 1815 when they brought back Louis XVIII the sec- ond time, they were thoroughly exasperated and imposed harsher terms. France was given the boundaries, not of 1792 (as in the first treaty), but of 1790. Thus she lost various fortresses on the frontiers of Alsace-Lorraine, and ceded back to the King of Sardinia the province of Savoy. She had also to pay a war indemnity (huge for the day) of 700,000,000 francs ($140,000,- 000) and submit to the military occupation of some of her border towns until the sum had been discharged. These terms were not crushing, but they were humiliating. They served to start Louis XVIII upon his renewed lease of power with very little glory. France was still a very great nation, but she hardly held even her old position before 1789. British sea power had seem- ingly given its possessor a strangle hold upon the commerce of the world, and British industries were incomparably more developed than those of any rival. The most powerful politician in Europe was not at Paris; he was at Vienna, and he was the clever absolutist Prince Metternich. The greatest military power seemed to rest with Czar Alexander I, who was now no- toriously at Metternich's beck and call. France was thus thrown back upon herseK. Most of her colonies had been seized by the WHAT PARTS OF THE REVOLUTION LASTED S97 English. The treaty of peace returned to her only a few small islands in the West Indies and some trading factories in Africa and India. The great colonial empire which had existed before 1760 had, of course, vanished much earlier. The second great colonial empire, which was to cover Northern Africa before 1900, was not yet even planted. Frenchmen had therefore few outside problems to take their thoughts away from their home troubles. The France of 1815, nevertheless, was very far from being the France of 1789. The Jacobins had decidedly failed. Their de- spised and berated predecessors, the men of 1789, had largely succeeded. The "privileges" and most of the other gross abuses of the Old Regime had vanished never to return. There were no privileged "classes," and property was widely divided among a large fraction of the population: all Frenchmen were equal in the eyes of the law and had, theoretically, equal claims to public office. The Church had been shorn of its overweening prerogatives. The national finances were in relatively good order. There was pretty complete religious toleration. In short, in 1815 "the nation was already provided with its social and administrative organization; it remained — as it still remains — a democratic society, whose affairs are managed by a centralized administration. The mechanism of the central government, was not, however, yet constructed France has labored to establish it: she has spent the nineteenth century in making herself a politi- cal constitution." ^ The importance of this statement can be realized only if it is understood how completely the Govern- ment in Paris dominated the entire life of the nation. America and most British communities would remain essentially demo- cratic and liberal even if the National Government were sud- denly to become non -liberal; local autonomy is so strong. But there was and still is (to American thinking) very little local autonomy in France. The Paris ministries extend their power to the obscurest commune. Therefore our gaze is continually upoa the capital. ' Seignobos. 398 A HISTORY OF FRANCE In 1815 the great bulk of the French nation was not, it should be said, profoundly interested in politics. The population had risen, despite the long wars, to some 29,000,000. The great majority of the people were still the peasants. The Revolution and its destruction of the estates of the noblesse and the Church had brought to many of these their heart's desire — a solid little farm with a modest competency. They constituted, on the whole, the most thrifty, self-respecting, stable, home- keeping peasantry in the world: with a deplorably high element of illiteracy and superstition, indeed, but comparing very fa- vorably with those of any other country. They were the real strength of the nation. The Revolution and the Empire had done more for them than for any other class of Frenchmen, but they cared relatively little who was their ruler so long as he gave them peace, good order, and prosperity. Again and again the peasantry of France were to redress the blunders of the more obvious parts of the nation: to repress revolutionary excesses; to pay enormous war debts and indemnities; and finally, in 1914-18, to supply the great majority of those sturdy, indomitable poilus who were to be the living bulwark of the freedom of the world. ^ In the cities there were, of course, considerable industrial classes, but French cities were, by present comparisons, neither numerous nor large. Outside of Paris, probably only Lyons had over 100,000 inhabitants. French manufacturers M'ere by no means so far developed as were the English. A very large frac- tion of these artisan classes were, of course, in Paris, the seat of government. On several occasions a sudden uprising by them was therefore to have extremely serious political consequences: for their fingers were always close to the administrative wind- pipe of France. Ten thousand howling working-men in Paris ^ As is well known, a great fraction of the " defeatist," "Internationalist," pro-German propaganda which threatened to ruin France in 1917-18, at the height of the struggle with Germany, found its best reception among the industrial elements in Paris. It made relatively little head among the peasantry. THE BOURGEOISIE 399 could accomplish far more in the way of a revolution than 100,000 malcontent peasants scattered through the depart- ments. But when the revolution had once been accomplished, its cheerful acceptance by aU the rest of France could by no means be assumed. The peasantry could more slowly, indeed, but none the less emphatically, express their dissent. This was to be peculiarly true in 1848. Above peasant and artisan was the great class known as the bourgeoisie — property-owners of more or less social preten- sion, public officials, great and small, professional men, etc. They were charged with being intensely conservative, leading "a simple, quiet life, the life of a small town — monotonous, without comforts, without amusements, without intellectual activity, a slave to public opinion." They were also accused of having almost as few political ideas as the peasants, and with being grossly selfish in their efiforts, especially in those to pre- vent the artisans from bettering their wages and conditions of labor. The sodden state of French public opinion is testified to by the extremely small number of newspapers in circulation. True, under the "Restoration" there was, most of the time, a severe press censorship and a tax of ten centimes (two cents) on every copy, also a very heavy postage; still it is an amazing fact that an official report of 1824 makes a formal estimate that there were only 55,000 copies of papers with political articles circulated in all France. These papers it must be admitted were usually stupid and unenlightening enough — but the public for the while seemed hardly eager for anything better. Of course there was a saving minority in the nation that looked intelligently toward the future — that planned for a better day. These men were as a rule members also of the bourgeoisie, or were scions of the old noblesse who had enlight- enment enough to stop plotting reaction and forget their pedi- grees. Yet in the main it may be said that what spurred enough Frenchmen to accomplish political changes between 1815 and 1848 were these four factors: (1) The fear lest a complete reac- 400 A HISTORY OF FRANCE tion of the Old Regime (as seemed repeatedly threatened) would upset all the fortunes and property-titles established since 1789; (2) a demand from the property-owning classes that the Government should be efficient, and give stable conditions calculated to promote profitable commerce and industry; (3) a demand from the Parisian industrial classes that something should be done to mitigate their grievously unfavorable condi- tions of labor; and then (4) a gradual return to the ideas and idealism of a former generation, with the demand for genuinely liberal institutions and a realization of the theories of democracy. All these things combined at length to pull France out of the soulless mire into which she seemed to have been cast in 1815, and to set her on the way to nobler things. Louis XVIII, installed in 1814 and reinstalled in 1815, had been placed in power by the Allies, because Metternich and Czar Alexander could not find any other possible monarch for France, and they abhorred the idea of admitting that the people could choose their own government. "It would be," affirmed Metternich, "a new breaking forth of the Revolution [to do this]. Besides what question is a [popular] assembly to decide? The legitimate King is here." Louis XVIII 1 had been nominally "king" since 1795 when his nephew, the luckless "Louis XVII," the unhappy Dauphin of the French Revolution, had died in captivity because of the brutality of his keepers. ^ He had lived weary years in exile, mostly in Russia and England, hoping against hope for the ruin of the Corsican and a return to France. Now at last fortune had favored him. The Great Powers twice placed him on the throne. Truth to tell he was not a very majestic substitute for the "Little Corporal." A portrait, published with official con- sent, shows him fat, gross, and with hands and feet deformed with gout. He was sixty years old in 1815. In 1789 he had been notoriously a champion of absolutism and reaction, but fortu- ' The former Comte de Provence, eldest brother of Louis XVI. 2 See p. 325. LOUIS XVIII 401 nately in his exile he had absorbed not a few useful ideas. He realized that much had happened since he had fled in disguise from France in 1791. As a contemporary well says, "he had in him a very firm desire to die upon the throne"; and obviously the only method by which he could fulfill this wish was by ac- cepting all the more significant innovations which had com- mended themselves to the nation. During his reign from 1815 to 1824 he showed considerable intelligence and firmness in his policy, and on the whole he left a worthy memory. To the best of his ability he endeavored to unite the champions of the Old Regime and of the New, saying that "he did not wish to be king over two peoples," and that "the children of one father- land should be a people of brothers." If, however, Louis XVIII realized that the only condition on which he could remain in France was to recognize what had happened since 1789, very few of his family and personal associ- ates did this. In 1814-15 a great swarm of "emigrant" noblemen had hastened back to Paris. Exile proverbially makes men warped and bitter. The returned outlaws, whose kindred very hkely had died under the guillotine, could see nothing good in anything the New Regime had accomplished. They clamored for vengeance, for the return of their lost estates, for the upset- ting of every enactment since the good old days of Calonne's and Marie Antoinette's garden fStes at Versailles. Professing extreme loyalty to Louis XVIII, they were soon disgusted because the King did not at once embark on a policy of extreme reaction. In this they were supported by the King's brother, the Count of Artois, who (since Louis lacked a son) was obviously to be his heir as Charles X. Artois was full of the most ab- solutist notions conceivable. " He would rather," he later averred, "saw wood than * reign' in the fashion of a king of England!" On the day Louis XVIII proclaimed a new Constitution (the "Charter"), Artois feigned illness that he might not have to swear fidelity to it. His palace was the constant center for Ultra-Royalist intrigues. The King realized that his brother's 402 A HISTORY OF FRANCE influence was malignant and would ruin the dynasty, but for the sake of family peace he often yielded to him. Considering, there- fore, the kind of man the future Charles X was, it is perhaps slight wonder that the Bourbon regime lasted as long as 1830. The European Allies had brought back the Bourbons, but they did not try to bring back Absolutism. Metternich wished to have no constitution in his own Austria, but he assented to the suggestion that if France were forced back under a purely autocratic rule, there would soon be a new revolution which would menace the peace of other countries. Louis XVIII was therefore very strictly compelled to publish a constitution for France, as a condition to being set upon the throne. This Con- stitution was the once famous "Charter." Circumscribed as it now seems, in its day it gave France, on the whole, a more liberal government than that of any other kingdom except England, and it was very decidedly more liberal than the system in France under Napoleon. From 1815 to 1848 France was governed by this "Charter," although very important changes were made in that document in 1830. Since nearly all public life in that time revolved around the attacks upon or the defense of the document, we cannot avoid discussing its main provisos. Louis XVIII claimed to reign "by the grace of God" even as had his unlucky brother, and the Charter was declared to emanate "from the free exercise of the royal authority." It was therefore in theory the gracious concession of an autocrat, not the expression of the popular will. Also it was dated from "the nineteenth year of the reign," as if Louis XVIII had been a ruling monarch since 1795 when his nephew died. The theory of the Charter was thus wholly illiberal. Yet in its text are con- tained clauses that made it possible to argue that France was a somewhat limited monarchy; and the chief flaw in the letter of the document was not the great powers granted the King, but the great powers it granted the wealthy classes. The King was, of course, the head of "the executive power." THE CHAMBERS 403 He led the armies, declared war, made peace, signed treaties, and (an ambiguous clause destined to work mischief) "made the regulations and ordinances necessary for the execution of the laws and the safety of the State." He named all the public officials, and governed through "responsible" ministers. If the latter misbehaved, they could be indicted by the lower house of the legislature and tried before the upper house. The "legislative power" was shared by the King with the " Chamber of Peers " and the " Chamber of Deputies." The King initiated the proposal of laws. They had to be discussed and ratified by the two Chambers, then the King promulgated them. The "peers'* seem to have been an obvious imitation of the British House of Lords. They were at the outset all named by the King from among the great personages, marshals, civil notables, etc., of France. Some were appointed simply for life. Others could transmit their honor by hereditary succession. The "deputies" were elected for a term of five years, one fifth of the Chamber to be chosen annually so that there should not be too many sudden changes. No tax could be established or levied without the consent of the Chambers, which consent must be annually renewed; and this in theory should have given the new parliament a very heavy hand upon the Crown: but all this apparent evidence of liberalism was vitiated by the one important fact that only the well-to-do and wealthy were allowed to vote for members of the Chamber of Deputies. To be an elector a Frenchman must be thirty years of age and must pay a direct tax of 300 francs ($60).^ To be eligible to be chosen a member of the lower House himself, he had to be forty years old and to pay a direct tax of 1000 francs ($200). Under such a franchise, to be known as a "voter" would be a somewhat conspicuous honor: in a rural community probably it would come to only two or three of the most important landowners. There were in 1815 in all France only above 90,000 ordinary • Of course a much greater sum relatively then than to-day : say two to three times as great, all changes considered. 404 A HISTORY OF PRANCE electors, and of these less than 12,000 Were qualified to be sent to Paris. A new kind of privilege was thus arbitrarily created: one of the most obnoxious varieties and sure to awaken heart- burnings — the privilege of wealth. Apart from this great error the Charter contained many excel- lent provisions. The judicial organization of the Empire was maintained and the judges were given self-respect and proper power by their irremovability save for direct crimes. Individual liberty was guaranteed, as well as religious liberty, although Catholicism was declared the religion of the State. Also liberty of the press was affirmed, provided it "conformed to laws which should repress the abuse of that liberty" — a qualification destined to breed much woe. No property was to be seized without compensation, and as a concession to the popular feeling which had helped to pull down Napoleon, conscription for the army was abolished. Special laws were to provide for military reorganization. In spite, then, of many limitations and of one grand fault, the Charter was a document which, if handled and developed in a proper spirit, would have given France contentment and pros- perity. The essential conquests of 1789 had been preserved, liberty, equality in all private rights at least, and the theoretical right to a share in the government. The practical effect of the Charter was, of course, to entrust the franchise to the upper bourgeoisie, usually landowners, but also often mill-owners and bankers. These men were naturally devoted to the "rights of property," but they were no friends to the claims of the noblesse who talked wildly of reestablishing the Old Regime. They were not inaccessible to new ideas, and small a fraction as they were of the total manhood of France, they were presently to show themselves conscious of the drift and force of public opinion. The result was that following 1815 we have something very like a real limited monarchy, with parties, programmes, an "opposi- tion," elections, etc., although the whole scheme of government was anything but democratic. THE KING VERSUS THE ULTRA-ROYALISTS 405 The "Restoration" had not lasted long before three parties were developing rapidly in French political life: (1) the Ultra- Royalists; (2) the Independents; (3) the Constitutional Royal- ists. The first element was frankly reactionary. It regarded everything that had happened since June, 1789, as a crime, and the granting of the Charter as a direful blunder. This was the party of the returned exiles, and its whole ambition was to turn back the clock of history just as far as possible. The Independ- ents also regarded the Charter with extreme dissatisfaction. It did not grant enough of popular liberties, and the Independ- ents nursed the secret desire of sending the Bourbons again upon their travels. This party was, of course, the child of the old RepubUcans and the father of the later Republicans. With it lay the future; but for the moment it was very weak. The whole current of the reactionary epoch was against it. Midway between these disturbing elements were the Constitutional Royalists. They believed the Charter presented a good working scheme calculated to satisfy France, and they were resolved to keep it in operation with practically no changes. Whether they could succeed or not, largely depended on the support they might receive from the King. If Louis XVIII had been left to himself there is little doubt he would have tried earnestly to make the Charter a success. He had found the throne "a most comfortable easy-chair," and wished to do nothing to send himself on another flight to Ghent, chased out by a new uprising. But he found poor enough allies in the returned "emigrants," the "Ultras." More absolutist than the King, these noblemen who surrounded him, and whom he could not disregard, avowed they wanted an Absolute Mon- archy — then they could get whatever they wanted. They demanded a complete "purification" of the civil and military service, the dismissal of all the parvenu Napoleonic prefects, generals, etc., and their replacement by aristocrats who suffered poverty and exile "for the good cause." They demanded, too, huge indemnities for their lost estates. The press and education 406 A HISTORY OF FRANCE were likewise to be entrusted only to reliable Royalists, or to their very ardent and reliable helpers, the clergy. When the King failed to endorse these projects, the full acceptance of which would have cost him his throne, they wrathfully drank to the toast, "The health of the King in spite of everything," and hopefully looked ahead for the day when the Count of Artois would take the royal seat. When after the "Hundred Days," the Chamber of the new legislature assembled, it was speedily evident that in the con- fusion attending the fall of the Empire the Ultras had won a great majority among the deputies. In the South Country the Royalists were conducting wholesale rabblings and lynchings of their opponents in a regular "White Terror." At Paris the new Chambers were hardly less ardent for swift and bloody revenge upon the men who had again set up the hated Corsican. Every- thing in France was to be "purged"; and as Louis XVIII angrily declared, "If these gentlemen had their way completely, they would end even by purging me!" The King strove to moderate them, but he could not save some of their victims. Marshal Ney had earned their particular wrath because he had deserted to Napoleon after promising the Bourbons to arrest him. When the Royalists returned to Paris, Ney failed to take warning promptly and to escape. He was seized, to the great disgust of the King: "By letting himself be caught, he has done us more harm than he did on March 13 [when he deserted]," exclaimed the Monarch testily. But Louis could. not rescue Ney. The "Bravest of the Brave" was dragged before a court of generals who were completely intimidated by the cries for blood rising from the salons of the noblesse and from the Chambers. Ney was convicted of treason, and was shot on December 7, 1815, in the Luxembourg Gardens. Thus ended the career of one of the most distinguished oflScers who ever fought for France. His fate left a stigma upon the Restoration that did nothing to lessen its unpopularity; and for this stigma not the King, but his "loyal" nobility were responsible. ARMY VERSUS ORGANIZATION 407 Truth to tell the Ultras were without the least rational political programme, and after having thus destroyed Ney and certain other objects of especial vengeance, they made haste to weave their own rope. They foolishly rejected the budget, thus striking fear into every wealthy magnate interested in French financial stability. The King promptly dissolved the Chamber, and the electors, terrified at the storm of sanguinary passions that had been loosed, returned a "moderate" majority. France was thus saved from another spasm of revolution, with possible foreign intervention. Although Louis's ministers had had to wrestle with this intractable element, they were not unsuccessful in handling the grave problem of rehabilitating the nation. Once again the enormous practical genius of the French people asserted itself. Mere conditions of peace, law and order, gave back a large measure of prosperity. The heavy indemnity due to the Allies was paid off steadily, and in 1818 the last of the foreign armies of occupation quitted French soil, instead of going in 1820 as had been originally expected. "I can die in peace," said the King, "since I shall see France free, and the French flag floating over every city of France." Another problem not unwisely handled was that of the army. The Napoleonic conscription had been abandoned, and the magnificent fighting machine (or rather all of it that had sur- vived Waterloo) was being allowed to dwindle away. But the nation could not hold up its head again in Europe without an efficient military force. There was nothing for it but to go back to a form of conscription. As many troops as possible were to be recruited by volunteering; then for the remainder all the young men of twenty were to draw lots, and those receiving "bad numbers" (a small proportion) were obliged to serve six years with the active army and six years more in the reserve. In this way an army of about 240,000 was provided, nearly all of them long-service, professionalized soldiers. Compared with other European armies, this was a sufficient force-; but it was very 408 A HISTORY OF FRANCE easy for a young man of good family to avoid this kind of con- scription/ and the bourgeoisie usually hated military service. France thus drifted onward, almost until 1870, with the bulk of her youth untrained, while Prussia was making "universal service" a reality. This danger, however, did not become press- ing until the 1860's. What awakened controversy at the time was the proviso in the new law that promotion and appointments as officers were equally open to all classes. This blasted the Ultras' hopes of monopolizing again the officers' corps in the army, and drew their violent though useless protest. The meas- ure passed in spite of them, and another rock had been set in the path to reaction. The thing which did, however, for the moment tend to pro- mote reaction was the evidence that the " Independents " — the radical party which talked of the tricolor flag and even of a republic — were again becoming a serious factor in the Chamber of Deputies. In 1817 they had had only 25 voices out of 258; in 1818 they had had 45; in 1819, at least 90. One of their leaders was the notorious Gregoire; a bitter foe of the Catholic Church, an ardent old-line Jacobin and member of the Convention, who had said that "kings were to the moral world what monsters were to the physical." Even the moderate "Constitutionalists" joined with tlie Ultras in voting to banish him from the Cham- ber. On top of this excitement came the murder by an isolated fanatic of the Due de Berry, the son of the Count of Artois, and a presumable heir to the crown. The Republicans had had no part in the crime, but of course they reaped in full its unpopular- ity. In 1820 there was another inevitable Royalist reaction, which Louis XVIII could not withstand. "It is all over with me," remarked the King gloomily, meaning that he could no longer hold back the pressure of the Ultras. The result was ten years of steady tightening of autocracy, and" then the cord ' The ptirchase of substitutes was not unknown. The Government did not dislike this. With the extra money could be hired professional soldiers far more efficient than young bourgeois gentlemen serving against their will. ALTERATIONS IN THE LOWER CHAMBER 409 snapped: France escaped to a somewhat more liberal regime by the bloody road of revolution. Just before 1820 there had been signs of a gradual hberalizing of the Government. In 1819 a law had been passed permitting trial by jury for press cases, and doing away with the censorship, although newspapers were still subject to a heavy tax and had to make a deposit of money ($40,000) as security for good behavior. Now all this came to an end. The Ultras reestablished the control of the press, and then proceeded (1820) to juggle with the organization of the deputies to their own great ad- vantage. The membership of the lower Chamber was increased to 430. Only the original 256 could be voted for by the ordinary 300-franc taxpayers. The remainder, 172, were to be chosen solely by the ballots of the 1000-franc taxpayers who were them- selves eligible as legislators. This practically gave a double vote to the very rich. The new elections (November, 1820) rejoiced the Ultras with an enormous majority. The Independents (the "Tricolor Party") sank to a helpless handful in the Chambers. The Royalists, of course, were enchanted. They seemed to have crushed opposition. As a matter of fact the radicals — denied now the ordinary means of pressing their cause — fell back on good revolutionary expedients — secret societies, intrigues, and presently on downright conspiracies. In 1830 they were to show their power at the barricades. Surrounded by such reactionary influences in 1823, Louis XVIII was induced to intervene in Spain to overthrow an at- tempt of the Liberals in that much-vexed country to compel their tyrannous King to establish Constitutionalism. It is true Metternich would have probably induced some other autocratic power to intervene if France had hung back, but it irked patri- otic men sorely that the country, which in 1793 had endeavored to carry liberty to all the oppressed lands of Europe, should now seem the servile gendarme of Absolutism. In 1824 the Ultras had such success in a new election that there were only 19 Liber- als in the entire Chamber, and the majority openly entertained 410 A HISTORY OF FRANCE schemes to reestablish a landed aristocracy and the authority of the clergy. The Royalists were thus in a mood to disregard jauntily the warnings of such old but still venerated leaders as Lafayette. In 1824 that famous general revisited the country where he had first drawn the sword for liberty, America, and was received with imparalleled honors and rejoicings. To his American friends Lafayette spoke his mind very freely: "France," he declared, "cannot be happy under the rule of the Bourbons; and we must send them adrift!" Lafayette's desires were greatly promoted that same year by the death of Louis XVIII and the accession of his brother as Charles X (1824-30). The new King never attempted like his predecessor to steer a middle course between the Moderate Royalists and the Ultras. Charles was always avowedly an Ultra. He hated Constitutionalism and doubtless would have restored the Monarchy of Louis XIV the instant that it might have become possible. He was also an extreme partisan of the Church. It was to this Prince "who never learned anything and never forgot anything," that there was very largely due that fatal alliance of "the Altar and the Throne" which was to afflict alike French political life and the Catholic Church of France down to the very eve of 1914. For practical purposes, after 1815 the ecclesiastics of France had entered into a working agree- ment with the Ultras. The churchmen were to do everything possible to promote a return to Autocracy. The Ultras were to secure to the clergy a complete control of education, and to get back for them, if possible, all the wealth and influence they had possessed before 1789. Charles X, as Crown Princf and as King, never concealed his intense sympathy with this movement. The new King, indeed, at his accession announced his inten- tion to "maintain the Charter." Political prisoners were re- leased, even the press censorship was for a little while re- abolished. Every sovereign is naturally gracious and popular the week after he comes to power; but Charles soon showed his REVIVAL OF POLITICAL OPPOSITION 411 hopelessly mediseval temper. In 1825 he had himself crowned at Reims with all the elaborate ceremonial used before 1789, and in the precise costume of the ancient kings — tunic, dalmatic, golden scepter, and the rest. Frenchmen had a keen sense of the ludicrous. It did not add to the prestige of the Monarch in the nineteenth century to have himself "anointed on seven parts of his person with sacred oil, ' miraculously preserved,' and dating from the time of Clovis." Nor did many of Charles's subjects take seriously his claim to heal the sick "by the King's touch." Such proceedings only moved the godless to laughter, but there was worse than laughter when this "Son of St. Louis" under- took to urge his ministers to execute a violently reactionary political programme. The returned noblemen had long demanded compensation, if not actual restoration, for their confiscated estates. This was now done by voting them 1,000,000,000 francs indemnity; but to raise the money the interest on the earlier public debt was "converted" from five per cent to three per cent. The numerous and powerful bondholders were enraged at the change, and were more distrustful of the Restoration than ever. The ecclesiastics everywhere showed their hand in the Government. The death penalty was established for stealing sacred vessels from churches. The number of bishops increased. The teachers in the State educational system were put under the supervision of the Church authorities, and there were general dismissals of civil officials who did not show zeal for the new policy. Inevitably all these undertakings raised up enemies right and left. The electoral body in France had been a small enough part of the nation in any case; now even the electors began to desert the Government. To the Liberals were joined many great manu- facturers and bankers — wealthy, powerful men despite their short pedigrees, who were furious at the way things were going. An attempt to carry a law reestablishing primogeniture in the transmission of large estates, a necessary preliminary to reestab- lishing a privileged aristocracy, broke down in the Chamber of 412 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Peers.' Another attempt to carry a press law, which would have required every newspaper to deposit with the Government the manuscript copy of every issue ^2;e days before publication, was similarly thwarted. In anger the Ultra prime minister Villele proceeded to swamp the Liberal majority in the Chamber of Peers by getting the King to name 73 new peers from among picked reactionaries. But the Government went on to dissolve the lower Chamber and precipitated a new election (1827), hoping to get a wholly tractable parliament. Instantly it was discovered how utterly out of touch ministers and King had become with even the most privileged classes in the nation. A strong anti-Ultra majority was returned, despite the very limited franchise. To Charles's open sorrow Villele resigned, and the King in order to do busi- ness had to take the Moderate Martignac as his prime minister. But Charles hated the Martignac policies and he quickly showed his hand. The last thing he desired was to play the part of a genuinely constitutional king. In 1829 he deliberately dis- missed his Moderate ministers and gave the power to a personal friend, the "emigrant" Count Polignac, who was to help him most admirably in pulling down the dynasty. He was a narrow- minded Ultra, "with the fatal obstinacy of a martyr, and the worst courage of the 'let the heavens fall' sort."^ Minister and King charged cheerfully ahead, confessing that a majority of the Chamber was now against them, but resolved to let nothing swerve their purpose. Such statesmen seldom fail to precipitate revolutions. The great weakness of Polignac's position was that he could not legally collect taxes without the consent of the Chambers. Men began to talk of "legal resistance." The Liberal Journal ' The "peers" under the Restoration were sometimes more liberal than the "deputies." The "peers" contained a large sprinkling of intelligent magnates taken over from the Napoleonic regime. 2 A fair sample of his "liberality" was his refusal in 1814 to swear allegiance to the Charter because it guaranteed freedom of worship to Jews and Protes- tants. CHARLES DISSOLVES THE CHAMBERS 413 des DSbats, in August, 1829, flatly said, "The people will pay a thousand millions to the law: they will not pay one franc to the ordinances of a minister"; and wound up its warning article with "Unhappy France! Unhappy King!" '■ The minister and the Monarch, however, seem to have hugged the delusion that since only the well-to-do and wealthy could vote for deputies, the rest of the nation had no interest in how the administration might coerce the parliament. As a matter of fact, serious schemes were now on foot for eCFecting a radical change in the Govern- ment, and the rights of the deputies were being generally felt to be identical with the rights of the people. Associations began to be formed to resist the payment of taxes in case the ministers should try to collect them illegally, and to one of these bodies joined the famous historian and "Constitutionalist" Guizot, possibly the leading literary man of France, who had been dismissed from the University because his lectures had not been reactionary. Lafayette made a tour of the South Country. The acclamations which greeted him showed how numerous were the Liberals and the violently anti-clerical Free Masons. In Paris the hitherto feeble little Republican clubs took courage and began to form schemes to throw up barricades. The clever young political writer Thiers also lent his pen to an organized attack on the policy of the Government. And so Polignac and Charles X marched onward to their fall. In March, 1830, the deputies by a formal vote declared their lack of confidence in the Polignac Ministry. Charles retaliated by dissolving the Chamber and ordering a new election. "This is not a question of the Ministry, but of the Monarchy," he said bluntly. Hitherto it had been possible to claim that the King was merely the victim of bad advisers. Now he invited all criti- cisms directly upon himself. The King himself went into the pohtical lists to get a favorable majority. "Perform your duty," he told the electors, "and I will do mine." Louis XIV had been ' The author of this article was prosecuted and condemned, but the courts finally acquitted him on appeal. 414 A HISTORY OF FRANCE charged with saying, "I am the State." Charles X was practi- cally saying, "I am the Ministry." The instant the election was held, the eyes of the Ultras should have been opened. Public opinion had the few electors in its clutches. In place of a majority of 221 against Polignac in the Chamber, there was now one of 274. Talleyrand, the time-serv- ing minister of Napoleon, who had done so much to secure the recall of the Bourbons and who was now shrewdly watching events in retirement, summed up the situation very crisply. "In 1814 the return of the Bourbons secured the repose of Europe. In 1830 or 1831 their departure will secure the repose of France." But the King and his myrmidon did not allow matters to drag out until 1831. ' The last events in the Bourbon Monarchy were so inevitable they need not detain us long. Only with the aid of a great and loyal army could Charles X have adhered to his policy and kept his throne. On the strength of a vague clause in the Charter which gave the King power to issue ordinances "for the safety of the State," on July 26, 1830, Polignac suddenly placarded Paris with four "ordinances" that changed the fundamental laws of France. The first ordinance completely suppressed the liberty of the press. The second dissolved the Chamber just elected. The third modified the electoral law so drastically that practically only great landed proprietors could vote, barely leaving some 25,000 "electors " in all France. The fourth ordered new elections and the convocation of a Chamber elected as prescribed in the third ordinance. Four days later the Govern- ment and the dynasty had been overthrown by armed insur- rection. The fighting was confined to Paris, and its episodes can be omitted. If was merely a case of spontaneous combustion. When the unconstitutional ordinances were issued, the editors ' Czar Nicholas, an extreme Absolutist, advised the King to be cautious, for nobody wanted to plunge France in revolution, but Charles X doggedly replied " Concessions ruined Louis XVI." RESISTANCE AND BARRICADES 415 of the liberal papers of Paris issued a protest. "The Govern- ment has violated the law. We are under no obligation to obey. . . . We shall resist [the Government]. It is for France to judge how far the resistance shall extend." The editors by themselves were, of course, physically helpless, but now, as in 1789, the populace of Paris came to the rescue with a fighting force. The "Party of the Tricolor" arose. Its leader, Cavaignac, the son of a member of the Convention, wished clearly to establish a re- public: many who followed him had no exact programme, but "hatred of the Bourbons and love of the Tricolor flag kept them together." Not more than 8000 to 10,000 men took arms against the Government at first, but physical conditions in Paris greatly favored them.' Many of the wards of the capital formed laby- rinths of crooked lanes lined with tall old houses. A few paving- stones, an upturned cart, some chairs flung into the street with their legs pointing outward, made a formidable barricade. It was before the days of machine guns and shrapnel. The soldiers could use little except their muskets in forcing their way down streets cut up, block by block, with barricades, and with the insurgents pouring in flanking volleys from every window. Marshal Marmont, who commanded the King's troops, was very unpopular in Paris. He had commanded in the city when it was surrendered to the Allies in 1814. He had only 14,000 available men. The troops were neither cowardly nor mutinous, but they had no such love for the Bourbons that they would make reck- less sacrifices to aid them, and they hated to fire on the beloved Tricolor flag which the insurgents everywhere hoisted. The result was that while Charles X complacently played cards at his suburban palace, the capital and then the throne was lost to him. On the 26th of July, 1830, had appeared the illegal ordinances. On the 27th the barricades were springing up over Paris by ' Modern readers, recalling the street fighting in Berlin in 1919, can rather easily picture the struggle in Paris, taking, however, into account the existence of very rrooked, difficult streets. 416 A HISTORY OP PRANCE magic. On the 28th the insurgents held the City Hall and Notre Dame and were yelling, "Down with the Bourbons!" Mar- mont's men were being driven out of the east of the city and were taking refuge near the Louvre. On the 29th the insurgents were on the offensive, and an executive committee in the City Hall was organizing again the "National Guard," to protect life and property, and was putting it under the command of its old leader Lafayette. As for Charles X, he was at last terrified enough to dismiss Polignac and to announce that the fatal "ordinances" were repealed. When his envoys reached the City Hall they were not received. "Too late," was the answer, "the throne of Charles X has already passed from him in blood." The moment the Republican insurgents had sent Marmont's legions skulking backward the liberal Royalists acted. They had taken possession of the Chamber of Deputies and affected to represent legal authority. They had a candidate for the throne of a strictly constitutional monarchy, Louis-Philippe, Duke of Orleans, of whom more hereafter. A proclamation, drafted by the skillful Thiers, was posted, urging all Frenchmen to com- promise on the Duke. "He awaits our call. Let us issue this call, and he will accept the Charter as we have always wished it to be. It is at the hands of the French nation that he will receive his crown." The Duke of Orleans took possession of the royal palace, although for the moment he only affected to be "Lieutenant- General of the Kingdom." He made the famous promise, "The Charter shall henceforth be a reality." Cavaignac and his Republican committee still held the City Hall. They had wished, not for a better king, but for no king at all; however, it was clear enough that they only represented a minor fraction of the nation. Louis-Philippe rode across the city to their stronghold, praised and cajoled them, embraced Lafayette, and stood out with him. upon the balcony of the City Hall, draped in the Tricolor and receiving the applause of the people (July 31). The Republicans perforce made the best of the LOUIS-PHILIPPE PROCLAIMED 417 situation. As Cavalgnac said frankly: "You are wrong in thank- ing us [for retiring] : we have yielded because we are not ready for resistance." The rest of France cheerfully accepted the decision of the capital. Charles X vainly tried to abdicate in favor of his grand- son, but the Chamber promptly declared Louis-Philippe "King of the French" (August 7, 1830). The deposed monarch then retired wearily to England and ended his days in exile, dying at Goritz in Austria, ia 1836. No king was ever more clearly the author of his own troubles than he.' And so the nation was to have another government and an- other dynasty. Louis-Philippe, "the King of the Barricades," was to substitute for the rule of the Ultras the reign of the bourgeois. • An opinion wjrtli quoting is that of Queen Victoria of England who wrote in a letter to King Leopold I of Belgium in 1836, that Charles X "from his despotic and harsh disposition upset all that the other [Louis XVIII] had done, snd lost the throae." CHAPTER XX THE " CITIZEN-KING " AND THE RULE OF THE BOURGEOIS The "July Revolution" of 1830 caused a great rumbling and tumbling in Europe. It seemed as if France was about to start again on her old path of being the trouble-maker for the world. Almost before. the tidings of the new king in Paris had become cold, the report spread of the outbreak in Brussels (August 25, 1830) whereby the Belgians declared their independence and put an end to their uncomfortable union with Holland. In November was to come a revolt in Poland against Russian au- thority, and before the year closed there had been also move- ments in many of the smaller German States aiming to wring constitutions from their unwilling rulers. Early in 1831 there were new uprisings of Liberalists in several of the wretched little Italian principalities in a vain efiFort to get better government and less tyranny. For all these upheavals, which threatened to wreck the whole precious system laid down in 1815 at Vienna, the autocrats of Austria, Russia, and Prussia, and their second cousins the Tory party in England, were prone to blame Louis- Philippe. Would France fly off at a tangent? Would she quickly degenerate into a new Jacobinism at home, and encourage every kind of disturbing propaganda abroad? Therp was a serious possibility that German, Austrian, and Russian armies might even, at Metternich's behest, invade France again, to restore the Bourbons as a preventive of a new spread of Revolutionary heresy. All these fears were in vain. The whole history of the reign of Louis-Philippe is one of dull anti-climax. The new regime was very little different from that of the Restoration. The real change consisted in giving power to a new set of men. Instead of the Bourbons, tied by tradition and obligation to the old noblesse EARLY CAREER OF LOUIS-PHILIPPE 419 and the clergy, there was the Orleans family, half bourgeois and "Voltairean," and forced to lean on the semi-liberal middle classes. Theoretically, indeed, this "July Monarchy" ^ repre- sented the acceptance of the sovereignty of the people. Thiers in a proclamation said, "It is from the French people that he [Louis-Philippe] will hold his crown." Guizot, another promoter of the new dynasty, announced, "He will respect our rights, for it is from us that he will hold his own rights." The new ruler himself declared that he was "King of the French by the grace of God and the good-will of the nation"; and he took particular pains to swear allegiance to the Charter. It was written into the law that the Charter was not merely granted by the Monarch, but handed down by the nation and agreed to by the King; also that the King had no power to issue ordinances which sus- pended or altered the regular statutes. So far all was excellent. France was to become a limited monarchy in fact as well as in name. But although the King was to be "limited," he was nevertheless still a king. The question of his personality and policy became all-important. Louis-Philippe was the son of a Duke of Orleans who in 1789 would have possessed a clear title to the throne had anything cut off the reigning family of the Bourbons. The elder prince had been on very uncousinly terms with Louis XVI, had pan- dered demagogically to the Revolutionists, had called himself "Philippe Egalite (Equality) " when the old titles were shipped overboard, and had finally been elected to the Convention and actually voted for the execution of the King.^ Citizen "Egalite" himself fell under the guillotine in 1793. His oldest son was Louis-Philippe. That heir to a great title spent a wandering and ' The French, as the reader has of course noted, delight to describe political institutions, etc., from the date which saw their birth. The "July Monarchy," of course, originated with the revolution of July, 1830. ' This truckling to the mob did not win him the least respect from the more honorable Jacobins. One of them declared he would vote to acquit Louis XVI, and not to convict (as he had intended), "that I may not tread in the steps of the man who voted before me." 420 A HISTORY OF FRANCE poverty-stricken youth. He taught mathematics in Switzerland. For a little while he lived as an exile in the United States near Brooklyn; then he drifted back to England, the Government whereof gave him a pension. He married the daughter of the King of Sicily and in 1814 came back to Paris with the Bour- bons. His kinsmen naturally detested him, and gave him just as little favor at court as possible, but he recovered most of his family property, and made himself very popular by his demo- cratic habits — walking the streets under his green umbrella, talking and rubbing elbows with working-men, sending his sons to the same schools as did well-to-do bourgeois, and welcoming to his palace artists and literary men who were of avowedly "liberal" tendencies. His habits were those of a jovial English gentleman rather than of a French grand seigneur, and when in 1830 it became needful to make a hurried dispatch of the Bourbons, no candidate for the throne seemed more likely to meet the requirements than he. He would steer France to liberty, it was said, without plunging her on the rocks of Jacobinism. Nevertheless this "Citizen-King," who even after reaching the throne seemed so delightfully democratic in his habits, was as a matter of fact intensely tenacious of authority, anxious to dictate to his ministers, and almost as obstinate as Charles X. He had a large family. He devoted a large part of his energies to the eminently "bourgeois" pursuit of marrying o£E his chil- dren advantageously and adding to the great personal wealth of the Orleans princes. He took pains not to violate the terms of the Charter as it was revised in 1830-31, but he set his face like flint against any proposition to amplify the modest liberties therein granted. He knew the other Great Powers regarded his advent with distrust if not with aversion. He carefully dis- couraged, therefore, any proposal by the French liberals to carry diplomatic and military aid to the struggling revolutionists in other countries. His private life was virtuous and dignified, but he never was guilty of constructive statesmanship, and he hugged the delusion that by playing for the favor of a single influential THE NEW NATIONAL GUARD 421 class of the nation he could avoid the need of conciliating all the rest. This delusion was the final cause of his downfall. The Charter had presented certain features which even the most moderate Liberals in 1830 demanded should be altered. Of course the Republicans desired universal suffrage. They were told in substance to be content with their beloved Tricolor flag and a very modest enlargement of the electorate. By the new law of 1831 the double vote for the very rich was suppressed. For the electors, the legal age was lowered to twenty-five, and the tax rating from 300 to 200 francs ($40). Certain professional "capacities" — lawyers, judges, professors, physicians — were allowed to vote even if they only paid 100 francs. To be a can- didate for the Chamber of Deputies one had to pay 500 francs tax, not 1000 as formerly. This raised the whole electoral body to about 190,000 out of a population of 30,000,000. The 190,000 were known soon by an arrogant name, insulting to the rest of the nation; they were the Pays legale ("the country before the law"), as if the rest of their fellow citizens counted for nothing! To defend this aristocracy of wealth the ruling powers now proceeded to reorganize the National Guard, and make it into a really formidable fighting force. Its purpose, however, was not so much to defend the frontier against a new Prussian or Austrian invasion as to defend the July Monarchy against the assaults by the radicals. Pains were taken that only reliable bourgeois should be enrolled in the lists of the new "legions." The reorganized militia found in truth that its task was no sinecure. It had to handle serious riots and even rebellions. In the first years of Louis-Philippe more than two thousand Guardsmen were killed or wounded fighting insurgents. The Corps was in short the bulwark of the Orleanist regime. While it was faithful the Constitutional Monarchy held its own. When it deserted, in 1848, Louis-Philippe fled quickly into exile. So then we have a fairly complete and formidable personal monarchy "veiled under a middle-class disguise." Just as Augustus Caesar called himself, not "king," but "first citizen," 4?2 A HISTORY OF FRANCE to hoodwink his fellow Romans as to the true nature of his government, so Louis-Philippe erased the royal lilies from the panels of his carriages, and on reception days caused the doors of his palace to stand open to almost any decently dressed citizen who cared to come in and shake hands with the head of the State. But the true philosophy of his government revealed itself in the speech of his prime minister, Casimir-Perier, in March, 1831, "France has desired that the Monarchy should become national : it does not desire that it should become power- less." No recent period of French histoiy is so exempt from striking episodes as this reign of Louis-Philippe (1830-48). There were no serious wars except in Algeria — a colonial conquest to be discussed later, no important crisis in the Government, abso- lutely no important political reforms. The Church now paid the penalty for the much- vaunted alliance of "the Altar and the Throne" under Charles X. Without being actually persecuted and deposed as a State religion, the Church party was made to feel clearly enough that the new Government owed it little and loved it less. On the other hand, the Republicans, without whose brave if undisciplined fighting behind the barricades the overthrow of the Bourbons would have been impossible, were soon angry and vengeful. They had dreamed of some kind of a return to the brave days of 1792-94 : and behold, the new rulers of France were barely adhering to the most essential things won in 1789 ! The result was a series of insurrections by the work- ing-classes bent on completing the task they had dropped in 1830. There were two days of fierce street fighting in Paris in 1832; while in 1834 in Lyons the ill-paid silk-workers rose in insurrection giving the city over to a five days' riot, and only succumbing to a serious military effort. These attempts should have been a warning to Louis-Philippe and his "Liberal" ministers that a genuine attempt should be made to conciliate the lower classes, both by enlarging the elec- torate and by legislation calculated to improve the economic ELEMENTS OF OPPOSITION 423 condition of the industrial elements. Nothing substantial was done except in the way of repression. The courts were clogged with prosecutions of Republican newspapers, and the Tribune (a leading radical organ) was prosecuted 111 separate times, and condemned to fines in the aggregate of 157,000 francs ($31,400). The hatred for the King grew: between 1835 and 1846 six dis- tinct attempts were made to murder him. The 1835 attempt was especially diabolical. A Corsican, one Fieschi, manufactured an "infernal machine" with a hundred gun-barrels, which were fired simultaneously at the King when he rode with his suite through a street in Paris. Louis-Philippe and his sons all es- caped: but twelve other persons perished. The natural answer to such a deed was more repression. Special courts were set to handle offenders attacking the security of the State. Convictions could be given by a mere majority vote of the jury, seven out of twelve.' Exceedingly heavy penalties were provided for all "excesses" by the press; for example, it was forbidden to pub- lish the lists of jurors; and if a newspaper was fined, it was for- bidden that sympathizers of the editor should take up a sub- scription to discharge his penalty. There seemed now as little real liberty in France as in the palmiest days of the Ultras. Louis-Philippe was thus subjected from both sides to the most biting manner of criticism; the friends of the Church and of the old Bourbons (still to be reck- oned with) of course would have none of him, and as most unnatural allies they now had the Republicans. These elements of dissatisfaction continued to grow until the new explosion of 1848. The one class the King did stand well with was his sworn partisans, the upper bourgeois. This was an age for stock- jobbing and expanding commercial enterprises. France was prosperous, although it was not a prosperity that was shared fairly by the artisan classes. Wealth was creating a host of pre- ' Note, however, French law at that time did not require unanimity in a jury to convict: eight out o£ twelve could bring in an adverse verdict. 424 A HISTORY OF FRANCE tentious parvenus who found the prevaihng atmosphere of Paris much to their hking. Thiers and Guizot, the most im- portant of Louis-Philippe's ministers, were nothing if not ardent defenders of "the rights of property." The novels of Balzac, written in this period, give typical pictures of the spirit of sordid acquisitiveness which seemed to dominate the life of the nation: a spirit whose loftiest gospel was that "honesty is the best policy," and which often seemed to treat bankruptcy as a less pardonable offense than murder. With lighter and more roman- tic touch, the elder Dumas, in his "Count of Monte Cristo," gives a commentary upon the "higher circles" of this period — the great financiers who think in terms of millions, the vulgar scrambhng for wealth as the key to power, the sham aristo- crats who boast their nobility while they conceal a very recent family skeleton: the willingness of great and small to cringe before any adventurer who seems to have a vast banker's credit. It was as if the nation that had given the world the the- ology of Calvin, the philosophy of Rousseau, the heroic idealism of the Girondists, was running to seed in an inglorious commer- cialism which made wealth the superior of breeding, intelligence, and religion. This was not so, but it was certainly true of the men who seemed leading the policy of France for these monot- onous eighteen years. While Louis-Philippe maintained pretty stiffly his personal control of the Government, he did not make the mistake of trying to do without real ministers. On the contrary, by using competent administrators he boasted that he alike confirmed his own power and satisfied the "country-before-the-law." He was obliged repeatedly to use as prime minister Thiers, one of the Liberals to whom he largely owed his throne in 1830. But Thiers was not sufficiently subservient. He held that the King should choose his ministers from the party predominant in the Chamber and then let them govern in their own way, until they lost the confidence of the deputies. That, however, was far too "constitutional" for Louis-Philippe. He desired to choose his LOUIS-PHILIPPE NAPOLEON III ADOLPHE THIERS LEON GAME ETTA THIERS 425 owB ministers, and mark out for them a policy of his own selec- tion, leaving to them the task of manipulating the Chamber so as to avoid friction, and getting it to ratify cheerfully the propo- sitions submitted. Thiers was a personage of very high ability, who was re- peatedly summoned to power prior to 1840 because the King could find no other man able to handle the Chamber, but in 1840 there came a crisis over foreign matters. England, Austria, and Russia were interfering in the affairs of Egypt, whose viceroy, Mehemet Ali, had placed himself under French pro- tection. Thiers was willing to risk even a war with England to vindicate French interests in the Near East, and he urged a bellicose policy. Louis-PhUippe imderstood clearly enough, however, that his beloved bourgeois wished for anything sooner than a capital war. At best, it would interrupt speculations and dividends; at worst, it would see France invaded by a new coali- tion. He dismissed Thiers from office, pocketed the national pride, and summoned as prime minister Guizot (another Liberal of 1830 fame), who by a somewhat inglorious surrender of French claims in Egypt tided over the crisis. At last the King had found a lieutenant after his own heart. Guizot and Louis- Philippe remained in close working alliance from 1840 to 1848 when they suddenly and simultaneously had to take the road to exile. Before Thiers left power he had apparently, with the hearty consent of the King, taken a step which was to have important consequences. Ever since 1815, the Napoleonic legend had been growing and gripping the imaginations of the rising generation of France. The Corsican was no longer the pitiless "ogre" of the conscription; he was the peerless champion of France against her old enemies, the hero of Lodi, Jena, and Moscow. Thiers had himself greatly contributed to this rehabilitation of the Emperor's memory by his literary efforts,' he being already one ' His famous History of the Consulate and the Empire, however, did not appear "ntil after his retirement from office in 1840. 426 A HISTORY OF FRANCE of the most famous historians as well as politicians of France. Napoleon had expressed a wish in his will to be buried on the banks of the Seine, "in the midst of the French people I have loved so well." In 1840 the Government sent a frigate to St. Helena, and Louis-Philippe's third son. Prince de Joinville, honored the famous dead by commanding this vessel that brought the casket homeward. In December, 1840, Paris went into extravagant excitement over the most magnificent State funeral which the capital had ever seen. As the catafalque passed under the Arch of Triumph the old cry once more rang out — " Vive rEmpereur!" The numerous veterans of the great captain dissolved in tears. And so the procession swept on to the Dome of the Invalides. This funeral was undoubtedly a serious political blunder. It seemed to revive and to stimulate the " Napoleonic legend " — the belief growing in the hearts of all too many Frenchmen that the Emperor had been a true patriot who had been over- thrown only because he had defended the honor and liberty of the nation. Within less than ten years the friends of the July Monarchy were to lament this celebration in their exile, and yet in 1840 the proceedings seemed harmless enough. If there were dangers to Louis-Philippe were they not from the old Bourbons or the new Republicans? As for the Bonapartist pre- tensions, the leader of the party was a certain Louis Napoleon, son of the one-time "King of Holland." He was considered a very impractical adventurer. In 1836 he had attempted a fili- bustering raid upon Strasbourg. It had failed comically. In 1840 he had just attempted another raid upon Boulogne. It had failed even more comically, and this time its leader had been lodged tightly in prison. The King and his ministers had more dangerous foes to dread. '' Louis-Philippe had had ten prime ministers in the ten years preceding 1840: now he was to have only one for eight years. Frangois Guizot was frankly a Monarchist. "The throne," as he put it, "was not an empty armchair." He was a native of INERTIA OF THE GOVERNMENT 427 Nismes in the South Country and was born of a Protestant family at a time when to be a Protestant meant public disfavor if not regular persecution. He had been professor of modern history in the University of Paris, ^ but in 1822 the Ultra min- isters found his teachings "too liberal" and suspended him. From that time until 1830 he had been one of the leading defenders of constitutionalism against reaction, and he might have been expected to go on and advocate a progressive regime under the " Citizen-King." This was not to be. As he had opposed anything less than the terms of the Charter before 1830, so after 1830 he opposed the slightest enlargement of its very narrow "liberties." Constitutionalism to him meant the rule of the upper bourgeoisie — the only part of France edu- cated, but not mediaevatized. He was entirely willing, with all his Calvinist tenacity, to put his talents at the disposal of Louis-Philippe. He had been first tried in lesser positions. Now he was made prime minister. The King was delighted with him, declaring, "He is my mouth!" This last phase of the July Monarchy is extremely unevent- ful. The Government had neither a reform programme nor even one of deliberate reaction. Its sole ambition was for the static prosperity of the dynasty and of the favored classes. There were no serious wars (save in Algeria), and Guizot deliberately endured the taunt that he was "for peace at any price" in his foreign policy. Louis-Philippe continued to play the "Citizen- King," although after the Fieschi affair in 1835 he no longer dared to walk along the Paris streets, and when he drove out he sat with his back to the horses, as being thus a less exposed target for assassins. Thirteen times in all he is alleged to have been shot at, and it must be admitted that the King faced with considerable bravery the constant chance of being murdered; but he never seems to have endeavored to make his existence safer by conciliating public opinion with liberalizing reforms.^ ' His printed lectures on The History of Civilization are epoch-making in the new scientific study of history as it developed in the nineteenth century. ^ Louis-Philippe and his Queen, Marie Amelie, seem to have kept up all their 428 A HISTORY OF FRANCE The brilliant orator Lamartine summed up the situation when in 1842 he said of Guizot and his master, "A stone post could carry out their policy ! " And in 1847 another protesting deputy cried, "What have they done in seven years? — Nothing, noth- ing, nothing ! " To all of which criticism Guizot calmly rephed that his aim was "to satisfy the general body of sane and calm citizens" rather than "the limited body of fanatics" affected with "a craze for innovation." And yet this was a strictly constitutional regime. The min- ister and the King could declare they were living up to the precise letter of the Charter. Not merely did Guizot have a majority in the Chamber in 1840; it was increased by the elections of 1842 and of 1846. How, therefore, could it be truth- fully said that the policy of the Government defied public opinion? As a matter of fact the ministers, with admirable adroitness, had made themselves very secure with the " country- before-the-law." The body of electors was so small that it was possible for the Government to offer direct inducements to their disposing fraction to get it to select deputies who would be after the "Citizen-King's" own heart. Readers familiar with the means whereby Walpole in eighteenth-century England retained his majority in the House of Commons will have a keen idea of the methods of Guizot. The average "electoral college" con- tained such a number of public officials (who owed their posi- tions to the good-will of the ministry) that the Government could count on a solid block of devoted friends in every district. Petty governmental favors — for example, patronage with licenses to sell tobacco, opportunities for good speculations in the new railways, and actual gifts of Government contracts, etc. — would secure the votes of more waverers. After a deputy had been elected, it would be lucky if Guizot did not soon have him bound hand and foot. There were no salaries to the mem- bourgeois virtues to the end. Shortly before 1848 an American lady in Paris was visiting a prominent dressmaker. Observing an old black silk dress hanging over a chair she remarked, "I did not know you would fix over old dresses?" "I do so only for the Queen" came the prompt answer. OPPOSITION PARTIES 429 bers of the Chamber. The Government would offer them all kinds of chances to get railway franchises, and what was worse, downright oflBcial positions. Presently about 200 deputies, nearly fifty per cent of the entire Chamber, were holding Government offices and drawing Government pay — which they were naturally loath to forfeit by unfriendly votes and speeches! "Corruption" (the name was almost openly used) thus became a regular system of government, and the numerous scandals, revealed in 1848, proved sufficiently that the subal- terns practiced the system as well as the austere prime minister. "What is the Chamber?" cried a deputy in 1841 — "A great bazar, where every one barters his conscience, or what passes for his conscience, in exchange for a place or an office." There was, indeed, an opposition to Guizot that vented itself in protests about his inert foreign policy and in demands for electoral reform. It was only a helpless minority. Part of the protests came from sincere liberals, who desired either an orderly republic, or at least a monarchy with infinitely greater popular rights than existed under the "Citizen-King." There was rising, however, a party of protest which aimed for economic as well as merely political reforms. French industry was de- veloping. The factories were increasing in size. The use of the steam engine and of the new machinery was driving out the old hand work.^ Labor conditions were bad, the hours long, pay pitifully small, and the legitimate grievances of the working- class many. The bourgeois administration met the rising indus- trial discontent with few concessions, almost no intelligent reforms and much repression. Better working conditions im- plied, for the moment at least, smaller dividends for the great manufacturers who swore by Guizot. It was well known that the Paris industrial quarters were full of socialist theorizing and that a very clever author and thinker — Louis Blanc — was ' Steam stationary engines came into France much more slowly than in England. They were hardly used in industry prior to 181.'5; in 1810 there had been only 15 or 16, employed solely for pumping. In 1830 there were still only 625: but in 1850 these had risen to 5322. 430 A HISTORY OF FRANCE advocating not merely a democratic republic, but the creatioii of "national workshops," owned by the State, controlled by their workmen, and suppressing, or at least gradually succeed- ing, all private industrial establishments. As early as 1842, an acute German observer. Stein, asserted, "The time for purely political movements in France is past: the next revolution must inevitably be a social revolution." The King, the Prime Minister, and the bourgeoisie heeded none of these things. Guizot met the demand for an increase of the voting body with arrogant disdain. " Work and grow rich!" he declared. "Then you will become voters !" — although his whole policy toward the artisans made it practically impossible for the average Frenchman even to hope to "grow rich." ' There were, indeed, certain desirable changes made by the July Monarchy. Some of the terribly severe penal laws were modified. An honest attempt was made to introduce better primary schools. Hitherto elementary instruction for the chil- ren of the poor in many communes had been simply a farce. Henceforth the communes were required not merely to appoint a schoolmaster, but to provide him with a lodging, a school- room, and a fixed salary. These primary schools, however, were not strictly free, and this fact put them still at a heavy discount. It was to be a good while before the French school system was on a satisfactory basis. The July Monarchy was thus mainly a period of shams, sterility, and growing discontent. Nevertheless Louis-Philippe did witness one great change for France which was to react mightily upon her future and, one may say, upon the future of other nations, especially that of the great continent of Africa. In 1815 France had possessed one foothold on African soil, ' He had also said, "This world is no place for universal suffrage, that absurd system which would call all living creatures to the exercise of political rights." This from a leader who had suffered much for liberalism under the Bouibon Monarchy ! MOSLEM ALGERIA 431 the insignificant trading post of Senegal. In 1914 she was to possess nearly one third of the entire African continent, acquir- ing this by one of the most important feats of colonial expansion in the history of the world. The foundations for this amazing success were laid by the otherwise inglorious monarchs Charles X and Louis-Philippe. Algeria was one of the Mohammedan North African States between Tunis on the east and Morocco on the west. Since the Arabs had conquered the country in the seventh century, sweep- ing out the remnants of Roman and Byzantine power, the country had lapsed back into semi-barbarism. The native Moors had become completely Mohammedanized, and under Islamic conditions the country, which had given to the Christian world St. Augustine, was as lost to progress as if sunk in the bottom of the sea. The government had been nominally under a "dey" supposed to be the vassal of the Turkish Sultan, but his authority over the interior tribes of "Arabs" and "Berbers" was very uncertain. It became still more uncertain when, beyond the heights of the Atlas Mountains, Algeria wandered off into the limitless sands of Sahara. Under good government, however, Algeria was capable of great fertility, and was one of the most promising lands not yet occupied by Europeans. In 1815, Algiers, the chief city, was still the center of a law- less piratical power whose ships were the terror of Mediterranean waters. Most Americans know that in 1815 the United States declared war on the Dey, and sent a squadron under Commo- dore Decatur which avenged the depredations against American commerce and forced the Corsairs to promise good behavior for the future. There were also English demonstrations against the Dey in 1816 and 1819, but nothing real was accomplished. Oriental promises are easily broken, and the Algerine pirate chiefs were irresponsible and incorrigible. In 1827, however, a dispute arose between France and Dey Hussein over a commercial matter. The local despot lost his temper during a discussion and struck the French consul in the face with his 432 A HISTORY OF FRANCE fly-flapper. This was a direct insult to Charles X's Government which could not be overlooked unless the French wished to lose all prestige before Orientals. French warships blockaded Algiers Harbor, and in 1829 the corsairs added to their insults by firing on a French vessel carrying a flag of truce. The Paris Govern- ment was now compelled to very resolute action. A regular expeditionary force was sent to Algeria, the Dey was attacked by land and sea, and on July 5, 1830, the city of Algiers surrendered. This act was almost simultaneous with the July Revolution. The victory came too late to prop up the prestige of the tottering Bourbons, and Louis-Philippe found himself faced with the question of following up the conquest or at once evacuating the country. In France there were soon two parties. The majority of the Chambers favored letting Algeria alone. To the average bourgeois elector the region seemed far away, with only remote commercial possibilities, but with a very great certainty of being a heavy drain on the taxpayer. Popular sentiment, however, was decidedly in favor of pursuing a conquest fairly begun. With characteristic sluggishness the July Monarchy decided merely to occupy the chief harbors and "to await events." The natives, however, provided the "events" themselves. They made formidable attacks on the French troops and it was needful to take the offensive to avenge the out- breaks. Nevertheless, the French hold on Algeria for long was con- fined merely to the coast. For several years only the towns of Algeria, Oran, and Bona were occupied by garrisons, although some attempts were made to negotiate with the local "beys" of the interior (former dependents of the "dey"), that they should put themselves under French protection. "While matters were in this inchoate state, however, the Moors found a re- doubtable leader: the Emir Abd-el-Kader, "a man of rare intelligence, a fearless horseman, and an eloquent orator." This gallant chieftain, a veritable new Jugurtha on the old Numidian soU, united the scattered tribes under his sovereignty. RESISTANCE OF ABD-EI^KADER 433 and for fifteen years waged fairly even warfare with the whole power which France could send to Africa. For Louis-Philippe to have evacuated Algeria now, in the face of such an attack, would have shaken the prestige of his Government alike in all the Levant and in France itself. This became increasingly true after 1835, when the Emir defeated General Trezel in a regular battle on the banks of the Macta. Abd-el-Kader continued to fight so successfully that in 1837 the French were fain to make a treaty with him by which, in return for a vague acknowledgment of " French sovereignty,"' the whole of western Algeria was resigned to his direct rule. But the Emir looked on this treaty only as a truce preparatory to a regular Jidad ("Holy War"). He devoted his great energies to organiz- ing a formidable army partly on the European model, and assembled not merely field artillery, but a park of siege guns. It was claimed that 50,000 cavalry and a still larger body of footmen would answer his summons. He prepared arsenals, powder factories, cannon foundries, and posts for supply along the probable strategic positions. When he believed that all was ready, in 1839 he broke the truce, and drove his attack up to the very gates of Algiers, burning the farms and massacring the unlucky French colonists who fell into his hands. There was nothing for it now but for Louis-Philippe to send a really formidable army into Algeria. General Bugeaud was given first 80,000, then 115,000, men to handle a decidedly serious military situation. He made a deliberate change in the French system of warfare in Africa. Hitherto the invaders had held on to the coast towns, but had made no effort to grasp the hinterland. Bugeaud lightened the equipment of his regulars, used small cannon that could be carried by mule-back, and multiplied the number of his swift, mobile columns. By this principle of the "resolute offensive" Bugeaud carried the war into the western Oran district, whence Abd-el-Kader drew most of his resources, captured his strongholds and magazines one by one, and by 1843 he had chased the Emir and the remnant of 434 A HISTORY OF FRANCE his forces into Morocco. This was not quite the end, however. Islamic fanaticism made a supreme effort. A devotee, Bu-Mazu (the "Goat Man"), called the faithful again to arms and Abd- el-Kader appeared again in Algeria. But by this time the Berbers and the other Moorish elements were splitting into parties. A strong faction had come to regard French rule as a lesser evil than that of falling under the despotism of the Emir. Finally, in 1847, Abd-el-Kader surrendered to the Due d'Aumale, a son of Louis-Philippe (Bugeaud having recently retired), and the period of conquest was over.^ The French had still, of course, their problems in Algeria. To handle the warhke and fanatical mountain or desert tribes required much firmness and very much tact. There was to be a spasmodic insurrection in 1864, and a decidedly serious one in 1871, when the prestige of France was everywhere lowered by the defeat by Germany, and when the restless Moors were fain to believe that her power was broken. They learned to their cost that Frenchmen could still fight, although it required a bitter struggle to reassert European authority at a moment when the home Government was sorely beset with many nearer problems. By 1890 the French hold on Algeria was so consolidated that the attempt could be begun to reach out across the Sahara and to couple up with the French post developing in the great region of the Niger and the Senegal. Finally in 1914 the relations be- tween European and Algerine had become so mutually trustful that France was able, not merely to withdraw a large fraction of her entire army of occupation to meet the German crisis but to recruit many tens of thousands of fiery Berbers to fight val- iantly and loyally for the cause of the world's freedom on the fields of Picardy and Champagne. ' Abd-el-Kader was sent (contrary to the terms of his capitulation) to France, and there held prisoner until Louis Napoleon came into power. The latter gave him a pension and allowed him to retire to Damascus in Syria. He died there in comfortable exile in 1883. One of his grandsons seems to have been an officer in the French army in 1914. RISING DEMAND FOR REFORM 435 The surrender of Abd-el-Kader was only two months, almost to a day, before the downfall of Louis-Philippe. The July Monarchy continued apparently prosperous and pretentious up to the very end. The suddenness of its downfall indicated how rotten had been its foundation. Its prestige and popularity had been, indeed, undermined by the notorious "Spanish mar- riages," wherein the King had clearly shown his willingness to advance the private interests of his family even at the expense of the general interests of France.' The downfall of Louis Philippe had, indeed, been foreseen for years by many shrewd observers. Metternich, who (with all his narrowness) was no fool, remarked early in the reign that the Orleanist regime rested neither on popular enthusiasm, the authority of a pleb- iscite, the glory of a Napoleon, nor the sanction of a "legiti- mate" dynasty. "Its durability rests solely upon accidents." That it lasted as long as it did was mainly due to the inherent conservatism of the French masses outside of Paris, the sordid worldly wisdom of the King's bourgeois politicians, the gener- ally peaceful state of Europe, and to a large amount of mere good luck. In February, 1848, that good luck suddenly deserted. Year by year the demand for "reform" — mainly electoral reform — had been rising. Even with the very limited franchise there was a respectable amount of protest in the Chamber. Outside of the Chamber there was still more protest. In 1847 there began to be a series of "reform banquets," as a substitute for parades and for regular public meetings which the Govern- ment resolutely discouraged. The participants in these banquets often claimed to be loyal to the King, but that they were simply desiring a wider franchise. Sometimes the agitators, however, 1 The details of this rather sordid family plot need not be discussed. The essential fact was that Louis-Philippe arranged for the marriage of one of his younger sons to a Spanish princess who was likely to inherit the throne of Spain. This marriage enraged the English, who believed the King had broken a pledge given to them in the matter; and it did France no good whatever. It merely enabled Louis-Philippe to provide for an unattached member of his own family, while embittering relations with a great foreign power. 436 A HISTORY OF FRANCE expected something more. There began to be "Republican" banquets at which the Monarchy's right to existence was at least indirectly criticized. Nothing was done to meet the demands of the moderates, so it was not surprising that the radicals made headway. It could not be denied that the existing franchise made the Chamber a mere "club of capitalists"; and when charges of corruption were hurled against the body, Guizot felt it enough to ask his own nominees in the deputies whether they felt themselves corrupted? The whole situation was summed up in the striking assertion of Lamartine, "France is bored." Omitting picturesque and merely personal incidents the over- throw of the July Monarchy came briefly thus: on the 22d of February, 1848, the Opposition elements in the deputies re- solved to hold a grand banquet of protest against the "do nothing" policy of the Government. The authorities, however, foolishly prohibited the banquet. The original holders thereof peaceably decided to give it up, but the news of its abandon- ment was not spread in time. There was excitement and ex- pectancy of a clash, and on the 22d many Parisians were on the streets. Turbulent elements were soon shouting recklessly, "Hurrah for reform!" All day there were petty riots and some gun-shops were plundered. The police, however, seemed to have the situation well in hand. The leaders, of the radical movement considered the case unpromising and did not issue a summons to arms, but on the morning of the 23d unattached bodies of working-men began casting up barricades. The Government then called out the National Guard. That body, however, "bourgeois" as it was, was disgusted with the ministry. Many of its members in turn began yelling, "Hurrah for reform!" — often adding, "Down with Guizot." This defection of the Guard shook the resolution of King and premier. Guizot resigned and the word spread that there would be a "reform ministry" and a genuine recasting of the Constitution. What more was there to fight for? That night all respectable middle-class Parisians first illuminated their THE RADICALS CALL FOR A REPUBLIC 437 windows and then quietly went to bed. The victory was won and the crisis seemed over. But the crisis was not over for the Repubhcan radicals. They realized that there was no time like the present, when barricades were up and arms were still in the hands of the industrial element. In front of the Foreign Office a body of anti-monarchists was fired upon by the police. Placing several dead bodies on a cart and parading the same by torchlight through the artisan quarters, the radicals called the people "to arms!" The Monarchy had been slaughtering the people; now let the people turn out the Monarchy. On the 24th the cry was no longer for "reform," but, "Long live the Republic!" Vainly Louis-Philippe now began announcing concession after concession. The soldiers, as in 1830, proved none too valiant when fighting for a Government highly unpopular. The eastern quarters of the city were soon held by the insurgents. Every- where were the placards, "Louis-Philippe massacres us as Charles. X did; let him follow Charles X!" The elderly King showed considerable energy in exhorting the National Guard to resist the radicals, but when he heard discordant shouts from its ranks he returned discouraged to the Tuileries and hastily abdicated in favor of his young grandson, the Comte de Paris. Under a popular regent for the lad the dynasty might be saved. But no such eleventh-hour subterfuge could deliver the Orleanists. At 4.30 p.m. on that turbulent 24th of February the mob forced its way into the Tuileries. The Chamber had in the meantime proclaimed the young Comte de Paris as king. The lad's "reign" lasted only a few minutes. The mob surged into the hall. The Republican fraction of the deputies hastily took charge of the situation and proclaimed a provisional govern- ment to rule France until a more regular executive could be chosen. The last relics of royalty vanished. At the City Hall a still more radical body of "Democratic Republicans" had also proclaimed a new government, but the two factions presently reached a compromise by which the conservative Republicans 438 A HISTORY OF FRANCE took most of the governmental portfolios, and the radical leaders were put in as "secretaries" to the various ministers.' The next day the new provisional rulers sent out their proclamation, "The Republic is the Government of France!" A few days later they decreed the convocation of a national convention to draw up a constitution. Meantime the Orleans princes were fleeing, not very heroically, across the Channel to join their Bourbon cousins in dreary exile. Old Louis-Philippe died in England in 1850. He had been neither a knave nor a fool, but by his sordid, self -centered, obsti- nate policy he had destroyed the chance that France could find a peaceful happiness as a democratic government with an heredi- tary president as in England. Needless to say his opinions of the acts of his countrymen remained bitter unto the end. "All is possible," said he, to a visitor in his exile — "all is possible to France — an empire, a republic, the [Bourbon claimant] Cham- bord, or my grandson; but one thing is impossible — that any of these should last. The nation has hilled respect." ^ This judgment was, of course, harsh and untrue. But it was quite true that an insurrection by only a limited fraction of Paris had overthrown the Government and substituted another without making the slightest attempt to discover what kind of a reformed regime would be most welcome to the rest of France. The departments had accepted the new revolution in a kind of stupor, unprepared, unconsulted, unorganized for prompt action and confronted with a completed deed. Speedy develop- ments, however, were to show the great gulf fixed between the >■ Modern readers will not fail to see the similarity to the case of the "Ma- jority" and the "Independent Socialists" when the German Monarchy was overthrown in Berlin in November, 1918. ^ Louis-Philippe's Prime Minister long survived him. Guizot escaped to Lon- don in 1848. In 1849 he returned to France, but soon found that chances of restoring the Orleans Monarchy were hopeless. He then retired definitely from politics, and devoted himself with dignity and success to literary work. His old age, when he was recognized as a national "sage," went far to redeem the blunders of his ministry. He was a devout Protestant, and took a distinguished position as a leader of the French non-Catholics. He died in Normandy in 1874. THE SALONS 439 explosive faubourgs and the conservative solid peasantry. As a very competent judge (Jules Simon) thus sums up the 1848 Revolution: "The agitation, set on foAt by certain Liberals, resulted in the Republic which they dreaded, and at the last moment, universal sufiFrage, set on foot by certain Republicans, resulted in promoting the cause of socialism which they abhorred." Aspects op French Life undeb the Restored Monarchy: 1814-1848 Despite the fact that this is mainly a political history, certain phases of French life, the development of conditions in Paris, etc., have a considerable importance in illustrating the conditions under which the events of 1814 to 1848 were possible. The revolutions of 1830 and 1848 were both largely of Parisian manufacture, and to understand them a certain understanding of affairs in the capital is highly necessary. French society in this period reflects the general state of transition from the days of the Old Regime to the Modern France of to-day, and like every era of social transition it presented various phases which have to be accounted for in ordinary history.* French society has never seemed more refined than during this period when the nobility, who had profited by recent adversity, and the bour- geoisie, who had never forsaken their habits of cold restraint, set their stamp upon society. It is true, however, that there were now political dissensions which gave rise to at least two political parties, and we no longer find a single, unified upper society as in the France of the eighteenth century. On the one side were the salons of the Royalists; on the other, those of the Liberals. When the Chaussee-d'Antin or the Faubourg Saint-Honore entertained and held their revels, it might safely be concluded tlaat the Faubourg Saint-Germain was depressed and had no interest in the lists of invitations and in the succeeding festivities. Royalists and Liberals alike, however, shared a predilection for unostentatious elegance, took a keen delight in the life of the salon, and enjoyed the society of elegant women. The old type of French conversa- tion, with its deference and spirited gallantry, was revived. The polish ' The following is largely adapted from M. Alfred Rambaud's excellent Histoire de la Civilisation Contemporaine en France, pp. 491-615. 440 A HISTORY OF FRANCE and the etiquette peculiar to these circles have in fact never again been witnessed since their decline after the year 1848. In the salons of 1820 and 1840 there lived again that same iugenious type of conversation with its clever retorts, its pleasantries and witticisms; even the very madrigals and other poetic affectations of the Ancien RSgime. Politics, philosophy, art, literature were discussed, but just as in the period before the Revolution, much less mention was made of natural science because the interests of the people were essentially literary. The dramas of Victor Hugo, the works of Ingres or of Delacroix, the lyrical compositions of Meyerbeer or Berlioz held a much more prominent place in conversation than the discoveries of Ampere the electrician, or of Arago the astronomer. The influence exerted by the ruling classes on the life of society had not yet been menaced by the counter-influence of the lower classes. It was rarely that any person of social pretensions allowed even a single word of "slang" to intrude into his conversation. Nor had society as yet been affected by those stormy petrels of the middle classes, the artists or the "daubers," the litterati, or above all the literary "bo- hemians." The ideas, the manners, the artistic and literary tastes of these parvenus in letters and in learning, were still simply the occasion for jests and caricatures on the part of good society; and to stamp a thing as "bourgeois" was to damn it as equivalent to all that was hopelessly out of date. Society, however, had its caprices; for example, about 1820 it sud- denly became completely infatuated with the poetry of Byron, with Goethe's "Werther," with "Rene," by Chateaubriand; and as a con- sequence of this mania it became actually fashionable to look "dis- pirited" and "weary of life." "The younger set, who were usually in the best of health, posed as consumptives." The seraphic poetry of Lamartine was popular with large coteries of ethereal and fragile ladies who, with their eyes lifted to heaven, "affected to live on nothing else than the perfume of roses!" Very little is heard of the court of Louis XVIII; the King, who was of a studious nature, a scholar and a classicist, in short, an urbane old gentleman who recited Horace and who made really clever jests, was infirm and afflicted with gout, and had no fondness for society. When his daughter-in-law, the Duchess de Berry, ceased to do the honors of the court after the tragic death of her husband, very little enter- taining was indulged in except at the residences of the Duke and Duchess of Angouleme or at the Pavilion de Marsan where the Count of Artois, the heir-presumptive, held his state. Under Charles X these receptions were limited to a small circle of Royalists of good THE ROYAL COURT 441 standing, or to such individuals as had given proof of their loyalty to the Monarchy. Under the Orleans regime there was of course a de- cidedly marked change. Louis-Philippe, who held his throne as a result of the combined efforts of the Paris masses and of the bourgeois, had caught the alle- giance of the former by singing the "Marseillaise" on the balcony of the Tuileries, of the latter by his practice of admitting them freely to bis salons. The first receptions given by Louis-Philippe at the Palais Royal were in fact a curious spectacle. By the indulgence of the King practically any orderly person who desired was allowed to attend, and the ofiScers of the National Guard from the market districts and from the suburbs arrived in full dress, their wives on their arms, to pay their compliments to the "Citizen-King." The personal virtues of the King and Queen and the simple, un- affected manners of the entire royal household naturally delighted the bourgeois. They were gratified when the King authorized them to promenade in the Garden of the Tuileries under the very windows of his apartment, which was in turn thrown open to them on certain days. Visitors were impressed, while passing through the salons, and even the bedchambers of the royal couple, to see everywhere evidences of good management in both the public and private life of the court. They enjoyed and appreciated the familiar sight of the King going about with his green umbrella, an act and article which was to the average bourgeois a symbol alike of economy and of foresight. They were also greatly impressed on learning that the King like themselves carved his own fowl at table even in the presence of ambassadors. The sons of the King received the same education as the sons of the bourgeoisie, and attended the public lycee; when they had finished the general course there, a reception was held at the Tuileries to which their comrades were invited. And in fairness it should be said, that notwith- standing all the charges hurled against the July Monarchy, no Prince, even under the Old Regime, has been more lamented than was the Duke of Orleans after his tragic death in 1842. In literature the bourgeois had abandoned the drama of the "Boule- vard " to the people and had been shocked from the very first by the invasion of Victor Hugo at the Comedie Frangaise. The favorite authors were Scribe and Musset. They were by no means averse to certain types of gayety; even in the best homes of the bourgeois after a particularly good dinner it was the custom to remain around the table and sing the songs of Beranger, the refrains whereof were sung in a chorus. The best society attended the masked ball at the Opera; here every- 442 A HISTORY OF FRANCE body danced together, met the leaders of feminine society, and learned the methods of polite intrigue. As the population of Paris grew, the originally miodest character of these balls vanished. More and more they were attended by adventurers and strangers. The management began to hire professional dancers; Musard with his brass band, strident and roisterous, with his symphonies of pistol shots and falling chairs, and with his infernal "gallop"; Chicard, with his gauntlets, his helmet, and extravagant plumes, took possession, and one by one the respectable people deserted these heterogeneous f^tes. The Restoration had retained the State lottery which had been sup- pressed in 1793 and reestablished in 1797. It had an enormous fascina- tion for a certain type of people; they attempted to divine the winning numbers, to see them in dreams, to obtain them from fortune-tellers or from clairvoyant mediums. There were five lottery bureaus — respectively at Paris, Bordeaux, Lille, Lyons, and Strasbourg — and there were five "drawings" per month. There was also a system of public gambling which was highly popular. It was played at Paris under the patronage of the State, just as later it went on at Baden or Monte Carlo. Even this, however, did not drive out private gambling- houses, and during a spasm of public righteousness in 1836 both the private and the public establishments as well were ordered suppressed. In 1839 the lottery was likewise forbidden as "immoral." It has been calculated that these two institutions cost the French nation very nearly four hundred million francs annually ($80,000,000). Social customs were borrowed wholesale from England in this period, despite the alleged national antagonism. One of the most important and desirable of these usages, introduced following 1814, was that of personal hygiene. People began to pay more attention to cleanliness than they had during the preceding twenty-five years of military campaigns, bivouacs, and nomadic life. "They began to use perfume less and water more." In their homes they devoted less attention to elegance and thought more of "comfort," a word which was English both in spirit and in form. British cooking, which was wholesome and simple, also largely replaced the super-refined dishes of the French chefs. Even in France they came to know thoroughly the meaning of "a good beefsteak." At first there was a rage for the woven fabrics, for the steel, and for the thousand and one little knick-knacks which England could sup- ply; a passion held in check only by very stringent customs duties. "Coats, shoes, needles, razors, in fact there was nothing that was good, beautiful, or convenient but what came from across the Chan- nel." PUBLIC LIFE 443 The word mode was replaced by that of "fashion" and every one prided himself on being "fashionable." People spoke glibly of the ■'courses," "horses," "Irish banquets," "the steeple-chase," the "turf," "jockeys," "starters," and quite after the English fashion, of "bets" with "bookmakers." Horses, and even in fact strictly French songs, were given English names. The Second Restoration excited the most intense hatred because of the harsh treatment it awarded the leaders of the Napoleonic army, whereas the ruthless slayers in the "Massacres of the Midi" (South Country) ' were treated with extreme indulgence. The alliance between the Royalists and the invaders^ was an additional cause for dis- affection. Among the elements which proved most irreconcilable to the Res- toration were the oflScers of Napoleon who had been put on half- pay, whereas the State had lavished military promotions on the de- tested "emigrants" who had flocked back with the Monarchy. Some of these unhappy officers had gone to Texas under the leadership of General Lallemand to establish a military colony called the Champ d'Asile (the "Place of Refuge") which was supported in France by a national subscription (1819). It was given the name of the Canton de Marengo and its chief town was AigleviUe ("'Eagle-town"). Other retired half-pay officers, riding-coats buttoned up under their chins and with their hats, ornamented with the rosette or red ribbon, cocked over one eye, contented themselves with assisting in the instruction of recruits on the parade grounds, an act which irritated many of them, however, because of the consciousness of their own inaction and un- merited disgrace. Still others mixed in regular conspiracies and became the chief source of danger to the dynasty. The Cafe Valois was the rendezvous of the peaceful Legitimists, the old "emigrants" who were called the voUigeurs oi Louis XVIII. The Bonapartists frequented the Cafe Lamblin. When the bodyguards announced their intention, in 1814, of coming thither to set up a bust of Louis XVIII, three hundred officers of the Empire garrisoned the ' Marshal Brune had been assassinated by a Royalist mob at Avignon in a most dastardly fashion; General Ramel was slain by another at Toulouse. The excesses of the "White Terror" recall those of the Terror of 1793. ^ France's enemies, not her friends, were officially her allies at this time. "Long live our friends the enemies," B^ranger ironically remarked. A captain on half-pay was arrested for calling his horse the "Cossack." The magistrate who examined him asked him how he dared give his horse a name which was dear to all good Frenchmen! 444 A HISTORY OF FRANCE place to protect it, and even the intervention of the authorities failed to prevent bloodshed. After the return of the Emperor in 1815 the Cafe Montansier at the Palaise-Royal became the headquarters of the Imperial officers. They converted the stage of the music hall into a political rostrum, substi- tuted themselves for the actors, and uttered the most abusive tirades against the Bourbons. After the second return of the King the royal musketeers and the bodyguards in their fury for reprisal took this cafe by storm, shattered the glasses and dishes, and hurled the silver and furniture out of the windows. In the provinces the old seigneurs of the village, who were very often in league with the parish priests, disturbed the purchasers of "national property," ^ treated the mayor and the municipal council with con- tempt, and maintained that they still had the right to sit in the old scigneurial pew and to receive the consecrated wafer in church before the rest of the congregation. These pretentious country squires soon became the victims of open satire and caricature, and stock figures for the jests of the Liberals. It was as if in France two nations, two armies, stood facing each other. Liberals and Bonapartists at this time held common cause. In a thousand ways, some of them quite absurd, the antagonism between them and the Legitimists showed jtself. The Royalists punned on the two words libSreaux and libSrSs (that is, "returned convicts"), they more seriously distributed pious books and "Legitimist" pamphlets. The Liberal publisher, Touquet, retaliated by multiplying the editions of Rousseau and Voltaire which were sold in all sizes and at all prices. This same Touquet also sold Liberal snuff-boxes under the cover of which was concealed the text of the Charter. The Royalists adopted this same device, substituting the will of Louis XVI or the portrait of their "martyr king." In 1819 canes were manufactured with adjustable heads, which revealed, when opened, a statue of Napoloen. The fad was also conceived of selling tricolored braces and of manufacturing alcoholic beverages which were called "Liqueur des Braves" or "Larmes [tears] du GSniral Foy." In 1815 the clergy refused burial in the church of Saint-Roch to an actress. Mile. Raucourt. Incensed by this insult, the Liberals forced the doors of the church, broke down the gratings, and deposited the coffin before the High Altar. Louis XVIII indulgently dispatched a chaplain to repeat the last rites over the dead and the threatening mob subsided. In 1817 the Liberals and Royalists crowded ^ This comprised the Church lands and estates of the noblesses confiscated during the Revolution. SECRET SOCIETIES 44*; into the The&tre-Frangais for a presentation of "Germanicus" by a mediocre tragedian Arnault who was famous solely because of his well- known fidelity to Napoleon. On both sides officers drew their swords in the riot which ensued, and it was necessary to call out the gendarmes. The epilogue was a half-dozen of duels on the morrow! Dueling, indeed, had never been so common as during the first years of the Restoration. Every morning (reports had it) the officers of the old Imperial Guard and the new Royal Guard had their combats. There were also the parliamentary duels which followed the discus- sions in the Chambers, such as the duel between General Foy and M. de Corday (1820). In these encounters pistols were ordinarily used. If the first one to fire missed, the other out of courtesy would fire in the air. Of these duels the most celebrated during the July Monarchy was that one in which Emile de Girardin killed a fellow journalist, Armand Carrel; a duel which was much more famous from the uproar it created than were the principals themselves (1836). Freemasonry, to which nearly all Liberals belonged, was not nearly so active during this period as were some other types of secret societies. On one side was the Congregation, which was under the supervision of the Jesuits; on the other was the Carbonari (French, Charbonnerie) which was established by Buchez, at that time a medical student. The Carbonari, or, as the Italian word signifies, "Charcoal-burners," were organized in imitation of their fellow members in Italy. They swore over a dagger their "eternal hatred to the King and to Monarchy." Members were charged an assessment of a franc a month. They organ- ized in groups of twenties. When numbers increased, new "twenties" were formed until they enveloped the entire country, and even the army, with a network of organizations. They were modeled like a hierarchy, and at the top was the "Supreme Council" of whose com- position the thousands of members themselves, as well as the Bourbon police, were ignorant. "Carbonarism" invaded the army and the results came in the military conspiracies of Saumur and Belfort, the plot of Captain Valle, and the attempted insurrection of Lieutenant- Colonel Caron in Alsace. One of the most celebrated trials occurred at this time and ended in the execution of "the four sergeants of La Rochelle" (1822), on whose tombs the people of Paris placed flowers every year. This redoubtable association disappeared when the hatred .for the Bourbons began to wear ofif. Under Louis-Philippe there were, however, other societies, more or less secret; such as the "Friends of the People," the "Friends of Equality," the "July Union," the "Rights of Man" (which numbered more than sixty thousand adherents in 1833), "Action," the "Seasons," 446 A HISTORY OF FRANCE the "Families," all of which continued to organize riots and insurrec- tions, became the subjects for judicial proceedings, and provoked the restrictive law of 1835.' The new Government, following the Old Regime, had permitted a peculiar type of working-men's associations to survive when it abol- ished the others. The guilds which did not include "stationary work- men" — that is, laborers who settled in one place — served to gather into groups the "journeymen" who went from one town to another in search of work, or, as the saying went, who made "the tour of Prance." In every town of this "tour," the guild received any traveler who was a member of the "company." It attempted to secure work for him; he was entertained in their appointed tavern, and he was taken in charge by the "mother of the guild" whose members were called her "chil- dren." If he fell ill, he was n\irsed by the "mother," watched over by his companions, and visited by the "rouleur," one of the dignitaries of the society. If he died, his body was suitably accompanied to the ceme- tery, where it was buried by the members of the association. All those who joined the guild were initiated to certain "mysteries." When two workmen encountered each other, they exchanged certain formulas and signs of recognition. A very elaborate ritual accompanied this ceremony, on account of which it became customary for members to carry canes and ribbons during public celebrations, and to hold their drinking-glasses over the table, etc. At the funeral of any member, after the eulogy had been pronounced by one of the company, the rest would utter a groan and would then pass alongside the grave, two by two, placing their canes on the ground in the form of a cross. At the corners of the grave they would place their feet in a certain manner. After the ceremony the attendant members then embraced each other. These corporations still retained certain of the quaint vices of those of the Old Regime. The title of "journeyman" was purchased only after a long and painful apprenticeship. The apprentices were called the "aspirants," the "youngsters," or "foxes." The journeymen usu- ally took advantage of them and harassed them in a thousand different ways. They always took the best of the work for themselves and sent the apprentices into the brousaailles or "brambles" — that is, the sub- urbs or little villages. They did not allow them to sleep in the same room as they did themselves nor could the novices sit down at the same table with them at the f^tes. "Renard, fetch me my boots," a journeyman would cry and the apprentice was bound to obey. ' See p. 423. LABOR ORGANIZATIONS 447 The two most celebrated of these associations at the beginning of the century were the "Children of Solomon" and the "Children of Master James." The former claimed that their society had been established by Hiram, the architect of Solomon, who had been assassinated in the original Temple by three traitors to whom he had refused to reveal the secrets of the guild. The latter prided themselves on being able to trace their society back to their master, James, a Provencal architect who had been a colleague of Hiram, and had been murdered by a jealous enemy after his return to Provence from Jerusalem. The "Children of Solomon," who asserted that they were the older organization, were extremely arrogant. Their rites had been com- municated to only four guilds: the stone-masons, the locksmiths, the carpenters, and the joiners. These received workmen into membership without any religious distinctions, and as a result recruited members very largely from among the Protestants. The "Children of Master James" were more hospitable and had confided their mysteries to a large number of guilds, but they received only Catholic journeymen into membership. They styled themselves the "Companions of Duty," or the "Dutiful." ^ These companies were jealous of one another and treated each other with downright hostility. The locksmiths of "Solomon" would have nothing to do with those of "Master James" in the village where they happened to be working. Frequently scrimmages arose between these gavots and devoirants. At Sens in 1842, a devoirant ("Master James" member) conceived the idea of mounting an ass and riding past the shops of the locksmiths of the rival association crying "Gee-up, Gavot" ("Solomon" member). The result was a bloody quarrel. In 1845 at Nantes the bakers prepared to celebrate the feast of their patron saint with the insignia of the regular "companies" — the canes and ribbons. Infuriated by this usurpation, the journeymen fell upon the procession and a regular riot ensued. These "associations" very frequently lost sight of their real object. Their aflfection of the "mysteries," the oppressions of the journeymen over the apprentices, and the constant warfare and bickering naturally prevented mutual assistance. The Old Regime had tried to proscribe the guilds and the Constituent Assembly renewed this proscription by its restrictive law of 1791. Nevertheless, among the laborers of lower capacities and more quarrelsome natures, with whom this system had become entrenched, the companies long survived. ' There were also other associations like the "Children of Father Soubise" and the "Good Cousins," but these two mentioned above were the most important. 448 A HISTORY OF FRANCE In 1823 the apprentices revolted against their masters and established the SociitS des Independants. In 1839 another revolt produced a new and better type of association. It was at this time that preparations for the expedition to Algeria were under way, and were attracting a large number of working-men to the southern seaport of Toulon. The "mother" of the company proposed that the journeymen allow the apprentices to occupy the same rooms. They refused, and were offended by the proposition, whereupon they deserted the "mother" and or- dered the apprentices to follow them. The Juniors, however, refused in turn, threw off their signs of bondage, and established the SocUtS del' Union, They no longer made use of insignia such as the canes and ribbons, had no password, no rallying cry, and no martial hymns. The society had a single purpose, that of mutual aid and succor. This was, of course, the legitimate type of labor organization which in the end prevailed. Little by little the old system of guilds iJierefore fell into disuse. The growth of national activities and of national wealth was begin- ning at this time to be realized in Paris, a growth which Napoleon had succeeded in stimulating only by despoiling the entire world for his own personal "glory." Paris was now developing rapidly. In 1816 it numbered 710,000 inhabitants; ^ in 1826, 800,000; in 1836, 909,000; and in 1846 more than a million (1,053,000). Under the Restoration the Pont des Invalides, the Pont d'ArcoH and other bridges were built across the Seine. The statue of Louis XIII, by Cortot and Dupaty, was erected in the Place Royale, that of Louis XIV by Bosio, in the Place des Victoires, and in 1818 was set up that of Henry IV by Lemot, made of the bronze in the statues of Napoleon and Desaix. A system of gas lighting was introduced during this period, an omnibus service was developed, and an efficient police system estab- lished. Under the July Monarchy Paris owed a great deal of its development to the efforts of the Prefect of the Seine, Rambuteau. It was he who at this time constructed the bridge of Louis-PhUippe and the Pont du Carrousel. The Rue Rambuteau was laid out, and the Place de la Concorde, with the Obelisque de Luxor surrounded by the eight statues representative of the eight principal cities of France, was planned. The column in honor of the July Monarchy (Colonne de 1 Probably its population had long been stagnant. It was very hard to teed an inland city of more than a certain size, before the development of modern transportation tnetho(^. APPEARANCE OF PARIS 449 Juillet) was also erected, the Arc de I'Etoile finished, and the two mar- vels of mediaeval Gothic architecture, Notre Dame and the Sainte- Chapelle were restored. Among other things which were completed, were the Church of the Madeleine, the PantMon, the Palais Bourbon, and the Palais de Quai d'Orsay.. The School of Fine Arts (I'Ecole de Beaux-Arts), the school of medicine (I'ficole de mMecine), and the normal school of the Rue d'Ulm were likewise built. The squares of Louvois and Saint-Sulpice were laid out, the latter with its beautiful fountains of Visconte.' Finally, Thiers and Guizot gave to the capital the system of barriers which surround it, and the detached forts (1841) which the Opposition press denounced at the time as no better than "prisons" the despotism of the Government was arming against Paris, but which were to prove of great value in the siege of 1870. At this period Paris was far from presenting the appearance which it does to-day. In the center of the capital the most important streets were, as at present, Saint-Denis and Saint-Martin. At this time the Avenue de I'Opera, the Boulevard Saint-Germain, the Rue des Ecoles, and other famous thoroughfares had not been laid out. The wealthy districts lay along the boulevards, Malesherbes, Haussmann, and Pereire, and the Avenues de Villiers and de Courcelles, or along the broad streets which radiate from the Arc de Triomphe. The thickly crowded districts and the slums along the northern and southern boulevards were not yet in existence. Paris included only a dozen arrondissements (wards) instead of as to-day twenty, the last eight having been formed later by including within the city the suburban communes. When vaudeville actors wished to poke fun at illegitimate love-affairs, they spoke of them as the "marriages performed in the town hall of the thirteenth ward ! " There were still a number of inextricable labyrinths of narrow streets in Paris, with high old houses on either side, naturally very damp because the rays of the sun rarely penetrated thither. It was these rows of houses that gave excellent vantage to the barricade fighters, in the various revolutions that racked the city in 1830 and 1848 as well as during the less successful uprisings. One of the most famous of these ' Louis-Philippe, who was accused of avarice because he was so economical, levied on his own "Civil List" for thirty millions of francs, which he used for the restoration of the chateaux at Versailles, Fontainebleau, and Pau, which were not inhabited by the court at this time and which he generously opened up to the public. 450 A HISTORY OF FRANCE labyrinths occupied the space which lies between the Arc du Carrousel and the old Louvre. Along these narrow streets were to be found the huts where the dealers in parrots and other exotic birds had set up their shops. Many of these huts almost seemed to hem in the Tuileries. During the Restoration very few of the streets in Paris had side- walks. In 1830 there were in all only 16 kilometers (about 10 miles) of such footways. The July Monarchy did much to remedy this evil state and increased the sidewalks to a total of 195 kilometers (about 140 miles). At best, however, these sidewalks were narrow and uneven. Pedestrians could protect themselves from passing vehicles only by hugging the walls or by stepping upon the doorsteps of the houses. The dwellings in turn were usually small and narrow although with oftentimes five or six stories, with tiled roofs which were very steep and with gutters which often disgorged rainwater in torrents on the heads of passers-by. Many streets, so far as they were paved at all, were made of limestone blocks, very irregularly and poorly laid, and were so much ready material for the master-builders of the barricades during the insurrections. Macadamized paving, invented by the Scotch engineer, John Loudon MacAdam who died in 1836, was not used in Paris until after 1849. The system of sewerage was likewise very inade- quate. In 1806 there were only 24,297 meters (say 75,000 feet) thereof. The Government of Louis-Philippe, especially during the prefecture- ship of Rambuteau, increased this number to 78,675 meters (over 240,000 feet). Subterranean Paris, however, dates especially from the Second Empire.' "Conveniences" were still being installed in the houses of Paris before 1848 precisely in the manner they exist in rural French communities to-day. What wonder that the cholera epidemic of 1832 had so many victims ! The streets, instead of being raised in the center as at present to assure the drainage of water, were deliberately made on two planes with a depression in the center of the street which formed a gutter. To cross from one side of the street to the other after hard rain-storms was like crossing a veritable torrent. On occasions like these, enterpris- ing fellows would place a board across the gutter and would assist pedestrians across dryshod in return for a fee of a sou. Carle Vernet has depicted this popular scene in one of his engravings entitled "Pass, Pay" {Passez, payez). In the middle of the street at regular intervals there also were openings into the sewer. They were covered, indeed, ' The development of the sewers under the engineer Belgrand was so great that the extent was then increased to 772,846 meters. APPEARANCE OF PARIS 451 with an iron grating, but clumsy vehicles often shattered them to the great detriment of goods or passengers. The population of the capital was so congested that there was not a square where people could go for a breath of fresh air even in the heat of summer. To mention another nuisance, the water of the Seine was practically never fit for drinking purposes but provincial visitors who were not so aware of this fact as were the Parisians, often were not sufficiently careful and had to pay the penalty by all sorts of plagues and epidemic diseases. There was no more thought then of having water in the houses than of having gas on every story. Water was drawn either from wells or "water posts," or it was carried into the house by water-carriers. Some of the more prosperous of the latter had a two-wheeled cart drawn by a horse and went from door to door. All Parisians of this period could recall having seen these lusty "auvergers" ' (so-called because nearly all of the water-carriers came originally from Central France) who climbed the stairs every morning with two buckets of water hanging from a yoke across their shoulders, and from which they served their customers. One bucket cost a sou or even more. Nothing was more astonishing to visitors than to find that in Paris wcUer like everything else had to be paid for. Markets and market-places were not very numerous. All the provi- sions for ordinary households were bought from small merchants who passed from house to house, pushing their hand-carts before them. These were called the "merchants of the Four Seasons" and preserved the tradition of the "criers" of old Paris. Shop-fronts, which were much less numerous and less elegant than they are to-day, were not closed at night by metal gratings locked by some mechanical device, as is now the case in most European cities. Instead the shopkeeper would have to unlock, one after another, the eight or ten shutters which protected the shop-front, and which were fastened at the top by a hook and at the base by a latch. It was not unusual, after he had unlatched the narrow entrance to his place of business, and was passing along with his shutters on his shoulder, to knock violently against some unsuspecting passer-by. The basements of the shops were reached by means of trap-doors which opened out upon the street and were consequently another source of danger to the pedestrian. All these things indicated how tenaciously "the good old ways" ' The "auvergnat" water-carrier, the charcoal merchant, the vender of fagots, and the errand boy were types especially dear to romance, song, and the vaudeville at this time. 452 A HISTORY OF FRANCE still hung on the French capital. Nevertheless the period of the restored Monarchy was undoubtedly a time of progress in the aspect of Paris as in so many other things. For example, the lighting of the city street^ was vastly improved. In 1848 there were still 2608 old-style lanterns, but there were also no less than 8600 of the far more efficient new-style gas lamps. Such were some of the social customs and physical conditions of the France and of the capital, which bridged the gap from the Old Regime to the Third Republic we know to-day. CHAPTER XXI RADICAL OUTBREAKS AND THE REACTION TO CESARISM THE SECOND REPUBLIC: 1848-51 Never had the fact that all governmental power in France was centralized in Paris reacted more decidedly, and on the whole more unfortunately, upon the nation, than in February, 1848. The departments had had almost no part in the new revolution: they certainly had little sympathy with the extreme radicals who had fought the movement through to physical success. The average peasant, or bourgeois in the small towns, was only very mildly interested in politics. He wanted assured conditions for his farm or business, light taxes, personal liberty, and a government at Paris which appeared to be reasonably pro- gressive and which would maintain for France a leadership among the nations. The country was frankly disgusted with the policy of absolute prudence (Americans would say of "safety first") in foreign affairs which seemed to make France cringe to outsiders, especially to England, lest by any show of resolution the financiers in Paris should see their bonds go down in value during foreign complications. But as for constitutional details the provincial Frenchman cared next to nothing. It is a damning indictment of the Guizot-Louis-Philippe rulers that notwith- standing this state of political quiescence, they were unable to keep their hold upon the Government. It is true, it was radical Paris which expelled them. It is also true that nowhere in the departments was there the slightest hope of any material action to prevent their expulsion. And so France found a "republic" thrust upon her over- night. This result was accepted with reasonable submission if with very little enthusiasm. But any acute student of public opinion would have said that to make the republic succeed, it must be a very orderly, reasonable, moderate republic, care- 454 A HISTORY OF FRANCE fully respecting the rights of property, and not endeavoring to produce Utopias too rapidly. This is precisely what the "Second Republic " did not do. The result was a reaction to dictatorship ^nd then to open imperialism, on the ground that Csesarism was far better than anarchy. The violence of the Paris Socialists in 1848 was the best argument for the founding and for the exist- ence of the "Second Empire." On account of its experiment with part of the programme of socialism, the Second Republic presents great interest to students of economic theory and sociology. As historical stu- dents, however, the episodes of 1848 need not detain us very long. Their main importance was: (1) to disgust the French nation with half-baked experiments of radicalism; (2) to hasten thereby the coming to power of Napoleon III, as the champion of "order." The Republicans who overthrew Louis-Philippe were them- selves seriously divided. The moderate Republicans, whereof the eloquent Lamartine was a typical leader, aimed for a democratic republic with the beloved tricolor flag. The radical Republicans, led notably by Louis Blanc, desired a socialistic repubUc with the red flag of extreme revolution. The moderates and the radicals at first worked together. They both wished some kind, at least, of a republic. The moderates had on the whole the upper hand in the new provisional government, but they had to make heavy concessions to the radicals who struck while the iron was hot. In March, 1848, "all citizens" were to be enrolled in the National Guard. It ceased to be merely a bour- geois affair. Soon in Paris it contained 190,000 instead of 56,000 members — most of the reinforcements coming from the indus- trialists. Political clubs, often controlled by the most violent type of agitators, sprang up hke mushrooms. There were repeated armed demonstrations before the City Hall, where the provisional government had its seat; and the terrified adminis- trators were driven to one concession after another. NATIONAL WORKSHOPS 455 On February 25, following such a demonstration, Louis Blanc carried the decree, "The Government of the French Republic undertakes to guarantee the existence of the working-man by labor, and to provide labor for all citizens." This was soon fol- lowed by a decree ordaining "national workshops." On February 28, following a second demonstration, the admin- istrators created a "government committee on the laboring class with the express mission of looking after their interests." Blanc and Albert as heads of this committee took their seats in the Luxembourg. They were able to issue some useful and highly proper orders : for example, reducing the normal working day to ten hours in Paris and eleven hours in the departments."^ All sorts of excellent schemes were mooted. The employers, however, sullenly resisted the committee. The radicals demanded that it should produce instantaneous results. The committee (with very little power to enforce its mandates) wasted its time in futile conferences, while both sides, of course, grew distrustful and angry. Finally, on April 26, the radicals attempted to coerce the Government again. The working-men's clubs paraded en masse to the City Hall to demand "the abolition of the exploitation of one man by another, and for the organization of labor by association." Just what was implied by this demand was not wholly clear. Seventy-five years later the world would have called it "Bolshevism" — perhaps unjustly. But the moderate Republicans were taking fright. The east of Paris might rage for socialism, but to submit to it would be about the surest way to send the rest of France back to monarchy. Ledru-Rollin, one of the most prominent leaders in the anti-Orleanist movement, called out various reliable companies of the National Guard, which met the working-men before the City Hall with the ' Hours of labor in France had been abominably long: and in general French- men seem to have been willing to spend a greater fraction of the day at work than in certain other countries. The regulation stated was a very considerable gain. 456 A HISTORY OF FRANCE counter-cry of "Down with the Communists!" For the instant the radicals quailed and dispersed. So all the socialistic schemes seemed to have fizzled out, save only the "National Workshops." Even these institutions were conducted, it would seem, by men who secretly desired that they should fail, although in fair truth it must be said that any such project would obviously require the most careful introduc- tion and the working-out of details to have any hope of success; and the Socialists were demanding that the new organizations should spring up like mushrooms and function overnight. The disturbances in Paris produced an abundance of unemployed labor. There were 6000 "national" working-men early in March, 1848. There were soon 25,000; and there were over 100,000 in May. Obviously great factories could not be pro- vided at once for all of these, without wholesale expropriations from which the Government shrank. The men were therefore employed in building fortifications around Paris at two francs (forty cents) per day. Presently to save money (the treasury was in a most sorry condition) these laborers were kept busy only two days of the week. For the other four they were left idle on only one franc (twenty cents) per day. Paris was thus full of disgruntled and often ignorant men, with all too much time on their hands and very ready to listen to extremist orators with their catalogues of grievances. Meantime the provisional government was trying desperately to get its young republic really started. The finances were in confusion. Loans could not be floated. The only expedient was to increase the direct taxes about forty-five per cent — a pro- ceeding which naturally made the peasants and bourgeois very angry. Under this unpleasant condition the elections were held for the Constituent Assembly which was to arrange the per- manent government of France. The balloting was by universal suffrage, and 900 members were chosen from the various de- partments. The Assembly was to administer the government, until it completed its labors, by means of an executive com- NATIONAL WORKSHOPS CLOSED 457 mittee of five. Under the circumstances the expected happened. The old Bourbons had few friends; the Orleanists were for the moment utterly discredited; the Bonapartists had had no time to organize and to lift their heads. The great majority of the Convention therefore ■professed to desire a republic. But very few Socialist deputies were elected, and a considerable number of delegates represented the great landowners and the clergy — elements still very powerful. The radicals would obviously get little comfort from such an Assembly. It did not take long for the Paris Socialists to discover the facts of the case, and to determine that "there's no receipt like pike and drum for mending constitutions." Not to be thwarted now had they fought behind the barricades in Febru- ary. On May 15 armed bands thrust themselves into the Assem- bly Hall, and were in the very act of declaring that the whole body was dissolved and that a new "Provisional Government" was set up, when a sudden rally of the National Guard chased them out. There was no bloodshed. But the Assembly was ren- dered justly fearful. It made arrests, closed the political clubs, and decided to strike at the heart of the matter by winding up the "national workshops." They were costing 150,000 francs per day, and were accomplishing little save to "tear up the paving, and to remove earth uselessly" at the Champ de Mars. Doubt- less Louis Blanc's enemies were bringing this to pass in order to discredit his whole set of liberal and not wholly impractical proposals. But in any case the situation was intolerable. On the 21st of June, 1848, the Assembly ordered the national work- shops closed. The younger workmen could enlist in the army; the older would be given jobs on the public works in the depart- ments. The Assembly thus flung down the gauntlet. The Sociahsts promptly took it up. They had now an elaborate organization and plenty of muskets, though they were short of artillery. AU the east of Paris, from the Pantheon clear to the Boulevard Saint-Martin, was turned into an entrenched camp with over 458 A HISTORY OF FRANCE 400 barricades, often built scientifically and elaborately, with moats and battlements sometimes rising higher than the first stories of the houses. Behind these were at least 50,000 insur- gents. The Government had for the moment only 40,000 troops, regulars and reliable National Guards, to send against them; but it was now a case of the working quarters of Paris against nearly all the rest of France. The bourgeois National Guards from the suburbs, and later from the out-lying cities and com- munities in a wide circuit, came gradually swarming in "all eager to exterminate the Socialists." The Assembly gave General Cavaignac, an old Republican agitator but no Socialist, dictatorial powers to crush the radicals. Four days long the desperate struggle lasted, bloody to the last degree. The streets of Paris were raked with artillery. The Archbishop was shot down while trying to interpose between the raging combatants. On June 26 the last entrenchments of the "Reds" were stormed in the Faubourg Saint-Antoine. How many thousands perished in these bloody "Days of June" can never be safely guessed. Eleven thousand prisoners were taken by the Government troops, and of these 3000 were exiled to Algeria without trial, by a simple decree of the Assembly. This explosion had very important consequences. The indus- trial classes were crushed and beaten for the moment, but their hatred toward the bourgeois and the peasants (who had clearly sided with the bourgeois) was intense and lasting.' It was to mark an evil schism in France. On the other hand, the bourgeois themselves were terrified and threatened in fortune. The national bonds had sold for 116 in February. They were worth only 50 in April; the June commotions did nothing to restore their value! Many worthy merchants and small manufacturers ' One should observe that neither now nor later were the French industrial classes so strong as they were, for example, in England. French manufactures were very largely of objects of elegance and luxury: not coarse staples made in huge grimy factories. The proportion, in France, of small handicraftsmen work- ing in their own shops and of thrifty peasants (always conservative folk) was very large. Outade of Paris, "labor," as we understand the term, was decidedly weak. THE NEW CONSTITUTION 459 were utterly ruined by the existing business prostration. What but evil had this much- vaunted Repubhc brought them? Was it not better to have a "strong government" well able to assure "order." As for the peasants they found that the changed regime had merely brought forty-five per cent higher taxes, and they were led to believe (perhaps unjustly) that the execrated "Reds" intended to begin a wholesale division of farm lands. They, like the bourgeois, sighed for a government that would permit none of these things. The Assembly, however, had been elected before this revul- sion of popular feeling. It continued to be mildly Republican. With much labor a new constitution was drafted which it was hoped would avoid the evils of the brave efforts of 1791 and 1795. The United States had by this time been in existence long enough to present some pretty clear examples of how to get along without monarchy. Unfortunately, however, the As- sembly failed to borrow many excellent points in the American Constitution, and it woefully failed to recognize the essential difference between many things in America and in France. Briefly speaking the "Constitution of 1848" set up a President, elected for a term of four years by direct universal suffrage. He was clothed with very large executive powers, but was not eligible for reelection immediately upon retirement. Over against him was set a single Legislative Assembly of 750 mem- bers also chosen by universal suffrage. The means for securing reconciliation between President and Assembly in case of friction were, to say the least, very scanty and imperfect. It had been proposed that the Assembly should choose the Presi- dent, but Lamartine, the silver-tongued orator of the year, the historian of the Girondists and himself partaking of their Utopian spirit, had cried magnificently, "Let God and the na- tion speak — something must be left to Providence!" And so "God and the nation" were allowed to choose "Napoleon the Little." "Thus," says a penetrating French historian (Seignobos), 460 A HISTORY OF FRANCE "was the American mechanism transported from a federal government, without an army and without a functionary class, into a centralized government, provided with an irresistible army and a body of office-holders accustomed to ruling." What wonder the life of the Second Republic was a short and unhappy one! By December, 1848, the new Constitution had been pro- claimed, and France was in the throes of a presidential election. Instantly there came on the scene a man who was destined to stand in the center of the politics of Europe for two and twenty years, then to disappear amid a great national catastrophe. Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, born in 1808, was the son of JiOuis, the brother of Napoleon I, who from 1806 to 1810 had been King of Holland. He, with the rest of the Bonaparte family, following 1814, had spent his life in various forms of exile. His branch of the family had had a decent private fortune, and young Louis Napoleon was brought up partly in Switzerland and partly in South Germany. There, it is said, he acquired a slight German accent which he never wholly lost. His ambitious mother did not cease to fill him with the consciousness that he was the heir to a great potential heritage. "With your name," she would say, "you will always count for something, whether in the Old World of Europe or in the New." In 1832 there died in Austria the unfortunate Duke of Reichstadt, "Napoleon II," son of Napoleon I and Maria Louisa. The passing of this poor youth, "the Eaglet," left Louis Napoleon the best claimant in the family to the Bona- partist heritage. Henceforth he began to take himself very seriously, to gather up the loose threads of old Bonapartist plots and conspiracies, and to begin a literary progapanda in favor of a new "Empire" as the true solution for the political ills of France. He appeared to be a hopeless visionary, and the July Monarchists did not regard him as in any way dangerous, until suddenly he appeared in Strasbourg in 1836 and made a desperate EARLY LIFE OF LOUIS NAPOLEON 461 attempt to seduce the garrison. He was arrested, placed on a ship bound for America, and released in New York in April (1837) ; but in August he slipped back to Switzerland. Later he spent much time in London. The disgust already developing against Louis- Philippe's regime prevented this pretender's claims from perish- ing under sheer ridicule. He gathered a certain number of ardent friends. "Would you believe it," the bluff old Duke of Welling- ton wrote of him, "this young man will not have it said he is not going to be Emperor of the French ! His chief thoughts are of what he will do "when he comes to the throne.' " In 1839 he pubhshed a book, "Napoleonic Ideas," to justify his hopes and propaganda. This book "a curious mixture of Bouapartism, socialism, and pacifism," represented Napoleon I absurdly enough as the supreme champion of French liberty, having been entrusted by the people with the task of protecting their freedom against reactionaries. In 1840 Louis Napoleon strove once again to seize the throne. His attempt this time was by means of a small "filibustering" expedition across the Channel to Boulogne. The attempt failed even more abjectly than the one at Strasbourg. Its leader was held prisoner in the fortress of Ham, but in 1846 he escaped thence in a somewhat cheap-novel manner, and got back to London. There he remained two years more, still in good counte- nance, dreaming dreams and seeing visions. "Though fortune has twice betrayed me," he would say, "yet my destiny will none the less surely be fulfilled. I wait." In 1848 he waited no longer. After the fall of the July Monarchy he promptly turned up in France. He had influence enough, thanks to the awakening of Bonapartist memories, to get elected to the new Constituent Assembly. But he would not take his seat at first. He realized that the Assembly was likely to make mistakes and he did not wish to share the blame for them. He had thus no part in the notorious Days of June. However, in September he took a seat. When in October a law was proposed intended to make it im- 462 A HISTORY OF FRANCE possible for him to run for the presidency, he made so poor a speech defending his position, that Thouret, who had made the hostile motion, contemptuously withdrew it on the ground that such a proviso was wholly unnecessary. Hardly two months later, however, this "pretender," whom shrewd politicians treated as little better than a dreamy fool, suddenly became a most formidable candidate for the presidency. He had powerful backing. The great Church element, which had been under disfavor in Louis-Philippe's day, believed it saw in him a candidate who would put the Clericals once more into at least part of their power. The peasants were scared and angry at all that the Republican leaders had done or produced since February. The memories of the glories of the Empire had become increasingly gilded by distance. The peasants knew that above all things Napoleon I had stood for "law and order." They hated Cavaignac the "Democratic" candidate, and Ledru-Rollin the "Socialist" candidate. The Royalists of both persuasions resolved to vote Bonapartist: the pretender, they argued, would probably make a quick failure, then the Mon- archists could return. The result was that nearly all the depart- ments of France "went heavily," as Americans would say, for this obscure idealist and petty conspirator. Over 5,430,000 Frenchmen voted for Louis Napoleon; 1,450,000 for Cavaignac; only about 370,000 for Ledru-Rollin. The new President promptly seized the reins of power. He took oath "to remain faithful to the democratic Republic . . . and to regard as enemies all who may attempt to change the form of the government." He then promptly showed his hand by naming ministers who were mostly ex-Orleanists and Catho- lics. The Republic was to find in him a peculiar "guardian" indeed. From the moment Louis Napoleon took over the presidency (December 20, 1848) to the moment he overthrew the Consti- tution which he had sworn to defend, it was perfectly safe to predict that he would make some effort to harden into perma- ADROIT POLICY OF THE PRESIDENT 463 nent power. Considering his Bonapartist blood and theories to ask anything else of him was unreasonable. The change, how- ever, might have come less violently. It might also have been entirely thwarted had there been a sane and united opposition. As it was, almost everything played straight into the adroit adventurer's hands. In May, 1849, the new "Legislative Assembly" had been elected. Anti-Republican reaction was in full swing. Over 500 of the 750 members were of one stripe or another of Monarch- ists. The Republican minority was not itself imited; some were moderates, some "Reds." France thus faced this bizarre situa- tion: the legal government was a Republic, but the President desired to transform the government into one form of monarchy; the majority of the deputies into still another form of monarchy. It was easy for the President and the majority to work together to make a return to radicalism impossible. The rub came when they attempted a constructive programme for the future. The policy of Louis Napoleon from 1849 to 1851 was extraor- dinarily clever. He confirmed himself in the good graces of the Clericals by sending an army to Rome to overthrow the revolu- tionaries there, and to renew the temporal power of Pope Pius IX. He sat back while the Legislative Assembly, on its own initiative, passed laws gagging the ^ress, suspending the right of public meeting, and finally, in May, 1850, ordering that hereafter three years' residence in a district was necessary in order to be a voter. This struck off the list over three million migratory workmen and laborers. The law was very unpopular, but the Assembly reaped all the blame. "I cannot understand how you, the offspring of universal suffrage," said a friend to Louis Napoleon, "can defend the restricted suffrage?" "You do not understand," replied the President; "I am preparing the ruin of the Assembly." "But you will perish with it," was the suggestion. "On the contrary," Louis Napoleon de- clared, " when the Assembly is hanging over the precipice I shall cut the rope!" 464 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Very soon it became evident that the President's chief public asset was the fact that he had had a very famous uncle. "The name of Napoleon," he said in an address, "is itself a pro- gramme. It stands for order, authority, religion, and the wel- fare of the people in internal affairs; and in foreign affairs for the national dignity." Great reviews were held of the army, likewise public festivals, at which loud-voiced individuals (pos- sibly not without monetary inspiration) would cry, "Long live Napoleon!" or even, "Long live the Emperor!" A general who ordered his men not to do this was cashiered. Around the Presi- dent was soon gathering a group of short-pedigreed, bold, adroit, political and military adventurers, who saw every kind of personal profit in Ufting a fellow adventurer into permanent power. The ministers and most of the public officials were com- pletely controlled by the President. A change in the presidency would pretty plainly imply a change in all their well-paid com- fortable offices. As Americans would assert, a great political "machine" was speedily in the making. The immediate object of this machine was to insure Louis Napoleon's reelection as President. His term would run out late in 1852. The Constitution forbade his reelection. But the As- sembly could change this arrangement by a two-thirds vote. The change was requested and was denied in a very untactful manner (July 19, 1851). The President could say that he had been chosen by the wills of the vast majority of all Frenchmen: very likely this same majority wished to reelect him. Was the mere letter of a constitution, hastily drafted and wholly un- tested by experience, to set aside the deliberate will of the nation? When a political leader once abandons himself to such questionings all the rest is easy. From 1848 to 1851 Louis Napoleon was thus taking every possible measure to transform his presidential chair into a throne. At his palace, the Elysee, he appealed to all kinds of interests. He enjoyed being called "Prince," "Highness," and "Monseigneur," but listened calmly when styled plain "Citi- DE MORNY, SAINT-ARNAUD 465 zen." He flattered the clergy at every turn, distributed sausages and cigars to soldiers, chattered to sedate bourgeois about the need of "order in the streets," and then went out on tours in the provinces and was all friendliness and benignity to the peasants. But while the President thus pursued a course of wise modesty, his friends were acting for him. The men who erected the Second Empire were neither elegant noblemen, wild-eyed radicals, nor sword-clattering soldiers. They were men who might have felt in congenial company around a gambling table or manipulating unstable bonds and stocks. One of the President's prime coun- selors and men of action was his illegitimate half-brother, De Morny, "well fitted to keep secrets, to conduct plots, and to do the crudest things in a jocund, offhand way." Another adven- turer was a De Persigny who had changed his name, probably for good reasons, from Fialin. Another was Saint-Arnaud, a headlong, courageous soldier who had won a considerable fame in Algeria, where daredevil leadership counted for more against the Arabs than did textbook strategy. He also had changed his name, having once been Le Roy, and then again Florival, while he had been an actor in a small Paris theater. Saint-Arnaud was counted "an excellent administrator, a cultivated and agreeable companion, perfectly unscrupulous, and ready to assist in any scheme of what he considered necessary cruelty." There were other satellites of the President — De Maupas, Rouher, Magnan, etc. — all of about the same dusky character. To make Louis Napoleon autocrat meant for them, of course, incalculable personal gain. The Constitution of 1848 had made it possible for a gang of greedy adventurers like these to conspire with the President to subvert the nation. The divisions and the utter political inepti- tude of the Legislative Assembly made it possible for this conspiracy to proceed with very reasonable hopes of success. By December, 1851, all was ready for springing the plot. The conspirators were satisfied (1) that public opinion in 466 A HISTORY OF FRANCE France would acquiesce in the overthrow of the Assembly; (2) that the Republican movement was for the time being nearly dead; (3) that the army (carefully flattered and manipulated) could be relied upon to obey orders from "Napoleon." To handle the army, on whose action in the last analysis everything depended, Saint-Arnaud was put in as Minister of War. Men realized something was coming. A prominent deputy declared, "When you see Saint-Arnaud a minister, say, 'Here is the coup d'etat' " Another congenial spirit was De Maupas, appointed now as prefect of the Paris police, a most ticklish office in the crisis. The President said to him, "Here I am on the edge of a ditch full of water. On the other side I see safety for the country. Will you be one of the men to help me across?" De Maupas was charmed at the responsibility. However, up to the very last, Louis Napoleon hesitated to take the leap or the plunge: halting "between the desire to establish himself firmly in power without risking anything, and the fear of losing that power if he risked nothing." It was De Morny and the rest who at last overbore his doubtings, and forced him to take action. On the evening of December 1, 1851, the President was greeting casual guests at his reception at the filysee. When the last visitor had departed, the chief magistrate of the Republic went into his smoking-room with De Morny, Saint-Arnaud, and a few others. Orders then flew fast, and every- thing moved like clock-work. A time schedule had been drawn up, adjusted down to minutes: at such a fixed time certain ob- noxious generals were to be arrested; at such a time troops were to assume given positions; at such a time every printing-office in Paris was to be surrounded. The plan, in short, involved the arrest of practically every man in Paris prominent in politics since February, 1848, saving .only the President's sworn myrmidons. The execution of the coup was a masterpiece. Gendarmes seized the Government printing-office. Proclamations were set up, but the copy for each split into such short sections that no f THE CONSPIRACY 467 compositor could get an idea of the entire document. When dawn broke on December 2, the Parisians found the soldiers patroUing the streets and the walls placarded with the Presi- dent's manifestoes. The Assembly was declared dissolved, uni- versal suffrage was restored, and a plebiscite was ordered to be held very shortly to determine the future constitution. Two regiments of regulars held the "Legislative Palace," and soon the news spread that practically all the leaders of the deputies. Royalists, Republicans, and "Reds" alike, were safe in the Mazas Prison. ' A wholesale arrest of journalists and unofficial agitators was going on. The President's aim was of course to deprive all the elements that might resist the coup of any possible leaders. However, it was impossible to seize all the deputies. About two hundred of them made their way to the "Mairie" of the Tenth Arrondissement of Paris. Here they hastily organized, declared the President deposed for treason, and announced that the Assembly was still in lawful session. But theirs was merely so much empty thunder. De Maupas sent General Forney to break up the gathering, and the end of this despairing session was the departure of these last supporters of the Consti- tution marching away to prison between two lines of soldiers. There was one last recourse. Victor Hugo, the famous author, Jules Favre, and other prominent Liberals tried it. The Fau- bourg Saint-Antoine was still the hotbed of radicalism. At the summons of the Liberals a number of the old radical fighters took up arms. Barricades rose on the evening of the 3d; but not until the 4th was there any serious bloodshed. Then Saint- Arnaud drove his troops over the barricades, and used grape- shot pitilessly even upon unarmed spectators. The resistance, that had been too much for Charles X and Louis-Philippe, and ' The imprisoned deputies, to get food, ordered in a luncheon from a neigh- boring restaurant. There were very few drinking-glasses. Royalist and radical deputies drank together. "Equality and fraternity!" cried a conservative noble- man, passing his tumbler to a "Red" fellow captive. "Ah!" was the answer, "but not liberty!" 468 A HISTORY OF FRANCE which had almost baffled Cavaignac in 1848, had been snuffed out now by the regulars. Paris was firmly in the hands of the nephew of the Corsican. Paris was won: but Paris was not the whole of France. As the news of the Coup d'etat spread, there were serious uprisings in several centers of democratic sympathies; especially in the South Country and around Marseilles there was resistance which taxed the local gendarmerie. De Morny, who had been appointed Minister of the Interior the moment his half-brother seized Paris, crushed these demonstrations with an iron hand. The Bonapartists exaggerated the amount of disturbance in order to pose before the bourgeois and well-to-do peasants as "saviors of the country" from general upheaval and ruin. De Morny authorized his departmental prefects to replace all mayors, schoolmasters, and local justices, who were in any sense unreliable. Suspected persons were to be arrested instantly. On December 6 he ordered that no newspaper could appear unless one of his trusted prefects had first seen the proofs. "The Administration," De Morny proclaimed, "needed all its moral force to accomplish its work of regeneration and salva- tion." And on the 8th, he ordered wholesale arrests, as convicts and criminals at common law, of "all those rascally members of secret societies and unrecognized political associations." Under these circumstances, bewildered, fed only with abso- lutely censored, and often with deliberately perverted, informa- tion, with all free agencies of opinion enchained, or at least intimidated by the military, what possible chance was there for a proper expression of national judgment when the plebiscite was held on December 20, 1851? There was martial law in 32 departments, while 26,642 persons had been arrested, and these victims were being tried by special tribunals acting without a jury. The people were asked whether they were willing to allow Louis Napoleon to draw up a new constitution. No alternative was presented. If a majority had been registered against the President, he ought logically to have retired from office and LOUIS NAPOLEON UPHELD 469 resigned the administration to sheer anarchy. De Morny used all the machinery of the Government to "insure the free and sincere expression of the will of the nation," and to insure that it expressed itself in one particular way. Every kind of expedi- ent was to be used by the public officials "in the smallest hamlets" to get a favorable vote. "Liberty of conscience" was granted, De Morny wrote to the departmental prefects, "but the resolute and consistent use of every allowable means of influence and persuasion is what I expect of you." Such eminently practical methods produced results. Choos- ing between Louis Napoleon and anarchy, the French nation chose Louis Napoleon. There were cast in his favor 7,481,000 votes: 647,000 against him.' He promptly proclaimed himself "President for ten years," with almost autocratic powers and with a legislature entirely at his mercy. Few were greatly inter- ested in this last phase of the "Republic" and of its "Prince President." All knew what was speedily to come. To clear the way for the final step, De Morny, who never flinched from "dirty work," hastened the judicial forces in which prominent radicals were hurried before rigid tribunals and finally before a special Court of Justice — a kind of reversed Revolutionary Tribunal to deal summarily with political of- fenders. "The number of guilty persons and the fear of public strife," said De Morny in a circular, "did not admit of acting otherwise." All in all, well over 20,000 such cases found their way into these special courts. There was little to fear from the old conservatives: they were soon released. With the Republi- cans and even with moderate Liberals it was different. Of these 8000 were imprisoned in France, about 10,000 were exiled to Algeria, and about 6000 were allowed to live at home under police "supervision." But a very great number more, including ' It was, of course, alleged that these returns were "cooked" by the Govern- ment, but it cannot be denied that a very large majority of the votes were cast for the Bonapartists. Various footings of the election returns differ considerably, although they all agree in the general effect. 470 A HISTORY OF FRANCE some of the most distinguished men in the nation, were in exile in England, Belgium, or Switzerland. As George Sand wrote in 1852, "When you go into the provinces and see how crushed is the spirit, you must bear in mind all the force [of public opinion] lay in a few men - — now in prison, dead, or banished." On March 29, 1852, the Prince-President solemnly proclaimed the new Constitution, annoimcing grandiloquently, "The dic- tatorship entrusted to me by the people terminates to-day." It might well terminate. A higher title than "Dictator" was awaiting him. When he toured through France he was received literally with royal honors. He made speeches clearly indicating he was soon to be a, monarch, and promising how excellent would be his rule. Many conservatives had feared he would imitate his uncle and plunge France into dangerous wars. He strove hard to reassure them. At Bordeaux he made his famous state- ment, "The Empire means peace." Then came the climax. The "Senate," newly created by the new Constitution, proceeded to pass a decree to the effect that France was an Empire and that "Napoleon III was Emperor of the French." Again there was the inevitable plebiscite (November 21, 1852). The radicals were crushed and without heart. There was no organized oppo- sition: 7,824,000 Frenchmen voted "Yes" to the question of the enthronement of the Bonapartist; 253,000 were allowed to be counted for "No." On December 2, 1852, the anniversary of Austerlitz and of the Coup d'l&tat, "Napoleon III" became hereditary Emperor, and took to himself all the splendid trap- pings of French autocracy. And so the circle from monarchy to monarchy was closed. Thus was completed one of the most remarkable personal successes in history. A man who a very few years earlier had been (to quote Queen Victoria's own words) "in exile, poor and unthought of," was now practically the autocrat of what was then counted the most wealthy and powerful country in Conti- nental Europe. REMARKABLE PERSONAL TRIUMPH 471 Louis Napoleon was, during the next ten years, to become the most commanding figure in Europe, filling men's thoughts and imaginations to an extent the present age can hardly realize. But all through his days of greatness the memory of the treach- ery and brutality of the Coujp d'£tat was to- cling to him and from their exUe implacable enemies were to brand him as "Napoleon the Little" and "the Pinchbeck Napoleon." In 1870 the world was to learn that these names were justified. CHAPTER Xtll NAPOLEON THE LITTLE: HIS PROSPERITY AND DECADENCE Once again a Bonaparte was in the Tuilen'es. But he was far from being a resolute, egotistical "little corporal." With all his sins, and they were many. Napoleon III was not without noble ambitions and humanitarian impulses. He desired to have power partly at least because he was genuinely persuaded that he could give France a good fortune and a happiness impossible under Bourbon, Orleanist, or any type of Republic. He was above all things a dreamer, and many of his dreams were worthy. His portraits show him with his clear blue eyes always gazing neither downward nor forward, but upward, as if in a constant reverie. His air was frequently melancholic, his personal actions usually kindly and benevolent. The man who turned Saint- Arnaud and his Janizaries loose in the Paris streets was by no means impervious when brought face to face himself with human suffering. It was his sight of the vast numbers of wounded aft^ the battle of Solferino which went far to induce him to make a speedy peace with Austria (1859). Whether he would ever have screwed his courage to the sticking point for the Coup d'Etat, had there been no De Morny and other like spirits close at hand, is something that can never be told. Napoleon III had boasted much of playing the part of the champion of the people. He, or his advisers, took peculiar pains that the French nation should not choose any other champions. The Constitution of 1852, under which the Second Empire was governed until 1860, was a "constitution" only because that word was written near the head of the document. Grim Czar Nicholas I, Autocrat of all the Russias, hardly exercised more complete power than his "great and good friend," ^ "the Emperor of the French." '■ This was the title Nicholas used toward Napoleon III. The latter was THE LEGISLATIVE BODY 473 The "Man of Destiny" did not, indeed, endeavor to govern without the forms of a Umited monarchy., On the contrary, there was seldom a time when so much was said about "popular sovereignty" and "consulting the national will." But special care had been taken by the authors of the Constitution of 1852 that the "national will" should always coincide with the Emperor's. In his own right the powers of the Emperor were vast. He declared war, signed treaties, and appointed and dis- missed all public officials. The ministers of the great depart- ments of state were the mere creatures of his pleasure. He alone could propose new laws. Naturally, therefore, his power of sanctioning them after passage and of giving them validity by promulgation completed his grip on all legislation. The actual bills for the legislature were drafted by the Council of State (named by the Emperor), and if the feeble legislature mustered courage to make any amendments, the Council could advise the Emperor whether to accept or reject them. The regular "Legislative Body" (Corps Ugislatif) consisted of 261 deputies, elected by popular vote for a term of six years. It was completely under the rein and curb of the Emperor. It met at his summons, he could adjourn it and dissolve it. He named its president and vice-president. It could consider no bill except what was proposed by the imperial ministers, except with the special consent of the Council of State. The sessions were indeed public in that auditors were allowed in a gallery, but nothing of the debates could be published, beyond a very sum- mary official abstract prepared by the president of the body, himself of course the Emperor's nominee and obligated to sup- press any remark unwelcome to the Government. The deputies were supposed to vote the appropriation bills (budget), but if the Government desired, it could always get fimds for an object by shifting them from one account to another. The deputies, in extremely incensed because the Czar would not write to him as "my Brother.'' The crowned heads of Europe generally looked on Napoleon III as an unwel- come upstart with no claims to social equality. 474 A HISTORY OF FRANCE short, did not in any real sense possess the decisive power of the purse. In higher honor than the Legislative Body was the new "Senate" of 150 members, some sitting in "their own right," — admirals, marshals, cardinals, — the rest named for life by the Emperor. They examined the laws passed by the deputies, and no measure could be promulgated until they had given approval. Thus theoretically they had a kind of veto power, but of course they in turn were completely at the Emperor's disposal. If there were any matters in the Government not adjusted by the Con- stitution, they could promulgate the necessary laws — thereby practically amending the Constitution. Finally, it should be said, this very self-important body met in secret, another aid to manipulation by its lord and master. Much was always being said by Napoleon III about the "privileges" of being a voter in France. These often-flattered voters, however, found little left to their discretion. The Gov- ernment undertook to "enlighten them" (to use an official formula) how to cast their ballots. "Official candidates" favored by the Emperor were announced. Every pubUc functionary was obliged to work for their election. Their appeals and proclama- tions were printed on the official white paper. ^ The departmental prefects distributed ballots for the favored candidates, and on a thousand pretexts could repress the appeals and meetings of the Opposition candidates. Ballot boxes were solely in the custody of Government officials, and very strange things doubtless happened while depositing and counting the vote. Nominally there was no press censorship. In practice it was nigh impossible to subject the Government to real criticism. A heavy deposit (50,000 francs [$10,000] for a paper in Paris) had to be made for the good behavior of a journal. Press cases were tried in special courts without a jury. If a paper displeased the Government, it might be "warned." If there was a second warn- ' In France only Government placards and notices could be posted on while paper: all private appeab and pronunciamentoes had to be on colored paper. SPIES AND POLICE ACTIVITY 475 ing, the paper might be suppressed outright. It was an offense to pubhsh "false news"; and since to err in trivial matters is not an unknown newspaper error, almost any unwelcome jour- nal could be prosecuted out of existence. The administration of these laws was often left to local officials anxious to curry favor at Paris, by showing themselves busy prosecutors. Some of the "warnings" were for utterly comical reasons; for example, two papers were admonished for printing a discussion of the value of certain chemical manures "because this can only bring about indecision in the minds of the purchasers." '■ Never in modern France had the country been more infested with spies, "agents of police," and all the despicable small-fry of oppressive officialdom : making arbitrary arrests everywhere, and often selecting their victims out of sheer caprice. The most innocent expressions were enough to bring persons to the lockup. At Tours a woman remarked, "The grape blight is coming again." She was seized and the prefect of the department him- self threatened her with life imprisonment "if she spread any more bad news." Education was, of course, completely in the clutches of the new Government. Instructors of all classes had to take oath to the Emperor or be dismissed, and consequently many honorably resigned. History and philosophy were discouraged as studies; they might lead to dangerous political discussions and "discon- tent." The Minister of Education (Fortoul) undertook to reduce all the teaching in France to an automatic lifeless system, and issued the oft-quoted order that professors were to shave their mustaches "that they might drop from their appearance as well as from their manners the last vestiges of anarchy." ^ ' More famous even is the case of the paper which reported a speech by Napoleon III which "several times evoked cries of 'long live the Emperor!' " The paper was promptly "warned" because "this doubtful expression is un- suitable in the presence of the wild enthusiasm which the Emperor's words excited." ^ At that time the wearing of a mtistache or beard was sometimes regarded as a sign favoring Republican or radical theories. This notwithstanding that Napoleon III wore his well-known "imperial" goatee. 476 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Under these circumstances the question, of course, is, "How could the French nation, liberty-loving, keenly appreciative of wrongs and shams, and highly intelligent, endure this regime? The first answer is that the measures of repression made any kind of resistance highly difficult. But in any case Napoleon III had three great assets: (1) The army was his. The soldiers were delighted to obey the man who promised to imitate the tradi- tions of his mighty uncle, and who flattered and pampered them at every turn. (2) The run of the bourgeois were his. They asked only for law and order, and for steady material prosperity. The Second Empire undertook to provide them with these. (3) The clergy were at first devotedly on the side of Napoleon III. The Clericals had hated Louis-Philippe's regime. They had more or less welcomed the Second Republic. Now the Second Empire promised them honor and influence; while political conditions in Italy were such that Pope Pius IX might at any time need the support of French bayonets. In return the Clericals praised and supported the imperial regime, and (most valuable help of all) the parish priests often mustered their docile peasants down to the ballot places to vote for the "official candidates." Napoleon III was always hated by the industrial element in Paris and other sizable cities. He was irreconcilably opposed by most of the intellectual and literary leaders of the nation. But bayonets and ballots were what for the moment counted. For not a few years the Emperor could defy all mutterings of opposition. Nevertheless, Napoleon III and the eager spirits around him never deceived themselves into believing that they were firmly rooted in power, and could remain in the Tuileries if once they became highly unpopular. To attract and retain popular imagination there must be wars, victorious, of course, and as bloodless and inexpensive as possible, but adding to the "glory" of the Napoleonic name. To satisfy the bourgeois there must also be a steady promotion of railways, steamships, commerce, etc. To conciliate the hostile industrialists, measures must be A COURT OF PARVENUS 477 taken for the benefit of the working-men. The Emperor, in short, set out to play the benevolent despot, and it must be admitted that his intentions were good. He intended to make the Second Empire justify itself by the vast and genuine benefits it conferred upon France.' Unfortunately, to be a successful despot one must have efficient helpers: men of probity, capacity, and self-respect. But the Coup d'Etat had made it impossible for Napoleon III ever to command the best brains of France. The men who should have been in his ministries were in exile, or at least muttering helplessly in private life. In their stead were the personages who had managed the deed of the 2d of December, and of course many other spirits like them. It was the time for every broken- down soldier of fortune, for every nobleman of tarnished title, for every reckless promoter who seemed nearest home when he leaned over the roulette wheel, to flock to Paris from all Europe and offer his "services" to the Emperor or his ministers.^ Napoleon III created a magnificent and glittering court, an elegant nineteenth-century counterpart of the splendors of Louis XIV, but "it was composed of men and women all more or less adventurers. It was the court of the nouveaux riches and of a mushroom aristocracy. There were prizes to be won, and pleasures to be enjoyed, and it was ' like as in the days of Noah, until the flood came and swept them all away.' " With such coadjutors it is perhaps a testimony to the ability of the Emperor that he was able to hold his throne eighteen years, and that the first half of this reign was on the whole a great outward success. Europe was in ferment from 1848 on- ward. Italy and Germany were painfully achieving their national unity. The huge conglomerate of the Austro-Hungarian domin-' ' See note, pp. 494^95. ' It was well said that the revived imperialism of Louis Napoleon was not, like the Old Monarchy, a cause (to be fought and died for), but to most of its ad- herents, a speculation. They had to be attracted and held by direct hopes of personal gain : not by any appeal to their patriotism or personal fealty — rotten foundations for any government ! 478 A HISTORY OF FRANCE ions, which young Franz Josef was already ruling, was in un- happy labor. Russia was reaching out her iron hand once more toward Constantinople and the rest of the heritage of "the Sick Man of Europe." Foreign complications could hardly be avoided even had Napoleon III so desired, and how could he be a Napoleon and wish to avoid foreign complications.'' In the French army, fired now by careful references to the memories of Lodi and Jena, he had a fighting instrument which seemed the best in Europe until sudden collision with Von Moltke's new war-machine taught men otherwise. It is not fair to say that the Second Empire deliberately sought wars of aggrandize- ment as did the Pan-Germans in 1914. It is fair to say that the Emperor seemed well content when Russia and Austria in their turn took measures which enabled him to declare that "the struggle was forced upon him." Despite the famous promise, "The Empire is peace," Napoleon had to go to war with Russia in 1854, and with Austria in 1859. He won both of these wars, if not overwhelmingly, at least in a manner which increased his prestige, his hold upon France, and his claim to be the first figure in Europe. It is no purpose of this volume to untangle the diplomatic mazes in which Europe was involved from 1848 down through 1870, and in which Napoleon III and his foreign ministers were tangled for their full share. It is needful, however, to see how his foreign policy reacted upon the prosperity and destinies of the great French people which had placed itself, somewhat reluc- tantly, indeed, under his leadership. In the first of his wars Napoleon III had the alliance of the old national enemy, Eng- land, against Russia. The Crimean War (1854-56) was not entered upon by France against Czar Nicholas I for precisely the same reason as by the British. The latter were fearful that the dreaded Muscovite was about to seize Constantinople as the outer door to Egypt and India. The French had long regarded themselves as the protectors of the Latin Christians of the much distracted Turkish Empire, and as the preferred Christian DEFEAT OF THE RUSSIANS 479 Power in all the Sultan's dominions. Nicholas was thrusting forward the claims of the Greek Christians as against those of their very uncordial brethren of the West, and in the Levant was certainly overshadowing all other non-Moslem nations by his constant interference in Turkish affairs. The personal rela- tions of the Czar and the Emperor were also very cold. Nicholas regarded Napoleon as a mere upstart with only fictitious claims to pose as a fellow monarch. The Crimean War could have been avoided in 1854, alike by England and France, if only they had been willing to treat with the Czar in a conciliatory spirit for the liquidation of the nigh-bankrupt Ottoman Empire. It is now generally agreed that the Turks were not worth saving, and that their preservation was therefore little short of a crime. On the other hand, Russian policy was certainly aggressive, brutal, and seemingly was menacing to the Western Powers. The blame is therefore fairly distributed. This war lasted two years (1854-56). As is well known, the superior Anglo-French navies held the Russian squadrons in close blockade. The Czar's armies soon evacuated the Balkan States, and the struggle practically resolved itself into the prolonged and desperate siege of Sebastopol, the chief fortress in the Crimean peninsula. This siege began in October, 1854. The stronghold held out until September, 1855. The story of the valor of attackers and defenders — of the Alma, Balaklava, Inkermann, and the storming of the Malakhoff and the Redan, can be left to other books. As for the French part in the struggle, it is fair to say that if the English supplied the greater part of the necessary shipping for the war, the French land contingent at the siege was always the larger, and therefore did proportion- ately more than the English to win the open battles, repulse the sorties, and finally to force the Russians to evacuate the city. The French troops were said to have been more resourceful than the British in meeting the awful cold and hardships of the Russian winter. Their original commander had been Saint- Arnaud of Coup d'l^tat fame, but he died of cholera almost 480 A HISTORY OF FRANCE before the siege was begun, and Canrobert and Pelissier carried the struggle through at last to military success.^ The bad roads of Southern Russia and the miserable adminis- trative service of the Czar perhaps did more than French or British valor to bring about a victory for the Western Allies. Nicholas I had died a chagrined man in 1855. The hated par- venu and the despised EngUsh were defeating him. His succes- sor, Alexander II, was fain to make peace, albeit on decidedly humiliating terms. In March and April, 1856, Napoleon III had the congenial honor of entertaining the leading diplomats of Europe at the once famous Congress of Paris, which "settled" the ever un- settled Eastern Question. With the precise terms of this treaty we need not deal: enough that Turkey was given a new lease of life under the fostering protection of Britain and France, and that Russia was obUged to renounce most of her claims to meddle in Turkish affairs and even the right to keep warships on the Black Sea. The Emperor played a great part at this conference. He seemed laying the law down to obedient Europe. He dictated a settlement of the problems of Roumania that was very unwelcome to Austria. He allowed the delicate question of the oppression of Italy, and of the misgovernment of the Austro-Italian provinces, a question even more distasteful to the Hapsburgs, to be raised by Cavour, the prime minister of Sardinia. The princes of Europe recognized his great power and ceased to treat him as an upstart. The members of his family were "taken in" to the various royal houses. French pride was immensely flattered by seeing their ruler — almost as in the days of Louis XIV — treated as the first sovereign of Eittope. The Crimean War, in short, had been neither very sanguinary nor very expensive and it had paid Napoleon III excellent dividends. ' Most Americans read of the Crimean War only in English narratives. These inevitably fail to accent the fact that the French did the lion's share of the fighting and won corresponding right to credit for the victory. NAPOLEON MARRIES EUGfiNIE 481 So within five years after the Coup d'Etat the Second Empire was at its height. Paris was the center of wealth, elegance, and fashion. Never had all the questionable amusements of the glittering capital been so attractive, never had the famous city been so "gay." It was a time of sudden prosperity and cor- responding profusion. If Napoleon's ministeVs and proteges were often adventurers, they were most interesting adventurers, who lived most admirably by their wits. The imperial court had needed a mistress in 1852. The Emperor's advisers cast eyes on a HohenzoUern princess ' and one or two other high-born eligi- bles; but before 1856 the old dynasties had no great ambition to mate up with a Bonaparte. Napoleon, therefore, married Eugenie de Montijo (January 29, 1853), a young Spanish lady of fairly noble descent, whose family had been especially faith- ful to the cause of Joseph Bonaparte when he posed as King of Spain. The new Empress was "tall, fair and graceful, with hair like one of Titian's beauties." She made an admirable arbitress of costume and etiquette, to be copied by every robe-maker and in every drawing-room in Europe. Her personal character seems to have been on the whole benevolent and worthy, but her political views were largely limited to an intense partisanship with everything friendly to the Church and a corresponding dis- like of everything anti-Clerical or Protestant. Her influence was against the Italian patriots because they were anti-Papal, and against Prussia chiefly, it would seem, because Prussians were Lutherans. On the whole, therefore, she tended to embroil her husband with elements he needed as his friends. While the Crimean War was raging, Queen Victoria and the Prince-Consort Albert visited their mighty aUy at Boulogne. The Prince was a shrewd observer and in his memoranda gave interesting sidelights upon the Second Empire and its master. ' She was sister to the Prince of HohenzoUern, whose candidacy for the throne of Spain in 1 870 precipitated the Franco-Prussian War. Royal marriages have seldom kept the peace, but it is worth speculating, whether if Napoleon had married this princess the struggle of 1870 would have occurred — at least in the form it actually did. 482 A HISTORY OF FRANCE "The gentlemen composing the Emperor's entourage" wrote the Prince, "are not distinguished by birth, manners, or educa- tion. The tone [of the circle] is rather that of a garrison, with a good deal of smoking. . . . Upon the whole, my impression is that neither in home nor in foreign politics would the Emperor take any violent steps, but that he appears in distress for means of governing and is obliged to look about him from day to day. Having deprived the people of any active participation in the government, and reduced them to mere spectators, they grow impatient, like a crowd at a display of fireworks, whenever there is any cessation of the display." This was in 1854. In 1855 Napoleon and Eugenie made a return visit to England, and were received with magnificent hospitality at Windsor, passing through London "where seven years before he [the Emperor] was wont to stroll with his faithful dog at his heels to the news-vendor's stall by the Burlington Arcade to get the latest news." In 1856 came, of course, the Congress of Paris, and higher glories still. A little son had just been born to the imperial couple, the promise seemingly of a long and prosperous dynasty. The Heir Presumptive of Prussia came to accept the Emperor's bounty for a brief visit. With the Prussian suite was a modest officer. Major von Moltke. He had not yet risen to fame but, like Prince Albert, was well able to see under the surface. His letters home to Germany praised many things in the Second Empire, and dwelt much on Na- poleon's good-humor and benevolence, but declared: "He suffers from the want of men of ability to uphold him. He can- not make use of men of independent character, who insist on having their own notions, as the direction of affairs of state must be concentrated in his hands." Von Moltke commends the Emperor, however, for not forgetting that "the French people like to see their sovereigns surrounded by a brilliant court." So the Congress of Paris came and went: and Napoleon drifted on to his second great war — with Austria in behalf of THE WAR WITH AUSTRIA 483 Italian freedom. The Emperor had been in his youth a member of a secret society for the hberation of Italy from the Austrian yoke. His generous impulses made him sympathize with the bitter complaints arising from the peninsula at the oppressions by the Hapsburgs and by the lesser princes, their dependents. His own political theories, about the right of every nation to settle its own destinies by plebiscites, inclined him also to listen favorably to the pleas of Cavour, the very astute prime minister of Sardinia-Piedmont,' that France should intervene in Italian affairs and should at least drive the Austrians out of Lombardy and Venetia. Again we must turn aside from the highly interesting diplo- matic story. In 1858 Napoleon made a secret alliance with Cavour and Victor Emmanuel to aid them to drive the Austrians from Italian soil. In return for great additions to his territory within the peninsula, Victor Emmanuel would cede to France his French-speaking districts of Savoy and Nice. In 1859, after a most exciting diplomatic flurry, Cavour maneuvered Austria into declaring war upon Piedmont, under circumstances which permitted Napoleon to say he was merely coming to the rescue of a weak ally. This Italian war, however, was not universally popular in France. Behind the Austrian stood the Pope fearful for his "temporal power"; consequently the Empress and the French clericals discouraged the whole undertaking. The bour- geois element too disliked the military uncertainties and the war taxation. Nevertheless Napoleon threw a considerable army into Northern Italy. Neither the Austrian nor the French gen- erals displayed the least real capacity as strategists, but the French infantry were incomparably the better fighters, and under blundering leadership they carried the Tricolor gallantly through the two great victories, first of Magenta and soon after that of Solferino. ' Victor Emmanuel, King of Sardinia-Piedmont, the northwest portion of Italy, alone of all the Italian dynasts had resisted the pressure of Austria to maintain a harsh autocracy, and had allowed his people a liberal constitution. 484 A HISTORY OF FRANCE The Austrians, nevertheless, were not yet crushed. There was danger of an unfriendly move on the Rhine by Prussia. The Clericals in France were anxious and angry. Therefore, leaving his Piedmontese ally somewhat shabbily in the lurch, Napoleon concluded peace with Franz Josef very suddenly at Villa Franca (July 11, 1859). Lombardy alone was to be ceded to Sardinia-Piedmont, and Venetia was still to lie in Austrian bondage. Since he had not completed his part of the bargain, the Emperor did not now insist on getting Savoy and Nice; but when a little later (1859-60) the Central and South Italian States themselves expelled their local "grand dukes" or papal legates, and united under Victor Emmanuel as "King of Italy," Napoleon exacted the promised districts as his price for closing his ears to the cries of the outraged Clericals at the direful cur- tailing of the territories of the Pope. So France gained two new departments, made from Savoy in the Alps, and also a fair city (Nice) on the Riviera, but at the expense of some decidedly ungracious bargaining on the part of her Emperor. The Italian war left Napoleon with perhaps greater military prestige than ever, but at the cost of the good-will of the Clericals, while in turn the Italians did not love him. They felt that he had left them in the lurch as to Venetia, and then had exacted an unfair price for letting them consolidate most of the rest of their country without his intervention. Nevertheless in 1859 the glory of the Second Empire was probably at its height. France was remarkably prosperous. Great public works were undertaken to win the industrial classes. Railroads were developed. Huge stock companies were floated with more or less Government patronage. Paris had been systematically rebuilt with wide, stately boulevards by Baron Haussmann. The expense was vast, but the effect was magnifi- cent. Paris became somewhat less picturesque, but was now more clearly than ever the superb, clean, modern capital. An- other object was also gained. The wide, straight avenues could hereafter be easily swept by artillery. The elimination of the ATTEMPTS TO CONCILIATE THE LIBERALS 485 crooked, mediseval-looking streets made barricade fighting a hundred per cent harder. After 1859 it was evident that the Pope was likely to lose his entire temporal power in Rome and become, as indeed happened in 1870, the "prisoner of the Vatican." For this result the Clericals blamed Napoleon, and their support cooled. To replace them he began to favor the long-despised Liberals. The Republicans had been suppressed with an iron hand. Prior to 1857 they had not had a single representative in the entire body of deputies. In 1857 and down to 1863 they had only five — "The Five" — chosen by districts in Paris and Lyons which even the police and the official candidates could not entirely coerce. The two brands of Royalists had been a little less persecuted, but were about equally helpless. Mails and travelers' baggage had been regularly searched at the frontiers to prevent the incoming of anti-Bonapartist literature. Now, however, the pressure was a little released. In 1860 the official Moniteur was allowed to reprint the full debates in the Cham- ber. In 1861 measures were taken to have the items in the budget voted separately, with some real control by the deputies over the treasury. The Chamber was allowed to reply with an ad- dress to the speech from the throne. The press restrictions were also partially lifted. Very moderate criticisms of the Govern- ment were permitted. In 1863 there were elected 35 Opposition members to the deputies.' This was a very small fraction of the Chamber (set by the Constitution of 1851 at 251 members), but it involved real debates, and compelled the Government to defend itself in a parliamentary way against a genuine Opposi' tion. In Paris only Opposition deputies were elected. This meant that Napoleon could not count on the loyalty of the nerve- center of France, a very dangerous situation in case for an instant he lost control of the army. ' Many of these were, indeed, Orleanists or regular old-line Bourbons., " Legitimists; " but they merged their issues in common hostility to Bouapartism, and called themselves the "Liberal Opposition." 486 A HISTORY OF FRANCE However, having taken the first steps toward a liberal regime, it was impossible to tighten up again. In 1864 the Emperor strove to conciliate the industrialists by a law giving the work- ingmen a right to form labor unions (hitherto prohibited in deference to bourgeois interests), and also, of course, to "strike" to better their condition, a measure of the greatest importance for the future economic and social development of the country. Whatever popularity Napoleon III may, nevertheless, have gained by such a step was completely offset by the loss of pres- tige he brought on the Second Empire by his utterly disastrous and discreditable adventure in Mexico. The "Man of Destiny" had watched the American Civil War with cynical interest. If the great Anglo-Saxon Republic could have been rent asunder and eternally weakened, there was an end to the Monroe Doctrine, and a delightful vista was opened in Latin America for every kind of imperialistic ex- ploitation. Probably Napoleon III would have intervened in behalf of the Southern Confederacy had he been sure of the support of England, and also of French public opinion, which may not have understood all the issues in America, but which balked at spending blood and treasure to uphold a government founded on slavery. ' But after American hands seemed firmly tied in 1862, the Emperor determined at least to interfere in Mexico. His intervention there was the beginning of the end of the Second Empire. Once more we have a story familiar to Americans, and only indirectly concerning the life of the French people. Mexican finances were in their normal grievous disorder, and French, English, and Spanish banking interests brought about a joint intervention by their three nations to secure the payment of the debt. But soon it was evident that Napoleon intended a direct political occupation of the offending nation. England and ^ It is alleged that Napoleon III told Southern sympathizers that he wished, indeed, to interfere in their behalf, but feared that if he did so there would be riots in the streets of Paris. MEXICAN DISASTER INJURES NAPOLEON 487 Spain hastily withdrew. A French army was sent up from Vera Cruz into the interior, and after some initial defeats took Mexico City (1863). The anti-Republican clericals in Mexico now played into Napoleon's hands. They caused a monarchy to be proclaimed and offered the "Empire of Mexico" to the Archduke Maximilian of Austria,' an amiable prince who knew nothing of Mexican problems, and who rashly trusted to the solemn promise of Napoleon to support him with French bayo- nets till his new Government was well settled. In 1864 Maxi- milian arrived in Mexico, but the Republicans continued their resistance. The French forces sent over were not large enough to conquer the country, and the whole expedition was so ex- pensive that the French taxpayers began to become very vocal in the Chambers. Then in 1865 the Southern Confederacy col- lapsed. The United States sent stern "notes" to Paris about Mexico, the Monroe Doctrine had a most ominous resurrection, and an army of Northern veterans concentrated significantly in Texas. A desperate conflict with the now armed and victori- ous United States was the last thing Napoleon wanted. Despite his solemn promise to the Austrian Prince, in 1867 he withdrew the French troops from Mexico and left Maximilian to his fate. How the latter remained, resisted the Republicans, was taken, and then shot is one of the best-known stories of North American history. The Mexican affair cost Napoleon a vast deal of money; it tied up French troops in America at a time when they were sorely needed to protect national interests in Europe; it ended with the disgraceful death of Maximilian, whose friends blamed Napoleon severely for luring him to his ruin; and, of course, it brought no "glory," but only an immense onus of failure at the end. By the time it was finished, the Second Empire had lost all the splendor which had followed the Congress of Paris, and was itself obviously drifting on the rocks. Those rocks and quicksands were now clearly lying in the * Brother of the Emperor Franz Josef, who died in 1916. 488 A HISTORY OF FRANCE direction of Germany. In 1862 Bismarck became first minister of Prussia, while Von Moltke was building that great scientific war-machine which the world was soon to learn to know so well. It had been a serious blow in certain quarters to French pride when the bulk of Italy had become united in a single powerful kingdom. Now, as by successive steps Bismarck began erecting a great well-compacted German State directly across the Rhine, the anxiety and the injured feelings grew infinitely faster. In 1864 this astute minister of King William I had induced Austria to join with Prussia in a common attack on Denmark, which was duly overwhelmed by the two Great Powers and bereft of Schleswig-Holstein. It was patent enough that the two victors in this inglorious war were bound to quarrel over the supremacy of Germany. In the issue of that quarrel France had every possible interest. If Napoleon III announced his intention of aiding Austria, all Bismarck's schemes for making Prussia dominant in Central Europe would vanish in thin air, and never did that clever Junker use his great gifts of cajolery and insinuation to better advantage than in 1865, when he visited the Emperor at Biarritz, and in several confidential interviews talked Napoleon into promising neutrality in German aflFairs, in return for some utterly vague hopes, and repudiable half -promises of giving France additional territories west of the Rhine while Prussia adjusted matters with Austria. Napoleon agreed to neutrality. He did not believe that either of the Germanic Powers would be victorious promptly. The result (he expected) would be a dragging, indecisive war, into which he could presently plunge as the irresistible arbiter. So he sat back, permitted Italy to make alliance with Prussia against Austria — and waited events. Events came with a vengeance War was declared between Prussia and Austria on June 16, 1866. On July 3, seventeen days later, the power of Austria lay crushed and nigh helpless after the great battle of Sadowa (or Koniggratz). On August 23, the final Treaty of Prague was signed, and the war was over. VAIN ANGER OF FRANCE 489 Austria had been obliged to resign all interest in German affairs and to cede Venetia to Italy. As for Prussia she annexed Hano- ver, Hesse-Cassel, Nassau, and other German States and pro- ceeded to organize all but South Germany into the formidable North-German Confederation — very strictly under her own leadership. Prussia had thus increased her area nearly twenty- five per cent. She had increased her power and prestige in Europe infinitely more. The news of the catastrophe of Sadowa was hardly less terrible in Paris than in Vienna. From the French standpoint the Emperor had committed a hideous mistake. He had watched a great aggressive military power spring up on the very bound- aries of France, and had done absolutely nothing to prevent a vast national danger. In vain now he tried to remind Bismarck of his alleged promises of more territories for France — the Bavarian and Hessian lands west of the Rhine.'' — or (no creditable proposal) the jjermission to seize part of Belgium? Anything in short to save the shattered prestige of the Second Empire! Bismarck, more or less bluntly, refused to remember any of his fine words at Biarritz. He encouraged the Belgian proposition only enough so that he could let it leak out in 1870 to discredit France with England. He made it very plain that Prussia intended to organize Germany in her own way, and would snap her fingers at French intervention. Napoleon would willingly have considered going to war, but the Mexican adven- ture had tied up part of the army, while other regiments were in Rome protecting the Pope against the seizure of the Eter- nal City by the Italian patriots. Even with his whole forces con- solidated, competent generals told the Emperor that he would Still lack strength to attack Von Moltke's terrible new war- machine. In infinite anguish Napoleon resolved to keep the peace. One last attempt he made to solace French pride by an an- nexation. The Grand Duchy of Luxembourg belonged to the King of Holland. The latter needed money and took no joy in this minor principality. In 1867 it was arranged to sell the little 490 A HISTORY OF FRANCE country to France, i Matters seemed almost completed, when suddenly Bismarck announced that he could not consent, and informed the King of Holland if he went ahead with the sale "public opinion" in Germany might force war. Of course the King dropped the matter at once. Napoleon had again been ut- terly rebuffed by the Prussian, and all Europe, and especially all France, knew it. Between 1867 and 1870 the Second Empire enjoyed its Indian summer. France was still very prosperous. Commerce and industry showed gratifying gains. The great increase of wealth enabled the munificent patronage of the fine arts. Paris was more than ever the abode of comfort, luxury, and of all alluring forms of amusement and "wickedness." In 1867 the Emperor was the host to many of the crowned heads of Europe at the Great Universal Exposition, held now a second time in Paris. ^ But no one could conceal the fact that Napoleon III was losing pres- tige. He was suffering painfully from a disease of the bladder, and was unable to concentrate his attention on public affairs. The Mexican fiasco and the full consequences of the Prussian aggrandisement both came home to the French people in 1867. As Thiers, the veteran statesman, now again in politics, bitterly exclaimed, "There are no blunders left for us to make." In 1868 a rising journalist, Henri Rochefort, dipped his pen in gall. In his organ, the Lanterne, he launched attacks like this: "I am a thorough Bonapartist: but I must be allowed to choose my hero in the dynasty. As a Bonapartist, / yrefer Napoleon II. It is my right. He represents to me the ideal of the sovereign. No one can deny that he occupied the throne, be- cause his successor was Napoleon III. What a reign, my friends, what a reign! No taxes! No war! No Civil List! Oh, yes. Na- poleon II, I love and admire you without reserve!" Rochefort ' The inhabitants of Luxembourg seem to have been reasonably willing for the change. * The first "Exposition" held in 1855 had also been a great success and an excellent advertisement for the prosperity of France in the early years of the Second Empire. NEW APPROACHES TO THE LIBERALS 491 paid for this utterance with prosecution and exile; but the dis- semination of this "scarlet pamphlet" could not be stopped. The Second Empire was being ruinously discredited. Under these circumstances there was nothing left for the Emperor to do save to try to regain his popularity by increasing concessions to the Liberals. An attempt was made by the Gov- ernment to create the "Democratic Empire." In 1868 the press laws were still further relaxed. Political meetings could be held if they were vouched for by seven responsible citizens. In 1869 there were still more ample concessions. After some discussion the Emperor granted ministerial responsibility. Hereafter the Chamber was to have real control. It could initiate laws, de- mand explanations of policy from the ministers, and control its own organization. The ministers were supposed to be responsible to the majority of the Chamber, although it was not until 1870 that this last step was put in practice. In this last stage the office of premier was accepted by Ollivier, the leader hitherto of the moderate Opposition, who now announced that he intended to govern according to strictly Liberal and parliamentary views. So again the wheel had turned. From Autocracy Na- poleon III was swinging over to Limited Monarchy. He boasted in 1869 that he was founding at length a system of government "equally removed from reaction and from revolutionary theories"; and he appealed to the nation: "I can answer for order: help me to save liberty I " Whether if there had been no foreign disaster the Second Empire would have lasted is at best doubtful. The memory of the crime of the Coup d'Etat clung around it like a poisoned Nessus shirt. The Republicans lifted their heads the moment the pressure of the police relaxed. In the elections for the new Chamber in May, 1869, the Government candidates had in all only 4,438,000 votes. The Opposition had 3,385,000. The city of Paris went against the Government by 231,000 votes to only 74,000. Fully ninety Opposition deputies were chosen. ^ ^ Or 116 if some very lukewarm "Bonapartists" be taken into account. 492 A HISTORY OF FRANCE On the 2d of December, 1869, the date of the seizure of power by Napoleon, the Republicans held a celebration in honor of the Frenchmen who had died in 1851 defending Republican liberties. A young advocate, Gambetta, appeared to defend those who were promptly accused of "insulting the Govern- ment." His speech smote heavily upon the defenders of the Bonapartist regime. "Listen, you who have for seventeen years been the absolute master of France. The thing that character- izes you best, because it proves your own remorse, is the fact you have never dared to say, ' We will place among the solemn festivals of France, this Second of December.' . . . Good! This anniversary we [Republicans] take to ourselves. We will observe it always, without fail, . . . the anniversary of our dead, until the day when the country having become once again master itself, shall impose on you the great expiation in the name of liberty, equality, and fraternity." After the Liberal reforms of April, 1870, notwithstanding all this, Ollivier undertook to assure the Emperor of a "happy old age." To bolster up the prestige of the new Government, an- other referendum vote was held. France was asked to ballot on the proposition: "The nation approves of the Liberal reforms made in the Constitution since 1860, and ratifies the senatorial decree of April 20, 1870." As might be expected, a great majority was cast in favor of the Government. The question had been cleverly worded so as not to make the voters reply whether they really liked the Second Empire, but only whether they approved the moves toward liberalism : 7,358,000 voters replied, "Yes"; 1,571,000 "No." The Republicans denounced the whole scheme as a dishonest trick. For the moment, however, the Second Empire seemed to have been given a new sanction and a new lease of life. Very possibly this referendum actually con- tributed to bring on the final disaster, convincing Napoleon III (as Lebon wrote later) "that he still possessed the confidence of the country, and that a little external glory succeeding upon so many reverses, would restore his shaken authority." IMPERFECT ARMY REFORMS 493 In 1869 had come the Emperor's last foreign sunshine. The Suez Canal (the work of a remarkable Frenchman, De Lesseps) had been completed. Napoleon himself could not go to Egypt to attend the opening, but Eugenie went on a man-of-war, to be the guest of honor of Khedive Ismail and to shine as the "bright particular star" of the fMe along with the Emperor Franz Josef and very many other European royalties. The interna- tional horizon seemed fairly clear in 1869 and in 1870. France had apparently submitted to the consolidation of North Ger- many. No great issues appeared pending. Nevertheless all men knew there was serious tension. Frenchmen talked of "avenging Sadowa " as if it had been their own defeat. Prussians talked of the need of humbling "the hereditary enemy." In France it was keenly realized by military men that all was not well with the army. The new Prussian organization had been an eye-opener. In 1866 a genuine attempt had been made in France to reorganize the military system. The term of army service had been too long. The troops were practically profes- sional soldiers, not short-term conscripts. There was no ade- quate reserve. A law of 1855 had actually allowed the payment of a money commutation for army service, and most bourgeois were glad enough to hand over the cash and to save their sons from an irksome duty. Marshal Niel proposed universal service, but the Chamber of that year (1866) had refused to listen and the Emperor had declined to force the matter through. Finally certain imperfect reforms had been voted in 1868. Had they been effected, they would have given an army of 800,000 men. For the most part, however, they were still on paper in 1870, when the great crash came. France faced Prussia in that year with her old professional army, and with practically no efficient i reserves or other trained organization behind it. It was easy to be wise after the event. Nevertheless in 1870 as in 1914 the half of the year passed with the world appearing very peaceful. The policy of OUivier, the new Liberal prime minister, was so pacifistic, that in Janu- 494 A HISTORY OF FRANCE ary, 1870, he offered to reduce the size of the French army pro- vided Prussia would do the same. Bismarck, who knew his own plottings, waved this well-meant proposal aside. Matters thus drifted calmly on _ until early summer. The Second Empire seemed in less danger of foundering than at any time since 1866. Europe had quieted down. OUivier seemed resolved to let Prussianized Germany strictly alone. It was publicly said that the international horizon was singularly clear, and many diplo- mats departed for their vacations. Then suddenly the great gusts blew. On July 19, 1870, war existed between France and Prussia. On September 2 "Napoleon the Little" ceased to reign. Note on the Economic and Material Progress of France: 1852-1870 It is idle to deny that the Second Empire contributed much to the material betterment of the nation. In fact, it was incumbent on Napoleon III and his fellow adventurers to popularize their rule by improving the condition of the masses. The Emperor furthermore had an honest love of humanity — so long as that love did not conflict with his own aggrandizement. Many Government hospitals and convalescent homes were founded, and steps taken to establish a system of public physicians and free medicines. Self-help societies were encouraged, and the Government fostered benefit funds for the relief of old men and women; also for insurance against sickness and accidents; and in 1868 there was founded the "Prince Imperial's Fund" to advance to work- ing-men the money wherewith to buy their own tools. The commercial treaty with Great Britain (1860) was much denounced by the manu- facturing interests, but it certainly aided to reduce the cost of many essential articles for the poor. The establishment of the right of work- ing-men to organize and to strike for better conditions has been men- tioned. By one of those back-washes of reaction, which are so curious, the lawmakers of the Revolution had actually made organized "strik- ing" a penal offense. All this was now changed. Raihoad-building was pushed with energy. There had been almost no railroads in France before 1842. There were only about 2100 miles of them in 1851. There were nearly 10,000 miles in 1870. The magnificent reconstruction of Paris by Baron Haussmann has been explained. Besides the enormous and costly changes in the boule- vards and avenues, there was a wholesale erection of new churches, NOTE ON ECONOMIC PROGRESS 495 hospitals, theaters, markets, barracks, etc., which added enormously to the magnificence of the capital. In addition to Paris, Lille, Lyons, Bordeaux, and Marseilles were proportionately beautified. These great public undertakings, the stimulation of commerce and industry, etc., naturally produced a corresponding development in financial enterprises. The Credit Foncier was founded in 1852 and the Credit Lyonnais in 1865, to advance money to agriculturists, manu- facturers, and merchants. These great establishments did much to add to the stability and prosperity of France. The Government deliberately increased the public debt to find money for its numerous undertakings, but it had no trouble in floating its bonds. In 1868 it required a loan of 400,000,000 francs ($80,000,000). There were no less than 830,000 subscribers, and they together offered 15,000,000,000 francs. It was this wealth, accumulated between 1852 and 1870, that en- abled France to recover so rapidly from the terrible maltreatment by Prussia. Tested only from a materialistic standard the Second Empire de- served well of the nation; it was a tribute to the intelligence, moral qualities, and conscience of France that she refused to be drugged into contentment by the Bonapartist adventurers. CHAPTER XXm THE CRUCIFIXION BY PRUSSIA: 1870-71 It was the misfortune of Napoleon III that his Government was so unstable that the least swing of the international weather vane could create a situation in which he must either engage in a capital war or see his throne put in jeopardy provided he did not avenge "the national honor." Firmly rooted govern- ments can do many distasteful or unpopular things: but the Second Empire was not a firmly rooted government. Hence one of the main reasons for the crisis and debacle of 1870. Why Otto von Bismarck felt that his policy for German con- solidation would be advantaged by a war with France is a matter solely for German history. And as for the detailed moves on the military chess-board which registered the downfall of the Second Empire and the agony of the nation it had led to dis- aster, these also are outside the scope of this book. We have only to see how the gang of cheerful incompetents whom Napoleon III called his ministers plunged their country into the war, and what were the physical and moral efPects of a frightful calamity upon the French nation. Few modern countries (prior to 1914) had been more tried than was France in 1870-71, and that the nation could survive the crucifixion it then suffered, and become again an upstanding power in the world, is one of the best evidences possible that the stock of the Gallo-Roman, Frank and Northman, was still productive, worthy, and strong after very many centuries of momentous history. In 1870 OUivier was head of the Cabinet, but he necessarily had to leave diplomatic affairs largely to the Due de Gramont, an exceedingly jingoistic and incautious foreign minister. There were no outstanding questions which seemed to promise direct THE SPANISH CANDIDATURE 497 trouble, but the whole international situation was still rather turbid. Things had not changed since 1869 when General Ducrot wrote: "We are alike bellicose and pacific. We cannot resign ourselves to accept freely the situation which we created by the enormous blunders we committed in 1866, and yet we cannot decide frankly upon war. Peace rests on too frail foundations to last. Prussia may adjourn its projects but will never renounce them. In this state of transition, of friction, and of defiances, is it not clear that at any instant an unforeseen incident can bring on a terrible crisis?" The outline of what happened, of the events which played directly into the hands of Bismarck, master of unscrupulous intrigue, and of Von Moltke, master of the legions, stands some- what as follows : The throne of Spain was vacant. Early in July it became known in Paris that the disposing faction at Madrid had offered the crown to Prince Leopold of HohenzoUern Sigmaringen, a kinsman of William I of Prussia. Instantly the Paris press blew up in a rage. Another insult from Prussia! A HohenzoUern south of the Pyrenees as well as just across the Rhine! Would the Government endure it? etc. There was an angry "interpellation" in the Chamber. On July 6, 1870, the Due de Gramont, "in a tone of insolent provocation," told that body that it would destroy the balance of power in Europe if one of the great kingdoms put a prince on the throne of Charles V, and in that case "France would discharge her duty without hesitation and without weakness." Leopold of HohenzoUern promptly withdrew his candidature. King William of Prussia was not anxious for war. He did noth- ing to reply to the fiery utterance of De Gramont; but the latter was resolved on a public rebuff for Prussia, to make it appear that the latter had recoiled before the threats of France. The French Foreign Office therefore pressed for a formal letter from William forbidding his kinsman to renew his candidature. The King was not willing to go so far, inasmuch as the matter was now for all practical purposes closed. Then by a blunder, to be 498 A HISTORY OF FRANCE paid for by a great nation's tears, De Gramont required Bene- detti,the French ambassador, to wait on William at the watering- place of Ems, on the fateful 13th of July, to demand a binding pledge from the King that the Prince should never again aspire to the throne of Spain. The King declined somewhat coldly to do as requested; but he parted from Benedetti on terms of perfect cordiality, and it was understood that the negotiations were to continue amicably. " Benedetti had not therefore been insulted, nor did he com- plain of an insult." ^ But, as all the world knows to-day, Bis- marck in Berlin deliberately gave to the press a garbled tele- gram from Ems representing the King as treating the envoy with gross discourtesy and "showing him the door." The great minister's motive was of course to render conflict inevitable in order to consolidate Germany after a victorious war against France. No device of unmoral statecraft ever had prompter success than this "edited" Ems telegram. The situation at Paris had already become ticklish. Irresponsible journalists had been call- ing for an "energetic policy" and "for clearing the Prussians out of the right bank of the Rhine." De Gramont, however, had been sure he could obtain a great diplomatic success without fighting; and the Emperor and OUivier, the premier, had been firmly on the side of peace. In fact on the 12th, when the order to Benedetti had been sent, the Council of Ministers had voted that whatever the reply of the King of Prussia, "the Govern- ment would content itself with what it had obtained." Now, however, the wine-glass seemed flung across the table in the face of France. The warm summer weather filled the Paris boulevards. The one roar was, "To Berlin!" For Napoleon III to have refused to answer the challenge would have cost the Second Empire the last remnants of its waning prestige. How long the "Man of Destiny" could then have kept his crown would have been a matter for nice calculation. ' Chuquet. FOOLISH CONFIDENCE OF THE GOVERNMENT 499 The nation had been fed up on lying statements as to the efiEciency of the army. In the Cabinet the war party instantly gained the upper hand. The Empress was all for action. Per- sonal prejudices were swaying the queen of elegance and fashion. "This is my war!" she is alleged to have exclaimed. "We will crush those Protestant Prussians!" The Emperor was still half persuaded to peace, but he was racked by disease and overborne by the clamor. On the 15th of July, OUivier appeared in the Chamber to ask for a credit of 50,000,000 francs for war purposes. Thiers vainly tried to pin him down to facts and dis- cover whether the "insult" was really so deadly as represented. The premier waved him aside. In the spirit of explosive patriot- ism then reigning, anything like calm debate was impossible. By an enormous majority war was declared (July 19, 1870). The leaders of the French nation were either men living in a fool's paradise, or else they were criminally leading the nation over a precipice, merely to postpone for a little interval their own personal ejection from power. OUivier made his ever- famous utterance, "I accept the challenge with a light heart." De Gramont (after the event) said: "I decided upon war with an absolute confidence in victory. I believed in the greatness of my country, its strength, its warlike virtues, even as I believe in my holy religion." But, after all, war is primarily a mihtary undertaking. Neither the premier nor the foreign minister were military experts, and what were their military "experts" say- ing? Leboeuf, the Minister of War, was assuring his colleagues that "the army was ready"; and when pressed to tell what that meant, replied, "I mean that the army is perfectly equipped in every respect; that it will not need a single gaiter button for a year to come!" And so a great nation was sent down into the valley of humiliation. The military story of 1870 has become fairly familiar now to every educated American. ^ We all understand how complete • The author has contributed his interpretation of the military events in 1870-71 in The Roots of the War (N.Y. 1918), pp. 3-23, wherein the principal battles, etc., are outlined. 500 A HISTORY OF FRANCE was the preparation in Prussia and her South-German allies; how like an impersonal engine of destruction Von Moltke's thousands mobilized in perfect order and with admirable equipment set forth toward the Rhine. We also know how the instant the summons came to active service, the military machine of the Second Empire displayed its complete incompetence. Of course the prime evil had been that Napoleon III in military no less than civil affairs had not been able to command the best abilities in France. His generals were mostly adventurers, downright "grafters," or at best routine-hardened mediocrities who assumed that because Napoleon the Great had defeated the Prussians at Jena, the same methods would enable "Na- poleon the Little" to defeat the Prussians again, say at Frank- fort. The soldiers were brave, the subaltern officers competent; but the higher command, the methods of supply, etc., were execrable. The field guns were much inferior to the Prussian, and so through nearly every detail of the service. The military reforms proposed in 1868 had been most imperfectly executed.' There were no adequate reserves. The bulk of the youth of France had not been trained to arms. The old professional army, in short, was practically all that could be relied upon, and up to August 1 it barely exceeded 250,000 men, to be pitted against much larger Prussian forces which were steadily aug- menting. A competent critic, assessing the disaster which fol- lowed, as;signed the ruin of the nation to three causes, easy to state — "inferiority of numbers, inferiority of weapons, inferi- ority of the higher command." More pithily still might be set down the one cause of causes — the incompetence of Napoleon III to exercise the power he had seized by a crime. Napoleon had done more than get himself embroiled with Prussia when he ought to have known enough to keep the ' In fairness it should be said that Marshal Niel, a decidedly able war min- ister, tried energetically to reform the military system. If he had lived much might have been accomplished; but in 1869 he died. His successor, Leboeuf, was a boastful meddler, who undid most of Niel's reforms and accomplished nothing on his own account. UTTER CONFUSION IN ARMY 501 peace. He had also failed to make any alliance for France. Austria might have moved against Prussia, but she feared a counter-attack by Russia, and waited for "the first French victories" — which never came. Italy might have come to Napoleon's aid, but her price was the evacuation of Rome by the French troops. The Emperor was too dependent upon the Clericals to dare to leave the Pope to his fate. The French gar- rison remained in Rome until the situation had become hopeless in the North. France, therefore, went into the war without a friend, with an army miserably organized and equipped, and, as it soon appeared, still more miserably commanded. The result was hardly doubtful the moment the two hosts came to grips. Even before the first defeats it began to be evident that things were very wrong. It was said that the telegraph oflices swarmed 'ivith soldiers and officers all writing messages begin- ning, "Please send me." Reports of utter confusion came back to Paris from Metz, the grand headquarters. Nevertheless the capital continued excited and joyfully expectant. Late in July the Emperor and the young Prince Imperial took trains for Metz to join the army, leaving the Empress in Paris as regent. Father and son were never to see Paris again. For our purposes what now happened can be stated in the briefest possible manner. 1. To satisfy the impatience of the French populace for a "victory," on August 2 Napoleon ordered an attack on a weak Prussian detachment just across the frontier at Saarbriicken. It was absurd to call it a battle. The Prussian battalion retired after a little firing. The Emperor telegraphed that the Prince had had his "baptism of fire," and the skirmish was celebrated with Te Deums as being a really important victory. 2. On August 4 an overwhelming force of Prussians surprised and defeated a French division at Weissenburg, thus winning the first serious engagement. 3. On August 6, 45,000 French under MacMahon were at- tacked at Worth in Alsace by about twice as many Prussians^ 502 A HISTORY OF FRANCE After valiant resistance the French had to flee in what was little better than rout. 4. On this same disastrous August 6 the French corps of Frossard was attacked at Forbach in Lorraine. It beat off the first attacks, but finally had to retire, more as a consequence of bad generalship than of the inability of the soldiery to stop the Prussians. 5. Paris had waited impatiently for the successes promised by the Government. On the very day after the defeat at Worth, the city was sent for some hours into a frenzied ecstasy over the false report (possibly instigated to promote stock speculations) of a great victory and the capture of the Prussian Crown Prince. Then came bulletins admitting that the enemy was across the frontier, "which fact presented us marked military advantages," and that "all could be recovered." The reaction of feeling, of course, needed a victim. OUivier resigned. Count Palikao became head of the ministry (August 10). He was a pompous, utterly inefficient man, who continued the policy of lying about the situation, saying oracularly, "If Paris knew what I know, the city would be illuminated." 6. The Germans drove right onward against Metz. The Em- peror abandoned the command of the main army to Marshal Bazaine (a showy, selfish individual, overwhelmed by a situa- tion far too great for him) and got away from Metz just in time to escape being hemmed in by the Prussians. The latter forced the French forces back into Metz in a series of battles beginning on August 14 and culminating in the decisive engagement of Gravelotte (August 18). The French fought bravely, but Bazaine ruined all his chances by great sluggishness in action, and utter failure to fling in his ample reserves to reinforce hard- pressed divisions in the firing line. Soon he was blockaded in Metz, and was calling lustily for a relieving army. 7. Napoleon dared not go back to Paris with the awful tale of defeat. He took refuge in the camp at Ch&lons where his best general, MacMahon, was trying to organize a very heterogene- DISASTER OF SEDAN — NAPOLEON PRISONER 503 ous reserve army into something useful.' MacMahon wished to leave Bazaine to hold out for a while, and to retire himself slowly toward Paris, exhausting the Germans by Fabian tactics. Since his was the only regular field army now available for France, this advice was the one thing really possible. But Palikao and the affrighted Empress telegraphed from Paris that if the army retreated without trying to rescue Bazaine, there would be a revolution which would destroy the dynasty. In defiance of all good strategy, MacMahon set off for the Meuse, vainly hoping to make a junction with Bazaine. With his army went the Emperor, a sad guest, a helpless witness of events he could not control. As might have been expected, MacMahon was chased down by Von Moltke, penned up by vastly superior forces in Sedan near the Belgian line, and after a brave and almost frantic struggle, he was forced to surrender on Septem- ber 2, with 82,000 unwounded men, including — as the Germans gleefully reported — "one Emperor." Napoleon III telegraphed laconically to Paris: "The army has been defeated and is captive. I myself am a prisoner." The Prussians sent him to a pleasant castle in Hesse where he re- mained until after the war. Then he departed to exile in Eng- land. He had done to France almost all the harm which one man could. 8. The Prussians now, of course, advanced directly on Paris. There was no longer any French field army capable of opposing them. Strasbourg and other frontier fortresses were still holding out gallantly but hopelessly. Bazaine lay supinely under the guns of Metz. By September 19 the Prussians had seized Ver- sailles and begun the investment of the capital. They had no longer to fight against the Second Empire, but against the new " Government of the National Defense." The moment the fell news of Sedan spread in Paris the old ■ Despite his defeat at Worth, MacMahon was the only one of the French generals capable of meeting Von Moltke with any show of equality. Had he been given a free hand, uninterfered with by cowardly politicians, he might have saved Prance from the worst consequences of the war. 504 A HISTORY OF FRANCE bonds of authority were snapped. The lying bulletins and the creeping consciousness that the myrmidons of "Napoleon the Little" were leading the country into a frightful physical dis- aster had exasperated the Parisians. It speaks well for their self-restraint that there were not violent lynchings and even massacres. On the night of September 3 the Chamber was in session. Jules Favre, a Republican leader, instantly proposed that the Bonapartist regime be considered ended and that a provisional government be set up. In the prevailing torpor, his proposal was neither rejected nor accepted. At 10 a.m. on the 4th, working- men were parading and crying, "Downfall! Downfall!" At the Tuileries the ministers were having a last distracted conference with the Empress Regent. Palikao offered to try to hold down the mob with "40,000 men," but no 40,000 reliable troops were available. So the day passed in futile debates amid all the sup- posedly ruling bodies. At last, while the Chamber was voting on a motion of Thiers for a committee of national defense, the mob swept into the building. The session was broken up. The members, to please the people, withdrew to the City Hall. Here they were joined by Trochu, the military governor of Paris, a man who had the confidence of the garrison, and who had no great personal friendship for Eugenie. Trochu put him- self at the head of a new provisional government. His fellow members were mostly Republicans. The most prominent were Jules Favre, who took the portfolio of Foreign Affairs, and Gambetta who became Minister of the Interior. The crisis was not one that permitted constitutional quibbling or nice processes of adjustment and transition. Eugenie fled (somewhat beset by the mob), chased from the Tuileries by the yells of " Deposition ! " and " Long live the Republic ! " Thanks to the aid of her American dentist. Dr. Evans, ' she presently, with ' Later-day readers will not fail to note with some humor that as William II of Prussia had his indispensable court dentist, the dapper American, Dr. Davis, so Napoleon III and his family likewise were served by a skillful Yankee, Dr. Evans. GOVERNMENT OF THE NATIONAL DEFENCE 505 some adventures, escaped to England, there to enter upon a long exile. The Senate and the Legislative Chamber dispersed without much dignity. Thiers spoke the obituary words for the helpless deputies: "We can neither resist nor assist those who are fight- ing against the enemy. We can only say, 'God help them! ' " The Government of National Defense was received promptly with obedience by all France. There was nothing else to do, unless the land were to be consigned to anarchy in the face of a victorious advancing enemy. And so again France had a "republic" — but a republic handicapped by terrors without and utter demoralization within; a republic given the almost impossible task of saving the nation from physical ruin. No new government ever came into being on harder terms, yet this was to be the Government which was to emerge twice victor of the Mame, victorious at Verdun, victorious in Champagne, and through its commander-in-chief to speak for the democracies of the world in dictating the armistice to the HohenzoUern in 1918. But before that "day of glory" France was to go down into the Valley of the Shadow for many distressful years. The new Government tried to negotiate with the Prussians. Napoleon III had made the war. Napoleon was now gone. The French people were willing to pay for peace by a heavy indem- nity — so Jules Favre argued in an interview with Bismarck; but when the latter talked of annexing Alsace and northern Lorraine he met the proud answer, " Not one inch of our lands, not one stone of our fortresses." The war must go on. "We are not in power, but in combat!" announced the Republican chiefs to the country, and they called on France to defend the national integrity. Thiers was started off on a round of the European capitals, in vain quest of an alliance;^ while all energies at home were devoted to resistance to the bitter end. ' He received friendly expressions of regret at the plight of Prance, but not one Great Power would do the only thing that might have stopped the Prussian — namely, threaten to draw the sword. This tacit permission that Franca should be crushed was duly regretted in London and St. Petersburg, after 1900, as the Pan-German menace grew. 506 A HISTORY OF FRANCE If the French did not save their territory in the struggle which followed, they assuredly saved their honor. The case was so desperate that there would have been no shame in prompt surrender to the enemy. ^ Outside of the besieged garrisons of Metz and Strasbourg there were barely 95,000 regular troops (widely scattered) at the orders of the Government, and almost no dependable reserves. Of these troops about 50,000 were in Paris. The Prussians were advancing with over 230,000, flushed with victory and admirably organized. But between September 4 and 19 (when the enemy closed in) enormous efforts were made at the capital. Heavy naval guns were rushed up from the arsenals at Cherbourg and Brest; 125,000 "Gardes Mobiles" (a kind of militia) were brought from the provinces, and a great fraction of the city folk were enrolled in the new "National Guard." In all 500,000 persons were listed for the defense of the capital.^ Unfortunately this number was utterly deceptive. Undisciplined, without compe- tent officers, embodied in the haste of panic, most of these troops had nothing but fervid patriotism to pit against Von Moltke's veterans. It was impossible to use the bulk of them for offensive fighting, and the Germans were, of course, too canny to try to ' Undoubtedly by November, 1870, the position of France and of Paris was nigh hopeless, and prudent men began to counsel capitulation. General Ducrot (one of the chief officers in Paris), however, spoke the sentiments of very many, when he told Thiers that he felt the capital should still hold out and gain time for the coimtry to raise new armies and make another effort. "You speak as a soldier," said Thiers, "not as a statesman." "I speak as a statesman," replied Ducrot; "a great nation like France always recovers from its material ruin, but it can never recover from moral ruin. This generation will suffer, but the next will benefit by the honor which we shall have saved." Ducrot was right. France saved her honor and her self-respect by her re- sistance after Sedan. Out of the agony of the winter of 1870-71 was born the spirit which led to the victory of 1918. ' It was afterward wisely argued that the Government of the National Defense made a serious mistake in leaving so large a garrison locked up in Paris. It could have used the troops better for relief operations from the out- side. There was no danger that the Germans would make a direct assault upon the forts protecting the city. GAMBETTA ESCAPES FROM PARIS 507 stcrm the defense system which girdled Paris. Nevertheless, this energy, plus the foresight which hurried huge quantities of provisions into the city, enabled the capital to hold out, not the four weeks that Von Moltke had reckoned, but four months. To save Paris before provisions failed, it was needful that the departments should raise a huge relieving army and cut through the besiegers' lines. But the policy of placing so large a garrison in the capital made the prospects of the attempt very discourag- ing, despite the great potential resources of provincial France. The new Government remained for the most part in Paris, but stationed at Tours three delegates to organize the exterior war. They were rather inefficient men. Only 23,000 reliable troops and one battery of six guns were said to have been actually at their disposal when they began their work, but a mighty moral reinforcement was at hand. It was before the days of aeroplanes, but the Parisians were sending up balloons (when the wind favored) to drift across the German lines. On October 9, Leon Gambetta, thirty-two years old, the same young advocate who had recently excoriated the Second Empire, "^ escaped from Paris by balloon and appeared in Tours. He now came as a "delegate" from the imprisoned Government in the capital. Soon he seemed himself the incarna- tion of the entire Government of France. With an energy worthy of Carnot in the original Revolution, he flung himself into the task of organizing "the nation in arms." Every able-bodied Frenchman was called to the colors. Without competent staff officers, forced to build his own organization, obeyed more because of his imperious patriotism than because of any lawful commission, Gambetta called into being vast armies. In four months he armed, organized, and sent into battle 600,000 men, fired by the lyrical proclamations which the French masses loved so well. Gambetta's handicaps, however, could not have been over- come by a Napoleon I. He could enroll large armies, but he was 1 See p. 492. 508 A HISTORY OF FRANCE allowed no time to train them. He had almost no well-tested professional officers; only brave amateurs who had to learn the sxixa art of war by leading their fello'^ citizens against the most scientifically prepared army in the world. No genius for organ- ization, no fervid appeal to patriotism could make well-inten- tioned bourgeois and peasants into hardened and experienced soldiers overnight. Nevertheless, Gambetta would probably have saved Paris had only he been spared a new calamity; had not the German army around Paris been almost doubled in strength. After their first victories, the Prussians had besieged Stras- bourg. On August 13 they had begun the bombardment, intend- ing by their deadly shell-fire, aimed at private buildings, schools, etc., rather than at the forts, to induce the citizens to put press- ure on the commander to surrender. In this they utterly failed. The people took refuge in cellars. Many public edifices were burned including two valuable libraries. The famous cathedral was somewhat shattered. But the citizens bore up bravely. As their commandant told them, "Your heroism, at this hour, consists in patience." The city, however, had not been properly provisioned, and on September 27 there was nothing for it but to hoist the white flag over the cathedral. Strasbourg entered upon her forty-eight years of captivity. ^ The fall of Strasbourg, of course, released a considerable German force for use before Paris, but that was nothing to what became available a month later. Bazaine had clung around the fortress of Metz in an utterly cowardly manner. He made no resolute efforts to cut his way through the German blockade, though the besieging force was not overwhelmingly superior to his own. When news of the fall of the Empire drifted into his camp his "stupid and criminal" mind turned to politics. He ' By the bombardment 300 civilians, men, women, and children, had been killed, and over 2000 wounded; 600 houses had been burned. It was deeds like these which made the Alsatians very loath to be reconciled to their new Prussian masters! BAZAINE SURRENDERS METZ 509 would negotiate with the enemy, patch up some kind of truce, lead back to Paris the only army left to France, and reestablish the Second Empire or some other kind of dictatorship. Bismarck spun him along with sham negotiations and half-promises until Pazaine's supplies were exhausted and the morale of his sol- diers was so undermined that there was nothing possible but surrender. It was an infinitely more disgraceful capitulation than that of Sedan. On October 27, 1870, Bazaine surrendered at Metz with 179,000 men, 1570 cannon, and 260,000 muskets. His act was the last evil legacy of the Second Empire, and came just in time to complete the act of ruin.' Bazaine's duty had been to try to cut his way through the enemy. Failing that, he ought to have held out to the last gasp, even if his men were starving. His mere existence in Metz kept 200,000 Germans immobilized, and consequently made the relief of Paris by Gambetta possible. Now at one stroke this whole great German force was released to aid in the blockade of Paris. Gambetta's relieving armies were just beginning to take shape and to get into action. On November 9, a fairly com- petent French general, D'Aurelles de Paladine, won a victory at Coulmiers (almost the first gleam of sunlight on the French arms) and retook Orleans from the Teutons. But before any use ^ After the close of hostilities, in 1873, Bazaine was tried by court martial for gross neglect of duty in surrendering when he did. It was still left vague why he practically played the traitor, entering into a political negotiation with Bismarck, and even betraying to the Germans the all-important fact that he was near the end of his provisions. Probably he entertained some vicious notion of coming back to Paris as another "restorer of order,." He was in fact an utterly mediocre man, though typical of the kind of adventurers the Second Empire brought to the top. During the trial he asserted in way of defense that after the capture of the Emperor and the flight of the Empress there was nothing left to fight for; "All was lost." "There was still France!" crushingly answered the president of the court. Bazaine was sentenced to death, but MacMahon, then President, good- heartedly commuted the penalty for an old comrade to twenty years' imprison- ment. In 1874 Bazaine escaped from custody and fled to Spain. There he lived in despised exile, counted by most Frenchmen as a kind of Benedict Arnold, until he died in 1888. 510 A HISTORY OF FRANCE could be made of this success, the German besieging hosts had been so reinforced by "the avalanche descending from Metz" that the case became absolutely hopeless. The remainder of the melancholy story is soon told. A winter of unusual severity added to the miseries of the unhappy French armies. Ill-equipped, shoeless, coatless often, unac- quainted with their new and half-trained officers, the French soldiery did all that mortals might, but they could do no more. Every attempt to break through the German blockade was de- feated. Every attempt (several times bravely undertaken) by the Paris garrison to break out was likewise defeated. Gambetta still toiled on; optimistic, indefatigable, willing to struggle against every adverse circumstance. The central departments of France, however, were becoming terribly ravaged by the war. The peasants were losing heart. The military men were telling Gambetta that the case was hopeless, and in January conditions within Paris brought the war to its inevitable chmax. The capital held out until the daily bread ration had been reduced to 300 grammes, and that of a "black and gluey mix- ture of rice, oats, hempseed, and bran." Horse meat was selling at 12 francs ($2.40) per pound (500 grammes), but a person was only allowed to buy 30 grammes per day. Rats were worth 2 francs apiece. The lions, elephants, and giraffes in the menagerie had long since been served up in exclusive restaurants.^ Firewood and coal had become exhausted in a winter so severe that wine froze in the vats. Young children were dying by hundreds for lack of milk, and of course the mortality among the invalids and the old was frightful. The Germans early in January began also a long-range bombardment, killing and wounding in all about 400 persons, although this cannonading did little to produce the final surrender. The end came when the authorities knew 1 The food situation in Paris during the latter part of the siege is well illus- trated by the tale of the wealthy gentleman who sent to a butcher-shop to inquire it he could buy anything edible tor his two favorite cats. The reply was that they had nothing the cats would care to eat, but they would gladly make a cash offer for the cats themselves. SURRENDER OF PARIS fill that in a few days even the scanty bread ration would fail, and feared lest in that case they could not handle the inevitable rioting. Jules Favre went out to Versailles to the Prussians on Jan- uary 23. Bismarck was inexorable to pleas for mercy and on Jan- uary 28 Paris surrendered, most of the regular garrison becoming prisoners of war. When the news spread to the departments, although Gambetta wished to go on fighting, the leaders of the army told him the situation was hopeless. France must make peace on whatever terms or face absolute ruin. The broken- hearted "dictator" quietly laid down his office and retired to Spain, while Favre and Thiers conducted the final sad negotia- tions with Bismarck. A National Convention was to be called, to give a popular approval to the treaty, and to establish a permanent government for France. The country which had seemed incomparably the first Power of Europe as recently as 1856, had now to submit to the demands of ceding Alsace and northern Lorraine (including Metz) to Germany, and of paying an indemnity of five billion francs (one billion dollars). It was only thanks to the firmness and even to the despairing threats of Thiers that the strong fortress of Belfort was not also re- quired,' and six billion francs instead of five. The humiliation of the "Grand Nation" was abject and unparalleled. The National Assembly met at Bordeaux on February 12, 1871. The circumstances under which it was elected and the character of its members will be discussed in the next chapter. On February 26 the preliminaries of the treaty of peace were drafted between Thiers and Bismarck at Versailles. There was an agonizing debate when the deputies from Alsace-Lorraine pleaded with their fellow countrymen against being handed over to the hated alien and proclaimed "their immutable will to ' Belfort was not taken by the Germans. It held out gallantly till the end of the war. The French were thus doubly resolved not to give it up. The dramatic interview between Bismarclc and Thiers is related by the author in The Roots of the War, p. 21. 512 A HISTORY OF FRANCE remain French." There was nothing to do, however, but to record their protest and sorrowfully to bid them depart. One of the dissenting and protesting minority, that declared the whole act of separation void, was a yoimg politician, a certain Georges Clemenceau, who many years later was to ride again into Strasbourg with the Tricolor going on before him. The cup of national sorrow was not yet full. After the slaughter of Frenchmen by Prussians must come the slaughter of Frenchmen by Frenchmen. The sufferings of the Parisian masses during the siege undoubtedly had been bitter. There had been several times, even while the investment lasted, when a popular uprising, a mad spasm of discontent, had almost over- thrown the Provisional Government. On the 31st of October, 1870, a turbulent band of insurgents had tried to usurp power at the City Hall and had been dispersed only by armed force. Now the vain struggle was over. The Germans had made their brief parade through the Arc de Triomphe. The great masses of the city were left disheartened, restless, with most of them out of employment and still very unsatisfactorily fed. As Machiavelli has wisely generalized, "Almost all the great sieges known to history have terminated with seditions, for the moral and physical sufferings of the people predispose them to be influ- enced by agitators, while the arms with which they are unavoid- ably provided furnish the weapons for a rising." This was exactly the case in Paris in that most unhappy spring of 1871. The next chapter will explain how the new National Assembly was largely dominated by partisans whom the Parisian populace considered monarchical and reactionary. The deputies first met at Bordeaux to be safe from German molestation, but on the 10th of March, as the Germans retired,^ the Assembly departed for Versailles. This selection of the old Royalist residence town * The Germans were to stay in the northeastern departments until the in- demnity had been paid. They were also to remain for a while in some of the fort* dominating Paris. DANGEROUS SITUATION IN PARIS 513 and not of Paris seemed an insult to the capital, a sign that the Assembly did not sympathize with the sufferings of the Parisians and would do nothing for them. Bad blood was brewing, and every radical agitator found his opportunity. The industrial population of the eastern quarters of Paris had "gone through the siege in a violent state of exaltation, physical and moral, with diseased nerves and a distracted mind." The workers had had little to eat and had been deprived of much of their famiUar light wine, but there had been an unfortunate abundance of whiskey and brandy. When the city fell, not understanding that modern warfare is less a matter of bravery than of careful, scientific preparation, they readily charged the defeat to sheer "treason" on the part of the Government. They were passionate Republicans and believed the Assembly was about to call back the kings. They had been organized as part of the National Guard, and now they clung tightly to their weapons, and refused to be deprived of some two hundred and thirty cannon which they claimed were the property of the people of Paris and not of the Central Government. While they were resentful and distrustful, and were being worked upon by the Sociahst chiefs (who saw their opportunity), the As- sembly committed a grievous blunder. It suppressed the pay of li francs (30 cents) per day which had been given the National Guardsmen, and which, considering the suspension of all regular industry, was the sole sustenance of many working-men. The Assembly also ordered the resumption of the collection of debts, rents, etc., which had been interrupted during the siege. One hundred and fifty thousand Parisians suddenly found them- selves liable to legal process for unpaid rents. Needless to say discontent grew apace. On the 18th of March, 1871, Thiers, now head of the new executive government set up by the Assembly, ordered some troops to seize a park of cannon belonging to the Paris National Guard. The populace resisted. The troops wavered and frater- nized with the malcontents. The guns were not taken, and in tho 514 A HISTORY OF FRANCE disturbance a band of desperadoes murdered the generals Lacomte and Clement Thomas. This was the beginning of a^ hideous civil war which lasted until May 28. The capital now found itself in the hands of the "Council General of the Commune of Paris," made up of delegates elected by the industrial quarters alone. This Commune pro- fessed to be the regular government of the city, appointed ministers, adopted the "red" flag of ultra-radicalism, and pre- tended to issue decrees binding upon all France. The ruling idea, however, seems to have been to reduce France to a loose federation of autonomous communes, each working out its own particular brand of socialism. In one sense the movement repre- sented Paris battling against the departments; the struggle of the ideals of the industrial population fighting against the ideals of the peasants and the bourgeoisie. Some of the Communist chiefs were men of sincere enthusiasms and considerable ability; some were unpoised fanatics; some were mere uncaged criminals of the most dangerous type. As the struggle went on, and tended to go against the Socialists, increasingly desperate counsels of course prevailed, and the viler elements came ever more con- spicuously to the top. The Commune began then, like many another social movement, in a genuine attempt to redress undoubted wrongs and to bring nearer the Earthly Paradise: it ended with blood-.stained desperadoes trying to bum down Paris to make its ash-heaps the monument to their own ruin. Early in April the Communist troops marched out on Ver- sailles to break up the Assembly. That body, however, had col- lected loyalist forces and drove them back. The Germans had now released many of their prisoners. MacMahon's and Bazaine's veterans came back from captivity, only to find France rent with civil war and threatened with anarchy on top of foreign invasion. Thiers put Marshal MacMahon in charge of the Gov- ernment forces (some 150,000 men) with which to recapture the capital. So Paris underwent the miseries of a second siege: not SECOND SIEGE OF PAEIS BY MacMAHON 515 this time one of mere starvation or long-range bombardment, but like the fighting of 1830 and 1848, barrier by barrier, and street by street, although both attack and defense were now more sustained, elaborate, and desperate. The Germans from their forts in the outskirts looked on with sardonic neutrality while their late foes slaughtered one another. MacMahon had on his side numbers, equipment, better leadership, and dis- cipline, as well as the moral asset of the better cause. It took him several weeks to storm the outer forts and make a breach in the inner "girdle" of Paris. Then on the 21st of May these were forced, and the fighting began for actual possession of the city. It was hellish, utterly destructive warfare. The Government troops were madly exasperated at the action of their foes who would thus add to the agonies of France while the victorious alien was still upon their soil.^ Quarter was seldom asked and more seldom given. In brutal desperation the Communists finally set fire with kerosene to many of the most magnificent edifices in the city. The Tuileries Palace was burned. The Louvre barely escaped. Many other buildings were destroyed or scathed. "The Seine ran down between two walls of fire." Various prominent personages, whom the Communists had seized in April as "hostages," were put to death in cold blood. So perished the Archbishop of Paris, Monseigneur Darboy, and several other prominent churchmen, and the president of the High Court of Cassation. The victorious troops on their part fought their way forward without mercy. The last stand of the Communists was around the desecrated tombs of the great cemetery of Pere-Lachaise. By the 28th of May "the Bloody Week" was over, and the last barricade was forced. After that Paris was to have respite from ' Four decades afterward the responsible historian Lavisse, after confessing that the Parisian populace were not without serious grievances in 1871, records as his solemn judgment, "Of all the insurrections whereof history keeps record, undoubtedly the most criminal was that of March, 1871, made under the eyes of the victorious enemy." 516 A HISTORY OF FRANCE actual warfare until Prussian shells dropped again from gigantic cannon and aeroplanes in 1914-18. According to official figures 6500 persons perished in the fighting or were shot upon being taken with arms in their hands. The actual number, however, was probably fully 17,000. At least 36,000 prisoners were marched out to Versailles to be tried by court martial. Of these fully 10,000 were condemned to transportation; often to the desolate Pacific island of New Caledonia. The severity and reck- lessness of the punishment corresponded with the anger and horror of the victors. And so at length "the torment passed." Thiers and his colleagues could devote themselves to the rebuilding of France. The Franco-Prussian War, followed as it was by the Com- mune, inflicted on France a downfall, a sudden humiliation, and an enormous physical loss almost unparalleled prior to 1914. At one blow the country seemed stricken from the list of great nations and its very existence threatened. The disaster had appeared to point to something inherently rotten in the whole foundation of French society, and tojbe proof positive that here was a decadent and tottering state. The world for the instant lost confidence in France, and took her at her coarsest critic's measure, and France almost lost confidence in herself. No longer the "first Power of Europe" the issue now was whether she was about to sink to the level of decrepit Spain, forever overshadowed and coerced by her mail-clad Hohenzollern neighbor. The mere physical loss was great. Between the economic pros- tration of the war, the destruction of property in battle, and the great indemnity due Germany, the nation was at least three billion dollars the poorer; a sum esteemed colossal before 1914, and that loss coming too with 4300 square miles of territory and over 1,500,000 citizens violently wrenched away. As for the seizure of Alsace-Lorraine, it fixed a great gulf of enmity be- tween Frenchman and Teuton which, in the words of a distin< THE LOSS OF ALSACE-LORRAINE 517 guished American, was "to unsettle the peace of the world for nearly fifty years." ' " Think of it always, speak of it never," was the advice Gam- betta gave his countrymen concerning the national loss; but such heroic counsel could hardly be followed. The question of "revanche" thrust itself into almost every political discussion directly or indirectly. It was the phantom behind every act cf French diplomacy, and behind every act of German diplomacy plotting to keep the snatched plunder and to render its former possessor helpless forever. The duty of "revenge" was taught as a bitter gospel to the next generation, who grew up without the personal memories of seeing the Prussian spiked helmets going down the village streets. In the decade before the Great War it was pretended that the memory was gradually seeming less acute, that the mourning over Strasbourg was becoming more perfunctory. The call to arms, at the threat of the new German invasion, evoked all the old agonies and yearnings of 1871, and to the sons of France the war was not merely a new defense of the beloved patrie, it was a crusade to undo an intol- erable wrong. The following is from the most popular textbook upon French history, used by the children of France during the two decades before 1914, its author one of the most distinguished historians of his day and a member of the famous Academy: ^ After speaking of the great prosperity of France under the Third Eepublie, the author goes on to say that "this must not suffer us to ' Speech of President Wilson before Congress, January 8, 1918. The economic consequences of the loss of this territory to France were very serious. The value of the iron and coal mines was not realized until later, but in 1871 France was deprived of one quarter of her cotton spindles, as well as of a large fraction of all her other textile industries. ' La Deuxieme Annie d'Histoire de France (pp. 404-06), by Ernest Lavisse, a book intended for use of boys and girls of eleven to thirteen. The words itali- cized were printed in heavy type in the original. A certain amount of patriotic- exhortation is here omitted: it is entirely along the lines of the material that is reproduced. The lesson inculcated in this manual was one calculated to burn deep into 518 A HISTORY OF FRANCE forget the disasters of 1870 and 1871, following the peace of Frankfort which humiliated and diminished France. Our old-time military honor has been wounded. "We were beaten, because our army was too small, was badly or- ganized, badly commanded, and because our fortresses were not in a proper condition for defense. "The Imperial Government failed in its duty to maintain the army and the fortresses. Our disasters impose upon us the obligation to watch ourselves, through the deputies which we elect, over the safety of our native land, and never to entrust our destinies to the "power of only one man. " We were beaten, because many Frenchmen loved too well the pleas- ures of peace, the tranquillity which it gives, and the riches which it enables them to procure. They said that an army cost heavily, and that it was better to use the money to build machines for industry than to east cannon. But war came. Our losses, added to the war indemnity, amounted to at least fifteen billion francs [$3,000,000,000]. Our dis- asters teach us that all economy practiced upon the army costs too dearly, and that France, which has formidable armed neighbors, must place and keep herself in a state to resist them. " We were beaten, because very many Frenchmen believed there was no need for them to learn the art of being a soldier. " We were beaten, because very many Frenchmen believed the time for wars was passed. They said that men ought to love one another, and that a war was a barbarism which dishonored humanity. But the Germans were writing and teaching that war is an honor for humanity, and they hated France and never lost an occasion to treat us as 'he- reditary enemies.' For a long time they were preparing to make war on France and thbt ahe preparing again. Our disasters teach us that it' is needful to love France ahooe everything else, and then, in the second place only, 'humanity.' " "AH war begun without just cause is a crime, and so is the conquest of lands belonging to others. France must renounce all ideas of wars of conquest. But at the peace of Frankfort France had to cede provinces inhabited by 1,500,000 Frenchmen. The Germans have never asked the inhabitants of Alsace-Lorraine if they wish to become Germans. Since 1871 they have governed our fellow citizens with extreme forms the memories of the most backward lad of the rearmost bench in all the little communal schools from Calais to Bayonne. The passage shows clearly how the iron had entered into the soul of France. This textbook had extremely wide use in the schools. DUTY TO REMEMBER THE LOST PROVINCES 519 of severity. Every time they have had a chance the Alsatians have proved that their sentiments have not changed. When they have elected deputies to the German parliament they have charged them to protest against the treaty of Frankfort, which has delivered them over to Germany. "They have proved that they have kept faithfully their attachment to France. The first duty of France is not tojorget AlsoDe-Lorraine which does notforgei her." CHAPTER XXIV THE PAINFUL BIRTH OF THE THIRD REPUBLIC Once more a National Assembly met for the now unpleasantly familiar task of giving a Constitution to France. It was at least the eleventh time since 1789 that the duty of recasting the Government had been performed,* and never under less hopeful auspices than in 1871. It was not until 1875 that the Assembly was to complete its task even partially, and for many years thereafter its work was to be counted as merely provisional and transitory. Yet it was this Assembly, elected under the shadow of Prussian invasion, which was to create the Third Republic: the Government which has lasted longer than any other French Government since 1792, and which confronted the might of the German Titan in 1914 and emerged the victor. In 1871 France still seemed reaching out into the dark for the system that could give her honor and security abroad, simultaneously with the ardently loved domestic hberty, equality, and fraternity. Bismarck had dechned to accept a peace signed only by the ' The constitutional changes in Prance since 1789 have been as follows: 1. 1791. Limited Monarchy, overthrown in 1792. 2. 1793. Jacobin Republic (this constitution never put in force.) 3. 1795. Republic of the Directory. 4. 1799. Consulate (nominal republic). 5. 1804. First Empire. 6. 1814. " Bourbon " Limited Monarchy under the " Charter." 7. 1830. . "July" or "Orleanist" Limited Monarchy. 8. 1848. Second Republic. 9. 1851. Autocratic "Republic" of Louis-Napoleon. 10. 1852. Second Empire (overthrown in 1870). 11. 1875. Third Republic (promsicmal republic since 1870). Of course the differences between the Consulate and the First Empire were, so far as the constitutional law was involved, rather superficial : the differences between "Napoleon the Little's" regime in 1851 and in 1852 were still more superficial. No account is made of the "Hundred Days" regime of Napoleon I in 1815. AN ILL-COMPACTED MONARCHIST MAJORITY 521 self-appointed Government of the National Defense. He de- manded that the treaty be ratified by a body freely elected and entitled to speak for the whole of France. After the capitulation of Paris, late in January, it was necessary to hold the elections in a very great hurry in order to hquidate the war. The voting took place February 8, 1871. Seven hundred and fifty deputies were chosen and a mere plurahty among the voters sufficed to elect. Paris, the Southeast departments, and the invaded dis- tricts chose mostly Repubhcans of varying degrees of radical- ism; but the great masses of the peasantry above all things desired peace. Now Gambetta, the most prominent Republican, had done his uttermost to continue the war. The peasants, therefore, elected in the main men of one or the other type of Monarchists. The Assembly thus met at Bordeaux with a decided majority in favor of setting up some kind of a king. It would not proclaim the Republic. It simply named Thiers, the most prominent statesman of the day, as "Chief of the Executive Power." The truth was, the Monarchists were very loath to have any new reign begin with the humihation of signing a disastrous peace with Germany. They expected to discredit the Republicans by forcing that responsibility upon them. The second great fact was that while the Monarchists had a nominal majority, they were stiU sorely divided among themselves. There were still a few Bonapartists, despite the general execration of the fallen Empire. The plurality of the Monarchists were probably Orleanists; but there were enough "Legitimists" (old Bourbon adherents) to make it impossible for the friends of the July Monarchy to force the issue with the Repubhcans. The Mon- archists were at first, therefore, quite willing to spin matters along until they could compose their own differences. The man of the occasion was Louis Adolphe Thiers. He was of a Marseilles bourgeois family and was already (in 1871) no less than seventy-four years old. He had been famous for decades alike as an historian and a pohtician. He had been minister and 522 A HISTORY OF FRANCE then prime minister to Louis-Philippe,* but had fallen out with the "Citizen-King" because he insisted that the monarch should not try to play the personal autocrat. From 1840 to 1863 he had devoted most of his time to literature, but during the wane of the Second Empire he had reentered political life and soon began to exercise a great influence in the debates of the Chamber. In 1870 he had refused to be swept off his feet by De Gramont's call for war, and was one of the small minority among the deputies who voted against breaking with Prussia. Now that resistance had ceased, he was hailed as the most prominent Liberal in France. More than twenty districts honored him by choosing him as their representative. He pre- ferred to sit for Paris; and almost immediately the Assembly forced on him the dubious honor of being "Chief of the Ex- ecutive Power" for the period of transition, with the melancholy task of concluding the negotiations with Bismarck, and of putting down with machine-guns and cannon the Paris Com- mune. Thiers had hitherto ranked as a leader of considerable, but one could not say of remarkable, ability. He now in his old age came forward as possessing a talent close to genius: he became one of the true saviors and builders of France. Hitherto he had failed to work well with colleagues, because of a constitutional inability to take orders from anybody else.^ Now, however, re- sponsible only to his conscience, the Assembly, and the nation, he came to the rescue of his afflicted country and served her with all his ripened but not decadent powers. He therefore won a just place "in what is perhaps the highest, as it is certainly the smallest class of statesmen — the class of those to whom » See p. 424. * An English diplomat wrote in 1869, "for a man of talents, learning, and experience, I never met one who impressed me as having so great an idea of his own importance I " This same observer, however, did not fail to do justice to the sincerity and honest patriotism of Thiers's character. Thiers, at that time, predicted the ruin of the Second Empire, and added prophetically, "If I am wanted, I shall not fail." THIERS FAVORS A REPUBLIC 523 their country has had recourse in a great disaster, who have shown in bringing her through the disaster the utmost con- stancy, courage, devotion, and skill, and who have been rewarded by as much success as the occasion permitted." ^ It was not until May 10, 1871, that Thiers was able to bring the war with Germany ofGcially to a close by the final treaty signed at Frankfort-on-Main. Of course the struggle with the Commune did not cease until nearly three weeks later. The Germans were still in the Northeastern departments and were not to retire until, by installments, the huge war indemnity v^as paid. The first task of Thiers's Government was therefore financial. France must pull herself together economically both for the sake of the home situation and to be able to buy the retirement of the Teutons. To stabilize his position, in August, 1871, Thiers induced the Assembly to pass the so-called "Rivet" law (named for its mover) giving to him the title of "President of the Republic" and the status of a "parliamentary king." The President was supposed to select ministers agreeable to the majority of the Assembly, but to it he was also himself responsible. Thiers always said that the moment the Assembly clearly desired it, he would resign. He took pains, nevertheless, not to be obliged to resign without due cause. He would appear in person on the tribune before the deputies, overpower them with his eloquence, and dominate their debates. The Monarchists soon began to distrust him. On his past record he had been considered a very liberal, but a sincere. Royalist. He was on notoriously bad terms personally with the radical chief, Gambetta. Yet he began presently to show disquieting signs of regarding the divisions in the monarchical parties as insuperable. "The Re- public is the Government which divides us the least ! " was one of his famous sayings. The majority of the Assembly, therefore, grew very anxious under his leadership ; but the national situa- tion was so serious, and Thiers was so indispensable, that for a 1 Saintsbury. 524 A HISTORY OF FRANCE long time they had to bend to his eloquent proposals and dared not overthrow him. As stated, the first great task was to pay off the Germans. There were grave doubts as to the ability of France to discharge the debt and to ransom her soil. Bismarck had reckoned on seeing France economically crippled for at least a decade. But Thiers appealed to the solid peasantry and bourgeois of the country, and he did not appeal in vain. Never had the proverbial thrift, the famous "stockings," of the unpretentious classes stood their nation in better stead. France was obligated to pay one billion francs in 1871. She paid two billion. She paid off the remaining three billion by the earlier part of 1873. In Septem- ber, 1873, the last German soldier quitted the invaded soil. The national loans had been a great success. The second loan had been oversubscribed by four times; and for the final three billions required, the public offered the Government forty- three bilhons. Such evidences alike of substantial prosperity and of trust in the national future, of course added enormously to the prestige of France abroad and to the self-respect and confi- dence of the nation at home. The only possible mutterings were in Germany. The debt had been too promptly, too easily dis- charged! From this time until 1914 are heard the suggestions of the Prussian militarists, and of the later Pan-Germans, that Bismarck had been too lenient and that in the confidently predicted "next war" the Teutons must take pains to "bleed France white." The other great practical task before Thiers was to reorganize the army. Until the French war-machine was put on a modern scientific basis the country was completely at the mercy of its recent conquerors. The proposals for universal military service, which had been so disastrously refused by the Chambers under the Second Empire, were now brought forward and improved, with much belated willingness to learn from Germanic precept and example. The "Military Law of 1872" was the foundation for that magnificent fighting engine which, under Joffre, MILITARY REORGANIZATION 525 Petain, and Foch, was to stand between world-civilization and barbarism on so many desperate occasions from 1914 to 1918. By this statute all Frenchmen from twenty to forty were liable to personal military service. The active army, the "active reserve," the territorial army, and the "territorial reserve" were all carefully established and delimited. The period of active service was at that time set at five years, but at first there were a good many exemptions for teachers, clergymen, and the sole supporters of families. Also young men who were qualified substantially for university studies need only serve one year. These exemptions were presently to be for the most part canceled, and the actual term was later reduced to three years, and then for a short time to two years. On the eve of the Great War it was to be restored to three years. In any case the principle of the nation trained for arms was never lost. In no country was military service more general than in France during the forty years following 1872. In no country was the discipline more democratic, the relations of officers and men more friendly. In no country were the army and the nation more inseparable. Yet it was to be the army for the service of the nation, and not in the final issue dominating its politics.' What the value of this truly Republican army was to be to the world was not demonstrated until forty-two years after the passage of the military law; but the thanks of America, Eng- land, and Italy no less than of France were one day to be tend- ered the memory of the sage old statesman who saw through the enactment of the army legislation. These were noteworthy achievements. Thiers was hailed as "Liberator of the Land" when the last Prussians crossed the frontiers. His popularity was very great. Furthermore, it was evident, from the various elections to fill vacancies in the Assembly, that the drift of national feeling was decidedly in favor of a republic. All this, however, made the Royalists in the ' Of course the attempt of the militarists to dominate the political situa- tion during the Dreyfus crisis (see pp. 559) completely broke down. 526 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Assembly feel that they must act speedily or the "Provisional President" would become a "Constitutional President" in very truth. Thiers could not count on the support of the extreme radicals. The survivors of the old Communist elenients hated him bitterly for the way he had handled them in 1871. The President on his part had not the least sympathy with proposi- tions for making a "republic" merely the basis for wholesale social and economic reconstruction. "The Republic," he said pithily, "will be conservative or it will cease to be." And when Gambetta made speeches in favor of "the coming into politics of a new social stratum," Thiers promptly called the policy of the other anti-Monarchist chief that of a "raving lunatic." Under these conditions his tenure of power became increasingly uncertain. However, he charged boldly onward and particularly re- quested the Assembly to begin on what was its supposedly chief duty — to estabhsh the regular form of government (1872). This the Monarchists were by no means ready to do. They un- derstood well enough that any king who might be enthroned, save by pretty general popular consent, was likely to have a short, turbulent reign and to discredit the whole Royalist cause. The Assembly, therefore, procrastinated and declined to take any real action save to vote that Thiers should henceforth com- municate with it only by message, not by mingling freely in the debates. Thiers submitted, although protesting that to ask for a "speech from the throne" from a "little bourgeois" like him- self was an absurdity. He ordered his ministers, however, to begin bringing in bills which, if accepted, would have put the Republican Government on a permanent basis. At the same time local elections in Paris seemed to show that the radicals there were again getting the upper hands. The Monarchists took fright, and on May 24, 1873, by a small majority they carried a resolution implying the censure of the Government. Thiers, in accordance with his pledge to the Assembly, did not defy it, although the country was probably upon his side. He retired CLERICALS AND THE ROYALISTS 527 gracefully. His great work was accomplished. He had restored law, order, and peaceful prosperity to France; had ransomed her soil from the alien; had given her again a formidable army; and had set her along the road to RepubKcanism, however much against the wishes of the Assembly. He could now sit back and see the Royalists weave their own shroud.^ The Monarchist factions now united sufficiently to elect Marshal MacMahon as Provisional President. This general had been considered more unfortunate than blameworthy in the disaster at Sedan. He was a man of upright morals of the old school, an honorable aristocrat in his habits, and sincerely con- vinced that royalty of some form was the best government for France. The idea, of course, was that he should aid the As- sembly to shape events so that a "king" could return, peace- fully and amid general acclamations, once more to the throne of St. Louis. On the side of the Monarchists was all the tremendous Cleri- cal influence. The Church as a political factor had been at a low ebb under the July Monarchy. Under the Second Empire it had again recovered enormous strength. It now found itself bitterly opposed to the "atheistical" Republicans. The French Clericals also had felt terribly outraged by the action of the Italian Gov- ernment in 1870 in overthrowing the temporal dominion of the Pope at Rome. Armed intervention to restore the Pontiflf to his alleged rights in Italy was vehemently agitated, and it was freely suggested that, with a pious " son of the Church " upon a refurbished throne, French armies could be found for the pur- pose. Clericalism and Monarchism thus entered again into a political alliance, for which the former at least was to pay extremely dearly. MacMahon appointed as premier an Orleanist nobleman, the ' Thiers continued to attend the Assembly as a deputy for Paris, mingling unobtrusively in public life. He died in 1877 just before the ruin of the Royalist hopes, but at a time when the prospects of the enemies of the Republic were already very black. He was justly honored after his death as one of the worthies of France. 528 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Due de Broglie, with a policy of keeping the Republic from being consolidated and of doing nothing to offend the Church. To clear the way for a return to royalty, De Broghe proceeded to "purify" the public service, to displace prefects and all lesser functionaries who were not after the reactionaries' own hearts. Meantime from a thousand pulpits, and in ten thousand fashionable sitting-rooms, the priests and the pious laity began to extol the coming reign of "Henry V"; that is of the Comte de Chambord, the Bourbon-line pretender. The Monarchists were, indeed, making a remarkable effort to forgive and forget their feuds, and to unite on a single candidate. That candidate was the grandson of Charles X, the Comte de Chambord, born in 1820, who had spent a long life in luxurious exile, mostly at villas owned by the Bourbon family in the Tyrol. The Count was without children, and his next heir would presumably be the Comte de Paris, the successor to the Orleanist claims of Louis- Philippe. Under these circumstances there seemed Uttle to gaia by continuing family quarrels. Chambord was becoming an elderly man. Upon his death (if he were king) the Orleanists were bound to come into their own. The Comte de Paris, there- fore, in 1873 made a solemn visit to Frohsdorf, in Austria, to announce his formal reconciliation, and to salute Chambord as "the head of the House of France and the sole representative of the Monarchical Party." This was all very well, although Chambord showed himself decidedly stiff to his kinsman, and the reconcUiation was more formal than genuine. However, difficulties soon arose over the character of "Henry V" himself. The pretender, brought up in a narrow circle of Royalist devotees, took his case with enormous seriousness. He was full of high notions worthy of Charles X or even of Louis XIV. He was not willing to take the crown save under conditions which would make him a genuine king in the traditional sense of the term. Nevertheless, the Royalists of the Assembly believed that he would prove amenable. A committee of nine of their party negotiated with him. Hopeful progress SCHEME TO ENTHRONE HENRY V 529 was made. The "King" was not to be elected, but the Assembly was to call him to the throne as of hereditary right. He was to have a constitution presented to him by the Assembly, and accepted graciously by him as King. It was to be a fairly liberal constitution, a considerable improvement over the discarded "Charter" of 1814-48. Everything seemed ready. The Repub- Scans were out of power and seemed helpless. Whether, how- ever, "Henry V" would have had a long reign no man may tell, for now he came to the rescue of his dearest enemies. It was well understood, so the Orleanist politicians fondly thought, that Chambord would accept the Tricolor flag and not insist on the old white-with-lilies of the Bourbons. All was ready for the solemn entry of the "King" into Paris. The lamps and lanterns for the illumination of the aristocratic mansions and hotels were being manufactured. The state carriages "for their Majesties" were ready.' And then Chambord, center of all this devotion, turned and ruined his supporters. The pretender had earlier balked and protested at the idea of being "King of the Revolution," as he said would be the case if he used the Tricolor in his reign. In October, 1873, to the consternation of all his warmest adherents, he issued a letter in which he solemnly declared that he could not under any circumstances take the throne unless it were under the white flag of Henry IV: "re- ceived as a sacred deposit from the old king, his grandfather, dying in exile." The confirmation of this assertion shook the Royalist cause to its foundations. The Tricolor, as all experienced politicians knew, was the symbol for the French people of all that the nation had achieved since 1789. Its removal would create a perfectly gratuitous handicap for the Monarchy. The army would never endure the suggestion. As MacMahon angrily said, "Before ' These unlucky carriages were long left on the hands of their makers. Then, it is said, they were sold for use by another scion of royalty, likewise unlucky in history. They were used in the marriage of the Crown Prince of Greece to the sister of William II of Germany. This prince was the later notorious Con- stantine ("Tino") who lost his throne, in 1917, after half ruining his kingdom. 530 A HISTORY OF FRANCE the white flag the chassepots [army rifles] will go off of them- selves." Besides, the whole incident went far to prove that Chambord was a stubborn, self-willed man, who, like Charles X, would and could learn nothing of what had happened in France, and that he would in any case prove so unamenable to advice as to make a new revolution a certainty. The pretender himself seems to have realized his own limitations, and to have been resolved never to attempt to be king except under wholly favorable conditions. As he stated later in a conversation, "If I had made all the concessions asked of me, I might have re- covered the crown, but I should not have remained on the throne six months." ' This is very possibly true. The Monarchists were, therefore, very reluctantly thrown back upon themselves. There were vain and disloyal hopes that Chambord would die — the Comte de Paris would then prove very much more possible! But Chambord retained excellent health, and only died in 1883, when the Republic had become firmly established. In disgust, therefore, the majority of the Assembly tried to prolong the Provisional Government in the vain expectation that something lucky would turn up. In MacMahon they had, indeed, a reliable President and they determined to keep him in power as long as possible. Late in ' Chambord's aversion to the Tricolor amounted to a genuine monomania. Pope Pius IX naturally wished to have a friend o£ the Church on the throne of France, and urged him to waive the flag question. The pretender, with a stub- bornness worthy of a more worthy cause, absolutely refused. After he had made this blunder as to the flag, Chambord tried to repair the situation by a bold counter-stroke. He suddenly appeared incognito at Versailles. His idea was to get MacMahon to introduce him either into the Assembly or into the neighboring army camp, during a parade, and then somehow the enthusiasm excited by the presence of "the King" would cause him to be pro- claimed on his own terms. MacMahon, however, to his bitter disappointment, bluntly refused, telling the Prince that, " Entirely devoted as I am to the Comte de Chambord, I should be happy to sacrifice my life for him, but even for him I could not sacrifice my honor." In other words, he would only proclaim Cham- bord King when he had been elected in a wholly parliamentary way. There was nothing for Chambord to do save to go back to exile, a sadder and a wiser pretender. DRIFT TOWARDS THE REPUBLICANS 531 1873 they declared him elected President for seven years (the Septennate), a time sufficient, they hoped, to disentangle the personal snarls in the dynasties. Unfortunately for the Monarchists the country was clearly growing away from them. The memories of the Commune were ceasing to scare the well-to-do. Gambetta was becoming studi- ously moderate in his speeches and was showing friendship for the Thiers type of conservative Republicans. The Assembly had been elected to give a permanent government to France. In 1874, and still more loudly in 1875, was arising the question, Was that body a lasting dictatorship in commission? Did it not intend to discharge its sworn duty and then to disband? The Royalist prime minister, De Broglie, indeed, did all that he could to help his cause and curb the Republicans. The vast powers of the centralized administration at Paris were invoked. The nomination of the mayors of communes was taken away from the local councils and again (as before 1871) entrusted to the ministers; that is, to the Royalists. Republican journals were prosecuted on all possible pretexts, and between Novem- ber, 1873, and November, 1874, no fewer than two hundred such newspapers were punished, something which the continuation of the proclamation of "the state of siege" enabled the Govern- ment to do very readily. The word "republic" was stricken from official documents. It was only proper to speak of the "French nation." Nevertheless, as the situation dragged along, the pres- sure on the Assembly to enact the fundamental laws became irresistible, and with very ill grace at last the deputies acted. What forced the issue was largely the remarkable tour which Gambetta made in 1874 through France, as "The Traveling Agent for the Republicans," and the signs that he was gaining the sympathy, not merely of the radical working-men, but of the solid bourgeois; and finally the impression made by the elec- tions to the municipal councils held all over the country late in that same year. The results were overwhelmingly pro-Republi- can; in fact they amounted to the decision of a national plebi- 532 A HISTORY OF FRANCE scite against the Monarchists. As an additional handicap to the Royalists came the fact that the incessant clamor of the clericals for intervention in behalf of the Pope meant an unprovoked war with Italy, which, under conditions then existing in Europe, might well mean a new war with Germany.' Thus coerced, the Assembly in February, 1875, passed two constitutional laws upon the "Organization of the Senate," and the "Organization of the Public Powers." In July it fol- lowed with one upon the "Relations of the Public Powers." These three laws formed what has been often, if improperly, called the "Constitution of 1875." They were slightly modified in 1884, but otherwise they remained the organic law of France up to the time thisTaook was written. The Royalists fought hard against so much as introducing the word "republic" into any one of these highly important documents; but on January 30, 1875, after a fierce debate the so-called Walloon amendment was carried by one vote, using the much-disliked word in the title of the "President of the Republic." By so narrow a margin was the final chasm cleared.^ These arrangements of 1875 had the great advantage over earlier French constitutions that they did not represent an elaborate scheme drawn up by political scientists, to present an ideal and immutable system for the government of the nation. They were prepared by men of practical experience; and the Royalists (hoping for a change in the tide later) kept them just as simple as possible. They were a mere stop-gap, their makers expected, before a new arrangement, and consequently they were also left very easy to amend. And yet this system, adopted ' Bismarck was then engaged in his "Kultur-kampf" with the Prussian Catholic clergy. The French Clericals were loud in their outcries against the Chancellor's policy. Bismarck took great offense at French comments upon his doings at home, and made it clear that he would not endure any officious meddling in behalf of non-French Clericals. ^ The story is that when the news of this vote came to Madame MacMahon, she was at a dinner party. She smote her hands together and cried angrily, "At last we have it — that rascally Republic!" THE PRESIDENT 533 by haphazard methods, and voted for reluctantly by the ma- jority of those who endorsed it officially, was to outlast by far aU the highly articulated creations of the men of 1791, 1795, and 1848. This book is of course not a treatise on ccmparative govern- ments; it is enough to state very briefly the main points in the government of the Third Republic. 1. The President of France was to be elected for a term of seven years by the Senate and Chamber of Deputies meeting together in a single "National Assembly" for the purpose. His powers were nominally very large — command of the army, handling of diplomacy, right to propose legislation, to pardon, to negotiate treaties, etc. But he was stripped of nine tenths of the reality of these powers by the requirement that nothing he did was valid save on the counter-signature of ministers respon- sible collectively and singly to the Chambers. The President thus occupied a position of great dignity,' and he represented France on ceremonial occasions, but his direct political influence was almost nil. His main opportunities would come when a cabinet resigned and a new one was forming. If the party groups demanding a share in the new Government were not very well organized, the President could probably have considerable influ- ence in selecting the new list of ministers. But when once a ministry was solidly in power, the President was almost help- less, and it was not the President, but the majority of the lower Chamber, which could dictate a ministerial change. As a British writer said with some sarcasm: "The King of England reigns, but does not govern. The President of the United States gov- erns, though he does not reign. The President of France neither reigns nor governs." 2. The system, tried in 1848, of having only one legislative ' The President of France is expected to live in a state ot magnificence which Americans do not desire of their chief executive. He dwells in the Palais de rfilysee not in a "White House." He goes about with splendid military escort. His allowance is 1,200,000 francs ($240,000) per year. But he is not allowed one tithe of the real power of his American contemporary. 534 A HISTORY OF FRANCE body had not approved itself. The men of 1875, therefore, created an "Upper House" partly on the model of the British Peers, partly on that of the American Senate. The French Senate contained 300 members. Seventy-five of these were originally chosen for life, the vacancies to be filled by the survivors them- selves; but after 1884 all members were declared elective.' The remaining senators in any case were chosen for nine years, one third retiring every three years. The election for senators was to take place, not by immediate popular vote, but by a council made up of electors chosen by the local councils of the various communes in a given department.^ Each of the regular depart- ments was entitled to at least two senators; the larger were entitled to more : Paris (Department of the Seine) received ten. The Senate soon developed into a dignified and influential body. Among its members were not merely prominent politicians, but men distinguished in literature and science. It has been on the whole a most excellent stabilizing force in France, not subject to the sudden shifts and gusts of the lower Chamber and far more sedate and less tumultuous in its proceedings. It has never, however, become the dominant half of the legislature. Ministries are not responsible to it, and seldom have resigned on account of an adverse vote. In a long struggle with the deputies it is practically bound to yield. Nevertheless, the whole influence of the Senate has been good. It has been a distinct force for the better government of the Republic. 3. The Chamber of Deputies contained 597 members (later 610) elected by small districts (arrondissements), ^hy the votes of aU adult male citizens. A new election was required every four * The original life members were allowed to keep their seats, but as they died off, their places were filled by ordinary election as with the other 225 members. * The method of choosing senators was somewhat complicated. Various other dignitaries besides the representatives of the communes were allowed to vote. ' Between 1884 and 1889 the deputies were chosen by a general ticket, each elector voting for as many candidates as there were seats portioned out to the entire department. This system was abandoned on account of the advantages it gave to a demagogic agitator as illustrated in the Boulanger case. (See p. 546.) REPUBLICAN MAJORITY ELECTED 535 years, and the Chamber could be dissolved and a general elec- tion precipitated by the action of the President of the Republic, although only after winning the consent of the Senate. The Chamber of Deputies was, of course, the mainspring of the Government of France. It had the right to initiate laws, and a ministry suffering from its adverse vote was obliged to resign instantly. The law required that it (of course, along with the Senate) should meet annually in January, and sit for at least five months. The President could adjourn it if he wished, but only for one month; and if he found it needful to proclaim a state of siege (that is, martial law) the Chambers were obliged to assemble almost immediately to head off a possible coup d'Stat. The situation, therefore, created by the laws of 1875 was really to lodge the highest political influence in France in the Chamber of Deputies: as a competent writer wisely says, "The separation of executive and legislative authority is only apparent; and the Chambers, especially that of the Deputies, which represents most directly the country, possesses in fact all the power." '■ From this time onward, therefore, France may be said to have become a strictly parliamentary government, her system differ- ing in detail, but not in democratic genius, from the government of Britain by the House of Commons. The Constitutional Assembly adjourned on the 31st of December, 1875. The elections for the new Senate and Deputies took place early in 1876. Thanks to the more complicated sys- tem of voting and the creation of life members, the Monarchists obtained a feeble majority in the Senate, but all the efforts of their ministers could not prevent the return of a Republican majority of nearly 200 to the lower House. MacMahon had to bow to the storm and appoint a Republican ministry to fall in with the popular demand. But the Monarchists were anything but ready to throw up their game. The Clericals, desperate now for intervention in 1 Malet. 536 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Rome to restore the Papal Government, strained every nerve in their behalf. The new Republican ministers presented certain bills to curtail the control of the Church over education. The Clericals retaliated with a solemn petition to MacMahon asking him to support the Pope against the Italian Government. In the Chamber of Deputies a resolution was thereupon passed denouncing ultra-clerical agitation, and during the debate Gambetta used the phrase, long famous in all the conflicts between French liberal and French churchman : " Clericalism — there 's the enemy! " This resolution brought matters to a climax. The Monarchists were utterly alarmed. They had lost the deputies. The approaching municipal elections might shake their weak hold on the Senate. They had still the presidency and they used their power over MacMahon to induce him to spring what was known as the "Parhamentary Coup d'Etat" of May 16, 1877. The prime minister was the Republican Jules Simon. He and MacMahon esteemed one another personally. "What a pity," the President is alleged to have told Simon, "that you persist in governing with the Chamber. If you woxdd only consent to do ivithout it, affairs would go on better, and I would keep you as minister just as long as I remained as President." "I am a Repubhcan," answered Simon; "I govern with Parliament and with my party. Otherwise I would not be here." "I know it," said the Marshal — "very unlucky!" Now, however, when all the Monarchists' hopes seemed coming to grief, and when the Papal Nuncio (ambassador) was informing the President that the Vatican would break diplomatic relations with France un- less the ministry was changed, MacMahon acted sharply. On this famous "16th of May" he drove Simon from office, and proceeded to summon to power the Due de Broglie, the darling of the Monarchists and Clericals: thus, of course, deliberately casting defiance into the teeth of the majority of the deputies. The only thing now possible was an appeal to the electors, miless, indeed, MacMahon was ready for a miUtary revolution, MacMAHON dissolves the chamber 537 and he was not sure enough of his ground for that. About every- thing short of sheer military coercion was attempted, however. The Chamber was dissolved, the elections were put off till the last possible moment to allow all kinds of chicanery to be used to catch Royalist votes, and as Edmond About remarked, "The masterpiece of the Broglie Cabinet was to have concentrated in five months all the arbitrary exercise of power which the Imperial despotism had exercised in eighteen years." MacMahon and Broghe acting together removed civil officials at every turn to get submissive helpers: ^ they prosecuted Re- pubhcan newspapers on every possible pretext; suspended Republican municipal councils; and (unhappy imitation of the Second Empire) presented "official candidates." As Mac- Mahon announced in a formal proclamation, "My Government will designate to you among the candidates those who alone may make use of my name"; and in another manifesto, "The struggle is between order and disorder; you will vote for the ' Broglie's Minister of the Interior, the smooth " Gascon upstart," Fourtou, was especially zealous in this work of prostituting the civil administration to purely partisan ends. The men he thrust into the prefectures and sub-pre- fectures were very largely members of the provincial noblesse. "There were marquises, counts, viscounts, and barons galore." (Vizetelly.) The old nobDity made the most of this brief return to pubUc office. It is said there was seldom so much feasting, elaborate entertaining, and lavish display of brave official uniforms, state carriages, liveried servants, etc., as in the few months following the much-discussed " 16th of May." Of course the reader understands that after 1870 the French nobility had practically no official status as svjch, and almost any one could give himself out as possessing a title provided he did not try to use it in an official or legal capacity. There had been a wholesale creation of "nobles" since the Revolution. Napoleon I had created 9 princes, 32 dukes, 388 counts, and 1070 barons! The Bourbons had been nearly as liberal, besides throwing in 70 marquises. Louis-Philippe had been somewhat more sparing. Napoleon III had kept him- self to 5 dukes, 35 counts, and a "considerable number" of barons. After 1870, spurious titles were so conomon that one of MacMahon's ministers of justice had to issue a formal circular warning all Government functionaries not to sign their names with any title they could not prove their right to possess. The above will indicate sufficiently that to claim to be a " nobleman," under the Third Republic, by no means indicated possessing an ancestry running back, for example, to the famous Third Crusade. 538 A HISTORY OF FRANCE candidates / recommend." This was quite in the style of Charles X or Napoleon III. The clergy rallied behind the official candi- dates, with all the ardor of Peter the Hermit preaching his crusade. The Republicans were denounced in every circle of the pious; and so once more, to its great sorrow, the Catholic Church of France cast in its lot with a strictly political cause and party — to suflEer the inevitable consequences if that cause were beaten. In the face of the common danger the Republicans forgot their factions and closed their ranks. They now boasted that they were the true conservatives, defending the rights of the sovereign people against the revolutionary schemes of the Presi- dent and the Clericals. Gambetta threw out the famous warning to MacMahon, "When the country shall have spoken, he must either submit or resign! " ^ Despite frantic Royalist manifestoes, ecclesiastical thunders, and downright official coercion, the answer of the country could not be mistaken. Three hundred and eighteen Republicans were returned, giving that party a firm control of the lower Chamber. MacMahon saw the futility of further resistance. He dismissed De Broglie and called in Republican ministers. The new Chamber promptly quashed the elections of over fifty members, on the ground that the seats had been obtained by unlawful ministerial or clerical pressure. Thus passed the Royalists' last real chance. They were to have a gleam of hope ten years later in the Boulanger incident, but they were never to tighten their fingers upon the Government of France again. In 1878 the Republicans gained a majority of about fifty in the Senate. MacMahon was now an isolated and disappointed man. He had been an honest and high-minded believer that a limited monarchy was the best government for the nation, and now the nation had clearly repudiated him. Nevertheless, like a stout ' For this "injury done the President," Gambetta was prosecuted and sentenced to three months' imprisonment and two thousand francs fine. He was soon in a position, however, to defy his enemies. MacMAHON resigns 539 soldier, lie was loath to desert his post. When, however, in 1879 the Republican minister began presenting for his signature decrees punishing certain prominent generals for their acts in 1877, he absolutely refused. The officers, he said, had simply been obeying his own orders, and "if I were to sign, I should not dare to kiss my children afterwards." There was only one thing left for him to do. His term had not expired, but he promptly resigned the presidency (January 30, 1879), and the National Assembly (both Chambers sitting together) promptly elected in his place Jules Grevy, an old Republican chief, while Gambetta was elected president of the lower Chamber. The Republicans were now in complete control of the Government, and in no immediate danger of losing it unless they committed gross blunders. One of their first acts was to decree the immedi- ate transfer of the Chamber from Versailles back to Paris. Thus, then, very ingloriously, and thanks, to a large extent, to the absurd obstinacy of Chambord, the over-zealousness of the Clericals, and to the ability of about all the Monarchists to make wholesale blunders, the Third Republic was born.' It came into power with less Sclat possibly than any other govern- ment France had witnessed since 1789; its speedy downfall was continually predicted; it was to have many anxious days and discreditable episodes; but it was to weather all the gales, it was even to endure through the Great War, and it was to wit- ness the consolation and glory of France in 1918. ' Another piece of good fortune for the Republicans came in 1879 when the unfortunate " Prince Imperial," the son of Napoleon III, was killed fighting in the British service against the natives in South Africa. Prince Victor, the next in the Bonapartist line of pretenders, was an entirely repulsive and impossible candidate. Thus ended all chances of a new undertaking in behalf of a "Na- poleon IV." As an Orleanist nobleman is reported to have said in disgust: "You Republicans have all the luck. The Bonapartists have just lost their prince. And we Royalists have kept ours [Chambord]!" CHAPTER XXV THE YEAES OF PEACE : 1879-1914 France was putting on a brave face when MacMahon went out, and Grevy came in. In 1878, to show that she had not been crushed by Sedan and the Commune, she invited the world again to a magnificent International Exhibition at Paris, a testimony to all of the recovery of her wealth, of the soundness of her social and economic hfe, and the vitality of her artistic genius. But for all this show of courage, the country did not possess a merry heart. The blow from Prussia had cut the ground from under her feet internationally. French diplomats were no longer taken at their former value. Their country could not be trusted to back them up with effective deeds if they indulged in bold words. The eyes of the Continent were not fixed now upon Paris, but upon Berlin. Bismarck the Destroyer was exer- cising a power over Europe possessed by no French ruler since Napoleon III. German learning, German science, German industrial methods, German ideas and dogmas, from destructive theology to destructive socialism, seemed dictating the move- ments of the world. France was regarded to have fallen from her high estate largely because she had deserved her calamity. The numerous changes in her Constitution were looked upon as proof positive that her people were hopelessly frivolous and volatile — "a nation of ballet-masters and hair-dressers," as was once ungallantly thrown at them, or (to quote a geography often studied in America) "the French are a gay people very fond of dancing and of light wines." "Gay" the France of 1871 and onward certainly was not. The whole public tone was changed to a sterner, soberer cast. There were long moments of painful introspectioh, followed not infrequently by other moments of seeming despair. Writing CHANGE IN THE MOOD OF FRANCE 541 under the shadow of the great defeat, this is the way a keen- minded and intelHgent woman wrote of her country's crisis and future: "Wounded, sick, humbled, borne on a raft in the midst of the tempest, the nation often asked herself what hardships were yet awaiting her. The course remains obscure, and the nearest objects even uncertain and veiled. [But] France has not lost, and will not lose her courage. She is laboring: she is hoping: and while endeavoring to find her proper path, she reckons upon the day when revolutions will be at an end, and when liberty with order will forever crown the long and painful efforts of her most faithful servants, of every name and every period." ' In the thirty years following the retirement of MacMahon, France was to pull herseK together and to lift up her head. Certain external circumstances were to favor this process of recovery. In the first place, Bismarck was to continue in power at Berlin down to 1890, and the Iron Chancellor, with all his sins, never ceased to realize that his new creation, the German Empire, needed genuine peace for internal consolidation; and although he from time to time snarled and threatened his neighbors across the Vosges, he never actually put his hand on his sword. Furthermore, about the time that Bismarck gave way to his more truculent young master, William II, France was to have the good fortune to make an alliance with Russia, an agreement which insured the Third Republic against being dragged into a new war with Germany at a hopeless military disadvantage. Again, between 1879 and 1900, although the relations between France and Britain were often deplorably uncordial, and even presented very disagreeable "incidents," nothing really happened to produce a great crisis with the "hereditary enemy." The result was that these were years of peace, and a time likewise in which it was relatively easy for the foreign minister of the Third Republic to preserve peace with honor. ^ This absence of extreme international tension, of course, ' Madame de Witt. ' Of course there were anxious moments that sent a flurry through the 542 A HISTORY OF PRANCE made the problem of internal rehabilitation very much easier. What, nevertheless, really was saving the day were the quiet, prosaic virtues of the great majority of the French people. The mass of the bourgeois and the peasants had no strong political convictions. They were ready now as formerly to support any government which maintained order and a decent amount of personal liberty. The Third Republic was able to accomplish this prime end, and that was originally the reason it was allowed to endure. But the rehabilitation of France was not due to any magic virtues in the simple organic "Laws of 1875." The new Constitution merely provided peaceful and static modernized conditions under which the great forces of the intelligence, sobriety, and collective morality of the French people could be brought into play unhindered. Between 1879 and 1914 there seem to be almost no great figures in French history; no sweep- ing constitutional reforms; no startling events which illustrate the genius of a nation. Some of the episodes are, indeed, very interesting, but their main interest lies in the fact that they did not subvert the nation. Then, in 1914, after this long, prosaic story of the Third Republic, the curtain again rises on a world crisis, and behold ! friend and foe alike recognize it — France is herself again. During the earlier part of this time, in fact down to the end of the Dreyfus crisis about 1899, the real political issue, how- ever disguised, was always around one point, — the right of the Third Republic to exist. The Monarchists were very far from Bourse, the newspapers, and the Chambers. Such was the wretched "Schnoe- bele" affair in 1887, when the arrest of a French police official on the Alsatian frontier precipitated an angry exchange between the Paris and Berlin diplomats. French public opinion also was highly exasperated at the English interven- tion in Egypt in 1882, although it was only the timidity and blunders of the French Cabinet which had prevented the Third Republic from sharing the military occupation of the disordered land of the Khedives. There was more friction, and almost an explosion, in 1898, when the English compelled a French expedition to withdraw from Pashoda on the Upper Nile. After 1900 England and France rapidly came together in the face of the German peril. MONARCHIST INTRIGUES 543 surrendering the game when MacMahon handed in his resigna- tion. They confidently expected the Republicans to make such blunders as would disgust the nation. To that end they persist- ently egged on the extreme radical and demagogic factions, well understanding that a second Commune would be the veritable herald for the coronation ceremonies of a king. The Monarch- ists^ never came really near to controlling a majority in the Chamber of Deputies, but they were repeatedly in suflBcient strength to combine with dissident Republican factions to upset ministries, and in the later eighties their intrigues almost seemed close to success. This was when they rallied behind an adventurer, Boulanger, whose attempt to establish a dictator- ship in the style of Louis Napoleon must have been inevitably followed by a reaction to orderly Monarchy. The Republicans thus all through this period had to face an inveterate and resourceful Opposition; not an Opposition of ordinary partisans who desired (as in America or England) to get the Government merely to enjoy the delights of office and in a legal manner to execute a platform of economic or legal "reforms"; but an Opposition that desired to overturn the whole Constitution, and which was quite willing, if orderly means to get its will failed, to discuss the chances of a coup d'etat. And behind the Monarchists for long stood the clergy, still with an enormous influence over all the pious Catholics of France, and the great aristocratic families, stripped, indeed, of their official privileges, but not of their wealth and enormous social influence in all the nerve-centers of the nation. It is not surprising, therefore, that there were times when the Third Republic seemed fighting for its life.^ ' By this time the "Legitimist" and "OrI6anist" factions had fairly well amalgamated. The Bonapartista, of course, had their own ambitions, but for tactical reasons they would sometimes vote and act with the Royalists. ^ The hopes and ardor of the Monarchists were still strong all through the eighties. The Third Republic seemed too frail to last. An American friend of the writer has told how, in 1885, when he was dining in a Paris restaurant with si, fellow countryman, he chanced to remark in English, " I think we have seen the S44 A HISTORY OF FRANCE The Republicans were furthermore handicapped by the fact that they had for long only a few really high-class leaders and were suffering from extremely poor party discipline. Gambetta died on the very last day of 1882.^ He had not been a chieftain of perfect poise and judgment during the tumultuous early seventies; but as time advanced he had become steadier, saner, and more moderate. His love tor France had been very gen- uine. There had been unpleasant incidents in his personal career, but none could deny that in statesmanlike ability, as well as In mere eloquence and political adroitness, he was head and shoulders above the small-fry parliamentarians who too often afflicted the counsels of the Third Republic. He had awakened too many bitter pereonal enemies to succeed as prime minister when he held that treacherous office for a short time preceding his death. None the less he was admittedly the heart and soul of the Third Republic. When he passed from the scene, France was consigned to an era of rule by decidedly small men; nor till the eve of 1914, when the renewal of the threat from Germany set the best blood of the land to tingling, did the leadership again faU largely to individuals who deserved their official eminence.^ If the Republicans had been united as a single party, matters might have been better. As a matter of fact, they were split into an utterly perplexing congeries of "groups." Between the conservative deputies who represented the wealthy bourgeois majiuf acturers and the great landowners, and certain Parisian last of Royalty in France." Upon this a very tall and elegant head waiter ap- proached, and said solemnly, respectfully, and in perfect English, "Gentlemen, I assure you most earnestly that the Comte de Paris will infallibly take his place on the throne of his fathers." ' He died apparently from the accidental discharge of a revolver he was handling. There is no proof that he committed suicide. ^ This does not mean that there were no statesmen of upright character and good practical ability in this epoch. It means that as a class both the friends and the enemies of the Third Republic were decidedly mediocre. Perhaps it was as well at this critical time that the nation was not afflicted by the special brilliance of its rulers. Over-clever men can make great blunders. MANY MINISTERIAL SHIFTS UNIMPORTANT 545 legislators whose constituents openly lamented the downfall of the Commune, the sole point of contact was usually the dislike of the idea of the enthronement of the Comte de Paris, or of Prince Napoleon, the Bonapartist pretender. There could be no easy cooperation between these factions. Most ministries were patchwork affairs, not groups of congenial col- leagues, but temporary parcelings-out of the various portfolios to the chiefs of several different factions, in the vague hope that the premier of the new Cabinet could escape a vote of "no confidence" long enough to put through some desired piece of legislation. Between 1875 and 1900 there were only four years when there was not at least one change in the ministry; and by 1912 there had been forty-five ministries in only thirty' seven years. After 1900, however, conditions tended to stabilize, and the average term grew longer, although the so-called Waldeck-Rousseau Ministry (1899-1902) continued to bear the record with the unprecedented term of nearly three years.^ Under these circumstances it is safe to say that one of the reasons the Third Republic endured was because first and last, after infinite groping and agony, the French people had reached the conclusion that a democratic republic was the government best fitted to their national genius. To trace the yearly annals of this Government is by no means necessary in a sketch like the present. Assuredly there is no call for outlining the fate of the forty-five and more ministries; nor, as explained, have the Presidents of the Republic been by any means such influential personages as to require that their separate terms be discussed like the "administrations" of their American compeers. To understand the perils and recovery of the democratic system in France it is sufficient to fasten upon a few decisive incidents. The most imjjortant of these are the Boulanger fiasco, the ' Of coiHse the defeat ot a ministry did not imply that aU its members would go out of office. The premier would often resign, a new party chief take his pbee, a few other shifts be made- and most of the portfolios be passed back to their former holders. 546 A HISTORY OF FRANCE Dreyfus case, and then, just before the Great War, the final collision with the Clericals. By the time this last internal struggle was ended, the country was girding itself for the death-battle with the Teuton giant. Whatever the sins or virtues of the new Government in the eighties, it did little to catch the public imagination, and the Parisian press, financed often from Royalist sources, exploited to the uttermost every official scandal and imcleanness which could be dragged to light. It was very wise, considering the military situation, to do nothing to provoke Germany or to attempt a desperate campaign for the lost provinces; but such a policy had nothing glorious about it. It weakened the Republic to be constantly taunted with ignominious submission; and it was very easy for irresponsible Royalist candidates to throw out dark hints of a programme of "revenge." On the other hand, there came a steady call from the more radical elements for a drastic revision of the Constitution, to render the Government less obnoxiously "moderate." There were also during the later eighties a number of concurring problems which served to weaken the Republican ministries: new encounters with the Clericals in the attempt to secularize education; very heavy expenses for colonial wars, especially in Cochin-China and Anam, which seemed to bring little profit or glory; large outlays on public works, followed by business depressions, increased taxes, and a dangerous increase in the public debt. All these factors aided to precipitate what was known as the Boulanger crisis of 1886-89. George Ernest Boulanger (born in 1837) had jieither Bourbon, Orleanist, nor Napoleonic blood in his veins; he was not even a "nobleman"; yet he practically became a pretender to the supreme power, if not to the throne of France. His father was a Breton lawyer and head of an insurance company. The later "brave general " himself served with some credit as a major in the War of 1870. He subsequently rose to a high position in the BOULANGER'S- POLICY AS WAR MINISTER 547 army, without, however, mingling much in politics. He was ex- tremely fond of showy uniforms covered with glittering decora- tions, and what with his handsome auburn hair and beard, his very regular features, and his fine military carriage, he made an almost ideal " man on horseback " to catch the popular eye. In December, 1885, by one of the frequent reorganizations of the Cabinet, Boulanger was thrust into the ministry of war at the demand of the radicals, who declared that he was "the only general who was genuinely a Republican." ^ How "Republican " he really was, the country presently had full opportunity to decide. Boulanger soon showed himself anything but an ordinary rou- tine administrator. The acts of the " Freycinet " Cabinet to which he belonged seemed extremely anti-Royalist. Indeed, in June, 1886, the war minister had a somewhat peculiar share in the leg- islation, which decreed the banishment of the Orleanist and other families pretending to the crown of France, on the ground that their presence in the country was a constant stimulus to revolu- tionary intrigues. The General was soon the object of loud ap- plause from the less responsible section of the press. He openly flattered the popular desire for "revenge" on Germany, and let his partisans acclaim him as the future conqueror of Alsace-Lor- raine. At the same time he was taking steps in the army to relax the severity of the discipline, to make life in the barracks pleas- anter, and in general to increase his own popularity with the rank and file. At great public reviews this hero of the cafe songs — "General Revenge," as they styled him ^- was a striking figure with his tall, black horse, and his brilliant uniform. When a di- plomatic incident arose with Germany, it was with difficulty that Boulanger's colleagues prevented him from ordering such move- ments of troops to the frontier as might have produced the most serious danger of a great war. Meantime around the war minister ' It is worth noticing that one of the agents most active in securing the ap- pointment of Boulanger was Clemenceau, who presently, however, saw through liim and turned against him. 548 A HISTORY OF FRANCE were gathering irresponsible radicals, who wished for any kind of a change, in order to overthrow the humdrum regime of the "bourgeois" Republicans; and with them were far more intelli- gent and sinister Royalists who saw in Boulanger the precise in- strument they needed. He was given greater and greater praise and newspaper publicity. Such proceedings could not, however, be concealed. The moderate Republicans were not entire fools. In July, 1887, they forced a reorganization of the ministry, by which Boulanger lost his war portfolio. The General could not be disciplined, however, for the popular applause he was receiving. He had to be named commander of an army corps, but was sent to one with its headquarters at Cler- mont-Ferrand in Auvergne. His influence was still potent in Paris. The Royalists took up his cause with zeal, and better still with money. At the national fite, July 14, 1887, their hired dem- onstrators made the capital ring with their yells, "Down with the Republic ! Down with [President] Grevy! Hurrah for Boulan- ger! It 's Boulanger we need!" It was evident that the country was by no means through with "the brave general." Then suddenly the Third Republic faced a serious scandal. A prominent general was charged with "procuring" for very un- worthy persons decorations of the Legion of Honor and other hke orders. An investigation revealed that Daniel Wilson, the son- in-law of President Grevy himself, had been hand in glove with the offender. Wilson was already known as a very shady stock- jobber. There was no proof that the President had been conscious that family influences had been controlling him, but he was now becoming old and clearly had been open to improper suggestions. His official honor was tarnished. He ought to have resigned promptly. On the contrary, he obstinately clung to office, and when the Cabinet resigned he tried to find other ministers who would serve him. But no prominent French statesmen would accept their portfolios at his hands. The Chambers put public pressure upon him by adjourning to a fixed time " to receive the President's message." So Grevy with very ill grace resigned to BOULANGER INTRIGUES WITH MONARCHISTS 549 France, but he was now eighty years old and manifestly had lost his grip on men and on measures. His downfall, of course, increased the general disfavor in which many held the Third Republic and it played directly into the hands of Boulanger. During 1888 that officer was the most important figure in France. The National Assembly had elected as President to suc- ceed Grevy, a Moderate Republican, Sadi Carnot (December, 1887, to June, 1894), a gentleman of great personal dignity and integrity, and the heir to the name and tradition of a distinguished Republican family, being a descendant of the famous Carnot, the Jacobin war minister. The new President did not possess sufficient official authority, however, to accomplish much in an increasingly serious situation. The ordinary supporters of the Government were split into petty factions and had lost all effi- cient leadership; the Cabinet was weak, and the Royalists, with their radical tools, seemed to possess every kind of opportunity. Boulanger now began regular negotiations with the Orleanists and the Bonapartists. It was a grand game of bluff on every side; for what could the Comte de Paris ordinarily have expected of a leader who was all the time talking of a change in the Constitu- tion whereby the "President of the Republic" would be elected by a general plebiscite (quite in Louis Napoleon's style) instead of indirectly by the Chambers? The truth was the Royalists had taken Boulanger's correct measure. They believed him useful to overthrow the Third Republic. They would then have no diffi- culty in overthrowing him. The General promptly plunged into politics. The Government proceeded to punish him for alleged breaches in discipline and placed him on the retired list (March, 1888). He now could pose as a persecuted martyr. Behind him was a curious combination of all the enemies of the moderate democratic regime: "exalted patriots" howling for "revenge"; radicals who favored the ex- treme forms of socialism; black-gowned Clericals, and a whole retinue of titled ladies and fine gentlemen who passed for the upper noblesse. Boulanger never had constructive statesmanship 550 A HISTORY OF FRANCE enough to propose a real reform programme. His party was called the "Revisionists and Nationalists," who made their concrete issues on an attack on the Laws of 1875. "Dissolution! Revision! Constituent [Assembly] ! " were their watchwords. The only thing certain was that a cowp d 'Stat was fairly in prospect. Money, in most amazing quantities, began to be at the disposal of " General Revenge." Newspapers ever more zealously sounded his praises. Popular song-writers tuned their lyres in his behalf. "Death to the Prussians, and hurrah for Boulanger!" went the refrain of one of the songs. Statesmen all over Europe were be- coming anxious. Under such leadership France seemed headed straight into a war for the lost provinces. But the military situa- tion was such that nothing then save a great defeat could be looked for. It was high time that affairs steadied or a catastrophe was certain. Yet for the nonce the Republican chiefs seemed helpless. Whenever there was a bye-election to fill a vacancy in the Chamber of Deputies, Boulanger stood forth as candidate. Never in French electioneering were funds used more freely than in his behalf. When the ordinary Orleanist sources of supply dried up, a great lady, the Duchesse d'Uzes, came forward with her private purse. She was convinced that the promotion of Bou- langer was a direct step to bringing back the " king," an act most pleasing to Heaven. Therefore she advanced no less than 3,000,000 francs ($600,000). With such a stimulus, the object of her devotion won six elections within five months (March to August, 1888), resigning, of course, after each triumph, and presenting himself before a new constituency. His object was very plain. By a great number of such successes, won by heavy ma- jorities, he could claim that he was in everything, except the bare letter of the law, the choice of the nation. He would therefore possess a "mandate" to call on the army to seize the presidential palace, and to proclaim a dictatorship. Late in 1888 this adventurer had to a peculiar extent usurped the imaginations of the unpolitical. Thousands who knew noth- ing of his real basis of support looked on Boulanger as a man who BOULANGER'S CROWNING SUCCESSES 551 would restore public life to cleanliness, prosperity, and dignity, and who was also capable, in some strange way, without hazard of an utterly disastrous war, of repairing the territorial loss of 1871. The noisy and well-financed "League of Patriots" did everything to inculcate such notions, while the "brave general" lived in a kind of state in an elegant mansion at Paris, surrounded by sec- retaries, courted by lesser soldiers of fortune like himself, and welcomed at many magnificent soirees and dinners by marquises and dukes of haughty jjedigree. However, the Republican factions were at last awakening to their danger. They dropped some of their personal feuds. The honest radicals who had earlier supported Boulanger began to repudiate him. The very light metal of the man, mentally and morally, made the sinister elements behind his candidacies all too obvious. Early in 1889 he obtained his last triumph. A seat in the Paris delegation became vacant. Boulanger's support- ers spent at least 450,000 francs ($90,000) in his behalf, and won him the election. He received no less than 244,000 votes, against Jacques (Moderate Republican) with 162,000, and Boule (So- cialist) only 17,000. This brought matters to an issue. Many of Boulanger's supporters now expected him to strike his blow: to call on the police and the garrison to follow him,' march down to the Palais d'Elysee, and order Carnot "in the name of the na- tion" forthwith to depart. But alas! "General Revenge," though capable of threatening to beard Germany, was not of the stuff of which stout revolution- ists were made. He could not screw his courage to the sticking point. The Republican majority in the deputies struck back in a self-defense. The weak aijid procrastinating Floquet Ministry was thrown out, and its successor, the sterner Tirard-Constans Ministry, pricked the whole bubble by one bold stroke. Constans, ^ Just how such a summons would have been received no one may say. It is certain, however, that Boulanger was very popular with the Paris police force and with many elements in the army. But he never gave his adherents a chance to show their coui'age and devotion. 552 A HISTORY OF FRANCE the new Minister of the Interior, had got hold of evidence that Boulanger was not confining himself to lawful means of agita- tion. He issued an order for the arrest of the General, to bring him before the Senate to be tried for offenses against the safety of the State. The Prefect of the Paris police hesitated to execute the order, and said he doubted the fidelity of his officers. "Very well," remarked Constans coolly, "resign your post. Here are pen, ink, and jjaper. We are prejjared for this contingency." The Prefect promptly accepted his orders, but they were never to be executed. Some one of his assistants "leaked." Boulanger so far from defying the Government to do its worst, fled post-haste to Brussels, like an absconding cashier (March 31, 1889). This ignominious exit ruined him absolutely in the eyes of most of his followers. Instead of a hero, they discovered only a cowardly charlatan. His usefulness to the Royalists vanished even more rapidly. They promptly stopped throwing good money after bad. The Belgian Government did not enjoy having the re- sponsibility of harboring so dangerous an agitator thus close to France. It induced Boulanger to withdraw to England. During his absence there the Senate tried him for conspiracy against the nation, and found him guilty 203 votes to 3. He was sentenced to transportation for life, but of course remained safe under the British flag. The subsequent elections to the deputies completed the utter rout of Boulanger's followers. He presently withdrew to the is- land of Jersey, and then, in September, 1891, he committed sui- cide in Brussels at the grave of a woman who had been his mis- tress, and for whose sake he had divorced his wife. This was a sufficiently tragic end for an impostqr who had almost persuaded the majority of Frenchmen that he was a wise statesman and a mighty general, who could avenge 1871 and give them peace, prosperity, and glory. The collapse of Boulanger was a very heavy blow for the Roy- aUsts and Clericals. Once more things had looked very hopefuL THE DREYFUS AFFAIR 553 Once more they had utterly lost. After 1889 there was much less danger than before of a sudden overthrow of the Republic. The question of the main forms of government was less debated, and the party groups spUt along problems of economic better- ment (tariff, income tax, etc.), and the various programmes of the different stripes of Socialists who were coming to the front. Then, toward the close of the century, the Republic was verita- bly put on the rack by the famous "Dreyfus Affair" which was only dismissed from public contentions a few years before the outbreak of the Great War. Stated in the abstract the "Affair," although highly distress- ing to its principals, contained nothing that should convulse a great nation. A young officer of Jewish extraction is accused of selling confidential military documents to a "foreign p)ower." He is condemned, and banished to a convict camp. Presently the evidence against him is discovered to be utterly spurious. The case is reopened. He is first pardoned, then openly vindicated ai;id reinstated in his profession. The true criminals are chased into ignominous exile, or are disgraced and punished in France. What is there here to make really significant political history? And yet the "Dreyfus Affair" began to trouble France in 1894; it usurped the first place in pubUc discussions from 1898 down through 1900 and it was not finally disposed of till 1906. While it was at its height, the settlement of the "Affair" veritably threatened to upset the Third Republic, and by a turn of fortune's wheel the final issue was to discredit still further the Monarchists and prob- ably to hasten the disestabhshment of the CathoUc Church in France. The reason for this is, as an American writer has properly put it, that in France "incidents are idealized. To the Republicans, the Dreyfus conviction did not mean the chance of miscarriage of justice in the case of a young Jewish officer. It meant that a coali- tion of reactionaries and Clericals, always the enemies of the Re- public, and strong in the army, with the anti-Semites were try- ing to ride roughshod over the rights of the people, and therefore 554 A HISTORY OF FRANCE over the Republic itseK. That thought girded them to endure con- tinuous strife and sacrifice, until the wrong had been righted, and 'the principle' of the thing established." ^ The "Dreyfus Affair" presents so many highly interesting incidents, is so rich in personal factors, is so engrossing when con- sidered merely as a study of mass psychology and of human nature in general, that it is best to stick very closely to bald de- tails lest it receive a wholly disproportionate amount of space. In 1894 President Sadi Carnot, after an extremely creditable tenure of office, had been killed by an anarchist, and M. Casimir- Perier was in the presidential palace, when, late in the year, it became known that a certain Captain Alfred Dreyfus, an Alsatian Jew, and a member of the general staff of the army, had been arrested, accused of selling military secrets to Germany. The trial, involving as it did highly confidential matters, was con- ducted before a secret court martial. The main evidence was a document (the famous bordereau) alleged to have been in Drey- fus's handwriting. Presently it was announced that the defend- ant had been condemned. There was, of course, general indigna- tion that venal traitors could be found in the very nerve-center of the army. Few had the slightest doubts as to the justice of the verdict. On January 5, 1895, Dreyfus was publicly degraded from his rank, with every detail of ignominy, and sentenced to life imprisonment in Devil's Island in French Guiana (South America). The matter then dropped from public attention, after some complaint from the Socialists that for a lesser crime a com- mon soldier would have been executed, while now a wealthy offi- cer escaped with his life. Casimir-Perier did not remain in office to wrestle with the problems presently created by the reopening of the "Affair." He had got on very poorly with his Cabinet, and felt aggrieved at the way certain deputies had continually reviled him in the Chamber. To very general surprise, on January 15, 1895, he re- signed the presidency (in which he was pretty clearly a misfit), ^ Professor William Anderson, in The Roots of the War, p. 125. PICQUAET AND DREYFUS 555 and two days later the National Assembly elected Felix Faure, "a well-meaning man, but full of vanity, and naively delighted with his own rise in the world from a humble position to that of chief magistrate." Without proving decidedly incapable, it is fair to say that Faure did not handle the Dreyfus case in a very fortunate manner. • What now followed is best explained by a series of brief, con- crete statements: 1. France as well as other European countries had been vexed for the preceding decade by the "anti-Semitic movement," in- volving a general attack upon the Jews and their influence. This propaganda in France seems to have had heavy backing from the Clericals in an attempt to create prejudice against the Republic because the latter was supported by various prominent French Jews. In 1892 the national scandal over the bankruptcy of the Panama Canal Company — an event that shook the Cabinets and Chambers if not the actual Government — was intensified by the charge that great Jewish financiers had been exploiting the helpless Christian stockholders. Drumont, an irresponsible journalist, founded a newspaper "Free Speech" {La Libre Parole) which gained great popularity from its continuous at- tacks on all things Hebraic. In the hot struggle which followed, Dreyfus's guilt was constantly affirmed by many Frenchmen merely because he was a Jew; and the attempt to defend him was represented as a deliberate attack on Christianity. 2. After Dreyfus had disappeared in exile his wealthy family still struggled to prove his innocence. They would not have suc- ceeded had not, in 1896, a Colonel Picquart, a fearless and intelli- gent soldier permitted to inspect military secrets, become con- vinced that the famous bordereau was not by Dreyfus, but by a notorious and dissolute brother officer, Major Esterhazy. When, however, Picquart communicated his doubts to higher officers, he was at once told that the evidence was conclusive and was ordered away to Tunis. He was replaced in the Intelligence Department by a certain Colonel Henry. 556 A HISTORY OF FRANCE 3. By this time the dissensions among the experts had leaked out. Dreyfus found defenders in civil life, especially Senator Scheurer-Kestner, a fairly prominent politician. Many un- settling facts in the case were brought to light. A considerable number of influential literary men began to take up the claim for "revisRin." On the other hand, a new party, the "Nationalist," came forward to make the conviction of Dreyfus a point of honor. It was soon evident that this group was largely composed of Monarchists, Clericals, and various types of reactionaries, who were trading on the popularity of the military, and trying to get the Republicans into the unhappy position of "attacking the honor of the army." ^ The Republicans naturally did not care to fall into this trap. In 1897 Prime Minister Mehne declared publicly that the case was closed and there could be no new trial. It was known that President Faure agreed with him. 4. Esterhazy was now given the form of a court martial, and was triumphantly acquitted, being congratulated on the result by some of the highest dignitaries in the army. Picquart in turn was arrested and imprisoned on charge of "indiscipline." The Clericals, the anti-Semites, and the corrupt gang which as soon developed held high places in the army were, of course, dehghted. As was well said, the "Nationalist" party was made up of the alliance of "the sword and the holy water sprinkler." 5. The Chamber of Deputies passed a resolution condemning the friends of Dreyfus for their "odious campaign," which was distracting the country and casting discredit upon the army, but now to the rescue flew Emile Zola, one of the most prominent novelists of France. On January 13, 1898, he fired into L'Aurore, ' The importance of the question of the " honor of the army " (as involved in the Dreyfus agitation) will be understood by remembering that "the army, at an epoch when neither the Legislature nor the Government inspired respect, and the Church was the object of polemic, was the only institution in Prance to unite the nation by appealing to its martial and patriotic instincts. This is the explanation of the enthusiasm of the public for generals and other officers by whom the trial of Dreyfus and subsequent proceedings had been conducted in a manner repug- nant to those who do not favor the arbitrary ways of military dictatorship." (Bodley.) LOUBET ELECTED PRESIDENT 557 a widely read newspaper,' his memorable public letter "7 ac- cuse," in which he charged various prominent army oflScers by name with having been in a conspiracy to ruin Dreyfus. His object was a prosecution for libel and a judicial inquiry into the whole affair. The chiefs of the army put forth all their power. Zola was condemned. The verdict was quashed on a technicality. He was tried and condemned a second time. Zola then, for rea- sons of legal strategy, not cowardice, fled to England. He had amply achieved his intention of turning a blazing light upon the whole history of the original trial of Dreyfus. 6. In a Cabinet reorganization, the new Minister of War was Godefroy Cavaignac. He asserted officially that Dreyfus was guilty, because of other documents, in addition to the bordereaUy which proved the case beyond the least doubt. To the minister's utter demoralization, however. Colonel Henry, of the Intelligence Department, suddenly committed suicide, after leaving a con- fession that he had forged the chief of these supplementary doc- uments "in the interest of the country." Almost simultaneously Esterhazy was found to have fled to England, where he cheer- fully confessed to have been the author of the famous bordereau. 7. An increasing fraction of Frenchmen were now, of course, convinced that Dreyfus was innocent. The Socialists and all the other radical parties, which were naturally anti-Clerical and anti- Monarchist, began to shift their position. At this juncture Presi- dent Faure suddenly died, it is alleged, of apoplexy (Feburary 16, ■1899). In his place was elected Emile Loubet, a leader of moder- ate views and common sense, who found it much easier to take a just attitude toward Dreyfus than Faure could have done. 8. The question of the "revision" of the sentence had now passed into the hands of the Court of Cassation, the highest court of France. With admirable professional firmness, the judges, unmoved by passion and threatenings, proceeded to a careful technical examination, and at length decreed that the ' Edited by the famous Georges Clemenceau (see p. 592), the later "organizer of victory" for France, 1917-18. 558 A HISTORY OF FRANCE whole of the former proceedings were void, and that Dreyfus should be brought back from his exile, and given a new trial. 9. Dreyfus was tried a second time at Rennes in Brittany be- fore a court martial sitting from August 7 to September 9, 1899. The seven judges were all military men who doubtless looked upon the prisoner as at least the instrument of bringing great contempt upon the honor of the army, and they were also obvi- ously anxious to save the reputations of the high officers who had commicted themselves to the defendant's guilt as an article of faith. Popular passions rose to the boiling point. An attempt was made to assassinate Dreyfus's chief advocate. Much evidence favorable to the defendant was excluded; much hearsay asser- tion was admitted for the prosecution. The verdict was "guilty," five votes to two, but "with extenuating circumstances" and with only ten years' imprisonment. This was, of course, an ab- surd decision. If Dreyfus was really guilty, he deserved little short of death, for there could be no "extenuating circum- stances" in a case of the kind. 10. "Nationalists" and Dreyfusards were alike angry at the verdict, but by this time the great majority of Frenchmen out- side of narrow military circles were convinced that there had been a gross miscarriage of justice. The Ministry recommended to President Loubet that he pardon Dreyfus and he did so. This gave back to the unhappy captain his liberty, but not his good name. Yet the "Nationalists" raged that Loubet had sold him- self and the honor of France to " the gold of the Jews." At length, however, matters quieted. In 1900 an act of amnesty for the entire "Affair" was passed. France became involved in other matters and the case ceased to be acute. 11. The victim and his family naturally, however, labored for a complete vindication. The question of the validity of the second verdict was brought before the Court of Cassation. This time the feet of justice were deliberately slow, if only to let pas- sions cool still more. At last in 1906 the high court set aside the DREYFUS IS COMPLETELY VINDICATED 559 second verdict as it had the first. Esterhazy was branded as the real criminal. Dreyfus was restored to the army and given the rank of major — due to him if he had not been disgraced. Pi- cquart, expelled from the service in 1898 for having stood up for truth and righteousness, was reinstated now as brigadier-general; a little later he became a major-general and was appointed Minis- ter of War in the new Clemenceau Cabinet. Zola had died before this consummation of justice. His remains were buried in the Pantheon, the Westminster Abbey of France. As for the ofEcers who had conspired against Dreyfus, they were cashiered from the army, or only remained in it professionally broken and disgraced. So the famous "Affair" ended, and "like stories in popular novels all the heroes were rewarded and all the villains were punished." It is impossible, even after going over the great mass of the evidence, to discover quite why so many high officers in the army committed themselves implicitly to the theory of the guilt of Dreyfus, even if they disliked him personally and disliked Jews in general. Esterhazy surely seemed marked from the outset as the probable culprit.. While there is no earthly doubt of the es- sential facts in the case, there may be certain personal items that can never be cleared up. Beyond a peradventure many honorable soldiers felt that the good name of the army was being impugned before the world, and that for the sake of preserving that name spotless it were better for one miserable captain to linger on Devil's Island than for the honor of the bulwark of France to be smirched by judicial proceedings. The trial, however, rendered a high service apart from its vindication of the innocent. It be- trayed a carelessness, rottenness, and in some cases a sheer cor- ruptibility among a type of French officers which had to be weeded out unless the nation were to advance to a new Sedan. To the credit of the Third RepubUc this necessary work was bravely and unsparingly done. The personnel of the officers' corps was purified and invigorated; a higher standard of profes- sional duty was set; and when the crisis of 1914 came, the hand- ling of the army was in the hands of a vastly cleaner and abler 560 A HISTOEY OF FRANCE ^ set of men than those who had prostituted justice in 1894, and perjured themselves defending injustice in 1898-99. Had there been no Dreyfus case there might have been no victory of the Marne. The collapse of this attempt to sustain iniquity gave the last blow to the Monarchists. It was manifest that Orleanist gold had stimulated the "NationaUst" agitation. How outrageous and artificial was the anti-Semitic agitation is proved by the fact that wealthy Jewish speculators seem to have advanced money to the Royalists to finance anti-Semitic papers — doubtless ex- pecting very good interest when the " king " should have come to his own. After 1900 it can hardly be said that there were enough avowed Royalists left in France to make them an appreciable danger to the Republic. Even more calamitous, however, did the results of the Drey- fus case prove to the Clericals. They had enmeshed themselves completely with "the honor of the army," and now they had their reward. French Clericalism had become so hopelessly polit- ical that the attempts of Pope Leo XIII, an extremely sagacious pontiff, to disentangle it from its alliance with the Monarchists, met with only indifferent success. In 1892 he had issued an ency- clical cautioning French Cathohcs that the Church was not com- mitted to any special form of government, and that as good citi- zens they should loyally work with the Third Republic. Only a part of the Clericals accepted this admonition with apparent good faith; the majority seem to have rejected it just so far as they could and not openly defy their Holy Father. Thus the French Catholic Church drifted on to the opening years of the twentieth century with the words "Clerical" and "Royalist" almost if not quite synonyms in the popular speech. Then the long delayed tempest burst on the Churchmen. These words are written too soon after the disestablishment of the French Catholic Church to make it possible to speak with complete historical retrospect and responsibility. Probably most THE CHURCH AND EDUCATION 561 Americans will praise or blame what was done in France in 1901 to 1907 according as they are themselves Protestants or Catho- lics, although very many of the latter will admit with cheerful- ness that it was desirable to alter a situation in which the Church was fixed under the secular control of a government whereof a great many of the political leaders were freethinkers, not to mention atheistical Socialists, or such as were Prot- estants or Jews. The working alliance between the Government of France and the Papacy which had lasted from the eighth century in the days of Pepin was now about to be violently sundered; and the feel- ings of the aggrieved parties had been by no means completely restored at the time of the outbreak of the Great War. The pre- cise quarrel between the Third Republic and the Vatican turned, however, on so many technical questions, and on matters under- standable only by Frenchmen, that it is highly difficult to in- dulge in any details and to preserve lucidity. It is better both for clearness and also for impartiality once more to stick to the barest possible statements of fact. The original issue arose over questions largely concerned with education. Despite certain hostile moves by the Republicans, the control of the teaching of French youth had remained largely in the hands of various ecclesiastical bodies which were charged with inculcating very undemocratic, not to say pro-monarchi- cal, principles, into the minds of their pupils. Besides, the Cath- ohc membership in religious orders and Congregations had been increasing vastly in numbers despite the fact that the law made the authorization and augmentation of some of them, to say the least, very hard. It was claimed that a great fraction of the na- tional wealth (over a billion francs in 1900) had been swept under the "dead hand" {mortmain) of these orders; the nuns had risen to over 75,000, the monks to over 190,000, and they constituted the veritable standing army of "a rival power" to the State. In 1900, Waldeck-Rousseau, a prime minister of more than ordinary abiUty and with a firm hold upon the Chambers, declared that 562 A HISTORY OF FRANCE this situation constituted a menace to the safety of the Republic, and various doings of the monastic orders in the Dreyfus case certainly gave color to the charge. In 1901 he carried, therefore, the somewhat famous "Law of Associations" which provided that all Church "Congregations" should be "authorized"; that all not then "authorized" (only a limited number) should apply to the Chambers for authorization; that those who did not apply or had their requests refused should forthwith be dissolved and their property be seized by the Government for charitable pur- poses. In 1902, Waldeck-Rousseau was succeeded by Combes, an ex- tremely bitter foe of the Church. Combes had been a student for the priesthood in his youth, then had become utterly estranged from the Catholics. The Clericals, of course, denounced him as an old-time pagan persecutor. "Clericalism," he declared, "is in fact to be found at the bottom of every agitation and every intrigue [in France] during the last five and thirty years!" The "Law of Associations" handled by such a minister soon proved a terrible weapon against the monks. Very few orders were per- mitted to continue. Over five hundred teaching, praying, and " commercial "1 orders were put out of existence. In 1904 another blow was struck by a law requiring all teaching by religious or- ders to cease within ten years, including even that by "author- ized" bodies. The Clericals, of course, cried aloud, denounced this act as sheer tyranny, and one intended to make the next generation of Frenchmen into blaspheming atheists. Combes, however, strode on his way and apparently a large majority of the Chambers supported him. Nevertheless he had let the Concordat of 1801 alone. The absurd situation still existed that the State (the Third Republic) appointed the bishops; and though the bishops appointed the ' A good many monkish establishments were charged with actually conducting profitable forms of business; for example, the distilling of liqueurs. All these mat- ters were of course merry sport for the radicals. The trading monks were forced to disband, or emigrate to England or elsewhere. POPE PIUS X FALLS OUT WITH FRANCE 563 priests, it was only with the consent of the Government. In re- turn for this control the State paid the salaries of the French clergy. The situation was an anomalous, not to say outrageous one, and probably the churchmen themselves would have been glad to have had it ended, provided they could have brought themselves to accept the Republic as a fixture, and dismissed all dreams of seeing a pious "king" proceed once more in state to Reims to be crowned with the crown of St. Louis. The Repub- licans had long chafed at the situation. They had hesitated to force the issue, well understanding the power of the enemy, but the Vatican presently gave them intense provocation. In 1903 died Pope Leo XIII, one of the most astute pontiffs who ever sat on the throne of St. Peter. His successor, Pius X (1903-14), was a man of great saintliness and nobility of charac- ter, but of by no means the same degree of worldly wisdom. He promptly took a very stiff attitude toward proceedings in France, and in 1904 precipitated a crisis when President Loubet visited Rome to exchange civilities with the King of Italy. Pius, in a formal diplomatic letter, denounced the action of the President in visiting a "usurper" in this city where the Pope was a "pris- oner," as a deliberate insult to the Vatican. The French Government had now a good technical excuse for becoming very angry. It made counter-complaints that the Pope was interfering with the French bishops in a way forbidden by the Concordat. Already since 1903 a committee of the Chamber had been working on a biU aimed to separate Church and State. Diplomatic relations between the Republic and the Vatican were promptly severed (July 30, 1904), and on December 9, 1905, the law was actually passed dissolving the Concordat, suppressing the salaries paid by the Government to the clergy, and making the Third Republic wash its hands of any responsibility for the upkeep of religion.' The Catholic Church was left perfectly free ' Protestant pastors and Jewish rabbis had hitherto been paid by the Govern- ment. These also were turned adrift, although their adherents did not make any such vehement protest as did the Clericals. 564 A HISTORY OF FRANCE to shift for itself. Aged clergymen were to be pensioned. The rest were (presently at least) to be maintained solely by the contri- butions of the faithful. All this represented what was, on the whole, a skillful and hon- est attempt to dissolve relations with the Church without mak- ing the Republic turn persecutor. The main friction came over the church buildings, cathedrals, chapels, etc., which were in theory the property of the community. These were not to be given outright to the Church, but were to be held by "Cultural Associations" to be organized in each city or town by the pious Catholics who could arrange for the maintenance of religious worship. There were other, somewhat elaborate, provisions to safeguard the handling of the great endowments still left to the Church. The measure, in short, was a studiously moderate one, and reflected high credit on M. Briand, who had the main share in its drafting and enactment. The run of opinion among the French Catholics was undoubt- edly in favor of making the best of this law, and organizing the "Cultural Associations" to work with the Government; but Pius X soon created an almost intolerable situation by issuing a formal encyclical (1906) denouncing the separation of Church and State as "a very pernicious error," and ordering all Catholic laymen to have nothing to do with forming Cultural Associa- tions. Possibly the Pontiff's expectation was to goad the Repub- licans into some acts of brutal persecution which would supply the Clericals with the advertising and glories of martyrdoms, and so to produce the inevitable reaction in favor of the Church. This pitfall the succeeding Clemenceau Ministry skillfully avoided. A law was passed in 1907 allowing the clergy to continue to use the church buildings under arrangements to be made in each place between the local priests and the prefects or mayors. It was, of course, impossible for the Catholic authorities to order the priests to cease to say mass in an ancient and sacred building, merely because the Church had no longer a technical, legal own- ership of the same, if the services were not in the least obstructed. FALLIERES PRESIDENT .-565 There was accordingly no serious interruption in the regular re- ligious worship in France — an act of persecution into which the extreme Clericals had possibly hoped that the Government would blunder. In the nine years following the disestablishment of the French Church there was, of course, much friction and heartburning. The attitude of .Pope Pius X continued to be that of outraged astonishment, but on the whole, passions had considerably cooled. Despite violent outcry, the Government had gone ahead and taken over many ecclesiastical buildings (not churches), such as bishop's palaces, rectories, theological schools, etc., for secular uses. The Minister of Labor had located his offices in the one- time residence of the Archbishop of Paris. On the other hand, it was claimed that the exemption from governmental interference was producing a genuine return of piety and spirituality among the Catholics of France. The religious question was, however, still a sullen one when in 1914, Catholic, Protestant, Jew, Free- thinker, and Atheist rallied as one man against the Teutonic peril. The foregoing has been a mere tracing of a few of the crises and problems that thrust themselves upon the Third Republic. Loubet had occupied the presidential chair very creditably from 1899 to 1906. One of the last acts in his administration had been the passage of a law (1905) reducing the period of army service from three to two years. This measure, it proved, was unwise, and was too great a concession to the anti-militarists, but it at least testified to the peace-loving character of Frenchmen in the first decade of the twentieth century. Loubet was succeeded by Armand Fallieres (1906 to 1913), "an easy-going, good-na- tured, and well-meaning but second-rate statesman," who, how- ever, was favored by never being obliged to face a crisis calling for high-grade executive ability. During his administration, besides, of course, the aftermatl> of the religious question, there was the run of labor agitation, so« 566 A HISTORY OF FRANCE cial reform legislation, industrial problems, railway strikes (nota- bly in 1910), etc., which France shared in about average measure with other great civilized states. Socialism and its peculiar maniT festation of "syndicalism" ^ were showing such power as to cause anxiety to the bourgeoisie; and there were inevitably the usual economic, budgetary, and taxation matters to provide exciting debates in the Chambers. But from 1905 onwards the thoughts of all citizens were no longer being concentrated so exclusively upon the old questions of Republicans and Royalists, Clericals and Radicals. The contending factions, so implacably hostile, it would seem, were being reminded ever more significantly that they were first of all things Frenchmen. A new generation was, indeed growing up, men to whom 1870 was a childhood recollec- tion, or, more often, an anecdote from their fathers; nevertheless, their eyes were again being turned toward the Rhinelands, not in vengeful ambitions to recover the lost provinces, though the memory thereof could not die, but lest some new and absolutely: crippling stroke be aimed at the beloved patrie. In 1913, after a violent discussion throughout the nation and in the Chambers, the army law was again altered, restoring three years of military service. The Socialists and other radicals protested with fury, but the best intelligence of France consented to the sacrifice, for the warnings from the eastern frontier were too terrible to be dis- regarded. In that same year President Fallieres's term expired, and in his place the National Assembly chose Raymond Poincare, a moderate Republican of approved worth as a statesman. He had been in the Palais d'filysee less than eighteen months, when there broke over France a storm which made every earlier danger surmounted by the Third Republic appear simply as a tale thai is told. The Pan-German was at the gates. ' " Socialism " had become a very general term for various stripes of radi- calism in France. The existence of a great mass of peasant landowners, small capitalists, etc. was a formidable barrier to the triumph of the " orthodox " doctrines of Karl Marx. Some French " Socialists " were extreme commun- ists, others hardly more than pronounced Republicans. VALUE OF THE FRENCH COLONIES 567 The Extension of the Colonial Empire of France under the Third Republic It is impossible to form a complete estimate of the achievements of mod- em France without taking into account the success of the Third Repub- lic in establishing a magnificent colonial empire, embracing a large frac- tion of Central Africa, and its second similar success on a very ample if smaller scale in Cochin-China. For obvious reasons, less is known by Americans of this great colonial achievement than of the performance of the British colonizers; but the French conquerors and explorers have earned the entire right to have their results compared honorably with those of their English-speaking contemporaries. The eve of the Great War found France uncontestably the second colonial power in the world. The romance, heroism, and the inevitably great physical sacrifices at- tending these conquests we cannot, of course, discuss, but it has seemed useful to give American readers even a bald and matter-of-fact state- ment of the events which have made the Tricolor to fly over so large a fraction of the tropical world.' French colonies must be divided into two classes, those which are valuable only for their resources, and those which are suitable fields for colonization. The former type are those where the climate prevents native Frenchmen from settling and building homes for themselves. Foreigners can usually live in most tropical countries if their resi- dence can be broken by periodic furloughs, spent in cooler and drier climates. Such lands are valuable as colonies, however, because of their natural resources, their raw products, and their markets. This is en- tirely true of such lands as Congo, the Soudan, Indo-China, and, in large part, Madagascar. Colonies which are suitable for colonization are those where climatic and living conditions most nearly approach those in France, so that Frenchmen can settle there with their families and have no great longing to return to their native soil; such lands, for instance, as Algeria and Tunis. By a rather singular piece of good fortune these are the near- est of French possessions. Algiers is only twenty-four hours' steaming from Marseilles. No other European state has such an excellent colonial field so near at hand. Algeria and Tunis are like prolongations of the French homeland where the French race may be renewed. They are a ' The following account is largely adapted from M. Albert Malet's excellent Bistmre de France, de 1789 (Paris, 1916), pp. 570-83. 568 A HISTORY OF FRANCE "New France" in the making, by far the most precious of all the colonies. The conquest of Algeria was completed under the Third Republic by the establishment of a French protectorate over Tunis (1881-83) and Morocco (1911). Tunis was governed by a ruler, called a "bey," who was nominally a vassal of Turkey. Once established in Algeria, France felt that her posi- tion in that province could never be rendered secure untU she had like- wise extended her influence to Tunis. The first step was to get the friend- ship of the Bey, and in order to win his confidence several loans were adroitly arranged for him at Paris. French policy was dictated largely from the point of view of Algerian safety, which was constantly being menaced by border raids from Tunis. There was another reason, however, which was presently involved: from the beginning of 1870 the Italians, who had then scarcely achieved their own national unity, were casting longing eyes on Tunis, itself an old Roman colony and the nearest neighbor of Sicily. The possession of Tunis would have rendered Italy almost the' master of the Mediterranean, thanks to the narrowness of the passage between Sicily and North Africa. Their policy was so active, that in 1881 Jules Ferry, President of the French Council, felt that it was urgent that France should take measures to prevent "the key to the French Empire" (as he called Tunis) from falling into the hands of a foreign power. The incessant plundering raids (there were more than two thousand forays in ten years!) committed on the Algerian frontier by the unruly Kroumirs, Tunisian highlanders, which the Bey admitted he was quite helpless to control, served as a good excuse for the entrance of a French army into Tunis (April, 1881). Almost simultaneously a military force was dispatched from Toulon which disembarked at Bizerta, marched to Tunis, and on May 12, 1881, forced the Bey to sign a treaty in the palace of Bardo which placed him under French protection. By the terms of this treaty he promised in particular to carry on no negotiations with foreigners except through the mediation of the French "Resident" who became virtually the Bey's Minister of Foreign Affairs. Tunis appeared so thoroughly subjugated that in a short time the French troops were recalled. This was the signal for a general uprising, the center of which was at Kairouan, one of the sacred cities of the Moslems. The insurrection was promptly suppressed. While a naval squadron bombarded and seized Sfax, 35,000 troops, who had advanced from three different directions, surrounded Kairouan and occupied that The French Empire 30= in Africa, 1914 French possessions 20' Long. 10* Weat OT Long. lO'W. from 20' Green. 30' CONQUEST OF NORTH AND CENTRAL AFRICA 569 point without so much as a shot having been fired (September 25, 1881). The French Government, however, had the sagacity not to convert the protectorate into downright annexation. France was content to hold Bizerta where a large naval base had been built. The powers of the Resident were, however, increased. He now became the head of the reorganized administration in Tunis which was nevertheless otherwise composed entirely of natives. During the early years of the twentieth century, in spite of the dif- ficulties interposed by Germany (1905-11), France succeeded in com- pleting her occupation of North Africa and insured the complete security of her Algerian Empire by establishing a protectorate over Morocco. How much France has accomplished in Algeria in three quarters of a century and in Tunis in less than thirty years can readily be seen from the following statistics: In 1881 there were only a few hundred French- men in Tunis; in 1906 there were 35,000 in Tunis alone. In 1881 there were 600 kilometers (about 375 miles) of roadway, 200 kilometers (about 125 miles) of railways, and one mediocre harbor for large vessels; to-day there are 2500 kilometers (about 1560 miles) of roads, 1900 kilometers (1190 miles) of railroads, and four modem ports. The finances have been so well administered that all the public works have been paid for with- out the creation of new imposts, and the receipts have in fact exceeded the expenditures. The annual commerce on the first date amounted to only 38,000,000 francs (about $7,600,000) ; it has increased fivefold, and now amounts to more than 200,000,000 francs (about $40,000,000) per annum. As for Algeria, the results are even more striking. There were in the vicinity of 2,000,000 inhabitants in the old Moorish State in 1830, with practically no Europeans. There were only a few miles of roads, and a trade which amounted to some 8,000,000 francs ($1,600,000) a year. In 1908 the population exceeded 5,000,000 inhabitants, of whom no less than 514,000 were Frenchmen (either native-born or naturalized). Al- giers is one of the leading ports in the Mediterranean and is the second most important of French harbors. Fourteen thousand kilometers (8750 miles) of roads and 3700 kilometers of railways (2315 miles) have been constructed, while the commerce (nearly a half of which consists of Algerian agricultural products) exceeds one billion of francs ($200,000- 000). It is thirty years ago, when these results were far from having been attained, that a German visitor wrote: "Whoever has witnessed the tre- mendous amount of labor which France has expended on Algeria, feels only contempt for those who, even in the presence of all these remarka- 570 A HISTORY OF FRANCE ble achievements, still dare to allege that the French are not good colo- nizers." In West Africa, France has built up a great empire which very prob- ably in the near future (as a result of the cultivation of cotton), will be- come the supply station for one of the most important of French indus- tries; hence one of the most valuable assets of French economic power. According to statistics, the West African commerce amounts to more than 200,000,000 francs ($40,000,000) per annum, and 1400 kilometers (about 875 miles) of railway are employed in transporting raw materials. This empire includes (along the Atlantic coast) Senegal, Guinea, the Ivory Coast, and Dahomey; while in the interior are the vast regions drained by the mighty Niger. This whole rich empire, which is seven or eight times as large as France itself, is ordinarily called the "French Soudan." Its twelve or thirteen million inhabitants are, of course, mainly negroes (the word Soudan signifies the "black country"), but they are superior to the run of Equatorial Africans. Taken as a class they are a hardy, intelligent, industrious, and courageous people. With the exception of the natives of Dahomey, who have retained their old fetish worship, they have all been converted to a type of Mohamme- danism. They are divided into numerous tribes, each of which has its own rudimentary political organization. As a rule they live in groups, either in open villages built of circular huts, or in fortified towns sur- rounded by thick mud walls. The conquest of this enormous territory was begun under Napoleon III, about the year 1855, and continued intermittently for more than forty years, up to 1898. It was actively pressed, however, only after the establishment of the Third Republic, beginning particularly with 1880. From the very outset progress was made as much by the efforts of small exploring parties, each accompanied by a handful of soldiers, as by reg- ular colonial expeditions. In fact there was never any necessity for a large military force. The largest expeditionary corps was that which subdued Dahomey, and it numbered only 3000 men. On the other hand, France made an abundant use of the native troops just as Dupleix had attempted in the eighteenth century in India,^ and as the Government was already doing in Algeria. These natives, battalions of Senegalese sharpshooters and companies of Soudan spahis, recruited from among those tribes which had been the longest subjugated, usually proved to be hardy warriors of unfailing loyalty and devotion. The first step in the conquest was the occupation of the valley of the > See p. 208. THE PROCESS OF OCCUPATION 571 Senegal by Faidterbe, the future commander of the "Army of the North" in 1870, and the establishment of a post at Medine (1865), near the head of the river. This had scarcely been built, when it was attacked by Hadj-Omar, a Mohammedan adventurer who was pillaging and burning the country, and slaughtering all who dared to resist him. His ambition was to establish a large empire for himself between the Sene- gal and the Niger, and the ousting of the French seemed a means of real- izing this ambition. Medine, however, which was defended by an heroic mulatto, Paul Holl, eight soldiers of the marine infantry, and forty Senegalese, resisted for more than three months the attacks of 15,000 natives until Faidherbe could come to the rescue of the brave garrison. By 1880 France felt that her possession of Senegal was more or less secure. Her leaders were desirous, nevertheless, of reaching the Niger and of opening up to the outside world that great valley which was reputed to be so very rich in natural resources. Halfway up the course of the Niger the French met with the opposition of the son and successor of Hadj-Omar, Ahmadou; and a little later, near the head of the valley, with that of another bold adventurer, Samory, a slave-trader, who,, wherever he roamed, always left behind him traces of devastation and bloodshed. Colonel Archinard soon put an end to the attacks of Ahma- dou, and in 1890, Segou, the capital of that bloody despot, was captured. But against Samory, who had succeeded in making himself "King of the Niger," with an "empire" more than half the size of France, and who had collected a fighting force of 40,000 warriors, the struggle lasted for no less than sixteen years (1882-98). In the end, however, he was out- witted by a very daring attack and taken captive in the very heart of his own camp. In the course of this long struggle France secured possession of Tim- buctou (December 15, 1893), which lies at the head of the bend in the Niger — a town celebrated throughout Mohammedan Africa. It was at one time the commercial and religious center of East Africa, but it had now fallen into decay and retained only a part of its one-time glory and importance — and that remnant solely because it is the gateway from the Soudan into the wide Sahara, the point of departure for the line of caravans which through all the ages have ploughed across the sands headed for their destinations in the coastal states of North Africa. In the south the King of Dahomey, Behanzin, notorious for his prac- tice of human sacrifices, had attacked the French posts along the Guinea coast. As a result an expedition under the leadership of Colonel Dodds succeeded in subduing that tyrant-ridden and iniquitous kingdom, al- though only after some rather serious fighting (1893-94). During this period a connection had also been made across the Sahara 572 A HISTORY OF FRANCE between the French possessions of North and those of West Africa. This act involved the occupation of the oases, a process which commenced in 1843 when the French took possession of Biskra. The task was achieved, in spite of the treacherous resistance of the Touaregs, a tribe of nomadic Berbers who at times assisted the caravans in their passage, then again fell upon them in the most ruthless fashion. A term was put to their depredations, when by expeditions sent out between January, 1900, and March, 1902, France succeeded in gaining In-Salah and the Oasis of Touat. In the Congo region France has pursued her favorite policy of "peace- ful penetration." Enormous territories, rich in natural resources, have been opened up to her on the right bank of the Congo and its affluent, the Oubangui, without any show of armed force or serious resistance having been encountered. This French possession of Equatorial Africa is due largely to treaties negotiated with native chiefs, especially to the skillful diplomacy and tact of a daring adventurer and explorer. Lieuten- ant Savorgnan de Brazza. In the Congo it had been France's ambition from the start to extend her dominion as far north as Lake Tchad, and she succeeded in reaching the valley of the river Chari. When she attempted to descend that river, however, she was met again by another Mohammedan despot, Rabah, the leader of a band of brigands and a slave-dealer — the Samory, in short, of Central Africa, who also had created another vast "empire." He offered the French a lively resistance. Two small expedi- tions sent out by them were foully cut to pieces. But early in 1900 the power of Rabah was broken when three separate French forces, the first under Foureau and Lamy which crossed the Sahara from Algeria, the second under Joalland from Senegal, and the third under Gentil which had come up from the Congo, made a juncture on the shores of Lake Tchad (April, 1900). Shortly before this event a convention had been signed between France and England (March 21, 1899) as a result of the "Fashoda affair." ^ By this the spheres of influence of the two countries in the Sou- dan were delimited. France renounced all claim to the Eastern Soudan and abandoned those posts which she had established on the affluents of the Nile. On the other hand, England granted her full liberty of action in the Central Soudan, particularly in those regions situated to the north and east of Lake Tchad. The juncture of the three military expeditions on the shores of Lake » See p. 581. OCCUPATION OF MADAGASCAR 578 Tchad was, from a political point of view, an act of extreme importance. The successful march across the hinterland from each of France's large African possessions transformed her theoretical claim to this territory, which had already been conceded by Great Britain and Germany, to a status of actual ownership. Since this barrier had been broken down, there was no longer anything to prevent France from starting work on the Trans-Sahara Railroad, the basis for which already existed in Algeria. The unity of the French Empire in Africa had been assured. Madagascar — the French conquest of which occurred in 1895 — is a large island in the southern part of the Indian Ocean, whose area ex- ceeds that of France. Geologically speaking, it is made up of a lofty pla- teau which is surrounded by forests — an admirable means of defense — and a coastal zone, which is very narrow on the eastern coast, but which broadens out on the west to a considerable degree. The coastal fringe is very flat, and the climate there, as in general throughout the entire island, extremely unhealthful for Europeans. The population of the island numbers about 2,500,000 inhabitants and is made up largely of negroes who are still in an uncivilized state. They are spoken of under the general title of Malgaches. During the course of the twelfth century, however, there was an invasion of Asiatics from the Malay Archipelago. These folk were presumably Mongolians, and they settled on the plateau. They were known as the Hovas and their superior qualities soon enabled them to dominate the island. The majority of them have been converted to Christianity by English missionaries and as a result have acquired a quasi-civilization. In their capital, Antananarivo, a pretentious city of some 50,000 inhabitants, there were schools, printing-presses, and news- papers. The native Government was an absolute monarchy. At the time of the French conquest there was an army of about 40,000 men who were armed with repeating rifles and modem artillery. The flrst French establishment in Madagascar actually dates from the reign of Louis XIII and Richelieu, when the post of Fort Dauphin was built in the south of the island (1642). But little was done then to con- quer the island. During the greater part of the nineteenth century there was a struggle for supremacy at the capital between the French and English, in which each country contested for the ear of the successive kings or queens of Madagascar. English influence was preponderant up to about 1878. As a result either of English instigation or of an un- warranted assumption that the English would sanction radical proceed- ings, the Hovas were at that time convinced that they could fall upon the French posts on the coasts with impunity. The inevitable conse- quence of such a policy was an open conflict with the French during 574 A HISTORY OF FRANCE ■which Tamatve and the principal posts were bombarded and blockaded. In 1885 the Hovas pretended to admit their defeat, and accepted France as suzerain power. A French Resident- was set up at Antanana- rivo to direct the foreign affairs of the Hovas and control their home ad- ministration. For ten years the Hovas apparently succeeded in blinding France as to their real purpose of another stroke for independence, but in 1895 the situation again seemed ominous and a new military expedi- tion was dispatched. Under the command of General Duchesne 15,000 men were landed at Majunga on the west coast of Madagascar (March- August, 1895). These forces were to march eastward across the plateau to the capital. The region, however, was one which was practically devoid of inhabitants, and in order to prevent the troops from being cut off from supplies it was necessary to construct a road. Moreover, the country was so ma- larial that more than 5000 men died from fever along the way. Finally a picked company of 4000 men succeeded in forcing their way across the plateau where they took the army of the Hovas by surprise and eventu- ally reached Antananarivo. They proceeded to storm the palace on Sep- tember 30, 1895, whereupon Queen Ranavalo capitulated. Once again the Hovas agreed to accept a French protectorate. The recall of the larger share of the expeditionary forces was, however, the occasion for still another general uprising on the part of the Hovas, instigated by the Queen and her ministers (July, 1896). The insurrection was promptly suppressed by General Gallieni (later famous as the defender of Paris in 1914), who caused two of the ministers to be tried and shot for high treason (October 11, 1896). The protectorate was then abolished, and Madagascar was declared a French colony. The treacherous Queen, Ranavalo, was deported to Algeria (February, 1897). Since then France has undertaken numerous progressive measures in Madagascar. Slavery has been abolished, and schools and hospitals have been opened everywhere. A thousand kilometers (625 miles) of roads have been built and some 200 kilometers (125 miles) of railways. The commerce of the island has increased from 27,000,000 francs in 1898 ($5,400,000) to 65,000,000 francs in 1906 ($13,000,000). A large naval station has been built at Diego Suarez as a base for the French fleet. These are the principal results of the first ten years of French domina- tion in Madagascar. French possessions in Indo-China include what was formerly known as the "Empire of Annam." This ill-compacted dominion at the be- ginning of the nineteenth century had comprised the following native states; to the north, Tonkin, which lies in the rich delta of the Song-Koi, FRENCH INDOCHINA 575 or Red River; in the center, "Annam Proper," along the coast of the China Sea; and to the south, Cochin-China, which lies in the delta of the Mekong. The whole represented an area a little more than three fifths of the surface of France. To the east of the Mekong and to the north of Cochin-China, France has now also seciu-ed the protectorate over the little Kingdom of Cambodia. The population of the former Annamese Empire is Mongolian and the basis of its civilization very largely is Chinese. The inhabitants (over 30,000,000) are, considering their tropical environment, active, industrious, and intelligent. The Government was formerly that of an absolute monarchy of the regular Oriental type, with the capital at Hue. The "Emperor" was nominally a vassal of China, although the tribute, the sign of his vassalage, was rarely paid, and it was usually only in times of danger and dire distress that this potentate consented to admit his subordinate position. As for Cambodia, the inhabitants are likewise Mongolian, but their civilization is Hindu, and as a result they reveal much less of that energetic action which characterizes their neighbors across the Mekong. The French conquest of this region falls into two distinct periods. The earlier, 1859-67, marks the capture of Cochin-China. French interest in that country dates, indeed, from 1787, when Louis XVI, at the request of the Annamese Emperor, sent over French officers and engineers to fortify Hue and the leading cities of Tonkin. This informal connection was retained, stimulated by a natural desire on the part of France to se- cure a naval base for her fleet and an entrance into China for her com- merce. In 1858, as a result of the persecutions of French missionaries and native Christians, an excuse was offered the ambitious Gov- ernment of Napoleon III for French intervention. Military operations were begun which centered around Saigon, in Cochin-China, from 1859 to 1861. By 1863 the region had been partially subdued and in 1867 the conquest was completed. Meanwhile, in 1863 Cambodia, out of fear of her western neighbor, Siam, had voluntarily placed herself under French protection. The conquest of Tonkin in Northern Annam turned out to be a more serious matter. French interest in this region had grown out of a series of explorations and trading voyages by two Frenchmen, Francois Gar- nier and Jean Dupuis, both of whom were convinced of the value of the Red River in opening up important parts of Southern China, particu- larly Yunnan, to French commerce. The Annamites, however, resented their intrusion and attempted to block the Red River. As a result, when pacific measures had failed. Gamier with 175 men attacked and cap- tured Hanoi, the capital of Tonkin, in November, 1873. He then pro- 576 A HISTORY OF FRANCE ceeded up the delta of the Red River and within a month it was in French hands. Gamier himself, however, unfortunately fell into an ambuscade and was killed. When the question was referred to the French Government, it refused to push its advantage; the memories of 1870 were still too vivid to war- rant a fresh military undertaking. Ah arrangement was consequently made with the natives whereby France offered to give up her conquests in return for the privilege of trading on the Red River (1873). The Emperor of Annam, by his poor observance of this treaty, soon gave cause for fresh complaints, and in 1881 a new expedition (of 600 men) was sent out under General Riviere. Meanwhile the Annamites, not trusting to their own strength, had secured aid from their suzerain, China, and had succeeded in enlisting certain mercenary troops known as the "Black Flags." Riviere, nevertheless, managed to repeat the ear- lier conquests of Gamier. Inadvertently, however, he was himself be- sieged at Hanoi, and killed in a desperate sortie there (May, 1883). France now found herself at war, not only with Annam, but for all prac- tical purposes with China as well. The contest with the former, however, was brief. Under the leadership of Admiral Courbet, the city of Hue was captured and a peace dictated (August 25, 1883) whereby Annam became a French protectorate. France, however, still had the suzerain of Annam to reckon with. The war with China, which began during a recess in the French Parliament, was carried on without any formal declaration of hostilities. There were serious engagements, nevertheless, both on land and sea, the theater of war being Tonkin and the southern coast of the Celestial Empire. It was a bitter and expensive struggle, for the French, who fought in an un- known and wild country against fairly well-trained and excellently equipped Chinese troops, who completely outnumbered their European foes. Like so many Oriental struggles, where the treachery of the natives becomes a serious factor, the contest falls into two stages. In the earlier part events moved rapidly. In December, 1883, Son-Tay, a stronghold in Tonkin, was stormed and taken by Admiral Courbet. One by one the remaining Chinese fortresses fell before the French; and, in May, 1884, a treaty of peace was signed, binding China to evacuate Tonkin. By virtue of this treaty France was given the right to occupy the for- tress of Lang-Son (on the frontier of Tonkin and China) immediately, but the French troops charged with this task were treacherously assaulted at Bac-Le (June 23, 1884) . As a result hostilities were reopened after a for- mal ultimatum had been presented at Pekin. Chinese resistance was still tenacious and both on land and sea there were some serious engagements. The arsenal at Foo-Chou was captured by Courbet, and Formosa was FRENCH INDOCHINA 577 blockaded. On land Domine with 600 men held out against the 15,000 Chinese at Tuyen-Quan for three months (December, 1884, to March, 1885). In March came the most serious engagement of the war, "the affair of Lang-Son," which resulted in the political overthrow of Jules Ferry, then prime minister of France. General de Negrier with a brigade of 4000 men had been attacked at Lang-Son (which had been taken by the French earlier in the war) by 20,000 Chinese whom he at first re- pulsed. During the engagement he was wounded, and his successor, who unfortunately lacked his confidence, foolishly dispatched various de- spondent reports to France which caused wild excitement in the Cham- bers and resulted in a ministerial crisis. Meantime the Chinese, who even before Lang-Son had started peace negotiations, convinced as they at last were of the superior strength of the French, had capitulated, and on Jime 9, 1885, the second and definitive treaty of Tien-Tsin was signed. China renounced all claim to Tonkin and recognized the protectorate of France over Annam. At home there had been a violent political opposition to all French colonial ventures, mainly on the part of the conservative Royalists act- ing in their curious alliance with the extreme radicals, who of course execrated "imperialism." They now denounced the Tonkin expedition and the Chinese War as a most criminal piece of folly. Jules Ferry was loaded with violent abuse. As a result of a coalition between these strangely matched political elements, the bill for the payment of the expenses of the war narrowly escaped defeat, passing by a bare majority of four votes (274 to 270). So indifferent for the moment was France to her new acquisition! Since 1885 the Third Republic has pursued much the same policy in Indo-China as in Algeria and Tunis, and with equal success. Saigon and Hanoi are now prosperous cities. Railroads have been built, the coal mines are being exploited, and mills constructed. Methods of agricul- ture have been improved to such an extent that Indo-China has become one of the greatest rice-producing countries. Commerce in its turn has increased so rapidly that it amounted to more than 550,000,000 francs ($110,000,000) in 1907. The foregoing may be called a feeble tracing over the dry annals of remarkable achievements. Described in their fullness, these deeds would entitle the explorers and conquerors of the Third Republic to rank as worthy sons of Champlain, La Salle, Montcalm, and the others who in an earlier epoch wrought so valiantly and who so nearly succeeded in their task of making "New France" and not "New England" the dom- 578 A HISTOEY OF FRANCE inant power on the Western Hemisphere. The new African and Asiatic empires won for the Tricolor do not, indeed (except in Algeria), open many lands suitable for settlement by white men, but they certainly place at French disposal a tropical wealth which can largely compen- sate for that lost empirs of Hindustan which the futile Government of Louis XV had almost grasped in the days of Dupleix. CHAPTER XXVI FRANCE HERSELF AGAIN" Once more, and for the last time in this outline story of two thousand years, it must be said we are dealing with merely the history of France, not with that of all Europe. Until after the dawn of the twentieth century the relations of the Third Republic with its neighbors had continued on the whole highly peaceful. French statesmen were too well aware of their own handicaps and of the terrible consequences of provok- ing an unsuccessful war, to dare to push home policies which might embroil them with England, the old "natural enemy," or with Germany, her successor in disfavor. There had been, of course, serious friction with the former Power over Egypt, and the open wound caused by Alsace-Lorraine was unhealed ; but de- spite many vaporings in the Paris press, no intelligent foreigner, save possibly in the days of Boulanger's popularity, could charge France with being a menace to the tranquillity of the world. The defensive alliance concluded with Russia in 1893 served to pro- tect the Republic against gross acts of aggression, but it was well understood that this agreement of the Czar (a "marriage of con- venience" between two very dissimilar Powers!) was defensive only. It did not authorize the French to pick a quarrel with Ger- many in order to get back the lost provinces; and in 1904-05, when Russia in turn was at war with Japan, France stood hon- estly neutral, although giving the Muscovite all the sympathy and aid which international law permitted. It was just as the rumbles of the Dreyfus case were dying away, and '- monarcns: royalty little respected by lOeO-llOs! Philip I f barons. 1108-1137. Louis VI the Fat, able, energetic king. 1137-1180. Louis VII; great "Angevin" peril to French royalty from Henry of Anjou and England. 1180-1223. Philip Augustus, builder of the greatness of French mon- archy: 1214, Battle of Bouvines. 1223-1226. Louis VIII. 1226-1270. Louis IX (Saint Louis) remarkably good, pious, and yet efiBcient king (1226-42 — regency of Blanche of Castile). 1270-1285. Philip m. 1285-1314. Philip IV " the Fair," violent, tyranous king, advances royal power: 1303, humiliation of Pope Boniface VIII by King. 1314-1316. Louis V. 1316-1322. Philip V; "Salic Law" invoked. 1322-1328. Charles IV. Du-ect Capetian line expires. Valois Kings (Capetian side-line) 1328-1350. Philip VI: 13S7, " Hundred Years' War " with England be- gins; 134.6, Battle of CrScy. 1350-1364. John : 1S56, Battle of Poitiers; 1360, treaty of Bretigny with England. 1364-1380. Charles V " the Sage " : first expulsion of the English. 1380-1422. Charles VI, partly imbecile; 1j^15, second invasion of the English, and Battle of Agineourt; 1420, treaty of Troyes with the English. 1422-1461. Charles VII: US9-S0, career of Jeanne, Dare; second expulsion of the English: 1453, end of "Hundred Years' War." 1461-1483. Louis XI: struggle with Charles of Burgundy; 1477, Charles killed before Nancy. APPENDIX 607 1483-1498. Charles VIII: 1494-95, invasion of Italy. 1498-1515. Louis XII: unsuccessful wars in Italy. 1515-1547. Francis I: wars with Charles V of Germany and Spain; 1525, Battle of Pavia. 1547-1559. Henry II: 1552, Metz and Verdun teken; 1558, Calais taken. Persecution and growing power of the Protestants ("Huguenots"). 1559-1560. Francis II. 1560-1574. Charles IX. (During this and the next reign Queen-Mother Catherine de' Medici often the true ruler of France.) " Wars of Religion "; 167S, Massacre of St. Bartholomew. 1574-1589. Henry III: Struggle with Protestants; also with Catholic Guises and " Holy League." House of Bourbon (decendants of Louis IX) I58g-i6i0. Henry IV (" of Navarre "). Resistance of Catholic party: 1590, Battle of Ivry; 1593, conversion of King to Catholi- cism; 1598, Edict of Nantes; wise economic reforms of Sully. 1610-1643. Louis XI: 162^, Richelisu becomes Prime Minister; 1628, La Rochelle taken; 1631, treaty with Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, France enters "Thirty Years' War"; 1642, death of Richelieu. 1643-1715. Louis XIV: 1643-61, regency and ruleof Cardinal Maza- rin; 1648-53, civil wars of the "Fronde"; 1661, personal rule of Louis XIV begins: extraordinarily able minis- ters, Colbert, Louvois, etc.; great prosperity of kingdom; 1667-68, Louis's " first war," with Spain; 1673-78, " second war," against Holland, Spain, Austria, etc.; 1681, Stras- bourg taken; 1685, revocation of the Edict of Nantes; 1689-97, "third war," against England and European co- alition; 1701-13, "fourth war," or "War of the Spanish Succession." Economic prostration and humiliation of France. 1715-1774. Louis XV: 1715-23, regency of Duke of Orleans; 1726-43. Cardinal Fleury Prime Minister; 1740-48, War of the Aus- trian Succession; 1745, Pompadour begins her "reign"; 1756-63, Seven Years' War; 1759, EngUsh take Quebec; 1760, English overpower French in India; 1763, humiliat- ing Peace of Paris. Age of Voltaire, Montesquieu, the En- cyclopaedists, Rousseau. 1774-1789. Louis XVI [as a nominal monarch until 1792]: 1774, Tur- 608 APPENDIX gofs Ministry; 177&-81, Necker Finance Minister; 1778-83, war with England for America; 1788, convocation of the " Notables "; 1789, calling of the States General. The French Revolution, 1789-1804 1789. May 5, meeting of the States General; June 17, National Constituent Assembly organized; June SO, the " Tennis Court " Oath; July 14, storming of the Bastile ; October 6, the King taken to Paris. 1790. Constituent Assembly busy with reform legislation. 1791. June 20, flight of Louis XVI to Varennes. Recaptured; September 14, King accepts the new Constitution. October 1, "Legislative Assembly" meets. 1792. April 20, war declared on Austria and Prussia; August 10, forcing of the Tuileries; monarchy overthrovm. 1792. First Republic. Constituent Convention elected ; September 20, Battle of Valmy. 1793. January 21, Louis XVI executed. France at war with nearly all Europe. Committee of Public Safety. Fall of Gi- rondists. 179i. Dictatorship of Bohespierre ["Terror"]: April 5, execution of Danton ; July 28, execution of Robespierre. 1795. " Constitution of the Year III " (" Directory ») : October 5, Royalist rising defeated by young oflScer Bonaparte. 1796-1797. Bonaparte's first Italian campaign: 1797, Peace of Campo- Formio. 1798-1799. Bonaparte's Egyptian Expedition. 1799. November 9, Bonaparte overthrows Directors : becomes First Consul ; " Constitution of the Year VIII." 1800. Bonaparte's second Italian campaign. 1801. Peace of Lun6ville. 1802. Peace of Amiens with Britain; merely truce of about one year. The First Empire, 1804-1814 1804. May 18, Napoleon I Emperor ; October 21, Battle of Trafal- gar; December 2, Battle of Austerlitz. Peace of Pressburg with Austria. 1806-1807. War with Prussia: October U, 1806, Battle of Jena; July 7, 1807, Peace of Tilsit. 1809. New war with and victory over Austria. APPENDIX 60S 1818. Moscow expedition. 1813. Rising of Europe against Napoleon: October 16-19, Battle of Leipzig. 1814. Invasion of France: April, abdication of Napoleon — he goes to Elba. [First Restoration of the Bourbons. Louis XVIII.] 1815. March 1. Napoleon lands again in France: the Hundred Days: June 18, Battle of Waterloo; second abdication of Napoleon. [Second Restoration of Louis XVIIL] France seeking Permanent Institutions [1814-1871] 18U-18S4: Louit XVIII [interrupted by " Hundred Days." 1815]: " the Charter " ; reaction; "Ultra "-Royalists; persecution of Liberals; nobility more violent than the King. 182^.-1830. Charles X: extreme reactionary; 1829, Polignac Prime Minister; 1830, illegal ordinances. 1830. July 27-29, " July Revolution " in Paris. 1830-18^8. Louis-Philippe, "King of the French": Revised Charter; Bourgeois monarchy; 1840-48, Guizot Prime Minister. 1848. February 22-24. Overthrow of monarchy: Second Repub- lic, June 23-26. Suppression of Radicals; "June Days"; Republican Constitution: December 10, Louis Napoleon elected President. 1850-1851. Louis Napoleon President of France. 1851. December 3, Coup d'Stat; dictatorship of President. 1852-1870. " Second Empire"; December 2, 1852, Napoleon HI Emperor. Autocratic regime. 1854-1856. Crimean War. 1859. Austrian War. 1862-1867. Mexican expedition. 1869. Attempt at Liberal Empire. 1870. War with Prussia ; September 2, Sedan ; end of Second Empire. 1870. September i. Government of National Defense; Provisional Republic; Gambetta. 1871. January 28, surrender of Paris. Election of National As- sembly. Cession of Alsace-Lorraine. The Third Republic 1871-1873. Thiers Provisional President. 1871, Commune of Paris. 1871-73, German indemnity discharged. 610 APPENDIX 1873. MacMahon President. " White Flag " episode. 1875. Republican Constitution adopted. 1877. Republicans get full control of the Government. 1887-1891. Boulanger agitation. 1894. Dreyfus condemned. 1898-1899. Dreyfus case reopened and convulses France [finally settled in 1906]. 1902-1905. Struggle' with Clericals: 1905, Separation of Church and State. 1914-1918. War with Germany: 1914, September, First Battle of the Marne; 1916, Battles of Verdun; 1917, Clemenceau becomes Prime Minister; 1918, July, Second Battle of the Mame. Armistice and defeat of Germany. France recovers Alsace- Lorraine. 1919. Treaty of Versailles. B THE STATES GENERAL (1302-1789) Compiled by Gertrude A. Jacobsbn, A.M. Origin of institution. Development of the curia regis: the old feudal council of the mediaeval kings. Purpose and powers. At first the States General was purely advisory, consultative rather than deliberative. Later it secured a partial control over taxation, but the privilege of voting subsidies was never clearly established. The occasion for an assembly of the Es- tates General was, however, usually financial; at first, the king felt the need of supplementing the old feudal dues; later, when the royal taxes became permanent and general, the "States" were nevertheless called in to assent to the creation of new taxes. The French kings, however, used the States General as a means of vot- ing subsidies only when their own position was weak, or when France was undergoing a national crisis. Consequently the most frequent assemblies of the "States" were during periods of the Hundred Years' War and the Wars of Religion when the royal power sorely needed the good-will of the nation. The legislative power in France ordinarily was almost entirely vested in the king and his council. The "States" had no right to "register" (i.e. pass upon, promulgate, or veto) royal edicts. They did exert some legislative power, however, through the so-called "Fundamental Laws" of France, a body of custom which dealt with the question of the succession and the alienation of the royal domain, and which could be amended or abrogated only with the consent of the "States." The latter had no right to initiate legisla- tion, but through their privilege of presenting the cahiers, or lists of grievances, petitions, etc., they could demand and some- times could obtain legislative reforms from the king. Composition and Procedure of the States General. The States General in- cluded deputies from the three social orders, the clergy, noblesse, and bourgeoisie. The latter were admitted for the first time in 1302, hence the true "States General" date from then. The deputies of the "Third Estate" were always elected, either by popular suf- frage or by electoral colleges. The two higher estates were origi- 612 APPENDIX nally convened personally by means of direct royal "letters of sum- mons." By the sixteenth century, however, they too were elected by the members of their respective orders. A clergyman in order to be a voter had to possess a benefice, a noble to hold a fief. Social posi- tion seems to have been the basis for the electoral privilege of the bourgeoisie, rather than a property qualification. At first only the "privileged towns" were represented by members. The country districts and border regions seem to have sent few or no deputies prior to 1789. The three orders sat, deliberated, and voted separately. They met for a joint session only for a brief period at the beginning and end of each meeting. The vote was always taken by bailliage (district), the electoral unit, and was never personal. The number of deputies varied considerably, but this was usually immaterial in results. Each order had its own "orator." The basis for deliberation was the separate cahiers drawn up by each bailliage, as well as of course any problems or propositions submitted by the king. Causes for the failure of the system. 1. The rigidity of organization which prevented evolution. 2. The refusal of the two higher orders (as a rule) to coalesce with the bourgeois'e. The former were jealous guardians of class privilege. 3. Inability of the bourgeoisie to establish their complete control over taxation. 4. Growing absolutism of the French sovereigns. Inability of the "States" to secure any real control over the king's ministers. List of meetings of the States General. 1302. Paris. First meeting in which "Third Estate" participated. Occasion: the quarrel between Philip IV and Boniface VlLl. Purpose: to get popular support for the King against the Pope. Results: States perfectly amenable to king. Bourgeoisie de- lighted to have a share in the royal counsels. Each "order," including the clergy, sent a letter of protest to the Pope. 1304. Paris. Discussed issue with Pope; also best means of repairing havoc wrought by the Flemish wars. 1308. Tours. [About 1000 members of Third Estate present: elected by a measure of popular suffrage; alleged that even women were allowed to vote for members in some instances.] Sup« ported Philip IV in his policy against the Templars. APPENDIX 613 1314. Paris. Voted money grants necessary for Philip IV's Flemish Wars. 1317. Paris. Ratified "Salic" Law of succession to throne. 1320-21. Pontoise and Poitiers. Discussed question of baronial vs. royal coinage. 1326. Meaux. Financial questions. 1328. Paris. Subsidy for Flemish wars. 1351. Paris. Voted heavy income tax to aid Government against Eng- lish, in return for important financial and administrative reforms. 1355. Paris. Voted subsidies against the English. "Grand Ordinances" accepted by Government giving pledge of quasi-popular liberties. 1356. Paris. Convened to raise ransom for King John, English prisoner. Radical sentiment, fitienne Marcel leader. Demands for wholesale reforms, especially for dismissal of obnoxious royal ministers and setting up a board of magnates and burgesses appointed by "States" to control Government. Dauphin adjourns the assembly. 1357. Paris. Practically continuation of last meeting. Marcel's power at height. "Grand remonstrance." Scheme for setting up regu- lar government by parliamentary commission. Radicalism at high tide. Dauphin under coercion accepts scheme. 1357-58. Paris. Revolutionary meetings under Marcel's authority. De- serted by all more moderate elements. Marcel overthrown and slain. Attempt to introduce popular parliamentary regime failure. 1358. Compiegne. Amenable and loyal "States" votes Dauphin a subsidy. 1359. Paris. Rejects proposed treaty of peace with England. 1367. Chartres. Grants subsidies in return for financial reforms. 614 APPENDIX 1369. 1380. 1382. 1413. 1420. 1421 1423. 1424. 1425. 1426. 1428. 1433. 1434. 1435. 1436. 1439. 1448. 1468. 1484. Meetings during stress of English invasion. Usually for voting subsi- dies to carry on the war. Most of deputies from South France only. 1492, 1493 1506 Paris and Rouen. Subsidies voted for English war. Paris. Demands and gets abolition of certain unpopular taxes. Compiegne. Same problem as last. Paris. Protests against new taxes, and moderate reforms are prom- ised. Paris. BatiQes treaty of Troyes with English. (Only North France participates.) (place?) Bourges and Selles. Selles and Poitiers. Poitiers. Menu-sur-Yevre. Chinon. Tours. Tours. Poitiers. Poitiers. Orleans. Considers peace with England. Votes a famous "Ordi- nance" which practically replaced old feudal levies with a royal standing army. Bourges. New subsidies voted. Tours. Convened by Louis XI to gain support in refusal to execute agreement to separate Normandy from the crown lands (as demanded by king's brother). Deputies loyally sup- port king's position. Tours. Bold claims for popular sovereignty asserted by Philip Pot and others. Proposal to establish elective advisory coimcil to control the young King Charles \11L Scheme collapses. Subsidy voted. Deputies disperse. Crown repudiates elabo- rate promises. Unimportant meetings. [After attempt by radicals in 1484, crown very wary of convoking States, if avoidable.] ;l APPENDIX 615 1560. Orleans. Attempt at compromise between Catholics and Protes- tants. Friction between two upper Orders and Third Es- tate. 1561. Pontoise. Another attempt at religious compromise. Estates demand that they be regularly convoked every two years. 1576. Blois. Religious issue. Contentions and practically no results. 1588. Blois. Ultra-Catholics demand extermination of Protestants. Demands for control of royal government by "States." Stormy adjournment after murder of Duke of Guise by Henry III. 1593. Paris. [Illegal.] Convened by "Holy League" against Henry IV. Attempt to settle succession on an undoubted Catholic. No practical result. 1596. Paris. [Only small number of deputies present: practically only a meeting of "Notables."] Considers abortive scheme of Sully to set up High Council to manage royal finance. 1614. Paris. [Last meeting before the Revolution.] 464 deputies present — 140 clergy, 132 nobility, 192 bourgeoisie. Quarrel be- tween two upper Orders and Third Estate. Latter demands reduction of taxation and also a position of official equality with other two orders. After acrimonious, useless discus- sions meeting adjourns (February, 1615). King promises sundry fiscal reforms which are never executed. [Futility of 1614 meeting goes far to convince responsible Frenchmen "States" system is useless for good govern- ment. Country seemed better off under well-meaning king and capable ministers. Great growth of royal power practi- cally silences all demands for convening the "States" until well into the eighteenth century.] 1789 (May 5). Versailles. Convening of great " States General" which inaugurated French Revolution. Declared itself National Assembly June 17, 1789. SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY BOOKS ON FRENCH HISTORY AVAILABLE FOR ENGLISH READERS N.B. Even when confined to the Enghsh language the list of important books on French history is a very long one. Undoubtedly many volumes of considerable interest and value have been omitted. It is often difficult to determine when a given book has genuine historical significance and when it is merely an interesting collection of biographical data or social anecdote. No country is richer than France in this later type of literature. Earlier and later editions than those indicated often exist for many works. No attempt is made to list the host of books relating to the part of France in the German War, 1914-19. General Histories of France Adams, George Burton. The Growth of the French Nation. N.Y. 1910. Excellent stimulating sketch by a distinguished American scholar. Cambridge Modern History. Cambridge, The University Press. 1902-12. Vols. I-XII (vol. VII on United States only). Many chapters on French history of highest authority, but uneven and disconnected. Davis, Muriel O. The Political History of Prance. (1789-1900.) Oxford University. 1917. Pleasant outline of the later history. Duruy, Victor. A Short History of France. 2 vols. N.Y. 1917 (and other older editions). The work of a distinguished French historian. Strong on characterization of events: weak on institutions. Modern part least complete. Guizot, F. P. G. History of France. 8 vols. Tr. by Robt. Black., N."S. 1869 and later editions. Written "for my grandchildren," by an ex-prime minister of France. Ad- mirable smooth narrative, but often takes too much for granted for non- French readers. Guizot did not write the part following 1789, and the whole work stops with T848. Guizot, F. P. G. and Masson Gustave. Concise History of France. Boston. 1882. Very fair abridgment of last. Guizot, F. P. G. History of Civilization in France. 3 vols. N.Y. 1860 and later editions. This was the great work on French "culture" which made Guizot's reputa- 618 SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY tion as a historian. Only useful to those who have a firm grasp on the political history. Hassall, Arthur. France, Mediaeval and Modern. Oxford. 1918. A convenient "fact book," but without the least real claim to be a read- able narrative history. Headlam, Cecil. France. London. 1913. Brief narrative. Kitchin, George. A History of France. 3 vols. : covering period from 55 B.C. tol793A.D. Oxford. 1894-99 (and later editions). The best general history in English: clear, well-balanced, interesting. It is a misfortune the work stops with the Revolution. Lacombe, Paul. The Growth of a People. N.Y. 1883. A clever sketch by a clever Frenchman. The "people" is of course the ' French nation. MacDonald, J. R. Moreton. History of France. 3 vols. N.Y. 1915. Closes with 1871. Written from the point of view of stiff British conservatism. Not wholly reliable, although convenient and readable. Stephen, Sir James. Lectures on the History of France. 2 vols. London. 1857. Old, but of very high value, especially for its interpretation of various tendencies and institutions. Not a continuous narrative. Mediseval and Modern France : to 1789 [Arranged in chronological order of the subjects treated: see also Biographies.] Sergeant, L. The Franks. (Story of the Nations.) N.Y. 1896. A good useful narrative of the deeds of the Franks in Merovingian and Carolingian times. Michelet, Jules. The History of Prance. Tr. by W. K. Kelly. London. 1844-46. 2 vols, in 4. Translations of books I and II, ending with 1454, are the only ones published. A great history, illimiinating and sugge.stive, although not one of perfect poise and balance. A misfortune the edition is out of print. Masson, Gustave. Mediseval France. (Stories of the Nations.) N.Y. 1888. Sketch of modest value. Thompson, J. W. The Development of the French Monarchy under Louis VI, 1108-1137. Chicago. The University of Chicago Press. 1895. Doctoral Dissertation. A useful monograph on an important king. Walker, Williston. On the Increase of Royal Power in Prance under Philip Augustus, 1179-1223. Doctoral Dissertation. Leipzig. 1888. Another useful monograph. Willert, P. F. Reign of Lewis XL Oxford and Cambridge. 1876. London. 1876. SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 619 Grant, Arthur James. The French Monarchy, 1483-1789. 2 vols. Cam- bridge. 1900. 2d ed., 1905. (Cambridge Historical Series.) Can be confidently recommended to serious students of French history. Well-balanced and interesting. Important comprehensive work. Tilly, A. A. The Dawn of the French Renaissance. N.Y. 1918. BatifFol, Louis. The Century of the Renaissance. Tr. by Elsie F. Buckley. N.Y. 1916. Good. Covers "Wars of Religion." Baird, Henry M. The Rise of the Huguenots. 2 vols. N.Y. 1879. The authoritative history of early French Protestantism. Baird, Henry M. The Huguenots and Henry of Navarre. 2 vols. N.Y. 1886. Continuation of the last. Baird, Henry M. The Huguenots and the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. 2 vols. N.Y. 1895. Completion of the study of French Protestantism. Excellent work. Ranke, Leopold von. Civil Wars and Monarchy in France in the 16th and 17th Centuries. N.Y. 1853. Tr. by M. A. Garvey. Old work, but by a great historical scholar. Wakeman, H. O. The Ascendancy of Prance, 1598-1775. N.Y. and London. 1894. Covers all Europe for this important period, but with especial attention to France. Handy general history. Stryienski, Casimir. The Eighteenth Centiu-y. Tr. from the French by H. N. Dickinson. N.Y. 1916. (Crowned by the Academic des sciences morales et politiques.) Entertaining and stimulating. Lord, A. P. The Regency of Marie de MMicis. N.Y. 1903. Perkins, James Breck. France under Mazarin. 2 vols. N.Y. and London. 1886. Authoritative work. Hassall, Arthur. Louis XIV and the Zenith of the French Monarchy. N.Y. 1895. Well-written, reliable biography of a mighty king. Perkins, James Breck. France under the Regency, with a review of the ad- ministration of Louis XIV. Boston and N.Y. 1892. Best work in English on subject. Very readable. Perkins, James Breck. France imder Louis XV. 2 vols. Boston and N.Y. 1897. Authoritative, comprehensive, and interesting. Among most important works in English upon French historical subjects. Gufirard, Albert L^on. French Civilization in the 18th Century. N.Y. 1914. 620 SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY Revolutionary Era, 1789-99 [Arranged by authors, alphabetically.] Acton, John Emerich, Lord. Lectures on the French Revolution. London. 1910. Adams, C. K. Democracy and Monarchy in Prance. N.Y. 1875. Adams, H. P. The French Revolution. Chicago. 1914. Anderson, Prank Maloy. The Constitutions and Other Select Documents illustrative of the History of France, 1789-1901. Minneapolis. 1908. Highly valuable collection of documents, weD translated. Useful to any student of modern Prance. Aulard, P. V. A. The French Revolution, a Political History, 1789-1804. 4 vols. Translated. N.Y. 1910. The "great" recent history of Prance. To be reckoned with in any serious study of the Revolution. BeUoc, HUaire. The French Revolution. N.Y. 1911. Stimulating but very short sketch. Bourne, H. E. Municipal Politics in Paris in 1789. N.Y. 1906. Reprinted from the American Historical Review, vol. XL Jan. 1906. Bourne, H. E. Organization of the First Committee of Public Safety. Amer. Hist. Assoc, Annual Report for 1894. Bourne, H. E. The French Revolution and the Napoleonic Era. N.Y. 1918. Very good. Biuke, Edmund. Reflections on the Revolution in France. London. 1790. N.Y. 1912, and other reprints. A famous and bitter criticism of the earlier phases of the Revolution. See also Burke's "Letters on a Regicide Peace." Carlyle, Thomas. The French Revolution. 3 vols. N.Y. 1902. 2 vols. N.Y. 1908 and many other editions. A dramatic commentary rather than a history. Stands of course in a dass by itself. Fisher, H. A. L. (British Academy.) Bonapartism. Oxford. 1908. Fling, F. M. Mirabeau and the French Constitution in the Years 1789 and 1790. Ithaca, N.Y. 1891. Important monograph. Fling, F. M. and Helen D. Source Problems on the French Revolution. N.Y. and London. 1913. Useful selection of documents. Gardiner, Mrs. Bertha M. The French Revolution. London and N.Y. 1905 and other editions. A very good short narrative for the "general" reader. Gosselin, S. S. F. (pseud. G. Lenfitre). The Tribunal of Terror: A Study of Paris in 1793-95. Philadelphia. 1909. Tr. by Frederic Lees. SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 621 Hazen, Charles D. Contemporary American Opinion of the French Revolu- tion. Baltimore. The Johns Hopkins Press. 1897. Hazen, Charles D. The French Revolution and Napoleon. N.Y. 1917. Excellent manual. Henderson, Ernest Flagg. Symbol and Satire in the French Revolution. N.Y. and London. 1912. Johnston, Robert Matteson. The French Revolution. N.Y. 1909. ^ Stimulating sketch. Lamartine, A. M. L. de. History of the Girondists. 3 vols. N.Y. London. 1899 and other editions. A famous "rhapsody" rather than a history. Laprade, W. T. England and the French Revolution, 1787-97. Baltimore. The Johns Hopkins Press. 1909. Lecky, Wm. Edw. Hartpole. The French Revolution: chapter from the author's History of England during the 18th Century. N.Y. and Boston. 1904. Important as being the commentary of a distinguished English' thinker. Legg, L. G. Weckham, editor. Select Documents illustrative of the History of the French Revolution. 2 vols. Oxford. 1905. * Lenfitre, G. (pseud.) (Gosselin, S. S. F.) The Tribunal of Terror: A Study or Paris in 1793-95. Philadelphia. 1909. /^ Lowell, Edward Jackson. The Eve of the French Revolution. Boston and N.Y. 1900. Excellent study of the causes which toppled down the "Old Regime." Probably the best work on the subject in English for general purposes. ^ MacLehose, Sophia H. The Last Days of the French Monarchy. Glasgow. 1901. Good sketch. ' Madelin, Louis. The French Revolution. Tr. N.Y. 1916. (Gobert Prize, crowned by the French Academy.) Best single-volume history on subject. Up-to-date and extremely readable. Mathews, Shailer. The French Revolution. N.Y. and London. 1911 and other editions. The 6est short sketch on subject. Readable, clear, and authoritative. Highly commended to all who cannot study through Madelin. VMignet, F. A. M. A. History of the French Revolution, 1789-1814. N.Y. and London. 1915 and many earlier editions. Old, but still of much value. Was the first scientific history of the Revolu- tion ever written. Author had been brought up in an atmosphere where the "Terror" was still a lively memory. Morris, William O'Connor. The French Revolution and the First Empire. N.Y. 1874. 622 SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY McCarthy, Justin Huntly. The French Revolution. 2 vols. N.Y. 1898, '99. Like all Mr. McCarthy's works, very journahstic. Not wholly reliable. Rose, John Holland. The Revolutionary and Napoleonic Era, 1789-1815. Cambridge. 1911. Good general handbook. Stephens, Henry Morse. A History of the French Revolution. 2 vols. N.Y. 1886-91. A masterly history that has never been completed. Sybel, Heinrich von. History of the French Revolution. 4 vols. London. 1867-69. Tr. by Walter C. Perry. German viewpoint. Taine, H. A. The Ancient Regime. N.Y. 1896. Tr. by John Durand. Brilliant picture of France before 1789. Possibly too highly colored. Not a complete survey of subject, but entirely stimulating. Taine, H. A. Contemporary France: the Modern R6gime. 2 vols. N.Y. 1890-94. Tr. by John Durand. Taine, H. A. The French Revolution. 3 vols. N.Y. 1878-85. Highly critical commentary rather than a history. Thiers, Louis Adolphe. The History of the French Revolution. New ed. 5 vols. London. 1881. Famous work by a famous man, but no longer an authority. Tocqueville, Alexis de. The Old Regime and the Revolution. N.Y. 1856. Tr. by John Bonner. Ranks with Taine as a classic study of conditions before 1789. Young, Arthur. The Example of Prance a Warning to Great Britain. London. 1793. An Idea of the Present State of France. London. 1795. Later reprints of both. Famous memoirs of an Englishman who visited France during the earlier stages of the Revolution. Napoleon Browning, Oscar. The Fall of Napoleon. London and N.Y. 1907. Dodge, T. A. Napoleon, a History of the Art of War. 4 vols. BostOD 1904-07. Best technical military study in English. Largely ignores political side. Fisher, H. A. L. Napoleon. N.Y. 1913. Small handy sketch. Fournier, August. Napoleon I. N.Y. 1903. Tr. by Margaret Bacon Cor- win and Arthur Dart Bissell. Probably best biography in moderate compass. Hassall, Arthiu'. Life of Napoleon. London. 1911. Johnston, R. M. Napoleon; a Short Biography. N.Y. 1904. Best of all the short studies. Very clever generalizations. SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 623 Jomini, General Baron de. Life of Napoleon. N.Y. 1864. MUitary. Maccunn, Francis John. The Contemporary English View of Napoleon. London. 1914. Napoleon I. The Corsican: a Diary of Napoleon's Life in his own Words. Boston. 1910. Compiled by R. M. Johnston. Not a real diary, but a good piecing together of memoirs, dispatches, etc. Petre, F. Lorraine. Napoleon's Conquest of Prussia, 1806. London and N.Y. 1907. Petre, F. Lorraine. Napoleon's Campaign in Poland, 1806-07. London and N.Y. 1906. Petre, F. Lorraine. Napoleon at Bay. London and N.Y. 1914. Hose, J. Holland. The Life of Napoleon I. 2 vols. N.Y. 1907. Shares with Fournier the claim to be the best moderate-sized biography. Rose, J. Holland. Napoleonic Studies. London. 1904. Rose, J. Holland. The Personality of Napoleon. N.Y. 1913. Rosebery, Lord. Napoleon, the Last Phase. N.Y. and London. 1900. Sloane, Wm. M. Life of Napoleon Bonaparte. 4 vols. N.Y. 1896-97. Somewhat longer than Rose or Fournier. An excellent work. Thibaudeau, A. C. Bonaparte and the Consulate. N.Y. 1908. Thiers, S. A. History of the Consulate and Empire under Napoleon. 12 vols. N.Y. 1893-94. Tr. by D. Forbes Campbell and John Stebbing. Highly eulogistic. In its day famous, and still retains considerable value. Wartenburg, Count Yorck von. Napoleon as a General. 2 vols. London. 1902. Military study. France from iSrg to 1871 [See also many Biographies, especially those of Napoleon IH, etc.] Guizot, F. P. G. Prance under Louis-Philippe. London. 1865. Tr. of vol. 7 of the author's MSmaires pour servir d Vhistoire de mon temps. Paris, 1858-67. Useful as giving the viewpoint of a prime maker of the history the author describes. Hall, Sir John Richard. The Bourbon Restoration. London. 1909. Hall, John. England and the Orleans Monarchy. London. 1913. Hooper, George. The Campaign of Sedan. London. 1887. Imbert de Saint-Amand, A. L. Revolution of 1848. N.Y. 1895. Tr. by Elizabeth G. Martin. Interesting memoirs and personalia. Lamartine, A. M. L. de. The History of the Restoration of Monarchy in Prance. 4 vols. London. 1882. Tr. by Captain Rafter. Interesting, but not authoritative history. 624 SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY Michaud, Louis Gabriel. Public and Private Life of Louis-Philippe. Londoa 1851. Tr. by V. L. Chemery. Simpson, F. A. The Else of Louis Napoleon. N.Y. 1909. The Third Republic Barker, E. H. France of the French. N.Y. 1909. Description and discussion of present conditions. Bodley, J. E. C. Prance. 2 vols. N.Y. 1898. Pungent discussion of French institutions and conditions at end of nine- teenth century. Some of the i)essimistic conclusions have not been justified. Bracq, Jean Charlemagne. France under the Bepublic. N.Y. 1910. Rev. ed. 1916. Good description of situation just before 1914. Bracq, Jean C. The Provocation of France. N.Y. 1916. The case of France against Germany at the outbreak of the Great War. Coubertin, Pierre de. The Evolution of Prance under the Third Republic. N.Y. 1897. Tr. from the French by Isabel F. Hapgood. Excellent account of happenings 1871-96. Dawbarn, Charles. Makers of New France. N.Y. 1915. Light biographical sketches. Dimnet, Ernest. France Herself Again. London. 1914. Written by a liberal French Clerical. Represents that just previous to the Great War France had recovered her moral poise and vigor. An important study of the situation in 1913-14. George, W. L. Prance in the Twentieth Century. N.Y. 1909. Sketchy. Hanotaux, Gabriel. Contemporary France. 4 vols. Westminster. 1903-09. An authoritative treatise on the rise of the Third Republic by a former Cabinet Minister. Latimer, E. France in the Nineteenth Century (1830-90). Chicago. 1895. Very light, sketchy, and anecdotal. Deals also with July Monarchy and Second Empire. A book of curious "lore" rather than history. NotalwayO accurate, but highly interesting. Lawton, Frederick. The Third French Republic. London. 1909 Very good. Historical and descriptive. March, Thomas. The Paris Commune. London. 1896. The best narrative in English. Poincar^, Raymond. How France is Governed. London. 1913. Tr. by Bernard Miall. By the statesman who became President of France on the eve of the Great War. Explains clearly the system under which the Third Bepublic was working. SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 625 Simon, Jules. The Government of M. Thiers, 1871-1873. 2 vols. N.Y. 1879. Tardieu, Andr6. France and the Alliances. N.Y. 1908. Very important diplomatic study. Verguet, Paul. France in Danger. N.Y. 1915. Tr. by Beatrice Barstow. Discusses peril from Germany on eve of Great War. A book with prophetic qualities. Vizetelly, E. A. Bepublican Prance, 1870-1912. London. 1913. Useful, though decidedly jom'nalistic. Wright, C. H. C. A History of the Third French Eepublic. Boston. 1916. Best short book on entire subject. The French Church Allison, J. M. S. Church and State in the Beign of Louis-Philippe. Princeton University Press. 1916. Bodley, J. E. C. The Church in France. London. 1906. Galton, Arthur. Church and State in France, 1300-1907. London. 1907. Gu&ard, Albert L^on. French Prophets of Yesterday: a Study of Religious Thought imder the Second Empire. N.Y. 1912. Jervis, William H. P. The Gallican Church and the Revolution. London. 1882. Sabatier, Paul. Disestablishment in France. N.Y. 1906. Tr. by Robert Dell. French Protestant view. Sabatier, Paul. France To-day. N.Y. 1913. Sloane, Wm. M. The French Revolution and Religious Reform, 1789-1804. N.Y. 1901. Monographs on Diplomatic History [Only a few leading titles are suggested.] Benedetti, Vincent, Comte. Studies in Diplomacy. N.Y. 1896. Bastide, C. Anglo-French Entente in the Seventeenth Century. N.Y. 1913. Black, John B. Elizabeth and Henry IV, Anglo-French Relations, 1589-1603. Oxford. 1914. (Arnold Prize Essay, 1914.) Coquelle, P. Napoleon and England, 1803-13. A study from unprinted documents. London. 1904. Tr. by Gordon D. Knox. Introduction by J. Holland Rose. Corwin, Edward S. French Policy and the American Alliance of 1778. Prince- ton University Press. 1916. Lord, W. F. England and France in the Mediterranean, 1660-1830. London. 1901. Ollivier, fimile. The Franco-Prussian War and its Hidden Causes. Boston. 1912. Tr. by G, B. Ives. 626 SELECT BIBIJOGRAPHY Social France [Including a few economic studies.] Bradby, Godfrey. The Great Days of Versailles. Studies from court life in the latter days of Louis XIV. N.Y. and London. 1906. Carette, Mme. A. RecoDections of the Court of Tuileries (at the time of the Empress Eugenie). N.Y. 1889. Elliot, Francis M. D. Old Court Life in Prance. 2 vols. N.Y. 1893. Farmer, James Eugtee. Versailles and the Court under Louis XIV. N.Y, 1905. Haggard, A. C. P. The France of Joan of Arc. N.Y. 1912. Hugon, C6cile. Social Prance in the Seventeenth Century. London. 1911. Imbert de Saint-Amand, A. L. Court of the Second Empire. N.Y. 1898. Luchaire, Achille. Social France at the Time of Philip Augustus. N.Y. 1912. Authorized translation from the French (2d ed.) by Edw. B. Krehbiel. Highly valuable work. One of most important discussions of mediaeval life. Pratz, Claire de. France from within. London and N.Y. 1914, Sichel, Edith H. The Household of the Lafayettes. Westminster. 1897. Vizetelly, E. A. ("Le Petit Homme Rouge.") Court Life of the Second French Empire (1852-1870). N.Y. 1907. By a well-known English journalist based upon his personal recollections and memoirs. Wergeland, Agnes M. History of the Working Classes in Prance. Chicago, University of Chicago Press. 1916. Williams, Hugh Noel. Henri II, his Court and his Times. London. 1910. N.Y. 1911. Young, Arthur. Travels in Prance (1787, '88, '89). N.Y. 1913 and other editions. Very important. Biographies [Arranged in chronological order.] [Studies of certain very important personages, e.g.. Napoleon I, will often be found grouped under the works on ordinary history. The enormous number of biographies of French leaders, either written in England or America, or trans- lated, makes it inevitable that very many books of high worth should be omitted.] Charlemagne. Davis, H. W. C. Charlemagne. (Heroes of the Nations Series.) N.Y. 1899. Very good. SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 627 Einhard. Life of Charlemagne, by Einhard. Tr. from the Latin text by S.E.Turner. N.Y. Important source material. The author lived at the Emperor's court. Hodgkin, L. Charles the Great. London. 1899. Another good short sketch. Mombert, J. I. A History of Charles the Great. London. 1888. The best long monograph in English on the subject. Medioeval Kings. Hutton, W. H. Philip Augustus. London. 1896. Knox, Winifred. The Court of a Saint (Louis IX). London. 1909. Interesting. Perry, Frederick. Saint Louis (Louis IX of France). N.Y. 1901. Shows Saint Louis's distinguished place in secular history. Jeanne Dare ("Joan of Arc"). Bangs, Mary R. Jeanne D'Arc. Boston. 1910. France, Anatole. The Life of Joan of Arc. 2 vols. London. 1909. Tr. by Winifred Stephens. By a distinguished French writer. Lang, Andrew. The Maid of France. London and N.Y. 1909. Very interesting. LoweU, Francis Cabot. Joan of Arc. Boston. 1896. Probably the best sketch in English. Murray, T. D. (editor). Jeanne d'Arc. The story of her life set forth in original documents. N.Y. 1902. Louis XI and Charles the Bold. Hare, Christopher, (pseud.) (Mrs. Marian Andrews.) Life of Louis XL London. 1907. Haggard, A. C. P. Louis XI and Charles the Bold. N.Y. 1913. Kirk, John Foster. History of Charles the Bold. 3 vols. Philadelphia. 1864-68. An American work which has probably not received the recognition it deserved. Its author was a contemporary of Prescott and Motley. Putnam, Ruth. Charles the Bold. (Heroes of the Nation Series.) N.Y. 1908. Good. Leaders in the "Wars of Religion." Sichel, Edith. Catherine de Medici and the French Reformation. London. 1904. Sichel, Edith. The Later Years of Catherine de Medici. London. 1911. Besant, Sir Walter. Gaspard de Coligny. London. 1881. Interesting sketch. Whitehead, A. W. Gaspard de Coligny, Admiral of France. London. 1904. 628 SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY Willert, Paul F. Henry IV, i.e., Henry of Navarre. (Heroes of the Nations Series.) N.Y. and London. 1900. Good sketch. Williams, H. Noel. Queen Margot, Wife of Henry of Navarre. N.Y. 1907. The Seventeenth Century. Lodge, Richard. Richelieu. N.Y. and London. 1896. Satisfactory. Perkins, J. B. Richelieu and the Growth of French Power. N.Y. 1900. d'Aumale, Due. History of the Princes of the House of Cond6. 2 vols. London. 1872. Tr. by R. B. Bothwick. Including many besides the "Great Cond^." Mahon, Lord. (Stanhope, P. H. S.) The Great Cond6 (The Life of Louis, Prince of Conde). London. 1845. Old, but useful. Hassall, Arthur. Mazarin. (Foreign Statesmen Series.) London. 1911. Good short sketch. King, Bolton. The Life of Mazarin. N.Y. 1912. Blennerhassett, Charlotte (Lady). Louis XIV and Madame de Maintenon. N.Y. 1911. Dyson, C. C. Madame de Maintenon. N.Y. 1909. Bowles, Emily. Madame de Maintenon. London. 1888. Greater part told in Madame de Maintenon 's own words. Sargent, A. J. The Economic Policy of Colbert. London. 1899. Important study of the great finance minister. Mims, Stewart L. Colbert's West India Policy. New Haven. Yale Uni- versity Press. 1912. Excellent discussion of an important phase of Colbert's efforts to up- build France. Pre-Revoluiionary Characters. Morley, John. Voltaire. London. 1903. Tallentyre, S. G. (pseud.) (Hall, Evelyn B.) The Life of Voltaire. 2 vols. London. 1903. Morley, John. Rousseau. London. 1883. Morley, John. Diderot and the Encyclopaedists. N.Y. 1879. Morley, John. Critical Miscellanies. Vol. II. Essays on Turgot, Condor- cet, de Maistre, etc. N.Y. 1886-1908. Sorel, Albert. Montesquieu. London, etc. 1887. Tr. by Gustave Masson. Williams, Hugh Noel. Madame de Pompadour. N.Y. & London. 1902. SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 629 Douglas, R. B. Life and Times of Madame du Barry. London. 1896. Williams, H. N. Madame du Barry. London. 1904. Condorcet, Marquis de. Life of Turgot. London. 1887. Stephens, W. Walker. Life and Writings of Turgot. London. 1895. Belloc, Hilaire. Marie Antoinette. London. 1909. Haggard, A. C. P. Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. 2 vols. N.Y. 1909. Imbert de Saint-Amand, A. L. Marie Antoinette and the End of the Old Regime. N.Y. 1891. Tr. by Thomas Sergeant Perry. Imbert de Saint-Amand, A. L. Marie Antoinette at the Tuileries, 1789-91. N.Y. 1892. Tr. by Elizabeth Gilbert Martin. Imbert de Saint-Amand, A. L. Marie Antoinette and the Downfall of Royalty. N.Y. 1892. Tr. by Elizabeth Gilbert Martin. La Rocheterie, M. de. The Life of Marie Antoinette. N.Y. 1906. Tr. by Cora Hamilton Bell. (Crowned by the Academie frangaise.) Willert, P. F. Mh^abeau. London and N.Y. 1898. Barthou, Louis. Mirabeau. N.Y. 1913. Fling, Fred M. Mirabeau and the French Revolution. Vol. I. Closes in 1774 when Mirabeau legally comes of age. Last 2 vols, not yet published. N.Y. 1908. Excellent so far as it goes. Tuckerman, Bayard. Life of General Lafayette. 2 vols. London. 1889. Blind, Mathilde. Madame Roland. London. 1886. Boston. 1886. Taylor, Ida A. Life of Madame Roland. N.Y. 1911. Bradby,E.D. Life of Barnave. 2 vols. Oxford. 1915. Bax, Ernest B. Jean Paul Marat, the People's Friend. Boston. 1901. Beesly, A. H. Life of Danton. N.Y. 1906. Belloc, Hilaire. Danton. N.Y. 1911. Excellent. Belloc, Hilaire. Robespierre. N.Y. 1902. Clapham,J.H. De Abbg Siey^s. London. 1912. Dunoger, Alphonse. The Public Prosecutor of the Terror, Antoine Quentin Fouquier Tinville. N.Y. 1913. Tr. by A. W. Evans. A good account of a famous scoundrel. Napoleonic Characters. Atteridge, A. H. Joachim Murat. London. 1911. Turquan, Joseph. The Empress Josephine. London and N.Y. 1913. Authorized translation by Violette Montagu. 630 SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY Blennerhassett, Charlotte J. Talleyrand. 2 vols. London. 1894. Tr. from the German by P. C. Clarke. Lacombe, Bernard Mercier de. Talleyrand the Man. London. 1910. Tr. from the French of La Vie PrivSe de TaUeyrand, by A. D. Albert!. Restoration and Second Empire. Imbert de Saint-Amand, A. L. The Duchess of AngouISme and the Two Restorations. N.Y. 1892. Cheetham, F. H. Louis Napoleon and the Genesis of the Second Empire (to the Third Republic). London. 1909. Jerrold, Blanchard. The Life of Napoleon III. 4 vols. London. 1871-74. Derived from State Records, from Unpublished Family Correspondence and Personal Testimony. Bartheg, E. The Empress Euggnie and Her Circle. N.Y. 1913. Third Republic. Gambetta, L^on Michel. Gambetta, Life and Letters, by P. B. Ghensi. London. 1910. Authorized translation by Violette Montagu. See also works on Thiers, etc., under other headings. Chronicles, Memoirs, Autobiographies, etc. N.B. French history abounds in this entertaining and often valuable species of literature. Much of it has been translated. Herein is presented only a very imperfect "skimming" with many significant works omitted. To 1500 A.D. (by periods.) Gregorius, Saint, Bishop of Toms. History of the Pranks. (Selections, tr. by Ernest Brehaut.) N.Y. Columbia University Press. 1916. The great original authority for the Merovingian Franks. Delightfully naive reading. Gives clear pictme of violence and utter confusion of Prankish times. Froissart, Jean. Chronicles of England, France and Spain . . . from the latter part of the reign of Edw. II to the Coronation of Henry IV. 2 vols. N.Y. 1901 and other editions. Tr. from the French by Thomas Johnes. Classic chronicle for the first half of the Hundred Years' War. Highly important. Monstrelet, Enguerrand de. The Chronicles of. (An account of the Civil Wars between the Houses of Orleans and Burgundy, 1400-1444.) 2 vols. London. 1867. Gives the story of France during the second half of the Hundred Years' War. A worthy continuation of Froissart. Comines, Philip de. Memoirs (lived 1445-1509). 2 vols. London. 1882- 83. Edited with life and notes by Andrew R. Scoble. Delightful reading: tells story of contest of Louis XI and Charles the Bold. SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY 631 600 to 1700 A.D. (Alpabetically arranged.) Broglie, Due de. The King's Secret. (Secret correspondence of Louis XV with his diplomatic agents, 1752-74.) 2 vols. London and N.Y. 1879. Duclos, Charles P. Secret Memoirs of the Regency, the Minority of Louis XV. N.Y. 1910. Retz, Cardinal de (1643-79). Memoirs of. N.Y. 1903 and other editions. The charming autobiography of an utterly worldly "ecclesiastical" ad- venturer. Throws clear light on spirit of times. Saint-Simon, L. de R. (1675-1755). Memoirs of. 3 vols. (Louis XIV and the Regency.) London, n.d. (1901.) Tr. by Bayle, St. John. N.Y. 1910. An abridged translation: London. 1915. The classic memoirs for the age of Louis XIV; very often quoted. Sully, Duke of (1559-1641). Memoirs of. 5 vols. London. 1810. Tr. by Charlotte Lennox. Gives the viewpoint of one of the greatest of the Huguenots. Revolutionary and Napoleonic Era. Bar^re de Vieuzac, Bertrand. Memoirs of. i vols. (Chairman of the Committee of Public Safety during the Revolution.) London. 1896. The clever apology of a great villain. See Macaulay's scathing essay. Barras, P. F. J. M., Vicomte de. Memoirs of. (Member of the Directorate.) 4 vols. 1895-96. Bourrienne, L. A. F. de. Memoirs of Napoleon I. 2 vols, or 4 vols. Many editions. ' Probably the most familiar and among the more authoritative of the numerous memoirs prepared by the companions of the Corsican. Broglie, due de (1786-1820). Personal Recollections of. 2 vols. Lon- don. 1887. Ducrest, Georgette. Memoirs relating to the Empress Josephine. N.Y. 1911. Fouch6, Joseph, due d'Otrante. The Memoirs of. 2 vols. London. 1896. The story of one of the shrewdest and most slippery of all Napoleon's myrmidons. Lafayette, Marquis de. Memoirs of General Lafayette. 3 vols. N.Y. and London. 1837. Napoleon I. Confidential Correspondence of Napoleon Bonaparte with his brother Joseph. 2 vols. N.Y. 1856. Many other portions of Napoleon's correspondence have found their way into English. Rigby, E. Letters from France, etc., in 1789. London. 1880. Roland de La PlatiSre, Marie Jeanne (1754-1793). The Private Memoirs of Madame Roland. Chicago. 1900. 632 SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY Thibaudeau, A. C. Memoirs of the Consulate. London. 1908. N.Y. 1908. Tr. by Dr. G. K. Fortescue. Modem France since 1815 A.D. d'Amb^, Baron (pseud.). Intimate Memoirs of Napoleon III. 2 vols. Boston. 1912. Barclay, Sir Thomas. Thirty Years: Anglo-French Reminiscences. (1876- 1906.) Boston. 1914. Praser, William, Sir. Napoleon III. (My Recollections.) London. 1896. de Marbot, Jean B. A. M., Baron (1782-1854). Memoirs. 2 vols. Lon- don. 1892. Murat, C. L. (Princess Caroline, 1833-1902.) My Memoirs. N.Y. 1910. Senior, Nassau William. Journals kept in France and Italy, 1848-1852: with a Sketch of the Revolution of 1848. 2 vols. London. 1871. Senior, Nassau William. Conversations with M. Thiers, M. Guizot, etc. 2 vols. London. 1878. Valuable record. Taine, H. The Life and Letters of Hippolyte Taine (1870-1892). 3 vols. London. 1908. N.Y. 1902-08. Taine was a keen observer, and he was in a position to observe much. Talleyrand, Prince de. Memoirs. N.Y. and London. 1891-92. Tr. by R. Ledos de Beaufort. Introduction by W. Reid. 6 vols. Important. Talleyrand, Prince de. Correspondence with Louis XVIII during the Congress of Vienna. N.Y. 1881. Thiers, L. A. Memoirs of (1870-73). N.Y. 1916. Tocqueville, Alexis de. Correspondence and Conversations of Alexis de Tocqueville with N. W. Senior from 1834 to 1859. 2 vols. 2d ed. Lon- don. 1872. Washburn Elihu Benjamin. Recollections of a Minister to France, 1869- 1877. 2 vols. N.Y. 1889. Author was American Minister to Napoleon III and then to the Govern- ment of National Defense. Was in Paris 1870-71 and saw the siege and the Commune. Very important som'ce. INDEX INDEX Abd-el-Kader, 432-34. Absolutism, decline of, in 18th century 246. Africa, West, French colonization of, 670. Agincourt, battle of, 92. Aides (indirect taxes), 254. Albigensian heresy and crusade, 59. Alexander VII, Pope, humiliated by Louis XIV, 171. Alexander I, Czar, quarrels with Napoleon I, 382; assists in his defeat, 383 S.; vast power of, 396. Algeria, 431; first French intervention, 432; struggle with Abd-el-Kader, 433, 434; French power consolidated in, 434; re- sults of occupation of, 569. Alsace, most of it conquered for France, 143. Alsace-Lorraine, demanded by Bismarck, 605; ceded by France, 511, 612; results of this act, 517, 618; demand for return of, during War of 1914-18, 597; evacuated by Germans at armistice, 600; restored to France by Treaty of Versailles, 602. American Independence, War of, France in- tervenes in, 239, 240. _ Annam, French occupation of, 675 ff. Anne of Austria, 146 . Area, of France, 2. Army, reorganized for Louis XIV, 166, 167; as found by Bonaparte, 333; reorganized under Louis XVIII, 407; state of, in 1870, 500; reorganized by Thiers, 524, 525; purged of bad elements after Dreyfus af- fair, 559. Artois, Count of, his influence under Louis XVIII, 401. See also Charles X. Austerhtz, battle of, 341. Austria, war with Revolutionary France, 291 ff. Austrian Succession, war of, 203, 204. Barbarians. See Germanic tribes. Barry, du, mistress of Louis XV, 202. Bastile, taken by Parisians, 273; effect of capture, 274. Bazaine, 502; surrenders Metz, 510; punish- ment of, 510 n. Belfort, saved by efforts of Thiers, 511. Benedetti, 498. Bibliography, list of useful books in English on French History (Appendix), 617 ff. Bishops, under Old Regime, 257. Black Prince (Edward, Prince of Wales), 88-90. Blanche of Castile, 60. Blenheim, battle of, 192. Bonaparte, Napoleon, rescues Convention from Royalists, 327; overthrows Direc- tory and becomes First Consul, 329; origin and youth, 330; supports Revolu- tion, 331; marries Josephine, 331; first campaign in Italy, 332; finds Repubhcan army serviceable, 333; his military meth- ods, 334; his lieutenants, 335; defeats Austrians and Sardinians, 336; expedi- tion to Egypt, 337; siezea government as First Consul, 338; second war in Italy, 338; plans invasion of England, 339; be- comes Emperor, 339. Bonaparte, Jerome, King of Westphalia, 347. Bonaparte, Joseph, King of Spain, 347. Bonaparte, Louis, abdicates as King of Hol- land, 344. Bonapartist officers, their attitude under Restoration, 443, 444. Boulanger, pretender to power, 546 ff; poses for popular favor, 547; is taken up by Royalists, 54S; enters politics, 549; last successes, 551; fiees to Belgium, 552; dies, 552. Bourgeoisie (burgher class), rise of, 79; con- dition before 1789, 263. Bouvines, battle of, 57. Bretigny, Treaty of, 90. Brienne, Archbishop of, 239. Brunswick, Duke of, publishes Royalist manifesto, 294; retires after Valmy, 303. Buffon, 221. Cadoudal, conspiracy of, 361. Csesar, Julius, conquers Gaul, 11-12. Caillaux trial, 585, 586. Calais, captured by English, 88; recapttired by French, 114. Calonne, 238, 239. Calvin, Protestant leader, 115. Camisards, 183, 184. Canada, French, 208, 209. Capetian monarchy, weak at beginning, 47; why sxirvived and gathered strength, 48; aided by Church and Papacy, 49. Capitation tax, 253. Carnot, Frangois, President of France, 554. Carnot, Nicholas (Revolutionary war min- ister), 309. Carolingian dynasty, as "Mayors of the Palace," 22 ff. 636 INDEX Carrier, Terrorist at Nantes, 310, 311. Casimir-P^rier, presidency of, 554. Castles, center of feudalism, 45; 65; dis- mantled by Richelieu, 137, 138. Cathedrals, mediseval, 74-75. Catherine de' Medici, 118 ff. Cavaignac, suppresses radicals, 458; de- feated for presidency, 462. Cavour, 483. Chambord, Comte de (pretender), 528 ff.; utterly fails, 530. Charles Martel, 23 ff.; defeats Moslems, 24- 25. Charlemagne (Charles the Great), physical characteristics, 29; interest in learning, 30, 35; his many activities, 30; conquest of Saxony, 31, 32; conquest of Lombards, 32; relations with Popes, 32, 33; crowned "Emperor" at Rome, 33; extent of his dominions, 34; system of government, 34, 35. Charles the "Bald," 37. Charles the "Fat" (last real Carolingian "Emperor"), 38, 39. Charles the "Simple," 39. Charles IV, 85. Charles V, 90 ff.; defeats English, 91. Charles VI, 91 ff.; Treaty of Troyes made in his name, 93. Charles VII, 93 ff.; desperate position of, 94; rescued by Jeanne Dare, 95-97; final vic- tory over English, 98. Charles the Bold (of Burgundy), 100-04; defeated and slain by Swiss, 104. Charles VIII, 110; he invades Italy. 110. Charles IX, 118, 120. Charles X (Count of Artois) , accession and character, 410, 411; supports Ultras, 411; makes Polignac minister, 412; supports him in reactionary measures, 413, 414; revolt against, 415, 416; abdicates and dies in exile, 417. Charles V (of Germany and Spain), rela- tions to France, 112-14. Charles II (of England), 176, 177. Charles II (of Spain), 189, 190. Charter, terms as granted by Louis XVIII, 402; reactionary changes in, 409. Chateau-Gaillard, 56. Chateaux, burning of, in 1789, 275. China, hostiUties with, in 1884, 576. Chronology of French history (Appendix), 605-10. Church and State, separation of, 560 ff.; Concordat repealed, 563; question of "cultural associations," 564; results of separation, 565. Cities, medisBval, 77 ff.; how they obtained charters, 78; aspect of, in Middle Ages, 79, 80. Civil Constitution of the clergy, 283, Clemenceau, war ministry of, 592 ff.; defies his critics, 597; declared benefactor of country, 599. Clergy, mediaeval, status of, 71 ff.; educa- tion of, 73; condition under Old H6gime, 256 ff.; worldhness of, 258, 599. Chmate, of France, 7. Clovis, becomes king, 18; energy and cru- elty, 19; becomes a Christian, 19-20; zeal for Christianity, 20, 21; his victories, 20; rule of his descendants, 21 ff. Code Napolfion, 358. Colbert, becomes " Controller-General," 159; his zeal for work, 160; energy in de- veloping France, 161; regulates trade and manufactures, 162; regulates commerce, 163; improves navy, 164. Coligny, 120, 121. Colonies, French, in 18th Century, 206; growth of new French Colonial Empire, 567; extension over Tunis, 568; over West Africa, 570; over Congo region, 572; over Madagascar, 573; over Indo-C!!hina, 574 ff.; extent of French power in the East, 577. Combes, anti-clerical policy of, 562 ff. Committee of Pubhc Safety, 308 ff. Commune of Paris, government of, under Revolution, 299, 300; outbreak of, in 1871, 513-516. Communes (free), aided by Louis VI, 52. See also Cities. Concini, 132. Concordat, between Napoleon (while First Consul) and Pope, 357; repealed in 1905, 563. Cond6, general of Louis XIV, 144, 148, 149. Congo Region, French occupation in, 572. "Congregations," Rehgious, under Third Repubhc, 561, 562. Congress of Paris, 480, 482. Conscription, under Napoleon I, 378. Constitution, of the Directory, 326; of Sec- ond Republic, 459; of Second Empire, 472; of 1875 (for Third Republic), 533. Constitutional clergy, under Terrorists, 315. Consul, First. See Bonaparte, Napoleon. "Continental Blockade," 343. Convention, National, elected 1792, 303 ff.; parties in, 304; tries the king, 305; orders his death, 306. Corday, Charlotte, 319. Coucy, seigneurial motto of, 45. , Coup d'etat (of Louis Napoleon), 466-69. Court, royal, under Louis XVI, 246 ff. Cr6cy, battle of, 87. Crimean War, 478-79. Cromwell, ally of French, 149. Crusades, essentially a French movement. INDEX 637 53; part of French chivalry in most of them, 53, 54. Curfe, parish clergy, under Old Rfigime, 258. D'Alembert, 232. Danton, 288 ff.; kindles patriotism against Prussians, 300; stirs up France to extend "freedom" to other countries, 307; is exe- cuted, 320. "Day of Dupes," 140. "Days of June," 458. Debt, public, increase of, under Old Re- gime, 252. Declaration of Rights of Man, 280. D'Enghien executed, 361. Departments, substituted for Provinces, 279, 280.. Diderot, 232. Directory, institution of, 326 ff . ; govern- ment by, 328; is overthrown by Bona- parte, 329. Dover, Treaty of, 176. Dreyfus "Affair," beginning of, 553; anti- Semitic element in, 555; Dreyfus de- fended by Zola and others, 556; given new trial, 558; is pardoned, 559; is vindicated, 559; results of Dreyfus "Affair," 560. Druids, 10; suppressed by Romans, 12. Dubois, Cardinal, 198. Dumouriez, 301 ; turns traitor, 307. Dupleix, 20S. Edward III (of England), 86 £f. Education, reformed by Napoleon I, 373. Empire, First. See Napoleon I. Empire, Second. See Napoleon III. Ems telegram, 498. "Encyclopaedia," the, 232 S. EnterUe Cordiale, 581 ff. Esterhazy, culprit in Dreyfus "Affair," 555 ff. Etiquette, of court under Louis XIV, 155 ff. Eudes, Count of Paris, 38, 39. Eugenie, Empress, arbitress of fashion, 481; visits Suez Canal, 493; flees to England, 504, 505. Extravagance, of court, under Old Regime, 247. FalliSres, presidency of, 565. Festival of Reason, in Notre Dame, 319. Festival of the Supreme Being, 322. Feudal courts, under Old Regime, 250. Feudalism, origin and growth, 42 ff.; ranks and institutions in, 44-45; castle center of- 45, 46; life in times of, 64 ff.; warfare under, 68-69; limitations to comfort un- der, 70; condition of peasantry under, 75. Feudal lords, great princes in Hugh Capet's time, 47. Feuds (private warfare), mediseval, 68-69. Fiscal system, under Old Regime, 251 ii. Fleury, Cardinal, 199. Foch, made commander-in-chief of the Al- lied armies, war of 1914-18, 595; launches successful attack on Germans, 598, 599; declared benefactor of country, 599. Forbach, battle of, 502. Fouch6, 371. Fouquet, 159, 160. "Fourth of August," legislation of, 275. France (geographical) , located between northern and southern Europe, 1; area of, 2; main distances across, 3; indented coast of, 3; great central plateau of, 4; river val- leys of, 4-7; Garonne system, 5; Loire sys- tem, 5; Seine system, 6; Flemish region, 6; Rhone system, 6-7; cUmate, 7; great forests of, 8. Francis I, 112-13; captured at Pavia, 113. Francis II, 118. Franco-Prussian War, 496 ff.; results of, 516; extreme bitterness of French over, 517, 518. Frankfort, Treaty of, 523. Frankland: under Merovingians, 21; under Carolingian "Mayors of the Palace," 22 ff.; under Carolingian "kings," 25 ff.; conditions in, at end of eighth century, 26; dissolution of, under later Carclingi- ans, 36 ff.; replaced by "France," 41. Franklin, Benjamin, in France, 241. Franks, 18 ff . ; pass under power of Clovie, 18. See Frankland. French language, widely diffused iti 18th century, 214; wide literary influence of, 222. Fronde, civil wars, 148. Gabelle, salt tax, 254. Gambetta, rouses France in 1870, 507; or- ganizes great armies, 507, 508; fails to save Paris, 509, 510; tours France in 1874, 531; bitterly criticizes MacMahon, 538; his death, 544. Garonne river system, 5. Gaul, invaded by Germanic tribes, 15; pene- trated by Christianity, 15-16; becomes CathoUc Christian country, 16. Gauls, contact with Greeks, 9; of Celtic race, 9; culture and habits of, 10-11; con- quered by Romans, 11, 12; condition un- der Roman rule, 12-14; Romanization of, 13-15. GSnSralitis, 247, 248. German War (1914-18), beginning of, 583; sore ordeal for France, 584, 585; condi- tion of France at outbreak of, 585; spirit of French people in 1914, 586; letter illus- trative of national temper, 587; battle of 638 INDEX Marne, 588; defense of Verdun, 589, 590; heavy strain of war on France, 590; disas- trous attack by Nivelle, 591; pacifist agi- tation, 591; American aid comes slowly, 591; Kussian collapse, 592; Clemenceau, Prime Minister of France, 592 ff.; great German drive on Paris, 594, 595; repulae of Germans with American aid, 596; Clemenceau defies critics, 597; Foch de- feats Germans, 598, 599; Germans appeal for armistice, 599; celebrations over vic- tory, 600; what the war had cost France, 600, 601; the war evinces power of the French people, 601; Treaty of Versailles, 602. Germanic tribes, invade Gaul, 15, 16; over- run country in 5th century, 17. Girondists, 287 ff.; attack royal power, 294; lose control of Convention, 309; leaders are executed, 317. Gramont, de, 496, 498, 499. Grasse, de, French Admiral at Yorktown, 240. Gravelotte, battle of, 502. Great War. See German War. Greeks settle in "Gaul," 9. Gr6vy, becomes President, 539; obhged to resign, 548. Guesclin, du, 91. Guild and trade corporations, before 1789, 263, 264. Guilds, labor, under Restoration, 446-48. Guillotine, statistics of victims of 1793-94, 318. Guise, dukes of, 119, 121 S. Guizot, 413; becomes Prime Minister, 425; inglorious character of his administration, 428; corruption in his government, 429; rejects demand for electoral reform, 435; outbreak against him, February, 1848, 436; resigns, 436, 437; later career, 438 n. Hubert, atheist and Jacobite, 319. Henry I, 49. Henry II, 113 ff.: captures Metz, 113; recap- tures Calais, 114. Henry III, 118, 121. Henry IV ("of Navarre**)* 121 ff.; warfare with the Cathohc League, 123; wins bat- tle of Ivry, 124; becomes a Catholic. 125; becomes accepted king, 126; wise policy of reforms, 127 ff.; is murdered, 130. 'Henry V" (Chambord, pretender), 528 ff. Henry V (of England), wins battle of Agin- cotu-t, 92; makes Treaty of Troyes, 93. Hohenlinden, battle of, 338. Holbach, 233. Holland, attacked by France, 177. Homage, ceremony of, 45. Hugh Capet, becomes king of "France" and founds new dynasty, 41; his doznin- ions and vassals, 47. Huguenots, rise of party, 116 ff.; given tol- eration by Henry IV, 127; deprived of po- htical power by Richelieu, 135; perse- cuted by Louis XIV, 179 ff.; flee from France, 183. Hundred Days, 390-93. Hundred Years' War, 86 ff.; final defeat of English, 98; results of the war, 98-99. India, French in, 207, 208. Indo-China, French occupation of, 574 fif, Intendants, 150, 159, 247, 248. Italian wars (1495-1559), 108 ff. Ivry, battle of, 124. Jacobins, 288 ff.; in the Convention, 304, 305. Jansenists, oppressed by Jesuits, 216 ff. Jeanne Dare ("Joan of Arc"), 95-97. Jemappes, battle of, 307. Jena, battle of, 342, 343. Jesuits, downfall of, 218, 219. Joffre, his orders at the battle of the Marne, 588. John, King, 88; defeated and taken at Poi- tiers, 88. Josephine de Beauharnais, marries Bona- parte, 331; divorced, 346. July Monarchy. See Louis-Philippe. "July Revolution" (1830), 414-17, Kellermann, 302. Knighthood, 66. Lafayette, goes to America, 239 ; com- mands National Guard, in French Revo- lution, 277, 278. Languedoc, dialect of South France, 47. Languedoil, dialect of North France, 47. La Rochelle, Protestant stronghold, 116; taken by Richeheu, 135. Lavoisier, 221. Law, John, charlatan financier, 198 n. Law of the Maximum, 313. Legal systems, under Old Regime, 249. Legislative Assembly, 286 ff.; has friction with King, 290; declares war on Aiistria, 291; gives place to "National Conven- tion," 303. Lettres de cachet, 245. Levy en masse, in 1793, 311. Lodi, battle of, 336. Loire river system, 5. Lombardy, conquest of, by Charlemagne, 33. Lorraine ("Lothair's land"), first creation of. 37. Lothair, 37. Loubet, presidency of, 566. INDEX Louis (I) the Pious, weak reign of, 36-37. Louis VI, 50; his vigorous rule, 50-51; re- pulses Germans, 51; assists "free com- munes," 52. Louis VII, marries Eleanor of Guienne, 52; struggle with Henry II of England, 53; participates in Crusade, 54. Loms IX (St. Louis), 59 ff.; his mother, Blanche, regent, 60; his admirable charac- ter, 60; his crusade, 61; rule and reforms in France, 61, 62; strengthens kingship by his virtues, 62; dies as a saint, 62, 63. Louis X, 85. Louis XI, 99 ff.; struggle with Bm-gundy, 100-04; Pfironne incident, 102 n.; useful measures by, 105; his despicable charac- ter, 105-06. Louis XII, 110; his contest for Italy, 111. Loxiis XIII, 132 ff.; makes RicheUeu "First Minister," 134; sustains Richelieu against enemies, 136-40. Loxiis^ XIV, begins nominal reign, 146; is pupil of Mazarin, 150; assumes actual government, 152; autocratic notions of, 153; position as "Sun King," 154; eti- quette of his court, 155; relations to nobil- , ity, 157; his ministers and secretaries, 158-59; served by Colbert, 160 ff.; his army reorganized by Louvois, 165; great military power of, 166, 167; wins diplo- matic triumph over Spain, 171; humili- ates Pope Alexander VII, 171; pmrchases Dunkirk from England, 172; literary life in his reign, 172-73; embarks on schemes for vast conquests, 174; character of his wars, 1 75 ; attacks Spain, 176 ; makes treaty with Charles II of England, 176; attacks Holland, 177; makes Treaty of Nimwegen, 179; persecutes Huguenots, 179 ff.; revokes edict of Nantes, 181-83; builds Versailles, 184, 185; seizes Stras- bourg, 186; wages war against "League of Augsburg, " 187; makes Treaty of Rys- wick, 188; involved in Spanish succession Question, 188; begins War of Spanish Suc- cession, 191; is badly defeated, 192, 193; makes Treaty of Utrecht, 193 ; leaves France in miserable condition, 193; bears his adversity bravely, 194; death, 194. Louis XV, reign of, 196 ff.; comes to crown a minor, 197; nominally assumes govern- ment, 199; his early popularity, 199, 200; his evil character, 200; his immorality and mistresses, 201, 202 ; his extravagance, 203; wars in his reign, 204 ff. ; engages in Seven Years' War, 209; makes disastrous Peace of Paris, 211; dies, 212. Louis XVI, becomes king, 234; character of, 234, 235; his queen, 235, 236; his brothers, 236; has Turgot as Minister, 236; has Necker as Minister, 237; has Calonne as Minister, 238; wages war for American Independence, 239; convenes States Gen- eral, 270; unable to control it, 271; yields to " National. Assembly," 272; visits Paris, July, 1789, 275; forced to withdraw to Paris, Oct. 5, 1789, 278; flight to Va- rennes, 284; restored to throne, 285; de- posed, 297; brought to trial, 305; is exe- cuted, 306. Louis XVIII, proclaimed king, 389; flees to Ghent on return of Napoleon, 390; condi- tion of France after Restoration, 395-97; his character and abilities, 400, 401 ; grants the "Charter," 402; quarrels with Ultras, 406; obliged to submit to them, 409; dies, 410. Louis Napoleon. See Napoleon III. Louis-Philippe, first comes to prominence, 416; becomes king by July Revolution, 418; character as Duke of Orleans, 419, 420; accepts revision of "Charter," 421; dull character of his reign, 422; attempts against his life, 423 ; little real liberty un- der him, 423; is very friendly to boiu"- geoisie, 423; has Thiers as Minister, 424; allows funeral of Napoleon, 425; makes Guizot Prime Minister, 425; inglorious character of his reign, 428; economic progress under, 429; Algeria conquered in his name, 430; revolt against him, Feb- ruary, 1848, 436, 437; abdicates, 437; dies in exile, 438; personal habits of, 441. Louvois, reorganizes French army, 165-67. Lugdunum (modern Lyons), capital of Ro- man Gaul, 14. Lutetia (modern Paris) founded by Romans, 13. Luxembourg, French attempt to gain, 489, 490. Luynes, de, 132. Lyons, punished by Convention, 310- MacMahon, beaten at Worth, 501; surren- ders at Sedan, 503; puts down Commune, 514, 515; presidency of, 527 ff.; attempts "parliamentary Cou-p d'^tat,'^ 1877, 536; resigns presidency, 539, Madagascar, French occupation of, 573, 574. Magenta, battle of, 483. Manor, as economic and social unit, 27. Marat, 288 ff.; is mtirdered, 319. Marie Antoinette, character of, 235; en- courages reactionary movements, 276, 277; favors war with Austria, 291; sent to scaffold, 317. Marie de' Medici, 132 ff,; quarrels with Richelieu, 139; flees into banishment, 1401 Marlborough, British general, 191-93. 640 INDEX Marmont, surrenders Paris, 388; fails to subdue Paris for Charles X, 415. Marseilles ("Maasalia"), settled by Greeks, 9. Marseilles battalion, 295. Marseillaise, first use of, 295. Massacres in prisons, September, 1792, 301. "Massalia." ^ee Marseilles. "Mayor of the Palace" (Major Domus), 21 ff.; struggles between rival "Mayors, "22. Mazarin, 146 £F.; administration and charac- ter of, 150, 151. Merovingians (dynasty of Clevis), 21 ff.; deposed by Pepin the Short, 25. Metric system, adoption of, 314. Metternich, defies Napoleon, 386; domi- nates European politics, 396. Metz, captured by French, 113; attacked by Germans, 502; surrendered by Bazaine, 510. Mexico, French intervention in, 486-87. Mirabeau, 272 ff. Mississippi Company, 198 n. Monks, mediEeval, 72. Montcalm, 209. Montesquieu, 223. Moreau, 338. Morny, de, 464. 465, 468, 469. Morocco question, 581, 582. Moscow, campaign of, 383, 384. Mountaineers, 287 ff. Murat, made King of Naples, 347. Nantes, Edict of, 127; its revocation, 181- 83. Napoleon I (Napoleon Bonaparte), becomes Emperor, 339; his coronation, 340; de- feats Austria and Russia at Austerlitz, 341; defeats Prussia, 342; dictates Peace of Tilsit, 343 ; orders ' ' blockade ' ' of Britain, 344; invades Spain, 345; defeats Austria again, 346; divorces Josephine, 346; marries Maria Louisa, 346; pacific reformer as well as military conqueror, 349; bad condition of France when he took power, 350-51 ; constitution under the Consulate, 352; veiled absolutism, 353; institution of prefects, 354; judicial re- forms, 354; his views on religion, 356; Concordat with Pope, 357; causes legal code to be prepared, 358; conspired against by Royalists, 360; executes D'Enghien, 361; suppresses political lib- erty, 363; abilities and characteristics of, 365-67; methods of transacting business, 367; personal habits as Emperor, 368; his court, 368, 369; arbitrary imprisonments by, 371 ; suppression of free speech, 371 ; es- tablishes "University," 372; cares for ed- ucation, 373; inculcates "piety," 374; im- prisons Pope Pius VII, 375; vast extent ot his dominions, 377; becomes unpopular through conscription, 378; promotes in- dustry and public works, 379; his posi- tion in 1811, 381; wastage in his army,' 382; quarrels with Czar, 382; Moscow campaign, 383, 384; defies Metternich, 386; loses battle of Leipzig, 387; forced to abdicate, 388; retires to Elba, 389; re- turns to France, 390; defeated at Water- loo, 392; abdicates second time, 393; ban- ished to St. Helena, where he dies, 394; funeral of (1840), 426. Napoleon III (Louis Napoleon), early ca- reer of, 426, 460, 461; filibustering at- tempts, 461, 462; elected president, 462; relations with Repubhcan Assembly, 463; makes bid for dictatorship, 464; methods of intrigue, and helpers, 465; Coup d'etat, 466-69; wins plebiscite, 469; becomes Em- peror, 470; constitution under him, 472; pretense of popular liberties, 474; abun- dance of police supervision, 475; he is friendly to Clericals, 476; mediocrity of his ministers, 477; involved in Crimean War, 478 ; presides over Congress of Paris, 480; height of his prosperity, 481; marries Eugenie, 481 ; visited by Victoria, 481; Moltke's comment on his regime, 483; at war with Austria in Italy, 483; annexes Savoy and Nice, 484; permits growth of opposition, 485; intervenes in Mexico, 486; ordered out by United States, 487; is hoodwinked by Bismarck, 488, 489; tries to get Luxembourg, 489; criticized by Rochefort, 490; grants parlia- mentary control, 491; criticized by Gam- betta, 492; sustained by plebiscite, 492; material prosperity under, 494, 495; in. volved in war with Prussia, 497 ff. ; evil state of French army under him, 500; speedy defeats of French, 501, 502; sur- renders at Sedan, 503; deposed, 504. National Assembly, created from States General, 271; its actions, 272 ff.; abol- ishes feudal rights, 275, 276; establishes legal equality, 279; general reform legisla- tion, 280; quarrels with Church, 282, 283; dissolves itself, 285. National Defense, Government of, 1870, 504, 505 ff. "National workshops," 455; operation of, 456; ordered abolished, 457^ outbreaks as consequence, 458. Necker, Finance Minister, 237. Ney, deserts to Napoleon, 390; executed, 406. Nice, annexed to France, 484. Nimwegen, Treaty of, 179. Noblesse, under Old Regime, 259 ff.; high INDEX 641 nohlease, 260; country noblesse, 260, 261; noblesse of the robe, 261. Normandy, set off as duchy, 40; becomeB rival power to kings of France, 50; con- quered by Philip Augustus, 56. Northmen, ravages of, 38-39; settle in Nor- mandy, 40. Ollivier, Prime Minister, 491, 496, 499; re- signs, 502. Orders, privileged and non-privileged, 256 ff. Orleans, saved by Jeanne Dare, 94-96. Orleans, Philip of. Regent, 198, 199. Oudenarde, battle of, 192. Pan-German conspiracy, directed against France, 580, 581. Paris (Roman Lutetia) foundation of, 13; siege of, by Northmen, 38-39; center for Hugh Capet's duchy of "France," 41; growth of, under Restored Monarchy, 448; architecture and street life, 449, 450; discomforts of life in, before 1848, 451; improved lighting system in, 452; siege of 1870-71, 503 ff.; surrender of, 510, 511; devastated by the Commune, 513-16. Parlement of Paris, supports Fronde, 148; coerced by Louis XIV, 215; defends Jan- senists, 217; defies Louis XV, 218; over- throws Jesuits, 218; abolished by Louis XV, 219, 220; restored by Louis XVI, 220. Pavia, battle of, 113. Peasantry, before 1789, 264; their fearful burdens, 265; poverty and wretchedness of, just before Revolution, 266. Pepin of Heristal, 23. Pepin "the Short," 25. Philip I, 50. Philip II ("Augustus"), character, 54; struggle with Henry II, 55; with Richard the Lion-Hearted, 55-56; defeats John, 56-57; conquers Normandy, 56; and An- jou, 57; wins battle of Bouvines, 57; his successful administration and glory, 58. Philip III, 82. Philip IV ("the Fair"), 82 ff.; quarrels with Boniface VIII, 82-84; convokes States General, 83 ; Suppresses Templars, 84 n. Philip V, 85. Philip VI, of Valois, 85 ff.; quarrels with Edward III, 86; defeated at Cr6cy, 87. Phocseans, settle "Massalia," 9. Picquart, defends Dreyfus, 555 ff. Pius VII, Pope, imprisoned by Napoleon I, 375. Pius X, Pope, relations with France, 563 ff. Poincar6, becomes president, 566. Polignac, 412; publishes illegal "ordi- nances," 414; driven from power, 416. Pompadour, Marquise de, 201, 202. Popes open relations with Frankish kings» 25; with Charlemagne, 32-33. Poverty, in Prance just before 1789, 266. Prefects, institution of, 354. Prussia, war with Revolutionary France, 291 ff. See also Franco-Prussian War. Punishments, crimiual, under Old Regime, 251. Purchase of royal offices, under Old Re- gime, 250. Pyrenees, Peace of the, 149, 150, Quesnay, 233. Ramillies, battle of, 192. Reformation, in France, 114 ff. RepubUc, Second, 453 ff. Republic, Third, proclaimed after Sedan, 504. "Republican marriages" at Nantes, 311. Restoration (of Bourbons) , condition of France under, 397 ff. Revolutionary tribunal, 308. Rhone river system, 6-7. Richard "the Lion-Hearted," 55. Richelieu, Cardinal, career of, 133 ff.; be- comes "First Minister," 134; takes La Rochelle, 135; resists conspiracies against him, 136-40; his policies against the no- bles, 136, 138; vigorous foreign policy, 141 ; successful last years, 143-45; charac- ter, 145. River systems, of France, 4-7. Robert I, 49. Robespierre, 289 ff.; becomes "dictator," 319; destroys Danton, 320; executes his drastic policy, 321 ; his power undermined, 322, 323; his downfall, 324; his execution, 325. Rocroi, battle of, 144. Rollo, first Duke of Normandy, 40. Roman Empire, Western, fall of, 17. Romans, conquer Gaul, 11-12; their rule in Gaul, 12-15; found cities in Gaul, 13; di- vide Gaul into six provinces, 14; make Lugdunum (Lyons) capital, 14. Rossbach, battle of, 210. Rousseau, 228 ff.; his "Social Contract," 229; "back to nature" theories, 230. Royal Power, in 18th century, 244; decline of, 246. Ryswick, Treaty of, 188. Saarbrucken, 501. Sadowa, battle of, effect on France, 489. St. Bartholomew's day, massacre of, 120-21. Salic Law (of succession to crown of France), 85. Salt tax, 254. Savoy, annexed to France, 484. 642 INDEX Saxony, conquest of, by Charlemagne, 31. Second Empire, 472 £f,; overthrown, 504. See also Napoleon III. Second Republic, proclamation of, in 1848, 438; first stages of, 453; factions within, 454; election of Constituent Assembly, 456; "Days of June," under, 458; Consti- tution of, 459; overthrown by Louis Na- poleon, 470. Secret Societies, under Restoration, 445. Sedan, battle of, 503. Seigneurs (feudal lords), status of, 44; rela- tions of, with vassals and suzerain, 46. Seine river system, 6. September massacres, 301. Serfs, mediseval, condition of, 75 ff.; how became free, 77. Seven Years' War, 209 ff. "Social Contract," of Rousseau, 229-31. Socialism, nature of, in modern France, 566 n. Society, in Prance 1815-48, 439-41; influ- enced by Bnglish example, 442. Solferino, battle of, 483. "South Country" (Midi), in feudal times, 47. Spain, invaded by Napoleon, 345 ff. Spanish succession, problem of, 188; war of, 191 ff. States General, first summoned by Philip IV, 83; controlled by radicals after Poi- tiers, 89; futile meeting in 1614, 134; or- dered convened by Louis XVI, 242; elec- tion, composition, and convening of, in 1789, 270; attempt of Third Estate to control, 271; declares self "National As- sembly," 271; outline of institution and list of meetings (Appendix), 611-15. Strasbourg, taken by French, 186; surren- ders to Prussians, 508; recovered by French, 600. Suez Canal, opening of, 493. Sully, wise reforms of, 127-30. Swiss guard, defends Tuileries for Louis XVI, 296. Syagrius, 17, 18. Taille, direct tax, 252, 253. Taxes, under Old Regime, 252 ff. Tennis Court, Oath of, 272. "Tenth of August," attack on Tuileries, 296. "Terror, Reign of," beginning of the, 314; end of the, 325. Thiers, "Chief of Executive Power," 521; makes peace with Germany, 523; dis- trusted by Monarchists, 623, 524; pays off German indemnity, 524; reorganizes army, 524, 525; retires from office, 526, 527. Third Estate, under Old ESgime, 262 ff. Third Republic, first years of, 520; con- trolled by Thiers, 521; regularly organ- ized in 1875, 532; organic laws of, 533 ff. "Thirteenth of Vend^miaire" (Royalist up- rising), 327. Tilsit, Peace of, 343. Toulon, taken from English, 313. Toulouse, crusade against heresy in, 59; brought under Capetian royal power, 59. Tours, battle of, 24-25. Trafalgar, battle of, 341. Troyes, Treaty of, 93. Tuileries, attack on, August 10, 1792, 296. Tunis, French protectorate in, 568. Turenne, 144, 148; his genius, 167; honored by Louis XIV, 168. Turgot, Finance Minister, 236; his reforms, 237; is driven from office, 237. "Twenty" tax (^vingtihme), 253. Ultras, 405 ff.; force reactionary changes, 408, 409; supported by Charles X, 411. University, founded by Napoleon, 372. Uz6s, Duchesse de, supports Boulanger, 550. Valmy, battle of, 302. Vassal, condition of, 43 ff. Vassalage, feudal, 67-68. Vauban, 169. Vercingetorix, 12. Verdun, Treaty of, 37. Vernacular languages, growing use of, 74. Versailles, built by Louis XIV, 184, 185; Treaty of, 602. Villa Franca, Peace of, 484. Villdle, 412. Visigoths, 17, 20. Voltaire, influence of, 224; personal career of, 224 ff.; attacks Catholic Church, 225; voluminous writings of, 226; visits Fred- erick the Great, 227; vast influence of, 228. Waldeck-Rousseau, Prime Minister, at- tacks religious Congregations, 561, 562. "Wars of Religion," 116 ff. Waterloo, battle of, 392, 393. Weissenburg, battle of, 501. "White Flag" incident, 629, 530. William the Norman ("the Conqueror"). 50. William of Orange (William III of Ene- land),177ff. Women, condition of, in feudal ages 67. World War. See German War. Worth, battle of, 601. Zola, defends Dreyfus, 566 ff.