<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0310" id="link2HCH0310"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XII—DISORDER A PARTISAN OF ORDER </h2>
<h3> Bossuet muttered in Combeferre's ear: </h3>
<p>"He did not answer my question."</p>
<p>"He is a man who does good by gun-shots," said Combeferre.</p>
<p>Those who have preserved some memory of this already distant epoch know
that the National Guard from the suburbs was valiant against
insurrections. It was particularly zealous and intrepid in the days of
June, 1832. A certain good dram-shop keeper of Pantin des Vertus or la
Cunette, whose "establishment" had been closed by the riots, became
leonine at the sight of his deserted dance-hall, and got himself killed to
preserve the order represented by a tea-garden. In that bourgeois and
heroic time, in the presence of ideas which had their knights, interests
had their paladins. The prosiness of the originators detracted nothing
from the bravery of the movement. The diminution of a pile of crowns made
bankers sing the Marseillaise. They shed their blood lyrically for the
counting-house; and they defended the shop, that immense diminutive of the
fatherland, with Lacedaemonian enthusiasm.</p>
<p>At bottom, we will observe, there was nothing in all this that was not
extremely serious. It was social elements entering into strife, while
awaiting the day when they should enter into equilibrium.</p>
<p>Another sign of the times was the anarchy mingled with governmentalism
[the barbarous name of the correct party]. People were for order in
combination with lack of discipline.</p>
<p>The drum suddenly beat capricious calls, at the command of such or such a
Colonel of the National Guard; such and such a captain went into action
through inspiration; such and such National Guardsmen fought, "for an
idea," and on their own account. At critical moments, on "days" they took
counsel less of their leaders than of their instincts. There existed in
the army of order, veritable guerilleros, some of the sword, like
Fannicot, others of the pen, like Henri Fonfrede.</p>
<p>Civilization, unfortunately, represented at this epoch rather by an
aggregation of interests than by a group of principles, was or thought
itself, in peril; it set up the cry of alarm; each, constituting himself a
centre, defended it, succored it, and protected it with his own head; and
the first comer took it upon himself to save society.</p>
<p>Zeal sometimes proceeded to extermination. A platoon of the National Guard
would constitute itself on its own authority a private council of war, and
judge and execute a captured insurgent in five minutes. It was an
improvisation of this sort that had slain Jean Prouvaire. Fierce Lynch
law, with which no one party had any right to reproach the rest, for it
has been applied by the Republic in America, as well as by the monarchy in
Europe. This Lynch law was complicated with mistakes. On one day of
rioting, a young poet, named Paul Aime Garnier, was pursued in the Place
Royale, with a bayonet at his loins, and only escaped by taking refuge
under the porte-coch�re of No. 6. They shouted:—"There's another of
those Saint-Simonians!" and they wanted to kill him. Now, he had under his
arm a volume of the memoirs of the Duc de Saint-Simon. A National Guard
had read the words Saint-Simon on the book, and had shouted: "Death!"</p>
<p>On the 6th of June, 1832, a company of the National Guards from the
suburbs, commanded by the Captain Fannicot, above mentioned, had itself
decimated in the Rue de la Chanvrerie out of caprice and its own good
pleasure. This fact, singular though it may seem, was proved at the
judicial investigation opened in consequence of the insurrection of 1832.
Captain Fannicot, a bold and impatient bourgeois, a sort of condottiere of
the order of those whom we have just characterized, a fanatical and
intractable governmentalist, could not resist the temptation to fire
prematurely, and the ambition of capturing the barricade alone and
unaided, that is to say, with his company. Exasperated by the successive
apparition of the red flag and the old coat which he took for the black
flag, he loudly blamed the generals and chiefs of the corps, who were
holding council and did not think that the moment for the decisive assault
had arrived, and who were allowing "the insurrection to fry in its own
fat," to use the celebrated expression of one of them. For his part, he
thought the barricade ripe, and as that which is ripe ought to fall, he
made the attempt.</p>
<p>He commanded men as resolute as himself, "raging fellows," as a witness
said. His company, the same which had shot Jean Prouvaire the poet, was
the first of the battalion posted at the angle of the street. At the
moment when they were least expecting it, the captain launched his men
against the barricade. This movement, executed with more good will than
strategy, cost the Fannicot company dear. Before it had traversed two
thirds of the street it was received by a general discharge from the
barricade. Four, the most audacious, who were running on in front, were
mown down point-blank at the very foot of the redoubt, and this courageous
throng of National Guards, very brave men but lacking in military
tenacity, were forced to fall back, after some hesitation, leaving fifteen
corpses on the pavement. This momentary hesitation gave the insurgents
time to re-load their weapons, and a second and very destructive discharge
struck the company before it could regain the corner of the street, its
shelter. A moment more, and it was caught between two fires, and it
received the volley from the battery piece which, not having received the
order, had not discontinued its firing.</p>
<p>The intrepid and imprudent Fannicot was one of the dead from this
grape-shot. He was killed by the cannon, that is to say, by order.</p>
<p>This attack, which was more furious than serious, irritated Enjolras.—"The
fools!" said he. "They are getting their own men killed and they are using
up our ammunition for nothing."</p>
<p>Enjolras spoke like the real general of insurrection which he was.
Insurrection and repression do not fight with equal weapons. Insurrection,
which is speedily exhausted, has only a certain number of shots to fire
and a certain number of combatants to expend. An empty cartridge-box, a
man killed, cannot be replaced. As repression has the army, it does not
count its men, and, as it has Vincennes, it does not count its shots.
Repression has as many regiments as the barricade has men, and as many
arsenals as the barricade has cartridge-boxes. Thus they are struggles of
one against a hundred, which always end in crushing the barricade; unless
the revolution, uprising suddenly, flings into the balance its flaming
archangel's sword. This does happen sometimes. Then everything rises, the
pavements begin to seethe, popular redoubts abound. Paris quivers
supremely, the quid divinum is given forth, a 10th of August is in the
air, a 29th of July is in the air, a wonderful light appears, the yawning
maw of force draws back, and the army, that lion, sees before it, erect
and tranquil, that prophet, France.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0311" id="link2HCH0311"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XIII—PASSING GLEAMS </h2>
<p>In the chaos of sentiments and passions which defend a barricade, there is
a little of everything; there is bravery, there is youth, honor,
enthusiasm, the ideal, conviction, the rage of the gambler, and, above
all, intermittences of hope.</p>
<p>One of these intermittences, one of these vague quivers of hope suddenly
traversed the barricade of the Rue de la Chanvrerie at the moment when it
was least expected.</p>
<p>"Listen," suddenly cried Enjolras, who was still on the watch, "it seems
to me that Paris is waking up."</p>
<p>It is certain that, on the morning of the 6th of June, the insurrection
broke out afresh for an hour or two, to a certain extent. The obstinacy of
the alarm peal of Saint-Merry reanimated some fancies. Barricades were
begun in the Rue du Poirier and the Rue des Gravilliers. In front of the
Porte Saint-Martin, a young man, armed with a rifle, attacked alone a
squadron of cavalry. In plain sight, on the open boulevard, he placed one
knee on the ground, shouldered his weapon, fired, killed the commander of
the squadron, and turned away, saying: "There's another who will do us no
more harm."</p>
<p>He was put to the sword. In the Rue Saint-Denis, a woman fired on the
National Guard from behind a lowered blind. The slats of the blind could
be seen to tremble at every shot. A child fourteen years of age was
arrested in the Rue de la Cossonerie, with his pockets full of cartridges.
Many posts were attacked. At the entrance to the Rue Bertin-Poiree, a very
lively and utterly unexpected fusillade welcomed a regiment of
cuirrassiers, at whose head marched Marshal General Cavaignac de Barague.
In the Rue Planche-Mibray, they threw old pieces of pottery and household
utensils down on the soldiers from the roofs; a bad sign; and when this
matter was reported to Marshal Soult, Napoleon's old lieutenant grew
thoughtful, as he recalled Suchet's saying at Saragossa: "We are lost when
the old women empty their pots de chambre on our heads."</p>
<p>These general symptoms which presented themselves at the moment when it
was thought that the uprising had been rendered local, this fever of
wrath, these sparks which flew hither and thither above those deep masses
of combustibles which are called the faubourgs of Paris,—all this,
taken together, disturbed the military chiefs. They made haste to stamp
out these beginnings of conflagration.</p>
<p>They delayed the attack on the barricades Maubuee, de la Chanvrerie and
Saint-Merry until these sparks had been extinguished, in order that they
might have to deal with the barricades only and be able to finish them at
one blow. Columns were thrown into the streets where there was
fermentation, sweeping the large, sounding the small, right and left, now
slowly and cautiously, now at full charge. The troops broke in the doors
of houses whence shots had been fired; at the same time, manoeuvres by the
cavalry dispersed the groups on the boulevards. This repression was not
effected without some commotion, and without that tumultuous uproar
peculiar to collisions between the army and the people. This was what
Enjolras had caught in the intervals of the cannonade and the musketry.
Moreover, he had seen wounded men passing the end of the street in
litters, and he said to Courfeyrac:—"Those wounded do not come from
us."</p>
<p>Their hope did not last long; the gleam was quickly eclipsed. In less than
half an hour, what was in the air vanished, it was a flash of lightning
unaccompanied by thunder, and the insurgents felt that sort of leaden
cope, which the indifference of the people casts over obstinate and
deserted men, fall over them once more.</p>
<p>The general movement, which seemed to have assumed a vague outline, had
miscarried; and the attention of the minister of war and the strategy of
the generals could now be concentrated on the three or four barricades
which still remained standing.</p>
<p>The sun was mounting above the horizon.</p>
<p>An insurgent hailed Enjolras.</p>
<p>"We are hungry here. Are we really going to die like this, without
anything to eat?"</p>
<p>Enjolras, who was still leaning on his elbows at his embrasure, made an
affirmative sign with his head, but without taking his eyes from the end
of the street.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />