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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Evolution of an Empire, by Mary Parmele
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Evolution of an Empire
+ A Brief Historical Sketch of France
+
+Author: Mary Parmele
+
+Release Date: October 15, 2010 [EBook #34071]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE EVOLUTION OF AN EMPIRE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Al Haines
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+EVOLUTION OF AN EMPIRE
+
+
+
+A BRIEF HISTORICAL SKETCH OF
+
+FRANCE
+
+
+
+BY
+
+MARY PARMELE
+
+
+_Author of "Evolution of Empire Series, Germany;"
+ "Who? When? What? Literature Chart."_
+
+
+
+NEW YORK
+
+WILLIAM BEVERLEY HARISON,
+
+59 FIFTH AVENUE
+
+1894
+
+
+
+
+PUBLISHED AND COPYRIGHTED, 1894,
+
+BY
+
+WILLIAM BEVERLEY HARISON,
+
+59 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK CITY.
+
+
+
+ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED BY
+
+THE PUBLISHERS' PRINTING COMPANY
+
+182-186 WEST 14TH STREET
+
+NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+In an attempt to tell the story of a great nation in about 100 pages,
+it is needless to say there must be a rigid exclusion of all save
+essential facts. To those already familiar with the subject, this
+sketch is offered merely as a reminder of the sequence of conditions
+and events in the evolution of France; while to the student it is
+presented as a framework upon which may be placed, in orderly and
+comprehensible fashion, the results of future reading and research.
+
+To the latter class I would suggest that a series of papers, written
+upon the most prominent themes found in the Table of Contents, will
+bear fruit in knowledge more real and vital than may be obtained from
+the writings of others, however eloquent and vivid the presentation.
+
+M. P.
+
+NEW YORK, July 23d, 1894.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+The Aryan Family of Nations--Keltic Race--Ancient Gaul--Gauls in
+Rome--Gauls in Greece and in Asia Minor
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Roman Conquest of Gaul--Julius Cæsar
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Birth of Christianity--Its Dissemination--Persecution at Lyons by order
+of Marcus Aurelius--The Roman Empire Espouses Christianity under
+Constantine
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Gaul Overrun and Subjugated by Franks--Clovis King--Decay of the
+Merovingian Line--_Maire du Palais_ King _de facto_--Charles
+Martel--Birth of Mohammedanism--Its Triumphs--Christendom
+Threatened--Pepin King--Charlemagne--Alliance with Pope--France, Italy,
+and Germany Emerge as Separate Nationalities
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+The Northmen--Beginnings of Feudalism in France--Normandy Bestowed upon
+the Northmen--Conquest of England by William, Duke of
+Normandy--Albigenses--Inquisition at Toulouse--The Crusades
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+Decline of Feudalism--Creation of the Commune--Charles VII.--Henry V.
+in France--Joan of Arc
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+Francis I.--Huguenots--Catharine de Medici--Francis II.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+Massacre of St. Bartholomew--Henry III.--Henry IV.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+Edict of Nantes--Louis XIII.--Richelieu
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+Louis XIV.--Revocation of the Edict of Nantes--Louis XV.--Age of
+Voltaire and Rousseau--The Gathering Storm
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette--American Colonies Arrayed Against
+England--French Aid to America--Smouldering Fires of Discontent--Louis
+Convokes States-General--National Assembly Created by Commons--Bastille
+Attacked--Revolution--Execution of King
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+Napoleon Bonaparte--Toulon--Campaign in Italy--Empire
+Established--Europe Under the Feet of the Great Corsican--Marie
+Louise--Waterloo--Louis XVIII.--Charles X.--Louis Philippe--Second
+Republic--Louis Napoleon President--Second Empire--Napoleon
+III.--Franco-Prussian War--Sedan--Third Republic--Review of Present
+Conditions
+
+
+
+
+EVOLUTION OF AN EMPIRE.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+One of the greatest achievements of modern research is the discovery of
+a key by which we may determine the kinship of nations. What we used
+to conjecture, we now know. An identity in the structural form of
+language establishes with scientific certitude that however diverse
+their character and civilizations, Russian, German, English, French,
+Spaniard, are all but branches from the same parent stem, are all alike
+children of the Asiatic Aryan.
+
+So skilful are modern methods of questioning the past, and so
+determined the effort to find out its secrets, we may yet know the
+origin and history of this wonderful Asiatic people, and when and why
+they left their native continent and colonized upon the northern shores
+of the Mediterranean. Certain it is, however, that, more centuries
+before the Christian era than there have been since, they had peopled
+Western Europe.
+
+This branch of the Aryan family is known as the Keltic, and was older
+brother to the Teuton and Slav, which at a much later period followed
+them from the ancestral home, and appropriated the middle and eastern
+portions of the European Continent.
+
+The name of Gaul was given to the territory lying between the Ocean and
+the Mediterranean, and the Pyrenees and the Alps. And at a later
+period a portion of Northern Gaul, and the islands lying north of it,
+received from an invading chieftain and his tribe the name _Brit_ or
+_Britain_ (or Pryd or Prydain).
+
+If the mind could be carried back on the track of time, and we could
+see what we now call France as it existed twenty centuries before the
+Christian era, we should behold the same natural features: the same
+mountains rearing their heads; the same rivers flowing to the sea; the
+same plains stretching out in the sunlight. But instead of vines and
+flowers and cultivated fields we should behold great herds of wild ox
+and elk, and of swine as fierce as wolves, ranging in a climate as cold
+as Norway; and vast inaccessible forests, the home of beasts of prey,
+which contended with man for food and shelter.
+
+Let us read Guizot's description of life in Gaul five centuries before
+Christ:
+
+"Here lived six or seven millions of men a bestial life, in dwellings
+dark and low, built of wood and clay and covered with branches or
+straw, open to daylight by the door alone and confusedly heaped
+together behind a rampart of timber, earth, and stone, which enclosed
+and protected what they were pleased to call--a _town_."
+
+Such was the Paris, and such the Frenchmen of the age of Pericles! And
+the same tides that washed the sands of Southern Gaul, a few hours
+later ebbed and flowed upon the shores of Greece--rich in culture, with
+refinements and subtleties in art which are the despair of the world
+to-day--with an intellectual endowment never since attained by any
+people.
+
+The same sun which rose upon temples and palaces and life serene and
+beautiful in Greece, an hour later lighted sacrificial altars and
+hideous orgies in the forests of Gaul. While the Gaul was nailing the
+heads of human victims to his door, or hanging them from the bridle of
+his horse, or burning or flogging his prisoners to death, the Greek,
+with a literature, an art, and a civilization in ripest perfection,
+discussed with his friends the deepest problems of life and destiny,
+which were then baffling human intelligence, even as they are with us
+to-day. Truly we of Keltic and Teuton descent are late-comers upon the
+stage of national life.
+
+There was no promise of greatness in ancient Gaul. It was a great
+unregulated force, rushing hither and thither. Impelled by insatiate
+greed for the possessions of their neighbors, there was no permanence
+in their loves or their hatreds. The enemies of to-day were the allies
+of to-morrow. Guided entirely by the fleeting desires and passions of
+the moment, with no far-reaching plans to restrain, the sixty or more
+tribes composing the Gallic people were in perpetual state of feud and
+anarchy, apparently insensible to the ties of brotherhood, which give
+concert of action, and stability in form of national life. If they
+overran a neighboring country, it seemed not so much for permanent
+acquisition, as to make it a camping-ground until its resources were
+exhausted.
+
+We read of one Massillia who came with a colony of Greeks long ages
+ago, and after founding the city of Marseilles, created a narrow bright
+border of Greek civilization along the Southern edge of the benighted
+land. It was a brief illumination, lasting only a century or more, and
+leaving few traces; but it may account for the superior intellectual
+quality of the southern provinces in future France.
+
+It requires a vast extent of territory to sustain a people living by
+the chase, and upon herds and flocks; hence the area which now amply
+maintains thirty-five millions of Frenchmen was all too small for six
+or seven million Gauls; and they were in perpetual struggle with their
+neighbors for land--more land.
+
+"Give us land," they said to the Romans, and when land was denied them
+and the gates of cities disdainfully closed upon their messengers, not
+land, but vengeance, was their cry; and hordes of half-naked barbarians
+trampled down the vineyards, and rushed, a tumultuous torrent, upon
+Rome.
+
+The Romans could not stand before this new and strange kind of warfare.
+The Gauls streamed over the vanquished legions into the Eternal City,
+silent and deserted save only by the Senate and a few who remained
+intrenched in the Citadel; and there the barbarians kept them besieged
+for seven months, while they made themselves at home amid
+uncomprehended luxuries.
+
+Of course Roman skill and courage at last dislodged and drove them
+back. But the fact remained that the Gaul had been there,--master of
+Rome; that the ironclad legions had been no match for his naked force,
+and a new sensation thrilled through the length and breadth of Gaul.
+It was the first throb of national life. The sixty or more fragments
+drew closer together into something like Gallic unity--with a common
+danger to meet, a common foe to drive back.
+
+Hereafter there was another hunger to be appeased besides that for food
+and land; a hunger for conquest, for vengeance, and for glory for the
+Gallic name. National pride was born.
+
+For years they hovered like wolves about Rome. But skill and superior
+intelligence tell in the centuries. It took long--and cost no end of
+blood and treasure; but two hundred years from the capture of Rome, the
+Gauls were driven out of Italy, and the Alps pronounced a barrier set
+by Nature herself against barbarian encroachments.
+
+Italy was not the only country suffering from the destroying footsteps
+of the Western Kelts. There had been long ago an overflow of a tribe
+in Northern Gaul (the Kymrians), which had hewed and plundered its way
+south and eastward; until at the time of Alexander (340 B.C.) it was
+knocking at the gates of Macedonia.
+
+Stimulated by the success at Rome fifty years earlier, they were, with
+fresh insolence, demanding "land," and during the centuries which
+followed, the Gallic name acquired no fresh lustre in Greece.
+Half-naked, gross, ferocious and ignorant, sometimes allies, but always
+a scourge, they finally crossed the Hellespont (278 B.C.), and turned
+their attention to Asia Minor. And there, at last, we find them
+settled in a province called Gallicia, where they lived without
+amalgamating with the people about them; it is said, even as late as
+400 years after Christ, speaking the language of their tribal home
+(what is now Belgium). And these were the Galatians--the "foolish
+Galatians," to whom Paul addressed his epistle; and we have followed up
+this Gallic thread simply because it mingles with the larger strand of
+ancient and sacred history with which we are all so familiar.
+
+
+It is not strange that Roman courage and endurance became a by-word.
+Her fibre was toughened by perpetual strain of conflict. Even while
+she was struggling with Gaul and while the echoes of the Hunnish
+invasion were still resounding through the Continent, Hannibal, with
+his hosts, was pouring through Gaul and gathering accessions from that
+people as he swept down into Italy. Then, with the memories of the
+Carthagenian wars still fresh at Rome, the Goths were at her
+gates,--their blows directed with a solidity superior to that of the
+barbarians who had preceded them. Where the Gauls had knocked, the
+Goths thundered.
+
+Again the city was invaded by barbarian feet, and again did superior
+training and intelligence drive back the invading torrent and triumph
+over native brute force.
+
+Such, in brief outline, was the condition of the centuries just before
+the Christian era.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+The making of a nation is not unlike bread or cake making. One element
+is used as the basis, to which are added other component parts, of
+varying qualities, and the result we call England, or Germany, or
+France. The steps by which it is accomplished, the blending and fusing
+of the elements, require centuries, and the process makes what we
+call--history.
+
+It was written in the book of fate that Gaul should become a great
+nation; but not until fused and interpenetrated with two other
+nationalities. She must first be humanized and civilized by the Roman,
+and then energized and made free from the Roman by the Teuton.
+
+The instrument chosen for the former was Julius Cæsar, and for the
+latter--five centuries later--Clovis, the Frankish leader. It is safe
+to affirm that no man has ever so changed the course of human events as
+did Julius Cæsar. Napoleon, who strove to imitate him 1800 years
+later, was a charlatan in comparison; a mere scene-shifter on a great
+theatrical stage. Not a trace of his work remains upon humanity to-day.
+
+Cæsar opened up a pathway for the old civilizations of the world to
+flow into Western Europe, and the sodden mass of barbarism was infused
+with a life-compelling current. This was not accomplished by placing
+before the inferior race a higher ideal of life for imitation, but by a
+mingling of the blood of the nations--a transfusion into Gallic veins
+of the germs of a higher living and thinking--thus making them heirs to
+the great civilizations of antiquity.
+
+No human event was ever fraught with such consequences to the human
+race as the conquest of Gaul by Julius Cæsar.
+
+The Gallic wars had for centuries drained the treasure and taxed the
+resources of Rome. Cæsar conceived the audacious idea of stopping them
+at their source--in fact, of making Gaul a Roman province.
+
+It was a marvellous exhibition, not simply of force, but of force
+wielded by supreme intelligence and craft. He had lived four years
+among this people and knew their sources of weakness, their internal
+jealousies and rivalries, their incohesiveness. When they hurled
+themselves against Rome, it was as a mass of sharp fragments. When the
+Goths did the same, it was as one solid, indivisible body. Cæsar saw
+that by adroit management he could disintegrate this people, even while
+conquering them.
+
+By forcibly maintaining in power those who submitted to him, being by
+turns gentle and severe, ingratiating here, terrifying there, he
+established a tremendous personal force; and during nine years carried
+on eight campaigns, marvels in the art of war, as well as in the
+subtler methods of negotiation and intrigue. He had successively dealt
+with all the Gallic tribes, even including Great Britain, subjugating
+either through their own rivalries, or by his invincible arm.
+
+Equally able to charm and to terrify, he had all the gifts, all the
+means to success and empire, that can be possessed by man. Great in
+politics as in war, as full of resource in the forum as on the
+battle-field, he was by nature called to dominion.
+
+It was not as a patriot, simply intent upon freeing Rome of an
+harassing enemy, that he endured those nine years in Gaul--not as a
+great leader burning with military ardor that he conducted those eight
+campaigns. The conquest of Gaul meant the greater conquest of Rome.
+The one was accomplished; he now turned his back upon the devastated
+country, and prepared to complete his great project of human ascendency.
+
+Rome was mistress of the world; he--would be master of Rome.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+While the Star of Empire was thus moving toward the West, another and
+brighter star was about to arise in the East. So accustomed are we to
+the story, that we lose all sense of wonder at its recital.
+
+Julius Cæsar's brief triumph was over. Marc Antony had recited his
+virtues over his bier, Rome had wept, and then forgotten him in the
+absorbing splendors of his nephew Augustus. In an obscure village of
+an obscure country in Asia Minor, the young wife of a peasant finds
+shelter in a stable, and gives birth to a son, who is cradled in the
+straw of a manger, from which the cattle are feeding.
+
+Can the mind conceive of human circumstances more lowly? The child
+grew to manhood, and in his thirty-three years of life was never lifted
+above the obscure sphere into which he was born; never spoke from the
+vantage-ground of worldly elevation,--simply moving among people of his
+own station in life, mechanics, fishermen, and peasants, he told of a
+religion of love, a gospel of peace, for which he was willing to die.
+
+Who would have dreamed that this was the germ of the most potent, the
+most regenerative force the world had ever known? That thrones,
+empires, principalities, and powers would melt and crumble before his
+name? Of all miracles, is not this the greatest?
+
+The passionate ardor with which this religion was propagated in the
+first two centuries had no motive but the yearning to make others share
+in its benefits and hopes; and to this end to accept the belief that
+Jesus Christ had come in fulfilment of a long-promised Saviour,--who
+should be sent to this world clothed with divine authority to establish
+a spiritual kingdom, in which he was King of Kings, Lord of Lords,
+Mediator between us and the Father, of whom he was the "only begotten
+Son."
+
+The religion in its essence was absolutely simple. Its founder summed
+it up in two sentences,--expressing the duty of man to man, and of man
+to God. That was all the Theology he formulated.
+
+For two centuries the religion of Christ was an elementary spiritual
+force. It appealed only to the highest attributes and longings of the
+human soul, and under its sustaining influence frail women, men, and
+even children were able to endure tortures, of which we cannot read
+even now without shuddering horror.
+
+
+Nature's method of gardening is very beautiful. She carefully guards
+the seed until it is ripe, then she bursts the imprisoning walls and
+gives it to the winds to distribute. Precisely such method was used in
+disseminating Christianity. It was not for one people--it was for the
+healing of the nations, and its home was wherever man abides.
+
+Nearly five decades after Christ's death upon the cross, Jerusalem was
+destroyed by Titus. The home of Christianity was effaced. At just the
+right moment the enclosing walls had broken, and freed to the winds the
+germs in all their primitive purity.
+
+Imperial favor had not tarnished it, human ambitions had not employed
+and degraded it, nor had it been made into complex system by ingenious
+casuists. The pure spiritual truth, unsullied as it came from the hand
+of its founder, was scattered broadcast, as the band of Christians
+dispersed throughout the Roman Empire, naturally forming into
+communities here and there, which became the centres of Christian
+propagandism. Lyons in Gaul was such a centre.
+
+
+The fires of persecution had been lighted here and there throughout the
+Empire, and the Emperor Nero, under whom the Apostles Peter and Paul
+are said to have suffered martyrdom, had amused himself by making
+torches of the Christians at Rome. But until 177 A.D. Gaul was exempt
+from such horrors.
+
+Marcus Aurelius--that peerless pagan,--large in intelligence, exalted
+in character, and guided by a conscientious rectitude which has made
+his name shine like a star in the lurid light of Roman history, still
+failed utterly to comprehend the significance of this spiritual kingdom
+established by Christ on earth. He it was who ordered the first
+persecution in Gaul. In pursuance of his command, horrible tortures
+were inflicted at Lyons upon those who would not abjure the new faith.
+
+A letter, written by an eye-witness, pictures with terrible vividness
+the scenes which followed. Many cases are described with harrowing
+detail, and of one Blandina it is said: "From morn till eve they put
+her to all manner of torture, marvelling that she still lived with her
+body pierced through and through and torn piecemeal by so many tortures
+of which a single one should have sufficed to kill her, to which she
+only replied, 'I am a Christian.'"
+
+The recital goes on to tell how she was then cast into a dungeon,--her
+feet compressed and dragged out to the utmost tension of the
+muscles,--then left alone in darkness, until new methods of torture
+could be devised.
+
+Finally she was brought, with other Christians, into the amphitheatre,
+hanging from a cross to which she was tied, and there thrown to the
+beasts. As the beasts refused to touch her she was taken back to the
+dungeon to be reserved for another occasion, being brought out daily to
+witness the fate and suffering of her friends and fellow-martyrs; still
+answering the oft-repeated question--"I am a Christian."
+
+The writer goes on to say, "After she had undergone fire, the talons of
+beasts, and every agony which could be thought of, she was wrapped in a
+network and thrown to a bull, who tossed her in the air"--and her
+sufferings were ended.
+
+Truly it cost something to say "I am a Christian" in those days.
+
+Marcus Aurelius probably gave orders for the persecution at Lyons, with
+little knowledge of what would be the nature of those persecutions, or
+of the religion he was trying to exterminate. Some of the hours spent
+in writing introspective essays would have been well employed in
+studying the period in which he lived, and the Empire he ruled.
+
+Paganism and Druidism, those twin monsters, receded before the
+advancing light of Christianity. Neither contained anything which
+could nourish the soul of man, and both had become simply badges of
+nationality.
+
+Druidism was the last stronghold of independent Gallic life. It was a
+mixture of northern myth and oriental dreams of metempsychosis, coarse,
+mystical, and cruel. The Roman paganism which was superimposed by the
+conquering race was the mere shell of a once vital religion. Educated
+men had long ceased to believe in the gods and divinities of Greece,
+and it is said that the Roman augurs, while giving their solemn
+prophetic utterances, could not look at each other without laughing.
+
+
+In the year 312, alas for Christianity, it was espoused by imperial
+power. When the Emperor Constantine declared himself a Christian,
+there was no doubt rejoicing among the saints; but it was the beginning
+of the degeneracy of the religion of Christ. The faith of the humble
+was to be raised to a throne; its lowly garb to be exchanged for purple
+and scarlet, the gospel of peace to be enforced by the sword.
+
+The Empire was crumbling, and upon its ruins the race of the future and
+social conditions of modern times were forming. Paganism and Druidism
+would have been an impossibility. Christianity even with its lustre
+dimmed, its purity tarnished, its simplicity overlaid with
+scholasticism, was better than these. The miracle had been
+accomplished. The great Roman Empire had said: "I am Christian."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Gaul had been Latinized and Christianized. Now one more thing was
+needed to prepare her for a great future. Her fibre was to be
+toughened by the infusion of a stronger race. Julius Cæsar had shaken
+her into submission, and Rome had chastised her into decency of
+behavior and speech, but as her manners improved her native vigor
+declined. She took kindly to Roman luxury and effeminacy, and could no
+longer have thundered at the gates of her neighbors demanding "land."
+
+But at last the great Roman Empire was dying, and even degenerate Gaul
+was struggling out of her relaxing grasp. In her extremity she called
+upon the Franks, a powerful Germanic race, to aid her. This people had
+long looked with covetous eyes at the fair fields stretching beyond the
+Rhine, and lost no time in accepting the invitation. They overspread
+the land, and Gaul and Roman alike were submerged beneath the Teuton
+flood, while the Frankish Conqueror, Clovis (son of the great
+Merovaæus), was at Paris (or "Lutetia") wearing the kingly crown.
+
+Such was the beginning of independent and of dynastic life in France.
+
+Rome had found a more powerful ally than she hoped; and the desire of
+Gaul was accomplished in that she was free from Rome. But the king of
+whom she had dreamed was of her own race; not this terrible Frank. Had
+she exchanged one servitude for another? Had she been, not set free,
+but simply annexed to the realm of the Barbarian across the Rhine? Let
+us say rather that it was an espousal. She had brought her dowry of
+beauty and "land," that most coveted of possessions, and had pledged
+obedience, for which she was to be cherished, honored, and protected,
+and to bear the name of her lord.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ancient heroes are said to be seen through a shadowy lens, which
+magnifies their stature. Let us hope that the crimes of the three or
+four generations immediately succeeding Clovis have been in like manner
+expanded; for it is sickening to read of such monstrous prodigality of
+wickedness. Whole families butchered, husbands, wives,
+children--anything obstructing the path to the throne--with an atrocity
+which makes Richard III. seem a mere pigmy in the art of intrigue and
+killing. The chapter closes with the daughter and mother of kings
+(Brunehilde or Brunhaut) naked and tied by one arm, one leg and her
+hair to the tail of an unbroken horse, and amid jeers and shouts dashed
+over the stones of Paris (600 A.D.).
+
+But even the Frank succumbed to the enervating Gallic influence. The
+Merovingian line commenced by Clovis faded from ferocity into
+imbecility. Its Kings in less than two centuries had become mere
+lay-figures, wearing the symbols of an authority which existed nowhere,
+unless in the _Maire du Palais_.
+
+This office from being a sort of royal stewardship had grown to be the
+governing power _de facto_. While Theodoric, the Phantom King, was
+having his long locks dressed and perfumed, his _Maire du Palais_,
+Charles, was moulding and welding his kingdom, and at the same time
+staying the Mohammedan flood which was pouring over the Pyrenees; and,
+by his final and decisive blow in defence of the Christianity espoused
+by Clovis, earning the name _Charles Martel_ (the hammer).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Less than one hundred years after the death of Clovis, there had come
+out of Asia, that birthplace of religions, a new faith, which was
+destined to be for centuries the scourge of Christendom, and which
+to-day rules one-third of the human family. Zoroaster, Buddha, Christ,
+had successively come with saving message to humanity, and now (600
+A.D.) Mohammed believed himself divinely appointed to drive out of
+Arabia the idolatry of ancient Magianism (the religion of Zoroaster).
+
+Christianity had passed through strange vicissitudes. Kings, Emperors,
+Popes, and Bishops had been terrible custodians of its truths, and
+while many still held it in its primitive purity, ecclesiastics were
+fiercely fighting over the nature of the Trinity, the divinity of the
+Virgin Mother, and the Church was shaken to its foundation by furious
+factions.
+
+In this hour of weakness, the Persians (590 A.D.) had conquered Asia
+Minor. Bethlehem, Gethsemane, and Calvary were profaned; the Holy
+Sepulchre had been burned, and the cross carried off amid shouts of
+laughter. Magianism had insulted Christianity, and no miracle had
+interposed! The heavens did not roll asunder, nor did the earth open
+her abysses to swallow them up. There was consternation and doubt in
+Christendom.
+
+Such was the state of the Church when Mohammedanism came into
+existence. "There is but one God, and Mohammed is his Prophet." Such
+was its battle-cry and its creed, and the moral precepts of the Koran
+its gospel. There seems nothing in this to account for the mad
+enthusiasm and the passion for worship in its followers. But in less
+than a hundred years this lion out of Arabia had subjected Syria,
+Mesopotamia, Egypt, Northern Africa, and the Spanish Peninsula. Now,
+sword in one hand, and the Koran in the other, the Mohammedan had
+crossed the Pyrenees and was in Southern Gaul.
+
+Under the strange magic of this faith, the largest religious empire the
+world had known had sprung into existence, stretching from the Chinese
+Wall to the Atlantic; from the Caspian to the Indian Ocean; and
+Jerusalem, the metropolis of Christianity-Jerusalem, the Mecca of the
+Christian, was lost! The crescent floated over the birthplace of our
+Lord, and notwithstanding the temporary successes of the Crusades, it
+does to this day.
+
+If the Pyrenees were passed, the very existence of Christendom was
+threatened. Charles Martel, the grandfather of Charlemagne, averted
+this danger when he stayed the infidel flood at the battle of Tours,
+732 A.D.
+
+Pepin, the son of Charles Martel, who succeeded him as _Maire du
+Palais_, does not seem to have had the temper or spirit of an usurper,
+but simply to have been an energetic, resolute man who was bored by the
+circumlocution of governing through a King who did not exist. He
+determined to put an end to the fiction, and to cut the Gordian knot by
+first cutting the long curls of the last Merovingian, Childeric; and
+then putting the crown upon his own head, he sent the unfortunate
+phantom of royalty to a monastery, to reflect upon the uncertainty of
+human pleasures and events. By right of manhood and superiority, the
+Carlovingian line had succeeded to the Merovingian.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Against the dark background of European history, and with the broad
+level of obscurity stretching over the ages at its feet, there rises
+one shining pinnacle. Considered as man or sovereign, Charlemagne is
+one of the most impressive figures in history. His seven feet of
+stature clad in shining steel, his masterful grasp of the forces of his
+time, his splendid intelligence, instinct even then with the modern
+spirit, all combine to elevate him in solitary grandeur.
+
+Charlemagne found France in disorder measureless, and apparently
+insurmountable. Barbarian invasion without, and anarchy within; Saxon
+paganism pressing in upon the North, and Asiatic Islamism upon the
+South and West; a host of forces struggling for dominion in a nation
+brutish, ignorant, and without cohesion.
+
+It is the attribute of genius to discern opportunity where others see
+nothing. Charlemagne saw rising out of this chaos a great resuscitated
+Roman empire, which should be at the same time a spiritual and
+Christian empire as well. Saxons, Slavs, Huns, Lombards, Arabs, came
+under his compelling grasp; these antagonistic races all held together
+by the force of one terrible will, in unnatural combination with
+France. No political liberties, no popular assemblies discussing
+public measures; it is Charlemagne alone who fills the picture; it is
+absolutism,--marked by prudence, ability, and grandeur, but still,
+absolutism.
+
+The Pope looked approvingly upon this son of the Church by whose order
+4,500 pagan heads could be cut off in one day, and a whole army
+compelled to baptism in an afternoon. Here was a champion to be
+propitiated! Charlemagne, on the other hand, saw in the Church the
+most compliant and effective means to empire. In the loving alliance
+formed, he was to be the protector, the Pope the protected. He wore
+the Church as a precious jewel in his crown.
+
+It was a splendid dream, splendidly realized; the most imposing of
+human successes, and the most impressive of human failures. It seems
+designed as a lesson for the human race in the transitory nature of
+power applied from without.
+
+The vast fabric passed with himself; was gone like a shadow when he was
+gone. The unity of the Empire was buried in the grave of its founder.
+In twenty-nine years (by the treaty of Verdun) three kingdoms emerged
+from the crumbling mass. France, Italy, Germany, already separated by
+race repulsions, had taken up each a distinct national existence, the
+Imperial crown remaining with Germany.
+
+And France--France, the centre of this dream of unity, with her native
+incohesiveness, and in the irony of fate, had broken into no less than
+59 fragments, loosely held together by one Carlovingian King.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+I think that it was Lincoln who said that "the Lord must like common
+people, because he had made so many of them." The path for the common
+people in France at this time led through heavy shadows. But a darker
+time was approaching. A system of oppression was maturing, which was
+soon to envelop them in the obscurity of darkest night.
+
+Those Scandinavian freebooters called Northmen, and later Normans, were
+the scourge of the kingdom. Nothing was safe from their insolent
+courage and rapacity.
+
+The rich could intrench themselves in stone fortresses, with moats and
+drawbridges, and be in comparative security, but the poor were utterly
+defenceless against this perennial destroyer. The result was a compact
+between the powerful and the weak, which was the beginning of the
+Feudal System. It was in effect an exchange of protection for service
+and fealty. You give us absolute control of your persons--your
+military service when required, and a portion of your substance and the
+fruit of your toil--and we will in exchange give you our fortified
+castles as a refuge from the Northmen. Such was the offer. It was a
+choice between vassalage, serfdom, or destruction outright.
+
+Simple enough in its beginnings, this became a ramified system of
+oppression, a curious network of authority, ingeniously controlling an
+entire people. The conditions upon which was engrafted this compact
+were of great antiquity, had indeed been brought across the Rhine by
+their German conquerors; but the Northmen were the impelling cause of
+the swift development of feudalism in France.
+
+Charlemagne had felt grave apprehensions of evil from these robber
+incursions, but could not have conceived of a result such as this, the
+most oppressive system ever fastened upon a nation, and one which would
+at the same time sap the foundations of royalty itself.
+
+The theory was that the King was absolute owner of all the territory;
+the great lords holding their titles from him on condition of military
+service, their vassals pledging military service and obedience to them
+again on similar terms, and sub-vassals again to them repeating the
+pledge; and so on in descending chain, until at last the serf, that
+wretched being whom none looks up to nor fears, is ground to powder
+beneath the superimposed mass. No appeal from the authority, no escape
+from the caprice or cruelty of his feudal lord. Could any scales
+weigh, could any words measure the suffering which must have been
+endured? Is it strange, with every aspiration thwarted, hope stifled,
+that Europe sank into the long sleep of the Middle Ages?
+
+
+It is easy to conceive that under such a system, where all the affairs
+of the realm were adjusted by individual rulers with unlimited power,
+and where the great barons could make war upon each other without
+authorization from the King, that by the time this nominal head of the
+entire system was reached, there was nothing for him to do. In fact,
+there was not left one vestige of kingly authority, and Carlovingian
+rulers were almost as insignificant as their Merovingian predecessors.
+France had, instead of one great sovereign, 150 petty ones!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In 911 A.D. the Northmen were offered the province henceforth known as
+Normandy, upon condition of their acceptance of the religion and
+submission to the laws of the realm. Rollo, the disreputable
+robber-chief, took the oath of fealty to the King of France his
+Suzerain, and Christian baptism transformed him into respectable,
+law-abiding Robert, Duke of Normandy.
+
+With marvellous facility this people took on the language and manners
+of their neighbors, and in a century and a half were prepared to
+instruct the Britons in a higher civilization.
+
+I think it is one hundred years of respectability that is required by a
+certain aristocratic club for admission to its membership. The blood
+does not acquire the proper shade of azure until it has flowed in the
+full light of day for at least three generations. Decidedly, William
+the Conqueror, first Norman King of England, could not have been
+admitted to this club.
+
+A century before his birth, his ancestors had lived by looting their
+neighbors. They were highwaymen, robbers, by profession. And, to
+increase his ineligibility, his mother, a pretty Norman peasant girl,
+daughter of a tanner, had ensnared the affections of that pleasant Duke
+of Normandy, known as "Robert the Devil."
+
+William, the fruit of this unconsecrated union, became in time Duke of
+Normandy. With that reversion to ancestral types to which scientists
+tell us we are all liable, he seems to have looked across the Channel
+toward England, with an awakening of his robber-instincts. In a few
+weeks, Harold, the last King of the Saxons, lay dead at his feet, and
+William, Duke of Normandy, was William I., King of England.
+
+Then was presented the curious anomaly of an English sovereign who was
+also ruler of a French province; an English king who was vassal to the
+King of France. A door was thus opened (1066 A.D.) through which
+entered entangling complications and countless woes in the future.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If Charlemagne had worn the Church as a precious jewel in his crown in
+the ninth century, the Church now in the eleventh century wore all the
+European states, a tiara of jewels in her mitre. The centre of
+dominion had passed from the Empire of Germany to Rome, when Henry IV.
+prostrated himself barefooted before Gregory VII. at Canossa in 1072.
+
+The Church was at its zenith. As a political system it was unrivalled;
+but its triumphs brought little joy to the earnest souls still clinging
+to the ideals of primitive Christianity. But what availed it for
+Abelard to lead an intellectual revolt against corrupted beliefs in the
+North, or the Albigenses a spiritual one in the South? He was silenced
+and immured for life, while the unhappy inhabitants of Languedoc were
+massacred and almost exterminated, and an inquisition, established at
+Toulouse, made sure that heretical germs should not again spread from
+that infected centre.
+
+But however imperfect the religious sentiment of the time, however it
+may have departed from the simple precepts of its founder, its power to
+sway the hearts and lives of the people may be judged from the
+extraordinary movement started in France in the twelfth century.
+
+How inconceivable, in this practical age, that Europe should three
+times have emptied her choicest and best into Asia for a sentiment!
+Business suspended, private interests sacrificed or forgotten, life,
+treasure, all eagerly given--for what? That a small bit of territory,
+a thousand miles away, be torn from profaning infidels, because of its
+sacred associations, because it was the birthplace of a religion whose
+meaning seems to have escaped them--a religion which they wore on their
+battle-flags, but not in their hearts. How would a barefooted,
+rope-girdled monk, however inspired and eloquent, fare to-day in New
+York, or London, or Paris?
+
+History has no stranger chapter than that of the Crusades. When Peter
+the Hermit pictured the desecration of the Holy Land by Mohammedans,
+all classes in France, from King to serf, were for the first time moved
+by a common sentiment, and poured life and treasure with passionate
+zeal into those streams which three times inundated Palestine.
+
+The order of Knights Templar had been created, and a splendid ideal of
+manhood held up before the French nation, and now the knightly ideal,
+side by side with the Christian and the romantic ideal, entered into
+the life of the people. Romance, song, poetry, eloquence came into
+being from a sort of spiritual baptism, and France began to wear the
+mantle of beauty which was to be her chief glory in the future.
+
+But future France was not clad in coat of mail in the twelfth century.
+She was lying helpless, beneath the mass of feudal trappings. Her time
+was not yet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+Like all oppressive systems, feudalism bore within itself the seeds of
+its own destruction. When the King, shorn of prerogative and of
+dignity, made alliance with the people lying in helpless misery beneath
+the mailed surface, the system was rudely shaken. When artisans
+flocked to the free cities enjoying especial immunities and privileges
+from the King, and by skill and industry amassed fortunes, the
+_commune_ and the _bourgeoisie_ were created, and feudalism was
+stricken to its centre. When spendthrift nobles and needy barons
+mortgaged their estates, the end was not far off. And when in 1302 the
+"_tiers état_" entered the States-General as a legitimate order of the
+Government, the very foundations were crumbling, and it needed but the
+final _coup de grâce_ given by Charles VII. in the fifteenth century,
+when he established a standing army under the control of the King.
+When this was done, the feudal system was relegated to the region of
+the obsolete.
+
+It was well for that sovereign that he could do something to save his
+name from the obloquy attached to it on account of his base desertion
+of Joan of Arc, to whom he owed his throne and his kingdom.
+
+From the moment when a French province was attached to the crown of
+England, the dream of that nation was the conquest of France.
+Generations came and went, one dynasty replaced another, and still the
+struggle continued; France sometimes seeming near to dominion over
+England, and England always believing it was her destiny to bring
+France under the rule of an English sovereign.
+
+A glamour of romance is thrown over history by the royal marriages
+which occur in dazzling profusion. It seems to have been the custom,
+whenever a peace was concluded in Europe, to cement it with a royal
+marriage, and to throw in a princess as a sacrifice,--one of the
+conditions of almost every treaty being that a royal daughter, or
+sister, or niece, should be tossed across the Channel, or into Germany,
+or Italy, or Spain, an unwilling bride thrown into the arms of a
+reluctant bridegroom; with the result that in the succeeding generation
+there was a plentiful sprinkling of heirs with claims, more or less
+shadowy, to the neighboring thrones. This was the source, or rather
+pretext, for most of the wars between France and England for four
+hundred years.
+
+In the early part of the fifteenth century the great crisis arrived.
+With that lack of unity which seemed a fatal Gallic inheritance, France
+broke into civil war, while an invading English army was in the heart
+of her kingdom. England's dream was near realization.
+
+An insane King, a vicious intriguing Queen-Regent, the Duke of Burgundy
+madly jealous of the Duke of Orleans, and both ready to sacrifice
+France in the rage of disappointed ambition,--such were the elements.
+England's opportunity had come.
+
+The depraved Queen Isabella, acting for her insane husband, held
+conference with Henry V., and actually concluded a treaty bestowing the
+regency upon the English King. There was the usual douceur of a
+princess thrown in, and Katharine, the daughter of Isabella, and sister
+to the Dauphin (the future King Charles VII.), was espoused by King
+Henry V. of England, who set up a royal court at Vincennes.
+
+The fortunes of the kingdom had never been so desperate. The people
+saw in these insolent traitorous dukes their natural enemy; in the
+King, their friend and protector. Had not monarchy given them life and
+hope? It was to them sacred next to Heaven. They rose in an outburst
+of patriotism. The young Dauphin was hastily and informally crowned,
+and thousands flocked to his standard. It was the King and the people
+against the great vassals, the last struggle of an expiring feudalism.
+Desperation lent fury to the conflict which was, upon both sides, a
+fight for existence; the Queen-mother in unnatural alliance with the
+Duke of Burgundy, who was resolved to rule or ruin.
+
+He soon saw that defeat was inevitable, and, preferring infamy, threw
+himself into the hands of the English, offering to turn the kingdom
+over to the infant King Henry VI. (Henry V. having died).
+
+Charles abandoned hope; how could he struggle against such a
+combination? He was considering whether he should find refuge in Spain
+or in Scotland, when the tide of events was turned by the strangest
+romance in history.
+
+
+It must ever remain a mystery that a peasant girl, a child in years and
+in experience, should have believed herself called to such a mission;
+conferring only with her heavenly guides or "voices," that she should
+have sought the King, inspired him with faith in her, and in himself
+and his cause, reanimated the courage of the army, and led it herself
+to victory absolute and complete; and then, compelling the
+half-reluctant, half-doubting Charles to go with her to Rheims, where
+she had him anointed and consecrated, this simple child in that day
+bestowed upon him a kingdom, and upon France a King!
+
+Was there ever a stranger chapter in history! Alas, if it could have
+ended here, and she could have gone back to her mother and her spinning
+and her simple pleasures, as she was always longing to do when her work
+should be done. But no! we see her falling into the hands of the
+defeated and revengeful English--this child, who had wrested from them
+a kingdom already in their grasp. She was turned over to the French
+ecclesiastical court to be tried. A sorceress and a blasphemer they
+pronounce her, and pass her on to the secular authorities, and her
+sentence is--death.
+
+We see the poor defenceless girl, bewildered, terrified, wringing her
+hands and declaring her innocence as she rides to execution. God and
+man had abandoned her. No heavenly voice spoke, no miracle intervened
+as her young limbs were tied to the stake and the fagots and straw
+piled up about her. The torch was applied, and her pure soul mounted
+heavenward in a column of flames.
+
+Rugged men wept. A Burgundian general said, as he turned gloomily
+away, "We have murdered a saint."
+
+And Charles, sitting upon the throne she had rescued for him, what was
+he doing to save her? Nothing--to his everlasting shame be it said,
+nothing. He might not have succeeded; the effort at rescue, or to stay
+the event, might have been unavailing. But where was his knighthood,
+where his manhood, that he did not try, or utter passionate protest
+against her fate?
+
+Twenty-five years later we see him erecting statues to her memory, and
+"rehabilitating" her desecrated name. And to-day, the Church which
+condemned her for blasphemy is placing her upon the calendar of saints,
+while all political parties alike are using her name as a thing to
+conjure with.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+The early part of the sixteenth century must ever be memorable in the
+history of Europe. Ferdinand and Isabella had given to the human race
+a new world. Luther had hurled his defiance at Rome--had arraigned Leo
+X. for blasphemy and corrupt practices. Henry V., grandson of
+Ferdinand and Isabella (and nephew of Katharine, wife of Henry VIII.)
+was Emperor of Germany. Astute and powerful though he was, he had been
+unable to stay the Protestant flood. His empire, apparently hungering
+for the new heresy, was divided already into States Protestant and
+States Catholic. England was Protestant. The conversion of her King,
+because the Pope refused to annul his marriage with Katharine, was not
+one of the proudest triumphs of the new faith, but one of the most
+important. Had Katharine's charms been fresher, or Anne Boleyn's less
+alluring, the course of history might have been strangely changed.
+Henry VIII. as persecutor of heretics would have found congenial
+occupation for his ferocious instincts, and Protestantism would have
+been long delayed. Spain was unchangeably Catholic, while France
+offered congenial soil for the new faith. The germs of heresy, long
+slumbering, were everywhere stirred into life.
+
+Francis I. was King; sumptuous in tastes, suave and elegant in manners,
+as handsome as an Apollo, gay, pleasure-loving, as vicious as he was
+false, and if need be with a cruelty which matched his ambition, such
+was the man who held the destinies of France at this time.
+
+A rival claimant for the throne of Germany, he was destined to spend
+his life in fruitless contest with the more able, wily, and astute
+Henry V., the possession of that Empire the ignis-fatuus ever luring
+him on; an end to which all other ends were simply the means. The
+religious question upon which Europe was divided meant nothing to him,
+except as he could use it in his duel with the Emperor. He was in turn
+the ally of Henry VIII. or the willing tool of Henry V. If he needed
+the English King's friendship, the Protestants had protection. If he
+desired to placate Henry V., the roastings and torturings commenced
+again.
+
+In 1547 Francis and Henry VIII. each went to his reward, and a few
+years later Henry V. had laid down his crown and carried his weary,
+unsatisfied heart to St. Yuste. The brilliant pageant was over; but
+Protestantism was expanding.
+
+The question at issue was deeper than any one knew. Neither Luther nor
+Leo X. understood the revolution they had precipitated. Protestants
+and Papists alike failed to comprehend the true nature of the struggle,
+which was not for supremacy of Romanist or Protestant; not whether this
+dogma or that was true, and should prevail; but an assertion of the
+right of every human soul to choose its own faith and form of worship.
+The great battle for human liberty had commenced; the struggle for
+religious liberty was but the prelude to what was to follow. There was
+abundant proof later that Protestants no less than Papists needed only
+opportunity and power to be as cruel and intolerant as their
+persecutors had been. Before the Reformation was fifty years old,
+Servetus, one of the greatest men of his age, a scholar, philosopher,
+and man of irreproachable character, was burned at Geneva for heretical
+views concerning the nature of the Trinity, Calvin, the great organizer
+of Protestant theology, giving, if not the order for this crime, at
+least the nod of approval.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Huguenot, that name of tragic association, was a corruption of the
+German _Eidgenossen_--meaning associates. By the way of Switzerland it
+came into France as _Eguenots_, and the transition to its present form
+was simple. The Huguenots were no longer a timorous band hiding in
+darkness as in the time of Francis I. A party with such leaders as
+Anthony de Bourbon, Prince of Condé (his brother), and Admiral Coligny,
+was not to be put down by a few roastings and stranglings here and
+there. Anthony de Bourbon (King of Navarre) was next in succession
+should the House of Valois become extinct, with a young son valiant as
+himself (the future Henry IV.) pressing on toward manhood.
+
+Catholic France needed plenty of comfort from Rome and Madrid in
+dealing with this formidable body of heretics which had fastened upon
+her vitals, and which was in turn receiving aid and comfort from the
+young Protestant Queen across the Channel.
+
+
+When that fair princess Catharine de Medici became the wife of Henry,
+second son of Francis I., no one suspected the tremendous import of the
+event. Powerless to win the affection or even confidence of her
+husband, she remained during his reign almost unobserved, but, as the
+event proved, not unobservant. Her alert faculties were not idle, and
+when upon the death of Henry II. she found herself Queen-Regent, with
+only a frail boy of sixteen to obstruct her will, she quickly gathered
+the threads she already knew so well, and her supple hand closed upon
+them with a grasp not to be relinquished while she lived.
+
+Another young Princess had been tossed across the Channel. This time
+it was her most serene little highness, Marie Stuart, Queen of
+Scotland, intended for the dauphin, who was to be Francis II.
+
+In order to be prepared for this high destiny, the little maid was
+brought when only six years old to the Court of France to be trained
+under the direct supervision of her future mother-in-law, Catharine de
+Medici. Poor little Marie Stuart--predestined to sin and to tragedy!
+Who could be good, with the blood of the Guises in her veins, and with
+Catharine de Medici as preceptress?
+
+This marriage was planned before Catharine's advent to power, or it
+would never have been. Marie was the niece of the Duke of Guise, and
+the central thought of Catharine's policy was the exclusion of this
+ambitious, intriguing family from every avenue to power in the state.
+Now, Marie would be Queen, and who so natural advisers as her uncles of
+the house of "Lorraine"?
+
+The marriage of the two children had taken place--the sickly boy with
+only a modest portion of intelligence was Francis II. Marie, his
+Queen, whom he adored, controlled him utterly, and was in turn
+controlled by her uncles, the Guises. The wily Catharine saw herself
+defeated by a beautiful girl of sixteen.
+
+The family of Guise was the self-appointed head of the Catholic party
+in France and represented the most extreme views regarding the
+treatment of heretics. So the strange result was, that Catharine, if
+she looked for any allies in her fight with the house of Lorraine, of
+which the Duke of Guise was the head, must make common cause with the
+Protestants, whom she hated a little less than she did the uncles of
+Marie Stuart. But events were soon to change the situation. Did she
+hasten them? Such a suspicion may never have existed. But may one not
+suspect anything of a woman capable of a St. Bartholomew?
+
+Francis II. was dead. Marie Stuart had passed out of French history.
+The fates were fighting on the side of Catharine, who wasted no regrets
+upon the death of a son, which made her Queen-Regent during the
+minority of her second son Charles. She entered upon her fight with
+the Guises with renewed energy, and became to some extent protector of
+the Protestants. Realizing that her time was brief, she prepared
+Charles for the position he would soon hold.
+
+What can be said of a mother who seeks to exterminate every germ of
+truth or virtue in her son--who immerses him in degrading vices in
+order to deaden his too sensitive conscience and make him a willing
+tool for her purposes? Inheriting the splendid intelligence as well as
+genius for statecraft of the de Medici, nourished from her infancy upon
+Machiavellian principles, cold and cruel by nature, this Florentine
+woman has written her name in blood across the pages of French history.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+There is not time to tell the story of the events leading up to that
+fateful night, August 24, 1572. Impelled always by her fear and dread
+of the Guises, Catharine had been vacillating in her policy with the
+Huguenots. Charles IX. was now King: impressible, easily influenced,
+yet stubborn, intractable, incoherent, passionate, and unreliable;
+sometimes inclining to the Guises, sometimes to Coligny and the
+Huguenots, and always submitting at last after vain struggle to his
+imperious mother's will, in her efforts to free him from both. We see
+in him a weak character, not naturally bad, torn to distraction by the
+cruel forces about him, who when compelled to yield, as he always did
+in the end, to that terrible woman, would give way to fits of impotent
+rage against the fate which allowed him no peace.
+
+A time arrived when Catharine feared the influence of the Protestant
+Coligny more than the Guises. Brave, patriotic, magnetic, he had
+succeeded in winning Charles' consent to declare war against Spain.
+Philip II. of Spain was Catharine's son-in-law and closest ally. Her
+entire policy would be undermined. At all hazards Coligny must be
+gotten rid of. The young King of Navarre, adored leader of the
+Protestants, was a constant menace; he too must in some way be disposed
+of.
+
+There were sinister conferences with Philip of Spain and with his
+Minister, that incarnation of cruelty and of the Inquisition, the Duke
+of Alva.
+
+God knows France was not guiltless in what followed; but the
+initiative, the inception of the horrid deed, was not French. It was
+conceived in the brain of either this Italian woman or her Spanish
+adviser and co-conspirator, the Duke of Alva. We will never know the
+inside history of the massacre of St. Bartholomew. It must ever remain
+a matter of conjecture just how and when it was planned, but the
+probabilities point strongly one way.
+
+Charles was to be gradually prepared for it by his mother, the plot
+revealed to him as he was in condition to bear it; by working upon his
+fears, his suspicions, by stories of plottings against his life and his
+kingdom, to infuriate him, and then--before his rage was exhausted--to
+act. The marriage of Charles' sister Margaret with the young
+Protestant leader Henry of Navarre, with its promise of future
+protection to the Huguenots, was part of the plot. It would lure all
+the leaders of the cause to Paris. Coligny, Condé, all the heads of
+the party were urgently invited to attend the marriage-feast which was
+to inaugurate an era of peace.
+
+Admiral Coligny was requested by Catharine, simply as a measure of
+protection to the Protestants, to have an additional regiment of guards
+in Paris, to act in case of any unforeseen violence.
+
+Two days after the marriage and while the festivities were at their
+height, an attempt upon the life of the old Admiral awoke suspicion and
+alarm. But Catharine and her son went immediately in person to see the
+wounded old man, and to express their grief and horror at the event.
+They commanded that a careful list of the names and abode of every
+Protestant in Paris be made, in order, as they said, "to take them
+under their own immediate protection." "My dear father," said the
+King, "the hurt is yours, the grief is mine."
+
+At that moment, the knives were already sharpened, every man instructed
+in his part in the hideous drama, and the signal for its commencement
+determined upon. Charles did not know it, but his mother did. She
+went to her son's room that night, artfully and eloquently pictured the
+danger he was in, confessed to him that she had authorized the attempt
+upon Coligny, but that it was done because of the Admiral's plottings
+against him, which she had discovered. But the Guises--her enemies and
+his--they knew it, and would denounce her and the King! The only thing
+now is to finish the work. He must die.
+
+Charles was in frightful agitation and stubbornly refused. Finally
+with an air of offended dignity she bowed coldly and said to her son,
+"Sir, will you permit me to withdraw with my daughter, from your
+kingdom?" The wretched Charles was conquered. In a sort of insane
+fury he exclaimed, "Well, let them kill him, and all the rest of the
+Huguenots too. See that not one remains to reproach me."
+
+This was more than she had hoped. All was easy now. So eager was she
+to give the order before a change of mood, that she flew herself to
+give the signal, fully two hours earlier than was expected. At
+midnight the tocsin rang out upon the night, and the horror began.
+
+Lulled to a feeling of security by artfully contrived circumstances,
+husbands, wives, sons, daughters, peacefully sleeping, were awakened to
+see each other hideously slaughtered.
+
+The stars have looked down upon some terrible scenes in Paris, her
+stones are not unacquainted with the taste of human blood, but never
+had there been anything like this. The carnage of battle is merciful
+compared with it. Shrieking women and children, half-clothed, fleeing
+from knives already dripping with human blood; frantic mothers
+shielding the bodies of their children, and wives pleading for the
+lives of husbands; the living hiding beneath the bodies of the dead.
+
+The cry that ascended to Heaven from Paris that night was the most
+awful and despairing in the world's history. It was centuries of
+cruelty crowded into a few hours.
+
+The number slain can never be accurately stated; but it was thousands.
+Human blood is intoxicating. An orgie set in which laughed at orders
+to cease. Seven days it continued and then died out for lack of
+material. The provinces had caught the contagion, and orders to slay
+were received and obeyed in all except two, the Governor of Bayonne, to
+his honor be it told, writing to the King in reply: "Your Majesty has
+many faithful subjects in Bayonne, but not one executioner."
+
+And where was "His Majesty" while this work was being done? How was it
+with Catharine? She was possibly seeing to the embalming of Coligny's
+head, which we learn she sent as a present to the Pope. We hear of no
+regrets, no misgivings, that she was calm, collected, suave and
+unfathomable as ever, but that Charles in a strange, half-frenzied
+state was amusing himself by firing from the windows of the palace at
+the fleeing Huguenots. Had he killed himself in remorse, would it not
+have been better, instead of lingering two wretched years, a prey to
+mental tortures and an inscrutable malady, before he died?
+
+Europe was shocked. Christendom averted her face in horror. But at
+Madrid and Rome there was satisfaction.
+
+Catharine and the Duke of Alva had done their work skilfully, but the
+result surprised and disappointed them. Tens of thousands of Huguenots
+were slain, which was well; but many times that number remained, with
+spirit unbroken, which was not well.
+
+They had been too merciful! Why had Henry of Navarre been spared? Had
+not Alva said, "Take the big fish and let the small fry go. One salmon
+is worth more than a thousand frogs."
+
+But Charles considered the matter settled when he uttered those
+swelling words to Henry of Navarre the day after the massacre: "I mean
+in future to have one religion in my kingdom. It is mass or death."
+
+
+Catharine's third son now wore the crown of France. In Henry III. she
+had as pliant an instrument for her will as in the two brothers
+preceding him; and, like them, his reign was spent in alternating
+conflict with the Protestants and the Duke de Guise. At last, wearied
+and exasperated, this half-Italian and altogether conscienceless King
+quite naturally thought of the stiletto. The old Duke, as he entered
+the King's apartment by invitation, was stricken down by assassins
+hidden for that purpose.
+
+Henry had not counted on the rebound from that blow. Catholic France
+was excited to such popular fury against him that he threw himself into
+the arms of the Protestants, imploring their aid in keeping his crown
+and his kingdom; and when himself assassinated, a year later, in the
+absence of a son he named Henry, King of Navarre, his successor. A
+Protestant and a Huguenot was King of France.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+After long wandering in strange seas, we come in view of familiar
+lights and headlands. With the advent of the house of Bourbon, we have
+grasped a thread which leads directly down to our own time.
+
+
+The accession of a Protestant King was hailed with delirious joy by the
+Huguenots, and with corresponding rage by Catholic France. The one
+looked forward to redressing of wrongs and avenging of injuries; and
+the other flatly refused submission unless Henry should recant his
+heresy, and become a convert to the true faith.
+
+The new King saw there was no bed of roses preparing for him. After
+four years of effort to reconcile the irreconcilable, he decided upon
+his course. He was not called to the throne to rule over Protestant
+France, nor to be an instrument of vengeance for the Huguenots. He saw
+that the highest good of the kingdom required, not that he should
+impose upon it either form of belief or worship, but give equal
+opportunity and privilege to both.
+
+To the consternation of the Huguenots he announced himself ready to
+listen to the arguments in favor of the religion of Rome; and it took
+just five hours of deliberation to convince him of its truth. He
+announced himself ready to abjure his old faith. Bitter reproaches on
+the one side and rejoicings on the other greeted this decision. It was
+not heroic. But many even among the Protestants acknowledged it to be
+an act of supreme political wisdom.
+
+Peace was restored, and the "Edict of Nantes," which quickly followed,
+proved to his old friends, the Huguenots, that they were not forgotten.
+The Protestants, with every disability removed, shared equal privileges
+with the Catholics throughout the kingdom; and the first victory for
+religious liberty was splendidly won.
+
+An era of unexampled prosperity dawned. Never had the kingdom been so
+wisely and beneficently governed. Sincerity, simplicity, and sympathy
+had taken the place of dissimulation, craft, and cruelty. Uplifting
+agencies were everywhere at work, reaching even to the peasantry, that
+forgotten element in the nation.
+
+The reign of the Bourbon dynasty had opened auspiciously. Henry IV.
+was the idol of the people. His loveless marriage with Margaret de
+Valois had been annulled, and he had espoused Marie de Medici. The
+blood from that poisoned stream was again to be intermingled with the
+blood of the future Kings of France.
+
+After a reign of twenty-one years, the sagacious ruler who had done
+more than any other to make her great and happy was stricken down by
+the hand of an assassin, and a cry of grief arose alike from Catholic
+and Protestant throughout the kingdom.
+
+
+Poor France was again at the mercy of a woman with the corrupt
+instincts of the de Medici. The widow of Henry IV., who was Regent
+during the infancy of her son Louis, was intriguing, vulgar, and
+without the ability of the great Catharine. The kingdom was rent by
+cabals of aspiring favorites and ambitious nobles, until the reign of
+Louis XIII., or rather of Cardinal Richelieu, began.
+
+The foundations of this man's policy lay deep, out of sight of all save
+his own far-reaching intelligence. Pitiless as an iceberg, he crushed
+every obstacle to his purpose. Impartial as fate, with no loves, no
+hatreds, Catholics, Protestants, nobles, Parliaments, one after another
+were borne down before his determination to make the King, what he had
+not been since Charlemagne, supreme in France.
+
+The will of the great minister mowed down like a scythe. The power of
+the grandees, that last remnant of feudalism, and a perpetual menace to
+monarchy, was swept away. One great noble after another was humiliated
+and shorn of his privileges, if not of his head.
+
+The Huguenots, being first shaken into submission, saw their political
+liberties torn from them by the stroke of a pen, and even while the
+Catholics were making merry over this discomfiture, the minister was
+planning to send Henrietta, sister of the King, across the Channel to
+become Queen of Protestant England, as wife of Charles I. But the act
+of supreme audacity was to come. This high prelate of the church, this
+cardinal minister, formed alliance with Gustavus Adolphus, the great
+leader of the Protestants in the war upon the Emperor and the Pope!
+
+He allowed no religion, no class, to sway or to hold him. He was for
+France; and her greatness and glory augmented under his ruthless
+dominion. By his extraordinary genius he made the reign of a
+commonplace King one of dazzling splendor; and while gratifying his own
+colossal ambition he so strengthened the foundations of the monarchy
+that princes of the blood themselves could not shake it.
+
+It was great--it was dazzling, but of all his work there is but one
+thing which revolutions and time have not swept away. The "French
+Academy" alone survives as his monument. Out of a gathering of
+literary friends he created a national institution, its object the
+establishing a court of last appeal in all that makes for eloquence in
+speaking or writing the French language. In a country where nothing
+endures, this has remained unchanged for two hundred and thirty years.
+
+But this master of statecraft, this creator of despotic monarchy, had
+one unsatisfied ambition. He would have exchanged all his honors for
+the ability to write one play like those of Corneille. Hungering for
+literary distinction, he could not have gotten into his own Academy had
+he not created it. And jealous of his laurels, he hated Corneille as
+much as he did the enemies of France.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+Again do we recognize the fine Italian hand in French politics.
+Cardinal Mazarin was Minister during the regency of Anne of Austria,
+directing and controlling the affairs of the Kingdom, less intent upon
+the greatness of France than the greatness and magnificence of her
+Prime Minister. At last the wily Italian was gone, and Louis XIV.
+settled himself upon the throne which Richelieu had rendered so exalted
+and immovable.
+
+Cardinal Mazarin had said of the young Louis that "there was enough in
+him to make four Kings, and one honest man." His greatness consisted
+more in amplitude than in kind. Nature made him in prodigal mood. He
+was an average man of colossal proportions. His ability, courage,
+dignity, industry, greed for power and possessions, were all on a
+magnificent scale, and so were his vanity, his loves, his cruelties,
+his pleasures, his triumphs, and his disappointments.
+
+No King more wickedly oppressed France, and none made her more
+glorious. He made her feared abroad and magnificent at home, but he
+desolated her, and drained her resources with ambitious wars. He
+crowned her with imperishable laurels in literature, art, and every
+manifestation of genius, but he signed the "Revocation of the Edict of
+Nantes," and drove out of his kingdom 500,000 of the best of his
+subjects.
+
+If the names of Marlborough and Maintenon could have been stricken out
+of his life, the story might have had a different ending. From the
+moment the great Duke checked his victorious army, his sun began to go
+down; but it was Maintenon who most obscured its setting.
+
+His unloved Queen, the Spanish Marie Therese, had borne his mad
+infatuation for Louise la Vallière; la Vallière had carried her broken
+heart to a convent, and been superseded by de Montespan, and de
+Montespan had invited her own destruction by bringing into her
+household the pious widow of the poet Scarron, Madame de Maintenon,
+(grand-daughter of d'Aubigne, the historian of the Reformation).
+Grave, austere, ambitious, talented, she was not too much engrossed in
+her duties as governess of de Montespan's children to find ways of
+establishing an influence over the King.
+
+This man who had absorbed into himself all the functions of the
+Government, who was Ministers, Magistrates, Parliaments, all in one,
+this central sun of whom Corneille, Molière, Racine were but single
+rays, was destined to be enslaved in his old age by a designing
+adventuress; her will his law. The hey-day of youth having passed, he
+was beginning to be anxious about his soul. She artfully pricked his
+conscience, and de Montespan was sent away, but de Maintenon remained.
+
+She next convinced him that the only fitting atonement for his sins was
+to drive heresy out of his kingdom, and re-establish the true faith.
+At her bidding he undid the glorious work of Henry IV., signed the
+"Revocation of the Edict of Nantes," and brutally stamped out
+Protestantism.
+
+A part of the scheme of penitence seems to have been that on the death
+of poor Marie Therese, he should make her (de Maintenon) his lawful
+wife, which he did privately; and his sun went down obscured by
+crushing griefs and disappointments. His children swept away, the
+prestige of success tarnished, this demigod was taken to pieces by
+time's destroying fingers, quite as unceremoniously as are the rest of
+us, hiding finally behind the bed-curtains while a kneeling courtier
+passed to him his wig on the end of a stick, and at last lying down
+like any other old dying sinner, overwhelmed with the vanity of earthly
+things and with the vastness of eternity.
+
+Still more would the dying moments of the Grand Monarque have been
+embittered could he have foreseen into what hands his great inheritance
+was passing.
+
+
+Upon Louis XV. more than any other rests the responsibility of the
+crisis which was approaching.
+
+A heartless sybarite, depraved in tastes, without sense of
+responsibility or comprehension of his times, a brutalized voluptuary
+governed by a succession of designing women, regardless of national
+poverty, indulging in wildest extravagance,--such was the man in whom
+was vested the authority rendered so absolute by Richelieu,--such the
+man who opened up a pathway for the storm.
+
+As for the nobility, their degradation may be imagined when it is said
+there was as bitter rivalry between titled and illustrious fathers to
+secure for their daughters the coveted position held by Madame de
+Pompadour, as for the highest offices of State.
+
+Could the upper ranks fall lower than this? Had not the kingdom
+reached its lowest depths, where its foreign policy was determined by
+the amount of consideration shown to Madame de Pompadour? But this
+woman, whose friendship was artfully sought by the great Empress Maria
+Theresa, was superseded, and the fresher charms of Madame du Barri
+enslaved the King. The deposed favorite could not survive her fall,
+and died of a broken heart. It is said that as Louis, looking from an
+upper window of his palace, saw the coffin borne out in a drenching
+rain, he smiled and said: "Ah, the Marquise has a bad day for her
+journey." It may be imagined that the man who could be so pitiless to
+the woman he had loved would feel little pity for the people whom he
+had not loved, but whom he knew only as a remote, obscure something,
+which held up the weight of his glory.
+
+But this "obscure something" was undergoing strange transformation.
+The greater light at the surface had sent some glimmering rays down
+into the mass below, which began to awaken and to think. Misery,
+hopeless and abject, was changing into rage and thirst for vengeance.
+
+A new class had come into existence which was not noble, but with
+highly trained intelligence it looked with contempt and loathing upon
+the frivolous, half-educated nobles. Scorn was added to the ferment of
+human passions beneath the surface, and when Voltaire had spoken, and
+the restraints of religion were loosened, no living hand, not that of a
+Richelieu nor a Louis XIV., could have averted the coming doom.
+But--no one seems to have suspected what was approaching.
+
+A wonderful literature had come into existence--not stately and classic
+as in the age preceding,--but instinct with a new sort of life. The
+highest speculations which can occupy the soul of man were handled with
+marvellous lightness of touch and prismatic brilliancy of expression;
+but all was negation. None tried to build; all to demolish. The
+black-winged angel of Destruction was hovering over the land.
+
+Then Rousseau tossed his dreamy abstractions into the quivering air,
+and the formula, "Liberty, Fraternity, and Equality," was caught up by
+the titled aristocracy as a charming idyllic toy, while Princes, Dukes,
+and Marquises amused themselves with a dream of Arcadian simplicity, to
+be attained in some indefinite way in some remote and equally
+indefinite future. It was all a masquerade. No reality, no sincerity,
+no convictions, good or evil. The only thing that was real was that an
+over-taxed, impoverished people was exasperated and--hungry.
+
+Did the King need new supplies for his unimaginable luxuries, they were
+taxed. Was it necessary to have new accessions to French "glory," in
+order to allay popular clamor or discontent, they must supply the men
+to fight the glorious battles, and the means with which to pay them.
+Every burden fell at last upon this lowest stratum of the State, the
+nobility and clergy, while owning two-thirds of the land, being nearly
+exempt from taxation.
+
+And yet the King and nobility of France, in love with Rousseau's
+theories, were airily discussing the "rights of man." Wolves and foxes
+coming together to talk over the sacredness of the rights of
+property--or the occupants of murderers' row growing eloquent over the
+sanctity of human life! How incomprehensible that among those
+quick-witted Frenchmen there seems not one to have realized that the
+logical sequence of the formula, "Liberty, Fraternity, and Equality,"
+must be, "Down with the Aristocrats!"
+
+And so the surface which Richelieu had converted into adamant grew
+thinner and thinner each day, until King and Court danced upon a mere
+gilded crust, unconscious of the abysmal fires beneath. Some of those
+powdered heads fell into the executioner's basket twenty-five years
+later. Did they recall this time? Did Madame du Barri think of it,
+did she exult at her triumph over de Pompadour, when she was dragged
+shrieking and struggling to the guillotine?
+
+
+And while France was thus weaving her future, what were the other
+nations doing? England, sane, practical, with little time for
+abstractions, and little said about "glory," was importing turnips,
+converting agriculture into a science, and under the instruction of
+exiled Huguenots, establishing marvellous industries. In the new
+kingdom of Prussia, a half-savage, half-inspired King had been
+importing artisans and skill of all sorts, reclaiming waste lands.
+Living like a miser, he had indulged in but one luxury: an army, which
+should be the best in the world. There was no powder, no patches at
+his Court; where he thrashed with his own royal hands male and female
+courtiers, starved, imprisoned, and cudgelled his son and heir to his
+throne for playing on the violin; and, it is said, so terrified and
+scarified his grenadiers with canes and cats that not one of them would
+not have preferred facing the enemy to meeting his enraged sovereign,
+had he done wrong.
+
+Frederick was not a pleasant barbarian. But there is at least a ring
+of sincerity about all this, which it is refreshing to recall after the
+tinsel and depraved refinements of France under Louis XV., and
+something too which gives promise, in spite of its brutality, of a
+stalwart future.
+
+Five years before the close of this miserable reign, an event occurred
+seemingly of small importance to Europe. A child was born in an
+obscure Italian household. His name was Napoleon Bonaparte.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+Louis XV. was dead, and two children, with the light-heartedness of
+youth and inexperience, stepped upon the throne which was to be a
+scaffold--Louis XVI., only twenty, and Marie Antoinette, his wife,
+nineteen. He, amiable, kind, full of generous intentions; she,
+beautiful, simple, child-like and lovely. Instead of a debauched old
+King with depraved surroundings, here were a Prince and Princess out of
+a fairy-tale. The air was filled with indefinite promise of a new era
+for mankind to be inaugurated by this amiable young king, whose
+kindness of heart shone forth in his first speech, "We will have no
+more loans, no credit, no fresh burdens on the people;" then, leaving
+his ministers to devise ways of paying the enormous salaries of
+officials out of an empty treasury, and to arrange the financial
+details of his benevolent scheme of government, he proceeded with his
+gay and brilliant young wife to Rheims, there to be crowned with a
+magnificence undreamed of by Louis XIV.
+
+In the midst of these rejoicings over the new reign, and of speculative
+dreams of universal freedom, there was wafted across the Atlantic news
+of a handful of patriots arrayed against the tyranny of the British
+Crown. Here were the theories of the new philosophy translated into
+the reality of actual experience. "No taxation without
+representation," "No privileged class," "No government without the
+consent of the governed." Was this not an embodiment of their dreams?
+Nor did it detract from the interest in the conflict that
+England--England, the hated rival of France, was defied by an indignant
+people of her own race. There was not a young noble in the land who
+would not have rushed if he could to the defence of the outraged
+colonies.
+
+The King, half doubting, and vaguely fearing, was swept into the
+current, and the armies and the courage of the Americans were
+splendidly reinforced by generous, enthusiastic France.
+
+Why should the simple-hearted Louis see what no one else seemed to see:
+that victory or failure were alike full of peril for France? If the
+colonies were conquered, France would feel the vengeance of England; if
+they were freed and self-governing, the principle of Monarchy had a
+staggering blow.
+
+In the mean time, as the American Revolution moved on toward success,
+there was talk in the cabin as well as the _château_ of the "rights of
+man." In shops and barns, as well as in clubs and drawing-rooms, there
+was a glimmering of the coming day.
+
+"What is true upon one continent is true upon another," say they. "If
+it is cowardly to submit to tyranny in America, what is it in France?"
+"If Englishmen may revolt against oppression, why may not Frenchmen?"
+"No government without the consent of the governed, eh? When has our
+consent been asked, the consent of twenty-five million people? Are we
+sheep, that we have let a few thousands govern us for a thousand years,
+_without_ our consent?"
+
+Poverty and hunger gave force and urgency to these questions. The
+people began to clamor more boldly for the good time which had been
+promised by the kind-hearted King. The murmur swelled to an ominous
+roar. Thousands were at his very palace gates, telling him in no
+unmistakable terms that they were tired of smooth words and fair
+promises. What they wanted was a new constitution and--bread.
+
+Poor Louis! the one could be made with pen and paper; but by what
+miracle could he produce the other? How gladly would he have given
+them anything. But what could he do? There was not enough money to
+pay the salaries of his officials, nor for his gay young Queen's fêtes
+and balls! The old way would have been to impose new taxes. But how
+could he tax a people crying at his gates for bread? He made more
+promises which he could not keep; yielded, one after another,
+concessions of authority and dignity; then vacillated, and tried to
+return over the slippery path, only to be dragged on again by an
+irresistible fate.
+
+When Louis XVI. convoked the States-General, he made his last
+concession to the demands of his subjects.
+
+That almost-forgotten body had not been seen since Richelieu effaced
+all the auxiliary functions of government. Nobles, ecclesiastics, and
+_tiers état_ (or commons) found themselves face to face once more. The
+handsome contemptuous nobles, the princely ecclesiastics were
+unchanged--but there was a new expression in the pale faces of the
+commons. There was a look of calm defiance as they met the disdainful
+gaze of the aristocrats across the gulf of two centuries.
+
+The two superior bodies absolutely refused to sit in the same room with
+the commons. They might under the same roof, but in the same
+room--never.
+
+No outburst met this insult. With marvellous self-control and dignity,
+and with an ominous calm, the commons constituted themselves into the
+"National Assembly."
+
+Aristocratic France had committed its concluding act of arrogance and
+folly. And when poor distracted Louis gave impotent order for the
+Assembly to disperse, he committed suicide. Louis the man lived on to
+be slain by the people three years later, but Louis the King died at
+that moment.
+
+When the Assembly defied his authority and continued to solemnly act as
+if he had not spoken, the power had passed to the people. They were
+sovereign.
+
+Paris was in wild excitement; and a rumor that troops were marching
+upon the Assembly to disperse it converted excitement into madness.
+The populace marched toward the Bastille, and in another hour the heads
+of the Governor and his officials were being carried on pikes through
+the streets of Paris.
+
+The horrible drama had opened, and events developed with the swiftness
+of a falling avalanche. Louis might have followed his fleeing nobles.
+But always vacillating, and "letting I dare not wait upon I would," the
+opportunity was lost. He and his family were prisoners in the
+"Temple," while an awful travesty upon a court of justice was sending
+out death-warrants for his friends and adherents faster than the
+guillotine could devour them.
+
+More and more furious swept the torrent, gathering to itself all that
+was vile and outcast. Where were the pale-faced, determined patriots
+who sat in the "National Assembly"? Some of them riding with Dukes and
+Marquises to the guillotine. Was this the equality they expected when
+they cried "Down with the Aristocrats"?
+
+Did they think they could guide the whirlwind after raising it? As
+well whisper to the cyclone to level only the tall trees, or to the
+conflagration to burn only the temples and palaces.
+
+With restraining agencies removed, religion, government, King, all
+swept away, that hideous brood born of vice, poverty, hatred, and
+despair came out from dark hiding-places; and what had commenced as a
+patriotic revolt had become a wild orgie of bloodthirsty demons, led by
+three master-demons, Robespierre, Marat, and Danton, vying with each
+other in ferocity.
+
+Then we see that simple girl thinking by one supreme act of heroism and
+sacrifice, like Joan of Arc, to save her country. Foolish child! Did
+she think to slay the monster devouring Paris by cutting off one of his
+heads? The death of Marat only added to the fury of the tempest; and
+the falling of Charlotte Corday's head was not more noticed than the
+falling of a leaf in the forest.
+
+On the 21st of January, 1793, Louis XVI. embraced for the last time his
+adored wife and children; then, with every possible indignity, was
+strapped to a plank and shoved under the guillotine.
+
+The kindest-hearted, most inoffensive gentleman in Europe had expiated
+the crimes of his ancestors.
+
+A few months later, Marie Antoinette, daughter of the proud Empress
+Maria Theresa, and child of the Cæsars, was borne along the same road.
+And how bravely she met her awful fate! We forget her follies, her
+reckless grasping after pleasures, in view of her horrible sufferings
+and in admiration of her courage as she rides to her death; sitting in
+that hideous tumbril, head erect, pale, proud, defiant, as if upon a
+throne.
+
+With the death of the King and Queen the madness had reached its
+height, and a revulsion of feeling set in. There was a surfeit of
+blood, and an awakening sense of horror, which turned upon the
+instigators. Danton fell, and finally, when amid cries of "Death to
+the tyrant!" Robespierre was dragged wounded and shivering to the fate
+he had brought upon so many thousands, the drama which had opened at
+the Bastille was fittingly closed.
+
+The great battle for human liberty had been fought and won. Religious
+freedom and political freedom were identical in principle. The right
+of the human conscience proclaimed by Luther in 1517 had in 1793 only
+expanded into the large conception of all the inherent rights of the
+_individual_.
+
+It had taken centuries for English persistence to accomplish what
+France, with such appalling violence, had done in as many years. It
+had been a furious outburst of pent-up force; but the work had been
+thorough. Not a germ of tyranny remained. The incrustations of a
+thousand years were not alone broken, but pulverized; the privileged
+classes were swept away, and their vast estates, two-thirds of the
+territory of France, ready to be distributed among the rightful owners
+of the soil, those who by toil and industry could win them. France was
+as new as if she had no history. There was ample opportunity for her
+people now. What would they do with it?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+It is strange to read that the armies went on fighting battles
+automatically, even while there was no central head to direct them.
+While the ghastly scenes were enacting in Paris, and while Josephine de
+Beauharnais was at the Conciergerie listening with blanched face to the
+call of her husband's name on the death roll for the day, a young
+lieutenant of artillery, only twenty-four years old, was at Toulon,
+winning his first military honors. He would have been thought a
+strange prophet who had said that in less than ten years the young
+Corsican lieutenant would be Emperor, and the prisoner at the
+Conciergerie Empress of the French! Nor did M. de Beauharnais, as he
+rode to execution, dream that forty-five years later his grandson would
+over the same stones be borne to his coronation.
+
+In the anarchy which prevailed after the Revolution, the young hero of
+Toulon was called upon to quell a riot in Paris. The people realized
+they had met a master. For twenty-five years from that day, the
+history of France, and indeed of Europe, was that of one man, Napoleon
+Bonaparte. Commander-in-chief of the Army, then First Consul of the
+Republic, then Emperor--the steps in his ascent were as rapid and as
+bewildering as the movements in one of his own campaigns. France,
+groping about helplessly among the wreckage of the past, believed what
+she most desired was _liberty_ and _self-government_.
+
+This Italian, who was a French citizen even only by merest accident,
+knew her better than she did herself, and that what she really wanted
+was a fresh mantle of glory to cover her humiliation, and--a master.
+
+Leading a broken, unpaid, half-clothed army into Italy, he electrified
+France and all Europe. Before the world had really found out who he
+was, and whence he had come, he had conquered all of Northern Italy,
+part of Austria and Belgium, had created a Cisalpine Republic out of
+the fragments, and was making treaties and dictating terms to kings and
+princes.
+
+France, discredited and almost disgraced among the monarchies of
+Europe, found herself suddenly feared and glorious. Napoleon had
+captured the most imaginative and military people in Europe. The rest
+of the way was easy. Prudent, discreet, knowing when to wait, and when
+to come down like an avalanche, this marvellous man held France in his
+hands, and placed Europe under his feet.
+
+The people which had exerted such superhuman effort for freedom were
+held by a hand more despotic than Richelieu's, more destructive to
+popular freedom than that of Louis XIV.; and the more absolute his
+rule, the more overpowering his authority, the better pleased they
+seemed to be.
+
+But, was there not equal opportunity for every man in the Empire?
+Every soldier's knapsack, might it not hold a Marshal's baton? Was not
+the Emperor himself a living illustration of what a man from the people
+might become? And then what did it mean to Frenchmen to be suddenly
+lifted to dazzling ascendancy in Europe? Who would not willingly serve
+a master who could bring Hapsburg, Hohenzollern, Romanoff, Bourbon,
+crouching at his feet--who could tear down states, and set them up, and
+if an extra throne were needed for a retainer, could carve a new state
+from territory of friend and foe alike, and place a diadem upon every
+head in his domestic or military household? It was the most stupendous
+display of personal power ever beheld, England alone standing upright
+in his presence, and in the end accomplishing his ruin.
+
+When Austria with a reluctant shudder bestowed her princess upon the
+invincible parvenu, and when France with regretful pity saw the adored
+Josephine set aside for that disdainful royal maiden, Marie Louise, at
+that moment Napoleon passed the meridian of his greatness.
+
+It had taken just fifteen years to make the most astonishing and
+dazzling chapter in French history; and then came "Moscow" and "Elba,"
+to be quickly followed by "Waterloo" and "St. Helena." And then for
+France--most incomprehensible of all--a return to the Bourbons! It had
+required the greatest tragedy of modern times to get rid of them, and
+here they were again, Louis XVIII. and Charles X., as overbearing and
+as arrogant as if their brother's head had not dropped into a basket in
+1793. When somebody said of the Bourbons "they learn nothing and
+forget nothing," he was inaccurate. They had certainly forgotten the
+French Revolution.
+
+But death removed the first, and popular sentiment the second, of these
+relics of an obsolete past. And a new experiment was tried. This time
+it was the son of _Philippe Egalité_, that wickedest of all the
+regicides, who came smiling and bowing before the people as a popular
+sovereign, who would beneficently rule under a liberal constitution.
+Whatever his father had been, Louis Philippe was far from being a
+wicked man. Whether teaching school in Switzerland, or giving French
+lessons in America, or wearing the kingly crown in France, he was the
+kindest hearted, most inoffensive of gentlemen.
+
+
+When in the pre-revolutionary days we read of France making war, it
+means that the King, or his minister, with more or less deference to
+the will of a few thousand nobles, did so. They are the France
+referred to. The real France was not consulted and had nothing to do
+with it, unless it were to fill the ranks with fathers, sons, and
+husbands, and then pay the taxes imposed to support them. But times
+were changed. Under a constitutional monarchy, the King does not
+govern; he reigns. Louis Philippe was King of the French,--not of
+France. He was chosen by the people as their ornamental figurehead.
+But what if he ceased to be ornamental? What was the use of a King who
+in eighteen years had added not a single ray of glory to the national
+name, but who was using his high position to increase his enormous
+private fortune, and incessantly begging an impoverished country for
+benefits and emoluments for five sons?
+
+An excellent father, truly, though a short-sighted one. His power had
+no roots. The cutting from the Orleans tree had never taken hold upon
+the soil, and toppled over at the sound of Lamartine's voice
+proclaiming a Republic from the balcony of the "Hôtel de Ville."
+
+When invited to step down from his royal throne, he did so on the
+instant. Never did King succumb with such alacrity, and never did
+retiring royalty look less imposing, than when Louis Philippe was in
+hiding at Havre under the name of "William Smith," waiting for safe
+convoy to England, without having struck one blow in defence of his
+throne.
+
+But three terrible words had floated into the open windows of the
+Tuileries. With the echoes of 1792 still sounding in his ears,
+"Liberty," "Fraternity," and "Equality," shouted in the streets of
+Paris, had not a pleasant sound!
+
+
+Republicanism was an abiding sentiment in France, even while two dull
+Bourbon Kings were stupidly trying to turn back the hands on the dial
+of time, and while an Orleans, with more supple neck, was posing as a
+popular sovereign. During all this tiresome interlude, the real fact
+was developing. A Republican sentiment which had existed vaguely in
+the air was materializing, consolidating, into a more and more tangible
+reality in the minds of thinking men and patriots.
+
+The ablest men in the country stood with plans matured, ready to meet
+this crisis. A Republic was proclaimed; M. de Lamartine, Ledru-Rollin,
+General Cavaignac, M. Raspail, and Louis Napoleon were rival candidates
+for the office of President.
+
+The nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte, and son of Hortense, was only known
+as the perpetrator of two very absurd attempts to overthrow the
+monarchy under Louis Philippe. But since the remains of the great
+Emperor had been returned to France by England, and the splendors of
+the past placed in striking contrast with a dull, lustreless present,
+there had been a revival of Napoleonic memories and enthusiasm. Here
+was an opportunity to unite two powerful sentiments in one man--a
+Napoleon at the head of Republican France would express the glory of
+the past and the hope of the future.
+
+The magic of the name was irresistible. Louis Napoleon was elected
+President of the second Republic, and history prepared to repeat
+itself. What sort of a ruler would he be--this dark, mysterious,
+unmagnetic man? Even should he not turn out well, no great harm could
+be done. It was only for four years. His hand had not the steely
+fineness of touch of his great uncle's, but it was strong, and guided,
+they soon found, by a subtle intelligence.
+
+The overthrow of Monarchy in France had set fire to Republicanism in
+Europe, Kossuth with transcendent eloquence leading a revolution in
+Hungary, and Garibaldi and Mazzini with pen and sword in Italy. Europe
+was in a blaze of revolt. The first great military exploit of Napoleon
+Bonaparte had been in Italy, and so was his nephew's, but with this
+difference--the object of the one was to build up Republics on the
+other side of the Alps, and of the other to pull them down. Garibaldi
+and Mazzini were driven out of Italy by French bayonets, which also
+propped up the pontifical throne for the fugitive Pope.
+
+The Assembly soon realized that in this Prince-President it had no
+automaton to deal with. A deep antagonism grew, and the cunningly
+devised issue could not fail to secure popular support to Louis
+Napoleon. When an Assembly is at war with the President because it
+desires to restrict the suffrage, and he to make it universal, can any
+one doubt the result? He was safe in appealing to the people on such
+an issue, and sure of being sustained in his Proclamation dissolving
+the Assembly. He was gathering the reins into his hands with the
+astute courage of his uncle. Moving on almost identical lines with his
+great original, the nephew set his face toward the same goal.
+
+The French people must have realized they were being betrayed. They
+must have seen that this ambitious plotter was slipping the old fetters
+of arbitrary power into position. But, under the powerful spell of the
+Napoleonic name, lulled to tranquillity by the gift of suffrage, and
+fascinated by the growing splendors of an ingenious reproduction of the
+most brilliant chapter in French history, they were unresistingly drawn
+into the Imperial net.
+
+France was for the second time an Empire, and Napoleon III. was Emperor
+of the French.
+
+His Mephistophelian face did not look as classic under the laurel
+wreath as had his uncle's, nor had his work the blinding splendor nor
+the fineness of texture of his great model. But then, an imitation
+never has. It was a marble masterpiece, done in plaster! But what a
+clever reproduction it was! And how, by sheer audacity, it compelled
+recognition and homage, and at last even adulation in Europe!--and what
+a clever stroke it was, for this heavy, unsympathetic man to bring up
+to his throne from the people a radiant Empress, who would capture
+romantic and æsthetic France!
+
+The distance was great from cheap lodgings in New York to a seat upon
+the Imperial throne of France; but human ambition is not easily
+satisfied. A Pelion always rises beyond an Ossa. It was not enough to
+feel that he had re-established the prosperity and prestige of France,
+that fresh glory had been added to the Napoleonic name. Was there not
+after all a certain irritating reserve in the homage paid him, was
+there not a touch of condescension in the friendship of his royal
+neighbors? And had he not always a Mordecai at his gate--while the
+"_Faubourg St. Germain_" stood aloof and disdainful, smiling at his
+brand-new aristocracy?
+
+War is the thing to give solidity to empire and to reputation! Neither
+France nor Europe can withstand the magic of military renown. And so,
+upon a quickly improvised pretext, the French Emperor started, amid the
+booming of cannon and the wild acclamations of a delighted people, upon
+his errand of conquest. The insolent Germans were to be chastised;
+and, incidentally, Europe was to be made to tremble!
+
+In a few months the bubble was pricked. The glittering French army
+proved to be a thing of tinsel and fustian. No reality, no power to
+stand before the solid German battalions, it melted like hoar-frost.
+Napoleon III. was prisoner of war at Sedan, and King William, Unser
+Fritz, and Von Moltke were at Versailles.
+
+Moved by his colossal misfortunes, and perhaps partly in displeasure at
+having a French Republic once more at her door, England offered asylum
+to the deposed Emperor. There, from the seclusion of "Chiselhurst," he
+and his still beautiful Eugenie watched the Republic weathering the
+first days of storm and stress, and coming out at last stable and
+triumphant.
+
+The weary exile felt that not in his day would the reaction come. But
+his son would yet wear the Imperial crown which was his birthright.
+Futile dream! The boy was destined to cruel fate--to be slain by Zulu
+assegai, while fighting the battles of England,--England, the author of
+_Waterloo_. Strange ending for the heir to the name and glory of
+Napoleon Bonaparte.
+
+But the reaction Louis Napoleon so confidently hoped for did not come.
+With military pride humbled in the dust, national pride wounded by the
+loss of two provinces, loaded down with an immense war indemnity, the
+people set about the task of rehabilitation; in an incredibly short
+time, the galling debt was paid, financial prosperity and political
+strength restored, and with military organization second to none in
+Europe, France, with revengeful eyes fastened on Germany, waits for the
+day of reckoning.
+
+For twenty-four years the Republic has existed. Communistic fires
+always smouldering have again and again burst forth--demagogues,
+fanatics, and those creatures for whom there is no place in organized
+society, whose element is chaos, standing ready to fan the fires of
+revolt; while Orleanist, Bonapartist, Bourbon, are ever on the alert,
+watching for opportunity to slip in through the open door of Revolution.
+
+England in conscious superiority smiles at a nation which has had seven
+political revolutions in a hundred years. Republic, then Empire, then
+a return to the Bourbons, then Constitutional Monarchy under Louis
+Philippe, then Republic, followed by Empire again, and now for the
+third time a Republic!
+
+But France, complex, mobile, changeful as the sea, in riotous enjoyment
+of her new-found liberties, casts off a form of government as she would
+an ill-fitting garment. She knows the value of tranquillity--she had
+it for one thousand years! The _people_, which have only breathed the
+upper air for a century--the people, who were stifled under feudalism,
+stamped upon by Valois Kings, riveted down by Richelieu, then prodded,
+outraged, and starved by Bourbons, have become a great nation.
+Many-sided, resourceful, gifted, it matters not whether they have
+called the head of their government Consul, Emperor, King, or
+President. They are a race of freemen, who can never again be enslaved
+by tyrannous system.
+
+It was a bright day for France when that ambitious young Emperor of
+Germany sent his great Chancellor into retirement; and another bright
+day when, taking offence at scant courtesy at the hands of the Czar, he
+left ajar the back door to his dominions. An alliance between despotic
+Russia thirsting for the waters of the Mediterranean, and Republican
+France thirsting for revenge, is the darkest cloud on the German
+horizon to-day. It is only a matter of months or of years when France
+will be at the throat of Germany demanding Alsace and Lorraine. The
+French army is not the one which faced Von Moltke in 1871; and when
+France knocks at her front door, Germany will have all she can attend
+to, without hearing Russian batteries thundering at her rear. A
+dramatic reconciliation with the old Chancellor is interesting, but it
+will not undo the work of the last four years.
+
+There is no longer thought of conflict between any two nations of
+Europe. The next war is to be one of tremendous combinations.
+National alliances are shifting and uncertain. But at the time this is
+written (1894) Germany, Austria, and Italy are drawn together in one
+hostile camp, while France and Russia, in loving embrace, stand in the
+other; and England, aloof and suspicious, holds herself ready to hurl
+her weight against whichever one obstructs her path to India.
+
+There is something in the air which makes one think the name Napoleon
+is still a thing to conjure with. But whatever the future may hold for
+France, no American can be indifferent to the fate of a nation to whom
+we owe so much. Nor can we ever forget that in the hour of our direst
+extremity, and regardless of cost to herself, she helped us to
+establish our liberties, and to take our place among the great nations
+of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Evolution of an Empire, by Mary Parmele
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+The Project Gutenberg E-text of A Brief Historical Sketch of Franch,
+by Mary Parmele
+</TITLE>
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Evolution of an Empire, by Mary Parmele
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Evolution of an Empire
+ A Brief Historical Sketch of France
+
+Author: Mary Parmele
+
+Release Date: October 15, 2010 [EBook #34071]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE EVOLUTION OF AN EMPIRE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Al Haines
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+THE
+</H3>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+EVOLUTION OF AN EMPIRE
+</H1>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+A BRIEF HISTORICAL SKETCH OF
+</H3>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+FRANCE
+</H2>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+BY
+</H4>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+MARY PARMELE
+</H3>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent" ALIGN="center">
+<I>Author of "Evolution of Empire Series, Germany;"<BR>
+"Who? When? What? Literature Chart."</I><BR>
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+NEW YORK
+<BR>
+WILLIAM BEVERLEY HARISON,
+<BR>
+59 FIFTH AVENUE
+<BR>
+1894
+</H4>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H5 ALIGN="center">
+PUBLISHED AND COPYRIGHTED, 1894,
+<BR>
+BY
+<BR>
+WILLIAM BEVERLEY HARISON,
+<BR>
+59 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK CITY.
+</H5>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H5 ALIGN="center">
+ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED BY
+<BR>
+THE PUBLISHERS' PRINTING COMPANY
+<BR>
+182-186 WEST 14TH STREET
+<BR>
+NEW YORK
+</H5>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+PREFACE.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+In an attempt to tell the story of a great nation in about 100 pages,
+it is needless to say there must be a rigid exclusion of all save
+essential facts. To those already familiar with the subject, this
+sketch is offered merely as a reminder of the sequence of conditions
+and events in the evolution of France; while to the student it is
+presented as a framework upon which may be placed, in orderly and
+comprehensible fashion, the results of future reading and research.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To the latter class I would suggest that a series of papers, written
+upon the most prominent themes found in the Table of Contents, will
+bear fruit in knowledge more real and vital than may be obtained from
+the writings of others, however eloquent and vivid the presentation.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+M. P.
+<BR>
+NEW YORK, July 23d, 1894.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+CONTENTS.
+</H2>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap01">CHAPTER I.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+The Aryan Family of Nations&mdash;Keltic Race&mdash;Ancient Gaul&mdash;Gauls in
+Rome&mdash;Gauls in Greece and in Asia Minor
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap02">CHAPTER II.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+Roman Conquest of Gaul&mdash;Julius Cæsar
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap03">CHAPTER III.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+Birth of Christianity&mdash;Its Dissemination&mdash;Persecution at Lyons by order
+of Marcus Aurelius&mdash;The Roman Empire Espouses Christianity under
+Constantine
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap04">CHAPTER IV.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+Gaul Overrun and Subjugated by Franks&mdash;Clovis King&mdash;Decay of the
+Merovingian Line&mdash;<I>Maire du Palais</I> King <I>de facto</I>&mdash;Charles
+Martel&mdash;Birth of Mohammedanism&mdash;Its Triumphs&mdash;Christendom
+Threatened&mdash;Pepin King&mdash;Charlemagne&mdash;Alliance with Pope&mdash;France, Italy,
+and Germany Emerge as Separate Nationalities
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap05">CHAPTER V.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+The Northmen&mdash;Beginnings of Feudalism in France&mdash;Normandy Bestowed upon
+the Northmen&mdash;Conquest of England by William, Duke of
+Normandy&mdash;Albigenses&mdash;Inquisition at Toulouse&mdash;The Crusades
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap06">CHAPTER VI.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+Decline of Feudalism&mdash;Creation of the Commune&mdash;Charles VII.&mdash;Henry V.
+in France&mdash;Joan of Arc
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap07">CHAPTER VII.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+Francis I.&mdash;Huguenots&mdash;Catharine de Medici&mdash;Francis II.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+Massacre of St. Bartholomew&mdash;Henry III.&mdash;Henry IV.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap09">CHAPTER IX.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+Edict of Nantes&mdash;Louis XIII.&mdash;Richelieu
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap10">CHAPTER X.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+Louis XIV.&mdash;Revocation of the Edict of Nantes&mdash;Louis XV.&mdash;Age of
+Voltaire and Rousseau&mdash;The Gathering Storm
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap11">CHAPTER XI.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette&mdash;American Colonies Arrayed Against
+England&mdash;French Aid to America&mdash;Smouldering Fires of Discontent&mdash;Louis
+Convokes States-General&mdash;National Assembly Created by Commons&mdash;Bastille
+Attacked&mdash;Revolution&mdash;Execution of King
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+<A HREF="#chap12">CHAPTER XII.</A>
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="contents">
+Napoleon Bonaparte&mdash;Toulon&mdash;Campaign in Italy&mdash;Empire
+Established&mdash;Europe Under the Feet of the Great Corsican&mdash;Marie
+Louise&mdash;Waterloo&mdash;Louis XVIII.&mdash;Charles X.&mdash;Louis Philippe&mdash;Second
+Republic&mdash;Louis Napoleon President&mdash;Second Empire&mdash;Napoleon
+III.&mdash;Franco-Prussian War&mdash;Sedan&mdash;Third Republic&mdash;Review of Present
+Conditions
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap01"></A>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+EVOLUTION OF AN EMPIRE.
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER I.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+One of the greatest achievements of modern research is the discovery of
+a key by which we may determine the kinship of nations. What we used
+to conjecture, we now know. An identity in the structural form of
+language establishes with scientific certitude that however diverse
+their character and civilizations, Russian, German, English, French,
+Spaniard, are all but branches from the same parent stem, are all alike
+children of the Asiatic Aryan.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So skilful are modern methods of questioning the past, and so
+determined the effort to find out its secrets, we may yet know the
+origin and history of this wonderful Asiatic people, and when and why
+they left their native continent and colonized upon the northern shores
+of the Mediterranean. Certain it is, however, that, more centuries
+before the Christian era than there have been since, they had peopled
+Western Europe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This branch of the Aryan family is known as the Keltic, and was older
+brother to the Teuton and Slav, which at a much later period followed
+them from the ancestral home, and appropriated the middle and eastern
+portions of the European Continent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The name of Gaul was given to the territory lying between the Ocean and
+the Mediterranean, and the Pyrenees and the Alps. And at a later
+period a portion of Northern Gaul, and the islands lying north of it,
+received from an invading chieftain and his tribe the name <I>Brit</I> or
+<I>Britain</I> (or Pryd or Prydain).
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If the mind could be carried back on the track of time, and we could
+see what we now call France as it existed twenty centuries before the
+Christian era, we should behold the same natural features: the same
+mountains rearing their heads; the same rivers flowing to the sea; the
+same plains stretching out in the sunlight. But instead of vines and
+flowers and cultivated fields we should behold great herds of wild ox
+and elk, and of swine as fierce as wolves, ranging in a climate as cold
+as Norway; and vast inaccessible forests, the home of beasts of prey,
+which contended with man for food and shelter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Let us read Guizot's description of life in Gaul five centuries before
+Christ:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Here lived six or seven millions of men a bestial life, in dwellings
+dark and low, built of wood and clay and covered with branches or
+straw, open to daylight by the door alone and confusedly heaped
+together behind a rampart of timber, earth, and stone, which enclosed
+and protected what they were pleased to call&mdash;a <I>town</I>."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Such was the Paris, and such the Frenchmen of the age of Pericles! And
+the same tides that washed the sands of Southern Gaul, a few hours
+later ebbed and flowed upon the shores of Greece&mdash;rich in culture, with
+refinements and subtleties in art which are the despair of the world
+to-day&mdash;with an intellectual endowment never since attained by any
+people.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The same sun which rose upon temples and palaces and life serene and
+beautiful in Greece, an hour later lighted sacrificial altars and
+hideous orgies in the forests of Gaul. While the Gaul was nailing the
+heads of human victims to his door, or hanging them from the bridle of
+his horse, or burning or flogging his prisoners to death, the Greek,
+with a literature, an art, and a civilization in ripest perfection,
+discussed with his friends the deepest problems of life and destiny,
+which were then baffling human intelligence, even as they are with us
+to-day. Truly we of Keltic and Teuton descent are late-comers upon the
+stage of national life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was no promise of greatness in ancient Gaul. It was a great
+unregulated force, rushing hither and thither. Impelled by insatiate
+greed for the possessions of their neighbors, there was no permanence
+in their loves or their hatreds. The enemies of to-day were the allies
+of to-morrow. Guided entirely by the fleeting desires and passions of
+the moment, with no far-reaching plans to restrain, the sixty or more
+tribes composing the Gallic people were in perpetual state of feud and
+anarchy, apparently insensible to the ties of brotherhood, which give
+concert of action, and stability in form of national life. If they
+overran a neighboring country, it seemed not so much for permanent
+acquisition, as to make it a camping-ground until its resources were
+exhausted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We read of one Massillia who came with a colony of Greeks long ages
+ago, and after founding the city of Marseilles, created a narrow bright
+border of Greek civilization along the Southern edge of the benighted
+land. It was a brief illumination, lasting only a century or more, and
+leaving few traces; but it may account for the superior intellectual
+quality of the southern provinces in future France.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It requires a vast extent of territory to sustain a people living by
+the chase, and upon herds and flocks; hence the area which now amply
+maintains thirty-five millions of Frenchmen was all too small for six
+or seven million Gauls; and they were in perpetual struggle with their
+neighbors for land&mdash;more land.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Give us land," they said to the Romans, and when land was denied them
+and the gates of cities disdainfully closed upon their messengers, not
+land, but vengeance, was their cry; and hordes of half-naked barbarians
+trampled down the vineyards, and rushed, a tumultuous torrent, upon
+Rome.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Romans could not stand before this new and strange kind of warfare.
+The Gauls streamed over the vanquished legions into the Eternal City,
+silent and deserted save only by the Senate and a few who remained
+intrenched in the Citadel; and there the barbarians kept them besieged
+for seven months, while they made themselves at home amid
+uncomprehended luxuries.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Of course Roman skill and courage at last dislodged and drove them
+back. But the fact remained that the Gaul had been there,&mdash;master of
+Rome; that the ironclad legions had been no match for his naked force,
+and a new sensation thrilled through the length and breadth of Gaul.
+It was the first throb of national life. The sixty or more fragments
+drew closer together into something like Gallic unity&mdash;with a common
+danger to meet, a common foe to drive back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hereafter there was another hunger to be appeased besides that for food
+and land; a hunger for conquest, for vengeance, and for glory for the
+Gallic name. National pride was born.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For years they hovered like wolves about Rome. But skill and superior
+intelligence tell in the centuries. It took long&mdash;and cost no end of
+blood and treasure; but two hundred years from the capture of Rome, the
+Gauls were driven out of Italy, and the Alps pronounced a barrier set
+by Nature herself against barbarian encroachments.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Italy was not the only country suffering from the destroying footsteps
+of the Western Kelts. There had been long ago an overflow of a tribe
+in Northern Gaul (the Kymrians), which had hewed and plundered its way
+south and eastward; until at the time of Alexander (340 B.C.) it was
+knocking at the gates of Macedonia.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Stimulated by the success at Rome fifty years earlier, they were, with
+fresh insolence, demanding "land," and during the centuries which
+followed, the Gallic name acquired no fresh lustre in Greece.
+Half-naked, gross, ferocious and ignorant, sometimes allies, but always
+a scourge, they finally crossed the Hellespont (278 B.C.), and turned
+their attention to Asia Minor. And there, at last, we find them
+settled in a province called Gallicia, where they lived without
+amalgamating with the people about them; it is said, even as late as
+400 years after Christ, speaking the language of their tribal home
+(what is now Belgium). And these were the Galatians&mdash;the "foolish
+Galatians," to whom Paul addressed his epistle; and we have followed up
+this Gallic thread simply because it mingles with the larger strand of
+ancient and sacred history with which we are all so familiar.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+It is not strange that Roman courage and endurance became a by-word.
+Her fibre was toughened by perpetual strain of conflict. Even while
+she was struggling with Gaul and while the echoes of the Hunnish
+invasion were still resounding through the Continent, Hannibal, with
+his hosts, was pouring through Gaul and gathering accessions from that
+people as he swept down into Italy. Then, with the memories of the
+Carthagenian wars still fresh at Rome, the Goths were at her
+gates,&mdash;their blows directed with a solidity superior to that of the
+barbarians who had preceded them. Where the Gauls had knocked, the
+Goths thundered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again the city was invaded by barbarian feet, and again did superior
+training and intelligence drive back the invading torrent and triumph
+over native brute force.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Such, in brief outline, was the condition of the centuries just before
+the Christian era.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap02"></A>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER II.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+The making of a nation is not unlike bread or cake making. One element
+is used as the basis, to which are added other component parts, of
+varying qualities, and the result we call England, or Germany, or
+France. The steps by which it is accomplished, the blending and fusing
+of the elements, require centuries, and the process makes what we
+call&mdash;history.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was written in the book of fate that Gaul should become a great
+nation; but not until fused and interpenetrated with two other
+nationalities. She must first be humanized and civilized by the Roman,
+and then energized and made free from the Roman by the Teuton.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The instrument chosen for the former was Julius Cæsar, and for the
+latter&mdash;five centuries later&mdash;Clovis, the Frankish leader. It is safe
+to affirm that no man has ever so changed the course of human events as
+did Julius Cæsar. Napoleon, who strove to imitate him 1800 years
+later, was a charlatan in comparison; a mere scene-shifter on a great
+theatrical stage. Not a trace of his work remains upon humanity to-day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cæsar opened up a pathway for the old civilizations of the world to
+flow into Western Europe, and the sodden mass of barbarism was infused
+with a life-compelling current. This was not accomplished by placing
+before the inferior race a higher ideal of life for imitation, but by a
+mingling of the blood of the nations&mdash;a transfusion into Gallic veins
+of the germs of a higher living and thinking&mdash;thus making them heirs to
+the great civilizations of antiquity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No human event was ever fraught with such consequences to the human
+race as the conquest of Gaul by Julius Cæsar.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Gallic wars had for centuries drained the treasure and taxed the
+resources of Rome. Cæsar conceived the audacious idea of stopping them
+at their source&mdash;in fact, of making Gaul a Roman province.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a marvellous exhibition, not simply of force, but of force
+wielded by supreme intelligence and craft. He had lived four years
+among this people and knew their sources of weakness, their internal
+jealousies and rivalries, their incohesiveness. When they hurled
+themselves against Rome, it was as a mass of sharp fragments. When the
+Goths did the same, it was as one solid, indivisible body. Cæsar saw
+that by adroit management he could disintegrate this people, even while
+conquering them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By forcibly maintaining in power those who submitted to him, being by
+turns gentle and severe, ingratiating here, terrifying there, he
+established a tremendous personal force; and during nine years carried
+on eight campaigns, marvels in the art of war, as well as in the
+subtler methods of negotiation and intrigue. He had successively dealt
+with all the Gallic tribes, even including Great Britain, subjugating
+either through their own rivalries, or by his invincible arm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Equally able to charm and to terrify, he had all the gifts, all the
+means to success and empire, that can be possessed by man. Great in
+politics as in war, as full of resource in the forum as on the
+battle-field, he was by nature called to dominion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was not as a patriot, simply intent upon freeing Rome of an
+harassing enemy, that he endured those nine years in Gaul&mdash;not as a
+great leader burning with military ardor that he conducted those eight
+campaigns. The conquest of Gaul meant the greater conquest of Rome.
+The one was accomplished; he now turned his back upon the devastated
+country, and prepared to complete his great project of human ascendency.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Rome was mistress of the world; he&mdash;would be master of Rome.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap03"></A>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER III.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+While the Star of Empire was thus moving toward the West, another and
+brighter star was about to arise in the East. So accustomed are we to
+the story, that we lose all sense of wonder at its recital.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Julius Cæsar's brief triumph was over. Marc Antony had recited his
+virtues over his bier, Rome had wept, and then forgotten him in the
+absorbing splendors of his nephew Augustus. In an obscure village of
+an obscure country in Asia Minor, the young wife of a peasant finds
+shelter in a stable, and gives birth to a son, who is cradled in the
+straw of a manger, from which the cattle are feeding.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Can the mind conceive of human circumstances more lowly? The child
+grew to manhood, and in his thirty-three years of life was never lifted
+above the obscure sphere into which he was born; never spoke from the
+vantage-ground of worldly elevation,&mdash;simply moving among people of his
+own station in life, mechanics, fishermen, and peasants, he told of a
+religion of love, a gospel of peace, for which he was willing to die.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Who would have dreamed that this was the germ of the most potent, the
+most regenerative force the world had ever known? That thrones,
+empires, principalities, and powers would melt and crumble before his
+name? Of all miracles, is not this the greatest?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The passionate ardor with which this religion was propagated in the
+first two centuries had no motive but the yearning to make others share
+in its benefits and hopes; and to this end to accept the belief that
+Jesus Christ had come in fulfilment of a long-promised Saviour,&mdash;who
+should be sent to this world clothed with divine authority to establish
+a spiritual kingdom, in which he was King of Kings, Lord of Lords,
+Mediator between us and the Father, of whom he was the "only begotten
+Son."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The religion in its essence was absolutely simple. Its founder summed
+it up in two sentences,&mdash;expressing the duty of man to man, and of man
+to God. That was all the Theology he formulated.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For two centuries the religion of Christ was an elementary spiritual
+force. It appealed only to the highest attributes and longings of the
+human soul, and under its sustaining influence frail women, men, and
+even children were able to endure tortures, of which we cannot read
+even now without shuddering horror.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Nature's method of gardening is very beautiful. She carefully guards
+the seed until it is ripe, then she bursts the imprisoning walls and
+gives it to the winds to distribute. Precisely such method was used in
+disseminating Christianity. It was not for one people&mdash;it was for the
+healing of the nations, and its home was wherever man abides.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Nearly five decades after Christ's death upon the cross, Jerusalem was
+destroyed by Titus. The home of Christianity was effaced. At just the
+right moment the enclosing walls had broken, and freed to the winds the
+germs in all their primitive purity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Imperial favor had not tarnished it, human ambitions had not employed
+and degraded it, nor had it been made into complex system by ingenious
+casuists. The pure spiritual truth, unsullied as it came from the hand
+of its founder, was scattered broadcast, as the band of Christians
+dispersed throughout the Roman Empire, naturally forming into
+communities here and there, which became the centres of Christian
+propagandism. Lyons in Gaul was such a centre.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+The fires of persecution had been lighted here and there throughout the
+Empire, and the Emperor Nero, under whom the Apostles Peter and Paul
+are said to have suffered martyrdom, had amused himself by making
+torches of the Christians at Rome. But until 177 A.D. Gaul was exempt
+from such horrors.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marcus Aurelius&mdash;that peerless pagan,&mdash;large in intelligence, exalted
+in character, and guided by a conscientious rectitude which has made
+his name shine like a star in the lurid light of Roman history, still
+failed utterly to comprehend the significance of this spiritual kingdom
+established by Christ on earth. He it was who ordered the first
+persecution in Gaul. In pursuance of his command, horrible tortures
+were inflicted at Lyons upon those who would not abjure the new faith.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A letter, written by an eye-witness, pictures with terrible vividness
+the scenes which followed. Many cases are described with harrowing
+detail, and of one Blandina it is said: "From morn till eve they put
+her to all manner of torture, marvelling that she still lived with her
+body pierced through and through and torn piecemeal by so many tortures
+of which a single one should have sufficed to kill her, to which she
+only replied, 'I am a Christian.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The recital goes on to tell how she was then cast into a dungeon,&mdash;her
+feet compressed and dragged out to the utmost tension of the
+muscles,&mdash;then left alone in darkness, until new methods of torture
+could be devised.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Finally she was brought, with other Christians, into the amphitheatre,
+hanging from a cross to which she was tied, and there thrown to the
+beasts. As the beasts refused to touch her she was taken back to the
+dungeon to be reserved for another occasion, being brought out daily to
+witness the fate and suffering of her friends and fellow-martyrs; still
+answering the oft-repeated question&mdash;"I am a Christian."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The writer goes on to say, "After she had undergone fire, the talons of
+beasts, and every agony which could be thought of, she was wrapped in a
+network and thrown to a bull, who tossed her in the air"&mdash;and her
+sufferings were ended.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Truly it cost something to say "I am a Christian" in those days.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marcus Aurelius probably gave orders for the persecution at Lyons, with
+little knowledge of what would be the nature of those persecutions, or
+of the religion he was trying to exterminate. Some of the hours spent
+in writing introspective essays would have been well employed in
+studying the period in which he lived, and the Empire he ruled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paganism and Druidism, those twin monsters, receded before the
+advancing light of Christianity. Neither contained anything which
+could nourish the soul of man, and both had become simply badges of
+nationality.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Druidism was the last stronghold of independent Gallic life. It was a
+mixture of northern myth and oriental dreams of metempsychosis, coarse,
+mystical, and cruel. The Roman paganism which was superimposed by the
+conquering race was the mere shell of a once vital religion. Educated
+men had long ceased to believe in the gods and divinities of Greece,
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+In the year 312, alas for Christianity, it was espoused by imperial
+power. When the Emperor Constantine declared himself a Christian,
+there was no doubt rejoicing among the saints; but it was the beginning
+of the degeneracy of the religion of Christ. The faith of the humble
+was to be raised to a throne; its lowly garb to be exchanged for purple
+and scarlet, the gospel of peace to be enforced by the sword.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Empire was crumbling, and upon its ruins the race of the future and
+social conditions of modern times were forming. Paganism and Druidism
+would have been an impossibility. Christianity even with its lustre
+dimmed, its purity tarnished, its simplicity overlaid with
+scholasticism, was better than these. The miracle had been
+accomplished. The great Roman Empire had said: "I am Christian."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap04"></A>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER IV.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Gaul had been Latinized and Christianized. Now one more thing was
+needed to prepare her for a great future. Her fibre was to be
+toughened by the infusion of a stronger race. Julius Cæsar had shaken
+her into submission, and Rome had chastised her into decency of
+behavior and speech, but as her manners improved her native vigor
+declined. She took kindly to Roman luxury and effeminacy, and could no
+longer have thundered at the gates of her neighbors demanding "land."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But at last the great Roman Empire was dying, and even degenerate Gaul
+was struggling out of her relaxing grasp. In her extremity she called
+upon the Franks, a powerful Germanic race, to aid her. This people had
+long looked with covetous eyes at the fair fields stretching beyond the
+Rhine, and lost no time in accepting the invitation. They overspread
+the land, and Gaul and Roman alike were submerged beneath the Teuton
+flood, while the Frankish Conqueror, Clovis (son of the great
+Merovaæus), was at Paris (or "Lutetia") wearing the kingly crown.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Such was the beginning of independent and of dynastic life in France.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Rome had found a more powerful ally than she hoped; and the desire of
+Gaul was accomplished in that she was free from Rome. But the king of
+whom she had dreamed was of her own race; not this terrible Frank. Had
+she exchanged one servitude for another? Had she been, not set free,
+but simply annexed to the realm of the Barbarian across the Rhine? Let
+us say rather that it was an espousal. She had brought her dowry of
+beauty and "land," that most coveted of possessions, and had pledged
+obedience, for which she was to be cherished, honored, and protected,
+and to bear the name of her lord.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent" ALIGN="center">
+<SPAN STYLE="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</SPAN><BR>
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ancient heroes are said to be seen through a shadowy lens, which
+magnifies their stature. Let us hope that the crimes of the three or
+four generations immediately succeeding Clovis have been in like manner
+expanded; for it is sickening to read of such monstrous prodigality of
+wickedness. Whole families butchered, husbands, wives,
+children&mdash;anything obstructing the path to the throne&mdash;with an atrocity
+which makes Richard III. seem a mere pigmy in the art of intrigue and
+killing. The chapter closes with the daughter and mother of kings
+(Brunehilde or Brunhaut) naked and tied by one arm, one leg and her
+hair to the tail of an unbroken horse, and amid jeers and shouts dashed
+over the stones of Paris (600 A.D.).
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But even the Frank succumbed to the enervating Gallic influence. The
+Merovingian line commenced by Clovis faded from ferocity into
+imbecility. Its Kings in less than two centuries had become mere
+lay-figures, wearing the symbols of an authority which existed nowhere,
+unless in the <I>Maire du Palais</I>.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This office from being a sort of royal stewardship had grown to be the
+governing power <I>de facto</I>. While Theodoric, the Phantom King, was
+having his long locks dressed and perfumed, his <I>Maire du Palais</I>,
+Charles, was moulding and welding his kingdom, and at the same time
+staying the Mohammedan flood which was pouring over the Pyrenees; and,
+by his final and decisive blow in defence of the Christianity espoused
+by Clovis, earning the name <I>Charles Martel</I> (the hammer).
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent" ALIGN="center">
+<SPAN STYLE="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</SPAN><BR>
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Less than one hundred years after the death of Clovis, there had come
+out of Asia, that birthplace of religions, a new faith, which was
+destined to be for centuries the scourge of Christendom, and which
+to-day rules one-third of the human family. Zoroaster, Buddha, Christ,
+had successively come with saving message to humanity, and now (600
+A.D.) Mohammed believed himself divinely appointed to drive out of
+Arabia the idolatry of ancient Magianism (the religion of Zoroaster).
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Christianity had passed through strange vicissitudes. Kings, Emperors,
+Popes, and Bishops had been terrible custodians of its truths, and
+while many still held it in its primitive purity, ecclesiastics were
+fiercely fighting over the nature of the Trinity, the divinity of the
+Virgin Mother, and the Church was shaken to its foundation by furious
+factions.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In this hour of weakness, the Persians (590 A.D.) had conquered Asia
+Minor. Bethlehem, Gethsemane, and Calvary were profaned; the Holy
+Sepulchre had been burned, and the cross carried off amid shouts of
+laughter. Magianism had insulted Christianity, and no miracle had
+interposed! The heavens did not roll asunder, nor did the earth open
+her abysses to swallow them up. There was consternation and doubt in
+Christendom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Such was the state of the Church when Mohammedanism came into
+existence. "There is but one God, and Mohammed is his Prophet." Such
+was its battle-cry and its creed, and the moral precepts of the Koran
+its gospel. There seems nothing in this to account for the mad
+enthusiasm and the passion for worship in its followers. But in less
+than a hundred years this lion out of Arabia had subjected Syria,
+Mesopotamia, Egypt, Northern Africa, and the Spanish Peninsula. Now,
+sword in one hand, and the Koran in the other, the Mohammedan had
+crossed the Pyrenees and was in Southern Gaul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Under the strange magic of this faith, the largest religious empire the
+world had known had sprung into existence, stretching from the Chinese
+Wall to the Atlantic; from the Caspian to the Indian Ocean; and
+Jerusalem, the metropolis of Christianity-Jerusalem, the Mecca of the
+Christian, was lost! The crescent floated over the birthplace of our
+Lord, and notwithstanding the temporary successes of the Crusades, it
+does to this day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If the Pyrenees were passed, the very existence of Christendom was
+threatened. Charles Martel, the grandfather of Charlemagne, averted
+this danger when he stayed the infidel flood at the battle of Tours,
+732 A.D.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Pepin, the son of Charles Martel, who succeeded him as <I>Maire du
+Palais</I>, does not seem to have had the temper or spirit of an usurper,
+but simply to have been an energetic, resolute man who was bored by the
+circumlocution of governing through a King who did not exist. He
+determined to put an end to the fiction, and to cut the Gordian knot by
+first cutting the long curls of the last Merovingian, Childeric; and
+then putting the crown upon his own head, he sent the unfortunate
+phantom of royalty to a monastery, to reflect upon the uncertainty of
+human pleasures and events. By right of manhood and superiority, the
+Carlovingian line had succeeded to the Merovingian.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent" ALIGN="center">
+<SPAN STYLE="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</SPAN><BR>
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Against the dark background of European history, and with the broad
+level of obscurity stretching over the ages at its feet, there rises
+one shining pinnacle. Considered as man or sovereign, Charlemagne is
+one of the most impressive figures in history. His seven feet of
+stature clad in shining steel, his masterful grasp of the forces of his
+time, his splendid intelligence, instinct even then with the modern
+spirit, all combine to elevate him in solitary grandeur.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Charlemagne found France in disorder measureless, and apparently
+insurmountable. Barbarian invasion without, and anarchy within; Saxon
+paganism pressing in upon the North, and Asiatic Islamism upon the
+South and West; a host of forces struggling for dominion in a nation
+brutish, ignorant, and without cohesion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is the attribute of genius to discern opportunity where others see
+nothing. Charlemagne saw rising out of this chaos a great resuscitated
+Roman empire, which should be at the same time a spiritual and
+Christian empire as well. Saxons, Slavs, Huns, Lombards, Arabs, came
+under his compelling grasp; these antagonistic races all held together
+by the force of one terrible will, in unnatural combination with
+France. No political liberties, no popular assemblies discussing
+public measures; it is Charlemagne alone who fills the picture; it is
+absolutism,&mdash;marked by prudence, ability, and grandeur, but still,
+absolutism.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Pope looked approvingly upon this son of the Church by whose order
+4,500 pagan heads could be cut off in one day, and a whole army
+compelled to baptism in an afternoon. Here was a champion to be
+propitiated! Charlemagne, on the other hand, saw in the Church the
+most compliant and effective means to empire. In the loving alliance
+formed, he was to be the protector, the Pope the protected. He wore
+the Church as a precious jewel in his crown.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a splendid dream, splendidly realized; the most imposing of
+human successes, and the most impressive of human failures. It seems
+designed as a lesson for the human race in the transitory nature of
+power applied from without.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The vast fabric passed with himself; was gone like a shadow when he was
+gone. The unity of the Empire was buried in the grave of its founder.
+In twenty-nine years (by the treaty of Verdun) three kingdoms emerged
+from the crumbling mass. France, Italy, Germany, already separated by
+race repulsions, had taken up each a distinct national existence, the
+Imperial crown remaining with Germany.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And France&mdash;France, the centre of this dream of unity, with her native
+incohesiveness, and in the irony of fate, had broken into no less than
+59 fragments, loosely held together by one Carlovingian King.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap05"></A>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER V.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+I think that it was Lincoln who said that "the Lord must like common
+people, because he had made so many of them." The path for the common
+people in France at this time led through heavy shadows. But a darker
+time was approaching. A system of oppression was maturing, which was
+soon to envelop them in the obscurity of darkest night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Those Scandinavian freebooters called Northmen, and later Normans, were
+the scourge of the kingdom. Nothing was safe from their insolent
+courage and rapacity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rich could intrench themselves in stone fortresses, with moats and
+drawbridges, and be in comparative security, but the poor were utterly
+defenceless against this perennial destroyer. The result was a compact
+between the powerful and the weak, which was the beginning of the
+Feudal System. It was in effect an exchange of protection for service
+and fealty. You give us absolute control of your persons&mdash;your
+military service when required, and a portion of your substance and the
+fruit of your toil&mdash;and we will in exchange give you our fortified
+castles as a refuge from the Northmen. Such was the offer. It was a
+choice between vassalage, serfdom, or destruction outright.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Simple enough in its beginnings, this became a ramified system of
+oppression, a curious network of authority, ingeniously controlling an
+entire people. The conditions upon which was engrafted this compact
+were of great antiquity, had indeed been brought across the Rhine by
+their German conquerors; but the Northmen were the impelling cause of
+the swift development of feudalism in France.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Charlemagne had felt grave apprehensions of evil from these robber
+incursions, but could not have conceived of a result such as this, the
+most oppressive system ever fastened upon a nation, and one which would
+at the same time sap the foundations of royalty itself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The theory was that the King was absolute owner of all the territory;
+the great lords holding their titles from him on condition of military
+service, their vassals pledging military service and obedience to them
+again on similar terms, and sub-vassals again to them repeating the
+pledge; and so on in descending chain, until at last the serf, that
+wretched being whom none looks up to nor fears, is ground to powder
+beneath the superimposed mass. No appeal from the authority, no escape
+from the caprice or cruelty of his feudal lord. Could any scales
+weigh, could any words measure the suffering which must have been
+endured? Is it strange, with every aspiration thwarted, hope stifled,
+that Europe sank into the long sleep of the Middle Ages?
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+It is easy to conceive that under such a system, where all the affairs
+of the realm were adjusted by individual rulers with unlimited power,
+and where the great barons could make war upon each other without
+authorization from the King, that by the time this nominal head of the
+entire system was reached, there was nothing for him to do. In fact,
+there was not left one vestige of kingly authority, and Carlovingian
+rulers were almost as insignificant as their Merovingian predecessors.
+France had, instead of one great sovereign, 150 petty ones!
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent" ALIGN="center">
+<SPAN STYLE="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</SPAN><BR>
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In 911 A.D. the Northmen were offered the province henceforth known as
+Normandy, upon condition of their acceptance of the religion and
+submission to the laws of the realm. Rollo, the disreputable
+robber-chief, took the oath of fealty to the King of France his
+Suzerain, and Christian baptism transformed him into respectable,
+law-abiding Robert, Duke of Normandy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With marvellous facility this people took on the language and manners
+of their neighbors, and in a century and a half were prepared to
+instruct the Britons in a higher civilization.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I think it is one hundred years of respectability that is required by a
+certain aristocratic club for admission to its membership. The blood
+does not acquire the proper shade of azure until it has flowed in the
+full light of day for at least three generations. Decidedly, William
+the Conqueror, first Norman King of England, could not have been
+admitted to this club.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A century before his birth, his ancestors had lived by looting their
+neighbors. They were highwaymen, robbers, by profession. And, to
+increase his ineligibility, his mother, a pretty Norman peasant girl,
+daughter of a tanner, had ensnared the affections of that pleasant Duke
+of Normandy, known as "Robert the Devil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+William, the fruit of this unconsecrated union, became in time Duke of
+Normandy. With that reversion to ancestral types to which scientists
+tell us we are all liable, he seems to have looked across the Channel
+toward England, with an awakening of his robber-instincts. In a few
+weeks, Harold, the last King of the Saxons, lay dead at his feet, and
+William, Duke of Normandy, was William I., King of England.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then was presented the curious anomaly of an English sovereign who was
+also ruler of a French province; an English king who was vassal to the
+King of France. A door was thus opened (1066 A.D.) through which
+entered entangling complications and countless woes in the future.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent" ALIGN="center">
+<SPAN STYLE="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</SPAN><BR>
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If Charlemagne had worn the Church as a precious jewel in his crown in
+the ninth century, the Church now in the eleventh century wore all the
+European states, a tiara of jewels in her mitre. The centre of
+dominion had passed from the Empire of Germany to Rome, when Henry IV.
+prostrated himself barefooted before Gregory VII. at Canossa in 1072.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Church was at its zenith. As a political system it was unrivalled;
+but its triumphs brought little joy to the earnest souls still clinging
+to the ideals of primitive Christianity. But what availed it for
+Abelard to lead an intellectual revolt against corrupted beliefs in the
+North, or the Albigenses a spiritual one in the South? He was silenced
+and immured for life, while the unhappy inhabitants of Languedoc were
+massacred and almost exterminated, and an inquisition, established at
+Toulouse, made sure that heretical germs should not again spread from
+that infected centre.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But however imperfect the religious sentiment of the time, however it
+may have departed from the simple precepts of its founder, its power to
+sway the hearts and lives of the people may be judged from the
+extraordinary movement started in France in the twelfth century.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+How inconceivable, in this practical age, that Europe should three
+times have emptied her choicest and best into Asia for a sentiment!
+Business suspended, private interests sacrificed or forgotten, life,
+treasure, all eagerly given&mdash;for what? That a small bit of territory,
+a thousand miles away, be torn from profaning infidels, because of its
+sacred associations, because it was the birthplace of a religion whose
+meaning seems to have escaped them&mdash;a religion which they wore on their
+battle-flags, but not in their hearts. How would a barefooted,
+rope-girdled monk, however inspired and eloquent, fare to-day in New
+York, or London, or Paris?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+History has no stranger chapter than that of the Crusades. When Peter
+the Hermit pictured the desecration of the Holy Land by Mohammedans,
+all classes in France, from King to serf, were for the first time moved
+by a common sentiment, and poured life and treasure with passionate
+zeal into those streams which three times inundated Palestine.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The order of Knights Templar had been created, and a splendid ideal of
+manhood held up before the French nation, and now the knightly ideal,
+side by side with the Christian and the romantic ideal, entered into
+the life of the people. Romance, song, poetry, eloquence came into
+being from a sort of spiritual baptism, and France began to wear the
+mantle of beauty which was to be her chief glory in the future.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But future France was not clad in coat of mail in the twelfth century.
+She was lying helpless, beneath the mass of feudal trappings. Her time
+was not yet.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap06"></A>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VI.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Like all oppressive systems, feudalism bore within itself the seeds of
+its own destruction. When the King, shorn of prerogative and of
+dignity, made alliance with the people lying in helpless misery beneath
+the mailed surface, the system was rudely shaken. When artisans
+flocked to the free cities enjoying especial immunities and privileges
+from the King, and by skill and industry amassed fortunes, the
+<I>commune</I> and the <I>bourgeoisie</I> were created, and feudalism was
+stricken to its centre. When spendthrift nobles and needy barons
+mortgaged their estates, the end was not far off. And when in 1302 the
+"<I>tiers état</I>" entered the States-General as a legitimate order of the
+Government, the very foundations were crumbling, and it needed but the
+final <I>coup de grâce</I> given by Charles VII. in the fifteenth century,
+when he established a standing army under the control of the King.
+When this was done, the feudal system was relegated to the region of
+the obsolete.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was well for that sovereign that he could do something to save his
+name from the obloquy attached to it on account of his base desertion
+of Joan of Arc, to whom he owed his throne and his kingdom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the moment when a French province was attached to the crown of
+England, the dream of that nation was the conquest of France.
+Generations came and went, one dynasty replaced another, and still the
+struggle continued; France sometimes seeming near to dominion over
+England, and England always believing it was her destiny to bring
+France under the rule of an English sovereign.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A glamour of romance is thrown over history by the royal marriages
+which occur in dazzling profusion. It seems to have been the custom,
+whenever a peace was concluded in Europe, to cement it with a royal
+marriage, and to throw in a princess as a sacrifice,&mdash;one of the
+conditions of almost every treaty being that a royal daughter, or
+sister, or niece, should be tossed across the Channel, or into Germany,
+or Italy, or Spain, an unwilling bride thrown into the arms of a
+reluctant bridegroom; with the result that in the succeeding generation
+there was a plentiful sprinkling of heirs with claims, more or less
+shadowy, to the neighboring thrones. This was the source, or rather
+pretext, for most of the wars between France and England for four
+hundred years.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the early part of the fifteenth century the great crisis arrived.
+With that lack of unity which seemed a fatal Gallic inheritance, France
+broke into civil war, while an invading English army was in the heart
+of her kingdom. England's dream was near realization.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+An insane King, a vicious intriguing Queen-Regent, the Duke of Burgundy
+madly jealous of the Duke of Orleans, and both ready to sacrifice
+France in the rage of disappointed ambition,&mdash;such were the elements.
+England's opportunity had come.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The depraved Queen Isabella, acting for her insane husband, held
+conference with Henry V., and actually concluded a treaty bestowing the
+regency upon the English King. There was the usual douceur of a
+princess thrown in, and Katharine, the daughter of Isabella, and sister
+to the Dauphin (the future King Charles VII.), was espoused by King
+Henry V. of England, who set up a royal court at Vincennes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fortunes of the kingdom had never been so desperate. The people
+saw in these insolent traitorous dukes their natural enemy; in the
+King, their friend and protector. Had not monarchy given them life and
+hope? It was to them sacred next to Heaven. They rose in an outburst
+of patriotism. The young Dauphin was hastily and informally crowned,
+and thousands flocked to his standard. It was the King and the people
+against the great vassals, the last struggle of an expiring feudalism.
+Desperation lent fury to the conflict which was, upon both sides, a
+fight for existence; the Queen-mother in unnatural alliance with the
+Duke of Burgundy, who was resolved to rule or ruin.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He soon saw that defeat was inevitable, and, preferring infamy, threw
+himself into the hands of the English, offering to turn the kingdom
+over to the infant King Henry VI. (Henry V. having died).
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Charles abandoned hope; how could he struggle against such a
+combination? He was considering whether he should find refuge in Spain
+or in Scotland, when the tide of events was turned by the strangest
+romance in history.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+It must ever remain a mystery that a peasant girl, a child in years and
+in experience, should have believed herself called to such a mission;
+conferring only with her heavenly guides or "voices," that she should
+have sought the King, inspired him with faith in her, and in himself
+and his cause, reanimated the courage of the army, and led it herself
+to victory absolute and complete; and then, compelling the
+half-reluctant, half-doubting Charles to go with her to Rheims, where
+she had him anointed and consecrated, this simple child in that day
+bestowed upon him a kingdom, and upon France a King!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Was there ever a stranger chapter in history! Alas, if it could have
+ended here, and she could have gone back to her mother and her spinning
+and her simple pleasures, as she was always longing to do when her work
+should be done. But no! we see her falling into the hands of the
+defeated and revengeful English&mdash;this child, who had wrested from them
+a kingdom already in their grasp. She was turned over to the French
+ecclesiastical court to be tried. A sorceress and a blasphemer they
+pronounce her, and pass her on to the secular authorities, and her
+sentence is&mdash;death.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We see the poor defenceless girl, bewildered, terrified, wringing her
+hands and declaring her innocence as she rides to execution. God and
+man had abandoned her. No heavenly voice spoke, no miracle intervened
+as her young limbs were tied to the stake and the fagots and straw
+piled up about her. The torch was applied, and her pure soul mounted
+heavenward in a column of flames.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Rugged men wept. A Burgundian general said, as he turned gloomily
+away, "We have murdered a saint."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Charles, sitting upon the throne she had rescued for him, what was
+he doing to save her? Nothing&mdash;to his everlasting shame be it said,
+nothing. He might not have succeeded; the effort at rescue, or to stay
+the event, might have been unavailing. But where was his knighthood,
+where his manhood, that he did not try, or utter passionate protest
+against her fate?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Twenty-five years later we see him erecting statues to her memory, and
+"rehabilitating" her desecrated name. And to-day, the Church which
+condemned her for blasphemy is placing her upon the calendar of saints,
+while all political parties alike are using her name as a thing to
+conjure with.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap07"></A>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VII.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+The early part of the sixteenth century must ever be memorable in the
+history of Europe. Ferdinand and Isabella had given to the human race
+a new world. Luther had hurled his defiance at Rome&mdash;had arraigned Leo
+X. for blasphemy and corrupt practices. Henry V., grandson of
+Ferdinand and Isabella (and nephew of Katharine, wife of Henry VIII.)
+was Emperor of Germany. Astute and powerful though he was, he had been
+unable to stay the Protestant flood. His empire, apparently hungering
+for the new heresy, was divided already into States Protestant and
+States Catholic. England was Protestant. The conversion of her King,
+because the Pope refused to annul his marriage with Katharine, was not
+one of the proudest triumphs of the new faith, but one of the most
+important. Had Katharine's charms been fresher, or Anne Boleyn's less
+alluring, the course of history might have been strangely changed.
+Henry VIII. as persecutor of heretics would have found congenial
+occupation for his ferocious instincts, and Protestantism would have
+been long delayed. Spain was unchangeably Catholic, while France
+offered congenial soil for the new faith. The germs of heresy, long
+slumbering, were everywhere stirred into life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Francis I. was King; sumptuous in tastes, suave and elegant in manners,
+as handsome as an Apollo, gay, pleasure-loving, as vicious as he was
+false, and if need be with a cruelty which matched his ambition, such
+was the man who held the destinies of France at this time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A rival claimant for the throne of Germany, he was destined to spend
+his life in fruitless contest with the more able, wily, and astute
+Henry V., the possession of that Empire the ignis-fatuus ever luring
+him on; an end to which all other ends were simply the means. The
+religious question upon which Europe was divided meant nothing to him,
+except as he could use it in his duel with the Emperor. He was in turn
+the ally of Henry VIII. or the willing tool of Henry V. If he needed
+the English King's friendship, the Protestants had protection. If he
+desired to placate Henry V., the roastings and torturings commenced
+again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In 1547 Francis and Henry VIII. each went to his reward, and a few
+years later Henry V. had laid down his crown and carried his weary,
+unsatisfied heart to St. Yuste. The brilliant pageant was over; but
+Protestantism was expanding.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The question at issue was deeper than any one knew. Neither Luther nor
+Leo X. understood the revolution they had precipitated. Protestants
+and Papists alike failed to comprehend the true nature of the struggle,
+which was not for supremacy of Romanist or Protestant; not whether this
+dogma or that was true, and should prevail; but an assertion of the
+right of every human soul to choose its own faith and form of worship.
+The great battle for human liberty had commenced; the struggle for
+religious liberty was but the prelude to what was to follow. There was
+abundant proof later that Protestants no less than Papists needed only
+opportunity and power to be as cruel and intolerant as their
+persecutors had been. Before the Reformation was fifty years old,
+Servetus, one of the greatest men of his age, a scholar, philosopher,
+and man of irreproachable character, was burned at Geneva for heretical
+views concerning the nature of the Trinity, Calvin, the great organizer
+of Protestant theology, giving, if not the order for this crime, at
+least the nod of approval.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent" ALIGN="center">
+<SPAN STYLE="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</SPAN><BR>
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Huguenot, that name of tragic association, was a corruption of the
+German <I>Eidgenossen</I>&mdash;meaning associates. By the way of Switzerland it
+came into France as <I>Eguenots</I>, and the transition to its present form
+was simple. The Huguenots were no longer a timorous band hiding in
+darkness as in the time of Francis I. A party with such leaders as
+Anthony de Bourbon, Prince of Condé (his brother), and Admiral Coligny,
+was not to be put down by a few roastings and stranglings here and
+there. Anthony de Bourbon (King of Navarre) was next in succession
+should the House of Valois become extinct, with a young son valiant as
+himself (the future Henry IV.) pressing on toward manhood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Catholic France needed plenty of comfort from Rome and Madrid in
+dealing with this formidable body of heretics which had fastened upon
+her vitals, and which was in turn receiving aid and comfort from the
+young Protestant Queen across the Channel.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+When that fair princess Catharine de Medici became the wife of Henry,
+second son of Francis I., no one suspected the tremendous import of the
+event. Powerless to win the affection or even confidence of her
+husband, she remained during his reign almost unobserved, but, as the
+event proved, not unobservant. Her alert faculties were not idle, and
+when upon the death of Henry II. she found herself Queen-Regent, with
+only a frail boy of sixteen to obstruct her will, she quickly gathered
+the threads she already knew so well, and her supple hand closed upon
+them with a grasp not to be relinquished while she lived.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Another young Princess had been tossed across the Channel. This time
+it was her most serene little highness, Marie Stuart, Queen of
+Scotland, intended for the dauphin, who was to be Francis II.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In order to be prepared for this high destiny, the little maid was
+brought when only six years old to the Court of France to be trained
+under the direct supervision of her future mother-in-law, Catharine de
+Medici. Poor little Marie Stuart&mdash;predestined to sin and to tragedy!
+Who could be good, with the blood of the Guises in her veins, and with
+Catharine de Medici as preceptress?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This marriage was planned before Catharine's advent to power, or it
+would never have been. Marie was the niece of the Duke of Guise, and
+the central thought of Catharine's policy was the exclusion of this
+ambitious, intriguing family from every avenue to power in the state.
+Now, Marie would be Queen, and who so natural advisers as her uncles of
+the house of "Lorraine"?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The marriage of the two children had taken place&mdash;the sickly boy with
+only a modest portion of intelligence was Francis II. Marie, his
+Queen, whom he adored, controlled him utterly, and was in turn
+controlled by her uncles, the Guises. The wily Catharine saw herself
+defeated by a beautiful girl of sixteen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The family of Guise was the self-appointed head of the Catholic party
+in France and represented the most extreme views regarding the
+treatment of heretics. So the strange result was, that Catharine, if
+she looked for any allies in her fight with the house of Lorraine, of
+which the Duke of Guise was the head, must make common cause with the
+Protestants, whom she hated a little less than she did the uncles of
+Marie Stuart. But events were soon to change the situation. Did she
+hasten them? Such a suspicion may never have existed. But may one not
+suspect anything of a woman capable of a St. Bartholomew?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Francis II. was dead. Marie Stuart had passed out of French history.
+The fates were fighting on the side of Catharine, who wasted no regrets
+upon the death of a son, which made her Queen-Regent during the
+minority of her second son Charles. She entered upon her fight with
+the Guises with renewed energy, and became to some extent protector of
+the Protestants. Realizing that her time was brief, she prepared
+Charles for the position he would soon hold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What can be said of a mother who seeks to exterminate every germ of
+truth or virtue in her son&mdash;who immerses him in degrading vices in
+order to deaden his too sensitive conscience and make him a willing
+tool for her purposes? Inheriting the splendid intelligence as well as
+genius for statecraft of the de Medici, nourished from her infancy upon
+Machiavellian principles, cold and cruel by nature, this Florentine
+woman has written her name in blood across the pages of French history.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap08"></A>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VIII.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+There is not time to tell the story of the events leading up to that
+fateful night, August 24, 1572. Impelled always by her fear and dread
+of the Guises, Catharine had been vacillating in her policy with the
+Huguenots. Charles IX. was now King: impressible, easily influenced,
+yet stubborn, intractable, incoherent, passionate, and unreliable;
+sometimes inclining to the Guises, sometimes to Coligny and the
+Huguenots, and always submitting at last after vain struggle to his
+imperious mother's will, in her efforts to free him from both. We see
+in him a weak character, not naturally bad, torn to distraction by the
+cruel forces about him, who when compelled to yield, as he always did
+in the end, to that terrible woman, would give way to fits of impotent
+rage against the fate which allowed him no peace.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A time arrived when Catharine feared the influence of the Protestant
+Coligny more than the Guises. Brave, patriotic, magnetic, he had
+succeeded in winning Charles' consent to declare war against Spain.
+Philip II. of Spain was Catharine's son-in-law and closest ally. Her
+entire policy would be undermined. At all hazards Coligny must be
+gotten rid of. The young King of Navarre, adored leader of the
+Protestants, was a constant menace; he too must in some way be disposed
+of.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There were sinister conferences with Philip of Spain and with his
+Minister, that incarnation of cruelty and of the Inquisition, the Duke
+of Alva.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+God knows France was not guiltless in what followed; but the
+initiative, the inception of the horrid deed, was not French. It was
+conceived in the brain of either this Italian woman or her Spanish
+adviser and co-conspirator, the Duke of Alva. We will never know the
+inside history of the massacre of St. Bartholomew. It must ever remain
+a matter of conjecture just how and when it was planned, but the
+probabilities point strongly one way.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Charles was to be gradually prepared for it by his mother, the plot
+revealed to him as he was in condition to bear it; by working upon his
+fears, his suspicions, by stories of plottings against his life and his
+kingdom, to infuriate him, and then&mdash;before his rage was exhausted&mdash;to
+act. The marriage of Charles' sister Margaret with the young
+Protestant leader Henry of Navarre, with its promise of future
+protection to the Huguenots, was part of the plot. It would lure all
+the leaders of the cause to Paris. Coligny, Condé, all the heads of
+the party were urgently invited to attend the marriage-feast which was
+to inaugurate an era of peace.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Admiral Coligny was requested by Catharine, simply as a measure of
+protection to the Protestants, to have an additional regiment of guards
+in Paris, to act in case of any unforeseen violence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Two days after the marriage and while the festivities were at their
+height, an attempt upon the life of the old Admiral awoke suspicion and
+alarm. But Catharine and her son went immediately in person to see the
+wounded old man, and to express their grief and horror at the event.
+They commanded that a careful list of the names and abode of every
+Protestant in Paris be made, in order, as they said, "to take them
+under their own immediate protection." "My dear father," said the
+King, "the hurt is yours, the grief is mine."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At that moment, the knives were already sharpened, every man instructed
+in his part in the hideous drama, and the signal for its commencement
+determined upon. Charles did not know it, but his mother did. She
+went to her son's room that night, artfully and eloquently pictured the
+danger he was in, confessed to him that she had authorized the attempt
+upon Coligny, but that it was done because of the Admiral's plottings
+against him, which she had discovered. But the Guises&mdash;her enemies and
+his&mdash;they knew it, and would denounce her and the King! The only thing
+now is to finish the work. He must die.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Charles was in frightful agitation and stubbornly refused. Finally
+with an air of offended dignity she bowed coldly and said to her son,
+"Sir, will you permit me to withdraw with my daughter, from your
+kingdom?" The wretched Charles was conquered. In a sort of insane
+fury he exclaimed, "Well, let them kill him, and all the rest of the
+Huguenots too. See that not one remains to reproach me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This was more than she had hoped. All was easy now. So eager was she
+to give the order before a change of mood, that she flew herself to
+give the signal, fully two hours earlier than was expected. At
+midnight the tocsin rang out upon the night, and the horror began.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lulled to a feeling of security by artfully contrived circumstances,
+husbands, wives, sons, daughters, peacefully sleeping, were awakened to
+see each other hideously slaughtered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The stars have looked down upon some terrible scenes in Paris, her
+stones are not unacquainted with the taste of human blood, but never
+had there been anything like this. The carnage of battle is merciful
+compared with it. Shrieking women and children, half-clothed, fleeing
+from knives already dripping with human blood; frantic mothers
+shielding the bodies of their children, and wives pleading for the
+lives of husbands; the living hiding beneath the bodies of the dead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The cry that ascended to Heaven from Paris that night was the most
+awful and despairing in the world's history. It was centuries of
+cruelty crowded into a few hours.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The number slain can never be accurately stated; but it was thousands.
+Human blood is intoxicating. An orgie set in which laughed at orders
+to cease. Seven days it continued and then died out for lack of
+material. The provinces had caught the contagion, and orders to slay
+were received and obeyed in all except two, the Governor of Bayonne, to
+his honor be it told, writing to the King in reply: "Your Majesty has
+many faithful subjects in Bayonne, but not one executioner."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And where was "His Majesty" while this work was being done? How was it
+with Catharine? She was possibly seeing to the embalming of Coligny's
+head, which we learn she sent as a present to the Pope. We hear of no
+regrets, no misgivings, that she was calm, collected, suave and
+unfathomable as ever, but that Charles in a strange, half-frenzied
+state was amusing himself by firing from the windows of the palace at
+the fleeing Huguenots. Had he killed himself in remorse, would it not
+have been better, instead of lingering two wretched years, a prey to
+mental tortures and an inscrutable malady, before he died?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Europe was shocked. Christendom averted her face in horror. But at
+Madrid and Rome there was satisfaction.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Catharine and the Duke of Alva had done their work skilfully, but the
+result surprised and disappointed them. Tens of thousands of Huguenots
+were slain, which was well; but many times that number remained, with
+spirit unbroken, which was not well.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They had been too merciful! Why had Henry of Navarre been spared? Had
+not Alva said, "Take the big fish and let the small fry go. One salmon
+is worth more than a thousand frogs."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Charles considered the matter settled when he uttered those
+swelling words to Henry of Navarre the day after the massacre: "I mean
+in future to have one religion in my kingdom. It is mass or death."
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Catharine's third son now wore the crown of France. In Henry III. she
+had as pliant an instrument for her will as in the two brothers
+preceding him; and, like them, his reign was spent in alternating
+conflict with the Protestants and the Duke de Guise. At last, wearied
+and exasperated, this half-Italian and altogether conscienceless King
+quite naturally thought of the stiletto. The old Duke, as he entered
+the King's apartment by invitation, was stricken down by assassins
+hidden for that purpose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Henry had not counted on the rebound from that blow. Catholic France
+was excited to such popular fury against him that he threw himself into
+the arms of the Protestants, imploring their aid in keeping his crown
+and his kingdom; and when himself assassinated, a year later, in the
+absence of a son he named Henry, King of Navarre, his successor. A
+Protestant and a Huguenot was King of France.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap09"></A>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER IX.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+After long wandering in strange seas, we come in view of familiar
+lights and headlands. With the advent of the house of Bourbon, we have
+grasped a thread which leads directly down to our own time.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+The accession of a Protestant King was hailed with delirious joy by the
+Huguenots, and with corresponding rage by Catholic France. The one
+looked forward to redressing of wrongs and avenging of injuries; and
+the other flatly refused submission unless Henry should recant his
+heresy, and become a convert to the true faith.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The new King saw there was no bed of roses preparing for him. After
+four years of effort to reconcile the irreconcilable, he decided upon
+his course. He was not called to the throne to rule over Protestant
+France, nor to be an instrument of vengeance for the Huguenots. He saw
+that the highest good of the kingdom required, not that he should
+impose upon it either form of belief or worship, but give equal
+opportunity and privilege to both.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To the consternation of the Huguenots he announced himself ready to
+listen to the arguments in favor of the religion of Rome; and it took
+just five hours of deliberation to convince him of its truth. He
+announced himself ready to abjure his old faith. Bitter reproaches on
+the one side and rejoicings on the other greeted this decision. It was
+not heroic. But many even among the Protestants acknowledged it to be
+an act of supreme political wisdom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Peace was restored, and the "Edict of Nantes," which quickly followed,
+proved to his old friends, the Huguenots, that they were not forgotten.
+The Protestants, with every disability removed, shared equal privileges
+with the Catholics throughout the kingdom; and the first victory for
+religious liberty was splendidly won.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+An era of unexampled prosperity dawned. Never had the kingdom been so
+wisely and beneficently governed. Sincerity, simplicity, and sympathy
+had taken the place of dissimulation, craft, and cruelty. Uplifting
+agencies were everywhere at work, reaching even to the peasantry, that
+forgotten element in the nation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The reign of the Bourbon dynasty had opened auspiciously. Henry IV.
+was the idol of the people. His loveless marriage with Margaret de
+Valois had been annulled, and he had espoused Marie de Medici. The
+blood from that poisoned stream was again to be intermingled with the
+blood of the future Kings of France.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After a reign of twenty-one years, the sagacious ruler who had done
+more than any other to make her great and happy was stricken down by
+the hand of an assassin, and a cry of grief arose alike from Catholic
+and Protestant throughout the kingdom.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Poor France was again at the mercy of a woman with the corrupt
+instincts of the de Medici. The widow of Henry IV., who was Regent
+during the infancy of her son Louis, was intriguing, vulgar, and
+without the ability of the great Catharine. The kingdom was rent by
+cabals of aspiring favorites and ambitious nobles, until the reign of
+Louis XIII., or rather of Cardinal Richelieu, began.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The foundations of this man's policy lay deep, out of sight of all save
+his own far-reaching intelligence. Pitiless as an iceberg, he crushed
+every obstacle to his purpose. Impartial as fate, with no loves, no
+hatreds, Catholics, Protestants, nobles, Parliaments, one after another
+were borne down before his determination to make the King, what he had
+not been since Charlemagne, supreme in France.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The will of the great minister mowed down like a scythe. The power of
+the grandees, that last remnant of feudalism, and a perpetual menace to
+monarchy, was swept away. One great noble after another was humiliated
+and shorn of his privileges, if not of his head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Huguenots, being first shaken into submission, saw their political
+liberties torn from them by the stroke of a pen, and even while the
+Catholics were making merry over this discomfiture, the minister was
+planning to send Henrietta, sister of the King, across the Channel to
+become Queen of Protestant England, as wife of Charles I. But the act
+of supreme audacity was to come. This high prelate of the church, this
+cardinal minister, formed alliance with Gustavus Adolphus, the great
+leader of the Protestants in the war upon the Emperor and the Pope!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He allowed no religion, no class, to sway or to hold him. He was for
+France; and her greatness and glory augmented under his ruthless
+dominion. By his extraordinary genius he made the reign of a
+commonplace King one of dazzling splendor; and while gratifying his own
+colossal ambition he so strengthened the foundations of the monarchy
+that princes of the blood themselves could not shake it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was great&mdash;it was dazzling, but of all his work there is but one
+thing which revolutions and time have not swept away. The "French
+Academy" alone survives as his monument. Out of a gathering of
+literary friends he created a national institution, its object the
+establishing a court of last appeal in all that makes for eloquence in
+speaking or writing the French language. In a country where nothing
+endures, this has remained unchanged for two hundred and thirty years.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But this master of statecraft, this creator of despotic monarchy, had
+one unsatisfied ambition. He would have exchanged all his honors for
+the ability to write one play like those of Corneille. Hungering for
+literary distinction, he could not have gotten into his own Academy had
+he not created it. And jealous of his laurels, he hated Corneille as
+much as he did the enemies of France.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap10"></A>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER X.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Again do we recognize the fine Italian hand in French politics.
+Cardinal Mazarin was Minister during the regency of Anne of Austria,
+directing and controlling the affairs of the Kingdom, less intent upon
+the greatness of France than the greatness and magnificence of her
+Prime Minister. At last the wily Italian was gone, and Louis XIV.
+settled himself upon the throne which Richelieu had rendered so exalted
+and immovable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cardinal Mazarin had said of the young Louis that "there was enough in
+him to make four Kings, and one honest man." His greatness consisted
+more in amplitude than in kind. Nature made him in prodigal mood. He
+was an average man of colossal proportions. His ability, courage,
+dignity, industry, greed for power and possessions, were all on a
+magnificent scale, and so were his vanity, his loves, his cruelties,
+his pleasures, his triumphs, and his disappointments.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No King more wickedly oppressed France, and none made her more
+glorious. He made her feared abroad and magnificent at home, but he
+desolated her, and drained her resources with ambitious wars. He
+crowned her with imperishable laurels in literature, art, and every
+manifestation of genius, but he signed the "Revocation of the Edict of
+Nantes," and drove out of his kingdom 500,000 of the best of his
+subjects.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If the names of Marlborough and Maintenon could have been stricken out
+of his life, the story might have had a different ending. From the
+moment the great Duke checked his victorious army, his sun began to go
+down; but it was Maintenon who most obscured its setting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His unloved Queen, the Spanish Marie Therese, had borne his mad
+infatuation for Louise la Vallière; la Vallière had carried her broken
+heart to a convent, and been superseded by de Montespan, and de
+Montespan had invited her own destruction by bringing into her
+household the pious widow of the poet Scarron, Madame de Maintenon,
+(grand-daughter of d'Aubigne, the historian of the Reformation).
+Grave, austere, ambitious, talented, she was not too much engrossed in
+her duties as governess of de Montespan's children to find ways of
+establishing an influence over the King.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This man who had absorbed into himself all the functions of the
+Government, who was Ministers, Magistrates, Parliaments, all in one,
+this central sun of whom Corneille, Molière, Racine were but single
+rays, was destined to be enslaved in his old age by a designing
+adventuress; her will his law. The hey-day of youth having passed, he
+was beginning to be anxious about his soul. She artfully pricked his
+conscience, and de Montespan was sent away, but de Maintenon remained.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She next convinced him that the only fitting atonement for his sins was
+to drive heresy out of his kingdom, and re-establish the true faith.
+At her bidding he undid the glorious work of Henry IV., signed the
+"Revocation of the Edict of Nantes," and brutally stamped out
+Protestantism.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A part of the scheme of penitence seems to have been that on the death
+of poor Marie Therese, he should make her (de Maintenon) his lawful
+wife, which he did privately; and his sun went down obscured by
+crushing griefs and disappointments. His children swept away, the
+prestige of success tarnished, this demigod was taken to pieces by
+time's destroying fingers, quite as unceremoniously as are the rest of
+us, hiding finally behind the bed-curtains while a kneeling courtier
+passed to him his wig on the end of a stick, and at last lying down
+like any other old dying sinner, overwhelmed with the vanity of earthly
+things and with the vastness of eternity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Still more would the dying moments of the Grand Monarque have been
+embittered could he have foreseen into what hands his great inheritance
+was passing.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Upon Louis XV. more than any other rests the responsibility of the
+crisis which was approaching.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A heartless sybarite, depraved in tastes, without sense of
+responsibility or comprehension of his times, a brutalized voluptuary
+governed by a succession of designing women, regardless of national
+poverty, indulging in wildest extravagance,&mdash;such was the man in whom
+was vested the authority rendered so absolute by Richelieu,&mdash;such the
+man who opened up a pathway for the storm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As for the nobility, their degradation may be imagined when it is said
+there was as bitter rivalry between titled and illustrious fathers to
+secure for their daughters the coveted position held by Madame de
+Pompadour, as for the highest offices of State.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Could the upper ranks fall lower than this? Had not the kingdom
+reached its lowest depths, where its foreign policy was determined by
+the amount of consideration shown to Madame de Pompadour? But this
+woman, whose friendship was artfully sought by the great Empress Maria
+Theresa, was superseded, and the fresher charms of Madame du Barri
+enslaved the King. The deposed favorite could not survive her fall,
+and died of a broken heart. It is said that as Louis, looking from an
+upper window of his palace, saw the coffin borne out in a drenching
+rain, he smiled and said: "Ah, the Marquise has a bad day for her
+journey." It may be imagined that the man who could be so pitiless to
+the woman he had loved would feel little pity for the people whom he
+had not loved, but whom he knew only as a remote, obscure something,
+which held up the weight of his glory.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But this "obscure something" was undergoing strange transformation.
+The greater light at the surface had sent some glimmering rays down
+into the mass below, which began to awaken and to think. Misery,
+hopeless and abject, was changing into rage and thirst for vengeance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A new class had come into existence which was not noble, but with
+highly trained intelligence it looked with contempt and loathing upon
+the frivolous, half-educated nobles. Scorn was added to the ferment of
+human passions beneath the surface, and when Voltaire had spoken, and
+the restraints of religion were loosened, no living hand, not that of a
+Richelieu nor a Louis XIV., could have averted the coming doom.
+But&mdash;no one seems to have suspected what was approaching.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A wonderful literature had come into existence&mdash;not stately and classic
+as in the age preceding,&mdash;but instinct with a new sort of life. The
+highest speculations which can occupy the soul of man were handled with
+marvellous lightness of touch and prismatic brilliancy of expression;
+but all was negation. None tried to build; all to demolish. The
+black-winged angel of Destruction was hovering over the land.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Rousseau tossed his dreamy abstractions into the quivering air,
+and the formula, "Liberty, Fraternity, and Equality," was caught up by
+the titled aristocracy as a charming idyllic toy, while Princes, Dukes,
+and Marquises amused themselves with a dream of Arcadian simplicity, to
+be attained in some indefinite way in some remote and equally
+indefinite future. It was all a masquerade. No reality, no sincerity,
+no convictions, good or evil. The only thing that was real was that an
+over-taxed, impoverished people was exasperated and&mdash;hungry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Did the King need new supplies for his unimaginable luxuries, they were
+taxed. Was it necessary to have new accessions to French "glory," in
+order to allay popular clamor or discontent, they must supply the men
+to fight the glorious battles, and the means with which to pay them.
+Every burden fell at last upon this lowest stratum of the State, the
+nobility and clergy, while owning two-thirds of the land, being nearly
+exempt from taxation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And yet the King and nobility of France, in love with Rousseau's
+theories, were airily discussing the "rights of man." Wolves and foxes
+coming together to talk over the sacredness of the rights of
+property&mdash;or the occupants of murderers' row growing eloquent over the
+sanctity of human life! How incomprehensible that among those
+quick-witted Frenchmen there seems not one to have realized that the
+logical sequence of the formula, "Liberty, Fraternity, and Equality,"
+must be, "Down with the Aristocrats!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And so the surface which Richelieu had converted into adamant grew
+thinner and thinner each day, until King and Court danced upon a mere
+gilded crust, unconscious of the abysmal fires beneath. Some of those
+powdered heads fell into the executioner's basket twenty-five years
+later. Did they recall this time? Did Madame du Barri think of it,
+did she exult at her triumph over de Pompadour, when she was dragged
+shrieking and struggling to the guillotine?
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+And while France was thus weaving her future, what were the other
+nations doing? England, sane, practical, with little time for
+abstractions, and little said about "glory," was importing turnips,
+converting agriculture into a science, and under the instruction of
+exiled Huguenots, establishing marvellous industries. In the new
+kingdom of Prussia, a half-savage, half-inspired King had been
+importing artisans and skill of all sorts, reclaiming waste lands.
+Living like a miser, he had indulged in but one luxury: an army, which
+should be the best in the world. There was no powder, no patches at
+his Court; where he thrashed with his own royal hands male and female
+courtiers, starved, imprisoned, and cudgelled his son and heir to his
+throne for playing on the violin; and, it is said, so terrified and
+scarified his grenadiers with canes and cats that not one of them would
+not have preferred facing the enemy to meeting his enraged sovereign,
+had he done wrong.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Frederick was not a pleasant barbarian. But there is at least a ring
+of sincerity about all this, which it is refreshing to recall after the
+tinsel and depraved refinements of France under Louis XV., and
+something too which gives promise, in spite of its brutality, of a
+stalwart future.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Five years before the close of this miserable reign, an event occurred
+seemingly of small importance to Europe. A child was born in an
+obscure Italian household. His name was Napoleon Bonaparte.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap11"></A>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XI.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Louis XV. was dead, and two children, with the light-heartedness of
+youth and inexperience, stepped upon the throne which was to be a
+scaffold&mdash;Louis XVI., only twenty, and Marie Antoinette, his wife,
+nineteen. He, amiable, kind, full of generous intentions; she,
+beautiful, simple, child-like and lovely. Instead of a debauched old
+King with depraved surroundings, here were a Prince and Princess out of
+a fairy-tale. The air was filled with indefinite promise of a new era
+for mankind to be inaugurated by this amiable young king, whose
+kindness of heart shone forth in his first speech, "We will have no
+more loans, no credit, no fresh burdens on the people;" then, leaving
+his ministers to devise ways of paying the enormous salaries of
+officials out of an empty treasury, and to arrange the financial
+details of his benevolent scheme of government, he proceeded with his
+gay and brilliant young wife to Rheims, there to be crowned with a
+magnificence undreamed of by Louis XIV.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the midst of these rejoicings over the new reign, and of speculative
+dreams of universal freedom, there was wafted across the Atlantic news
+of a handful of patriots arrayed against the tyranny of the British
+Crown. Here were the theories of the new philosophy translated into
+the reality of actual experience. "No taxation without
+representation," "No privileged class," "No government without the
+consent of the governed." Was this not an embodiment of their dreams?
+Nor did it detract from the interest in the conflict that
+England&mdash;England, the hated rival of France, was defied by an indignant
+people of her own race. There was not a young noble in the land who
+would not have rushed if he could to the defence of the outraged
+colonies.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The King, half doubting, and vaguely fearing, was swept into the
+current, and the armies and the courage of the Americans were
+splendidly reinforced by generous, enthusiastic France.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Why should the simple-hearted Louis see what no one else seemed to see:
+that victory or failure were alike full of peril for France? If the
+colonies were conquered, France would feel the vengeance of England; if
+they were freed and self-governing, the principle of Monarchy had a
+staggering blow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the mean time, as the American Revolution moved on toward success,
+there was talk in the cabin as well as the <I>château</I> of the "rights of
+man." In shops and barns, as well as in clubs and drawing-rooms, there
+was a glimmering of the coming day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What is true upon one continent is true upon another," say they. "If
+it is cowardly to submit to tyranny in America, what is it in France?"
+"If Englishmen may revolt against oppression, why may not Frenchmen?"
+"No government without the consent of the governed, eh? When has our
+consent been asked, the consent of twenty-five million people? Are we
+sheep, that we have let a few thousands govern us for a thousand years,
+<I>without</I> our consent?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Poverty and hunger gave force and urgency to these questions. The
+people began to clamor more boldly for the good time which had been
+promised by the kind-hearted King. The murmur swelled to an ominous
+roar. Thousands were at his very palace gates, telling him in no
+unmistakable terms that they were tired of smooth words and fair
+promises. What they wanted was a new constitution and&mdash;bread.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Poor Louis! the one could be made with pen and paper; but by what
+miracle could he produce the other? How gladly would he have given
+them anything. But what could he do? There was not enough money to
+pay the salaries of his officials, nor for his gay young Queen's fêtes
+and balls! The old way would have been to impose new taxes. But how
+could he tax a people crying at his gates for bread? He made more
+promises which he could not keep; yielded, one after another,
+concessions of authority and dignity; then vacillated, and tried to
+return over the slippery path, only to be dragged on again by an
+irresistible fate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When Louis XVI. convoked the States-General, he made his last
+concession to the demands of his subjects.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That almost-forgotten body had not been seen since Richelieu effaced
+all the auxiliary functions of government. Nobles, ecclesiastics, and
+<I>tiers état</I> (or commons) found themselves face to face once more. The
+handsome contemptuous nobles, the princely ecclesiastics were
+unchanged&mdash;but there was a new expression in the pale faces of the
+commons. There was a look of calm defiance as they met the disdainful
+gaze of the aristocrats across the gulf of two centuries.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The two superior bodies absolutely refused to sit in the same room with
+the commons. They might under the same roof, but in the same
+room&mdash;never.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No outburst met this insult. With marvellous self-control and dignity,
+and with an ominous calm, the commons constituted themselves into the
+"National Assembly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aristocratic France had committed its concluding act of arrogance and
+folly. And when poor distracted Louis gave impotent order for the
+Assembly to disperse, he committed suicide. Louis the man lived on to
+be slain by the people three years later, but Louis the King died at
+that moment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When the Assembly defied his authority and continued to solemnly act as
+if he had not spoken, the power had passed to the people. They were
+sovereign.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paris was in wild excitement; and a rumor that troops were marching
+upon the Assembly to disperse it converted excitement into madness.
+The populace marched toward the Bastille, and in another hour the heads
+of the Governor and his officials were being carried on pikes through
+the streets of Paris.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The horrible drama had opened, and events developed with the swiftness
+of a falling avalanche. Louis might have followed his fleeing nobles.
+But always vacillating, and "letting I dare not wait upon I would," the
+opportunity was lost. He and his family were prisoners in the
+"Temple," while an awful travesty upon a court of justice was sending
+out death-warrants for his friends and adherents faster than the
+guillotine could devour them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+More and more furious swept the torrent, gathering to itself all that
+was vile and outcast. Where were the pale-faced, determined patriots
+who sat in the "National Assembly"? Some of them riding with Dukes and
+Marquises to the guillotine. Was this the equality they expected when
+they cried "Down with the Aristocrats"?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Did they think they could guide the whirlwind after raising it? As
+well whisper to the cyclone to level only the tall trees, or to the
+conflagration to burn only the temples and palaces.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With restraining agencies removed, religion, government, King, all
+swept away, that hideous brood born of vice, poverty, hatred, and
+despair came out from dark hiding-places; and what had commenced as a
+patriotic revolt had become a wild orgie of bloodthirsty demons, led by
+three master-demons, Robespierre, Marat, and Danton, vying with each
+other in ferocity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then we see that simple girl thinking by one supreme act of heroism and
+sacrifice, like Joan of Arc, to save her country. Foolish child! Did
+she think to slay the monster devouring Paris by cutting off one of his
+heads? The death of Marat only added to the fury of the tempest; and
+the falling of Charlotte Corday's head was not more noticed than the
+falling of a leaf in the forest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the 21st of January, 1793, Louis XVI. embraced for the last time his
+adored wife and children; then, with every possible indignity, was
+strapped to a plank and shoved under the guillotine.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The kindest-hearted, most inoffensive gentleman in Europe had expiated
+the crimes of his ancestors.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A few months later, Marie Antoinette, daughter of the proud Empress
+Maria Theresa, and child of the Cæsars, was borne along the same road.
+And how bravely she met her awful fate! We forget her follies, her
+reckless grasping after pleasures, in view of her horrible sufferings
+and in admiration of her courage as she rides to her death; sitting in
+that hideous tumbril, head erect, pale, proud, defiant, as if upon a
+throne.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With the death of the King and Queen the madness had reached its
+height, and a revulsion of feeling set in. There was a surfeit of
+blood, and an awakening sense of horror, which turned upon the
+instigators. Danton fell, and finally, when amid cries of "Death to
+the tyrant!" Robespierre was dragged wounded and shivering to the fate
+he had brought upon so many thousands, the drama which had opened at
+the Bastille was fittingly closed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The great battle for human liberty had been fought and won. Religious
+freedom and political freedom were identical in principle. The right
+of the human conscience proclaimed by Luther in 1517 had in 1793 only
+expanded into the large conception of all the inherent rights of the
+<I>individual</I>.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It had taken centuries for English persistence to accomplish what
+France, with such appalling violence, had done in as many years. It
+had been a furious outburst of pent-up force; but the work had been
+thorough. Not a germ of tyranny remained. The incrustations of a
+thousand years were not alone broken, but pulverized; the privileged
+classes were swept away, and their vast estates, two-thirds of the
+territory of France, ready to be distributed among the rightful owners
+of the soil, those who by toil and industry could win them. France was
+as new as if she had no history. There was ample opportunity for her
+people now. What would they do with it?
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap12"></A>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XII.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+It is strange to read that the armies went on fighting battles
+automatically, even while there was no central head to direct them.
+While the ghastly scenes were enacting in Paris, and while Josephine de
+Beauharnais was at the Conciergerie listening with blanched face to the
+call of her husband's name on the death roll for the day, a young
+lieutenant of artillery, only twenty-four years old, was at Toulon,
+winning his first military honors. He would have been thought a
+strange prophet who had said that in less than ten years the young
+Corsican lieutenant would be Emperor, and the prisoner at the
+Conciergerie Empress of the French! Nor did M. de Beauharnais, as he
+rode to execution, dream that forty-five years later his grandson would
+over the same stones be borne to his coronation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the anarchy which prevailed after the Revolution, the young hero of
+Toulon was called upon to quell a riot in Paris. The people realized
+they had met a master. For twenty-five years from that day, the
+history of France, and indeed of Europe, was that of one man, Napoleon
+Bonaparte. Commander-in-chief of the Army, then First Consul of the
+Republic, then Emperor&mdash;the steps in his ascent were as rapid and as
+bewildering as the movements in one of his own campaigns. France,
+groping about helplessly among the wreckage of the past, believed what
+she most desired was <I>liberty</I> and <I>self-government</I>.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This Italian, who was a French citizen even only by merest accident,
+knew her better than she did herself, and that what she really wanted
+was a fresh mantle of glory to cover her humiliation, and&mdash;a master.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Leading a broken, unpaid, half-clothed army into Italy, he electrified
+France and all Europe. Before the world had really found out who he
+was, and whence he had come, he had conquered all of Northern Italy,
+part of Austria and Belgium, had created a Cisalpine Republic out of
+the fragments, and was making treaties and dictating terms to kings and
+princes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+France, discredited and almost disgraced among the monarchies of
+Europe, found herself suddenly feared and glorious. Napoleon had
+captured the most imaginative and military people in Europe. The rest
+of the way was easy. Prudent, discreet, knowing when to wait, and when
+to come down like an avalanche, this marvellous man held France in his
+hands, and placed Europe under his feet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The people which had exerted such superhuman effort for freedom were
+held by a hand more despotic than Richelieu's, more destructive to
+popular freedom than that of Louis XIV.; and the more absolute his
+rule, the more overpowering his authority, the better pleased they
+seemed to be.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But, was there not equal opportunity for every man in the Empire?
+Every soldier's knapsack, might it not hold a Marshal's baton? Was not
+the Emperor himself a living illustration of what a man from the people
+might become? And then what did it mean to Frenchmen to be suddenly
+lifted to dazzling ascendancy in Europe? Who would not willingly serve
+a master who could bring Hapsburg, Hohenzollern, Romanoff, Bourbon,
+crouching at his feet&mdash;who could tear down states, and set them up, and
+if an extra throne were needed for a retainer, could carve a new state
+from territory of friend and foe alike, and place a diadem upon every
+head in his domestic or military household? It was the most stupendous
+display of personal power ever beheld, England alone standing upright
+in his presence, and in the end accomplishing his ruin.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When Austria with a reluctant shudder bestowed her princess upon the
+invincible parvenu, and when France with regretful pity saw the adored
+Josephine set aside for that disdainful royal maiden, Marie Louise, at
+that moment Napoleon passed the meridian of his greatness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It had taken just fifteen years to make the most astonishing and
+dazzling chapter in French history; and then came "Moscow" and "Elba,"
+to be quickly followed by "Waterloo" and "St. Helena." And then for
+France&mdash;most incomprehensible of all&mdash;a return to the Bourbons! It had
+required the greatest tragedy of modern times to get rid of them, and
+here they were again, Louis XVIII. and Charles X., as overbearing and
+as arrogant as if their brother's head had not dropped into a basket in
+1793. When somebody said of the Bourbons "they learn nothing and
+forget nothing," he was inaccurate. They had certainly forgotten the
+French Revolution.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But death removed the first, and popular sentiment the second, of these
+relics of an obsolete past. And a new experiment was tried. This time
+it was the son of <I>Philippe Egalité</I>, that wickedest of all the
+regicides, who came smiling and bowing before the people as a popular
+sovereign, who would beneficently rule under a liberal constitution.
+Whatever his father had been, Louis Philippe was far from being a
+wicked man. Whether teaching school in Switzerland, or giving French
+lessons in America, or wearing the kingly crown in France, he was the
+kindest hearted, most inoffensive of gentlemen.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+When in the pre-revolutionary days we read of France making war, it
+means that the King, or his minister, with more or less deference to
+the will of a few thousand nobles, did so. They are the France
+referred to. The real France was not consulted and had nothing to do
+with it, unless it were to fill the ranks with fathers, sons, and
+husbands, and then pay the taxes imposed to support them. But times
+were changed. Under a constitutional monarchy, the King does not
+govern; he reigns. Louis Philippe was King of the French,&mdash;not of
+France. He was chosen by the people as their ornamental figurehead.
+But what if he ceased to be ornamental? What was the use of a King who
+in eighteen years had added not a single ray of glory to the national
+name, but who was using his high position to increase his enormous
+private fortune, and incessantly begging an impoverished country for
+benefits and emoluments for five sons?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+An excellent father, truly, though a short-sighted one. His power had
+no roots. The cutting from the Orleans tree had never taken hold upon
+the soil, and toppled over at the sound of Lamartine's voice
+proclaiming a Republic from the balcony of the "Hôtel de Ville."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When invited to step down from his royal throne, he did so on the
+instant. Never did King succumb with such alacrity, and never did
+retiring royalty look less imposing, than when Louis Philippe was in
+hiding at Havre under the name of "William Smith," waiting for safe
+convoy to England, without having struck one blow in defence of his
+throne.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But three terrible words had floated into the open windows of the
+Tuileries. With the echoes of 1792 still sounding in his ears,
+"Liberty," "Fraternity," and "Equality," shouted in the streets of
+Paris, had not a pleasant sound!
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Republicanism was an abiding sentiment in France, even while two dull
+Bourbon Kings were stupidly trying to turn back the hands on the dial
+of time, and while an Orleans, with more supple neck, was posing as a
+popular sovereign. During all this tiresome interlude, the real fact
+was developing. A Republican sentiment which had existed vaguely in
+the air was materializing, consolidating, into a more and more tangible
+reality in the minds of thinking men and patriots.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The ablest men in the country stood with plans matured, ready to meet
+this crisis. A Republic was proclaimed; M. de Lamartine, Ledru-Rollin,
+General Cavaignac, M. Raspail, and Louis Napoleon were rival candidates
+for the office of President.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte, and son of Hortense, was only known
+as the perpetrator of two very absurd attempts to overthrow the
+monarchy under Louis Philippe. But since the remains of the great
+Emperor had been returned to France by England, and the splendors of
+the past placed in striking contrast with a dull, lustreless present,
+there had been a revival of Napoleonic memories and enthusiasm. Here
+was an opportunity to unite two powerful sentiments in one man&mdash;a
+Napoleon at the head of Republican France would express the glory of
+the past and the hope of the future.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The magic of the name was irresistible. Louis Napoleon was elected
+President of the second Republic, and history prepared to repeat
+itself. What sort of a ruler would he be&mdash;this dark, mysterious,
+unmagnetic man? Even should he not turn out well, no great harm could
+be done. It was only for four years. His hand had not the steely
+fineness of touch of his great uncle's, but it was strong, and guided,
+they soon found, by a subtle intelligence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The overthrow of Monarchy in France had set fire to Republicanism in
+Europe, Kossuth with transcendent eloquence leading a revolution in
+Hungary, and Garibaldi and Mazzini with pen and sword in Italy. Europe
+was in a blaze of revolt. The first great military exploit of Napoleon
+Bonaparte had been in Italy, and so was his nephew's, but with this
+difference&mdash;the object of the one was to build up Republics on the
+other side of the Alps, and of the other to pull them down. Garibaldi
+and Mazzini were driven out of Italy by French bayonets, which also
+propped up the pontifical throne for the fugitive Pope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Assembly soon realized that in this Prince-President it had no
+automaton to deal with. A deep antagonism grew, and the cunningly
+devised issue could not fail to secure popular support to Louis
+Napoleon. When an Assembly is at war with the President because it
+desires to restrict the suffrage, and he to make it universal, can any
+one doubt the result? He was safe in appealing to the people on such
+an issue, and sure of being sustained in his Proclamation dissolving
+the Assembly. He was gathering the reins into his hands with the
+astute courage of his uncle. Moving on almost identical lines with his
+great original, the nephew set his face toward the same goal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The French people must have realized they were being betrayed. They
+must have seen that this ambitious plotter was slipping the old fetters
+of arbitrary power into position. But, under the powerful spell of the
+Napoleonic name, lulled to tranquillity by the gift of suffrage, and
+fascinated by the growing splendors of an ingenious reproduction of the
+most brilliant chapter in French history, they were unresistingly drawn
+into the Imperial net.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+France was for the second time an Empire, and Napoleon III. was Emperor
+of the French.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His Mephistophelian face did not look as classic under the laurel
+wreath as had his uncle's, nor had his work the blinding splendor nor
+the fineness of texture of his great model. But then, an imitation
+never has. It was a marble masterpiece, done in plaster! But what a
+clever reproduction it was! And how, by sheer audacity, it compelled
+recognition and homage, and at last even adulation in Europe!&mdash;and what
+a clever stroke it was, for this heavy, unsympathetic man to bring up
+to his throne from the people a radiant Empress, who would capture
+romantic and æsthetic France!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The distance was great from cheap lodgings in New York to a seat upon
+the Imperial throne of France; but human ambition is not easily
+satisfied. A Pelion always rises beyond an Ossa. It was not enough to
+feel that he had re-established the prosperity and prestige of France,
+that fresh glory had been added to the Napoleonic name. Was there not
+after all a certain irritating reserve in the homage paid him, was
+there not a touch of condescension in the friendship of his royal
+neighbors? And had he not always a Mordecai at his gate&mdash;while the
+"<I>Faubourg St. Germain</I>" stood aloof and disdainful, smiling at his
+brand-new aristocracy?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+War is the thing to give solidity to empire and to reputation! Neither
+France nor Europe can withstand the magic of military renown. And so,
+upon a quickly improvised pretext, the French Emperor started, amid the
+booming of cannon and the wild acclamations of a delighted people, upon
+his errand of conquest. The insolent Germans were to be chastised;
+and, incidentally, Europe was to be made to tremble!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In a few months the bubble was pricked. The glittering French army
+proved to be a thing of tinsel and fustian. No reality, no power to
+stand before the solid German battalions, it melted like hoar-frost.
+Napoleon III. was prisoner of war at Sedan, and King William, Unser
+Fritz, and Von Moltke were at Versailles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Moved by his colossal misfortunes, and perhaps partly in displeasure at
+having a French Republic once more at her door, England offered asylum
+to the deposed Emperor. There, from the seclusion of "Chiselhurst," he
+and his still beautiful Eugenie watched the Republic weathering the
+first days of storm and stress, and coming out at last stable and
+triumphant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The weary exile felt that not in his day would the reaction come. But
+his son would yet wear the Imperial crown which was his birthright.
+Futile dream! The boy was destined to cruel fate&mdash;to be slain by Zulu
+assegai, while fighting the battles of England,&mdash;England, the author of
+<I>Waterloo</I>. Strange ending for the heir to the name and glory of
+Napoleon Bonaparte.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But the reaction Louis Napoleon so confidently hoped for did not come.
+With military pride humbled in the dust, national pride wounded by the
+loss of two provinces, loaded down with an immense war indemnity, the
+people set about the task of rehabilitation; in an incredibly short
+time, the galling debt was paid, financial prosperity and political
+strength restored, and with military organization second to none in
+Europe, France, with revengeful eyes fastened on Germany, waits for the
+day of reckoning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For twenty-four years the Republic has existed. Communistic fires
+always smouldering have again and again burst forth&mdash;demagogues,
+fanatics, and those creatures for whom there is no place in organized
+society, whose element is chaos, standing ready to fan the fires of
+revolt; while Orleanist, Bonapartist, Bourbon, are ever on the alert,
+watching for opportunity to slip in through the open door of Revolution.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+England in conscious superiority smiles at a nation which has had seven
+political revolutions in a hundred years. Republic, then Empire, then
+a return to the Bourbons, then Constitutional Monarchy under Louis
+Philippe, then Republic, followed by Empire again, and now for the
+third time a Republic!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But France, complex, mobile, changeful as the sea, in riotous enjoyment
+of her new-found liberties, casts off a form of government as she would
+an ill-fitting garment. She knows the value of tranquillity&mdash;she had
+it for one thousand years! The <I>people</I>, which have only breathed the
+upper air for a century&mdash;the people, who were stifled under feudalism,
+stamped upon by Valois Kings, riveted down by Richelieu, then prodded,
+outraged, and starved by Bourbons, have become a great nation.
+Many-sided, resourceful, gifted, it matters not whether they have
+called the head of their government Consul, Emperor, King, or
+President. They are a race of freemen, who can never again be enslaved
+by tyrannous system.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a bright day for France when that ambitious young Emperor of
+Germany sent his great Chancellor into retirement; and another bright
+day when, taking offence at scant courtesy at the hands of the Czar, he
+left ajar the back door to his dominions. An alliance between despotic
+Russia thirsting for the waters of the Mediterranean, and Republican
+France thirsting for revenge, is the darkest cloud on the German
+horizon to-day. It is only a matter of months or of years when France
+will be at the throat of Germany demanding Alsace and Lorraine. The
+French army is not the one which faced Von Moltke in 1871; and when
+France knocks at her front door, Germany will have all she can attend
+to, without hearing Russian batteries thundering at her rear. A
+dramatic reconciliation with the old Chancellor is interesting, but it
+will not undo the work of the last four years.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There is no longer thought of conflict between any two nations of
+Europe. The next war is to be one of tremendous combinations.
+National alliances are shifting and uncertain. But at the time this is
+written (1894) Germany, Austria, and Italy are drawn together in one
+hostile camp, while France and Russia, in loving embrace, stand in the
+other; and England, aloof and suspicious, holds herself ready to hurl
+her weight against whichever one obstructs her path to India.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There is something in the air which makes one think the name Napoleon
+is still a thing to conjure with. But whatever the future may hold for
+France, no American can be indifferent to the fate of a nation to whom
+we owe so much. Nor can we ever forget that in the hour of our direst
+extremity, and regardless of cost to herself, she helped us to
+establish our liberties, and to take our place among the great nations
+of the earth.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Evolution of an Empire, by Mary Parmele
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Evolution of an Empire, by Mary Parmele
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Evolution of an Empire
+ A Brief Historical Sketch of France
+
+Author: Mary Parmele
+
+Release Date: October 15, 2010 [EBook #34071]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE EVOLUTION OF AN EMPIRE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Al Haines
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+EVOLUTION OF AN EMPIRE
+
+
+
+A BRIEF HISTORICAL SKETCH OF
+
+FRANCE
+
+
+
+BY
+
+MARY PARMELE
+
+
+_Author of "Evolution of Empire Series, Germany;"
+ "Who? When? What? Literature Chart."_
+
+
+
+NEW YORK
+
+WILLIAM BEVERLEY HARISON,
+
+59 FIFTH AVENUE
+
+1894
+
+
+
+
+PUBLISHED AND COPYRIGHTED, 1894,
+
+BY
+
+WILLIAM BEVERLEY HARISON,
+
+59 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK CITY.
+
+
+
+ELECTROTYPED AND PRINTED BY
+
+THE PUBLISHERS' PRINTING COMPANY
+
+182-186 WEST 14TH STREET
+
+NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+In an attempt to tell the story of a great nation in about 100 pages,
+it is needless to say there must be a rigid exclusion of all save
+essential facts. To those already familiar with the subject, this
+sketch is offered merely as a reminder of the sequence of conditions
+and events in the evolution of France; while to the student it is
+presented as a framework upon which may be placed, in orderly and
+comprehensible fashion, the results of future reading and research.
+
+To the latter class I would suggest that a series of papers, written
+upon the most prominent themes found in the Table of Contents, will
+bear fruit in knowledge more real and vital than may be obtained from
+the writings of others, however eloquent and vivid the presentation.
+
+M. P.
+
+NEW YORK, July 23d, 1894.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+The Aryan Family of Nations--Keltic Race--Ancient Gaul--Gauls in
+Rome--Gauls in Greece and in Asia Minor
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Roman Conquest of Gaul--Julius Caesar
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Birth of Christianity--Its Dissemination--Persecution at Lyons by order
+of Marcus Aurelius--The Roman Empire Espouses Christianity under
+Constantine
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Gaul Overrun and Subjugated by Franks--Clovis King--Decay of the
+Merovingian Line--_Maire du Palais_ King _de facto_--Charles
+Martel--Birth of Mohammedanism--Its Triumphs--Christendom
+Threatened--Pepin King--Charlemagne--Alliance with Pope--France, Italy,
+and Germany Emerge as Separate Nationalities
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+The Northmen--Beginnings of Feudalism in France--Normandy Bestowed upon
+the Northmen--Conquest of England by William, Duke of
+Normandy--Albigenses--Inquisition at Toulouse--The Crusades
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+Decline of Feudalism--Creation of the Commune--Charles VII.--Henry V.
+in France--Joan of Arc
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+Francis I.--Huguenots--Catharine de Medici--Francis II.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+Massacre of St. Bartholomew--Henry III.--Henry IV.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+Edict of Nantes--Louis XIII.--Richelieu
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+Louis XIV.--Revocation of the Edict of Nantes--Louis XV.--Age of
+Voltaire and Rousseau--The Gathering Storm
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette--American Colonies Arrayed Against
+England--French Aid to America--Smouldering Fires of Discontent--Louis
+Convokes States-General--National Assembly Created by Commons--Bastille
+Attacked--Revolution--Execution of King
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+Napoleon Bonaparte--Toulon--Campaign in Italy--Empire
+Established--Europe Under the Feet of the Great Corsican--Marie
+Louise--Waterloo--Louis XVIII.--Charles X.--Louis Philippe--Second
+Republic--Louis Napoleon President--Second Empire--Napoleon
+III.--Franco-Prussian War--Sedan--Third Republic--Review of Present
+Conditions
+
+
+
+
+EVOLUTION OF AN EMPIRE.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+One of the greatest achievements of modern research is the discovery of
+a key by which we may determine the kinship of nations. What we used
+to conjecture, we now know. An identity in the structural form of
+language establishes with scientific certitude that however diverse
+their character and civilizations, Russian, German, English, French,
+Spaniard, are all but branches from the same parent stem, are all alike
+children of the Asiatic Aryan.
+
+So skilful are modern methods of questioning the past, and so
+determined the effort to find out its secrets, we may yet know the
+origin and history of this wonderful Asiatic people, and when and why
+they left their native continent and colonized upon the northern shores
+of the Mediterranean. Certain it is, however, that, more centuries
+before the Christian era than there have been since, they had peopled
+Western Europe.
+
+This branch of the Aryan family is known as the Keltic, and was older
+brother to the Teuton and Slav, which at a much later period followed
+them from the ancestral home, and appropriated the middle and eastern
+portions of the European Continent.
+
+The name of Gaul was given to the territory lying between the Ocean and
+the Mediterranean, and the Pyrenees and the Alps. And at a later
+period a portion of Northern Gaul, and the islands lying north of it,
+received from an invading chieftain and his tribe the name _Brit_ or
+_Britain_ (or Pryd or Prydain).
+
+If the mind could be carried back on the track of time, and we could
+see what we now call France as it existed twenty centuries before the
+Christian era, we should behold the same natural features: the same
+mountains rearing their heads; the same rivers flowing to the sea; the
+same plains stretching out in the sunlight. But instead of vines and
+flowers and cultivated fields we should behold great herds of wild ox
+and elk, and of swine as fierce as wolves, ranging in a climate as cold
+as Norway; and vast inaccessible forests, the home of beasts of prey,
+which contended with man for food and shelter.
+
+Let us read Guizot's description of life in Gaul five centuries before
+Christ:
+
+"Here lived six or seven millions of men a bestial life, in dwellings
+dark and low, built of wood and clay and covered with branches or
+straw, open to daylight by the door alone and confusedly heaped
+together behind a rampart of timber, earth, and stone, which enclosed
+and protected what they were pleased to call--a _town_."
+
+Such was the Paris, and such the Frenchmen of the age of Pericles! And
+the same tides that washed the sands of Southern Gaul, a few hours
+later ebbed and flowed upon the shores of Greece--rich in culture, with
+refinements and subtleties in art which are the despair of the world
+to-day--with an intellectual endowment never since attained by any
+people.
+
+The same sun which rose upon temples and palaces and life serene and
+beautiful in Greece, an hour later lighted sacrificial altars and
+hideous orgies in the forests of Gaul. While the Gaul was nailing the
+heads of human victims to his door, or hanging them from the bridle of
+his horse, or burning or flogging his prisoners to death, the Greek,
+with a literature, an art, and a civilization in ripest perfection,
+discussed with his friends the deepest problems of life and destiny,
+which were then baffling human intelligence, even as they are with us
+to-day. Truly we of Keltic and Teuton descent are late-comers upon the
+stage of national life.
+
+There was no promise of greatness in ancient Gaul. It was a great
+unregulated force, rushing hither and thither. Impelled by insatiate
+greed for the possessions of their neighbors, there was no permanence
+in their loves or their hatreds. The enemies of to-day were the allies
+of to-morrow. Guided entirely by the fleeting desires and passions of
+the moment, with no far-reaching plans to restrain, the sixty or more
+tribes composing the Gallic people were in perpetual state of feud and
+anarchy, apparently insensible to the ties of brotherhood, which give
+concert of action, and stability in form of national life. If they
+overran a neighboring country, it seemed not so much for permanent
+acquisition, as to make it a camping-ground until its resources were
+exhausted.
+
+We read of one Massillia who came with a colony of Greeks long ages
+ago, and after founding the city of Marseilles, created a narrow bright
+border of Greek civilization along the Southern edge of the benighted
+land. It was a brief illumination, lasting only a century or more, and
+leaving few traces; but it may account for the superior intellectual
+quality of the southern provinces in future France.
+
+It requires a vast extent of territory to sustain a people living by
+the chase, and upon herds and flocks; hence the area which now amply
+maintains thirty-five millions of Frenchmen was all too small for six
+or seven million Gauls; and they were in perpetual struggle with their
+neighbors for land--more land.
+
+"Give us land," they said to the Romans, and when land was denied them
+and the gates of cities disdainfully closed upon their messengers, not
+land, but vengeance, was their cry; and hordes of half-naked barbarians
+trampled down the vineyards, and rushed, a tumultuous torrent, upon
+Rome.
+
+The Romans could not stand before this new and strange kind of warfare.
+The Gauls streamed over the vanquished legions into the Eternal City,
+silent and deserted save only by the Senate and a few who remained
+intrenched in the Citadel; and there the barbarians kept them besieged
+for seven months, while they made themselves at home amid
+uncomprehended luxuries.
+
+Of course Roman skill and courage at last dislodged and drove them
+back. But the fact remained that the Gaul had been there,--master of
+Rome; that the ironclad legions had been no match for his naked force,
+and a new sensation thrilled through the length and breadth of Gaul.
+It was the first throb of national life. The sixty or more fragments
+drew closer together into something like Gallic unity--with a common
+danger to meet, a common foe to drive back.
+
+Hereafter there was another hunger to be appeased besides that for food
+and land; a hunger for conquest, for vengeance, and for glory for the
+Gallic name. National pride was born.
+
+For years they hovered like wolves about Rome. But skill and superior
+intelligence tell in the centuries. It took long--and cost no end of
+blood and treasure; but two hundred years from the capture of Rome, the
+Gauls were driven out of Italy, and the Alps pronounced a barrier set
+by Nature herself against barbarian encroachments.
+
+Italy was not the only country suffering from the destroying footsteps
+of the Western Kelts. There had been long ago an overflow of a tribe
+in Northern Gaul (the Kymrians), which had hewed and plundered its way
+south and eastward; until at the time of Alexander (340 B.C.) it was
+knocking at the gates of Macedonia.
+
+Stimulated by the success at Rome fifty years earlier, they were, with
+fresh insolence, demanding "land," and during the centuries which
+followed, the Gallic name acquired no fresh lustre in Greece.
+Half-naked, gross, ferocious and ignorant, sometimes allies, but always
+a scourge, they finally crossed the Hellespont (278 B.C.), and turned
+their attention to Asia Minor. And there, at last, we find them
+settled in a province called Gallicia, where they lived without
+amalgamating with the people about them; it is said, even as late as
+400 years after Christ, speaking the language of their tribal home
+(what is now Belgium). And these were the Galatians--the "foolish
+Galatians," to whom Paul addressed his epistle; and we have followed up
+this Gallic thread simply because it mingles with the larger strand of
+ancient and sacred history with which we are all so familiar.
+
+
+It is not strange that Roman courage and endurance became a by-word.
+Her fibre was toughened by perpetual strain of conflict. Even while
+she was struggling with Gaul and while the echoes of the Hunnish
+invasion were still resounding through the Continent, Hannibal, with
+his hosts, was pouring through Gaul and gathering accessions from that
+people as he swept down into Italy. Then, with the memories of the
+Carthagenian wars still fresh at Rome, the Goths were at her
+gates,--their blows directed with a solidity superior to that of the
+barbarians who had preceded them. Where the Gauls had knocked, the
+Goths thundered.
+
+Again the city was invaded by barbarian feet, and again did superior
+training and intelligence drive back the invading torrent and triumph
+over native brute force.
+
+Such, in brief outline, was the condition of the centuries just before
+the Christian era.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+The making of a nation is not unlike bread or cake making. One element
+is used as the basis, to which are added other component parts, of
+varying qualities, and the result we call England, or Germany, or
+France. The steps by which it is accomplished, the blending and fusing
+of the elements, require centuries, and the process makes what we
+call--history.
+
+It was written in the book of fate that Gaul should become a great
+nation; but not until fused and interpenetrated with two other
+nationalities. She must first be humanized and civilized by the Roman,
+and then energized and made free from the Roman by the Teuton.
+
+The instrument chosen for the former was Julius Caesar, and for the
+latter--five centuries later--Clovis, the Frankish leader. It is safe
+to affirm that no man has ever so changed the course of human events as
+did Julius Caesar. Napoleon, who strove to imitate him 1800 years
+later, was a charlatan in comparison; a mere scene-shifter on a great
+theatrical stage. Not a trace of his work remains upon humanity to-day.
+
+Caesar opened up a pathway for the old civilizations of the world to
+flow into Western Europe, and the sodden mass of barbarism was infused
+with a life-compelling current. This was not accomplished by placing
+before the inferior race a higher ideal of life for imitation, but by a
+mingling of the blood of the nations--a transfusion into Gallic veins
+of the germs of a higher living and thinking--thus making them heirs to
+the great civilizations of antiquity.
+
+No human event was ever fraught with such consequences to the human
+race as the conquest of Gaul by Julius Caesar.
+
+The Gallic wars had for centuries drained the treasure and taxed the
+resources of Rome. Caesar conceived the audacious idea of stopping them
+at their source--in fact, of making Gaul a Roman province.
+
+It was a marvellous exhibition, not simply of force, but of force
+wielded by supreme intelligence and craft. He had lived four years
+among this people and knew their sources of weakness, their internal
+jealousies and rivalries, their incohesiveness. When they hurled
+themselves against Rome, it was as a mass of sharp fragments. When the
+Goths did the same, it was as one solid, indivisible body. Caesar saw
+that by adroit management he could disintegrate this people, even while
+conquering them.
+
+By forcibly maintaining in power those who submitted to him, being by
+turns gentle and severe, ingratiating here, terrifying there, he
+established a tremendous personal force; and during nine years carried
+on eight campaigns, marvels in the art of war, as well as in the
+subtler methods of negotiation and intrigue. He had successively dealt
+with all the Gallic tribes, even including Great Britain, subjugating
+either through their own rivalries, or by his invincible arm.
+
+Equally able to charm and to terrify, he had all the gifts, all the
+means to success and empire, that can be possessed by man. Great in
+politics as in war, as full of resource in the forum as on the
+battle-field, he was by nature called to dominion.
+
+It was not as a patriot, simply intent upon freeing Rome of an
+harassing enemy, that he endured those nine years in Gaul--not as a
+great leader burning with military ardor that he conducted those eight
+campaigns. The conquest of Gaul meant the greater conquest of Rome.
+The one was accomplished; he now turned his back upon the devastated
+country, and prepared to complete his great project of human ascendency.
+
+Rome was mistress of the world; he--would be master of Rome.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+While the Star of Empire was thus moving toward the West, another and
+brighter star was about to arise in the East. So accustomed are we to
+the story, that we lose all sense of wonder at its recital.
+
+Julius Caesar's brief triumph was over. Marc Antony had recited his
+virtues over his bier, Rome had wept, and then forgotten him in the
+absorbing splendors of his nephew Augustus. In an obscure village of
+an obscure country in Asia Minor, the young wife of a peasant finds
+shelter in a stable, and gives birth to a son, who is cradled in the
+straw of a manger, from which the cattle are feeding.
+
+Can the mind conceive of human circumstances more lowly? The child
+grew to manhood, and in his thirty-three years of life was never lifted
+above the obscure sphere into which he was born; never spoke from the
+vantage-ground of worldly elevation,--simply moving among people of his
+own station in life, mechanics, fishermen, and peasants, he told of a
+religion of love, a gospel of peace, for which he was willing to die.
+
+Who would have dreamed that this was the germ of the most potent, the
+most regenerative force the world had ever known? That thrones,
+empires, principalities, and powers would melt and crumble before his
+name? Of all miracles, is not this the greatest?
+
+The passionate ardor with which this religion was propagated in the
+first two centuries had no motive but the yearning to make others share
+in its benefits and hopes; and to this end to accept the belief that
+Jesus Christ had come in fulfilment of a long-promised Saviour,--who
+should be sent to this world clothed with divine authority to establish
+a spiritual kingdom, in which he was King of Kings, Lord of Lords,
+Mediator between us and the Father, of whom he was the "only begotten
+Son."
+
+The religion in its essence was absolutely simple. Its founder summed
+it up in two sentences,--expressing the duty of man to man, and of man
+to God. That was all the Theology he formulated.
+
+For two centuries the religion of Christ was an elementary spiritual
+force. It appealed only to the highest attributes and longings of the
+human soul, and under its sustaining influence frail women, men, and
+even children were able to endure tortures, of which we cannot read
+even now without shuddering horror.
+
+
+Nature's method of gardening is very beautiful. She carefully guards
+the seed until it is ripe, then she bursts the imprisoning walls and
+gives it to the winds to distribute. Precisely such method was used in
+disseminating Christianity. It was not for one people--it was for the
+healing of the nations, and its home was wherever man abides.
+
+Nearly five decades after Christ's death upon the cross, Jerusalem was
+destroyed by Titus. The home of Christianity was effaced. At just the
+right moment the enclosing walls had broken, and freed to the winds the
+germs in all their primitive purity.
+
+Imperial favor had not tarnished it, human ambitions had not employed
+and degraded it, nor had it been made into complex system by ingenious
+casuists. The pure spiritual truth, unsullied as it came from the hand
+of its founder, was scattered broadcast, as the band of Christians
+dispersed throughout the Roman Empire, naturally forming into
+communities here and there, which became the centres of Christian
+propagandism. Lyons in Gaul was such a centre.
+
+
+The fires of persecution had been lighted here and there throughout the
+Empire, and the Emperor Nero, under whom the Apostles Peter and Paul
+are said to have suffered martyrdom, had amused himself by making
+torches of the Christians at Rome. But until 177 A.D. Gaul was exempt
+from such horrors.
+
+Marcus Aurelius--that peerless pagan,--large in intelligence, exalted
+in character, and guided by a conscientious rectitude which has made
+his name shine like a star in the lurid light of Roman history, still
+failed utterly to comprehend the significance of this spiritual kingdom
+established by Christ on earth. He it was who ordered the first
+persecution in Gaul. In pursuance of his command, horrible tortures
+were inflicted at Lyons upon those who would not abjure the new faith.
+
+A letter, written by an eye-witness, pictures with terrible vividness
+the scenes which followed. Many cases are described with harrowing
+detail, and of one Blandina it is said: "From morn till eve they put
+her to all manner of torture, marvelling that she still lived with her
+body pierced through and through and torn piecemeal by so many tortures
+of which a single one should have sufficed to kill her, to which she
+only replied, 'I am a Christian.'"
+
+The recital goes on to tell how she was then cast into a dungeon,--her
+feet compressed and dragged out to the utmost tension of the
+muscles,--then left alone in darkness, until new methods of torture
+could be devised.
+
+Finally she was brought, with other Christians, into the amphitheatre,
+hanging from a cross to which she was tied, and there thrown to the
+beasts. As the beasts refused to touch her she was taken back to the
+dungeon to be reserved for another occasion, being brought out daily to
+witness the fate and suffering of her friends and fellow-martyrs; still
+answering the oft-repeated question--"I am a Christian."
+
+The writer goes on to say, "After she had undergone fire, the talons of
+beasts, and every agony which could be thought of, she was wrapped in a
+network and thrown to a bull, who tossed her in the air"--and her
+sufferings were ended.
+
+Truly it cost something to say "I am a Christian" in those days.
+
+Marcus Aurelius probably gave orders for the persecution at Lyons, with
+little knowledge of what would be the nature of those persecutions, or
+of the religion he was trying to exterminate. Some of the hours spent
+in writing introspective essays would have been well employed in
+studying the period in which he lived, and the Empire he ruled.
+
+Paganism and Druidism, those twin monsters, receded before the
+advancing light of Christianity. Neither contained anything which
+could nourish the soul of man, and both had become simply badges of
+nationality.
+
+Druidism was the last stronghold of independent Gallic life. It was a
+mixture of northern myth and oriental dreams of metempsychosis, coarse,
+mystical, and cruel. The Roman paganism which was superimposed by the
+conquering race was the mere shell of a once vital religion. Educated
+men had long ceased to believe in the gods and divinities of Greece,
+and it is said that the Roman augurs, while giving their solemn
+prophetic utterances, could not look at each other without laughing.
+
+
+In the year 312, alas for Christianity, it was espoused by imperial
+power. When the Emperor Constantine declared himself a Christian,
+there was no doubt rejoicing among the saints; but it was the beginning
+of the degeneracy of the religion of Christ. The faith of the humble
+was to be raised to a throne; its lowly garb to be exchanged for purple
+and scarlet, the gospel of peace to be enforced by the sword.
+
+The Empire was crumbling, and upon its ruins the race of the future and
+social conditions of modern times were forming. Paganism and Druidism
+would have been an impossibility. Christianity even with its lustre
+dimmed, its purity tarnished, its simplicity overlaid with
+scholasticism, was better than these. The miracle had been
+accomplished. The great Roman Empire had said: "I am Christian."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Gaul had been Latinized and Christianized. Now one more thing was
+needed to prepare her for a great future. Her fibre was to be
+toughened by the infusion of a stronger race. Julius Caesar had shaken
+her into submission, and Rome had chastised her into decency of
+behavior and speech, but as her manners improved her native vigor
+declined. She took kindly to Roman luxury and effeminacy, and could no
+longer have thundered at the gates of her neighbors demanding "land."
+
+But at last the great Roman Empire was dying, and even degenerate Gaul
+was struggling out of her relaxing grasp. In her extremity she called
+upon the Franks, a powerful Germanic race, to aid her. This people had
+long looked with covetous eyes at the fair fields stretching beyond the
+Rhine, and lost no time in accepting the invitation. They overspread
+the land, and Gaul and Roman alike were submerged beneath the Teuton
+flood, while the Frankish Conqueror, Clovis (son of the great
+Merovaaeus), was at Paris (or "Lutetia") wearing the kingly crown.
+
+Such was the beginning of independent and of dynastic life in France.
+
+Rome had found a more powerful ally than she hoped; and the desire of
+Gaul was accomplished in that she was free from Rome. But the king of
+whom she had dreamed was of her own race; not this terrible Frank. Had
+she exchanged one servitude for another? Had she been, not set free,
+but simply annexed to the realm of the Barbarian across the Rhine? Let
+us say rather that it was an espousal. She had brought her dowry of
+beauty and "land," that most coveted of possessions, and had pledged
+obedience, for which she was to be cherished, honored, and protected,
+and to bear the name of her lord.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ancient heroes are said to be seen through a shadowy lens, which
+magnifies their stature. Let us hope that the crimes of the three or
+four generations immediately succeeding Clovis have been in like manner
+expanded; for it is sickening to read of such monstrous prodigality of
+wickedness. Whole families butchered, husbands, wives,
+children--anything obstructing the path to the throne--with an atrocity
+which makes Richard III. seem a mere pigmy in the art of intrigue and
+killing. The chapter closes with the daughter and mother of kings
+(Brunehilde or Brunhaut) naked and tied by one arm, one leg and her
+hair to the tail of an unbroken horse, and amid jeers and shouts dashed
+over the stones of Paris (600 A.D.).
+
+But even the Frank succumbed to the enervating Gallic influence. The
+Merovingian line commenced by Clovis faded from ferocity into
+imbecility. Its Kings in less than two centuries had become mere
+lay-figures, wearing the symbols of an authority which existed nowhere,
+unless in the _Maire du Palais_.
+
+This office from being a sort of royal stewardship had grown to be the
+governing power _de facto_. While Theodoric, the Phantom King, was
+having his long locks dressed and perfumed, his _Maire du Palais_,
+Charles, was moulding and welding his kingdom, and at the same time
+staying the Mohammedan flood which was pouring over the Pyrenees; and,
+by his final and decisive blow in defence of the Christianity espoused
+by Clovis, earning the name _Charles Martel_ (the hammer).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Less than one hundred years after the death of Clovis, there had come
+out of Asia, that birthplace of religions, a new faith, which was
+destined to be for centuries the scourge of Christendom, and which
+to-day rules one-third of the human family. Zoroaster, Buddha, Christ,
+had successively come with saving message to humanity, and now (600
+A.D.) Mohammed believed himself divinely appointed to drive out of
+Arabia the idolatry of ancient Magianism (the religion of Zoroaster).
+
+Christianity had passed through strange vicissitudes. Kings, Emperors,
+Popes, and Bishops had been terrible custodians of its truths, and
+while many still held it in its primitive purity, ecclesiastics were
+fiercely fighting over the nature of the Trinity, the divinity of the
+Virgin Mother, and the Church was shaken to its foundation by furious
+factions.
+
+In this hour of weakness, the Persians (590 A.D.) had conquered Asia
+Minor. Bethlehem, Gethsemane, and Calvary were profaned; the Holy
+Sepulchre had been burned, and the cross carried off amid shouts of
+laughter. Magianism had insulted Christianity, and no miracle had
+interposed! The heavens did not roll asunder, nor did the earth open
+her abysses to swallow them up. There was consternation and doubt in
+Christendom.
+
+Such was the state of the Church when Mohammedanism came into
+existence. "There is but one God, and Mohammed is his Prophet." Such
+was its battle-cry and its creed, and the moral precepts of the Koran
+its gospel. There seems nothing in this to account for the mad
+enthusiasm and the passion for worship in its followers. But in less
+than a hundred years this lion out of Arabia had subjected Syria,
+Mesopotamia, Egypt, Northern Africa, and the Spanish Peninsula. Now,
+sword in one hand, and the Koran in the other, the Mohammedan had
+crossed the Pyrenees and was in Southern Gaul.
+
+Under the strange magic of this faith, the largest religious empire the
+world had known had sprung into existence, stretching from the Chinese
+Wall to the Atlantic; from the Caspian to the Indian Ocean; and
+Jerusalem, the metropolis of Christianity-Jerusalem, the Mecca of the
+Christian, was lost! The crescent floated over the birthplace of our
+Lord, and notwithstanding the temporary successes of the Crusades, it
+does to this day.
+
+If the Pyrenees were passed, the very existence of Christendom was
+threatened. Charles Martel, the grandfather of Charlemagne, averted
+this danger when he stayed the infidel flood at the battle of Tours,
+732 A.D.
+
+Pepin, the son of Charles Martel, who succeeded him as _Maire du
+Palais_, does not seem to have had the temper or spirit of an usurper,
+but simply to have been an energetic, resolute man who was bored by the
+circumlocution of governing through a King who did not exist. He
+determined to put an end to the fiction, and to cut the Gordian knot by
+first cutting the long curls of the last Merovingian, Childeric; and
+then putting the crown upon his own head, he sent the unfortunate
+phantom of royalty to a monastery, to reflect upon the uncertainty of
+human pleasures and events. By right of manhood and superiority, the
+Carlovingian line had succeeded to the Merovingian.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Against the dark background of European history, and with the broad
+level of obscurity stretching over the ages at its feet, there rises
+one shining pinnacle. Considered as man or sovereign, Charlemagne is
+one of the most impressive figures in history. His seven feet of
+stature clad in shining steel, his masterful grasp of the forces of his
+time, his splendid intelligence, instinct even then with the modern
+spirit, all combine to elevate him in solitary grandeur.
+
+Charlemagne found France in disorder measureless, and apparently
+insurmountable. Barbarian invasion without, and anarchy within; Saxon
+paganism pressing in upon the North, and Asiatic Islamism upon the
+South and West; a host of forces struggling for dominion in a nation
+brutish, ignorant, and without cohesion.
+
+It is the attribute of genius to discern opportunity where others see
+nothing. Charlemagne saw rising out of this chaos a great resuscitated
+Roman empire, which should be at the same time a spiritual and
+Christian empire as well. Saxons, Slavs, Huns, Lombards, Arabs, came
+under his compelling grasp; these antagonistic races all held together
+by the force of one terrible will, in unnatural combination with
+France. No political liberties, no popular assemblies discussing
+public measures; it is Charlemagne alone who fills the picture; it is
+absolutism,--marked by prudence, ability, and grandeur, but still,
+absolutism.
+
+The Pope looked approvingly upon this son of the Church by whose order
+4,500 pagan heads could be cut off in one day, and a whole army
+compelled to baptism in an afternoon. Here was a champion to be
+propitiated! Charlemagne, on the other hand, saw in the Church the
+most compliant and effective means to empire. In the loving alliance
+formed, he was to be the protector, the Pope the protected. He wore
+the Church as a precious jewel in his crown.
+
+It was a splendid dream, splendidly realized; the most imposing of
+human successes, and the most impressive of human failures. It seems
+designed as a lesson for the human race in the transitory nature of
+power applied from without.
+
+The vast fabric passed with himself; was gone like a shadow when he was
+gone. The unity of the Empire was buried in the grave of its founder.
+In twenty-nine years (by the treaty of Verdun) three kingdoms emerged
+from the crumbling mass. France, Italy, Germany, already separated by
+race repulsions, had taken up each a distinct national existence, the
+Imperial crown remaining with Germany.
+
+And France--France, the centre of this dream of unity, with her native
+incohesiveness, and in the irony of fate, had broken into no less than
+59 fragments, loosely held together by one Carlovingian King.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+I think that it was Lincoln who said that "the Lord must like common
+people, because he had made so many of them." The path for the common
+people in France at this time led through heavy shadows. But a darker
+time was approaching. A system of oppression was maturing, which was
+soon to envelop them in the obscurity of darkest night.
+
+Those Scandinavian freebooters called Northmen, and later Normans, were
+the scourge of the kingdom. Nothing was safe from their insolent
+courage and rapacity.
+
+The rich could intrench themselves in stone fortresses, with moats and
+drawbridges, and be in comparative security, but the poor were utterly
+defenceless against this perennial destroyer. The result was a compact
+between the powerful and the weak, which was the beginning of the
+Feudal System. It was in effect an exchange of protection for service
+and fealty. You give us absolute control of your persons--your
+military service when required, and a portion of your substance and the
+fruit of your toil--and we will in exchange give you our fortified
+castles as a refuge from the Northmen. Such was the offer. It was a
+choice between vassalage, serfdom, or destruction outright.
+
+Simple enough in its beginnings, this became a ramified system of
+oppression, a curious network of authority, ingeniously controlling an
+entire people. The conditions upon which was engrafted this compact
+were of great antiquity, had indeed been brought across the Rhine by
+their German conquerors; but the Northmen were the impelling cause of
+the swift development of feudalism in France.
+
+Charlemagne had felt grave apprehensions of evil from these robber
+incursions, but could not have conceived of a result such as this, the
+most oppressive system ever fastened upon a nation, and one which would
+at the same time sap the foundations of royalty itself.
+
+The theory was that the King was absolute owner of all the territory;
+the great lords holding their titles from him on condition of military
+service, their vassals pledging military service and obedience to them
+again on similar terms, and sub-vassals again to them repeating the
+pledge; and so on in descending chain, until at last the serf, that
+wretched being whom none looks up to nor fears, is ground to powder
+beneath the superimposed mass. No appeal from the authority, no escape
+from the caprice or cruelty of his feudal lord. Could any scales
+weigh, could any words measure the suffering which must have been
+endured? Is it strange, with every aspiration thwarted, hope stifled,
+that Europe sank into the long sleep of the Middle Ages?
+
+
+It is easy to conceive that under such a system, where all the affairs
+of the realm were adjusted by individual rulers with unlimited power,
+and where the great barons could make war upon each other without
+authorization from the King, that by the time this nominal head of the
+entire system was reached, there was nothing for him to do. In fact,
+there was not left one vestige of kingly authority, and Carlovingian
+rulers were almost as insignificant as their Merovingian predecessors.
+France had, instead of one great sovereign, 150 petty ones!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In 911 A.D. the Northmen were offered the province henceforth known as
+Normandy, upon condition of their acceptance of the religion and
+submission to the laws of the realm. Rollo, the disreputable
+robber-chief, took the oath of fealty to the King of France his
+Suzerain, and Christian baptism transformed him into respectable,
+law-abiding Robert, Duke of Normandy.
+
+With marvellous facility this people took on the language and manners
+of their neighbors, and in a century and a half were prepared to
+instruct the Britons in a higher civilization.
+
+I think it is one hundred years of respectability that is required by a
+certain aristocratic club for admission to its membership. The blood
+does not acquire the proper shade of azure until it has flowed in the
+full light of day for at least three generations. Decidedly, William
+the Conqueror, first Norman King of England, could not have been
+admitted to this club.
+
+A century before his birth, his ancestors had lived by looting their
+neighbors. They were highwaymen, robbers, by profession. And, to
+increase his ineligibility, his mother, a pretty Norman peasant girl,
+daughter of a tanner, had ensnared the affections of that pleasant Duke
+of Normandy, known as "Robert the Devil."
+
+William, the fruit of this unconsecrated union, became in time Duke of
+Normandy. With that reversion to ancestral types to which scientists
+tell us we are all liable, he seems to have looked across the Channel
+toward England, with an awakening of his robber-instincts. In a few
+weeks, Harold, the last King of the Saxons, lay dead at his feet, and
+William, Duke of Normandy, was William I., King of England.
+
+Then was presented the curious anomaly of an English sovereign who was
+also ruler of a French province; an English king who was vassal to the
+King of France. A door was thus opened (1066 A.D.) through which
+entered entangling complications and countless woes in the future.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If Charlemagne had worn the Church as a precious jewel in his crown in
+the ninth century, the Church now in the eleventh century wore all the
+European states, a tiara of jewels in her mitre. The centre of
+dominion had passed from the Empire of Germany to Rome, when Henry IV.
+prostrated himself barefooted before Gregory VII. at Canossa in 1072.
+
+The Church was at its zenith. As a political system it was unrivalled;
+but its triumphs brought little joy to the earnest souls still clinging
+to the ideals of primitive Christianity. But what availed it for
+Abelard to lead an intellectual revolt against corrupted beliefs in the
+North, or the Albigenses a spiritual one in the South? He was silenced
+and immured for life, while the unhappy inhabitants of Languedoc were
+massacred and almost exterminated, and an inquisition, established at
+Toulouse, made sure that heretical germs should not again spread from
+that infected centre.
+
+But however imperfect the religious sentiment of the time, however it
+may have departed from the simple precepts of its founder, its power to
+sway the hearts and lives of the people may be judged from the
+extraordinary movement started in France in the twelfth century.
+
+How inconceivable, in this practical age, that Europe should three
+times have emptied her choicest and best into Asia for a sentiment!
+Business suspended, private interests sacrificed or forgotten, life,
+treasure, all eagerly given--for what? That a small bit of territory,
+a thousand miles away, be torn from profaning infidels, because of its
+sacred associations, because it was the birthplace of a religion whose
+meaning seems to have escaped them--a religion which they wore on their
+battle-flags, but not in their hearts. How would a barefooted,
+rope-girdled monk, however inspired and eloquent, fare to-day in New
+York, or London, or Paris?
+
+History has no stranger chapter than that of the Crusades. When Peter
+the Hermit pictured the desecration of the Holy Land by Mohammedans,
+all classes in France, from King to serf, were for the first time moved
+by a common sentiment, and poured life and treasure with passionate
+zeal into those streams which three times inundated Palestine.
+
+The order of Knights Templar had been created, and a splendid ideal of
+manhood held up before the French nation, and now the knightly ideal,
+side by side with the Christian and the romantic ideal, entered into
+the life of the people. Romance, song, poetry, eloquence came into
+being from a sort of spiritual baptism, and France began to wear the
+mantle of beauty which was to be her chief glory in the future.
+
+But future France was not clad in coat of mail in the twelfth century.
+She was lying helpless, beneath the mass of feudal trappings. Her time
+was not yet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+Like all oppressive systems, feudalism bore within itself the seeds of
+its own destruction. When the King, shorn of prerogative and of
+dignity, made alliance with the people lying in helpless misery beneath
+the mailed surface, the system was rudely shaken. When artisans
+flocked to the free cities enjoying especial immunities and privileges
+from the King, and by skill and industry amassed fortunes, the
+_commune_ and the _bourgeoisie_ were created, and feudalism was
+stricken to its centre. When spendthrift nobles and needy barons
+mortgaged their estates, the end was not far off. And when in 1302 the
+"_tiers etat_" entered the States-General as a legitimate order of the
+Government, the very foundations were crumbling, and it needed but the
+final _coup de grace_ given by Charles VII. in the fifteenth century,
+when he established a standing army under the control of the King.
+When this was done, the feudal system was relegated to the region of
+the obsolete.
+
+It was well for that sovereign that he could do something to save his
+name from the obloquy attached to it on account of his base desertion
+of Joan of Arc, to whom he owed his throne and his kingdom.
+
+From the moment when a French province was attached to the crown of
+England, the dream of that nation was the conquest of France.
+Generations came and went, one dynasty replaced another, and still the
+struggle continued; France sometimes seeming near to dominion over
+England, and England always believing it was her destiny to bring
+France under the rule of an English sovereign.
+
+A glamour of romance is thrown over history by the royal marriages
+which occur in dazzling profusion. It seems to have been the custom,
+whenever a peace was concluded in Europe, to cement it with a royal
+marriage, and to throw in a princess as a sacrifice,--one of the
+conditions of almost every treaty being that a royal daughter, or
+sister, or niece, should be tossed across the Channel, or into Germany,
+or Italy, or Spain, an unwilling bride thrown into the arms of a
+reluctant bridegroom; with the result that in the succeeding generation
+there was a plentiful sprinkling of heirs with claims, more or less
+shadowy, to the neighboring thrones. This was the source, or rather
+pretext, for most of the wars between France and England for four
+hundred years.
+
+In the early part of the fifteenth century the great crisis arrived.
+With that lack of unity which seemed a fatal Gallic inheritance, France
+broke into civil war, while an invading English army was in the heart
+of her kingdom. England's dream was near realization.
+
+An insane King, a vicious intriguing Queen-Regent, the Duke of Burgundy
+madly jealous of the Duke of Orleans, and both ready to sacrifice
+France in the rage of disappointed ambition,--such were the elements.
+England's opportunity had come.
+
+The depraved Queen Isabella, acting for her insane husband, held
+conference with Henry V., and actually concluded a treaty bestowing the
+regency upon the English King. There was the usual douceur of a
+princess thrown in, and Katharine, the daughter of Isabella, and sister
+to the Dauphin (the future King Charles VII.), was espoused by King
+Henry V. of England, who set up a royal court at Vincennes.
+
+The fortunes of the kingdom had never been so desperate. The people
+saw in these insolent traitorous dukes their natural enemy; in the
+King, their friend and protector. Had not monarchy given them life and
+hope? It was to them sacred next to Heaven. They rose in an outburst
+of patriotism. The young Dauphin was hastily and informally crowned,
+and thousands flocked to his standard. It was the King and the people
+against the great vassals, the last struggle of an expiring feudalism.
+Desperation lent fury to the conflict which was, upon both sides, a
+fight for existence; the Queen-mother in unnatural alliance with the
+Duke of Burgundy, who was resolved to rule or ruin.
+
+He soon saw that defeat was inevitable, and, preferring infamy, threw
+himself into the hands of the English, offering to turn the kingdom
+over to the infant King Henry VI. (Henry V. having died).
+
+Charles abandoned hope; how could he struggle against such a
+combination? He was considering whether he should find refuge in Spain
+or in Scotland, when the tide of events was turned by the strangest
+romance in history.
+
+
+It must ever remain a mystery that a peasant girl, a child in years and
+in experience, should have believed herself called to such a mission;
+conferring only with her heavenly guides or "voices," that she should
+have sought the King, inspired him with faith in her, and in himself
+and his cause, reanimated the courage of the army, and led it herself
+to victory absolute and complete; and then, compelling the
+half-reluctant, half-doubting Charles to go with her to Rheims, where
+she had him anointed and consecrated, this simple child in that day
+bestowed upon him a kingdom, and upon France a King!
+
+Was there ever a stranger chapter in history! Alas, if it could have
+ended here, and she could have gone back to her mother and her spinning
+and her simple pleasures, as she was always longing to do when her work
+should be done. But no! we see her falling into the hands of the
+defeated and revengeful English--this child, who had wrested from them
+a kingdom already in their grasp. She was turned over to the French
+ecclesiastical court to be tried. A sorceress and a blasphemer they
+pronounce her, and pass her on to the secular authorities, and her
+sentence is--death.
+
+We see the poor defenceless girl, bewildered, terrified, wringing her
+hands and declaring her innocence as she rides to execution. God and
+man had abandoned her. No heavenly voice spoke, no miracle intervened
+as her young limbs were tied to the stake and the fagots and straw
+piled up about her. The torch was applied, and her pure soul mounted
+heavenward in a column of flames.
+
+Rugged men wept. A Burgundian general said, as he turned gloomily
+away, "We have murdered a saint."
+
+And Charles, sitting upon the throne she had rescued for him, what was
+he doing to save her? Nothing--to his everlasting shame be it said,
+nothing. He might not have succeeded; the effort at rescue, or to stay
+the event, might have been unavailing. But where was his knighthood,
+where his manhood, that he did not try, or utter passionate protest
+against her fate?
+
+Twenty-five years later we see him erecting statues to her memory, and
+"rehabilitating" her desecrated name. And to-day, the Church which
+condemned her for blasphemy is placing her upon the calendar of saints,
+while all political parties alike are using her name as a thing to
+conjure with.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+The early part of the sixteenth century must ever be memorable in the
+history of Europe. Ferdinand and Isabella had given to the human race
+a new world. Luther had hurled his defiance at Rome--had arraigned Leo
+X. for blasphemy and corrupt practices. Henry V., grandson of
+Ferdinand and Isabella (and nephew of Katharine, wife of Henry VIII.)
+was Emperor of Germany. Astute and powerful though he was, he had been
+unable to stay the Protestant flood. His empire, apparently hungering
+for the new heresy, was divided already into States Protestant and
+States Catholic. England was Protestant. The conversion of her King,
+because the Pope refused to annul his marriage with Katharine, was not
+one of the proudest triumphs of the new faith, but one of the most
+important. Had Katharine's charms been fresher, or Anne Boleyn's less
+alluring, the course of history might have been strangely changed.
+Henry VIII. as persecutor of heretics would have found congenial
+occupation for his ferocious instincts, and Protestantism would have
+been long delayed. Spain was unchangeably Catholic, while France
+offered congenial soil for the new faith. The germs of heresy, long
+slumbering, were everywhere stirred into life.
+
+Francis I. was King; sumptuous in tastes, suave and elegant in manners,
+as handsome as an Apollo, gay, pleasure-loving, as vicious as he was
+false, and if need be with a cruelty which matched his ambition, such
+was the man who held the destinies of France at this time.
+
+A rival claimant for the throne of Germany, he was destined to spend
+his life in fruitless contest with the more able, wily, and astute
+Henry V., the possession of that Empire the ignis-fatuus ever luring
+him on; an end to which all other ends were simply the means. The
+religious question upon which Europe was divided meant nothing to him,
+except as he could use it in his duel with the Emperor. He was in turn
+the ally of Henry VIII. or the willing tool of Henry V. If he needed
+the English King's friendship, the Protestants had protection. If he
+desired to placate Henry V., the roastings and torturings commenced
+again.
+
+In 1547 Francis and Henry VIII. each went to his reward, and a few
+years later Henry V. had laid down his crown and carried his weary,
+unsatisfied heart to St. Yuste. The brilliant pageant was over; but
+Protestantism was expanding.
+
+The question at issue was deeper than any one knew. Neither Luther nor
+Leo X. understood the revolution they had precipitated. Protestants
+and Papists alike failed to comprehend the true nature of the struggle,
+which was not for supremacy of Romanist or Protestant; not whether this
+dogma or that was true, and should prevail; but an assertion of the
+right of every human soul to choose its own faith and form of worship.
+The great battle for human liberty had commenced; the struggle for
+religious liberty was but the prelude to what was to follow. There was
+abundant proof later that Protestants no less than Papists needed only
+opportunity and power to be as cruel and intolerant as their
+persecutors had been. Before the Reformation was fifty years old,
+Servetus, one of the greatest men of his age, a scholar, philosopher,
+and man of irreproachable character, was burned at Geneva for heretical
+views concerning the nature of the Trinity, Calvin, the great organizer
+of Protestant theology, giving, if not the order for this crime, at
+least the nod of approval.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Huguenot, that name of tragic association, was a corruption of the
+German _Eidgenossen_--meaning associates. By the way of Switzerland it
+came into France as _Eguenots_, and the transition to its present form
+was simple. The Huguenots were no longer a timorous band hiding in
+darkness as in the time of Francis I. A party with such leaders as
+Anthony de Bourbon, Prince of Conde (his brother), and Admiral Coligny,
+was not to be put down by a few roastings and stranglings here and
+there. Anthony de Bourbon (King of Navarre) was next in succession
+should the House of Valois become extinct, with a young son valiant as
+himself (the future Henry IV.) pressing on toward manhood.
+
+Catholic France needed plenty of comfort from Rome and Madrid in
+dealing with this formidable body of heretics which had fastened upon
+her vitals, and which was in turn receiving aid and comfort from the
+young Protestant Queen across the Channel.
+
+
+When that fair princess Catharine de Medici became the wife of Henry,
+second son of Francis I., no one suspected the tremendous import of the
+event. Powerless to win the affection or even confidence of her
+husband, she remained during his reign almost unobserved, but, as the
+event proved, not unobservant. Her alert faculties were not idle, and
+when upon the death of Henry II. she found herself Queen-Regent, with
+only a frail boy of sixteen to obstruct her will, she quickly gathered
+the threads she already knew so well, and her supple hand closed upon
+them with a grasp not to be relinquished while she lived.
+
+Another young Princess had been tossed across the Channel. This time
+it was her most serene little highness, Marie Stuart, Queen of
+Scotland, intended for the dauphin, who was to be Francis II.
+
+In order to be prepared for this high destiny, the little maid was
+brought when only six years old to the Court of France to be trained
+under the direct supervision of her future mother-in-law, Catharine de
+Medici. Poor little Marie Stuart--predestined to sin and to tragedy!
+Who could be good, with the blood of the Guises in her veins, and with
+Catharine de Medici as preceptress?
+
+This marriage was planned before Catharine's advent to power, or it
+would never have been. Marie was the niece of the Duke of Guise, and
+the central thought of Catharine's policy was the exclusion of this
+ambitious, intriguing family from every avenue to power in the state.
+Now, Marie would be Queen, and who so natural advisers as her uncles of
+the house of "Lorraine"?
+
+The marriage of the two children had taken place--the sickly boy with
+only a modest portion of intelligence was Francis II. Marie, his
+Queen, whom he adored, controlled him utterly, and was in turn
+controlled by her uncles, the Guises. The wily Catharine saw herself
+defeated by a beautiful girl of sixteen.
+
+The family of Guise was the self-appointed head of the Catholic party
+in France and represented the most extreme views regarding the
+treatment of heretics. So the strange result was, that Catharine, if
+she looked for any allies in her fight with the house of Lorraine, of
+which the Duke of Guise was the head, must make common cause with the
+Protestants, whom she hated a little less than she did the uncles of
+Marie Stuart. But events were soon to change the situation. Did she
+hasten them? Such a suspicion may never have existed. But may one not
+suspect anything of a woman capable of a St. Bartholomew?
+
+Francis II. was dead. Marie Stuart had passed out of French history.
+The fates were fighting on the side of Catharine, who wasted no regrets
+upon the death of a son, which made her Queen-Regent during the
+minority of her second son Charles. She entered upon her fight with
+the Guises with renewed energy, and became to some extent protector of
+the Protestants. Realizing that her time was brief, she prepared
+Charles for the position he would soon hold.
+
+What can be said of a mother who seeks to exterminate every germ of
+truth or virtue in her son--who immerses him in degrading vices in
+order to deaden his too sensitive conscience and make him a willing
+tool for her purposes? Inheriting the splendid intelligence as well as
+genius for statecraft of the de Medici, nourished from her infancy upon
+Machiavellian principles, cold and cruel by nature, this Florentine
+woman has written her name in blood across the pages of French history.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+There is not time to tell the story of the events leading up to that
+fateful night, August 24, 1572. Impelled always by her fear and dread
+of the Guises, Catharine had been vacillating in her policy with the
+Huguenots. Charles IX. was now King: impressible, easily influenced,
+yet stubborn, intractable, incoherent, passionate, and unreliable;
+sometimes inclining to the Guises, sometimes to Coligny and the
+Huguenots, and always submitting at last after vain struggle to his
+imperious mother's will, in her efforts to free him from both. We see
+in him a weak character, not naturally bad, torn to distraction by the
+cruel forces about him, who when compelled to yield, as he always did
+in the end, to that terrible woman, would give way to fits of impotent
+rage against the fate which allowed him no peace.
+
+A time arrived when Catharine feared the influence of the Protestant
+Coligny more than the Guises. Brave, patriotic, magnetic, he had
+succeeded in winning Charles' consent to declare war against Spain.
+Philip II. of Spain was Catharine's son-in-law and closest ally. Her
+entire policy would be undermined. At all hazards Coligny must be
+gotten rid of. The young King of Navarre, adored leader of the
+Protestants, was a constant menace; he too must in some way be disposed
+of.
+
+There were sinister conferences with Philip of Spain and with his
+Minister, that incarnation of cruelty and of the Inquisition, the Duke
+of Alva.
+
+God knows France was not guiltless in what followed; but the
+initiative, the inception of the horrid deed, was not French. It was
+conceived in the brain of either this Italian woman or her Spanish
+adviser and co-conspirator, the Duke of Alva. We will never know the
+inside history of the massacre of St. Bartholomew. It must ever remain
+a matter of conjecture just how and when it was planned, but the
+probabilities point strongly one way.
+
+Charles was to be gradually prepared for it by his mother, the plot
+revealed to him as he was in condition to bear it; by working upon his
+fears, his suspicions, by stories of plottings against his life and his
+kingdom, to infuriate him, and then--before his rage was exhausted--to
+act. The marriage of Charles' sister Margaret with the young
+Protestant leader Henry of Navarre, with its promise of future
+protection to the Huguenots, was part of the plot. It would lure all
+the leaders of the cause to Paris. Coligny, Conde, all the heads of
+the party were urgently invited to attend the marriage-feast which was
+to inaugurate an era of peace.
+
+Admiral Coligny was requested by Catharine, simply as a measure of
+protection to the Protestants, to have an additional regiment of guards
+in Paris, to act in case of any unforeseen violence.
+
+Two days after the marriage and while the festivities were at their
+height, an attempt upon the life of the old Admiral awoke suspicion and
+alarm. But Catharine and her son went immediately in person to see the
+wounded old man, and to express their grief and horror at the event.
+They commanded that a careful list of the names and abode of every
+Protestant in Paris be made, in order, as they said, "to take them
+under their own immediate protection." "My dear father," said the
+King, "the hurt is yours, the grief is mine."
+
+At that moment, the knives were already sharpened, every man instructed
+in his part in the hideous drama, and the signal for its commencement
+determined upon. Charles did not know it, but his mother did. She
+went to her son's room that night, artfully and eloquently pictured the
+danger he was in, confessed to him that she had authorized the attempt
+upon Coligny, but that it was done because of the Admiral's plottings
+against him, which she had discovered. But the Guises--her enemies and
+his--they knew it, and would denounce her and the King! The only thing
+now is to finish the work. He must die.
+
+Charles was in frightful agitation and stubbornly refused. Finally
+with an air of offended dignity she bowed coldly and said to her son,
+"Sir, will you permit me to withdraw with my daughter, from your
+kingdom?" The wretched Charles was conquered. In a sort of insane
+fury he exclaimed, "Well, let them kill him, and all the rest of the
+Huguenots too. See that not one remains to reproach me."
+
+This was more than she had hoped. All was easy now. So eager was she
+to give the order before a change of mood, that she flew herself to
+give the signal, fully two hours earlier than was expected. At
+midnight the tocsin rang out upon the night, and the horror began.
+
+Lulled to a feeling of security by artfully contrived circumstances,
+husbands, wives, sons, daughters, peacefully sleeping, were awakened to
+see each other hideously slaughtered.
+
+The stars have looked down upon some terrible scenes in Paris, her
+stones are not unacquainted with the taste of human blood, but never
+had there been anything like this. The carnage of battle is merciful
+compared with it. Shrieking women and children, half-clothed, fleeing
+from knives already dripping with human blood; frantic mothers
+shielding the bodies of their children, and wives pleading for the
+lives of husbands; the living hiding beneath the bodies of the dead.
+
+The cry that ascended to Heaven from Paris that night was the most
+awful and despairing in the world's history. It was centuries of
+cruelty crowded into a few hours.
+
+The number slain can never be accurately stated; but it was thousands.
+Human blood is intoxicating. An orgie set in which laughed at orders
+to cease. Seven days it continued and then died out for lack of
+material. The provinces had caught the contagion, and orders to slay
+were received and obeyed in all except two, the Governor of Bayonne, to
+his honor be it told, writing to the King in reply: "Your Majesty has
+many faithful subjects in Bayonne, but not one executioner."
+
+And where was "His Majesty" while this work was being done? How was it
+with Catharine? She was possibly seeing to the embalming of Coligny's
+head, which we learn she sent as a present to the Pope. We hear of no
+regrets, no misgivings, that she was calm, collected, suave and
+unfathomable as ever, but that Charles in a strange, half-frenzied
+state was amusing himself by firing from the windows of the palace at
+the fleeing Huguenots. Had he killed himself in remorse, would it not
+have been better, instead of lingering two wretched years, a prey to
+mental tortures and an inscrutable malady, before he died?
+
+Europe was shocked. Christendom averted her face in horror. But at
+Madrid and Rome there was satisfaction.
+
+Catharine and the Duke of Alva had done their work skilfully, but the
+result surprised and disappointed them. Tens of thousands of Huguenots
+were slain, which was well; but many times that number remained, with
+spirit unbroken, which was not well.
+
+They had been too merciful! Why had Henry of Navarre been spared? Had
+not Alva said, "Take the big fish and let the small fry go. One salmon
+is worth more than a thousand frogs."
+
+But Charles considered the matter settled when he uttered those
+swelling words to Henry of Navarre the day after the massacre: "I mean
+in future to have one religion in my kingdom. It is mass or death."
+
+
+Catharine's third son now wore the crown of France. In Henry III. she
+had as pliant an instrument for her will as in the two brothers
+preceding him; and, like them, his reign was spent in alternating
+conflict with the Protestants and the Duke de Guise. At last, wearied
+and exasperated, this half-Italian and altogether conscienceless King
+quite naturally thought of the stiletto. The old Duke, as he entered
+the King's apartment by invitation, was stricken down by assassins
+hidden for that purpose.
+
+Henry had not counted on the rebound from that blow. Catholic France
+was excited to such popular fury against him that he threw himself into
+the arms of the Protestants, imploring their aid in keeping his crown
+and his kingdom; and when himself assassinated, a year later, in the
+absence of a son he named Henry, King of Navarre, his successor. A
+Protestant and a Huguenot was King of France.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+After long wandering in strange seas, we come in view of familiar
+lights and headlands. With the advent of the house of Bourbon, we have
+grasped a thread which leads directly down to our own time.
+
+
+The accession of a Protestant King was hailed with delirious joy by the
+Huguenots, and with corresponding rage by Catholic France. The one
+looked forward to redressing of wrongs and avenging of injuries; and
+the other flatly refused submission unless Henry should recant his
+heresy, and become a convert to the true faith.
+
+The new King saw there was no bed of roses preparing for him. After
+four years of effort to reconcile the irreconcilable, he decided upon
+his course. He was not called to the throne to rule over Protestant
+France, nor to be an instrument of vengeance for the Huguenots. He saw
+that the highest good of the kingdom required, not that he should
+impose upon it either form of belief or worship, but give equal
+opportunity and privilege to both.
+
+To the consternation of the Huguenots he announced himself ready to
+listen to the arguments in favor of the religion of Rome; and it took
+just five hours of deliberation to convince him of its truth. He
+announced himself ready to abjure his old faith. Bitter reproaches on
+the one side and rejoicings on the other greeted this decision. It was
+not heroic. But many even among the Protestants acknowledged it to be
+an act of supreme political wisdom.
+
+Peace was restored, and the "Edict of Nantes," which quickly followed,
+proved to his old friends, the Huguenots, that they were not forgotten.
+The Protestants, with every disability removed, shared equal privileges
+with the Catholics throughout the kingdom; and the first victory for
+religious liberty was splendidly won.
+
+An era of unexampled prosperity dawned. Never had the kingdom been so
+wisely and beneficently governed. Sincerity, simplicity, and sympathy
+had taken the place of dissimulation, craft, and cruelty. Uplifting
+agencies were everywhere at work, reaching even to the peasantry, that
+forgotten element in the nation.
+
+The reign of the Bourbon dynasty had opened auspiciously. Henry IV.
+was the idol of the people. His loveless marriage with Margaret de
+Valois had been annulled, and he had espoused Marie de Medici. The
+blood from that poisoned stream was again to be intermingled with the
+blood of the future Kings of France.
+
+After a reign of twenty-one years, the sagacious ruler who had done
+more than any other to make her great and happy was stricken down by
+the hand of an assassin, and a cry of grief arose alike from Catholic
+and Protestant throughout the kingdom.
+
+
+Poor France was again at the mercy of a woman with the corrupt
+instincts of the de Medici. The widow of Henry IV., who was Regent
+during the infancy of her son Louis, was intriguing, vulgar, and
+without the ability of the great Catharine. The kingdom was rent by
+cabals of aspiring favorites and ambitious nobles, until the reign of
+Louis XIII., or rather of Cardinal Richelieu, began.
+
+The foundations of this man's policy lay deep, out of sight of all save
+his own far-reaching intelligence. Pitiless as an iceberg, he crushed
+every obstacle to his purpose. Impartial as fate, with no loves, no
+hatreds, Catholics, Protestants, nobles, Parliaments, one after another
+were borne down before his determination to make the King, what he had
+not been since Charlemagne, supreme in France.
+
+The will of the great minister mowed down like a scythe. The power of
+the grandees, that last remnant of feudalism, and a perpetual menace to
+monarchy, was swept away. One great noble after another was humiliated
+and shorn of his privileges, if not of his head.
+
+The Huguenots, being first shaken into submission, saw their political
+liberties torn from them by the stroke of a pen, and even while the
+Catholics were making merry over this discomfiture, the minister was
+planning to send Henrietta, sister of the King, across the Channel to
+become Queen of Protestant England, as wife of Charles I. But the act
+of supreme audacity was to come. This high prelate of the church, this
+cardinal minister, formed alliance with Gustavus Adolphus, the great
+leader of the Protestants in the war upon the Emperor and the Pope!
+
+He allowed no religion, no class, to sway or to hold him. He was for
+France; and her greatness and glory augmented under his ruthless
+dominion. By his extraordinary genius he made the reign of a
+commonplace King one of dazzling splendor; and while gratifying his own
+colossal ambition he so strengthened the foundations of the monarchy
+that princes of the blood themselves could not shake it.
+
+It was great--it was dazzling, but of all his work there is but one
+thing which revolutions and time have not swept away. The "French
+Academy" alone survives as his monument. Out of a gathering of
+literary friends he created a national institution, its object the
+establishing a court of last appeal in all that makes for eloquence in
+speaking or writing the French language. In a country where nothing
+endures, this has remained unchanged for two hundred and thirty years.
+
+But this master of statecraft, this creator of despotic monarchy, had
+one unsatisfied ambition. He would have exchanged all his honors for
+the ability to write one play like those of Corneille. Hungering for
+literary distinction, he could not have gotten into his own Academy had
+he not created it. And jealous of his laurels, he hated Corneille as
+much as he did the enemies of France.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+Again do we recognize the fine Italian hand in French politics.
+Cardinal Mazarin was Minister during the regency of Anne of Austria,
+directing and controlling the affairs of the Kingdom, less intent upon
+the greatness of France than the greatness and magnificence of her
+Prime Minister. At last the wily Italian was gone, and Louis XIV.
+settled himself upon the throne which Richelieu had rendered so exalted
+and immovable.
+
+Cardinal Mazarin had said of the young Louis that "there was enough in
+him to make four Kings, and one honest man." His greatness consisted
+more in amplitude than in kind. Nature made him in prodigal mood. He
+was an average man of colossal proportions. His ability, courage,
+dignity, industry, greed for power and possessions, were all on a
+magnificent scale, and so were his vanity, his loves, his cruelties,
+his pleasures, his triumphs, and his disappointments.
+
+No King more wickedly oppressed France, and none made her more
+glorious. He made her feared abroad and magnificent at home, but he
+desolated her, and drained her resources with ambitious wars. He
+crowned her with imperishable laurels in literature, art, and every
+manifestation of genius, but he signed the "Revocation of the Edict of
+Nantes," and drove out of his kingdom 500,000 of the best of his
+subjects.
+
+If the names of Marlborough and Maintenon could have been stricken out
+of his life, the story might have had a different ending. From the
+moment the great Duke checked his victorious army, his sun began to go
+down; but it was Maintenon who most obscured its setting.
+
+His unloved Queen, the Spanish Marie Therese, had borne his mad
+infatuation for Louise la Valliere; la Valliere had carried her broken
+heart to a convent, and been superseded by de Montespan, and de
+Montespan had invited her own destruction by bringing into her
+household the pious widow of the poet Scarron, Madame de Maintenon,
+(grand-daughter of d'Aubigne, the historian of the Reformation).
+Grave, austere, ambitious, talented, she was not too much engrossed in
+her duties as governess of de Montespan's children to find ways of
+establishing an influence over the King.
+
+This man who had absorbed into himself all the functions of the
+Government, who was Ministers, Magistrates, Parliaments, all in one,
+this central sun of whom Corneille, Moliere, Racine were but single
+rays, was destined to be enslaved in his old age by a designing
+adventuress; her will his law. The hey-day of youth having passed, he
+was beginning to be anxious about his soul. She artfully pricked his
+conscience, and de Montespan was sent away, but de Maintenon remained.
+
+She next convinced him that the only fitting atonement for his sins was
+to drive heresy out of his kingdom, and re-establish the true faith.
+At her bidding he undid the glorious work of Henry IV., signed the
+"Revocation of the Edict of Nantes," and brutally stamped out
+Protestantism.
+
+A part of the scheme of penitence seems to have been that on the death
+of poor Marie Therese, he should make her (de Maintenon) his lawful
+wife, which he did privately; and his sun went down obscured by
+crushing griefs and disappointments. His children swept away, the
+prestige of success tarnished, this demigod was taken to pieces by
+time's destroying fingers, quite as unceremoniously as are the rest of
+us, hiding finally behind the bed-curtains while a kneeling courtier
+passed to him his wig on the end of a stick, and at last lying down
+like any other old dying sinner, overwhelmed with the vanity of earthly
+things and with the vastness of eternity.
+
+Still more would the dying moments of the Grand Monarque have been
+embittered could he have foreseen into what hands his great inheritance
+was passing.
+
+
+Upon Louis XV. more than any other rests the responsibility of the
+crisis which was approaching.
+
+A heartless sybarite, depraved in tastes, without sense of
+responsibility or comprehension of his times, a brutalized voluptuary
+governed by a succession of designing women, regardless of national
+poverty, indulging in wildest extravagance,--such was the man in whom
+was vested the authority rendered so absolute by Richelieu,--such the
+man who opened up a pathway for the storm.
+
+As for the nobility, their degradation may be imagined when it is said
+there was as bitter rivalry between titled and illustrious fathers to
+secure for their daughters the coveted position held by Madame de
+Pompadour, as for the highest offices of State.
+
+Could the upper ranks fall lower than this? Had not the kingdom
+reached its lowest depths, where its foreign policy was determined by
+the amount of consideration shown to Madame de Pompadour? But this
+woman, whose friendship was artfully sought by the great Empress Maria
+Theresa, was superseded, and the fresher charms of Madame du Barri
+enslaved the King. The deposed favorite could not survive her fall,
+and died of a broken heart. It is said that as Louis, looking from an
+upper window of his palace, saw the coffin borne out in a drenching
+rain, he smiled and said: "Ah, the Marquise has a bad day for her
+journey." It may be imagined that the man who could be so pitiless to
+the woman he had loved would feel little pity for the people whom he
+had not loved, but whom he knew only as a remote, obscure something,
+which held up the weight of his glory.
+
+But this "obscure something" was undergoing strange transformation.
+The greater light at the surface had sent some glimmering rays down
+into the mass below, which began to awaken and to think. Misery,
+hopeless and abject, was changing into rage and thirst for vengeance.
+
+A new class had come into existence which was not noble, but with
+highly trained intelligence it looked with contempt and loathing upon
+the frivolous, half-educated nobles. Scorn was added to the ferment of
+human passions beneath the surface, and when Voltaire had spoken, and
+the restraints of religion were loosened, no living hand, not that of a
+Richelieu nor a Louis XIV., could have averted the coming doom.
+But--no one seems to have suspected what was approaching.
+
+A wonderful literature had come into existence--not stately and classic
+as in the age preceding,--but instinct with a new sort of life. The
+highest speculations which can occupy the soul of man were handled with
+marvellous lightness of touch and prismatic brilliancy of expression;
+but all was negation. None tried to build; all to demolish. The
+black-winged angel of Destruction was hovering over the land.
+
+Then Rousseau tossed his dreamy abstractions into the quivering air,
+and the formula, "Liberty, Fraternity, and Equality," was caught up by
+the titled aristocracy as a charming idyllic toy, while Princes, Dukes,
+and Marquises amused themselves with a dream of Arcadian simplicity, to
+be attained in some indefinite way in some remote and equally
+indefinite future. It was all a masquerade. No reality, no sincerity,
+no convictions, good or evil. The only thing that was real was that an
+over-taxed, impoverished people was exasperated and--hungry.
+
+Did the King need new supplies for his unimaginable luxuries, they were
+taxed. Was it necessary to have new accessions to French "glory," in
+order to allay popular clamor or discontent, they must supply the men
+to fight the glorious battles, and the means with which to pay them.
+Every burden fell at last upon this lowest stratum of the State, the
+nobility and clergy, while owning two-thirds of the land, being nearly
+exempt from taxation.
+
+And yet the King and nobility of France, in love with Rousseau's
+theories, were airily discussing the "rights of man." Wolves and foxes
+coming together to talk over the sacredness of the rights of
+property--or the occupants of murderers' row growing eloquent over the
+sanctity of human life! How incomprehensible that among those
+quick-witted Frenchmen there seems not one to have realized that the
+logical sequence of the formula, "Liberty, Fraternity, and Equality,"
+must be, "Down with the Aristocrats!"
+
+And so the surface which Richelieu had converted into adamant grew
+thinner and thinner each day, until King and Court danced upon a mere
+gilded crust, unconscious of the abysmal fires beneath. Some of those
+powdered heads fell into the executioner's basket twenty-five years
+later. Did they recall this time? Did Madame du Barri think of it,
+did she exult at her triumph over de Pompadour, when she was dragged
+shrieking and struggling to the guillotine?
+
+
+And while France was thus weaving her future, what were the other
+nations doing? England, sane, practical, with little time for
+abstractions, and little said about "glory," was importing turnips,
+converting agriculture into a science, and under the instruction of
+exiled Huguenots, establishing marvellous industries. In the new
+kingdom of Prussia, a half-savage, half-inspired King had been
+importing artisans and skill of all sorts, reclaiming waste lands.
+Living like a miser, he had indulged in but one luxury: an army, which
+should be the best in the world. There was no powder, no patches at
+his Court; where he thrashed with his own royal hands male and female
+courtiers, starved, imprisoned, and cudgelled his son and heir to his
+throne for playing on the violin; and, it is said, so terrified and
+scarified his grenadiers with canes and cats that not one of them would
+not have preferred facing the enemy to meeting his enraged sovereign,
+had he done wrong.
+
+Frederick was not a pleasant barbarian. But there is at least a ring
+of sincerity about all this, which it is refreshing to recall after the
+tinsel and depraved refinements of France under Louis XV., and
+something too which gives promise, in spite of its brutality, of a
+stalwart future.
+
+Five years before the close of this miserable reign, an event occurred
+seemingly of small importance to Europe. A child was born in an
+obscure Italian household. His name was Napoleon Bonaparte.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+Louis XV. was dead, and two children, with the light-heartedness of
+youth and inexperience, stepped upon the throne which was to be a
+scaffold--Louis XVI., only twenty, and Marie Antoinette, his wife,
+nineteen. He, amiable, kind, full of generous intentions; she,
+beautiful, simple, child-like and lovely. Instead of a debauched old
+King with depraved surroundings, here were a Prince and Princess out of
+a fairy-tale. The air was filled with indefinite promise of a new era
+for mankind to be inaugurated by this amiable young king, whose
+kindness of heart shone forth in his first speech, "We will have no
+more loans, no credit, no fresh burdens on the people;" then, leaving
+his ministers to devise ways of paying the enormous salaries of
+officials out of an empty treasury, and to arrange the financial
+details of his benevolent scheme of government, he proceeded with his
+gay and brilliant young wife to Rheims, there to be crowned with a
+magnificence undreamed of by Louis XIV.
+
+In the midst of these rejoicings over the new reign, and of speculative
+dreams of universal freedom, there was wafted across the Atlantic news
+of a handful of patriots arrayed against the tyranny of the British
+Crown. Here were the theories of the new philosophy translated into
+the reality of actual experience. "No taxation without
+representation," "No privileged class," "No government without the
+consent of the governed." Was this not an embodiment of their dreams?
+Nor did it detract from the interest in the conflict that
+England--England, the hated rival of France, was defied by an indignant
+people of her own race. There was not a young noble in the land who
+would not have rushed if he could to the defence of the outraged
+colonies.
+
+The King, half doubting, and vaguely fearing, was swept into the
+current, and the armies and the courage of the Americans were
+splendidly reinforced by generous, enthusiastic France.
+
+Why should the simple-hearted Louis see what no one else seemed to see:
+that victory or failure were alike full of peril for France? If the
+colonies were conquered, France would feel the vengeance of England; if
+they were freed and self-governing, the principle of Monarchy had a
+staggering blow.
+
+In the mean time, as the American Revolution moved on toward success,
+there was talk in the cabin as well as the _chateau_ of the "rights of
+man." In shops and barns, as well as in clubs and drawing-rooms, there
+was a glimmering of the coming day.
+
+"What is true upon one continent is true upon another," say they. "If
+it is cowardly to submit to tyranny in America, what is it in France?"
+"If Englishmen may revolt against oppression, why may not Frenchmen?"
+"No government without the consent of the governed, eh? When has our
+consent been asked, the consent of twenty-five million people? Are we
+sheep, that we have let a few thousands govern us for a thousand years,
+_without_ our consent?"
+
+Poverty and hunger gave force and urgency to these questions. The
+people began to clamor more boldly for the good time which had been
+promised by the kind-hearted King. The murmur swelled to an ominous
+roar. Thousands were at his very palace gates, telling him in no
+unmistakable terms that they were tired of smooth words and fair
+promises. What they wanted was a new constitution and--bread.
+
+Poor Louis! the one could be made with pen and paper; but by what
+miracle could he produce the other? How gladly would he have given
+them anything. But what could he do? There was not enough money to
+pay the salaries of his officials, nor for his gay young Queen's fetes
+and balls! The old way would have been to impose new taxes. But how
+could he tax a people crying at his gates for bread? He made more
+promises which he could not keep; yielded, one after another,
+concessions of authority and dignity; then vacillated, and tried to
+return over the slippery path, only to be dragged on again by an
+irresistible fate.
+
+When Louis XVI. convoked the States-General, he made his last
+concession to the demands of his subjects.
+
+That almost-forgotten body had not been seen since Richelieu effaced
+all the auxiliary functions of government. Nobles, ecclesiastics, and
+_tiers etat_ (or commons) found themselves face to face once more. The
+handsome contemptuous nobles, the princely ecclesiastics were
+unchanged--but there was a new expression in the pale faces of the
+commons. There was a look of calm defiance as they met the disdainful
+gaze of the aristocrats across the gulf of two centuries.
+
+The two superior bodies absolutely refused to sit in the same room with
+the commons. They might under the same roof, but in the same
+room--never.
+
+No outburst met this insult. With marvellous self-control and dignity,
+and with an ominous calm, the commons constituted themselves into the
+"National Assembly."
+
+Aristocratic France had committed its concluding act of arrogance and
+folly. And when poor distracted Louis gave impotent order for the
+Assembly to disperse, he committed suicide. Louis the man lived on to
+be slain by the people three years later, but Louis the King died at
+that moment.
+
+When the Assembly defied his authority and continued to solemnly act as
+if he had not spoken, the power had passed to the people. They were
+sovereign.
+
+Paris was in wild excitement; and a rumor that troops were marching
+upon the Assembly to disperse it converted excitement into madness.
+The populace marched toward the Bastille, and in another hour the heads
+of the Governor and his officials were being carried on pikes through
+the streets of Paris.
+
+The horrible drama had opened, and events developed with the swiftness
+of a falling avalanche. Louis might have followed his fleeing nobles.
+But always vacillating, and "letting I dare not wait upon I would," the
+opportunity was lost. He and his family were prisoners in the
+"Temple," while an awful travesty upon a court of justice was sending
+out death-warrants for his friends and adherents faster than the
+guillotine could devour them.
+
+More and more furious swept the torrent, gathering to itself all that
+was vile and outcast. Where were the pale-faced, determined patriots
+who sat in the "National Assembly"? Some of them riding with Dukes and
+Marquises to the guillotine. Was this the equality they expected when
+they cried "Down with the Aristocrats"?
+
+Did they think they could guide the whirlwind after raising it? As
+well whisper to the cyclone to level only the tall trees, or to the
+conflagration to burn only the temples and palaces.
+
+With restraining agencies removed, religion, government, King, all
+swept away, that hideous brood born of vice, poverty, hatred, and
+despair came out from dark hiding-places; and what had commenced as a
+patriotic revolt had become a wild orgie of bloodthirsty demons, led by
+three master-demons, Robespierre, Marat, and Danton, vying with each
+other in ferocity.
+
+Then we see that simple girl thinking by one supreme act of heroism and
+sacrifice, like Joan of Arc, to save her country. Foolish child! Did
+she think to slay the monster devouring Paris by cutting off one of his
+heads? The death of Marat only added to the fury of the tempest; and
+the falling of Charlotte Corday's head was not more noticed than the
+falling of a leaf in the forest.
+
+On the 21st of January, 1793, Louis XVI. embraced for the last time his
+adored wife and children; then, with every possible indignity, was
+strapped to a plank and shoved under the guillotine.
+
+The kindest-hearted, most inoffensive gentleman in Europe had expiated
+the crimes of his ancestors.
+
+A few months later, Marie Antoinette, daughter of the proud Empress
+Maria Theresa, and child of the Caesars, was borne along the same road.
+And how bravely she met her awful fate! We forget her follies, her
+reckless grasping after pleasures, in view of her horrible sufferings
+and in admiration of her courage as she rides to her death; sitting in
+that hideous tumbril, head erect, pale, proud, defiant, as if upon a
+throne.
+
+With the death of the King and Queen the madness had reached its
+height, and a revulsion of feeling set in. There was a surfeit of
+blood, and an awakening sense of horror, which turned upon the
+instigators. Danton fell, and finally, when amid cries of "Death to
+the tyrant!" Robespierre was dragged wounded and shivering to the fate
+he had brought upon so many thousands, the drama which had opened at
+the Bastille was fittingly closed.
+
+The great battle for human liberty had been fought and won. Religious
+freedom and political freedom were identical in principle. The right
+of the human conscience proclaimed by Luther in 1517 had in 1793 only
+expanded into the large conception of all the inherent rights of the
+_individual_.
+
+It had taken centuries for English persistence to accomplish what
+France, with such appalling violence, had done in as many years. It
+had been a furious outburst of pent-up force; but the work had been
+thorough. Not a germ of tyranny remained. The incrustations of a
+thousand years were not alone broken, but pulverized; the privileged
+classes were swept away, and their vast estates, two-thirds of the
+territory of France, ready to be distributed among the rightful owners
+of the soil, those who by toil and industry could win them. France was
+as new as if she had no history. There was ample opportunity for her
+people now. What would they do with it?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+It is strange to read that the armies went on fighting battles
+automatically, even while there was no central head to direct them.
+While the ghastly scenes were enacting in Paris, and while Josephine de
+Beauharnais was at the Conciergerie listening with blanched face to the
+call of her husband's name on the death roll for the day, a young
+lieutenant of artillery, only twenty-four years old, was at Toulon,
+winning his first military honors. He would have been thought a
+strange prophet who had said that in less than ten years the young
+Corsican lieutenant would be Emperor, and the prisoner at the
+Conciergerie Empress of the French! Nor did M. de Beauharnais, as he
+rode to execution, dream that forty-five years later his grandson would
+over the same stones be borne to his coronation.
+
+In the anarchy which prevailed after the Revolution, the young hero of
+Toulon was called upon to quell a riot in Paris. The people realized
+they had met a master. For twenty-five years from that day, the
+history of France, and indeed of Europe, was that of one man, Napoleon
+Bonaparte. Commander-in-chief of the Army, then First Consul of the
+Republic, then Emperor--the steps in his ascent were as rapid and as
+bewildering as the movements in one of his own campaigns. France,
+groping about helplessly among the wreckage of the past, believed what
+she most desired was _liberty_ and _self-government_.
+
+This Italian, who was a French citizen even only by merest accident,
+knew her better than she did herself, and that what she really wanted
+was a fresh mantle of glory to cover her humiliation, and--a master.
+
+Leading a broken, unpaid, half-clothed army into Italy, he electrified
+France and all Europe. Before the world had really found out who he
+was, and whence he had come, he had conquered all of Northern Italy,
+part of Austria and Belgium, had created a Cisalpine Republic out of
+the fragments, and was making treaties and dictating terms to kings and
+princes.
+
+France, discredited and almost disgraced among the monarchies of
+Europe, found herself suddenly feared and glorious. Napoleon had
+captured the most imaginative and military people in Europe. The rest
+of the way was easy. Prudent, discreet, knowing when to wait, and when
+to come down like an avalanche, this marvellous man held France in his
+hands, and placed Europe under his feet.
+
+The people which had exerted such superhuman effort for freedom were
+held by a hand more despotic than Richelieu's, more destructive to
+popular freedom than that of Louis XIV.; and the more absolute his
+rule, the more overpowering his authority, the better pleased they
+seemed to be.
+
+But, was there not equal opportunity for every man in the Empire?
+Every soldier's knapsack, might it not hold a Marshal's baton? Was not
+the Emperor himself a living illustration of what a man from the people
+might become? And then what did it mean to Frenchmen to be suddenly
+lifted to dazzling ascendancy in Europe? Who would not willingly serve
+a master who could bring Hapsburg, Hohenzollern, Romanoff, Bourbon,
+crouching at his feet--who could tear down states, and set them up, and
+if an extra throne were needed for a retainer, could carve a new state
+from territory of friend and foe alike, and place a diadem upon every
+head in his domestic or military household? It was the most stupendous
+display of personal power ever beheld, England alone standing upright
+in his presence, and in the end accomplishing his ruin.
+
+When Austria with a reluctant shudder bestowed her princess upon the
+invincible parvenu, and when France with regretful pity saw the adored
+Josephine set aside for that disdainful royal maiden, Marie Louise, at
+that moment Napoleon passed the meridian of his greatness.
+
+It had taken just fifteen years to make the most astonishing and
+dazzling chapter in French history; and then came "Moscow" and "Elba,"
+to be quickly followed by "Waterloo" and "St. Helena." And then for
+France--most incomprehensible of all--a return to the Bourbons! It had
+required the greatest tragedy of modern times to get rid of them, and
+here they were again, Louis XVIII. and Charles X., as overbearing and
+as arrogant as if their brother's head had not dropped into a basket in
+1793. When somebody said of the Bourbons "they learn nothing and
+forget nothing," he was inaccurate. They had certainly forgotten the
+French Revolution.
+
+But death removed the first, and popular sentiment the second, of these
+relics of an obsolete past. And a new experiment was tried. This time
+it was the son of _Philippe Egalite_, that wickedest of all the
+regicides, who came smiling and bowing before the people as a popular
+sovereign, who would beneficently rule under a liberal constitution.
+Whatever his father had been, Louis Philippe was far from being a
+wicked man. Whether teaching school in Switzerland, or giving French
+lessons in America, or wearing the kingly crown in France, he was the
+kindest hearted, most inoffensive of gentlemen.
+
+
+When in the pre-revolutionary days we read of France making war, it
+means that the King, or his minister, with more or less deference to
+the will of a few thousand nobles, did so. They are the France
+referred to. The real France was not consulted and had nothing to do
+with it, unless it were to fill the ranks with fathers, sons, and
+husbands, and then pay the taxes imposed to support them. But times
+were changed. Under a constitutional monarchy, the King does not
+govern; he reigns. Louis Philippe was King of the French,--not of
+France. He was chosen by the people as their ornamental figurehead.
+But what if he ceased to be ornamental? What was the use of a King who
+in eighteen years had added not a single ray of glory to the national
+name, but who was using his high position to increase his enormous
+private fortune, and incessantly begging an impoverished country for
+benefits and emoluments for five sons?
+
+An excellent father, truly, though a short-sighted one. His power had
+no roots. The cutting from the Orleans tree had never taken hold upon
+the soil, and toppled over at the sound of Lamartine's voice
+proclaiming a Republic from the balcony of the "Hotel de Ville."
+
+When invited to step down from his royal throne, he did so on the
+instant. Never did King succumb with such alacrity, and never did
+retiring royalty look less imposing, than when Louis Philippe was in
+hiding at Havre under the name of "William Smith," waiting for safe
+convoy to England, without having struck one blow in defence of his
+throne.
+
+But three terrible words had floated into the open windows of the
+Tuileries. With the echoes of 1792 still sounding in his ears,
+"Liberty," "Fraternity," and "Equality," shouted in the streets of
+Paris, had not a pleasant sound!
+
+
+Republicanism was an abiding sentiment in France, even while two dull
+Bourbon Kings were stupidly trying to turn back the hands on the dial
+of time, and while an Orleans, with more supple neck, was posing as a
+popular sovereign. During all this tiresome interlude, the real fact
+was developing. A Republican sentiment which had existed vaguely in
+the air was materializing, consolidating, into a more and more tangible
+reality in the minds of thinking men and patriots.
+
+The ablest men in the country stood with plans matured, ready to meet
+this crisis. A Republic was proclaimed; M. de Lamartine, Ledru-Rollin,
+General Cavaignac, M. Raspail, and Louis Napoleon were rival candidates
+for the office of President.
+
+The nephew of Napoleon Bonaparte, and son of Hortense, was only known
+as the perpetrator of two very absurd attempts to overthrow the
+monarchy under Louis Philippe. But since the remains of the great
+Emperor had been returned to France by England, and the splendors of
+the past placed in striking contrast with a dull, lustreless present,
+there had been a revival of Napoleonic memories and enthusiasm. Here
+was an opportunity to unite two powerful sentiments in one man--a
+Napoleon at the head of Republican France would express the glory of
+the past and the hope of the future.
+
+The magic of the name was irresistible. Louis Napoleon was elected
+President of the second Republic, and history prepared to repeat
+itself. What sort of a ruler would he be--this dark, mysterious,
+unmagnetic man? Even should he not turn out well, no great harm could
+be done. It was only for four years. His hand had not the steely
+fineness of touch of his great uncle's, but it was strong, and guided,
+they soon found, by a subtle intelligence.
+
+The overthrow of Monarchy in France had set fire to Republicanism in
+Europe, Kossuth with transcendent eloquence leading a revolution in
+Hungary, and Garibaldi and Mazzini with pen and sword in Italy. Europe
+was in a blaze of revolt. The first great military exploit of Napoleon
+Bonaparte had been in Italy, and so was his nephew's, but with this
+difference--the object of the one was to build up Republics on the
+other side of the Alps, and of the other to pull them down. Garibaldi
+and Mazzini were driven out of Italy by French bayonets, which also
+propped up the pontifical throne for the fugitive Pope.
+
+The Assembly soon realized that in this Prince-President it had no
+automaton to deal with. A deep antagonism grew, and the cunningly
+devised issue could not fail to secure popular support to Louis
+Napoleon. When an Assembly is at war with the President because it
+desires to restrict the suffrage, and he to make it universal, can any
+one doubt the result? He was safe in appealing to the people on such
+an issue, and sure of being sustained in his Proclamation dissolving
+the Assembly. He was gathering the reins into his hands with the
+astute courage of his uncle. Moving on almost identical lines with his
+great original, the nephew set his face toward the same goal.
+
+The French people must have realized they were being betrayed. They
+must have seen that this ambitious plotter was slipping the old fetters
+of arbitrary power into position. But, under the powerful spell of the
+Napoleonic name, lulled to tranquillity by the gift of suffrage, and
+fascinated by the growing splendors of an ingenious reproduction of the
+most brilliant chapter in French history, they were unresistingly drawn
+into the Imperial net.
+
+France was for the second time an Empire, and Napoleon III. was Emperor
+of the French.
+
+His Mephistophelian face did not look as classic under the laurel
+wreath as had his uncle's, nor had his work the blinding splendor nor
+the fineness of texture of his great model. But then, an imitation
+never has. It was a marble masterpiece, done in plaster! But what a
+clever reproduction it was! And how, by sheer audacity, it compelled
+recognition and homage, and at last even adulation in Europe!--and what
+a clever stroke it was, for this heavy, unsympathetic man to bring up
+to his throne from the people a radiant Empress, who would capture
+romantic and aesthetic France!
+
+The distance was great from cheap lodgings in New York to a seat upon
+the Imperial throne of France; but human ambition is not easily
+satisfied. A Pelion always rises beyond an Ossa. It was not enough to
+feel that he had re-established the prosperity and prestige of France,
+that fresh glory had been added to the Napoleonic name. Was there not
+after all a certain irritating reserve in the homage paid him, was
+there not a touch of condescension in the friendship of his royal
+neighbors? And had he not always a Mordecai at his gate--while the
+"_Faubourg St. Germain_" stood aloof and disdainful, smiling at his
+brand-new aristocracy?
+
+War is the thing to give solidity to empire and to reputation! Neither
+France nor Europe can withstand the magic of military renown. And so,
+upon a quickly improvised pretext, the French Emperor started, amid the
+booming of cannon and the wild acclamations of a delighted people, upon
+his errand of conquest. The insolent Germans were to be chastised;
+and, incidentally, Europe was to be made to tremble!
+
+In a few months the bubble was pricked. The glittering French army
+proved to be a thing of tinsel and fustian. No reality, no power to
+stand before the solid German battalions, it melted like hoar-frost.
+Napoleon III. was prisoner of war at Sedan, and King William, Unser
+Fritz, and Von Moltke were at Versailles.
+
+Moved by his colossal misfortunes, and perhaps partly in displeasure at
+having a French Republic once more at her door, England offered asylum
+to the deposed Emperor. There, from the seclusion of "Chiselhurst," he
+and his still beautiful Eugenie watched the Republic weathering the
+first days of storm and stress, and coming out at last stable and
+triumphant.
+
+The weary exile felt that not in his day would the reaction come. But
+his son would yet wear the Imperial crown which was his birthright.
+Futile dream! The boy was destined to cruel fate--to be slain by Zulu
+assegai, while fighting the battles of England,--England, the author of
+_Waterloo_. Strange ending for the heir to the name and glory of
+Napoleon Bonaparte.
+
+But the reaction Louis Napoleon so confidently hoped for did not come.
+With military pride humbled in the dust, national pride wounded by the
+loss of two provinces, loaded down with an immense war indemnity, the
+people set about the task of rehabilitation; in an incredibly short
+time, the galling debt was paid, financial prosperity and political
+strength restored, and with military organization second to none in
+Europe, France, with revengeful eyes fastened on Germany, waits for the
+day of reckoning.
+
+For twenty-four years the Republic has existed. Communistic fires
+always smouldering have again and again burst forth--demagogues,
+fanatics, and those creatures for whom there is no place in organized
+society, whose element is chaos, standing ready to fan the fires of
+revolt; while Orleanist, Bonapartist, Bourbon, are ever on the alert,
+watching for opportunity to slip in through the open door of Revolution.
+
+England in conscious superiority smiles at a nation which has had seven
+political revolutions in a hundred years. Republic, then Empire, then
+a return to the Bourbons, then Constitutional Monarchy under Louis
+Philippe, then Republic, followed by Empire again, and now for the
+third time a Republic!
+
+But France, complex, mobile, changeful as the sea, in riotous enjoyment
+of her new-found liberties, casts off a form of government as she would
+an ill-fitting garment. She knows the value of tranquillity--she had
+it for one thousand years! The _people_, which have only breathed the
+upper air for a century--the people, who were stifled under feudalism,
+stamped upon by Valois Kings, riveted down by Richelieu, then prodded,
+outraged, and starved by Bourbons, have become a great nation.
+Many-sided, resourceful, gifted, it matters not whether they have
+called the head of their government Consul, Emperor, King, or
+President. They are a race of freemen, who can never again be enslaved
+by tyrannous system.
+
+It was a bright day for France when that ambitious young Emperor of
+Germany sent his great Chancellor into retirement; and another bright
+day when, taking offence at scant courtesy at the hands of the Czar, he
+left ajar the back door to his dominions. An alliance between despotic
+Russia thirsting for the waters of the Mediterranean, and Republican
+France thirsting for revenge, is the darkest cloud on the German
+horizon to-day. It is only a matter of months or of years when France
+will be at the throat of Germany demanding Alsace and Lorraine. The
+French army is not the one which faced Von Moltke in 1871; and when
+France knocks at her front door, Germany will have all she can attend
+to, without hearing Russian batteries thundering at her rear. A
+dramatic reconciliation with the old Chancellor is interesting, but it
+will not undo the work of the last four years.
+
+There is no longer thought of conflict between any two nations of
+Europe. The next war is to be one of tremendous combinations.
+National alliances are shifting and uncertain. But at the time this is
+written (1894) Germany, Austria, and Italy are drawn together in one
+hostile camp, while France and Russia, in loving embrace, stand in the
+other; and England, aloof and suspicious, holds herself ready to hurl
+her weight against whichever one obstructs her path to India.
+
+There is something in the air which makes one think the name Napoleon
+is still a thing to conjure with. But whatever the future may hold for
+France, no American can be indifferent to the fate of a nation to whom
+we owe so much. Nor can we ever forget that in the hour of our direst
+extremity, and regardless of cost to herself, she helped us to
+establish our liberties, and to take our place among the great nations
+of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
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