They had not slept, only some of them had fallen into drowsy
somnolence, heavy and nerve-racking, worse indeed than any
wakefulness.
Within the houses, the women too had kept the tedious vigil, listening for
every sound, dreading every bit of news, which the wind might waft in
through the small, open windows.
If one prisoner escaped, every family in Boulogne would be deprived of
the bread-winner. Therefore the women wept, and tried to remember
those Paters and Aves which the tyranny of liberty, fraternity and equality
had ordered them to forget.
Broken rosaries were fetched out from neglected corners, and knees stiff
with endless, thankless toil were bent once more in prayer.
"Oh God! Good God! Do not allow that woman to flee!"
"Holy Virgin! Mother of God! Make that she should not escape!"
Some of the women went out in the early dawn to take hot soup and
coffee to their men who were watching outside the prison.
Questions and surmises went round in muffled whispers as the steaming
cans were passed round. No one had a definite answer to give, although
Desire Melun declared that he had, once during the night, caught sight of
a woman's face at one of the windows above: but as he could not
describe the woman's face, nor locate with any degree of precision the
particular window at which she was supposed to have appeared, it was
unanimously decided that Desire must have been dreaming.
The cry came first from the Town Hall, and therefore from behind the
crowd of men and women, whose faces had been so resolutely set for all
these past hours towards the Gayole prison.
They were all awake! but too tired and cramped to move as yet, and to
turn in the direction whence arose that cry.
It was just the voice of Auguste Moleux, the town-crier of Boulogne,
who, bell in hand, was trudging his way along the Rue Daumont, closely
followed by two fellows of the municipal guard.
Auguste was in the very midst of the sullen crowd, before the men even
troubled about his presence here, but now with many a vigorous "Allons
donc!" and "Voyez-moi ca, fais donc place, voyons!" he elbowed his way
through the throng.
He was neither tired nor cramped; he served the Republic in comfort and
ease, and had slept soundly on his paillasse in the little garret allotted to
him in the Town Hall.
The crowd parted in silence, to allow him to pass. Auguste was lean and
powerful, the scanty and meagre food, doled out to him by a paternal
government, had increased his muscular strength whilst reducing his fat.
He had very hard elbows, and soon he managed, by dint of pushing and
cursing to reach the gateway of Gayole.
"Voyons! enlevez-moi ca," he commanded in stentorian tones, pointing
to the proclamation.
The fellows of the municipal guard fell to and tore the parchment away
from the door whilst the crowd looked on with stupid amazement.
"Mes enfants," he said, "my little cabbages! wake up! the government of
the Republic has decreed that to-day is to be a day of gaiety and public
rejoicings!"
"Gaiety? ... Public rejoicings forsooth, when the bread-winner of every
family ..."
"Hush! Hush! Be silent, all of you," quoth Auguste impatiently, "you do
not understand! ... All that is at an end ... There is no fear that the woman
shall escape. ... You are all to dance and rejoice. ... The Scarlet Pimpernel
has been captured in Boulogne, last night ..."
"Who knows?" sighed a feminine voice, "perhaps he came to Boulogne
to help them."
"And he has been caught anyway," concluded Auguste Moleux
sententiously, "and, my little cabbages, remember this, that so great is the
pleasure of the all-powerful Committee of Public Safety at this capture,
that because he has been caught in Boulogne, therefore Boulogne is to be
specially rewarded!"
"Sh ... Jeanette, dost not know that there's no Holy Virgin now?"
"And dost know, Auguste, how we are to be rewarded?"
It is a difficult matter for the human mind to turn very quickly from
despair to hope, and the fisherman of Boulogne had not yet grasped the
fact that they were to make merry and that thoughts of anxiety must be
abandoned for those of gaiety.
Auguste Moleux took out a parchment from the capacious pocket of his
coat; he put on his most solemn air of officialdom, and pointing with
extended forefinger to the parchment, he said:
"A general amnesty to all natives of Boulogne who are under arrest at the
present moment: a free pardon to all natives of Boulogne who are under
sentence of death: permission to all natives of Boulogne to quit the town
with their families, to embark on any vessel they please, in or out of the
harbour, and to go whithersoever they choose, without passports,
formalities or question of any kind."
Dead silence followed this announcement. Hope was just beginning to
crowd anxiety and sullenness out of the way.
"Then poor Andre Legrand will be pardoned," whispered a voice
suddenly; "he was to have been guillotined to-day."
"And Denise Latour! she was innocent enough, the gentle pigeon."
"And they'll let poor Abbe Foucquet out of prison too."
But some in the crowd were silent, others whispered eagerly.
"Thinkest thou it would be safer for us to get out of the country whilst
we can?" said one of the men in a muffled tone, and clutching nervously
at a woman's wrist.
"Aye! aye! it might leak out about that boat we procured for ..."
Others talked in whispers of England or the New Land across the seas:
they were those who had something to hide, money received from
refugee aristocrats, boats sold to would-be emigres, information
withheld, denunciations shirked: the amnesty would not last long, 'twas
best to be safely out of the way.
"In the meanwhile, my cabbages," quoth Auguste sententiously, "are you
not grateful to Citizen Robespierre, who has sent this order specially
down from Paris?"
Out there, far away, beyond the harbour, the grey light of dawn was
yielding to the crimson glow of morning. The rain had ceased and heavy
slaty clouds parted here and there, displaying glints of delicate turquoise
sky, and tiny ethereal vapours in the dim and remote distance of infinity,
flecked with touches of rose and gold.
The towers and pinnacles of old Boulogne detached themselves one by
one from the misty gloom of night. The old bell of the Beffroi tolled the
hour of six. Soon the massive cupola of Notre Dame was clothed in
purple hues, and the gilt cross on St. Joseph threw back across the square
a blinding ray of gold.
The town sparrows began to twitter, and from far out at sea in the
direction of Dunkirk there came the muffled boom of cannon.
"And remember, my pigeons," admonished Auguste Moleux solemnly,
"that in this order which Robespierre has sent from Paris, it also says that
from to-day onwards le bon Dieu has ceased to be!"
Many faces were turned towards the East just then, for the rising sun,
tearing with one gigantic sweep the banks of cloud asunder, now
displayed his magnificence in a gorgeous immensity of flaming crimson.
The sea, in response, turned to liquid fire beneath the glow, whilst the
whole sky was irradiated with the first blush of morning.
"There is only one religion in France now," explained Auguste Moleux,
"the religion of Reason! We are all citizens! We are all free and all able to
think for ourselves. Citizen Robespierre has decreed that there is no good
God. Le bon Dieu was a tyrant and an aristocrat, and, like all tyrants and
aristocrats, He has been deposed. There is no good God, there is no Holy
Virgin and no Saints, only Reason, who is a goddess and whom we all
honour."
And the townsfolk of Boulogne, with eyes still fixed on the gorgeous
East, shouted with sullen obedience:
Only the women, trying to escape the town-crier's prying eyes, or the
soldiers' stern gaze, hastily crossed themselves behind their husbands'
backs, terrified lest le bon Dieu had, after all, not altogether ceased to
exist at the bidding of Citizen Robespierre.
Thus the worthy natives of Boulogne, forgetting their anxieties and fears,
were ready enough to enjoy the national fete ordained for them by the
Committee of Public Safety, in honour of the capture of the Scarlet
Pimpernel. They were even willing to accept this new religion which
Robespierre had invented: a religion which was only a mockery, with an
actress to represent its supreme deity.
Mais, que voulez-vous? Boulogne had long ago ceased to have faith in
God: the terrors of the Revolution, which culminated in that agonizing
watch of last night, had smothered all thoughts of worship and of prayer.
The Scarlet Pimpernel must indeed be a dangerous spy that his arrest
should cause so much joy in Paris!
Even Boulogne had learned by experience that the Committee of Public
Safety did not readily give up a prey, once its vulture-like claws had
closed upon it. The proportion of condemnations as against acquittals
was as a hundred to one.
But because this one man was taken, scores to-day were to be set free!
In the evening at a given hour--seven o'clock had Auguste Moleux, the
town-crier, understood--the boom of the cannon would be heard, the
gates of the town would be opened, the harbour would become a free
port.
Whatever he was--hero or spy--he was undoubtedly the primary cause of
all their joy.
By the time Auguste Moleux had cried out the news throughout the
town, and pinned the new proclamation of mercy up on every public
building, all traces of fatigue and anxiety had vanished. In spite of the fact
that wearisome vigils had been kept in every home that night, and that
hundreds of men and women had stood about for hours in the vicinity of
the Gayole Fort, no sooner was the joyful news known, than all lassitude
was forgotten and everyone set to with a right merry will to make the
great fete-day a complete success.
There is in every native of Normandy, be he peasant or gentleman, an
infinite capacity for enjoyment, and at the same time a marvellous faculty
for co-ordinating and systematizing his pleasures.
In a trice the surly crowds had vanished. Instead of these, there were
groups of gaily-visaged men pleasantly chattering outside every eating
and drinking place in the town. The national holiday had come upon
these people quite unawares, so the early part of it had to be spent in
thinking out a satisfactory programme for it. Sipping their beer or coffee,
or munching their cherries a l'eau-de-vie, the townsfolk of Boulogne, so
lately threatened with death, were quietly organizing processions.
There was to be a grand muster on the Place de la Senechaussee, then a
torchlight and lanthorn-light march, right round the Ramparts,
culminating in a gigantic assembly outside the Town Hall, where the
Citizen Chauvelin, representing the Committee of Public Safety, would
receive an address of welcome from the entire population of Boulogne.
The procession was to be in costume! There were to be Pierrots and
Pierettes, Harlequins and English clowns, aristocrats and goddesses! All
day the women and girls were busy contriving travesties of all sorts, and
the little tumbledown shops in the Rue de Chateau and the Rue Frederic
Sauvage--kept chiefly by Jews and English traders-- were ransacked for
old bits of finery, and for remnants of costumes, worn in the days when
Boulogne was still a gay city and Carnivals were held every year.
And then, of course, there would be the Goddess of Reason, in her
triumphal car! the apotheosis of the new religion, which was to make
everybody happy, rich and free.
Forgotten were the anxieties of the night, the fears of death, the great and
glorious Revolution, which for this one day would cease her perpetual
demand for the toll of blood.
Nothing was remembered save the pleasures and joys of the moment, and
at times the name of that Englishman--spy, hero or adventurer --the cause
of all this bounty: the Scarlet Pimpernel.