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If there had ever existed any doubt as to the crimes of high treason charged against Louis XVI, the doubt vanished before the crushing proofs furnished against him during his examination. Deseze, Tronchet and Malesherbes, charged with the defense made their main plea on the royal inviolability guaranteed by the Const.i.tution of 1791.
According to the defense of Louis XVI, and, indeed, according to the text of the Const.i.tution itself, the King, even though he violated the Const.i.tution, even though he betrayed the state, even though he led an invasion upon France, and at the head of foreign troops put the country to fire and sword, even then he incurred no penalty other than that of deposition. Such was the brief of the King's lawyers.
This theory, in which the absurd jostled the monstrous, was not judged worthy of a refutation by the Convention. Capet's accusers placed the question on a higher plane, by affirming and demonstrating the nullity of the Const.i.tutional pact of 1791. Such was the opinion held by Robespierre, St. Just, Condorcet, Carnot, Danton, several Girondins, and, in fact, the great majority of the house.
In the name of justice, of right, and of reason, Louis XVI richly merited the verdict of guilty.
The sovereignty of the people being permanent, indivisible and inalienable, the Const.i.tution of 1791 was radically null and void, in that it provided for the hereditary alienation of a portion of the people's rights, in favor of the ex-royal family. The Conventionists of 1793 were no more in love with the Const.i.tution of 1791 than the Const.i.tuents of 1791 were with the monarchical, feudal and religious inst.i.tutions which had weighed like an incubus on France fourteen centuries long.
A nation has the power, but never the right, to alienate its sovereignty, either in whole or in part, by delegating it to a hereditary family. Such an alienation, imposed amid the violence of conquest, borne out of habits of thought, or consented to in a moment of public aberration, binds neither the present generation nor those to come. Accordingly, the Const.i.tution of 1791 being virtually null in fact, Louis Capet could not invoke the protection of that Const.i.tution, which guaranteed the inviolability of the royal person, and limited his punishment to deposition in a few specified cases. Louis XVI was, then, legally brought to trial. By reconquering its full sovereignty on the 10th of August, the nation invested the Convention with the powers necessary for judging the one-time King. His crimes were notorious and flagrant; their penalty was written in the books of the law, equally for all citizens; he must, then, undergo the penalty for his misdeeds.
I, John Lebrenn, add here some further pa.s.sages from my diary, relating to the trial, judgment and execution of Louis Capet.
JANUARY 15, 1793.--Having heard the defense submitted by Deseze, one of the attorneys for Louis XVI, the Convention put to a vote this first question:
"Is Louis Capet guilty of conspiracy against liberty and the nation, and of a.s.sault on the general safety of the State?"
The a.s.sembly contained seven hundred and forty-nine members.
Six hundred and eighty-three replied:
"Yes, the accused is guilty."
The roll-call being completed, the president of the a.s.sembly announced the decision:
"In the name of the French people, the National Convention declares Louis Capet guilty of conspiracy against liberty and the nation, and of a.s.sault on the general safety of the State."
The second question was:
"Shall the decision of the National Convention be submitted to ratification by the people?"
The members who voted for ratification by the people were two hundred and eighty-one; those against ratification, four hundred and twenty-three.
The president announced the result of the vote:
"The National Convention declares the judgment rendered on Louis Capet shall not be sent for ratification to the people."
JANUARY 17, 1793.--To-day and yesterday the sessions of the Convention were permanent, due to the gravity of the situation. The debate turned upon the third question:
"What shall be the penalty imposed on Louis XVI?"
I was present at the sessions wherein the elected Representatives of the people decided the fate of the Frankish monarchy, imposed on Gaul for fourteen centuries. It was not alone the man, the King, that the Convention decapitated--it was the most ancient monarchy in Europe. It was not only the head of Capet that the Republic wished defiantly to cast at the feet of allied Europe; it was the crown of the last of the Kings.
It was eight in the evening. In response to their names as the roll was called the members of the Convention mounted the tribunal one by one, and in the midst of a solemn silence cast their vote.
This evening, Thursday, at eight o'clock, while throughout the s.p.a.cious hall one might have heard a pin drop, Vergniaud announced the result:
"The a.s.sembly consists of seven hundred and forty-nine members; 15 are absent on committees, 7 because of illness, 1 without cause, censured; and 5 excused; number remaining, seven hundred and twenty-one.
"Required for an absolute majority, three hundred and sixty-one.
"Members voting for death unconditionally, three hundred and eighty-seven.
"Members voting for imprisonment, irons, or conditional death, three hundred and thirty-four.
"In the name of the people and the National Convention, I declare the penalty of death p.r.o.nounced against Louis Capet."
JANUARY 19, 1793.--The question put by Mailhe, "Shall there be any postponement of Louis XVI's execution?" was discussed during the sessions of the 17th and 18th. At the end of to-day's session, the president put the question to a vote:
"Shall the execution of Louis Capet be postponed, yes or no?"
The vote resulted: for postponement, three hundred and ten; against, three hundred and eighty. The postponement was lost. Pale, and with grief impressed upon his features, Vergniaud again ascended the tribunal and in a trembling voice announced:
"The National Convention declares:
"Article first.--Louis Capet, last King of France, is guilty of conspiracy against the liberty of the nation and of a.s.sault upon the general safety of the State.
"Article second.--The National Convention declares that Louis Capet shall suffer the penalty of death.
"Article third.--Notice of the decree which condemns Louis Capet to death shall he sent to the Executive Council.
"The Executive Council is charged to notify Louis XVI of the decree during the day, and to have him executed within twenty-four hours.
"The mayors and munic.i.p.al officers of Paris shall be enjoined to allow Louis Capet liberty to communicate with his family, and to call upon a minister of the denomination he may elect, to attend his last moments."
At three in the morning of Sunday, January 20, the meeting adjourned; and to cries of "Long live the Nation!" "Long live the Republic!" the mult.i.tude poured out of the galleries.
CHAPTER XIX.
EXECUTION.
Such were the memorable sessions of the National a.s.sembly of the 15th, 17th, 19th and 20th of January, 1793.
Glory to the men of energy, to the inexorable patriots!
JANUARY 21, 1793.--The execution of Louis Capet took place to-day, Monday, the 21st of January, 1793!
My sister and I were present at the death of Louis. A vast throng filled the Place of the Revolution. The scaffold faced the avenue of the Elysian Fields, a short distance from the spot occupied by the statue of Louis XV.