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Basses-Alpes).
  Achille Fould, Minister of Finance (of the Seine).
  De Fourment (of the Somme).
  Fouquier-d'HĂ©rouĂ«l (of the Aisne).
  Fremy (of the Yonne).
  Furtado (of the Seine).
  Gasc (of the Haute Garonne).
  Gaslonde (of the Manche).
  De Gasparin (ex-Minister).
  Ernest de Girardin (of the Charente).
  Augustin Giraud (of Maine-et-Loire).
  Charles Giraud, of the Institut, member of the Court of Public
      Instruction, ex-Minister.
  Godelle (of the Aisne).
  Goulhot de Saint-Germain (of the Manche).
  General de Grammont (of the Loire).
  De Grammont (of the Haute-SaĂ´ne).
  De Greslan (of the RĂ©union).
  General de Grouchy (of the Gironde).
  Kallez Claparède (of the Bas-Rhin).
  General d'Hautpoul, ex-Minister (of the Aude).
  HĂ©bert (of the Aisne).
  De Heeckeren (of the Haut-Rhin).
  D'HĂ©rembault (of the Pas-de-Calais).
  Hermann.
  Heurtier (of the Loire).
  General Husson (of the Aube).
  Janvier (of the Tarn-et-Garonne).
  Lacaze (of the Hautes-PyrĂ©nĂ©es).
  Lacrosse, ex-Minister (of Finistère).
  Ladoucette (of the Moselle).
  FrĂ©dĂ©ric de Lagrange (of the Gers).
  De Lagrange (of the Gironde).
  General de La Hitte, ex-Minister.
  Delangle, ex-Attorney-General.
  Lanquetin, President of the Municipal Commission.
  De la Riboissière (of Ille-et-Vilaine).
  General Lawoestine.
  Lebeuf (of the Seine-et-Marne).
  GenĂ©ral Lebreton (of the Eure-et-Loir).
  Le Comte (of the Yonne).
  Le Conte (of the CĂ´tes-du-Nord).
  Lefebvre-DuruflĂ©, Minister of Commerce (of the Eure).
  LĂ©lut (of the Haute-SaĂ´ne).
  Lemarois (of the Manche).
  Lemercier (of the Charente). Lequien (of the Pas-de-Calais).
  Lestiboudois (of the Nord).
  Levavasseur (of the Seine-InfĂ©rieure).
  Le Verrier (of the Manche).
  Lezay de MarnĂ©sia (of Loir-et-Cher).
  General Magnan, Commander-in-chief of the Army of Paris.
  Magne, Minister of Public Works (of the Dordogne).
  Edmond Maigne (of the Dordogne).
  Marchant (of the Nord).
  Mathieu Bodet, Barrister at the Court of Cassation.
  De Maupas, Prefect of Police.
  De MĂ©rode (of the Nord).
  Mesnard, President of the Chamber of the Court of Cassation.
  Meynadier, ex-Prefect (of the Lozère).
  De Montalembert (of the Doubs).
  De Morny (of the Puy-de-DĂ´me).
  De Mortemart (of the Seine-InfĂ©rieure).
  De Mouchy (of the Oise).
  De Moustiers (of the Doubs).
  Lucien Murat (of the Lot).
  General d'Ornano (of the Indre-et-Loire).
  Pepin Lehalleur (of the Seine-et-Marne).
  Joseph PĂ©rier, Governor of the Bank.
  De Persigny (of the Nord).
  Pichon, Mayor of Arras (of the Pas de Calais).
  Portalis, First President of the Court of Cassation.
  Pongerard, Mayor of Pennes (of the Ille-et-Vilaine).
  General de PrĂ©val.
  De RancĂ© (of Algeria).
  General Randon, ex-Minister, Governor-General of Algeria.
  General Regnauld de Saint-Jean-d'AngĂ©ly, ex-Minister (of the
      Charente-InfĂ©rieure).
  Renouard de Bussière (of the Bas-Rhin).
  Renouard (of the Lozère).
  General RogĂ©.
  Rouher, Keeper of the Seals, Minister of Justice (of the Puy-de-DĂ´me).
  De Royer, ex-Minister, Attorney-General at the Court of Appeal of
      Paris.
  General de Saint-Arnaud, Minister of War.
  De Saint-Arnaud, Barrister at the Court of Appeal of Paris.
  De Salis (of the Moselle).
  Sapey (of the Isère).
  Schneider, ex-Minister.
  De SĂ©gur d'Aguesseau (of the Hautes-PyrĂ©neĂ©s).
  Seydoux (of the Nord).
  AmĂ©dĂ©e Thayer.
  Thieullen (of the CĂ´tes-du-Nord).
  De Thorigny, ex-Minister.
  Toupot de BĂ©veaux (of the Haute-Marne).
  Tourangin, ex-Prefect. Troplong, First President of the Court of
      Appeal.
  De Turgot, Minister for Foreign Affairs.
  Vaillant, Marshal of France.
  Vaisse, ex-Minister (of the Nord).
  De Vandeul (of the Haute-Marne).
  General Vast-Vimeux (of the Charente-InfĂ©rieure).
  Vauchelle, Mayor of Versailles.
  Viard (of the Meurthe).
  Vieillard (of the Manche).
  Vuillefroy.
  Vuitry, Under-Secretary of State at the Ministry of Finance De Wagram.

  "The President of the Republic,

  "LOUIS NAPOLEON BONAPARTE.

  "Minister of the Interior, DE MORNY."

The name of Bourbousson is found on this list.

It would be a pity if this name were lost.

At the same time as this placard appeared the protest of M. Daru, as follows:—

  "I approve of the proceedings of the National Assembly at the Mairie
  of the Tenth Arrondissement on the 2d of December, 1851, in which I was
  hindered from participating by force.

  "DARU."

Some of these members of the Consultative Committee came from Mazas or from Mount Valerien. They had been detained in a cell for four-and-twenty hours, and then released. It may be seen that these legislators bore little malice to the man who had made them undergo this disagreeable taste of the law.

Many of the personages comprised in this menagerie possessed no other renown but the outcry caused by their debts, clamoring around them. Such a one had been twice declared bankrupt, but this extenuating circumstance was added, "not under his own name:" Another who belonged to a literary or scientific circle was reputed to have sold his vote. A third, who was handsome, elegant, fashionable, dandified, polished, gilded, embroidered, owed his prosperity to a connection which indicated a filthiness of soul.

Such people as these gave their adherence with little hesitation to the deed which "saved society."

Some others, amongst those who composed this mosaic, possessed no political enthusiasm, and merely consented to figure in this list in order to keep their situations and their salaries; they were under the Empire what they had been before the Empire, neuters, and during the nineteen years of the reign, they continued to exercise their military, judicial, or administrative functions unobtrusively, surrounded with the right and proper respect due to inoffensive idiots.

Others were genuine politicians, belonging to that learned school which begins with Guizot, and does not finish with Parieu, grave physicians of social order, who reassure the frightened middle-classes, and who preserve dead things.

  "Shall I lose my eye?" asked Messer Pancrace.
  "Not at all, my friend, I hold it in my hand."

In this quasi Council of State there were a goodly number of men of the Police, a race of beings then held in esteem, Carlier, Piétri, Maupas, etc.

Shortly after the 2d of December under the title of Mixed Commissions, the police substituted itself for justice, drew up judgments, pronounced sentences, violated every law judicially without the regular magistracy interposing the slightest obstacle to this irregular magistracy: Justice allowed the police to do what it liked with the satisfied look of a team of horses which had just been relieved.

Some of the men inscribed on the list of this commission refused: Léon Faucher Goulard, Mortemart, Frédéric Granier, Marchand, Maillard Paravay, Beugnot. The newspapers received orders not to publish these refusals.

M. Beugnot inscribed on his card: "Count Beugnot, who does not belong to the Consultative Committee."

M. Joseph PĂ©rier went from corner to corner of the streets, pencil in hand, scratching out his name from all the placards, saying, "I shall take back my name wherever I find it."

General Baraguay d'Hilliers did not refuse. A brave soldier nevertheless; he had lost an arm in the Russian war. Later on, he has been Marshall of France; he deserved better than to have been created a Marshal by Louis Bonaparte. It did not appear likely that he would have come to this. During the last days of November General Baraguay d'Hilliers, seated in a large arm-chair before the high fireplace of the Conference Hall of the National Assembly, was warming himself; some one, one of his colleagues, he who is writing these lines, sat down near him on the other side of the fireplace. They did not speak to each other, one belonging to the Right, the other to the Left; but M. Piscatory came in, who belonged a little to the Right and a little to the Left. He addressed himself to Baraguay d'Hilliers: "Well, general, do you know what they are saying?"

"What?"

"That one of these days the President will shut the door in our faces."

General Baraguay d'Hilliers answered, and I heard the answer,—"If M. Bonaparte should close the door of the Assembly against us, France will fling it wide open again."

Louis Bonaparte at one moment thought of entitling this committee the "Executive Commission." "No," said Morny to him, "that would be to credit them with courage. They will willingly be supporters; they will not be proscribers."

General Rulhière was dismissed for having blamed the passive obedience of the army.

Let us here mention an incident. Some days after the 4th of December, Emmanuel Arago met M. Dupin, who was going up the Faubourg Saint Honoré.

"What!" said Arago, "are you going to the Elysée?"

M. Dupin answered, "I never go to disreputable houses."

Yet he went there.

M. Dupin, it may be remembered, was appointed Attorney-General at the Court of Cessation.







CHAPTER VII. THE OTHER LIST

Opposite to the list of adherents should be placed the list of the proscribed. In this manner the two sides of the coup d'Ă©tat can be seen at a glance.

  "DECREE.

  "ARTICLE I.—The ex-Representatives of the Assembly, whose names are
  found beneath, are expelled from French territory, from Algeria, and
  from the Colonies, for the sake of public safety:—

  "Edmond Valentine.          Charrassin.
  Paul Racouchot.             Bandsept.
  Agricol Perdiguier.         Savoye.
  Eugène Cholat.              Joly.
  Louis Latrade.              Combier.
  Michel Renaud.              Boysset.
  Joseph Benoist (du RhĂ´ne).  DuchĂ©.
  Joseph Burgard.             Ennery.
  Jean Colfavru.              Guilgot.
  Joseph Faure (du Rhone).    Hochstuhl.
  Pierre-Charles Gambon.      Michot Boutet.
  Charles Lagrange.           Baune.
  Martin Nadaud.              Bertholon.
  BarthĂ©lemy Terrier.         Schoelcher.
  Victor Hugo.                De Flotte.
  Cassal.                     Joigneaux.
  Signard.                    Laboulaye.
  Viguier.                    Bruys.
  Esquiros.                   Gaston Dussoubs.
  Madier de Montjau.          Guiter.
  NoĂ«l Parfait.               Lafon.
  Emile PĂ©an.                 Lamarque.
  Pelletier.                  Pierre Lafranc.
  Raspail.                    Jules Leroux.
  ThĂ©odore Bac.               Francisque Maigne.
  Bancel.                     Malardier.
  Belin (DrĂ´me).              Mathieu (de la DrĂ´me).
  Bosse.                      Millotte.
  Bourzat.                    Roselli-Mollet.
  Brive.                      Charras.
  Chavoix.                    Saint-Ferreol.
  ClĂ©ment Dulac.              Sommier.
  Dupout (de Bussac).         Testelin (Nord).

  "ARTICLE II.—In the event, contrary to the present decree, of one of
  the persons named in Article I. re-entering the prohibited limits, he
  may be transported for the sake of public safety.

  "Given at the Palace of the Tuileries, at the Cabinet Council assembled,
  January 9th, 1852.

  "LOUIS BONAPARTE.

  "DE MORNY, Minister of the Interior."

There was besides a list of the "provisionally exiled," on which figured Edward Quinet, Victor Chauffour, General Laidet, Pascal Duprat, Versigny, Antony Thouret, Thiers, Girardin, and Rémusat. Four Representatives, Mathé, Greppo, Marc-Dufraisse, and Richardet, were added to the list of the "expelled." Representative Miot was reserved for the tortures of the casemates of Africa. Thus in addition to the massacres, the victory of the coup d'état was paid for by these figures: eighty-eight Representatives proscribed, one killed.

I usually dined at Brussels in a café, called the Café des Mille Colonnes, which was frequented by the exiles. On the 10th of January I had invited Michel de Bourges to lunch, and we were sitting at the same table. The waiter brought me the Moniteur Français; I glanced over it.

"Ah," said I, "here is the list of the proscribed." I ran my eye over it, and I said to Michel de Bourges, "I have a piece of bad news to tell you." Michel de Bourges turned pale. I added, "You are not on the list." His face brightened.

Michel de Bourges, so dauntless in the face of death, was faint-hearted in the face of exile.







CHAPTER VIII. DAVID D'ANGERS

Brutalities and ferocities were mingled together. The great sculptor, David d'Angers, was arrested in his own house, 16, Rue d'Assas; the Commissary of Police on entering, said to him,—

"Have you any arms in your house?"

"Yes," Said David, "for my defence."

And he added,—

"If I had to deal with civilized people."

"Where are these arms?" rejoined the Commissary. "Let us see them."

David showed him his studio full of masterpieces.

They placed him in a fiacre, and drove him to the station-house of the Prefecture of Police.

Although there was only space for 120 prisoners, there were 700 there. David was the twelfth in a dungeon intended for two. No light nor air. A narrow ventilation hole above their heads. A dreadful tub in a corner, common to all, covered but not closed by a wooden lid. At noon they brought them soup, a sort of warm and stinking water, David told me. They stood leaning against the wall, and trampled upon the mattresses which had been thrown on the floor, not having room to lie down on them. At length, however, they pressed so closely to each other, that they succeeded in lying down at full length. Their jailers had thrown them some blankets. Some of them slept. At day break the bolts creaked, the door was half-opened and the jailers cried out to them, "Get up!" They went into the adjoining corridor, the jailer took up the mattresses, threw

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