Les Miserables

(やまだぃちぅ) #1

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of this sort that had slain Jean Prouvaire. Fierce Lynch law,
with which no one party had any right to reproach the rest,
for it has been applied by the Republic in America, as well as
by the monarchy in Europe. This Lynch law was complicated
with mistakes. On one day of rioting, a young poet, named
Paul Aime Garnier, was pursued in the Place Royale, with
a bayonet at his loins, and only escaped by taking refuge
under the porte-cochere of No. 6. They shouted:—‘There’s
another of those Saint-Simonians!’ and they wanted to kill
him. Now, he had under his arm a volume of the memoirs
of the Duc de Saint-Simon. A National Guard had read the
words Saint-Simon on the book, and had shouted: ‘Death!’
On the 6th of June, 1832, a company of the National
Guards from the suburbs, commanded by the Captain Fan-
nicot, above mentioned, had itself decimated in the Rue de
la Chanvrerie out of caprice and its own good pleasure. This
fact, singular though it may seem, was proved at the judicial
investigation opened in consequence of the insurrection of



  1. Captain Fannicot, a bold and impatient bourgeois, a
    sort of condottiere of the order of those whom we have just
    characterized, a fanatical and intractable governmental-
    ist, could not resist the temptation to fire prematurely, and
    the ambition of capturing the barricade alone and unaided,
    that is to say, with his company. Exasperated by the suc-
    cessive apparition of the red flag and the old coat which he
    took for the black flag, he loudly blamed the generals and
    chiefs of the corps, who were holding council and did not
    think that the moment for the decisive assault had arrived,
    and who were allowing ‘the insurrection to fry in its own

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