The Last Revolutionaries by Laura Mason
Author:Laura Mason
Language: eng
Format: epub
Published: 2022-02-01T09:53:43+00:00
e l e v e n
Perfect Equality
In the early weeks of the trial, prosecutors and defendants kept their eyes
on the approaching legislative elections, the former believing a quick
courtroom victory would boost the Directoryâs candidates and the latter
hoping for a democratic victory to discredit the proceedings. The elections
arrived well before the trial was done, bringing results no one expected.
After that, the prosecutorsâ sense of urgency faded.1
They should have kept the pressure on, because the proceedings were ex-
hausting everyone.
Inside the abbey, inmates quarreled with guards who ransacked their
cells and seized personal items. They quarreled with one another, too, vent-
ing the frustrations of an inconceivably long trial and continuing confine-
ment in chilly, makeshift cells.2
Babeuf, in particular, was ailing. Always a man of extremes, he main-
tained an especially punishing regimen in Vendôme, working tirelessly on
a defense he did not believe in and petitioning to have his son imprisoned
with him so he could continue the boyâs education. Perhaps to ease the
memory of little Sophieâs starvation after Thermidor, he deprived himself of
food in order to share his prison rations with Marie-Anne and Ãmile. All of
it took a toll. He was irritable, exhausted, and often ill. His legs and ankles
sometimes swelled so badly that he had trouble walking and begged the
court to suspend sessions. When those requests were denied, he required
prison guards to carry him up several flights of stairs to the courtroom. It was
not clear how much longer he could go on.3
159
perfect equality
Outside the abbey, locals were divided between suspicion of the prison-
ers in their midst and irritation at the unruly troops reputedly offering safety.
Suspicion won out when prison guards seized a packet of smuggled letters
that hinted at the possibility of a Paris insurrection and advised on corrupt-
ing jurors. Rumors of these letters suggested that the soldiers might be worth
putting up with. More potently, the news fueled long-simmering impa-
tience to be done with proceedings that were entering their third month
and still far from over. The trial of the king himself had only taken six
weeks.4
None of this prevented Viellart and Bailly from delaying further. They
asked for a lengthy recess to prepare their closing statement and did not
emerge until late April.
Bailly delivered the summation to a packed house. Beginning much as
his colleague had at the trialâs opening, he argued that revolutionary up-
heaval produced this plot. However, more wary than Viellart of seeming to
condemn the entire revolution, he focused on the Terror. Good deputies
were frustrated by the âweak, fearful menâ who capitulated to Robespierre,
he argued. âThe helpless Convention [became] his slave . . . and we saw
that disastrous state known as revolutionary government flourish . . . History will scarcely believe the horrors imposed by that abhorrent regime: the
hundred thousand new Bastilles on French soil, the thousand scaffolds
placed permanently in public squares, the appalling number of victims they
consumed.â
Like Viellart, Bailly claimed that Robespierreâs heirs survived 9 Thermi-
dor. He charged them with exciting the bloody Prairial uprising, attacking
the constitution of 1795, and rallying others to their execrable âcommunity
of goods.â Then, he continued, driven by greed, a mad desire for anarchy,
and loathing of ârepublic and government,â they organized the conspiracy
before the court now.
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