History of the Girondists, Volume I eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 709 pages of information about History of the Girondists, Volume I.

History of the Girondists, Volume I eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 709 pages of information about History of the Girondists, Volume I.
due to his rank.  La Fayette would in reality direct the whole of the campaign and of the armed propaganda of the revolution.  “This role suits him,” said the old marechal.  “I do not understand this war of cities.”  To cause La Fayette to march on Namur, which was but ill defended, capture it, march from thence on Brussels and Liege, the two capitals of the Pays Bas, and the focus of Belgian independence—­send General Biron forward at the head of ten thousand men on Mons, to oppose the Austrian General Beaulieu, whose force was only two or three thousand men—­detach from the garrison at Lille another corps of three thousand men, who would occupy Tournay, and who, after having left a garrison in this town, would swell the corps of Biron—­send twelve hundred men from Dunkirk to surprise Furnes, and then advance by converging into the heart of the Belgian provinces with these forty thousand men under the command of La Fayette—­attack, on every side, in ten days an enemy ill prepared to resist—­to rouse the populations to revolt, and then increase the attacking army to eighty thousand troops, and join to it the Belgian battalions raised in the name of freedom, to combat the emperor’s army as it arrived from Germany:—­such was Dumouriez’s bold idea of the campaign.  Nothing was wanting to ensure its success but a man capable of executing it.  Dumouriez disposed of the troops and the generals in conformity with this plan.

XI.

The impulse of France responded to the impulse of her genius.

On the other side of the Rhine the preparations were making with promptitude and energy.  The emperor and the king of Prussia met at Frankfort, where they were joined by the Duke of Brunswick.  The empress of Russia adhered to the aggression of the powers against France, and marched her troops into Poland, to repress the germs of the same principles that were to be combated at Paris.  Germany yielded, in spite of herself, to the impulse of the three cabinets, and poured her masses towards the Rhine.  The emperor preluded this war of thrones against people by his coronation at Frankfort.  The head-quarters of the Duke of Brunswick were at Coblentz, the capital of the emigration.  The generalissimo of the confederation had an interview there with the two brothers of Louis XVI., and promised to restore to them, ere long, their country and their rank, whilst they, in their turn, styled him the Hero of the Rhine, and the Right arm of kings.

Every thing wore a military aspect.  The two princes of Prussia, quartered in a village near Coblentz, had but one room, and slept on the floor.  The king of Prussia was welcomed on every bank of the Rhine by the salvos of his artillery.  In every town through which he passed the emigres, the population, and the troops, proclaimed him beforehand the preserver of Germany.  His name, written in letters of fire at the illuminations, was surrounded by this adulatory device, “Vivat Villelmus, Francos deleat, jura regis restituat!”—­“Long live William, the exterminator of the French, the restorer of royalty.

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History of the Girondists, Volume I from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.