recall a long series of crimes, but when one examines
this low, crooked, and obscure life, one finds a fresh
stain at every step, and perhaps no one has ever surpassed
him in dissimulation, in profound hypocrisy, in indefatigable
depravity. Derues was executed at thirty-two,
and his whole life was steeped in vice; though happily
so short, it is full of horror, and is only a tissue
of criminal thoughts and deeds, a very essence of
evil. He had no hesitation, no remorse, no repose,
no relaxation; he seemed compelled to lie, to steal,
to poison! Occasionally suspicion is aroused,
the public has its doubts, and vague rumours hover
round him; but he burrows under new impostures, and
punishment passes by. When he falls into the
hands of human justice his reputation protects him,
and for a few days more the legal sword is turned
aside. Hypocrisy is so completely a part of his
nature, that even when there is no longer any hope,
when he is irrevocably sentenced, and he knows that
he can no longer deceive anyone, neither mankind nor
Him whose name he profanes by this last sacrilege,
he yet exclaims, “O Christ! I shall suffer
even as Thou.” It is only by the light
of his funeral pyre that the dark places of his life
can be examined, that this bloody plot is unravelled,
and that other victims, forgotten and lost in the
shadows, arise like spectres at the foot of the scaffold,
and escort the assassin to his doom.
Let us trace rapidly the history of Derues’
early years, effaced and forgotten in the notoriety
of his death. These few pages are not written
for the glorification of crime, and if in our own days,
as a result of the corruption of our manners, and
of a deplorable confusion of all notions of right
and wrong, it has been sought to make him an object;
of public interest, we, on our part, only wish to
bring him into notice, and place him momentarily on
a pedestal, in order to cast him still lower, that
his fall may be yet greater. What has been permitted
by God may be related by man. Decaying and satiated
communities need not be treated as children; they
require neither diplomatic handling nor precaution,
and it may be good that they should see and touch
the putrescent sores which canker them. Why fear
to mention that which everyone knows? Why dread
to sound the abyss which can be measured by everyone?
Why fear to bring into the light of day unmasked
wickedness, even though it confronts the public gaze
unblushingly? Extreme turpitude and extreme excellence
are both in the schemes of Providence; and the poet
has summed up eternal morality for all ages and nations
in this sublime exclamation—
“Abstulit
hunc tandem Rufini poem tumultum.”