was drowned by the shouts of the mob who had gathered
round a coffee-house where stood a bust of the emperor,
which they insisted should be given up to them.
Verdier, hoping to calm, what he took to be a simple
street row, gave orders that the bust should be brought
out, and this concession, so significant on the part
of a general commanding in the emperor’s name,
convinced the crowd that his cause was lost.
The fury of the populace grew greater now that they
felt that they could indulge it with impunity; they
ran to the Town Hall, and tearing down and burning
the tricoloured, raised the white flag. The roll
of the generale, the clang of the tocsin were heard,
the neighbouring villages poured in their populations
and increased the throng in the streets; single acts
of violence began to occur, wholesale massacres were
approaching. I had arrived in the town with my
friend M____ the very beginning of the tumult, so
we had seen the dangerous agitation and excitement
grow under our eyes, but we were still ignorant of
its true cause, when, in the rue de Noailles, we met
an acquaintance, who, although his political opinions
did not coincide with ours, had always shown himself
very friendly to us. ‘Well,’ said
I, ‘what news?’ ’Good for me and
bad for you,’ he answered;’ I advise you
to go away at once.’ Surprised and somewhat
alarmed at these words, we begged him to explain.
‘Listen,’ said he; ’there are going
to be riots in the town; it is well known that you
used to go to Brune’s nearly every evening, and
that you are in consequence no favourite with your
neighbours; seek safety in the country.’
I addressed some further question to him, but, turning
his back on me, he left me without another word.
“M______ and I were still looking at each other in stupefaction, when the
increasing uproar aroused us to a sense that if we desired to follow the
advice just given we had not a moment to lose. We hastened to my house,
which was situated in the Allees de Meilhan. My wife was just going out,
but I stopped her.
“‘We are not safe here,’ I said;
‘we must get away into the country.’
“‘But where can we go?’
“‘Wherever luck takes us. Let us
start.’
“She was going to put on her bonnet, but I told
her to leave it behind; for it was most important
that no one should think we suspected anything, but
were merely going for a stroll. This precaution
saved us, for we learned the next day that if our
intention to fly had been suspected we should have
been stopped.
“We walked at random, while behind us we heard
musket shots from every part of the town. We
met a company of soldiers who were hurrying to the
relief of their comrades, but heard later that they
had not been allowed to pass the gate.
“We recollected an old officer of our acquaintance
who had quitted the service and withdrawn from the
world some years before, and had taken a place in
the country near the village of Saint-Just; we directed
our course towards his house.