Triumph
The dread tribunal of five Judges,
Public Prosecutor, and determined Jury, sat every
day. Their lists went forth every evening, and
were read out by the gaolers of the various prisons
to their prisoners. The standard gaoler-joke
was, “Come out and listen to the Evening Paper,
you inside there!”
“Charles Evremonde, called Darnay!”
So at last began the Evening Paper at La Force.
When a name was called, its owner
stepped apart into a spot reserved for those who were
announced as being thus fatally recorded. Charles
Evremonde, called Darnay, had reason to know the usage;
he had seen hundreds pass away so.
His bloated gaoler, who wore spectacles
to read with, glanced over them to assure himself
that he had taken his place, and went through the
list, making a similar short pause at each name.
There were twenty-three names, but only twenty were
responded to; for one of the prisoners so summoned
had died in gaol and been forgotten, and two had already
been guillotined and forgotten. The list was
read, in the vaulted chamber where Darnay had seen
the associated prisoners on the night of his arrival.
Every one of those had perished in the massacre;
every human creature he had since cared for and parted
with, had died on the scaffold.
There were hurried words of farewell
and kindness, but the parting was soon over.
It was the incident of every day, and the society
of La Force were engaged in the preparation of some
games of forfeits and a little concert, for that evening.
They crowded to the grates and shed tears there;
but, twenty places in the projected entertainments
had to be refilled, and the time was, at best, short
to the lock-up hour, when the common rooms and corridors
would be delivered over to the great dogs who kept
watch there through the night. The prisoners
were far from insensible or unfeeling; their ways
arose out of the condition of the time. Similarly,
though with a subtle difference, a species of fervour
or intoxication, known, without doubt, to have led
some persons to brave the guillotine unnecessarily,
and to die by it, was not mere boastfulness, but a
wild infection of the wildly shaken public mind.
In seasons of pestilence, some of us will have a
secret attraction to the disease— a terrible
passing inclination to die of it. And all of
us have like wonders hidden in our breasts, only needing
circumstances to evoke them.
The passage to the Conciergerie was
short and dark; the night in its vermin-haunted cells
was long and cold. Next day, fifteen prisoners
were put to the bar before Charles Darnay’s name
was called. All the fifteen were condemned,
and the trials of the whole occupied an hour and a
half.
“Charles Evremonde, called Darnay,”
was at length arraigned.
His judges sat upon the Bench in feathered
hats; but the rough red cap and tricoloured cockade
was the head-dress otherwise prevailing. Looking
at the Jury and the turbulent audience, he might have
thought that the usual order of things was reversed,
and that the felons were trying the honest men.
The lowest, cruelest, and worst populace of a city,
never without its quantity of low, cruel, and bad,
were the directing spirits of the scene: noisily
commenting, applauding, disapproving, anticipating,
and precipitating the result, without a check.
Of the men, the greater part were armed in various
ways; of the women, some wore knives, some daggers,
some ate and drank as they looked on, many knitted.
Among these last, was one, with a spare piece of
knitting under her arm as she worked. She was
in a front row, by the side of a man whom he had never
seen since his arrival at the Barrier, but whom he
directly remembered as Defarge. He noticed that
she once or twice whispered in his ear, and that she
seemed to be his wife; but, what he most noticed in
the two figures was, that although they were posted
as close to himself as they could be, they never looked
towards him. They seemed to be waiting for something
with a dogged determination, and they looked at the
Jury, but at nothing else. Under the President
sat Doctor Manette, in his usual quiet dress.
As well as the prisoner could see, he and Mr. Lorry
were the only men there, unconnected with the Tribunal,
who wore their usual clothes, and had not assumed
the coarse garb of the Carmagnole.
Charles Evremonde, called Darnay,
was accused by the public prosecutor as an emigrant,
whose life was forfeit to the Republic, under the
decree which banished all emigrants on pain of Death.
It was nothing that the decree bore date since his
return to France. There he was, and there was
the decree; he had been taken in France, and his head
was demanded.
“Take off his head!” cried
the audience. “An enemy to the Republic!”
The President rang his bell to silence
those cries, and asked the prisoner whether it was
not true that he had lived many years in England?
Undoubtedly it was.
Was he not an emigrant then? What did he call
himself?
Not an emigrant, he hoped, within the sense and spirit
of the law.
Why not? the President desired to know.
Because he had voluntarily relinquished
a title that was distasteful to him, and a station
that was distasteful to him, and had left his country—he
submitted before the word emigrant in the present
acceptation by the Tribunal was in use—to
live by his own industry in England, rather than on
the industry of the overladen people of France.
What proof had he of this?
He handed in the names of two witnesses; Theophile
Gabelle, and
Alexandre Manette.
But he had married in England? the President reminded
him.
True, but not an English woman.
A citizeness of France?
Yes. By birth.
Her name and family?
“Lucie Manette, only daughter
of Doctor Manette, the good physician who sits there.”
This answer had a happy effect upon
the audience. Cries in exaltation of the well-known
good physician rent the hall. So capriciously
were the people moved, that tears immediately rolled
down several ferocious countenances which had been
glaring at the prisoner a moment before, as if with
impatience to pluck him out into the streets and kill
him.
On these few steps of his dangerous
way, Charles Darnay had set his foot according to
Doctor Manette’s reiterated instructions.
The same cautious counsel directed every step that
lay before him, and had prepared every inch of his
road.
The President asked, why had he returned
to France when he did, and not sooner?
He had not returned sooner, he replied,
simply because he had no means of living in France,
save those he had resigned; whereas, in England, he
lived by giving instruction in the French language
and literature. He had returned when he did,
on the pressing and written entreaty of a French citizen,
who represented that his life was endangered by his
absence. He had come back, to save a citizen’s
life, and to bear his testimony, at whatever personal
hazard, to the truth. Was that criminal in the
eyes of the Republic?
The populace cried enthusiastically,
“No!” and the President rang his bell
to quiet them. Which it did not, for they continued
to cry “No!” until they left off, of their
own will.
The President required the name of
that citizen. The accused explained that the
citizen was his first witness. He also referred
with confidence to the citizen’s letter, which
had been taken from him at the Barrier, but which
he did not doubt would be found among the papers then
before the President.
The Doctor had taken care that it
should be there—had assured him that it
would be there—and at this stage of the
proceedings it was produced and read. Citizen
Gabelle was called to confirm it, and did so.
Citizen Gabelle hinted, with infinite delicacy and
politeness, that in the pressure of business imposed
on the Tribunal by the multitude of enemies of the
Republic with which it had to deal, he had been slightly
overlooked in his prison of the Abbaye—in
fact, had rather passed out of the Tribunal’s
patriotic remembrance—until three days
ago; when he had been summoned before it, and had been
set at liberty on the Jury’s declaring themselves
satisfied that the accusation against him was answered,
as to himself, by the surrender of the citizen Evremonde,
called Darnay.
Doctor Manette was next questioned.
His high personal popularity, and the clearness of
his answers, made a great impression; but, as he proceeded,
as he showed that the Accused was his first friend
on his release from his long imprisonment; that, the
accused had remained in England, always faithful and
devoted to his daughter and himself in their exile;
that, so far from being in favour with the Aristocrat
government there, he had actually been tried for his
life by it, as the foe of England and friend of the
United States—as he brought these circumstances
into view, with the greatest discretion and with the
straightforward force of truth and earnestness, the
Jury and the populace became one. At last, when
he appealed by name to Monsieur Lorry, an English
gentleman then and there present, who, like himself,
had been a witness on that English trial and could
corroborate his account of it, the Jury declared that
they had heard enough, and that they were ready with
their votes if the President were content to receive
them.
At every vote (the Jurymen voted aloud
and individually), the populace set up a shout of
applause. All the voices were in the prisoner’s
favour, and the President declared him free.
Then, began one of those extraordinary
scenes with which the populace sometimes gratified
their fickleness, or their better impulses towards
generosity and mercy, or which they regarded as some
set-off against their swollen account of cruel rage.
No man can decide now to which of these motives such
extraordinary scenes were referable; it is probable,
to a blending of all the three, with the second predominating.
No sooner was the acquittal pronounced, than tears
were shed as freely as blood at another time, and such
fraternal embraces were bestowed upon the prisoner
by as many of both sexes as could rush at him, that
after his long and unwholesome confinement he was
in danger of fainting from exhaustion; none the less
because he knew very well, that the very same people,
carried by another current, would have rushed at him
with the very same intensity, to rend him to pieces
and strew him over the streets.
His removal, to make way for other
accused persons who were to be tried, rescued him
from these caresses for the moment. Five were
to be tried together, next, as enemies of the Republic,
forasmuch as they had not assisted it by word or deed.
So quick was the Tribunal to compensate itself and
the nation for a chance lost, that these five came
down to him before he left the place, condemned to
die within twenty-four hours. The first of them
told him so, with the customary prison sign of Death—a
raised finger—and they all added in words,
“Long live the Republic!”
The five had had, it is true, no audience
to lengthen their proceedings, for when he and Doctor
Manette emerged from the gate, there was a great crowd
about it, in which there seemed to be every face he
had seen in Court—except two, for which
he looked in vain. On his coming out, the concourse
made at him anew, weeping, embracing, and shouting,
all by turns and all together, until the very tide
of the river on the bank of which the mad scene was
acted, seemed to run mad, like the people on the shore.
They put him into a great chair they
had among them, and which they had taken either out
of the Court itself, or one of its rooms or passages.
Over the chair they had thrown a red flag, and to
the back of it they had bound a pike with a red cap
on its top. In this car of triumph, not even
the Doctor’s entreaties could prevent his being
carried to his home on men’s shoulders, with
a confused sea of red caps heaving about him, and
casting up to sight from the stormy deep such wrecks
of faces, that he more than once misdoubted his mind
being in confusion, and that he was in the tumbril
on his way to the Guillotine.
In wild dreamlike procession, embracing
whom they met and pointing him out, they carried him
on. Reddening the snowy streets with the prevailing
Republican colour, in winding and tramping through
them, as they had reddened them below the snow with
a deeper dye, they carried him thus into the courtyard
of the building where he lived. Her father had
gone on before, to prepare her, and when her husband
stood upon his feet, she dropped insensible in his
arms.
As he held her to his heart and turned
her beautiful head between his face and the brawling
crowd, so that his tears and her lips might come together
unseen, a few of the people fell to dancing.
Instantly, all the rest fell to dancing, and the courtyard
overflowed with the Carmagnole. Then, they elevated
into the vacant chair a young woman from the crowd
to be carried as the Goddess of Liberty, and then
swelling and overflowing out into the adjacent streets,
and along the river’s bank, and over the bridge,
the Carmagnole absorbed them every one and whirled
them away.
After grasping the Doctor’s
hand, as he stood victorious and proud before him;
after grasping the hand of Mr. Lorry, who came panting
in breathless from his struggle against the waterspout
of the Carmagnole; after kissing little Lucie, who
was lifted up to clasp her arms round his neck; and
after embracing the ever zealous and faithful Pross
who lifted her; he took his wife in his arms, and
carried her up to their rooms.
“Lucie! My own! I am safe.”
“O dearest Charles, let me thank
God for this on my knees as I have prayed to Him.”
They all reverently bowed their heads
and hearts. When she was again in his arms,
he said to her:
“And now speak to your father,
dearest. No other man in all this France could
have done what he has done for me.”
She laid her head upon her father’s
breast, as she had laid his poor head on her own breast,
long, long ago. He was happy in the return he
had made her, he was recompensed for his suffering,
he was proud of his strength. “You must
not be weak, my darling,” he remonstrated; “don’t
tremble so. I have saved him.”