The History of a Crime


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He told me his mane. It was M. de la R----. He knew my brother Abel's  
wife and family, the Montferriers, relations of the Chambacères, and he  
lived in the Rue Caumartin. He had been a Prefect under the Provisional  
Government. There was a carriage in waiting. We got in, and as Baudin  
told me that he would pass the night at Cournet's, I gave him the  
address of M. do la R----, so that he could send for me if any notice of  
the movement came from the Faubourg St. Marceau or elsewhere. But I  
hoped for nothing more that night, and I was right.  
About a quarter of an hour after the separation of the Representatives,  
and after we had left the Rue Popincourt, Jules Favre, Madier de  
Montajau, de Flotte, and Carnot, to whom we had sent word to the Rue des  
Moulins, arrived at Cournet's, accompanied by Schoelcher, by Charamaule,  
by Aubry (du Nord), and by Bastide. Some Representatives were still  
remaining at Cournet's. Several, like Baudin, were going to pass the  
night there. They told our colleagues what had been settled respecting  
my proposition, and of the rendezvous at the Salle Roysin; only it  
appears that there was some doubt regarding the hour agreed upon, and  
that Baudin in particular did not exactly remember it, and that our  
colleagues believed that the rendezvous, which had been fixed for nine  
o'clock in the morning, was fixed for eight.  
This alteration in the hour, due to the treachery of memory for which no  
one can be blamed, prevented the realization of the plan which I had  
conceived of an Assembly holding its sittings in the Faubourg, and  
giving battle to Louis Bonaparte, but gave us as a compensation the  
heroic exploits of the Ste. Marguerite barricade.  
214  


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