The History of a Crime


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"
Those are our colleagues!" exclaimed Aubry (du Nord).  
In truth the last batch of the Representatives, prisoners of the Quai  
d'Orsay, the batch destined for Vincennes, was passing through the  
Faubourg. It was about seven o'clock in the morning. Some shops were  
being opened and were lighted inside, and a few passers-by came out of  
the houses.  
Three carriages defiled one after the other, closed, guarded, dreary,  
dumb; no voice came out, no cry, no whisper. They were carrying off in  
the midst of swords, of sabres, and of lances, with the rapidity and  
fury of the whirlwind, something which kept silence; and that something  
which they were carrying off, and which maintained this sinister  
silence, was the broken Tribune, the Sovereignty of the Assemblies, the  
supreme initiative whence all civilization is derived; it was the word  
which contains the future of the world, it was the speech of France!  
A last carriage arrived, which by some chance had been delayed. It was  
about two or three hundred yards behind the principal convoy, and was  
only escorted by three Lancers. It was not a police-van, it was an  
omnibus, the only one in the convoy. Behind the conductor, who was a  
police agent, there could distinctly be seen the Representatives heaped  
up in the interior. It seemed easy to rescue them.  
Cournet appealed to the passers-by; "Citizens," he cried, "these are  
your Representatives, who are being carried off! You have just seen  
them pass in the vans of convicts! Bonaparte arrests them contrary to  
239  


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