<h2>XXVI</h2>
<p><ANTIMG class="figleft" style="width: 98px; height: 106px;" alt="Initial T" title="T" src="images/lett.png" />he sun of Thermidor
was setting in a blood-red sky, while
Évariste
wandered, gloomy and careworn, in the Marbeuf gardens, now a National
park frequented by the Parisian idlers. There were stalls for the sale
of lemonade and ices; wooden horses and shooting-galleries were
provided
for the younger patriots. Under a tree, a little Savoyard in rags, with
a black cap on his head, was making a marmot dance to the shrill notes
of his hurdy-gurdy. A man, still young, slim-waisted, wearing a blue
coat and his hair powdered, with a big dog at his heels, stopped to
listen to the rustic music. Évariste recognized Robespierre.
He found
him paler, thinner, his face harder and drawn in folds of suffering. He
thought to himself:</p>
<p>"What fatigues, how many griefs have left their imprint on his
brow! How
grievous a thing it is to work for the happiness of mankind! What are
his thoughts at this moment? Does the sound of this mountain music
perhaps distract him from the cares of government? Is he thinking that
he has made a pact with Death and that the hour of reckoning is coming
close? Is he dreaming of a triumphant return to the Committee of Public
Safety, from which he withdrew, weary of being held in check, with
Couthon and Saint-Just, by a seditious majority? Behind that
impenetrable countenance what hopes are seething or what fears?"</p>
<p>But Maximilien smiled at the lad, in a gentle, kind voice
asked him
several questions about his native valley, the humble home and parents
the poor child had left behind, tossed him a small piece of silver and
resumed his stroll. After taking a few steps, he turned round again to
call his dog; sniffing at the marmot, it was showing its teeth at the
little creature that bristled up in defiance.</p>
<p>"To heel, Brount!" he called, "to heel!"—and he
plunged among the dark
trees.</p>
<p>Gamelin, out of respect, did not interrupt his lonely walk;
but, as he
gazed after the slender form disappearing in the darkness, he mentally
addressed his hero in these impassioned words:</p>
<p>"I have seen thy sadness, Maximilien; I have understood thy
thought. Thy
melancholy, thy fatigue, even the look of fear that stamps thy face,
everything says: 'Let the reign of terror end and that of fraternity
begin! Frenchmen, be united, be virtuous, be good and kind. Love ye one
another....' Well then, I will second your designs; that you, in your
wisdom and goodness, may be able to put an end to our civil discord, to
our fratricidal hate, turn the headsman into a gardener who will
henceforth cut off only the heads of cabbages and lettuces. I will pave
the way with my colleagues of the Tribunal that must lead to clemency
by
exterminating conspirators and traitors. We will redouble our vigilance
and our severity. No culprit shall escape us. And when the head of the
last enemy of the Republic shall have fallen under the knife, then it
will be given thee to be merciful without committing a crime, then thou
canst inaugurate the reign of innocence and virtue in all the land, oh!
father of thy country!"</p>
<p>The Incorruptible was already almost out of sight. Two men in
round hats
and nankeen breeches, one of whom, a tall, lean man of a wild, unkempt
aspect, had a blur on one eye and resembled Tallien, met him at the
corner of an avenue, looked at him askance and passed on, pretending
not
to recognize him. When they had gone far enough to be out of hearing,
they muttered under their breath:</p>
<p>"So there he goes, the King, the Pope, the God. For he is God;
and
Catherine Théot is his prophetess."</p>
<p>"Dictator, traitor, tyrant! the race of Brutus is not extinct."</p>
<p>"Tremble, malefactor! the Tarpeian rock is near the Capitol!"</p>
<p>The dog Brount ran towards the pair. They said no more and
quickened
their pace.</p>
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