Page:An adventure (1911).pdf/136

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126
AN ADVENTURE

nearer to the building than the nerves of some of the deputies could sustain with calmness.[1] But the mob had not yet realised that it had the upper hand, and was content to believe that the protected King was the imprisoned King, and only continued to howl ferocious threats outside the grilles.

If the Assembly did not immediately see its way to the definite imprisonment of the Sovereign, neither did it choose that the royal party should sit on its own benches, so it ordained that they should be placed in the logographie—the reporter's room—a sort of den not far from the President's chair, open to the Manège and within sight and hearing of all that passed, but without dignity or decent comfort.[2] Here, without apparently any opportunity for resting or meals, the King, Queen, Princess Elizabeth, Madame Royale, and the Dauphin remained, until (at least) 10 p.m.[3] A few faithful attendants, such as the Princesse de Lamballe, Madame de Tourzel, the Prince de Poix, and the Duc de la Rochefoucauld,

  1. Marie Antoinette, Lenotre, p. 3.
  2. Mémoires de Madame de Tourzel, p. 216.
  3. Rocheterie says 18 hours; Dufour, 13 hours.