Page:Works of Thomas Carlyle - Volume 04.djvu/127

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JAN.-MARCH 1793]
PLACE DE LA RÉVOLUTION
113

of Kings, and haters of Anarchy, rank in coalition; as in a war for life. England signifies to Citizen Chauvelin, the Ambassador or rather Ambassador's-Cloak, that he must quit the country in eight days. Ambassador's-Cloak and Ambassador, Chauvelin and Talleyrand, depart accordingly.[1] Talleyrand, implicated in that Iron Press of the Tuileries, thinks it safest to make for America,

England has cast out the Embassy: England declares war,—being shocked principally, it would seem, at the condition of the river Scheldt. Spain declares war; being shocked principally at some other thing; which doubtless the Manifesto indicates.[2] Nay we find it was not England that declared war first, or Spain first; but that France herself declared war first on both of them;[3]—a point of immense Parliamentary and Journalistic interest in those days, but which has become of no interest whatever in these. They all declare war. The sword is drawn, the scabbard thrown away. It is even as Danton said, in one of his all-too gigantic figures: 'The coalised Kings threaten us; we hurl at their feet, as gage of battle, the Head of a King.'

  1. Annual Register of 1793, pp. 114–28.
  2. 23d March (Annual Register, p. 161).
  3. 1st February; 7th March (Moniteur of these dates).
VOL. III.
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