"Ladies and gentlemen..." "In this little box I'll show you a new world, with distance and perspective." "One sou per person." "You'll see wonders!" "We came straight from Venice by boat, with our musicians to show you this wonderful invention." "With it, you can see for yourselves the greatest events of history, old and new." "Come, bring your children!" "See our wonderful machine..." "Step right up." "Put your eye to the miraculous keyhole, the mirror of history." "Look at good King Louis XVI and his Queen." "The Queen in the midst of her people." "Notice the Queen's sumptuous attire!" "And now, a great episode!" "Those who were there can see it again in the magic machine." "Come on!" "Good day, sir and madam." "Something very important happened two years ago: 1789." "The storming of the Bastille!" "Fortress of tyrants, prison of men and ideas!" "5,000 Parisians, on July 14th, leave their homes." "while their children sleep to forge a new destiny." "83 dead, 88 wounded, poor people." "Admire, impaled on this lance, the Bastille Governor's severed head." "The symbol of the fall of the old regime, of the triumph of the Third-estate!" "Come on!" "October 5, 1789:" "10,000 starving women, and a few men in women's clothes, go to Versailles to ask the King for bread for their children." "Six hours on foot in the rain!" "Here we meet a beautiful woman, with a medieval sword." "The fascinating Miss Theroigne de Méricourt, in love with war, with revolution, but especially with men." "Messalina and Joan of Arc!" "She loved the battle of love and war." "The King, the good daddy of the people, appears on the balcony." "10,000 women scream:" ""The King back to Paris!"" "So he'll return to Paris." "Marie-Antoinette with her friend Axel de Fersen is afraid to appear as the crowd is chanting" ""Come on out." "Great Harlot!"" "La Fayette leads her on to the balcony and kisses her hand." "The people, being kind-hearted, as we know, begin to shout:" ""Long live the Queen!"" ""Our Queen!" So the women went back to Paris with the baker, the baker's wife and the baker's son, meaning that Their Majesties' presence in Paris guaranteed them bread." "Name any event, I'll give it to you!" "The magic box shows you a new world, with distance and perspective!" "One sou per person." "You'll see wonders!" ""Agreement between the subscribers and the author."" ""Two copies for the price of one."" ""Louis X and The Human Heart Exposed,"" ""450 copies printed of each."" ""Subscribers include the King and Queen,"" ""the Crown Prince's,"" ""the Ambassadors of Russia, Prussia and Spain..."" "England, Hungary, Sardinia, Naples, Vienna..." "Correct that's how Citizen Restif paid his wife's alimony and his legal costs." "200 subscribers at 100 louis adds up to..." "Adds up to zero!" "My father selected their names and none of them have bothered to answer him." "It's not enough to write, print, publish books." "You have to sell them!" ""My Calendar."" "Each day is dedicated to a woman my father loved." "365 women?" "No, far more!" "Often two women a day, even three." ""Feb 8." "Sister Pinon, of the Grey Order of Bicêtre."" ""Her job was doing my hair." "I hid my head in her thighs."" ""She'd say, squeezing my head:"" ""'Make the most of it, lad.' She'd come, too."" ""April 27." "Nanette Precy." "My first woman..."" ""It happened in a stable." "I was 9, she was 16."" ""The first time for both of us."" ""Later, we wept for joy in each other's arms,"" ""May 10." "Bathilde Boujard." "I met her in a bordello."" ""Only later, after the wildest delights,"" ""did we discover she was my daughter Bathilde..."" "My name's Agnes, not Bathilde." "I have lots of little sisters." "It's scandalous!" "I'm... outraged!" "I can tell!" "There are almost 400!" "We'll read them on your next visit." "Tote up the books and include the figure in the report." "I know it: 1,230!" "I met your father on one of his nightly tavern rounds." "He'd read his stories for hours." "Some nights we'd walk him home to hear more of his stories." "My mother said most of the people he brought home were vagabonds, beggars and thieves!" "Most were." "I was among the others." "Thomas Paine: "The Rights of Man"." "Introduction to the French edition." "I presume your father got an order to print this." "From Mr. Paine himself." "You know the famous writer of the American Revolution?" "He's not doing it for free." "Certainly not." "But so far, he's had no advance, not even for ink or paper." "I'm impounding this material." " I'm not sure you have the right!" " I'm sure!" ""Any source of profit may be impounded until a debt is repaid."" "You'll have a long wait!" "How can he pay if you impound his sources of profit?" "That's the law." "Anyway... when you've had 400 women paying alimony only to one is a bargain!" "The kind of bargain you'll never experience!" "Charity!" "Alms!" "Have pity on your less fortunate brethren!" "On those grounds, I qualify for alms, too." "Anyway, let's shake hands, brother!" "I'll introduce myself:" "Nicolas Restif de la Bretonne." "And you?" " Half-pint." " Half-pint!" "Delighted!" "Owl!" "Is that you, Owl?" "My lovely Faustine." "A pleasure!" "I recognized your footsteps, you scoundrel." "How's life?" "Trying hard to wear me down." " Headed for my place?" " Of course!" "I was at the café Manoury." "I thought of you, and here I am." "You always were a good liar!" "You didn't think of me." "True." "I was just passing by." "But when you called out, I was about to think of you, I swear!" "So come on up." "You'll meet someone nice." "It's too late." "Tonight I've got printing to do." "Must be urgent if you don't have time to sing a lullaby to a lovely young thing, whose tiny feet are encased in green satin mules with pink heels." "Pink?" "The biggest of my many mistakes was refusing your hand in marriage." "You still remember?" "We were two puppies." "My business was taking off, you'd have had money and a supply of young girls." "I only had eyes for you." "That was so long ago!" "Anyway, you loved your shady friendships." "Darkness was your domain." "You were the first to call me "The Owl"." " Nathalie!" " I said with an "M"!" "Hurry, Manon." " Mariette." " No." " Melisande." " No." "Despite my talent for lying," "I'd best forget how many of them are underage!" "Come along." "Feast for the eyes, ecstasy to the soul!" "Undeniable proof of God's existence!" "To have loved others, is like having wasted one's sword in water." "Oh, to fondle... those tiny... sparrow's feet!" "Those slim, doe-like ankles!" "He's a great writer." "Nicolas Edmé Restif de la Bretonne." "Does that mean I have to do something special?" "Just what you usually do." "Intellectuals or blacksmiths, they're all alike in bed." "But intellectuals talk more!" "Hubertine!" "I'm late!" "I'll be damned!" "You, too, honor with your presence this place of..." "My daughter works at the Royal Palace." "She's in charge of the Queen's bouillon." "You can't have her!" "You're already here?" "I was about to leave at eleven, but they locked my door from the outside." "That lasted an hour." "Around midnight, the door was unlocked." "I went out." "One of the floor-polishers told me he'd seen the Queen go out around 11:30." "She was going to her husband's bed." "No, when that happens, the King goes to her bed." "But it's very rare." "There was a commotion in the galley overlooking rue de l'Echelle." "But the page who sleeps by the King's door saw no one!" "What happened in the Palace between eleven and midnight?" "He's an old friend of mine." "And the nosiest man in Paris!" "Professional concern:" "I write the truth." "Then what has been rumoured in Paris for a month has occurred?" "What was rumoured?" "I heard footsteps and voices, but when I went out, all was normal." "Not to rush things, but here we're still at my tiny feet." "If La Fayette stayed, instead of fleeing abroad... like d'Artois, Condé, Polignac, d'Orléans, it means he's for the King." "They hope other European Kings will help them crush the Revolution." "Listen to this:" ""A perverse Queen eggs on a cowardly King"" ""who is plotting to slaughter all patriots."" ""Our gold and weapons are sent abroad."" ""The tyrants around us pounce on a starved and unarmed France."" "Impossible, no?" "Louis' brother-in-law is King of Austria..." "Can I help you?" "I'm looking for a friend, a coachman." "You didn't see..." "a Royal coach leave?" "A Royal coach?" "No." "From rue de l'Echelle, maybe?" "I don't recall." "So everything's normal." "No activities." "What kind?" "The nocturnal kind." "I don't know, maybe..." "Good night, corporal." " They said two..." "You're alone?" " For the time being, yes." "I'll give the other to your servant." "Wait here." "The ladies are coming." "Don't follow too closely." "Sure..." "Who are you?" "A stranger who couldn't resist helping such a lovely lady." " How did they find it?" " By searching!" "Couldn't you stop them?" "You can handle men, when you want to." "Law-men want things to take away, not to consume on the spot!" "It was the only profitable job I'd had all year!" "My poor little girl." "That fate gave you such a father!" "Mr. Paine said not to worry about the manuscript." "There's no hurry." "But I'm in a hurry to get paid!" "He said that... when?" "Three hours ago." "He came to say good-bye." "He's off to Metz for several weeks." "He'll get in touch when he's back." "Several weeks..." "He left you money?" "A little." "But it's for me!" "For you!" "Little bitch!" "Metz, you said?" "We need money not only for the seizure, but for the butcher, the baker, the stationer." "They can wait to get wealthy!" "I've waited 60 years!" "Out of the way!" "Strawberries for your journey!" "Passengers for Sens, Auxerre," "MÃ¢con, all aboard!" "Hats for sale!" "Old hats!" "134 pounds!" "Wendel and Paine." "Two for Metz." "That coach will be departing third." " You're Mr. Paine?" " My friend." "A gentleman to see you." "He said to wake him up as soon as you got here." "Mr. Restif." "What are you doing here?" "My daughter told you of the seizure." ""Man cannot live on poetry"!" "I don't have much money on me." "It's not prudent when travelling." "I can give you only a few ducats." "Here." "But don't worry." "We'll deal with all that when I'm back." "Come and meet Mr. de Wendel." "May I introduce my friend, M. Restif de la Bretonne" "Mr. de Wendel owns foundries in Alsatia." "Only they can make 10-ft iron bars." "I need them for my project." "That you showed to the Academy of Sciences?" "Your partner dropped out?" "Passengers for Meaux, Châlons, Verdun, Metz, all aboard!" "It's there, Madame." "Hurry, you!" "A single-arch bridge 300 feet long!" "I can't sleep nights!" "All those people!" "Well, good-bye." "I'm up by the coachman." "Take care of them." "Be very careful..." "The other one, too." "They're fragile." "I must leave, too." "An unforeseen event." "But I have no reservation." "Nothing doing." "We're full up." "Up there..." "There's room for three." "If you have a ticket." "But I can..." "I can pay you." "We're late!" "When are we leaving?" "There isn't room for three!" "Where to?" "I'm going to Verdun..." "to Metz... depends." "See if they'll sell you a ticket..." "Thank you, fellow." "I'll be right back." "We'll be travelling together." "Where are you going?" "I haven't had the pleasure, sir." "Yet..." "I have a feeling I've seen you before." "Highly unlikely!" "The lady with you, too." "I've met her before, somewhere." "Hardly." "Madame doesn't associate with your kind!" "A German traveller wrote of the politeness of the French." "He didn't meet you on his travels!" "Lottery tickets!" "One ticket to Metz." "Sorry, I'm in a hurry." "You getting on, so we can leave?" "It's uncomfortable..." "We're waiting for you!" "We're late already!" " I'm coming, sir." " Get moving!" "I'm sorry, sir." "I'm a student in Paris." "My name's Emile Delage." "What's yours?" "Marie Madeleine." "It's taking hours!" " Out of the way!" " Hurry!" "Wait for me!" "I have to leave, too!" "Bastard!" "A horse!" "I have to catch up with that stage!" " A horse?" "We'll see." " How much is it?" "Are you sure his ducats were counterfeit?" "Absolutely." "Whereas mine are real." "You can be sure of it." "I know that man..." "A shady character, a crook, a traveller without baggage." "You noticed?" "I pretended not to know him!" "I hope he doesn't lodge a complaint." "About what?" "We were ready to leave and he had no ticket!" "His own fault!" "I hate flowers!" "Restif wasn't what I expected." "He came to bid farewell to Mr. Tom Paine." "He has exquisite manners." "What did you expect?" "An obscene faun?" "Like most Frenchmen, you've only read "The Perverted Peasant", or "The Peasant Wife"." "But he's written novels and essays." " Thank you, Madame." " Don't mention it!" "...anthologies, over 100 works." "He writes his "Paris Nights", day after day." "Quantity doesn't mean quality." "That holds for nature's works and men's." "But he writes with such style that some think..." "Restif de la Bretonne is a pen-name for Beaumarchais or Diderot." "I haven't read his works, but I'm told they're so full of scurrilous material, they should be burned in public." "With their author?" "If it were up to him, he'd have no qualms." "I've only seen him smile when, before popular juries existed, he could pass death sentences all by himself." "Don't make a face, dear!" "Have you read them, Madame?" "That man's books, me?" "I wouldn't dream of it!" "I would!" "And with the greatest pleasure." "I found them uniquely inspired on the subject of man, of woman, of love amongst our good people." "I'm glad to hear some aristocrats don't scorn the people." "None of us here scorns the people." "But to go as far as make them the heroes of books!" "We should read this Restif, too." "Right, Mr. Baldi?" "Sounds very instructive." "Though we don't need lessons in that field!" "Three or four years ago, I read something by Restif in a journal, I think." "What struck me, was that he spoke of sudden upheavals, and disorders, and it has all come about as he predicted." "You, the wealthy, don't be harsh and haughty!" "Beware, judges." "A deadly revolution is in the making." "The nobility hasn't understood the people." "The clergy has lost contact with them." "Soon the people will fight social injustice." "Everyone will be a citizen." "Listen to the voice of a plebeian who lives with the people." "Artists can often sense what's afoot, they understand the causes, know who's responsible long before others do." "I hold your "artists" to be among the most responsible." "All your philosophers and encyclopaedists, who discredited the regime, through irony and doubt." "Like Beaumarchais!" "His "Marriage of Figaro" is more dangerous than 10,000 mortars aimed at the nobility." "Yet what happens?" "He is applauded at Court out of coquetry and stupidity." "I applauded him." "A sure sign of stupidity is being deaf to criticism." "Wise words, Countess." "Providing you accept the worst when it happens." "I think that the worst has already happened." "Stop!" "Help me!" "Are you hurt?" "Try to get up." "Give me your hand." "Nothing broken?" "No, nothing." "You're not much of a horseman." "In my youth I was." "But the years have caught up with me." " As you can tell." " They caught up with me, too." "I had to settle for that poor nag, because of a slippery hairdresser." "But I'll catch up with him and his Countess." "Their flight confirms my suspicions." " Are you sure you're all right?" " Don't worry." "I hit myself way below my head!" "Now please help me, catch up with that coach." "On this horse, I'll never manage." "It's on your way, I'll explain." "I'd like to, but this is almost an "uncharitable"." ""Uncharitable": so-called because its small size exempted the driver from having to give a ride to a friend or acquaintance travelling on foot." "Forgive me if I insist." "I can't offer you money, only my gratitude." "Perhaps even posterity's." "Isn't that too great a commitment, sir?" "This event will become one of my "Revolutionary Nights"." "I'll mention you, if you'll let me." "But I haven't introduced myself:" "Nicolas Edmé Restif de la Bretonne." "The author of "Fanchette's Foot"?" "Of "The Bastard Daughter"," ""The Parisian Couple", "The New Abelard", "Contemporary Women"?" "At your service." "And thank you for not mentioning "The Perverted Peasant"." "I've read and enjoyed that, too." "But I can see why it may not be your favourite." "Some fathers prefer their least gifted children..." "To whom do I have the honor?" "Chevalier de Seingalt." "When I saw the Countess get into the stagecoach" "When I saw the Countess get into the stagecoach with the two packages that came from the Palace," "I concluded she was following some important person." "My suspicions were well-founded." "You're saying that right now," "Louis Capet has left Paris?" "He may be travelling on this same road." "But where to?" "I find it hard to believe." "He's such a coward." "When he moves, it's only to go hunting." "Dante said it long ago, when he meets Hugues Capet in Purgatory:" ""I was the root of the evil weed"" ""That Christian lands in shadows kept"" ""Ne'er did much good come of its seed"." "I knew Louis as a child." "I was loyal to his father until..." "What year was it?" "Seventeen hundred..." "There's the stage!" " Fasten your belt." " Belt?" "It's there." "Tie it on." "Now, watch!" "Hold on tight!" "Move!" "Catch that stage!" "What?" "They're not allowed to pass us." "We'll get killed!" "Put me down!" "You hear me?" "You're mad!" " Let him by!" " Get back!" "I'm going to faint." "I've fainted." "Virginie, darling!" "We're near Meaux." "They'll need fresh horses." "Maybe we should let them by." "Never!" "Chevalier de Seingalt eats no one's dust!" "Not the King's." "Nor that of a nameless scoundrel!" "Sniff, Madame!" "Make way for de Seingalt and de la Bretonne!" "Make way for genius!" "How amusing!" "Meaux relay!" "I need no one." "Here!" "Move over!" "Bring my toilet case." "Hurry!" "My toilet case!" " A quiet spot?" " This way, sir." "Friend, did a very large carriage go by this morning, from Paris?" "Wait..." "This morning, around 6:00." "They wanted 11 fresh horses!" "3 saddle-horses for 3 horsemen, 2 for a carriage, and six for a huge coach." "I never saw one so big!" "How'll they cross the Somme bridge?" "Who was inside?" "The curtains were drawn." "They say it's a Russian noblewoman returning home." "Quite a way to go!" "Put your hat back on, please." "And loaded!" "The head flunky, a tall fellow, handed out ecus like pennies." "Did likewise at the Clayes relay, and at Bondy." "If they got here at six, they must have left Paris at midnight." "I also heard a child's voice, a little girl." "Strange hours to travel!" "Sneaking out incognito..." "Meaux relay!" "Mr. Baldi has to pee." "You were in a big hurry this morning: what happened?" "I told you:" "I've never had the pleasure!" "Madame, what a journey!" "Not too shaken?" "May I?" "You, here?" "I'll tell you why I'm here." "Last night, someone left Paris in secret." "I think I know who it was." "You mean the King?" " You knew?" " Yes." "The Marquis de Lafayette who I knew from the American revolution, burst into my room this morning, saying:" ""The birdies have flown."" "The King's bed was empty." "So you left to chase the King?" "No, my trip with M. de Wendel had been planned." "What are you doing here?" "Observing." "We're here, in Meaux." "It's 10:30." "If they left at midnight, they'd be at Montmirail, then Chaintrix, Châlons," "St. Menehould, Clermont..." "Careful!" "Verdun, Metz." "They want to reach the eastern border and be protected by the troops of Alsatia, Lorraine, Champagne:" "90 battalions and 400 squadrons, mostly Swiss and German mercenaries." "Unless at Clermont they make a detour to Montmédy, here." "It's a mile from the border with Luxembourg." "Where the King's brother-in-law's troops are." "14,000 Austrians ready to move on Paris." "Mr. Paine, if this plan succeeds, then the old régime will return to power." "The French people won't stand for that." "I agree." "They won't give up all they've gained in the last two years." "It would mean civil war." "It will be a hot day." "Come take off my veil." "Can't she take it off herself?" "Come, Madame..." "Life gets more expensive by the day." "Tradesmen won't take notes." "They distrust the currency of their own revolution!" " Leaving, Chevalier?" " That's the lady with the packages?" "In my day, I'd have led her a dance!" "If I see the King, I'll tell him to wait for you, so a great writer can witness his flight!" "Thank you, Chevalier." "People like us, responsible for the wealth of this country, have been saddled with more taxes, and scorned." "Move, I hate children!" "My poor husband, a landowner, used to say: our biggest crop is taxes!" "But you got even by forcing up prices." "And then took over the clergy's lands..." "Strange man!" "It's him." "Now I'm sure it is." "I never saw such a tall man." "Remember at the coronation, 17 years ago?" "Of course, it's Giacomo Casanova!" "That's what I thought." "You're right, Madame." "I met him years ago at the Cardinal of Strasbourg's court." "He had a great reputation as a ladies' man." "Why didn't you introduce us, dammit!" "The stage is ready to leave." "I'll travel on top." "No..." "I insist." "You're too kind." "That reckless driver a gentleman?" "How odd!" "He still doesn't know how to travel!" "He knows other things..." "Casanova..." "Yes, a Venetian nobleman." " Never heard of him." " Neither have I." "What?" "Perhaps I should explain that, at the time, my name didn't cause much excitement in France, except among people, mostly women, which I had known personally." "Though "My Escape from the Dungeon" had been published, my reputation wasn't made till much later, through the success of my "Memoirs"' written in French and published after my death" "which, as you all know, occurred in 1798." "So it goes..." "Never heard of him!" "What are we waiting for?" "Let's go!" "Let's go, hurry!" "Had I known that Casanova was hiding under the name of Chevalier de Seingalt," "I'd have expressed my admiration." "But he expressed his for me first." "From what I just heard, I doubt his main talent was as an author." "In Strasbourg, he was known as a gambler, as a man who ran lotteries, designed textiles, put on plays, dabbled in the occult sciences..." "As a seer, too!" "But mostly for his boudoir escapades!" "I heard even" "Madame de Pompadour was mad for him." "It seems no woman could resist your compatriot." "Thank you!" "Did you really travel with him?" "Certainly." "But I assure you I resisted him!" "I barely saw him." "He must have been very handsome." "How old is he?" "60?" "Even 70." "Does it matter?" "In my country, there's a saying..." "What does that mean?" "Well, it means:" ""Go out with young men, but go to bed with old ones"." "This trip confirms that old Europe still has writers who can blend personal charm with seductive language." "I won't discuss Mr. Casanova's literary talents, but as for his amorous exploits," "I have some reservations." "First, he's too big." "I told him:" "the best lovers are always of small stature." "That's been proven." ""Proven" by whom?" "The influx of blood, which gives the virile member its potency, is all the greater and fiercer, if the area to be irrigated is smaller." "Your conversation isn't fit for a barrack-room!" "You're revolting!" "No wonder: you're the author of "The Pornographer"." "Don't bother to read it." "It won't live up to your expectations, dear Judge!" "I'm sorry." "I'd like to catch some sleep." "Change places!" "Here, quick!" "You've got some nerve!" "Shame on you!" "You should shut up..." "with your filthy mind!" "Eleven horses!" "Teams changed at relays further ahead, returning to Meaux relay." "It could be a single team!" "The countryside is full of horses!" "A carriage drawn by six or eight horses would go much faster than us, right?" "Not necessarily, sir." "Depends on the weight of the carriage." "And you can't always find enough fresh horses." "Especially now, in the haymaking season." "You always get fresh horses?" "Sure." "We're a State service!" "Horses are always waiting for us." "Must we talk about horses this whole trip!" "Thank you." "How kind." "Look up there!" "Etienne, look at them!" "Pull up, François." "Need any help?" "No thank you, my coachman rode off to look for a wheelwright." "Mr. Casanova!" "How did you know?" "I'm incognito." "Your reputation travels faster than you!" "That takes some doing!" "True!" "We went at such a merry clip, that one of our hubs broke." "Join us... until the next relay." "To refuse such... such an invitation, is a sign of my decrepitude." "That's all my worldly wealth!" "I can't leave it unguarded;" " Someone could stay and guard it." " In that case..." "Maybe your hairdresser could stay." "Well, Mr. Jacob?" "You'll stay with Mr. Casanova's carriage and join us at the next stop, or the following one." "But, Madame, may I remind you..." "You'll stay here!" "Yes, I think..." "I mean, I'm sure..." " I can't leave you all alone!" " Thank you for your help." "For wanting to stay." "My coachman will soon be back." "Take care of my things." " Please..." " No, I'll go on top." "Our charming ladies would never forgive me!" "But I refuse to deprive them of your company." "They'd lose on the deal!" "You're in a delicate spot." "Those two gentlemen have such regard for each other, and I certainly won't travel on top." "Yes, of course." "The air will do me good." "After you..." "The toilet-case that fell onto the road is yours?" "It didn't fall." "I put it there to caution drivers." "Now you can take its place, to prevent accidents." "When you passed us earlier, I fainted!" "De la Borde..." "I knew someone by that name." "He was Louis XV's farmer-general, and his head valet." "I remember well." "He was my husband's father." "Now I understand why he was such a dour, crusty old man:" "he couldn't guess some day he'd have a daughter-in-law like you" "You've spent time at the Court of France!" "He's been the toast of every court in Europe!" "It wasn't a great privilege!" "Courts aren't the gardens full of rare blossoms people imagine." "I mostly met wrinkled old countesses and princesses!" "I mean, in my time." "These days, queens judging by you, choose their ladies-in-waiting better." "What makes you think" "I'm a lady-in-waiting to Her Majesty?" "Yes... that's true." "How did I know you were..." "You underestimate Mr. Casanova's talents as a seer!" "They're only part of his great success." "He told you that in Louis XV's time, old Count de la Borde had yet to meet you." "Hence you married the young Count after Louis XVI's marriage to Marie-Antoinette." "Mr. Casanova, hearing your charming accent, fancied you might be Austrian like Marie-Antoinette, and, admiring your lovely figure, concluded you were her age, had grown up together in Austria, and that when she became Queen," "Marie-Antoinette called you to Paris as a lady-in-waiting." "Makes sense!" "What about me?" "Guess something about me?" "That you're Italian... from Bologna." "You have character and your husband..." "Me?" "A husband?" "I'm an artist!" "Art and husbands don't mix." "No way!" "His wife looks like an old shoe." "He told her he had a case in Metz, so he could follow me to my concert." "You're a musician?" "Opera singer." "You loathe my friend the tenor Baldi." " Right?" " How do you know?" "I heard you call your dog." "You so hate Baldi, you gave your dog his name!" "He's diabolical." "He guesses everything!" "He knows all about us!" "He reads us like an open book." "He only has insights when people interest him." "He guessed nothing about me." "I'm respectful: you're in mourning." "If a widow's inconsolable, she's wedded to her sorrow." "If she's consolable, at least in public, she hides her availability." "And if she's already been consoled, she doesn't want it known." "In any event, she'd rather not be unveiled." "I'm a winegrower in Champagne." "A reassuring activity." "Mr. Casanova and Mr. de la Bretonne, I thank you." "It's a privilege for me, never a ladies' man, to witness your seduction lessons:" "how to act with ladies, how to interest them, ask them questions..." "Forgive me for covering my head." "I do it only to take off my hat to you!" "The gentleman's making fun of us!" "He's one of the richest men in France." "He can afford to!" "Makes no difference to me!" "I once horsewhipped Salomon de Rothschild, the banker." "Maybe that's why I'm destitute now!" "In that case, I must have walloped every banker in Europe!" "Gentlemen, you're mistaken." "I'm being sincere." "But your pasts are so eventful, you neglect the present." "You haven't even noticed the three ladies here watching you." "The looks they're giving you!" "Who knows, maybe I'll witness in this very coach, between two relays, your 1,000th conquest," "Mr. de la Bretonne or Mr. Casanova!" "What a pain in the ass!" "Why not give Mr. Wendel that pleasure?" "True, the conditions aren't ideal," "Six people in a carriage, four more than necessary." "But you've been in more desperate straits," "and come out ahead." "I remember," "Mr. Restif, reading some of your truly perilous escapes," "with a husband snoring in the same bed beside you." "Or in a confessional, within convent walls, on a river-barge, up a tree, in a stable, with a girl holding yarn, for her blind mother to skein." "You can't be defeated by a stage coach!" "Since you've read my works, you know I never favoured the kind of women who travel by carriage." "Then what would you do, sir, to instruct Mr. de Wendel?" "Maybe... after an exchange of glances, at the next post-station." "No." "The husbands will be there." "It must happen in the carriage." "We could wait for nightfall..." "And travelling in the darkness..." "No." "The journey will be over before nightfall." "At best, one could draw the curtain." "Like this..." "This game doesn't amuse me." "Making love in a carriage, which we may have done anyway, or in the most secret alcove, is all the same." "What matters is... that there should be... is that in love-making, there should be... should be..." "There should be... what?" "Mystery!" "Even if America fought harder for its independence than for changing institutions, your revolution is an extension of ours." "It's a movement that will affect the whole world." "I don't agree with you." "Nor does the American ambassador." "I sat next to him at a dinner recently." "He said the new social order being imposed here, against religion, order, and property, seriously worries all Americans." "All?" "He and his pals from the Southern states are fearful of a constitution that favours equality and the abolition of slavery." "No, but even in New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, they fear that France won't manage to maintain its stability and treaties." "Which would be a threat to its trade with Europe." "America needn't fear for its European trade." "As long as Europeans don't stop eating." "Ambassador Morris also said and I think that... he was referring to you and what you wrote about equality, that the rights of man are established by the laws of nature." "Which is why it never can be true that all men are equal." "I, unlike you and Mr. Morris, if you'll allow me, wish for man's right to enjoy the fruits of his labour, within the common interest, to be recognized as soon as possible." "When royal courts stop plundering poverty will disappear from nations for the greater good of the many." "He never stops." "He's not working, he's asleep on his feet." "Gilbert, you work too hard." "You work at charcoal even as you sleep." "The stagecoach!" "They're not there yet!" "Carrying quite a load!" "They'll have to stop at the climb." "And they'll want us to help 'em." "No chance!" "The climb is too steep." "We must walk a ways." "All that smoke!" "It's terrible for my throat." "What do all those brawny young men do?" "What opera are you performing in Metz?" "The program says "Dido Abandoned" and "Don Giovanni"." ""Don Giovanni"?" "Really?" "I was at the première in Prague four years ago." "Mozart conducted at his harpsichord." "Da Ponte, who had to leave, asked me to stand in for him at rehearsals." "Mozart speaks perfect Italian." "He and I reworked a few verses of the "Catalogue" aria." "You know..." "More smokestacks, mean more machinery, more dependence on workmen." "And those who manipulate them." "Agitators are using the financial crisis to stir up the workers" "First blacksmiths, hatters, then fruit sellers, carpenters, now iron workers..." "In Paris, they're holding meetings." "Instead of working, they go on strike." "I've actually seen it:" "a workman stopping work." "Just suddenly stop working." "The most terrifying sight I ever saw!" "Forgive an amateur for imposing on an artist." "Don't worry!" "I'm a contralto." "Leporello's a baritone." "Leporello's as great as Sancho Panza." "He has all the anger of the servant who envies and despises his master." "At one point he sings:" ""I want to be a gentleman and serve no more"." "The impossible dream of all servants of all times!" "It seems you don't approve of what's happened in France since '89?" "I may displease some of you, but I'll say no." "I don't approve because things have grown uglier here." "Coachmen and servants think they have the right to be rude." "I miss the sweeter France of yore, when all was harmony and light." "It was a good place for a foreigner to live." "Dignity was respected." "Dignity is the first thing you lose." "Soon you'll have the people as your monarch:" "the most violent and tyrannical of monarchs!" "Stop it!" "I forbid you to say that!" "I'm speaking to you, Mr. Casanova." "Or Madame Casanova!" "I thank you for that!" "You just proved my point!" "In the older France, no one would have so rudely forbidden me to speak." "Young man, you should only forbid" " actions which can harm society." " Words can be harmful, too." "Maybe." "But to forbid them is a step towards tyranny." "He's handsome, but what a disposition!" "In Bologna, we call them "ball busters"!" "The girl is charming, too." "Not bad." "A bit dark, maybe." "If God made them black, there's a reason." "Out of the way!" "These roads are truly getting dangerous!" "Nature calls!" "Good idea." "Wretched bladder!" "I'm at that age:" "you never stop peeing, and what an effort!" "You always get punished in the places where you sinned." "True!" "If it was limited to that area... but the eyes, hands, feet, they all weaken." "I don't have gout, it's my kidneys." "You're lucky:" "I have gout and kidney trouble." "In case you didn't notice, I'm also a bit deaf." "What?" "Finally... seeing our fate:" "poverty, illnesses, sorrows, suffering..." "They have one advantage:" "they make dying easier." "I visited Voltaire in his chateau in Ferney, in 1779." "He was dying." "We had a fierce argument, but he fed me sublimely." "You two!" "Get some rocks for the wheels." "Block the wheel." "The other one, too!" "Now push!" "Harder!" "Mr. Baldi, I'm coming!" "De Florange!" "How are my other darlings up there?" "Poor Mr. Baldi." "Were you scared, Mr. Baldi?" "What did you do all alone?" "Play with yourself?" "An alfresco lunch, hurriedly consumed, and not by just anyone!" "This bottle is from the Royal cellars." "I forgot, you're a seer." "No, I'm just observant, even though my eyesight is failing." "I've drunk that wine at the King's table." "You know..." "I saw you when I was fifteen." "Really?" "Can you keep a secret?" "You were my first love." "You met me too soon, and I met you too late." "So it goes..." "Our travelling companions are waiting." "Seeing it's you, they must think we went off for a flirtatious interlude..." "For me, it was one, Madame." "Off we go!" ""Enemies of the Revolution have kidnapped the King."" ""Loyal citizens must wrest him from them"" ""and return him to the Assembly."" ""Signed:" "La Fayette."" "Orders are also hereby issued to stop the 6-horse green coach carrying the King and his family." "Six horses carrying the King and his family." "I, Commander Bayon of the seventh Battalion of the second division of the National Guard." "dispatched by the city of Paris to arrest them, here at the first stop after a 6-hour journey, do hereby send citizen..." "Gabriel Vallet, Excellency." "Gabriel Vallet, to the Châlons town hall, to carry the above-mentioned orders to all townships from here to the border." "If it takes you more than an hour, you're guilty of treason!" "Leave at once!" "You heard?" "Orders to arrest the King and his entire family." "You can't arrest the King!" "By now, he's at the head of 1,000 hussars!" "You knew about this?" "I didn't know it, but I foresaw it last night." "The King fled along this road today?" "Mr. Baldi, maybe you can catch him." "How does the news strike you, Mr. Paine?" "A king in flight grows less of a king by the minute." " You're the host?" " At your service." "On his throne or in flight, no king ever made me miss a meal." "By the fire." "I saw him." "But it wasn't him." "He wasn't wearing his red coat!" "Yes, it was." "Here." "There he is!" "Just as he was." "Supreme of truffles, roast partridge, foie gras, carp in sorrel, cheeses, desserts, wines..." "Bring me the lot!" "They saw six people in the large carriage." "An old woman, two ladies, one very pretty, two little girls, a majordomo." "That's Madame de Tourzel, the Royal children's governess," "Madame Elizabeth, the King's sister." "The pretty lady is Marie-Antoinette." "And the Dauphin, dressed as a girl." "And his Royal sister." "The majordomo in frock coat and round hat." "The King?" "In a frock coat?" "What's so odd about that?" "A King can't flee in his crown and ermine cape." "Much too showy!" "The King isn't fleeing!" "He's on his way to joint his allies." "For the good of France." "The pride of kings throws humanity into confusion." "France is confused because of people who wanted a new government." "I love disorder." "No government is good." "Because it enriches one part of society, and impoverishes another." "More than either would be in their natural state." "Governments, alas, are governed!" "But worst of all, is the government of the aristocracy and the monarchy." "The two most tyrannical swindles in the history of man." "For instance, look at the Royal Beast of England, dear George III." "He needed more subjects overseas to squeeze like lemons, to keep up the luxurious living at his court." "But America..." "General Lafayette edited that." "When did they discover he'd fled?" "7:00 a.m." "When did you leave?" "8:00 a.m." "What's happening in Paris?" "The city's in turmoil." "How did you decide they'd headed for Metz?" "To meet up with de Bouillé's troops at the border?" "Obviously." " Roast partridges!" " Fine!" "Do you always eat that much?" "Even when I indulged in other pleasures besides eating." "It's superb!" "In France, it's even worse." "4,000 privileged families, princes de blood, sword, or church, who despise each other and vegetate at Court, indulging in every excess." "Since you're so well-informed about Court life, did you know those 4,000 families contribute huge sums to the Royal budget and to charity?" "The people don't want charity." "They want their rights." "Their rights... and the duties that go with them!" "The duty to respect their King!" "A King by divine right!" "The aristocrats were the first to neglect those duties." "Most fled abroad and forgot their King." "I don't share your ideas!" "Don't get so excited!" "As to that "divine right"..." "How did the aristocracy obtain it?" "Do they have special access to God that the people don't have?" "No, it's a trick to hand down the office from father to son, so that after a lion, an ass may sit on the throne!" "Bon appetit on this day of mystery!" "Right, Madame?" "Won't you have something?" "Gladly, but I usually fast." "I have nothing against revolutions." "They can do good." "But those who make them are seldom good." "For you the only good people are those who don't make revolutions." "For us judges, this period..." "For the likes of you..." "Are you glad he escaped?" "Marat was right:" "La Fayette's in league with the King and the great whore!" "You swine!" " I forbid you to say that!" " Go ahead and stop me!" "He can't stop a thing." "You can stop yourself!" "For dignity's sake." "Aline, pick it up." "Sorry, Judge." "Your cheese." "He has a liver this big!" "What a trip!" "They're everywhere!" "I'm here." "With all your things, Mr. Casanova." "All's well." "Good lad!" "Like some?" "Good!" "Princess, give me a kiss!" "What's a kiss to you?" "Give me a kiss!" "Come with me!" "Princess... your King ran away, I saw him." "He said to me: "Take that bitch!"" "What a pretty neck!" "For my brother-in-law." "He's an executioner in Paris!" "What do you want?" "A kiss, too?" "All right, Countess?" "It's all over." "You offended me more than that wretch!" "What is it, Madame?" "Look at your hair!" "That brute!" "Marie-Madeleine, quick!" "What's going on?" "None of your business, sir!" "He's such a pest!" "Come help Madame." "Leave that alone!" "People are restless." "Today... anything could happen." "Would you be kind enough to say farewell for me, to our tempestuous friends." "I haven't been consoled." "My life is a wasteland." "You took my breath away." "You made your 1,000th conquest in that coach." "Please don't refuse." "Today anything could happen." "You said so yourself." "Make my happiness complete." "It's insanity, but take me away!" "We'll go to my place in Champagne, or wherever you want." "Please, Giacomo..." "What you call insanity, would have been the height of wisdom until a while ago." "But at the age of 66, one develops another kind of wisdom, that doesn't bring happiness, but protects one" "from disappointments." "It's cold today." "Where was I?" "Thank you for your double offer." "Your beauty and your country house." "I'd have loved them both." "Believe me, only I will regret this." "This old man didn't take your breath away." "It was his name, his reputation, his past." "Today, those things are gone." "In any case, Madame, thank you again!" "I'm glad to have met the great Restif." "And I'll never forget the Chevalier de Seingalt." "Your horse is dead." "Of a burst heart." "I can saddle another for you." "Hey, you!" "I broke my ass on a saddle for 40 leagues, at six leagues an hour!" "You have room!" "Take me in your carriage!" "Since you asked so politely..." "See, Madame?" "That's the company my new wisdom gets me!" "Thank you for your precious help, young friend." "I'll remember you." "And I you, Mr. Casanova." "A pity we didn't meet in our youth..." "Who knows!" "Of course..." "Why not!" "One shouldn't turn down anything on principle." " My gout!" " You're fit as a fiddle!" "Say good-bye to your lovely mistress." "I won't fail." "Sir, if you'll allow me..." "The supreme of truffles, partridges, desserts, cheeses, wines..." "Who will pay for them?" "Me!" "If you'll shout:" "long live dignity!" " Long live dignity!" " Bravo!" "Here, my good man." "Here..." "A letter of credit signed by Count Waldstein, the last of that noble lineage." ""I hereby agree"" ""to honor within six months,"" ""payment of the debt endorsed by Count Wallenstein."" ""...in the amount of..."" ""Write the desired amount in the blank space."" ""...on behalf of Mr..."" ""Write in the creditor's name."" ""Signed and approved"" ""by the Chevalier de Seingalt."" "Jean-Louis Romeuf, aide to General La Fayette." "Did a Captain of the National Guard come through from Paris?" "He just left by carriage." "But he'd been here an hour." "I must leave at once." "A horse!" "He gets a carriage!" "Drink, Madame." "It's cocoa." "Drink some, it always did you good." "Why are you crying, Madame?" "It's over now." "The crowd spilled over from the streets into the Royal Palace." "But only to look around." "They touched nothing." "In the King's room, beside the huge ceremonial bed, a woman sold cherries for six sous a pound." "That's cheap!" "People had climbed onto monuments and bell-towers." "The General came out, oblivious of taunts and insults, and faced the crowd:" ""Is it in the public interest to arrest the King?"" "Everyone shouted: "Yes!"" "Then he said:" ""I'll take care of it personally."" "Gentlemen, at your leisure." "The stage is ready." "So the orders to capture the King, passed on by that captain, came from my friend La Fayette?" "There was no mention of capture in the General's orders." "They state:" ""The enemies of the Revolution have kidnapped the King."" "The General dictated them to me." "How dare that captain!" "He altered the General's orders!" "La Fayette ordered both of you to leave?" "Only me." "The Captain was sent by the Assembly." "Calling it a "kidnapping"!" "What a brilliant idea to save the crown!" "But why did he do it?" "It could divide the various factions in the Assembly." "La Fayette's aide is here." "Mr. de Romeuf?" "How many officers are following the King?" "Where will I sit?" "There's our stage." "What torture!" "Now I'll sit beside the coachman." "I insist!" "It's no place for a lady!" "A lady is always a lady." "Wherever she sits!" "You always talk of revolution." "Now I'll make one:" "I'll sit beside the citizen coachman." "That's Mr. de Wendel's seat." "Tell him to sit down!" "It's unbearable!" "Homeless?" "The Royal Palace is for rent!" "If you see the King:" "lead him back to the stables!" "Do you have a plan, Lieutenant?" "When I get to Châlons," "I'll ask for news of the King's kidnappers at the Town Hall." "I see." "The same place where Capt. Bayon, who left with Casanova, hopes to get news of the King's escape!" "Kidnapped or escaping, the King did well to leave the Palace, where he was under house arrest." "Humbled by the Assembly, he'd become the shadow of a monarch." "But the people are for the King." "They call him "good daddy", and love him." "They'll rejoice when he returns." "You may be right." "But the people have changed." "The lower classes in the cities and the peasants realized they're poor." "Of course!" "Revolutionary propaganda taught them that!" "They're starting to wonder if in the hereafter, after death, the last will really come first." "Faced with that doubt, they've become interested in the here and now." "No, Mr. Restif." "I could give you countless examples of the people's love of its King." "His Majesty's trip to Cherbourg." "June 21, 1786." "Inauguration of the Naval port of Cherbourg." "In the presence of King Louis XVI, the last of the huge conical towers, eight of which are already anchored to the ocean floor to mark off the harbour, is towed out to sea." "I had the pleasure of being there." ""He and the crowd were one", as the War Minister said." "The cheers of 20,000 citizens drowned out the salute of 600 canons!" "I know you disapprove of all I say." "But if you'd seen him at Cherbourg in his red coat..." "He was my King, my ideal, my religion." "May I have a look, Countess?" "Traveling papers, please." "We're going to Metz." "I'm giving a concert." "I'm going to Metz, too." " To Nancy." " I'm home, I live here." "Did you have a good trip, Madame?" "Get Madame's baggage." "Something's wrong..." "They went through two hours ago instead of five." "They were alone." "It seems the Duke of Choiseul and his 40 hussars left 15 minutes before their carriage arrived." "They didn't wait!" "This was to be the safest part of their journey." "With more soldiers at each relay." "What happened?" "No one knows." "I'll go get news!" "What went wrong?" "I saw the coach..." "Drouet says he met them..." "You're sure it was him?" "It's the same face that's on the notes!" "Look." "I waved and a woman waved back." "That explains all those soldiers this morning." "I was at Clermont fair." "I saw 150 hussars!" "They told us we were to escort a treasure coming from Paris to Metz." "That reassured us local folks." " Then what?" " What?" "When was this "treasure" coming through?" "At five o'clock." "Then at six o'clock a cabriolet appeared carrying the strangest fellow." "He had little braids and ribbons everywhere!" "And frizzy hair!" "And he was all dressed in yellow!" "Leonard!" "What was that screamer doing here?" "Choiseul had given him a note for Capt. d'Andoins." "It read: "The treasure won't come through today."" "But the "treasure", or something very valuable, did come through." "And how!" "At 7:45, a carriage appeared, the biggest I've ever seen, and a cabriolet." "But we'd had orders to unsaddle our horses and were off duty." "What did the Captain do?" "What could he do?" "He came over and said:" ""Things have gone awry." "Hurry or you're lost."" ""Change horses fast and away with you!"" "Drouet had been out haymaking in the fields." "When he saw..." "Who is Drouet?" "He's our postmaster." "He saw the huge carriage, and feared for the horses on the climb." "Now he says he recognized the King and Queen:" "as a dragoon, he'd met them in Versailles." "As if Drouet hobnobbed with the King!" "Then a man arrived with orders from Paris..." "From Captain Bayon." "Don't ask me!" "He said the King had left." "They were disarmed, the Captain was jailed." "Drouet went to Town Hall, and the mayor told him to go with all speed after the carriage." "He left Verdun about the same time as Guillaume." "Known as "Bignose"!" "Then Baron de Goguelat's plan didn't work!" "Why?" "Was there a traitor?" "No, incompetent officers, disloyal troops, towns in favour of the new order." "And our good people?" "If they recognized their King, why didn't they protect him?" "I don't know, Madame." "They're so different, seen from up close." "I don't understand, tonight they seem distant and hostile." "Those ingrates!" "A pleasure meeting you." "I hope the rest of your journey is pleasant." "One moment." "Mr. Baldi, come here!" "Why are you here?" "What are you looking at?" "Let's go home." "This morning I woke up, sensing something important would happen to me." "The King and Queen came here with their children." "So I said to myself:" ""This is a big day for my inn."" "I was wrong." "The King wasn't it." "It was your coming." "That's what made it a big day for me." "Careful!" "Can we have drink?" "Giacomo, it's Nicolas Restif!" "I've had the pleasure." " The husband of my poor Zephire." " Mother!" "My son!" "The husband of our Zephire." "You married my Zephire?" "Yours?" "No, hers." "Well, yours." "She's our Zephire." "Nicolas, Giacomo was my first love." " Then you're my father-in-law?" " And you my son-in-law?" " Come, sit down." " What a day!" "All three of us together!" " Nanette, what about me?" " Plato, go away!" "There's no room!" "Madame is waiting for you." "We're ready to leave!" "Go!" "Mr. Restif will travel with me." "We'll catch up with you." "Pig's feet, St. Menehould style." "Sir, if you wish to dine, we have mackerel in sauce, stuffed duck, or pig's feet, St. Menehould style." "Bring everything." "Absolutely everything." "They're my guests." "Zephire left me after a year." "She left me for a better world, at least, I hope it is." "Yes, pneumonia carried her off in three weeks." "No one told me... me, her papa!" "Listen..." "I'll tell you a secret." "Your Zephire wasn't my daughter." "Too many of them have been attributed to me, too." "But as the saying goes, one's never too sure of the father." "Or of the mother." "I have no recollection of this Madame Nanette." "I'd never seen her before tonight." "Then why did you go along when she said..." "Who knows?" "Love of intrigue, gallantry, a sense of theatre..." "I don't know." "When she hugged me, as I came into the inn, I knew I'd never met her." "But why say so?" "Why disappoint a woman past her prime in front of her villagers" "Then I'm not your son-in-law?" "Since I'm not your father-in-law..." "I'm not so sure my Zephire was Nanette's daughter, either." "It happened on a journey, a long time ago." "Shortly after Zephire's death, I stopped at an inn." "The proprietress had just lost her daughter in Paris." "Her name was Zephire!" "What a discovery!" "In truth, some of the details didn't tally." "But why quibble?" "Nanette's grief was so genuine." "She was so glad to meet her poor daughter's husband!" "And in those days," "Nanette was still a great beauty." "So we pooled our sorrows in her bed, for three whole days." ""In the Palace a perverse Queen,"" ""incites a cowardly King"" ""to massacre all patriots."" ""The gold and weapons of France"" ""are sent abroad so tyrants"" ""on our borders..."" "Help me!" "For over six years now," "I've lived in Bohemia at Dux Castle." "I'm Count Waldstein's librarian." "In fact, I'm a kind of court jester." "I'm forever fighting with the servants, who mock me and insult me." "That's why I've run away." "I wrote to the Duke of Weimar, to the Duchesse of Saxony." "I want a position with some dignity." "But they've kept me waiting!" "Shall we sit over there?" "Count Waldstein sent two men to Paris, to tell me he was sorry and wanted me back." "He even honoured some letters of credit on which I'd signed his name, for some German Jews." "He did it because he wants me to return." "He's bored." "He needs me to amuse his guests." "I'll show you how." "Noble ladies and knights!" "I'll tell you the story of how I pretended to fall from my horse, opposite the house of the two most virtuous sisters in Dresden." "Marika and Birgitt!" "Rescued and laid out on a bed in their house," "I asked them to fetch from my saddle-bag, a flask of miraculous ointment." "It was just" "Burgundy wine!" "I asked Birgitt and Marika to rub it with nimble fingers on my naked skin, and massage me where..." "Restif, I'm really tired." "I think I..." "It's time I returned to port." "But I want to be alone." "On foot." "Not escorted by gendarmes." "In Paris, I got them off my tail..." "A fresh horse!" "Hurry!" "Dr. Mangin!" "What is it?" "Where are you off to so late?" "To Paris!" "To carry a message from the town of Varennes to the Assembly:" "the King and Queen have been arrested!" "They are at present in the house of Mr. Sauce, the deputy-mayor of Varennes." "They were arrested coming into town by some patriots, who'd been alerted by Mr. Drouet, postmaster in St. Menehould." "All the townspeople are guarding the store." "What kind of store?" "Mr. Sauce makes candles, and sells spices and colonial wares." "Where is Varennes?" "About six leagues from here, toward Montmédy." "It was lucky the postmaster ran into his men bringing back the horses." "They showed him where the coach veered off.." "Or else Drouet would have headed for Verdun, not Varennes." "Lucky for whom?" "An all-night wake..." "It's a whole new show, the audience takes to the stage." "Your Machiavelli wrote:" ""Chains are too heavy and bonds too tight"" ""for those who have tasted freedom."" "In my seminary "The Prince" was banned." "I presume you're going to Varennes." "That's why I left Paris, to catch up with them and witness the event." "You'll write about a royal family, prisoners of a candle-maker!" "Even Shakespeare couldn't make a tragedy of that!" "I don't write tragedies." "I just jot down what I see." "There's our coach." "I'll head for Verdun." "I'd rather not attend a king's funeral." "The French people don't want his death." "My dear Restif, when a king is captured, not by another king, but by a postmaster, he's as good as dead." "They've found me." "But I'm not beaten yet!" "In my youth," "I escaped from deeper dungeons." "When I was young..." "But youth is a habit we soon get over." "Restif, do me a favour when you get back to Paris..." "Go see Goldoni, he's old, sick, and nearly blind." "The new regime cancelled his artist's pension." "He's sold his library, book by book." "He's in a garret on rue Dauphine." "It's a promise." "Farewell." "Out of the way!" "Make way for the coach!" "Go to Varennes!" "Head for Varennes." "This is a State service." "We're due in Metz." "And we're due in Varennes!" "I must get to Metz." "I have business to do." "Our business, Mr. Paine." " No coach for Metz?" " I'll try and arrange one." "I'll meet you in Alsatia in a few days." "My foundries won't move!" "Our baggage!" "They're going to Varennes." "Our baggage!" " They're going to Varennes." " Calm down!" "I can see why you're worried." "Your wife's alone in Paris, with all this mess." "Go back to her." "Catch the first stage, you'll be home by tomorrow morning." "No, if I came all this way..." " So what?" " What about you?" "I've got the theatre." "My concert." "Don't worry about me." "You can't stay all alone." "Me?" "I am alone." "I've always been alone." "I'm used to it." " Hadn't you understood?" " Virginie, you have me!" "You have your art." "You..." "It's easier to get rid of a king, than of your wife." "As for my art..." "I'm in the first act... at the back of the stage with the choir." "They only hired me because of you and our relationship." "Don't sulk, Mr. Baldi." "You'll be my watchdog, you'll take care of me, right?" "Maybe M. de Wendel will agree to keep me company till we reach Metz?" " It will be a pleasure." " Thank you." "Dearie, go get the basket of doggies." "Doggies!" "Madame..." "Mr. Emile wants me to..." "Mr. Emile must be me." "Emile wants me to see him to his village." "It's nearby." "I said I had to ask you for permission." "If she doesn't give it, what then?" "I won't go." "Then you don't love him." "No, wait." "Madame always took care of me." "I was brought to her when I was 9." "Madame, maybe for him I'm just a whim, a curiosity." "But now for the first time," "I want to laugh and cry." "Marie Madeleine, what do you want to do?" "Come or don't come, but decide yourself." "Go on." "Madame, tonight such strange things are happening..." "I wonder what, in these troubled times, a poor man can do with his 100 workmen to care for." "Maybe a poor man shouldn't have 100 workers to care for." "Will you forgive me?" "I was never so afraid in my life." "Afraid..." "Not only of that madman who attacked me afraid of the speeches, of the people, of you afraid of the unfamiliar, afraid for all I'm about to lose..." "The Court is a cosy nest..." "Like the King's red coat at Cherbourg, it meant security." "This has nothing to do with ideals." "If I felt secure with some other ideal, that would suit me." "My father was a brewer, so you can imagine..." "Will you forgive me?" "It was only fear." "Won't you be afraid tomorrow?" "Kings are notoriously ungrateful, and fallen kings are even worse." "Raise my spirits tonight?" "No one can do that for you." "All of us are afraid." "Faith and ideals are to protect us from fear." "But we must find the ideals that suit us." "Yes, Countess." "And when we realize our ideals have reached a dead end, we must dare to change them." "Change is what scares me." "When cats and buffoons lose their rich masters, they're pelted with stones." "In the American Declaration of Independence we changed the word "property" to "pursuit of happiness"." "Were you happy, Mr. Jacob?" "No, I was always too afraid..." "to give up what I had." "And..." "I hate happiness!" "To Varennes!" "I ran into my postmen coming back with my horses." "They warned me that the coach had left the road to Verdun." "To head for Varennes-Montmédy." "So we did the same, took a shortcut through the woods, that saved us a good 45 minutes." "Reaching Varennes, we were delighted to see in the darkness the two coaches stopped by the church waiting for fresh horses." "Don't stay there." "I didn't know the post-station had been moved." "Beyond the bridge over the river." "Half a mile further, and they'd all have been safe." "Luckily, the nearby inn still had some customers, all good patriots." "We worked out a plan:" "some came here to wake up Sauce, the mayor, while we built a barricade at the bridge," " so the coaches couldn't cross." " Or any soldiers come in." "Meanwhile, my husband went to cross-examine the travellers." "We'd been told they were Russians." "But they all spoke French." "A doctor!" "A lady-in-waiting has stomach pains." "Stomach pains!" "Next, they'll blame it on my food!" "Annette, go fetch the doctor." "Dr. Mangin's away." "Get Dr. Porel." "Get the doctor, I tell you." "Hurry!" "Excuses, to delay them!" "To Paris!" "The children are sleeping!" "Those bells!" "Two men with orders from the Assembly and from Gen. La Fayette." "They're from Paris." "He arrested the King:" "the mayor, Mr. Sauce." "No, deputy-mayor." "The mayor's away." "I arrested no one." "The shock of it all, the dark night..." "The traveller's own safety made it unwise for them to go on, so I invited them to rest in my home, that's all." "When we got back to the carriage, I shouted to Sauce:" ""If you let them leave, you'll be guilty of treason!"" "It's true, he shouted that." "That's Mr. Drouet, postmaster at St. Menehould." "When Sauce asked to see their passport, a man in livery ordered the coachman to move on." "So I shouted:" ""One step and we'll shoot!"" "Yes, that's what he shouted." "I told all the lads in Varennes to aim their guns." "Which weren't loaded!" "I didn't know it, neither did the travellers." "So they got out and went with Sauce." "As you can imagine, I was in a state:" "it was late, my house was full of royalty." "I had to get rooms ready, make food..." "When His Majesty kissed my husband," "I was moved to tears." "It was like a family finding a long-lost father again." "The King said to me: "In Paris, I lived surrounded by daggers."" ""I came to revisit"" ""my loyal subjects in the countryside,"" ""to experience again the peace and freedom I'd lost."" "Freedom!" "Freedom to flee abroad." "Drouet!" "A monster from hell!" "His Majesty said he only planned to go..." "To Montmédy, not far from here." "Where Bouillé, that blackguard, waits to escort him across the border!" "No, he'll go back to Paris!" "Right now." "Prepare the coach!" "To Paris!" "They're resting!" "Those bells!" "You see, what a mess!" "A good thing you people got here!" "Come on up and see His Majesty." "Make way for the Assembly's envoys!" "They've come from Paris!" "Let's hope this nasty business does our town some good." "The King promised he'd help, but we're banking on the Assembly." "I sent Dr. Mangin straight to Paris so they'd know the King was my guest." "I also dispatched to the far side of town, some old wooden cannons." "Make way for the Assembly's envoys." "Please..." "Countess de la Borde, how come you're here?" "Baron de Goguelat, what happened to you?" "A bullet hit my shoulder as I made my way through the local Guardsmen to reach this wretched inn." "And your infallible plan to escort the King?" "Counter-orders, delays, mutinous hussars, the meddling of the Queen's hairdresser..." "Do you have an even more infallible plan now?" "We must delay the King's departure till the Marquis de Bouillé gets here from Montmédy." "I advised the King to shoot his way out, but he refused." "Can you blame him?" "Idiocy is the worst of treasons." "And no revolution will ever stop it." "Sire, two envoys from the Assembly wish to be received by Your Majesty." "Sire..." "The King." "You won't get far." "The interests of the State..." "In Paris, blood is running." "Our wives, our children, our mothers may be slaughtered." "Am I not a mother, too, sir?" "The Queen!" "Sire!" "We've brought a decree from the Assembly." "Where is it?" "Lt. Romeuf, the General's aide, has it." "Monsieur de Romeuf!" "You, of all people!" "I hoped not to catch up with you." "I'm here to serve you." "France no longer has a King!" "Don't let it soil my children's bed." "Her Majesty is right..." "From her point of view." "Take me away!" "When he embraced my husband, I was so moved." "It was like a family reunited with their father, after fearing they'd lost him." "Make way!" "Calm down, Madame." "I'll deal with the baggage." "The journal just came from Paris!" "Let me read it!" "Citizens!" "The "Friend of the People" from Paris." "Listen to Marat:" ""It's a thankless task to be right six months ahead of time."" "Make way!" ""Didn't I predict that Louis would flee?"" ""How did a whole family that we wrongly"" ""felt stood for the well-being of France"" ""escape from us in the heart of Paris?"" ""Beware of the vows of Princes."" ""The Austrian woman seduced La Fayette."" ""Louis XVI in livery escaped with the Dauphin,"" ""his wife and his whole family."" ""The Father of France abandoned his people"" ""and escaped to send us instead of his royal person"" ""a lengthy foreign and internal war."" ""The people's conduct in the most difficult moments,"" ""proves that it no longer needs leaders."" ""The time has come for the heads of Bailly and La Fayette to roll,"" ""and of all the villains in the General Staff and the Assembly."" ""You need a military tribunal,"" ""or you are lost!" To Paris!" ""Last night at eleven o'clock"" ""Louis XVI went to bed after receiving this virtuous order."" ""His only contact with virtue!"" ""At 11:15 he left the Luxembourg Palace with his wife."" ""This plot, a scheme of the Bourbon and Austrian royal houses,"" ""this cowardly plot hatched 18 months ago..."" " Need anything else?" " No, thanks." ""The King thought he could escape the National Guard,"" ""and the disgruntled people of Paris,"" ""to find refuge among his loyal generals."" ""and kind-hearted country folk."" ""Instead he ran into the National Guard and disgruntled country folk."" ""who blocked his way to the border."" "You're saying his arrest was a victory for the disgruntled people." "I spoke of deeds, not victory." "Moments ago, I watched the faces of those peasants." "They weren't moved, they weren't children happy to have found a "long-lost father"." "Those faces betrayed centuries of famine, of poverty and humiliation..." "And the fear that the end of injustice is not yet at hand." "For that they'll have to wait for a future occasion." ""Now is the time to make the heads of ministers roll..."" ""the heads of the Chiefs-of-Staff, of generals..."" ""...of counter-revolutionary townships"" ""of traitors in the Assembly."" ""Start by securing them, if there's still time."" ""Men of the National Guard, in these critical times,"" ""you've been abandoned by your officers"" ""who hide when danger lurks"" ""and only come out to betray their country..."" "Gentlemen, I forgot to thank you." "The journey was long and ended badly, but because of you, its memory will be easier to bear." "Countess, would you satisfy my curiosity?" "What was in those 2 mysterious packages," "I helped you carry last night?" "So it was you?" "That's why I mistrusted you from the start!" "An understandable attitude to have towards men of letters, chroniclers, scribblers..." "We're a race of spies, we don't participate or form bonds, yet we describe, classify and sometimes confuse everything." "That's why, am I right, Countess?" "We're a curious lot." "The costume His Majesty wore at the inauguration of Cherbourg." "Tomorrow is Corpus Christi." "He was to wear it at Montmédy, to reviews his troops." "It must be exhausting to play King!" "To a great task, great honours!" "If he'd travelled in that outfit, they might not have dared arrest him." "Who knows..." "Your Majesty!" "Long live the people!" " Long live France!" " Everyone to Paris!" "That's what one learns from travelling." "See the King mount the scaffold with his confessor, on January 21, 1793!" "We've already included it in our machine to view the new world." "Come see Louis XVI." "There's the head of the King of France, falling into the basket, sliced by the guillotine." "Step right up!" "Bring your children!" "See the great moments of history with your own eyes." "Don't push!" "Come see the history of the world in moving pictures." "Reality becomes fantasy, fantasy becomes reality." "In this magic box, I'll show you a new world." "With its distances and perspectives." "One sou per person." "What you'll see is beautiful..." "Folks, in this machine we have..." "Nicolas Edmé Restif de la Bretonne wrote in 1792 these words that are in the second part of Chapter 17 of the Revolutionary Nights:" ""All those ideas exhausted me."" ""For relief I plunged into the centuries that followed."" ""I saw the people of 1992 reading our history."" ""I strained to hear them and I heard."" ""The harshness of their judgment terrified me."" ""Some claimed we lacked humanity,"" ""whereas those with extreme views, as in my day, approved."" "All Europe, apparently, had a new government, united and at peace." "But I saw in the pages of history the terrible jolts it had endured." "I thought I heard the readers saying to each other:" ""We're so glad we didn't live in those terrible times"" ""when human life was valueless."" ""Once the pain is over,"" ""if you didn't die of it, it becomes a joy,"" ""and one needs such jolts"" ""to appreciate the price of tranquillity."" ""As you need an illness to appreciate good health."" "What fine reasoning, exclaimed a visionary," "You're no different than people 200 years ago." "You're made of the same organic molecules." "Now you're at peace, because those molecules are weary of war." "But beware." "After a little rest, you'll feel strong again, and I'm afraid you'll go back to it."