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<h1> EL DORADO </h1>
<h2> By Baroness Orczy </h2>
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<h2> FOREWORD </h2>
<p>There has of late years crept so much confusion into the mind of the
student as well as of the general reader as to the identity of the Scarlet
Pimpernel with that of the Gascon Royalist plotter known to history as the
Baron de Batz, that the time seems opportune for setting all doubts on
that subject at rest.</p>
<p>The identity of the Scarlet Pimpernel is in no way whatever connected with
that of the Baron de Batz, and even superficial reflection will soon bring
the mind to the conclusion that great fundamental differences existed in
these two men, in their personality, in their character, and, above all,
in their aims.</p>
<p>According to one or two enthusiastic historians, the Baron de Batz was the
chief agent in a vast network of conspiracy, entirely supported by foreign
money—both English and Austrian—and which had for its object
the overthrow of the Republican Government and the restoration of the
monarchy in France.</p>
<p>In order to attain this political goal, it is averred that he set himself
the task of pitting the members of the revolutionary Government one
against the other, and bringing hatred and dissensions amongst them, until
the cry of "Traitor!" resounded from one end of the Assembly of the
Convention to the other, and the Assembly itself became as one vast den of
wild beasts wherein wolves and hyenas devoured one another and, still
unsatiated, licked their streaming jaws hungering for more prey.</p>
<p>Those same enthusiastic historians, who have a firm belief in the
so-called "Foreign Conspiracy," ascribe every important event of the Great
Revolution—be that event the downfall of the Girondins, the escape
of the Dauphin from the Temple, or the death of Robespierre—to the
intrigues of Baron de Batz. He it was, so they say, who egged the Jacobins
on against the Mountain, Robespierre against Danton, Hebert against
Robespierre. He it was who instigated the massacres of September, the
atrocities of Nantes, the horrors of Thermidor, the sacrileges, the
noyades: all with the view of causing every section of the National
Assembly to vie with the other in excesses and in cruelty, until the
makers of the Revolution, satiated with their own lust, turned on one
another, and Sardanapalus-like buried themselves and their orgies in the
vast hecatomb of a self-consumed anarchy.</p>
<p>Whether the power thus ascribed to Baron de Batz by his historians is real
or imaginary it is not the purpose of this preface to investigate. Its
sole object is to point out the difference between the career of this
plotter and that of the Scarlet Pimpernel.</p>
<p>The Baron de Batz himself was an adventurer without substance, save that
which he derived from abroad. He was one of those men who have nothing to
lose and everything to gain by throwing themselves headlong in the
seething cauldron of internal politics.</p>
<p>Though he made several attempts at rescuing King Louis first, and then the
Queen and Royal Family from prison and from death, he never succeeded, as
we know, in any of these undertakings, and he never once so much as
attempted the rescue of other equally innocent, if not quite so
distinguished, victims of the most bloodthirsty revolution that has ever
shaken the foundations of the civilised world.</p>
<p>Nay more; when on the 29th Prairial those unfortunate men and women were
condemned and executed for alleged complicity in the so-called "Foreign
Conspiracy," de Batz, who is universally admitted to have been the head
and prime-mover of that conspiracy—if, indeed, conspiracy there was—never
made either the slightest attempt to rescue his confederates from the
guillotine, or at least the offer to perish by their side if he could not
succeed in saving them.</p>
<p>And when we remember that the martyrs of the 29th Prairial included women
like Grandmaison, the devoted friend of de Batz, the beautiful Emilie de
St. Amaranthe, little Cecile Renault—a mere child not sixteen years
of age—also men like Michonis and Roussell, faithful servants of de
Batz, the Baron de Lezardiere, and the Comte de St. Maurice, his friends,
we no longer can have the slightest doubt that the Gascon plotter and the
English gentleman are indeed two very different persons.</p>
<p>The latter's aims were absolutely non-political. He never intrigued for
the restoration of the monarchy, or even for the overthrow of that
Republic which he loathed.</p>
<p>His only concern was the rescue of the innocent, the stretching out of a
saving hand to those unfortunate creatures who had fallen into the nets
spread out for them by their fellow-men; by those who—godless,
lawless, penniless themselves—had sworn to exterminate all those who
clung to their belongings, to their religion, and to their beliefs.</p>
<p>The Scarlet Pimpernel did not take it upon himself to punish the guilty;
his care was solely of the helpless and of the innocent.</p>
<p>For this aim he risked his life every time that he set foot on French
soil, for it he sacrificed his fortune, and even his personal happiness,
and to it he devoted his entire existence.</p>
<p>Moreover, whereas the French plotter is said to have had confederates even
in the Assembly of the Convention, confederates who were sufficiently
influential and powerful to secure his own immunity, the Englishman when
he was bent on his errands of mercy had the whole of France against him.</p>
<p>The Baron de Batz was a man who never justified either his own ambitions
or even his existence; the Scarlet Pimpernel was a personality of whom an
entire nation might justly be proud.</p>
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