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<h2> CHARLOTTE CORDAY AND ADAM LUX </h2>
<p>Perhaps some readers will consider this story inconsistent with those that
have preceded it. Yet, as it is little known to most readers and as it is
perhaps unique in the history of romantic love, I cannot forbear relating
it; for I believe that it is full of curious interest and pathetic power.</p>
<p>All those who have written of the French Revolution have paused in their
chronicle of blood and flame to tell the episode of the peasant Royalist,
Charlotte Corday; but in telling it they have often omitted the one part
of the story that is personal and not political. The tragic record of this
French girl and her self-sacrifice has been told a thousand times by
writers in many languages; yet almost all of them have neglected the brief
romance which followed her daring deed and which was consummated after her
death upon the guillotine. It is worth our while to speak first of
Charlotte herself and of the man she slew, and then to tell that other
tale which ought always to be entwined with her great deed of daring.</p>
<p>Charlotte Corday—Marie Anne Charlotte Corday d'Armand—was a
native of Normandy, and was descended, as her name implies, from noble
ancestors. Her forefathers, indeed, had been statesmen, civil rulers, and
soldiers, and among them was numbered the famous poet Corneille, whom the
French rank with Shakespeare. But a century or more of vicissitudes had
reduced her branch of the family almost to the position of peasants—a
fact which partly justifies the name that some give her when they call her
"the Jeanne d'Arc of the Revolution."</p>
<p>She did not, however, spend her girlish years amid the fields and woods
tending her sheep, as did the other Jeanne d'Arc; but she was placed in
charge of the sisters in a convent, and from them she received such
education as she had. She was a lonely child, and her thoughts turned
inward, brooding over many things.</p>
<p>After she had left the convent she was sent to live with an aunt. Here she
devoted herself to reading over and over the few books which the house
contained. These consisted largely of the deistic writers, especially
Voltaire, and to some extent they destroyed her convent faith, though it
is not likely that she understood them very fully.</p>
<p>More to her taste was a copy of Plutarch's Lives. These famous stories
fascinated her. They told her of battle and siege, of intrigue and
heroism, and of that romantic love of country which led men to throw away
their lives for the sake of a whole people. Brutus and Regulus were her
heroes. To die for the many seemed to her the most glorious end that any
one could seek. When she thought of it she thrilled with a sort of
ecstasy, and longed with all the passion of her nature that such a
glorious fate might be her own.</p>
<p>Charlotte had nearly come to womanhood at the time when the French
Revolution first broke out. Royalist though she had been in her
sympathies, she felt the justice of the people's cause. She had seen the
suffering of the peasantry, the brutality of the tax-gatherers, and all
the oppression of the old regime. But what she hoped for was a democracy
of order and equality and peace. Could the king reign as a constitutional
monarch rather than as a despot, this was all for which she cared.</p>
<p>In Normandy, where she lived, were many of those moderate republicans
known as Girondists, who felt as she did and who hoped for the same
peaceful end to the great outbreak. On the other hand, in Paris, the party
of the Mountain, as it was called, ruled with a savage violence that soon
was to culminate in the Reign of Terror. Already the guillotine ran red
with noble blood. Already the king had bowed his head to the fatal knife.
Already the threat had gone forth that a mere breath of suspicion or a
pointed finger might be enough to lead men and women to a gory death.</p>
<p>In her quiet home near Caen Charlotte Corday heard as from afar the story
of this dreadful saturnalia of assassination which was making Paris a city
of bloody mist. Men and women of the Girondist party came to tell her of
the hideous deeds that were perpetrated there. All these horrors gradually
wove themselves in the young girl's imagination around the sinister and
repulsive figure of Jean Paul Marat. She knew nothing of his associates,
Danton and Robespierre. It was in Marat alone that she saw the monster who
sent innocent thousands to their graves, and who reveled like some
arch-fiend in murder and gruesome death.</p>
<p>In his earlier years Marat had been a very different figure—an
accomplished physician, the friend of nobles, a man of science and
original thought, so that he was nearly elected to the Academy of
Sciences. His studies in electricity gained for him the admiration of
Benjamin Franklin and the praise of Goethe. But when he turned to politics
he left all this career behind him. He plunged into the very mire of red
republicanism, and even there he was for a time so much hated that he
sought refuge in London to save his life.</p>
<p>On his return he was hunted by his enemies, so that his only place of
refuge was in the sewers and drains of Paris. A woman, one Simonne Evrard,
helped him to escape his pursuers. In the sewers, however, he contracted a
dreadful skin-disease from which he never afterward recovered, and which
was extremely painful as well as shocking to behold.</p>
<p>It is small wonder that the stories about Marat circulated through the
provinces made him seem more a devil than a man. His vindictiveness
against the Girondists brought all of this straight home to Charlotte
Corday and led her to dream of acting the part of Brutus, so that she
might free her country from this hideous tyrant.</p>
<p>In January, 1793, King Louis XVI. met his death upon the scaffold; and the
queen was thrust into a foul prison. This was a signal for activity among
the Girondists in Normandy, and especially at Caen, where Charlotte was
present at their meetings and heard their fervid oratory. There was a plot
to march on Paris, yet in some instinctive way she felt that such a scheme
must fail. It was then that she definitely formed the plan of going
herself, alone, to the French capital to seek out the hideous Marat and to
kill him with her own hands.</p>
<p>To this end she made application for a passport allowing her to visit
Paris. This passport still exists, and it gives us an official description
of the girl. It reads:</p>
<p>Allow citizen Marie Corday to pass. She is twenty-four years of age, five
feet and one inch in height, hair and eyebrows chestnut color, eyes gray,
forehead high, mouth medium size, chin dimpled, and an oval face.</p>
<p>Apart from this verbal description we have two portraits painted while she
was in prison. Both of them make the description of the passport seem
faint and pale. The real Charlotte had a wealth of chestnut hair which
fell about her face and neck in glorious abundance. Her great gray eyes
spoke eloquently of truth and courage. Her mouth was firm yet winsome, and
her form combined both strength and grace. Such is the girl who, on
reaching Paris, wrote to Marat in these words:</p>
<p>Citizen, I have just arrived from Caen. Your love for your native place
doubtless makes you wish to learn the events which have occurred in that
part of the republic. I shall call at your residence in about an hour. Be
so good as to receive me and give me a brief interview. I will put you in
such condition as to render great service to France.</p>
<p>This letter failed to gain her admission, and so did another which she
wrote soon after. The fact is that Marat was grievously ill. His disease
had reached a point where the pain could be assuaged only by hot water;
and he spent the greater part of his time wrapped in a blanket and lying
in a large tub.</p>
<p>A third time, however, the persistent girl called at his house and
insisted that she must see him, saying that she was herself in danger from
the enemies of the Republic. Through an open door Marat heard her mellow
voice and gave orders that she should be admitted.</p>
<p>As she entered she gazed for a moment upon the lank figure rolling in the
tub, the rat-like face, and the shifting eyes. Then she approached him,
concealing in the bosom of her dress a long carving-knife which she had
purchased for two francs. In answer to Marat's questioning look she told
him that there was much excitement at Caen and that the Girondists were
plotting there.</p>
<p>To this Marat answered, in his harsh voice:</p>
<p>"All these men you mention shall be guillotined in the next few days!"</p>
<p>As he spoke Charlotte flashed out the terrible knife and with all her
strength she plunged it into his left side, where it pierced a lung and a
portion of his heart.</p>
<p>Marat, with the blood gushing from his mouth, cried out:</p>
<p>"Help, darling!"</p>
<p>His cry was meant for one of the two women in the house. Both heard it,
for they were in the next room; and both of them rushed in and succeeded
in pinioning Charlotte Corday, who, indeed, made only a slight effort to
escape. Troops were summoned, she was taken to the Prison de l'Abbaye, and
soon after she was arraigned before the revolutionary tribunal.</p>
<p>Placed in the dock, she glanced about her with an air of pride, as of one
who gloried in the act which she had just performed. A written charge was
read. She was asked what she had to say. Lifting her head with a look of
infinite satisfaction, she answered in a ringing voice:</p>
<p>"Nothing—except that I succeeded!"</p>
<p>A lawyer was assigned for her defense. He pleaded for her earnestly,
declaring that she must he regarded as insane; but those clear, calm eyes
and that gentle face made her sanity a matter of little doubt. She showed
her quick wit in the answers which she gave to the rough prosecutor,
Fouquier-Tinville, who tried to make her confess that she had accomplices.</p>
<p>"Who prompted you to do this deed?" roared Tinville.</p>
<p>"I needed no prompting. My own heart was sufficient."</p>
<p>"In what, then, had Marat wronged you?"</p>
<p>"He was a savage beast who was going to destroy the remains of France in
the fires of civil war."</p>
<p>"But whom did you expect to benefit?" insinuated the prosecutor.</p>
<p>"I have killed one man to save a hundred thousand."</p>
<p>"What? Did you imagine that you had murdered all the Marats?"</p>
<p>"No, but, this one being dead, the rest will perhaps take warning."</p>
<p>Thus her directness baffled all the efforts of the prosecution to trap her
into betraying any of her friends. The court, however, sentenced her to
death. She was then immured in the Conciergerie.</p>
<p>This dramatic court scene was the beginning of that strange, brief romance
to which one can scarcely find a parallel. At the time there lived in
Paris a young German named Adam Lux. The continual talk about Charlotte
Corday had filled him with curiosity regarding this young girl who had
been so daring and so patriotic. She was denounced on every hand as a
murderess with the face of a Medusa and the muscles of a Vulcan. Street
songs about her were dinned into the ears of Adam Lux.</p>
<p>As a student of human nature he was anxious to see this terrible creature.
He forced his way to the front of the crowded benches in the court-room
and took his stand behind a young artist who was finishing a beautiful
sketch. From that moment until the end of the trial the eyes of Adam Lux
were fastened on the prisoner. What a contrast to the picture he had
imagined!</p>
<p>A mass of regal chestnut hair crowned with the white cap of a Norman
peasant girl; gray eyes, very sad and serious, but looking serenely forth
from under long, dark lashes; lips slightly curved with an expression of
quiet humor; a face the color of the sun and wind, a bust indicative of
perfect health, the chin of a Caesar, and the whole expression one of
almost divine self-sacrifice. Such were the features that the painter was
swiftly putting upon his canvas; but behind them Adam Lux discerned the
soul for which he gladly sacrificed both his liberty and his life.</p>
<p>He forgot his surroundings and seemed to see only that beautiful, pure
face and to hear only the exquisite cadences of the wonderful voice. When
Charlotte was led forth by a file of soldiers Adam staggered from the
scene and made his way as best he might to his lodgings. There he lay
prostrate, his whole soul filled with the love of her who had in an
instant won the adoration of his heart.</p>
<p>Once, and only once again, when the last scene opened on the tragedy, did
he behold the heroine of his dreams.</p>
<p>On the 17th of July Charlotte Corday was taken from her prison to the
gloomy guillotine. It was toward evening, and nature had given a setting
fit for such an end. Blue-black thunder-clouds rolled in huge masses
across the sky until their base appeared to rest on the very summit of the
guillotine. Distant thunder rolled and grumbled beyond the river. Great
drops of rain fell upon the soldiers' drums. Young, beautiful, unconscious
of any wrong, Charlotte Corday stood beneath the shadow of the knife.</p>
<p>At the supreme moment a sudden ray from the setting sun broke through the
cloud-wrack and fell upon her slender figure until she glowed in the eyes
of the startled spectators like a statue cut in burnished bronze. Thus
illumined, as it were, by a light from heaven itself, she bowed herself
beneath the knife and paid the penalty of a noble, if misdirected,
impulse. As the blade fell her lips quivered with her last and only plea:</p>
<p>"My duty is enough—the rest is nothing!"</p>
<p>Adam Lux rushed from the scene a man transformed. He bore graven upon his
heart neither the mob of tossing red caps nor the glare of the sunset nor
the blood-stained guillotine, but that last look from those brilliant
eyes. The sight almost deprived him of his reason. The self-sacrifice of
the only woman he had ever loved, even though she had never so much as
seen him, impelled him with a sort of fury to his own destruction.</p>
<p>He wrote a bitter denunciation of the judges, of the officers, and of all
who had been followers of Marat. This document he printed, and scattered
copies of it through every quarter in Paris. The last sentences are as
follows:</p>
<p>The guillotine is no longer a disgrace. It has become a sacred altar, from
which every taint has been removed by the innocent blood shed there on the
17th of July. Forgive me, my divine Charlotte, if I find it impossible at
the last moment to show the courage and the gentleness that were yours! I
glory because you are superior to me, for it is right that she who is
adored should be higher and more glorious than her adorer!</p>
<p>This pamphlet, spread broadcast among the people, was soon reported to the
leaders of the rabble. Adam Lux was arrested for treason against the
Republic; but even these men had no desire to make a martyr of this
hot-headed youth. They would stop his mouth without taking his life.
Therefore he was tried and speedily found guilty, but an offer was made
him that he might have passports that would allow him to return to Germany
if only he would sign a retraction of his printed words.</p>
<p>Little did the judges understand the fiery heart of the man they had to
deal with. To die on the same scaffold as the woman whom he had idealized
was to him the crowning triumph of his romantic love. He gave a prompt and
insolent refusal to their offer. He swore that if released he would
denounce his darling's murderers with a still greater passion.</p>
<p>In anger the tribunal sentenced him to death. Only then he smiled and
thanked his judges courteously, and soon after went blithely to the
guillotine like a bridegroom to his marriage feast.</p>
<p>Adam Lux! Spirit courtship had been carried on silently all through that
terrible cross-examination of Charlotte Corday. His heart was betrothed to
hers in that single gleam of the setting sun when she bowed beneath the
knife. One may believe that these two souls were finally united when the
same knife fell sullenly upon his neck and when his life-blood sprinkled
the altar that was still stained with hers.</p>
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