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So near and yet so far-I
From the Revolution in 1789 till the Second Coming of de Gaulle
in 1958, France had a uniquely dramatic history. In a two-part
article, CHRISTOPHER HURST looks at this phenomenon.
IT is sometimes tempting to think that no other people could be
more different from the British than their nearest neighbours,
the French. It is in the way we think and act and look, and in
the nature of our environment. Enter the central districts of
Paris and one immediately sees and feels the difference. London
has many charms, some hidden away, but nowhere can it produce the
drama or glamour of the Champs Elyses, sweeping up to the mighty
Arc de Triomphe built to celebrate Napoleon's victories; the
Place de la Concorde; the Trocadero and the Eiffel Tower; the
Louvre; the Invalides; the two islands (Cit, with the cathedral
of Notre Dame, and St. Louis); the national cemetery of P`ere
Lachaise; the palaces, Elyse and Matignon, occupied respectively
by the President and the prime minister (they have an air of
privacy and elegance lacking at Buckingham Palace); the supremely
smart Faubourg St. Honor; the many grand residences still in
private occupation; and so on. For me the former royal palace at
Versailles lacks soul - Hampton Court and Windsor Castle stir me
far more - but it stands as the supreme European example of
architectural bombast and royal extravagance (by Louis XIV and
his successors) and a model which many lesser monarchs throughout
Europe later emulated. It could be nowhere but in France.
The panorama of French history, political and cultural, since
Louis XIV, the "Sun King" (died 1715), is unequalled in its
inherent drama and its dramatic reverses of fortune. In the art
of the last decades of the Bourbon monarchy one finds an
exquisite refinement; portraits of effeminate noblemen and
pampered ladies, fantasy pastoral landscapes, and furniture for
which only a palace can be a suitable home. (What a contrast to
the robustness of the contemporary English artists Reynolds and
Hogarth, and the furniture and buildings of William Kent.) Yet
this art is shamelessly decadent, reflecting the gross social
inequalities that led to the Revolution of 1789.
And what a revolution it was. Romantics everywhere hailed the
storming of the Bastille on July 14, 1789, as the start of a new
era in the history of mankind ("Blest was it in that dawn to be
alive, and to be young was very heaven," said Wordsworth). The
revolution lasted several agonising years of rapid change, war
and uncertainty. Robespierre was the quintessential revolutionary
- a brilliant young lawyer of burning conviction, known as "the
Incorruptible". He was partly responsible for the Terror, which
consumed the King and Queen, hundreds of aristocrats, and finally
himself.
What could have been more symbolic of the new era than the
revolutionary calendar - rational and scientific with "decades"
(of 10 days) replacing weeks, and the months and days given
beautiful names from nature (e.g. Fructidor and Germinal). "Year
I" began on September 22, 1792. Napoleon reinstated the old
Gregorian calendar in 1806. The Revolution's legacy was
powerfully felt in North and South America and in the nascent
Balkan nation-states (like Greece) that emerged from the Ottoman
empire. To ancient tyrannies it flashed a warning. And out of its
womb leaped Napoleon.
Like the Revolution itself he was in a class of his own - a man
for all time. He waged destructive, costly and ultimately
pointless wars, and ended in ignominious defeat and exile, but he
is remembered in France and throughout the world as a hero. He
was a military genius, whose campaigns are studied to this day,
and his radical transformations of the French legal and
administrative system have survived. Needless to say, he left an
artistic legacy - in the neo-classical "Empire" style.
French history has never been short of contrasts. The Second
Empire of the great man's nephew Napoleon III is a by-word for
vulgar ostentation and imperialistic posturing, but it produced
the drastic rebuilding of much of Paris by Baron Haussmann, which
gave it long, straight vistas in a style that would have appealed
to Louis XIV, and which are generally admired as typically
Parisian. It was a statement about the self-perception of France
- as somehow more glorious than other nations. This obsession was
to recur with de Gaulle in the second half of the 20th Century.
But the younger Napoleon's career also ended in defeat and exile.
Whereas the victorious powers in 1815 were happy to replace
Napoleon I on the throne with a brother of Louis XVI, thus
starting a period of reaction in Europe that lasted till the next
wave of revolutions broke in 1848, the Germany of Bismarck
inflicted the maximum of humiliation on France, robbing it of its
two eastern provinces and proclaiming the king of Prussia Emperor
of Germany in the palace of Versailles. It is hard to imagine
what a similar blow would have done to the British psyche at that
time.
The consequences of that defeat were more notable than the defeat
itself. Paris was besieged by the Germans in 1870-71 for four
months, and when this could only be raised by surrender, the
Parisians revolted against the French National Assembly.
Municipal elections were won by revolutionaries who set up the
famous Commune government. The story is complex, but for 10 weeks
the Communards ruled Paris, deliberately harking back to 1793,
until government troops crushed them, killing 20,000. Thousands
more were imprisoned or deported. For long afterwards the right
regarded the Commune as a dreadful warning, while for the left it
was a glorious forestate of proletarian rule; Karl Marx wrote a
classic text on the subject, and socialist workers continue to
make an annual pilgrimage to the wall at the back of P`ere
Lachaise cemetery where the last Communards were gunned down. The
thought of this happening in London makes the brain reel.
Next in this progression of luridly dramatic happenings we come
to the affair of Alfred Dreyfus (1859-1935), a career officer in
the French army from a wealthy Jewish background, who in 1894 was
accused, on deliberately fabricated evidence, of selling military
secrets to the German military attach. He was tried in an
irregular fashion, and sentenced to life imprisonment on the
notorious Devil's Island off the coast of French Guiana. In front
of a large parade in the Ecole Militaire in Paris he had the
insignia torn off his uniform and his sword broken by a brother-
officer. A photograph exists of the condemned Dreyfus leaving the
court, and the soldiers lining the steps have their backs turned
towards him. The French certainly know how to do these things.
But powerful liberal forces were mobilised to campaign for
Dreyfus's release, and the novelist Emile Zola published a
blistering newspaper article famously headed "J' accuse", for
which the government sued him for libel. In 1899 Dreyfus was
retried and again found guilty, but in 1904 at a further re-trial
his convictions were reversed. He was awarded the Legion of
Honour and promoted from captain to major. The army had fought
long and desperately to preserve its sacred honour, which would
be fatally tarnished if it became known that Dreyfus had been
framed.
The affair divided elite society in France between liberal,
republican, anti-clerical "Dreyfusards" on one side and anti-
republican, Catholic, militaristic, anti-semitic "anti-
Dreyfusards" on the other. The controversy has never died, and it
re-surfaced a few years ago when a move to erect a statue of
Dreyfus in the courtyard at the Ecole Militaire where he was
disgraced had to be dropped due to conservative opposition; and
quite recently a book was published in France claiming that
Dreyfus was guilty. I have visited his modest grave in the Jewish
section of Montparnasse cemetery. On the stone are inscribed the
names of Dreyfus, his wife, his son, his daughter and son-in-law,
and a daughter of the latter who was deported to Auschwitz by the
Nazis and never returned. This last discovery gave me a profound
shock, and I was also amazed that no allusion to the affair
appears on the stone. One thing which no one ever accused Dreyfus
of lacking was dignity.
No review of the landmarks in the history of the French nation
and the French national consciousness could be complete without
dwelling on the supreme battle of attrition in the war of 1914-
18: Verdun. It was fought over a front of 15 miles in eastern
France and lasted 10 months. The tragedy has a heroic grandeur,
as anyone who has wandered round the Ossuary of Douaumont (as I
did early one wet autumn morning, with no other person in sight)
can testify. That starkly modern monument piercing the sky is
like a cry of pain. Alistair Horne, author of a near-definitive
account of the battle, The Price of Glory (1962), says that the
death toll was "at least 700,000". In military terms, it may not
have been completely fruitless; it left the German army
exhausted, whereas a breakthrough might have spelt either a
French military disaster or an agonising prolongation of the war.
Be that as it may, the legend of this bloodiest of battles lives
on as a beacon of heroism and glory. A number of the French and
German military leaders in World War II fought at Verdun as young
officers. One such was Charles de Gaulle. But standing alone was
the "hero of Verdun", the victorious commander of the French
forces in the later stages of the battle: Philippe Ptain.
Promoted Marshal of France after the war, he was destined to play
a role in World War II that caused him to be tried, after the
Allied victory, and sentenced to death by his own countrymen.
(To be continued)
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