William Makepeace Thackeray

Ballads


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And woke up the Pikemen of Paris

       To follow the bold Barbaroux.

       "With pikes, and with shouts, and with torches

       March'd onwards our dusty battalions,

       And we girt the tall castle of Louis,

       A million of tatterdemalions!

       We storm'd the fair gardens where tower'd

       The walls of his heritage splendid.

       Ah, shame on him, craven and coward,

       That had not the heart to defend it!

       "With the crown of his sires on his head,

       His nobles and knights by his side,

       At the foot of his ancestors' palace

       'Twere easy, methinks, to have died.

       But no: when we burst through his barriers,

       Mid heaps of the dying and dead,

       In vain through the chambers we sought him—

       He had turn'd like a craven and fled.

      . … .

       "You all know the Place de la Concorde?

       'Tis hard by the Tuilerie wall.

       Mid terraces, fountains, and statues,

       There rises an obelisk tall.

       There rises an obelisk tall,

       All garnish'd and gilded the base is:

       'Tis surely the gayest of all

       Our beautiful city's gay places.

       "Around it are gardens and flowers,

       And the Cities of France on their thrones,

       Each crown'd with his circlet of flowers

       Sits watching this biggest of stones!

       I love to go sit in the sun there,

       The flowers and fountains to see,

       And to think of the deeds that were done there

       In the glorious year ninety-three.

       "'Twas here stood the Altar of Freedom;

       And though neither marble nor gilding

       Was used in those days to adorn

       Our simple republican building,

       Corbleu! but the MERE GUILLOTINE

       Cared little for splendor or show,

       So you gave her an axe and a beam,

       And a plank and a basket or so.

       "Awful, and proud, and erect,

       Here sat our republican goddess.

       Each morning her table we deck'd

       With dainty aristocrats' bodies.

       The people each day flocked around

       As she sat at her meat and her wine:

       'Twas always the use of our nation

       To witness the sovereign dine.

       "Young virgins with fair golden tresses,

       Old silver-hair'd prelates and priests,

       Dukes, marquises, barons, princesses,

       Were splendidly served at her feasts.

       Ventrebleu! but we pamper'd our ogress

       With the best that our nation could bring,

       And dainty she grew in her progress,

       And called for the head of a King!

       "She called for the blood of our King,

       And straight from his prison we drew him;

       And to her with shouting we led him,

       And took him, and bound him, and slew him.

       'The monarchs of Europe against me

       Have plotted a godless alliance

       I'll fling them the head of King Louis,'

       She said, 'as my gage of defiance.'

       "I see him as now, for a moment,

       Away from his jailers he broke;

       And stood at the foot of the scaffold,

       And linger'd, and fain would have spoke.

       'Ho,drummer! quick! silence yon Capet,'

       Says Santerre, 'with a beat of your drum.'

       Lustily then did I tap it,

       And the son of Saint Louis was dumb."

      PART II.

      "The glorious days of September

       Saw many aristocrats fall;

       'Twas then that our pikes drunk the blood

       In the beautiful breast of Lamballe.

       Pardi, 'twas a beautiful lady!

       I seldom have looked on her like;

       And I drumm'd for a gallant procession,

       That marched with her head on a pike.

       "Let's show the pale head to the Queen,

       We said—she'll remember it well.

       She looked from the bars of her prison,

       And shriek'd as she saw it, and fell.

       We set up a shout at her screaming,

       We laugh'd at the fright she had shown

       At the sight of the head of her minion;

       How she'd tremble to part with her own.

       "We had taken the head of King Capet,

       We called for the blood of his wife;

       Undaunted she came to the scaffold,

       And bared her fair neck to the knife.

       As she felt the foul fingers that touch'd her,

       She shrunk, but she deigned not to speak:

       She look'd with a royal disdain,

       And died with a blush on her cheek!

       "'Twas thus that our country was saved;

       So told us the safety committee!

       But psha! I've the heart of a soldier,

       All gentleness, mercy, and pity.

       I loathed to assist at such deeds,

       And my drum beat its loudest of tunes

       As we offered to justice offended

       The blood of the bloody tribunes.

       "Away with such foul recollections!

       No more of the axe and the block;

       I saw the last fight of the sections,

       As they fell 'neath our guns at Saint Rock.

       Young BONAPARTE led us that day;

       When he sought the Italian frontier,

       I follow'd my gallant young captain,

       I follow'd him many a long year.

       "We came to an army in rags,

       Our general was but a boy

       When we first saw the Austrian flags

       Flaunt proud in the fields of Savoy.

       In the glorious year ninety-six,

       We march'd to the banks of the Po;

       I carried my drum and my sticks,

       And we laid the proud Austrian low.

       "In triumph we enter'd Milan,

       We seized on the Mantuan keys;