Posts Tagged ‘Choderlos de Laclos’
The brain and the catalyst that weakened King Louis 16 defenses during the Revolution
Posted by: adonis49 on: February 18, 2021
The Mastermind behind the success of French Revolution: Chaderlos de Laclos
Posted on October 23, 2014
Pierre-Ambroise Choderlos de Laclos (1741-1803) is famous for his book “The Dangerous Liaisons“. Many considered him a scandalous writer at par with the marquis de Sade or Restif de la Bretonne.
Very few knows that he was the mischievous brain behind the French Revolution that managed to clench victory and ripen its fruits.
Chaderlos de Laclos was the mastermind behind the massive women march from Paris to Versailles.
He figured out that unless the center of power (King and Constituent Assembly) transfer from Versailles to Paris then the revolution might falter.
Chaderlos de Laclos incorporated famous women who used to organize orgies such as Theroigne de Mericourt, and most importantly, transvestite men carrying weapons for the next phase of the march purpose.
As the women marched, the initial slogan was “We want bread“.
Actually, Chaderlos convinced his patron Duke Philip of Orleans to refrain from distributing wheat in Paris for a couple of days to give the impression that the King is failing in his duties. Duke Phillip of Orleans hated the King and the Queen and believed he was better for that position. He is better known in French history as “Equality Phillip”
The King received a delegation of women and promised them to distribute wheat and bread immediately.
The women stayed overnight outside Versailles and the next day the slogan changed to “We want the King in Paris”
The transvestite men with weapons managed to infiltrate inside the Versailles walls and committed a slaughter hood of the surprised guards and almost broke inside the King and Queen quarters.
The King had a wake up call and decided to pleasure the masses and return with all his family to Paris.
La Fayette (the general who participated in the American revolution) was chief of the National Guards and secured the safe passage of the King to Paris.
From then on, the king and his family were practically prisoners to the revolutionaries and unable to leave Paris.
Born in Amiens, Chaderlos , as the second son, was destined to the sacerdotal. Luckily for him, the first son died and Chaderlos could join the military career. He opted for the artillery since he was excellent in math.
He slowly climbed the ranks due to lack of real battle engagements and was promoted Captain in 1771
For the next 17 years, he was still captain, but he took several sabbaticals in order to finish his book.
He married Marie-Soulange Dupre in 1786. She was 24 and he was 42. This was a love marriage that endured and they got 2 kids.
In 1788, after quitting the army, he sided and joined the party of the Duke of Orleans in Paris.
When La Fayette summoned the Duke to go to exile in London on temporary basis, due to his involvement in the women’s march, Chaderlos joined the Duke in exile.
Chaderlos would be promoted General by Napoleon in 1800 and he died of dysentery at Tarente. He was quickly buried in a common grave .
A few maxims of Chaderlos:
1. Hate is more clairvoyant and more ingenious than Love
2. I was taken by surprise to notice that we can feel pleasure by doing good deeds
3. Our ridicule increases proportionally the harder we defend it
4. For him, pleasing is a means. For her it is success itself
5. For man, infidelity is Not inconsistency
6. In love, we can permit excesses only with persons we plan to leave very soon
7. Nature extended constancy to man. And obstinate tendency to women
8. I love her too much to feel jealousy. I have taken the option to be proud of (her foibles)
9. A missed occasion can be recaptured. We never return after a precipitated demand (of marriage?)
10. It is good to accustom someone destined for great adventures by him getting the habit for great events.
Read: Gonzague Saint Bris “La Fayette”
Best French king decapitated: Louis 16
Posted by: adonis49 on: June 13, 2020
Best French king decapitated: Louis 16
Note: Re-edit of “Decapitated French king Louis 16: Probably the best king the French failed to value. 2015”
Talleyrand said during the revolution that culminated in a period of utter Terror:
“The French had no idea that in the Regency, in their long history, they never had it so well and lived that well”
Louis 16 succeeded to his infamous grandfather Louis 15 who reign long, dilapidated the treasury and lost most French colonies to England, including India and Canada.
Louis 16 is another case of orphaned kid: his mother died when he was 10 and his elder brother died at the age 14.
During his upbringing, he was not taken care of, and mostly ignored by his grandfather, his aunts and his sisters. They all considered that his elder brother and even his 2 younger brothers to be far more brilliant and capable for ruling.
The British David Hume esteemed greatly the precocious intelligence of this future king when he saw him as kid. Ben Franklin would describe Louis 16 kindness as “His eyes expressed the milk of human tenderness.
When Louis 15 died, in the most horrible of deaths by measles, Paris celebrated and all joints opened their doors for this happy great news.
As they celebrated when Louis 14 died.
Two successive rules of lapidating the treasury and engaging in frequent wars had exhausted the French citizens.
Louis 15 was the epitome in ineptitude.
He reigned for 59 years, the longest of any monarch in history, and he spent his life fucking little girls of less than 14 years old that the various noble and immoral classes and institutions offered to him in order to keep this lazy kind busy.
The girls stayed prisoners until they gave birth and were sold at high prices for noblemen.
Louis 15 lost the French colonies in India and Canada to England and signed the humiliating treaty to end the 7-year war with terms that weakened the French navy to its minimum and other trade imbalances.
Louis 15 is famous for instituting the “Black cabinet“, the secret service agency or “”Secret du Roi” that was located in Versailles close to his bedroom apartment.
This agency was constituted of 32 members and was headed successively by Prince Conti, Jean-Pierre Tercier and Marshal de Broglie.
This secret service agency figured out ways to tacitly ship weapons to the new American insurgents.
This secret agency ran havoc in Europe by controlling, managing and creating events, scandals and subversive situations.
This most inept king stank awfully for 10 days during his disease and only his 3 sisters were permitted to care for his decaying body.
The body was placed in a double lead box containing chaux to prevent the nauseous smell from emanating. The convoy avoided crossing Paris and was buried silently.
Prime minister Choiseul ruled unperturbed for 12 years.
Russia Catherine II referred to Choiseul as “Europe coachman” and the Queen of Austria adulated him for arranging the marriage of her daughter Marie-Antoinette to the French Dauphin, in direct line for succession.
This astute and dynamic minister wrote about his monarch Louis 15:
“His was the most inept of a person. A soulless and without spirit man. He loved making harm as little kids love to make animals suffer. He lacked any kinds of vigor to make decisions and his vanity was incomparable. He knew he had no potential for anything and totally inconsequential and let his ministers and sweethearts rule the kingdom.
Louis 15 believed that his amorous activities solidified his authority. He believed that everyone must obey his current sweetheart and mistress because she was honoured by his intimacy…”and on and on
Louis 16 was officially sacred absolute monarch in June 1775 at Reims. He went through the traditional motion of touching 2,400 patients, a touch that should heal many of the sick persons.
His first decision was to lock up the latest mistress of Louis 15, Madame du Barry, in a monastery. She was later beheaded by the revolutionaries in 1792.
Once, the people in Paris threw a lavish fiesta and 136 persons died. Louis 16, still a Dauphin (first in line for succession) refused to receive his allotted salary until all the bereaved families got their compensation.
Louis 16 was expert in drawing maps and had passion for geography and marine activities, like building ships and constructing ports. He was also expert in fabricating locks and keys.
He could go hunting for 8 hours straight and kept detailed diaries of his daily activities and expenses.
Louis 16 was a rotund colossus with blue eyes and jovial face, though he was endemically a melancholic person and faithful to his wife.
Sex was not a pleasurable or exciting activity for this hardworking king who read abundantly books and all state reports and who enjoyed eating.
He restituted the rights of the Huguenots (French protestants) that Louis 14 had revoked in the edict of Nantes, a century ago.
He rebuilt the French navy to become at par with the British navy and dispatched two military campaigns to America to support the insurgents, which culminated in the surrender of the British troops in Yorktown.
He was the first and only monarch who recognized the independence of the USA, even before the battle of Yorktown in 1778.
Beaumarchais, the author of the famous play “The Barber of Seville“, was the main agent who exported through a fictitious company all the necessary military equipment and everything else to the American insurgents.
The first French secret agent to contact the insurgents in Philadelphia was Chevalier de Bonvouloir. He met the 5 leading insurgents, including Ben Franklin, Francis Daymon and John Jay in Carpenter’s Hall and sent coded letters to the French ambassador in London who dispatched them to Vergenne, the French foreign affairs minister.
Chevalier de Bonvouloir was a crippled short man. His parents sent him to the Antilles early on in order to safeguard the status of the family from a handicapped unwanted child.
The Congress sent Silas Deane as its clandestine representative to France in order to enrol volunteers and de La Fayette got in contact with him before his first trip to America.
This massive aid to the American insurgents and the reconstitution of the navy exhausted the treasury and a few ministers of finance were sacked and replaced in order to establish an equilibrium in the budget.
In one harsh winter season, Louis 16 ordered distributing supplies to the poorer classes in France.
In 1786, accompanied by the navy and war ministers, Louis 16 inaugurated the construction of the grandiose artificial port in Cherbourg.
Louis 16 could easily retain his power as an absolute monarch if he wished to: He had the means militarily, institutionally and was loved by the people outside Paris. He preferred not to shed blood and agreed on a Constitutional monarchy as stated by the national Assembly.
When he was in Versailles, guarded by loyal Belgium troops, he opted to spare the blood of his citizens, during the women march that was organized by Choderlos de Laclos, and followed La Fayette to Paris where he became practically hostage to the revolutionaries.
As Louis 16 escaped Paris in the night, La Fayette got in contact with Thomas Paine, the American revolutionary who settled in Paris and was against any kinds of monarchy and who wrote the pamphlet “Common Sense” that triggered the Boston Tea Party insurgency.
Thomas Paine said to La Fayette: “This should be a great new to you. You won’t have to care for this Royal family and its security. You have a wonderful opportunity to declare the “Republic
The monarch was caught in Varenne, and he could easily continue his flight in crossing the bridge if he allowed the military to open the way by opening fire on the crowd. La Fayette had to come and secure the return to Paris for his monarch.
In many critical occasions, the king ordered his guards not to fire on the mob. I
n one incident, 500 Swiss guards were killed and massacred by the mob because he ordered them not to defend themselves.
Captain Napoleon Bonaparte was watching this bloody scene from a window. At the first opportunity, Bonaparte fired his canons on the mob and became one of the 3 consuls, before snatching power and becoming an absolute dictator for 16 years.
Thomas Paine convinced the French Assembly to vote for the exile of the King to New Orleans, in the French Louisiana Territory before Napoleon sold it in 1803.
Again, the infamous and bloody Marat (who will be assassinated by a woman royalist in his bath) turned the table over and the Assembly voted for the decapitation of the monarch
The famous Alexis de Tocqueville, who analyzed the American political system in the 19th century, also analyzed the French system during the Regency (or Louis 16 period) concluded that the administrative institutions were so well smoothly running that for 50 years after the revolution not much has been reformed or altered to the institutions.
Louis 16 was the ideal monarch to submit to the Constitutional monarchy system, a system he openly and publicly agreed to and promised to defend. The French in Paris begged to differ and never had confidence in this monarch.