of Louis XVI, remained in Paris. At the 
time when the King was first subjected to actual personal restraint, a 
few young noblemen and gentlemen had formed themselves into a 
private club, and held their sittings in the Rue Vivienne. Their object 
was to assist the King in the difficulties with which he was surrounded, 
and their immediate aim was to withdraw him from the metropolis; 
Louis' own oft-repeated indecision alone prevented them from being 
successful. These royalists were chiefly from the province of Poitou, 
and as their meetings gradually became known and talked of in Paris, 
they were called the Poitevins. 
They had among them one or two members of the Assembly, but the 
club chiefly consisted of young noblemen attached to the Court, or of 
officers in the body-guard of the King; their object, at first, had been to 
maintain, undiminished, the power of the throne; but they had long 
since forgotten their solicitude for the King's power, in their anxiety for 
his safety and personal freedom. 
The storming of the Tuilleries, and the imprisonment of Louis, 
completely destroyed their body as a club; but the energy of each 
separate member was raised to the highest pitch. The Poitevins no 
longer met in the Rue Vivienne, but they separated with a 
determination on the part of each individual royalist to use every effort 
to replace the King. 
There were three young men in this club, who were destined to play a 
conspicuous part in the great effort about to be made, in a portion of 
France, for the restitution of the monarchy; their fathers had lived 
within a few miles of each other, and though of different ages, and very 
different dispositions, they had come to Paris together since the 
commencement of the revolution. 
M. de Lescure was a married man, about twenty-seven years of age, of 
grave and studious habits, but nevertheless of an active temperament. 
He was humane, charitable, and benevolent: his strongest passion was 
the love of his fellow-creatures; his pure heart had glowed, at an early 
age, with unutterable longings for the benefits promised to the human 
race by the school of philosophy from which the revolution originated.
Liberty and fraternity had been with him principles, to have realized 
which he would willingly have sacrificed his all; but at the 
commencement of the revolution he had seen with horror the 
successive encroachments of the lower classes, and from conscience 
had attached himself to the Crown. Hitherto he had been without 
opportunity of showing the courage for which he was afterwards so 
conspicuous; he did not even himself know that he was a brave man; 
before, however, his career was ended, he had displayed the chivalry of 
a Bayard, and performed the feats of a Duguescin. A perfect man, we 
are told, would be a monster; and a certain dry obstinacy of manner, 
rather than of purpose, preserved de Lescure from the monstrosity of 
perfection. Circumstances decreed that the latter years of his life should 
be spent among scenes of bloodshed; that he should be concerned in all 
the horrors of civil war; that instruments of death should be familiar to 
his hands, and the groans of the dying continually in his ears. But 
though the horrors of war were awfully familiar to him, the harshness 
of war never became so; he spilt no blood that he could spare, he took 
no life that he could save. The cruelty of his enemies was unable to 
stifle the humanity of his heart; even a soldier and a servant of the 
republic became his friend as soon as he was vanquished. 
Two young friends had followed M. de Lescure to Paris--Henri de 
Larochejaquelin and Adolphe Denot. The former was the son of the 
Marquis de Larochejaquelin, and the heir of an extensive property in 
Poitou; M. de Lescure and he were cousins, and the strictest friendship 
had long existed between the families. Young Larochejaquelin was of a 
temperament very different from that of his friend: he was eager, 
impetuous, warm-tempered, and fond of society; but he had formed his 
principles on those of M. de Lescure. The love of his fellow-creatures 
was not with him the leading passion of his heart, as it was with the 
other; but humanity had early been instilled into him as the virtue most 
necessary to cultivate, and he consequently fully appreciated and 
endeavoured to imitate the philanthropy of his friend. 
At the time alluded to, Henri de Larochejaquelin was not quite twenty 
years of age. He was a lieutenant in the body-guard immediately 
attached to the King's person, and called the "Garde du Roi." At any
other period, he would hardly yet have finished his education, but the 
revolution gave a precocious manhood to the rising generation. Henri's 
father, moreover, was very old;    
    
		
	
	
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