Chapter 63: What's going on in France

The situation in France was as expected by Jerome Bonaparte.

After the June 1st victory over the Lu Yi. Napoleon's remains, Paris indeed ushered in a temporary peace between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie.

The bourgeoisie once again recalled the glory of Napoleon's empire, while the proletariat believed that the government's welcoming of Louis Napoleon's body was to implement Louis Napoleon's theory of Prince Louis Napoleon and seek welfare for the workers.

Under the false peace, those workers finally stopped for a few days.

Lamartine also received unanimous praise in Paris for his strategy of welcoming the corpse of Lui Napoleon. His vote in the Seine surpassed Ludru Rolland, known as the "Friend of the Workers", to become the first in the Seine.

Everything seems to be going in the right direction.

However, the illusion is an illusion after all. After a long wait of half a month, the happy workers did not wait for any reform measures from the government.

Starving, they decided to protest to the National Assembly again.

On June 15, a group of workers rushed to the National Assembly, and the policemen who were in charge of guarding the National Assembly were disarmed by the workers.

The once peaceful National Assembly was thrown into chaos by the emergence of workers.

After the workers explained their origins to the members of the National Assembly, they hoped that the National Assembly would face up to their demands.

Perhaps because the workers were so numerous, the members of the National Assembly pushed Thiers out for negotiation.

Thiers, in order to stabilize the workers, pretended to agree to all the workers' suggestions.

The workers who believed in the justice of the National Assembly left with satisfaction.

Although General Gulden, who arrived later, led the National Guard to arrest some of the workers, he was dismissed from the National Assembly after he had seriously lost points in the National Assembly.

After this time the National Assembly lost the last shreds of patience with the workers.

Under the promotion of Thiers and others, Cavaignac, who served as the governor of Algeria and returned to Paris to report his duties, was elected as the Minister of War of the French Republic.

The iron-blooded butcher will become the object of hatred of the Parisian working class.

After the executioner is ready, the next step is to act.

Under the authorization of the National Assembly, Cavaignac secretly transferred more than 50,000 troops from the Seine and its neighboring provinces to the suburbs of Paris.

Once the order of the National Assembly is given, they will go to Paris.

On June 20, everything was ready, except for kicking out the annoying ruling council.

Under the proposal of the Falu Member of the Party of Order [Orthodox], the National Assembly decided to agree with the Fallou Member of Theo after intense discussions.

The newspaper "On the Dissolution of the National Workshop by the National Assembly" appeared in Paris.

The workers looked angrily at the remarks made by the so-called republican newspaper The National. They were unwilling to believe that the government they fought so hard for in February would abandon them in just four months.

On June 25th, a huge parade began, with nearly 30,000 workers participating in the parade. The whole of Paris seemed to be occupied in an instant. Fear and disgust filled the eyes of the workers, who in their eyes were not at all people who shared their fate with them, but parasites throughout Paris, rioters who destroyed their peace.

The workers moved forward fearlessly under the disgusted eyes of the property owners. They came to Paris City Hall and asked Paris to give them an explanation.

However, what awaited them was not the government's mediators, but a cold notice.

The notice said: According to the unanimous consent of the National Assembly and the ruling committee, the national workshop will be dissolved, the young and middle-aged people in the national workshop will be incorporated into the army, and the remaining personnel will be sent to other provinces to work.

This notice is not so much a notice as it is a declaration of war from the bourgeois government.

It was not the so-called nobles who issued this notice, but a group of scholars, psychologists, and poets, who should have stood on the same front as the toiling masses, but now they have become potential executioners who want the lives of the workers.

When the workers were about to negotiate with the ruling council, Paris Mayor Maraste met with representatives elected by the workers, who told Maraste that if the government did not rescind the order, they would start a revolution like the February Revolution Another revolution.

The threat of the workers' representatives was not taken seriously by Marast. He arrogantly told the workers' representatives that either the workers would obey the government's order to dissolve voluntarily, or the government would force them to dissolve.

The second condition does not have the preferential treatment of the first condition.

[After this incident, Marast became the Speaker of the National Assembly. 】

"Sir, then we will defend our rights in our own way!" The worker representative played the final message to Marast with trembling lips.

Marast, who learned from a certain way that the army was stationed, was of course not afraid of the threat of the workers. Once the workers started to wait for them, it would be 50,000 troops who would cooperate with the thunder of the National Guard.

Marast continued to speak to the workers in an arrogant tone: "You are welcome!"

The workers' representatives led the workers away They wanted to use this last time to mobilize.

The National Assembly has also not been idle. Promoted by the party of Order, a dictatorial proposal to suspend the power of the ruling council to be handed over to Cavaignac is being voted on.

This proposal was made by Bastide, who succeeded Lamartine as French foreign minister.

[Bastide: A right-wing republican who succeeded Lamartine as foreign minister in early June, and is also foreign minister in the government of the dictator Cavaignac. 】

The Party of Order and the republican right-wing members unanimously agreed to the proposal to suspend the ruling committee, and also announced the appointment of Cavaignac as the ruling party, and is currently the only ruling party in France.

After the meeting, the Bonapartists gathered in Princess Mathilde's private residence to conspire.

"His Royal Highness is right! Those guys are really going to do something to them!" Pesini said excitedly.

"Yeah! I didn't expect that they couldn't bear it so quickly!" Roue also sighed with emotion. Peace only lasted for less than half a month, and another revolution was about to be born.

"My brother said no, what should I do next?" Princess Mathilde asked.

As Pierre Bonaparte's intention to replace Jerome Bonaparte as the leader of Bonaparte was thwarted, the elder Jerome Bonaparte had no intention of Bonaparte's small group and helped his younger brother Mathilde . Bonaparte became the backbone of the French Bonaparte.

"His Royal Highness instructed us in the letter to restrain ourselves during the martial law and not let them find out that we missed it."

"Rouet, let all Bonapartists try not to be exposed to the government's sight during this time."

"Yes!"