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PAGE 8

Louis XVII: The Boy King Who Never Reigned
by [?]

“I allow it! So go in front, chevalier, little Louis. We will take the same way we came.”

The Dauphin sprang along the path for quite a distance, when he stopped suddenly and turned round to the queen, who with her two footmen was walking quietly behind him.

“Well, Chevalier Bayard, what are you stopping for?” asked the queen with a smile.

“I am waiting for you,” he said gravely, “because this is where my knightly service commences, for it is here that danger begins.”

“It is true,” said the Queen, and even as she spoke, there came to her ears a sound of shouting as loud as the booming of cannon. “Oh, my child,” cried Marie Antoinette, “the sound is like the thundering of a storm at sea! But such storms lie in God’s hand and He protects those who trust Him. Think of that, little Louis, and do not be afraid!”

“Oh, I am not afraid!” cried Louis, running happily on. And yet, outside the fence behind which they were walking, was a dense mass of angry people muttering curses on the queen and the Dauphin.

All at once, the mother’s heart almost stopped beating from fright and horror. A man had extended his bare, powerful arm through the paling of the fence, to bar the Dauphin’s way when he should try to pass it.

The boy saw the arm, hesitated a little, then went bravely forward. The queen hurried that she might be near him when he reached the danger point. On walked the Dauphin in proud courage. On hurried the queen and as she reached him, she cried:

“Come here, my son. Give me your hand.”

But instead of responding to her cry, the little prince sprang forward and stood directly in front of the outstretched arm, and reaching out his small white hand, laid it on the brown clenched fist that had been ready to clutch him as in a vise, while a chorus of cheers at his courage went up from outside the wall.

“Good-day sir,” he said in a loud voice, “Good-day!” As he spoke he took hold of the great rough hand and shook it.

“Little fool,” roared the man, “what do you mean, and how dare you lay your puny paw in the claws of a lion?”

The Dauphin smiled. “Sir, I thought you were stretching out your hand to reach me with it, and so I give you mine and say good-day, sir!”

“And if I wanted, I could crush your fingers with my fist,” cried the man, still holding the little hand firmly.

But from a hundred throats outside the fence came the cry “You shall not do it, Simon. You shall not hurt the boy!”

“Who can hinder me if I choose to do it?” asked the cobbler, whose name was Simon, with a coarse laugh. “See, I hold the hand of the future King of France, and I can break it if I choose, and make it so it can never lift the sceptre of France. The little monkey thought he would take hold of my hand and make me draw it back, but now my hand has got hold of his, and holds it fast. And mark this, boy, the time is past when kings seized us and trod us down, now we seize them, and do not let them go unless we will.”

“But, Mr. Simon,” said Louis, “you see very plainly that I do not want to do any harm, and I know you do not want to do me any harm, and I ask you to be so good as to take away your arm, that my mamma can go on with her walk.”

“But suppose I do not do as you want me to?” asked the man defiantly. “I suppose then your mamma would dictate to me, and perhaps call some soldiers and order them to shoot the dreadful people?”

“You know, Master Simon, that I give no such commands and never gave such,” said the queen quickly. “The king and I love our people and never would give our soldiers orders to fire on them, and now, sir–the Queen of France and her son will no longer be detained!” With a quick movement she struck back the arm of the cobbler, Simon, snatched the Dauphin away like lightning and passed by before Simon had time to put his arm back.