The Uprising of June 20 1792

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Pfeiffer not such positive knowledge but all said that there was much fer- mentation.*^' Saint-Prix told the mayor that six weeks before, all was peaceable but that since then a club had been formed at the Porte Saint-Marcel, which had excited the people and in- duced them to carry a petition under arms to the national assem- bly and to the king and that this club had been invited by a letter from Santerre to join his battalion. Santerre admitted the cor- respondence, but denied that he had tak...en the initiative. Saint- Prix then advised the mayor to follow what he considered a policy of prudence. He said that since he could not prevent the procession, he had better legalize it. He advised him to go with the municipality to the place of assembling and read the decree of the department and state to the people in a proclamation that a petition presented under arms is illegal and request them to lay down their arms before entering the assembly and the king's palace. He suggested that Petion precede the petitioners accom- panied by officers of the municipality and that he order the com- mandant to furnish a number of volunteers from the battalions to protect the march of the petitioners and so give it a legal character.^^ This suggestion struck Petion as a means of escape from his dilemma, for he and his colleagues feared lest they should be re- duced to the necessity of using force against a great multitude of citizens.

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