In
Honor Of The 142nd Anniversary Of
The Paris Commune -Jean Jacques Paget’s Dream
Jean Jacques Paget, all of age fourteen, son of
Francois Paget the journeyman tinsmith and a known radical thinker, a follower
of Proudhon, around the neighborhood, had not slept a wink the past twenty-four
hours. Well, maybe a couple of winks after they, he and his comrades, had erected
the barricade at the corner of Saint Catherine’s, and he had rested his eyes for
a few minutes. But like the bulletin from the Central Committee of the National
Guard stated every citizen of Paris, every honest democrat, every person who
stood against the depredations of the Theirs government that had fled to Versailles
in panic needed to be vigilant, needed to defend the Commune with his or her
life. And young Paget, leaning for support against some chairs that had hastily
been thrown on the pile was willing, young as he was, to defend the Commune
with his life (and he thought his father too although he was away at the Hotel
de Ville attending to Committee of Public Safety business and so not at the barricade).
He was sure of that, just as sure as he was of the dream he had of what would
come of all this when the dust settled, when they could take down the barricades
and begin life, a people’s commune life,
like his father kept arguing with one and
all about.
Young Paget, if he had been asked the finer points of
political doctrine would have had to
confess that he was unaware of what the programs of Blanqui and Proudhon and like were about but he
knew, knew in a mind’s eye way, what he wanted. First and foremost he
wanted cheap bread for the table; bread so he did not allows feel hungry like now
with bread dear in his growing bones, bones suffering all the suffering a
fourteen year old suffers. He wanted free education so he could learn to read
better, and maybe become a printer or a skilled tradesman and not have to
drudge away in some crummy old factory like the ones that were starting to foul
up the air of the neighborhood. He wanted an end to military service for the state,
the state that had taken his older brother Leon away, Leon who was now a prisoner
of the bloody Germans who were howling at the outer walls of his dear Paris. Let
the Central Committee of the National Guard provide for the defense, they could
do better than that fool Louis Bonaparte had done. He wanted the banks
abolished, or at least controlled some so Paget, Senior, Papa, could finally
end his journeymanship and open his own shop. He wanted the streets cleaned up
too so every time it rained he didn’t get his shoes all mucked up and smelly
for a week. He wanted a house that where the roof didn’t leak and there were
not about eight people to each room. He wanted a room of his own, if possible,
no more than two though. He wanted free boat rides on the Seine although he
would not insist on that demand. Mainly though he wanted the government to
leave him and family alone, stop taking their money for never-ending taxes and
keeping Paget, Senior away from his dream. And he thought he was right, right
in the sense that he was feeling that his father and his friends and comrades
could figure out how to run the government without a lot of muss and fuss, and that
was what he really was willing to defend, defend to the death if necessary if
it came to that…
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