The Caillaux Drama
John N. (John Nathan) Raphael
13 chapters
5 hour read
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13 chapters
THECAILLAUXDRAMA
THECAILLAUXDRAMA
Waiting. THE CAILLAUX DRAMA BY JOHN N. RAPHAEL   LONDON: MAX GOSCHEN LTD. 20 GREAT RUSSELL STREET W.C. MCMXIV TO  MY  MOTHER CONTENTS ILLUSTRATIONS...
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ITHE STORY OF THE DRAMA
ITHE STORY OF THE DRAMA
Late on Monday afternoon, March 16, 1914, a rumour fired imaginations, like a train of gunpowder, all over Paris. In newspaper offices, in cafés, in clubs, people asked one another whether they had heard the news and whether the news were true. It seemed incredible. The wife of the Minister of Finance, said rumour, Madame Joseph Caillaux, one of the spoiled children of Paris society, had gone to the office of the Figaro , had waited there an hour or more for the managing editor, Monsieur Gaston
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IICELL NO. 12
IICELL NO. 12
Agence Nouvelle—Photo, Paris MME. CAILLAUX (AND DETECTIVE) ON HER WAY TO THE LAW COURTS TO BE EXAMINED It is a very short drive from the Rue du Faubourg Montmartre to the prison of Saint Lazare, where Madame Caillaux was taken from the police-station. She had been taken from the office of the Figaro to the police-station in her own luxurious car. She drove to Saint Lazare in one of the horrible red taxicabs which have rattled for too many years about the streets of Paris, with a member of the po
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IIITHE CRIME AND THE PUBLIC
IIITHE CRIME AND THE PUBLIC
Whenever anything sensational occurs to disturb the serenity of daily life in Paris, the vortex of politics promptly sucks it in. The Parisians—Frenchmen in general, in fact—are insatiable politicians, and no matter what the happening, discussion of it becomes immediately a party matter. It is of little consequence whether the item which is talked about in clubs, in cafés, in the newspapers, in the theatre lobbies, at dinner-parties, and at supper after the theatre is green hair, the Caillaux Dr
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IVMONSIEUR CAILLAUX’S EXAMINATION
IVMONSIEUR CAILLAUX’S EXAMINATION
The principal witness for the defence of Madame Caillaux will be her husband, and as is usual in France where every witness is allowed and is expected to tell the examining magistrate who collects evidence before the trial everything he knows which bears in any way upon the case, Monsieur Caillaux has gone at length into his wife’s motives for the crime, and has described very fully the happenings on March 16, 1914, when the murder was committed. He was examined by Monsieur Boucard in his room a
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VTHE CAMPAIGN OF THE “FIGARO”
VTHE CAMPAIGN OF THE “FIGARO”
In order to understand the details of the Caillaux drama, it is necessary to search for the reasons which contributed to the bitter campaign in the Figaro against Madame Caillaux’s husband, the Minister of Finance. In order to understand these reasons fully it will be necessary to go some way back into the history of French politics, when some insight will be possible into the inner meaning of the campaign, into the interests which lay behind it, and the reason of its bitterness. When Monsieur R
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VICALMETTE v. CAILLAUX
VICALMETTE v. CAILLAUX
Whenever an official in the French Colonial Office had to refuse the application of a subordinate for leave, he would tone down his refusal with the metaphor, “We’ll try and give you leave at all events before the affaire Prieu is decided finally.” For many years l’affaire Prieu had been the Jarndyce v. Jarndyce case of the French Colonial Office, and it was almost forgotten when Monsieur Caillaux and the Figaro brought it back at a bound into the domain of actuality. The case was forgotten so t
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VIITHE “TON JO” LETTER
VIITHE “TON JO” LETTER
That is the “Ton Jo” letter. That is the document which, printed in big black type in the centre of the front page of the Figaro on Friday, March 13, 1914, and re-printed in facsimile lower down on the same page, was followed on the 16th by the revolver shots which killed Monsieur Gaston Calmette. The letter was written by Monsieur Caillaux on July 5, 1901—thirteen years before it was published in the Figaro . When he wrote it Monsieur Caillaux was Minister of Finance in the Waldeck-Rousseau Cab
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VIIIAGADIR
VIIIAGADIR
In almost every newspaper article which I have read on the Caillaux drama one sentence has invariably amused me. “The question of Agadir,” we read, in French and English papers both, “is too fresh in the reader’s mind for any exhaustive reference to it here to be necessary.” But memories are short in these fast-living days, and though the history of Agadir is recent history, no story of the Caillaux drama can be complete without recalling it at length. For one of the accusations against Monsieur
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IXL’AFFAIRE ROCHETTE
IXL’AFFAIRE ROCHETTE
In the first chapter of this book is reproduced in extenso the statement of Monsieur Victor Fabre, Procureur Général, a legal official of judge’s rank, whose position somewhat resembles that of the Public Prosecutor in England. Monsieur Fabre, the gravity of whose statement caused the downfall of the Monis-Caillaux Cabinet, declared that pressure had been brought to bear on him to postpone or adjourn the trial of a financier named Rochette, who, since the postponement of his trial has escaped ab
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X“THE TRUTH, THE WHOLE TRUTH ...”
X“THE TRUTH, THE WHOLE TRUTH ...”
The first Commission of Inquiry closed its labours on March 20, 1912, with the hearing of three witnesses of importance. These three witnesses were the Procureur Général, Monsieur Victor Fabre, the ex-Prime Minister, Monsieur Monis, and the presiding judge of the Chamber of Correctional Appeal, Monsieur Bidault de L’Isle. All three men were questioned on the rumours of the bringing of political influence to bear in March 1911 for the postponement of the Rochette trial. Two years later day for da
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XIABOUT FRENCH POLITICS
XIABOUT FRENCH POLITICS
Perhaps the most difficult part of the life of France for an Englishman to understand is her politics. To give with any thoroughness at all even a slight idea of the French political parties and the opinions for which these parties fight, would require another volume quite as big as this one. But the object of this chapter is not an essay on the intricacies of party politics in France, nor do I propose to attempt a detailed explanation of the differences of opinion which divide the parties. My o
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XIIBEFORE THE LAST ACT OF THE DRAMA
XIIBEFORE THE LAST ACT OF THE DRAMA
A French criminal trial is in every respect as unlike a criminal trial in England as can well be imagined. To begin with, if the Caillaux drama had been English, if the wife of an English Cabinet Minister were at the present moment in Brixton gaol awaiting her trial because she had walked into Printing House Square and shot the editor of the Times , this book, by the mere fact of its appearance, would send me and the publisher to prison for contempt of court. In France, not only is there no cont
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