Because of his lack of success at the law, he was living in Paris in extreme poverty. However, he showed enthusiasm for the political changes announced by the meeting of the Estates-General. According to his letters to his father, he watched with excitement the procession of deputies at the
Palace of Versailles, and with indignation the events following the closing of the
Salle des Menus to the deputies who had named themselves the
National Assembly - leading to the
Tennis Court Oath.
The sudden dismissal of
Jacques Necker by
King Louis XVI brought fame to Desmoulins. On
July 12, 1789 he leapt on a table outside one of the
cafés in the garden of the
Palais Royal, and announced to the crowd the dismissal of the reformer. Apparently losing his stammer due to the excitement, he addressed the passions of the public, calling "
To arms!" and adding:
:"
This dismissal is the tocsin of the St. Bartholomew of the patriots" (meaning that a massacre of the partisans of reform was under preparation).
Finally, after drawing two
pistols from under his coat, he declared that he would not fall alive into the hands of the police who were watching his movements. He descended, embraced by the crowd.
This was the actual beginning of the Revolution. Following Desmoulins, riots started throughout Paris. The mob, procuring arms by force on
July 13, was partly organized as the Parisian
militia, which was afterwards to be the
National Guard. On
July 14, the
storming of the Bastille occurred.
The following day, Desmoulins began the most publicised phase of his writing career. In May and June 1789 he had written
La France libre, which his publisher had refused to print. The taking of the Bastille, however, was a sign of changing times, and, on
July 18, Desmoulins's work was issued. Considerably in advance of public opinion, it already favoured a
republic, and through its elaborate examination of the
rights of king, of
nobles, of
Roman Catholic clergy and of the people, it became instantly popular, securing Desmoulins a partnership with
Honoré Mirabeau. It was immediately followed by a
slander campaign from
Royalist pamphleteers.