The Downfall
Part I
Chapter II
About eight o'clock the sun dispersed the heavy clouds, and the broad,
fertile plain about Mulhausen lay basking in the warm, bright light of a perfect
August Sunday. From the camp, now awake and bustling with life, could be heard
the bells of the neighboring parishes, pealing merrily in the limpid air. The
cheerful Sunday following so close on ruin and defeat had its own gayety, its
sky was as serene as on a holiday.
Gaude suddenly took his bugle and gave the call that announced the
distribution of rations, whereat Loubet appeared astonished. What was it? What
did it mean? Were they going to give out chickens, as he had promised Lapoulle
the night before? He had been born in the Halles, in the Rue de la Cossonerie,
was the unacknowledged son of a small huckster, had enlisted "for the money
there was in it," as he said, after having been a sort of Jack-of-all-trades,
and was now the gourmand, the epicure of the company, continually nosing after
something good to eat. But he went off to see what was going on, while Chouteau,
the company artist, house-painter by trade at Belleville, something of a dandy
and a revolutionary republican, exasperated against the government for having
called him back to the colors after he had served his time, was cruelly chaffing
Pache, whom he had discovered on his knees, behind the tent, preparing to say
his prayers. There was a pious man for you! Couldn't he oblige him, Chouteau, by
interceding with God to give him a hundred thousand francs or some such small
trifle? But Pache, an insignificant little fellow with a head running up to a
point, who had come to them from some hamlet in the wilds of Picardy, received
the other's raillery with the uncomplaining gentleness of a martyr. He was the
butt of the squad, he and Lapoulle, the colossal brute who had got his growth in
the marshes of the Sologne, so utterly ignorant of everything that on the day of
his joining the regiment he had asked his comrades to show him the King. And
although the terrible tidings of the disaster at Froeschwiller had been known
throughout the camp since early morning, the four men laughed, joked, and went
about their usual tasks with the indifference of so many machines.
But there arose a murmur of pleased surprise. It was occasioned by Jean, the
corporal, coming back from the commissary's, accompanied by Maurice, with a load
of firewood. So, they were giving out wood at last, the lack of which the night
before had deprived the men of their soup! Twelve hours behind time, only!
"Hurrah for the commissary!" shouted Chouteau.
"Never mind, so long as it is here," said Loubet. "Ah! won't I make you a
bully pot-au-feu!"
He was usually quite willing to take charge of the mess arrangements, and no
one was inclined to say him nay, for he cooked like an angel. On those
occasions, however, Lapoulle would be given the most extraordinary commissions
to execute.
"Go and look after the champagne—Go out and buy some truffles—"
On that morning a queer conceit flashed across his mind, such a conceit as
only a Parisian gamin contemplating the mystification of a greenhorn is
capable of entertaining:
"Look alive there, will you! Come, hand me the chicken."
"The chicken! what chicken, where?"
"Why, there on the ground at your feet, stupid; the chicken that I promised
you last night, and that the corporal has just brought in."
He pointed to a large, white, round stone, and Lapoulle, speechless with
wonder, finally picked it up and turned it about between his fingers.
"A thousand thunders! Will you wash the chicken! More yet; wash its claws,
wash its neck! Don't be afraid of the water, lazybones!"
And for no reason at all except the joke of it, because the prospect of the
soup made him gay and sportive, he tossed the stone along with the meat into the
kettle filled with water.
"That's what will give the bouillon a flavor! Ah, you didn't know that,
sacree andouille! You shall have the pope's nose; you'll see how tender
it is."
The squad roared with laughter at sight of Lapoulle's face, who swallowed
everything and was licking his chops in anticipation of the feast. That funny
dog, Loubet, he was the man to cure one of the dumps if anybody could! And when
the fire began to crackle in the sunlight, and the kettle commenced to hum and
bubble, they ranged themselves reverently about it in a circle with an
expression of cheerful satisfaction on their faces, watching the meat as it
danced up and down and sniffing the appetizing odor that it exhaled. They were
as hungry as a pack of wolves, and the prospect of a square meal made them
forgetful of all beside. They had had to take a thrashing, but that was no
reason why a man should not fill his stomach. Fires were blazing and pots were
boiling from one end of the camp to the other, and amid the silvery peals of the
bells that floated from Mulhausen steeples mirth and jollity reigned supreme.
But just as the clocks were on the point of striking nine a commotion arose
and spread among the men; officers came running up, and Lieutenant Rochas, to
whom Captain Beaudoin had come and communicated an order, passed along in front
of the tents of his platoon and gave the command:
"Pack everything! Get yourselves ready to march!"
"But the soup?"
"You will have to wait for your soup until some other day; we are to march at
once."
Gaude's bugle rang out in imperious accents. Then everywhere was
consternation; dumb, deep rage was depicted on every countenance. What, march on
an empty stomach! Could they not wait a little hour until the soup was ready!
The squad resolved that their bouillon should not go to waste, but it was only
so much hot water, and the uncooked meat was like leather to their teeth.
Chouteau growled and grumbled, almost mutinously. Jean had to exert all his
authority to make the men hasten their preparations. What was the great urgency
that made it necessary for them to hurry off like that? What good was there in
hazing people about in that style, without giving them time to regain their
strength? And Maurice shrugged his shoulders incredulously when someone said in
his hearing that they were about to march against the Prussians and settle old
scores with them. In less than fifteen minutes the tents were struck, folded,
and strapped upon the knapsacks, the stacks were broken, and all that remained
of the camp was the dying embers of the fires on the bare ground.
There were reasons, of importance that had induced General Douay's
determination to retreat immediately. The despatch from the sous-prefet
at Schelestadt, now three days old, was confirmed; there were telegrams that the
fires of the Prussians, threatening Markolsheim, had again been seen, and again,
another telegram informed them that one of the enemy's army corps was crossing
the Rhine at Huningue: the intelligence was definite and abundant; cavalry and
artillery had been sighted in force, infantry had been seen, hastening from
every direction to their point of concentration. Should they wait an hour the
enemy would surely be in their rear and retreat on Belfort would be impossible.
And now, in the shock consequent on defeat, after Wissembourg and Froeschwiller,
the general, feeling himself unsupported in his exposed position at the front,
had nothing left to do but fall back in haste, and the more so that what news he
had received that morning made the situation look even worse than it had
appeared the night before.
The staff had gone on ahead at a sharp trot, spurring their horses in the
fear lest the Prussians might get into Altkirch before them. General
Bourgain-Desfeuilles, aware that he had a hard day's work before him, had
prudently taken Mulhausen in his way, where he fortified himself with a copious
breakfast, denouncing in language more forcible than elegant such hurried
movements. And Mulhausen watched with sorrowful eyes the officers trooping
through her streets; as the news of the retreat spread the citizens streamed out
of their houses, deploring the sudden departure of the army for whose coming
they had prayed so earnestly: they were to be abandoned, then, and all the
costly merchandise that was stacked up in the railway station was to become the
spoil of the enemy; within a few hours their pretty city was to be in the hands
of foreigners? The inhabitants of the villages, too, and of isolated houses, as
the staff clattered along the country roads, planted themselves before their
doors with wonder and consternation depicted on their faces. What! that army,
that a short while before they had seen marching forth to battle, was now
retiring without having fired a shot? The leaders were gloomy, urged their
chargers forward and refused to answer questions, as if ruin and disaster were
galloping at their heels. It was true, then, that the Prussians had annihilated
the army and were streaming into France from every direction, like the angry
waves of a stream that had burst its barriers? And already to the frightened
peasants the air seemed filled with the muttering of distant invasion, rising
louder and more threatening at every instant, and already they were beginning to
forsake their little homes and huddle their poor belongings into farm-carts;
entire families might be seen fleeing in single file along the roads that were
choked with the retreating cavalry.
In the hurry and confusion of the movement the 106th was brought to a halt at
the very first kilometer of their march, near the bridge over the canal of the
Rhone and Rhine. The order of march had been badly planned and still more badly
executed, so that the entire 2d division was collected there in a huddle, and
the way was so narrow, barely more than sixteen feet in width, that the passage
of the troops was obstructed.
Two hours elapsed, and still the 106th stood there watching the seemingly
endless column that streamed along before their eyes. In the end the men,
standing at rest with ordered arms, began to become impatient. Jean's squad,
whose position happened to be opposite a break in the line of poplars where the
sun had a fair chance at them, felt themselves particularly aggrieved.
"Guess we must be the rear-guard," Loubet observed with good-natured
raillery.
But Chouteau scolded: "They don't value us at a brass farthing, and that's
why they let us wait this way. We were here first; why didn't we take the road
while it was empty?"
And as they began to discern more clearly beyond the canal, across the wide
fertile plain, along the level roads lined with hop-poles and fields of ripening
grain, the movement of the troops retiring along the same way by which they had
advanced but yesterday, gibes and jeers rose on the air in a storm of angry
ridicule.
"Ah, we are taking the back track," Chouteau continued. "I wonder if that is
the advance against the enemy that they have been dinning in our ears of late!
Strikes me as rather queer! No sooner do we get into camp than we turn tail and
make off, never even stopping to taste our soup."
The derisive laughter became louder, and Maurice, who was next to Chouteau in
the ranks, took sides with him. Why could they not have been allowed to cook
their soup and eat it in peace, since they had done nothing for the last two
hours but stand there in the road like so many sticks? Their hunger was making
itself felt again; they had a resentful recollection of the savory contents of
the kettle dumped out prematurely upon the ground, and they could see no
necessity for this headlong retrograde movement, which appeared to them idiotic
and cowardly. What chicken-livers they must be, those generals!
But Lieutenant Rochas came along and blew up Sergeant Sapin for not keeping
his men in better order, and Captain Beaudoin, very prim and starchy, attracted
by the disturbance, appeared upon the scene.
"Silence in the ranks!"
Jean, an old soldier of the army of Italy who knew what discipline was,
looked in silent amazement at Maurice, who appeared to be amused by Chouteau's
angry sneers; and he wondered how it was that a monsieur, a young man of
his acquirements, could listen approvingly to things—they might be true, all the
same—but that should not be blurted out in public. The army would never
accomplish much, that was certain, if the privates were to take to criticizing
the generals and giving their opinions.
At last, after another hour's waiting, the order was given for the 106th to
advance, but the bridge was still so encumbered by the rear of the division that
the greatest confusion prevailed. Several regiments became inextricably mingled,
and whole companies were swept away and compelled to cross whether they would or
no, while others, crowded off to the side of the road, had to stand there and
mark time; and by way of putting the finishing touch to the muddle; a squadron
of cavalry insisted on passing, pressing back into the adjoining fields the
stragglers that the infantry had scattered along the roadside. At the end of an
hour's march the column had entirely lost its formation and was dragging its
slow length along, a mere disorderly rabble.
Thus it happened that Jean found himself away at the rear, lost in a sunken
road, together with his squad, whom he had been unwilling to abandon. The 106th
had disappeared, nor was there a man or an officer of their company in sight.
About them were soldiers, singly or in little groups, from all the regiments, a
weary, foot-sore crew, knocked up at the beginning of the retreat, each man
straggling on at his own sweet will whithersoever the path that he was on might
chance to lead him. The sun beat down fiercely, the heat was stifling, and the
knapsack, loaded as it was with the tent and implements of every description,
made a terrible burden on the shoulders of the exhausted men. To many of them
the experience was an entirely new one, and the heavy great-coats they wore
seemed to them like vestments of lead. The first to set an example for the
others was a little pale faced soldier with watery eyes; he drew beside the road
and let his knapsack slide off into the ditch, heaving a deep sigh as he did so,
the long drawn breath of a dying man who feels himself coming back to life.
"There's a man who knows what he is about," muttered Chouteau.
He still continued to plod along, however, his back bending beneath its weary
burden, but when he saw two others relieve themselves as the first had done he
could stand it no longer. "Ah! zut!" he exclaimed, and with a quick
upward jerk of the shoulder sent his kit rolling down an embankment. Fifty
pounds at the end of his backbone, he had had enough of it, thank you! He was no
beast of burden to lug that load about.
Almost at the same moment Loubet followed his lead and incited Lapoulle to do
the same. Pache, who had made the sign of the cross at every stone crucifix they
came to, unbuckled the straps and carefully deposited his load at the foot of a
low wall, as if fully intending to come back for it at some future time. And
when Jean turned his head for a look at his men he saw that every one of them
had dropped his burden except Maurice.
"Take up your knapsacks unless you want to have me put under arrest!"
But the men, although they did not mutiny as yet, were silent and looked
ugly; they kept advancing along the narrow road, pushing the corporal before
them.
"Will you take up your knapsacks! if you don't I will report you."
It was as if Maurice had been lashed with a whip across the face. Report
them! that brute of a peasant would report those poor devils for easing their
aching shoulders! And looking Jean defiantly in the face, he, too, in an impulse
of blind rage, slipped the buckles and let his knapsack fall to the road.
"Very well," said the other in his quiet way, knowing that resistance would
be of no avail, "we will settle accounts to-night."
Maurice's feet hurt him abominably; the big, stiff shoes, to which he was not
accustomed, had chafed the flesh until the blood came. He was not strong; his
spinal column felt as if it were one long raw sore, although the knapsack that
had caused the suffering was no longer there, and the weight of his piece, which
he kept shifting from one shoulder to the other, seemed as if it would drive all
the breath from his body. Great as his physical distress was, however, his moral
agony was greater still, for he was in the depths of one of those fits of
despair to which he was subject. At Paris the sum of his wrongdoing had been
merely the foolish outbreaks of "the other man," as he put it, of his weak,
boyish nature, capable of more serious delinquency should he be subjected to
temptation, but now, in this retreat that was so like a rout, in which he was
dragging himself along with weary steps beneath a blazing sun, he felt all hope
and courage vanishing from his heart, he was but a beast in that belated,
straggling herd that filled the roads and fields. It was the reaction after the
terrible disasters at Wissembourg and Froeschwiller, the echo of the
thunder-clap that had burst in the remote distance, leagues and leagues away,
rattling at the heels of those panic-stricken men who were flying before they
had ever seen an enemy. What was there to hope for now? Was it not all ended?
They were beaten; all that was left them was to lie down and die.
"It makes no difference," shouted Loubet, with the blague of a child
of the Halles, "but this is not the Berlin road we are traveling, all the same."
To Berlin! To Berlin! The cry rang in Maurice's ears, the yell of the
swarming mob that filled the boulevards on that midsummer night of frenzied
madness when he had determined to enlist. The gentle breeze had become a
devastating hurricane; there had been a terrific explosion, and all the sanguine
temper of his nation had manifested itself in his absolute, enthusiastic
confidence, which had vanished utterly at the very first reverse, before the
unreasoning impulse of despair that was sweeping him away among those vagrant
soldiers, vanquished and dispersed before they had struck a stroke.
"This confounded blunderbuss must weigh a ton, I think," Loubet went on.
"This is fine music to march by!" And alluding to the sum he received as
substitute: "I don't care what people say, but fifteen hundred 'balls' for a job
like this is downright robbery. Just think of the pipes he'll smoke, sitting by
his warm fire, the stingy old miser in whose place I'm going to get my brains
knocked out!"
"As for me," growled Chouteau, "I had finished my time. I was going to cut
the service, and they keep me for their beastly war. Ah! true as I stand here, I
must have been born to bad luck to have got myself into such a mess. And now the
officers are going to let the Prussians knock us about as they please, and we're
dished and done for." He had been swinging his piece to and fro in his hand; in
his discouragement he gave it a toss and landed it on the other side of the
hedge. "Eh! get you gone for a dirty bit of old iron!"
The musket made two revolutions in the air and fell into a furrow, where it
lay, long and motionless, reminding one somehow of a corpse. Others soon flew to
join it, and presently the field was filled with abandoned arms, lying in long
winrows, a sorrowful spectacle beneath the blazing sky. It was an epidemic of
madness, caused by the hunger that was gnawing at their stomach, the shoes that
galled their feet, their weary march, the unexpected defeat that had brought the
enemy galloping at their heels. There was nothing more to be accomplished; their
leaders were looking out for themselves, the commissariat did not even feed
them; nothing but weariness and worriment; better to leave the whole business at
once, before it was begun. And what then? why, the musket might go and keep the
knapsack company; in view of the work that was before them they might at least
as well keep their arms free. And all down the long line of stragglers that
stretched almost far as the eye could reach in the smooth and fertile country
the muskets flew through the air to the accompaniment of jeers and laughter such
as would have befitted the inmates of a lunatic asylum out for a holiday.
Loubet, before parting with his, gave it a twirl as a drum-major does his
cane. Lapoulle, observing what all his comrades were doing, must have supposed
the performance to be some recent innovation in the manual, and followed suit,
while Pache, in the confused idea of duty that he owed to his religious
education, refused to do as the rest were doing and was loaded with obloquy by
Chouteau, who called him a priest's whelp.
"Look at the sniveling papist! And all because his old peasant of a mother
used to make him swallow the holy wafer every Sunday in the village church down
there! Be off with you and go serve mass; a man who won't stick with his
comrades when they are right is a poor-spirited cur."
Maurice toiled along dejectedly in silence, bowing his head beneath the
blazing sun. At every step he took he seemed to be advancing deeper into a
horrid, phantom-haunted nightmare; it was as if he saw a yawning, gaping gulf
before him toward which he was inevitably tending; it meant that he was
suffering himself to be degraded to the level of the miserable beings by whom he
was surrounded, that he was prostituting his talents and his position as a man
of education.
"Hold!" he said abruptly to Chouteau, "what you say is right; there is truth
in it."
And already he had deposited his musket upon a pile of stones, when Jean, who
had tried without success to check the shameful proceedings of his men, saw what
he was doing and hurried toward him.
"Take up your musket, at once! Do you hear me? take it up at once!"
Jean's face had flushed with sudden anger. Meekest and most pacific of men,
always prone to measures of conciliation, his eyes were now blazing with wrath,
his voice spoke with the thunders of authority. His men had never before seen
him in such a state, and they looked at one another in astonishment.
"Take up your musket at once, or you will have me to deal with!"
Maurice was quivering with anger; he let fall one single word, into which he
infused all the insult that he had at command:
"Peasant!"
"Yes, that's just it; I am a peasant, while you, you, are a gentleman! And it
is for that reason that you are a pig! Yes! a dirty pig! I make no bones of
telling you of it."
Yells and cat-calls arose all around him, but the corporal continued with
extraordinary force and dignity:
"When a man has learning he shows it by his actions. If we are brutes and
peasants, you owe us the benefit of your example, since you know more than we
do. Take up your musket, or Nom de Dieu! I will have you shot the first
halt we make."
Maurice was daunted; he stooped and raised the weapon in his hand. Tears of
rage stood in his eyes. He reeled like a drunken man as he labored onward,
surrounded by his comrades, who now were jeering at him for having yielded. Ah,
that Jean! he felt that he should never cease to hate him, cut to the quick as
he had been by that bitter lesson, which he could not but acknowledge he had
deserved. And when Chouteau, marching at his side, growled: "When corporals are
that way, we just wait for a battle and blow a hole in 'em," the landscape
seemed red before his eyes, and he had a distinct vision of himself blowing
Jean's brains out from behind a wall.
But an incident occurred to divert their thoughts; Loubet noticed that while
the dispute was going on Pache had also abandoned his musket, laying it down
tenderly at the foot of an embankment. Why? What were the reasons that had made
him resist the example of his comrades in the first place, and what were the
reasons that influenced him now? He probably could not have told himself, nor
did he trouble his head about the matter, chuckling inwardly with silent
enjoyment, like a schoolboy who, having long been held up as a model for his
mates, commits his first offense. He strode along with a self-contented, rakish
air, swinging his arms; and still along the dusty, sunlit roads, between the
golden grain and the fields of hops that succeeded one another with tiresome
monotony, the human tide kept pouring onward; the stragglers, without arms or
knapsacks, were now but a shuffling, vagrant mob, a disorderly array of
vagabonds and beggars, at whose approach the frightened villagers barred their
doors.
Something that happened just then capped the climax of Maurice's misery. A
deep, rumbling noise had for some time been audible in the distance; it was the
artillery, that had been the last to leave the camp and whose leading guns now
wheeled into sight around a bend in the road, barely giving the footsore
infantrymen time to seek safety in the fields. It was an entire regiment of six
batteries, and came up in column, in splendid order, at a sharp trot, the
colonel riding on the flank at the center of the line, every officer at his
post. The guns went rattling, bounding by, accurately maintaining their
prescribed distances, each accompanied by its caisson, men and horses, beautiful
in the perfect symmetry of its arrangement; and in the 5th battery Maurice
recognized his cousin Honore. A very smart and soldierly appearance the
quartermaster-sergeant presented on horseback in his position on the left hand
of the forward driver, a good-looking light-haired man, Adolphe by name, whose
mount was a sturdy chestnut, admirably matched with the mate that trotted at his
side, while in his proper place among the six men who were seated on the chests
of the gun and its caisson was the gunner, Louis, a small, dark man, Adolphe's
comrade; they constituted a team, as it is called, in accordance with the rule
of the service that couples a mounted and an unmounted man together. They all
appeared bigger and taller to Maurice, somehow, than when he first made their
acquaintance at the camp, and the gun, to which four horses were attached,
followed by the caisson drawn by six, seemed to him as bright and refulgent as a
sun, tended and cherished as it was by its attendants, men and animals, who
closed around it protectingly as if it had been a living sentient relative; and
then, besides, the contemptuous look that Honore, astounded to behold him among
that unarmed rabble, cast on the stragglers, distressed him terribly. And now
the tail end of the regiment was passing, the materiel of the batteries,
prolonges, forges, forage-wagons, succeeded by the rag-tag, the spare men and
horses, and then all vanished in a cloud of dust at another turn in the road
amid the gradually decreasing clatter of hoofs and wheels.
"Pardi!" exclaimed Loubet, "it's not such a difficult matter to cut a
dash when one travels with a coach and four!"
The staff had found Altkirch free from the enemy; not a Prussian had shown
his face there yet. It had been the general's wish, not knowing at what moment
they might fall upon his rear, that the retreat should be continued to
Dannemarie, and it was not until five o'clock that the heads of columns reached
that place. Tents were hardly pitched and fires lighted at eight, when night
closed in, so great was the confusion of the regiments, depleted by the absence
of the stragglers. The men were completely used up, were ready to drop with
fatigue and hunger. Up to eight o'clock soldiers, singly and in squads, came
trailing in, hunting for their commands; all that long train of the halt, the
lame, and the disaffected that we have seen scattered along the roads.
As soon as Jean discovered where his regiment lay he went in quest of
Lieutenant Rochas to make his report. He found him, together with Captain
Beaudoin, in earnest consultation with the colonel at the door of a small inn,
all of them anxiously waiting to see what tidings roll-call would give them as
to the whereabouts of their missing men. The moment the corporal opened his
mouth to address the lieutenant, Colonel Vineuil, who heard what the subject
was, called him up and compelled him to tell the whole story. On his long,
yellow face, where the intensely black eyes looked blacker still contrasted with
the thick snow-white hair and the long, drooping mustache, there was an
expression of patient, silent sorrow, and as the narrative proceeded, how the
miserable wretches deserted their colors, threw away arms and knapsacks, and
wandered off like vagabonds, grief and shame traced two new furrows on his
blanched cheeks.
"Colonel," exclaimed Captain Beaudoin, in his incisive voice, not waiting for
his superior to give an opinion, "it will best to shoot half a dozen of those
wretches."
And the lieutenant nodded his head approvingly. But the colonel's despondent
look expressed his powerlessness.
"There are too many of them. Nearly seven hundred! how are we to go to work,
whom are we to select? And then you don't know it, but the general is opposed.
He wants to be a father to his men, says he never punished a soldier all the
time he was in Africa. No, no; we shall have to overlook it. I can do nothing.
It is dreadful."
The captain echoed: "Yes, it is dreadful. It means destruction for us all."
Jean was walking off, having said all he had to say, when he heard Major
Bouroche, whom he had not seen where he was standing in the doorway of the inn,
growl in a smothered voice: "No more punishment, an end to discipline, the army
gone to the dogs! Before a week is over the scoundrels will be ripe for kicking
their officers out of camp, while if a few of them had been made an example of
on the spot it might have brought the remainder to their senses."
No one was punished. Some officers of the rear-guard that was protecting the
trains had been thoughtful enough to collect the muskets and knapsacks scattered
along the road. They were almost all recovered, and by daybreak the men were
equipped again, the operation being conducted very quietly, as if to hush the
matter up as much as possible. Orders were given to break camp at five o'clock,
but reveille sounded at four and the retreat to Belfort was hurriedly continued,
for everyone was certain that the Prussians were only two or three leagues away.
Again there was nothing to eat but dry biscuit, and as a consequence of their
brief, disturbed rest and the lack of something to warm their stomachs the men
were weak as cats. Any attempt to enforce discipline on the march that morning
was again rendered nugatory by the manner of their departure.
The day was worse than its predecessor, inexpressibly gloomy and
disheartening. The aspect of the landscape had changed, they were now in a
rolling country where the roads they were always alternately climbing and
descending were bordered with woods of pine and hemlock, while the narrow gorges
were golden with tangled thickets of broom. But panic and terror lay heavy on
the fair land that slumbered there beneath the bright sun of August, and had
been hourly gathering strength since the preceeding day. A fresh dispatch,
bidding the mayors of communes warn the people that they would do well to hide
their valuables, had excited universal consternation. The enemy was at hand,
then! Would time be given them to make their escape? And to all it seemed that
the roar of invasion was ringing in their ears, coming nearer and nearer, the
roar of the rushing torrent that, starting from Mulhausen, had grown louder and
more ominous as it advanced, and to which every village that it encountered in
its course contributed its own alarm amid the sound of wailing and lamentation.
Maurice stumbled along as best he might, like a man walking in a dream; his
feet were bleeding, his shoulders sore with the weight of gun and knapsack. He
had ceased to think, he advanced automatically into the vision of horrors that
lay before his eyes; he had ceased to be conscious even of the shuffling tramp
of the comrades around him, and the only thing that was not dim and unreal to
his sense was Jean, marching at his side and enduring the same fatigue and
horrible distress. It was lamentable to behold the villages they passed through,
a sight to make a man's heart bleed with anguish. No sooner did the inhabitants
catch sight of the troops retreating in disorderly array, with haggard faces and
bloodshot eyes, than they bestirred themselves to hasten their flight. They who
had been so confident only a short half month ago, those men and women of
Alsace, who smiled when war was mentioned, certain that it would be fought out
in Germany! And now France was invaded, and it was among them, above their
abodes, in their fields, that the tempest was to burst, like one of those dread
cataclysms that lay waste a province in an hour when the lightnings flash and
the gates of heaven are opened! Carts were backed up against doors and men
tumbled their furniture into them in wild confusion, careless of what they
broke. From the upper windows the women threw out a last mattress, or handed
down the child's cradle, that they had been near forgetting, whereon baby would
be tucked in securely and hoisted to the top of the load, where he reposed
serenely among a grove of legs of chairs and upturned tables. At the back of
another cart was the decrepit old grandfather tied with cords to a wardrobe, and
he was hauled away for all the world as if he had been one of the family
chattels. Then there were those who did not own a vehicle, so they piled their
household goods haphazard on a wheelbarrow, while others carried an armful of
clothing, and others still had thought only of saving the clock, which they went
off pressing to their bosom as if it had been a darling child. They found they
could not remove everything, and there were chairs and tables, and bundles of
linen too heavy to carry, lying abandoned in the gutter, Some before leaving had
carefully locked their dwellings, and the houses had a deathlike appearance,
with their barred doors and windows, but the greater number, in their haste to
get away and with the sorrowful conviction that nothing would escape
destruction, had left their poor abodes open, and the yawning apertures
displayed the nakedness of the dismantled rooms; and those were the saddest to
behold, with the horrible sadness of a city upon which some great dread has
fallen, depopulating it, those poor houses opened to the winds of heaven, whence
the very cats had fled as if forewarned of the impending doom. At every village
the pitiful spectacle became more heartrending, the number of the fugitives was
greater, as they clove their way through the ever thickening press, with hands
upraised, amid oaths and tears.
But in the open country as they drew near Belfort, Maurice's heart was still
more sorely wrung, for there the homeless fugitives were in greater numbers and
lined the borders of the road in an unbroken cortege. Ah! the unhappy ones, who
had believed that they were to find safety under the walls of the
fortifications! The father lashed the poor old nag, the mother followed after,
leading her crying children by the hand, and in this way entire families,
sinking beneath the weight of their burdens, were strung along the white,
blinding road in the fierce sunlight, where the tired little legs of the smaller
children were unable to keep up with the headlong flight. Many had taken off
their shoes and were going barefoot so as to get over the ground more rapidly,
and half-dressed mothers gave the breast to their crying babies as they strode
along. Affrighted faces turned for a look backward, trembling hands were raised
as if to shut out the horizon from their sight, while the gale of panic tumbled
their unkempt locks and sported with their ill-adjusted garments. Others there
were, farmers and their men, who pushed straight across the fields, driving
before them their flocks and herds, cows, oxen, sheep, horses, that they had
driven with sticks and cudgels from their stables; these were seeking the
shelter of the inaccessible forests, of the deep valleys and the lofty
hill-tops, their course marked by clouds of dust, as in the great migrations of
other days, when invaded nations made way before their barbarian conquerors.
They were going to live in tents, in some lonely nook among the mountains, where
the enemy would never venture to follow them; and the bleating and bellowing of
the animals and the trampling of their hoofs upon the rocks grew fainter in the
distance, and the golden nimbus that overhung them was lost to sight among the
thick pines, while down in the road beneath the tide of vehicles and pedestrians
was flowing still as strong as ever, blocking the passage of the troops, and as
they drew near Belfort the men had to be brought to a halt again and again, so
irresistible was the force of that torrent of humanity.
It was during one of those short halts that Maurice witnessed a scene that
was destined to remain indelibly impressed upon his memory.
Standing by the road-side was a lonely house, the abode of some poor peasant,
whose lean acres extended up the mountainside in the rear. The man had been
unwilling to leave the little field that was his all and had remained, for to go
away would have been to him like parting with life. He could be seen within the
low-ceiled room, sitting stupidly on a bench, watching with dull, lack-luster
eyes the passing of the troops whose retreat would give his ripe grain over to
be the spoil of the enemy. Standing beside him was his wife, still a young
woman, holding in her arms a child, while another was hanging by her skirts; all
three were weeping bitterly. Suddenly the door was thrown open with violence and
in its enframement appeared the grandmother, a very old woman, tall and lean of
form, with bare, sinewy arms like knotted cords that she raised above her head
and shook with frantic gestures. Her gray, scanty locks had escaped from her cap
and were floating about her skinny face, and such was her fury that the words
she shouted choked her utterance and came from her lips almost unintelligible.
At first the soldiers had laughed. Wasn't she a beauty, the old crazy hag!
Then words reached their ears; the old woman was screaming:
"Scum! Robbers! Cowards! Cowards!"
With a voice that rose shriller and more piercing still she kept lashing them
with her tongue, expectorating insult on them, and taunting them for dastards
with the full force of her lungs. And the laughter ceased, it seemed as if a
cold wind had blown over the ranks. The men hung their heads, looked any way
save that.
"Cowards! Cowards! Cowards!"
Then all at once her stature seemed to dilate; she drew herself up, tragic in
her leanness, in her poor old apology for a gown, and sweeping the heavens with
her long arm from west to east, with a gesture so broad that it seemed to fill
the dome:
"Cowards, the Rhine is not there! The Rhine lies yonder! Cowards, cowards!"
They got under way again at last, and Maurice, whose look just then
encountered Jean's, saw that the latter's eyes were filled with tears, and it
did not alleviate his distress to think that those rough soldiers, compelled to
swallow an insult that they had done nothing to deserve, were shamed by it. He
was conscious of nothing save the intolerable aching in his poor head, and in
after days could never remember how the march of that day ended, prostrated as
he was by his terrible suffering, mental and physical.
The 7th corps had spent the entire day in getting over the fourteen or
fifteen miles between Dannemarie and Belfort, and it was night again before the
troops got settled in their bivouacs under the walls of the town, in the very
same place whence they had started four days before to march against the enemy.
Notwithstanding the lateness of the hour and their spent condition, the men
insisted on lighting fires and making soup; it was the first time since their
departure that they had had an opportunity to put warm food into their stomachs,
and seated about the cheerful blaze in the cool air of evening they were dipping
their noses in the porringers and grunting inarticulately in token of
satisfaction when news came in that burst upon the camp like a thunderbolt,
dumfoundering everyone. Two telegrams had just been received: the Prussians had
not crossed the Rhine at Markolsheim, and there was not a single Prussian at
Huningue. The passage of the Rhine at Markolsheim and the bridge of boats
constructed under the electric light had existed merely in imagination, were an
unexplained, inexplicable nightmare of the prefet at Schelestadt; and as for the
army corps that had menaced Huningue, that famous corps of the Black Forest,
that had made so much talk, it was but an insignificant detachment of
Wurtemburgers, a couple of battalions of infantry and a squadron of cavalry,
which had maneuvered with such address, marching and countermarching, appearing
in one place and then suddenly popping up in another at a distance, as to gain
for themselves the reputation of being thirty or forty thousand strong. And to
think that that morning they had been near blowing up the viaduct at Dannemarie!
Twenty leagues of fertile country had been depopulated by the most idiotic of
panics, and at the recollection of what they had seen during their lamentable
day's march, the inhabitants flying in consternation to the mountains, driving
their cattle before them; the press of vehicles, laden with household effects,
streaming cityward and surrounded by bands of weeping women and children, the
soldiers waxed wroth and gave way to bitter, sneering denunciation of their
leaders.
"Ah! it is too ridiculous too talk about!" sputtered Loubet, not stopping to
empty his mouth, brandishing his spoon. "They take us out to fight the enemy,
and there's not a soul to fight with! Twelve leagues there and twelve leagues
back, and not so much as a mouse in front of us! All that for nothing, just for
the fun of being scared to death!"
Chouteau, who was noisily absorbing the last drops in his porringer, bellowed
his opinion of the generals, without mentioning names:
"The pigs! what miserable boobies they are, hein! A pretty pack of
dunghill-cocks the government has given us as commanders! Wonder what they would
do if they had an army actually before them, if they show the white feather this
way when there's not a Prussian in sight, hein!—Ah no, not any of it in
mine, thank you; soldiers don't obey such pigeon-livered gentlemen."
Someone had thrown another armful of wood on the fire for the pleasurable
sensation of comfort there was in the bright, dancing flame, and Lapoulle, who
was engaged in the luxurious occupation of toasting his shins, suddenly went off
into an imbecile fit of laughter without in the least understanding what it was
about, whereon Jean, who had thus far turned a deaf ear to their talk, thought
it time to interfere, which he did by saying in a fatherly way:
"You had better hold your tongue, you fellows! It might be the worse for you
if anyone should hear you."
He himself, in his untutored, common-sense way of viewing things, was
exasperated by the stupid incompetency of their commanders, but then discipline
must be maintained, and as Chouteau still kept up a low muttering he cut him
short:
"Be silent, I say! Here is the lieutenant: address yourself to him if you
have anything to say."
Maurice had listened in silence to the conversation from his place a little
to one side. Ah, truly, the end was near! Scarcely had they made a beginning,
and all was over. That lack of discipline, that seditious spirit among the men
at the very first reverse, had already made the army a demoralized,
disintegrated rabble that would melt away at the first indication of
catastrophe. There they were, under the walls of Belfort, without having sighted
a Prussian, and they were whipped.
The succeeding days were a period of monotony, full of uncertainty and
anxious forebodings. To keep his troops occupied General Douay set them to work
on the defenses of the place, which were in a state of incompleteness; there was
great throwing up of earth and cutting through rock. And not the first item of
news! Where was MacMahon's army? What was going on at Metz? The wildest rumors
were current, and the Parisian journals, by their system of printing news only
to contradict it the next day, kept the country in an agony of suspense. Twice,
it was said, the general had written and asked for instructions, and had not
even received an answer. On the 12th of August, however, the 7th corps was
augmented by the 3d division, which landed from Italy, but there were still only
two divisions for duty, for the 1st had participated in the defeat at
Froeschwiller, had been swept away in the general rout, and as yet no one had
learned where it had been stranded by the current. After a week of this
abandonment, of this entire separation from the rest of France, a telegram came
bringing them the order to march. The news was well received, for anything was
preferable to the prison life they were leading in Belfort. And while they were
getting themselves in readiness conjecture and surmise were the order of the
day, for no one as yet knew what their destination was to be, some saying that
they were to be sent to the defense of Strasbourg, while others spoke with
confidence of a bold dash into the Black Forest that was to sever the Prussian
line of communication.
Early the next morning the 106th was bundled into cattle-cars and started off
among the first. The car that contained Jean's squad was particularly crowded,
so much so that Loubet declared there was not even room in it to sneeze. It was
a load of humanity, sent off to the war just as a load of sacks would have been
dispatched to the mill, crowded in so as to get the greatest number into the
smallest space, and as rations had been given out in the usual hurried, slovenly
manner and the men had received in brandy what they should have received in
food, the consequence was that they were all roaring drunk, with a drunkenness
that vented itself in obscene songs, varied by shrieks and yells. The heavy
train rolled slowly onward; pipes were alight and men could no longer see one
another through the dense clouds of smoke; the heat and odor that emanated from
that mass of perspiring human flesh were unendurable, while from the jolting,
dingy van came volleys of shouts and laughter that drowned the monotonous rattle
of the wheels and were lost amid the silence of the deserted fields. And it was
not until they reached Langres that the troops learned that they were being
carried back to Paris.
"Ah, nom de Dieu!" exclaimed Chouteau, who already, by virtue of his
oratorical ability, was the acknowledged sovereign of his corner, "they will
station us at Charentonneau, sure, to keep old Bismarck out of the Tuileries."
The others laughed loud and long, considering the joke a very good one,
though no one could say why. The most trivial incidents of the journey, however,
served to elicit a storm of yells, cat-calls, and laughter: a group of peasants
standing beside the roadway, or the anxious faces of the people who hung about
the way-stations in the hope of picking up some bits of news from the passing
trains, epitomizing on a small scale the breathless, shuddering alarm that
pervaded all France in the presence of invasion. And so it happened that as the
train thundered by, a fleeting vision of pandemonium, all that the good burghers
obtained in the way of intelligence was the salutations of that cargo of food
for powder as it hurried onward to its destination, fast as steam could carry
it. At a station where they stopped, however, three well-dressed ladies, wealthy
bourgeoises of the town, who distributed cups of bouillon among the men, were
received with great respect. Some of the soldiers shed tears, and kissed their
hands as they thanked them.
But as soon as they were under way again the filthy songs and the wild shouts
began afresh, and so it went on until, a little while after leaving Chaumont,
they met another train that was conveying some batteries of artillery to Metz.
The locomotives slowed down and the soldiers in the two trains fraternized with
a frightful uproar. The artillerymen were also apparently very drunk; they stood
up in their seats, and thrusting hands and arms out of the car-windows, gave
this cry with a vehemence that silenced every other sound:
"To the slaughter! to the slaughter! to the slaughter!"
It was as if a cold wind, a blast from the charnel-house, had swept through
the car. Amid the sudden silence that descended on them Loubet's irreverent
voice was heard, shouting:
"Not very cheerful companions, those fellows!"
"But they are right," rejoined Chouteau, as if addressing some pot-house
assemblage; "it is a beastly thing to send a lot of brave boys to have their
brains blown out for a dirty little quarrel about which they don't know the
first word."
And much more in the same strain. He was the type of the Belleville agitator,
a lazy, dissipated mechanic, perverting his fellow workmen, constantly spouting
the ill-digested odds and ends of political harangues that he had heard,
belching forth in the same breath the loftiest sentiments and the most asinine
revolutionary clap-trap. He knew it all, and tried to inoculate his comrades
with his ideas, especially Lapoulle, of whom he had promised to make a lad of
spirit.
"Don't you see, old man, it's all perfectly simple. If Badinguet and Bismarck
have a quarrel, let 'em go to work with their fists and fight it out and not
involve in their row some hundreds of thousands of men who don't even know one
another by sight and have not the slightest desire to fight."
The whole car laughed and applauded, and Lapoulle, who did not know who
Badinguet[*] was, and could not have told whether it was a king or an emperor in
whose cause he was fighting, repeated like the gigantic baby that he was:
[*] Napoleon III.
"Of course, let 'em fight it out, and take a drink together afterward."
But Chouteau had turned to Pache, whom he now proceeded to take in hand.
"You are in the same boat, you, who pretend to believe in the good God. He
has forbidden men to fight, your good God has. Why, then, are you here, you
great simpleton?"
"Dame!" Pache doubtfully replied, "it is not for any pleasure of mine
that I am here—but the gendarmes—"
"Oh, indeed, the gendarmes! let the gendarmes go milk the ducks!—say, do you
know what we would do, all of us, if we had the least bit of spirit? I'll tell
you; just the minute that they land us from the cars we'd skip; yes, we'd go
straight home, and leave that pig of a Badinguet and his gang of two-for-a-penny
generals to settle accounts with their beastly Prussians as best they may!"
There was a storm of bravos; the leaven of perversion was doing its work and
it was Chouteau's hour of triumph, airing his muddled theories and ringing the
changes on the Republic, the Rights of Man, the rottenness of the Empire, which
must be destroyed, and the treason of their commanders, who, as it had been
proved, had sold themselves to the enemy at the rate of a million a piece.
He was a revolutionist, he boldly declared; the others could not even say
that they were republicans, did not know what their opinions were, in fact,
except Loubet, the concocter of stews and hashes, and he had an opinion,
for he had been for soup, first, last, and always; but they all, carried away by
his eloquence, shouted none the less lustily against the Emperor, their
officers, the whole d——d shop, which they would leave the first chance they got,
see if they wouldn't! And Chouteau, while fanning the flame of their discontent,
kept an eye on Maurice, the fine gentleman, who appeared interested and whom he
was proud to have for a companion; so that, by way of inflaming his
passions also, it occurred to him to make an attack on Jean, who had thus far
been tranquilly watching the proceedings out of his half-closed eyes, unmoved
among the general uproar. If there was any remnant of resentment in the bosom of
the volunteer since the time when the corporal had inflicted such a bitter
humiliation on him by forcing him to resume his abandoned musket, now was a fine
chance to set the two men by the ears.
"I know some folks who talk of shooting us," Chouteau continued, with an ugly
look at Jean; "dirty, miserable skunks, who treat us worse than beasts, and,
when a man's back is broken with the weight of his knapsack and Brownbess,
aie! aie! object to his planting them in the fields to see if a
new crop will grow from them. What do you suppose they would say, comrades,
hein! now that we are masters, if we should pitch them all out upon the
track, and teach them better manners? That's the way to do, hein! We'll
show 'em that we won't be bothered any longer with their mangy wars. Down with
Badinguet's bed-bugs! Death to the curs who want to make us fight!"
Jean's face was aflame with the crimson tide that never failed to rush to his
cheeks in his infrequent fits of anger. He rose, wedged in though as he was
between his neighbors as firmly as in a vise, and his blazing eyes and doubled
fists had such a look of business about them that the other quailed.
"Tonnerre de Dieu! will you be silent, pig! For hours I have sat here
without saying anything, because we have no longer any leaders, and I could not
even send you to the guard-house. Yes, there's no doubt of it, it would be a
good thing to shoot such men as you and rid the regiment of the vermin. But see
here, as there's no longer any discipline, I will attend to your case myself.
There's no corporal here now, but a hard-fisted fellow who is tired of listening
to your jaw, and he'll see if he can't make you keep your potato-trap shut. Ah!
you d——d coward! You won't fight yourself and you want to keep others from
fighting! Repeat your words once and I'll knock your head off!"
By this time the whole car, won over by Jean's manly attitude, had deserted
Chouteau, who cowered back in his seat as if not anxious to face his opponent's
big fists.
"And I care no more for Badinguet than I do for you, do you understand? I
despise politics, whether they are republican or imperial, and now, as in the
past, when I used to cultivate my little farm, there is but one thing that I
wish for, and that is the happiness of all, peace and good-order, freedom for
every man to attend to his affairs. No one denies that war is a terrible
business, but that is no reason why a man should not be treated to the sight of
a firing-party when he comes trying to dishearten people who already have enough
to do to keep their courage up. Good Heavens, friends, how it makes a man's
pulses leap to be told that the Prussians are in the land and that he is to go
help drive them out!"
Then, with the customary fickleness of a mob, the soldiers applauded the
corporal, who again announced his determination to thrash the first man of his
squad who should declare non-combatant principles. Bravo, the corporal! they
would soon settle old Bismarck's hash! And, in the midst of the wild ovation of
which he was the object, Jean, who had recovered his self-control, turned
politely to Maurice and addressed him as if he had not been one of his men:
"Monsieur, you cannot have anything in common with those poltroons. Come, we
haven't had a chance at them yet; we are the boys who will give them a good
basting yet, those Prussians!"
It seemed to Maurice at that moment as if a ray of cheering sunshine had
penetrated his heart. He was humiliated, vexed with himself. What! that man was
nothing more than an uneducated rustic! And he remembered the fierce hatred that
had burned in his bosom the day he was compelled to pick up the musket that he
had thrown away in a moment of madness. But he also remembered his emotion at
seeing the two big tears that stood in the corporal's eyes when the old
grandmother, her gray hairs streaming in the wind, had so bitterly reproached
them and pointed to the Rhine that lay beneath the horizon in the distance. Was
it the brotherhood of fatigue and suffering endured in common that had served
thus to dissipate his wrathful feelings? He was Bonapartist by birth, and had
never thought of the Republic except in a speculative, dreamy way; his feeling
toward the Emperor, personally, too, inclined to friendliness, and he was
favorable to the war, the very condition of national existence, the great
regenerative school of nationalities. Hope, all at once, with one of those
fitful impulses of the imagination, that were common in his temperament, revived
in him, while the enthusiastic ardor that had impelled him to enlist one night
again surged through his veins and swelled his heart with confidence of victory.
"Why, of course, Corporal," he gayly replied, "we shall give them a basting!"
And still the car kept rolling onward with its load of human freight, filled
with reeking smoke of pipes and emanations of the crowded men, belching its
ribald songs and drunken shouts among the expectant throngs of the stations
through which it passed, among the rows of white-faced peasants who lined the
iron-way. On the 20th of August they were at the Pantin Station in Paris, and
that same evening boarded another train which landed them next day at Rheims
en route for the camp at Chalons.