The Downfall
Part II
Chapter V
It was nearly ten o'clock up on the Plateau de l'Algerie, and still the men
of Beaudoin's company were resting supine, among the cabbages, in the field
whence they had not budged since early morning. The cross fire from the
batteries on Hattoy and the peninsula of Iges was hotter than ever; it had just
killed two more of their number, and there were no orders for them to advance.
Were they to stay there and be shelled all day, without a chance to see anything
of the fighting?
They were even denied the relief of discharging their chassepots. Captain
Beaudoin had at last put his foot down and stopped the firing, that senseless
fusillade against the little wood in front of them, which seemed entirely
deserted by the Prussians. The heat was stifling; it seemed to them that they
should roast, stretched there on the ground under the blazing sky.
Jean was alarmed, on turning to look at Maurice, to see that he had declined
his head and was lying, with closed eyes, apparently inanimate, his cheek
against the bare earth. He was very pale, there was no sign of life in his face.
"Hallo there! what's the matter?"
But Maurice was only sleeping. The mental strain, conjointly with his
fatigue, had been too much for him, in spite of the dangers that menaced them at
every moment. He awoke with a start and stared about him, and the peace that
slumber had left in his wide-dilated eyes was immediately supplanted by a look
of startled affright as it dawned on him where he was. He had not the remotest
idea how long he had slept; all he knew was that the state from which he had
been recalled to the horrors of the battlefield was one of blessed oblivion and
tranquillity.
"Hallo! that's funny; I must have been asleep!" he murmured. "Ah! it has done
me good."
It was true that he suffered less from that pressure about his temples and at
his heart, that horrible constriction that seems as if it would crush one's
bones. He chaffed Lapoulle, who had manifested much uneasiness since the
disappearance of Chouteau and Loubet and spoke of going to look for them. A
capital idea! so he might get away and hide behind a tree, and smoke a pipe!
Pache thought that the surgeons had detained them at the ambulance, where there
was a scarcity of sick-bearers. That was a job that he had no great fancy for,
to go around under fire and collect the wounded! And haunted by a lingering
superstition of the country where he was born, he added that it was unlucky to
touch a corpse; it brought death.
"Shut up, confound you!" roared Lieutenant Rochas. "Who is going to die?"
Colonel de Vineuil, sitting his tall horse, turned his head and gave a smile,
the first that had been seen on his face that morning. Then he resumed his
statue-like attitude, waiting for orders as impassively as ever under the
tumbling shells.
Maurice's attention was attracted to the sick-bearers, whose movements he
watched with interest as they searched for wounded men among the depressions of
the ground. At the end of a sunken road, and protected by a low ridge not far
from their position, a flying ambulance of first aid had been established, and
its emissaries had begun to explore the plateau. A tent was quickly erected,
while from the hospital van the attendants extracted the necessary supplies;
compresses, bandages, linen, and the few indispensable instruments required for
the hasty dressings they gave before dispatching the patients to Sedan, which
they did as rapidly as they could secure wagons, the supply of which was
limited. There was an assistant surgeon in charge, with two subordinates of
inferior rank under him. In all the army none showed more gallantry and received
less acknowledgment than the litter-bearers. They could be seen all over the
field in their gray uniform, with the distinctive red badge on their cap and on
their arm, courageously risking their lives and unhurriedly pushing forward
through the thickest of the fire to the spots where men had been seen to fall.
At times they would creep on hands and knees: would always take advantage of a
hedge or ditch, or any shelter that was afforded by the conformation of the
ground, never exposing themselves unnecessarily out of bravado. When at last
they reached the fallen men their painful task commenced, which was made more
difficult and protracted by the fact that many of the subjects had fainted, and
it was hard to tell whether they were alive or dead. Some lay face downward with
their mouths in a pool of blood, in danger of suffocating, others had bitten the
ground until their throats were choked with dry earth, others, where a shell had
fallen among a group, were a confused, intertwined heap of mangled limbs and
crushed trunks. With infinite care and patience the bearers would go through the
tangled mass, separating the living from the dead, arranging their limbs and
raising the head to give them air, cleansing the face as well as they could with
the means at their command. Each of them carried a bucket of cool water, which
he had to use very savingly. And Maurice could see them thus engaged, often for
minutes at a time, kneeling by some man whom they were trying to resuscitate,
waiting for him to show some sign of life.
He watched one of them, some fifty yards away to the left, working over the
wound of a little soldier from the sleeve of whose tunic a thin stream of blood
was trickling, drop by drop. The man of the red cross discovered the source of
the hemorrhage and finally checked it by compressing the artery. In urgent
cases, like that of the little soldier, they rendered these partial attentions,
locating fractures, bandaging and immobilizing the limbs so as to reduce the
danger of transportation. And the transportation, even, was an affair that
called for a great deal of judgment and ingenuity; they assisted those who could
walk, and carried others, either in their arms, like little children, or
pickaback when the nature of the hurt allowed it; at other times they united in
groups of two, three, or four, according to the requirements of the case, and
made a chair by joining their hands, or carried the patient off by his legs and
shoulders in a recumbent posture. In addition to the stretchers provided by the
medical department there were all sorts of temporary makeshifts, such as the
stretchers improvised from knapsack straps and a couple of muskets. And in every
direction on the unsheltered, shell-swept plain they could be seen, singly or in
groups, hastening with their dismal loads to the rear, their heads bowed and
picking their steps, an admirable spectacle of prudent heroism.
Maurice saw a pair on his right, a thin, puny little fellow lugging a burly
sergeant, with both legs broken, suspended from his neck; the sight reminded the
young man of an ant, toiling under a burden many times larger than itself; and
even as he watched them a shell burst directly in their path and they were lost
to view. When the smoke cleared away the sergeant was seen lying on his back,
having received no further injury, while the bearer lay beside him,
disemboweled. And another came up, another toiling ant, who, when he had turned
his dead comrade on his back and examined him, took the sergeant up and made off
with his load.
It gave Maurice a chance to read Lapoulle a lesson.
"I say, if you like the business, why don't you go and give that man a lift!"
For some little time the batteries at Saint-Menges had been thundering as if
determined to surpass all previous efforts, and Captain Beaudoin, who was still
tramping nervously up and down before his company line, at last stepped up to
the colonel. It was a pity, he said, to waste the men's morale in that way and
keep their minds on the stretch for hours and hours.
"I can't help it; I have no orders," the colonel stoically replied.
They had another glimpse of General Douay as he flew by at a gallop, followed
by his staff. He had just had an interview with General de Wimpffen, who had
ridden up to entreat him to hold his ground, which he thought he could promise
to do, but only so long as the Calvary of Illy, on his right, held out; Illy
once taken, he would be responsible for nothing; their defeat would be
inevitable. General de Wimpffen averred that the 1st corps would look out for
the position at Illy, and indeed a regiment of zouaves was presently seen to
occupy the Calvary, so that General Douay, his anxiety being relieved on that
score, sent Dumont's division to the assistance of the 12th corps, which was
then being hard pushed. Scarcely fifteen minutes later, however, as he was
returning from the left, whither he had ridden to see how affairs were looking,
he was surprised, raising his eyes to the Calvary, to see it was unoccupied;
there was not a zouave to be seen there, they had abandoned the plateau that was
no longer tenable by reason of the terrific fire from the batteries at
Fleigneux. With a despairing presentiment of impending disaster he was spurring
as fast as he could to the right, when he encountered Dumont's division, flying
in disorder, broken and tangled in inextricable confusion with the debris of the
1st corps. The latter, which, after its retrograde movement, had never been able
to regain possession of the posts it had occupied in the morning, leaving Daigny
in the hands of the XIIth Saxon corps and Givonne to the Prussian Guards, had
been compelled to retreat in a northerly direction across the wood of Garenne,
harassed by the batteries that the enemy had posted on every summit from one end
of the valley to the other. The terrible circle of fire and flame was
contracting; a portion of the Guards had continued their march on Illy, moving
from east to west and turning the eminences, while from west to east, in the
rear of the XIth corps, now masters of Saint-Menges, the Vth, moving steadily
onward, had passed Fleigneux and with insolent temerity was constantly pushing
its batteries more and more to the front, and so contemptuous were they of the
ignorance and impotence of the French that they did not even wait for the
infantry to come up to support their guns. It was midday; the entire horizon was
aflame, concentrating its destructive fire on the 7th and 1st corps.
Then General Douay, while the German artillery was thus preparing the way for
the decisive movement that should make them masters of the Calvary, resolved to
make one last desperate attempt to regain possession of the hill. He dispatched
his orders, and throwing himself in person among the fugitives of Dumont's
division, succeeded in forming a column which he sent forward to the plateau. It
held its ground for a few minutes, but the bullets whistled so thick, the naked,
treeless fields were swept by such a tornado of shot and shell, that it was not
long before the panic broke out afresh, sweeping the men adown the slopes,
rolling them up as straws are whirled before the wind. And the general,
unwilling to abandon his project, ordered up other regiments.
A staff officer galloped by, shouting to Colonel de Vineuil as he passed an
order that was lost in the universal uproar. Hearing, the colonel was erect in
his stirrups in an instant, his face aglow with the gladness of battle, and
pointing to the Calvary with a grand movement of his sword:
"Our turn has come at last, boys!" he shouted. "Forward!"
A thrill of enthusiasm ran through the ranks at the brief address, and the
regiment put itself in motion. Beaudoin's company was among the first to get on
its feet, which it did to the accompaniment of much good-natured chaff, the men
declaring they were so rusty they could not move; the gravel must have
penetrated their joints. The fire was so hot, however, that by the time they had
advanced a few feet they were glad to avail themselves of the protection of a
shelter trench that lay in their path, along which they crept in an undignified
posture, bent almost double.
"Now, young fellow, look out for yourself!" Jean said to Maurice; "we're in
for it. Don't let 'em see so much as the end of your nose, for if you do they
will surely snip it off, and keep a sharp lookout for your legs and arms unless
you have more than you care to keep. Those who come out of this with a whole
skin will be lucky."
Maurice did not hear him very distinctly; the words were lost in the
all-pervading clamor that buzzed and hummed in the young man's ears. He could
not have told now whether he was afraid or not; he went forward because the
others did, borne along with them in their headlong rush, without distinct
volition of his own; his sole desire was to have the affair ended as soon as
possible. So true was it that he was a mere drop in the on-pouring torrent that
when the leading files came to the end of the trench and began to waver at the
prospect of climbing the exposed slope that lay before them, he immediately felt
himself seized by a sensation of panic, and was ready to turn and fly. It was
simply an uncontrollable instinct, a revolt of the muscles, obedient to every
passing breath.
Some of the men had already faced about when the colonel came hurrying up.
"Steady there, my children. You won't cause me this great sorrow; you won't
behave like cowards. Remember, the 106th has never turned its back upon the
enemy; will you be the first to disgrace our flag?"
And he spurred his charger across the path of the fugitives, addressing them
individually, speaking to them, of their country, in a voice that trembled with
emotion.
Lieutenant Rochas was so moved by his words that he gave way to an
ungovernable fit of anger, raising his sword and belaboring the men with the
flat as if it had been a club.
"You dirty loafers, I'll see whether you will go up there or not! I'll kick
you up! About face! and I'll break the jaw of the first man that refuses to
obey!"
But such an extreme measure as kicking a regiment into action was repugnant
to the colonel.
"No, no, lieutenant; they will follow me. Won't you, my children? You won't
let your old colonel fight it out alone with the Prussians! Up there lies the
way; forward!"
He turned his horse and left the trench, and they did all follow, to a man,
for he would have been considered the lowest of the low who could have abandoned
their leader after that brave, kind speech. He was the only one, however, who,
while crossing the open fields, erect on his tall horse, was cool and
unconcerned; the men scattered, advancing in open order and availing themselves
of every shelter afforded by the ground. The land sloped upward; there were
fully five hundred yards of stubble and beet fields between them and the
Calvary, and in place of the correctly aligned columns that the spectator sees
advancing when a charge is ordered in field maneuvers, all that was to be seen
was a loose array of men with rounded backs, singly or in small groups, hugging
the ground, now crawling warily a little way on hands and knees, now dashing
forward for the next cover, like huge insects fighting their way upward to the
crest by dint of agility and address. The enemy's batteries seemed to have
become aware of the movement; their fire was so rapid that the reports of the
guns were blended in one continuous roar. Five men were killed, a lieutenant was
cut in two.
Maurice and Jean had considered themselves fortunate that their way led along
a hedge behind which they could push forward unseen, but the man immediately in
front of them was shot through the temples and fell back dead in their arms;
they had to cast him down at one side. By this time, however, the casualties had
ceased to excite attention; they were too numerous. A man went by, uttering
frightful shrieks and pressing his hands upon his protruding entrails; they
beheld a horse dragging himself along with both thighs broken, and these
anguishing sights, these horrors of the battlefield, affected them no longer.
They were suffering from the intolerable heat, the noonday sun that beat upon
their backs and burned like hot coals.
"How thirsty I am!" Maurice murmured. "My throat is like an ash barrel. Don't
you notice that smell of something scorching, a smell like burning woolen?"
Jean nodded. "It was just the same at Solferino; perhaps it is the smell that
always goes with war. But hold, I have a little brandy left; we'll have a sup."
And they paused behind the hedge a moment and raised the flask to their lips,
but the brandy, instead of relieving their thirst, burned their stomach. It
irritated them, that nasty taste of burnt rags in their mouths. Moreover they
perceived that their strength was commencing to fail for want of sustenance and
would have liked to take a bite from the half loaf that Maurice had in his
knapsack, but it would not do to stop and breakfast there under fire, and then
they had to keep up with their comrades. There was a steady stream of men coming
up behind them along the hedge who pressed them forward, and so, doggedly
bending their backs to the task before them, they resumed their course.
Presently they made their final rush and reached the crest. They were on the
plateau, at the very foot of the Calvary, the old weather-beaten cross that
stood between two stunted lindens.
"Good for our side!" exclaimed Jean; "here we are! But the next thing is to
remain here!"
He was right; it was not the pleasantest place in the world to be in, as
Lapoulle remarked in a doleful tone that excited the laughter of the company.
They all lay down again, in a field of stubble, and for all that three men were
killed in quick succession. It was pandemonium let loose up there on the
heights; the projectiles from Saint-Menges, Fleigneux, and Givonne fell in such
numbers that the ground fairly seemed to smoke, as it does at times under a
heavy shower of rain. It was clear that the position could not be maintained
unless artillery was dispatched at once to the support of the troops who had
been sent on such a hopeless undertaking. General Douay, it was said, had given
instructions to bring up two batteries of the reserve artillery, and the men
were every moment turning their heads, watching anxiously for the guns that did
not come.
"It is absurd, ridiculous!" declared Beaudoin, who was again fidgeting up and
down before the company. "Who ever heard of placing a regiment in the air like
this and giving it no support!" Then, observing a slight depression on their
left, he turned to Rochas: "Don't you think, Lieutenant, that the company would
be safer there?"
Rochas stood stock still and shrugged his shoulders. "It is six of one and
half a dozen of the other, Captain. My opinion is that we will do better to stay
where we are."
Then the captain, whose principles were opposed to swearing, forgot himself.
"But, good God! there won't a man of us escape! We can't allow the men to be
murdered like this!"
And he determined to investigate for himself the advantages of the position
he had mentioned, but had scarcely taken ten steps when he was lost to sight in
the smoke of an exploding shell; a splinter of the projectile had fractured his
right leg. He fell upon his back, emitting a shrill cry of alarm, like a
woman's.
"He might have known as much," Rochas muttered. "There's no use his making
such a fuss over it; when the dose is fixed for one, he has to take it."
Some members of the company had risen to their feet on seeing their captain
fall, and as he continued to call lustily for assistance, Jean finally ran to
him, immediately followed by Maurice.
"Friends, friends, for Heaven's sake do not leave me here; carry me to the
ambulance!"
"Dame, Captain, I don't know that we shall be able to get so far, but
we can try."
As they were discussing how they could best take hold to raise him they
perceived, behind the hedge that had sheltered them on their way up, two
stretcher-bearers who seemed to be waiting for something to do, and finally,
after protracted signaling, induced them to draw near. All would be well if they
could only get the wounded man to the ambulance without accident, but the way
was long and the iron hail more pitiless than ever.
The bearers had tightly bandaged the injured limb in order to keep the bones
in position and were about to bear the captain off the field on what children
call a "chair," formed by joining their hands and slipping an arm of the patient
over each of their necks, when Colonel de Vineuil, who had heard of the
accident, came up, spurring his horse. He manifested much emotion, for he had
known the young man ever since his graduation from Saint-Cyr.
"Cheer up, my poor boy; have courage. You are in no danger; the doctors will
save your leg."
The captain's face wore an expression of resignation, as if he had summoned
up all his courage to bear his misfortune manfully.
"No, my dear Colonel; I feel it is all up with me, and I would rather have it
so. The only thing that distresses me is the waiting for the inevitable end."
The bearers carried him away, and were fortunate enough to reach the hedge in
safety, behind which they trotted swiftly away with their burden. The colonel's
eyes followed them anxiously, and when he saw them reach the clump of trees
where the ambulance was stationed a look of deep relief rose to his face.
"But you, Colonel," Maurice suddenly exclaimed, "you are wounded too!"
He had perceived blood dripping from the colonel's left boot. A projectile of
some description had carried away the heel of the foot-covering and forced the
steel shank into the flesh.
M. de Vineuil bent over his saddle and glanced unconcernedly at the member,
in which the sensation at that time must have been far from pleasurable.
"Yes, yes," he replied, "it is a little remembrance that I received a while
ago. A mere scratch, that don't prevent me from sitting my horse—" And he added,
as he turned to resume his position to the rear of his regiment: "As long as a
man can stick on his horse he's all right."
At last the two batteries of reserve artillery came up. Their arrival was an
immense relief to the anxiously expectant men, as if the guns were to be a
rampart of protection to them and at the same time demolish the hostile
batteries that were thundering against them from every side. And then, too, it
was in itself an exhilarating spectacle to see the magnificent order they
preserved as they came dashing up, each gun followed by its caisson, the drivers
seated on the near horse and holding the off horse by the bridle, the cannoneers
bolt upright on the chests, the chiefs of detachment riding in their proper
position on the flank. Distances were preserved as accurately as if they were on
parade, and all the time they were tearing across the fields at headlong speed,
with the roar and crash of a hurricane.
Maurice, who had lain down again, arose and said to Jean in great excitement:
"Look! over there on the left, that is Honore's battery. I can recognize the
men."
Jean gave him a back-handed blow that brought him down to his recumbent
position.
"Lie down, will you! and make believe dead!"
But they were both deeply interested in watching the maneuvers of the
battery, and never once removed their eyes from it; it cheered their heart to
witness the cool and intrepid activity of those men, who, they hoped, might yet
bring victory to them.
The battery had wheeled into position on a bare summit to the left, where it
brought up all standing; then, quick as a flash, the cannoneers leaped from the
chests and unhooked the limbers, and the drivers, leaving the gun in position,
drove fifteen yards to the rear, where they wheeled again so as to bring team
and limber face to the enemy and there remained, motionless as statues. In less
time than it takes to tell it the guns were in place, with the proper intervals
between them, distributed into three sections of two guns each, each section
commanded by a lieutenant, and over the whole a captain, a long maypole of a
man, who made a terribly conspicuous landmark on the plateau. And this captain,
having first made a brief calculation, was heard to shout:
"Sight for sixteen hundred yards!"
Their fire was to be directed upon a Prussian battery, screened by some
bushes, to the left of Fleigneux, the shells from which were rendering the
position of the Calvary untenable.
"Honore's piece, you see," Maurice began again, whose excitement was such
that he could not keep still, "Honore's piece is in the center section. There he
is now, bending over to speak to the gunner; you remember Louis, the gunner,
don't you? the little fellow with whom we had a drink at Vouziers? And that
fellow in the rear, who sits so straight on his handsome chestnut, is Adolphe,
the driver—"
First came the gun with its chief and six cannoneers, then the limber with
its four horses ridden by two men, beyond that the caisson with its six horses
and three drivers, still further to the rear were the prolonge, forge,
and battery wagon; and this array of men, horses and materiel extended to
the rear in a straight unbroken line of more than a hundred yards in length; to
say nothing of the spare caisson and the men and beasts who were to fill the
places of those removed by casualties, who were stationed at one side, as much
as possible out of the enemy's line of fire.
And now Honore was attending to the loading of his gun. The two men whose
duty it was to fetch the cartridge and the projectile returned from the caisson,
where the corporal and the artificer were stationed; two other cannoneers,
standing at the muzzle of the piece, slipped into the bore the cartridge, a
charge of powder in an envelope of serge, and gently drove it home with the
rammer, then in like manner introduced the shell, the studs of which creaked
faintly in the spirals of the rifling. When the primer was inserted in the vent
and all was in readiness, Honore thought he would like to point the gun himself
for the first shot, and throwing himself in a semi-recumbent posture on the
trail, working with one hand the screw that regulated the elevation, with the
other he signaled continually to the gunner, who, standing behind him, moved the
piece by imperceptible degrees to right or left with the assistance of the
lever.
"That ought to be about right," he said as he arose.
The captain came up, and stooping until his long body was bent almost double,
verified the elevation. At each gun stood the assistant gunner, waiting to pull
the lanyard that should ignite the fulminate by means of a serrated wire. And
the orders were given in succession, deliberately, by number:
"Number one, Fire! Number two, Fire!"
Six reports were heard, the guns recoiled, and while they were being brought
back to position the chiefs of detachment observed the effect of the shots and
found that the range was short. They made the necessary correction and the
evolution was repeated, in exactly the same manner as before; and it was that
cool precision, that mechanical routine of duty, without agitation and without
haste, that did so much to maintain the morale of the men. They were a
little family, united by the tie of a common occupation, grouped around the gun,
which they loved and reverenced as if it had been a living thing; it was the
object of all their care and attention, to it all else was subservient, men,
horses, caisson, everything. Thence also arose the spirit of unity and cohesion
that animated the battery at large, making all its members work together for the
common glory and the common good, like a well-regulated household.
The 106th had cheered lustily at the completion of the first round; they were
going to make those bloody Prussian guns shut their mouths at last! but their
elation was succeeded by dismay when it was seen that the projectiles fell
short, many of them bursting in the air and never reaching the bushes that
served to mask the enemy's artillery.
"Honore," Maurice continued, "says that all the other pieces are popguns and
that his old girl is the only one that is good for anything. Ah, his old girl!
He talks as if she were his wife and there were not another like her in the
world! Just notice how jealously he watches her and makes the men clean her off!
I suppose he is afraid she will overheat herself and take cold!"
He continued rattling on in this pleasant vein to Jean, both of them cheered
and encouraged by the cool bravery with which the artillerymen served their
guns; but the Prussian batteries, after firing three rounds, had now got the
range, which, too long at the beginning, they had at last ciphered down to such
a fine point that their shells were landed invariably among the French pieces,
while the latter, notwithstanding the efforts that were made to increase their
range, still continued to place their projectiles short of the enemy's position.
One of Honore's cannoneers was killed while loading the piece; the others pushed
the body out of their way, and the service went on with the same methodical
precision, with neither more nor less haste. In the midst of the projectiles
that fell and burst continually the same unvarying rhythmical movements went on
uninterruptedly about the gun; the cartridge and shell were introduced, the gun
was pointed, the lanyard pulled, the carriage brought back to place; and all
with such undeviating regularity that the men might have been taken for
automatons, devoid of sight and hearing.
What impressed Maurice, however, more than anything else, was the attitude of
the drivers, sitting straight and stiff in their saddles fifteen yards to the
rear, face to the enemy. There was Adolphe, the broad-chested, with his big
blond mustache across his rubicund face; and who shall tell the amount of
courage a man must have to enable him to sit without winking and watch the
shells coming toward him, and he not allowed even to twirl his thumbs by way of
diversion! The men who served the guns had something to occupy their minds,
while the drivers, condemned to immobility, had death constantly before their
eyes, and plenty of leisure to speculate on probabilities. They were made to
face the battlefield because, had they turned their backs to it, the coward that
so often lurks at the bottom of man's nature might have got the better of them
and swept away man and beast. It is the unseen danger that makes dastards of us;
that which we can see we brave. The army has no more gallant set of men in its
ranks than the drivers in their obscure position.
Another man had been killed, two horses of a caisson had been disemboweled,
and the enemy kept up such a murderous fire that there was a prospect of the
entire battery being knocked to pieces should they persist in holding that
position longer. It was time to take some step to baffle that tremendous fire,
notwithstanding the danger there was in moving, and the captain unhesitatingly
gave orders to bring up the limbers.
The risky maneuver was executed with lightning speed; the drivers came up at
a gallop, wheeled their limber into position in rear of the gun, when the
cannoneers raised the trail of the piece and hooked on. The movement, however,
collecting as it did, momentarily, men and horses on the battery front in
something of a huddle, created a certain degree of confusion, of which the enemy
took advantage by increasing the rapidity of their fire; three more men dropped.
The teams darted away at breakneck speed, describing an arc of a circle among
the fields, and the battery took up its new position some fifty or sixty yards
more to the right, on a gentle eminence that was situated on the other flank of
the 106th. The pieces were unlimbered, the drivers resumed their station at the
rear, face to the enemy, and the firing was reopened; and so little time was
lost between leaving their old post and taking up the new that the earth had
barely ceased to tremble under the concussion.
Maurice uttered a cry of dismay, when, after three attempts, the Prussians
had again got their range; the first shell landed squarely on Honore's gun. The
artilleryman rushed forward, and with a trembling hand felt to ascertain what
damage had been done his pet; a great wedge had been chipped from the bronze
muzzle. But it was not disabled, and the work went on as before, after they had
removed from beneath the wheels the body of another cannoneer, with whose blood
the entire carriage was besplashed.
"It was not little Louis; I am glad of that," said Maurice, continuing to
think aloud. "There he is now, pointing his gun; he must be wounded, though, for
he is only using his left arm. Ah, he is a brave lad, is little Louis; and how
well he and Adolphe get on together, in spite of their little tiffs, only
provided the gunner, the man who serves on foot, shows a proper amount of
respect for the driver, the man who rides a horse, notwithstanding that the
latter is by far the more ignorant of the two. Now that they are under fire,
though, Louis is as good a man as Adolphe—"
Jean, who had been watching events in silence, gave utterance to a
distressful cry:
"They will have to give it up! No troops in the world could stand such a
fire."
Within the space of five minutes the second position had become as untenable
as was the first; the projectiles kept falling with the same persistency, the
same deadly precision. A shell dismounted a gun, fracturing the chase, killing a
lieutenant and two men. Not one of the enemy's shots failed to reach, and at
each discharge they secured a still greater accuracy of range, so that if the
battery should remain there another five minutes they would not have a gun or a
man left. The crushing fire threatened to wipe them all out of existence.
Again the captain's ringing voice was heard ordering up the limbers. The
drivers dashed up at a gallop and wheeled their teams into place to allow the
cannoneers to hook on the guns, but before Adolphe had time to get up Louis was
struck by a fragment of shell that tore open his throat and broke his jaw; he
fell across the trail of the carriage just as he was on the point of raising it.
Adolphe was there instantly, and beholding his prostrate comrade weltering in
his blood, jumped from his horse and was about to raise him to his saddle and
bear him away. And at that moment, just as the battery was exposed flank to the
enemy in the act of wheeling, offering a fair target, a crashing discharge came,
and Adolphe reeled and fell to the ground, his chest crushed in, with arms wide
extended. In his supreme convulsion he seized his comrade about the body, and
thus they lay, locked in each other's arms in a last embrace, "married" even in
death.
Notwithstanding the slaughtered horses and the confusion that that
death-dealing discharge had caused among the men, the battery had rattled up the
slope of a hillock and taken post a few yards from the spot where Jean and
Maurice were lying. For the third time the guns were unlimbered, the drivers
retired to the rear and faced the enemy, and the cannoneers, with a gallantry
that nothing could daunt, at once reopened fire.
"It is as if the end of all things were at hand!" said Maurice, the sound of
whose voice was lost in the uproar.
It seemed indeed as if heaven and earth were confounded in that hideous din.
Great rocks were cleft asunder, the sun was hid from sight at times in clouds of
sulphurous vapor. When the cataclysm was at its height the horses stood with
drooping heads, trembling, dazed with terror. The captain's tall form was
everywhere upon the eminence; suddenly he was seen no more; a shell had cut him
clean in two, and he sank, as a ship's mast that is snapped off at the base.
But it was about Honore's gun, even more than the others, that the conflict
raged, with cool efficiency and obstinate determination. The non-commissioned
officer found it necessary to forget his chevrons for the time being and lend a
hand in working the piece, for he had now but three cannoneers left; he pointed
the gun and pulled the lanyard, while the others brought ammunition from the
caisson, loaded, and handled the rammer and the sponge. He had sent for men and
horses from the battery reserves that were kept to supply the places of those
removed by casualties, but they were slow in coming, and in the meantime the
survivors must do the work of the dead. It was a great discouragement to all
that their projectiles ranged short and burst almost without exception in the
air, inflicting no injury on the powerful batteries of the foe, the fire of
which was so efficient. And suddenly Honore let slip an oath that was heard
above the thunder of the battle; ill-luck, ill-luck, nothing but ill-luck! the
right wheel of his piece was smashed! Tonnerre de Dieu! what a state she
was in, the poor darling! stretched on her side with a broken paw, her nose
buried in the ground, crippled and good for nothing! The sight brought big tears
to his eyes, he laid his trembling hand upon the breech, as if the ardor of his
love might avail to warm his dear mistress back to life. And the best gun of
them all, the only one that had been able to drop a few shells among the enemy!
Then suddenly he conceived a daring project, nothing less than to repair the
injury there and then, under that terrible fire. Assisted by one of his men he
ran back to the caisson and secured the spare wheel that was attached to the
rear axle, and then commenced the most dangerous operation that can be executed
on a battlefield. Fortunately the extra men and horses that he had sent for came
up just then, and he had two cannoneers to lend him a hand.
For the third time, however, the strength of the battery was so reduced as
practically to disable it. To push their heroic daring further would be madness;
the order was given to abandon the position definitely.
"Make haste, comrades!" Honore exclaimed. "Even if she is fit for no further
service we'll carry her off; those fellows shan't have her!"
To save the gun, even as men risk their life to save the flag; that was his
idea. And he had not ceased to speak when he was stricken down as by a
thunderbolt, his right arm torn from its socket, his left flank laid open. He
had fallen upon his gun he loved so well, and lay there as if stretched on a bed
of honor, with head erect, his unmutilated face turned toward the enemy, and
bearing an expression of proud defiance that made him beautiful in death. From
his torn jacket a letter had fallen to the ground and lay in the pool of blood
that dribbled slowly from above.
The only lieutenant left alive shouted the order: "Bring up the limbers!"
A caisson had exploded with a roar that rent the skies. They were obliged to
take the horses from another caisson in order to save a gun of which the team
had been killed. And when, for the last time, the drivers had brought up their
smoking horses and the guns had been limbered up, the whole battery flew away at
a gallop and never stopped until they reached the edge of the wood of la
Garenne, nearly twelve hundred yards away.
Maurice had seen the whole. He shivered with horror, and murmured
mechanically, in a faint voice:
"Oh! poor fellow, poor fellow!"
In addition to this feeling of mental distress he had a horrible sensation of
physical suffering, as if something was gnawing at his vitals. It was the animal
portion of his nature asserting itself; he was at the end of his endurance, was
ready to sink with hunger. His perceptions were dimmed, he was not even
conscious of the dangerous position the regiment was in now it no longer was
protected by the battery. It was more than likely that the enemy would not long
delay to attack the plateau in force.
"Look here," he said to Jean, "I must eat—if I am to be killed for it
the next minute, I must eat."
He opened his knapsack and, taking out the bread with shaking hands, set his
teeth in it voraciously. The bullets were whistling above their heads, two
shells exploded only a few yards away, but all was as naught to him in
comparison with his craving hunger.
"Will you have some, Jean?"
The corporal was watching him with hungry eyes and a stupid expression on his
face; his stomach was also twinging him.
"Yes, I don't care if I do; this suffering is more than I can stand."
They divided the loaf between them and each devoured his portion
gluttonously, unmindful of what was going on about them so long as a crumb
remained. And it was at that time that they saw their colonel for the last time,
sitting his big horse, with his blood-stained boot. The regiment was surrounded
on every side; already some of the companies had left the field. Then, unable
longer to restrain their flight, with tears standing in his eyes and raising his
sword above his head:
"My children," cried M. de Vineuil, "I commend you to the protection of God,
who thus far has spared us all!"
He rode off down the hill, surrounded by a swarm of fugitives, and vanished
from their sight.
Then, they knew not how, Maurice and Jean found themselves once more behind
the hedge, with the remnant of their company. Some forty men at the outside were
all that remained, with Lieutenant Rochas as their commander, and the regimental
standard was with them; the subaltern who carried it had furled the silk about
the staff in order to try to save it. They made their way along the hedge, as
far as it extended, to a cluster of small trees upon a hillside, where Rochas
made them halt and reopen fire. The men, dispersed in skirmishing order and
sufficiently protected, could hold their ground, the more that an important
calvary movement was in preparation on their right and regiments of infantry
were being brought up to support it.
It was at that moment that Maurice comprehended the full scope of that
mighty, irresistible turning movement that was now drawing near completion. That
morning he had watched the Prussians debouching by the Saint-Albert pass and had
seen their advanced guard pushed forward, first to Saint-Menges, then to
Fleigneux, and now, behind the wood of la Garenne, he could hear the thunder of
the artillery of the Guard, could behold other German uniforms arriving on the
scene over the hills of Givonne. Yet a few moments, it might be, and the circle
would be complete; the Guard would join hands with the Vth corps, surrounding
the French army with a living wall, girdling them about with a belt of flaming
artillery. It was with the resolve to make one supreme, desperate effort, to try
to hew a passage through that advancing wall, that General Margueritte's
division of the reserve cavalry was massing behind a protecting crest
preparatory to charging. They were about to charge into the jaws of death, with
no possibility of achieving any useful result, solely for the glory of France
and the French army. And Maurice, whose thoughts turned to Prosper, was a
witness of the terrible spectacle.
What between the messages that were given him to carry and their answers,
Prosper had been kept busy since daybreak spurring up and down the plateau of
Illy. The cavalrymen had been awakened at peep of dawn, man by man, without
sound of trumpet, and to make their morning coffee had devised the ingenious
expedient of screening their fires with a greatcoat so as not to attract the
attention of the enemy. Then there came a period when they were left entirely to
themselves, with nothing to occupy them; they seemed to be forgotten by their
commanders. They could hear the sound of the cannonading, could descry the puffs
of smoke, could see the distant movements of the infantry, but were utterly
ignorant of the battle, its importance, and its results. Prosper, as far as he
was concerned, was suffering from want of sleep. The cumulative fatigue induced
by many nights of broken rest, the invincible somnolency caused by the easy gait
of his mount, made life a burden. He dreamed dreams and saw visions; now he was
sleeping comfortably in a bed between clean sheets, now snoring on the bare
ground among sharpened flints. For minutes at a time he would actually be sound
asleep in his saddle, a lifeless clod, his steed's intelligence answering for
both. Under such circumstances comrades had often tumbled from their seats upon
the road. They were so fagged that when they slept the trumpets no longer
awakened them; the only way to rouse them from their lethargy and get them on
their feet was to kick them soundly.
"But what are they going to do, what are they going to do with us?" Prosper
kept saying to himself. It was the only thing he could think of to keep himself
awake.
For six hours the cannon had been thundering. As they climbed a hill two
comrades, riding at his side, had been struck down by a shell, and as they rode
onward seven or eight others had bit the dust, pierced by rifle-balls that came
no one could say whence. It was becoming tiresome, that slow parade, as useless
as it was dangerous, up and down the battlefield. At last—it was about one
o'clock—he learned that it had been decided they were to be killed off in a
somewhat more decent manner. Margueritte's entire division, comprising three
regiments of chasseurs d'Afrique, one of chasseurs de France, and one of
hussars, had been drawn in and posted in a shallow valley a little to the south
of the Calvary of Illy. The trumpets had sounded: "Dismount!" and then the
officers' command ran down the line to tighten girths and look to packs.
Prosper alighted, stretched his cramped limbs, and gave Zephyr a friendly pat
upon the neck. Poor Zephyr! he felt the degradation of the ignominious,
heartbreaking service they were subjected to almost as keenly as his master; and
not only that, but he had to carry a small arsenal of stores and implements of
various kinds: the holsters stuffed with his master's linen and underclothing
and the greatcoat rolled above, the stable suit, blouse, and overalls, and the
sack containing brushes, currycomb, and other articles of equine toilet behind
the saddle, the haversack with rations slung at his side, to say nothing of such
trifles as side-lines and picket-pins, the watering bucket and the wooden basin.
The cavalryman's tender heart was stirred by a feeling of compassion, as he
tightened up the girth and looked to see that everything was secure in its
place.
It was a trying moment. Prosper was no more a coward than the next man, but
his mouth was intolerably dry and hot; he lit a cigarette in the hope that it
would relieve the unpleasant sensation. When about to charge no man can assert
with any degree of certainty that he will ride back again. The suspense lasted
some five or six minutes; it was said that General Margueritte had ridden
forward to reconnoiter the ground over which they were to charge; they were
awaiting his return. The five regiments had been formed in three columns, each
column having a depth of seven squadrons; enough to afford an ample meal to the
hostile guns.
Presently the trumpets rang out: "To horse!" and this was succeeded almost
immediately by the shrill summons: "Draw sabers!"
The colonel of each regiment had previously ridden out and taken his proper
position, twenty-five yards to the front, the captains were all at their posts
at the head of their squadrons. Then there was another period of anxious
waiting, amid a silence heavy as that of death. Not a sound, not a breath,
there, beneath the blazing sun; nothing, save the beating of those brave hearts.
One order more, the supreme, the decisive one, and that mass, now so inert and
motionless, would become a resistless tornado, sweeping all before it.
At that juncture, however, an officer appeared coming over the crest of the
hill in front, wounded, and preserving his seat in the saddle only by the
assistance of a man on either side. No one recognized him at first, but
presently a deep, ominous murmur began to run from squadron to squadron, which
quickly swelled into a furious uproar. It was General Margueritte, who had
received a wound from which he died a few days later; a musket-ball had passed
through both cheeks, carrying away a portion of the tongue and palate. He was
incapable of speech, but waved his arm in the direction of the enemy. The fury
of his men knew no bounds; their cries rose louder still upon the air.
"It is our general! Avenge him, avenge him!"
Then the colonel of the first regiment, raising aloft his saber, shouted in a
voice of thunder:
"Charge!"
The trumpets sounded, the column broke into a trot and was away. Prosper was
in the leading squadron, but almost at the extreme right of the right wing, a
position of less danger than the center, upon which the enemy always naturally
concentrate their hottest fire. When they had topped the summit of the Calvary
and began to descend the slope beyond that led downward into the broad plain he
had a distinct view, some two-thirds of a mile away, of the Prussian squares
that were to be the object of their attack. Beside that vision all the rest was
dim and confused before his eyes; he moved onward as one in a dream, with a
strange ringing in his ears, a sensation of voidness in his mind that left him
incapable of framing an idea. He was a part of the great engine that tore along,
controlled by a superior will. The command ran along the line: "Keep touch of
knees! Keep touch of knees!" in order to keep the men closed up and give their
ranks the resistance and rigidity of a wall of granite, and as their trot became
swifter and swifter and finally broke into a mad gallop, the chasseurs d'Afrique
gave their wild Arab cry that excited their wiry steeds to the verge of frenzy.
Onward they tore, faster and faster still, until their gallop was a race of
unchained demons, their shouts the shrieks of souls in mortal agony; onward they
plunged amid a storm of bullets that rattled on casque and breastplate, on
buckle and scabbard, with a sound like hail; into the bosom of that hailstorm
flashed that thunderbolt beneath which the earth shook and trembled, leaving
behind it, as it passed, an odor of burned woolen and the exhalations of wild
beasts.
At five hundred yards the line wavered an instant, then swirled and broke in
a frightful eddy that brought Prosper to the ground. He clutched Zephyr by the
mane and succeeded in recovering his seat. The center had given way, riddled,
almost annihilated as it was by the musketry fire, while the two wings had
wheeled and ridden back a little way to renew their formation. It was the
foreseen, foredoomed destruction of the leading squadron. Disabled horses
covered the ground, some quiet in death, but many struggling violently in their
strong agony; and everywhere dismounted riders could be seen, running as fast as
their short legs would let them, to capture themselves another mount. Many
horses that had lost their master came galloping back to the squadron and took
their place in line of their own accord, to rush with their comrades back into
the fire again, as if there was some strange attraction for them in the smell of
gunpowder. The charge was resumed; the second squadron went forward, like the
first, at a constantly accelerated rate of speed, the men bending upon their
horses' neck, holding the saber along the thigh, ready for use upon the enemy.
Two hundred yards more were gained this time, amid the thunderous, deafening
uproar, but again the center broke under the storm of bullets; men and horses
went down in heaps, and the piled corpses made an insurmountable barrier for
those who followed. Thus was the second squadron in its turn mown down,
annihilated, leaving its task to be accomplished by those who came after.
When for the third time the men were called upon to charge and responded with
invincible heroism, Prosper found that his companions were principally hussars
and chasseurs de France. Regiments and squadrons, as organizations, had ceased
to exist; their constituent elements were drops in the mighty wave that
alternately broke and reared its crest again, to swallow up all that lay in its
destructive path. He had long since lost distinct consciousness of what was
going on around him, and suffered his movements to be guided by his mount,
faithful Zephyr, who had received a wound in the ear that seemed to madden him.
He was now in the center, where all about him horses were rearing, pawing the
air, and falling backward; men were dismounted as if torn from their saddle by
the blast of a tornado, while others, shot through some vital part, retained
their seat and rode onward in the ranks with vacant, sightless eyes. And looking
back over the additional two hundred yards that this effort had won for them,
they could see the field of yellow stubble strewn thick with dead and dying.
Some there were who had fallen headlong from their saddle and buried their face
in the soft earth. Others had alighted on their back and were staring up into
the sun with terror-stricken eyes that seemed bursting from their sockets. There
was a handsome black horse, an officer's charger, that had been disemboweled,
and was making frantic efforts to rise, his fore feet entangled in his entrails.
Beneath the fire, that became constantly more murderous as they drew nearer, the
survivors in the wings wheeled their horses and fell back to concentrate their
strength for a fresh onset.
Finally it was the fourth squadron, which, on the fourth attempt, reached the
Prussian lines. Prosper made play with his saber, hacking away at helmets and
dark uniforms as well as he could distinguish them, for all was dim before him,
as in a dense mist. Blood flowed in torrents; Zephyr's mouth was smeared with
it, and to account for it he said to himself that the good horse must have been
using his teeth on the Prussians. The clamor around him became so great that he
could not hear his own voice, although his throat seemed splitting from the
yells that issued from it. But behind the first Prussian line there was another,
and then another, and then another still. Their gallant efforts went for
nothing; those dense masses of men were like a tangled jungle that closed around
the horses and riders who entered it and buried them in its rank growths. They
might hew down those who were within reach of their sabers; others stood ready
to take their place, the last squadrons were lost and swallowed up in their vast
numbers. The firing, at point-blank range, was so furious that the men's
clothing was ignited. Nothing could stand before it, all went down; and the work
that it left unfinished was completed by bayonet and musket butt. Of the brave
men who rode into action that day two-thirds remained upon the battlefield, and
the sole end achieved by that mad charge was to add another glorious page to
history. And then Zephyr, struck by a musket-ball full in the chest, dropped in
a heap, crushing beneath him Prosper's right thigh; and the pain was so acute
that the young man fainted.
Maurice and Jean, who had watched the gallant effort with burning interest,
uttered an exclamation of rage.
"Tonnerre de Dieu! what bravery wasted!"
And they resumed their firing from among the trees of the low hill where they
were deployed in skirmishing order. Rochas himself had picked up an abandoned
musket and was blazing away with the rest. But the plateau of Illy was lost to
them by this time beyond hope of recovery; the Prussians were pouring in upon it
from every quarter. It was somewhere in the neighborhood of two o'clock, and
their great movement was accomplished; the Vth corps and the Guards had effected
their junction, the investment of the French army was complete.
Jean was suddenly brought to the ground.
"I am done for," he murmured.
He had received what seemed to him like a smart blow of a hammer on the crown
of his head, and his kepi lay behind him with a great furrow plowed
through its top. At first he thought that the bullet had certainly penetrated
the skull and laid bare the brain; his dread of finding a yawning orifice there
was so great that for some seconds he dared not raise his hand to ascertain the
truth. When finally he ventured, his fingers, on withdrawing them, were red with
an abundant flow of blood, and the pain was so intense that he fainted.
Just then Rochas gave the order to fall back. The Prussians had crept up on
them and were only two or three hundred yards away; they were in danger of being
captured.
"Be cool, don't hurry; face about and give 'em another shot. Rally behind
that low wall that you see down there."
Maurice was in despair; he knew not what to do.
"We are not going to leave our corporal behind, are we, lieutenant?"
"What are we to do? he has turned up his toes."
"No, no! he is breathing still. Take him along!"
Rochas shrugged his shoulders as if to say they could not bother themselves
for every man that dropped. A wounded man is esteemed of little value on the
battlefield. Then Maurice addressed his supplications to Lapoulle and Pache.
"Come, give me a helping hand. I am not strong enough to carry him
unassisted."
They were deaf to his entreaties; all they could hear was the voice that
urged them to seek safety for themselves. The Prussians were now not more than a
hundred yards from them; already they were on their hands and knees, crawling as
fast as they could go toward the wall.
And Maurice, weeping tears of rage, thus left alone with his unconscious
companion, raised him in his arms and endeavored to lug him away, but he found
his puny strength unequal to the task, exhausted as he was by fatigue and the
emotions of the day. At the first step he took he reeled and fell with his
burden. If only he could catch sight of a stretcher-bearer! He strained his
eyes, thought he had discovered one among the crowd of fugitives, and made
frantic gestures of appeal; no one came, they were left behind, alone. Summoning
up his strength with a determined effort of the will he seized Jean once more
and succeeded in advancing some thirty paces, when a shell burst near them and
he thought that all was ended, that he, too, was to die on the body of his
comrade.
Slowly, cautiously, Maurice picked himself up. He felt his body, arms, and
legs; nothing, not a scratch. Why should he not look out for himself and fly,
alone? There was time left still; a few bounds would take him to the wall and he
would be saved. His horrible sensation of fear returned and made him frantic. He
was collecting his energies to break away and run, when a feeling stronger than
death intervened and vanquished the base impulse. What, abandon Jean! he could
not do it. It would be like mutilating his own being; the brotherly affection
that had bourgeoned and grown between him and that rustic had struck its roots
down into his life, too deep to be slain like that. The feeling went back to the
earliest days, was perhaps as old as the world itself; it was as if there were
but they two upon earth, of whom one could not forsake the other without
forsaking himself, and being doomed thenceforth to an eternity of solitude.
Molded of the same clay, quickened by the same spirit, duty imperiously
commanded to save himself in saving his brother.
Had it not been for the crust of bread he ate an hour before under the
Prussian shells Maurice could never have done what he did; how he did it
he could never in subsequent days remember. He must have hoisted Jean upon his
shoulders and crawled through the brush and brambles, falling a dozen times only
to pick himself up and go on again, stumbling at every rut, at every pebble. His
indomitable will sustained him, his dogged resolution would have enabled him to
bear a mountain on his back. Behind the low wall he found Rochas and the few men
that were left of the squad, firing away as stoutly as ever and defending the
flag, which the subaltern held beneath his arm. It had not occurred to anyone to
designate lines of retreat for the several army corps in case the day should go
against them; owing to this want of foresight every general was at liberty to
act as seemed to him best, and at this stage of the conflict they all found
themselves being crowded back upon Sedan under the steady, unrelaxing pressure
of the German armies. The second division of the 7th corps fell back in
comparatively good order, while the remnants of the other divisions, mingled
with the debris of the 1st corps, were already streaming into the city in
terrible disorder, a roaring torrent of rage and fright that bore all, men and
beasts, before it.
But to Maurice, at that moment, was granted the satisfaction of seeing Jean
unclose his eyes, and as he was running to a stream that flowed near by, for
water with which to bathe his friend's face, he was surprised, looking down on
his right into a sheltered valley that lay between rugged slopes, to behold the
same peasant whom he had seen that morning, still leisurely driving the plow
through the furrow with the assistance of his big white horse. Why should he
lose a day? Men might fight, but none the less the corn would keep on growing;
and folks must live.