The Downfall
Part III
Chapter I
All the long, long day of the battle Silvine, up on Remilly hill, where
Father Fouchard's little farm was situated, but her heart and soul absent with
Honore amid the dangers of the conflict, never once took her eyes from off
Sedan, where the guns were roaring. The following day, moreover, her anxiety was
even greater still, being increased by her inability to obtain any definite
tidings, for the Prussians who were guarding the roads in the vicinity refused
to answer questions, as much from reasons of policy as because they knew but
very little themselves. The bright sun of the day before was no longer visible,
and showers had fallen, making the valley look less cheerful than usual in the
wan light.
Toward evening Father Fouchard, who was also haunted by a sensation of
uneasiness in the midst of his studied taciturnity, was standing on his doorstep
reflecting on the probable outcome of events. His son had no place in his
thoughts, but he was speculating how he best might convert the misfortunes of
others into fortune for himself, and as he revolved these considerations in his
mind he noticed a tall, strapping young fellow, dressed in the peasant's blouse,
who had been strolling up and down the road for the last minute or so, looking
as if he did not know what to do with himself. His astonishment on recognizing
him was so great that he called him aloud by name, notwithstanding that three
Prussians happened to be passing at the time.
"Why, Prosper! Is that you?"
The chasseur d'Afrique imposed silence on him with an emphatic gesture; then,
coming closer, he said in an undertone:
"Yes, it is I. I have had enough of fighting for nothing, and I cut my lucky.
Say, Father Fouchard, you don't happen to be in need of a laborer on your farm,
do you?"
All the old man's prudence came back to him in a twinkling. He was
looking for someone to help him, but it would be better not to say so at once.
"A lad on the farm? faith, no—not just now. Come in, though, all the same,
and have a glass. I shan't leave you out on the road when you're in trouble,
that's sure."
Silvine, in the kitchen, was setting the pot of soup on the fire, while
little Charlot was hanging by her skirts, frolicking and laughing. She did not
recognize Prosper at first, although they had formerly served together in the
same household, and it was not until she came in, bringing a bottle of wine and
two glasses, that she looked him squarely in the face. She uttered a cry of joy
and surprise; her sole thought was of Honore.
"Ah, you were there, weren't you? Is Honore all right?"
Prosper's answer was ready to slip from his tongue; he hesitated. For the
last two days he had been living in a dream, among a rapid succession of
strange, ill-defined events which left behind them no precise memory, as a man
starts, half-awakened, from a slumber peopled with fantastic visions. It was
true, doubtless, he believed he had seen Honore lying upon a cannon, dead, but
he would not have cared to swear to it; what use is there in afflicting people
when one is not certain?
"Honore," he murmured, "I don't know, I couldn't say."
She continued to press him with her questions, looking at him steadily.
"You did not see him, then?"
He waved his hands before him with a slow, uncertain motion and an expressive
shake of the head.
"How can you expect one to remember! There were such lots of things, such
lots of things. Look you, of all that d——-d battle, if I was to die for it this
minute, I could not tell you that much—no, not even the place where I was. I
believe men get to be no better than idiots, 'pon my word I do!" And tossing off
a glass of wine, he sat gloomily silent, his vacant eyes turned inward on the
dark recesses of his memory. "All that I remember is that it was beginning to be
dark when I recovered consciousness. I went down while we were charging, and
then the sun was very high. I must have been lying there for hours, my right leg
caught under poor old Zephyr, who had received a piece of shell in the middle of
his chest. There was nothing to laugh at in my position, I can tell you; the
dead comrades lying around me in piles, not a living soul in sight, and the
certainty that I should have to kick the bucket too unless someone came to put
me on my legs again. Gently, gently, I tried to free my leg, but it was no use;
Zephyr's weight must have been fully up to that of the five hundred thousand
devils. He was warm still. I patted him, I spoke to him, saying all the pretty
things I could think of, and here's a thing, do you see, that I shall never
forget as long as I live: he opened his eyes and made an effort to raise his
poor old head, which was resting on the ground beside my own. Then we had a talk
together: 'Poor old fellow,' says I, 'I don't want to say a word to hurt your
feelings, but you must want to see me croak with you, you hold me down so hard.'
Of course he didn't say he did; he couldn't, but for all that I could read in
his great sorrowful eyes how bad he felt to have to part with me. And I can't
say how the thing happened, whether he intended it or whether it was part of the
death struggle, but all at once he gave himself a great shake that sent him
rolling away to one side. I was enabled to get on my feet once more, but ah! in
what a pickle; my leg was swollen and heavy as a leg of lead. Never mind, I took
Zephyr's head in my arms and kept on talking to him, telling him all the kind
thoughts I had in my heart, that he was a good horse, that I loved him dearly,
that I should never forget him. He listened to me, he seemed to be so pleased!
Then he had another long convulsion, and so he died, with his big vacant eyes
fixed on me till the last. It is very strange, though, and I don't suppose
anyone will believe me; still, it is the simple truth that great, big tears were
standing in his eyes. Poor old Zephyr, he cried just like a man—"
At this point Prosper's emotion got the better of him; tears choked his
utterance and he was obliged to break off. He gulped down another glass of wine
and went on with his narrative in disjointed, incomplete sentences. It kept
growing darker and darker, until there was only a narrow streak of red light on
the horizon at the verge of the battlefield; the shadows of the dead horses
seemed to be projected across the plain to an infinite distance. The pain and
stiffness in his leg kept him from moving; he must have remained for a long time
beside Zephyr. Then, with his fears as an incentive, he had managed to get on
his feet and hobble away; it was an imperative necessity to him not to be alone,
to find comrades who would share his fears with him and make them less. Thus
from every nook and corner of the battlefield, from hedges and ditches and
clumps of bushes, the wounded who had been left behind dragged themselves
painfully in search of companionship, forming when possible little bands of four
or five, finding it less hard to agonize and die in the company of their
fellow-beings. In the wood of la Garenne Prosper fell in with two men of the 43d
regiment; they were not wounded, but had burrowed in the underbrush like
rabbits, waiting for the coming of the night. When they learned that he was
familiar with the roads they communicated to him their plan, which was to
traverse the woods under cover of the darkness and make their escape into
Belgium. At first he declined to share their undertaking, for he would have
preferred to proceed direct to Remilly, where he was certain to find a refuge,
but where was he to obtain the blouse and trousers that he required as a
disguise? to say nothing of the impracticability of getting past the numerous
Prussian pickets and outposts that filled the valley all the way from la Garenne
to Remilly. He therefore ended by consenting to act as guide to the two
comrades. His leg was less stiff than it had been, and they were so fortunate as
to secure a loaf of bread at a farmhouse. Nine o'clock was striking from the
church of a village in the distance as they resumed their way. The only point
where they encountered any danger worth mentioning was at la Chapelle, where
they fell directly into the midst of a Prussian advanced post before they were
aware of it; the enemy flew to arms and blazed away into the darkness, while
they, throwing themselves on the ground and alternately crawling and running
until the fire slackened, ultimately regained the shelter of the trees. After
that they kept to the woods, observing the utmost vigilance. At a bend in the
road, they crept up behind an out-lying picket and, leaping on his back, buried
a knife in his throat. Then the road was free before them and they no longer had
to observe precaution; they went ahead, laughing and whistling. It was about
three in the morning when they reached a little Belgian village, where they
knocked up a worthy farmer, who at once opened his barn to them; they snuggled
among the hay and slept soundly until morning.
The sun was high in the heavens when Prosper awoke. As he opened his eyes and
looked about him, while the two comrades were still snoring, he beheld their
entertainer engaged in hitching a horse to a great carriole loaded with bread,
rice, coffee, sugar, and all sorts of eatables, the whole concealed under sacks
of charcoal, and a little questioning elicited from the good man the fact that
he had two married daughters living at Raucourt, in France, whom the passage of
the Bavarian troops had left entirely destitute, and that the provisions in the
carriole were intended for them. He had procured that very morning the
safe-conduct that was required for the journey. Prosper was immediately seized
by an uncontrollable desire to take a seat in that carriole and return to the
country that he loved so and for which his heart was yearning with such a
violent nostalgia. It was perfectly simple; the farmer would have to pass
through Remilly to reach Raucourt; he would alight there. The matter was
arranged in three minutes; he obtained a loan of the longed-for blouse and
trousers, and the farmer gave out, wherever they stopped, that he was his
servant; so that about six o'clock he got down in front of the church, not
having been stopped more than two or three times by the German outposts.
They were all silent for a while, then: "No, I had enough of it!" said
Prosper. "If they had but set us at work that amounted to something, as out
there in Africa! but this going up the hill only to come down again, the feeling
that one is of no earthly use to anyone, that is no kind of a life at all. And
then I should be lonely, now that poor Zephyr is dead; all that is left me to do
is to go to work on a farm. That will be better than living among the Prussians
as a prisoner, don't you think so? You have horses, Father Fouchard; try me, and
see whether or not I will love them and take good care of them."
The old fellow's eyes gleamed, but he touched glasses once more with the
other and concluded the arrangement without any evidence of eagerness.
"Very well; I wish to be of service to you as far as lies in my power; I will
take you. As regards the question of wages, though, you must not speak of it
until the war is over, for really I am not in need of anyone and the times are
too hard."
Silvine, who had remained seated with Charlot on her lap, had never once
taken her eyes from Prosper's face. When she saw him rise with the intention of
going to the stable and making immediate acquaintance with its four-footed
inhabitants, she again asked:
"Then you say you did not see Honore?"
The question repeated thus abruptly made him start, as if it had suddenly
cast a flood of light in upon an obscure corner of his memory. He hesitated for
a little, but finally came to a decision and spoke.
"See here, I did not wish to grieve you just now, but I don't believe Honore
will ever come back."
"Never come back—what do you mean?"
"Yes, I believe that the Prussians did his business for him. I saw him lying
across his gun, his head erect, with a great wound just beneath the heart."
There was silence in the room. Silvine's pallor was frightful to behold,
while Father Fouchard displayed his interest in the narrative by replacing upon
the table his glass, into which he had just poured what wine remained in the
bottle.
"Are you quite certain?" she asked in a choking voice.
"Dame! as certain as one can be of a thing he has seen with his own
two eyes. It was on a little hillock, with three trees in a group right beside
it; it seems to me I could go to the spot blindfolded."
If it was true she had nothing left to live for. That lad who had been so
good to her, who had forgiven her her fault, had plighted his troth and was to
marry her when he came home at the end of the campaign! and they had robbed her
of him, they had murdered him, and he was lying out there on the battlefield
with a wound under the heart! She had never known how strong her love for him
had been, and now the thought that she was to see him no more, that he who was
hers was hers no longer, aroused her almost to a pitch of madness and made her
forget her usual tranquil resignation. She set Charlot roughly down upon the
floor, exclaiming:
"Good! I shall not believe that story until I see the evidence of it, until I
see it with my own eyes. Since you know the spot you shall conduct me to it. And
if it is true, if we find him, we will bring him home with us."
Her tears allowed her to say no more; she bowed her head upon the table, her
frame convulsed by long-drawn, tumultuous sobs that shook her from head to foot,
while the child, not knowing what to make of such unusual treatment at his
mother's hands, also commenced to weep violently. She caught him up and pressed
him to her heart, with distracted, stammering words:
"My poor child! my poor child!"
Consternation was depicted on old Fouchard's face. Appearances
notwithstanding, he did love his son, after a fashion of his own. Memories of
the past came back to him, of days long vanished, when his wife was still living
and Honore was a boy at school, and two big tears appeared in his small red eyes
and trickled down his old leathery cheeks. He had not wept before in more than
ten years. In the end he grew angry at the thought of that son who was his and
upon whom he was never to set eyes again; he rapped out an oath or two.
"Nom de Dieu! it is provoking all the same, to have only one boy, and
that he should be taken from you!"
When their agitation had in a measure subsided, however, Fouchard was annoyed
that Silvine still continued to talk of going to search for Honore's body out
there on the battlefield. She made no further noisy demonstration, but harbored
her purpose with the dogged silence of despair, and he failed to recognize in
her the docile, obedient servant who was wont to perform her daily tasks without
a murmur; her great, submissive eyes, in which lay the chief beauty of her face,
had assumed an expression of stern determination, while beneath her thick brown
hair her cheeks and brow wore a pallor that was like death. She had torn off the
red kerchief that was knotted about her neck, and was entirely in black, like a
widow in her weeds. It was all in vain that he tried to impress on her the
difficulties of the undertaking, the dangers she would be subjected to, the
little hope there was of recovering the corpse; she did not even take the
trouble to answer him, and he saw clearly that unless he seconded her in her
plan she would start out alone and do some unwise thing, and this aspect of the
case worried him on account of the complications that might arise between him
and the Prussian authorities. He therefore finally decided to go and lay the
matter before the mayor of Remilly, who was a kind of distant cousin of his, and
they two between them concocted a story: Silvine was to pass as the actual widow
of Honore, Prosper became her brother, so that the Bavarian colonel, who had his
quarters in the Hotel of the Maltese Cross down in the lower part of the
village, made no difficulty about granting a pass which authorized the brother
and sister to bring home the body of the husband, provided they could find it.
By this time it was night; the only concession that could be obtained from the
young woman was that she would delay starting on her expedition until morning.
When morning came old Fouchard could not be prevailed on to allow one of his
horses to be taken, fearing he might never set eyes on it again. What assurance
had he that the Prussians would not confiscate the entire equipage? At last he
consented, though with very bad grace, to loan her the donkey, a little gray
animal, and his cart, which, though small, would be large enough to hold a dead
man. He gave minute instructions to Prosper, who had had a good night's sleep,
but was anxious and thoughtful at the prospect of the expedition now that, being
rested and refreshed, he attempted to remember something of the battle. At the
last moment Silvine went and took the counterpane from her own bed, folding and
spreading it on the floor of the cart. Just as she was about to start she came
running back to embrace Charlot.
"I entrust him to your care, Father Fouchard; keep an eye on him and see that
he doesn't get hold of the matches."
"Yes, yes; never fear!"
They were late in getting off; it was near seven o'clock when the little
procession, the donkey, hanging his head and drawing the narrow cart, leading,
descended the steep hill of Remilly. It had rained heavily during the night, and
the roads were become rivers of mud; great lowering clouds hung in the heavens,
imparting an air of cheerless desolation to the scene.
Prosper, wishing to save all the distance he could, had determined on taking
the route that lay through the city of Sedan, but before they reached
Pont-Maugis a Prussian outpost halted the cart and held it for over an hour, and
finally, after their pass had been referred, one after another, to four or five
officials, they were told they might resume their journey, but only on condition
of taking the longer, roundabout route by way of Bazeilles, to do which they
would have to turn into a cross-road on their left. No reason was assigned;
their object was probably to avoid adding to the crowd that encumbered the
streets of the city. When Silvine crossed the Meuse by the railroad bridge, that
ill-starred bridge that the French had failed to destroy and which, moreover,
had been the cause of such slaughter among the Bavarians, she beheld the corpse
of an artilleryman floating lazily down with the sluggish current. It caught
among some rushes near the bank, hung there a moment, then swung clear and
started afresh on its downward way.
Bazeilles, through which they passed from end to end at a slow walk, afforded
a spectacle of ruin and desolation, the worst that war can perpetrate when it
sweeps with devastating force, like a cyclone, through a land. The dead had been
removed; there was not a single corpse to be seen in the village streets, and
the rain had washed away the blood; pools of reddish water were to be seen here
and there in the roadway, with repulsive, frowzy-looking debris, matted masses
that one could not help associating in his mind with human hair. But what
shocked and saddened one more than all the rest was the ruin that was visible
everywhere; that charming village, only three days before so bright and smiling,
with its pretty houses standing in their well-kept gardens, now razed,
demolished, annihilated, nothing left of all its beauties save a few
smoke-stained walls. The church was burning still, a huge pyre of smoldering
beams and girders, whence streamed continually upward a column of dense black
smoke that, spreading in the heavens, overshadowed the city like a gigantic
funeral pall. Entire streets had been swept away, not a house left on either
side, nor any trace that houses had ever been there, save the calcined
stone-work lying in the gutter in a pasty mess of soot and ashes, the whole lost
in the viscid, ink-black mud of the thoroughfare. Where streets intersected the
corner houses were razed down to their foundations, as if they had been carried
away bodily by the fiery blast that blew there. Others had suffered less; one in
particular, owing to some chance, had escaped almost without injury, while its
neighbors on either hand, literally torn to pieces by the iron hail, were like
gaunt skeletons. An unbearable stench was everywhere, noticeable, the nauseating
odor that follows a great fire, aggravated by the penetrating smell of
petroleum, that had been used without stint upon floors and walls. Then, too,
there was the pitiful, mute spectacle of the household goods that the people had
endeavored to save, the poor furniture that had been thrown from windows and
smashed upon the sidewalk, crazy tables with broken legs, presses with cloven
sides and split doors, linen, also, torn and soiled, that was trodden under
foot; all the sorry crumbs, the unconsidered trifles of the pillage, of which
the destruction was being completed by the dissolving rain. Through the breach
in a shattered house-front a clock was visible, securely fastened high up on the
wall above the mantel-shelf, that had miraculously escaped intact.
"The beasts! the pigs!" growled Prosper, whose blood, though he was no longer
a soldier, ran hot at the sight of such atrocities.
He doubled his fists, and Silvine, who was white as a ghost, had to exert the
influence of her glance to calm him every time they encountered a sentry on
their way. The Bavarians had posted sentinels near all the houses that were
still burning, and it seemed as if those men, with loaded muskets and fixed
bayonets, were guarding the fires in order that the flames might finish their
work. They drove away the mere sightseers who strolled about in the vicinity,
and the persons who had an interest there as well, employing first a menacing
gesture, and in case that was not sufficient, uttering a single brief, guttural
word of command. A young woman, her hair streaming about her shoulders, her gown
plastered with mud, persisted in hanging about the smoking ruins of a little
house, of which she desired to search the hot ashes, notwithstanding the
prohibition of the sentry. The report ran that the woman's little baby had been
burned with the house. And all at once, as the Bavarian was roughly thrusting
her aside with his heavy hand, she turned on him, vomiting in his face all her
despair and rage, lashing him with taunts and insults that were redolent of the
gutter, with obscene words which likely afforded her some consolation in her
grief and distress. He could not have understood her, for he drew back a pace or
two, eying her with apprehension. Three comrades came running up and relieved
him of the fury, whom they led away screaming at the top of her voice. Before
the ruins of another house a man and two little girls, all three so weary and
miserable that they could not stand, lay on the bare ground, sobbing as if their
hearts would break; they had seen their little all go up in smoke and flame, and
had no place to go, no place to lay their head. But just then a patrol went by,
dispersing the knots of idlers, and the street again assumed its deserted
aspect, peopled only by the stern, sullen sentries, vigilant to see that their
iniquitous instructions were enforced.
"The beasts! the pigs!" Prosper repeated in a stifled voice. "How I should
like, oh! how I should like to kill a few of them!"
Silvine again made him be silent. She shuddered. A dog, shut up in a
carriage-house that the flames had spared and forgotten there for the last two
days, kept up an incessant, continuous howling, in a key so inexpressibly
mournful that a brooding horror seemed to pervade the low, leaden sky, from
which a drizzling rain had now begun to fall. They were then just abreast of the
park of Montivilliers, and there they witnessed a most horrible sight. Three
great covered carts, those carts that pass along the streets in the early
morning before it is light and collect the city's filth and garbage, stood there
in a row, loaded with corpses; and now, instead of refuse, they were being
filled with dead, stopping wherever there was a body to be loaded, then going on
again with the heavy rumbling of their wheels to make another stop further on,
threading Bazeilles in its every nook and corner until their hideous cargo
overflowed. They were waiting now upon the public road to be driven to the place
of their discharge, the neighboring potter's field. Feet were seen projecting
from the mass into the air. A head, half-severed from its trunk, hung over the
side of the vehicle. When the three lumbering vans started again, swaying and
jolting over the inequalities of the road, a long, white hand was hanging
outward from one of them; the hand caught upon the wheel, and little by little
the iron tire destroyed it, eating through skin and flesh clean down to the
bones.
By the time they reached Balan the rain had ceased, and Prosper prevailed on
Silvine to eat a bit of the bread he had had the foresight to bring with them.
When they were near Sedan, however, they were brought to a halt by another
Prussian post, and this time the consequences threatened to be serious; the
officer stormed at them, and even refused to restore their pass, which he
declared, in excellent French, to be a forgery. Acting on his orders some
soldiers had run the donkey and the little cart under a shed. What were they to
do? were they to be forced to abandon their undertaking? Silvine was in despair,
when all at once she thought of M. Dubreuil, Father Fouchard's relative, with
whom she had some slight acquaintance and whose place, the Hermitage, was only a
few hundred yards distant, on the summit of the eminence that overlooked the
faubourg. Perhaps he might have some influence with the military, seeing that he
was a citizen of the place. As they were allowed their freedom, conditionally
upon abandoning their equipage, she left the donkey and cart under the shed and
bade Prosper accompany her. They ascended the hill on a run, found the gate of
the Hermitage standing wide open, and on turning into the avenue of secular elms
beheld a spectacle that filled them with amazement.
"The devil!" said Prosper; "there are a lot of fellows who seem to be taking
things easy!"
On the fine-crushed gravel of the terrace, at the bottom of the steps that
led to the house, was a merry company. Arranged in order around a marble-topped
table were a sofa and some easy-chairs in sky-blue satin, forming a sort of
fantastic open-air drawing-room, which must have been thoroughly soaked by the
rain of the preceding day. Two zouaves, seated in a lounging attitude at either
end of the sofa, seemed to be laughing boisterously. A little infantryman, who
occupied one of the fauteuils, his head bent forward, was apparently holding his
sides to keep them from splitting. Three others were seated in a negligent pose,
their elbows resting on the arms of their chairs, while a chasseur had his hand
extended as if in the act of taking a glass from the table. They had evidently
discovered the location of the cellar, and were enjoying themselves.
"But how in the world do they happen to be here?" murmured Prosper, whose
stupefaction increased as he drew nearer to them. "Have the rascals forgotten
there are Prussians about?"
But Silvine, whose eyes had dilated far beyond their natural size, suddenly
uttered an exclamation of horror. The soldiers never moved hand or foot; they
were stone dead. The two zouaves were stiff and cold; they both had had the face
shot away, the nose was gone, the eyes were torn from their sockets. If there
appeared to be a laugh on the face of him who was holding his sides, it was
because a bullet had cut a great furrow through the lower portion of his
countenance, smashing all his teeth. The spectacle was an unimaginably horrible
one, those poor wretches laughing and conversing in their attitude of manikins,
with glassy eyes and open mouths, when Death had laid his icy hand on them and
they were never more to know the warmth and motion of life. Had they dragged
themselves, still living, to that place, so as to die in one another's company?
or was it not rather a ghastly prank of the Prussians, who had collected the
bodies and placed them in a circle about the table, out of derision for the
traditional gayety of the French nation?
"It's a queer start, though, all the same," muttered Prosper, whose face was
very pale. And casting a look at the other dead who lay scattered about the
avenue, under the trees and on the turf, some thirty brave fellows, among them
Lieutenant Rochas, riddled with wounds and surrounded still by the shreds of the
flag, he added seriously and with great respect: "There must have been some very
pretty fighting about here! I don't much believe we shall find the bourgeois for
whom you are looking."
Silvine entered the house, the doors and windows of which had been battered
in and afforded admission to the damp, cold air from without. It was clear
enough that there was no one there; the masters must have taken their departure
before the battle. She continued to prosecute her search, however, and had
entered the kitchen, when she gave utterance to another cry of terror. Beneath
the sink were two bodies, fast locked in each other's arms in mortal embrace,
one of them a zouave, a handsome, brown-bearded man, the other a huge Prussian
with red hair. The teeth of the former were set in the latter's cheek, their
arms, stiff in death, had not relaxed their terrible hug, binding the pair with
such a bond of everlasting hate and fury that ultimately it was found necessary
to bury them in a common grave.
Then Prosper made haste to lead Silvine away, since they could accomplish
nothing in that house where Death had taken up his abode, and upon their return,
despairing, to the post where the donkey and cart had been detained, it so
chanced that they found, in company with the officer who had treated them so
harshly, a general on his way to visit the battlefield. This gentleman requested
to be allowed to see the pass, which he examined attentively and restored to
Silvine; then, with an expression of compassion on his face, he gave directions
that the poor woman should have her donkey returned to her and be allowed to go
in quest of her husband's body. Stopping only long enough to thank her
benefactor, she and her companion, with the cart trundling after them, set out
for the Fond de Givonne, obedient to the instructions that were again given them
not to pass through Sedan.
After that they bent their course to the left in order to reach the plateau
of Illy by the road that crosses the wood of la Garenne, but here again they
were delayed; twenty times they nearly abandoned all hope of getting through the
wood, so numerous were the obstacles they encountered. At every step their way
was barred by huge trees that had been laid low by the artillery fire, stretched
on the ground like mighty giants fallen. It was the part of the forest that had
suffered so severely from the cannonade, where the projectiles had plowed their
way through the secular growths as they might have done through a square of the
Old Guard, meeting in either case with the sturdy resistance of veterans.
Everywhere the earth was cumbered with gigantic trunks, stripped of their leaves
and branches, pierced and mangled, even as mortals might have been, and this
wholesale destruction, the sight of the poor limbs, maimed, slaughtered and
weeping tears of sap, inspired the beholder with the sickening horror of a human
battlefield. There were corpses of men there, too; soldiers, who had stood
fraternally by the trees and fallen with them. A lieutenant, from whose mouth
exuded a bloody froth, had been tearing up the grass by handfuls in his agony,
and his stiffened fingers were still buried in the ground. A little farther on a
captain, prone on his stomach, had raised his head to vent his anguish in yells
and screams, and death had caught and fixed him in that strange attitude. Others
seemed to be slumbering among the herbage, while a zouave; whose blue sash had
taken fire, had had his hair and beard burned completely from his head. And
several times it happened, as they traversed those woodland glades, that they
had to remove a body from the path before the donkey could proceed on his way.
Presently they came to a little valley, where the sights of horror abruptly
ended. The battle had evidently turned at this point and expended its force in
another direction, leaving this peaceful nook of nature untouched. The trees
were all uninjured; the carpet of velvety moss was undefiled by blood. A little
brook coursed merrily among the duckweed, the path that ran along its bank was
shaded by tall beeches. A penetrating charm, a tender peacefulness pervaded the
solitude of the lovely spot, where the living waters gave up their coolness to
the air and the leaves whispered softly in the silence.
Prosper had stopped to let the donkey drink from the stream.
"Ah, how pleasant it is here!" he involuntarily exclaimed in his delight.
Silvine cast an astonished look about her, as if wondering how it was that
she, too, could feel the influence of the peaceful scene. Why should there be
repose and happiness in that hidden nook, when surrounding it on every side were
sorrow and affliction? She made a gesture of impatience.
"Quick, quick, let us be gone. Where is the spot? Where did you tell me you
saw Honore?"
And when, at some fifty paces from there, they at last came out on the
plateau of Illy, the level plain unrolled itself in its full extent before their
vision. It was the real, the true battlefield that they beheld now, the bare
fields stretching away to the horizon under the wan, cheerless sky, whence
showers were streaming down continually. There were no piles of dead visible;
all the Prussians must have been buried by this time, for there was not a single
one to be seen among the corpses of the French that were scattered here and
there, along the roads and in the fields, as the conflict had swayed in one
direction or another. The first that they encountered was a sergeant, propped
against a hedge, a superb man, in the bloom of his youthful vigor; his face was
tranquil and a smile seemed to rest on his parted lips. A hundred paces further
on, however, they beheld another, lying across the road, who had been mutilated
most frightfully, his head almost entirely shot away, his shoulders covered with
great splotches of brain matter. Then, as they advanced further into the field,
after the single bodies, distributed here and there, they came across little
groups; they saw seven men aligned in single rank, kneeling and with their
muskets at the shoulder in the position of aim, who had been hit as they were
about to fire, while close beside them a subaltern had also fallen as he was in
the act of giving the word of command. After that the road led along the brink
of a little ravine, and there they beheld a spectacle that aroused their horror
to the highest pitch as they looked down into the chasm, into which an entire
company seemed to have been blown by the fiery blast; it was choked with
corpses, a landslide, an avalanche of maimed and mutilated men, bent and twisted
in an inextricable tangle, who with convulsed fingers had caught at the yellow
clay of the bank to save themselves in their descent, fruitlessly. And a dusky
flock of ravens flew away, croaking noisily, and swarms of flies, thousands upon
thousands of them, attracted by the odor of fresh blood, were buzzing over the
bodies and returning incessantly.
"Where is the spot?" Silvine asked again.
They were then passing a plowed field that was completely covered with
knapsacks. It was manifest that some regiment had been roughly handled there,
and the men, in a moment of panic, had relieved themselves of their burdens. The
debris of every sort with which the ground was thickly strewn served to explain
the episodes of the conflict. There was a stubble field where the scattered
kepis, resembling huge poppies, shreds of uniforms, epaulettes, and
sword-belts told the story of one of those infrequent hand-to-hand contests in
the fierce artillery duel that had lasted twelve hours. But the objects that
were encountered most frequently, at every step, in fact, were abandoned
weapons, sabers, bayonets, and, more particularly, chassepots; and so numerous
were they that they seemed to have sprouted from the earth, a harvest that had
matured in a single ill-omened day. Porringers and buckets, also, were scattered
along the roads, together with the heterogeneous contents of knapsacks, rice,
brushes, clothing, cartridges. The fields everywhere presented an uniform scene
of devastation: fences destroyed, trees blighted as if they had been struck by
lightning, the very soil itself torn by shells, compacted and hardened by the
tramp of countless feet, and so maltreated that it seemed as if seasons must
elapse before it could again become productive. Everything had been drenched and
soaked by the rain of the preceding day; an odor arose and hung in the air
persistently, that odor of the battlefield that smells like fermenting straw and
burning cloth, a mixture of rottenness and gunpowder.
Silvine, who was beginning to weary of those fields of death over which she
had tramped so many long miles, looked about her with increasing distrust and
uneasiness.
"Where is the spot? where is it?"
But Prosper made no answer; he also was becoming uneasy. What distressed him
even more than the sights of suffering among his fellow-soldiers was the dead
horses, the poor brutes that lay outstretched upon their side, that were met
with in great numbers. Many of them presented a most pitiful spectacle, in all
sorts of harrowing attitudes, with heads torn from the body, with lacerated
flanks from which the entrails protruded. Many were resting on their back, with
their four feet elevated in the air like signals of distress. The entire extent
of the broad plain was dotted with them. There were some that death had not
released after their two days' agony; at the faintest sound they would raise
their head, turning it eagerly from right to left, then let it fall again upon
the ground, while others lay motionless and momentarily gave utterance to that
shrill scream which one who has heard it can never forget, the lament of the
dying horse, so piercingly mournful that earth and heaven seemed to shudder in
unison with it. And Prosper, with a bleeding heart, thought of poor Zephyr, and
told himself that perhaps he might see him once again.
Suddenly he became aware that the ground was trembling under the thundering
hoof-beats of a headlong charge. He turned to look, and had barely time to shout
to his companion:
"The horses, the horses! Get behind that wall!"
From the summit of a neighboring eminence a hundred riderless horses, some of
them still bearing the saddle and master's kit, were plunging down upon them at
break-neck speed. They were cavalry mounts that had lost their masters and
remained on the battlefield, and instinct had counseled them to associate
together in a band. They had had neither hay nor oats for two days, and had
cropped the scanty grass from off the plain, shorn the hedge-rows of leaves and
twigs, gnawed the bark from the trees, and when they felt the pangs of hunger
pricking at their vitals like a keen spur, they started all together at a mad
gallop and charged across the deserted, silent fields, crushing the dead out of
all human shape, extinguishing the last spark of life in the wounded.
The band came on like a whirlwind; Silvine had only time to pull the donkey
and cart to one side where they would be protected by the wall.
"Mon Dieu! we shall be killed!"
But the horses had taken the obstacle in their stride and were already
scouring away in the distance on the other side with a rumble like that of a
receding thunder-storm; striking into a sunken road they pursued it as far as
the corner of a little wood, behind which they were lost to sight.
Silvine, when she had brought the cart back into the road, insisted that
Prosper should answer her question before they proceeded further.
"Come, where is it? You told me you could find the spot with your eyes
bandaged; where is it? We have reached the ground."
He, drawing himself up and anxiously scanning the horizon in every direction,
seemed to become more and more perplexed.
"There were three trees, I must find those three trees in the first place.
Ah, dame! see here, one's sight is not of the clearest when he is
fighting, and it is no such easy matter to remember afterward the roads one has
passed over!"
Then perceiving people to his left, two men and a woman, it occurred to him
to question them, but the woman ran away at his approach and the men repulsed
him with threatening gestures; and he saw others of the same stripe, clad in
sordid rags, unspeakably filthy, with the ill-favored faces of thieves and
murderers, and they all shunned him, slinking away among the corpses like
jackals or other unclean, creeping beasts. Then he noticed that wherever these
villainous gentry passed the dead behind them were shoeless, their bare, white
feet exposed, devoid of covering, and he saw how it was: they were the tramps
and thugs who followed the German armies for the sake of plundering the dead,
the detestable crew who followed in the wake of the invasion in order that they
might reap their harvest from the field of blood. A tall, lean fellow arose in
front of him and scurried away on a run, a sack slung across his shoulder, the
watches and small coins, proceeds of his robberies, jingling in his pockets.
A boy about fourteen or fifteen years old, however, allowed Prosper to
approach him, and when the latter, seeing him to be French, rated him soundly,
the boy spoke up in his defense. What, was it wrong for a poor fellow to earn
his living? He was collecting chassepots, and received five sous for every
chassepot he brought in. He had run away from his village that morning, having
eaten nothing since the day before, and engaged himself to a contractor from
Luxembourg, who had an arrangement with the Prussians by virtue of which he was
to gather the muskets from the field of battle, the Germans fearing that should
the scattered arms be collected by the peasants of the frontier, they might be
conveyed into Belgium and thence find their way back to France. And so it was
that there was quite a flock of poor devils hunting for muskets and earning
their five sous, rummaging among the herbage, like the women who may be seen in
the meadows, bent nearly double, gathering dandelions.
"It's a dirty business," Prosper growled.
"What would you have! A chap must eat," the boy replied. "I am not robbing
anyone."
Then, as he did not belong to that neighborhood and could not give the
information that Prosper wanted, he pointed out a little farmhouse not far away
where he had seen some people stirring.
Prosper thanked him and was moving away to rejoin Silvine when he caught
sight of a chassepot, partially buried in a furrow. His first thought was to say
nothing of his discovery; then he turned about suddenly and shouted, as if he
could not help it:
"Hallo! here's one; that will make five sous more for you."
As they approached the farmhouse Silvine noticed other peasants engaged with
spades and picks in digging long trenches; but these men were under the direct
command of Prussian officers, who, with nothing more formidable than a light
walking-stick in their hands, stood by, stiff and silent, and superintended the
work. They had requisitioned the inhabitants of all the villages of the vicinity
in this manner, fearing that decomposition might be hastened, owing to the rainy
weather. Two cart-loads of dead bodies were standing near, and a gang of men was
unloading them, laying the corpses side by side in close contiguity to one
another, not searching them, not even looking at their faces, while two men
followed after, equipped with great shovels, and covered the row with a layer of
earth, so thin that the ground had already begun to crack beneath the showers.
The work was so badly and hastily done that before two weeks should have elapsed
each of those fissures would be breathing forth pestilence. Silvine could not
resist the impulse to pause at the brink of the trench and look at those pitiful
corpses as they were brought forward, one after another. She was possessed by a
horrible fear that in each fresh body the men brought from the cart she might
recognize Honore. Was not that he, that poor wretch whose left eye had been
destroyed? No! Perhaps that one with the fractured jaw was he? The one thing
certain to her mind was that if she did not make haste to find him, wherever he
might be on that boundless, indeterminate plateau, they would pick him up and
bury him in a common grave with the others. She therefore hurried to rejoin
Prosper, who had gone on to the farmhouse with the cart.
"Mon Dieu! how is it that you are not better informed? Where is the
place? Ask the people, question them."
There were none but Prussians at the farm, however, together with a woman
servant and her child, just come in from the woods, where they had been near
perishing of thirst and hunger. The scene was one of patriarchal simplicity and
well-earned repose after the fatigues of the last few days. Some of the soldiers
had hung their uniforms from a clothes-line and were giving them a thorough
brushing, another was putting a patch on his trousers, with great neatness and
dexterity, while the cook of the detachment had built a great fire in the middle
of the courtyard on which the soup was boiling in a huge pot from which ascended
a most appetizing odor of cabbage and bacon. There is no denying that the
Prussians generally displayed great moderation toward the inhabitants of the
country after the conquest, which was made the easier to them by the spirit of
discipline that prevailed among the troops. These men might have been taken for
peaceable citizens just come in from their daily avocations, smoking their long
pipes. On a bench beside the door sat a stout, red-bearded man, who had taken up
the servant's child, a little urchin five or six years old, and was dandling it
and talking baby-talk to it in German, delighted to see the little one laugh at
the harsh syllables which it could not understand.
Prosper, fearing there might be more trouble in store for them, had turned
his back on the soldiers immediately on entering, but those Prussians were
really good fellows; they smiled at the little donkey, and did not even trouble
themselves to ask for a sight of the pass.
Then ensued a wild, aimless scamper across the bosom of the great, sinister
plain. The sun, now sinking rapidly toward the horizon, showed its face for a
moment from between two clouds. Was night to descend and surprise them in the
midst of that vast charnel-house? Another shower came down; the sun was
obscured, the rain and mist formed an impenetrable barrier about them, so that
the country around, roads, fields, trees, was shut out from their vision.
Prosper knew not where they were; he was lost, and admitted it: his memory was
all astray, he could recall nothing precise of the occurrences of that terrible
day but one before. Behind them, his head lowered almost to the ground, the
little donkey trotted along resignedly, dragging the cart, with his customary
docility. First they took a northerly course, then they returned toward Sedan.
They had lost their bearings and could not tell in which direction they were
going; twice they noticed that they were passing localities that they had passed
before and retraced their steps. They had doubtless been traveling in a circle,
and there came a moment when in their exhaustion and despair they stopped at a
place where three roads met, without courage to pursue their search further, the
rain pelting down on them, lost and utterly miserable in the midst of a sea of
mud.
But they heard the sound of groans, and hastening to a lonely little house on
their left, found there, in one of the bedrooms, two wounded men. All the doors
were standing open; the two unfortunates had succeeded in dragging themselves
thus far and had thrown themselves on the beds, and for the two days that they
had been alternately shivering and burning, their wounds having received no
attention, they had seen no one, not a living soul. They were tortured by a
consuming thirst, and the beating of the rain against the window-panes added to
their torment, but they could not move hand or foot. Hence, when they heard
Silvine approaching, the first word that escaped their lips was: "Drink! Give us
to drink!" that longing, pathetic cry, with which the wounded always pursue the
by-passer whenever the sound of footsteps arouses them from their lethargy.
There were many cases similar to this, where men were overlooked in remote
corners, whither they had fled for refuge. Some were picked up even five and six
days later, when their sores were filled with maggots and their sufferings had
rendered them delirious.
When Silvine had given the wretched men a drink Prosper, who, in the more
sorely injured of the twain, had recognized a comrade of his regiment, a
chasseur d'Afrique, saw that they could not be far from the ground over which
Margueritte's division had charged, inasmuch as the poor devil had been able to
drag himself to that house. All the information he could get from him, however,
was of the vaguest; yes, it was over that way; you turned to the left, after
passing a big field of potatoes.
Immediately she was in possession of this slender clue Silvine insisted on
starting out again. An inferior officer of the medical department chanced to
pass with a cart just then, collecting the dead; she hailed him and notified him
of the presence of the wounded men, then, throwing the donkey's bridle across
her arm, urged him along over the muddy road, eager to reach the designated
spot, beyond the big potato field. When they had gone some distance she stopped,
yielding to her despair.
"My God, where is the place! Where can it be?"
Prosper looked about him, taxing his recollection fruitlessly.
"I told you, it is close beside the place where we made our charge. If only I
could find my poor Zephyr—"
And he cast a wistful look on the dead horses that lay around them. It had
been his secret hope, his dearest wish, during the entire time they had been
wandering over the plateau, to see his mount once more, to bid him a last
farewell.
"It ought to be somewhere in this vicinity," he suddenly said. "See! over
there to the left, there are the three trees. You see the wheel-tracks? And,
look, over yonder is a broken-down caisson. We have found the spot; we are here
at last!"
Quivering with emotion, Silvine darted forward and eagerly scanned the faces
of two corpses, two artillerymen who had fallen by the roadside.
"He is not here! He is not here! You cannot have seen aright. Yes, that is
it; some delusion must have cheated your eyes." And little by little an
air-drawn hope, a wild delight crept into her mind. "If you were mistaken, if he
should be alive! And be sure he is alive, since he is not here!"
Suddenly she gave utterance to a low, smothered cry. She had turned, and was
standing on the very position that the battery had occupied. The scene was most
frightful, the ground torn and fissured as by an earthquake and covered with
wreckage of every description, the dead lying as they had fallen in every
imaginable attitude of horror, arms bent and twisted, legs doubled under them,
heads thrown back, the lips parted over the white teeth as if their last breath
had been expended in shouting defiance to the foe. A corporal had died with his
hands pressed convulsively to his eyes, unable longer to endure the dread
spectacle. Some gold coins that a lieutenant carried in a belt about his body
had been spilled at the same time as his life-blood, and lay scattered among his
entrails. There were Adolphe, the driver, and the gunner, Louis, clasped in each
other's arms in a fierce embrace, their sightless orbs starting from their
sockets, mated even in death. And there, at last, was Honore, recumbent on his
disabled gun as on a bed of honor, with the great rent in his side that had let
out his young life, his face, unmutilated and beautiful in its stern anger,
still turned defiantly toward the Prussian batteries.
"Oh! my friend," sobbed Silvine, "my friend, my friend—"
She had fallen to her knees on the damp, cold ground, her hands joined as if
in prayer, in an outburst of frantic grief. The word friend, the only name by
which it occurred to her to address him, told the story of the tender affection
she had lost in that man, so good, so loving, who had forgiven her, had meant to
make her his wife, despite the ugly past. And now all hope was dead within her
bosom, there was nothing left to make life desirable. She had never loved
another; she would put away her love for him at the bottom of her heart and hold
it sacred there. The rain had ceased; a flock of crows that circled above the
three trees, croaking dismally, affected her like a menace of evil. Was he to be
taken from her again, her cherished dead, whom she had recovered with such
difficulty? She dragged herself along upon her knees, and with a trembling hand
brushed away the hungry flies that were buzzing about her friend's wide-open
eyes.
She caught sight of a bit of blood-stained paper between Honore's stiffened
fingers. It troubled her; she tried to gain possession of the paper, pulling at
it gently, but the dead man would not surrender it, seemingly tightening his
hold on it, guarding it so jealously that it could not have been taken from him
without tearing it in bits. It was the letter she had written him, that he had
always carried next his heart, and that he had taken from its hiding place in
the moment of his supreme agony, as if to bid her a last farewell. It seemed so
strange, was such a revelation, that he should have died thinking of her; when
she saw what it was a profound delight filled her soul in the midst of her
affliction. Yes, surely, she would leave it with him, the letter that was so
dear to him! she would not take it from him, since he was so bent on carrying it
with him to the grave. Her tears flowed afresh, but they were beneficent tears
this time, and brought healing and comfort with them. She arose and kissed his
hands, kissed him on the forehead, uttering meanwhile but that one word, which
was in itself a prolonged caress:
"My friend! my friend—"
Meantime the sun was declining; Prosper had gone and taken the counterpane
from the cart, and between them they raised Honore's body, slowly, reverently,
and laid it on the bed-covering, which they had stretched upon the ground; then,
first wrapping him in its folds, they bore him to the cart. It was threatening
to rain again, and they had started on their return, forming, with the donkey, a
sorrowful little cortege on the broad bosom of the accursed plain, when a deep
rumbling as of thunder was heard in the distance. Prosper turned his head and
had only time to shout:
"The horses! the horses!"
It was the starving, abandoned cavalry mounts making another charge. They
came up this time in a deep mass across a wide, smooth field, manes and tails
streaming in the wind, froth flying from their nostrils, and the level rays of
the fiery setting sun sent the shadow of the infuriated herd clean across the
plateau. Silvine rushed forward and planted herself before the cart, raising her
arms above her head as if her puny form might have power to check them.
Fortunately the ground fell off just at that point, causing them to swerve to
the left; otherwise they would have crushed donkey, cart, and all to powder. The
earth trembled, and their hoofs sent a volley of clods and small stones flying
through the air, one of which struck the donkey on the head and wounded him. The
last that was seen of them they were tearing down a ravine.
"It's hunger that starts them off like that," said Prosper. "Poor beasts!"
Silvine, having bandaged the donkey's ear with her handkerchief, took him
again by the bridle, and the mournful little procession began to retrace its
steps across the plateau, to cover the two leagues that lay between it and
Remilly. Prosper had turned and cast a look on the dead horses, his heart heavy
within him to leave the field without having seen Zephyr.
A little below the wood of la Garenne, as they were about to turn off to the
left to take the road that they had traversed that morning, they encountered
another German post and were again obliged to exhibit their pass. And the
officer in command, instead of telling them to avoid Sedan, ordered them to keep
straight on their course and pass through the city; otherwise they would be
arrested. This was the most recent order; it was not for them to question it.
Moreover, their journey would be shortened by a mile and a quarter, which they
did not regret, weary and foot-sore as they were.
When they were within Sedan, however, they found their progress retarded
owing to a singular cause. As soon as they had passed the fortifications their
nostrils were saluted by such a stench, they were obliged to wade through such a
mass of abominable filth, reaching almost to their knees, as fairly turned their
stomachs. The city, where for three days a hundred thousand men had lived
without the slightest provision being made for decency or cleanliness, had
become a cesspool, a foul sewer, and this devil's broth was thickened by all
sorts of solid matter, rotting hay and straw, stable litter, and the excreta of
animals. The carcasses of the horses, too, that were knocked on the head,
skinned, and cut up in the public squares, in full view of everyone, had their
full share in contaminating the atmosphere; the entrails lay decaying in the hot
sunshine, the bones and heads were left lying on the pavement, where they
attracted swarms of flies. Pestilence would surely break out in the city unless
they made haste to rid themselves of all that carrion, of that stratum of
impurity, which, in the Rue de Minil, the Rue Maqua, and even on the Place
Turenne, reached a depth of twelve inches. The Prussian authorities had taken
the matter up, and their placards were to be seen posted about the city,
requisitioning the inhabitants, irrespective of rank, laborers, merchants,
bourgeois, magistrates, for the morrow; they were ordered to assemble, armed
with brooms and shovels, and apply themselves to the task, and were warned that
they would be subjected to heavy penalties if the city was not clean by night.
The President of the Tribunal had taken time by the forelock, and might even
then be seen scraping away at the pavement before his door and loading the
results of his labors upon a wheelbarrow with a fire-shovel.
Silvine and Prosper, who had selected the Grande Rue as their route for
traversing the city, advanced but slowly through that lake of malodorous slime.
In addition to that the place was in a state of ferment and agitation that made
it necessary for them to pull up almost at every moment. It was the time that
the Prussians had selected for searching the houses in order to unearth those
soldiers, who, determined that they would not give themselves up, had hidden
themselves away. When, at about two o'clock of the preceding day, General de
Wimpffen had returned from the chateau of Bellevue after signing the
capitulation, the report immediately began to circulate that the surrendered
troops were to be held under guard in the peninsula of Iges until such time as
arrangements could be perfected for sending them off to Germany. Some few
officers had expressed their intention of taking advantage of that stipulation
which accorded them their liberty conditionally on their signing an agreement
not to serve again during the campaign. Only one general, so it was said,
Bourgain-Desfeuilles, alleging his rheumatism as a reason, had bound himself by
that pledge, and when, that very morning, his carriage had driven up to the door
of the Hotel of the Golden Cross and he had taken his seat in it to leave the
city, the people had hooted and hissed him unmercifully. The operation of
disarming had been going on since break of day; the manner of its performance
was, the troops defiled by battalions on the Place Turenne, where each man
deposited his musket and bayonet on the pile, like a mountain of old iron, which
kept rising higher and higher, in a corner of the place. There was a Prussian
detachment there under the command of a young officer, a tall, pale youth,
wearing a sky-blue tunic and a cap adorned with a cock's feather, who
superintended operations with a lofty but soldier-like air, his hands encased in
white gloves. A zouave, in a fit of insubordination, having refused to give up
his chassepot, the officer ordered that he be taken away, adding, in the same
even tone of voice: "And let him be shot forthwith!" The rest of the battalion
continued to defile with a sullen and dejected air, throwing down their arms
mechanically, as if in haste to have the ceremony ended. But who could estimate
the number of those who had disarmed themselves voluntarily, those whose muskets
lay scattered over the country, out yonder on the field of battle? And how many,
too, within the last twenty-four hours had concealed themselves, flattering
themselves with the hope that they might escape in the confusion that reigned
everywhere! There was scarcely a house but had its crew of those headstrong
idiots who refused to respond when called on, hiding away in corners and
shamming death; the German patrols that were sent through the city even
discovered them stowed away under beds. And as many, even after they were
unearthed, stubbornly persisted in remaining in the cellars whither they had
fled for shelter, the patrols were obliged to fire on them through the
coal-holes. It was a man-hunt, a brutal and cruel battue, during which the city
resounded with rifle-shots and outlandish oaths.
At the Pont du Meuse they found a throng which the donkey was unable to
penetrate and were brought to a stand-still. The officer commanding the guard at
the bridge, suspecting they were endeavoring to carry on an illicit traffic in
bread or meat, insisted on seeing with his own eyes what was contained in the
cart; drawing aside the covering, he gazed for an instant on the corpse with a
feeling expression, then motioned them to go their way. Still, however, they
were unable to get forward, the crowd momentarily grew denser and denser; one of
the first detachments of French prisoners was being conducted to the peninsula
of Iges under escort of a Prussian guard. The sorry band streamed on in long
array, the men in their tattered, dirty uniforms crowding one another, treading
on one another's heels, with bowed heads and sidelong, hang-dog looks, the
dejected gait and bearing of the vanquished to whom had been left not even so
much as a knife with which to cut their throat. The harsh, curt orders of the
guard urging them forward resounded like the cracking of a whip in the silence,
which was unbroken save for the plashing of their coarse shoes through the
semi-liquid mud. Another shower began to fall, and there could be no more
sorrowful sight than that band of disheartened soldiers, shuffling along through
the rain, like beggars and vagabonds on the public highway.
All at once Prosper, whose heart was beating as if it would burst his bosom
with repressed sorrow and indignation, nudged Silvine and called her attention
to two soldiers who were passing at the moment. He had recognized Maurice and
Jean, trudging along with their companions, like brothers, side by side. They
were near the end of the line, and as there was now no impediment in their way,
he was enabled to keep them in view as far as the Faubourg of Torcy, as they
traversed the level road which leads to Iges between gardens and truck farms.
"Ah!" murmured Silvine, distressed by what she had just seen, fixing her eyes
on Honore's body, "it may be that the dead have the better part!"
Night descended while they were at Wadelincourt, and it was pitchy dark long
before they reached Remilly. Father Fouchard was greatly surprised to behold the
body of his son, for he had felt certain that it would never be recovered. He
had been attending to business during the day, and had completed an excellent
bargain; the market price for officers' chargers was twenty francs, and he had
bought three for forty-five francs.