GERMINAL
PART V
CHAPTER III
FROM early morning, before daylight, a tremor had
agitated the settlements, and that tremor was now
swelling through the roads and over the whole
country. But the departure had not taken place as
arranged, for the news had spread that cavalry and
police were scouring the plain. It was said that
they had arrived from Douai during the night, and
Rasseneur was accused of having betrayed his mates
by warning M. Hennebeau; a putter even swore that
she had seen the servant taking a dispatch to the
telegraph office. The miners clenched their fists
and watched the soldiers from behind their
shutters by the pale light of the early morning.
Towards half-past seven, as the sun was rising,
another rumour circulated, reassuring the
impatient. It was a false alarm, a simple
military promenade, such as the general
occasionally ordered since the strike had broken
out, at the desire of the prefect of Lille. The
strikers detested this official; they reproached
him with deceiving them by the promise of a
conciliatory intervention, which was limited to a
march of troops into Montsou every week, to
overawe them. So when the cavalry and police
quietly took the road back to Marchiennes, after
contenting themselves with deafening the
settlements by the stamping of their horses over
the hard earth, the miners jeered at this innocent
prefect and his soldiers who turned on their heels
when things were beginning to get hot. Up till
nine o'clock they stood peacefully about, in good
humour, before their houses, following with their
eyes up the streets the meek backs of the last
gendarmes. In the depths of their large beds the
good people of Montsou were still sleeping, with
their heads among the feathers. At the manager's
house, Madame Hennebeau had just been seen setting
out in the carriage, leaving M. Hennebeau at work,
no doubt, for the closed and silent villa seemed
dead. Not one of the pits had any military guard;
it was a fatal lack of foresight in the hour of
danger, the natural stupidity which accompanies
catastrophes, the fault which a government commits
whenever there is need of precise knowledge of the
facts. And nine o'clock was striking when the
colliers at last took the Vandame road, to repair
to the rendezvous decided on the day before in the
forest.
Étienne had very quickly perceived that he
would certainly not find over at Jean-Bart the
three thousand comrades on whom he was counting.
Many believed that the demonstration was put off,
and the worst was that two or three bands, already
on the way, would compromise the cause if he did
not at all costs put himself at their head.
Almost a hundred, who had set out before daylight,
were taking refuge beneath the forest beeches,
waiting for the others. Souvarine, whom the young
man went up to consult, shrugged his shoulders;
ten resolute fellows could do more work than a
crowd; and he turned back to the open book before
him, refusing to join in. The thing threatened to
turn into sentiment when it would have been enough
to adopt the simple method of burning Montsou. As
Étienne left the house he saw Rasseneur,
seated before the metal stove and looking very
pale, while his wife, in her everlasting black
dress, was abusing him in polite and cutting
terms.
Maheu was of opinion that they ought to keep their
promise. A rendezvous like this was sacred.
However, the night had calmed their fever; he was
now fearing misfortune, and he explained that it
was their duty to go over there to maintain their
mates in the right path. Maheude approved with a
nod. Étienne repeated complacently that it
was necessary to adopt revolutionary methods,
without attempting any person's life. Before
setting out he refused his share of a loaf that
had been given him the evening before, together
with a bottle of gin; but he drank three little
glasses, one after the other, saying that he
wanted to keep out the cold; he even carried away
a tinful. Alzire would look after the children.
Old Bonnemort, whose legs were suffering from
yesterday's walk, remained in bed.
They did not go away together, from motives of
prudence. Jeanlin had disappeared long ago.
Maheu and Maheude went off on the side sloping
towards Montsou; while Étienne turned
towards the forest, where he proposed to join his
mates. On the way he caught up a band of women
among whom he recognized Mother Brulé and
the Levaque woman; as they walked they were eating
chestnuts which Mouquette had brought; they
swallowed the skins so as to feel more in their
stomachs. But in the forest he found no one; the
men were already at Jean-Bart. He took the same
course, and arrived at the pit at the moment when
Levaque and some hundreds others were penetrating
into the square. Miners were coming up from every
direction--the men by the main road, the women by
the fields, all at random, without leaders,
without weapons, flowing naturally thither like
water which runs down a slope. Étienne
perceived Jeanlin, who had climbed up on a
footbridge, installed as though at a theatre. He
ran faster, and entered among the first. There
were scarcely three hundred of them.
There was some hesitation when Deneulin showed
himself at the top of the staircase which led to
the receiving-room.
"What do you want?" he asked in a loud
voice.
After having watched the disappearance of the
carriage, from which his daughters were still
laughing towards him, he had returned to the pit
overtaken by a strange anxiety. Everything,
however, was found in good order. The men had
gone down; the cage was working, and he became
reassured again, and was talking to the head
captain when the approach of the strikers was
announced to him. He had placed himself at a
window of the screening-shed; and in the face of
this increasing flood which filled the square, he
at once felt his impotence. How could he defend
these buildings, open on every side? he could
scarcely group some twenty of his workmen round
himself. He was lost.
"What do you want?" he repeated, pale
with repressed anger, making an effort to accept
his disaster courageously.
There were pushes and growls amid the crowd.
Étienne at last came forward, saying:
"We do not come to injure you, sir, but work
must cease everywhere."
Deneulin frankly treated him as an idiot.
"Do you think you will benefit me if you stop
work at my place? You might just as well fire a
gun off into my back. Yes, my men are below, and
they shall not come up, unless you mean to murder
me first!"
These rough words raised a clamour. Maheu had to
hold back Levaque, who was pushing forward in a
threatening manner, while Étienne went on
discussing, and tried to convince Deneulin of the
lawfulness of their revolutionary conduct. But
the latter replied by the right to work. Besides,
he refused to discuss such folly; he meant to be
master in his own place. His only regret was that
he had not four gendarmes here to sweep away this
mob.
"To be sure, it is my fault; I deserve what
has happened to me. With fellows of your sort
force is the only argument. The Government thinks
to buy you by concessions. You will throw it
down, that's all, when it has given you
weapons."
Étienne was quivering, but still held
himself in. He lowered his voice.
"I beg you, sir, give the order for your men
to come up. I cannot answer for my mates. You
may avoid a disaster."
"No! be good enough to let me alone! Do I
know you? You do not belong to my works, you have
no quarrel with me. It is only brigands who thus
scour the country to pillage houses."
Loud vociferations now drowned his voice, the
women especially abused him. But he continued to
hold his own, experiencing a certain relief in
this frankness with which he expressed his
disciplinarian nature. Since he was ruined in any
case, he thought platitudes a useless cowardice.
But their numbers went on increasing; nearly five
hundred were pushing towards the door, and he
might have been torn to pieces if his head captain
had not pulled him violently back.
"For mercy's sake, sir! There will be a
massacre. What is the good of letting men be
killed for nothing?"
He struggled and protested in one last cry thrown
at the crowd:
"You set of brigands, you will know what,
when we are strongest again!"
They led him away; the hustling of the crowd had
thrown the first ranks against the staircase so
that the rail was twisted. It was the women who
pushed and screamed and urged on the men. The
door yielded at once; it was a door without a
lock, simply closed by a latch. But the staircase
was too narrow for the pushing crowd, which would
have taken long to get in if the rear of the
besiegers had not gone off to enter by other
openings. Then they poured in on all sides--by
the shed, the screening-place, the boiler
buildings. In less than five minutes the whole
pit belonged to them; they swarmed at every storey
in the midst of furious gestures and cries,
carried away by their victory over this master who
resisted.
Maheu, in terror, had rushed forward among the
first, saying to Étienne:
"They must not kill him!"
The latter was already running; then, when
Étienne understood that Deneulin had
barricaded himself in the captains' room, he
replied:
"Well, would it be our fault? such a
madman!" He was feeling anxious, however,
being still too calm to yield to this outburst of
anger. His pride of leadership also suffered on
seeing the band escape from his authority and
become enraged, going beyond the cold execution of
the will of the people, such as he had
anticipated. In vain he called for coolness,
shouting that they must not put right on their
enemies' side by acts of useless destruction.
"To the boilers!" shouted Mother
Brulé. "Put out the fires!"
Levaque, who had found a file, was brandishing it
like a dagger, dominating the tumult with a
terrible cry:
"Cut the cables! cut the cables!"
Soon they all repeated this; only Étienne
and Maheu continued to protest, dazed, and talking
in the tumult without obtaining silence. At last
the former was able to say:
"But there are men below, mates!"
The noise redoubled and voices arose from all
sides:
"So much the worse!--Ought not to go
down!--Serve the traitors right!--Yes, yes, let
them stay there!--And then, they have the
ladders!"
Then, when this idea of the ladders had made them
still more obstinate, Étienne saw that he
would have to yield. For fear of a greater
disaster he hastened towards the engine, wishing
at all events to bring the cages up, so that the
cables, being cut above the shaft, should not
smash them by falling down with their enormous
weight. The engine-man had disappeared as well as
the few daylight workers; and he took hold of the
starting lever, manipulating it while Levaque and
two other climbed up the metal scaffold which
supported the pulleys. The cages were hardly
fixed on the keeps when the strident sound was
heard of the file biting into the steel. There
was deep silence, and this noise seemed to fill
the whole pit; all raised their heads, looking and
listening, seized by emotion. In the first rank
Maheu felt a fierce joy possess him, as if the
teeth of the file would deliver them from
misfortune by eating into the cable of one of
these dens of wretchedness, into which they would
never descend again.
But Mother Brulé had disappeared by the
shed stairs still shouting:
"The fires must be put out! To the boilers!
to the boilers!"
Some women followed her. Maheude hastened to
prevent them from smashing everything, just as her
husband had tried to reason with the men. She was
the calmest of them; one could demand one's rights
without making a mess in people's places. When
she entered the boiler building the women were
already chasing away the two stokers, and the
Brulé, armed with a large shovel, and
crouching down before one of the stoves, was
violently emptying it, throwing the red-hot coke
on to the brick floor, where it continued to burn
with black smoke. There were ten stoves for the
five boilers. Soon the women warmed to the work,
the Levaque manipulating her shovel with both
hands, Mouquette raising her clothes up to her
thighs so as not to catch fire, all looking red in
the reflection of the flames, sweating and
dishevelled in this witch's kitchen. The piles of
coal increased, and the burning heat cracked the
ceiling of the vast hall.
"Enough, now!" cried Maheude; "the
store-room is afire."
"So much the better," replied Mother
Brulé. "That will do the work. Ah,
by God! haven't I said that I would pay them out
for the death of my man!"
At this moment Jeanlin's shrill voice was heard:
"Look out! I'll put it out, I will! I'll
let it all off!"
He had come in among the first, and had kicked his
legs about among the crowd, delighted at the fray
and seeking out what mischief he could do; the
idea had occurred to him to turn on the discharge
taps and let off the steam.
The jets came out with the violence of volleys;
the five boilers were emptied with the sound of a
tempest, whistling in such a roar of thunder that
one's ears seemed to bleed. Everything had
disappeared in the midst of the vapour, the hot
coal grew pale, and the women were nothing more
than shadows with broken gestures. The child
alone appeared mounted on the gallery, behind the
whirlwinds of white steam, filled with delight and
grinning broadly in the joy of unchaining this
hurricane.
This lasted nearly a quarter of an hour. A few
buckets of water had been thrown over the heaps to
complete their extinction; all danger of a fire
had gone by, but the anger of the crowd had not
subsided; on the contrary, it had been whipped up.
Men went down with hammers, even the women armed
themselves with iron bars; and they talked of
smashing boilers, of breaking engines, and of
demolishing the mine.
Étienne, forewarned, hastened to come up
with Maheu. He himself was becoming intoxicated
and carried away by this hot fever of revenge. He
struggled, however, and entreated them to be calm,
now that, with cut cables, extinguished fires, and
empty boilers, work was impossible. He was not
always listened to; and was again about to be
carried away by the crowd, when hoots arose
outside at a little low door where the ladder
passage emerged.
"Down with the traitors!--Oh! the dirty
chops of the cowards!--Down with them! down with
them!"
The men were beginning to come up from below. The
first arrivals, blinded by the daylight, stood
there with quivering eyelids. Then they moved
away, trying to gain the road and flee.
"Down with the cowards! down with the
traitors!"
The whole band of strikers had run up. In less
than three minutes there was not a man left in the
buildings; the five hundred Montsou men were
ranged in two rows, and the Vandame men, who had
had the treachery to go down, were forced to pass
between this double hedge. And as every fresh
miner appeared at the door of the passage, covered
with the black mud of work and with garments in
rags, the hooting redoubled, and ferocious jokes
arose. Oh! look at that one!--three inches of
legs and then his arse! and this one with his
nose eaten by those Volcan girls! and this other,
with eyes pissing out enough wax to furnish ten
cathedrals! and this other, the tall fellow
without a rump and as long as Lent! An enormous
putter-woman, who rolled out with her breast to
her belly and her belly to her backside, raised a
furious laugh. They wanted to handle them, the
joking increased and was turning to cruelty, blows
would soon have rained; while the row of poor
devils came out shivering and silent beneath the
abuse, with sidelong looks in expectation of
blows, glad when they could at last rush away out
of the mine.
"Hallo! how many are there in there?"
asked Étienne. He was astonished to see
them still coming out, and irritated at the idea
that it was not a mere handful of workers, urged
by hunger, terrorized by the captains. They had
lied to him, then, in the forest; nearly all
Jean-Bart had gone down. But a cry escaped from
him and he rushed forward when he saw Chaval
standing on the threshold. "By God! is this
the rendezvous you called us to?"
Imprecations broke out and there was a movement of
the crowd towards the traitor. What! he had
sworn with them the day before, and now they found
him down below with the others! Was he, then,
making fools of people?
"Off with him! To the shaft! to the
shaft!"
Chaval, white with fear, stammered and tried to
explain. But Étienne cut him short,
carried out of himself and sharing the fury of the
bank.
"You wanted to be in it, and you shall be in
it. Come on! take your damned snout along!"
Another clamour covered his voice. Catherine, in
her turn, had just appeared, dazzled by the bright
sunlight, and frightened at falling into the midst
of these savages. She was panting, with legs
aching from the hundred and two ladders, and with
bleeding palms, when Maheude, seeing her, rushed
forward with her hand up.
"Ah! slut! you, too! When your mother is
dying of hunger you betray her for your
bully!"
Maheu held back her arm, and stopped the blow.
But he shook his daughter; he was enraged, like
his wife; he threw her conduct in her face, and
both lost their heads, shouting louder than their
mates.
The sight of Catherine had completed
Étienne's exasperation. He repeated:
"On we go to the other pits, and you come
with us, you dirty devil!"
Chaval had scarcely time to get his sabots from
the shed and to throw his woollen jacket over his
frozen shoulders. They all dragged him on,
forcing him to run in the midst of them.
Catherine, bewildered, also put on her sabots,
buttoning at her neck her man's old jacket, with
which she kept off the cold; and she ran behind
her lover, she would not leave him, for surely
they were going to murder him.
Then in two minutes Jean-Bart was emptied.
Jeanlin had found a horn and was blowing it,
producing hoarse sounds, as though he were
gathering oxen together. The women--Mother
Brulé, the Levaque, and Mouquette--raised
their skirts to run, while Levaque, with an axe in
his hand, manipulated it like a drum-major's
stick. Other men continued to arrive; they were
nearly a thousand, without order, again flowing on
to the road like a torrent let loose. The gates
were too narrow, and the palings were broken down.
"To the pits!--Down with the traitors!--No
more work!"
And Jean-Bart fell suddenly into a great silence.
Not a man was left, not a breath was heard.
Deneulin came out of the captains' room, and quite
alone, with a gesture forbidding any one to follow
him, he went over the pit. He was pale and very
calm.
At first he stopped before the shaft, lifting his
eyes to look at the cut cables; the steel ends
hung useless, the bite of the file had left a
living scar, a fresh wound which gleamed in the
black grease. Afterwards he went up to the
engine, and looked at the crank, which was
motionless, like the joint of a colossal limb
struck by paralysis. He touched the metal, which
had already cooled, and the cold made him shudder
as though he had touched a corpse. Then he went
down to the boiler-room, walked slowly before the
extinguished stoves, yawning and inundated, and
struck his foot against the boilers, which sounded
hollow. Well! it was quite finished; his ruin
was complete. Even if he mended the cables and
lit the fires, where would he find men? Another
fortnight's strike and he would be bankrupt. And
in this certainty of disaster he no longer felt
any hatred of the Montsou brigands; he felt that
all had a complicity in it, that it was a general
agelong fault. They were brutes, no doubt, but
brutes who could not read, and who were dying of
hunger.