The Downfall: Chapter 6
Chapter 6
Up on his lofty terrace, whither he had betaken himself to watch how
affairs were shaping, Delaherche at last became impatient and was
seized with an uncontrollable desire for news. He could see that the
enemy's shells were passing over the city and that the few projectiles
which had fallen on the houses in the vicinity were only responses,
made at long intervals, to the irregular and harmless fire from Fort
Palatinat, but he could discern nothing of the battle, and his
agitation was rising to fever heat; he experienced an imperious
longing for intelligence, which was constantly stimulated by the
reflection that his life and fortune would be in danger should the
army be defeated. He found it impossible to remain there longer, and
went downstairs, leaving behind him the telescope on its tripod,
turned on the German batteries.
When he had descended, however, he lingered a moment, detained by the
aspect of the central garden of the factory. It was near one o'clock,
and the ambulance was crowded with wounded men; the wagons kept
driving up to the entrance in an unbroken stream. The regular
ambulance wagons of the medical department, two-wheeled and
four-wheeled, were too few in number to meet the demand, and vehicles
of every description from the artillery and other trains, _prolonges_,
provision vans, everything on wheels that could be picked up on the
battlefield, came rolling up with their ghastly loads; and later in
the day even carrioles and market-gardeners' carts were pressed into
the service and harnessed to horses that were found straying along the
roads. Into these motley conveyances were huddled the men collected
from the flying ambulances, where their hurts had received such hasty
attention as could be afforded. It was a sight to move the most
callous to behold the unloading of those poor wretches, some with a
greenish pallor on their face, others suffused with the purple hue
that denotes congestion; many were in a state of coma, others
uttered piercing cries of anguish; some there were who, in their
semi-conscious condition, yielded themselves to the arms of the
attendants with a look of deepest terror in their eyes, while a few,
the minute a hand was laid on them, died of the consequent shock. They
continued to arrive in such numbers that soon every bed in the vast
apartment would have its occupant, and Major Bouroche had given orders
to make use of the straw that had been spread thickly upon the floor
at one end. He and his assistants had thus far been able to attend to
all the cases with reasonable promptness; he had requested Mme.
Delaherche to furnish him with another table, with mattress and
oilcloth cover, for the shed where he had established his operating
room. The assistant would thrust a napkin saturated with chloroform to
the patient's nostrils, the keen knife flashed in the air, there was
the faint rasping of the saw, barely audible, the blood spurted in
short, sharp jets that were checked immediately. As soon as one
subject had been operated on another was brought in, and they followed
one another in such quick succession that there was barely time to
pass a sponge over the protecting oilcloth. At the extremity of the
grass plot, screened from sight by a clump of lilac bushes, they had
set up a kind of morgue whither they carried the bodies of the dead,
which were removed from the beds without a moment's delay in order to
make room for the living, and this receptacle also served to receive
the amputated legs, and arms, whatever debris of flesh and bone
remained upon the table.
Mme. Delaherche and Gilberte, seated at the foot of one of the great
trees, found it hard work to keep pace with the demand for bandages.
Bouroche, who happened to be passing, his face very red, his apron
white no longer, threw a bundle of linen to Delaherche and shouted:
"Here! be doing something; make yourself useful!"
But the manufacturer objected. "Oh! excuse me; I must go and try to
pick up some news. One can't tell whether his neck is safe or not."
Then, touching his lips to his wife's hair: "My poor Gilberte, to
think that a shell may burn us out of house and home at any moment! It
is horrible."
She was very pale; she raised her head and glanced about her,
shuddering as she did so. Then, involuntarily, her unextinguishable
smile returned to her lips.
"Oh, horrible, indeed! and all those poor men that they are cutting
and carving. I don't see how it is that I stay here without fainting."
Mme. Delaherche had watched her son as he kissed the young woman's
hair. She made a movement as if to part them, thinking of that other
man who must have kissed those tresses so short a time ago; then her
old hands trembled, she murmured beneath her breath:
"What suffering all about us, _mon Dieu!_ It makes one forget his
own."
Delaherche left them, with the assurance that he would be away no
longer than was necessary to ascertain the true condition of affairs.
In the Rue Maqua he was surprised to observe the crowds of soldiers
that were streaming into the city, without arms and in torn,
dust-stained uniforms. It was in vain, however, that he endeavored to
slake his thirst for news by questioning them; some answered with
vacant, stupid looks that they knew nothing, while others told long
rambling stories, with the maniacal gestures and whirling words of one
bereft of reason. He therefore mechanically turned his steps again
toward the Sous Prefecture as the likeliest quarter in which to look
for information. As he was passing along the Place du College two
guns, probably all that remained of some battery, came dashing up to
the curb on a gallop, and were abandoned there. When at last he turned
into the Grande Rue he had further evidence that the advanced guards
of the fugitives were beginning to take possession, of the city; three
dismounted hussars had seated themselves in a doorway and were sharing
a loaf of bread; two others were walking their mounts up and down,
leading them by the bridle, not knowing where to look for stabling for
them; officers were hurrying to and fro distractedly, seemingly
without any distinct purpose. On the Place Turenne a lieutenant
counseled him not to loiter unnecessarily, for the shells had an
unpleasant way of dropping there every now and then; indeed, a
splinter had just demolished the railing about the statue of the great
commander who overran the Palatinate. And as if to emphasize the
officer's advice, while he was making fast time down the Rue de la
Sous Prefecture he saw two projectiles explode, with a terrible crash,
on the Pont de Meuse.
He was standing in front of the janitor's lodge, debating with himself
whether it would be best to send in his card and try to interview one
of the aides-de-camp, when he heard a girlish voice calling him by
name.
"M. Delaherche! Come in here, quick; it is not safe out there."
It was Rose, his little operative, whose existence he had quite
forgotten. She might be a useful ally in assisting him to gain access
to headquarters; he entered the lodge and accepted her invitation to
be seated.
"Just think, mamma is down sick with the worry and confusion; she
can't leave her bed, so, you see, I have to attend to everything, for
papa is with the National Guards up in the citadel. A little while ago
the Emperor left the building--I suppose he wanted to let people see
he is not a coward--and succeeded in getting as far as the bridge down
at the end of the street. A shell alighted right in front of him; one
of his equerries had his horse killed under him. And then he came
back--he couldn't do anything else, could he, now?"
"You must have heard some talk of how the battle is going. What do
they say, those gentlemen upstairs?"
She looked at him in surprise. Her pretty face was bright and smiling,
with its fluffy golden hair and the clear, childish eyes of one who
bestirred herself among her multifarious duties, in the midst of all
those horrors, which she did not well understand.
"No, I know nothing. About midday I sent up a letter for Marshal
MacMahon, but it could not be given him right away, because the
Emperor was in the room. They were together nearly an hour, the
Marshal lying on his bed, the Emperor close beside him seated on a
chair. That much I know for certain, because I saw them when the door
was opened."
"And then, what did they say to each other?"
She looked at him again, and could not help laughing.
"Why, I don't know; how could you expect me to? There's not a living
soul knows what they said to each other."
She was right; he made an apologetic gesture in recognition of the
stupidity of his question. But the thought of that fateful
conversation haunted him; the interest there was in it for him who
could have heard it! What decision had they arrived at?
"And now," Rose added, "the Emperor is back in his cabinet again,
where he is having a conference with two generals who have just come
in from the battlefield." She checked herself, casting a glance at the
main entrance of the building. "See! there is one of them, now--and
there comes the other."
He hurried from the room, and in the two generals recognized Ducrot
and Douay, whose horses were standing before the door. He watched them
climb into their saddles and gallop away. They had hastened into the
city, each independently of the other, after the plateau of Illy had
been captured by the enemy, to notify the Emperor that the battle was
lost. They placed the entire situation distinctly before him; the army
and Sedan were even then surrounded on every side; the result could
not help but be disastrous.
For some minutes the Emperor continued silently to pace the floor of
his cabinet, with the feeble, uncertain step of an invalid. There was
none with him save an aide-de-camp, who stood by the door, erect and
mute. And ever, to and fro, from the window to the fireplace, from the
fireplace to the window, the sovereign tramped wearily, the
inscrutable face now drawn and twitching spasmodically with a nervous
tic. The back was bent, the shoulders bowed, as if the weight of his
falling empire pressed on them more heavily, and the lifeless eyes,
veiled by their heavy lids, told of the anguish of the fatalist who
has played his last card against destiny and lost. Each time, however,
that his walk brought him to the half-open window he gave a start and
lingered there a second. And during one of those brief stoppages he
faltered with trembling lips:
"Oh! those guns, those guns, that have been going since the morning!"
The thunder of the batteries on la Marfee and at Frenois seemed,
indeed, to resound with more terrific violence there than elsewhere.
It was one continuous, uninterrupted crash, that shook the windows,
nay, the very walls themselves; an incessant uproar that exasperated
the nerves by its persistency. And he could not banish the reflection
from his mind that, as the struggle was now hopeless, further
resistance would be criminal. What would avail more bloodshed, more
maiming and mangling; why add more corpses to the dead that were
already piled high upon that bloody field? They were vanquished, it
was all ended; then why not stop the slaughter? The abomination of
desolation raised its voice to heaven: let it cease.
The Emperor, again before the window, trembled and raised his hands to
his ears, as if to shut out those reproachful voices.
"Oh, those guns, those guns! Will they never be silent!"
Perhaps the dreadful thought of his responsibilities arose before him,
with the vision of all those thousands of bleeding forms with which
his errors had cumbered the earth; perhaps, again, it was but
the compassionate impulse of the tender-hearted dreamer, of the
well-meaning man whose mind was stocked with humanitarian theories. At
the moment when he beheld utter ruin staring him in the face, in that
frightful whirlwind of destruction that broke him like a reed and
scattered his fortunes in the dust, he could yet find tears for
others. Almost crazed at the thought of the slaughter that was
mercilessly going on so near him, he felt he had not strength to
endure it longer; each report of that accursed cannonade seemed to
pierce his heart and intensified a thousandfold his own private
suffering.
"Oh, those guns, those guns! they must be silenced at once, at once!"
And that monarch who no longer had a throne, for he had delegated all
his functions to the Empress regent, that chief without an army, since
he had turned over the supreme command to Marshal Bazaine, now felt
that he must once more take the reins in his hand and be the master.
Since they left Chalons he had kept himself in the background, had
issued no orders, content to be a nameless nullity without recognized
position, a cumbrous burden carried about from place to place among
the baggage of his troops, and it was only in their hour of defeat
that the Emperor reasserted itself in him; the one order that he was
yet to give, out of the pity of his sorrowing heart, was to raise the
white flag on the citadel to request an armistice.
"Those guns, oh! those guns! Take a sheet, someone, a tablecloth, it
matters not what! only hasten, hasten, and see that it is done!"
The aide-de-camp hurried from the room, and with unsteady steps the
Emperor continued to pace his beat, back and forth, between the window
and the fireplace, while still the batteries kept thundering, shaking
the house from garret to foundation.
Delaherche was still chatting with Rose in the room below when a
non-commissioned officer of the guard came running in and interrupted
them.
"Mademoiselle, the house is in confusion, I cannot find a servant. Can
you let me have something from your linen closet, a white cloth of
some kind?"
"Will a napkin answer?"
"No, no, it would not be large enough. Half of a sheet, say."
Rose, eager to oblige, was already fumbling in her closet.
"I don't think I have any half-sheets. No, I don't see anything that
looks as if it would serve your purpose. Oh, here is something; could
you use a tablecloth?"
"A tablecloth! just the thing. Nothing could be better." And he added
as he left the room: "It is to be used as a flag of truce, and hoisted
on the citadel to let the enemy know we want to stop the fighting.
Much obliged, mademoiselle."
Delaherche gave a little involuntary start of delight; they were to
have a respite at last, then! Then he thought it might be unpatriotic
to be joyful at such a time, and put on a long face again; but none
the less his heart was very glad and he contemplated with much
interest a colonel and captain, followed by the sergeant, as they
hurriedly left the Sous-Prefecture. The colonel had the tablecloth,
rolled in a bundle, beneath his arm. He thought he should like to
follow them, and took leave of Rose, who was very proud that her
napery was to be put to such use. It was then just striking two
o'clock.
In front of the Hotel de Ville Delaherche was jostled by a disorderly
mob of half-crazed soldiers who were pushing their way down from the
Faubourg de la Cassine; he lost sight of the colonel, and abandoned
his design of going to witness the raising of the white flag. He
certainly would not be allowed to enter the citadel, and then again he
had heard it reported that shells were falling on the college, and a
new terror filled his mind; his factory might have been burned since
he left it. All his feverish agitation returned to him and he started
off on a run; the rapid motion was a relief to him. But the streets
were blocked by groups of men, at every crossing he was delayed by
some new obstacle. It was only when he reached the Rue Maqua and
beheld the monumental facade of his house intact, no smoke or sign of
fire about it, that his anxiety was allayed, and he heaved a deep sigh
of satisfaction. He entered, and from the doorway shouted to his
mother and wife:
"It is all right! they are hoisting the white flag; the cannonade
won't last much longer."
He said nothing more, for the appearance presented by the ambulance
was truly horrifying.
In the vast drying-room, the wide door of which was standing open, not
only was every bed occupied, but there was no more room upon the
litter that had been shaken down on the floor at the end of the
apartment. They were commencing to strew straw in the spaces between
the beds, the wounded were crowded together so closely that they were
in contact. Already there were more than two hundred patients there,
and more were arriving constantly; through the lofty windows the
pitiless white daylight streamed in upon that aggregation of suffering
humanity. Now and then an unguarded movement elicited an involuntary
cry of anguish. The death-rattle rose on the warm, damp air. Down the
room a low, mournful wail, almost a lullaby, went on and ceased not.
And all about was silence, intense, profound, the stolid resignation
of despair, the solemn stillness of the death-chamber, broken only
by the tread and whispers of the attendants. Rents in tattered,
shell-torn uniforms disclosed gaping wounds, some of which had
received a hasty dressing on the battlefield, while others were still
raw and bleeding. There were feet, still incased in their coarse
shoes, crushed into a mass like jelly; from knees and elbows, that
were as if they had been smashed by a hammer, depended inert limbs.
There were broken hands, and fingers almost severed, ready to drop,
retained only by a strip of skin. Most numerous among the casualties
were the fractures; the poor arms and legs, red and swollen, throbbed
intolerably and were heavy as lead. But the most dangerous hurts were
those in the abdomen, chest, and head. There were yawning fissures
that laid open the entire flank, the knotted viscera were drawn into
great hard lumps beneath the tight-drawn skin, while as the effect of
certain wounds the patient frothed at the mouth and writhed like an
epileptic. Here and there were cases where the lungs had been
penetrated, the puncture now so minute as to permit no escape of
blood, again a wide, deep orifice through which the red tide of life
escaped in torrents; and the internal hemorrhages, those that were hid
from sight, were the most terrible in their effects, prostrating their
victim like a flash, making him black in the face and delirious. And
finally the head, more than any other portion of the frame, gave
evidence of hard treatment; a broken jaw, the mouth a pulp of teeth
and bleeding tongue, an eye torn from its socket and exposed upon the
cheek, a cloven skull that showed the palpitating brain beneath. Those
in whose case the bullet had touched the brain or spinal marrow were
already as dead men, sunk in the lethargy of coma, while the fractures
and other less serious cases tossed restlessly on their pallets and
beseechingly called for water to quench their thirst.
Leaving the large room and passing out into the courtyard, the shed
where the operations were going on presented another scene of horror.
In the rush and hurry that had continued unabated since morning it was
impossible to operate on every case that was brought in, so their
attention had been confined to those urgent cases that imperatively
demanded it. Whenever Bouroche's rapid judgment told him that
amputation was necessary, he proceeded at once to perform it. In the
same way he lost not a moment's time in probing the wound and
extracting the projectile whenever it had lodged in some locality
where it might do further mischief, as in the muscles of the neck, the
region of the arm pit, the thigh joint, the ligaments of the knee and
elbow. Severed arteries, too, had to be tied without delay. Other
wounds were merely dressed by one of the hospital stewards under his
direction and left to await developments. He had already with his own
hand performed four amputations, the only rest that he allowed himself
being to attend to some minor cases in the intervals between them, and
was beginning to feel fatigue. There were but two tables, his own and
another, presided over by one of his assistants; a sheet had been hung
between them, to isolate the patients from each other. Although the
sponge was kept constantly at work the tables were always red, and the
buckets that were emptied over a bed of daisies a few steps away, the
clear water in which a single tumbler of blood sufficed to redden,
seemed to be buckets of unmixed blood, torrents of blood, inundating
the gentle flowers of the parterre. Although the room was thoroughly
ventilated a nauseating smell arose from the tables and their horrid
burdens, mingled with the sweetly insipid odor of chloroform.
Delaherche, naturally a soft-hearted man, was in a quiver of
compassionate emotion at the spectacle that lay before his eyes, when
his attention was attracted by a landau that drove up to the door. It
was a private carriage, but doubtless the ambulance attendants had
found none other ready to their hand and had crowded their patients
into it. There were eight of them, sitting on one another's knees, and
as the last man alighted the manufacturer recognized Captain Beaudoin,
and gave utterance to a cry of terror and surprise.
"Ah, my poor friend! Wait, I will call my mother and my wife."
They came running up, leaving the bandages to be rolled by servants.
The attendants had already raised the captain and brought him into the
room, and were about to lay him down upon a pile of straw when
Delaherche noticed, lying on a bed, a soldier whose ashy face and
staring eyes exhibited no sign of life.
"Look, is he not dead, that man?"
"That's so!" replied the attendant. "He may as well make room for
someone else!"
He and one of his mates took the body by the arms and legs and carried
it off to the morgue that had been extemporized behind the lilac
bushes. A dozen corpses were already there in a row, stiff and stark,
some drawn out to their full length as if in an attempt to rid
themselves of the agony that racked them, others curled and twisted in
every attitude of suffering. Some seemed to have left the world with a
sneer on their faces, their eyes retroverted till naught was visible
but the whites, the grinning lips parted over the glistening teeth,
while in others, with faces unspeakably sorrowful, big tears still
stood on the cheeks. One, a mere boy, short and slight, half whose
face had been shot away by a cannon-ball, had his two hands clasped
convulsively above his heart, and in them a woman's photograph, one of
those pale, blurred pictures that are made in the quarters of the
poor, bedabbled with his blood. And at the feet of the dead had been
thrown in a promiscuous pile the amputated arms and legs, the refuse
of the knife and saw of the operating table, just as the butcher
sweeps into a corner of his shop the offal, the worthless odds and
ends of flesh and bone.
Gilberte shuddered as she looked on Captain Beaudoin. Good God! how
pale he was, stretched out on his mattress, his face so white beneath
the encrusting grime! And the thought that but a few short hours
before he had held her in his arms, radiant in all his manly strength
and beauty, sent a chill of terror to her heart. She kneeled beside
him.
"What a terrible misfortune, my friend! But it won't amount to
anything, will it?" And she drew her handkerchief from her pocket and
began mechanically to wipe his face, for she could not bear to look at
it thus soiled with powder, sweat, and clay. It seemed to her, too,
that she would be helping him by cleansing him a little. "Will it? it
is only your leg that is hurt; it won't amount to anything."
The captain made an effort to rouse himself from his semi-conscious
state, and opened his eyes. He recognized his friends and greeted them
with a faint smile.
"Yes, it is only the leg. I was not even aware of being hit; I thought
I had made a misstep and fallen--" He spoke with great difficulty.
"Oh! I am so thirsty!"
Mme. Delaherche, who was standing at the other side of the mattress,
looking down compassionately on the young man, hastily left the room.
She returned with a glass and a carafe of water into which a little
cognac had been poured, and when the captain had greedily swallowed
the contents of the glass, she distributed what remained in the carafe
among the occupants of the adjacent beds, who begged with trembling
outstretched hands and tearful voices for a drop. A zouave, for whom
there was none left, sobbed like a child in his disappointment.
Delaherche was meantime trying to gain the major's ear to see if
he could not prevail on him to take up the captain's case out of
its regular turn. Bouroche came into the room just then, with his
blood-stained apron and lion's mane hanging in confusion about his
perspiring face, and the men raised their heads as he passed and
endeavored to stop him, all clamoring at once for recognition and
immediate attention: "This way, major! It's my turn, major!" Faltering
words of entreaty went up to him, trembling hands clutched at his
garments, but he, wrapped up in the work that lay before him and
puffing with his laborious exertions, continued to plan and calculate
and listened to none of them. He communed with himself aloud, counting
them over with his finger and classifying them, assigning them their
numbers; this one first, then that one, then that other fellow; one,
two, three; the jaw, the arm, then the thigh; while the assistant who
accompanied him on his round made himself all ears in his effort to
memorize his directions.
"Major," said Delaherche, plucking him by the sleeve, "there is an
officer over here, Captain Beaudoin--"
Bouroche interrupted him. "What, Beaudoin here! Ah, the poor devil!"
And he crossed over at once to the side of the wounded man. A single
glance, however, must have sufficed to show him that the case was a
bad one, for he added in the same breath, without even stooping to
examine the injured member: "Good! I will have them bring him to me at
once, just as soon as I am through with the operation that is now in
hand."
And he went back to the shed, followed by Delaherche, who would not
lose sight of him for fear lest he might forget his promise.
The business that lay before him now was the rescision of a
shoulder-joint in accordance with Lisfranc's method, which surgeons
never fail to speak of as a "very pretty" operation, something neat
and expeditious, barely occupying forty seconds in the performance.
The patient was subjected to the influence of chloroform, while an
assistant grasped the shoulder with both hands, the fingers under the
armpit, the thumbs on top. Bouroche, brandishing the long, keen knife,
cried: "Raise him!" seized the deltoid with his left hand and with a
swift movement of the right cut through the flesh of the arm and
severed the muscle; then, with a deft rearward cut, he disarticulated
the joint at a single stroke, and presto! the arm fell on the table,
taken off in three motions. The assistant slipped his thumbs over the
brachial artery in such manner as to close it. "Let him down!"
Bouroche could not restrain a little pleased laugh as he proceeded to
secure the artery, for he had done it in thirty-five seconds. All that
was left to do now was to bring a flap of skin down over the wound and
stitch it, in appearance something like a flat epaulette. It was not
only "pretty," but exciting, on account of the danger, for a man will
pump all the blood out of his body in two minutes through the
brachial, to say nothing of the risk there is in bringing a patient to
a sitting posture when under the influence of anaesthetics.
Delaherche was white as a ghost; a thrill of horror ran down his back.
He would have turned and fled, but time was not given him; the arm was
already off. The soldier was a new recruit, a sturdy peasant lad; on
emerging from his state of coma he beheld a hospital attendant
carrying away the amputated limb to conceal it behind the lilacs.
Giving a quick downward glance at his shoulder, he saw the bleeding
stump and knew what had been done, whereon he became furiously angry.
"Ah, _nom de Dieu!_ what have you been doing to me? It is a shame!"
Bouroche was too done up to make him an immediate answer, but
presently, in his fatherly way:
"I acted for the best; I didn't want to see you kick the bucket, my
boy. Besides, I asked you, and you told me to go ahead."
"I told you to go ahead! I did? How could I know what I was saying!"
His anger subsided and he began to weep scalding tears. "What is going
to become of me now?"
They carried him away and laid him on the straw, and gave the table
and its covering a thorough cleansing; and the buckets of blood-red
water that they threw out across the grass plot gave to the pale
daisies a still deeper hue of crimson.
When Delaherche had in some degree recovered his equanimity he was
astonished to notice that the bombardment was still going on. Why had
it not been silenced? Rose's tablecloth must have been hoisted over
the citadel by that time, and yet it seemed as if the fire of the
Prussian batteries was more rapid and furious than ever. The uproar
was such that one could not hear his own voice; the sustained
vibration tried the stoutest nerves. On both operators and patients
the effect could not but be most unfavorable of those incessant
detonations that seemed to penetrate the inmost recesses of one's
being. The entire hospital was in a state of feverish alarm and
apprehension.
"I supposed it was all over; what can they mean by keeping it up?"
exclaimed Delaherche, who was nervously listening, expecting each shot
would be the last.
Returning to Bouroche to remind him of his promise and conduct him to
the captain, he was astonished to find him seated on a bundle of straw
before two pails of iced water, into which he had plunged both his
arms, bared to the shoulder. The major, weary and disheartened,
overwhelmed by a sensation of deepest melancholy and dejection, had
reached one of those terrible moments when the practitioner becomes
conscious of his own impotency; he had exhausted his strength,
physical and moral, and taken this means to restore it. And yet he was
not a weakling; he was steady of hand and firm of heart; but the
inexorable question had presented itself to him: "What is the use?"
The feeling that he could accomplish so little, that so much must be
left undone, had suddenly paralyzed him. What was the use? since
Death, in spite of his utmost effort, would always be victorious.
Two attendants came in, bearing Captain Beaudoin on a stretcher.
"Major," Delaherche ventured to say, "here is the captain."
Bouroche opened his eyes, withdrew his arms from their cold bath,
shook and dried them on the straw. Then, rising to his feet:
"Ah, yes; the next one-- Well, well, the day's work is not yet done."
And he shook the tawny locks upon his lion's head, rejuvenated and
refreshed, restored to himself once more by the invincible habit of
duty and the stern discipline of his profession.
"Good! just above the right ankle," said Bouroche, with unusual
garrulity, intended to quiet the nerves of the patient. "You displayed
wisdom in selecting the location of your wound; one is not much the
worse for a hurt in that quarter. Now we'll just take a little look at
it."
But Beaudoin's persistently lethargic condition evidently alarmed him.
He inspected the contrivance that had been applied by the field
attendant to check the flow of blood, which was simply a cord passed
around the leg outside the trousers and twisted tight with the
assistance of a bayonet sheath, with a growling request to be informed
what infernal ignoramus had done that. Then suddenly he saw how
matters were and was silent; while they were bringing him in from the
field in the overcrowded landau the improvised tourniquet had become
loosened and slipped down, thus giving rise to an extensive
hemorrhage. He relieved his feelings by storming at the hospital
steward who was assisting him.
"You confounded snail, cut! Are you going to keep me here all day?"
The attendant cut away the trousers and drawers, then the shoe and
sock, disclosing to view the leg and foot in their pale nudity,
stained with blood. Just over the ankle was a frightful laceration,
into which the splinter of the bursting shell had driven a piece of
the red cloth of the trousers. The muscle protruded from the lips of
the gaping orifice, a roll of whitish, mangled tissue.
Gilberte had to support herself against one of the uprights of the
shed. Ah! that flesh, that poor flesh that was so white; now all torn
and maimed and bleeding! Despite the horror and terror of the sight
she could not turn away her eyes.
"Confound it!" Bouroche exclaimed, "they have made a nice mess here!"
He felt the foot and found it cold; the pulse, if any, was so feeble
as to be undistinguishable. His face was very grave, and he pursed his
lips in a way that was habitual with him when he had a more than
usually serious case to deal with.
"Confound it," he repeated, "I don't like the looks of that foot!"
The captain, whom his anxiety had finally aroused from his
semi-somnolent state, asked:
"What were you saying, major?"
Bouroche's tactics, whenever an amputation became necessary, were
never to appeal directly to the patient for the customary
authorization. He preferred to have the patient accede to it
voluntarily.
"I was saying that I don't like the looks of that foot," he murmured,
as if thinking aloud. "I am afraid we shan't be able to save it."
In a tone of alarm Beaudoin rejoined: "Come, major, there is no use
beating about the bush. What is your opinion?"
"My opinion is that you are a brave man, captain, and that you are
going to let me do what the necessity of the case demands."
To Captain Beaudoin it seemed as if a sort of reddish vapor arose
before his eyes through which he saw things obscurely. He understood.
But notwithstanding the intolerable fear that appeared to be clutching
at his throat, he replied, unaffectedly and bravely:
"Do as you think best, major."
The preparations did not consume much time. The assistant had
saturated a cloth with chloroform and was holding it in readiness; it
was at once applied to the patient's nostrils. Then, just at the
moment that the brief struggle set in that precedes anaesthesia, two
attendants raised the captain and placed him on the mattress upon his
back, in such a position that the legs should be free; one of them
retained his grasp on the left limb, holding it flexed, while an
assistant, seizing the right, clasped it tightly with both his hands
in the region of the groin in order to compress the arteries.
Gilberte, when she saw Bouroche approach the victim with the
glittering steel, could endure no more.
"Oh, don't! oh, don't! it is too horrible!"
And she would have fallen had it not been that Mme. Delaherche put
forth her arm to sustain her.
"But why do you stay here?"
Both the women remained, however. They averted their eyes, not wishing
to see the rest; motionless and trembling they stood locked in each
other's arms, notwithstanding the little love there was between them.
At no time during the day had the artillery thundered more loudly than
now. It was three o'clock, and Delaherche declared angrily that he
gave it up--he could not understand it. There could be no doubt about
it now, the Prussian batteries, instead of slackening their fire, were
extending it. Why? What had happened? It was as if all the forces of
the nether regions had been unchained; the earth shook, the heavens
were on fire. The ring of flame-belching mouths of bronze that
encircled Sedan, the eight hundred guns of the German armies, that
were served with such activity and raised such an uproar, were
expending their thunders on the adjacent fields; had that concentric
fire been focused upon the city, had the batteries on those commanding
heights once begun to play upon Sedan, it would have been reduced to
ashes and pulverized into dust in less than fifteen minutes. But now
the projectiles were again commencing to fall upon the houses, the
crash that told of ruin and destruction was heard more frequently. One
exploded in the Rue des Voyards, another grazed the tall chimney of
the factory, and the bricks and mortar came tumbling to the ground
directly in front of the shed where the surgeons were at work.
Bouroche looked up and grumbled:
"Are they trying to finish our wounded for us? Really, this racket is
intolerable."
In the meantime an attendant had seized the captain's leg, and the
major, with a swift circular motion of his hand, made an incision in
the skin below the knee and some two inches below the spot where he
intended to saw the bone; then, still employing the same thin-bladed
knife, that he did not change in order to get on more rapidly, he
loosened the skin on the superior side of the incision and turned it
back, much as one would peel an orange. But just as he was on the
point of dividing the muscles a hospital steward came up and whispered
in his ear:
"Number two has just slipped his cable."
The major did not hear, owing to the fearful uproar.
"Speak up, can't you! My ear drums are broken with their d-----d
cannon."
"Number two has just slipped his cable."
"Who is that, number two?"
"The arm, you know."
"Ah, very good! Well, then, you can bring me number three, the jaw."
And with wonderful dexterity, never changing his position, he cut
through the muscles clean down to the bone with a single motion of his
wrist. He laid bare the tibia and fibula, introduced between them an
implement to keep them in position, drew the saw across them once, and
they were sundered. And the foot remained in the hands of the
attendant who was holding it.
The flow of blood had been small, thanks to the pressure maintained by
the assistant higher up the leg, at the thigh. The ligature of the
three arteries was quickly accomplished, but the major shook his head,
and when the assistant had removed his fingers he examined the stump,
murmuring, certain that the patient could not hear as yet:
"It looks bad; there's no blood coming from the arterioles."
And he completed his diagnosis of the case by an expressive gesture:
Another poor fellow who was soon to answer the great roll-call! while
on his perspiring face was again seen that expression of weariness and
utter dejection, that hopeless, unanswerable: "What is the use?" since
out of every ten cases that they assumed the terrible responsibility
of operating on they did not succeed in saving four. He wiped his
forehead, and set to work to draw down the flap of skin and put in the
three sutures that were to hold it in place.
Delaherche having told Gilberte that the operation was completed, she
turned her gaze once more upon the table; she caught a glimpse of the
captain's foot, however, as the attendant was carrying it away to the
place behind the lilacs. The charnel house there continued to receive
fresh occupants; two more corpses had recently been brought in and
added to the ghastly array, one with blackened lips still parted wide
as if rending the air with shrieks of anguish, the other, his form so
contorted and contracted in the convulsions of the last agony that he
was like a stunted, malformed boy. Unfortunately, there was beginning
to be a scarcity of room in the little secluded corner, and the human
debris had commenced to overflow and invade the adjacent alley. The
attendant hesitated a moment, in doubt what to do with the captain's
foot, then finally concluded to throw it on the general pile.
"Well, captain, that's over with," the major said to Beaudoin when he
regained consciousness. "You'll be all right now."
But the captain did not show the cheeriness that follows a successful
operation. He opened his eyes and made an attempt to raise himself,
then fell back on his pillow, murmuring wearily, in a faint voice:
"Thanks, major. I'm glad it's over."
He was conscious of the pain, however, when the alcohol of the
dressing touched the raw flesh. He flinched a little, complaining that
they were burning him. And just as they were bringing up the stretcher
preparatory to carrying him back into the other room the factory was
shaken to its foundations by a most terrific explosion; a shell had
burst directly in the rear of the shed, in the small courtyard where
the pump was situated. The glass in the windows was shattered into
fragments, and a dense cloud of smoke came pouring into the ambulance.
The wounded men, stricken with panic terror, arose from their bed of
straw; all were clamoring with affright; all wished to fly at once.
Delaherche rushed from the building in consternation to see what
damage had been done. Did they mean to burn his house down over his
head? What did it all mean? Why did they open fire again when the
Emperor had ordered that it should cease?
"Thunder and lightning! Stir yourselves, will you!" Bouroche shouted
to his staff, who were standing about with pallid faces, transfixed by
terror. "Wash off the table; go and bring me in number three!"
They cleansed the table; and once more the crimson contents of the
buckets were hurled across the grass plot upon the bed of daisies,
which was now a sodden, blood-soaked mat of flowers and verdure. And
Bouroche, to relieve the tedium until the attendants should bring him
"number three," applied himself to probing for a musket-ball, which,
having first broken the patient's lower jaw, had lodged in the root of
the tongue. The blood flowed freely and collected on his fingers in
glutinous masses.
Captain Beaudoin was again resting on his mattress in the large room.
Gilberte and Mme. Delaherche had followed the stretcher when he was
carried from the operating table, and even Delaherche, notwithstanding
his anxiety, came in for a moment's chat.
"Lie here and rest a few minutes, Captain. We will have a room
prepared for you, and you shall be our guest."
But the wounded man shook off his lethargy and for a moment had
command of his faculties.
"No, it is not worth while; I feel that I am going to die."
And he looked at them with wide eyes, filled with the horror of death.
"Oh, Captain! why do you talk like that?" murmured Gilberte, with a
shiver, while she forced a smile to her lips. "You will be quite well
a month hence."
He shook his head mournfully, and in the room was conscious of no
presence save hers; on all his face was expressed his unutterable
yearning for life, his bitter, almost craven regret that he was to be
snatched away so young, leaving so many joys behind untasted.
"I am going to die, I am going to die. Oh! 'tis horrible--"
Then suddenly he became conscious of his torn, soiled uniform and the
grime upon his hands, and it made him feel uncomfortable to be in the
company of women in such a state. It shamed him to show such weakness,
and his desire to look and be the gentleman to the last restored to
him his manhood. When he spoke again it was in a tone almost of
cheerfulness.
"If I have got to die, though, I would rather it should be with clean
hands. I should count it a great kindness, madame, if you would
moisten a napkin and let me have it."
Gilberte sped away and quickly returned with the napkin, with which
she herself cleansed the hands of the dying man. Thenceforth, desirous
of quitting the scene with dignity, he displayed much firmness.
Delaherche did what he could to cheer him, and assisted his wife in
the small attentions she offered for his comfort. Old Mme. Delaherche,
too, in presence of the man whose hours were numbered, felt her enmity
subsiding. She would be silent, she who knew all and had sworn to
impart her knowledge to her son. What would it avail to excite discord
in the household, since death would soon obliterate all trace of the
wrong?
The end came very soon. Captain Beaudoin, whose strength was ebbing
rapidly, relapsed into his comatose condition, and a cold sweat broke
out and stood in beads upon his neck and forehead. He opened his eyes
again, and began to feebly grope about him with his stiffening
fingers, as if feeling for a covering that was not there, pulling at
it with a gentle, continuous movement, as if to draw it up around his
shoulders.
"It is cold-- Oh! it is so cold."
And so he passed from life, peacefully, without a struggle; and on his
wasted, tranquil face rested an expression of unspeakable melancholy.
Delaherche saw to it that the remains, instead of being borne away and
placed among the common dead, were deposited in one of the
outbuildings of the factory. He endeavored to prevail on Gilberte, who
was tearful and disconsolate, to retire to her apartment, but she
declared that to be alone now would be more than her nerves could
stand, and begged to be allowed to remain with her mother-in-law in
the ambulance, where the noise and movement would be a distraction to
her. She was seen presently running to carry a drink of water to a
chasseur d'Afrique whom his fever had made delirious, and she assisted
a hospital steward to dress the hand of a little recruit, a lad of
twenty, who had had his thumb shot away and come in on foot from the
battlefield; and as he was jolly and amusing, treating his wound with
all the levity and nonchalance of the Parisian rollicker, she was soon
laughing and joking as merrily as he.
While the captain lay dying the cannonade seemed, if that were
possible, to have increased in violence; another shell had landed in
the garden, shattering one of the old elms. Terror-stricken men came
running in to say that all Sedan was in danger of destruction; a great
fire had broken out in the Faubourg de la Cassine. If the bombardment
should continue with such fury for any length of time there would be
nothing left of the city.
"It can't be; I am going to see about it!" Delaherche exclaimed,
violently excited.
"Where are you going, pray?" asked Bouroche.
"Why, to the Sous-Prefecture, to see what the Emperor means by fooling
us in this way, with his talk of hoisting the white flag."
For some few seconds the major stood as if petrified at the idea of
defeat and capitulation, which presented itself to him then for the
first time in the midst of his impotent efforts to save the lives of
the poor maimed creatures they were bringing in to him from the field.
Rage and grief were in his voice as he shouted:
"Go to the devil, if you will! All you can do won't keep us from being
soundly whipped!"
On leaving the factory Delaherche found it no easy task to squeeze his
way through the throng; at every instant the crowd of straggling
soldiers that filled the streets received fresh accessions. He
questioned several of the officers whom he encountered; not one of
them had seen the white flag on the citadel. Finally he met a colonel,
who declared that he had caught a momentary glimpse of it: that it had
been run up and then immediately hauled down. That explained matters;
either the Germans had not seen it, or seeing it appear and disappear
so quickly, had inferred the distressed condition of the French and
redoubled their fire in consequence. There was a story in circulation
how a general officer, enraged beyond control at the sight of the
flag, had wrested it from its bearer, broken the staff, and trampled
it in the mud. And still the Prussian batteries continued to play upon
the city, shells were falling upon the roofs and in the streets,
houses were in flames; a woman had just been killed at the corner of
the Rue Pont de Meuse and the Place Turenne.
At the Sous-Prefecture Delaherche failed to find Rose at her usual
station in the janitor's lodge. Everywhere were evidences of disorder;
all the doors were standing open; the reign of terror had commenced.
As there was no sentry or anyone to prevent, he went upstairs,
encountering on the way only a few scared-looking men, none of whom
made any offer to stop him. He had reached the first story and was
hesitating what to do next when he saw the young girl approaching him.
"Oh, M. Delaherche! isn't this dreadful! Here, quick! this way, if you
would like to see the Emperor."
On the left of the corridor a door stood ajar, and through the narrow
opening a glimpse could be had of the sovereign, who had resumed his
weary, anguished tramp between the fireplace and the window. Back and
forth he shuffled with heavy, dragging steps, and ceased not, despite
his unendurable suffering. An aide-de-camp had just entered the room
--it was he who had failed to close the door behind him--and
Delaherche heard the Emperor ask him in a sorrowfully reproachful
voice:
"What is the reason of this continued firing, sir, after I gave orders
to hoist the white flag?"
The torture to him had become greater than he could bear, that
never-ceasing cannonade, that seemed to grow more furious with every
minute. Every time he approached the window it pierced him to the
heart. More spilling of blood, more useless squandering of human life!
At every moment the piles of corpses were rising higher on the
battlefield, and his was the responsibility. The compassionate
instincts that entered so largely into his nature revolted at it, and
more than ten times already he had asked that question of those who
approached him.
"I gave orders to raise the white flag; tell me, why do they continue
firing?"
The aide-de-camp made answer in a voice so low that Delaherche failed
to catch its purport. The Emperor, moreover, seemed not to pause to
listen, drawn by some irresistible attraction to that window at which,
each time he approached it, he was greeted by that terrible salvo of
artillery that rent and tore his being. His pallor was greater even
than it had been before; his poor, pinched, wan face, on which were
still visible traces of the rouge that had been applied that morning,
bore witness to his anguish.
At that moment a short, quick-motioned man in dust-soiled uniform,
whom Delaherche recognized as General Lebrun, hurriedly crossed the
corridor and pushed open the door, without waiting to be announced.
And scarcely was he in the room when again was heard the Emperor's so
oft repeated question.
"Why do they continue to fire, General, when I have given orders to
hoist the white flag?"
The aide-de-camp left the apartment, shutting the door behind him, and
Delaherche never knew what was the general's answer. The vision had
faded from his sight.
"Ah!" said Rose, "things are going badly; I can see that clearly
enough by all those gentlemen's faces. It is bad for my tablecloth,
too; I am afraid I shall never see it again; somebody told me it had
been torn in pieces. But it is for the Emperor that I feel most sorry
in all this business, for he is in a great deal worse condition than
the marshal; he would be much better off in his bed than in that room,
where he is wearing himself out with his everlasting walking."
She spoke with much feeling, and on her pretty pink and white face
there was an expression of sincere pity, but Delaherche, whose
Bonapartist ardor had somehow cooled considerably during the last two
days, said to himself that she was a little fool. He nevertheless
remained chatting with her a moment in the hall below while waiting
for General Lebrun to take his departure, and when that officer
appeared and left the building he followed him.
General Lebrun had explained to the Emperor that if it was thought
best to apply for an armistice, etiquette demanded that a letter to
that effect, signed by the commander-in-chief of the French forces,
should be dispatched to the German commander-in-chief. He had also
offered to write the letter, go in search of General de Wimpffen, and
obtain his signature to it. He left the Sous-Prefecture with the
letter in his pocket, but apprehensive he might not succeed in finding
de Wimpffen, entirely ignorant as he was of the general's whereabouts
on the field of battle. Within the ramparts of Sedan, moreover, the
crowd was so dense that he was compelled to walk his horse, which
enabled Delaherche to keep him in sight until he reached the Minil
gate.
Once outside upon the road, however, General Lebrun struck into a
gallop, and when near Balan had the good fortune to fall in with the
chief. Only a few minutes previous to this the latter had written to
the Emperor: "Sire, come and put yourself at the head of your troops;
they will force a passage through the enemy's lines for you, or perish
in the attempt;" therefore he flew into a furious passion at the mere
mention of the word armistice. No, no! he would sign nothing, he would
fight it out! This was about half-past three o'clock, and it was
shortly afterward that occurred the gallant, but mad attempt, the last
serious effort of the day, to pierce the Bavarian lines and regain
possession of Bazeilles. In order to put heart into the troops a ruse
was resorted to: in the streets of Sedan and in the fields outside the
walls the shout was raised: "Bazaine is coming up! Bazaine is at
hand!" Ever since morning many had allowed themselves to be deluded by
that hope; each time that the Germans opened fire with a fresh battery
it was confidently asserted to be the guns of the army of Metz. In the
neighborhood of twelve hundred men were collected, soldiers of all
arms, from every corps, and the little column bravely advanced into
the storm of missiles that swept the road, at double time. It was a
splendid spectacle of heroism and endurance while it lasted; the
numerous casualties did not check the ardor of the survivors, nearly
five hundred yards were traversed with a courage and nerve that seemed
almost like madness; but soon there were great gaps in the ranks, the
bravest began to fall back. What could they do against overwhelming
numbers? It was a mad attempt, anyway; the desperate effort of a
commander who could not bring himself to acknowledge that he was
defeated. And it ended by General de Wimpffen finding himself and
General Lebrun alone together on the Bazeilles road, which they had to
make up their mind to abandon to the enemy, for good and all. All that
remained for them to do was to retreat and seek security under the
walls of Sedan.
Upon losing sight of the general at the Minil gate Delaherche had
hurried back to the factory at the best speed he was capable of,
impelled by an irresistible longing to have another look from his
observatory at what was going on in the distance. Just as he reached
his door, however, his progress was arrested a moment by encountering
Colonel de Vineuil, who, with his blood-stained boot, was being
brought in for treatment in a condition of semi-consciousness, upon
a bed of straw that had been prepared for him on the floor of a
market-gardener's wagon. The colonel had persisted in his efforts to
collect the scattered fragments of his regiment until he dropped from
his horse. He was immediately carried upstairs and put to bed in a
room on the first floor, and Bouroche, who was summoned at once,
finding the injury not of a serious character, had only to apply a
dressing to the wound, from which he first extracted some bits of the
leather of the boot. The worthy doctor was wrought up to a high pitch
of excitement; he exclaimed, as he went downstairs, that he would
rather cut off one of his own legs than continue working in that
unsatisfactory, slovenly way, without a tithe of either the assistants
or the appliances that he ought to have. Below in the ambulance,
indeed, they no longer knew where to bestow the cases that were
brought them, and had been obliged to have recourse to the lawn, where
they laid them on the grass. There were already two long rows of them,
exposed beneath the shrieking shells, filling the air with their
dismal plaints while waiting for his ministrations. The number of
cases brought in since noon exceeded four hundred, and in response to
Bouroche's repeated appeals for assistance he had been sent one young
doctor from the city. Good as was his will, he was unequal to the
task; he probed, sliced, sawed, sewed like a man frantic, and was
reduced to despair to see his work continually accumulating before
him. Gilberte, satiated with sights of horror, unable longer to endure
the sad spectacle of blood and tears, remained upstairs with her
uncle, the colonel, leaving to Mme. Delaherche the care of moistening
fevered lips and wiping the cold sweat from the brow of the dying.
Rapidly climbing the stairs to his terrace, Delaherche endeavored to
form some idea for himself of how matters stood. The city had suffered
less injury than was generally supposed; there was one great
conflagration, however, over in the Faubourg de la Cassine, from which
dense volumes of smoke were rising. Fort Palatinat had discontinued
its fire, doubtless because the ammunition was all expended; the guns
mounted on the Porte de Paris alone continued to make themselves heard
at infrequent intervals. But something that he beheld presently had
greater interest for his eyes than all beside; they had run up the
white flag on the citadel again, but it must be that it was invisible
from the battlefield, for there was no perceptible slackening of the
fire. The Balan road was concealed from his vision by the neighboring
roofs; he was unable to make out what the troops were doing in that
direction. Applying his eye to the telescope, however, which remained
as he had left it, directed on la Marfee, he again beheld the cluster
of officers that he had seen in that same place about midday. The
master of them all, that miniature toy-soldier in lead, half finger
high, in whom he had thought to recognize the King of Prussia, was
there still, erect in his plain, dark uniform before the other
officers, who, in their showy trappings, were for the most part
reclining carelessly on the grass. Among them were officers from
foreign lands, aides-de-camp, generals, high officials, princes; all
of them with field glasses in their hands, with which, since early
morning, they had been watching every phase of the death-struggle of
the army of Chalons, as if they were at the play. And the direful
drama was drawing to its end.
From among the trees that clothed the summit of la Marfee King William
had just witnessed the junction of his armies. It was an accomplished
fact; the third army, under the leadership of his son, the Crown
Prince, advancing by the way of Saint-Menges and Fleigneux, had
secured possession of the plateau of Illy, while the fourth, commanded
by the Crown Prince of Saxony, turning the wood of la Garenne and,
coming up through Givonne and Daigny, had also reached its appointed
rendezvous. There, too, the XIth and Vth corps had joined hands with
the XIIth corps and the Guards. The gallant but ineffectual charge of
Margueritte's division in its supreme effort to break through the
hostile lines at the very moment when the circle was being rounded out
had elicited from the king the exclamation: "Ah, the brave fellows!"
Now the great movement, inexorable as fate, the details of which had
been arranged with such mathematical precision, was complete, the jaws
of the vise had closed, and stretching on his either hand far in the
distance, a mighty wall of adamant surrounding the army of the French,
were the countless men and guns that called him master. At the north
the contracting lines maintained a constantly increasing pressure on
the vanquished, forcing them back upon Sedan under the merciless fire
of the batteries that lined the horizon in an array without a break.
Toward the south, at Bazeilles, where the conflict had ceased to rage
and the scene was one of mournful desolation, great clouds of smoke
were rising from the ruins of what had once been happy homes, while
the Bavarians, now masters of Balan, had advanced their batteries to
within three hundred yards of the city gates. And the other batteries,
those posted on the left bank at Pont Maugis, Noyers, Frenois,
Wadelincourt, completing the impenetrable rampart of flame and
bringing it around to the sovereign's feet on his right, that had been
spouting fire uninterruptedly for nearly twelve hours, now thundered
more loudly still.
But King William, to give his tired eyes a moment's rest, dropped his
glass to his side and continued his observations with unassisted
vision. The sun was slanting downward to the woods on his left, about
to set in a sky where there was not a cloud, and the golden light that
lay upon the landscape was so transcendently clear and limpid that the
most insignificant objects stood out with startling distinctness. He
could almost count the houses in Sedan, whose windows flashed back the
level rays of the departing day-star, and the ramparts and
fortifications, outlined in black against the eastern sky, had an
unwonted aspect of frowning massiveness. Then, scattered among the
fields to right and left, were the pretty, smiling villages, reminding
one of the toy villages that come packed in boxes for the little ones;
to the west Donchery, seated at the border of her broad plain; Douzy
and Carignan to the east, among the meadows. Shutting in the picture
to the north was the forest of the Ardennes, an ocean of sunlit
verdure, while the Meuse, loitering with sluggish current through the
plain with many a bend and curve, was like a stream of purest molten
gold in that caressing light. And seen from that height, with the
sun's parting kiss resting on it, the horrible battlefield, with its
blood and smoke, became an exquisite and highly finished miniature;
the dead horsemen and disemboweled steeds on the plateau of Floing
were so many splashes of bright color; on the right, in the direction
of Givonne, those minute black specks that whirled and eddied with
such apparent lack of aim, like motes dancing in the sunshine, were
the retreating fragments of the beaten army; while on the left a
Bavarian battery on the peninsula of Iges, its guns the size of
matches, might have been taken for some mechanical toy as it performed
its evolutions with clockwork regularity. The victory was crushing,
exceeding all that the victor could have desired or hoped, and the
King felt no remorse in presence of all those corpses, of those
thousands of men that were as the dust upon the roads of that broad
valley where, notwithstanding the burning of Bazeilles, the slaughter
of Illy, the anguish of Sedan, impassive nature yet could don her
gayest robe and put on her brightest smile as the perfect day faded
into the tranquil evening.
But suddenly Delaherche descried a French officer climbing the steep
path up the flank of la Marfee; he was a general, wearing a blue
tunic, mounted on a black horse, and preceded by a hussar bearing a
white flag. It was General Reille, whom the Emperor had entrusted with
this communication for the King of Prussia: "My brother, as it has
been denied me to die at the head of my army, all that is left me is
to surrender my sword to Your Majesty. I am Your Majesty's
affectionate brother, Napoleon." Desiring to arrest the butchery and
being no longer master, the Emperor yielded himself a prisoner, in the
hope to placate the conqueror by the sacrifice. And Delaherche saw
General Reille rein up his charger and dismount at ten paces from the
King, then advance and deliver his letter; he was unarmed and merely
carried a riding whip. The sun was setting in a flood of rosy light;
the King seated himself on a chair in the midst of a grassy open
space, and resting his hand on the back of another chair that was held
in place by a secretary, replied that he accepted the sword and would
await the appearance of an officer empowered to settle the terms of
the capitulation.
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