Read The Erckmann-Chatrian Megapack: 20 Classic Novels and Short Stories Online
Authors: Émile Erckmann,Alexandre Chatrian
Tags: #Fantasy, #War, #France, #Horror, #Historical, #Omnibus
“Ye shall take it out from the sheep or from the goats.
“And ye shall keep it until the fourteenth day of the same month.
“And they shall eat the flesh in that night, roast with fire, and unleavened bread; and with bitter herbs shall they eat it.”
But where was the sacrificial lamb to be found? Schmoûlé alone, the old
schamess
, had thought of it for us all, three months before; he had nourished a male goat of that year in his cellar, and that was the goat that was killed.
Every Jewish family had a portion of it, small indeed, but the law of the Lord was fulfilled.
We invited on that day, according to the law, one of the poorest of our brethren, Kalmes. We went together to the synagogue; the prayers were recited, and then we returned to partake of the feast at our table.
Everything was ready and according to the proper order, notwithstanding the great destitution; the white cloth, the goblet of vinegar, the hard egg, the horseradish, the unleavened bread, and the flesh of the goat. The lamp with seven burners shone above it; but we had not much bread.
Having taken my seat in the midst of my family, Sâfel took the jug and poured water upon my hands; then we all bent forward, each took a piece of bread, saying with heavy hearts:
“This is the bread of affliction which our fathers ate in Egypt. Whosoever is hungry, let him come and eat with us. Whosoever is poor, let him come and make the Passover!”
We sat down again, and Sâfel said to me:
“What mean ye by this service, my father?”
And I answered:
“We were slaves in Egypt, my child, and the Lord brought us forth with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm!”
These words inspired us with courage; we hoped that God would deliver us as He had delivered our fathers, and that the Emperor would be His right arm; but we were mistaken, the Lord wanted nothing more of that man!
CHAPTER XX
PEACE
The next morning, at daybreak, between six and seven o’clock, when we were all asleep, the report of a cannon made our windows rattle. The enemy usually fired only at night. I listened; a second report followed after a few seconds, then another, then others, one by one.
I rose, opened a window, and looked out. The sun was rising behind the arsenal. Not a soul was in the street; but, as one report came after another, doors and windows were opened; men in their shirts leaned out, listening.
No shells hissed through the air; the enemy fired blank cartridges.
As I listened, a great murmur came from the distance, outside of the city. First it came from the Mittelbronn hill, then it reached the Bichelberg, Quatre-Vents, the upper and lower Barracks.
Sorlé had just risen also; I finished dressing, and said to her:
“Something extraordinary is going on—God grant that it may be for good!”
And I went down in great perturbation.
It was not a quarter of an hour since the first report, and the whole city was out. Some ran to the ramparts, others were in groups, shouting and disputing at the corners of the streets. Astonishment, fear, and anger were depicted upon every face.
A large number of soldiers were mingled with the citizens, and all went up together in groups to the right and left of the French gate.
I was about following one of these groups, when Burguet came down the street. He looked thin and emaciated, as on the day when I saw him in the market.
“Well!” said I, running to meet him, “this is something serious!”
“Very serious, and promising no good, Moses!” said he.
“Yes, it is evident,” said I, “that the allies have gained victories; it may be that they are in Paris!”
He turned around in alarm, and said in a low voice:
“Take care, Moses, take care! If any one heard you, at a moment like this, the veterans would tear you in pieces!”
I was dreadfully frightened, for I saw that he was right, while, as for him, his cheeks shook. He took me by the arm and said:
“I owe you thanks for the provisions you sent me; they came very opportunely.”
And when I answered that we should always have a morsel of bread at his service, so long as we had any left, he pressed my hand; and we went together up the street of the infantry quarters, as far as to the ice-house bastion, where two batteries had been placed to command the Mittelbronn hill. There we could see the road to Paris as far as to Petite Saint Jean, and even to Lixheim; but those great heaps of earth, called
cavaliers
, were covered with people; Baron Parmentier, his assistant Pipelingre, the old curate Leth, and many other men of note were there, in the midst of the crowd, looking on in silence. We had only to see their faces to know that something dreadful was happening.
From this height on the talus, we saw what was riveting everybody’s attention. All our enemies, Austrians, Bavarians, Wurtemburgers, Russians, cavalry and infantry mixed together, were swarming around their intrenchments like ants, embracing each other, shaking hands, lifting their shakos on the points of their bayonets, waving branches of trees just beginning to turn green. Horsemen dashed across the plain, with their colbacs on the point of their swords, and rending the air with their shouts.
The telegraph was in operation on the hill of Saint Jean; Burguet pointed it out to me.
“If we understood those signals, Moses,” said he, “we should know better what was going to happen to us in the next fortnight.”
Some persons having turned round to listen to us, we went down again into the streets of the quarters, very thoughtfully.
The soldiers at the upper windows of the barracks were also looking out. Men and women in great numbers were collecting in the street.
We went through the crowd. In the street of the Capuchins, which was always deserted, Burguet, who was walking with his head down, exclaimed:
“So it is all over! What things have we seen in these last twenty-five years, Moses! What astonishing and terrible things! And it is all over!”
He took hold of my hand, and looked at me as if he were astonished at his own words; then he began to walk on.
“This winter campaign has been frightful to me,” said he; “it has dragged along—dragged along—and the thunder-bolt did not come! But to-morrow, the day after to-morrow, what are we going to hear? Is the Emperor dead? How will that affect us? Will France still be France? What will they leave us? What will they take from us?”
Reflecting on these things, we came in front of our house. Then, as if suddenly wakened, Burguet said to me:
“Prudence, Moses! If the Emperor is not dead, the veterans will hold out till the last second. Remember that, and whoever they suspect will have everything to fear.”
I thanked him, and went up, promising myself that I would follow his advice.
My wife and children were waiting breakfast for me, with the little basket of potatoes upon the table. We sat down, and I told them in a low voice what was to be seen from the top of the ramparts, and charged them to keep silent, for the danger was not over; the garrison might revolt and choose to defend itself, in spite of the officers; and those who mixed themselves in these matters, either for or against, even only in words, ran the risk of destruction without profit to any one.
They saw that I was right, and I had no need of saying more.
We were afraid that our sergeant would come, and that we should be obliged to answer him, if he asked what we thought of these matters; but he did not come in till about eleven, when we had all been in bed for a long time.
The next day the news of the entrance of the allies to Paris was affixed to the church doors and the pillars of the market; it was never known by whom! M. de Vablerie, and three or four other emigrants, capable of such a deed, were spoken of at the time, but nothing was known with certainty.
The mounted guard tore down the placards, but unfortunately not before the soldiers and citizens had read them.
It was something so new, so incredible, after those ten years of war, when the Emperor had been everything, and the nation had been, so to speak, in the shadow; when not a man had dared to speak or write a word without permission; when men had had no other rights than those of paying, and giving their sons as conscripts,—it was such a great matter to think that the Emperor could have been conquered, that a man like myself in the midst of his family shook his head three or four times, before daring to breathe a single word.
So everybody kept quiet, notwithstanding the placards. The officials stayed at home, so as not to have to talk about it; the governor and council of defence did not stir; but the last recruits, in the hope of going home to their villages, embracing their families, and returning to their trades or farming, did not conceal their joy, as was very natural. The veterans, whose only trade and only means of living was war, were full of indignation! They did not believe a word of it; they declared that the reports were all false, that the Emperor had not lost a battle, and that the placards and the cannon-firing of the allies were only a stratagem to make us open the gates.
And from that time, Fritz, the men began to desert, not one at a time, but by sixes, by tens, by twenties. Whole posts filed off over the mountain with their arms and baggage. The veterans fired upon the deserters; they killed some of them, and were ordered to escort the conscripts who carried soup to the outposts. * * * * *
During this time, the flag of truce officers did nothing but come and go, one after another. All, Russian, Austrian, Bavarian, staff-officers stayed whole hours at the head-quarters, having, no doubt, important matters to discuss.
Our sergeant came to our room only for a moment in the evening, to complain of the desertions, and we were glad of it; Zeffen was still sick, Sorlé could not leave her, and I had to help Sâfel until the people went home.
The shop was always full of veterans; as soon as one set went away another came.
These old, gray-headed men swallowed down glass after glass of brandy; they paid by turns, and grew more and more down-hearted. They trembled with rage, and talked of nothing but treason, while they looked at you as if they would see through you.
Sometimes they would smile and say:
“I tell you! if it is necessary to blow up the fortress, it will go!”
Sâfel and I pretended not to understand; but you can imagine our agony; after having suffered all that we had, to be in danger of being blown up with those veterans!
That evening our sergeant repeated word for word what the others had said: “It was all nothing but lies and treason. The Emperor would put a stop to it by sweeping off this rabble!”
“Just wait! Just wait!” he exclaimed, as he smoked his pipe, with his teeth set. “It will all be cleared up soon! The thunder-bolt is coming! And, this time, no pity, no mercy! All the villains will have to go then—all the traitors! The country will have to be cleansed for a hundred years! Never mind, Moses, we’ll laugh!”
You may well suppose that we did not feel like laughing.
But the day when I was most anxious was the eighth of April, in the morning, when the decree of the Senate, deposing the Emperor, appeared.
Our shop was full of marine artillerymen and subalterns from the storehouses. We had just served them, when the secretary of the treasury, a short stout man, with full yellow cheeks, and the regulation cap over his ears, came in and called for a glass; he then took the decree from his pocket.
“Listen!” said he, as he began calmly to read it to the others.
It seems as if I could hear it now:
“Whereas, Napoleon Bonaparte has violated the compact which bound him to the French nation, by levying taxes otherwise than in virtue of the law, by unnecessarily adjourning the Legislative Body, by illegally making many decrees involving sentence of death, by annulling the authority of the ministers, the independence of the judiciary, the freedom of the press, etc.; Whereas, Napoleon has filled up the measure of the country’s misfortunes, by his abuse of all the means of war committed to him, in men and money, and by refusing to treat on conditions which the national interest required him to accept; Whereas, the manifest wish of all the French demands an order of things, the first result of which shall be the re-establishment of general peace, and which shall also be the epoch of solemn reconciliation between all the States of the great European family, the Senate decrees: Napoleon Bonaparte has forfeited the throne; the right of succession is abolished in his family; the people and the army are released from the oath of allegiance to him.”
He had scarcely begun to read when I thought: “If that goes on they will tear down my shop over my head.”
In my fright, I even sent Sâfel out hastily by the back door. But it all happened very differently from what I expected. These veterans despised the Senate; they shrugged their shoulders, and the one who read the decree sniffed at it, and threw it under the counter. “The Senate!” said he. “What is the Senate? A set of hangers-on, a set of sycophants that the Emperor has bribed, right and left, to keep saying to him—‘
God bless you!
’”