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Chapter 1
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For many days now the fag-end of the army had been straggling through the town£®They were not troops£¬but a disbanded horde£®The beards of the men were long and filthy£¬their uniforms in tatters£¬and they advanced at an easy pace without flag or regiment£®All seemed worn-out and back-broken£¬incapable of a thought or a resolution£¬marching by habit solely£¬ and falling from fatigue as soon as they stopped£®In short£¬they were a mobilized£¬pacific people£¬bending under the weight of the gun£»some little squads on the alert£¬easy to take alarm and prompt in enthusiasm£¬ready to attack or to flee£»and in the midst of them£¬some red breeches£¬the remains of a division broken up in a great battle£»some somber artillery men in line with these varied kinds of foot soldiers£»and£¬sometimes the brilliant helmet of a dragoon on foot who followed with difficulty the shortest march of the lines£®

Some legions of free-shooters£¬under the heroic names of“Avengers of the Defeat£¬”“Citizens of the Tomb£¬”“Partakers of Death£¬”passed in their turn with the air of bandits£®

Their leaders were former cloth or grain merchants£¬exmerchants in tallow or soap£¬warriors of circumstance£¬elected officers on account of their escutcheons and the length of their mustaches£¬covered with arms and with braid£¬speaking in constrained voices£¬discussing plans of campaign£¬and pretending to carry agonized France alone on their swaggering shoulders£¬but sometimes fearing their own soldiers£¬prison-birds£¬that were often brave at first and later proved to be plunderers and debauchees£®

It was said that the Prussians were going to enter Rouen£®

The National Guard who for two months had been carefully reconnoitering in the neighboring woods£¬shooting sometimes their own sentinels£¬and ready for a combat whenever a little wolf stirred in the thicket£¬had now returned to their firesides£®Their arms£¬their uniforms£¬all the murderous accoutrements with which they had lately struck fear into the national heart for three leagues in every direction£¬had suddenly disappeared£®

The last French soldiers finally came across the Seine to reach the Audemer bridge through Saint-Sever and Bourg-Achard£»and£¬marching behind£¬on foot£¬between two officers of ordnance£¬the General£¬in despair£¬unable to do anything with these incongruous tatters£¬himself lost in the breaking-up of a people accustomed to conquer and disastrously beaten£¬in spite of his legendary bravery£®

A profound calm£¬a frightful£¬silent expectancy had spread over the city£®Many of the heavy citizens£¬emasculated by commerce£¬anxiously awaited the conquerors£¬trembling lest their roasting spits or kitchen knives be considered arms£®

All life seemed stopped£»shops were closed£¬ the streets dumb£®Sometimes an inhabitant£¬intimidated by this silence£¬moved rapidly along next the walls£® The agony of waiting made them wish the enemy would come£®

In the afternoon of the day which followed the departure of the French troops£¬some uhlans£¬coming from one knows not where£¬crossed the town with celerity£®Then£¬a little later£¬a black mass descended the side of St£®Catharine£¬while two other invading bands appeared by the way of Darnetal and Boisguillaume£®The advance guard of the three bodies joined one another at the same moment in Hotel de Ville square and£¬by all the neigh£­boring streets£¬the German army continued to arrive£¬spreading out its battalions£¬making the pavement re-sound under their hard£¬rhythmic step£®

Some orders of the commander£¬in a foreign guttural voice£¬reached the houses which seemed dead and deserted£¬while behind closed shutters£¬eyes were watching these victorious men£¬masters of the city£¬ of fortunes£¬of lives£¬through the“rights of war£®”The in£­habitants£¬shut up in their rooms£¬were visited with the kind of excitement that a cataclysm£¬or some fatal upheaval of the earth£®brings to us£¬against which all force is useless£®For the same sensation is produced each time that the established order of things is overturned£¬when security no longer exists£¬and all that protect the laws of man and of nature find themselves at the mercy of unreasoning£¬ferocious brutality£®The trembling of the earth crushing the houses and burying an entire people£»a river overflowing its banks and carrying in its course the drowned peasants£¬carcasses of beeves£¬and girders snatched from roofs£¬or a glorious army massacring those trying to defend themselves£¬leading others prisoners£¬pillaging in the name of the sword and thanking God to the sound of the cannon£¬all are alike frightful scourges which disconnect all belief in eternal justice£¬all the confidence that we have in the protection of Heaven and the reason of man£®


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