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Chapter 2
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Some detachments rapped at each door£¬then disappeared into the houses£®It was occupation after invasion£®Then the duty commences for the conquered to show themselves gracious toward the conquerors£®

After some time£¬as soon as the first terror disappears£¬a new calm is established£®In many families£¬the Prussian officer eats at the table£®He is sometimes well bred and£¬through politeness£¬pities France£¬and speaks of his repugnance in taking part in this affair£®One is grateful to him for this sentiment£»then£¬one may be£¬some day or other£¬in need of his protection£®By treat-ing him well£¬one has£¬perhaps£¬a less number of men to feed£®And why should we wound anyone on whom we are entirely dependent£¿To act thus would be less bravery than temerity£®And temerity is no longer a fault of the commoner of Rouen£¬as it was at the time of the heroic defense£¬when their city became famous£®Final-ly£¬each told himself that the highest judgment of French urbanity required that they be allowed to be polite to the strange soldier in the house£¬provided they did not show themselves familiar with him in public£®Outside they would not make themselves known to each other£¬but at home they could chat freely£¬and the German might remain longer each evening warming his feet at their hearthstones£®

The town even took on£¬little by little£¬its ordinary aspect£®The French scarcely went out£¬but the Prussian soldiers grumbled in the streets£®In short£¬the officers of the Blue Hussars£¬who dragged with arrogance their great weapons of death up and down the pavement£¬seemed to have no more grievous scorn for the simple citizens than the officers or the sportsmen who£¬the year before£¬drank in the same cafes£®

There was nevertheless£¬something in the air£¬something subtle and unknown£¬a strange£¬intolerable atmosphere like a penetrating odor£¬the odor of invasion£®It filled the dwellings and the public places£¬changed the taste of the food£¬gave the impression of being on a journey£¬far away£¬among barbarous and dangerous tribes£®

The conquerors exacted money£¬much money£®The inhabitants always paid and they were rich enough to do it£®But the richer a trading Norman becomes the more he suffers at every outlay£¬at each part of his fortune that he sees pass from his hands into those of another£®

Therefore£¬two or three leagues below the town£¬following the course of the river toward Croisset£¬Dieppedalle£¬or Biessart mariners and fishermen often picked up the swollen corpse of a German in uniform from the bottom of the river£¬killed by the blow of a knife£¬the head crushed with a stone£¬or perhaps thrown into the water by a push from the high bridge£®The slime of the river bed buried these obscure vengeances£¬savage£¬but legitimate£¬unknown heroisms£¬mute attacks more perilous than the battles of broad day£¬and without the echoing sound of glory£®

For hatred of the foreigner always arouses some intrepid ones£¬who are ready to die for an idea£®

Finally£¬as soon as the invaders had brought the town quite under subjection with their inflexible discipline£¬without having been guilty of any of the horrors for which they were famous along their triumphal line of march£¬people began to take courage£¬and the need of trade put new heart into the commerce of the country£®Some had large interests at Havre£¬which the French army occupied£¬and they wished to try and reach this port by going to Dieppe by land and there embarking£®

They used their influence with the German soldiers with whom they had an acquaintance£¬and finally£¬ an authorization of departure was obtained from the General-in-chief£®

Then£¬a large diligence£¬with four horses£¬having been engaged for this journey£¬and ten persons having engaged seats in it£¬it was resolved to set out on Tuesday morning before daylight£¬in order to escape observation£®

For some time before£¬the frost had been hardening the earth and on Monday£¬toward three o'clock£¬great black clouds coming from the north brought the snow which fell without interruption during the evening and all night£®


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