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The Whites and the Blues. Alexandre DumasЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Whites and the Blues - Alexandre Dumas


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This glance, thrown upon his private life, will aid us to judge and understand, perhaps more impartially than has been done in the past, the man who is to be one of the most important characters in this story.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      It was to this man, destined, unless the fates interfered, to a remarkable future, that Charles carried a letter of introduction. It was therefore with almost greater emotion than he had felt in approaching Schneider and Saint-Just that the boy entered the large but unpretentious house where Pichegru had made his headquarters.

      The sentinel, standing at the entrance to the corridor, told him that Pichegru was in his cabinet, the third door to the right.

      Charles entered the corridor with a firm step that gradually grew slower and less noisy as he approached the door that had been pointed out to him.

      When he reached the threshold of the half-open door, he could see the general, leaning with both hands on a table, studying a large map of Germany; so sure was he that he should forthwith carry hostilities beyond the Rhine.

      Pichegru appeared older than he really was, and his figure aided in the deception; he was above medium height, and he was solidly and sturdily built. He possessed no other elegance than that of strength. His chest was broad, although he stooped slightly. His vast shoulders, from which rose a short, full, vigorous neck, gave him something of the appearance of an athlete, like Milo, or a gladiator, like Spartacus. His face had the square contour peculiar to the Francs-Comtois of pure descent. His jawbones were enormous, and his forehead immense and very prominent about the temples. His nose was well-formed, and very straight, forming a long ridge from tip to base. Nothing could have been more gentle than his expression, unless he had reason to make it imperious or formidable. Had a great artist wished to express the impassibility of a demigod on a human face, he might have taken Pichegru's for a model.

      Charles made a slight movement which betrayed his presence to Pichegru. The latter possessed the quick sight and keen hearing of the man whose life often depends upon that hearing or sight. He raised his head swiftly and fastened his eyes upon the child with an expression of kindness that emboldened him greatly.

      He entered and handed his letter to the general with a bow. "For the citizen-general Pichegru," he said.

      "Did you recognize me?" asked the general.

      "Immediately, general."

      "But you had never seen me."

      "My father has described you to me."

      During this conversation Pichegru had opened the letter.

      "What!" he said, "so you are the son of my brave and dear friend—"

      The boy did not allow him to finish.

      "Yes, citizen-general," he said.

      "He says that he gives you to me."

      "It remains to be seen whether you will accept the gift."

      "What do you want me to do with you?"

      "Anything you please."

      "I cannot in conscience make a soldier of you; you are too young and weak."

      "General, I did not expect to have the pleasure of seeing you so soon. My father gave me another letter to a friend in Strasbourg, where I was to have stayed at least a year to study Greek under him."

      "It was not Euloge Schneider?" asked Pichegru, with a laugh.

      "Yes, it was."

      "Well?"

      "Well, he was arrested yesterday."

      "By whose order?"

      "By that of Saint-Just; he has been sent to the revolutionary tribunal at Paris."

      "In that case, you may as well say farewell to him. How did it happen?"

      Charles related Mademoiselle de Brumpt's story, to which Pichegru listened with evident interest.

      "In truth," he said, "some creatures dishonor humanity. Saint-Just did well. And you did not get spattered with the mud in the midst of all that?"

      "Oh!" said Charles, proud of being the hero of an adventure at his age, "I was in prison when it happened."

      "What, in prison?"

      "Yes; I was arrested the day before."

      "Then they have begun to arrest children?"

      "That is just what made Saint-Just so angry."

      "But why were you arrested?"

      "For warning two deputies from Besançon that it was not safe for them to remain in Strasbourg."

      "Dumont and Ballu?"

      "Yes."

      "They are on my staff; you will see them."

      "I thought they had returned to Besançon?"

      "They changed their minds on the way. And so it is to you they owe the warning that probably saved their lives?"

      "It seems I did wrong," said the boy, lowering his eyes.

      "Wrong! Who told you that you had done wrong in accomplishing a good deed and saving the lives of your fellow-creatures?"

      "Saint-Just; but he added that he pardoned me, since pity was a childish virtue. Then he quoted his own example to me; that very morning he had sent his best friend to be shot."

      Pichegru's face darkened.

      "That is true," he said; "the occurrence was put upon the order of the day, and I must acknowledge that, however one may judge of it individually, it had a good influence upon the discipline of the soldiers. But God preserve me from having to give such an example, for I do not hesitate to say that I should not do it. The devil! we are Frenchmen, and not Spartans. They can put a mask over our faces for a time, but sooner or later that mask will lift and the face beneath will be the same; it may have a few more wrinkles, but that is all."

      "Well, general, to return to my father's letter—"

      "It is settled that you stay with us. I attach you as secretary to my staff. Can you ride?"

      "I must confess, general, that I am not a very good horseman."

      "You will learn. You came on foot?"

      "From Rohwillers, yes."

      "And how did you get from Strasbourg to Rohwillers?"

      "I came in a carry-all with Madame Teutch."

      "The landlady of the Hôtel de la Lanterne?"

      "And sergeant-major Augereau."

      "And how the devil did you


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