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+Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
+by Vicente Blasco Ibanez
+
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+The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
+
+by Vicente Blasco Ibanez
+
+
+October, 1998 [Etext #1484]
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
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+
+The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
+(Los Cuatro Jinettes del Apocalipsis)
+
+by Vicente Blasco Ibanez
+
+
+Translated by Charlotte Brewster Jordan
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+PART I
+
+I. THE TRYST--IN THE GARDEN OF THE EXPIATORY CHAPEL
+II. MADARIAGA, THE CENTAUR
+III. THE DESNOYERS FAMILY
+IV. THE COUSIN FROM BERLIN
+V. IN WHICH APPEAR THE FOUR HORSEMEN
+
+
+PART II
+
+I. WHAT DON MARCELO ENVIED
+II. NEW LIFE
+III. THE RETREAT
+IV. NEAR THE SACRED GROTTO
+V. THE INVASION
+VI. THE BANNER OF THE RED CROSS
+
+
+PART III
+
+I. AFTER THE MARNE
+II. IN THE STUDIO
+IV. "NO ONE WILL KILL HIM"
+V. THE BURIAL FIELDS
+
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE TRYST
+
+
+(In the Garden of the Chapelle Expiatoire)
+
+
+They were to have met in the garden of the Chapelle Expiatoire at
+five o'clock in the afternoon, but Julio Desnoyers with the
+impatience of a lover who hopes to advance the moment of meeting by
+presenting himself before the appointed time, arrived an half hour
+earlier. The change of the seasons was at this time greatly
+confused in his mind, and evidently demanded some readjustment.
+
+Five months had passed since their last interview in this square had
+afforded the wandering lovers the refuge of a damp, depressing
+calmness near a boulevard of continual movement close to a great
+railroad station. The hour of the appointment was always five and
+Julio was accustomed to see his beloved approaching by the
+reflection of the recently lit street lamps, her figure enveloped in
+furs, and holding her muff before her face as if it were a half-
+mask. Her sweet voice, greeting him, had breathed forth a cloud of
+vapor, white and tenuous, congealed by the cold. After various
+hesitating interviews, they had abandoned the garden. Their love
+had acquired the majestic importance of acknowledged fact, and from
+five to seven had taken refuge in the fifth floor of the rue de la
+Pompe where Julio had an artist's studio. The curtains well drawn
+over the double glass windows, the cosy hearth-fire sending forth
+its ruddy flame as the only light of the room, the monotonous song
+of the samovar bubbling near the cups of tea--all the seclusion of
+life isolated by an idolizing love--had dulled their perceptions to
+the fact that the afternoons were growing longer, that outside the
+sun was shining later and later into the pearl-covered depths of the
+clouds, and that a timid and pallid Spring was beginning to show its
+green finger tips in the buds of the branches suffering the last
+nips of Winter--that wild, black boar who so often turned on his
+tracks.
+
+Then Julio had made his trip to Buenos Aires, encountering in the
+other hemisphere the last smile of Autumn and the first icy winds
+from the pampas. And just as his mind was becoming reconciled to
+the fact that for him Winter was an eternal season--since it always
+came to meet him in his change of domicile from one extreme of the
+planet to the other--lo, Summer was unexpectedly confronting him in
+this dreary garden!
+
+A swarm of children was racing and screaming through the short
+avenues around the monument. On entering the place, the first thing
+that Julio encountered was a hoop which came rolling toward his
+legs, trundled by a childish hand. Then he stumbled over a ball.
+Around the chestnut trees was gathering the usual warm-weather
+crowd, seeking the blue shade perforated with points of light. Many
+nurse-maids from the neighboring houses were working and chattering
+here, following with indifferent glances the rough games of the
+children confided to their care. Near them were the men who had
+brought their papers down into the garden under the impression that
+they could read them in the midst of peaceful groves. All of the
+benches were full. A few women were occupying camp stools with that
+feeling of superiority which ownership always confers. The iron
+chairs, "pay-seats," were serving as resting places for various
+suburban dames, loaded down with packages, who were waiting for
+straggling members of their families in order to take the train in
+the Gare Saint Lazare. . . .
+
+And Julio, in his special delivery letter, had proposed meeting in
+this place, supposing that it would be as little frequented as in
+former times. She, too, with the same thoughtlessness, had in her
+reply, set the usual hour of five o'clock, believing that after
+passing a few minutes in the Printemps or the Galeries on the
+pretext of shopping, she would be able to slip over to the
+unfrequented garden without risk of being seen by any of her
+numerous acquaintances.
+
+Desnoyers was enjoying an almost forgotten sensation, that of
+strolling through vast spaces, crushing as he walked the grains of
+sand under his feet. For the past twenty days his rovings had been
+upon planks, following with the automatic precision of a riding
+school the oval promenade on the deck of a ship. His feet
+accustomed to insecure ground, still were keeping on terra firma a
+certain sensation of elastic unsteadiness. His goings and comings
+were not awakening the curiosity of the people seated in the open,
+for a common preoccupation seemed to be monopolizing all the men and
+women. The groups were exchanging impressions. Those who happened
+to have a paper in their hands, saw their neighbors approaching them
+with a smile of interrogation. There had suddenly disappeared that
+distrust and suspicion which impels the inhabitants of large cities
+mutually to ignore one another, taking each other's measure at a
+glance as though they were enemies.
+
+"They are talking about the war," said Desnoyers to himself. "At
+this time, all Paris speaks of nothing but the possibility of war."
+
+Outside of the garden he could see also the same anxiety which was
+making those around him so fraternal and sociable. The venders of
+newspapers were passing through the boulevard crying the evening
+editions, their furious speed repeatedly slackened by the eager
+hands of the passers-by contending for the papers. Every reader was
+instantly surrounded by a group begging for news or trying to
+decipher over his shoulder the great headlines at the top of the
+sheet. In the rue des Mathurins, on the other side of the square, a
+circle of workmen under the awning of a tavern were listening to the
+comments of a friend who accompanied his words with oratorical
+gestures and wavings of the paper. The traffic in the streets, the
+general bustle of the city was the same as in other days, but it
+seemed to Julio that the vehicles were whirling past more rapidly,
+that there was a feverish agitation in the air and that people were
+speaking and smiling in a different way. The women of the garden
+were looking even at him as if they had seen him in former days. He
+was able to approach them and begin a conversation without
+experiencing the slightest strangeness.
+
+"They are talking of the war," he said again but with the
+commiseration of a superior intelligence which foresees the future
+and feels above the impressions of the vulgar crowd.
+
+He knew exactly what course he was going to follow. He had
+disembarked at ten o'clock the night before, and as it was not yet
+twenty-four hours since he had touched land, his mentality was still
+that of a man who comes from afar, across oceanic immensities, from
+boundless horizons, and is surprised at finding himself in touch
+with the preoccupations which govern human communities. After
+disembarking he had spent two hours in a cafe in Boulogne,
+listlessly watching the middle-class families who passed their time
+in the monotonous placidity of a life without dangers. Then the
+special train for the passengers from South America had brought him
+to Paris, leaving him at four in the morning on a platform of the
+Gare du Nord in the embrace of Pepe Argensola, the young Spaniard
+whom he sometimes called "my secretary" or "my valet" because it was
+difficult to define exactly the relationship between them. In
+reality, he was a mixture of friend and parasite, the poor comrade,
+complacent and capable in his companionship with a rich youth on bad
+terms with his family, sharing with him the ups and downs of
+fortune, picking up the crumbs of prosperous days, or inventing
+expedients to keep up appearances in the hours of poverty.
+
+"What about the war?" Argensola had asked him before inquiring about
+the result of his trip. "You have come a long ways and should know
+much."
+
+Soon he was sound asleep in his dear old bed while his "secretary"
+was pacing up and down the studio talking of Servia, Russia and the
+Kaiser. This youth, too, skeptical as he generally was about
+everything not connected with his own interests, appeared infected
+by the general excitement.
+
+When Desnoyers awoke he found her note awaiting him, setting their
+meeting at five that afternoon and also containing a few words about
+the threatened danger which was claiming the attention of all Paris.
+Upon going out in search of lunch the concierge, on the pretext of
+welcoming him back, had asked him the war news. And in the
+restaurant, the cafe and the street, always war . . . the
+possibility of war with Germany. . . .
+
+Julio was an optimist. What did all this restlessness signify to a
+man who had just been living more than twenty days among Germans,
+crossing the Atlantic under the flag of the Empire?
+
+He had sailed from Buenos Aires in a steamer of the Hamburg line,
+the Koenig Frederic August. The world was in blessed tranquillity
+when the boat left port. Only the whites and half-breeds of Mexico
+were exterminating each other in conflicts in order that nobody
+might believe that man is an animal degenerated by peace. On the
+rest of the planet, the people were displaying unusual prudence.
+Even aboard the transatlantic liner, the little world of passengers
+of most diverse nationalities appeared a fragment of future society
+implanted by way of experiment in modern times--a sketch of the
+hereafter, without frontiers or race antagonisms.
+
+One morning the ship band which every Sunday had sounded the Choral
+of Luther, awoke those sleeping in the first-class cabins with the
+most unheard-of serenade. Desnoyers rubbed his eyes believing
+himself under the hallucinations of a dream. The German horns were
+playing the Marseillaise through the corridors and decks. The
+steward, smiling at his astonishment, said, "The fourteenth of
+July!" On the German steamers they celebrate as their own the great
+festivals of all the nations represented by their cargo and
+passengers. Their captains are careful to observe scrupulously the
+rites of this religion of the flag and its historic commemoration.
+The most insignificant republic saw the ship decked in its honor,
+affording one more diversion to help combat the monotony of the
+voyage and further the lofty ends of the Germanic propaganda. For
+the first time the great festival of France was being celebrated on
+a German vessel, and whilst the musicians continued escorting a racy
+Marseillaise in double quick time through the different floors, the
+morning groups were commenting on the event.
+
+"What finesse!" exclaimed the South American ladies. "These Germans
+are not so phlegmatic as they seem. It is an attention . . .
+something very distinguished. . . . And is it possible that some
+still believe that they and the French might come to blows?"
+
+The very few Frenchmen who were travelling on the steamer found
+themselves admired as though they had increased immeasurably in
+public esteem. There were only three;--an old jeweller who had been
+visiting his branch shops in America, and two demi-mondaines from
+the rue de la Paix, the most timid and well-behaved persons aboard,
+vestals with bright eyes and disdainful noses who held themselves
+stiffly aloof in this uncongenial atmosphere.
+
+At night there was a gala banquet in the dining room at the end of
+which the French flag and that of the Empire formed a flaunting,
+conspicuous drapery. All the German passengers were in dress suits,
+and their wives were wearing low-necked gowns. The uniforms of the
+attendants were as resplendent as on a day of a grand review.
+
+During dessert the tapping of a knife upon a glass reduced the table
+to sudden silence. The Commandant was going to speak. And this
+brave mariner who united to his nautical functions the obligation of
+making harangues at banquets and opening the dance with the lady of
+most importance, began unrolling a string of words like the noise of
+clappers between long intervals of silence. Desnoyers knew a little
+German as a souvenir of a visit to some relatives in Berlin, and so
+was able to catch a few words. The Commandant was repeating every
+few minutes "peace" and "friends." A table neighbor, a commercial
+commissioner, offered his services as interpreter to Julio, with
+that obsequiousness which lives on advertisement.
+
+"The Commandant asks God to maintain peace between Germany and
+France and hopes that the two peoples will become increasingly
+friendly."
+
+Another orator arose at the same table. He was the most influential
+of the German passengers, a rich manufacturer from Dusseldorf who
+had just been visiting his agents in America. He was never
+mentioned by name. He bore the title of Commercial Counsellor, and
+among his countrymen was always Herr Comerzienrath and his wife was
+entitled Frau Rath. The Counsellor's Lady, much younger than her
+important husband, had from the first attracted the attention of
+Desnoyers. She, too, had made an exception in favor of this young
+Argentinian, abdicating her title from their first conversation.
+"Call me Bertha," she said as condescendingly as a duchess of
+Versailles might have spoken to a handsome abbot seated at her feet.
+Her husband, also protested upon hearing Desnoyers call him
+"Counsellor," like his compatriots.
+
+"My friends," he said, "call me 'Captain.' I command a company of
+the Landsturm." And the air with which the manufacturer accompanied
+these words, revealed the melancholy of an unappreciated man
+scorning the honors he has in order to think only of those he does
+not possess.
+
+While he was delivering his discourse, Julio was examining his small
+head and thick neck which gave him a certain resemblance to a bull
+dog. In imagination he saw the high and oppressive collar of a
+uniform making a double roll of fat above its stiff edge. The
+waxed, upright moustaches were bristling aggressively. His voice
+was sharp and dry as though he were shaking out his words. . . .
+Thus the Emperor would utter his harangues, so the martial burgher,
+with instinctive imitation, was contracting his left arm, supporting
+his hand upon the hilt of an invisible sword.
+
+In spite of his fierce and oratorical gesture of command, all the
+listening Germans laughed uproariously at his first words, like men
+who knew how to appreciate the sacrifice of a Herr Comerzienrath
+when he deigns to divert a festivity.
+
+"He is saying very witty things about the French," volunteered the
+interpreter in a low voice, "but they are not offensive."
+
+Julio had guessed as much upon hearing repeatedly the word
+Franzosen. He almost understood what the orator was saying--
+"Franzosen--great children, light-hearted, amusing, improvident.
+The things that they might do together if they would only forget
+past grudges!" The attentive Germans were no longer laughing. The
+Counsellor was laying aside his irony, that grandiloquent, crushing
+irony, weighing many tons, as enormous as a ship. Then he began
+unrolling the serious part of his harangue, so that he himself, was
+also greatly affected.
+
+"He says, sir," reported Julio's neighbor, "that he wishes France to
+become a very great nation so that some day we may march together
+against other enemies . . . against OTHERS!"
+
+And he winked one eye, smiling maliciously with that smile of common
+intelligence which this allusion to the mysterious enemy always
+awakened.
+
+Finally the Captain-Counsellor raised his glass in a toast to
+France. "Hoch!" he yelled as though he were commanding an evolution
+of his soldierly Reserves. Three times he sounded the cry and all
+the German contingent springing to their feet, responded with a
+lusty Hoch while the band in the corridor blared forth the
+Marseillaise.
+
+Desnoyers was greatly moved. Thrills of enthusiasm were coursing up
+and down his spine. His eyes became so moist that, when drinking
+his champagne, he almost believed that he had swallowed some tears.
+He bore a French name. He had French blood in his veins, and this
+that the gringoes were doing--although generally they seemed to him
+ridiculous and ordinary--was really worth acknowledging. The
+subjects of the Kaiser celebrating the great date of the Revolution!
+He believed that he was witnessing a great historic event.
+
+"Very well done!" he said to the other South Americans at the near
+tables. "We must admit that they have done the handsome thing."
+
+Then with the vehemence of his twenty-seven years, he accosted the
+jeweller in the passage way, reproaching him for his silence. He
+was the only French citizen aboard. He should have made a few words
+of acknowledgment. The fiesta was ending awkwardly through his
+fault.
+
+"And why have you not spoken as a son of France?" retorted the
+jeweller.
+
+"I am an Argentinian citizen," replied Julio.
+
+And he left the older man believing that he ought to have spoken and
+making explanations to those around him. It was a very dangerous
+thing, he protested, to meddle in diplomatic affairs. Furthermore,
+he had not instructions from his government. And for a few hours he
+believed that he had been on the point of playing a great role in
+history.
+
+Desnoyers passed the rest of the evening in the smoking room
+attracted thither by the presence of the Counsellor's Lady. The
+Captain of the Landsturm, sticking a preposterous cigar between his
+moustachios, was playing poker with his countrymen ranking next to
+him in dignity and riches. His wife stayed beside him most of the
+time, watching the goings and comings of the stewards carrying great
+bocks, without daring to share in this tremendous consumption of
+beer. Her special preoccupation was to keep vacant near her a seat
+which Desnoyers might occupy. She considered him the most
+distinguished man on board because he was accustomed to taking
+champagne with all his meals. He was of medium height, a decided
+brunette, with a small foot, which obliged her to tuck hers under
+her skirts, and a triangular face under two masses of hair,
+straight, black and glossy as lacquer, the very opposite of the type
+of men about her. Besides, he was living in Paris, in the city
+which she had never seen after numerous trips in both hemispheres.
+
+"Oh, Paris! Paris!" she sighed, opening her eyes and pursing her
+lips in order to express her admiration when she was speaking alone
+to the Argentinian. "How I should love to go there!"
+
+And in order that he might feel free to tell her things about Paris,
+she permitted herself certain confidences about the pleasures of
+Berlin, but with a blushing modesty, admitting in advance that in
+the world there was more--much more--that she wished to become
+acquainted with.
+
+While pacing around the Chapelle Expiatoire, Julio recalled with a
+certain remorse the wife of Counsellor Erckmann. He who had made
+the trip to America for a woman's sake, in order to collect money
+and marry her! Then he immediately began making excuses for his
+conduct. Nobody was going to know. Furthermore he did not pretend
+to be an ascetic, and Bertha Erckmann was certainly a tempting
+adventure in mid ocean. Upon recalling her, his imagination always
+saw a race horse--large, spare, roan colored, and with a long
+stride. She was an up-to-date German who admitted no defect in her
+country except the excessive weight of its women, combating in her
+person this national menace with every known system of dieting. For
+her every meal was a species of torment, and the procession of bocks
+in the smoking room a tantalizing agony. The slenderness achieved
+and maintained by will power only made more prominent the size of
+her frame, the powerful skeleton with heavy jaws and large teeth,
+strong and dazzling, which perhaps suggested Desnoyers'
+disrespectful comparison. "She is thin, but enormous,
+nevertheless!" was always his conclusion.
+
+But then, he considered her, notwithstanding, the most distinguished
+woman on board--distinguished for the sea--elegant in the style of
+Munich, with clothes of indescribable colors that suggested Persian
+art and the vignettes of mediaeval manuscripts. The husband admired
+Bertha's elegance, lamenting her childlessness in secret, almost as
+though it were a crime of high treason. Germany was magnificent
+because of the fertility of its women. The Kaiser, with his
+artistic hyperbole, had proclaimed that the true German beauty
+should have a waist measure of at least a yard and a half.
+
+When Desnoyers entered into the smoking room in order to take the
+seat which Bertha had reserved for him, her husband and his wealthy
+hangers-on had their pack of cards lying idle upon the green felt.
+Herr Rath was continuing his discourse and his listeners, taking
+their cigars from their mouths, were emitting grunts of approbation.
+The arrival of Julio provoked a general smile of amiability. Here
+was France coming to fraternize with them. They knew that his
+father was French, and that fact made him as welcome as though he
+came in direct line from the palace of the Quai d'Orsay,
+representing the highest diplomacy of the Republic. The craze for
+proselyting made them all promptly concede to him unlimited
+importance.
+
+"We," continued the Counsellor looking fixedly at Desnoyers as if he
+were expecting a solemn declaration from him, "we wish to live on
+good terms with France."
+
+The youth nodded his head so as not to appear inattentive. It
+appeared to him a very good thing that these peoples should not be
+enemies, and as far as he was concerned, they might affirm this
+relationship as often as they wished: the only thing that was
+interesting him just at that time was a certain knee that was
+seeking his under the table, transmitting its gentle warmth through
+a double curtain of silk.
+
+"But France," complained the manufacturer, "is most unresponsive
+towards us. For many years past, our Emperor has been holding out
+his hand with noble loyalty, but she pretends not to see it. . . .
+That, you must admit, is not as it should be."
+
+Just here Desnoyers believed that he ought to say something in order
+that the spokesman might not divine his more engrossing occupation.
+
+"Perhaps you are not doing enough. If, first of all, you would
+return that which you took away from France!" . . .
+
+Stupefied silence followed this remark, as if the alarm signal had
+sounded through the boat. Some of those who were about putting
+their cigars in their mouths, remained with hands immovable within
+two inches of their lips, their eyes almost popping out of their
+heads. But the Captain of the Landsturm was there to formulate
+their mute protest.
+
+"Return!" he said in a voice almost extinguished by the sudden
+swelling of his neck. "We have nothing to return, for we have taken
+nothing. That which we possess, we acquire by our heroism."
+
+The hidden knee with its agreeable friction made itself more
+insinuating, as though counselling the youth to greater prudence.
+
+"Do not say such things," breathed Bertha, "thus only the
+republicans, corrupted by Paris, talk. A youth so distinguished who
+has been in Berlin, and has relatives in Germany!" . . .
+
+But Desnoyers felt a hereditary impulse of aggressiveness before
+each of her husband's statements, enunciated in haughty tones, and
+responded coldly:--
+
+"It is as if I should take your watch and then propose that we
+should be friends, forgetting the occurrence. Although you might
+forget, the first thing for me to do would be to return the watch."
+
+Counsellor Erckmann wished to retort with so many things at once
+that he stuttered horribly, leaping from one idea to the other. To
+compare the reconquest of Alsace to a robbery. A German country!
+The race . . . the language . . . the history! . . .
+
+"But when did they announce their wish to be German?" asked the
+youth without losing his calmness. "When have you consulted their
+opinion?"
+
+The Counsellor hesitated, not knowing whether to argue with this
+insolent fellow or crush him with his scorn.
+
+"Young man, you do not know what you are talking about," he finally
+blustered with withering contempt. "You are an Argentinian and do
+not understand the affairs of Europe."
+
+And the others agreed, suddenly repudiating the citizenship which
+they had attributed to him a little while before. The Counsellor,
+with military rudeness, brusquely turned his back upon him, and
+taking up the pack, distributed the cards. The game was renewed.
+Desnoyers, seeing himself isolated by the scornful silence, felt
+greatly tempted to break up the playing by violence; but the hidden
+knee continued counselling self-control, and an invisible hand had
+sought his right, pressing it sweetly. That was enough to make him
+recover his serenity. The Counsellor's Lady seemed to be absorbed
+in the progress of the game. He also looked on, a malignant smile
+contracting slightly the lines of his mouth as he was mentally
+ejaculating by way of consolation, "Captain, Captain! . . . You
+little know what is awaiting you!"
+
+On terra firma, he would never again have approached these men; but
+life on a transatlantic liner, with its inevitable promiscuousness,
+obliges forgetfulness. The following day the Counsellor and his
+friends came in search of him, flattering his sensibilities by
+erasing every irritating memory. He was a distinguished youth
+belonging to a wealthy family, and all of them had shops and
+business in his country. The only thing was that he should be
+careful not to mention his French origin. He was an Argentinian;
+and thereupon, the entire chorus interested itself in the grandeur
+of his country and all the nations of South America where they had
+agencies or investments--exaggerating its importance as though its
+petty republics were great powers, commenting with gravity upon the
+deeds and words of its political leaders and giving him to
+understand that in Germany there was no one who was not concerned
+about the future of South America, predicting for all its divisions
+most glorious prosperity--a reflex of the Empire, always, provided,
+of course, that they kept under Germanic influence.
+
+In spite of these flatteries, Desnoyers was no longer presenting
+himself with his former assiduity at the hour of poker. The
+Counsellor's wife was retiring to her stateroom earlier than usual--
+their approach to the Equator inducing such an irresistible desire
+for sleep, that she had to abandon her husband to his card playing.
+Julio also had mysterious occupations which prevented his appearance
+on deck until after midnight. With the precipitation of a man who
+desires to be seen in order to avoid suspicion, he was accustomed to
+enter the smoking room talking loudly as he seated himself near the
+husband and his boon companions.
+
+The game had ended, and an orgy of beer and fat cigars from Hamburg
+was celebrating the success of the winners. It was the hour of
+Teutonic expansion, of intimacy among men, of heavy, sluggish jokes,
+of off-color stories. The Counsellor was presiding with much
+majesty over the diableries of his chums, prudent business men from
+the Hanseatic ports who had big accounts in the Deutsche Bank or
+were shopkeepers installed in the republic of the La Plata, with an
+innumerable family. He was a warrior, a captain, and on applauding
+every heavy jest with a laugh that distended his fat neck, he
+fancied that he was among his comrades at arms.
+
+In honor of the South Americans who, tired of pacing the deck, had
+dropped in to hear what the gringoes were saying, they were turning
+into Spanish the witticisms and licentious anecdotes awakened in the
+memory by a superabundance of beer. Julio was marvelling at the
+ready laugh of all these men. While the foreigners were remaining
+unmoved, they would break forth into loud horse-laughs throwing
+themselves back in their seats. And when the German audience was
+growing cold, the story-teller would resort to an infallible
+expedient to remedy his lack of success:--
+
+"They told this yarn to the Kaiser, and when the Kaiser heard it he
+laughed heartily."
+
+It was not necessary to say more. They all laughed then. Ha, ha,
+ha! with a spontaneous roar but a short one, a laugh in three blows,
+since to prolong it, might be interpreted as a lack of respect to
+His Majesty.
+
+As they neared Europe, a batch of news came to meet the boat. The
+employees in the wireless telegraphy office were working
+incessantly. One night, on entering the smoking room, Desnoyers saw
+the German notables gesticulating with animated countenances. They
+were no longer drinking beer. They had had bottles of champagne
+uncorked, and the Counsellor's Lady, much impressed, had not retired
+to her stateroom. Captain Erckmann, spying the young Argentinian,
+offered him a glass.
+
+"It is war," he shouted with enthusiasm. "War at last. . . . The
+hour has come!"
+
+Desnoyers made a gesture of astonishment. War! . . . What war? . . .
+Like all the others, he had read on the news bulletin outside a
+radiogram stating that the Austrian government had just sent an
+ultimatum to Servia; but it made not the slightest impression on
+him, for he was not at all interested in the Balkan affairs. Those
+were but the quarrels of a miserable little nation monopolizing the
+attention of the world, distracting it from more worthwhile matters.
+How could this event concern the martial Counsellor? The two
+nations would soon come to an understanding. Diplomacy sometimes
+amounted to something.
+
+"No," insisted the German ferociously. "It is war, blessed war.
+Russia will sustain Servia, and we will support our ally. . . .
+What will France do? Do you know what France will do?" . . .
+
+Julio shrugged his shoulders testily as though asking to be left out
+of all international discussions.
+
+"It is war," asserted the Counsellor, "the preventive war that we
+need. Russia is growing too fast, and is preparing to fight us.
+Four years more of peace and she will have finished her strategic
+railroads, and her military power, united to that of her allies,
+will be worth as much as ours. It is better to strike a powerful
+blow now. It is necessary to take advantage of this opportunity. . . .
+War. Preventive war!"
+
+All his clan were listening in silence. Some did not appear to feel
+the contagion of his enthusiasm. War! . . . In imagination they
+saw their business paralyzed, their agencies bankrupt, the banks
+cutting down credit . . . a catastrophe more frightful to them than
+the slaughters of battles. But they applauded with nods and grunts
+all of Erckmann's ferocious demonstrations. He was a Herr Rath, and
+an officer besides. He must be in the secrets of the destiny of his
+country, and that was enough to make them drink silently to the
+success of the war.
+
+Julio thought that the Counsellor and his admirers must be drunk.
+"Look here, Captain," he said in a conciliatory tone, "what you say
+lacks logic. How could war possibly be acceptable to industrial
+Germany? Every moment its business is increasing, every month it
+conquers a new market and every year its commercial balance soars
+upward in unheard of proportions. Sixty years ago, it had to man
+its boats with Berlin hack drivers arrested by the police. Now its
+commercial fleets and war vessels cross all oceans, and there is no
+port where the German merchant marine does not occupy the greatest
+part of the docks. It would only be necessary to continue living in
+this way, to put yourselves beyond the exigencies of war! Twenty
+years more of peace, and the Germans would be lords of the world's
+commerce, conquering England, the former mistress of the seas, in a
+bloodless struggle. And are they going to risk all this--like a
+gambler who stakes his entire fortune on a single card--in a
+struggle that might result unfavorably?" . . .
+
+"No, war," insisted the Counsellor furiously, "preventive war. We
+live surrounded by our enemies, and this state of things cannot go
+on. It is best to end it at once. Either they or we! Germany
+feels herself strong enough to challenge the world. We've got to
+put an end to this Russian menace! And if France doesn't keep
+herself quiet, so much the worse for her! . . . And if anyone
+else . . . ANYONE dares to come in against us, so much the worse
+for him! When I set up a new machine in my shops, it is to make
+it produce unceasingly. We possess the finest army in the world,
+and it is necessary to give it exercise that it may not rust out."
+
+He then continued with heavy emphasis, "They have put a band of iron
+around us in order to throttle us. But Germany has a strong chest
+and has only to expand in order to burst its bands. We must awake
+before they manacle us in our sleep. Woe to those who then oppose
+us! . . ."
+
+Desnoyers felt obliged to reply to this arrogance. He had never
+seen the iron circle of which the Germans were complaining. The
+nations were merely unwilling to continue living, unsuspecting and
+inactive, before boundless German ambition. They were simply
+preparing to defend themselves against an almost certain attack.
+They wished to maintain their dignity, repeatedly violated under
+most absurd pretexts.
+
+"I wonder if it is not the others," he concluded, "who are obliged
+to defend themselves because you represent a menace to the world!"
+
+An invisible hand sought his under the table, as it had some nights
+before, to recommend prudence; but now he clasped it forcibly with
+the authority of a right acquired.
+
+"Oh, sir!" sighed the sweet Bertha, "to talk like that, a youth so
+distinguished who has . . ."
+
+She was not able to finish, for her husband interrupted. They were
+no longer in American waters, and the Counsellor expressed himself
+with the rudeness of a master of his house.
+
+"I have the honor to inform you, young man," he said, imitating the
+cutting coldness of the diplomats, "that you are merely a South
+American and know nothing of the affairs of Europe."
+
+He did not call him an "Indian," but Julio heard the implication as
+though he had used the word itself. Ah, if that hidden handclasp
+had not held him with its sentimental thrills! . . . But this
+contact kept him calm and even made him smile. "Thanks, Captain,"
+he said to himself. "It is the least you can do to get even with
+me!"
+
+Here his relations with the German and his clientele came to an end.
+The merchants, as they approached nearer and nearer to their native
+land, began casting off that servile desire of ingratiating
+themselves which they had assumed in all their trips to the new
+world. They now had more important things to occupy them. The
+telegraphic service was working without cessation. The Commandant
+of the vessel was conferring in his apartment with the Counsellor as
+his compatriot of most importance. His friends were hunting out the
+most obscure places in order to talk confidentially with one
+another. Even Bertha commenced to avoid Desnoyers. She was still
+smiling distantly at him, but that smile was more of a souvenir than
+a reality.
+
+Between Lisbon and the coast of England, Julio spoke with her
+husband for the last time. Every morning was appearing on the
+bulletin board the alarming news transmitted by radiograph. The
+Empire was arming itself against its enemies. God would punish
+them, making all manner of troubles fall upon them. Desnoyers was
+motionless with astonishment before the last piece of news--"Three
+hundred thousand revolutionists are now besieging Paris. The
+suburbs are beginning to burn. The horrors of the Commune have
+broken out again."
+
+"My, but these Germans have gone mad!" exclaimed the disgusted youth
+to the curious group surrounding the radio-sheet. "We are going to
+lose the little sense that we have left! . . . What revolutionists
+are they talking about? How could a revolution break out in Paris
+if the men of the government are not reactionary?"
+
+A gruff voice sounded behind him, rude, authoritative, as if trying
+to banish the doubts of the audience. It was the Herr Comerzienrath
+who was speaking.
+
+"Young man, these notices are sent us by the first agencies of
+Germany . . . and Germany never lies."
+
+After this affirmation, he turned his back upon them and they saw
+him no more.
+
+On the following morning, the last day of the voyage. Desnoyers'
+steward awoke him in great excitement. "Herr, come up on deck! a
+most beautiful spectacle!"
+
+The sea was veiled by the fog, but behind its hazy curtains could be
+distinguished some silhouettes like islands with great towers and
+sharp, pointed minarets. The islands were advancing over the oily
+waters slowly and majestically, with impressive dignity. Julio
+counted eighteen. They appeared to fill the ocean. It was the
+Channel Fleet which had just left the English coast by Government
+order, sailing around simply to show its strength. Seeing this
+procession of dreadnoughts for the first time, Desnoyers was
+reminded of a flock of marine monsters, and gained a better idea of
+the British power. The German ship passed among them, shrinking,
+humiliated, quickening its speed. "One might suppose," mused the
+youth, "that she had an uneasy conscience and wished to scud to
+safety." A South American passenger near him was jesting with one
+of the Germans, "What if they have already declared war! . . . What
+if they should make us prisoners!"
+
+After midday, they entered Southampton roads. The Frederic August
+hurried to get away as soon as possible, and transacted business
+with dizzying celerity. The cargo of passengers and baggage was
+enormous. Two launches approached the transatlantic and discharged
+an avalanche of Germans residents in England who invaded the decks
+with the joy of those who tread friendly soil, desiring to see
+Hamburg as soon as possible. Then the boat sailed through the
+Channel with a speed most unusual in these places.
+
+The people, leaning on the railing, were commenting on the
+extraordinary encounters in this marine boulevard, usually
+frequented by ships of peace. Certain smoke lines on the horizon
+were from the French squadron carrying President Poincare who was
+returning from Russia. The European alarm had interrupted his trip.
+Then they saw more English vessels patrolling the coast line like
+aggressive and vigilant dogs. Two North American battleships could
+be distinguished by their mast-heads in the form of baskets. Then a
+Russian battleship, white and glistening, passed at full steam on
+its way to the Baltic. "Bad!" said the South American passengers
+regretfully. "Very bad! It looks this time as if it were going to
+be serious!" and they glanced uneasily at the neighboring coasts on
+both sides. Although they presented the usual appearance, behind
+them, perhaps, a new period of history was in the making.
+
+The transatlantic was due at Boulogne at midnight where it was
+supposed to wait until daybreak to discharge its passengers
+comfortably. It arrived, nevertheless, at ten, dropped anchor
+outside the harbor, and the Commandant gave orders that the
+disembarkation should take place in less than an hour. For this
+reason they had quickened their speed, consuming a vast amount of
+extra coal. It was necessary to get away as soon as possible,
+seeking the refuge of Hamburg. The radiographic apparatus had
+evidently been working to some purpose.
+
+By the glare of the bluish searchlights which were spreading a livid
+clearness over the sea, began the unloading of passengers and
+baggage for Paris, from the transatlantic into the tenders. "Hurry!
+Hurry!" The seamen were pushing forward the ladies of slow step who
+were recounting their valises, believing that they had lost some.
+The stewards loaded themselves up with babies as though they were
+bundles. The general precipitation dissipated the usual exaggerated
+and oily Teutonic amiability. "They are regular bootlickers,"
+thought Desnoyers. "They believe that their hour of triumph has
+come, and do not think it necessary to pretend any longer." . . .
+
+He was soon in a launch that was bobbing up and down on the waves
+near the black and immovable hulk of the great liner, dotted with
+many circles of light and filled with people waving handkerchiefs.
+Julio recognized Bertha who was waving her hand without seeing him,
+without knowing in which tender he was, but feeling obliged to show
+her gratefulness for the sweet memories that now were being lost in
+the mystery of the sea and the night. "Adieu, Frau Rath!"
+
+The distance between the departing transatlantic and the lighters
+was widening. As though it had been awaiting this moment with
+impunity, a stentorian voice on the upper deck shouted with a noisy
+guffaw, "See you later! Soon we shall meet you in Paris!" And the
+marine band, the very same band that three days before had
+astonished Desnoyers with its unexpected Marseillaise, burst forth
+into a military march of the time of Frederick the Great--a march of
+grenadiers with an accompaniment of trumpets.
+
+That had been the night before. Although twenty-four hours had not
+yet passed by, Desnoyers was already considering it as a distant
+event of shadowy reality. His thoughts, always disposed to take the
+opposite side, did not share in the general alarm. The insolence of
+the Counsellor now appeared to him but the boastings of a burgher
+turned into a soldier. The disquietude of the people of Paris, was
+but the nervous agitation of a city which lived placidly and became
+alarmed at the first hint of danger to its comfort. So many times
+they had spoken of an immediate war, always settling things
+peacefully at the last moment! . . . Furthermore he did not want
+war to come because it would upset all his plans for the future; and
+the man accepted as logical and reasonable everything that suited
+his selfishness, placing it above reality.
+
+"No, there will not be war," he repeated as he continued pacing up
+and down the garden. "These people are beside themselves. How
+could a war possibly break out in these days?" . . .
+
+And after disposing of his doubts, which certainly would in a short
+time come up again, he thought of the joy of the moment, consulting
+his watch. Five o'clock! She might come now at any minute! He
+thought that he recognized her afar off in a lady who was passing
+through the grating by the rue Pasquier. She seemed to him a little
+different, but it occurred to him that possibly the Summer fashions
+might have altered her appearance. But soon he saw that he had made
+a mistake. She was not alone, another lady was with her. They were
+perhaps English or North American women who worshipped the memory of
+Marie Antoinette and wished to visit the Chapelle Expiatoire, the
+old tomb of the executed queen. Julio watched them as they climbed
+the flights of steps and crossed the interior patio in which were
+interred the eight hundred Swiss soldiers killed in the attack of
+the Tenth of August, with other victims of revolutionary fury.
+
+Disgusted at his error, he continued his tramp. His ill humor made
+the monument with which the Bourbon restoration had adorned the old
+cemetery of the Madeleine, appear uglier than ever to him. Time was
+passing, but she did not come. Every time that he turned, he looked
+hungrily at the entrances of the garden. And then it happened as in
+all their meetings. She suddenly appeared as if she had fallen from
+the sky or risen up from the ground, like an apparition. A cough, a
+slight rustling of footsteps, and as he turned, Julio almost
+collided with her.
+
+"Marguerite! Oh, Marguerite!" . . .
+
+It was she, and yet he was slow to recognize her. He felt a certain
+strangeness in seeing in full reality the countenance which had
+occupied his imagination for three months, each time more
+spirituelle and shadowy with the idealism of absence. But his
+doubts were of short duration. Then it seemed as though time and
+space were eliminated, that he had not made any voyage, and but a
+few hours had intervened since their last interview.
+
+Marguerite divined the expansion which might follow Julio's
+exclamations, the vehement hand-clasp, perhaps something more, so
+she kept herself calm and serene.
+
+"No; not here," she said with a grimace of repugnance. "What a
+ridiculous idea for us to have met here!"
+
+They were about to seat themselves on the iron chairs, in the shadow
+of some shrubbery, when she rose suddenly. Those who were passing
+along the boulevard might see them by merely casting their eyes
+toward the garden. At this time, many of her friends might be
+passing through the neighborhood because of its proximity to the big
+shops. . . . They, therefore, sought refuge at a corner of the
+monument, placing themselves between it and the rue des Mathurins.
+Desnoyers brought two chairs near the hedge, so that when seated
+they were invisible to those passing on the other side of the
+railing. But this was not solitude. A few steps away, a fat,
+nearsighted man was reading his paper, and a group of women were
+chatting and embroidering. A woman with a red wig and two dogs--
+some housekeeper who had come down into the garden in order to give
+her pets an airing--passed several times near the amorous pair,
+smiling discreetly.
+
+"How annoying!" groaned Marguerite. "Why did we ever come to this
+place!"
+
+The two scrutinized each other carefully, wishing to see exactly
+what transformation Time had wrought.
+
+"You are darker than ever," she said. "You look like a man of the
+sea."
+
+Julio was finding her even lovelier than before, and felt sure that
+possessing her was well worth all the contrarieties which had
+brought about his trip to South America. She was taller than he,
+with an elegantly proportioned slenderness. "She has the musical
+step," Desnoyers had told himself, when seeing her in his
+imagination; and now, on beholding her again, the first thing that
+he admired was her rhythmic tread, light and graceful as she passed
+through the garden seeking another seat. Her features were not
+regular but they had a piquant fascination--a true Parisian face.
+Everything that had been invented for the embellishment of feminine
+charm was used about her person with the most exquisite
+fastidiousness. She had always lived for herself. Only a few
+months before had she abdicated a part of this sweet selfishness,
+sacrificing reunions, teas, and calls in order to give Desnoyers
+some of the afternoon hours.
+
+Stylish and painted like a priceless doll, with no loftier ambition
+than to be a model, interpreting with personal elegance the latest
+confections of the modistes, she was at last experiencing the same
+preoccupations and joys as other women, creating for herself an
+inner life. The nucleus of this new life, hidden under her former
+frivolity, was Desnoyers. Just as she was imagining that she had
+reorganized her existence--adjusting the satisfactions of worldly
+elegance to the delights of love in intimate secrecy--a fulminating
+catastrophe (the intervention of her husband whose possible
+appearance she seemed to have overlooked) had disturbed her
+thoughtless happiness. She who was accustomed to think herself the
+centre of the universe, imagining that events ought to revolve
+around her desires and tastes, had suffered this cruel surprise with
+more astonishment than grief.
+
+"And you, how do you think I look?" Marguerite queried.
+
+"I must tell you that the fashion has changed. The sheath skirt has
+passed away. Now it is worn short and with more fullness."
+
+Desnoyers had to interest himself in her apparel with the same
+devotion, mixing his appreciation of the latest freak of the
+fashion-monger with his eulogies of Marguerite's beauty.
+
+"Have you thought much about me?" she continued. "You have not been
+unfaithful to me a single time? Not even once? . . . Tell me the
+truth; you know I can always tell when you are lying."
+
+"I have always thought of you," he said putting his hand on his
+heart, as if he were swearing before a judge.
+
+And he said it roundly, with an accent of truth, since in his
+infidelities--now completely forgotten--the memory of Marguerite had
+always been present.
+
+"But let us talk about you!" added Julio. "What have you been doing
+all the time?"
+
+He had brought his chair nearer to hers, and their knees touched.
+He took one of her hands, patting it and putting his finger in the
+glove opening. Oh, that accursed garden which would not permit
+greater intimacy and obliged them to speak in a low tone, after
+three months' absence! . . . In spite of his discretion, the man
+who was reading his paper raised his head and looked irritably at
+them over his spectacles as though a fly were distracting him with
+its buzzing. . . . The very idea of talking love-nonsense in a
+public garden when all Europe was threatened with calamity!
+
+Repelling the audacious hand, Marguerite spoke tranquilly of her
+existence during the last months.
+
+"I have passed my life the best I could, but I have been greatly
+bored. You know that I am now living with mama, and mama is a lady
+of the old regime who does not understand our tastes. I have been
+to the theatres with my brother. I have made many calls on the
+lawyer in order to learn the progress of my divorce and hurry it
+along . . . and nothing else."
+
+"And your husband?"
+
+"Don't let's talk about him. Do you want to? I pity the poor man!
+So good . . . so correct. The lawyer assures me that he agrees to
+everything and will not impose any obstacles. They tell me that he
+does not come to Paris, that he lives in his factory. Our old home
+is closed. There are times when I feel remorseful over the way I
+have treated him."
+
+"And I?" queried Julio, withdrawing his hand.
+
+"You are right," she returned smiling. "You are Life. It is cruel
+but it is human. We have to live our lives without taking others
+into consideration. It is necessary to be selfish in order to be
+happy."
+
+The two remained silent. The remembrance of the husband had swept
+across them like a glacial blast. Julio was the first to brighten
+up.
+
+"And you have not danced in all this time?"
+
+"No, how could I? The very idea, a woman in divorce proceedings! . . .
+I have not been to a single chic party since you went away. I
+wanted to preserve a certain decorous mourning fiesta. How horrible
+it was! . . . It needed you, the Master!"
+
+They had again clasped hands and were smiling. Memories of the
+previous months were passing before their eyes, visions of their
+life from five to seven in the afternoon, dancing in the hotels of
+the Champs Elysees where the tango had been inexorably associated
+with a cup of tea.
+
+She appeared to tear herself away from these recollections, impelled
+by a tenacious obsession which had slipped from her mind in the
+first moments of their meeting.
+
+"Do you know much about what's happening? Tell me all. People talk
+so much. . . . Do you really believe that there will be war? Don't
+you think that it will all end in some kind of settlement?"
+
+Desnoyers comforted her with his optimism. He did not believe in
+the possibility of a war. That was ridiculous.
+
+"I say so, too! Ours is not the epoch of savages. I have known
+some Germans, chic and well-educated persons who surely must think
+exactly as we do. An old professor who comes to the house was
+explaining yesterday to mama that wars are no longer possible in
+these progressive times. In two months' time, there would scarcely
+be any men left, in three, the world would find itself without money
+to continue the struggle. I do not recall exactly how it was, but
+he explained it all very clearly, in a manner most delightful to
+hear."
+
+She reflected in silence, trying to co-ordinate her confused
+recollections, but dismayed by the effort required, added on her own
+account.
+
+"Just imagine what war would mean--how horrible! Society life
+paralyzed. No more parties, nor clothes, nor theatres! Why, it is
+even possible that they might not design any more fashions! All the
+women in mourning. Can you imagine it? . . . And Paris deserted. . . .
+How beautiful it seemed as I came to meet you this afternoon! . . .
+No, no, it cannot be! Next month, you know, we go to Vichy.
+Mama needs the waters. Then to Biarritz. After that, I shall go to
+a castle on the Loire. And besides there are our affairs, my
+divorce, our marriage which may take place the next year. . . . And
+is war to hinder and cut short all this! No, no, it is not
+possible. My brother and others like him are foolish enough to
+dream of danger from Germany. I am sure that my husband, too, who
+is only interested in serious and bothersome matters, is among those
+who believe that war is imminent and prepare to take part in it.
+What nonsense! Tell me that it is all nonsense. I need to hear you
+say it."
+
+Tranquilized by the affirmations of her lover, she then changed the
+trend of the conversation. The possibility of their approaching
+marriage brought to mind the object of the voyage which Desnoyers
+had just made. There had not been time for them to write to each
+other during their brief separation.
+
+"Did you succeed in getting the money? The joy of seeing you made
+me forget all about such things. . . ."
+
+Adopting the air of a business expert, he replied that he had
+brought back less than he expected, for he had found the country in
+the throes of one of its periodical panics; but still he had managed
+to get together about four hundred thousand francs. In his purse he
+had a check for that amount. Later on, they would send him further
+remittances. A ranchman in Argentina, a sort of relative, was
+looking after his affairs. Marguerite appeared satisfied, and in
+spite of her frivolity, adopted the air of a serious woman.
+
+"Money, money!" she exclaimed sententiously. "And yet there is no
+happiness without it! With your four hundred thousand and what I
+have, we shall be able to get along. . . . I told you that my
+husband wishes to give me back my dowry. He has told my brother so.
+But the state of his business, and the increased size of his factory
+do not permit him to return it as quickly as he would like. I can't
+help but feel sorry for the poor man . . . so honorable and so
+upright in every way. If he only were not so commonplace! . . ."
+
+Again Marguerite seemed to regret these tardy spontaneous eulogies
+which were chilling their interview. So again she changed the trend
+of her chatter.
+
+"And your family? Have you seen them?" . . .
+
+Desnoyers had been to his father's home before starting for the
+Chapelle Expiatoire. A stealthy entrance into the great house on
+the avenue Victor Hugo, and then up to the first floor like a
+tradesman. Then he had slipt into the kitchen like a soldier
+sweetheart of the maids. His mother had come there to embrace him,
+poor Dona Luisa, weeping and kissing him frantically as though she
+had feared to lose him forever. Close behind her mother had come
+Luisita, nicknamed Chichi, who always surveyed him with sympathetic
+curiosity as if she wished to know better a brother so bad and
+adorable who had led decent women from the paths of virtue, and
+committed all kinds of follies. Then Desnoyers had been greatly
+surprised to see entering the kitchen with the air of a tragedy
+queen, a noble mother of the drama, his Aunt Elena, the one who had
+married a German and was living in Berlin surrounded with
+innumerable children.
+
+"She has been in Paris a month. She is going to make a little visit
+to our castle. And it appears that her eldest son--my cousin, 'The
+Sage,' whom I have not seen for years--is also coming here."
+
+The home interview had several times been interrupted by fear.
+"Your father is at home, be careful," his mother had said to him
+each time that he had spoken above a whisper. And his Aunt Elena
+had stationed herself at the door with a dramatic air, like a stage
+heroine resolved to plunge a dagger into the tyrant who should dare
+to cross the threshold. The entire family was accustomed to submit
+to the rigid authority of Don Marcelo Desnoyers. "Oh, that old
+man!" exclaimed Julio, referring to his father. "He may live many
+years yet, but how he weighs upon us all!"
+
+His mother, who had never wearied of looking at him, finally had to
+bring the interview to an end, frightened by certain approaching
+sounds. "Go, he might surprise us, and he would be furious." So
+Julio had fled the paternal home, caressed by the tears of the two
+ladies and the admiring glances of Chichi, by turns ashamed and
+proud of a brother who had caused such enthusiasm and scandal among
+her friends.
+
+Marguerite also spoke of Senor Desnoyers. A terrible tyrant of the
+old school with whom they could never come to an understanding.
+
+The two remained silent, looking fixedly at each other. Now that
+they had said the things of greatest urgency, present interests
+became more absorbing. More immediate things, unspoken, seemed to
+well up in their timid and vacillating eyes, before escaping in the
+form of words. They did not dare to talk like lovers here. Every
+minute the cloud of witnesses seemed increasing around them. The
+woman with the dogs and the red wig was passing with greater
+frequency, shortening her turns through the square in order to greet
+them with a smile of complicity. The reader of the daily paper was
+now exchanging views with a friend on a neighboring bench regarding
+the possibilities of war. The garden had become a thoroughfare.
+The modistes upon going out from their establishments, and the
+ladies returning from shopping, were crossing through the square in
+order to shorten their walk. The little avenue was a popular short-
+cut. All the pedestrians were casting curious glances at the
+elegant lady and her companion seated in the shadow of the shrubbery
+with the timid yet would-be natural look of those who desire to hide
+themselves, yet at the same time feign a casual air.
+
+"How exasperating!" sighed Marguerite. "They are going to find us
+out!"
+
+A girl looked at her so searchingly that she thought she recognized
+in her an employee of a celebrated modiste. Besides, some of her
+personal friends who had met her in the crowded shops but an hour
+ago might be returning home by way of the garden.
+
+"Let us go," she said rising hurriedly. "If they should spy us here
+together, just think what they might say! . . . and just when they
+are becoming a little forgetful!"
+
+Desnoyers protested crossly. Go away? . . . Paris had become a
+shrunken place for them nowadays because Marguerite refused to go to
+a single place where there was a possibility of their being
+surprised. In another square, in a restaurant, wherever they might
+go--they would run the same risk of being recognized. She would
+only consider meetings in public places, and yet at the same time,
+dreaded the curiosity of the people. If Marguerite would like to go
+to his studio of such sweet memories! . . .
+
+"To your home? No! no indeed!" she replied emphatically "I cannot
+forget the last time I was there."
+
+But Julio insisted, foreseeing a break in that firm negative. Where
+could they be more comfortable? Besides, weren't they going to
+marry as soon as possible? . . .
+
+"I tell you no," she repeated. "Who knows but my husband may be
+watching me! What a complication for my divorce if he should
+surprise us in your house!"
+
+Now it was he who eulogized the husband, insisting that such
+watchfulness was incompatible with his character. The engineer had
+accepted the facts, considering them irreparable and was now
+thinking only of reconstructing his life.
+
+"No, it is better for us to separate," she continued. "Tomorrow we
+shall see each other again. You will hunt a more favorable place.
+Think it over, and you will find a solution for it all."
+
+But he wished an immediate solution. They had abandoned their
+seats, going slowly toward the rue des Mathurins. Julio was
+speaking with a trembling and persuasive eloquence. To-morrow? No,
+now. They had only to call a taxicab. It would be only a matter of
+a few minutes, and then the isolation, the mystery, the return to a
+sweet past--to that intimacy in the studio where they had passed
+their happiest hours. They would believe that no time had elapsed
+since their first meetings.
+
+"No," she faltered with a weakening accent, seeking a last
+resistance. "Besides, your secretary might be there, that Spaniard
+who lives with you. How ashamed I would be to meet him again!"
+
+Julio laughed. . . . Argensola! How could that comrade who knew
+all about their past be an obstacle? If they should happen to meet
+him in the house, he would be sure to leave immediately. More than
+once, he had had to go out so as not to be in the way. His
+discretion was such that he had foreseen events. Probably he had
+already left, conjecturing that a near visit would be the most
+logical thing. His chum would simply go wandering through the
+streets in search of news.
+
+Marguerite was silent, as though yielding on seeing her pretexts
+exhausted. Desnoyers was silent, too, construing her stillness as
+assent. They had left the garden and she was looking around
+uneasily, terrified to find herself in the open street beside her
+lover, and seeking a hiding-place. Suddenly she saw before her the
+little red door of an automobile, opened by the hand of her adorer.
+
+"Get in," ordered Julio.
+
+And she climbed in hastily, anxious to hide herself as soon as
+possible. The vehicle started at great speed. Marguerite
+immediately pulled down the shade of the window on her side, but,
+before she had finished and could turn her head, she felt a hungry
+mouth kissing the nape of her neck.
+
+"No, not here," she said in a pleading tone. "Let us be sensible!"
+
+And while he, rebellious at these exhortations, persisted in his
+advances, the voice of Marguerite again sounded above the noise of
+the rattling machinery of the automobile as it bounded over the
+pavement.
+
+"Do you really believe that there will be no war? Do you believe
+that we will be able to marry? . . . Tell me again. I want you to
+encourage me . . . I need to hear it from your lips."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+MADARIAGA, THE CENTAUR
+
+
+In 1870 Marcelo Desnoyers was nineteen years old. He was born in
+the suburbs of Paris, an only child; his father, interested in
+little building speculations, maintained his family in modest
+comfort. The mason wished to make an architect of his son, and
+Marcelo was in the midst of his preparatory studies when his father
+suddenly died, leaving his affairs greatly involved. In a few
+months, he and his mother descended the slopes of ruin, and were
+obliged to give up their snug, middle-class quarters and live like
+laborers.
+
+When the fourteen-year-old boy had to choose a trade, he learned
+wood carving. This craft was an art related to the tastes awakened
+in Marcelo by his abandoned studies. His mother retired to the
+country, living with some relatives while the lad advanced rapidly
+in the shops, aiding his master in all the important orders which he
+received from the provinces. The first news of the war with Prussia
+surprised him in Marseilles, working on the decorations of a
+theatre.
+
+Marcelo was opposed to the Empire like all the youths of his
+generation. He was also much influenced by the older workmen who
+had taken part in the Republic of '48, and who still retained vivid
+recollections of the Coup d'Etat of the second of December.
+
+One day he saw in the streets of Marseilles a popular manifestation
+in favor of peace which was practically a protest against the
+government. The old republicans in their implacable struggle with
+the Emperor, the companies of the International which had just been
+organized, and a great number of Italians and Spaniards who had fled
+their countries on account of recent insurrections, composed the
+procession. A long-haired, consumptive student was carrying the
+flag. "It is peace that we want--a peace which may unite all
+mankind," chanted the paraders. But on this earth, the noblest
+propositions are seldom heard, since Destiny amuses herself in
+perverting them and turning them aside.
+
+Scarcely had the friends of peace entered the rue Cannebiere with
+their hymn and standard, when war came to meet them, obliging them
+to resort to fist and club. The day before, some battalions of
+Zouaves from Algiers had disembarked in order to reinforce the army
+on the frontier, and these veterans, accustomed to colonial
+existence and undiscriminating as to the cause of disturbances,
+seized the opportunity to intervene in this manifestation, some with
+bayonets and others with ungirded belts. "Hurrah for War!" and a
+rain of lashes and blows fell upon the unarmed singers. Marcelo saw
+the innocent student, the standard-bearer of peace, knocked down
+wrapped in his flag, by the merry kicks of the Zouaves. Then he
+knew no more, since he had received various blows with a leather
+strap, and a knife thrust in his shoulder; he had to run the same as
+the others.
+
+That day developed for the first time, his fiery, stubborn
+character, irritable before contradiction, even to the point of
+adopting the most extreme resolution. "Down with War!" Since it
+was not possible for him to protest in any other way, he would leave
+the country. The Emperor might arrange his affairs as best he
+could. The struggle was going to be long and disastrous, according
+to the enemies of the Empire. If he stayed, he would in a few
+months be drawn for the soldiery. Desnoyers renounced the honor of
+serving the Emperor. He hesitated a little when he thought of his
+mother. But his country relatives would not turn her out, and he
+planned to work very hard and send her money. Who knew what riches
+might be waiting for him, on the other side of the sea! . . . Good-
+bye, France!
+
+Thanks to his savings, a harbor official found it to his interest to
+offer him the choice of three boats. One was sailing to Egypt,
+another to Australia, another to Montevideo and Buenos Aires, which
+made the strongest appeal to him? . . . Desnoyers, remembering his
+readings, wished to consult the wind and follow the course that it
+indicated, as he had seen various heroes of novels do. But that day
+the wind blew from the sea toward France. He also wished to toss up
+a coin in order to test his fate. Finally he decided upon the
+vessel sailing first. Not until, with his scanty baggage, he was
+actually on the deck of the next boat to anchor, did he take any
+interest in its course--"For the Rio de la Plata." . . . And he
+accepted these words with a fatalistic shrug. "Very well, let it be
+South America!" The country was not distasteful to him, since he
+knew it by certain travel publications whose illustrations
+represented herds of cattle at liberty, half-naked, plumed Indians,
+and hairy cowboys whirling over their heads serpentine lassos tipped
+with balls.
+
+The millionaire Desnoyers never forgot that trip to America--forty-
+three days navigating in a little worn-out steamer that rattled like
+a heap of old iron, groaned in all its joints at the slightest
+roughness of the sea, and had to stop four times for repairs, at the
+mercy of the winds and waves.
+
+In Montevideo, he learned of the reverses suffered by his country
+and that the French Empire no longer existed. He felt a little
+ashamed when he heard that the nation was now self-governing,
+defending itself gallantly behind the walls of Paris. And he had
+fled! . . . Months afterwards, the events of the Commune consoled
+him for his flight. If he had remained, wrath at the national
+downfall, his relations with his co-laborers, the air in which he
+lived--everything would surely have dragged him along to revolt. In
+that case, he would have been shot or consigned to a colonial prison
+like so many of his former comrades.
+
+So his determination crystallized, and he stopped thinking about the
+affairs of his mother-country. The necessities of existence in a
+foreign land whose language he was beginning to pick up made him
+think only of himself. The turbulent and adventurous life of these
+new nations compelled him to most absurd expedients and varied
+occupations. Yet he felt himself strong with an audacity and self-
+reliance which he never had in the old world. "I am equal to
+everything," he said, "if they only give me time to prove it!"
+Although he had fled from his country in order not to take up arms,
+he even led a soldier's life for a brief period in his adopted land,
+receiving a wound in one of the many hostilities between the whites
+and reds in the unsettled districts.
+
+In Buenos Aires, he again worked as a woodcarver. The city was
+beginning to expand, breaking its shell as a large village.
+Desnoyers spent many years ornamenting salons and facades. It was a
+laborious existence, sedentary and remunerative. But one day he
+became tired of this slow saving which could only bring him a
+mediocre fortune after a long time. He had gone to the new world to
+become rich like so many others. And at twenty-seven, he started
+forth again, a full-fledged adventurer, avoiding the cities, wishing
+to snatch money from untapped, natural sources. He worked farms in
+the forests of the North, but the locusts obliterated his crops in a
+few hours. He was a cattle-driver, with the aid of only two peons,
+driving a herd of oxen and mules over the snowy solitudes of the
+Andes to Bolivia and Chile. In this life, making journeys of many
+months' duration, across interminable plains, he lost exact account
+of time and space. Just as he thought himself on the verge of
+winning a fortune, he lost it all by an unfortunate speculation.
+And in a moment of failure and despair, being now thirty years old,
+he became an employee of Julio Madariaga.
+
+He knew of this rustic millionaire through his purchases of flocks--
+a Spaniard who had come to the country when very young, adapting
+himself very easily to its customs, and living like a cowboy after
+he had acquired enormous properties. The country folk, wishing to
+put a title of respect before his name, called him Don Madariaga.
+
+"Comrade," he said to Desnoyers one day when he happened to be in a
+good humor--a very rare thing for him--"you must have passed through
+many ups and downs. Your lack of silver may be smelled a long ways
+off. Why lead such a dog's life? Trust in me, Frenchy, and remain
+here! I am growing old, and I need a man."
+
+After the Frenchman had arranged to stay with Madariaga, every
+landed proprietor living within fifteen or twenty leagues of the
+ranch, stopped the new employee on the road to prophesy all sorts of
+misfortune.
+
+"You will not stay long. Nobody can get along with Don Madariaga.
+We have lost count of his overseers. He is a man who must be killed
+or deserted. Soon you will go, too!"
+
+Desnoyers did not doubt but that there was some truth in all this.
+Madariaga was an impossible character, but feeling a certain
+sympathy with the Frenchman, had tried not to annoy him with his
+irritability.
+
+"He's a regular pearl, this Frenchy," said the plainsman as though
+trying to excuse himself for his considerate treatment of his latest
+acquisition. "I like him because he is very serious. . . . That is
+the way I like a man."
+
+Desnoyers did not know exactly what this much-admired seriousness
+could be, but he felt a secret pride in seeing him aggressive with
+everybody else, even his family, whilst he took with him a tone of
+paternal bluffness.
+
+The family consisted of his wife Misia Petrona (whom he always
+called the China) and two grown daughters who had gone to school in
+Buenos Aires, but on returning to the ranch had reverted somewhat to
+their original rusticity.
+
+Madariaga's fortune was enormous. He had lived in the field since
+his arrival in America, when the white race had not dared to settle
+outside the towns for fear of the Indians. He had gained his first
+money as a fearless trader, taking merchandise in a cart from fort
+to fort. He had killed Indians, was twice wounded by them, and for
+a while had lived as a captive with an Indian chief whom he finally
+succeeded in making his staunch friend. With his earnings, he had
+bought land, much land, almost worthless because of its insecurity,
+devoting it to the raising of cattle that he had to defend, gun in
+hand, from the pirates of the plains.
+
+Then he had married his China, a young half-breed who was running
+around barefoot, but owned many of her forefathers' fields. They
+had lived in an almost savage poverty on their property which would
+have taken many a day's journey to go around. Afterwards, when the
+government was pushing the Indians towards the frontiers, and
+offering the abandoned lands for sale, considering it a patriotic
+sacrifice on the part of any one wishing to acquire them, Madariaga
+bought and bought at the lowest figure and longest terms. To get
+possession of vast tracts and populate it with blooded stock became
+the mission of his life. At times, galloping with Desnoyers through
+his boundless fields, he was not able to repress his pride.
+
+"Tell me something, Frenchy! They say that further up the country,
+there are some nations about the size of my ranches. Is that so?" . . .
+
+The Frenchman agreed. . . . The lands of Madariaga were indeed
+greater than many principalities. This put the old plainsman in
+rare good humor and he exclaimed in the cowboy vernacular which had
+become second nature to him--"Then it wouldn't be absurd to proclaim
+myself king some day? Just imagine it, Frenchy;--Don Madariaga, the
+First. . . . The worst of it all is that I would also be the last,
+for the China will not give me a son. . . . She is a weak cow!"
+
+The fame of his vast territories and his wealth in stock reached
+even to Buenos Aires. Every one knew of Madariaga by name, although
+very few had seen him. When he went to the Capital, he passed
+unnoticed because of his country aspect--the same leggings that he
+was used to wearing in the fields, his poncho wrapped around him
+like a muffler above which rose the aggressive points of a necktie,
+a tormenting ornament imposed by his daughters, who in vain arranged
+it with loving hands that he might look a little more respectable.
+
+One day he entered the office of the richest merchant of the
+capital.
+
+"Sir, I know that you need some young bulls for the European market,
+and I have come to sell you a few."
+
+The man of affairs looked haughtily at the poor cowboy. He might
+explain his errand to one of the employees, he could not waste his
+time on such small matters. But the malicious grin on the rustic's
+face awoke his curiosity.
+
+"And how many are you able to sell, my good man?"
+
+"About thirty thousand, sir."
+
+It was not necessary to hear more. The supercilious merchant sprang
+from his desk, and obsequiously offered him a seat.
+
+"You can be no other than Don Madariaga."
+
+"At the service of God and yourself, sir," he responded in the
+manner of a Spanish countryman.
+
+That was the most glorious moment of his existence.
+
+In the outer office of the Directors of the Bank, the clerks offered
+him a seat until the personage the other side of the door should
+deign to receive him. But scarcely was his name announced than that
+same director ran to admit him, and the employee was stupefied to
+hear the ranchman say, by way of greeting, "I have come to draw out
+three hundred thousand dollars. I have abundant pasturage, and I
+wish to buy a ranch or two in order to stock them."
+
+His arbitrary and contradictory character weighed upon the
+inhabitants of his lands with both cruel and good-natured tyranny.
+No vagabond ever passed by the ranch without being rudely assailed
+by its owner from the outset.
+
+"Don't tell me any of your hard-luck stories, friend," he would yell
+as if he were going to beat him. "Under the shed is a skinned
+beast; cut and eat as much as you wish and so help yourself to
+continue your journey. . . . But no more of your yarns!"
+
+And he would turn his back upon the tramp, after giving him a few
+dollars.
+
+One day he became infuriated because a peon was nailing the wire
+fencing too deliberately on the posts. Everybody was robbing him!
+The following day he spoke of a large sum of money that he would
+have to pay for having endorsed the note of an acquaintance,
+completely bankrupt. "Poor fellow! His luck is worse than mine!"
+
+Upon finding in the road the skeleton of a recently killed sheep, he
+was beside himself with indignation. It was not because of the loss
+of the meat. "Hunger knows no law, and God has made meat for
+mankind to eat. But they might at least have left the skin!" . . .
+And he would rage against such wickedness, always repeating, "Lack
+of religion and good habits!" The next time, the bandits stripped
+the flesh off of three cows, leaving the skins in full view, and the
+ranchman said, smiling, "That is the way I like people, honorable
+and doing no wrong."
+
+His vigor as a tireless centaur had helped him powerfully in his
+task of populating his lands. He was capricious, despotic and with
+the same paternal instincts as his compatriots who, centuries before
+when conquering the new world, had clarified its native blood. Like
+the Castilian conquistadors, he had a fancy for copper-colored
+beauty with oblique eyes and straight hair. When Desnoyers saw him
+going off on some sudden pretext, putting his horse at full gallop
+toward a neighboring ranch, he would say to himself, smilingly, "He
+is going in search of a new peon who will help work his land fifteen
+years from now."
+
+The personnel of the ranch often used to comment on the resemblance
+of certain youths laboring here the same as the others, galloping
+from the first streak of dawn over the fields, attending to the
+various duties of pasturing. The overseer, Celedonio, a half-breed
+thirty years old, generally detested for his hard and avaricious
+character, also bore a distant resemblance to the patron.
+
+Almost every year, some woman from a great distance, dirty and bad-
+faced, presented herself at the ranch, leading by the hand a little
+mongrel with eyes like live coals. She would ask to speak with the
+proprietor alone, and upon being confronted with her, he usually
+recalled a trip made ten or twelve years before in order to buy a
+herd of cattle.
+
+"You remember, Patron, that you passed the night on my ranch because
+the river had risen?"
+
+The Patron did not remember anything about it. But a vague instinct
+warned him that the woman was probably telling the truth. "Well,
+what of it?"
+
+"Patron, here he is. . . . It is better for him to grow to manhood
+by your side than in any other place."
+
+And she presented him with the little hybrid. One more, and offered
+with such simplicity! . . . "Lack of religion and good habits!"
+Then with sudden modesty, he doubted the woman's veracity. Why must
+it necessarily be his? . . . But his wavering was generally short-
+lived.
+
+"If it's mine, put it with the others."
+
+The mother went away tranquilly, seeing the youngster's future
+assured, because this man so lavish in violence was equally so in
+generosity. In time there would be a bit of land and a good flock
+of sheep for the urchin.
+
+These adoptions at first aroused in Misia Petrona a little
+rebellion--the only ones of her life; but the centaur soon reduced
+her to terrified silence.
+
+"And you dare to complain of me, you weak cow! . . . A woman who
+has only given me daughters. You ought to be ashamed of yourself."
+
+The same hand that negligently extracted from his pocket a wad of
+bills rolled into a ball, giving them away capriciously without
+knowing just how much, also wore a lash hanging from the wrist. It
+was supposed to be for his horse, but it was used with equal
+facility when any of his peons incurred his wrath.
+
+"I strike because I can," he would say to pacify himself.
+
+One day, the man receiving the blow, took a step backward, hunting
+for the knife in his belt.
+
+"You are not going to beat me, Patron. I was not born in these
+parts. . . . I come from Corrientes."
+
+The Patron remained with upraised thong. "Is it true that you were
+not born here? . . . Then you are right; I cannot beat you. Here
+are five dollars for you."
+
+When Desnoyers came on the place, Madariaga was beginning to lose
+count of those who were under his dominion in the old Latin sense,
+and could take his blows. There were so many that confusion often
+reigned.
+
+The Frenchman admired the Patron's expert eye for his business. It
+was enough for him to contemplate for a few moments a herd of
+cattle, to know its exact number. He would go galloping along with
+an indifferent air, around an immense group of horned and stamping
+beasts, and then would suddenly begin to separate the different
+animals. He had discovered that they were sick. With a buyer like
+Madariaga, all the tricks and sharp practice of the drovers came to
+naught.
+
+His serenity before trouble was also admirable. A drought suddenly
+strewed his plains with dead cattle, making the land seem like an
+abandoned battlefield. Everywhere great black hulks. In the air,
+great spirals of crows coming from leagues away. At other times, it
+was the cold; an unexpected drop in the thermometer would cover the
+ground with dead bodies. Ten thousand animals, fifteen thousand,
+perhaps more, all perished!
+
+"WHAT a knock-out!" Madariaga would exclaim with resignation.
+"Without such troubles, this earth would be a paradise. . . . Now,
+the thing to do is to save the skins!"
+
+And he would rail against the false pride of the emigrants, against
+the new customs among the poor which prevented his securing enough
+hands to strip the victims quickly, so that thousands of hides had
+to be lost. Their bones whitened the earth like heaps of snow. The
+peoncitos (little peons) went around putting the skulls of cows with
+crumpled horns on the posts of the wire fences--a rustic decoration
+which suggested a procession of Grecian lyres.
+
+"It is lucky that the land is left, anyway!" added the ranchman.
+
+He loved to race around his immense fields when they were beginning
+to turn green in the late rains. He had been among the first to
+convert these virgin wastes into rich meadow-lands, supplementing
+the natural pasturage with alfalfa. Where one beast had found
+sustenance before, he now had three. "The table is set," he would
+chuckle, "we must now go in search of the guests." And he kept on
+buying, at ridiculous prices, herds dying of hunger in others'
+uncultivated fields, constantly increasing his opulent lands and
+stock.
+
+One morning Desnoyers saved his life. The old ranchman had raised
+his lash against a recently arrived peon who returned the attack,
+knife in hand. Madariaga was defending himself as best he could,
+convinced from one minute to another that he was going to receive
+the deadly knife-thrust--when Desnoyers arrived and, drawing his
+revolver, overcame and disarmed the adversary.
+
+"Thanks, Frenchy," said the ranchman, much touched. "You are an
+all-round man, and I am going to reward you. From this day I shall
+speak to you as I do to my family."
+
+Desnoyers did not know just what this familiar talk might amount to,
+for his employer was so peculiar. Certain personal favors,
+nevertheless, immediately began to improve his position. He was no
+longer allowed to eat in the administration building, the proprietor
+insisting imperiously that henceforth Desnoyers should sit at his
+own table, and thus he was admitted into the intimate life of the
+Madariaga family.
+
+The wife was always silent when her husband was present. She was
+used to rising in the middle of the night in order to oversee the
+breakfasts of the peons, the distribution of biscuit, and the
+boiling of the great black kettles of coffee or shrub tea. She
+looked after the chattering and lazy maids who so easily managed to
+get lost in the nearby groves. In the kitchen, too, she made her
+authority felt like a regular house-mistress, but the minute that
+she heard her husband's voice she shrank into a respectful and
+timorous silence. Upon sitting down at table, the China would look
+at him with devoted submission, her great, round eyes fixed on him,
+like an owl's. Desnoyers felt that in this mute admiration was
+mingled great astonishment at the energy with which the ranchman,
+already over seventy, was continuing to bring new occupants to live
+on his demesne.
+
+The two daughters, Luisa and Elena, accepted with enthusiasm the new
+arrival who came to enliven the monotonous conversations in the
+dining room, so often cut short by their father's wrathful
+outbursts. Besides, he was from Paris. "Paris!" sighed Elena, the
+younger one, rolling her eyes. And Desnoyers was henceforth
+consulted in all matters of style every time they ordered any
+"confections" from the shops of Buenos Aires.
+
+The interior of the house reflected the different tastes of the two
+generations. The girls had a parlor with a few handsome pieces of
+furniture placed against the cracked walls, and some showy lamps
+that were never lighted. The father, with his boorishness, often
+invaded this room so cherished and admired by the two sisters,
+making the carpets look shabby and faded under his muddy boot-
+tracks. Upon the gilt centre-table, he loved to lay his lash.
+Samples of maize scattered its grains over a silk sofa which the
+young ladies tried to keep very choice, as though they feared it
+might break.
+
+Near the entrance to the dining room was a weighing machine, and
+Madariaga became furious when his daughters asked him to remove it
+to the offices. He was not going to trouble himself to go outside
+every time that he wanted to know the weight of a leather skin! . . .
+A piano came into the ranch, and Elena passed the hours
+practising exercises with desperate good will. "Heavens and earth!
+She might at least play the Jota or the Perican, or some other
+lively Spanish dance!" And the irate father, at the hour of siesta,
+betook himself to the nearby eucalyptus trees, to sleep upon his
+poncho.
+
+This younger daughter whom he dubbed La Romantica, was the special
+victim of his wrath and ridicule. Where had she picked up so many
+tastes which he and his good China never had had? Music books were
+piled on the piano. In a corner of the absurd parlor were some
+wooden boxes that had held preserves, which the ranch carpenter had
+been made to press into service as a bookcase.
+
+"Look here, Frenchy," scoffed Madariaga. "All these are novels and
+poems! Pure lies! . . . Hot air!"
+
+He had his private library, vastly more important and glorious, and
+occupying less space. In his desk, adorned with guns, thongs, and
+chaps studded with silver, was a little compartment containing deeds
+and various legal documents which the ranchman surveyed with great
+pride.
+
+"Pay attention, now and hear marvellous things," announced the
+master to Desnoyers, as he took out one of his memorandum books.
+
+This volume contained the pedigree of the famous animals which had
+improved his breeds of stock, the genealogical trees, the patents of
+nobility of his aristocratic beasts. He would have to read its
+contents to him since he did not permit even his family to touch
+these records. And with his spectacles on the end of his nose, he
+would spell out the credentials of each animal celebrity. "Diamond
+III, grandson of Diamond I, owned by the King of England, son of
+Diamond II, winner in the races." His Diamond had cost him many
+thousands, but the finest horses on the ranch, those which brought
+the most marvellous prices, were his descendants.
+
+"That horse had more sense than most people. He only lacked the
+power to talk. He's the one that's stuffed, near the door of the
+parlor. The girls wanted him thrown out. . . . Just let them dare
+to touch him! I'd chuck them out first!"
+
+Then he would continue reading the history of a dynasty of bulls
+with distinctive names and a succession of Roman numbers, the same
+as kings--animals acquired by the stubborn ranchman in the great
+cattle fairs of England. He had never been there, but he had used
+the cable in order to compete in pounds sterling with the British
+owners who wished to keep such valuable stock in their own country.
+Thanks to these blue-blooded sires that had crossed the ocean with
+all the luxury of millionaire passengers, he had been able to
+exhibit in the concourses of Buenos Aires animals which were
+veritable towers of meat, edible elephants with their sides as fit
+and sleek as a table.
+
+"That book amounts to something! Don't you think so, Frenchy? It
+is worth more than all those pictures of moons, lakes, lovers and
+other gewgaws that my Romantica puts on the walls to catch the
+dust."
+
+And he would point out, in contrast, the precious diplomas which
+were adorning his desk, the metal vases and other trophies won in
+the fairs by the descendants of his blooded stock.
+
+Luisa, the elder daughter, called Chicha, in the South American
+fashion, was much more respected by her father. "She is my poor
+China right over again," he said, "the same good nature, and the
+same faculty for work, but more of a lady." Desnoyers entirely
+agreed with him, and yet the father's description seemed to him weak
+and incomplete. He could not admit that the pale, modest girl with
+the great black eyes and smile of childish mischief bore the
+slightest resemblance to the respectable matron who had brought her
+into existence.
+
+The great fiesta for Chicha was the Sunday mass. It represented a
+journey of three leagues to the nearest village, a weekly contact
+with people unlike those of the ranch. A carriage drawn by four
+horses took the senora and the two senoritas in the latest suits and
+hats arrived, via Buenos Aires, from Europe. At the suggestion of
+Chicha, Desnoyers accompanied them in the capacity of driver.
+
+The father remained at home, taking advantage of this opportunity to
+survey his fields in their Sunday solitude, thus keeping a closer
+oversight on the shiftlessness of his hands. He was very religious--
+"Religion and good manners, you know." But had he not given
+thousands of dollars toward building the neighboring church? A man
+of his fortune should not be submitted to the same obligations as
+ragamuffins!
+
+During the Sunday lunch the young ladies were apt to make comments
+upon the persons and merits of the young men of the village and
+neighboring ranches, who had lingered at the church door in order to
+chat with them.
+
+"Don't fool yourselves, girls!" observed the father shrewdly. "You
+believe that they want you for your elegance, don't you? . . . What
+those shameless fellows really want are the dollars of old
+Madariaga, and once they had them, they would probably give you a
+daily beating."
+
+For a while the ranch received numerous visitors. Some were young
+men of the neighborhood who arrived on spirited steeds, performing
+all kinds of tricks of fancy horsemanship. They wanted to see Don
+Julio on the most absurd pretexts, and at the same time improved the
+opportunity to chat with Chicha and Luisa. At other times they were
+youths from Buenos Aires asking for a lodging at the ranch, as they
+were just passing by. Don Madariaga would growl--
+
+"Another good-for-nothing scamp who comes in search of the Spanish
+ranchman! If he doesn't move on soon . . . I'll kick him out!"
+
+But the suitor did not stand long on the order of his going,
+intimidated by the ominous silence of the Patron. This silence, of
+late, had persisted in an alarming manner, in spite of the fact that
+the ranch was no longer receiving visitors. Madariaga appeared
+abstracted, and all the family, including Desnoyers, respected and
+feared this taciturnity. He ate, scowling, with lowered head.
+Suddenly he would raise his eyes, looking at Chicha, then at
+Desnoyers, finally fixing them upon his wife as though asking her to
+give an account of things.
+
+His Romantica simply did not exist for him. The only notice that he
+ever took of her was to give an ironical snort when he happened to
+see her leaning at sunset against the doorway, looking at the
+reddening glow--one elbow on the door frame and her cheek in her
+hand, in imitation of the posture of a certain white lady that she
+had seen in a chromo, awaiting the knight of her dreams.
+
+Desnoyers had been five years in the house when one day he entered
+his master's private office with the brusque air of a timid person
+who has suddenly reached a decision.
+
+"Don Julio, I am going to leave and I would like our accounts
+settled."
+
+Madariaga looked at him slyly. "Going to leave, eh? . . . What
+for?" But in vain he repeated his questions. The Frenchman was
+floundering through a series of incoherent explanations--"I'm going;
+I've got to go."
+
+"Ah, you thief, you false prophet!" shouted the ranchman in
+stentorian tones.
+
+But Desnoyers did not quail before the insults. He had often heard
+his Patron use these same words when holding somebody up to
+ridicule, or haggling with certain cattle drovers.
+
+"Ah, you thief, you false prophet! Do you suppose that I do not
+know why you are going? Do you suppose old Madariaga has not seen
+your languishing looks and those of my dead fly of a daughter,
+clasping each others' hands in the presence of poor China who is
+blinded in her judgment? . . . It's not such a bad stroke, Frenchy.
+By it, you would be able to get possession of half of the old
+Spaniard's dollars, and then say that you had made it in America.
+
+And while he was storming, or rather howling, all this, he had
+grasped his lash and with the butt end kept poking his manager in
+the stomach with such insistence that it might be construed in an
+affectionate or hostile way.
+
+"For this reason I have come to bid you good-bye," said Desnoyers
+haughtily. "I know that my love is absurd, and I wish to leave."
+
+"The gentleman would go away," the ranchman continued spluttering.
+"The gentleman believes that here one can do what one pleases! No,
+siree! Here nobody commands but old Madariaga, and I order you to
+stay. . . . Ah, these women! They only serve to antagonize men.
+And yet we can't live without them!" . . .
+
+He took several turns up and down the room, as though his last words
+were making him think of something very different from what he had
+just been saying. Desnoyers looked uneasily at the thong which was
+still hanging from his wrist. Suppose he should attempt to whip him
+as he did the peons? . . . He was still undecided whether to hold
+his own against a man who had always treated him with benevolence
+or, while his back was turned, to take refuge in discreet flight,
+when the ranchman planted himself before him.
+
+"You really love her, really?" he asked. "Are you sure that she
+loves you? Be careful what you say, for love is blind and
+deceitful. I, too, when I married my China was crazy about her. Do
+you love her, honestly and truly? . . . Well then, take her, you
+devilish Frenchy. Somebody has to take her, and may she not turn
+out a weak cow like her mother! . . . Let us have the ranch full of
+grandchildren!"
+
+In voicing this stock-raiser's wish, again appeared the great
+breeder of beasts and men. And as though he considered it necessary
+to explain his concession, he added--"I do all this because I like
+you; and I like you because you are serious."
+
+Again the Frenchman was plunged in doubt, not knowing in just what
+this greatly appreciated seriousness consisted.
+
+At his wedding, Desnoyers thought much of his mother. If only the
+poor old woman could witness this extraordinary stroke of good
+fortune! But she had died the year before, believing her son
+enormously rich because he had been sending her sixty dollars every
+month, taken from the wages that he had earned on the ranch.
+
+Desnoyers' entrance into the family made his father-in-law pay less
+attention to business.
+
+City life, with all its untried enchantments and snares, now
+attracted Madariaga, and he began to speak with contempt of country
+women, poorly groomed and inspiring him with disgust. He had given
+up his cowboy attire, and was displaying with childish satisfaction,
+the new suits in which a tailor of the Capital was trying to
+disguise him. When Elena wished to accompany him to Buenos Aires,
+he would wriggle out of it, trumping up some absorbing business.
+"No; you go with your mother."
+
+The fate of his fields and flocks gave him no uneasiness. His
+fortune, managed by Desnoyers, was in good hands.
+
+"He is very serious," again affirmed the old Spaniard to his family
+assembled in the dining roam--"as serious as I am. . . . Nobody can
+make a fool of him!"
+
+And finally the Frenchman concluded that when his father-in-law
+spoke of seriousness he was referring to his strength of character.
+According to the spontaneous declaration of Madariaga, he had, from
+the very first day that he had dealings with Desnoyers, perceived in
+him a nature like his own, more hard and firm perhaps, but without
+splurges of eccentricities. On this account he had treated him with
+such extraordinary circumspection, foreseeing that a clash between
+the two could never be adjusted. Their only disagreements were
+about the expenses established by Madariaga during his regime.
+Since the son-in-law was managing the ranches, the work was costing
+less, and the people working more diligently;--and that, too,
+without yells, and without strong words and deeds, with only his
+presence and brief orders.
+
+The old man was the only one defending the capricious system of a
+blow followed by a gift. He revolted against a minute and
+mechanical administration, always the same, without any arbitrary
+extravagance or good-natured tyranny. Very frequently some of the
+half-breed peons whom a malicious public supposed to be closely
+related to the ranchman, would present themselves before Desnoyers
+with, "Senor Manager, the old Patron say that you are to give me
+five dollars." The Senor Manager would refuse, and soon after
+Madariaga would rush in in a furious temper, but measuring his
+words, nevertheless, remembering that his son-in-law's disposition
+was as serious as his own.
+
+"I like you very much, my son, but here no one overrules me. . . .
+Ah, Frenchy, you are like all the rest of your countrymen! Once you
+get your claws on a penny, it goes into your stocking, and nevermore
+sees the light of day, even though they crucify you. . . ! Did I
+say five dollars? Give him ten. I command it and that is enough."
+
+The Frenchman paid, shrugging his shoulders, whilst his father-in-
+law, satisfied with his triumph, fled to Buenos Aires. It was a
+good thing to have it well understood that the ranch still belonged
+to Madariaga, the Spaniard.
+
+From one of these trips, he returned with a companion, a young
+German who, according to him, knew everything and could do
+everything. His son-in-law was working too hard. This Karl
+Hartrott would assist him in the bookkeeping. Desnoyers accepted
+the situation, and in a few days felt increasing esteem for the new
+incumbent.
+
+Although they belonged to two unfriendly nations, it didn't matter.
+There are good people everywhere, and this Karl was a subordinate
+worth considering. He kept his distance from his equals, and was
+hard and inflexible toward his inferiors. All his faculties seemed
+concentrated in service and admiration for those above him.
+Scarcely would Madariaga open his lips before the German's head
+began nodding in agreement, anticipating his words. If he said
+anything funny, his clerk's laugh would break forth in scandalous
+roars. With Desnoyers he appeared more taciturn, working without
+stopping for hours at a time. As soon as he saw the manager
+entering the office he would leap from his seat, holding himself
+erect with military precision. He was always ready to do anything
+whatever. Unasked, he spied on the workmen, reporting their
+carelessness and mistakes. This last service did not especially
+please his superior officer, but he appreciated it as a sign of
+interest in the establishment.
+
+The old man bragged triumphantly of the new acquisition, urging his
+son-in-law also to rejoice.
+
+"A very useful fellow, isn't he? . . . These gringoes from Germany
+work well, know a good many things and cost little. Then, too, so
+disciplined! so servile! . . . I am sorry to praise him so to you
+because you are a Frenchy, and your nation has in them a very
+powerful enemy. His people are a hard-shelled race."
+
+Desnoyers replied with a shrug of indifference. His country was far
+away, and so was Germany. Who knew if they would ever return! . . .
+They were both Argentinians now, and ought to interest themselves in
+present affairs and not bother about the past.
+
+"And how little pride they have!" sneered Madariaga in an ironical
+tone. "Every one of these gringoes when he is a clerk at the
+Capital sweeps the shop, prepares the meals, keeps the books, sells
+to the customers, works the typewriter, translates four or five
+languages, and dances attendance on the proprietor's lady friend, as
+though she were a grand senora . . . all for twenty-five dollars a
+month. Who can compete with such people! You, Frenchy, you are
+like me, very serious, and would die of hunger before passing
+through certain things. But, mark my words, on this very account
+they are going to become a terrible people!"
+
+After brief reflection, the ranchman added:
+
+"Perhaps they are not so good as they seem. Just see how they treat
+those under them! It may be that they affect this simplicity
+without having it, and when they grin at receiving a kick, they are
+saying inside, "Just wait till my turn comes, and I'll give you
+three!"
+
+Then he suddenly seemed to repent of his suspicions.
+
+"At any rate, this Karl is a poor fellow, a mealy-mouthed simpleton
+who the minute I say anything opens his jaws like a fly-catcher. He
+insists that he comes of a great family, but who knows anything
+about these gringoes? . . . All of us, dead with hunger when we
+reach America, claim to be sons of princes."
+
+Madariaga had placed himself on a familiar footing with his Teutonic
+treasure, not through gratitude as with Desnoyers, but in order to
+make him feel his inferiority. He had also introduced him on an
+equal footing in his home, but only that he might give piano lessons
+to his younger daughter. The Romantica was no longer framing
+herself in the doorway--in the gloaming watching the sunset
+reflections. When Karl had finished his work in the office, he was
+now coming to the house and seating himself beside Elena, who was
+tinkling away with a persistence worthy of a better fate. At the
+end of the hour the German, accompanying himself on the piano, would
+sing fragments from Wagner in such a way that it put Madariaga to
+sleep in his armchair with his great Paraguay cigar sticking out of
+his mouth.
+
+Elena meanwhile was contemplating with increasing interest the
+singing gringo. He was not the knight of her dreams awaited by the
+fair lady. He was almost a servant, a blond immigrant with reddish
+hair, fat, heavy, and with bovine eyes that reflected an eternal
+fear of disagreeing with his chiefs. But day by day, she was
+finding in him something which rather modified these impressions--
+his feminine fairness, except where he was burned by the sun, the
+increasingly martial aspect of his moustachios, the agility with
+which he mounted his horse, his air of a troubadour, intoning with a
+rather weak tenor voluptuous romances whose words she did not
+understand.
+
+One night, just before supper, the impressionable girl announced
+with a feverish excitement which she could no longer repress that
+she had made a grand discovery.
+
+"Papa, Karl is of noble birth! He belongs to a great family."
+
+The plainsman made a gesture of indifference. Other things were
+vexing him in those days. But during the evening, feeling the
+necessity of venting on somebody the wrath which had been gnawing at
+his vitals since his last trip to Buenos Aires, he interrupted the
+singer.
+
+"See here, gringo, what is all this nonsense about nobility which
+you have been telling my girl?"
+
+Karl left the piano that he might draw himself up to the approved
+military position before responding. Under the influence of his
+recent song, his pose suggested Lohengrin about to reveal the secret
+of his life. His father had been General von Hartrott, one of the
+commanders in the war of '70. The Emperor had rewarded his services
+by giving him a title. One of his uncles was an intimate councillor
+of the King of Prussia. His older brothers were conspicuous in the
+most select regiments. He had carried a sword as a lieutenant.
+
+Bored with all this grandeur, Madariaga interrupted him. "Lies . . .
+nonsense . . . hot air!" The very idea of a gringo talking to him
+about nobility! . . . He had left Europe when very young in order
+to cast in his lot with the revolting democracies of America, and
+although nobility now seemed to him something out-of-date and
+incomprehensible, still he stoutly maintained that the only true
+nobility was that of his own country. He would yield first place to
+the gringoes for the invention of machinery and ships, and for
+breeding priceless animals, but all the Counts and Marquises of
+Gringo-land appeared to him to be fictitious characters.
+
+"All tomfoolery!" he blustered. "There isn't any nobility in your
+country, nor have you five dollars all told to rub against each
+other. If you had, you wouldn't come over here to play the gallant
+to women who are . . . you know what they are as well as I do."
+
+To the astonishment of Desnoyers, the German received this onslaught
+with much humility, nodding his head in agreement with the Patron's
+last words.
+
+"If there's any truth in all this twaddle about titles," continued
+Madariaga implacably, "swords and uniforms, what did you come here
+for? What in the devil did you do in your own country that you had
+to leave it?"
+
+Now Karl hung his head, confused and stuttering.
+
+"Papa, papa," pleaded Elena. "The poor little fellow! How can you
+humiliate him so just because he is poor?"
+
+And she felt a deep gratitude toward her brother-in-law when he
+broke through his usual reserve in order to come to the rescue of
+the German.
+
+"Oh, yes, of course, he's a good-enough fellow," said Madariaga,
+excusing himself. "But he comes from a land that I detest."
+
+When Desnoyers made a trip to Buenos Aires a few days afterward, the
+cause of the old man's wrath was explained. It appeared that for
+some months past Madariaga had been the financial guarantor and
+devoted swain of a German prima donna stranded in South America with
+an Italian opera company. It was she who had recommended Karl--an
+unfortunate countryman, who after wandering through many parts of
+the continent, was now living with her as a sort of gentlemanly
+singer. Madariaga had joyously expended upon this courtesan many
+thousands of dollars. A childish enthusiasm had accompanied him in
+this novel existence midst urban dissipations until he happened to
+discover that his Fraulein was leading another life during his
+absence, laughing at him with the parasites of her retinue;
+whereupon he arose in his wrath and bade her farewell to the
+accompaniment of blows and broken furniture.
+
+The last adventure of his life! . . . Desnoyers suspected his
+abdication upon hearing him admit his age, for the first time. He
+did not intend to return to the capital. It was all false glitter.
+Existence in the country, surrounded by all his family and doing
+good to the poor was the only sure thing. And the terrible centaur
+expressed himself with the idyllic tenderness and firm virtue of
+seventy-five years, already insensible to temptation.
+
+After his scene with Karl, he had increased the German's salary,
+trying as usual, to counteract the effects of his violent outbreaks
+with generosity. That which he could not forget was his dependent's
+nobility, constantly making it the subject of new jests. That
+glorious boast had brought to his mind the genealogical trees of the
+illustrious ancestry of his prize cattle. The German was a
+pedigreed fellow, and thenceforth he called him by that nickname.
+
+Seated on summer nights under the awning, he surveyed his family
+around him with a sort of patriarchal ecstasy. In the evening hush
+could be heard the buzzing of insects and the croaking of the frogs.
+From the distant ranches floated the songs of the peons as they
+prepared their suppers. It was harvest time, and great bands of
+immigrants were encamped in the fields for the extra work.
+
+Madariaga had known many of the hard old days of wars and violence.
+Upon his arrival in South America, he had witnessed the last years
+of the tyranny of Rosas. He loved to enumerate the different
+provincial and national revolutions in which he had taken part. But
+all this had disappeared and would never return. These were the
+times of peace, work and abundance.
+
+"Just think of it, Frenchy," he said, driving away the mosquitoes
+with the puffs of his cigar. "I am Spanish, you French, Karl
+German, my daughters Argentinians, the cook Russian, his assistant
+Greek, the stable boy English, the kitchen servants Chinas
+(natives), Galicians or Italians, and among the peons there are many
+castes and laws. . . . And yet we all live in peace. In Europe, we
+would have probably been in a grand fight by this time, but here we
+are all friends."
+
+He took much pleasure in listening to the music of the laborers--
+laments from Italian songs to the accompaniment of the accordion,
+Spanish guitars and Creole choruses, wild voices chanting of love
+and death.
+
+"This is a regular Noah's ark," exulted the vainglorious patriarch.
+
+"He means the tower of Babel," thought Desnoyers to himself, "but
+it's all the same thing to the old man."
+
+"I believe," he rambled on, "that we live thus because in this part
+of the world there are no kings and a very small army--and mankind
+is thinking only of enjoying itself as much as possible, thanks to
+its work. But I also believe that we live so peacefully because
+there is such abundance that everyone gets his share. . . . How
+quickly we would spring to arms if the rations were less than the
+people!"
+
+Again he fell into reflective silence, shortly after announcing the
+result of his meditations.
+
+"Be that as it may be, we must recognize that here life is more
+tranquil than in the other world. Men are taken for what they are
+worth, and mingle together without thinking whether they came from
+one country or another. Over here, fellows do not come in droves to
+kill other fellows whom they do not know and whose only crime is
+that they were born in an unfriendly country. . . . Man is a bad
+beast everywhere, I know that; but here he eats, owns more land than
+he needs so that he can stretch himself, and he is good with the
+goodness of a well-fed dog. Over there, there are too many; they
+live in heaps getting in each other's way, and easily run amuck.
+Hurrah for Peace, Frenchy, and the simple life! Where a man can
+live comfortably and runs no danger of being killed for things he
+doesn't understand--there is his real homeland!"
+
+And as though an echo of the rustic's reflections, Karl seated at
+the piano, began chanting in a low voice one of Beethoven's hymns--
+
+
+ "We sing the joy of life,
+ We sing of liberty,
+ We'll ne'er betray our fellow-man,
+ Though great the guerdon be."
+
+
+Peace! . . . A few days afterward Desnoyers recalled bitterly the
+old man's illusion, for war--domestic war--broke loose in this
+idyllic stage-setting of ranch life.
+
+"Run, Senor Manager, the old Patron has unsheathed his knife and is
+going to kill the German!" And Desnoyers had hurried from his
+office, warned by the peon's summons. Madariaga was chasing Karl,
+knife in hand, stumbling over everything that blocked his way. Only
+his son-in-law dared to stop him and disarm him.
+
+"That shameless pedigreed fellow!" bellowed the livid old man as he
+writhed in Desnoyers' firm clutch. "Half famished, all he thinks he
+has to do is to come to my house and take away my daughters and
+dollars. . . . Let me go, I tell you! Let me loose that I may kill
+him."
+
+And in order to free himself from Desnoyers, he tried further to
+explain the difficulty. He had accepted the Frenchman as a husband
+for his daughter because he was to his liking, modest, honest . . .
+and serious. But this singing Pedigreed Fellow, with all his
+airs! . . . He was a man that he had gotten from . . . well, he
+didn't wish to say just where! And the Frenchman, though knowing
+perfectly well what his introduction to Karl had been, pretended
+not to understand him.
+
+As the German had, by this time, made good his escape, the ranchman
+consented to being pushed toward his house, talking all the time
+about giving a beating to the Romantica and another to the China for
+not having informed him of the courtship. He had surprised his
+daughter and the Gringo holding hands and exchanging kisses in a
+grove near the house.
+
+"He's after my dollars," howled the irate father. "He wants America
+to enrich him quickly at the expense of the old Spaniard, and that
+is the reason for so much truckling, so much psalm-singing and so
+much nobility! Imposter! . . . Musician!"
+
+And he repeated the word "musician" with contempt, as though it were
+the sum and substance of everything vile.
+
+Very firmly and with few words, Desnoyers brought the wrangling to
+an end. While her brother-in-law protected her retreat, the
+Romantica, clinging to her mother, had taken refuge in the top of
+the house, sobbing and moaning, "Oh, the poor little fellow!
+Everybody against him!" Her sister meanwhile was exerting all the
+powers of a discreet daughter with the rampageous old man in the
+office, and Desnoyers had gone in search of Karl. Finding that he
+had not yet recovered from the shock of his terrible surprise, he
+gave him a horse, advising him to betake himself as quickly as
+possible to the nearest railway station.
+
+Although the German was soon far from the ranch, he did not long
+remain alone. In a few days, the Romantica followed him. . . .
+Iseult of the white hands went in search of Tristan, the knight.
+
+This event did not cause Madariaga's desperation to break out as
+violently as his son-in-law had expected. For the first time, he
+saw him weep. His gay and robust old age had suddenly fallen from
+him, the news having clapped ten years on to his four score. Like a
+child, whimpering and tremulous, he threw his arms around Desnoyers,
+moistening his neck with tears.
+
+"He has taken her away! That son of a great flea . . . has taken
+her away!"
+
+This time he did not lay all the blame on his China. He wept with
+her, and as if trying to console her by a public confession, kept
+saying over and over:
+
+"It is my fault. . . . It has all been because of my very, very
+great sins."
+
+Now began for Desnoyers a period of difficulties and conflicts. The
+fugitives, on one of his visits to the Capital, threw themselves on
+his mercy, imploring his protection. The Romantica wept, declaring
+that only her brother-in-law, "the most knightly man in the world,"
+could save her. Karl gazed at him like a faithful hound trusting in
+his master. These trying interviews were repeated on all his trips.
+Then, on returning to the ranch, he would find the old man ill-
+humored, moody, looking fixedly ahead of him as though seeing
+invisible power and wailing, "It is my punishment--the punishment
+for my sins."
+
+The memory of the discreditable circumstances under which he had
+made Karl's acquaintance, before bringing him into his home,
+tormented the old centaur with remorse. Some afternoons, he would
+have a horse saddled, going full gallop toward the neighboring
+village. But he was no longer hunting hospitable ranches. He
+needed to pass some time in the church, speaking alone with the
+images that were there only for him--since he had footed the bills
+for them. . . . "Through my sin, through my very great sin!"
+
+But in spite of his self-reproach, Desnoyers had to work very hard
+to get any kind of a settlement out of the old penitent. Whenever
+he suggested legalizing the situation and making the necessary
+arrangements for their marriage, the old tyrant would not let him go
+on. "Do what you think best, but don't say anything to me about
+it."
+
+Several months passed by. One day the Frenchman approached him with
+a certain air of mystery. "Elena has a son and has named him
+'Julio' after you."
+
+"And you, you great useless hulk," stormed the ranchman, "and that
+weak cow of a wife of yours, you dare to live tranquilly on without
+giving me a grandson! . . . Ah, Frenchy, that is why the Germans
+will finally overwhelm you. You see it, right here. That bandit
+has a son, while you, after four years of marriage . . . nothing. I
+want a grandson!--do you understand THAT?"
+
+And in order to console himself for this lack of little ones around
+his own hearth, he betook himself to the ranch of his overseer,
+Celedonio, where a band of little half-breeds gathered tremblingly
+and hopefully about him.
+
+Suddenly China died. The poor Misia Petrona passed away as
+discreetly as she had lived, trying even in her last hours to avoid
+all annoyance for her husband, asking his pardon with an imploring
+look for any trouble which her death might cause him. Elena came to
+the ranch in order to see her mother's body for the last time, and
+Desnoyers who for more than a year had been supporting them behind
+his father-in-law's back, took advantage of this occasion to
+overcome the old man's resentment.
+
+"Well, I'll forgive her," said the ranchman finally. "I'll do it
+for the sake of my poor wife and for you. She may remain on the
+ranch, and that shameless gringo may come with her."
+
+But he would have nothing to do with him. The German was to be an
+employee under Desnoyers, and they could live in the office building
+as though they did not belong to the family. He would never say a
+word to Karl.
+
+But scarcely had the German returned before he began giving him
+orders rudely as though he were a perfect stranger. At other times
+he would pass by him as though he did not know him. Upon finding
+Elena in the house with his older daughter, he would go on without
+speaking to her.
+
+In vain his Romantica transfigured by maternity, improved all
+opportunities for putting her child in his way, calling him loudly
+by name: "Julio . . . Julio!"
+
+"They want that brat of a singing gringo, that carrot top with a
+face like a skinned kid to be my grandson? . . . I prefer
+Celedonio's."
+
+And by way of emphasizing his protest, he entered the dwelling of
+his overseer, scattering among his dusky brood handfuls of dollars.
+
+After seven years of marriage, the wife of Desnoyers found that she,
+too, was going to become a mother. Her sister already had three
+sons. But what were they worth to Madariaga compared to the
+grandson that was going to come? "It will be a boy," he announced
+positively, "because I need one so. It shall be named Julio, and I
+hope that it will look like my poor dead wife."
+
+Since the death of his wife he no longer called her the China,
+feeling something of a posthumous love for the poor woman who in her
+lifetime had endured so much, so timidly and silently. Now "my poor
+dead wife" cropped out every other instant in the conversation of
+the remorseful ranchman.
+
+His desires were fulfilled. Luisa gave birth to a boy who bore the
+name of Julio, and although he did not show in his somewhat sketchy
+features any striking resemblance to his grandmother, still he had
+the black hair and eyes and olive skin of a brunette. Welcome! . . .
+This WAS a grandson!
+
+In the generosity of his joy, he even permitted the German to enter
+the house for the baptismal ceremony.
+
+When Julio Desnoyers was two years old, his grandfather made the
+rounds of his estates, holding him on the saddle in front of him.
+He went from ranch to ranch in order to show him to the copper-
+colored populace, like an ancient monarch presenting his heir.
+Later on, when the child was able to say a few words, he entertained
+himself for hours at a time talking with the tot under the shade of
+the eucalyptus tree. A certain mental failing was beginning to be
+noticed in the old man. Although not exactly in his dotage, his
+aggressiveness was becoming very childish. Even in his most
+affectionate moments, he used to contradict everybody, and hunt up
+ways of annoying his relatives.
+
+"Come here, you false prophet," he would say to Julio. "You are a
+Frenchy."
+
+The grandchild protested as though he had been insulted. His mother
+had taught him that he was an Argentinian, and his father had
+suggested that she also add Spanish, in order to please the
+grandfather.
+
+"Very well, then; if you are not a Frenchy, shout, 'Down with
+Napoleon!'"
+
+And he looked around him to see if Desnoyers might be near,
+believing that this would displease him greatly. But his son-in-law
+pursued the even tenor of his way, shrugging his shoulders.
+
+"Down with Napoleon!" repeated Julio.
+
+And he instantly held out his hand while his grandfather went
+through his pockets.
+
+Karl's sons, now four in number, used to circle around their
+grandparent like a humble chorus kept at a distance, and stare
+enviously at these gifts. In order to win his favor, they one day
+when they saw him alone, came boldly up to him, shouting in unison,
+"Down with Napoleon!"
+
+"You insolent gringoes!" ranted the old man. "That's what that
+shameless father has taught you! If you say that again, I'll chase
+you with a cat-o-nine-tails. . . . The very idea of insulting a
+great man in that way!"
+
+While he tolerated this blond brood, he never would permit the
+slightest intimacy. Desnoyers and his wife often had to come to
+their rescue, accusing the grandfather of injustice. And in order
+to pour the vials of his wrath out on someone, the old plainsman
+would hunt up Celedonio, the best of his listeners, who invariably
+replied, "Yes, Patron. That's so, Patron."
+
+"They're not to blame," agreed the old man, "but I can't abide them!
+Besides, they are so like their father, so fair, with hair like a
+shredded carrot, and the two oldest wearing specs as if they were
+court clerks! . . . They don't seem like folks with those glasses;
+they look like sharks."
+
+Madariaga had never seen any sharks, but he imagined them, without
+knowing why, with round, glassy eyes, like the bottoms of bottles.
+
+By the time he was eight years old, Julio was a famous little
+equestrian. "To horse, peoncito," his grandfather would cry, and
+away they would race, streaking like lightning across the fields,
+midst thousands and thousands of horned herds. The "peoncito,"
+proud of his title, obeyed the master in everything, and so learned
+to whirl the lasso over the steers, leaving them bound and
+conquered. Upon making his pony take a deep ditch or creep along
+the edge of the cliffs, he sometimes fell under his mount, but
+clambered up gamely.
+
+"Ah, fine cowboy!" exclaimed the grandfather bursting with pride in
+his exploits. "Here are five dollars for you to give a handkerchief
+to some china."
+
+The old man, in his increasing mental confusion, did not gauge his
+gifts exactly with the lad's years; and the infantile horseman,
+while keeping the money, was wondering what china was referred to,
+and why he should make her a present.
+
+Desnoyers finally had to drag his son away from the baleful
+teachings of his grandfather. It was simply useless to have masters
+come to the house, or to send Julio to the country school.
+Madariaga would always steal his grandson away, and then they would
+scour the plains together. So when the boy was eleven years old,
+his father placed him in a big school in the Capital.
+
+The grandfather then turned his attention to Julio's three-year-old
+sister, exhibiting her before him as he had her brother, as he took
+her from ranch to ranch. Everybody called Chicha's little girl
+Chichi, but the grandfather bestowed on her the same nickname that
+he had given her brother, the "peoncito." And Chichi, who was
+growing up wild, vigorous and wilful, breakfasting on meat and
+talking in her sleep of roast beef, readily fell in with the old
+man's tastes. She was dressed like a boy, rode astride like a man,
+and in order to win her grandfather's praises as "fine cowboy,"
+carried a knife in the back of her belt. The two raced the fields
+from sun to sun, Madariaga following the flying pigtail of the
+little Amazon as though it were a flag. When nine years old she,
+too, could lasso the cattle with much dexterity.
+
+What most irritated the ranchman was that his family would remember
+his age. He received as insults his son-in-law's counsels to remain
+quietly at home, becoming more aggressive and reckless as he
+advanced in years, exaggerating his activity, as if he wished to
+drive Death away. He accepted no help except from his harum-scarum
+"Peoncito." When Karl's children, great hulking youngsters,
+hastened to his assistance and offered to hold his stirrup, he would
+repel them with snorts of indignation.
+
+"So you think I am no longer able to help myself, eh! . . . There's
+still enough life in me to make those who are waiting for me to die,
+so as to grab my dollars, chew their disappointment a long while
+yet!"
+
+Since the German and his wife were kept pointedly apart from the
+family life, they had to put up with these allusions in silence.
+Karl, needing protection, constantly shadowed the Frenchman,
+improving every opportunity to overwhelm him with his eulogies. He
+never could thank him enough for all that he had done for him. He
+was his only champion. He longed for a chance to prove his
+gratitude, to die for him if necessary. His wife admired him with
+enthusiasm as "the most gifted knight in the world." And Desnoyers
+received their devotion in gratified silence, accepting the German
+as an excellent comrade. As he controlled absolutely the family
+fortune, he aided Karl very generously without arousing the
+resentment of the old man. He also took the initiative in bringing
+about the realization of Karl's pet ambition--a visit to the
+Fatherland. So many years in America! . . . For the very reason
+that Desnoyers himself had no desire to return to Europe, he wished
+to facilitate Karl's trip, and gave him the means to make the
+journey with his entire family. The father-in-law had no curiosity
+as to who paid the expenses. "Let them go!" he said gleefully, "and
+may they never return!"
+
+Their absence was not a very long one, for they spent their year's
+allowance in three months. Karl, who had apprised his parents of
+the great fortune which his marriage had brought him, wished to make
+an impression as a millionaire, in full enjoyment of his riches.
+Elena returned radiant, speaking with pride of her relatives--of the
+baron, Colonel of Hussars, of the Captain of the Guard, of the
+Councillor at Court--asserting that all countries were most
+insignificant when compared with her husband's. She even affected a
+certain condescension toward Desnoyers, praising him as "a very
+worthy man, but without ancient lineage or distinguished family--and
+French, besides."
+
+Karl, on the other hand, showed the same devotion as before, keeping
+himself submissively in the background when with his brother-in-law
+who had the keys of the cash box and was his only defense against
+the browbeating old Patron. . . . He had left his two older sons in
+a school in Germany. Years afterwards they reached an equal footing
+with the other grandchildren of the Spaniard who always begrudged
+them their existence, "perfect frights, with carroty hair, and eyes
+like a shark."
+
+Suddenly the old man became very lonely, for they had also carried
+off his second "Peoncito." The good Chicha could not tolerate her
+daughter's growing up like a boy, parading 'round on horseback all
+the time, and glibly repeating her grandfather's vulgarities. So
+she was now in a convent in the Capital, where the Sisters had to
+battle valiantly in order to tame the mischievous rebellion of their
+wild little pupil.
+
+When Julio and Chichi returned to the ranch for their vacations, the
+grandfather again concentrated his fondness on the first, as though
+the girl had merely been a substitute. Desnoyers was becoming
+indignant at his son's dissipated life. He was no longer at
+college, and his existence was that of a student in a rich family
+who makes up for parental parsimony with all sorts of imprudent
+borrowings.
+
+But Madariaga came to the defense of his grandson. "Ah, the fine
+cowboy!" . . . Seeing him again on the ranch, he admired the dash
+of the good looking youth, testing his muscles in order to convince
+himself of their strength, and making him to recount his nightly
+escapades as ringleader of a band of toughs in the Capital. He
+longed to go to Buenos Aires himself, just to see the youngster in
+the midst of this gay, wild life. But alas! he was not seventeen
+like his grandson; he had already passed eighty.
+
+"Come here, you false prophet! Tell me how many children you
+have. . . . You must have a great many children, you know!"
+
+"Father!" protested Chicha who was always hanging around, fearing
+her parent's bad teachings.
+
+"Stop nagging at me!" yelled the irate old fellow in a towering
+temper. "I know what I'm saying."
+
+Paternity figured largely in all his amorous fancies. He was almost
+blind, and the loss of his sight was accompanied by an increasing
+mental upset. His crazy senility took on a lewd character,
+expressing itself in language which scandalized or amused the
+community.
+
+"Oh, you rascal, what a pretty fellow you are!" he said, leering at
+Julio with eyes which could no longer distinguish things except in a
+shadowy way. "You are the living image of my poor dead wife. . . .
+Have a good time, for Grandpa is always here with his money! If you
+could only count on what your father gives you, you would live like
+a hermit. These Frenchies are a close-fisted lot! But I am looking
+out for you. Peoncito! Spend and enjoy yourself--that's what your
+Granddaddy has piled up the silver for!"
+
+When the Desnoyers children returned to the Capital, he spent his
+lonesome hours in going from ranch to ranch. A young half-breed
+would set the water for his shrub-tea to boiling on the hearth, and
+the old man would wonder confusedly if she were his daughter.
+Another, fifteen years old, would offer him a gourd filled with the
+bitter liquid and a silver pipe with which to sip it. . . . A
+grandchild, perhaps--he wasn't sure. And so he passed the
+afternoons, silent and sluggish, drinking gourd after gourd of shrub
+tea, surrounded by families who stared at him with admiration and
+fear.
+
+Every time he mounted his horse for these excursions, his older
+daughter would protest. "At eighty-four years! Would it not be
+better for him to remain quietly at home. . . . Some day something
+terrible would happen. . . . And the terrible thing did happen.
+One evening the Patron's horse came slowly home without its rider.
+The old man had fallen on the sloping highway, and when they found
+him, he was dead. Thus died the centaur as he had lived, with the
+lash hanging from his wrist, with his legs bowed by the saddle.
+
+A Spanish notary, almost as old as he, produced the will. The
+family was somewhat alarmed at seeing what a voluminous document it
+was. What terrible bequests had Madariaga dictated? The reading of
+the first part tranquilized Karl and Elena. The old father had left
+considerable more to the wife of Desnoyers, but there still remained
+an enormous share for the Romantica and her children. "I do this,"
+he said, "in memory of my poor dead wife, and so that people won't
+talk."
+
+After this, came eighty-six legacies. Eighty-five dark-hued
+individuals (women and men), who had lived on the ranch for many
+years as tenants and retainers, were to receive the last paternal
+munificence of the old patriarch. At the head of these was
+Celedonio whom Madariaga had greatly enriched in his lifetime for no
+heavier work than listening to him and repeating, "That's so,
+Patron, that's true!" More than a million dollars were represented
+by these bequests in lands and herds. The one who completed the
+list of beneficiaries was Julio Desnoyers. The grandfather had made
+special mention of this namesake, leaving him a plantation "to meet
+his private expenses, making up for that which his father would not
+give him."
+
+"But that represents hundreds of thousands of dollars!" protested
+Karl, who had been making himself almost obnoxious in his efforts to
+assure himself that his wife had not been overlooked in the will.
+
+The days following the reading of this will were very trying ones
+for the family. Elena and her children kept looking at the other
+group as though they had just waked up, contemplating them in an
+entirely new light. They seemed to forget what they were going to
+receive in their envy of the much larger share of their relatives.
+
+Desnoyers, benevolent and conciliatory, had a plan. An expert in
+administrative affairs, he realized that the distribution among the
+heirs was going to double the expenses without increasing the
+income. He was calculating, besides, the complications and
+disbursements necessary for a judicial division of nine immense
+ranches, hundreds of thousands of cattle, deposits in the banks,
+houses in the city, and debts to collect. Would it not be better
+for them all to continue living as before? . . . Had they not lived
+most peaceably as a united family? . . .
+
+The German received this suggestion by drawing himself up haughtily.
+No; to each one should be given what was his. Let each live in his
+own sphere. He wished to establish himself in Europe, spending his
+wealth freely there. It was necessary for him to return to "his
+world."
+
+As they looked squarely at each other, Desnoyers saw an unknown
+Karl, a Karl whose existence he had never suspected when he was
+under his protection, timid and servile. The Frenchman, too, was
+beginning to see things in a new light.
+
+"Very well," he assented. "Let each take his own. That seems fair
+to me."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE DESNOYERS FAMILY
+
+
+The "Madariagan succession," as it was called in the language of the
+legal men interested in prolonging it in order to augment their
+fees--was divided into two groups, separated by the ocean. The
+Desnoyers moved to Buenos Aires. The Hartrotts moved to Berlin as
+soon as Karl could sell all the legacy, to re-invest it in lands and
+industrial enterprises in his own country.
+
+Desnoyers no longer cared to live in the country. For twenty years,
+now, he had been the head of an enormous agricultural and stock
+raising business, overseeing hundreds of men in the various ranches.
+The parcelling out of the old man's fortune among Elena and the
+other legatees had considerably constricted the radius of his
+authority, and it angered him to see established on the neighboring
+lands so many foreigners, almost all Germans, who had bought of
+Karl. Furthermore, he was getting old, his wife's inheritance
+amounted to about twenty millions of dollars, and perhaps his
+brother-in-law was showing the better judgment in returning to
+Europe.
+
+So he leased some of the plantations, handed over the
+superintendence of others to those mentioned in the will who
+considered themselves left-handed members of the family--of which
+Desnoyers as the Patron received their submissive allegiance--and
+moved to Buenos Aires.
+
+By this move, he was able to keep an eye on his son who continued
+living a dissipated life without making any headway in his
+engineering studies. Then, too, Chichi was now almost a woman--her
+robust development making her look older than she was--and it was
+not expedient to keep her on the estate to become a rustic senorita
+like her mother.
+
+Dona Luisa had also tired of ranch life, the social triumphs of her
+sister making her a little restless. She was incapable of feeling
+jealous, but material ambitions made her anxious that her children
+should not bring up the rear of the procession in which the other
+grandchildren were cutting such a dashing figure.
+
+During the year, most wonderful reports from Germany were finding
+their way to the Desnoyers home in the Capital. "The aunt from
+Berlin," as the children called her, kept sending long letters
+filled with accounts of dances, dinners, hunting parties and titles--
+many high-sounding and military titles;--"our brother, the
+Colonel," "our cousin, the Baron," "our uncle, the Intimate
+Councillor," "our great-uncle, the Truly Intimate." All the
+extravagances of the German social ladder, which incessantly
+manufactures new titles in order to satisfy the thirst for honors of
+a people divided into castes, were enumerated with delight by the
+old Romantica. She even mentioned her husband's secretary (a
+nobody) who, through working in the public offices, had acquired the
+title of Rechnungarath, Councillor of Calculations. She also
+referred with much pride to the retired Oberpedell which she had in
+her house, explaining that that meant "Superior Porter."
+
+The news about her children was no less glorious. The oldest was
+the wise one of the family. He was devoted to philology and the
+historical sciences, but his sight was growing weaker all the time
+because of his omnivorous reading. Soon he would be a Doctor, and
+before he was thirty, a Herr Professor. The mother lamented that he
+had not military aspirations, considering that his tastes had
+somewhat distorted the lofty destinies of the family.
+Professorships, sciences and literature were more properly the
+perquisites of the Jews, unable, because of their race, to obtain
+preferment in the army; but she was trying to console herself by
+keeping in mind that a celebrated professor could, in time, acquire
+a social rank almost equal to that of a colonel.
+
+Her other four sons would become officers. Their father was
+preparing the ground so that they might enter the Guard or some
+aristocratic regiment without any of the members being able to vote
+against their admission. The two daughters would surely marry, when
+they had reached a suitable age with officers of the Hussars whose
+names bore the magic "von" of petty nobility, haughty and charming
+gentlemen about whom the daughter of Misia Petrona waxed most
+enthusiastic.
+
+The establishment of the Hartrotts was in keeping with these new
+relationships. In the home in Berlin, the servants wore knee-
+breeches and white wigs on the nights of great banquets. Karl had
+bought an old castle with pointed towers, ghosts in the cellars, and
+various legends of assassinations, assaults and abductions which
+enlivened its history in an interesting way. An architect,
+decorated with many foreign orders, and bearing the title of
+"Councillor of Construction," was engaged to modernize the mediaeval
+edifice without sacrificing its terrifying aspect. The Romantica
+described in anticipation the receptions in the gloomy salon, the
+light diffused by electricity, simulating torches, the crackling of
+the emblazoned hearth with its imitation logs bristling with flames
+of gas, all the splendor of modern luxury combined with the
+souvenirs of an epoch of omnipotent nobility--the best, according to
+her, in history. And the hunting parties, the future hunting
+parties! . . . in an annex of sandy and loose soil with pine woods--
+in no way comparable to the rich ground of their native ranch, but
+which had the honor of being trodden centuries ago by the Princes of
+Brandenburg, founders of the reigning house of Prussia. And all
+this advancement in a single year! . . .
+
+They had, of course, to compete with other oversea families who had
+amassed enormous fortunes in the United States, Brazil or the
+Pacific coast; but these were Germans "without lineage," coarse
+plebeians who were struggling in vain to force themselves into the
+great world by making donations to the imperial works. With all
+their millions, the very most that they could ever hope to attain
+would be to marry their daughters with ordinary soldiers. Whilst
+Karl! . . . The relatives of Karl! . . . and the Romantica let her
+pen run on, glorifying a family in whose bosom she fancied she had
+been born.
+
+From time to time were enclosed with Elena's effusions brief, crisp
+notes directed to Desnoyers. The brother-in-law continued giving an
+account of his operations the same as when living on the ranch under
+his protection. But with this deference was now mixed a badly
+concealed pride, an evident desire to retaliate for his times of
+voluntary humiliation. Everything that he was doing was grand and
+glorious. He had invested his millions in the industrial
+enterprises of modern Germany. He was stockholder of munition
+factories as big as towns, and of navigation companies launching a
+ship every half year. The Emperor was interesting himself in these
+works, looking benevolently on all those who wished to aid him.
+Besides this, Karl was buying land. At first sight, it seemed
+foolish to have sold the fertile fields of their inheritance in
+order to acquire sandy Prussian wastes that yielded only to much
+artificial fertilizing; but by becoming a land owner, he now
+belonged to the "Agrarian Party," the aristocratic and conservative
+group par excellence, and thus he was living in two different but
+equally distinguished worlds--that of the great industrial friends
+of the Emperor, and that of the Junkers, knights of the countryside,
+guardians of the old traditions and the supply-source of the
+officials of the King of Prussia.
+
+On hearing of these social strides, Desnoyers could not but think of
+the pecuniary sacrifices which they must represent. He knew Karl's
+past, for on the ranch, under an impulse of gratitude, the German
+had one day revealed to the Frenchman the cause of his coming to
+America. He was a former officer in the German army, but the desire
+of living ostentatiously without other resources than his salary,
+had dragged him into committing such reprehensible acts as
+abstracting funds belonging to the regiment, incurring debts of
+honor and paying for them with forged signatures. These crimes had
+not been officially prosecuted through consideration of his father's
+memory, but the members of his division had submitted him to a
+tribunal of honor. His brothers and friends had advised him to
+shoot himself as the only remedy; but he loved life and had fled to
+South America where, in spite of humiliations, he had finally
+triumphed.
+
+Wealth effaces the spots of the past even more rapidly than Time.
+The news of his fortune on the other side of the ocean made his
+family give him a warm reception on his first voyage home;
+introducing him again into their world. Nobody could remember
+shameful stories about a few hundred marks concerning a man who was
+talking about his father-in-law's lands, more extensive than many
+German principalities. Now, upon installing himself definitely in
+his country, all was forgotten. But, oh, the contributions levied
+upon his vanity . . . Desnoyers shrewdly guessed at the thousands
+of marks poured with both hands into the charitable works of the
+Empress, into the imperialistic propagandas, into the societies of
+veterans, into the clubs of aggression and expansion organized by
+German ambition.
+
+The frugal Frenchman, thrifty in his expenditures and free from
+social ambitions, smiled at the grandeurs of his brother-in-law. He
+considered Karl an excellent companion although of a childish pride.
+He recalled with satisfaction the years that they had passed
+together in the country. He could not forget the German who was
+always hovering around him, affectionate and submissive as a younger
+brother. When his family commented with a somewhat envious vivacity
+upon the glories of their Berlin relatives, Desnoyers would say
+smilingly, "Leave them in peace; they are paying very dear for their
+whistle."
+
+But the enthusiasm which the letters from Germany breathed finally
+created an atmosphere of disquietude and rebellion. Chichi led the
+attack. Why were they not going to Europe like other folks? all
+their friends had been there. Even the Italian and Spanish
+shopkeepers were making the voyage, while she, the daughter of a
+Frenchman, had never seen Paris! . . . Oh, Paris. The doctors in
+attendance on melancholy ladies were announcing the existence of a
+new and terrible disease, "the mania for Paris." Dona Luisa
+supported her daughter. Why had she not gone to live in Europe like
+her sister, since she was the richer of the two? Even Julio gravely
+declared that in the old world he could study to better advantage.
+America is not the land of the learned.
+
+Infected by the general unrest, the father finally began to wonder
+why the idea of going to Europe had not occurred to him long before.
+Thirty-four years without going to that country which was not
+his! . . . It was high time to start! He was living too near to
+his business. In vain the retired ranchman had tried to keep himself
+indifferent to the money market. Everybody was coining money around
+him. In the club, in the theatre, wherever he went, the people were
+talking about purchases of lands, of sales of stock, of quick
+negotiations with a triple profit, of portentous balances. The
+amount of money that he was keeping idle in the banks was beginning
+to weigh upon him. He finally ended by involving himself in some
+speculation; like a gambler who cannot see the roulette wheel
+without putting his hand in his pocket.
+
+His family was right. "To Paris!" For in the Desnoyers' mind, to
+go to Europe meant, of course, to go to Paris. Let the "aunt from
+Berlin" keep on chanting the glories of her husband's country!
+"It's sheer nonsense!" exclaimed Julio who had made grave
+geographical and ethnic comparisons in his nightly forays. "There
+is no place but Paris!" Chichi saluted with an ironical smile the
+slightest doubt of it--"Perhaps they make as elegant fashions in
+Germany as in Paris? . . . Bah!" Dona Luisa took up her children's
+cry. "Paris!" . . . Never had it even occurred to her to go to a
+Lutheran land to be protected by her sister.
+
+"Let it be Paris, then!" said the Frenchman, as though he were
+speaking of an unknown city.
+
+He had accustomed himself to believe that he would never return to
+it. During the first years of his life in America, the trip would
+have been an impossibility because of the military service which he
+had evaded. Then he had vague news of different amnesties. After
+the time for conscription had long since passed, an inertness of
+will had made him consider a return to his country as somewhat
+absurd and useless. On the other side, nothing remained to attract
+him. He had even lost track of those country relatives with whom
+his mother had lived. In his heaviest hours he had tried to occupy
+his activity by planning an enormous mausoleum, all of marble, in La
+Recoleta, the cemetery of the rich, in order to move thither the
+remains of Madariaga as founder of the dynasty, following him with
+all his own when their hour should come. He was beginning to feel
+the weight of age. He was nearly seventy years old, and the rude
+life of the country, the horseback rides in the rain, the rivers
+forded upon his swimming horse, the nights passed in the open air,
+had brought on a rheumatism that was torturing his best days.
+
+His family, however, reawakened his enthusiasm. "To Paris!" . . .
+He began to fancy that he was twenty again, and forgetting his
+habitual parsimony, wished his household to travel like royalty, in
+the most luxurious staterooms, and with personal servants. Two
+copper-hued country girls, born on the ranch and elevated to the
+rank of maids to the senora and her daughter, accompanied them on
+the voyage, their oblique eyes betraying not the slightest
+astonishment before the greatest novelties.
+
+Once in Paris, Desnoyers found himself quite bewildered. He
+confused the names of streets, proposed visits to buildings which
+had long since disappeared, and all his attempts to prove himself an
+expert authority on Paris were attended with disappointment. His
+children, guided by recent reading up, knew Paris better than he.
+He was considered a foreigner in his own country. At first, he even
+felt a certain strangeness in using his native tongue, for he had
+remained on the ranch without speaking a word of his language for
+years at a time. He was used to thinking in Spanish, and
+translating his ideas into the speech of his ancestors spattered his
+French with all kinds of Creole dialect.
+
+"Where a man makes his fortune and raises his family, there is his
+true country," he said sententiously, remembering Madariaga.
+
+The image of that distant country dominated him with insistent
+obsession as soon as the impressions of the voyage had worn off. He
+had no French friends, and upon going into the street, his feet
+instinctively took him to the places where the Argentinians gathered
+together. It was the same with them. They had left their country
+only to feel, with increasing intensity, the desire to talk about it
+all the time. There he read the papers, commenting on the rising
+prices in the fields, on the prospects for the next harvests and on
+the sales of cattle. Returning home, his thoughts were still in
+America, and he chuckled with delight as he recalled the way in
+which the two chinas had defied the professional dignity of the
+French cook, preparing their native stews and other dishes in Creole
+style.
+
+He had settled the family in an ostentatious house in the avenida
+Victor Hugo, for which he paid a rental of twenty-eight thousand
+francs. Dona Luisa had to go and come many times before she could
+accustom herself to the imposing aspect of the concierges--he,
+decorated with gold trimmings on his black uniform and wearing white
+whiskers like a notary in a comedy, she with a chain of gold upon
+her exuberant bosom, and receiving the tenants in a red and gold
+salon. In the rooms above was ultra-modern luxury, gilded and
+glacial, with white walls and glass doors with tiny panes which
+exasperated Desnoyers, who longed for the complicated carvings and
+rich furniture in vogue during his youth. He himself directed the
+arrangement and furnishings of the various rooms which always seemed
+empty.
+
+Chichi protested against her father's avarice when she saw him
+buying slowly and with much calculation and hesitation. "Avarice,
+no!" he retorted, "it is because I know the worth of things."
+
+Nothing pleased him that he had not acquired at one-third of its
+value. Beating down those who overcharged but proved the
+superiority of the buyer. Paris offered him one delightful spot
+which he could not find anywhere else in the world--the Hotel
+Drouot. He would go there every afternoon that he did not find
+other important auctions advertised in the papers. For many years,
+there was no famous failure in Parisian life, with its consequent
+liquidation, from which he did not carry something away. The use
+and need of these prizes were matters of secondary interest, the
+great thing was to get them for ridiculous prices. So the trophies
+from the auction-rooms now began to inundate the apartment which, at
+the beginning, he had been furnishing with such desperate slowness.
+
+His daughter now complained that the home was getting overcrowded.
+The furnishings and ornaments were handsome, but too many . . . far
+too many! The white walls seemed to scowl at the magnificent sets
+of chairs and the overflowing glass cabinets. Rich and velvety
+carpets over which had passed many generations, covered all the
+compartments. Showy curtains, not finding a vacant frame in the
+salons, adorned the doors leading into the kitchen. The wall
+mouldings gradually disappeared under an overlay of pictures, placed
+close together like the scales of a cuirass. Who now could accuse
+Desnoyers of avarice? . . . He was investing far more than a
+fashionable contractor would have dreamed of spending.
+
+The underlying idea still was to acquire all this for a fourth of
+its price--an exciting bait which lured the economical man into
+continuous dissipation. He could sleep well only when he had driven
+a good bargain during the day. He bought at auction thousands of
+bottles of wine consigned by bankrupt firms, and he who scarcely
+ever drank, packed his wine cellars to overflowing, advising his
+family to use the champagne as freely as ordinary wine. The failure
+of a furrier induced him to buy for fourteen thousand francs pelts
+worth ninety thousand. In consequence, the entire Desnoyers family
+seemed suddenly to be suffering as frightfully from cold as though a
+polar iceberg had invaded the avenida Victor Hugo. The father kept
+only one fur coat for himself but ordered three for his son. Chichi
+and Dona Luisa appeared arrayed in all kinds of silky and luxurious
+skins--one day chinchilla, other days blue fox, marten or seal.
+
+The enraptured buyer would permit no one but himself to adorn the
+walls with his new acquisitions, using the hammer from the top of a
+step-ladder in order to save the expense of a professional picture
+hanger. He wished to set his children the example of economy. In
+his idle hours, he would change the position of the heaviest pieces
+of furniture, trying every kind of combination. This employment
+reminded him of those happy days when he handled great sacks of
+wheat and bundles of hides on the ranch. Whenever his son noticed
+that he was looking thoughtfully at a monumental sideboard or heavy
+piece, he prudently betook himself to other haunts.
+
+Desnoyers stood a little in awe of the two house-men, very solemn,
+correct creatures always in dress suit, who could not hide their
+astonishment at seeing a man with an income of more than a million
+francs engaged in such work. Finally it was the two coppery maids
+who aided their Patron, the three working contentedly together like
+companions in exile.
+
+Four automobiles completed the luxuriousness of the family. The
+children would have been more content with one--small and dashing,
+in the very latest style. But Desnoyers was not the man to let a
+bargain slip past him, so one after the other, he had picked up the
+four, tempted by the price. They were as enormous and majestic as
+coaches of state. Their entrance into a street made the passers-by
+turn and stare. The chauffeur needed two assistants to help him
+keep this flock of mastodons in order, but the proud owner thought
+only of the skill with which he had gotten the best of the salesmen,
+anxious to get such monuments out of their sight.
+
+To his children he was always recommending simplicity and economy.
+"We are not as rich as you suppose. We own a good deal of property,
+but it produces a scanty income."
+
+And then, after refusing a domestic expenditure of two hundred
+francs, he would put five thousand into an unnecessary purchase just
+because it would mean a great loss to the seller. Julio and his
+sister kept protesting to their mother, Dona Luisa--Chichi even
+going so far as to announce that she would never marry a man like
+her father.
+
+"Hush, hush!" exclaimed the scandalized Creole. "He has his little
+peculiarities, but he is very good. Never has he given me any cause
+for complaint. I only hope that you may be lucky enough to find his
+equal."
+
+Her husband's quarrelsomeness, his irritable character and his
+masterful will all sank into insignificance when she thought of his
+unvarying fidelity. In so many years of married life . . . nothing!
+His faithfulness had been unexceptional even in the country where
+many, surrounded by beasts, and intent on increasing their flocks,
+had seemed to become contaminated by the general animalism. She
+remembered her father only too well! . . . Even her sister was
+obliged to live in apparent calmness with the vainglorious Karl,
+quite capable of disloyalty not because of any special lust, but
+just to imitate the doings of his superiors.
+
+Desnoyers and his wife were plodding through life in a routine
+affection, reminding Dona Luisa, in her limited imagination, of the
+yokes of oxen on the ranch who refused to budge whenever another
+animal was substituted for the regular companion. Her husband
+certainly was quick tempered, holding her responsible for all the
+whims with which he exasperated his children, yet he could never
+bear to have her out of his sight. The afternoons at the hotel
+Drouot would be most insipid for him unless she was at his side, the
+confidante of his plans and wrathful outbursts.
+
+"To-day there is to be a sale of jewels; shall we go?"
+
+He would make this proposition in such a gentle and coaxing voice--
+the voice that Dona Luisa remembered in their first talks around the
+old home. And so they would go together, but by different routes;--
+she in one of the monumental vehicles because, accustomed to the
+leisurely carriage rides of the ranch, she no longer cared to walk;
+and Desnoyers--although owner of the four automobiles, heartily
+abominating them because he was conservative and uneasy with the
+complications of new machinery--on foot under the pretext that,
+through lack of work, his body needed the exercise. When they met
+in the crowded salesrooms, they proceeded to examine the jewels
+together, fixing beforehand, the price they would offer. But he,
+quick to become exasperated by opposition, always went further,
+hurling numbers at his competitors as though they were blows. After
+such excursions, the senora would appear as majestic and dazzling as
+a basilica of Byzantium--ears and neck decorated with great pearls,
+her bosom a constellation of brilliants, her hands radiating points
+of light of all colors of the rainbow.
+
+"Too much, mama," Chichi would protest. "They will take you for a
+pawnbroker's lady!" But the Creole, satisfied with her splendor,
+the crowning glory of a humble life, attributed her daughter's
+faultfinding to envy. Chichi was only a girl now, but later on she
+would thank her for having collected all these gems for her.
+
+Already the home was unable to accommodate so many purchases. In
+the cellars were piled up enough paintings, furniture, statues, and
+draperies to equip several other dwellings. Don Marcelo began to
+complain of the cramped space in an apartment costing twenty-eight
+thousand francs a year--in reality large enough for a family four
+times the size of his. He was beginning to deplore being obliged to
+renounce some very tempting furniture bargains when a real estate
+agent smelled out the foreigner and relieved him of his
+embarrassment. Why not buy a castle? . . .
+
+The entire family was delighted with the idea. An historic castle,
+the most historic that could be found, would supplement their
+luxurious establishment. Chichi paled with pride. Some of her
+friends had castles. Others, of old colonial family, who were
+accustomed to look down upon her for her country bringing up, would
+now cry with envy upon learning of this acquisition which was almost
+a patent of nobility. The mother smiled in the hope of months in
+the country which would recall the simple and happy life of her
+youth. Julio was less enthusiastic. The "old man" would expect him
+to spend much time away from Paris, but he consoled himself by
+reflecting that the suburban place would provide excuse for frequent
+automobile trips.
+
+Desnoyers thought of the relatives in Berlin. Why should he not
+have his castle like the others? . . . The bargains were alluring.
+Historic mansions by the dozen were offered him. Their owners,
+exhausted by the expense of maintaining them, were more than anxious
+to sell. So he bought the castle of Villeblanche-sur-Marne, built
+in the time of the religious wars--a mixture of palace and fortress
+with an Italian Renaissance facade, gloomy towers with pointed
+hoods, and moats in which swans were swimming.
+
+He could now live with some tracts of land over which to exercise
+his authority, struggling again with the resistance of men and
+things. Besides, the vast proportions of the rooms of the castle
+were very tempting and bare of furniture. This opportunity for
+placing the overflow from his cellars plunged him again into buying.
+With this atmosphere of lordly gloom, the antiques would harmonize
+beautifully, without that cry of protest which they always seemed to
+make when placed in contact with the glaring white walls of modern
+habitations. The historic residence required an endless outlay; on
+that account it had changed owners so many times.
+
+But he and the land understood each other beautifully. . . . So at
+the same time that he was filling the salons, he was going to begin
+farming and stock-raising in the extensive parks--a reproduction in
+miniature of his enterprises in South America. The property ought
+to be made self-supporting. Not that he had any fear of the
+expenses, but he did not intend to lose money on the proposition.
+
+The acquisition of the castle brought Desnoyers a true friendship--
+the chief advantage in the transaction. He became acquainted with a
+neighbor, Senator Lacour, who twice had been Minister of State, and
+was now vegetating in the senate, silent during its sessions, but
+restless and voluble in the corridors in order to maintain his
+influence. He was a prominent figure of the republican nobility, an
+aristocrat of the new regime that had sprung from the agitations of
+the Revolution, just as the titled nobility had won their spurs in
+the Crusades. His great-grandfather had belonged to the Convention.
+His father had figured in the Republic of 1848. He, as the son of
+an exile who had died in banishment, had when very young marched
+behind the grandiloquent figure of Gambetta, and always spoke in
+glowing terms of the Master, in the hope that some of his rays might
+be reflected on his disciple. His son Rene, a pupil of the Ecole
+Centrale regarded his father as "a rare old sport," laughing a
+little at his romantic and humanitarian republicanism. He,
+nevertheless, was counting much on that same official protection
+treasured by four generations of Lacours dedicated to the service of
+the Republic, to assist him when he became an engineer.
+
+Don Marcelo who used to look uneasily upon any new friendship,
+fearing a demand for a loan, gave himself up with enthusiasm to
+intimacy with this "grand man." The personage admired riches and
+recognized, besides, a certain genius in this millionaire from the
+other side of the sea accustomed to speaking of limitless pastures
+and immense herds. Their intercourse was more than the mere
+friendliness of a country neighborhood, and continued on after their
+return to Paris. Finally Rene visited the home on the avenida
+Victor Hugo as though it were his own.
+
+The only disappointments in Desnoyers' new life came from his
+children. Chichi irritated him because of the independence of her
+tastes. She did not like antiques, no matter how substantial and
+magnificent they might be, much preferring the frivolities of the
+latest fashion. She accepted all her father's gifts with great
+indifference. Before an exquisite blonde piece of lace, centuries
+old, picked up at auction, she made a wry face, saying, "I would
+much rather have had a new dress costing three hundred francs." She
+and her brother were solidly opposed to everything old.
+
+Now that his daughter was already a woman, he had confided her
+absolutely to the care of Dona Luisa. But the former "Peoncito" was
+not showing much respect for the advice and commands of the good
+natured Creole. She had taken up roller-skating with enthusiasm,
+regarding it as the most elegant of diversions. She would go every
+afternoon to the Ice Palace, Dona Luisa chaperoning her, although to
+do this she was obliged to give up accompanying her husband to his
+sales. Oh, the hours of deadly weariness before that frozen oval
+ring, watching the white circle of balancing human monkeys gliding
+by on runners to the sound of an organ! . . . Her daughter would
+pass and repass before her tired eyes, rosy from the exercise,
+spirals of hair escaped from her hat, streaming out behind, the
+folds of her skirt swinging above her skates--handsome, athletic and
+Amazonian, with the rude health of a child who, according to her
+father, "had been weaned on beefsteaks."
+
+Finally Dona Luisa rebelled against this troublesome vigilance,
+preferring to accompany her husband on his hunt for underpriced
+riches. Chichi went to the skating rink with one of the dark-
+skinned maids, passing the afternoons with her sporty friends of the
+new world. Together they ventilated their ideas under the glare of
+the easy life of Paris, freed from the scruples and conventions of
+their native land. They all thought themselves older than they
+were, delighting to discover in each other unsuspected charms. The
+change from the other hemisphere had altered their sense of values.
+Some were even writing verses in French. And Desnoyers became
+alarmed, giving free rein to his bad humor, when Chichi of evenings,
+would bring forth as aphorisms that which she and her friends had
+been discussing, as a summary of their readings and observations.--
+"Life is life, and one must live! . . . I will marry the man I love,
+no matter who he may be. . . ."
+
+But the daughter's independence was as nothing compared to the worry
+which the other child gave the Desnoyers. Ay, that other one! . . .
+Julio, upon arriving in Paris, had changed the bent of his
+aspirations. He no longer thought of becoming an engineer; he
+wished to become an artist. Don Marcelo objected in great
+consternation, but finally yielded. Let it be painting! The
+important thing was to have some regular profession. The father,
+while he considered property and wealth as sacred rights, felt that
+no one should enjoy them who had not worked to acquire them.
+
+Recalling his apprenticeship as a wood carver, he began to hope that
+the artistic instincts which poverty had extinguished in him were,
+perhaps, reappearing in his son. What if this lazy boy, this lively
+genius, hesitating before taking up his walk in life, should turn
+out to be a famous painter, after all! . . . So he agreed to all of
+Julio's caprices, the budding artist insisting that for his first
+efforts in drawing and coloring, he needed a separate apartment
+where he could work with more freedom. His father, therefore,
+established him near his home, in the rue de la Pompe in the former
+studio of a well-known foreign painter. The workroom and its
+annexes were far too large for an amateur, but the owner had died,
+and Desnoyers improved the opportunity offered by the heirs, and
+bought at a remarkable bargain, the entire plant, pictures and
+furnishings.
+
+Dona Luisa at first visited the studio daily like a good mother,
+caring for the well-being of her son that he may work to better
+advantage. Taking off her gloves, she emptied the brass trays
+filled with cigar stubs and dusted the furniture powdered with the
+ashes fallen from the pipes. Julio's visitors, long-haired young
+men who spoke of things that she could not understand, seemed to her
+rather careless in their manners. . . . Later on she also met there
+women, very lightly clad, and was received with scowls by her son.
+Wasn't his mother ever going to let him work in peace? . . . So the
+poor lady, starting out in the morning toward the rue de la Pompe,
+stopped midway and went instead to the church of Saint Honore
+d'Eylau.
+
+The father displayed more prudence. A man of his years could not
+expect to mingle with the chums of a young artist. In a few months'
+time, Julio passed entire weeks without going to sleep under the
+paternal roof. Finally he installed himself permanently in his
+studio, occasionally making a flying trip home that his family might
+know that he was still in existence. . . . Some mornings, Desnoyers
+would arrive at the rue de la Pompe in order to ask a few questions
+of the concierge. It was ten o'clock; the artist was sleeping.
+Upon returning at midday, he learned that the heavy sleep still
+continued. Soon after lunch, another visit to get better news. It
+was two o'clock, the young gentleman was just arising. So the
+father would retire, muttering stormily--"But when does this painter
+ever paint?" . . .
+
+At first Julio had tried to win renown with his brush, believing
+that it would prove an easy task. In true artist fashion, he
+collected his friends around him, South American boys with nothing
+to do but enjoy life, scattering money ostentatiously so that
+everybody might know of their generosity. With serene audacity, the
+young canvas-dauber undertook to paint portraits. He loved good
+painting, "distinctive" painting, with the cloying sweetness of a
+romance, that copied only the forms of women. He had money, a good
+studio, his father was standing behind him ready to help--why
+shouldn't he accomplish as much as many others who lacked his
+opportunities? . . .
+
+So he began his work by coloring a canvas entitled, "The Dance of
+the Hours," a mere pretext for copying pretty girls and selecting
+buxom models. These he would sketch at a mad speed, filling in the
+outlines with blobs of multi-colored paint, and up to this point all
+went well. Then he would begin to vacillate, remaining idle before
+the picture only to put it in the corner in hope of later
+inspiration. It was the same way with his various studies of
+feminine heads. Finding that he was never able to finish anything,
+he soon became resigned, like one who pants with fatigue before an
+obstacle waiting for a providential interposition to save him. The
+important thing was to be a painter . . . even though he might not
+paint anything. This afforded him the opportunity, on the plea of
+lofty aestheticism, of sending out cards of invitation and asking
+light women to his studio. He lived during the night. Don Marcelo,
+upon investigating the artist's work, could not contain his
+indignation. Every morning the two Desnoyers were accustomed to
+greet the first hours of dawn--the father leaping from his bed, the
+son, on his way home to his studio to throw himself upon his couch
+not to wake till midday.
+
+The credulous Dona Luisa would invent the most absurd explanations
+to defend her son. Who could tell? Perhaps he had the habit of
+painting during the night, utilizing it for original work. Men
+resort to so many devilish things! . . .
+
+Desnoyers knew very well what these nocturnal gusts of genius were
+amounting to--scandals in the restaurants of Montmartre, and
+scrimmages, many scrimmages. He and his gang, who believed that at
+seven a full dress or Tuxedo was indispensable, were like a band of
+Indians, bringing to Paris the wild customs of the plains.
+Champagne always made them quarrelsome. So they broke and paid, but
+their generosities were almost invariably followed by a scuffle. No
+one could surpass Julio in the quick slap and the ready card. His
+father heard with a heavy heart the news brought him by some friends
+thinking to flatter his vanity--his son was always victorious in
+these gentlemanly encounters; he it was who always scratched the
+enemy's skin. The painter knew more about fencing than art. He was
+a champion with various weapons; he could box, and was even skilled
+in the favorite blows of the prize fighters of the slums. "Useless
+as a drone, and as dangerous, too," fretted his father. And yet in
+the back of his troubled mind fluttered an irresistible
+satisfaction--an animal pride in the thought that this hare-brained
+terror was his own.
+
+For a while, he thought that he had hit upon a way of withdrawing
+his son from such an existence. The relatives in Berlin had visited
+the Desnoyers in their castle of Villeblanche. With good-natured
+superiority, Karl von Hartrott had appreciated the rich and rather
+absurd accumulations of his brother-in-law. They were not bad; he
+admitted that they gave a certain cachet to the home in Paris and to
+the castle. They smacked of the possessions of titled nobility.
+But Germany! . . . The comforts and luxuries in his country! . . .
+He just wished his brother-in-law to admire the way he lived and the
+noble friendships that embellished his opulence. And so he insisted
+in his letters that the Desnoyers family should return their visit.
+This change of environment might tone Julio down a little. Perhaps
+his ambition might waken on seeing the diligence of his cousins,
+each with a career. The Frenchman had, besides, an underlying
+belief in the more corrupt influence of Paris as compared with the
+purity of the customs in Patriarchal Germany.
+
+They were there four months. In a little while Desnoyers felt ready
+to retreat. Each to his own kind; he would never be able to
+understand such people. Exceedingly amiable, with an abject
+amiability and evident desire to please, but constantly blundering
+through a tactless desire to make their grandeur felt. The high-
+toned friends of Hartrott emphasized their love for France, but it
+was the pious love that a weak and mischievous child inspires,
+needing protection. And they would accompany their affability with
+all manner of inopportune memories of the wars in which France had
+been conquered. Everything in Germany--a monument, a railroad
+station, a simple dining-room device, instantly gave rise to
+glorious comparisons. "In France, you do not have this," "Of
+course, you never saw anything like this in America."
+
+Don Marcelo came away fatigued by so much condescension, and his
+wife and daughter refused to be convinced that the elegance of
+Berlin could be superior to Paris. Chichi, with audacious
+sacrilege, scandalized her cousins by declaring that she could not
+abide the corseted officers with immovable monocle, who bowed to the
+women with such automatic rigidity, blending their gallantries with
+an air of superiority.
+
+Julio, guided by his cousins, was saturated in the virtuous
+atmosphere of Berlin. With the oldest, "The Sage," he had nothing
+to do. He was a poor creature devoted to his books who patronized
+all the family with a protecting air. It was the others, the sub-
+lieutenants or military students, who proudly showed him the rounds
+of German joy.
+
+Julio was accordingly introduced to all the night restaurants--
+imitations of those in Paris, but on a much larger scale. The women
+who in Paris might be counted by the dozens appeared here in
+hundreds. The scandalous drunkenness here never came by chance, but
+always by design as an indispensable part of the gaiety. All was
+grandiose, glittering, colossal. The libertines diverted themselves
+in platoons, the public got drunk in companies, the harlots
+presented themselves in regiments. He felt a sensation of disgust
+before these timid and servile females, accustomed to blows, who
+were so eagerly trying to reimburse themselves for the losses and
+exposures of their business. For him, it was impossible to
+celebrate with hoarse ha-has, like his cousins, the discomfiture of
+these women when they realized that they had wasted so many hours
+without accomplishing more than abundant drinking. The gross
+obscenity, so public and noisy, like a parade of riches, was
+loathsome to Julio. "There is nothing like this in Paris," his
+cousins repeatedly exulted as they admired the stupendous salons,
+the hundreds of men and women in pairs, the thousands of tipplers.
+"No, there certainly was nothing like that in Paris." He was sick
+of such boundless pretension. He seemed to be attending a fiesta of
+hungry mariners anxious at one swoop to make amends for all former
+privations. Like his father, he longed to get away. It offended
+his aesthetic sense.
+
+Don Marcelo returned from this visit with melancholy resignation.
+Those people had undoubtedly made great strides. He was not such a
+blind patriot that he could not admit what was so evident. Within a
+few years they had transformed their country, and their industry was
+astonishing . . . but, well . . . it was simply impossible to have
+anything to do with them. Each to his own, but may they never take
+a notion to envy their neighbor! . . . Then he immediately repelled
+this last suspicion with the optimism of a business man.
+
+"They are going to be very rich," he thought. "Their affairs are
+prospering, and he that is rich does not hunt quarrels. That war of
+which some crazy fools are always dreaming would be an impossible
+thing."
+
+Young Desnoyers renewed his Parisian existence, living entirely in
+the studio and going less and less to his father's home. Dona Luisa
+began to speak of a certain Argensola, a very learned young
+Spaniard, believing that his counsels might prove most helpful to
+Julio. She did not know exactly whether this new companion was
+friend, master or servant. The studio habitues also had their
+doubts. The literary ones always spoke of Argensola as a painter.
+The painters recognized only his ability as a man of letters. He
+was among those who used to come up to the studio of winter
+afternoons, attracted by the ruddy glow of the stove and the wines
+secretly provided by the mother, holding forth authoritatively
+before the often-renewed bottle and the box of cigars lying open on
+the table. One night, he slept on the divan, as he had no regular
+quarters. After that first night, he lived entirely in the studio.
+
+Julio soon discovered in him an admirable reflex of his own
+personality. He knew that Argensola had come third-class from
+Madrid with twenty francs in his pocket, in order to "capture
+glory," to use his own words. Upon observing that the Spaniard was
+painting with as much difficulty as himself, with the same wooden
+and childish strokes, which are so characteristic of the make-
+believe artists and pot-boilers, the routine workers concerned
+themselves with color and other rank fads. Argensola was a
+psychological artist, a painter of souls. And his disciple, felt
+astonished and almost displeased on learning what a comparatively
+simple thing it was to paint a soul. Upon a bloodless countenance,
+with a chin as sharp as a dagger, the gifted Spaniard would trace a
+pair of nearly round eyes, and at the centre of each pupil he would
+aim a white brush stroke, a point of light . . . the soul. Then,
+planting himself before the canvas, he would proceed to classify
+this soul with his inexhaustible imagination, attributing to it
+almost every kind of stress and extremity. So great was the sway of
+his rapture that Julio, too, was able to see all that the artist
+flattered himself into believing that he had put into the owlish
+eyes. He, also, would paint souls . . . souls of women.
+
+In spite of the ease with which he developed his psychological
+creations, Argensola preferred to talk, stretched on a divan, or to
+read, hugging the fire while his friend and protector was outside.
+Another advantage this fondness for reading gave young Desnoyers was
+that he was no longer obliged to open a volume, scanning the index
+and last pages "just to get the idea." Formerly when frequenting
+society functions, he had been guilty of coolly asking an author
+which was his best book--his smile of a clever man--giving the
+writer to understand that he merely enquired so as not to waste time
+on the other volumes. Now it was no longer necessary to do this;
+Argensola would read for him. As soon as Julio would see him
+absorbed in a book, he would demand an immediate share: "Tell me the
+story." So the "secretary," not only gave him the plots of comedies
+and novels, but also detailed the argument of Schopenhauer or of
+Nietzsche . . . Dona Luisa almost wept on hearing her visitors--
+with that benevolence which wealth always inspires--speak of her son
+as "a rather gay young man, but wonderfully well read!"
+
+In exchange for his lessons, Argensola received, much the same
+treatment as did the Greek slaves who taught rhetoric to the young
+patricians of decadent Rome. In the midst of a dissertation, his
+lord and friend would interrupt him with--"Get my dress suit ready.
+I am invited out this evening."
+
+At other times, when the instructor was luxuriating in bodily
+comfort, with a book in one hand near the roaring stove, seeing
+through the windows the gray and rainy afternoon, his disciple would
+suddenly appear saying, "Quick, get out! . . . There's a woman
+coming!"
+
+And Argensola, like a dog who gets up and shakes himself, would
+disappear to continue his reading in some miserable little coffee
+house in the neighborhood.
+
+In his official capacity, this widely gifted man often descended
+from the peaks of intellectuality to the vulgarities of everyday
+life. He was the steward of the lord of the manor, the intermediary
+between the pocketbook and those who appeared bill in hand.
+"Money!" he would say laconically at the end of the month, and
+Desnoyers would break out into complaints and curses. Where on
+earth was he to get it, he would like to know. His father was as
+regular as a machine, and would never allow the slightest advance
+upon the following month. He had to submit to a rule of misery.
+Three thousand francs a month!--what could any decent person do with
+that? . . . He was even trying to cut THAT down, to tighten the
+band, interfering in the running of his house, so that Dona Luisa
+could not make presents to her son. In vain he had appealed to the
+various usurers of Paris, telling them of his property beyond the
+ocean. These gentlemen had the youth of their own country in the
+hollow of their hand and were not obliged to risk their capital in
+other lands. The same hard luck pursued him when, with sudden
+demonstrations of affection, he had tried to convince Don Marcelo
+that three thousand francs a month was but a niggardly trifle.
+
+The millionaire fairly snorted with indignation. "Three thousand
+francs a trifle!" And the debts besides, that he often had to pay
+for his son! . . .
+
+"Why, when I was your age," . . . he would begin saying--but Julio
+would suddenly bring the dialogue to a close. He had heard his
+father's story too many times. Ah, the stingy old miser! What he
+had been giving him all these months was no more than the interest
+on his grandfather's legacy. . . . And by the advice of Argensola
+he ventured to get control of the field. He was planning to hand
+over the management of his land to Celedonio, the old overseer, who
+was now such a grandee in his country that Julio ironically called
+him "my uncle."
+
+Desnoyers accepted this rebellion coldly. "It appears just to me.
+You are now of age!" Then he promptly reduced to extremes his
+oversight of his home, forbidding Dona Luisa to handle any money.
+Henceforth he regarded his son as an adversary, treating him during
+his lightning apparitions at the avenue Victor Hugo with glacial
+courtesy as though he were a stranger.
+
+For a while a transitory opulence enlivened the studio. Julio had
+increased his expenses, considering himself rich. But the letters
+from his uncle in America soon dissipated these illusions. At first
+the remittances exceeded very slightly the monthly allowance that
+his father had made him. Then it began to diminish in an alarming
+manner. According to Celedonio, all the calamities on earth seemed
+to he falling upon his plantation. The pasture land was yielding
+scantily, sometimes for lack of rain, sometimes because of floods,
+and the herds were perishing by hundreds. Julio required more
+income, and the crafty half-breed sent him what he asked for, but
+simply as a loan, reserving the return until they should adjust
+their accounts.
+
+In spite of such aid, young Desnoyers was suffering great want. He
+was gambling now in an elegant circle, thinking thus to compensate
+for his periodical scrimpings; but this resort was only making the
+remittances from America disappear with greater rapidity. . . .
+That such a man as he was should be tormented so for the lack of a
+few thousand francs! What else was a millionaire father for?
+
+If the creditors began threatening, the poor youth had to bring the
+secretary into play, ordering him to see the mother immediately; he
+himself wished to avoid her tears and reproaches. So Argensola
+would slip like a pickpocket up the service stairway of the great
+house on the avenue Victor Hugo. The place in which he transacted
+his ambassadorial business was the kitchen, with great danger that
+the terrible Desnoyers might happen in there, on one of his
+perambulations as a laboring man, and surprise the intruder.
+
+Dona Luisa would weep, touched by the heartrending tales of the
+messenger. What could she do! She was as poor as her maids; she
+had jewels, many jewels, but not a franc. Then Argensola came to
+the rescue with a solution worthy of his experience. He would
+smooth the way for the good mother, leaving some of her jewels at
+the Mont-de-Piete. He knew the way to raise money on them. So the
+lady accepted his advice, giving him, however, only jewels of medium
+value as she suspected that she might never see them again. Later
+scruples made her at times refuse flatly. Suppose Don Marcelo
+should ever find it out, what a scene! . . . But the Spaniard
+deemed it unseemly to return empty-handed, and always bore away a
+basket of bottles from the well-stocked wine-cellar of the
+Desnoyers.
+
+Every morning Dona Luisa went to Saint-Honore-d'Eylau to pray for
+her son. She felt that this was her own church. It was a
+hospitable and familiar island in the unexplored ocean of Paris.
+Here she could exchange discreet salutations with her neighbors from
+the different republics of the new world. She felt nearer to God
+and the saints when she could hear in the vestibule conversations in
+her language.
+
+It was, moreover, a sort of salon in which took place the great
+events of the South American colony. One day was a wedding with
+flowers, orchestra and chanting chorals. With Chichi beside her,
+she greeted those she knew, congratulating the bride and groom.
+Another day it was the funeral of an ex-president of some republic,
+or some other foreign dignitary ending in Paris his turbulent
+existence. Poor President! Poor General! . . .
+
+Dona Luisa remembered the dead man. She had seen him many times in
+that church devoutly attending mass and she was indignant at the
+evil tongues which, under the cover of a funeral oration, recalled
+the shootings and bank failures in his country. Such a good and
+religious gentleman! May God receive his soul in glory! . . . And
+upon going out into the square, she would look with tender eyes upon
+the young men and women on horseback going to the Bois de Boulogne,
+the luxurious automobiles, the morning radiant in the sunshine, all
+the primeval freshness of the early hours--realizing what a
+beautiful thing it is to live.
+
+Her devout expression of gratitude for mere existence usually
+included the monument in the centre of the square, all bristling
+with wings as if about to fly away from the ground. Victor Hugo! . . .
+It was enough for her to have heard this name on the lips of
+her son to make her contemplate the statue with a family interest.
+The only thing that she knew about the poet was that he had died.
+Of this she was almost sure, and she imagined that in life, he was a
+great friend of Julio's because she had so often heard her son
+repeat his name.
+
+Ay, her son! . . . All her thoughts, her conjectures, her desires,
+converged on him and her strong-willed husband. She longed for the
+men to come to an understanding and put an end to a struggle in
+which she was the principal victim. Would not God work this
+miracle? . . . Like an invalid who goes from one sanitarium to
+another in pursuit of health, she gave up the church on her street
+to attend the Spanish chapel on the avenue Friedland. Here she
+considered herself even more among her own.
+
+In the midst of the fine and elegant South American ladies who
+looked as if they had just escaped from a fashion sheet, her eyes
+sought other women, not so well dressed, fat, with theatrical ermine
+and antique jewelry. When these high-born dames met each other in
+the vestibule, they spoke with heavy voices and expressive gestures,
+emphasizing their words energetically. The daughter of the ranch
+ventured to salute them because she had subscribed to all their pet
+charities, and upon seeing her greeting returned, she felt a
+satisfaction which made her momentarily forget her woes. They
+belonged to those families which her father had so greatly admired
+without knowing why. They came from the "mother country," and to
+the good Chicha were all Excelentisimas or Altisimas, related to
+kings. She did not know whether to give them her hand or bend the
+knee, as she had vaguely heard was the custom at court. But soon
+she recalled her preoccupation and went forward to wrestle in prayer
+with God. Ay, that he would mercifully remember her! That he would
+not long forget her son! . . .
+
+It was Glory that remembered Julio, stretching out to him her arms
+of light, so that he suddenly awoke to find himself surrounded by
+all the honors and advantages of celebrity. Fame cunningly
+surprises mankind on the most crooked and unexpected of roads.
+Neither the painting of souls nor a fitful existence full of
+extravagant love affairs and complicated duels had brought Desnoyers
+this renown. It was Glory that put him on his feet.
+
+A new pleasure for the delight of humanity had come from the other
+side of the seas. People were asking one another in the mysterious
+tones of the initiated who wish to recognize a familiar spirit, "Do
+you know how to tango? . . ." The tango had taken possession of the
+world. It was the heroic hymn of a humanity that was suddenly
+concentrating its aspirations on the harmonious rhythm of the thigh
+joints, measuring its intelligence by the agility of its feet. An
+incoherent and monotonous music of African inspiration was
+satisfying the artistic ideals of a society that required nothing
+better. The world was dancing . . . dancing . . . dancing.
+
+A negro dance from Cuba introduced into South America by mariners
+who shipped jerked beef to the Antilles, conquered the entire earth
+in a few months, completely encircling it, bounding victoriously
+from nation to nation . . . like the Marseillaise. It was even
+penetrating into the most ceremonious courts, overturning all
+traditions of conservation and etiquette like a song of the
+Revolution--the revolution of frivolity. The Pope even had to
+become a master of the dance, recommending the "Furlana" instead of
+the "Tango," since all the Christian world, regardless of sects, was
+united in the common desire to agitate its feet with the tireless
+frenzy of the "possessed" of the Middle Ages.
+
+Julio Desnoyers, upon meeting this dance of his childhood in full
+swing in Paris, devoted himself to it with the confidence that an
+old love inspires. Who could have foretold that when as a student,
+he was frequenting the lowest dance halls in Buenos Aires, watched
+by the police, that he was really serving an apprenticeship to
+Glory? . . .
+
+From five to seven, in the salons of the Champs d'Elysees where it
+cost five francs for a cup of tea and the privilege of joining in
+the sacred dance, hundreds of eyes followed him with admiration.
+"He has the key," said the women, appraising his slender elegance,
+medium stature, and muscular springs. And he, in abbreviated jacket
+and expansive shirt bosom, with his small, girlish feet encased in
+high-heeled patent leathers with white tops, danced gravely,
+thoughtfully, silently, like a mathematician working out a problem,
+under the lights that shed bluish tones upon his plastered, glossy
+locks. Ladies asked to be presented to him in the sweet hope that
+their friends might envy them when they beheld them in the arms of
+the master. Invitations simply rained upon Julio. The most
+exclusive salons were thrown open to him so that every afternoon he
+made a dozen new acquaintances. The fashion had brought over
+professors from the other side of the sea, compatriots from the
+slums of Buenos Aires, haughty and confused at being applauded like
+famous lecturers or tenors; but Julio triumphed over these
+vulgarians who danced for money, and the incidents of his former
+life were considered by the women as deeds of romantic gallantry.
+
+"You are killing yourself," Argensola would say. "You are dancing
+too much."
+
+The glory of his friend and master was only making more trouble for
+him. His placid readings before the fire were now subject to daily
+interruptions. It was impossible to read more than a chapter. The
+celebrated man was continually ordering him to betake himself to the
+street. "A new lesson," sighed the parasite. And when he was alone
+in the studio numerous callers--all women, some inquisitive and
+aggressive, others sad, with a deserted air--were constantly
+interrupting his thoughtful pursuits.
+
+One of them terrified the occupants of the studio with her
+insistence. She was a North American of uncertain age, somewhere
+between thirty-two and fifty-nine, with short skirts that whenever
+she sat down, seemed to fly up as if moved by a spring. Various
+dances with Desnoyers and a visit to the rue de la Pompe she seemed
+to consider as her sacred rights, and she pursued the master with
+the desperation of an abandoned zealot. Julio had made good his
+escape upon learning that this beauty of youthful elegance--when
+seen from the back--had two grandchildren. "MASTER Desnoyers has
+gone out," Argensola would invariably say upon receiving her. And,
+thereupon she would burst into tears and threats, longing to kill
+herself then and there that her corpse might frighten away those
+other women who would come to rob her of what she considered her
+special privilege. Now it was Argensola who sped his companion to
+the street when he wished to be alone. He had only to remark
+casually, "I believe that Yankee is coming," and the great man would
+beat a hasty retreat, oftentimes in his desperate flight availing
+himself of the back stairs.
+
+At this time began to develop the most important event in Julio's
+existence. The Desnoyers family was to be united with that of
+Senator Lacour. Rene, his only son, had succeeded in awakening in
+Chichi a certain interest that was almost love. The dignitary
+enjoyed thinking of his son allied to the boundless plains and
+immense herds whose description always affected him like a
+marvellous tale. He was a widower, but he enjoyed giving at his
+home famous banquets and parties. Every new celebrity immediately
+suggested to him the idea of giving a dinner. No illustrious person
+passing through Paris, polar explorer or famous singer, could escape
+being exhibited in the dining room of Lacour. The son of Desnoyers-
+-at whom he had scarcely glanced before--now inspired him with
+sudden interest. The senator was a thoroughly up-to-date man who
+did not classify glory nor distinguish reputations. It was enough
+for him that a name should be on everybody's lips for him to accept
+it with enthusiasm. When Julio responded to his invitation, he
+presented him with pride to his friends, and came very near to
+calling him "dear master." The tango was monopolizing all
+conversation nowadays. Even in the Academy they were taking it up
+in order to demonstrate that the youth of ancient Athens had
+diverted itself in a somewhat similar way. . . . And Lacour had
+dreamed all his life of an Athenian republic.
+
+At these reunions, Desnoyers became acquainted with the Lauriers.
+He was an engineer who owned a motor-factory for automobiles in the
+outskirts of Paris--a man about thirty-five, tall, rather heavy and
+silent, with a deliberate air as though he wished to see deeply into
+men and things. She was of a light, frivolous character, loving
+life for the satisfactions and pleasures which it brought her,
+appearing to accept with smiling conformity the silent and grave
+adoration of her husband. She could not well do less with a man of
+his merits. Besides, she had brought to the marriage a dowry of
+three hundred thousand francs, a capital which had enabled the
+engineer to enlarge his business. The senator had been instrumental
+in arranging this marriage. He was interested in Laurier because he
+was the son of an old friend.
+
+Upon Marguerite Laurier the presence of Julio flashed like a ray of
+sunlight in the tiresome salon of Lacour. She was dancing the fad
+of the hour and frequenting the tango teas where reigned the adored
+Desnoyers. And to think that she was being entertained with this
+celebrated and interesting man that the other women were raving
+about! . . . In order that he might not take her for a mere middle-
+class woman like the other guests at the senator's party, she spoke
+of her modistes, all from the rue de la Paix, declaring gravely that
+no woman who had any self-respect could possibly walk through the
+streets wearing a gown costing less than eight hundred francs, and
+that the hat of a thousand francs--but a few years ago, an
+astonishing novelty--was nowadays a very ordinary affair.
+
+This acquaintanceship made the "little Laurier," as her friends
+called her notwithstanding her tallness, much sought by the master
+of the dance, in spite of the looks of wrath and envy hurled at her
+by the others. What a triumph for the wife of a simple engineer who
+was used to going everywhere in her mother's automobile! . . .
+Julio at first had supposed her like all the others who were
+languishing in his arms, following the rhythmic complications of the
+dance, but he soon found that she was very different. Her coquetry
+after the first confidential words, but increased his admiration.
+He really had never before been thrown with a woman of her class.
+Those of his first social period were the habituees of the night
+restaurants paid for their witchery. Now Glory was tossing into his
+arms ladies of high position but with an unconfessable past, anxious
+for novelties although exceedingly mature. This middle class woman
+who would advance so confidently toward him and then retreat with
+such capricious outbursts of modesty, was a new type for him.
+
+The tango salons soon began to suffer a great loss. Desnoyers was
+permitting himself to be seen there with less frequency, handing
+Glory over to the professionals. Sometimes entire weeks slipped by
+without the five-to-seven devotees being able to admire his black
+locks and his tiny patent leathers twinkling under the lights in
+time with his graceful movements.
+
+Marguerite was also avoiding these places. The meetings of the two
+were taking place in accordance with what she had read in the love
+stories of Paris. She was going in search of Julio, fearing to be
+recognized, tremulous with emotion, selecting her most inconspicuous
+suit, and covering her face with a close veil--"the veil of
+adultery," as her friends called it. They had their trysts in the
+least-frequented squares of the district, frequently changing the
+places, like timid birds that at the slightest disturbance fly to
+perch a little further away. Sometimes they would meet in the
+Buttes Chaumont, at others they preferred the gardens on the left
+bank of the Seine, the Luxembourg, and even the distant Parc de
+Montsouris. She was always in tremors of terror lest her husband
+might surprise them, although she well knew that the industrious
+engineer was in his factory a great distance away. Her agitated
+aspect, her excessive precautions in order to slip by unseen, only
+served to attract the attention of the passers-by. Although Julio
+was waxing impatient with the annoyance of this wandering love
+affair which only amounted to a few fugitive kisses, he finally held
+his peace, dominated by Marguerite's pleadings.
+
+She did not wish merely to be one in the procession of his
+sweethearts; it was necessary to convince herself first that this
+love was going to last forever. It was her first slip and she
+wanted it to be the last. Ay, her former spotless reputation! . . .
+What would people say! . . . The two returned to their adolescent
+period, loving each other as they had never loved before, with the
+confident and childish passion of fifteen-year-olds.
+
+Julio had leaped from childhood to libertinism, taking his
+initiation into life at a single bound. She had desired marriage in
+order to acquire the respect and liberty of a married woman, but
+feeling towards her husband only a vague gratitude. "We end where
+others begin," she had said to Desnoyers.
+
+Their passion took the form of an intense, reciprocal and vulgar
+love. They felt a romantic sentimentality in clasping hands or
+exchanging kisses on a garden bench in the twilight. He was
+treasuring a ringlet of Marguerite's--although he doubted its
+genuineness, with a vague suspicion that it might be one of the
+latest wisps of fashion. She would cuddle down with her head on his
+shoulder, as though imploring his protection, although always in the
+open air. If Julio ever attempted greater intimacy in a carriage,
+madame would repel him most vigorously. A contradictory duality
+appeared to inspire her actions. Every morning, on awaking, she
+would decide to yield, but then when near him, her middle-class
+respectability, jealous of its reputation, kept her faithful to her
+mother's teachings.
+
+One day she agreed to visit his studio with the interest that the
+haunts of the loved one always inspires. "Promise that you will not
+take advantage of me." He readily promised, swearing that
+everything should be as Marguerite wished. . . . But from that day
+they were no longer seen in the gardens, nor wandering around
+persecuted by the winter winds. They preferred the studio, and
+Argensola had to rearrange his existence, seeking the stove of
+another artist friend, in order to continue his reading.
+
+This state of things lasted two months. They never knew what secret
+force suddenly disturbed their tranquility. Perhaps one of her
+friends, guessing at the truth, had told the husband anonymously.
+Perhaps it was she herself unconsciously, with her inexpressible
+happiness, her tardy returns home when dinner was already served,
+and the sudden aversion which she showed toward the engineer in
+their hours alone, trying to keep her heart faithful to her lover.
+To divide her interest between her legal companion and the man she
+loved was a torment that her simple and vehement enthusiasm could
+not tolerate.
+
+While she was hurrying one night through the rue de la Pompe,
+looking at her watch and trembling with impatience at not finding an
+automobile or even a cab, a man stood in front of her. . . .
+Etienne Laurier! She always shuddered with fear on recalling that
+hour. For a moment she believed that he was going to kill her.
+Serious men, quiet and diffident, are most terrible in their
+explosions of wrath. Her husband knew everything. With the same
+patience that he employed in solving his industrial problems, he had
+been studying her day by day, without her ever suspecting the
+watchfulness behind that impassive countenance. Then he had
+followed her in order to complete the evidence of his misfortune.
+
+Marguerite had never supposed that he could be so common and noisy
+in his anger. She had expected that he would accept the facts
+coldly with that slight tinge of philosophical irony usually shown
+by distinguished men, as the husbands of her friends had done. But
+the poor engineer who, outside of his work, saw only his wife,
+loving her as a woman, and adoring her as a dainty and superior
+being, a model of grace and elegance, could not endure the thought
+of her downfall, and cried and threatened without reserve, so that
+the scandal became known throughout their entire circle of friends.
+The senator felt greatly annoyed in remembering that it was in his
+exclusive home that the guilty ones had become acquainted; but his
+displeasure was visited upon the husband. What lack of good
+taste! . . . Women will be women, and everything is capable of
+adjustment. But before the imprudent outbursts of this frantic
+devil no elegant solution was possible, and there was now nothing
+to do but to begin divorce proceedings.
+
+Desnoyers, senior, was very indignant upon learning of this last
+escapade of his son. He had always had a great liking for Laurier.
+That instinctive bond which exists between men of industry, patient
+and silent, had made them very congenial. At the senator's
+receptions he had always talked with the engineer about the progress
+of his business, interesting himself in the development of that
+factory of which he always spoke with the affection of a father.
+The millionaire, in spite of his reputation for miserliness, had
+even volunteered his disinterested support if at any time it should
+become necessary to enlarge the plant. And it was this good man's
+happiness that his son, a frivolous and useless dancer, was going to
+steal! . . .
+
+At first Laurier spoke of a duel. His wrath was that of a work
+horse who breaks the tight reins of his laboring outfit, tosses his
+mane, neighs wildly and bites. The father was greatly distressed at
+the possibility of such an outcome. . . . One scandal more! Julio
+had dedicated the greater part of his existence to the handling of
+arms.
+
+"He will kill the poor man!" he said to the senator. "I am sure
+that he will kill him. It is the logic of life; the good-for-
+nothing always kill those who amount to anything."
+
+But there was no killing. The Father of the Republic knew how to
+handle the clashing parties, with the same skill that he always
+employed in the corridors of the Senate during a ministerial crisis.
+The scandal was hushed up. Marguerite went to live with her mother
+and took the first steps for a divorce.
+
+Some evenings, when the studio clock was striking seven, she would
+yawn and say sadly: "I must go. . . . I have to go, although this
+is my true home. . . . Ah, what a pity that we are not married!"
+
+And he, feeling a whole garden of bourgeois virtues, hitherto
+ignored, bursting into bloom, repeated in a tone of conviction:
+
+"That's so; why are we not married!"
+
+Their wishes could be realized. The husband was facilitating the
+step by his unexpected intervention. So young Desnoyers set forth
+for South America in order to raise the money and marry Marguerite.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE COUSIN FROM BERLIN
+
+
+The studio of Julio Desnoyers was on the top floor, both the
+stairway and the elevator stopping before his door. The two tiny
+apartments at the back were lighted by an interior court, their only
+means of communication being the service stairway which went on up
+to the garrets.
+
+While his comrade was away, Argensola had made the acquaintance of
+those in the neighboring lodgings. The largest of the apartments
+was empty during the day, its occupants not returning till after
+they had taken their evening meal in a restaurant. As both husband
+and wife were employed outside, they could not remain at home except
+on holidays. The man, vigorous and of a martial aspect, was
+superintendent in a big department store. . . . He had been a
+soldier in Africa, wore a military decoration, and had the rank of
+sub-lieutenant in the Reserves. She was a blonde, heavy and rather
+anaemic, with bright eyes and a sentimental expression. On holidays
+she spent long hours at the piano, playing musical reveries, always
+the same. At other times Argensola saw her through the interior
+window working in the kitchen aided by her companion, the two
+laughing over their clumsiness and inexperience in preparing the
+Sunday dinner.
+
+The concierge thought that this woman was a German, but she herself
+said that she was Swiss. She was a cashier in a shop--not the one
+in which her husband was employed. In the mornings they left home
+together, separating in the Place d'Etoile. At seven in the evening
+they met here, greeting each other with a kiss, like lovers who meet
+for the first time; and then after supper, they returned to their
+nest in the rue de la Pompe. All Argensola's attempts at
+friendliness with these neighbors were repulsed because of their
+self-centredness. They responded with freezing courtesy; they lived
+only for themselves.
+
+The other apartment of two rooms was occupied by a single man. He
+was a Russian or Pole who almost always returned with a package of
+books, and passed many hours writing near the patio window. From
+the very first the Spaniard took him to be a mysterious man,
+probably a very distinguished one--a true hero of a novel. The
+foreign appearance of this Tchernoff made a great impression upon
+him--his dishevelled beard, and oily locks, his spectacles upon a
+large nose that seemed deformed by a dagger-thrust. There emanated
+from him, like an invisible nimbus, an odor of cheap wine and soiled
+clothing.
+
+When Argensola caught a glimpse of him through the service door he
+would say to himself, "Ah, Friend Tchernoff is returning," and
+thereupon he would saunter out to the stairway in order to have a
+chat with his neighbor. For a long time the stranger discouraged
+all approach to his quarters, which fact led the Spaniard to infer
+that he devoted himself to alchemy and kindred mysteries. When he
+finally was allowed to enter he saw only books, many books, books
+everywhere--scattered on the floor, heaped upon benches, piled in
+corners, overflowing on to broken-down chairs, old tables, and a bed
+that was only made up now and then when the owner, alarmed by the
+increasing invasion of dust and cobwebs, was obliged to call in the
+aid of his friend, the concierge.
+
+Argensola finally realized, not without a certain disenchantment,
+that there was nothing mysterious in the life of the man. What he
+was writing near the window were merely translations, some of them
+ordered, others volunteer work for the socialist periodicals. The
+only marvellous thing about him was the quantity of languages that
+he knew.
+
+"He knows them all," said the Spaniard, when describing their
+neighbor to Desnoyers. "He has only to hear of a new one to master
+it. He holds the key, the secret of all languages, living or dead.
+He speaks Castilian as well as we do, and yet he has never been in a
+Spanish-speaking country."
+
+Argensola again felt a thrill of mystery upon reading the titles of
+many of the volumes. The majority were old books, many of them in
+languages that he was not able to decipher, picked up for a song at
+second-hand shops or on the book stands installed upon the parapets
+of the Seine. Only a man holding the key of tongues could get
+together such volumes. An atmosphere of mysticism, of superhuman
+insight, of secrets intact for many centuries appeared to emanate
+from these heaps of dusty volumes with worm-eaten leaves. And mixed
+with these ancient tomes were others red and conspicuous, pamphlets
+of socialistic propaganda, leaflets in all the languages of Europe
+and periodicals--many periodicals, with revolutionary titles.
+
+Tchernoff did not appear to enjoy visits and conversation. He would
+smile enigmatically into his black beard, and was very sparing with
+his words so as to shorten the interview. But Argensola possessed
+the means of winning over this sullen personage. It was only
+necessary for him to wink one eye with the expressive invitation,
+"Do we go?" and the two would soon be settled on a bench in the
+kitchen of Desnoyers' studio, opposite a bottle which had come from
+the avenue Victor Hugo. The costly wines of Don Marcelo made the
+Russian more communicative, although, in spite of this aid, the
+Spaniard learned little of his neighbor's real existence. Sometimes
+he would mention Jaures and other socialistic orators. His surest
+means of existence was the translation of periodicals or party
+papers. On various occasions the name of Siberia escaped from his
+lips, and he admitted that he had been there a long time; but he did
+not care to talk about a country visited against his will. He would
+merely smile modestly, showing plainly that he did not wish to make
+any further revelations.
+
+The morning after the return of Julio Desnoyers, while Argensola was
+talking on the stairway with Tchernoff, the bell rang. How
+annoying! The Russian, who was well up in advanced politics, was
+just explaining the plans advanced by Jaures. There were still many
+who hoped that war might be averted. He had his motives for
+doubting it. . . . He, Tchernoff, was commenting on these illusions
+with the smile of a flat-nosed sphinx when the bell rang for a
+second time, so that Argensola was obliged to break away from his
+interesting friend, and run to open the main door.
+
+A gentleman wished to see Julio. He spoke very correct French,
+though his accent was a revelation for Argensola. Upon going into
+the bedroom in search of his master, who was just arising, he said
+confidently, "It's the cousin from Berlin who has come to say good-
+bye. It could not be anyone else."
+
+When the three came together in the studio, Desnoyers presented his
+comrade, in order that the visitor might not make any mistake in
+regard to his social status.
+
+"I have heard him spoken of. The gentleman is Argensola, a very
+deserving youth."
+
+Doctor Julius von Hartrott said this with the self-sufficiency of a
+man who knows everything and wishes to be agreeable to an inferior,
+conceding him the alms of his attention.
+
+The two cousins confronted each other with a curiosity not
+altogether free from distrust. Although closely related, they knew
+each other very slightly, tacitly admitting complete divergence in
+opinions and tastes.
+
+After slowly examining the Sage, Argensola came to the conclusion
+that he looked like an officer dressed as a civilian. He noticed in
+his person an effort to imitate the soldierly when occasionally
+discarding uniform--the ambition of every German burgher wishing to
+be taken for the superior class. His trousers were narrow, as
+though intended to be tucked into cavalry boots. His coat with two
+rows of buttons had the contracted waist with very full skirt and
+upstanding lapels, suggesting vaguely a military great coat. The
+reddish moustachios, strong jaw and shaved head completed his would-
+be martial appearance; but his eyes, large, dark-circled and near-
+sighted, were the eyes of a student taking refuge behind great thick
+glasses which gave him the aspect of a man of peace.
+
+Desnoyers knew that he was an assistant professor of the University,
+that he had published a few volumes, fat and heavy as bricks, and
+that he was a member of an academic society collaborating in
+documentary research directed by a famous historian. In his lapel
+he was wearing the badge of a foreign order.
+
+Julio's respect for the learned member of the family was not unmixed
+with contempt. He and his sister Chichi had from childhood felt an
+instinctive hostility toward the cousins from Berlin. It annoyed
+him, too, to have his family everlastingly holding up as a model
+this pedant who only knew life as it is in books, and passed his
+existence investigating what men had done in other epochs, in order
+to draw conclusions in harmony with Germany's views. While young
+Desnoyers had great facility for admiration, and reverenced all
+those whose "arguments" Argensola had doled out to him, he drew the
+line at accepting the intellectual grandeur of this illustrious
+relative.
+
+During his stay in Berlin, a German word of vulgar invention had
+enabled him to classify this prig. Heavy books of minute
+investigation were every month being published by the dozens in the
+Fatherland. There was not a professor who could resist the
+temptation of constructing from the simplest detail an enormous
+volume written in a dull, involved style. The people, therefore,
+appreciating that these near-sighted authors were incapable of any
+genial vision of comradeship, called them Sitzfleisch haben, because
+of the very long sittings which their works represented. That was
+what this cousin was for him, a mere Sitzfleisch haben.
+
+Doctor von Hartrott, on explaining his visit, spoke in Spanish. He
+availed himself of this language used by the family during his
+childhood, as a precaution, looking around repeatedly as if he
+feared to be heard. He had come to bid his cousin farewell. His
+mother had told him of his return, and he had not wished to leave
+Paris without seeing him. He was leaving in a few hours, since
+matters were growing more strained.
+
+"But do you really believe that there will be war?" asked Desnoyers.
+
+"War will be declared to-morrow or the day after. Nothing can
+prevent it now. It is necessary for the welfare of humanity."
+
+Silence followed this speech, Julio and Argensola looking with
+astonishment at this peaceable-looking man who had just spoken with
+such martial arrogance. The two suspected that the professor was
+making this visit in order to give vent to his opinions and
+enthusiasms. At the same time, perhaps, he was trying to find out
+what they might think and know, as one of the many viewpoints of the
+people in Paris.
+
+"You are not French," he added looking at his cousin. "You were
+born in Argentina, so before you I may speak the truth."
+
+"And were you not born there?" asked Julio smiling.
+
+The Doctor made a gesture of protest, as though he had just heard
+something insulting. "No, I am a German. No matter where a German
+may be born, he always belongs to his mother country." Then turning
+to Argensola--"This gentleman, too, is a foreigner. He comes from
+noble Spain, which owes to us the best that it has--the worship of
+honor, the knightly spirit."
+
+The Spaniard wished to remonstrate, but the Sage would not permit,
+adding in an oracular tone:
+
+"You were miserable Celts, sunk in the vileness of an inferior and
+mongrel race whose domination by Rome but made your situation worse.
+Fortunately you were conquered by the Goths and others of our race
+who implanted in you a sense of personal dignity. Do not forget,
+young man, that the Vandals were the ancestors of the Prussians of
+to-day."
+
+Again Argensola tried to speak, but his friend signed to him not to
+interrupt the professor who appeared to have forgotten his former
+reserve and was working up to an enthusiastic pitch with his own
+words.
+
+"We are going to witness great events," he continued. "Fortunate
+are those born in this epoch, the most interesting in history! At
+this very moment, humanity is changing its course. Now the true
+civilization begins."
+
+The war, according to him, was going to be of a brevity hitherto
+unseen. Germany had been preparing herself to bring about this
+event without any long, economic world-disturbance. A single month
+would be enough to crush France, the most to be feared of their
+adversaries. Then they would march against Russia, who with her
+slow, clumsy movements could not oppose an immediate defense.
+Finally they would attack haughty England, so isolated in its
+archipelago that it could not obstruct the sweep of German progress.
+This would make a series of rapid blows and overwhelming victories,
+requiring only a summer in which to play this magnificent role. The
+fall of the leaves in the following autumn would greet the definite
+triumph of Germany.
+
+With the assurance of a professor who does not expect his dictum to
+be refuted by his hearers, he explained the superiority of the
+German race. All mankind was divided into two groups--dolicephalous
+and the brachicephalous, according to the shape of the skull.
+Another scientific classification divided men into the light-haired
+and dark-haired. The dolicephalous (arched heads) represented
+purity of race and superior mentality. The brachicephalous (flat
+heads) were mongrels with all the stigma of degeneration. The
+German, dolicephalous par excellence, was the only descendant of the
+primitive Aryans. All the other nations, especially those of the
+south of Europe called "latins," belonged to a degenerate humanity.
+
+The Spaniard could not contain himself any longer. "But no person
+with any intelligence believes any more in those antique theories of
+race! What if there no longer existed a people of absolutely pure
+blood, owing to thousands of admixtures due to historical
+conquests!" . . . Many Germans bore the identical ethnic marks
+which the professor was attributing to the inferior races.
+
+"There is something in that," admitted Hartrott, "but although the
+German race may not be perfectly pure, it is the least impure of all
+races and, therefore, should have dominion over the world."
+
+His voice took on an ironic and cutting edge when speaking of the
+Celts, inhabitants of the lands of the South. They had retarded the
+progress of Humanity, deflecting it in the wrong direction. The
+Celt is individualistic and consequently an ungovernable
+revolutionary who tends to socialism. Furthermore, he is a
+humanitarian and makes a virtue of mercy, defending the existence of
+the weak who do not amount to anything.
+
+The illustrious German places above everything else, Method and
+Power. Elected by Nature to command the impotent races, he
+possesses all the qualifications that distinguish the superior
+leader. The French Revolution was merely a clash between Teutons
+and Celts. The nobility of France were descended from Germanic
+warriors established in the country after the so-called invasion of
+the barbarians. The middle and lower classes were the Gallic-Celtic
+element. The inferior race had conquered the superior,
+disorganizing the country and perturbing the world. Celtism was the
+inventor of Democracy, of the doctrines of Socialism and Anarchy.
+Now the hour of Germanic retaliation was about to strike, and the
+Northern race would re-establish order, since God had favored it by
+demonstrating its indisputable superiority.
+
+"A nation," he added, "can aspire to great destinies only when it is
+fundamentally Teutonic. The less German it is, the less its
+civilization amounts to. We represent 'the aristocracy of
+humanity,' 'the salt of the earth,' as our William said."
+
+Argensola was listening with astonishment to this outpouring of
+conceit. All the great nations had passed through the fever of
+Imperialism. The Greeks aspired to world-rule because they were the
+most civilized and believed themselves the most fit to give
+civilization to the rest of mankind. The Romans, upon conquering
+countries, implanted law and the rule of justice. The French of the
+Revolution and the Empire justified their invasions on the plea that
+they wished to liberate mankind and spread abroad new ideas. Even
+the Spaniards of the sixteenth century, when battling with half of
+Europe for religious unity and the extermination of heresy, were
+working toward their ideals obscure and perhaps erroneous, but
+disinterested.
+
+All the nations of history had been struggling for something which
+they had considered generous and above their own interests. Germany
+alone, according to this professor, was trying to impose itself upon
+the world in the name of racial superiority--a superiority that
+nobody had recognized, that she was arrogating to herself, coating
+her affirmations with a varnish of false science.
+
+"Until now wars have been carried on by the soldiery," continued
+Hartrott. "That which is now going to begin will be waged by a
+combination of soldiers and professors. In its preparation the
+University has taken as much part as the military staff. German
+science, leader of all sciences, is united forever with what the
+Latin revolutionists disdainfully term militarism. Force, mistress
+of the world, is what creates right, that which our truly unique
+civilization imposes. Our armies are the representatives of our
+culture, and in a few weeks we shall free the world from its
+decadence, completely rejuvenating it."
+
+The vision of the immense future of his race was leading him on to
+expose himself with lyrical enthusiasm. William I, Bismarck, all
+the heroes of past victories, inspired his veneration, but he spoke
+of them as dying gods whose hour had passed. They were glorious
+ancestors of modest pretensions who had confined their activities to
+enlarging the frontiers, and to establishing the unity of the
+Empire, afterwards opposing themselves with the prudence of
+valetudinarians to the daring of the new generation. Their
+ambitions went no further than a continental hegemony . . . but now
+William II had leaped into the arena, the complex hero that the
+country required.
+
+"Lamprecht, my master, has pictured his greatness. It is tradition
+and the future, method and audacity. Like his grandfather, the
+Emperor holds the conviction of what monarchy by the grace of God
+represents, but his vivid and modern intelligence recognizes and
+accepts modern conditions. At the same time that he is romantic,
+feudal and a supporter of the agrarian conservatives, he is also an
+up-to-date man who seeks practical solutions and shows a utilitarian
+spirit. In him are correctly balanced instinct and reason."
+
+Germany, guided by this hero, had, according to Hartrott, been
+concentrating its strength, and recognizing its true path. The
+Universities supported him even more unanimously than the army. Why
+store up so much power and maintain it without employment? . . .
+The empire of the world belongs to the German people. The
+historians and philosophers, disciples of Treitschke, were taking it
+upon themselves to frame the rights that would justify this
+universal domination. And Lamprecht, the psychological historian,
+like the other professors, was launching the belief in the absolute
+superiority of the Germanic race. It was just that it should rule
+the world, since it only had the power to do so. This "telurian
+germanization" was to be of immense benefit to mankind. The earth
+was going to be happy under the dictatorship of a people born for
+mastery. The German state, "tentacular potency," would eclipse with
+its glory the most imposing empire of the past and present. Gott
+mit uns!
+
+"Who will be able to deny, as my master says, that there exists a
+Christian, German God, the 'Great Ally,' who is showing himself to
+our enemies, the foreigners, as a strong and jealous divinity?" . . .
+
+Desnoyers was listening to his cousin with astonishment and at the
+same time looking at Argensola who, with a flutter of his eyes,
+seemed to be saying to him, "He is mad! These Germans are simply
+mad with pride."
+
+Meanwhile, the professor, unable to curb his enthusiasm, continued
+expounding the grandeur of his race. From his viewpoint, the
+providential Kaiser had shown inexplicable weakenings. He was too
+good and too kind. "Deliciae generis humani," as had said Professor
+Lasson, another of Hartrott's masters. Able to overthrow everything
+with his annihilating power, the Emperor was limiting himself merely
+to maintaining peace. But the nation did not wish to stop there,
+and was pushing its leader until it had him started. It was useless
+now to put on the brakes. "He who does not advance recedes";--that
+was the cry of PanGermanism to the Emperor. He must press on in
+order to conquer the entire world.
+
+"And now war comes," continued the pedant. "We need the colonies of
+the others, even though Bismarck, through an error of his stubborn
+old age, exacted nothing at the time of universal distribution,
+letting England and France get possession of the best lands. We
+must control all countries that have Germanic blood and have been
+civilized by our forbears."
+
+Hartrott enumerated these countries. Holland and Belgium were
+German. France, through the Franks, was one-third Teutonic blood.
+Italy. . . . Here the professor hesitated, recalling the fact that
+this nation was still an ally, certainly a little insecure, but
+still united by diplomatic bonds. He mentioned, nevertheless, the
+Longobards and other races coming from the North. Spain and
+Portugal had been populated by the ruddy Goth and also belonged to
+the dominant race. And since the majority of the nations of America
+were of Spanish and Portuguese origin, they should also be included
+in this recovery.
+
+"It is a little premature to think of these last nations just yet,"
+added the Doctor modestly, "but some day the hour of justice will
+sound. After our continental triumph, we shall have time to think
+of their fate. . . . North America also should receive our
+civilizing influence, for there are living millions of Germans who
+have created its greatness."
+
+He was talking of the future conquests as though they were marks of
+distinction with which his country was going to favor other
+countries. These were to continue living politically the same as
+before with their individual governments, but subject to the
+Teutons, like minors requiring the strong hand of a master. They
+would form the Universal United States, with an hereditary and all-
+powerful president--the Emperor of Germany--receiving all the
+benefits of Germanic culture, working disciplined under his
+industrial direction. . . . But the world is ungrateful, and human
+badness always opposes itself to progress.
+
+"We have no illusions," sighed the professor, with lofty sadness.
+"We have no friends. All look upon us with jealousy, as dangerous
+beings, because we are the most intelligent, the most active, and
+have proved ourselves superior to all others. . . . But since they
+no longer love us, let them fear us! As my friend Mann says,
+although Kultur is the spiritual organization of the world, it does
+not exclude bloody savagery when that becomes necessary. Kultur
+sanctifies the demon within us, and is above morality, reason and
+science. We are going to impose Kultur by force of the cannon."
+
+Argensola continued, saying with his eyes, "They are crazy, crazy
+with pride! . . . What can the world expect of such people!"
+
+Desnoyers here intervened in order to brighten this gloomy monologue
+with a little optimism. War had not yet been positively declared.
+The diplomats were still trying to arrange matters. Perhaps it
+might all turn out peaceably at the last minute, as had so often
+happened before. His cousin was seeing things entirely distorted by
+an aggressive enthusiasm.
+
+Oh, the ironical, ferocious and cutting smile of the Doctor!
+Argensola had never known old Madariaga, but it, nevertheless,
+occurred to him that in this fashion sharks must smile, although he,
+too, had never seen a shark.
+
+"It is war," boomed Hartrott. "When I left Germany, fifteen days
+ago, I knew that war was inevitable."
+
+The certainty with which he said this dissipated all Julio's hope.
+Moreover, this man's trip, on the pretext of seeing his mother,
+disquieted him. . . . On what mission had Doctor Julius von
+Hartrott come to Paris? . . .
+
+"Well, then," asked Desnoyers, "why so many diplomatic interviews?
+Why does the German government intervene at all--although in such a
+lukewarm way--in the struggle between Austria and Servia. . . .
+Would it not be better to declare war right out?"
+
+The professor replied with simplicity: "Our government undoubtedly
+wishes that the others should declare the war. The role of outraged
+dignity is always the most pleasing one and justifies all ulterior
+resolutions, however extreme they may seem. There are some of our
+people who are living comfortably and do not desire war. It is
+expedient to make them believe that those who impose it upon us are
+our enemies so that they may feel the necessity of defending
+themselves. Only superior minds reach the conviction of the great
+advancement that can be accomplished by the sword alone, and that
+war, as our grand Treitschke says, is the highest form of progress."
+
+Again he smiled with a ferocious expression. Morality, from his
+point of view, should exist among individuals only to make them more
+obedient and disciplined, for morality per se impedes governments
+and should be suppressed as a useless obstacle. For the State there
+exists neither truth nor falsehood; it only recognizes the utility
+of things. The glorious Bismarck, in order to consummate the war
+with France, the base of German grandeur, had not hesitated to
+falsify a telegraphic despatch.
+
+"And remember, that he is the most glorious hero of our time!
+History looks leniently upon his heroic feat. Who would accuse the
+one who triumphs? . . . Professor Hans Delbruck has written with
+reason, 'Blessed be the hand that falsified the telegram of Ems!'"
+
+It was convenient to have the war break out immediately, in order
+that events might result favorably for Germany, whose enemies are
+totally unprepared. Preventive war was recommended by General
+Bernhardi and other illustrious patriots. It would be dangerous
+indeed to defer the declaration of war until the enemies had
+fortified themselves so that they should be the ones to make war.
+Besides, to the Germans what kind of deterrents could law and other
+fictions invented by weak nations possibly be? . . . No; they had
+the Power, and Power creates new laws. If they proved to be the
+victors, History would not investigate too closely the means by
+which they had conquered. It was Germany that was going to win, and
+the priests of all cults would finally sanctify with their chants
+the blessed war--if it led to triumph.
+
+"We are not making war in order to punish the Servian regicides, nor
+to free the Poles, nor the others oppressed by Russia, stopping
+there in admiration of our disinterested magnanimity. We wish to
+wage it because we are the first people of the earth and should
+extend our activity over the entire planet. Germany's hour has
+sounded. We are going to take our place as the powerful Mistress of
+the World, the place which Spain occupied in former centuries,
+afterwards France, and England to-day. What those people
+accomplished in a struggle of many years we are going to bring about
+in four months. The storm-flag of the Empire is now going to wave
+over nations and oceans; the sun is going to shine on a great
+slaughter. . . .
+
+"Old Rome, sick unto death, called 'barbarians' the Germans who
+opened the grave. The world to-day also smells death and will
+surely call us barbarians. . . . So be it! When Tangiers and
+Toulouse, Amberes and Calais have become submissive to German
+barbarism . . . then we will speak further of this matter. We have
+the power, and who has that needs neither to hesitate nor to
+argue. . . . Power! . . . That is the beautiful word--the only
+word that rings true and clear. . . . Power! One sure stab and
+all argument is answered forever!"
+
+"But are you so sure of victory?" asked Desnoyers. "Sometimes
+Destiny gives us great surprises. There are hidden forces that we
+must take into consideration or they may overturn the best-laid
+plans."
+
+The smile of the Doctor became increasingly scornful and arrogant.
+Everything had been foreseen and studied out long ago with the most
+minute Germanic method. What had they to fear? . . . The enemy
+most to be reckoned with was France, incapable of resisting the
+enervating moral influences, the sufferings, the strain and the
+privations of war;--a nation physically debilitated and so poisoned
+by revolutionary spirit that it had laid aside the use of arms
+through an exaggerated love of comfort.
+
+"Our generals," he announced, "are going to leave her in such a
+state that she will never again cross our path."
+
+There was Russia, too, to consider, but her amorphous masses were
+slow to assemble and unwieldy to move. The Executive Staff of
+Berlin had timed everything by measure for crushing France in four
+weeks, and would then lead its enormous forces against the Russian
+empire before it could begin action.
+
+"We shall finish with the bear after killing the cock," affirmed the
+professor triumphantly.
+
+But guessing at some objection from his cousin, he hastened on--"I
+know what you are going to tell me. There remains another enemy,
+one that has not yet leaped into the lists but which all the Germans
+are waiting for. That one inspires more hatred than all the others
+put together, because it is of our blood, because it is a traitor to
+the race. . . . Ah, how we loathe it!"
+
+And in the tone in which these words were uttered throbbed an
+expression of hatred and a thirst for vengeance which astonished
+both listeners.
+
+"Even though England attack us," continued Hartrott, "we shall
+conquer, notwithstanding. This adversary is not more terrible than
+the others. For the past century she has ruled the world. Upon the
+fall of Napoleon she seized the continental hegemony, and will fight
+to keep it. But what does her energy amount to? . . . As our
+Bernhardi says, the English people are merely a nation of renters
+and sportsmen. Their army is formed from the dregs of the nation.
+The country lacks military spirit. We are a people of warriors, and
+it will be an easy thing for us to conquer the English, debilitated
+by a false conception of life."
+
+The Doctor paused and then added: "We are counting on the internal
+corruption of our enemies, on their lack of unity. God will aid us
+by sowing confusion among these detested people. In a few days you
+will see His hand. Revolution is going to break out in France at
+the same time as war. The people of Paris will build barricades in
+the streets and the scenes of the Commune will repeat themselves.
+Tunis, Algiers and all their other possessions are about to rise
+against the metropolis."
+
+Argensola seized the opportunity to smile with an aggressive
+incredulity.
+
+"I repeat it," insisted Hartrott, "that this country is going to
+have internal revolution and colonial insurrection. I know
+perfectly well what I am talking about. . . . Russia also will
+break out into revolution with a red flag that will force the Czar
+to beg for mercy on his knees. You have only to read in the papers
+of the recent strikes in Saint Petersburg, and the manifestations of
+the strikers with the pretext of President Poincare's visit. . . .
+England will see her appeals to her colonies completely ignored.
+India is going to rise against her, and Egypt, too, will seize this
+opportunity for her emancipation."
+
+Julio was beginning to be impressed by these affirmations enunciated
+with such oracular certainty, and he felt almost irritated at the
+incredulous Argensola, who continued looking insolently at the seer,
+repeating with his winking eyes, "He is insane--insane with pride."
+The man certainly must have strong reasons for making such awful
+prophecies. His presence in Paris just at this time was difficult
+for Desnoyers to understand, and gave to his words a mysterious
+authority.
+
+"But the nations will defend themselves," he protested to his
+cousin. "Victory will not be such a very simple thing as you
+imagine."
+
+"Yes, they will defend themselves, and the struggle will be fiercely
+contested. It appears that, of late years, France has been paying
+some attention to her army. We shall undoubtedly encounter some
+resistance; triumph may be somewhat difficult, but we are going to
+prevail. . . . You have no idea to what extent the offensive power
+of Germany has attained. Nobody knows with certainty beyond the
+frontiers. If our foes should comprehend it in all its immensity,
+they would fall on their knees beforehand to beg for mercy, thus
+obviating the necessity for useless sacrifices."
+
+There was a long silence. Julius von Hartrott appeared lost in
+reverie. The very thought of the accumulated strength of his race
+submerged him in a species of mystic adoration.
+
+"The preliminary victory," he suddenly exclaimed, "we gained some
+time ago. Our enemies, therefore, hate us, and yet they imitate us.
+All that bears the stamp of Germany is in demand throughout the
+world. The very countries that are trying to resist our arms copy
+our methods in their universities and admire our theories, even
+those which do not attain success in Germany. Oftentimes we laugh
+among ourselves, like the Roman augurs, upon seeing the servility
+with which they follow us! . . . And yet they will not admit our
+superiority!"
+
+For the first time, Argensola's eyes and general expression approved
+the words of Hartrott. What he had just said was only too true--the
+world was a victim of "the German superstition." An intellectual
+cowardice, the fear of Force had made it admire en masse and
+indiscriminately, everything of Teutonic origin, just because of the
+intensity of its glitter--gold mixed with talcum. The so-called
+Latins, dazed with admiration, were, with unreasonable pessimism,
+becoming doubtful of their ability, and thus were the first to
+decree their own death. And the conceited Germans merely had to
+repeat the words of these pessimists in order to strengthen their
+belief in their own superiority.
+
+With that Southern temperament, which leaps rapidly from one extreme
+to another, many Latins had proclaimed that in the world of the
+future, there would be no place for the Latin peoples, now in their
+death-agony--adding that Germany alone preserved the latent forces
+of civilization. The French who declaimed among themselves, with
+the greatest exaggeration, unconscious that folks were listening the
+other side of the door, had proclaimed repeatedly for many years
+past, that France was degenerating rapidly and would soon vanish
+from the earth. . . . Then why should they resent the scorn of
+their enemies. . . . Why shouldn't the Germans share in their
+beliefs?
+
+The professor, misinterpreting the silent agreement of the Spaniard
+who until then had been listening with such a hostile smile, added:
+
+"Now is the time to try out in France the German culture, implanting
+it there as conquerors."
+
+Here Argensola interrupted, "And what if there is no such thing as
+German culture, as a celebrated Teuton says?" It had become
+necessary to contradict this pedant who had become insufferable with
+his egotism. Hartrott almost jumped from his chair on hearing such
+a doubt.
+
+"What German is that?"
+
+"Nietzsche."
+
+The professor looked at him pityingly. Nietzsche had said to
+mankind, "Be harsh!" affirming that "a righteous war sanctifies
+every cause." He had exalted Bismarck; he had taken part in the war
+of '70; he was glorifying Germany when he spoke of "the smiling
+lion," and "the blond beast." But Argensola listened with the
+tranquillity of one sure of his ground. Oh, hours of placid reading
+near the studio chimney, listening to the rain beating against the
+pane! . . .
+
+"The philosopher did say that," he admitted, "and he said many other
+very different things, like all great thinkers. His doctrine is one
+of pride, but of individual pride, not that of a nation or race. He
+always spoke against 'the insidious fallacy of race.'"
+
+Argensola recalled his philosophy word for word. Culture, according
+to Nietzsche, was "unity of style in all the manifestations of
+life." Science did not necessarily include culture. Great
+knowledge might be accompanied with great barbarity, by the absence
+of style or by the chaotic confusion of all styles. Germany,
+according to the philosopher, had no genuine culture owing to its
+lack of style. "The French," he had said, "were at the head of an
+authentic and fruitful culture, whatever their valor might be, and
+until now everybody had drawn upon it." Their hatreds were
+concentrated within their own country. "I cannot endure Germany.
+The spirit of servility and pettiness penetrates everywhere. . . .
+I believe only in French culture, and what the rest of Europe calls
+culture appears to me to be a mistake. The few individual cases of
+lofty culture that I met in Germany were of French origin."
+
+"You know," continued Argensola, "that in quarrelling with Wagner
+about the excess of Germanism in his art, Nietzsche proclaimed the
+necessity of mediterraneanizing music. His ideal was a culture for
+all Europe, but with a Latin base."
+
+Julius von Hartrott replied most disdainfully to this, repeating the
+Spaniard's very words. Men who thought much said many things.
+Besides, Nietzsche was a poet, completely demented at his death, and
+was no authority among the University sages. His fame had only been
+recognized in foreign lands. . . . And he paid no further attention
+to the youth, ignoring him as though he had evaporated into thin air
+after his presumption. All the professor's attention was now
+concentrated on Desnoyers.
+
+"This country," he resumed, "is dying from within. How can you
+doubt that revolution will break out the minute war is declared? . . .
+Have you not noticed the agitation of the boulevard on account of
+the Caillaux trial? Reactionaries and revolutionists have been
+assaulting each other for the past three days. I have seen them
+challenging one another with shouts and songs as if they were going
+to come to blows right in the middle of the street. This division
+of opinion will become accentuated when our troops cross the
+frontier. It will then be civil war. The anti-militarists are
+clamoring mournfully, believing that it is in the power of the
+government to prevent the clash. . . . A country degenerated by
+democracy and by the inferiority of the triumphant Celt, greedy for
+full liberty! . . . We are the only free people on earth because we
+know how to obey."
+
+This paradox made Julio smile. Germany the only free people! . . .
+
+"It is so," persisted Hartrott energetically. "We have the liberty
+best suited to a great people--economical and intellectual liberty."
+
+"And political liberty?"
+
+The professor received this question with a scornful shrug.
+
+"Political liberty! . . . Only decadent and ungovernable people,
+inferior races anxious for equality and democratic confusion, talk
+about political liberty. We Germans do not need it. We are a
+nation of masters who recognize the sacredness of government, and we
+wish to be commanded by those of superior birth. We possess the
+genius of organization."
+
+That, according to the Doctor, was the grand German secret, and the
+Teutonic race upon taking possession of the world, would share its
+discovery with all. The nations would then be so organized that
+each individual would give the maximum of service to society.
+Humanity, banded in regiments for every class of production, obeying
+a superior officer, like machines contributing the greatest possible
+output of labor--there you have the perfect state! Liberty was a
+purely negative idea if not accompanied with a positive concept
+which would make it useful.
+
+The two friends listened with astonishment to this description of
+the future which Teutonic superiority was offering to the world.
+Every individual submitted to intensive production, the same as a
+bit of land from which its owner wishes to get the greatest number
+of vegetables. . . . Mankind reduced to mechanics. . . . No
+useless operations that would not produce immediate results. . . .
+And the people who heralded this awful idea were the very
+philosophers and idealists who had once given contemplation and
+reflection the first place in their existence! . . .
+
+Hartrott again harked back to the inferiority of their racial
+enemies. In order to combat successfully, it required self-
+assurance, an unquenchable confidence in the superiority of their
+own powers.
+
+"At this very hour in Berlin, everyone is accepting war, everyone is
+believing that victory is sure, while HERE! . . . I do not say that
+the French are afraid; they have a brave past that galvanizes them
+at certain times--but they are so depressed that it is easy to guess
+that they will make almost any sacrifices in order to evade what is
+coming upon them. The people first will shout with enthusiasm, as
+it always cheers that which carries it to perdition. The upper
+classes have no faith in the future; they are keeping quiet, but the
+presentiment of disaster may easily be conjectured. Yesterday I was
+talking with your father. He is French, and he is rich. He was
+indignant against the government of his country for involving the
+nation in the European conflict in order to defend a distant and
+uninteresting people. He complains of the exalted patriots who have
+opened the abyss between Germany and France, preventing a
+reconciliation. He says that Alsace and Lorraine are not worth what
+a war would cost in men and money. . . . He recognizes our
+greatness and is convinced that we have progressed so rapidly that
+the other countries cannot come up to us. . . . And as your father
+thinks, so do many others--all those who are wrapped in creature
+comfort, and fear to lose it. Believe me, a country that hesitates
+and fears war is conquered before the first battle."
+
+Julio evinced a certain disquietude, as though he would like to cut
+short the conversation.
+
+"Just leave my father out of it! He speaks that way to-day because
+war is not yet an accomplished fact, and he has to contradict and
+vent his indignation on whoever comes near him. To-morrow he will
+say just the opposite. . . . My father is a Latin."
+
+The professor looked at his watch. He must go; there were still
+many things which he had to do before going to the station. The
+Germans living in Paris had fled in great bands as though a secret
+order had been circulating among them. That afternoon the last of
+those who had been living ostensibly in the Capital would depart.
+
+"I have come to see you because of our family interest, because it
+was my duty to give you fair warning. You are a foreigner, and
+nothing holds you here. If you are desirous of witnessing a great
+historic event, remain--but it will be better for you to go. The
+war is going to be ruthless, very ruthless, and if Paris attempts
+resistance, as formerly, we shall see terrible things. Modes of
+offense have greatly changed."
+
+Desnoyers made a gesture of indifference.
+
+"The same as your father," observed the professor. "Last night he
+and all your family responded in the same way. Even my mother
+prefers to remain with her sister, saying that the Germans are very
+good, very civilized and there is nothing to apprehend in their
+triumph."
+
+This good opinion seemed to be troubling the Doctor.
+
+"They don't understand what modern warfare means. They ignore the
+fact that our generals have studied the art of overcoming the enemy
+and they will apply it mercilessly. Ruthlessness is the only means,
+since it perturbs the intelligence of the enemy, paralyzes his
+action and pulverizes his resistance. The more ferocious the war,
+the more quickly it is concluded. To punish with cruelty is to
+proceed humanely. Therefore, Germany is going to be cruel with a
+cruelty hitherto unseen, in order that the conflict may not be
+prolonged."
+
+He had risen and was standing, cane and straw hat in hand.
+Argensola was looking at him with frank hostility. The professor,
+obliged to pass near him, did so with a stiff and disdainful nod.
+
+Then he started toward the door, accompanied by his cousin. The
+farewell was brief.
+
+"I repeat my counsel. If you do not like danger, go! It may be
+that I am mistaken, and that this nation, convinced of the
+uselessness of defense, may give itself up voluntarily. . . . At
+any rate, we shall soon see. I shall take great pleasure in
+returning to Paris when the flag of the Empire is floating over the
+Eiffel Tower, a mere matter of three or four weeks, certainly by the
+beginning of September."
+
+France was going to disappear from the map. To the Doctor, her
+death was a foregone conclusion.
+
+"Paris will remain," he admitted benevolently, "the French will
+remain, because a nation is not easily suppressed; but they will not
+retain their former place. We shall govern the world; they will
+continue to occupy themselves in inventing fashions, in making life
+agreeable for visiting foreigners; and in the intellectual world, we
+shall encourage them to educate good actresses, to produce
+entertaining novels and to write witty comedies. . . . Nothing
+more."
+
+Desnoyers laughed as he shook his cousin's hand, pretending to take
+his words as a paradox.
+
+"I mean it," insisted Hartrott. "The last hour of the French
+Republic as an important nation has sounded. I have studied it at
+close range, and it deserves no better fate. License and lack of
+confidence above--sterile enthusiasm below."
+
+Upon turning his head, he again caught Argensola's malicious smile.
+
+"We know all about that kind of study," he added aggressively. "We
+are accustomed to examine the nations of the past, to dissect them
+fibre by fibre, so that we recognize at a glance the psychology of
+the living."
+
+The Bohemian fancied that he saw a surgeon talking self-sufficiently
+about the mysteries of the will before a corpse. What did this
+pedantic interpreter of dead documents know about life? . . .
+
+When the door closed, he approached his friend who was returning
+somewhat dismayed. Argensola no longer considered Doctor Julius von
+Hartrott crazy.
+
+"What a brute!" he exclaimed, throwing up his hands. "And to think
+that they are at large, these originators of gloomy errors! . . .
+Who would ever believe that they belong to the same land that
+produced Kant, the pacifist, the serene Goethe and Beethoven! . . .
+To think that for so many years, we have believed that they were
+forming a nation of dreamers and philosophers occupied in working
+disinterestedly for all mankind! . . ."
+
+The sentence of a German geographer recurred to him: "The German is
+bicephalous; with one head he dreams and poetizes while with the
+other he thinks and executes."
+
+Desnoyers was now beginning to feel depressed at the certainty of
+war. This professor seemed to him even worse than the Herr
+Counsellor and the other Germans that he had met on the steamer.
+His distress was not only because of his selfish thought as to how
+the catastrophe was going to affect his plans with Marguerite. He
+was suddenly discovering that in this hour of uncertainty he loved
+France. He recognized it as his father's native land and the scene
+of the great Revolution. . . . Although he had never mixed in
+political campaigns, he was a republican at heart, and had often
+ridiculed certain of his friends who adored kings and emperors,
+thinking it a great sign of distinction.
+
+Argensola tried to cheer him up.
+
+"Who knows? . . . This is a country of surprises. One must see the
+Frenchman when he tries to remedy his want of foresight. Let that
+barbarian of a cousin of yours say what he will--there is order,
+there is enthusiasm. . . . Worse off than we were those who lived
+in the days before Valmy. Entirely disorganized, their only defense
+battalions of laborers and countrymen handling a gun for the first
+time. . . . But, nevertheless, the Europe of the old monarchies
+could not for twenty years free themselves from these improvised
+warriors!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+IN WHICH APPEAR THE FOUR HORSEMEN
+
+
+The two friends now lived a feverish life, considerably accelerated
+by the rapidity with which events succeeded each other. Every hour
+brought forth an astonishing bit of news--generally false--which
+changed opinions very suddenly. As soon as the danger of war seemed
+arrested, the report would spread that mobilization was going to be
+ordered within a few minutes.
+
+Within each twenty-four hours were compressed the disquietude,
+anxiety and nervous waste of a normal year. And that which was
+aggravating the situation still more was the uncertainty, the
+expectation of the event, feared but still invisible, the distress
+on account of a danger continually threatening but never arriving.
+
+History in the making was like a stream overflowing its banks,
+events overlapping each other like the waves of an inundation.
+Austria was declaring war with Servia while the diplomats of the
+great powers were continuing their efforts to stem the tide. The
+electric web girdling the planet was vibrating incessantly in the
+depths of the ocean and on the peaks of the continents, transmitting
+alternate hopes and fears.
+
+Russia was mobilizing a part of its army. Germany, with its troops
+in readiness under the pretext of manoeuvres, was decreeing the
+state of "threatened war." The Austrians, regardless of the efforts
+of diplomacy, were beginning the bombardment of Belgrade. William
+II, fearing that the intervention of the Powers might settle the
+differences between the Czar and the Emperor of Austria, was forcing
+the course of events by declaring war upon Russia. Then Germany
+began isolating herself, cutting off railroad and telegraphic
+communications in order to shroud in mystery her invading forces.
+
+France was watching this avalanche of events, temperate in its words
+and enthusiasm. A cool and grave resolution was noticeable
+everywhere. Two generations had come into the world, informed as
+soon as they reached a reasonable age, that some day there would
+undoubtedly be war. Nobody wanted it; the adversary imposed
+it. . . . But all were accepting it with the firm intention of
+fulfilling their duty.
+
+During the daytime Paris was very quiet, concentrating the mind on
+the work in hand. Only a few groups of exalted patriots, following
+the tricolored flag, were passing through the place de la Concorde,
+in order to salute the statue of Strasbourg. The people were
+accosting each other in a friendly way in the streets. Everybody
+seemed to know everybody else, although they might not have met
+before. Eye attracted eye, and smiles appeared to broaden mutually
+with the sympathy of a common interest. The women were sad but
+speaking cheerily in order to hide their emotions. In the long
+summer twilight, the boulevards were filling with crowds. Those
+from the outlying districts were converging toward the centre of the
+city, as in the remote revolutionary days, banding together in
+groups, forming an endless multitude from which came shouts and
+songs. These manifestations were passing through the centre under
+the electric lights that were just being turned on, the processions
+generally lasting until midnight, with the national banner floating
+above the walking crowds, escorted by the flags of other nations.
+
+It was on one of these nights of sincere enthusiasm that the two
+friends heard an unexpected, astonishing piece of news. "They have
+killed Jaures!" The groups were repeating it from one to another
+with an amazement which seemed to overpower their grief. "Jaures
+assassinated! And what for?" The best popular element, which
+instinctively seeks an explanation of every proceeding, remained in
+suspense, not knowing which way to turn. The tribune dead, at the
+very moment that his word as welder of the people was most
+needed! . . .
+
+Argensola thought immediately of Tchernoff. "What will our
+neighbors say?" . . . The quiet, orderly people of Paris were
+fearing a revolution, and for a few moments Desnoyers believed that
+his cousin's auguries were about to be fulfilled. This
+assassination, with its retaliations, might be the signal for civil
+war. But the masses of the people, worn out with grief at the death
+of their hero, were waiting in tragic silence. All were seeing,
+beyond his dead body, the image of the country.
+
+By the following morning, the danger had vanished. The laboring
+classes were talking of generals and war, showing each other their
+little military memorandums, announcing the date of their departure
+as soon as the order of mobilization should be published. "I go the
+second day." "I the first." Those of the standing army who were on
+leave were recalled individually to the barracks. All these events
+were tending in the same direction--war.
+
+The Germans were invading Luxembourg; the Germans were ordering
+their armies to invade the French frontier when their ambassador was
+still in Paris making promises of peace. On the day after the death
+of Jaures, the first of August, the people were crowding around some
+pieces of paper, written by hand and in evident haste. These papers
+were copies of other larger printed sheets, headed by two crossed
+flags. "It has come; it is now a fact!". . . It was the order for
+general mobilization. All France was about to take up arms, and
+chests seemed to expand with a sigh of relief. Eyes were sparkling
+with excitement. The nightmare was at last over! . . . Cruel
+reality was preferable to the uncertainty of days and days, each as
+long as a week.
+
+In vain President Poincare, animated by a last hope, was explaining
+to the French that "mobilization is not necessarily war, that a call
+to arms may be simply a preventive measure." "It is war, inevitable
+war," said the populace with a fatalistic expression. And those who
+were going to start that very night or the following day were the
+most eager and enthusiastic.--"Now those who seek us are going to
+find us! Vive la France!" The Chant du Depart, the martial hymn of
+the volunteers of the first Republic, had been exhumed by the
+instinct of a people which seek the voice of Art in its most
+critical moments. The stanzas of the conservative Chenier, adapted
+to a music of warlike solemnity, were resounding through the
+streets, at the same time as the Marseillaise:
+
+
+ La Republique nous appelle.
+ Sachons vaincre ou sachons perir;
+ Un francais doit vivre pour elle.
+ Pour elle un francais doit mourir.
+
+
+The mobilization began at midnight to the minute. At dusk, groups
+of men began moving through the streets towards the stations. Their
+families were walking beside them, carrying the valise or bundle of
+clothes. They were escorted by the friends of their district, the
+tricolored flag borne aloft at the head of these platoons. The
+Reserves were donning their old uniforms which presented all the
+difficulties of suits long ago forgotten. With new leather belts
+and their revolvers at their sides, they were betaking themselves to
+the railway which was to carry them to the point of concentration.
+One of their children was carrying the old sword in its cloth
+sheath. The wife was hanging on his arm, sad and proud at the same
+time, giving her last counsels in a loving whisper.
+
+Street cars, automobiles and cabs rolled by with crazy velocity.
+Nobody had ever seen so many vehicles in the Paris streets, yet if
+anybody needed one, he called in vain to the conductors, for none
+wished to serve mere civilians. All means of transportation were
+for military men, all roads ended at the railroad stations. The
+heavy trucks of the administration, filled with sacks, were saluted
+with general enthusiasm. "Hurrah for the army!" The soldiers in
+mechanic's garb, on top of the swaying pyramid, replied to the
+cheers, waving their arms and uttering shouts that nobody pretended
+to understand.
+
+Fraternity had created a tolerance hitherto unknown. The crowds
+were pressing forward, but in their encounters, invariably preserved
+good order. Vehicles were running into each other, and when the
+conductors resorted to the customary threats, the crowds would
+intervene and make them shake hands. "Three cheers for France!"
+The pedestrians, escaping between the wheels of the automobiles were
+laughing and good-naturedly reproaching the chauffeur with, "Would
+you kill a Frenchman on his way to his regiment?" and the conductor
+would reply, "I, too, am going in a few hours. This is my last
+trip." As night approached, cars and cabs were running with
+increasing irregularity, many of the employees having abandoned
+their posts to take leave of their families and make the train. All
+the life of Paris was concentrating itself in a half-dozen human
+rivers emptying in the stations.
+
+Desnoyers and Argensola met in a boulevard cafe toward midnight.
+Both were exhausted by the day's emotions and under that nervous
+depression which follows noisy and violent spectacles. They needed
+to rest. War was a fact, and now that it was a certainty, they felt
+no anxiety to get further news. Remaining in the cafe proved
+impossible. In the hot and smoky atmosphere, the occupants were
+singing and shouting and waving tiny flags. All the battle hymns of
+the past and present were here intoned in chorus, to an
+accompaniment of glasses and plates. The rather cosmopolitan
+clientele was reviewing the European nations. All, absolutely all,
+were going to enroll themselves on the side of France. "Hurrah! . . .
+Hurrah!" . . . An old man and his wife were seated at a table
+near the two friends. They were tenants, of an orderly, humdrum
+walk in life, who perhaps in all their existence had never been
+awake at such an hour. In the general enthusiasm they had come to
+the boulevards "in order to see war a little closer." The foreign
+tongue used by his neighbors gave the husband a lofty idea of their
+importance.
+
+"Do you believe that England is going to join us?" . . .
+
+Argensola knew as much about it as he, but he replied
+authoritatively, "Of course she will. That's a sure thing!" The
+old man rose to his feet: "Hurrah for England!" and he began
+chanting a forgotten patriotic song, marking time with his arms in a
+spirited way, to the great admiration of his old wife, and urging
+all to join in the chorus that very few were able to follow.
+
+The two friends had to take themselves home on foot. They could not
+find a vehicle that would stop for them; all were hurrying in the
+opposite direction toward the stations. They were both in a bad
+humor, but Argensola couldn't keep his to himself.
+
+"Ah, these women!" Desnoyers knew all about his relations (so far
+honorable) with a midinette from the rue Taitbout. Sunday strolls
+in the suburbs of Paris, various trips to the moving picture shows,
+comments upon the fine points of the latest novel published in the
+sheets of a popular paper, kisses of farewell when she took the
+night train from Bois Colombes in order to sleep at home--that was
+all. But Argensola was wickedly counting on Father Time to mellow
+the sharpest virtues. That evening they had taken some refreshment
+with a French friend who was going the next morning to join his
+regiment. The girl had sometimes seen him with Argensola without
+noticing him particularly, but now she suddenly began admiring him
+as though he were another person. She had given up the idea of
+returning home that night; she wanted to see how a war begins. The
+three had dined together, and all her interest had centred upon the
+one who was going away. She even took offense, with sudden modesty,
+when Argensola tried as he had often done before, to squeeze her
+hand under the table. Meanwhile she was almost leaning her head on
+the shoulder of the future hero, enveloping him with admiring gaze.
+
+"And they have gone. . . . They have gone away together!" said the
+Spaniard bitterly. "I had to leave them in order not to make my
+hard luck any worse. To have worked so long . . . for another!"
+
+He was silent for a few minutes, then changing the trend of his
+ideas, he added: "I recognize, nevertheless, that her behavior is
+beautiful. The generosity of these women when they believe that the
+moment for sacrifice has come! She is terribly afraid of her
+father, and yet she stays away from home all night with a person
+whom she hardly knows, and whom she was not even thinking of in the
+middle of the afternoon! . . . The entire nation feels gratitude
+toward those who are going to imperil their lives, and she, poor
+child, wishing to do something, too, for those destined for death,
+to give them a little pleasure in their last hour . . . is giving
+the best she has, that which she can never recover. I have sketched
+her role poorly, perhaps. . . . Laugh at me if you want to, but
+admit that it is beautiful."
+
+Desnoyers laughed heartily at his friend's discomfiture, in spite of
+the fact that he, too, was suffering a good deal of secret
+annoyance. He had seen Marguerite but once since the day of his
+return. The only news of her that he had received was by letter. . . .
+This cursed war! What an upset for happy people! Marguerite's
+mother was ill. She was brooding over the departure of her son, an
+officer, on the first day of the mobilization. Marguerite, too, was
+uneasy about her brother and did not think it expedient to come to
+the studio while her mother was grieving at home. When was this
+situation ever to end? . . .
+
+That check for four hundred thousand francs which he had brought
+from America was also worrying him. The day before, the bank had
+declined to pay it for lack of the customary official advice.
+Afterward they said that they had received the advice, but did not
+give him the money. That very afternoon, when the trust companies
+had closed their doors, the government had already declared a
+moratorium, in order to prevent a general bankruptcy due to the
+general panic. When would they pay him? . . . Perhaps when the war
+which had not yet begun was ended--perhaps never. He had no other
+money available except the two thousand francs left over from his
+travelling expenses. All of his friends were in the same
+distressing situation, unable to draw on the sums which they had in
+the banks. Those who had any money were obliged to go from shop to
+shop, or form in line at the bank doors, in order to get a bill
+changed. Oh, this war! This stupid war!
+
+In the Champs Elysees, they saw a man with a broad-brimmed hat who
+was walking slowly ahead of them and talking to himself. Argensola
+recognized him as he passed near the street lamp, "Friend
+Tchernoff." Upon returning their greeting, the Russian betrayed a
+slight odor of wine. Uninvited, he had adjusted his steps to
+theirs, accompanying them toward the Arc de Triomphe.
+
+Julio had merely exchanged silent nods with Argensola's new
+acquaintance when encountering him in the vestibule; but sadness
+softens the heart and makes us seek the friendship of the humble as
+a refreshing shelter. Tchernoff, on the contrary, looked at
+Desnoyers as though he had known him all his life.
+
+The man had interrupted his monologue, heard only by the black
+masses of vegetation, the blue shadows perforated by the reddish
+tremors of the street lights, the summer night with its cupola of
+warm breezes and twinkling stars. He took a few steps without
+saying anything, as a mark of consideration to his companions, and
+then renewed his arguments, taking them up where he had broken off,
+without offering any explanation, as though he were still talking to
+himself. . . .
+
+"And at this very minute, they are shouting with enthusiasm the same
+as they are doing here, honestly believing that they are going to
+defend their outraged country, wishing to die for their families and
+firesides that nobody has threatened."
+
+"Who are 'they,' Tchernoff?" asked Argensola.
+
+The Russian stared at him as though surprised at such a question.
+
+"They," he said laconically.
+
+The two understood. . . . THEY! It could not be anyone else.
+
+"I have lived ten years in Germany," he continued, connecting up his
+words, now that he found himself listened to. "I was daily
+correspondent for a paper in Berlin and I know these people.
+Passing along these thronged boulevards, I have been seeing in my
+imagination what must be happening there at this hour. They, too,
+are singing and shouting with enthusiasm as they wave their flags.
+On the outside, they seem just alike--but oh, what a difference
+within! . . . Last night the people beset a few babblers in the
+boulevard who were yelling, 'To Berlin!'--a slogan of bad memories
+and worse taste. France does not wish conquests; her only desire is
+to be respected, to live in peace without humiliations or
+disturbances. To-night two of the mobilized men said on leaving,
+'When we enter Germany we are going to make it a republic!' . . . A
+republic is not a perfect thing, but it is better than living under
+an irresponsible monarchy by the grace of God. It at least
+presupposes tranquillity and absence of the personal ambitions that
+disturb life. I was impressed by the generous thought of these
+laboring men who, instead of wishing to exterminate their enemies,
+were planning to give them something better."
+
+Tchernoff remained silent a few minutes, smiling ironically at the
+picture which his imagination was calling forth.
+
+"In Berlin, the masses are expressing their enthusiasm in the lofty
+phraseology befitting a superior people. Those in the lowest
+classes, accustomed to console themselves for humiliations with a
+gross materialism, are now crying 'Nach Paris! We are going to
+drink champagne gratis!' The pietistic burgher, ready to do
+anything to attain a new honor, and the aristocracy which has given
+the world the greatest scandals of recent years, are also shouting,
+'Nach Paris!' To them Paris is the Babylon of the deadly sin, the
+city of the Moulin Rouge and the restaurants of Montmartre, the only
+places that they know. . . . And my comrades of the Social-
+Democracy, they are also cheering, but to another tune.--'To-morrow!
+To St. Petersburg! Russian ascendency, the menace of civilization,
+must be obliterated!' The Kaiser waving the tyranny of another
+country as a scarecrow to his people! . . . What a joke!"
+
+And the loud laugh of the Russian sounded through the night like the
+noise of wooden clappers.
+
+"We are more civilized than the Germans," he said, regaining his
+self-control.
+
+Desnoyers, who had been listening with great interest, now gave a
+start of surprise, saying to himself, "This Tchernoff has been
+drinking."
+
+"Civilization," continued the Socialist, "does not consist merely in
+great industry, in many ships, armies and numerous universities that
+only teach science. That is material civilization. There is
+another, a superior one, that elevates the soul and does not permit
+human dignity to suffer without protesting against continual
+humiliations. A Swiss living in his wooden chalet and considering
+himself the equal of the other men of his country, is more civilized
+than the Herr Professor who gives precedence to a lieutenant, or to
+a Hamburg millionaire who, in turn, bends his neck like a lackey
+before those whose names are prefixed by a von."
+
+Here the Spaniard assented as though he could guess what Tchernoff
+was going to say.
+
+"We Russians endure great tyranny. I know something about that. I
+know the hunger and cold of Siberia. . . . But opposed to our
+tyranny has always existed a revolutionary protest. Part of the
+nation is half-barbarian, but the rest has a superior mentality, a
+lofty moral spirit which faces danger and sacrifice because of
+liberty and truth. . . . And Germany? Who there has ever raised a
+protest in order to defend human rights? What revolutions have ever
+broken out in Prussia, the land of the great despots?
+
+Frederick William, the founder of militarism, when he was tired of
+beating his wife and spitting in his children's plates, used to
+sally forth, thong in hand, in order to cowhide those subjects who
+did not get out of his way in time. His son, Frederick the Great,
+declared that he died, bored to death with governing a nation of
+slaves. In two centuries of Prussian history, one single
+revolution--the barricades of 1848--a bad Berlinish copy of the
+Paris revolution, and without any result. Bismarck corrected with a
+heavy hand so as to crush completely the last attempts at protest--
+if such ever really existed. And when his friends were threatening
+him with revolution, the ferocious Junker, merely put his hands on
+his hips and roared with the most insolent of horse laughs. A
+revolution in Prussia! . . . Nothing at all, as he knew his
+people!"
+
+Tchernoff was not a patriot. Many a time Argensola had heard him
+railing against his country, but now he was indignant in view of the
+contempt with which Teutonic haughtiness was treating the Russian
+nation. Where, in the last forty years of imperial grandeur, was
+that universal supremacy of which the Germans were everlastingly
+boasting? . . .
+
+Excellent workers in science; tenacious and short-sighted
+academicians, each wrapped in his specialty!--Benedictines of the
+laboratory who experimented painstakingly and occasionally hit upon
+something, in spite of enormous blunders given out as truths,
+because they were their own . . . that was all! And side by side
+with such patient laboriosity, really worthy of respect--what
+charlatanism! What great names exploited as a shop sample! How
+many sages turned into proprietors of sanatoriums! . . . A Herr
+Professor discovers the cure of tuberculosis, and the tubercular
+keep on dying as before. Another labels with a number the
+invincible remedy for the most unconfessable of diseases, and the
+genital scourge continues afflicting the world. And all these
+errors were representing great fortunes, each saving panacea
+bringing into existence an industrial corporation selling its
+products at high prices--as though suffering were a privilege of the
+rich. How different from the bluff Pasteur and other clever men of
+the inferior races who have given their discoveries to the world
+without stooping to form monopolies!
+
+"German science," continued Tchernoff, "has given much to humanity,
+I admit that; but the science of other nations has done as much.
+Only a nation puffed up with conceit could imagine that it has done
+everything for civilization, and the others nothing. . . . Apart
+from their learned specialists, what genius has been produced in our
+day by this Germany which believes itself so transcendent? Wagner,
+the last of the romanticists, closes an epoch and belongs to the
+past. Nietzsche took pains to proclaim his Polish origin and
+abominated Germany, a country, according to him, of middle-class
+pedants. His Slavism was so pronounced that he even prophesied the
+overthrow of the Prussians by the Slavs. . . . And there are
+others. We, although a savage people, have given the world of
+modern times an admirable moral grandeur. Tolstoi and Dostoievsky
+are world-geniuses. What names can the Germany of William II put
+ahead of these? . . . His country was the country of music, but the
+Russian musicians of to-day are more original than the mere
+followers of Wagner, the copyists who take refuge in orchestral
+exasperations in order to hide their mediocrity. . . . In its time
+of stress the German nation had men of genius, before Pan-Germanism
+had been born, when the Empire did not exist. Goethe, Schiller,
+Beethoven were subjects of little principalities. They received
+influence from other countries and contributed their share to the
+universal civilization like citizens of the world, without insisting
+that the world should, therefore, become Germanized."
+
+Czarism had committed atrocities. Tchernoff knew that by
+experience, and did not need the Germans to assure him of it. But
+all the illustrious classes of Russia were enemies of that tyranny
+and were protesting against it. Where in Germany were the
+intellectual enemies of Prussian Czarism? They were either holding
+their peace, or breaking forth into adulation of the anointed of the
+Lord--a musician and comedian like Nero, of a sharp and superficial
+intelligence, who believed that by merely skimming through anything
+he knew it all. Eager to strike a spectacular pose in history, he
+had finally afflicted the world with the greatest of calamities.
+
+"Why must the tyranny that weighs upon my country necessarily be
+Russian? The worst Czars were imitators of Prussia. Every time
+that the Russian people of our day have attempted to revindicate
+their rights, the reactionaries have used the Kaiser as a threat,
+proclaiming that he would come to their aid. One-half of the
+Russian aristocracy is German; the functionaries who advise and
+support despotism are Germans; German, too, are the generals who
+have distinguished themselves by massacring the people; German are
+the officials who undertake to punish the laborers' strikes and the
+rebellion of their allies. The reactionary Slav is brutal, but he
+has the fine sensibility of a race in which many princes have become
+Nihilists. He raises the lash with facility, but then he repents
+and oftentimes weeps. I have seen Russian officials kill themselves
+rather than march against the people, or through remorse for
+slaughter committed. The German in the service of the Czar feels no
+scruples, nor laments his conduct. He kills coldly, with the
+minuteness and exactitude with which he does everything. The
+Russian is a barbarian who strikes and regrets; German civilization
+shoots without hesitation. Our Slav Czar, in a humanitarian dream,
+favored the Utopian idea of universal peace, organizing the
+Conference of The Hague. The Kaiser of culture, meanwhile, has been
+working years and years in the erection and establishment of a
+destructive organ of an immensity heretofore unknown, in order to
+crush all Europe. The Russian is a humble Christian, socialistic,
+democratic, thirsting for justice; the German prides himself upon
+his Christianity, but is an idolator like the German of other
+centuries. His religion loves blood and maintains castes; his true
+worship is that of Odin;--only that nowadays, the god of slaughter
+has changed his name and calls himself, 'The State'!"
+
+Tchernoff paused an instant--perhaps in order to increase the wonder
+of his companions--and then said with simplicity:
+
+"I am a Christian."
+
+Argensola, who already knew the ideas and history of the Russian,
+started with astonishment, and Julio persisted in his suspicion,
+"Surely Tchernoff is drunk."
+
+"It is true," declared the Russian earnestly, "that I do not worry
+about God, nor do I believe in dogmas, but my soul is Christian as
+is that of all revolutionists. The philosophy of modern democracy
+is lay Christianity. We Socialists love the humble, the needy, the
+weak. We defend their right to life and well-being, as did the
+greatest lights of the religious world who saw a brother in every
+unfortunate. We exact respect for the poor in the name of justice;
+the others ask for it in the name of charity. That only separates
+us. But we strive that mankind may, by common consent, lead a
+better life, that the strong may sacrifice for the weak, the lofty
+for the lowly, and the world be ruled by brotherliness, seeking the
+greatest equality possible."
+
+The Slav reviewed the history of human aspirations. Greek thought
+had brought comfort, a sense of well-being on the earth--but only
+for the few, for the citizens of the little democracies, for the
+free men, leaving the slaves and barbarians who constituted the
+majority, in their misery. Christianity, the religion of the lowly,
+had recognized the right of happiness for all mankind, but this
+happiness was placed in heaven, far from this world, this "vale of
+tears." The Revolution and its heirs, the Socialists, were trying
+to place happiness in the immediate realities of earth, like the
+ancients, but making all humanity participants in it like the
+Christians.
+
+"Where is the 'Christianity of modern Germany? . . . There is far
+more genuine Christian spirit in the fraternal laity of the French
+Republic, defender of the weak, than in the religiosity of the
+conservative Junkers. Germany has made a god in her own image,
+believing that she adores it, but in reality adoring her own image.
+The German God is a reflex of the German State which considers war
+as the first activity of a nation and the noblest of occupations.
+Other Christian peoples, when they have to go to war, feel the
+contradiction that exists between their conduct and the teachings of
+the Gospel, and excuse themselves by showing the cruel necessity
+which impels them. Germany declares that war is acceptable to God.
+I have heard German sermons proving that Jesus was in favor of
+Militarism.
+
+"Teutonic pride, the conviction that its race is providentially
+destined to dominate the world, brings into working unity their
+Protestants, Catholics and Jews.
+
+"Far above their differences of dogma is that God of the State which
+is German--the Warrior God to whom William is probably referring as
+'my worthy Ally.' Religions always tend toward universality. Their
+aim is to place humanity in relationship with God, and to sustain
+these relations among mankind. Prussia has retrograded to
+barbarism, creating for its personal use a second Jehovah, a
+divinity hostile to the greater part of the human race who makes his
+own the grudges and ambitions of the German people."
+
+Tchernoff then explained in his own way the creation of this
+Teutonic God, ambitious, cruel and vengeful. The Germans were
+comparatively recent Christians. Their Christianity was not more
+than six centuries old. When the Crusades were drawing to a close,
+the Prussians were still living in paganism. Pride of race,
+impelling them to war, had revived these dead divinities. The God
+of the Gospel was now adorned by the Germans with lance and shield
+like the old Teutonic god who was a military chief.
+
+"Christianity in Berlin wears helmet and riding boots. God at this
+moment is seeing Himself mobilized the same as Otto, Fritz and
+Franz, in order to punish the enemies of His chosen people. That
+the Lord has commanded, 'Thou shalt not kill,' and His Son has said
+to the world, 'Blessed are the peacemakers,' no longer matters.
+Christianity, according to its German priests of all creeds, can
+only influence the individual betterment of mankind, and should not
+mix itself in affairs of state. The Prussian God of the State is
+'the old German God,' the lineal descendant of the ferocious
+Germanic mythology, a mixture of divinities hungry for war."
+
+In the silence of the avenue, the Russian evoked the ruddy figures
+of the implacable gods, that were going to awake that night upon
+hearing the hum of arms and smelling the acrid odor of blood. Thor,
+the brutal god with the little head, was stretching his biceps and
+clutching the hammer that crushed cities. Wotan was sharpening his
+lance which had the lightning for its handle, the thunder for its
+blade. Odin, the one-eyed, was gaping with gluttony on the
+mountain-tops, awaiting the dead warriors that would crowd around
+his throne. The dishevelled Valkyries, fat and perspiring, were
+beginning to gallop from cloud to cloud, hallooing to humanity that
+they might carry off the corpses doubled like saddle bags, over the
+haunches of their flying nags.
+
+"German religiosity," continued the Russian, "is the disavowal of
+Christianity. In its eyes, men are no longer equal before God.
+Their God is interested only in the strong, and favors them with his
+support so that they may dare anything. Those born weak must either
+submit or disappear. Neither are nations equal, but are divided
+into leaders and inferior races whose destiny is to be sifted out
+and absorbed by their superiors. Since God has thus ordained, it is
+unnecessary to state that the grand world-leader is Germany."
+
+Argensola here interrupted to observe that German pride believed
+itself championed not only by God but by science, too.
+
+"I know that," interposed the Russian without letting him finish--
+"generalization, inequality, selection, the struggle for life, and
+all that. . . . The Germans, so conceited about their special
+worth, erect upon distant ground their intellectual monuments,
+borrowing of the foreigner their foundation material whenever they
+undertake a new line of work. A Frenchman and an Englishman,
+Gobineau and Chamberlain, have given them the arguments with which
+to defend the superiority of their race. With the rubbish left over
+from Darwin and Spencer, their old Haeckel has built up his doctrine
+of 'Monism' which, applied to politics, scientifically consecrates
+Prussian pride and recognizes its right to rule the world by force."
+
+"No, a thousand times no!" he exclaimed after a brief silence. "The
+struggle for existence with its procession of cruelties may be true
+among the lower species, but it should not be true among human
+creatures. We are rational beings and ought to free ourselves from
+the fatality of environment, moulding it to our convenience. The
+animal does not know law, justice or compassion; he lives enslaved
+in the obscurity of his instincts. We think, and thought signifies
+liberty. Force does not necessarily have to be cruel; it is
+strongest when it does not take advantage of its power, and is
+kindly. All have a right to the life into which they are born, and
+since among individuals there exist the haughty and the humble, the
+mighty and the weak, so should exist nations, large and small, old
+and young. The end of our existence is not combat nor killing in
+order that others may afterwards kill us, and, perhaps, be killed
+themselves. Civilized peoples ought unanimously to adopt the idea
+of southern Europe, striving for the most peaceful and sweetest form
+of life possible."
+
+A cruel smile played over the Russian's beard.
+
+"But there exists that Kultur, diametrically opposed to
+civilization, which the Germans wish to palm off upon us.
+Civilization is refinement of spirit, respect of one's neighbor,
+tolerance of foreign opinion, courtesy of manner. Kultur is the
+action of a State that organizes and assimilates individuals and
+communities in order to utilize them for its own ends; and these
+ends consist mainly in placing 'The State' above other states,
+overwhelming them with their grandeur--or what is the same thing--
+with their haughty and violent pride."
+
+By this time, the three had reached the place de l'Etoile. The dark
+outline of the Arc de Triomphe stood forth clearly in the starry
+expanse. The avenues extended in all directions, a double file of
+lights. Those around the monument illuminated its gigantic bases
+and the feet of the sculptured groups. Further up, the vaulted
+spaces were so locked in shadow that they had the black density of
+ebony.
+
+Upon passing under the Arch, which greatly intensified the echo of
+their footsteps, they came to a standstill. The night breeze had a
+wintry chill as it whistled past, and the curved masses seemed
+melting into the diffused blue of space. Instinctively the three
+turned to glance back at the Champs Elysees. They saw only a river
+of shadow on which were floating rosaries of red stars among the two
+long, black scarfs formed by the buildings. But they were so well
+acquainted with this panorama that in imagination they mentally saw
+the majestic sweep of the avenue, the double row of palaces, the
+place de la Concorde in the background with the Egyptian obelisk,
+and the trees of the Tuileries.
+
+"How beautiful it is!" exclaimed Tchernoff who was seeing something
+beyond the shadows. "An entire civilization, loving peace and
+pleasure, has passed through here."
+
+A memory greatly affected the Russian. Many an afternoon, after
+lunch, he had met in this very spot a robust man, stocky, with
+reddish beard and kindly eyes--a man who looked like a giant who had
+just stopped growing. He was always accompanied by a dog. It was
+Jaures, his friend Jaures, who before going to the senate was
+accustomed to taking a walk toward the Arch from his home in Passy.
+
+"He liked to come just where we are now! He loved to look at the
+avenues, the distant gardens, all of Paris which can be seen from
+this height; and filled with admiration, he would often say to me,
+'This is magnificent--one of the most beautiful perspectives that
+can be found in the entire world.' . . . Poor Jaures!"
+
+Through association of ideas, the Russian evoked the image of his
+compatriot, Michael Bakounine, another revolutionist, the father of
+anarchy, weeping with emotion at a concert after hearing the
+symphony with Beethoven chorals directed by a young friend of his,
+named Richard Wagner. "When our revolution comes," he cried,
+clasping the hand of the master, "whatever else may perish, this
+must be saved at any cost!"
+
+Tchernoff roused himself from his reveries to look around him and
+say with sadness:
+
+"THEY have passed through here!"
+
+Every time that he walked through the Arch, the same vision would
+spring up in his mind. THEY were thousands of helmets glistening in
+the sun, thousands of heavy boots lifted with mechanical rigidity at
+the same time; horns, fifes, drums large and small, clashing against
+the majestic silence of these stones--the warlike march from
+Lohengrin sounding in the deserted avenues before the closed houses.
+
+He, who was a foreigner, always felt attracted by the spell exerted
+by venerable buildings guarding the glory of a bygone day. He did
+not wish to know who had erected it. As soon as its pride is
+flattered, mankind tries immediately to solidify it. Then Humanity
+intervenes with a broader vision that changes the original
+significance of the work, enlarges it and strips it of its first
+egotistical import. The Greek statues, models of the highest
+beauty, had been originally mere images of the temple, donated by
+the piety of the devotees of those times. Upon evoking Roman
+grandeur, everybody sees in imagination the enormous Coliseum,
+circle of butcheries, or the arches erected to the glory of the
+inept Caesars. The representative works of nations have two
+significations--the interior or immediate one which their creators
+gave them, and the exterior or universal interest, the symbolic
+value which the centuries have given them.
+
+"This Arch," continued Tchernoff, "is French within, with its names
+of battles and generals open to criticism. On the outside, it is
+the monument of the people who carried through the greatest
+revolution for liberty ever known. The glorification of man is
+there below in the column of the place Vendome. Here there is
+nothing individual. Its builders erected it to the memory of la
+Grande Armee and that Grand Army was the people in arms who spread
+revolution throughout Europe. The artists, great inventors, foresaw
+the true significance of this work. The warriors of Rude who are
+chanting the Marseillaise in the group at the left are not
+professional soldiers, they are armed citizens, marching to work out
+their sublime and violent mission. Their nudity makes them appear
+to me like sans-culottes in Grecian helmets. . . . Here there is
+more than the glory and egoism of a great nation. All Europe is
+awake to new life, thanks to these Crusaders of Liberty. . . . The
+nations call to mind certain images. If I think of Greece, I see
+the columns of the Parthenon; Rome, Mistress of the World, is the
+Coliseum and the Arch of Trajan; and revolutionary France is the Arc
+de Triomphe."
+
+The Arch was even more, according to the Russian. It represented a
+great historical retaliation; the nations of the South, called the
+Latin races, replying, after many centuries, to the invasion which
+had destroyed the Roman jurisdiction--the Mediterranean peoples
+spreading themselves as conquerors through the lands of the ancient
+barbarians. Retreating immediately, they had swept away the past
+like a tidal wave--the great surf depositing all that it contained.
+Like the waters of certain rivers which fructify by overflowing,
+this recession of the human tide had left the soil enriched with new
+and generous ideas.
+
+"If THEY should return!" added Tchernoff with a look of uneasiness.
+"If they again should tread these stones! . . . Before, they were
+simple-minded folk, stunned by their rapid good-fortune, who passed
+through here like a farmer through a salon. They were content with
+money for the pocket and two provinces which should perpetuate the
+memory of their victory. . . . But now they will not be the
+soldiers only who march against Paris. At the tail of the armies
+come the maddened canteen-keepers, the Herr Professors, carrying at
+the side the little keg of wine with the powder which crazes the
+barbarian, the wine of Kultur. And in the vans come also an
+enormous load of scientific savagery, a new philosophy which
+glorifies Force as a principle and sanctifier of everything, denies
+liberty, suppresses the weak and places the entire world under the
+charge of a minority chosen by God, just because it possesses the
+surest and most rapid methods of slaughter. Humanity may well
+tremble for the future if again resounds under this archway the
+tramp of boots following a march of Wagner or any other
+Kapellmeister."
+
+They left the Arch, following the avenue Victor Hugo. Tchernoff
+walking along in dogged silence as though the vision of this
+imaginary procession had overwhelmed him. Suddenly he continued
+aloud the course of his reflections.
+
+"And if they should enter, what does it matter? . . . On that
+account, the cause of Right will not die. It suffers eclipses, but
+is born again; it may be ignored and trampled under foot, but it
+does not, therefore, cease to exist, and all good souls recognize it
+as the only rule of life. A nation of madmen wishes to place might
+upon the pedestal that others have raised to Right. Useless
+endeavor! The eternal hope of mankind will ever be the increasing
+power of more liberty, more brotherliness, more justice."
+
+The Russian appeared to calm himself with this statement. He and
+his friends spoke of the spectacle which Paris was presenting in its
+preparation for war. Tchernoff bemoaned the great suffering
+produced by the catastrophe, the thousands and thousands of domestic
+tragedies that were unrolling at that moment. Apparently nothing
+had changed. In the centre of the city and around the stations,
+there was unusual agitation, but the rest of the immense city did
+not appear affected by the great overthrow of its existence. The
+solitary street was presenting its usual aspect, the breeze was
+gently moving the leaves. A solemn peace seemed to be spreading
+itself through space. The houses appeared wrapped in slumber, but
+behind the closed windows might be surmised the insomnia of the
+reddened eyes, the sighs from hearts anguished by the threatened
+danger, the tremulous agility of the hands preparing the war outfit,
+perhaps the last loving greetings exchanged without pleasure, with
+kisses ending in sobs.
+
+Tchernoff thought of his neighbors, the husband and wife who
+occupied the other interior apartment behind the studio. She was no
+longer playing the piano. The Russian had overheard disputes, the
+banging of doors locked with violence, and the footsteps of a man in
+the middle of the night, fleeing from a woman's cries. There had
+begun to develop on the other side of the wall a regulation drama--a
+repetition of hundreds of others, all taking place at the same time.
+
+"She is a German," volunteered the Russian. "Our concierge has
+ferreted out her nationality. He must have gone by this time to
+join his regiment. Last night I could hardly sleep. I heard the
+lamentations through the thin wall partition, the steady, desperate
+weeping of an abandoned child, and the voice of a man who was vainly
+trying to quiet her! . . . Ah, what a rain of sorrows is now
+falling upon the world!"
+
+That same evening, on leaving the house, he had met her by her door.
+She appeared like another woman, with an old look as though in these
+agonizing hours she had been suffering for fifteen years. In vain
+the kindly Tchernoff had tried to cheer her up, urging her to accept
+quietly her husband's absence so as not to harm the little one who
+was coming.
+
+"For the unhappy creature is going to be a mother," he said sadly.
+"She hides her condition with a certain modesty, but from my window,
+I have often seen her making the dainty layette."
+
+The woman had listened to him as though she did not understand.
+Words were useless before her desperation. She could only sob as
+though talking to herself, "I am a German. . . . He has gone; he
+has to go away. . . . Alone! . . . Alone forever!" . . .
+
+"She is thinking all the time of her nationality which is separating
+her from her husband; she is thinking of the concentration camp to
+which they will take her with her compatriots. She is fearful of
+being abandoned in the enemy's country obliged to defend itself
+against the attack of her own country. . . . And all this when she
+is about to become a mother. What miseries! What agonies!"
+
+The three reached the rue de la Pompe and on entering the house,
+Tchernoff began to take leave of his companions in order to climb
+the service stairs; but Desnoyers wished to prolong the
+conversation. He dreaded being alone with his friend, still
+chagrined over the evening's events. The conversation with the
+Russian interested him, so they all went up in the elevator
+together. Argensola suggested that this would be a good opportunity
+to uncork one of the many bottles which he was keeping in the
+kitchen. Tchernoff could go home through the studio door that
+opened on the stairway.
+
+The great window had its glass doors wide open; the transoms on the
+patio side were also open; a breeze kept the curtains swaying,
+moving, too, the old lanterns, moth-eaten flags and other adornments
+of the romantic studio. They seated themselves around the table,
+near a window some distance from the light which was illuminating
+the other end of the big room. They were in the shadow, with their
+backs to the interior court. Opposite them were tiled roofs and an
+enormous rectangle of blue shadow, perforated by the sharp-pointed
+stars. The city lights were coloring the shadowy space with a
+bloody reflection.
+
+Tchernoff drank two glasses, testifying to the excellence of the
+liquid by smacking his lips. The three were silent with the
+wondering and thoughtful silence which the grandeur of the night
+imposes. Their eyes were glancing from star to star, grouping them
+in fanciful lines, forming them into triangles or squares of varying
+irregularity. At times, the twinkling radiance of a heavenly body
+appeared to broaden the rays of light, almost hypnotizing them.
+
+The Russian, without coming out of his revery, availed himself of
+another glass. Then he smiled with cruel irony, his bearded face
+taking on the semblance of a tragic mask peeping between the
+curtains of the night.
+
+"I wonder what those men up there are thinking!" he muttered. "I
+wonder if any star knows that Bismarck ever existed! . . . I wonder
+if the planets are aware of the divine mission of the German
+nation!"
+
+And he continued laughing.
+
+Some far-away and uncertain noise disturbed the stillness of the
+night, slipping through some of the chinks that cut the immense
+plain of roofs. The three turned their heads so as to hear
+better. . . . The sound of voices cut through the thick silence
+of night--a masculine chorus chanting a hymn, simple, monotonous
+and solemn. They guessed at what it must be, although they could
+not hear very well. Various single notes floating with greater
+intensity on the night wind, enabled Argensola to piece together
+the short song, ending in a melodious, triumphant yell--a true
+war song:
+
+
+ C'est l'Alsace et la Lorraine,
+ C'est l'Alsace qu'il nous faut,
+ Oh, oh, oh, oh.
+
+
+A new band of men was going away through the streets below, toward
+the railway station, the gateway of the war. They must be from the
+outlying districts, perhaps from the country, and passing through
+silence-wrapped Paris, they felt like singing of the great national
+hope, that those who were watching behind the dark facades might
+feel comforted, knowing that they were not alone.
+
+"Just as it is in the opera," said Julio listening to the last notes
+of the invisible chorus dying away into the night.
+
+Tchernoff continued drinking, but with a distracted air, his eyes
+fixed on the red cloud that floated over the roofs.
+
+The two friends conjectured his mental labor from his concentrated
+look, and the low exclamations which were escaping him like the
+echoes of an interior monologue. Suddenly he leaped from thought to
+word without any forewarning, continuing aloud the course of his
+reasoning.
+
+"And when the sun arises in a few hours, the world will see coursing
+through its fields the four horsemen, enemies of mankind. . . .
+Already their wild steeds are pawing the ground with impatience;
+already the ill-omened riders have come together and are exchanging
+the last words before leaping into the saddle."
+
+"What horsemen are these?" asked Argensola.
+
+"Those which go before the Beast."
+
+The two friends thought this reply as unintelligible as the
+preceding words. Desnoyers again said mentally, "He is drunk," but
+his curiosity forced him to ask, "What beast is that?"
+
+"That of the Apocalypse."
+
+There was a brief silence, but the Russian's terseness of speech did
+not last long. He felt the necessity of expressing his enthusiasm
+for the dreamer on the island rock of Patmos. The poet of great and
+mystic vision was exerting, across two thousand years, his influence
+over this mysterious revolutionary, tucked away on the top floor of
+a house in Paris. John had foreseen it all. His visions,
+unintelligible to the masses, nevertheless held within them the
+mystery of great human events.
+
+Tchernoff described the Apocalyptic beast rising from the depths of
+the sea. He was like a leopard, his feet like those of a bear, his
+mouth like the snout of a lion. He had seven heads and ten horns.
+And upon the horns were ten crowns, and upon each of his heads the
+name of a blasphemy. The evangelist did not say just what these
+blasphemies were, perhaps they differed according to the epochs,
+modified every thousand years when the beast made a new apparition.
+The Russian seemed to be reading those that were flaming on the
+heads of the monster--blasphemies against humanity, against justice,
+against all that makes life sweet and bearable. "Might is superior
+to Right!" . . . "The weak should not exist." . . . "Be harsh in
+order to be great." . . . And the Beast in all its hideousness was
+attempting to govern the world and make mankind render him homage!
+
+"But the four horsemen?" persisted Desnoyers.
+
+The four horsemen were preceding the appearance of the monster in
+John's vision.
+
+The seven seals of the book of mystery were broken by the Lamb in
+the presence of the great throne where was seated one who shone like
+jasper. The rainbow round about the throne was in sight like unto
+an emerald. Twenty-four thrones were in a semicircle around the
+great throne, and upon them twenty-four elders with white robes and
+crowns of gold. Four enormous animals, covered with eyes and each
+having six wings, seemed to be guarding the throne. The sounding of
+trumpets was greeting the breaking of the first seal.
+
+"Come and see," cried one of the beasts in a stentorian tone to the
+vision-seeing poet. . . . And the first horseman appeared on a
+white horse. In his hand he carried a bow, and a crown was given
+unto him. He was Conquest, according to some, the Plague according
+to others. He might be both things at the same time. He wore a
+crown, and that was enough for Tchernoff.
+
+"Come forth," shouted the second animal, removing his thousand eyes.
+And from the broken seal leaped a flame-colored steed. His rider
+brandished over his head an enormous sword. He was War. Peace fled
+from the world before his furious gallop; humanity was going to be
+exterminated.
+
+And when the third seal was broken, another of the winged animals
+bellowed like a thunder clap, "Come and see!" And John saw a black
+horse. He who mounted it held in his hand a scale in order to weigh
+the maintenance of mankind. He was Famine.
+
+The fourth animal saluted the breaking of the fourth seal with a
+great roaring--"Come and see!" And there appeared a pale-colored
+horse. His rider was called Death, and power was given him to
+destroy with the sword and with hunger and with death, and with the
+beasts of the earth.
+
+The four horsemen were beginning their mad, desolating course over
+the heads of terrified humanity.
+
+Tchernoff was describing the four scourges of the earth exactly as
+though he were seeing them. The horseman on the white horse was
+clad in a showy and barbarous attire. His Oriental countenance was
+contracted with hatred as if smelling out his victims. While his
+horse continued galloping, he was bending his bow in order to spread
+pestilence abroad. At his back swung the brass quiver filled with
+poisoned arrows, containing the germs of all diseases--those of
+private life as well as those which envenom the wounded soldier on
+the battlefield.
+
+The second horseman on the red steed was waving the enormous, two-
+edged sword over his hair bristling with the swiftness of his
+course. He was young, but the fierce scowl and the scornful mouth
+gave him a look of implacable ferocity. His garments, blown open by
+the motion of his wild race, disclosed the form of a muscular
+athlete.
+
+Bald, old and horribly skinny was the third horseman bouncing up and
+down on the rawboned back of his black steed. His shrunken legs
+clanked against the thin flanks of the lean beast. In one withered
+hand he was holding the scales, symbol of the scarcity of food that
+was going to become as valuable as gold.
+
+The knees of the fourth horseman, sharp as spurs, were pricking the
+ribs of the pale horse. His parchment-like skin betrayed the lines
+and hollows of his skeleton. The front of his skull-like face was
+twisted with the sardonic laugh of destruction. His cane-like arms
+were whirling aloft a gigantic sickle. From his angular shoulders
+was hanging a ragged, filthy shroud.
+
+And the furious cavalcade was passing like a hurricane over the
+immense assemblage of human beings. The heavens showed above their
+heads, a livid, dark-edged cloud from the west. Horrible monsters
+and deformities were swarming in spirals above the furious horde,
+like a repulsive escort. Poor Humanity, crazed with fear, was
+fleeing in all directions on hearing the thundering pace of the
+Plague, War, Hunger and Death. Men and women, young and old, were
+knocking each other down and falling to the ground overwhelmed by
+terror, astonishment and desperation. And the white horse, the red,
+the black and the pale, were crushing all with their relentless,
+iron tread--the athletic man was hearing the crashing of his broken
+ribs, the nursing babe was writhing at its mother's breast, and the
+aged and feeble were closing their eyes forever with a childlike
+sob.
+
+"God is asleep, forgetting the world," continued the Russian. "It
+will be a long time before he awakes, and while he sleeps the four
+feudal horsemen of the Beast will course through the land as its
+only lords."
+
+Tchernoff was overpowered by the intensity of his dramatic vision.
+Springing from his seat, he paced up and down with great strides;
+but his picture of the fourfold catastrophe revealed by the gloomy
+poet's trance, seemed to him very weak indeed. A great painter had
+given corporeal form to these terrible dreams.
+
+"I have a book," he murmured, "a rare book." . . .
+
+And suddenly he left the studio and went to his own quarters. He
+wanted to bring the book to show to his friends. Argensola
+accompanied him, and they returned in a few minutes with the volume,
+leaving the doors open behind them, so as to make a stronger current
+of air among the hollows of the facades and the interior patio.
+
+Tchernoff placed his precious book under the light. It was a volume
+printed in 1511, with Latin text and engravings. Desnoyers read the
+title, "The Apocalypse Illustrated." The engravings were by Albert
+Durer, a youthful effort, when the master was only twenty-seven
+years old. The three were fascinated by the picture portraying the
+wild career of the Apocalyptic horsemen. The quadruple scourge, on
+fantastic mounts, seemed to be precipitating itself with a realistic
+sweep, crushing panic-stricken humanity.
+
+Suddenly something happened which startled the three men from their
+contemplative admiration--something unusual, indefinable, a dreadful
+sound which seemed to enter directly into their brains without
+passing through their ears--a clutch at the heart. Instinctively
+they knew that something very grave had just happened.
+
+They stared at each other silently for a few interminable seconds.
+
+Through the open door, a cry of alarm came up from the patio.
+
+With a common impulse, the three ran to the interior window, but
+before reaching them, the Russian had a presentiment.
+
+"My neighbor! . . . It must be my neighbor. Perhaps she has killed
+herself!"
+
+Looking down, they could see lights below, people moving around a
+form stretched out on the tiled floor. The alarm had instantly
+filled all the court windows, for it was a sleepless night--a night
+of nervous apprehension when everyone was keeping a sad vigil.
+
+"She has killed herself," said a voice which seemed to come up from
+a well. "The German woman has committed suicide."
+
+The explanation of the concierge leaped from window to window up to
+the top floor.
+
+The Russian was shaking his head with a fatalistic expression. The
+unhappy woman had not taken the death-leap of her own accord.
+Someone had intensified her desperation, someone had pushed her. . . .
+The horsemen! The four horsemen of the Apocalypse! . . .
+Already they were in the saddle! Already they were beginning their
+merciless gallop of destruction!
+
+The blind forces of evil were about to be let loose throughout the
+world.
+
+The agony of humanity, under the brutal sweep of the four horsemen,
+was already begun!
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+WHAT DON MARCELO ENVIED
+
+
+Upon being convinced that war really was inevitable, the elder
+Desnoyers was filled with amazement. Humanity had gone crazy. Was
+it possible that war could happen in these days of so many
+railroads, so many merchant marines, so many inventions, so much
+activity developed above and below the earth? . . . The nations
+would ruin themselves forever. They were now accustomed to luxuries
+and necessities unknown a century ago. Capital was master of the
+world, and war was going to wipe it out. In its turn, war would be
+wiped out in a few months' time through lack of funds to sustain it.
+His soul of a business man revolted before the hundreds of thousands
+of millions that this foolhardy event was going to convert into
+smoke and slaughter.
+
+As his indignation had to fix upon something close at hand, he made
+his own countrymen responsible for this insanity. Too much talk
+about la revanche! The very idea of worrying for forty-four years
+over the two lost provinces when the nation was mistress of enormous
+and undeveloped lands in other countries! . . . Now they were going
+to pay the penalty for such exasperating and clamorous foolishness.
+
+For him war meant disaster writ large. He had no faith in his
+country. France's day had passed. Now the victors were of the
+Northern peoples, and especially that Germany which he had seen so
+close, admiring with a certain terror its discipline and its
+rigorous organization. The former working-man felt the conservative
+and selfish instinct of all those who have amassed millions. He
+scorned political ideals, but through class interest he had of late
+years accepted the declarations against the scandals of the
+government. What could a corrupt and disorganized Republic do
+against the solidest and strongest empire in the world? . . .
+
+"We are going to our deaths," he said to himself. "Worse than
+'70! . . . We are going to see horrible things!"
+
+The good order and enthusiasm with which the French responded to
+their country's call and transformed themselves into soldiers were
+most astonishing to him. This moral shock made his national faith
+begin to revive. The great majority of Frenchmen were good after
+all; the nation was as valiant as in former times. Forty-four years
+of suffering and alarm had developed their old bravery. But the
+leaders? Where were they going to get leaders to march to
+victory? . . .
+
+Many others were asking themselves the same question. The silence
+of the democratic government was keeping the country in complete
+ignorance of their future commanders. Everybody saw the army
+increasing from hour to hour: very few knew the generals. One name
+was beginning to be repeated from mouth to mouth, "Joffre . . .
+Joffre." His first pictures made the curious crowds struggle to get
+a glimpse of them. Desnoyers studied them very carefully. "He
+looks like a very capable person." His methodical instincts were
+gratified by the grave and confident look of the general of the
+Republic. Suddenly he felt the great confidence that efficient-
+looking bank directors always inspired in him. He could entrust his
+interests to this gentleman, sure that he would not act impulsively.
+
+Finally, against his will, Desnoyers was drawn into the whirlpool of
+enthusiasm and emotion. Like everyone around him, he lived minutes
+that were hours, and hours that were years. Events kept on
+overlapping each other; within a week the world seemed to have made
+up for its long period of peace.
+
+The old man fairly lived in the street, attracted by the spectacle
+of the multitude of civilians saluting the multitude of uniformed
+men departing for the seat of war.
+
+At night he saw the processions passing through the boulevards. The
+tricolored flag was fluttering its colors under the electric lights.
+The cafes were overflowing with people, sending forth from doors and
+windows the excited, musical notes of patriotic songs. Suddenly,
+amidst applause and cheers, the crowd would make an opening in the
+street. All Europe was passing here; all Europe--less the arrogant
+enemy--and was saluting France in her hour of danger with hearty
+spontaneity. Flags of different nations were filing by, of all
+tints of the rainbow, and behind them were the Russians with bright
+and mystical eyes; the English, with heads uncovered, intoning songs
+of religious gravity; the Greeks and Roumanians of aquiline profile;
+the Scandinavians, white and red; the North Americans, with the
+noisiness of a somewhat puerile enthusiasm; the Hebrews without a
+country, friends of the nation of socialistic revolutions; the
+Italians, as spirited as a choir of heroic tenors; the Spanish and
+South Americans, tireless in their huzzas. They were students and
+apprentices who were completing their courses in the schools and
+workshops, and refugees who, like shipwrecked mariners, had sought
+shelter on the hospitable strand of Paris. Their cheers had no
+special significance, but they were all moved by their desire to
+show their love for the Republic. And Desnoyers, touched by the
+sight, felt that France was still of some account in the world, that
+she yet exercised a moral force among the nations, and that her joys
+and sorrows were still of interest to humanity.
+
+"In Berlin and Vienna, too," he said to himself, "they must also be
+cheering enthusiastically at this moment . . . but Germans only, no
+others. Assuredly no foreigner is joining in their demonstrations."
+
+The nation of the Revolution, legislator of the rights of mankind,
+was harvesting the gratitude of the throngs, but was beginning to
+feel a certain remorse before the enthusiasm of the foreigners who
+were offering their blood for France. Many were lamenting that the
+government should delay twenty days, until after they had finished
+the operations of mobilization, in admitting the volunteers. And
+he, a Frenchman born, a few hours before, had been mistrusting his
+country! . . .
+
+In the daytime the popular current was running toward the Gare de
+l'Est. Crowded against the gratings was a surging mass of humanity
+stretching its tentacles through the nearby streets. The station
+that was acquiring the importance of a historic spot appeared like a
+narrow tunnel through which a great human river was trying to flow
+with many rippling encounters and much heavy pressure against its
+banks. A large part of France in arms was coursing through this
+exit from Paris toward the battlefields at the frontier.
+
+Desnoyers had been in the station only twice, when going and coming
+from Germany. Others were now taking the same road. The crowds
+were swarming in from the environs of the city in order to see the
+masses of human beings in geometric bodies, uniformly clad,
+disappearing within the entrance with flash of steel and the rhythm
+of clanking metal. The crystal archways that were glistening in the
+sun like fiery mouths were swallowing and swallowing people. When
+night fell the processions were still coming on, by light of the
+electric lamps. Through the iron grills were passing thousands and
+thousands of draught horses; men with their breasts crossed with
+metal and bunches of horsehair hanging from their helmets, like
+paladins of bygone centuries; enormous cases that were serving as
+cages for the aeronautic condors; strings of cannon, long and
+narrow, painted grey and protected, by metal screens, more like
+astronomical instruments than mouths of death; masses and masses of
+red kepis (military caps) moving in marching rhythm, rows and rows
+of muskets, some black and stark like reed plantations, others
+ending in bayonets like shining spikes. And over all these restless
+fields of seething throngs, the flags of the regiments were
+fluttering in the air like colored birds; a white body, a blue wing,
+or a red one, a cravat of gold on the neck, and above, the metal tip
+pointing toward the clouds.
+
+Don Marcelo would return home from these send-offs vibrating with
+nervous fatigue, as one who had just participated in a scene of
+racking emotion. In spite of his tenacious character which always
+stood out against admitting a mistake, the old man began to feel
+ashamed of his former doubts. The nation was quivering with life;
+France was a grand nation; appearances had deceived him as well as
+many others. Perhaps the most of his countrymen were of a light and
+flippant character, given to excessive interest in the sensuous side
+of life; but when danger came they were fulfilling their duty
+simply, without the necessity of the harsh force to which the iron-
+clad organizations were submitting their people.
+
+On leaving home on the morning of the fourth day of the mobilization
+Desnoyers, instead of betaking himself to the centre of the city,
+went in the opposite direction toward the rue de la Pompe. Some
+imprudent words dropped by Chichi, and the uneasy looks of his wife
+and sister-in-law made him suspect that Julio had returned from his
+trip. He felt the necessity of seeing at least the outside of the
+studio windows, as if they might give him news. And in order to
+justify a trip so at variance with his policy of ignoring his son,
+he remembered that the carpenter lived in the same street.
+
+"I must hunt up Robert. He promised a week ago that he would come
+here."
+
+This Robert was a husky young fellow who, to use his own words, was
+"emancipated from boss tyranny," and was working independently in
+his own home. A tiny, almost subterranean room was serving him for
+dwelling and workshop. A woman he called "my affinity" was looking
+carefully after his hearth and home, with a baby boy clinging to her
+skirts. Desnoyers was accustomed to humor Robert's tirades against
+his fellow citizens because the man had always humored his whimseys
+about the incessant rearrangement of his furniture. In the
+luxurious apartment in the avenue Victor Hugo the carpenter would
+sing La Internacional while using hammer and saw, and his employer
+would overlook his audacity of speech because of the cheapness of
+his work.
+
+Upon arriving at the shop he found the man with cap over one ear,
+broad trousers like a mameluke's, hobnailed boots and various
+pennants and rosettes fastened to the lapels of his jacket.
+
+"You've come too late, Boss," he said cheerily. "I am just going to
+close the factory. The Proprietor has been mobilized, and in a few
+hours will join his regiment."
+
+And he pointed to a written paper posted on the door of his dwelling
+like the printed cards on all establishments, signifying that
+employer and employees had obeyed the order of mobilization.
+
+It had never occurred to Desnoyers that his carpenter might become a
+soldier, since he was so opposed to all kinds of authority. He
+hated the flics, the Paris police, with whom he had, more than once,
+exchanged fisticuffs and clubbings. Militarism was his special
+aversion. In the meetings against the despotism of the barracks he
+had always been one of the noisiest participants. And was this
+revolutionary fellow going to war naturally and voluntarily? . . .
+
+Robert spoke enthusiastically of his regiment, of life among
+comrades with Death but four steps away.
+
+"I believe in my ideas, Boss, the same as before," he explained as
+though guessing the other's thought. "But war is war and teaches
+many things--among others that Liberty must be accompanied with
+order and authority. It is necessary that someone direct that the
+rest may follow--willingly, by common consent . . . but they must
+follow. When war actually comes one sees things very differently
+from when living at home doing as one pleases."
+
+The night that they assassinated Jaures he howled with rage,
+announcing that the following morning the murder would be avenged.
+He had hunted up his associates in the district in order to inform
+them what retaliation was being planned against the malefactors.
+But war was about to break out. There was something in the air that
+was opposing civil strife, that was placing private grievances in
+momentary abeyance, concentrating all minds on the common weal.
+
+"A week ago," he exclaimed, "I was an anti-militarist! How far away
+that seems now--as if a year had gone by! I keep thinking as
+before! I love peace and hate war like all my comrades. But the
+French have not offended anybody, and yet they threaten us, wishing
+to enslave us. . . . But we French can be fierce, since they oblige
+us to be, and in order to defend ourselves it is just that nobody
+should shirk, that all should obey. Discipline does not quarrel
+with Revolution. Remember the armies of the first Republic--all
+citizens, Generals as well as soldiers, but Hoche, Kleber and the
+others were rough-hewn, unpolished benefactors who knew how to
+command and exact obedience."
+
+The carpenter was well read. Besides the papers and pamphlets of
+"the Idea," he had also read on stray sheets the views of Michelet
+and other liberal actors on the stage of history.
+
+"We are going to make war on War," he added. "We are going to fight
+so that this war will be the last."
+
+This statement did not seem to be expressed with sufficient
+clearness, so he recast his thought.
+
+"We are going to fight for the future; we are going to die in order
+that our grandchildren may not have to endure a similar calamity.
+If the enemy triumphs, the war-habit will triumph, and conquest will
+be the only means of growth. First they will overcome Europe, then
+the rest of the world. Later on, those who have been pillaged will
+rise up in their wrath. More wars! . . . We do not want conquests.
+We desire to regain Alsace and Lorraine, for their inhabitants wish
+to return to us . . . and nothing more. We shall not imitate the
+enemy, appropriating territory and jeopardizing the peace of the
+world. We had enough of that with Napoleon; we must not repeat that
+experience. We are going to fight for our immediate security, and
+at the same time for the security of the world--for the life of the
+weaker nations. If this were a war of aggression, of mere vanity,
+of conquest, then we Socialists would bethink ourselves of our anti-
+militarism. But this is self-defense, and the government has not
+been at fault. Since we are attacked, we must be united in our
+defensive."
+
+The carpenter, who was also anti-clerical, was now showing a more
+generous tolerance, an amplitude of ideas that embraced all mankind.
+The day before he had met at the administration office a Reservist
+who was just leaving to join his regiment. At a glance he saw that
+this man was a priest.
+
+"I am a carpenter," he had said to him, by way of introduction, "and
+you, comrade, are working in the churches?"
+
+He employed this figure of speech in order that the priest might not
+suspect him of anything offensive. The two had clasped hands.
+
+"I do not take much stock in the clerical cowl," Robert explained to
+Desnoyers. "For some time I have not been on friendly terms with
+religion. But in every walk of life there must be good people, and
+the good people ought to understand each other in a crisis like
+this. Don't you think so, Boss?"
+
+The war coincided with his socialistic tendencies. Before this,
+when speaking of future revolution, he had felt a malign pleasure in
+imagining all the rich deprived of their fortunes and having to work
+in order to exist. Now he was equally enthusiastic at the thought
+that all Frenchmen would share the same fate without class
+distinction.
+
+"All with knapsacks on their backs and eating at mess."
+
+And he was even extending this military sobriety to those who
+remained behind the army. War was going to cause great scarcity of
+provisions, and all would have to come down to very plain fare.
+
+"You, too, Boss, who are too old to go to war--you, with all your
+millions, will have to eat the same as I. . . . Admit that it is a
+beautiful thing."
+
+Desnoyers was not offended by the malicious satisfaction that his
+future privations seemed to inspire in the carpenter. He was very
+thoughtful. A man of his stamp, an enemy of existing conditions,
+who had no property to defend, was going to war--to death, perhaps--
+because of a generous and distant ideal, in order that future
+generations might never know the actual horrors of war! To do this,
+he was not hesitating at the sacrifice of his former cherished
+beliefs, all that he had held sacred till now. . . . And he who
+belonged to the privileged class, who possessed so many tempting
+things, requiring defense, had given himself up to doubt and
+criticism! . . .
+
+Hours after, he again saw the carpenter, near the Arc de Triomphe.
+He was one of a group of workmen looking much as he did, and this
+group was joining others and still others that represented every
+social class--well-dressed citizens, stylish and anaemic young men,
+graduate students with worn jackets, pale faces and thick glasses,
+and youthful priests who were smiling rather shamefacedly as though
+they had been caught at some ridiculous escapade. At the head of
+this human herd was a sergeant, and as a rear guard, various
+soldiers with guns on their shoulders. Forward march,
+Reservists! . . .
+
+And a musical cry, a solemn harmony like a Greek chant, menacing and
+monotonous, surged up from this mass with open mouths, swinging
+arms, and legs that were opening and shutting like compasses.
+
+Robert was singing the martial chorus with such great
+
+energy that his eyes and Gallic moustachios were fairly trembling.
+In spite of his corduroy suit and his bulging linen hand bag, he had
+the same grand and heroic aspect as the figures by Rude in the Arc
+de Triomphe. The "affinity" and the boy were trudging along the
+sidewalk so as to accompany him to the station. For a moment he
+took his eyes from them to speak with a companion in the line,
+shaven and serious-looking, undoubtedly the priest whom he had met
+the day before. Now they were talking confidentially, intimately,
+with that brotherliness which contact with death inspires in
+mankind.
+
+The millionaire followed the carpenter with a look of respect,
+immeasurably increased since he had taken his part in this human
+avalanche. And this respect had in it something of envy, the envy
+that springs from an uneasy conscience.
+
+Whenever Don Marcelo passed a bad night, suffering from nightmare, a
+certain terrible thing--always the same--would torment his
+imagination. Rarely did he dream of mortal peril to his family or
+self. The frightful vision was always that certain notes bearing
+his signature were presented for collection which he, Marcelo
+Desnoyers, the man always faithful to his bond, with a past of
+immaculate probity, was not able to pay. Such a possibility made
+him tremble, and long after waking his heart would be oppressed with
+terror. To his imagination this was the greatest disgrace that a
+man could suffer.
+
+Now that war was overturning his existence with its agitations, the
+same agonies were reappearing. Completely awake, with full powers
+of reasoning, he was suffering exactly the same distress as when in
+his horrible dreams he saw his dishonored signature on a protested
+document.
+
+All his past was looming up before his eyes with such extraordinary
+clearness that it seemed as though until then his mind must have
+been in hopeless confusion. The threatened land of France was his
+native country. Fifteen centuries of history had been working for
+him, in order that his opening eyes might survey progress and
+comforts that his ancestors did not even know. Many generations of
+Desnoyers had prepared for his advent into life by struggling with
+the land and defending it that he might be born into a free family
+and fireside. . . . And when his turn had come for continuing this
+effort, when his time had arrived in the rosary of generations--he
+had fled like a debtor evading payment! . . . On coming into his
+fatherland he had contracted obligations with the human group to
+whom he owed his existence. This obligation should be paid with his
+arms, with any sacrifice that would repel danger . . . and he had
+eluded the acknowledgment of his signature, fleeing his country and
+betraying his trust to his forefathers! Ah, miserable coward! The
+material success of his life, the riches acquired in a remote
+country, were comparatively of no importance. There are failures
+that millions cannot blot out. The uneasiness of his conscience was
+proving it now. Proof, too, was in the envy and respect inspired by
+this poor mechanic marching to meet his death with others equally
+humble, all kindled with the satisfaction of duty fulfilled, of
+sacrifice accepted.
+
+The memory of Madariaga came to his memory.
+
+"Where we make our riches, and found a family--there is our
+country."
+
+No, the statement of the centaur was not correct. In normal times,
+perhaps. Far from one's native land when it is not exposed to
+danger, one may forget it for a few years. But he was living now in
+France, and France was being obliged to defend herself against
+enemies wishing to overpower her. The sight of all her people
+rising en masse was becoming an increasingly shameful torture for
+Desnoyers, making him think all the time of what he should have done
+in his youth, of what he had dodged.
+
+The veterans of '70 were passing through the streets, with the green
+and black ribbon in their lapel, souvenirs of the privations of the
+Siege of Paris, and of heroic and disastrous campaigns. The sight
+of these men, satisfied with their past, made him turn pale. Nobody
+was recalling his, but he knew it, and that was enough. In vain his
+reason would try to lull this interior tempest. . . . Those times
+were different; then there was none of the present unanimity; the
+Empire was unpopular . . . everything was lost. . . . But the
+recollection of a celebrated sentence was fixing itself in his mind
+as an obsession--"France still remained!" Many had thought as he
+did in his youth, but they had not, therefore, evaded military
+service. They had stood by their country in a last and desperate
+resistance.
+
+Useless was his excuse-making reasoning. Nobler thoughts showed him
+the fallacy of this beating around the bush. Explanations and
+demonstrations are unnecessary to the understanding of patriotic and
+religious ideals; true patriotism does not need them. One's
+country . . . is one's country. And the laboring man, skeptical and
+jesting, the self-centred farmer, the solitary pastor, all had
+sprung to action at the sound of this conjuring word, comprehending
+it instantly, without previous instruction.
+
+"It is necessary to pay," Don Marcelo kept repeating mentally. "I
+ought to pay my debt."
+
+As in his dreams, he was constantly feeling the anguish of an
+upright and desperate man who wishes to meet his obligations.
+
+Pay! . . . and how? It was now very late. For a moment the heroic
+resolution came into his head of offering himself as a volunteer, of
+marching with his bag at his side in some one of the groups of
+future combatants, the same as the carpenter. But the uselessness
+of the sacrifice came immediately into his mind. Of what use would
+it be? . . . He looked robust and was well-preserved for his age,
+but he was over seventy, and only the young make good soldiers.
+Combat is but one incident in the struggle. Equally necessary are
+the hardship and self-denial in the form of interminable marches,
+extremes of temperature, nights in the open air, shoveling earth,
+digging trenches, loading carts, suffering hunger. . . . No; it was
+too late. He could not even leave an illustrious name that might
+serve as an example.
+
+Instinctively he glanced behind. He was not alone in the world; he
+had a son who could assume his father's debt . . . but that hope
+only lasted a minute. His son was not French; he belonged to
+another people; half of his blood was from another source. Besides,
+how could the boy be expected to feel as he did? Would he even
+understand if his father should explain it to him? . . . It was
+useless to expect anything from this lady-killing, dancing clown,
+from this fellow of senseless bravado, who was constantly exposing
+his life in duels in order to satisfy a silly sense of honor.
+
+Oh, the meekness of the bluff Senor Desnoyers after these
+reflections! . . . His family felt alarmed at seeing the humility
+and gentleness with which he moved around the house. The two men-
+servants had gone to join their regiments, and to them the most
+surprising result of the declaration of war was the sudden kindness
+of their master, the lavishness of his farewell gifts, the paternal
+care with which he supervised their preparations for departure. The
+terrible Don Marcelo embraced them with moist eyes, and the two had
+to exert themselves to prevent his accompanying them to the station.
+
+Outside of his home he was slipping about humbly as though mutely
+asking pardon of the many people around him. To him they all
+appeared his superiors. It was a period of economic crisis; for the
+time being, the rich also were experiencing what it was to be poor
+and worried; the banks had suspended operations and were paying only
+a small part of their deposits. For some weeks the millionaire was
+deprived of his wealth, and felt restless before the uncertain
+future. How long would it be before they could send him money from
+South America? Was war going to take away fortunes as well as
+lives? . . . And yet Desnoyers had never appreciated money less,
+nor disposed of it with greater generosity.
+
+Numberless mobilized men of the lower classes who were going alone
+toward the station met a gentleman who would timidly stop them, put
+his hand in his pocket and leave in their right hand a bill of
+twenty francs, fleeing immediately before their astonished eyes.
+The working-women who were returning weeping from saying good-bye to
+their husbands saw this same gentleman smiling at the children who
+were with them, patting their cheeks and hastening away, leaving a
+five-franc piece in their hands.
+
+Don Marcelo, who had never smoked, was now frequenting the tobacco
+shops, coming out with hands and pockets filled in order that he
+might, with lavish generosity, press the packages upon the first
+soldier he met. At times the recipient, smiling courteously, would
+thank him with a few words, revealing his superior breeding--
+afterwards passing the gift on to others clad in cloaks as coarse
+and badly cut as his own. The mobilization, universally obligatory,
+often caused him to make these mistakes.
+
+The rough hands pressing his with a grateful clasp, left him
+satisfied for a few moments. Ah, if he could only do more! . . .
+The Government in mobilizing its vehicles had appropriated three of
+his monumental automobiles, and Desnoyers felt very sorry that they
+were not also taking the fourth mastodon. Of what use were they to
+him? The shepherds of this monstrous herd, the chauffeur and his
+assistants, were now in the army. Everybody was marching away.
+Finally he and his son would be the only ones left--two useless
+creatures.
+
+He roared with wrath on learning of the enemy's entrance into
+Belgium, considering this the most unheard-of treason in history.
+He suffered agonies of shame at remembering that at first he had
+held the exalted patriots of his country responsible for the
+war. . . . What perfidy, methodically carried out after long years
+of preparation! The accounts of the sackings, fires and butcheries
+made him turn pale and gnash his teeth. To him, to Marcelo
+Desnoyers, might happen the very same thing that Belgium was
+enduring, if the barbarians should invade France. He had a home in
+the city, a castle in the country, and a family. Through
+association of ideas, the women assaulted by the soldiery, made him
+think of Chichi and the dear Dona Luisa. The mansions in flames
+called to his mind the rare and costly furnishings accumulated in
+his expensive dwellings--the armorial bearings of his social
+elevation. The old folk that were shot, the women foully mutilated,
+the children with their hands cut off, all the horrors of a war of
+terror, aroused the violence of his character.
+
+And such things could happen with impunity in this day and
+generation! . . .
+
+In order to convince himself that punishment was near, that
+vengeance was overtaking the guilty ones, he felt the necessity of
+mingling daily with the people crowding around the Gare de l'Est.
+
+Although the greater part of the troops were operating on the
+frontiers, that was not diminishing the activity in Paris. Entire
+battalions were no longer going off, but day and night soldiers were
+coming to the station singly or in groups. These were Reserves
+without uniform on their way to enroll themselves with their
+companies, officials who until then had been busy with the work of
+the mobilization, platoons in arms destined to fill the great gaps
+opened by death.
+
+The multitude, pressed against the railing, was greeting those who
+were going off, following them with their eyes while they were
+crossing the large square. The latest editions of the daily papers
+were announced with hoarse yells, and instantly the dark throng
+would be spotted with white, all reading with avidity the printed
+sheets. Good news: "Vive la France!" A doubtful despatch,
+foreshadowing calamity: "No matter! We must press on at all costs!
+The Russians will close in behind them!" And while these dialogues,
+inspired by the latest news were taking place, many young girls were
+going among the groups offering little flags and tricolored
+cockades--and passing through the patio, men and still more men were
+disappearing behind the glass doors, on their way to the war.
+
+A sub-lieutenant of the Reserves, with his bag on his shoulder, was
+accompanied by his father toward the file of policemen keeping the
+crowds back. Desnoyers saw in the young officer a certain
+resemblance to his son. The father was wearing in his lapel the
+black and green ribbon of 1870--a decoration which always filled
+Desnoyers with remorse. He was tall and gaunt, but was still trying
+to hold himself erect, with a heavy frown. He wanted to show
+himself fierce, inhuman, in order to hide his emotion.
+
+"Good-bye, my boy! Do your best."
+
+"Good-bye, father."
+
+They did not clasp hands, and each was avoiding looking at the
+other. The official was smiling like an automaton. The father
+turned his back brusquely, and threading his way through the throng,
+entered a cafe, where for some time he needed the most retired seat
+in the darkest earner to hide his emotion.
+
+AND DON MARCELO ENVIED HIS GRIEF.
+
+Some of the Reservists came along singing, preceded by a flag. They
+were joking and jostling each other, betraying in excited actions,
+long halts at all the taverns along the way. One of them, without
+interrupting his song, was pressing the hand of an old woman
+marching beside him, cheerful and dry-eyed. The mother was
+concentrating all her strength in order, with feigned happiness, to
+accompany this strapping lad to the last minute.
+
+Others were coming along singly, separated from their companies, but
+not on that account alone. The gun was hanging from the shoulder,
+the back overlaid by the hump of the knapsack, the red legs shooting
+in and out of the turned-back folds of the blue cloak, and the smoke
+of a pipe under the visor of the kepis. In front of one of these
+men, four children were walking along, lined up according to size.
+They kept turning their heads to admire their father, suddenly
+glorified by his military trappings. At his side was marching his
+wife, affable and resigned, feeling in her simple soul a revival of
+love, an ephemeral Spring, born of the contact with danger. The
+man, a laborer of Paris, who a few months before was singing La
+Internacional, demanding the abolishment of armies and the
+brotherhood of all mankind, was now going in quest of death. His
+wife, choking back her sobs, was admiring him greatly. Affection
+and commiseration made her insist upon giving him a few last
+counsels. In his knapsack she had put his best handkerchiefs, the
+few provisions in the house and all the money. Her man was not to
+be uneasy about her and the children; they would get along all
+right. The government and kind neighbors would look after them.
+
+The soldier in reply was jesting over the somewhat misshapen figure
+of his wife, saluting the coming citizen, and prophesying that he
+would be born in a time of great victory. A kiss to the wife, an
+affectionate hair-pull for his offspring, and then he had joined his
+comrades. . . . No tears. Courage!. . . Vive la France!
+
+The final injunctions of the departing were now heard. Nobody was
+crying. But as the last red pantaloons disappeared, many hands
+grasped the iron railing convulsively, many handkerchiefs were
+bitten with gnashing teeth, many faces were hidden in the arms with
+sobs of anguish.
+
+AND DON MARCELO ENVIED THESE TEARS.
+
+The old woman, on losing the warm contact of her son's hand from her
+withered one, turned in the direction which she believed to be that
+of the hostile country, waving her arms with threatening fury.
+
+"Ah, the assassin! . . . the bandit!"
+
+In her wrathful imagination she was again seeing the countenance so
+often displayed in the illustrated pages of the periodicals--
+moustaches insolently aggressive, a mouth with the jaw and teeth of
+a wolf, that laughed . . . and laughed as men must have laughed in
+the time of the cave-men.
+
+AND DON MARCELO ENVIED THIS WRATH!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+NEW LIFE
+
+
+When Marguerite was able to return to the studio in the rue de la
+Pompe, Julio, who had been living in a perpetual bad humor, seeing
+everything in the blackest colors, suddenly felt a return of his old
+optimism.
+
+The war was not going to be so cruel as they all had at first
+imagined. The days had passed by, and the movements of the troops
+were beginning to be less noticeable. As the number of men
+diminished in the streets, the feminine population seemed to have
+increased. Although there was great scarcity of money, the banks
+still remaining closed, the necessity for it was increasingly great,
+in order to secure provisions. Memories of the famine of the siege
+of '70 tormented the imagination. Since war had broken out with the
+same enemy, it seemed but logical to everybody to expect a
+repetition of the same happenings. The storehouses were besieged by
+women who were securing stale food at exorbitant prices in order to
+store it in their homes. Future hunger was producing more terror
+than immediate dangers.
+
+For young Desnoyers these were about all the transformations that
+war was creating around him. People would finally become accustomed
+to the new existence. Humanity has a certain reserve force of
+adaptation which enables it to mould itself to circumstances and
+continue existing. He was hoping to continue his life as though
+nothing had happened. It was enough for him that Marguerite should
+continue faithful to their past. Together they would see events
+slipping by them with the cruel luxuriousness of those who, from an
+inaccessible height, contemplate a flood without the slightest risk
+to themselves.
+
+This selfish attitude had also become habitual to Argensola.
+
+"Let us be neutral," the Bohemian would say. "Neutrality does not
+necessarily mean indifference. Let us enjoy the great spectacle,
+since nothing like it will ever happen again in our lifetime."
+
+It was unfortunate that war should happen to come when they had so
+little money. Argensola was hating the banks even more than the
+Central Powers, distinguishing with special antipathy the trust
+company which was delaying payment of Julio's check. How lovely it
+would have been with this sum available, to have forestalled events
+by laying in every class of commodity! In order to supplement the
+domestic scrimping, he again had to solicit the aid of Dona Luisa.
+War had lessened Don Marcelo's precautions, and the family was now
+living in generous unconcern. The mother, like other house
+mistresses, had stored up provisions for months and months to come,
+buying whatever eatables she was able to lay hands on. Argensola
+took advantage of this abundance, repeating his visits to the home
+in the avenue Victor Hugo, descending its service stairway with
+great packages which were swelling the supplies in the studio.
+
+He felt all the joys of a good housekeeper in surveying the
+treasures piled up in the kitchen--great tins of canned meat,
+pyramids of butter crocks, and bags of dried vegetables. He had
+accumulated enough there to maintain a large family. The war had
+now offered a new pretext for him to visit Don Marcelo's wine-
+vaults.
+
+"Let them come!" he would say with a heroic gesture as he took stock
+of his treasure trove. "Let them come when they will! We are ready
+for them!"
+
+The care and increase of his provisions, and the investigation of
+news were the two functions of his existence. It seemed necessary
+to procure ten, twelve, fifteen papers a day; some because they were
+reactionary, and the novelty of seeing all the French united filled
+him with enthusiasm; others because they were radical and must be
+better informed of the news received from the government. They
+generally appeared at midday, at three, at four and at five in the
+afternoon. An half hour's delay in the publication of the sheet
+raised great hopes in the public, on the qui vive for stupendous
+news. All the last supplements were snatched up; everybody had his
+pockets stuffed with papers, waiting anxiously the issue of extras
+in order to buy them, too. Yet all the sheets were saying
+approximately the same thing.
+
+Argensola was developing a credulous, enthusiastic soul, capable of
+admitting many improbable things. He presumed that this same spirit
+was probably animating everybody around him. At times, his old
+critical attitude would threaten to rebel, but doubt was repulsed as
+something dishonorable. He was living in a new world, and it was
+but natural that extraordinary things should occur that could be
+neither measured nor explained by the old processes of reasoning.
+So he commented with infantile joy on the marvellous accounts in the
+daily papers--of combats between a single Belgian platoon and entire
+regiments of enemies, putting them to disorderly flight; of the
+German fear of the bayonet that made them run like hares the instant
+that the charge sounded; of the inefficiency of the German artillery
+whose projectiles always missed fire.
+
+It was logical and natural that little Belgium should conquer
+gigantic Germany--a repetition of David and Goliath--with all the
+metaphors and images that this unequal contest had inspired across
+so many centuries. Like the greater part of the nation, he had the
+mentality of a reader of tales of chivalry who feels himself
+defrauded if the hero, single-handed, fails to cleave a thousand
+enemies with one fell stroke. He purposely chose the most
+sensational papers, those which published many stories of single
+encounters, of individual deeds about which nobody could know with
+any degree of certainty.
+
+The intervention of England on the seas made him imagine a frightful
+famine, coming providentially like a thunder-clap to torture the
+enemy. He honestly believed that ten days of this maritime blockade
+would convert Germany into a group of shipwrecked sailors floating
+on a raft. This vision made him repeat his visits to the kitchen to
+gloat over his packages of provisions.
+
+"Ah, what they would give in Berlin for my treasures!" . . .
+
+Never had Argensola eaten with greater avidity. Consideration of
+the great privations suffered by the adversary was sharpening his
+appetite to a monstrous capacity. White bread, golden brown and
+crusty, was stimulating him to an almost religious ecstasy.
+
+"If friend William could only get his claws on this!" he would
+chuckle to his companion.
+
+So he chewed and swallowed with increasing relish; solids and
+liquids on passing through his mouth seemed to be acquiring a new
+flavor, rare and divine. Distant hunger for him was a stimulant, a
+sauce of endless delight.
+
+While France was inspiring his enthusiasm, he was conceding greater
+credit to Russia. "Ah, those Cossacks!" . . . He was accustomed to
+speak of them as intimate friends. He loved to describe the
+unbridled gallop of the wild horsemen, impalpable as phantoms, and
+so terrible in their wrath that the enemy could not look them in the
+face. The concierge and the stay-at-homes used to listen to him
+with all the respect due to a foreign gentleman, knowing much of the
+great outside world with which they were not familiar.
+
+"The Cossacks will adjust the accounts of these bandits!" he would
+conclude with absolute assurance. "Within a month they will have
+entered Berlin."
+
+And his public composed of women--wives and mothers of those who had
+gone to war--would modestly agree with him, with that irresistible
+desire which we all feel of placing our hopes on something distant
+and mysterious. The French would defend the country, reconquering,
+besides the lost territories, but the Cossacks--of whom so many were
+speaking but so few had seen--were going to give the death blow.
+The only person who knew them at first hand was Tchernoff, and to
+Argensola's astonishment, he listened to his words without showing
+any enthusiasm. The Cossacks were for him simply one body of the
+Russian army--good enough soldiers, but incapable of working the
+miracles that everybody was expecting from them.
+
+"That Tchernoff!" exclaimed Argensola. "Since he hates the Czar, he
+thinks the entire country mad. He is a revolutionary fanatic. . . .
+And I am opposed to all fanaticisms."
+
+Julio was listening absent-mindedly to the news brought by his
+companion, the vibrating statements recited in declamatory tones,
+the plans of the campaign traced out on an enormous map fastened to
+the wall of the studio and bristling with tiny flags that marked the
+camps of the belligerent armies. Every issue of the papers obliged
+the Spaniard to arrange a new dance of the pins on the map, followed
+by his comments of bomb-proof optimism.
+
+"We have entered into Alsace; very good! . . . It appears now that
+we abandon Alsace. Splendid! I suspect the cause. It is in order
+to enter again in a better place, getting at the enemy from
+behind. . . . They say that Liege has fallen. What a lie! . . .
+And if it does fall, it doesn't matter. Just an incident, nothing
+more! The others remain . . . the others! . . . that are advancing
+on the Eastern side, and are going to enter Berlin."
+
+The news from the Russian front was his favorite, but obliged him to
+remain in suspense every time that he tried to find on the map the
+obscure names of the places where the admired Cossacks were
+exhibiting their wonderful exploits.
+
+Meanwhile Julio was continuing the course of his own reflections.
+Marguerite! . . . She had come back at last, and yet each time
+seemed to be drifting further away from him. . . .
+
+In the first days of the mobilization, he had haunted her
+neighborhood, trying to appease his longing by this illusory
+proximity. Marguerite had written to him, urging patience. How
+fortunate it was that he was a foreigner and would not have to
+endure the hardship of war! Her brother, an officer in the
+artillery Reserves, was going at almost any minute. Her mother, who
+made her home with this bachelor son, had kept an astonishing
+serenity up to the last minute, although she had wept much while the
+war was still but a possibility. She herself had prepared the
+soldier's outfit so that the small valise might contain all that was
+indispensable for campaign life. But Marguerite had divined her
+poor mother's secret struggles not to reveal her despair, in moist
+eyes and trembling hands. It was impossible to leave her alone at
+such a time. . . . Then had come the farewell. "God be with you,
+my son! Do your duty, but be prudent." Not a tear nor a sign of
+weakness. All her family had advised her not to accompany her son
+to the railway station, so his sister had gone with him. And upon
+returning home, Marguerite had found her mother rigid in her arm
+chair, with a set face, avoiding all mention of her son, speaking of
+the friends who also had sent their boys to the war, as if they only
+could comprehend her torture. "Poor Mama! I ought to be with her
+now more than ever. . . . To-morrow, if I can, I shall come to see
+you."
+
+When at last she returned to the rue de la Pompe, her first care was
+to explain to Julio the conservatism of her tailored suit, the
+absence of jewels in the adornment of her person. "The war, my
+dear! Now it is the chic thing to adapt oneself to the depressing
+conditions, to be frugal and inconspicuous like soldiers. Who knows
+what we may expect!" Her infatuation with dress still accompanied
+her in every moment of her life.
+
+Julio noticed a persistent absent-mindedness about her. It seemed
+as though her spirit, abandoning her body, was wandering to far-away
+places. Her eyes were looking at him, but she seldom saw him. She
+would speak very slowly, as though wishing to weigh every word,
+fearful of betraying some secret. This spiritual alienation did
+not, however, prevent her slipping bodily along the smooth path of
+custom, although afterwards she would seem to feel a vague remorse.
+"I wonder if it is right to do this! . . . Is it not wrong to live
+like this when so many sorrows are falling on the world?" Julio
+hushed her scruples with:
+
+"But if we are going to marry as soon as possible! . . . If we are
+already the same as husband and wife!"
+
+She replied with a gesture of strangeness and dismay. To
+marry! . . . Ten days ago she had had no other wish. Now the
+possibility of marriage was recurring less and less in her thoughts.
+Why think about such remote and uncertain events? More immediate
+things were occupying her mind.
+
+The farewell to her brother in the station was a scene which had
+fixed itself ineradicably in her memory. Upon going to the studio
+she had planned not to speak about it, foreseeing that she might
+annoy her lover with this account; but alas, she had only to vow not
+to mention a thing, to feel an irresistible impulse to talk about
+it.
+
+She had never suspected that she could love her brother so dearly.
+Her former affection for him had been mingled with a silent
+sentiment of jealousy because her mother had preferred the older
+child. Besides, he was the one who had introduced Laurier to his
+home; the two held diplomas as industrial engineers and had been
+close friends from their school days. . . . But upon seeing the boy
+ready to depart, Marguerite suddenly discovered that this brother,
+who had always been of secondary interest to her, was now occupying
+a pre-eminent place in her affections.
+
+"He was so handsome, so interesting in his lieutenant's uniform! . . .
+He looked like another person. I will admit to you that I was
+very proud to walk beside him, leaning on his arm. People thought
+that we were married. Seeing me weep, some poor women tried to
+console me saying, 'Courage, Madame. . . . Your man will come
+back.' He just laughed at hearing these mistakes. The only thing
+that was really saddening him was thinking about our mother."
+
+They had separated at the door of the station. The sentries would
+not let her go any further, so she had handed over his sword that
+she had wished to carry till the last moment.
+
+"It is lovely to be a man!" she exclaimed enthusiastically. "I
+would love to wear a uniform, to go to war, to be of some real use!"
+
+She tried not to say more about it, as though she suddenly realized
+the inopportuneness of her last words. Perhaps she noticed the
+scowl on Julio's face.
+
+She was, however, so wrought up by the memory of that farewell that,
+after a long pause, she was unable to resist the temptation of again
+putting her thought into words.
+
+At the station entrance, while she was kissing her brother for the
+last time, she had an encounter, a great surprise. "He" had
+approached, also clad as an artillery officer, but alone, having to
+entrust his valise to a good-natured man from the crowd.
+
+Julio shot her a questioning look. Who was "he"? He suspected, but
+feigned ignorance, as though fearing to learn the truth.
+
+"Laurier," she replied laconically, "my former husband."
+
+The lover displayed a cruel irony. It was a cowardly thing to
+ridicule this man who had responded to the call of duty. He
+recognized his vileness, but a malign and irresistible instinct made
+him keep on with his sneers in order to discredit the man before
+Marguerite. Laurier a soldier!--He must cut a pretty figure dressed
+in uniform!
+
+"Laurier, the warrior!" he continued in a voice so sarcastic and
+strange that it seemed to be coming from somebody else. . . . "Poor
+creature!"
+
+She hesitated in her response, not wishing to exasperate Desnoyers
+any further. But the truth was uppermost in her mind, and she said
+simply:
+
+"No . . . no, he didn't look so bad. Quite the contrary. Perhaps
+it was the uniform, perhaps it was his sadness at going away alone,
+completely alone, without a single hand to clasp his. I didn't
+recognize him at first. Seeing my brother, he started toward us;
+but then when he saw me, he went his own way . . . Poor man! I
+feel sorry for him!"
+
+Her feminine instinct must have told her that she was talking too
+much, and she cut her chatter suddenly short. The same instinct
+warned her that Julio's countenance was growing more and more
+saturnine, and his mouth taking a very bitter curve. She wanted to
+console him and added:
+
+"What luck that you are a foreigner and will not have to go to the
+war! How horrible it would be for me to lose you!" . . .
+
+She said it sincerely. . . . A few moments before she had been
+envying men, admiring the gallantry with which they were exposing
+their lives, and now she was trembling before the idea that her
+lover might have been one of these.
+
+This did not please his amorous egoism--to be placed apart from the
+rest as a delicate and fragile being only fit for feminine
+adoration. He preferred to inspire the envy that she had felt on
+beholding her brother decked out in his warlike accoutrement. It
+seemed to him that something was coming between him and Marguerite
+that would never disappear, that would go on expanding, repelling
+them in contrary directions . . . far . . . very far, even to the
+point of not recognizing each other when their glances met.
+
+He continued to be conscious of this impalpable obstacle in their
+following interviews. Marguerite was extremely affectionate in her
+speech, and would look at him with moist and loving eyes. But her
+caressing hands appeared more like those of a mother than a lover,
+and her tenderness was accompanied with a certain disinterestedness
+and extraordinary modesty. She seemed to prefer remaining
+obstinately in the studio, declining to go into the other rooms.
+
+"We are so comfortable here. . . . I would rather not. . . . It is
+not worth while. I should feel remorse afterwards. . . . Why think
+of such things in these anxious times!"
+
+The world around her seemed saturated with love, but it was a new
+love--a love for the man who is suffering, desire for abnegation,
+for sacrifice. This love called forth visions of white caps, of
+tremulous hands healing shell-riddled and bleeding flesh.
+
+Every advance on Julio's part but aroused in Marguerite a vehement
+and modest protest as though they were meeting for the first time.
+
+"It is impossible," she protested. "I keep thinking of my brother,
+and of so many that I know that may be dying at this very minute."
+
+News of battles were beginning to arrive, and blood was beginning to
+flow in great quantities.
+
+"No, no, I cannot," she kept repeating.
+
+And when Julio finally triumphed, he found that her thoughts were
+still following independently the same line of mental stress.
+
+One afternoon, Marguerite announced that henceforth she would see
+him less frequently. She was attending classes now, and had only
+two free days.
+
+Desnoyers listened, dumbfounded. Classes? . . . What were her
+studies? . . .
+
+She seemed a little irritated at his mocking expression. . . . Yes,
+she was studying; for the past week she had been attending classes.
+Now the lessons were going to be more regular; the course of
+instruction had been fully organized, and there were many more
+instructors.
+
+"I wish to be a trained nurse. I am distressed over my
+uselessness. . . . Of what good have I ever been till now?" . . .
+
+She was silent for a few moments as though reviewing her past.
+
+"At times I almost think," she mused, "that war, with all its
+horrors, still has some good in it. It helps to make us useful to
+our fellowmen. We look at life more seriously; trouble makes us
+realize that we have come into the world for some purpose. . . . I
+believe that we must not love life only for the pleasures that it
+brings us. We ought to find satisfaction in sacrifice, in
+dedicating ourselves to others, and this satisfaction--I don't know
+just why, perhaps because it is new--appears to me superior to all
+other things."
+
+Julio looked at her in surprise, trying to imagine what was going on
+in that idolized and frivolous head. What ideas were forming back
+of that thoughtful forehead which until then had merely reflected
+the slightest shadow of thoughts as swift and flitting as birds? . . .
+
+But the former Marguerite was still alive. He saw her constantly
+reappearing in a funny way among the sombre preoccupations with
+which war was overshadowing all lives.
+
+"We have to study very hard in order to earn our diplomas as nurses.
+Have you noticed our uniform? . . . It is most distinctive, and the
+white is so becoming both to blondes and brunettes. Then the cap
+which allows little curls over the ears--the fashionable coiffure--
+and the blue cape over the white suit, make a splendid contrast.
+With this outfit, a woman well shod, and with few jewels, may
+present a truly chic appearance. It is a mixture of nun and great
+lady which is vastly becoming."
+
+She was going to study with a regular fury in order to become really
+useful . . . and sooner to wear the admired uniform.
+
+Poor Desnoyers! . . . The longing to see her, and the lack of
+occupation in these interminable afternoons which hitherto had been
+employed so delightfully, compelled him to haunt the neighborhood of
+the unoccupied palace where the government had just established the
+training school for nurses. Stationing himself at the corner,
+watching the fluttering skirts and quick steps of the feminine feet
+on the sidewalk, he imagined that the course of time must have
+turned backward, and that he was still but eighteen--the same as
+when he used to hang around the establishments of some celebrated
+modiste. The groups of women that at certain hours came out of the
+palace suggested these former days. They were dressed extremely
+quietly, the aspect of many of them as humble as that of the
+seamstresses. But they were ladies of the well-to-do class, some
+even coming in automobiles driven by chauffeurs in military uniform,
+because they were ministerial vehicles.
+
+These long waits often brought him unexpected encounters with the
+elegant students who were going and coming.
+
+"Desnoyers!" some feminine voices would exclaim behind him. "Isn't
+it Desnoyers?"
+
+And he would find himself obliged to relieve their doubts, saluting
+the ladies who were looking at him as though he were a ghost. They
+were friends of a remote epoch, of six months ago--ladies who had
+admired and pursued him, trusting sweetly to his masterly wisdom to
+guide them through the seven circles of the science of the tango.
+They were now scrutinizing him as if between their last encounter
+and the present moment had occurred a great cataclysm, transforming
+all the laws of existence--as if he were the sole survivor of a
+vanished race.
+
+Eventually they all asked the same questions--"Are you not going to
+the war? . . . How is it that you are not wearing a uniform?"
+
+He would attempt to explain, but at his first words, they would
+interrupt him:
+
+"That's so. . . . You are a foreigner."
+
+They would say it with a certain envy, doubtless thinking of their
+loved ones now suffering the privations and dangers of war. . . .
+But the fact that he was a foreigner would instantly create a vague
+atmosphere of spiritual aloofness, an alienation that Julio had not
+known in the good old days when people sought each other without
+considering nationality, without feeling that disavowal of danger
+which isolates and concentrates human groups.
+
+The ladies generally bade him adieu with malicious suspicion. What
+was he doing hanging around there? In search of his usual lucky
+adventure? . . . And their smiles were rather grave, the smiles of
+older folk who know the true significance of life and commiserate
+the deluded ones still seeking diversion in frivolities.
+
+This attitude was as annoying to Julio as though it were a
+manifestation of pity. They were supposing him still exercising the
+only function of which he was capable; he wasn't good for anything
+else. On the other hand, these empty heads, still keeping something
+of their old appearance, now appeared animated by the grand
+sentiment of maternity--an abstract maternity which seemed to be
+extending to all the men of the nation--a desire for self-sacrifice,
+of knowing first-hand the privations of the lowly, and aiding all
+the ills that flesh is heir to.
+
+This same yearning was inspiring Marguerite when she came away from
+her lessons. She was advancing from one overpowering dread to
+another, accepting the first rudiments of surgery as the greatest of
+scientific marvels. At the same time, she was astonished at the
+avidity with which she was assimilating these hitherto unsuspected
+mysteries. Sometimes with a funny assumption of assurance, she
+would even believe she had mistaken her vocation.
+
+"Who knows but what I was born to be a famous doctor?" she would
+exclaim.
+
+Her great fear was that she might lose her self-control when the
+time came to put her newly acquired knowledge into practice. To see
+herself before the foul odors of decomposing flesh, to contemplate
+the flow of blood--a horrible thing for her who had always felt an
+invincible repugnance toward all the unpleasant conditions of
+ordinary life! But these hesitations were short, and she was
+suddenly animated by a dashing energy. These were times of
+sacrifice. Were not the men snatched every day from the comforts of
+sensuous existence to endure the rude life of a soldier? . . . She
+would be, a soldier in petticoats, facing pain, battling with it,
+plunging her hands into putrefaction, flashing like a ray of
+sunlight into the places where soldiers were expecting the approach
+of death.
+
+She proudly narrated to Desnoyers all the progress that she was
+making in the training school, the complicated bandages that she was
+learning to adjust, sometimes over a mannikin, at others over the
+flesh of an employee, trying to play the part of a sorely wounded
+patient. She, so dainty, so incapable in her own home of the
+slightest physical effort, was learning the most skilful ways of
+lifting a human body from the ground and carrying it on her back.
+Who knew but that she might render this very service some day on the
+battlefield! She was ready for the greatest risks, with the
+ignorant audacity of women impelled by flashes of heroism. All her
+admiration was for the English army nurses, slender women of nervous
+vigor whose photographs were appearing in the papers, wearing
+pantaloons, riding boots and white helmets.
+
+Julio listened to her with astonishment. Was this woman really
+Marguerite? . . . War was obliterating all her winning vanities.
+She was no longer fluttering about in bird-like fashion. Her feet
+were treading the earth with resolute firmness, calm and secure in
+the new strength which was developing within. When one of his
+caresses would remind her that she was a woman, she would always say
+the same thing,
+
+"What luck that you are a foreigner! . . . What happiness to know
+that you do not have to go to war!"
+
+In her anxiety for sacrifice, she wanted to go to the battlefields,
+and yet at the same time, she was rejoicing to see her lover exempt
+from military duty. This preposterous lack of logic was not
+gratefully received by Julio but irritated him as an unconscious
+offense.
+
+"One might suppose that she was protecting me!" he thought. "She is
+the man and rejoices that I, the weak comrade, should be protected
+from danger. . . . What a grotesque situation!" . . .
+
+Fortunately, at times when Marguerite presented herself at the
+studio, she was again her old self, making him temporarily forget
+his annoyance. She would arrive with the same joy in a vacation
+that the college student or the employee feels on a holiday.
+Responsibility was teaching her to know the value of time.
+
+"No classes to-day!" she would call out on entering; and tossing her
+hat on a divan, she would begin a dance-step, retreating with
+infantile coquetry from the arms of her lover.
+
+But in a few minutes she would recover her customary gravity, the
+serious look that had become habitual with her since the outbreak of
+hostilities. She spoke often of her mother, always sad, but
+striving to hide her grief and keeping herself up in the hope of a
+letter from her son; she spoke, too, of the war, commenting on the
+latest events with the rhetorical optimism of the official
+dispatches. She could describe the first flag taken from the enemy
+as minutely as though it were a garment of unparalleled elegance.
+From a window, she had seen the Minister of War. She was very much
+affected when repeating the story of some fugitive Belgians recently
+arrived at the hospital. They were the only patients that she had
+been able to assist until now. Paris was not receiving the soldiers
+wounded in battle; by order of the Government, they were being sent
+from the front to the hospitals in the South.
+
+She no longer evinced toward Julio the resistance of the first few
+days. Her training as a nurse was giving her a certain passivity.
+She seemed to be ignoring material attractions, stripping them of
+the spiritual importance which she had hitherto attributed to them.
+She wanted to make Julio happy, although her mind was concentrated
+on other matters.
+
+One afternoon, she felt the necessity of communicating certain news
+which had been filling her mind since the day before. Springing up
+from the couch, she hunted for her handbag which contained a letter.
+She wanted to read it again to tell its contents to somebody with
+that irresistible impulse which forestalls confession.
+
+It was a letter which her brother had sent her from the Vosges. In
+it he spoke of Laurier more than of himself. They belonged to
+different batteries, but were in the same division and had taken
+part in the same combats. The officer was filled with admiration
+for his former brother-in-law. Who could have guessed that a future
+hero was hidden within that silent and tranquil engineer! . . . But
+he was a genuine hero, just the same! All the officials had agreed
+with Marguerite's brother on seeing how calmly he fulfilled his
+duty, facing death with the same coolness as though he were in his
+factory near Paris.
+
+He had asked for the dangerous post of lookout, slipping as near as
+possible to the enemy's lines in order to verify the exactitude of
+the artillery discharge, rectifying it by telephone. A German shell
+had demolished the house on the roof of which he was concealed, and
+Laurier, on crawling out unhurt from the ruins, had readjusted his
+telephone and gone tranquilly on, continuing the same work in the
+shelter of a nearby grove. His battery, picked out by the enemy's
+aeroplanes, had received the concentrated fire of the artillery
+opposite. In a few minutes all the force were rolling on the
+ground--the captain and many soldiers dead, officers wounded and
+almost all the gunners. There only remained as chief, Laurier, the
+Impassive (as his comrades nicknamed him), and aided by the few
+artillerymen still on their feet, he continued firing under a rain
+of iron and fire, so as to cover the retreat of a battalion.
+
+"He has been mentioned twice in dispatches," Marguerite continued
+reading. "I do not believe that it will be long before they give
+him the cross. He is valiant in every way. Who would have supposed
+all this a few weeks ago?" . . .
+
+She did not share the general astonishment. Living with Laurier had
+many times shown her the intrepidity of his character, the
+fearlessness concealed under that placid exterior. On that account,
+her instincts had warned her against rousing her husband's wrath in
+the first days of her infidelity. She still remembered the way he
+looked the night he surprised her leaving Julio's home. His was the
+passion that kills, and, nevertheless, he had not attempted the
+least violence with her. . . . The memory of his consideration was
+awakening in Marguerite a sentiment of gratitude. Perhaps he had
+loved her as no other man had.
+
+Her eyes, with an irresistible desire for comparison, sought
+Julio's, admiring his youthful grace and distinction. The image of
+Laurier, heavy and ordinary, came into her mind as a consolation.
+Certainly the officer whom she had seen at the station when saying
+good-bye to her brother, did not seem to her like her old husband.
+But Marguerite wished to forget the pallid lieutenant with the sad
+countenance who had passed before her eyes, preferring to remember
+him only as the manufacturer preoccupied with profits and incapable
+of comprehending what she was accustomed to call "the delicate
+refinements of a chic woman." Decidedly Julio was the more
+fascinating. She did not repent of her past. She did not wish to
+repent of it.
+
+And her loving selfishness made her repeat once more the same old
+exclamation--"How fortunate that you are a foreigner! . . . What a
+relief to know that you are safe from the dangers of war!"
+
+Julio felt the usual exasperation at hearing this. He came very
+near to closing his beloved's mouth with his hand. Was she trying
+to make fun of him? . . . It was fairly insulting to place him
+apart from other men.
+
+Meanwhile, with blind irrelevance, she persisted in talking about
+Laurier, commenting upon his achievements.
+
+"I do not love him, I never have loved him. Do not look so cross!
+How could the poor man ever be compared with you? You must admit,
+though, that his new existence is rather interesting. I rejoice in
+his brave deeds as though an old friend had done them, a family
+visitor whom I had not seen for a long time. . . . The poor man
+deserved a better fate. He ought to have married some other woman,
+some companion more on a level with his ideals. . . . I tell you
+that I really pity him!"
+
+And this pity was so intense that her eyes filled with tears,
+awakening the tortures of jealousy in her lover. After these
+interviews, Desnoyers was more ill-tempered and despondent than
+ever.
+
+"I am beginning to realize that we are in a false position," he said
+one morning to Argensola. "Life is going to become increasingly
+painful. It is difficult to remain tranquil, continuing the same
+old existence in the midst of a people at war."
+
+His companion had about come to the same conclusion. He, too, was
+beginning to feel that the life of a young foreigner in Paris was
+insufferable, now that it was so upset by war.
+
+"One has to keep showing passports all the time in order that the
+police may be sure that they have not discovered a deserter. In the
+street car, the other afternoon, I had to explain that I was a
+Spaniard to some girls who were wondering why I was not at the
+front. . . . One of them, as soon as she learned my nationality,
+asked me with great simplicity why I did not offer myself as a
+volunteer. . . . Now they have invented a word for the stay-at-
+homes, calling them Les Embusques, the hidden ones. . . . I am sick
+and tired of the ironical looks shot at me wherever I go; it makes
+me wild to be taken for an Embusque."
+
+A flash of heroism was galvanizing the impressionable Bohemian. Now
+that everybody was going to the war, he was wishing to do the same
+thing. He was not afraid of death; the only thing that was
+disturbing him was the military service, the uniform, the mechanical
+obedience to bugle-call, the blind subservience to the chiefs.
+Fighting was not offering any difficulties for him but his nature
+capriciously resented everything in the form of discipline. The
+foreign groups in Paris were trying to organize each its own legion
+of volunteers and he, too, was planning his--a battalion of
+Spaniards and South Americans, reserving naturally the presidency of
+the organizing committee for himself, and later the command of the
+body.
+
+He had inserted notices in the papers, making the studio in the rue
+de la Pompe the recruiting office. In ten days, two volunteers had
+presented themselves; a clerk, shivering in midsummer, who
+stipulated that he should be an officer because he was wearing a
+suitable jacket, and a Spanish tavern-keeper who at the very outset
+had wished to rob Argensola of his command on the futile pretext
+that he was a soldier in his youth while the Bohemian was only an
+artist. Twenty Spanish battalions were attempted with the same
+result in different parts of Paris. Each enthusiast wished to be
+commander of the others, with the individual haughtiness and
+aversion to discipline so characteristic of the race. Finally the
+future generalissimos, decided to enlist as simple volunteers . . .
+but in a French regiment.
+
+"I am waiting to see what the Garibaldis do," said Argensola
+modestly. "Perhaps I may go with them."
+
+This glorious name made military service conceivable to him. But
+then he vacillated; he would certainly have to obey somebody in this
+body of volunteers, and he did not believe in an obedience that was
+not preceded by long discussions. . . . What next!
+
+"Life has changed in a fortnight," he continued. "It seems as if we
+were living in another planet; our former achievements are not
+appreciated. Others, most obscure and poor, those who formerly had
+the least consideration, are now promoted to the first ranks. The
+refined man of complex spirituality has disappeared for who knows
+how many years! . . . Now the simple-minded man climbs triumphantly
+to the top, because, though his ideas are limited, they are sure and
+he knows how to obey. We are no longer the style."
+
+Desnoyers assented. It was so; they were no longer fashionable.
+None knew that better than he, for he who was once the sensation of
+the day, was now passing as a stranger among the very people who a
+few months before had raved over him.
+
+"Your reign is over," laughed Argensola. "The fact that you are a
+handsome fellow doesn't help you one bit nowadays. In a uniform and
+with a cross on my breast, I could soon get the best of you in a
+rival love affair. In times of peace, the officers only set the
+girls of the provinces to dreaming; but now that we are at war,
+there has awakened in every woman the ancestral enthusiasm that her
+remote grandmothers used to feel for the strong and aggressive
+beast. . . . The high-born dames who a few months ago were
+complicating their desires with psychological subtleties, are now
+admiring the military man with the same simplicity that the maid has
+for the common soldier. Before a uniform, they feel the humble and
+servile enthusiasm of the female of the lower animals before the
+crests, foretops and gay plumes of the fighting males. Look out,
+master! . . . We shall have to follow the new course of events or
+resign ourselves to everlasting obscurity. The tango is dead."
+
+And Desnoyers agreed that truly they were two beings on the other
+side of the river of life which at one bound had changed its course.
+There was no longer any place in the new existence for that poor
+painter of souls, nor for that hero of a frivolous life who, from
+five to seven every afternoon, had attained the triumphs most envied
+by mankind.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE RETREAT
+
+
+War had extended one of its antennae even to the avenue Victor Hugo.
+It was a silent war in which the enemy, bland, shapeless and
+gelatinous, seemed constantly to be escaping from the hands only to
+renew hostilities a little later on.
+
+"I have Germany in my own house," growled Marcelo Desnoyers.
+
+"Germany" was Dona Elena, the wife of von Hartrott. Why had not her
+son--that professor of inexhaustible sufficiency whom he now
+believed to have been a spy--taken her home with him? For what
+sentimental caprice had she wished to stay with her sister, losing
+the opportunity of returning to Berlin before the frontiers were
+closed?
+
+The presence of this woman in his home was the cause of many
+compunctions and alarms. Fortunately, the chauffeur and all the
+men-servants were in the army. The two chinas received an order in
+a threatening tone. They must be very careful when talking to the
+French maids--not the slightest allusion to the nationality of Dona
+Elena's husband nor to the residence of her family. Dona Elena was
+an Argentinian. But in spite of the silence of the maids, Don
+Marcelo was always in fear of some outburst of exalted patriotism,
+and that his wife's sister might suddenly find herself confined in a
+concentration camp under suspicion of having dealings with the
+enemy.
+
+Frau von Hartrott made his uneasiness worse. Instead of keeping a
+discreet silence, she was constantly introducing discord into the
+home with her opinions.
+
+During the first days of the war, she kept herself locked in her
+room, joining the family only when summoned to the dining room.
+With tightly puckered mouth and an absent-minded air, she would then
+seat herself at the table, pretending not to hear Don Marcelo's
+verbal outpourings of enthusiasm. He enjoyed describing the
+departure of the troops, the moving scenes in the streets and at the
+stations, commenting on events with an optimism sure of the first
+news of the war. Two things were beyond all discussion. The
+bayonet was the secret of the French, and the Germans were
+shuddering with terror before its fatal, glistening point. . . .
+The '75 cannon had proved itself a unique jewel, its shots being
+absolutely sure. He was really feeling sorry for the enemy's
+artillery since its projectiles so seldom exploded even when well
+aimed. . . . Furthermore, the French troops had entered
+victoriously into Alsace; many little towns were already theirs.
+
+"Now it is as it was in the '70's," he would exult, brandishing his
+fork and waving his napkin. "We are going to kick them back to the
+other side of the Rhine--kick them! . . . That's the word."
+
+Chichi always agreed gleefully while Dona Elena was raising her eyes
+to heaven, as though silently calling upon somebody hidden in the
+ceiling to bear witness to such errors and blasphemies.
+
+The kind Dona Luisa always sought her out afterwards in the
+retirement of her room, believing it necessary to give sisterly
+counsel to one living so far from home. The Romantica did not
+maintain her austere silence before the sister who had always
+venerated her superior instruction; so now the poor lady was
+overwhelmed with accounts of the stupendous forces of Germany,
+enunciated with all the authority of a wife of a great Teutonic
+patriot, and a mother of an almost celebrated professor. According
+to her graphic picture, millions of men were now surging forth in
+enormous streams, thousands of cannons were filing by, and
+tremendous mortars like monstrous turrets. And towering above all
+this vast machinery of destruction was a man who alone was worth an
+army, a being who knew everything and could do everything, handsome,
+intelligent, and infallible as a god--the Emperor.
+
+"The French just don't know what's ahead of them," declared Dona
+Elena. "We are going to annihilate them. It is merely a matter of
+two weeks. Before August is ended, the Emperor will have entered
+Paris."
+
+Senora Desnoyers was so greatly impressed by these dire prophecies
+that she could not hide them from her family. Chichi waxed
+indignant at her mother's credulity and her aunt's Germanism.
+Martial fervor was flaming up in the former Peoncito. Ay, if the
+women could only go to war! . . . She enjoyed picturing herself on
+horseback in command of a regiment of dragoons, charging the enemy
+with other Amazons as dashing and buxom as she. Then her fondness
+for skating would predominate over her tastes for the cavalry, and
+she would long to be an Alpine hunter, a diable bleu among those who
+slid on long runners, with musket slung across the back and
+alpenstock in hand, over the snowy slopes of the Vosges.
+
+But the government did not appreciate the valorous women, and she
+could obtain no other part in the war but to admire the uniform of
+her true-love, Rene Lacour, converted into a soldier. The senator's
+son certainly looked beautiful. He was tall and fair, of a rather
+feminine type recalling his dead mother. In his fiancee's opinion,
+Rene was just "a little sugar soldier." At first she had been very
+proud to walk the streets by the side of this warrior, believing
+that his uniform had greatly augmented his personal charm, but
+little by little a revulsion of feeling was clouding her joy. The
+senatorial prince was nothing but a common soldier. His illustrious
+father, fearful that the war might cut off forever the dynasty of
+the Lacours, indispensable to the welfare of the State, had had his
+son mustered into the auxiliary service of the army. By this
+arrangement, his heir need not leave Paris, ranking about as high as
+those who were kneading the bread or mending the soldiers' cloaks.
+Only by going to the front could he claim--as a student of the Ecole
+Centrale--his title of sub-lieutenant in the Artillery Reserves.
+
+"What happiness for me that you have to stay in Paris! How
+delighted I am that you are just a private! . . ."
+
+And yet, at the same time, Chichi was thinking enviously of her
+friends whose lovers and brothers were officers. They could parade
+the streets, escorted by a gold-trimmed kepis that attracted the
+notice of the passers-by and the respectful salute of the lower
+ranks.
+
+Each time that Dona Luisa, terrified by the forecasts of her sister,
+undertook to communicate her dismay to her daughter, the girl would
+rage up and down, exclaiming:--
+
+"What lies my aunt tells you! . . . Since her husband is a German,
+she sees everything as he wishes it to be. Papa knows more; Rene's
+father is better informed about these things. We are going to give
+them a thorough hiding! What fun it will be when they hit my uncle
+and all my snippy cousins in Berlin! . . ."
+
+"Hush," groaned her mother. "Do not talk such nonsense. The war
+has turned you as crazy as your father."
+
+The good lady was scandalized at hearing the outburst of savage
+desires that the mere mention of the Kaiser always aroused in her
+daughter. In times of peace, Chichi had rather admired this
+personage. "He's not so bad-looking," she had commented, "but with
+a very ordinary smile." Now all her wrath was concentrated upon
+him. The thousands of women that were weeping through his fault!
+The mothers without sons, the wives without husbands, the poor
+children left in the burning towns! . . . Ah, the vile wretch! . . .
+And she would brandish her knife of the old Peoncito days--a
+dagger with silver handle and sheath richly chased, a gift that her
+grandfather had exhumed from some forgotten souvenirs of his
+childhood in an old valise. The very first German that she came
+across was doomed to death. Dona Luisa was terrified to find her
+flourishing this weapon before her dressing mirror. She was no
+longer yearning to be a cavalryman nor a diable bleu. She would be
+entirely content if they would leave her, alone in some closed space
+with the detested monster. In just five minutes she would settle
+the universal conflict.
+
+"Defend yourself, Boche," she would shriek, standing at guard as in
+her childhood she had seen the peons doing on the ranch.
+
+And with a knife-thrust above and below, she would pierce his
+imperial vitals. Immediately there resounded in her imagination,
+shouts of joy, the gigantic sigh of millions of women freed at last
+from the bloody nightmare--thanks to her playing the role of Judith
+or Charlotte Corday, or a blend of all the heroic women who had
+killed for the common weal. Her savage fury made her continue her
+imaginary slaughter, dagger in hand. Second stroke!--the Crown
+Prince rolling to one side and his head to the other. A rain of
+dagger thrusts!--all the invincible generals of whom her aunt had
+been boasting fleeing with their insides in their hands--and
+bringing up the rear, that fawning lackey who wished to receive the
+same things as those of highest rank--the uncle from Berlin. . . .
+Ay, if she could only get the chance to make these longings a
+reality!
+
+"You are mad," protested her mother. "Completely mad! How can a
+ladylike girl talk in such a way?" . . .
+
+Surprising her niece in the ecstasy of these delirious ravings, Dona
+Elena would raise her eyes to heaven, abstaining thenceforth from
+communicating her opinions, reserving them wholly for the mother.
+
+Don Marcelo's indignation took another bound when his wife repeated
+to him the news from her sister. All a lie! . . . The war was
+progressing finely. On the Eastern frontier the French troops had
+advanced through the interior of Alsace and Lorraine.
+
+"But--Belgium is invaded, isn't it?" asked Dona Luisa. "And those
+poor Belgians?"
+
+Desnoyers retorted indignantly.
+
+"That invasion of Belgium is treason. . . . And a treason never
+amounts to anything among decent people."
+
+He said it in all good faith as though war were a duel in which the
+traitor was henceforth ruled out and unable to continue his
+outrages. Besides, the heroic resistance of Belgium was nourishing
+the most absurd illusions in his heart. The Belgians were certainly
+supernatural men destined to the most stupendous achievements. . . .
+And to think that heretofore he had never taken this plucky little
+nation into account! . . . For several days, he considered Liege a
+holy city before whose walls the Teutonic power would be completely
+confounded. Upon the fall of Liege, his unquenchable faith sought
+another handle. There were still remaining many other Lieges in the
+interior. The Germans might force their way further in; then we
+would see how many of them ever succeeded in getting out. The entry
+into Brussels did not disquiet him. An unprotected city! . . . Its
+surrender was a foregone conclusion. Now the Belgians would be
+better able to defend Antwerp. Neither did the advance of the
+Germans toward the French frontier alarm him at all. In vain his
+sister-in-law, with malicious brevity, mentioned in the dining-room
+the progress of the invasion, so confusedly outlined in the daily
+papers. The Germans were already at the frontier.
+
+"And what of that?" yelled Don Marcelo. "Soon they will meet
+someone to talk to! Joffre is going to meet them. Our armies are
+in the East, in the very place where they ought to be, on the true
+frontier, at the door of their home. But they have to deal with a
+treacherous and cowardly opponent that instead of marching face to
+face, leaps the walls of the corral like sheep-stealers. . . .
+Their underhand tricks won't do them any good, though! The French
+are already in Belgium and adjusting the accounts of the Germans.
+We shall smash them so effectually that never again will they be
+able to disturb the peace of the world. And that accursed
+individual with the rampant moustache we are going to put in a cage,
+and exhibit in the place de la Concorde!"
+
+Inspired by the paternal braggadocio, Chichi also launched forth
+exultingly an imaginary series of avenging torments and insults as a
+complement to this Imperial Exhibition.
+
+These allusions to the Emperor aggravated Frau von Hartrott more
+than anything else. In the first days of the war, her sister had
+surprised her weeping before the newspaper caricatures and leaflets
+sold in the streets.
+
+"Such an excellent man. . . so knightly . . . such a good father to
+his family! He wasn't to blame for anything. It was his enemies
+who forced him to assume the offensive."
+
+Her veneration for exalted personages was making her take the
+attacks upon this admired grandee as though they were directed
+against her own family.
+
+One night in the dining room, she abandoned her tragic silence.
+Certain sarcasms, shot by Desnoyers at her hero, brought the tears
+to her eyes, and this sentimental indulgence turned her thoughts
+upon her sons who were undoubtedly taking part in the invasion.
+
+Her brother-in-law was longing for the extermination of all the
+enemy. "May every barbarian be exterminated! . . . every one of the
+bandits in pointed helmets who have just burned Louvain and other
+towns, shooting defenceless peasants, old men, women and children! "
+
+"You forget that I am a mother," sobbed Frau von Hartrott. "You
+forget that among those whose extermination you are imploring, are
+my sons."
+
+Her violent weeping made Desnoyers realize more than ever the abyss
+yawning between him and this woman lodged in his own house. His
+resentment, however, overleapt family considerations. . . . She
+might weep for her sons all she wanted to; that was her right. But
+these sons were aggressors and wantonly doing evil. It was the
+other mothers who were inspiring his pity--those who were living
+tranquilly in their smiling little Belgian towns when their sons
+were suddenly shot down, their daughters violated and their houses
+burned to the ground.
+
+As though this description of the horrors of war were a fresh insult
+to her, Dona Elena wept harder than ever. What falsehoods! The
+Kaiser was an excellent man. His soldiers were gentlemen, the
+German army was a model of civilization and goodness. Her husband
+had belonged to this army, her sons were marching in its ranks. And
+she knew her sons--well-bred and incapable of wrong-doing. These
+Belgian calumnies she could no longer listen to . . . and, with
+dramatic abandon, she flung herself into the arms of her sister.
+
+Senor Desnoyers raged against the fate that condemned him to live
+under the same roof with this woman. What an unfortunate
+complication for the family! . . . and the frontiers were closed,
+making it impossible to get rid of her!
+
+"Very well, then," he thundered. "Let us talk no more about it. We
+shall never reach an understanding, for we belong to two different
+worlds. It's a great pity that you can't go back to your own
+people."
+
+After that, he refrained from mentioning the war in his sister-in-
+law's presence. Chichi was the only one keeping up her aggressive
+and noisy enthusiasm. Upon reading in the papers the news of the
+shootings, sackings, burning of cities, and the dolorous flight of
+those who had seen their all reduced to ashes, she again felt the
+necessity of assuming the role of lady-assassin. Ay, if she could
+only once get her hands on one of those bandits! . . . What did the
+men amount to anyway if they couldn't exterminate the whole lot? . . .
+
+Then she would look at Rene in his exquisitely fresh uniform, sweet-
+mannered and smiling as though all war meant to him was a mere
+change of attire, and she would exclaim enigmatically:
+
+"What luck that you will never have to go to the front! . . . How
+fine that you don't run any risks!"
+
+And her lover would accept these words as but another proof of her
+affectionate interest.
+
+One day Don Marcelo was able to appreciate the horrors of the war
+without leaving Paris. Three thousand Belgian refugees were
+quartered provisionally in the circus before being distributed among
+the provinces. When Desnoyers entered this place, he saw in the
+vestibule the same posters which had been flaunting their
+spectacular gayeties when he had visited it a few months before with
+his family.
+
+Now he noticed the odor from a sick and miserable multitude crowded
+together--like the exhalation from a prison or poorhouse infirmary.
+He saw a throng that seemed crazy or stupefied with grief. They did
+not know exactly where they were; they had come thither, they didn't
+know how. The terrible spectacle of the invasion was still so
+persistent in their minds that it left room for no other impression.
+They were still seeing the helmeted men in their peaceful hamlets,
+their homes in flames, the soldiery firing upon those who were
+fleeing, the mutilated women done to death by incessant adulterous
+assault, the old men burned alive, the children stabbed in their
+cradles by human beasts inflamed by alcohol and license. . . . Some
+of the octogenarians were weeping as they told how the soldiers of a
+civilized nation were cutting off the breasts from the women in
+order to nail them to the doors, how they had passed around as a
+trophy a new-born babe spiked on a bayonet, how they had shot aged
+men in the very armchair in which they were huddled in their
+sorrowful weakness, torturing them first with their jests and
+taunts.
+
+They had fled blindly, pursued by fire and shot, as crazed with
+terror as the people of the middle ages trying not to be ridden down
+by the hordes of galloping Huns and Mongols. And this flight had
+been across the country in its loveliest festal array, in the most
+productive of months, when the earth was bristling with ears of
+grain, when the August sky was most brilliant, and when the birds
+were greeting the opulent harvest with their glad songs!
+
+In that circus, filled with the wandering crowds, the immense crime
+was living again. The children were crying with a sound like the
+bleating of lambs; the men were looking wildly around with terrified
+eyes; the frenzied women were howling like the insane. Families had
+become separated in the terror of flight. A mother of five little
+ones now had but one. The parents, as they realized the number
+missing, were thinking with anguish of those who had disappeared.
+Would they ever find them again? . . . Or were they already
+dead? . . .
+
+Don Marcelo returned home, grinding his teeth and waving his cane in
+an alarming manner. Ah, the bandits! . . . If only his sister-in-
+law could change her sex! Why wasn't she a man? . . . It would be
+better still if she could suddenly assume the form of her husband,
+von Hartrott. What an interesting interview the two brothers-in-law
+would have! . . .
+
+The war was awakening religious sentiment in the men and increasing
+the devotion of the women. The churches were filled. Dona Luisa
+was no longer confining herself to those of her neighborhood. With
+the courage induced by extraordinary events, she was traversing
+Paris afoot and going from the Madeleine to Notre Dame, or to the
+Sacre Coeur on the heights of Montmartre. Religious festivals were
+now thronged like popular assemblies. The preachers were tribunes.
+Patriotic enthusiasm interrupted many sermon with applause.
+
+Each morning on opening the papers, before reading the war news,
+Senora Desnoyers would hunt other notices. "Where was Father Amette
+going to be to-day?" Then, under the arched vaultings of that
+temple, would she unite her voice with the devout chorus imploring
+supernatural intervention. "Lord, save France!" Patriotic
+religiosity was putting Sainte Genevieve at the head of the favored
+ones, so from all these fiestas, Dona Luisa, tremulous with faith,
+would return in expectation of a miracle similar to that which the
+patron saint of Paris had worked before the invading hordes of
+Attila.
+
+Dona Elena was also visiting the churches, but those nearest the
+house. Her brother-in-law saw her one afternoon entering Saint-
+Honoree d'Eylau. The building was filled with the faithful, and on
+the altar was a sheaf of flags--France and the allied nations. The
+imploring crowd was not composed entirely of women. Desnoyers saw
+men of his age, pompous and grave, moving their lips and fixing
+steadfast eyes on the altar on which were reflected like lost stars,
+the flames of the candles. And again he felt envy. They were
+fathers who were recalling their childhood prayers, thinking of
+their sons in battle. Don Marcelo, who had always considered
+religion with indifference, suddenly recognized the necessity of
+faith. He wanted to pray like the others, with a vague, indefinite
+supplication, including all beings who were struggling and dying for
+a land that he had not tried to defend.
+
+He was scandalized to see von Hartrott's wife kneeling among these
+people raising her eyes to the cross in a look of anguished
+entreaty. She was begging heaven to protect her husband, the German
+who perhaps at this moment was concentrating all his devilish
+faculties on the best organization for crushing the weak; she was
+praying for her sons, officers of the King of Prussia, who revolver
+in hand were entering villages and farmlands, driving before them a
+horror-stricken crowd, leaving behind them fire and death. And
+these orisons were going to mingle with those of the mothers who
+were praying for the youth trying to check the onslaught of the
+barbarians--with the petitions of these earnest men, rigid in their
+tragic grief! . . .
+
+He had to make a great effort not to protest aloud, and he left the
+church. His sister-in-law had no right to kneel there among those
+people.
+
+"They ought to put her out!" he growled indignantly. "She is
+compromising God with her absurd entreaties."
+
+But in spite of his annoyance, he had to endure her living in his
+household, and at the same time had taken great pains to prevent her
+nationality being known outside.
+
+It was a severe trial for Don Marcelo to be obliged to keep silent
+when at table with his family. He had to avoid the hysterics of his
+sister-in-law who promptly burst into sighs and sobs at the
+slightest allusion to her hero; and he feared equally the complaints
+of his wife, always ready to defend her sister, as though she were
+the victim. . . . That a man in his own home should have to curb
+his tongue and speak tactfully! . . .
+
+The only satisfaction permitted him was to announce the military
+moves. The French had entered Belgium. "It appears that the Boches
+have had a good set-back." The slightest clash of cavalry, a simple
+encounter with the advance troops, he would glorify as a decisive
+victory. "In Lorraine, too, we are making great headway!" . . .
+But suddenly the fountain of his bubbling optimism seemed to become
+choked up. To judge from the periodicals, nothing extraordinary was
+occurring. They continued publishing war-stories so as to keep
+enthusiasm at fever-heat, but nothing definite. The Government,
+too, was issuing communications of vague and rhetorical verbosity.
+Desnoyers became alarmed, his instinct warning him of danger.
+"There is something wrong," he thought. "There's a spring broken
+somewhere!"
+
+This lack of encouraging news coincided exactly with the sudden rise
+in Dona Elena's spirits. With whom had that woman been talking?
+Whom did she meet when she was on the street? . . . Without
+dropping her pose as a martyr, with the same woebegone look and
+drooping mouth, she was talking, and talking treacherously. The
+torment of Don Marcelo in being obliged to listen to the enemy
+harbored within his gates! . . . The French had been vanquished in
+Lorraine and in Belgium at the same time. A body of the army had
+deserted the colors; many prisoners, many cannon were captured.
+"Lies! German exaggerations!" howled Desnoyers. And Chichi with
+the derisive ha-ha's of an insolent girl, drowned out the triumphant
+communications of the aunt from Berlin. "I don't know, of course,"
+said the unwelcome lodger with mock humility. "Perhaps it is not
+authentic. I have heard it said." Her host was furious. Where had
+she heard it said? Who was giving her such news? . . .
+
+And in order to ventilate his wrath, he broke forth into tirades
+against the enemy's espionage, against the carelessness of the
+police force in permitting so many Germans to remain hidden in
+Paris. Then he suddenly became quiet, thinking of his own behavior
+in this line. He, too, was involuntarily contributing toward the
+maintenance and support of the foe.
+
+The fall of the ministry and the constitution of a government of
+national defense made it apparent that something very important must
+have taken place. The alarms and tears of Dona Luisa increased his
+nervousness. The good lady was no longer returning from the
+churches, cheered and strengthened. Her confidential talks with her
+sister were filling her with a terror that she tried in vain to
+communicate to her husband. "All is lost. . . . Elena is the only
+one that knows the truth."
+
+Desnoyers went in search of Senator Lacour. He would know all the
+ministers; no one could be better informed. "Yes, my friend," said
+the important man sadly. "Two great losses at Morhange and
+Charleroi, at the East and the North. The enemy is going to invade
+French soil! . . . But our army is intact, and will retreat in good
+order. Good fortune may still be ours. A great calamity, but all
+is not lost."
+
+Preparations for the defense of Paris were being pushed forward . . .
+rather late. The forts were supplying themselves with new cannon.
+Houses, built in the danger zone in the piping times of peace, were
+now disappearing under the blows of the official demolition. The
+trees on the outer avenues were being felled in order to enlarge the
+horizon. Barricades of sacks of earth and tree trunks were heaped
+at the doors of the old walls. The curious were skirting the
+suburbs in order to gaze at the recently dug trenches and the barbed
+wire fences. The Bois de Boulogne was filled with herds of cattle.
+Near heaps of dry alfalfa steers and sheep were grouped in the green
+meadows. Protection against famine was uppermost in the minds of a
+people still remembering the suffering of 1870. Every night, the
+street lighting was less and less. The sky, on the other hand, was
+streaked incessantly by the shafts from the searchlights. Fear of
+aerial invasion was increasing the public uneasiness. Timid people
+were speaking of Zeppelins, attributing to them irresistible powers,
+with all the exaggeration that accompanies mysterious dangers.
+
+In her panic, Dona Luisa greatly distressed her husband, who was
+passing the days in continual alarm, yet trying to put heart into
+his trembling and anxious wife. "They are going to come, Marcelo;
+my heart tells me so. The girl! . . . the girl!" She was accepting
+blindly all the statements made by her sister, the only thing that
+comforted her being the chivalry and discipline of those troops to
+which her nephews belonged. The news of the atrocities committed
+against the women of Belgium were received with the same credulity
+as the enemy's advances announced by Elena. "Our girl, Marcelo. . . .
+Our girl!" And the girl, object of so much solicitude, would
+laugh with the assurance of vigorous youth on hearing of her
+mother's anxiety. "Just let the shameless fellows come! I shall
+take great pleasure in seeing them face to face!" And she clenched
+her right hand as though it already clutched the avenging knife.
+
+The father became tired of this situation. He still had one of his
+monumental automobiles that an outside chauffeur could manage.
+Senator Lacour obtained the necessary passports and Desnoyers gave
+his wife her orders in a tone that admitted of no remonstrance.
+They must go to Biarritz or to some of the summer resorts in the
+north of Spain. Almost all the South American families had already
+gone in the same direction. Dona Luisa tried to object. It was
+impossible for her to separate herself from her husband. Never
+before, in their many years of married life, had they once been
+separated. But a harsh negative from Don Marcelo cut her pleadings
+short. He would remain. Then the poor senora ran to the rue de la
+Pompe. Her son! . . . Julio scarcely listened to his mother. Ay!
+he, too, would stay. So finally the imposing automobile lumbered
+toward the South carrying Dona Luisa, her sister who hailed with
+delight this withdrawal before the admired troops of the Emperor,
+and Chichi, pleased that the war was necessitating an excursion to
+the fashionable beaches frequented by her friends.
+
+Don Marcelo was at last alone. The two coppery maids had followed
+by rail the flight of their mistresses. At first the old man felt a
+little bewildered by this solitude, which obliged him to eat
+uncomfortable meals in a restaurant and pass the nights in enormous
+and deserted rooms still bearing traces of their former occupants.
+The other apartments in the building had also been vacated. All the
+tenants were foreigners, who had discreetly decamped, or French
+families surprised by the war when summering at their country seats.
+
+Instinctively he turned his steps toward the rue de la Pompe gazing
+from afar at the studio windows. What was his son doing? . . .
+Undoubtedly continuing his gay and useless life. Such men only
+existed for their own selfish folly.
+
+Desnoyers felt satisfied with the stand he had taken. To follow the
+family would be sheer cowardice. The memory of his youthful flight
+to South America was sufficient martyrdom; he would finish his life
+with all the compensating bravery that he could muster. "No, they
+will not come," he said repeatedly, with the optimism of enthusiasm.
+I have a presentiment that they will never reach Paris. And even if
+they DO come!" . . . The absence of his family brought him a joyous
+valor and a sense of bold youthfulness. Although his age might
+prevent his going to war in the open air, he could still fire a gun,
+immovable in a trench, without fear of death. Let them come! . . .
+He was longing for the struggle with the anxiety of a punctilious
+business man wishing to cancel a former debt as soon as possible.
+
+In the streets of Paris he met many groups of fugitives. They were
+from the North and East of France, and had escaped before the German
+advance. Of all the tales told by this despondent crowd--not
+knowing where to go and dependent upon the charity of the people--he
+was most impressed with those dealing with the disregard of
+property. Shootings and assassinations made him clench his fists,
+with threats of vengeance; but the robberies authorized by the
+heads, the wholesale sackings by superior order, followed by fire,
+appeared to him so unheard-of that he was silent with stupefaction,
+his speech seeming to be temporarily paralyzed. And a people with
+laws could wage war in this fashion, like a tribe of Indians going
+to combat in order to rob! . . . His adoration of property rights
+made him beside himself with wrath at these sacrileges.
+
+He began to worry about his castle at Villeblanche. All that he
+owned in Paris suddenly seemed to him of slight importance to what
+he had in his historic mansion. His best paintings were there,
+adorning the gloomy salons; there, too, the furnishings captured
+from the antiquarians after an auctioneering battle, and the crystal
+cabinets, the tapestries, the silver services.
+
+He mentally reviewed all of these objects, not letting a single one
+escape his inventory. Things that he had forgotten came surging up
+in his memory, and the fear of losing them seemed to give them
+greater lustre, increasing their size, and intensifying their value.
+All the riches of Villeblanche were concentrated in one certain
+acquisition which Desnoyers admired most of all; for, to his mind,
+it stood for all the glory of his immense fortune--in fact, the most
+luxurious appointment that even a millionaire could possess.
+
+"My golden bath," he thought. "I have there my tub of gold."
+
+This bath of priceless metal he had procured, after much financial
+wrestling, from an auction, and he considered the purchase the
+culminating achievement of his wealth. No one knew exactly its
+origin; perhaps it had been the property of luxurious princes;
+perhaps it owed its existence to the caprice of a demi-mondaine fond
+of display. He and his had woven a legend around this golden cavity
+adorned with lions' claws, dolphins and busts of naiads.
+Undoubtedly it was once a king's! Chichi gravely affirmed that it
+had been Marie Antoinette's, and the entire family thought that the
+home on the avenue Victor Hugo was altogether too modest and
+plebeian to enshrine such a jewel. They therefore agreed to put it
+in the castle, where it was greatly venerated, although it was
+useless and solemn as a museum piece. . . . And was he to permit
+the enemy in their advance toward the Marne to carry off this
+priceless treasure, as well as the other gorgeous things which he
+had accumulated with such patience Ah, no! His soul of a collector
+would be capable of the greatest heroism before he would let that go.
+
+Each day was bringing a fresh sheaf of bad news. The papers were
+saying little, and the Government was so veiling its communications
+that the mind was left in great perplexity. Nevertheless, the truth
+was mysteriously forcing its way, impelled by the pessimism of the
+alarmists, and the manipulation of the enemy's spies who were
+remaining hidden in Paris. The fatal news was being passed along in
+whispers. "They have already crossed the frontier. . . ." "They
+are already in Lille." . . . They were advancing at the rate of
+thirty-five miles a day. The name of von Kluck was beginning to
+have a familiar ring. English and French were retreating before the
+enveloping progression of the invaders. Some were expecting another
+Sedan. Desnoyers was following the advance of the Germans, going
+daily to the Gare du Nord. Every twenty-four hours was lessening
+the radius of travel. Bulletins announcing that tickets would not
+be sold for the Northern districts served to indicate how these
+places were falling, one after the other, into the power of the
+invader. The shrinkage of national territory was going on with such
+methodical regularity that, with watch in hand, and allowing an
+advance of thirty-five miles daily, one might gauge the hour when
+the lances of the first Uhlans would salute the Eiffel tower. The
+trains were running full, great bunches of people overflowing from
+their coaches.
+
+In this time of greatest anxiety, Desnoyers again visited his
+friend, Senator Lacour, in order to astound him with the most
+unheard-of petitions. He wished to go immediately to his castle.
+While everybody else was fleeing toward Paris he earnestly desired
+to go in the opposite direction. The senator couldn't believe his
+ears.
+
+"You are beside yourself!" he exclaimed. "It is necessary to leave
+Paris, but toward the South. I will tell you confidentially, and
+you must not tell because it is a secret--we are leaving at any
+minute; we are all going, the President, the Government, the
+Chambers. We are going to establish ourselves at Bordeaux as in
+1870. The enemy is surely approaching; it is only a matter of
+days . . . of hours. We know little of just what is happening,
+but all the news is bad. The army still holds firm, is yet intact,
+but retreating . . . retreating, all the time yielding ground. . . .
+Believe me, it will be better for you to leave Paris. Gallieni will
+defend it, but the defense is going to be hard and horrible. . . .
+Although Paris may surrender, France will not necessarily surrender.
+The war will go on if necessary even to the frontiers of Spain . . .
+but it is sad . . . very sad!"
+
+And he offered to take his friend with him in that flight to
+Bordeaux of which so few yet knew. Desnoyers shook his head. No;
+be wanted to go the castle of Villeblanche. His furniture . . . his
+riches . . . his parks.
+
+"But you will be taken prisoner!" protested the senator. "Perhaps
+they will kill you!"
+
+A shrug of indifference was the only response. He considered
+himself energetic enough to struggle against the entire German army
+in the defense of his property. The important thing was to get
+there, and then--just let anybody dare to touch his things! . . .
+The senator looked with astonishment at this civilian infuriated by
+the lust of possession. It reminded him of some Arab merchants that
+he had once known, ordinarily mild and pacific, who quarrelled and
+killed like wild beasts when Bedouin thieves seized their wares.
+This was not the moment for discussion, and each must map out his
+own course. So the influential senator finally yielded to the
+desire of his friend. If such was his pleasure, let him carry it
+through! So he arranged that his mad petitioner should depart that
+very night on a military train that was going to meet the army.
+
+That journey put Don Marcelo in touch with the extraordinary
+movement which the war had developed on the railroads. His train
+took fourteen hours to cover the distance normally made in two. It
+was made up of freight cars filled with provisions and cartridges,
+with the doors stamped and sealed. A third-class car was occupied
+by the train escort, a detachment of provincial guards. He was
+installed in a second-class compartment with the lieutenant in
+command of this guard and certain officials on their way to join
+their regiments after having completed the business of mobilization
+in the small towns in which they were stationed before the war. The
+crowd, habituated to long detentions, was accustomed to getting out
+and settling down before the motionless locomotive, or scattering
+through the nearby fields.
+
+In the stations of any importance all the tracks were occupied by
+rows of cars. High-pressure engines were whistling, impatient to be
+off. Groups of soldiers were hesitating before the different
+trains, making mistakes, getting out of one coach to enter others.
+The employees, calm but weary-looking, were going from side to side,
+giving explanations about mountains of all sorts of freight and
+arranging them for transport. In the convoy in which Desnoyers was
+placed the Territorials were sleeping, accustomed to the monotony of
+acting as guard. Those in charge of the horses had opened the
+sliding doors, seating themselves on the floor with their legs
+hanging over the edge. The train went very slowly during the night,
+across shadowy fields, stopping here and there before red lanterns
+and announcing its presence by prolonged whistling.
+
+In some stations appeared young girls clad in white with cockades
+and pennants on their breasts. Day and night they were there, in
+relays, so that no train should pass through without a visit. They
+offered, in baskets and trays, their gifts to the soldiers--bread,
+chocolate, fruit. Many, already surfeited, tried to resist, but had
+to yield eventually before the pleading countenance of the maidens.
+Even Desnoyers was laden down with these gifts of patriotic
+enthusiasm.
+
+He passed a great part of the night talking with his travelling
+companions. Only the officers had vague directions as to where they
+were to meet their regiments, for the operations of war were daily
+changing the situation. Faithful to duty, they were passing on,
+hoping to arrive in time for the decisive combat. The Chief of the
+Guard had been over the ground, and was the only one able to give
+any account of the retreat. After each stop the train made less
+progress. Everybody appeared confused. Why the retreat? . . . The
+army had undoubtedly suffered reverses, but it was still united and,
+in his opinion, ought to seek an engagement where it was. The
+retreat was leaving the advance of the enemy unopposed. To what
+point were they going to retreat? . . . They who two weeks before
+were discussing in their garrisons the place in Belgium where their
+adversaries were going to receive their death blow and through what
+places their victorious troops would invade Germany! . . .
+
+Their admission of the change of tactics did not reveal the
+slightest discouragement. An indefinite but firm hope was hovering
+triumphantly above their vacillations. The Generalissimo was the
+only one who possessed the secret of events. And Desnoyers approved
+with the blind enthusiasm inspired by those in whom we have
+confidence. Joffre! . . . That serious and calm leader would
+finally bring things out all right. Nobody ought to doubt his
+ability; he was the kind of man who always says the decisive word.
+
+At daybreak Don Marcelo left the train. "Good luck to you!" And he
+clasped the hands of the brave young fellows who were going to die,
+perhaps in a very short time. Finding the road unexpectedly open,
+the train started immediately and Desnoyers found himself alone in
+the station. In normal times a branch road would have taken him on
+to Villeblanche, but the service was now suspended for lack of a
+train crew. The employees had been transferred to the lines crowded
+with the war transportation.
+
+In vain he sought, with most generous offers, a horse, a simple cart
+drawn by any kind of old beast, in order to continue his trip. The
+mobilization had appropriated the best, and all other means of
+transportation had disappeared with the flight of the terrified. He
+would have to walk the eight miles. The old man did not hesitate.
+Forward March! And he began his course along the dusty, straight,
+white highway running between an endless succession of plains. Some
+groups of trees, some green hedges and the roofs of various farms
+broke the monotony of the countryside. The fields were covered with
+stubble from the recent harvest. The haycocks dotted the ground
+with their yellowish cones, now beginning to darken and take on a
+tone of oxidized gold. In the valleys the birds were flitting
+about, shaking off the dew of dawn.
+
+The first rays of the sun announced a very hot day. Around the hay
+stacks Desnoyers saw knots of people who were getting up, shaking
+out their clothes, and awaking those who were still sleeping. They
+were fugitives camping near the station in the hope that some train
+would carry them further on, they knew not where. Some had come
+from far-away districts; they had heard the cannon, had seen war
+approaching, and for several days had been going forward, directed
+by chance. Others, infected with the contagion of panic, had fled,
+fearing to know the same horrors. . . . Among them he saw mothers
+with their little ones in their arms, and old men who could only
+walk with a cane in one hand and the other arm in that of some
+member of the family, and a few old women, withered and motionless
+as mummies, who were sleeping as they were trundled along in
+wheelbarrows. When the sun awoke this miserable band they gathered
+themselves together with heavy step, still stiffened by the night.
+Many were going toward the station in the hope of a train which
+never came, thinking that, perhaps, they might have better luck
+during the day that was just dawning. Some were continuing their
+way down the track, hoping that fate might be more propitious in
+some other place.
+
+Don Marcelo walked all the morning long. The white, rectilinear
+ribbon of roadway was spotted with approaching groups that on the
+horizon line looked like a file of ants. He did not see a single
+person going in his direction. All were fleeing toward the South,
+and on meeting this city gentleman, well-shod, with walking stick
+and straw hat, going on alone toward the country which they were
+abandoning in terror, they showed the greatest astonishment. They
+concluded that he must be some functionary, some celebrity from the
+Government.
+
+At midday he was able to get a bit of bread, a little cheese and a
+bottle of white wine from a tavern near the road. The proprietor
+was at the front, his wife sick and moaning in her bed. The mother,
+a rather deaf old woman surrounded by her grandchildren, was
+watching from the doorway the procession of fugitives which had been
+filing by for the last three days. "Monsieur, why do they flee?"
+she said to Desnoyers. "War only concerns the soldiers. We
+countryfolk have done no wrong to anybody, and we ought not to be
+afraid."
+
+Four hours later, on descending one of the hills that bounded the
+valley of the Marne, he saw afar the roofs of Villeblanche clustered
+around the church, and further on, beyond a little grove, the slatey
+points of the round towers of his castle.
+
+The streets of the village were deserted. Only on the outer edges
+of the square did he see some old women sitting as in the placid
+evenings of bygone summers. Half of the neighborhood had fled; the
+others were staying by their firesides through sedentary routine, or
+deceiving themselves with a blind optimism. If the Prussians should
+approach, what could they do to them? . . . They would obey their
+orders without attempting any resistance, and it is impossible to
+punish people who obey. . . . Anything would be preferable to
+losing the homes built by their forefathers which they had never
+left.
+
+In the square he saw the mayor and the principal inhabitants grouped
+together. Like the women, they all stared in astonishment at the
+owner of the castle. He was the most unexpected of apparitions.
+While so many were fleeing toward Paris, this Parisian had come to
+join them and share in their fate. A smile of affection, a look of
+sympathy began to appear on the rough, bark-like countenances of the
+suspicious rustics. For a long time Desnoyers had been on bad terms
+with the entire village. He had harshly insisted on his rights,
+showing no tolerance in matters touching his property. He had
+spoken many times of bringing suit against the mayor and sending
+half of the neighborhood to prison, so his enemies had retaliated by
+treacherously invading his lands, poaching in his hunting preserves,
+and causing him great trouble with counter-suits and involved
+claims. His hatred of the community had even united him with the
+priest because he was on terms of permanent hostility with the
+mayor. But his relations with the Church turned out as fruitless as
+his struggles with the State. The priest was a kindly old soul who
+bore a certain resemblance to Renan, and seemed interested only in
+getting alms for his poor out of Don Marcelo, even carrying his
+good-natured boldness so far as to try to excuse the marauders on
+his property.
+
+How remote these struggles of a few months ago now seemed to
+him! . . . The millionaire was greatly surprised to see the
+priest, on leaving his house to enter the church, greet the mayor
+as he passed, with a friendly smile.
+
+After long years of hostile silence they had met on the evening of
+August first at the foot of the church tower. The bell was ringing
+the alarm, announcing the mobilization to the men who were in the
+field--and the two enemies had instinctively clasped hands. All
+French! This affectionate unanimity also came to meet the detested
+owner of the castle. He had to exchange greetings first on one
+side, then on the other, grasping many a horny hand. Behind his
+back the people broke out into kindly excuses--"A good man, with no
+fault except a little bad temper. . . ." And in a few minutes
+Monsieur Desnoyers was basking in the delightful atmosphere of
+popularity.
+
+As the iron-willed old gentleman approached his castle he concluded
+that, although the fatigue of the long walk was making his knees
+tremble, the trip had been well worth while. Never had his park
+appeared to him so extensive and so majestic as in that summer
+twilight, never so glistening white the swans that were gliding
+double over the quiet waters, never so imposing the great group of
+towers whose inverted images were repeated in the glassy green of
+the moats. He felt eager to see at once the stables with their
+herds of animals; then a brief glance showed him that the stalls
+were comparatively empty. Mobilization had carried off his best
+work horses; the driving and riding horses also had disappeared.
+Those in charge of the grounds and the various stable boys were also
+in the army. The Warden, a man upwards of fifty and consumptive,
+was the only one of the personnel left at the castle. With his wife
+and daughter he was keeping the mangers filled, and from time to
+time was milking the neglected cows.
+
+Within the noble edifice he again congratulated himself on the
+adamantine will which had brought him thither. How could he ever
+give up such riches! . . . He gloated over the paintings, the
+crystals, the draperies, all bathed in gold by the splendor of the
+dying day, and he felt more than proud to be their possessor. This
+pride awakened in him an absurd, impossible courage, as though he
+were a gigantic being from another planet, and all humanity merely
+an ant hill that he could grind under foot. Just let the enemy
+come! He could hold his own against the whole lot! . . . Then,
+when his common sense brought him out of his heroic delirium, he
+tried to calm himself with an equally illogical optimism. They
+would not come. He did not know why it was, but his heart told him
+that they would not get that far.
+
+He passed the following morning reconnoitering the artificial
+meadows that he had made behind the park, lamenting their neglected
+condition due to the departure of the men, trying himself to open
+the sluice gates so as to give some water to the pasture lands which
+were beginning to dry up. The grape vines were extending their
+branches the length of their supports, and the full bunches, nearly
+ripe, were beginning to show their triangular lusciousness among the
+leaves. Ay, who would gather this abundant fruit! . . .
+
+By afternoon he noted an extraordinary amount of movement in the
+village. Georgette, the Warden's daughter, brought the news that
+many enormous automobiles and soldiers, French soldiers, were
+beginning to pass through the main street. In a little while a
+procession began filing past on the high road near the castle,
+leading to the bridge over the Marne. This was composed of motor
+trucks, open and closed, that still had their old commercial signs
+under their covering of dust and spots of mud. Many of them
+displayed the names of business firms in Paris, others the names of
+provincial establishments. With these industrial vehicles
+requisitioned by mobilization were others from the public service
+which produced in Desnoyers the same effect as a familiar face in a
+throng of strangers. On their upper parts were the names of their
+old routes:--"Madeleine-Bastille, Passy-Bourne," etc. Probably he
+had travelled many times in these very vehicles, now shabby and aged
+by twenty days of intense activity, with dented planks and twisted
+metal, perforated like sieves, but rattling crazily on.
+
+Some of the conveyances displayed white discs with a red cross in
+the center; others had certain letters and figures comprehensible
+only to those initiates in the secrets of military administration.
+Within these vehicles--the only new and strong motors--he saw
+soldiers, many soldiers, but all wounded, with head and legs
+bandaged, ashy faces made still more tragic by their growing beards,
+feverish eyes looking fixedly ahead, mouths so sadly immobile that
+they seemed carven by agonizing groans. Doctors and nurses were
+occupying various carriages in this convoy escorted by several
+platoons of horsemen. And mingled with the slowly moving horses and
+automobiles were marching groups of foot-soldiers, with cloaks
+unbuttoned or hanging from their shoulders like capes--wounded men
+who were able to walk and joke and sing, some with arms in splints
+across their breasts, others with bandaged heads with clotted blood
+showing through the thin white strips.
+
+The millionaire longed to do something for these brave fellows, but
+he had hardly begun to distribute some bottles of wine and loaves of
+bread before a doctor interposed, upbraiding him as though he had
+committed a crime. His gifts might result fatally. So he had to
+stand beside the road, sad and helpless, looking after the sorrowful
+convoy. . . . By nightfall the vehicles filled with the sick were
+no longer filing by.
+
+He now saw hundreds of drays, some hermetically sealed with the
+prudence that explosive material requires, others with bundles and
+boxes that were sending out a stale odor of provisions. Then came
+great herds of cattle raising thick, whirling clouds of dust in the
+narrow parts of the road, prodded on by the sticks and yells of the
+shepherds in kepis.
+
+His thoughts kept him wakeful all night. This, then, was the
+retreat of which the people of Paris were talking, but in which many
+wished not to believe--the retreat reaching even there and
+continuing its indefinite retirement, since nobody knew what its end
+might be. . . . His optimism aroused a ridiculous hope. Perhaps
+this was only the retreat of the hospitals and stores which always
+follows an army. The troops, wishing to be rid of impedimenta, were
+sending them forward by railway and highway. That must be it. So
+all through the night, he interpreted the incessant bustle as the
+passing of vehicles filled with the wounded, with munitions and
+eatables, like those which had filed by in the afternoon.
+
+Toward morning he fell asleep through sheer weariness, and when he
+awoke late in the day his first glance was toward the road. He saw
+it filled with men and horses dragging some rolling objects. But
+these men were carrying guns and were formed in battalions and
+regiments. The animals were pulling the pieces of artillery. It
+was an army. . . . It was the retreat!
+
+Desnoyers ran to the edge of the road to be more convinced of the
+truth.
+
+Alas, they were regiments such as he had seen leaving the stations
+of Paris. . . . But with what a very different aspect! The blue
+cloaks were now ragged and yellowing garments, the trousers faded to
+the color of a half-baked brick, the shoes great cakes of mud. The
+faces had a desperate expression, with layers of dust and sweat in
+all their grooves and openings, with beards of recent growth, sharp
+as spikes, with an air of great weariness showing the longing to
+drop down somewhere forever, killing or dying, but without going a
+step further. They were tramping . . . tramping . . . tramping!
+Some marches had lasted thirty hours at a stretch. The enemy was on
+their tracks, and the order was to go on and not to fight, freeing
+themselves by their fleet-footedness from the involved movements of
+the invader.
+
+The chiefs suspected the discouraged exhaustion of their men. They
+might exact of them complete sacrifice of life--but to order them to
+march day and night, forever fleeing before the enemy when they did
+not consider themselves vanquished, when they were animated by that
+ferocious wrath which is the mother of heroism! . . . Their
+despairing expressions mutely sought the nearest officers, the
+leaders, even the colonel. They simply could go no further! Such a
+long, devastating march in such a few days, and what for? . . . The
+superior officers, who knew no more than their men, seemed to be
+replying with their eyes, as though they possessed a secret--
+"Courage! One more effort! . . . This is going to come to an end
+very soon."
+
+The vigorous beasts, having no imagination, were resisting less than
+the men, but their aspect was deplorable. How could these be the
+same strong horses with glossy coats that he had seen in the Paris
+processions at the beginning of the previous month? A campaign of
+twenty days had aged and exhausted them; their dull gaze seemed to
+be imploring pity. They were weak and emaciated, the outline of
+their skeletons so plainly apparent that it made their eyes look
+larger. Their harness, as they moved, showed the skin raw and
+bleeding. Yet they were pushing on with a mighty effort,
+concentrating their last powers, as though human demands were beyond
+their obscure instincts. Some could go no further and suddenly
+collapsed from sheer fatigue. Desnoyers noticed that the
+artillerymen rapidly unharnessed them, pushing them out of the road
+so as to leave the way open for the rest. There lay the skeleton-
+like frames with stiffened legs and glassy eyes staring fixedly at
+the first flies already attracted by their miserable carrion.
+
+The cannons painted gray, the gun-carriages, the artillery
+equipment, all that Don Marcelo had seen clean and shining with the
+enthusiastic friction that man has given to arms from remote epochs--
+even more persistent than that which woman gives to household
+utensils--were now dirty, overlaid with the marks of endless use,
+with the wreckage of unavoidable neglect. The wheels were deformed
+with mud, the metal darkened by the smoke of explosion, the gray
+paint spotted with mossy dampness.
+
+In the free spaces in this file, in the parentheses opened between
+battery and regiment, were sandwiched crowds of civilians--miserable
+groups driven on by the invasion, populations of entire towns that
+had disintegrated, following the army in its retreat. The approach
+of a new division would make them leave the road temporarily,
+continuing their march in the adjoining fields. Then at the
+slightest opening in the troops they would again slip along the
+white and even surface of the highway. They were mothers who were
+pushing hand-carts heaped high with pyramids of furniture and tiny
+babies, the sick who could hardly drag themselves along, old men
+carried on the shoulders of their grandsons, old women with little
+children clinging to their skirts--a pitiful, silent brood.
+
+Nobody now opposed the liberality of the owner of the castle. His
+entire vintage seemed to be overflowing on the highway. Casks from
+the last grape-gathering were rolled out to the roadside, and the
+soldiers filled the metal ladles hanging from their belts with the
+red stream. Then the bottled wine began making its appearance by
+order of date, and was instantly lost in the river of men
+continually flowing by. Desnoyers observed with much satisfaction
+the effects of his munificence. The smiles were reappearing on the
+despairing faces, the French jest was leaping from row to row, and
+on resuming their march the groups began to sing.
+
+Then he went to see the officers who in the village square were
+giving their horses a brief rest before rejoining their columns.
+With perplexed countenances and heavy eyes they were talking among
+themselves about this retreat, so incomprehensible to them all.
+Days before in Guise they had routed their pursuers, and yet now
+they were continually withdrawing in obedience to a severe and
+endless order. "We do not understand it," they were saying. "We do
+not understand." An ordered and methodical tide was dragging back
+these men who wanted to fight, yet had to retreat. All were
+suffering the same cruel doubt. "We do not understand."
+
+And doubt was making still more distressing this day-and-night march
+with only the briefest rests--because the heads of the divisions
+were in hourly fear of being cut off from the rest of the army.
+"One effort more, boys! Courage! Soon we shall rest!" The columns
+in their retirement were extending hundreds of miles. Desnoyers was
+seeing only one division. Others and still others were doing
+exactly this same thing at that very hour, their recessional
+extending across half of France. All, with the same disheartened
+obedience, were falling back, the men exclaiming the same as the
+officials, "We don't understand. We don't understand!"
+
+Don Marcelo soon felt the same sadness and bewilderment as these
+soldiers. He didn't understand, either. He saw the obvious thing,
+what all were able to see--the territory invaded without the Germans
+encountering any stubborn resistance;--entire counties, cities,
+villages, hamlets remaining in the power of the enemy, at the back
+of an army that was constantly withdrawing. His enthusiasm suddenly
+collapsed like a pricked balloon, and all his former pessimism
+returned. The troops were displaying energy and discipline; but
+what did that amount to if they had to keep retreating all the time,
+unable on account of strict orders to fight or defend the land?
+"Just as it was in the '70's," he sighed. "Outwardly there is more
+order, but the result is going to be the same."
+
+As though a negative reply to his faint-heartedness, he overheard
+the voice of a soldier reassuring a farmer: "We are retreating, yes--
+only that we may pounce upon the Boches with more strength.
+Grandpa Joffre is going to put them in his pocket when and where he
+will."
+
+The mere sound of the Marshal's name revived Don Marcelo's hope.
+Perhaps this soldier, who was keeping his faith intact in spite of
+the interminable and demoralizing marches, was nearer the truth than
+the reasoning and studious officers.
+
+He passed the rest of the day making presents to the last
+detachments of the column. His wine cellars were gradually
+emptying. By order of dates, he continued distributing thousands of
+bottles stored in the subterranean parts of the castle. By evening
+he was giving to those who appeared weakest bottles covered with the
+dust of many years. As the lines filed by the men seemed weaker and
+more exhausted. Stragglers were now passing, painfully drawing
+their raw and bleeding feet from their shoes. Some had already
+freed themselves from these torture cases and were marching
+barefoot, with their heavy boots hanging from their shoulders, and
+staining the highway with drops of blood. Although staggering with
+deadly fatigue, they kept their arms and outfits, believing that the
+enemy was near.
+
+Desnoyers' liberality stupefied many of them. They were accustomed
+to crossing their native soil, having to struggle with the
+selfishness of the producer. Nobody had been offering anything.
+Fear of danger had made the country folk hide their eatables and
+refuse to lend the slightest aid to their compatriots who were
+fighting for them.
+
+The millionaire slept badly this second night in his pompous bed
+with columns and plushes that had belonged to Henry IV--according to
+the declarations of the salesmen. The troops no longer were
+marching past. From time to time there straggled by a single
+battalion, a battery, a group of horsemen--the last forces of the
+rear guard that had taken their position on the outskirts of the
+village in order to cover the retreat. The profound silence that
+followed the turmoil of transportation awoke in his mind a sense of
+doubt and disquietude. What was he doing there when the soldiers
+had gone? Was he not crazy to remain there? . . . But immediately
+there came galloping into his mind the great riches which the castle
+contained. If he could only take it all away! . . . That was
+impossible now through want of means and time. Besides, his
+stubborn will looked upon such flight as a shameful concession. "We
+must finish what we have begun!" he said to himself. He had made
+the trip on purpose to guard his own, and he must not flee at the
+approach of danger. . . .
+
+The following morning, when he went down into the village, he saw
+hardly any soldiers. Only a single detachment of dragoons was still
+in the neighborhood; the horsemen were scouring the woods and
+pushing forward the stragglers at the same time that they were
+opposing the advance of the enemy. The troopers had obstructed the
+street with a barricade of carts and furniture. Standing behind
+this crude barrier, they were watching the white strip of roadway
+which ran between the two hills covered with trees. Occasionally
+there sounded stray shots like the snapping of cords. "Ours," said
+the troopers. These were the last detachments of sharpshooters
+firing at the advancing Uhlans. The cavalry of the rear guard had
+the task of opposing a continual resistance to the enemy, repelling
+the squads of Germans who were trying to work their way along to the
+retreating columns.
+
+Desnoyers saw approaching along the highroad the last stragglers
+from the infantry. They were not walking, they rather appeared to
+be dragging themselves forward, with the firm intention of
+advancing, but were betrayed by emaciated legs and bleeding feet.
+Some had sunk down for a moment by the roadside, agonized with
+weariness, in order to breathe without the weight of their
+knapsacks, and draw their swollen feet from their leather prisons,
+and wipe off the sweat; but upon trying to renew their march, they
+found it impossible to rise. Their bodies seemed made of stone.
+Fatigue had brought them to a condition bordering on catalepsy so,
+unable to move, they were seeing dimly the rest of the army passing
+on as a fantastic file--battalions, more battalions, batteries,
+troops of horses. Then the silence, the night, the sleep on the
+stones and dust, shaken by most terrible nightmare. At daybreak
+they were awakened by bodies of horsemen exploring the ground,
+rounding up the remnants of the retreat. Ay, it was impossible to
+move! The dragoons, revolver in hand, had to resort to threats in
+order to rouse them! Only the certainty that the pursuer was near
+and might make them prisoners gave them a momentary vigor. So they
+were forcing themselves up by superhuman effort, staggering,
+dragging their legs, and supporting themselves on their guns as
+though they were canes.
+
+Many of these were young men who had aged in an hour and changed
+into confirmed invalids. Poor fellows! They would not go very far!
+Their intention was to follow on, to join the column, but on
+entering the village they looked at the houses with supplicating
+eyes, desiring to enter them, feeling such a craving for immediate
+relief that they forgot even the nearness of the enemy.
+
+Villeblanche was now more military than before the arrival of the
+troops. The night before a great part of the inhabitants had fled,
+having become infected with the same fear that was driving on the
+crowds following the army. The mayor and the priest remained.
+Reconciled with the owner of the castle through his unexpected
+presence in their midst, and admiring his liberality, the municipal
+official approached to give him some news. The engineers were
+mining the bridge over the Marne. They were only waiting for the
+dragoons to cross before blowing it up. If he wished to go, there
+was still time.
+
+Again Desnoyers hesitated. Certainly it was foolhardy to remain
+there. But a glance at the woods over whose branches rose the
+towers of his castle, settled his doubts. No, no. . . . "We must
+finish what we have begun!"
+
+The very last band of troopers now made their appearance, coming out
+of the woods by different paths. They were riding their horses
+slowly, as though they deplored this retreat. They kept looking
+behind, carbine in hand, ready to halt and shoot. The others who
+had been occupying the barricade were already on their mounts. The
+division reformed, the commands of the officers were heard and a
+quick trot, accompanied by the clanking of metal, told Don Marcelo
+that the last of the army had left.
+
+He remained near the barricade in a solitude of intense silence, as
+though the world were suddenly depopulated. Two dogs, abandoned by
+the flight of their masters, leaped and sniffed around him, coaxing
+him for protection. They were unable to get the desired scent in
+that land trodden down and disfigured by the transit of thousands of
+men. A family cat was watching the birds that were beginning to
+return to their haunts. With timid flutterings they were picking at
+what the horses had left, and an ownerless hen was disputing the
+banquet with the winged band, until then hidden in the trees and
+roofs. The silence intensified the rustling of the leaves, the hum
+of the insects, the summer respiration of the sunburnt soil which
+appeared to have contracted timorously under the weight of the men
+in arms.
+
+Desnoyers was losing exact track of the passing of time. He was
+beginning to believe that all which had gone before must have been a
+bad dream. The calm surrounding him made what had been happening
+here seem most improbable.
+
+Suddenly he saw something moving at the far end of the road, at the
+very highest point where the white ribbon of the highway touched the
+blue of the horizon. There were two men on horseback, two little
+tin soldiers who appeared to have escaped from a box of toys. He
+had brought with him a pair of field glasses that had often
+surprised marauders on his property, and by their aid he saw more
+clearly the two riders clad in greenish gray! They were carrying
+lances and wearing helmets ending in a horizontal plate . . . They!
+He could not doubt it: before his eyes were the first Uhlans!
+
+For some time they remained motionless, as though exploring the
+horizon. Then, from the obscure masses of vegetation that bordered
+the roadside, others and still others came sallying forth in groups.
+The little tin soldiers no longer were showing their silhouettes
+against the horizon's blue; the whiteness of the highway was now
+making their background, ascending behind their heads. They came
+slowly down, like a band that fears ambush, examining carefully
+everything around.
+
+The advisability of prompt retirement made Don Marcelo bring his
+investigations to a close. It would be most disastrous for him if
+they surprised him here. But on lowering his glasses something
+extraordinary passed across his field of vision. A short distance
+away, so that he could almost touch them with his hand, he saw many
+men skulking along in the shadow of the trees on both sides of the
+road. His surprise increased as he became convinced that they were
+Frenchmen, wearing kepis. Where were they coming from? . . . He
+examined more closely with his spy glass. They were stragglers in a
+lamentable state of body and a picturesque variety of uniforms--
+infantry, Zouaves, dragoons without their horses. And with them
+were forest guards and officers from the villages that had received
+too late the news of the retreat--altogether about fifty. A few
+were fresh and vigorous, others were keeping themselves up by
+supernatural effort. All were carrying arms.
+
+They finally made the barricade, looking continually behind them, in
+order to watch, in the shelter of the trees, the slow advance of the
+Uhlans. At the head of this heterogeneous troop was an official of
+the police, old and fat, with a revolver in his right hand, his
+moustache bristling with excitement, and a murderous glitter in his
+heavy-lidded blue eyes. The band was continuing its advance through
+the village, slipping over to the other side of the barricade of
+carts without paying much attention to their curious countryman,
+when suddenly sounded a loud detonation, making the horizon vibrate
+and the houses tremble.
+
+"What is that?" asked the officer, looking at Desnoyers for the
+first time. He explained that it was the bridge which had just been
+blown up. The leader received the news with an oath, but his
+confused followers, brought together by chance, remained as
+indifferent as though they had lost all contact with reality.
+
+"Might as well die here as anywhere," continued the official. Many
+of the fugitives acknowledged this decision with prompt obedience,
+since it saved them the torture of continuing their march. They
+were almost rejoicing at the explosion which had cut off their
+progress. Instinctively they were gathering in the places most
+sheltered by the barricade. Some entered the abandoned houses whose
+doors the dragoons had forced in order to utilize the upper floors.
+All seemed satisfied to be able to rest, even though they might soon
+have to fight. The officer went from group to group giving his
+orders. They must not fire till he gave the word.
+
+Don Marcelo watched these preparations with the immovability of
+surprise. So rapid and noiseless had been the apparition of the
+stragglers that he imagined he must still be dreaming. There could
+be no danger in this unreal situation; it was all a lie. And he
+remained in his place without understanding the deputy who was
+ordering his departure with roughest words. Obstinate civilian! . . .
+
+The reverberation of the explosion had filled the highway with
+horsemen. They were coming from all directions, forming themselves
+into the advance group. The Uhlans were galloping around under the
+impression that the village was abandoned.
+
+"Fire!"
+
+Desnoyers was enveloped in a rain of crackling noises, as though the
+trunks of all the trees had split before his eyes.
+
+The impetuous band halted suddenly. Some of their men were rolling
+on the ground. Some were bending themselves double, trying to get
+across the road without being seen. Others remained stretched out
+on their backs or face downward with their arms in front. The
+riderless horses were racing wildly across the fields with reins
+dragging, urged on by the loose stirrups.
+
+And after this rude shock which had brought them surprise and death,
+the band disappeared, instantly swallowed up by the trees.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+NEAR THE SACRED GROTTO
+
+
+Argensola had found a new occupation even more exciting than marking
+out on the map the manoeuvres of the armies.
+
+"I am now devoting myself to the taube," he announced. "It appears
+from four to five with the precision a punctilious guest coming to
+take tea."
+
+Every afternoon at the appointed hour, a German aeroplane was flying
+over Paris dropping bombs. This would-be intimidation was producing
+no terror, the people accepting the visit as an interesting and
+extraordinary spectacle. In vain the aviators were flinging in the
+city streets German flags bearing ironic messages, giving accounts
+of the defeat of the retreating army and the failures of the Russian
+offensive. Lies, all lies! In vain they were dropping bombs,
+destroying garrets, killing or wounding old men, women and babes.
+"Ah, the bandits!" The crowds would threaten with their fists the
+malign mosquito, scarcely visible 6,000 feet above them, and after
+this outburst, they would follow it with straining eyes from street
+to street, or stand motionless in the square in order to study its
+evolutions.
+
+The most punctual of all the spectators was Argensola. At four
+o'clock he was in the place de la Concorde with upturned face and
+wide-open eyes, in most cordial good-fellowship with all the
+bystanders. It was as though they were holding season tickets at
+the same theatre, becoming acquainted through seeing each other so
+often. "Will it come? . . . Will it not come to-day?" The women
+appeared to be the most vehement, some of them rushing up, flushed
+and breathless, fearing that they might have arrived too late for
+the show. . . . A great cry--"There it comes! . . . There it is!"
+And thousands of hands were pointing to a vague spot on the horizon.
+With field glasses and telescopes they were aiding their vision, the
+popular venders offering every kind of optical instruments and for
+an hour the thrilling spectacle of an aerial hunt was played out,
+noisy and useless.
+
+The great insect was trying to reach the Eiffel Tower, and from its
+base would come sharp reports, at the same time that the different
+platforms spit out a fierce stream of shrapnel. As it zigzagged
+over the city, the discharge of rifles would crackle from roof and
+street. Everyone that had arms in his house was firing--the
+soldiers of the guard, and the English and Belgians on their way
+through Paris. They knew that their shots were perfectly useless,
+but they were firing for the fun of retorting, hoping at the same
+time that one of their chance shots might achieve a miracle; but the
+only miracle was that the shooters did not kill each other with
+their precipitate and ineffectual fire. As it was, a few passers-by
+did fall, wounded by balls from unknown sources.
+
+Argensola would tear from street to street following the evolutions
+of the inimical bird, trying to guess where its projectiles would
+fall, anxious to be the first to reach the bombarded house, excited
+by the shots that were answering from below. And to think that he
+had no gun like those khaki-clad Englishmen or those Belgians in
+barrick cap, with tassel over the front! . . . Finally the taube
+tired of manoeuvering, would disappear. "Until to-morrow!"
+ejaculated the Spaniard. "Perhaps to-morrow's show may be even more
+interesting!"
+
+He employed his free hours between his geographical observations and
+his aerial contemplations in making the rounds of the stations,
+watching the crowds of travellers making their escape from Paris.
+The sudden vision of the truth--after the illusion which the
+Government had been creating with its optimistic dispatches, the
+certainty that the Germans were actually near when a week before
+they had imagined them completely routed, the taubes flying over
+Paris, the mysterious threat of the Zeppelins--all these dangerous
+signs were filling a part of the community with frenzied
+desperation. The railroad stations, guarded by the soldiery, were
+only admitting those who had secured tickets in advance. Some had
+been waiting entire days for their turn to depart. The most
+impatient were starting to walk, eager to get outside of the city as
+soon as possible. The roads were black with the crowds all going in
+the same directions. Toward the South they were fleeing by
+automobile, in carriages, in gardeners' carts, on foot.
+
+Argensola surveyed this hegira with serenity. He would remain
+because he had always admired those men who witnessed the Siege of
+Paris in 1870. Now it was going to be his good fortune to observe
+an historical drama, perhaps even more interesting. The wonders
+that he would be able to relate in the future! . . . But the
+distraction and indifference of his present audience were annoying
+him greatly. He would hasten back to the studio, in feverish
+excitement, to communicate the latest gratifying news to Desnoyers
+who would listen as though he did not hear him. The night that he
+informed him that the Government, the Chambers, the Diplomatic
+Corps, and even the actors of the Comedie Francaise were going that
+very hour on special trains for Bordeaux, his companion merely
+replied with a shrug of indifference.
+
+Desnoyers was worrying about other things. That morning he had
+received a note from Marguerite--only two lines scrawled in great
+haste. She was leaving, starting immediately, accompanied by her
+mother. Adieu! . . . and nothing more. The panic had caused many
+love-affairs to be forgotten, had broken off long intimacies, but
+Marguerite's temperament was above such incoherencies from mere
+flight. Julio felt that her terseness was very ominous. Why not
+mention the place to which she was going? . . .
+
+In the afternoon, he took a bold step which she had always
+forbidden. He went to her home and talked a long time with the
+concierge in order to get some news. The good woman was delighted
+to work off on him the loquacity so brusquely cut short by the
+flight of tenants and servants. The lady on the first floor
+(Marguerite's mother) had been the last to abandon the house in
+spite of the fact that she was really sick over her son's departure.
+They had left the day before without saying where they were going.
+The only thing that she knew was that they took the train in the
+Gare d'Orsay. They were going toward the South like all the rest of
+the rich.
+
+And she supplemented her revelations with the vague news that the
+daughter had seemed very much upset by the information that she had
+received from the front. Someone in the family was wounded.
+Perhaps it was the brother, but she really didn't know. With so
+many surprises and strange things happening, it was difficult to
+keep track of everything. Her husband, too, was in the army and she
+had her own affairs to worry about.
+
+"Where can she have gone?" Julio asked himself all day long. "Why
+does she wish to keep me in ignorance of her whereabouts?"
+
+When his comrade told him that night about the transfer of the seat
+of government, with all the mystery of news not yet made public,
+Desnoyers merely replied:
+
+"They are doing the best thing. . . . I, too, will go tomorrow if I
+can."
+
+Why remain longer in Paris? His family was away. His father,
+according to Argensola's investigations, also had gone off without
+saying whither. Now Marguerite's mysterious flight was leaving him
+entirely alone, in a solitude that was filling him with remorse.
+
+That afternoon, when strolling through the boulevards, he had
+stumbled across a friend considerably older than himself, an
+acquaintance in the fencing club which he used to frequent. This
+was the first time they had met since the beginning of the war, and
+they ran over the list of their companions in the army. Desnoyers'
+inquiries were answered by the older man. So-and-so? . . . He had
+been wounded in Lorraine and was now in a hospital in the South.
+Another friend? . . . Dead in the Vosges. Another? . . .
+Disappeared at Charleroi. And thus had continued the heroic and
+mournful roll-call. The others were still living, doing brave
+things. The members of foreign birth, young Poles, English
+residents in Paris and South Americans, had finally enlisted as
+volunteers. The club might well be proud of its young men who had
+practised arms in times of peace, for now they were all jeopardizing
+their existence at the front. Desnoyers turned his face away as
+though he feared to meet in the eyes of his friend, an ironical and
+questioning expression. Why had he not gone with the others to
+defend the land in which he was living? . . .
+
+"To-morrow I will go," repeated Julio, depressed by this
+recollection.
+
+But he went toward the South like all those who were fleeing from
+the war. The following morning Argensola was charged to get him a
+railroad ticket for Bordeaux. The value of money had greatly
+increased, but fifty francs, opportunely bestowed, wrought the
+miracle and procured a bit of numbered cardboard whose conquest
+represented many days of waiting.
+
+"It is good only for to-day," said the Spaniard, "you will have to
+take the night train."
+
+Packing was not a very serious matter, as the trains were refusing
+to admit anything more than hand-luggage. Argensola did not wish to
+accept the liberality of Julio who tried to leave all his money with
+him. Heroes need very little and the painter of souls was inspired
+with heroic resolution, The brief harangue of Gallieni in taking
+charge of the defense of Paris, he had adopted as his own. He
+intended to keep up his courage to the last, just like the hardy
+general.
+
+"Let them come," he exclaimed with a tragic expression. "They will
+find me at my post!" . . .
+
+His post was the studio from which he could witness the happenings
+which he proposed relating to coming generations. He would entrench
+himself there with the eatables and wines. Besides he had the plan--
+just as soon as his partner should disappear--of bringing to live
+there with him certain lady-friends who were wandering around in
+search of a problematical dinner, and feeling timid in the solitude
+of their own quarters. Danger often gathers congenial folk together
+and adds a new attractiveness to the pleasures of a community. The
+tender affections of the prisoners of the Terror, when they were
+expecting momentarily to be conducted to the guillotine, flashed
+through his mind. Let us drain Life's goblet at one draught since
+we have to die! . . . The studio of the rue de la Pompe was about
+to witness the mad and desperate revels of a castaway bark well-
+stocked with provisions.
+
+Desnoyers left the Gare d'Orsay in a first-class compartment,
+mentally praising the good order with which the authorities had
+arranged everything, so that every traveller could have his own
+seat. At the Austerlitz station, however, a human avalanche
+assaulted the train. The doors were broken open, packages and
+children came in through the windows like projectiles. The people
+pushed with the unreason of a crowd fleeing before a fire. In the
+space reserved for eight persons, fourteen installed themselves; the
+passageways were heaped with mountains of bags and valises that
+served later travellers for seats. All class distinctions had
+disappeared. The villagers invaded by preference the best coaches,
+believing that they would there find more room. Those holding
+first-class tickets hunted up the plainer coaches in the vain hope
+of travelling without being crowded. On the cross roads were
+waiting from the day before long trains made up of cattle cars. All
+the stables on wheels were filled with people seated on the wooden
+floor or in chairs brought from their homes. Every train load was
+an encampment eager to take up its march; whenever it halted, layers
+of greasy papers, hulls and fruit skins collected along its entire
+length.
+
+The invaders, pushing their way in, put up with many annoyances and
+pardoned one another in a brotherly way. "In war times, war
+measures," they would always say as a last excuse. And each one was
+pressing closer to his neighbor in order to make a few more inches
+of room, and helping to wedge his scanty baggage among the other
+bundles swaying most precariously above. Little by little,
+Desnoyers was losing all his advantage as a first comer. These poor
+people who had been waiting for the train from four in the morning
+till eight at night, awakened his pity. The women, groaning with
+weariness, were standing in the corridors, looking with ferocious
+envy at those who had seats. The children were bleating like hungry
+kids. Julio finally gave up his place, sharing with the needy and
+improvident the bountiful supply of eatables with which Argensola
+had provided him. The station restaurants had all been emptied of
+food.
+
+During the train's long wait, soldiers only were seen on the
+platform, soldiers who were hastening at the call of the trumpet, to
+take their places again in the strings of cars which were constantly
+steaming toward Paris. At the signal stations, long war trains were
+waiting for the road to be clear that they might continue their
+journey. The cuirassiers, wearing a yellow vest over their steel
+breastplate, were seated with hanging legs in the doorways of the
+stable cars, from whose interior came repeated neighing. Upon the
+flat cars were rows of gun carriages. The slender throats of the
+cannon of '75 were pointed upwards like telescopes.
+
+Young Desnoyers passed the night in the aisle, seated on a valise,
+noting the sodden sleep of those around him, worn out by weariness
+and exhaustion. It was a cruel and endless night of jerks, shrieks
+and stops punctuated by snores. At every station, the trumpets were
+sounding precipitously as though the enemy were right upon them.
+The soldiers from the South were hurrying to their posts, and at
+brief intervals another detachment of men was dragged along the
+rails toward Paris. They all appeared gay, and anxious to reach the
+scene of slaughter as soon as possible. Many were regretting the
+delays, fearing that they might arrive too late. Leaning out of the
+window, Julio heard the dialogues and shouts on the platforms
+impregnated with the acrid odor of men and mules. All were evincing
+an unquenchable confidence. "The Boches! very numerous, with huge
+cannons, with many mitrailleuse . . . but we only have to charge
+with our bayonets to make them run like rabbits!"
+
+The attitude of those going to meet death was in sharp contrast to
+the panic and doubt of those who were deserting Paris. An old and
+much-decorated gentleman, type of a jubilee functionary, kept
+questioning Desnoyers whenever the train started on again--"Do you
+believe that they will get as far as Tours?" Before receiving his
+reply, he would fall asleep. Brutish sleep was marching down the
+aisles with leaden feet. At every junction, the old man would start
+up and suddenly ask, "Do you believe that we will get as far as
+Bordeaux?" . . . And his great desire not to halt until, with his
+family, he had reached an absolutely secure refuge, made him accept
+as oracles all the vague responses.
+
+At daybreak, they saw the Territorialists guarding the roads. They
+were armed with old muskets, and were wearing the red kepis as their
+only military distinction. They were following the opposite course
+of the military trains.
+
+In the station at Bordeaux, the civilian crowds struggling to get
+out or to enter other cars, were mingling with the troops. The
+trumpets were incessantly sounding their brazen notes, calling the
+soldiers together. Many were men of darkest coloring, natives with
+wide gray breeches and red caps above their black or bronzed faces.
+
+Julio saw a train bearing wounded from the battles of Flanders and
+Lorraine. Their worn and dirty uniforms were enlivened by the
+whiteness of the bandages sustaining the wounded limbs or protecting
+the broken heads. All were trying to smile, although with livid
+mouths and feverish eyes, at their first glimpse of the land of the
+South as it emerged from the mist bathed in the sunlight, and
+covered with the regal vestures of its vineyards. The men from the
+North stretched out their hands for the fruit that the women were
+offering them, tasting with delight the sweet grapes of the country.
+
+For four days the distracted lover lived in Bordeaux, stunned and
+bewildered by the agitation of a provincial city suddenly converted
+into a capital. The hotels were overcrowded, many notables
+contenting themselves with servants' quarters. There was not a
+vacant seat in the cafes; the sidewalks could not accommodate the
+extraordinary assemblage. The President was installed in the
+Prefecture; the State Departments were established in the schools
+and museums; two theatres were fitted up for the future reunions of
+the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies. Julio was lodged in a
+filthy, disreputable hotel at the end of a foul-smelling alley. A
+little Cupid adorned the crystals of the door, and the looking-glass
+in his room was scratched with names and unspeakable phrases--
+souvenirs of the occupants of an hour . . . and yet many grand
+ladies, hunting in vain for temporary residence, would have envied
+him his good fortune.
+
+All his investigations proved fruitless. The friends whom he
+encountered in the fugitive crowd were thinking only of their own
+affairs. They could talk of nothing but incidents of the
+installation, repeating the news gathered from the ministers with
+whom they were living on familiar terms, or mentioning with a
+mysterious air, the great battle which was going on stretching from
+the vicinity of Paris to Verdun. A pupil of his days of glory,
+whose former elegance was now attired in the uniform of a nurse,
+gave him some vague information. "The little Madame Laurier? . . .
+I remember hearing that she was living somewhere near here. . . .
+Perhaps in Biarritz." Julio needed no more than this to continue
+his journey. To Biarritz!
+
+The first person that he encountered on his arrival was Chichi. She
+declared that the town was impossible because of the families of
+rich Spaniards who were summering there. "The Boches are in the
+majority, and I pass a miserable existence quarrelling with them. . . .
+I shall finally have to live alone." Then he met his mother--
+embraces and tears. Afterwards he saw his Aunt Elena in the hotel
+parlors, most enthusiastic over the country and the summer colony.
+
+She could talk at great length with many of them about the decadence
+of France. They were all expecting to receive the news from one
+moment to another, that the Kaiser had entered the Capital.
+Ponderous men who had never done anything in all their lives, were
+criticizing the defects and indolence of the Republic. Young men
+whose aristocracy aroused Dona Elena's enthusiasm, broke forth into
+apostrophes against the corruption of Paris, corruption that they
+had studied thoroughly, from sunset to sunrise, in the virtuous
+schools of Montmartre. They all adored Germany where they had never
+been, or which they knew only through the reels of the moving
+picture films. They criticized events as though they were
+witnessing a bull fight. "The Germans have the snap! You can't
+fool with them! They are fine brutes!" And they appeared to admire
+this inhumanity as the most admirable characteristic. "Why will
+they not say that in their own home on the other side of the
+frontier?" Chichi would protest. "Why do they come into their
+neighbor's country to ridicule his troubles? . . . Possibly they
+consider it a sign of their wonderful good-breeding!"
+
+But Julio had not gone to Biarritz to live with his family. . . .
+The very day of his arrival, he saw Marguerite's mother in the
+distance. She was alone. His inquiries developed the information
+that her daughter was living in Pau. She was a trained nurse taking
+care of a wounded member of the family. "Her brother . . .
+undoubtedly it is her brother," thought Julio. And he again
+continued his trip, this time going to Pau.
+
+His visits to the hospitals there were also unavailing. Nobody
+seemed to know Marguerite. Every day a train was arriving with a
+new load of bleeding flesh, but her brother was not among the
+wounded. A Sister of Charity, believing that he was in search of
+someone of his family, took pity on him and gave him some helpful
+directions. He ought to go to Lourdes; there were many of the
+wounded there and many of the military nurses. So Desnoyers
+immediately took the short cut between Pau and Lourdes.
+
+He had never visited the sacred city whose name was so frequently on
+his mother's lips. For Dona Luisa, the French nation was Lourdes.
+In her discussions with her sister and other foreign ladies who were
+praying that France might be exterminated for its impiety, the good
+senora always summed up her opinions in the same words:--"When the
+Virgin wished to make her appearance in our day, she chose France.
+This country, therefore, cannot be as bad as you say. . . . When I
+see that she appears in Berlin, we will then re-discuss the matter."
+
+But Desnoyers was not there to confirm his mother's artless
+opinions. Just as soon as he had found a room in a hotel near the
+river, he had hastened to the big hostelry, now converted into a
+hospital. The guard told him that he could not speak to the
+Director until the afternoon. In order to curb his impatience he
+walked through the street leading to the basilica, past all the
+booths and shops with pictures and pious souvenirs which have
+converted the place into a big bazaar. Here and in the gardens
+adjoining the church, he saw wounded convalescents with uniforms
+stained with traces of the combat. Their cloaks were greatly soiled
+in spite of repeated brushings. The mud, the blood and the rain had
+left indelible spots and made them as stiff as cardboard. Some of
+the wounded had cut their sleeves in order to avoid the cruel
+friction on their shattered arms, others still showed on their
+trousers the rents made by the devastating shells.
+
+They were fighters of all ranks and of many races--infantry,
+cavalry, artillerymen; soldiers from the metropolis and from the
+colonies; French farmers and African sharpshooters; red heads, faces
+of Mohammedan olive and the black countenances of the Sengalese,
+with eyes of fire, and thick, bluish blubber lips; some showing the
+good-nature and sedentary obesity of the middle-class man suddenly
+converted into a warrior; others sinewy, alert, with the aggressive
+profile of men born to fight, and experienced in foreign fields.
+
+The city, formerly visited by the hopeful, Catholic sick, was now
+invaded by a crowd no less dolorous but clad in carnival colors.
+All, in spite of their physical distress, had a certain air of good
+cheer and satisfaction. They had seen Death very near, slipping out
+from his bony claws into a new joy and zest in life. With their
+cloaks adorned with medals, their theatrical Moorish garments, their
+kepis and their African headdresses, this heroic band presented,
+nevertheless, a lamentable aspect.
+
+Very few still preserved the noble vertical carriage, the pride of
+the superior human being. They were walking along bent almost
+double, limping, dragging themselves forward by the help of a staff
+or friendly arm. Others had to let themselves be pushed along,
+stretched out on the hand-carts which had so often conducted the
+devout sick from the station to the Grotto of the Virgin. Some were
+feeling their way along, blindly, leaning on a child or nurse. The
+first encounters in Belgium and in the East, a mere half-dozen
+battles, had been enough to produce these physical wrecks still
+showing a manly nobility in spite of the most horrible outrages.
+These organisms, struggling so tenaciously to regain their hold on
+life, bringing their reviving energies out into the sunlight,
+represented but the most minute part of the number mowed down by the
+scythe of Death. Back of them were thousands and thousands of
+comrades groaning on hospital beds from which they would probably
+never rise. Thousands and thousands were hidden forever in the
+bosom of the Earth moistened by their death agony--fatal land which,
+upon receiving a hail of projectiles, brought forth a harvest of
+bristling crosses!
+
+War now showed itself to Desnoyers with all its cruel hideousness.
+He had been accustomed to speak of it heretofore as those in robust
+health speak of death, knowing that it exists and is horrible, but
+seeing it afar off . . . so far off that it arouses no real emotion.
+The explosion of the shells were accompanying their destructive
+brutality with a ferocious mockery, grotesquely disfiguring the
+human body. He saw wounded objects just beginning to recover their
+vital force who were but rough skeletons of men, frightful
+caricatures, human rags, saved from the tomb by the audacities of
+science--trunks with heads which were dragged along on wheeled
+platforms; fragments of skulls whose brains were throbbing under an
+artificial cap; beings without arms and without legs, resting in the
+bottom of little wagons, like bits of plaster models or scraps from
+the dissecting room; faces without noses that looked like skulls
+with great, black nasal openings. And these half-men were talking,
+smoking, laughing, satisfied to see the sky, to feel the caress of
+the sun, to have come back to life, dominated by that sovereign
+desire to live which trustingly forgets present misery in the
+confident hope of something better.
+
+So strongly was Julio impressed that for a little while he forgot
+the purpose which had brought him thither. . . . If those who
+provoke war from diplomatic chambers or from the tables of the
+Military Staff could but see it--not in the field of battle fired
+with the enthusiasm which prejudices judgments--but in cold blood,
+as it is seen in the hospitals and cemeteries, in the wrecks left in
+its trail! . . .
+
+To Julio's imagination this terrestrial globe appeared like an
+enormous ship sailing through infinity. Its crews--poor humanity--
+had spent century after century in exterminating each other on the
+deck. They did not even know what existed under their feet, in the
+hold of the vessel. To occupy the same portion of the surface in
+the sunlight seemed to be the ruling desire of each group. Men,
+considered superior human beings, were pushing these masses to
+extermination in order to scale the last bridge and hold the helm,
+controlling the course of the boat. And all those who felt the
+overmastering ambition for absolute command knew the same thing . . .
+nothing. Not one of them could say with certainty what lay beyond
+the visible horizon, nor whither the ship was drifting. The sullen
+hostility of mystery surrounded them all; their life was precarious,
+necessitating incessant care in order to maintain it, yet in spite
+of that, the crew for ages and ages, had never known an instant of
+agreement, of team work, of clear reason. Periodically half of them
+would clash with the other half. They killed each other that they
+might enslave the vanquished on the rolling deck floating over the
+abyss; they fought that they might cast their victims from the
+vessel, filling its wake with cadavers. And from the demented
+throng there were still springing up gloomy sophistries to prove
+that a state of war was the perfect state, that it ought to go on
+forever, that it was a bad dream on the part of the crew to wish to
+regard each other as brothers with a common destiny, enveloped in
+the same unsteady environment of mystery. . . . Ah, human misery!
+
+Julio was drawn out of these pessimistic reflections by the childish
+glee which many of the convalescents were evincing. Some were
+Mussulmans, sharpshooters from Algeria and Morocco. In Lourdes, as
+they might be anywhere, they were interested only in the gifts which
+the people were showering upon them with patriotic affection. They
+all surveyed with indifference the basilica inhabited by "the white
+lady," their only preoccupation being to beg for cigars and sweets.
+
+Finding themselves regaled by the dominant race, they became greatly
+puffed up, daring everything like mischievous children. What
+pleased them most was the fact that the ladies would take them by
+the hand. Blessed war that permitted them to approach and touch
+these white women, perfumed and smiling as they appeared in their
+dreams of the paradise of the blest! "Lady . . . Lady," they would
+sigh, looking at them with dark, sparkling eyes. And not content
+with the hand, their dark paws would venture the length of the
+entire arm while the ladies laughed at this tremulous adoration.
+Others would go through the crowds, offering their right hand to all
+the women. "We touch hands." . . . And then they would go away
+satisfied after receiving the hand clasp.
+
+Desnoyers wandered a long time around the basilica where, in the
+shadow of the trees, were long rows of wheeled chairs occupied by
+the wounded. Officers and soldiers rested many hours in the blue
+shade, watching their comrades who were able to use their legs. The
+sacred grotto was resplendent with the lights from hundreds of
+candles. Devout crowds were kneeling in the open air, fixing their
+eyes in supplication on the sacred stones whilst their thoughts were
+flying far away to the fields of battle, making their petitions with
+that confidence in divinity which accompanies every distress. Among
+the kneeling mass were many soldiers with bandaged heads, kepis in
+hand and tearful eyes.
+
+Up and down the double staircase of the basilica were flitting
+women, clad in white, with spotless headdresses that fluttered in
+such a way that they appeared like flying doves. These were the
+nurses and Sisters of Charity guiding the steps of the injured.
+Desnoyers thought he recognized Marguerite in every one of them, but
+the prompt disillusion following each of these discoveries soon made
+him doubtful about the outcome of his journey. She was not in
+Lourdes, either. He would never find her in that France so
+immeasurably expanded by the war that it had converted every town
+into a hospital.
+
+His afternoon explorations were no more successful. The employees
+listened to his interrogations with a distraught air. He could come
+back again; just now they were taken up with the announcement that
+another hospital train was on the way. The great battle was still
+going on near Paris. They had to improvise lodgings for the new
+consignment of mutilated humanity. In order to pass away the time
+until his return, Desnoyers went back to the garden near the grotto.
+He was planning to return to Pau that night; there was evidently
+nothing more to do at Lourdes. In what direction should he now
+continue his search?
+
+Suddenly he felt a thrill down his back--the same indefinable
+sensation which used to warn him of her presence when they were
+meeting in the gardens of Paris. Marguerite was going to present
+herself unexpectedly as in the old days without his knowing from
+exactly what spot--as though she came up out of the earth or
+descended from the clouds.
+
+After a second's thought he smiled bitterly. Mere tricks of his
+desire! Illusions! . . . Upon turning his head he recognized the
+falsity of his hope. Nobody was following his footsteps; he was the
+only being going down the center of the avenue. Near him, in the
+diaphanous white of a guardian angel, was a nurse. Poor blind
+man! . . . Desnoyers was passing on when a quick movement on the
+part of the white-clad woman, an evident desire to escape notice,
+to hide her face by looking at the plants, attracted his attention.
+He was slow in recognizing her. Two little ringlets escaping from
+the band of her cap made him guess the hidden head of hair; the
+feet shod in white were the signs which enabled him to reconstruct
+the person somewhat disfigured by the severe uniform. Her face
+was pale and sad. There wasn't a trace left in it of the old
+vanities that used to give it its childish, doll-like beauty.
+In the depths of those great, dark-circled eyes life seemed to
+be reflected in new forms. . . . Marguerite!
+
+They stared at one another for a long while, as though hypnotized
+with surprise. She looked alarmed when Desnoyers advanced a step
+toward her. No . . . No! Her eyes, her hands, her entire body
+seemed to protest, to repel his approach, to hold him motionless.
+Fear that he might come near her, made her go toward him. She said
+a few words to the soldier who remained on the bench, receiving
+across the bandage on his face a ray of sunlight which he did not
+appear to feel. Then she rose, going to meet Julio, and continued
+forward, indicating by a gesture that they must find some place
+further on where the wounded man could not hear them.
+
+She led the way to a side path from which she could see the blind
+man confided to her care. They stood motionless, face to face.
+Desnoyers wished to say many things; many . . . but he hesitated,
+not knowing how to frame his complaints, his pleadings, his
+endearments. Far above all these thoughts towered one, fatal,
+dominant and wrathful.
+
+"Who is that man?"
+
+The spiteful accent, the harsh voice with which he said these words
+surprised him as though they came from someone else's mouth.
+
+The nurse looked at him with her great limpid eyes, eyes that seemed
+forever freed from contractions of surprise or fear. Her response
+slipped from her with equal directness.
+
+"It is Laurier. . . . It is my husband."
+
+Laurier! . . . Julio looked doubtfully and for a long time at the
+soldier before he could be convinced. That blind officer motionless
+on the bench, that figure of heroic grief, was Laurier! . . . At
+first glance, he appeared prematurely old with roughened and bronzed
+skin so furrowed with lines that they converged like rays around all
+the openings of his face. His hair was beginning to whiten on the
+temples and in the beard which covered his cheeks. He had lived
+twenty years in that one month. . . . At the same time he appeared
+younger, with a youthfulness that was radiating an inward vigor,
+with the strength of a soul which has suffered the most violent
+emotions and, firm and serene in the satisfaction of duty fulfilled,
+can no longer know fear.
+
+As Desnoyers contemplated him, he felt both admiration and jealousy.
+He was ashamed to admit the aversion inspired by the wounded man, so
+sorely wounded that he was unable to see what was going on around
+him. His hatred was a form of cowardice, terrifying in its
+persistence. How pensive were Marguerite's eyes if she took them
+off her patient for a few seconds! . . . She had never looked at
+him in that way. He knew all the amorous gradations of her glance,
+but her fixed gaze at this injured man was something entirely
+different, something that he had never seen before.
+
+He spoke with the fury of a lover who discovers an infidelity.
+
+"And for this thing you have run away without warning, without a
+word! . . . You have abandoned me in order to go in search of
+him. . . . Tell me, why did you come? . . . Why did you come?". . .
+
+"I came because it was my duty."
+
+Then she spoke like a mother who takes advantage of a parenthesis of
+surprise in an irascible child's temper, in order to counsel self-
+control, and explained how it had all happened. She had received
+the news of Laurier's wounding just as she and her mother were
+preparing to leave Paris. She had not hesitated an instant; her
+duty was to hasten to the aid of this man. She had been doing a
+great deal of thinking in the last few weeks; the war had made her
+ponder much on the values in life. Her eyes had been getting
+glimpses of new horizons; our destiny is not mere pleasure and
+selfish satisfaction; we ought to take our part in pain and
+sacrifice.
+
+She had wanted to work for her country, to share the general stress,
+to serve as other women did; and since she was disposed to devote
+herself to strangers, was it not natural that she should prefer to
+help this man whom she had so greatly wronged? . . . There still
+lived in her memory the moment in which she had seen him approach
+the station, completely alone among so many who had the consolation
+of loving arms when departing in search of death. Her pity had
+become still more acute on hearing of his misfortune. A shell had
+exploded near him, killing all those around him. Of his many
+wounds, the only serious one was that on his face. He had
+completely lost the sight of one eye; and the doctors were keeping
+the other bound up hoping to save it. But she was very doubtful
+about it; she was almost sure that Laurier would be blind.
+
+Marguerite's voice trembled when saying this as if she were going to
+cry, although her eyes were tearless. They did not now feel the
+irresistible necessity for tears. Weeping had become something
+superfluous, like many other luxuries of peaceful days. Her eyes
+had seen so much in so few days! . . .
+
+"How you love him!" exclaimed Julio.
+
+Fearing that they might be overheard and in order to keep him at a
+distance, she had been speaking as though to a friend. But her
+lover's sadness broke down her reserve.
+
+"No, I love you. . . . I shall always love you."
+
+The simplicity with which she said this and her sudden tenderness of
+tone revived Desnoyers' hopes.
+
+"And the other one?" he asked anxiously.
+
+Upon receiving her reply, it seemed to him as though something had
+just passed across the sun, veiling its light temporarily. It was
+as though a cloud had drifted over the land and over his thoughts,
+enveloping them in an unbearable chill.
+
+"I love him, too."
+
+She said it with a look that seemed to implore pardon, with the sad
+sincerity of one who has given up lying and weeps in foreseeing the
+injury that the truth must inflict.
+
+He felt his hard wrath suddenly dwindling like a crumbling mountain.
+Ah, Marguerite! His voice was tremulous and despairing. Could it
+be possible that everything between these two was going to end thus
+simply? Were her former vows mere lies? . . . They had been
+attracted to each other by an irresistible affinity in order to be
+together forever, to be one. . . . And now, suddenly hardened by
+indifference, were they to drift apart like two unfriendly
+bodies? . . . What did this absurdity about loving him at the
+same time that she loved her former husband mean, anyway?
+
+Marguerite hung her head, murmuring desperately:
+
+"You are a man, I am a woman. You would never understand me, no
+matter what I might say. Men are not able to comprehend certain of
+our mysteries. . . . A woman would be better able to appreciate the
+complexity."
+
+Desnoyers felt that he must know his fate in all its cruelty. She
+might speak without fear. He felt strong enough to bear the
+blow. . . . What had Laurier said when he found that he was being
+so tenderly cared for by Marguerite? . . .
+
+"He does not know who I am. . . . He believes me to be a war-nurse,
+like the rest, who pities him seeing him alone and blind with no
+relatives to write to him or visit him. . . . At certain times, I
+have almost suspected that he guesses the truth. My voice, the
+touch of my hands made him shiver at first, as though with an
+unpleasant sensation. I have told him that I am a Beigian lady who
+has lost her loved ones and is alone in the world. He has told me
+his life story very sketchily, as if he desired to forget a hated
+past. . . . Never one disagreeable word about his former wife.
+There are nights when I think that he knows me, that he takes
+advantage of his blindness in order to prolong his feigned
+ignorance, and that distresses me. I long for him to recover his
+sight, for the doctors to save that doubtful eye--and yet at the
+same time, I feel afraid. What will he say when he recognizes
+me? . . . But no; it is better that he should see, no matter
+what may result. You cannot understand my anxiety, you cannot
+know what I am suffering."
+
+She was silent for an instant, trying to regain her self-control,
+again tortured with the agony of her soul.
+
+"Oh, the war!" she resumed. "What changes in our life! Two months
+ago, my present situation would have appeared impossible,
+unimaginable. . . . I caring for my husband, fearing that he would
+discover my identity and leave me, yet at the same time, wishing
+that he would recognize me and pardon me. . . . It is only one
+week that I have been with him. I disguise my voice when I can, and
+avoid words that may reveal the truth . . . but this cannot keep up
+much longer. It is only in novels that such painful situations turn
+out happily."
+
+Doubt suddenly overwhelmed her.
+
+"I believe," she continued, "that he has recognized me from the
+first. . . . He is silent and feigns ignorance because he despises
+me . . . because he can never bring himself to pardon me. I have
+been so bad! . . . I have wronged him so!". . .
+
+She was recalling the long and reflective silences of the wounded
+man after she had dropped some imprudent words. After two days of
+submission to her care, he had been somewhat rebellious, avoiding
+going out with her for a walk. Because of his blind helplessness,
+and comprehending the uselessness of his resistance, he had finally
+yielded in passive silence.
+
+"Let him think what he will!" concluded Marguerite courageously.
+"Let him despise me! I am here where I ought to be. I need his
+forgiveness, but if he does not pardon me, I shall stay with him
+just the same. . . . There are moments when I wish that he may
+never recover his sight, so that he may always need me, so that I
+may pass my life at his side, sacrificing everything for him."
+
+"And I?" said Desnoyers.
+
+Marguerite looked at him with clouded eyes as though she were just
+awaking. It was true--and the other one? . . . Kindled by the
+proposed sacrifice which was to be her expiation, she had forgotten
+the man before her.
+
+"You!" she said after a long pause. "You must leave me. . . . Life
+is not what we have thought it. Had it not been for the war, we
+might, perhaps, have realized our dream, but now! . . . Listen
+carefully and try to understand. For the remainder of my life, I
+shall carry the heaviest burden, and yet at the same time it will be
+sweet, since the more it weighs me down the greater will my
+atonement be. Never will I leave this man whom I have so grievously
+wronged, now that he is more alone in the world and will need
+protection like a child. Why do you come to share my fate? How
+could it be possible for you to live with a nurse constantly at the
+side of a blind and worthy man whom we would constantly offend with
+our passion? . . . No, it is better for us to part. Go your way,
+alone and untrammelled. Leave me; you will meet other women who
+will make you more happy than I. Yours is the temperament that
+finds new pleasures at every step."
+
+She stood firmly to her decision. Her voice was calm, but back of
+it trembled the emotion of a last farewell to a joy which was going
+from her forever. The man would be loved by others . . . and she
+was giving him up! . . . But the noble sadness of the sacrifice
+restored her courage. Only by this renunciation could she expiate
+her sins.
+
+Julio dropped his eyes, vanquished and perplexed. The picture of
+the future outlined by Marguerite terrified him. To live with her
+as a nurse taking advantage of her patient's blindness would be to
+offer him fresh insult every day. . . . Ah, no! That would be
+villainy, indeed! He was now ashamed to recall the malignity with
+which, a little while before, he had regarded this innocent
+unfortunate. He realized that he was powerless to contend with him.
+Weak and helpless as he was sitting there on the garden bench, he
+was stronger and more deserving of respect than Julio Desnoyers with
+all his youth and elegance. The victim had amounted to something in
+his life; he had done what Julio had not dared to do.
+
+This sudden conviction of his inferiority made him cry out like an
+abandoned child, "What will become of me?" . . .
+
+Marguerite, too--contemplating the love which was going from her
+forever, her vanished hopes, the future illumined by the
+satisfaction of duty fulfilled but monotonous and painful--cried
+out:
+
+"And I. . . . What will become of me?" . . .
+
+As though he had suddenly found a solution which was reviving his
+courage, Desnoyers said:
+
+"Listen, Marguerite: I can read your soul. You love this man, and
+you do well. He is superior to me, and women are always attracted
+by superiority. . . . I am a coward. Yes, do not protest, I am a
+coward with all my youth, with all my strength. Why should you not
+have been impressed by the conduct of this man! . . . But I will
+atone for past wrongs. This country is yours, Marguerite; I will
+fight for it. Do not say no. . . ."
+
+And moved by his hasty heroism, he outlined the plan more
+definitely. He was going to be a soldier. Soon she would hear him
+well spoken of. His idea was either to be stretched on the
+battlefield in his first encounter, or to astound the world by his
+bravery. In this way the impossible situation would settle itself--
+either the oblivion of death or glory.
+
+"No, no!" interrupted Marguerite in an anguished tone. "You, no!
+One is enough. . . . How horrible! You, too, wounded, mutilated
+forever, perhaps dead! . . . No, you must live. I want you to
+live, even though you might belong to another. . . . Let me know
+that you exist, let me see you sometimes, even though you may have
+forgotten me, even though you may pass me with indifference, as if
+you did not know me."
+
+In this outburst her deep love for him rang true--her heroic and
+inflexible love which would accept all penalties for herself, if
+only the beloved one might continue to live.
+
+But then, in order that Julio might not feel any false hopes, she
+added:--"Live; you must not die; that would be for me another
+torment. . . . But live without me. No matter how much we may talk
+about it, my destiny beside the other one is marked out forever."
+
+"Ah, how you love him! . . . How you have deceived me!"
+
+In a last desperate attempt at explanation she again repeated what
+she had said at the beginning of their interview. She loved
+Julio . . . and she loved her husband. They were different kinds
+of love. She could not say which was the stronger, but misfortune
+was forcing her to choose between the two, and she was accepting
+the most difficult, the one demanding the greatest sacrifices.
+
+"You are a man, and you will never be able to understand me. . . .
+A woman would comprehend me."
+
+It seemed to Julio, as he looked around him, as though the afternoon
+were undergoing some celestial phenomenon. The garden was still
+illuminated by the sun, but the green of the trees, the yellow of
+the ground, the blue of the sky, all appeared to him as dark and
+shadowy as though a rain of ashes were falling.
+
+"Then . . . all is over between us?"
+
+His pleading, trembling voice charged with tears made her turn her
+head to hide her emotion. Then in the painful silence the two
+despairs formed one and the same question, as if interrogating the
+shades of the future: "What will become of me? murmured the man.
+And like an echo her lips repeated, "What will become of me?"
+
+All had been said. Hopeless words came between the two like an
+obstacle momentarily increasing in size, impelling them in opposite
+directions. Why prolong the painful interview? . . . Marguerite
+showed the ready and energetic decision of a woman who wishes to
+bring a scene to a close. "Good-bye!" Her face had assumed a
+yellowish cast, her pupils had become dull and clouded like the
+glass of a lantern when the light dies out. "Good-bye!" She must
+go to her patient.
+
+She went away without looking at him, and Desnoyers instinctively
+went in the opposite direction. As he became more self-controlled
+and turned to look at her again, he saw her moving on and giving her
+arm to the blind man, without once turning her head.
+
+He now felt convinced that he should never see her again, and became
+oppressed by an almost suffocating agony. And could two beings, who
+had formerly considered the universe concentrated in their persons,
+thus easily be separated forever? . . .
+
+His desperation at finding himself alone made him accuse himself of
+stupidity. Now his thoughts came tumbling over each other in a
+tumultuous throng, and each one of them seemed to him sufficient to
+have convinced Marguerite. He certainly had not known how to
+express himself. He would have to talk with her again . . . and he
+decided to remain in Lourdes.
+
+He passed a night of torture in the hotel, listening to the ripple
+of the river among its stones. Insomnia had him in his fierce jaws,
+gnawing him with interminable agony. He turned on the light several
+times, but was not able to read. His eyes looked with stupid fixity
+at the patterns of the wall paper and the pious pictures around the
+room which had evidently served as the lodging place of some rich
+traveller. He remained motionless and as abstracted as an Oriental
+who thinks himself into an absolute lack of thought. One idea only
+was dancing in the vacuum in his skull--"I shall never see her
+again. . . . Can such a thing be possible?"
+
+He drowsed for a few seconds, only to be awakened with the sensation
+that some horrible explosion was sending him through the air. And
+so, with sweats of anguish, he wakefully passed the hours until in
+the gloom of his room the dawn showed a milky rectangle of light,
+and began to be reflected on the window curtains.
+
+The velvet-like caress of day finally closed his eyes. Upon awaking
+he found that the morning was well advanced, and he hurried to the
+garden of the grotto. . . . Oh, the hours of tremulous and
+unavailing waiting, believing that he recognized Marguerite in every
+white-clad lady that came along, guiding a wounded patient!
+
+By afternoon, after a lunch whose dishes filed past him untouched,
+he returned to the garden in search of her. Beholding her in the
+distance with the blind man leaning on her arm, a feeling of
+faintness came over him. She looked to him taller, thinner, her
+face sharper, with two dark hollows in her cheeks and her eyes
+bright with fever, the lids drawn with weariness. He suspected that
+she, too, had passed an anguished night of tenacious, self-centred
+thought, of grievous stupefaction like his own, in the room of her
+hotel. Suddenly he felt all the weight of insomnia and
+listlessness, all the depressing emotion of the cruel sensations
+experienced in the last few hours. Oh, how miserable they both
+were! . . .
+
+She was walking warily, looking from one side to the other, as
+though foreseeing danger. Upon discovering him she clung to her
+charge, casting upon her former lover a look of entreaty, of
+desperation, imploring pity. . . Ay, that look!
+
+He felt ashamed of himself; his personality appeared to be unrolling
+itself before him, and he surveyed himself with the eyes of a judge.
+What was this seduced and useless man, called Julio Desnoyers, doing
+there, tormenting with his presence a poor woman, trying to turn her
+from her righteous repentance, insisting on his selfish and petty
+desires when all humanity was thinking of other things? . . . His
+cowardice angered him. Like a thief taking advantage of the sleep
+of his victim, he was stalking around this brave and true man who
+could not see him, who could not defend himself, in order to rob him
+of the only affection that he had in the world which had so
+miraculously returned to him! Very well, Gentleman Desnoyers! . . .
+Ah, what a scoundrel he was!
+
+Such subconscious insults made him draw himself erect, in haughty,
+cruel and inexorable defiance against that other I who so richly
+deserved the judge's scorn.
+
+He turned his head away; he could not meet Marguerite's piteous
+eyes; he feared their mute reproach. Neither did he dare to look at
+the blind man in his shabby and heroic uniform, with his countenance
+aged by duty and glory. He feared him like remorse.
+
+So the vanquished lover turned his back on the two and went away
+with a firm step. Good-bye, Love! Goodbye, Happiness! . . . He
+marched quickly and bravely on; a miracle had just taken place
+within him! he had found the right road at last!
+
+To Paris! . . . A new impetus was going to fill the vacuum of his
+objectless existence.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE INVASION
+
+
+Don Marcelo was fleeing to take refuge in his castle when he met the
+mayor of Villeblanche. The noise of the firing had made him hurry
+to the barricade. When he learned of the apparition of the group of
+stragglers he threw up his hands in despair. They were crazy.
+Their resistance was going to be fatal for the village, and he ran
+on to beg them to cease.
+
+For some time nothing happened to disturb the morning calm.
+Desnoyers had climbed to the top of his towers and was surveying the
+country with his field glasses. He couldn't make out the highway
+through the nearest group of trees, but he suspected that underneath
+their branches great activity was going on--masses of men on guard,
+troops preparing for the attack. The unexpected defense of the
+fugitives had upset the advance of the invasion. Desnoyers thought
+despairingly of that handful of mad fellows and their stubborn
+chief. What was their fate going to be? . . .
+
+Focussing his glasses on the village, he saw the red spots of kepis
+waving like poppies over the green of the meadows. They were the
+retreating men, now convinced of the uselessness of their
+resistance. Perhaps they had found a ford or forgotten boat by
+which they might cross the Maine, and so were continuing their
+retreat toward the river. At any minute now the Germans were going
+to enter Villeblanche.
+
+Half an hour of profound silence passed by. The village lay
+silhouetted against a background of hills--a mass of roofs beneath
+the church tower finished with its cross and iron weather cock.
+Everything seemed as tranquil as in the best days of peace.
+Suddenly he noticed that the grove was vomiting forth something
+noisy and penetrating--a bubble of vapor accompanied by a deafening
+report. Something was hurtling through the air with a strident
+curve. Then a roof in the village opened like a crater, vomiting
+forth flying wood, fragments of plaster and broken furniture. All
+the interior of the house seemed to be escaping in a stream of
+smoke, dirt and splinters.
+
+The invaders were bombarding Villeblanche before attempting attack,
+as though fearing to encounter persistent resistance in its streets.
+More projectiles fell. Some passed over the houses, exploding
+between the hamlet and the castle. The towers of the Desnoyers
+property were beginning to attract the aim of the artillerymen. The
+owner was therefore about to abandon his dangerous observatory when
+he saw something white like a tablecloth or sheet floating from the
+church tower. His neighbors had hoisted this signal of peace in
+order to avoid bombardment. A few more missiles fell and then there
+was silence.
+
+When Don Marcelo reached his park he found the Warden burying at the
+foot of a tree the sporting rifles still remaining in his castle.
+Then he went toward the great iron gates. The enemies were going to
+come, and he had to receive them. While uneasily awaiting their
+arrival his compunctions again tormented him. What was he doing
+there? Why had he remained? . . . But his obstinate temperament
+immediately put aside the promptings of fear. He was there because
+he had to guard his own. Besides, it was too late now to think
+about such things.
+
+Suddenly the morning stillness was broken by a sound like the
+deafening tearing of strong cloth. "Shots, Master," said the
+Warden. "Firing! It must be in the square."
+
+A few minutes after they saw running toward them a woman from the
+village, an old soul, dried up and darkened by age, who was panting
+from her great exertion, and looking wildly around her. She was
+fleeing blindly, trying to escape from danger and shut out horrible
+visions. Desnoyers and the Keeper's family listened to her
+explanations interrupted with hiccoughs of terror.
+
+The Germans were in Villeblanche. They had entered first in an
+automobile driven at full speed from one end of the village to the
+other. Its mitrailleuse was firing at random against closed houses
+and open doors, knocking down all the people in sight. The old
+woman flung up her arms with a gesture of terror. . . . Dead . . .
+many dead . . . wounded . . . blood! Then other iron-plated
+vehicles had stopped in the square, and behind them cavalrymen,
+battalions of infantry, many battalions coming from everywhere. The
+helmeted men seemed furious; they accused the villagers of having
+fired at them. In the square they had struck the mayor and
+villagers who had come forward to meet them. The priest, bending
+over some of the dying, had also been trodden under foot. . . . All
+prisoners! The Germans were talking of shooting them.
+
+The old dame's words were cut short by the rumble of approaching
+automobiles.
+
+"Open the gates," commanded the owner to the Warden. The massive
+iron grill work swung open, and was never again closed. All
+property rights were at an end.
+
+An enormous automobile, covered with dust and filled with men,
+stopped at the entrance. Behind them sounded the horns of other
+vehicles that were putting on the brakes. Desnoyers saw soldiers
+leaping out, all wearing the greenish-gray uniform with a sheath of
+the same tone covering the pointed casque. The one who marched at
+their head put his revolver to the millionaire's forehead.
+
+"Where are the sharpshooters?" he asked.
+
+He was pale with the pallor of wrath, vengeance and fear. His face
+was trembling under the influence of his triple emotion. Don
+Marcelo explained slowly, contemplating at a short distance from his
+eyes the black circle of the threatening tube. He had not seen any
+sharpshooters. The only inhabitants of the castle were the Warden
+with his family and himself, the owner of the castle.
+
+The officer surveyed the edifice and then examined Desnoyers with
+evident astonishment as though he thought his appearance too
+unpretentious for a proprietor. He had taken him for a simple
+employee, and his respect for social rank made him lower his
+revolver.
+
+He did not, however, alter his haughty attitude. He pressed Don
+Marcelo into the service as a guide, making him search ahead of him
+while forty soldiers grouped themselves at his back. They advanced
+in two files to the shelter of the trees which bordered the central
+avenue, with their guns ready to shoot, and looking uneasily at the
+castle windows as though expecting to receive from them hidden
+shots. Desnoyers marched tranquilly through the centre, and the
+official, who had been imitating the precautions of his men, finally
+joined him when he was crossing the drawbridge.
+
+The armed men scattered through the rooms in search of the enemy.
+They ran their bayonets through beds and divans. Some, with
+automatic destructiveness, slit the draperies and the rich bed
+coverings. The owner protested; what was the sense in such useless
+destruction? . . . He was suffering unbearable torture at seeing
+the enormous boots spotting the rugs with mud, on hearing the clash
+of guns and knapsacks against the most fragile, choicest pieces of
+furniture. Poor historic mansion! . . .
+
+The officer looked amazed that he should protest for such trifling
+cause, but he gave orders in German and his men ceased their rude
+explorations. Then, in justification of this extraordinary respect,
+he added in French:
+
+"I believe that you are going to have the honor of entertaining here
+the general of our division."
+
+The certainty that the castle did not hold any hidden enemies made
+him more amiable. He, nevertheless, persisted in his wrath against
+the sharpshooters. A group of the villagers had opened fire upon
+the Uhlans when they were entering unsuspiciously after the retreat
+of the French.
+
+Desnoyers felt it necessary to protest. They were neither
+inhabitants nor sharpshooters; they were French soldiers. He took
+good care to be silent about their presence at the barricade, but he
+insisted that he had distinguished their uniforms from a tower of
+the castle.
+
+The official made a threatening face.
+
+"You, too? . . . You, who appear a reasonable man, can repeat such
+yarns as these?" And in order to close the conversation, he said,
+arrogantly: "They were wearing uniforms, then, if you persist in
+saying so, but they were sharpshooters just the same. The French
+Government has distributed arms and uniforms among the farmers that
+they may assassinate us. . . . Belgium did the same thing. . . .
+But we know their tricks, and we know how to punish them, too!"
+
+The village was going to be burned. It was necessary to avenge the
+four German dead lying on the outskirts of Villeblanche, near the
+barricade. The mayor, the priest, the principal inhabitants would
+all be shot.
+
+By the time they reached the top floor Desnoyers could see floating
+above the boughs of his park dark clouds whose outlines were
+reddened by the sun. The top of the bell tower was the only thing
+that he could distinguish at that distance. Around the iron
+weathercock were flying long thin fringes like black cobwebs lifted
+by the breeze. An odor of burning wood came toward the castle.
+
+The German greeted this spectacle with a cruel smile. Then on
+descending to the park, he ordered Desnoyers to follow him. His
+liberty and his dignity had come to an end. Henceforth he was going
+to be an underling at the beck and call of these men who would
+dispose of him as their whims directed. Ay, why had he remained? . . .
+He obeyed, climbing into an automobile beside the officer, who
+was still carrying his revolver in his right hand. His men
+distributed themselves through the castle and outbuildings, in order
+to prevent the flight of an imaginary enemy. The Warden and his
+family seemed to be saying good-bye to him with their eyes. Perhaps
+they were taking him to his death. . . .
+
+Beyond the castle woods a new world was coming into existence. The
+short cut to Villeblanche seemed to Desnoyers a leap of millions of
+leagues, a fall into a red planet where men and things were covered
+with the film of smoke and the glare of fire. He saw the village
+under a dark canopy spotted with sparks and glowing embers. The
+bell tower was burning like an enormous torch; the roof of the
+church was breaking into flames with a crashing fury. The glare of
+the holocaust seemed to shrivel and grow pale in the impassive light
+of the sun.
+
+Running across the fields with the haste of desperation were
+shrieking women and children. The animals had escaped from the
+stables, and driven forth by the flames were racing wildly across
+the country. The cow and the work horse were dragging their halters
+broken by their flight. Their flanks were smoking and smelt of
+burnt hair. The pigs, the sheep and the chickens were all tearing
+along mingled with the cats and the dogs. All the domestic animals
+were returning to a brute existence, fleeing from civilized man.
+Shots were heard and hellish ha-ha's. The soldiers outside of the
+village were making themselves merry in this hunt for fugitives.
+Their guns were aimed at beasts and were hitting people.
+
+Desnoyers saw men, many men, men everywhere. They were like gray
+ants, marching in endless files towards the South, coming out from
+the woods, filling the roads, crossing the fields. The green of
+vegetation was disappearing under their tread; the dust was rising
+in spirals behind the dull roll of the cannons and the measured trot
+of thousands of horses. On the roadside several battalions had
+halted, with their accompaniment of vehicles and draw horses. They
+were resting before renewing their march. He knew this army. He
+had seen it in Berlin on parade, and yet it seemed to have changed
+its former appearance. There now remained very little of the heavy
+and imposing glitter, of the mute and vainglorious haughtiness which
+had made his relatives-in-law weep with admiration. War, with its
+realism, had wiped out all that was theatrical about this formidable
+organization of death. The soldiers appeared dirty and tired, out.
+The respiration of fat and sweaty bodies, mixed with the strong
+smell of leather, floated over the regiments. All the men had
+hungry faces.
+
+For days and nights they had been following the heels of an enemy
+which was always just eluding their grasp. In this forced advance
+the provisions of the administration would often arrive so late at
+the cantonments that they could depend only on what they happened to
+have in their knapsacks. Desnoyers saw them lined up near the road
+devouring hunks of black bread and mouldy sausages. Some had
+scattered through the fields to dig up beet roots and other tubers,
+chewing with loud crunchings the hard pulp to which the grit still
+adhered. An ensign was shaking the fruit trees using as a catch-all
+the flag of his regiment. That glorious standard, adorned with
+souvenirs of 1870, was serving as a receptacle for green plums.
+Those who were seated on the ground were improving this rest by
+drawing their perspiring, swollen feet from high boots which were
+sending out an insufferable smell.
+
+The regiments of infantry which Desnoyers had seen in Berlin
+reflecting the light on metal and leather straps, the magnificent
+and terrifying Hussars, the Cuirassiers in pure white uniform like
+the paladins of the Holy Grail, the artillerymen with breasts
+crossed with white bands, all the military variations that on parade
+had drawn forth the Hartrotts' sighs of admiration--these were now
+all unified and mixed together, of uniform color, all in greenish
+mustard like the dusty lizards that, slipping along, try to be
+confounded with the earth.
+
+The persistency of the iron discipline was easily discernible. A
+word from the chiefs, the sound of a whistle, and they all grouped
+themselves together, the human being disappearing in the throngs of
+automatons; but danger, weariness, and the uncertainty of triumph
+had for the time being brought officers and men nearer together,
+obliterating caste distinction. The officers were coming part way
+out of their overbearing, haughty seclusion, and were condescending
+to talk with the lower orders so as to revive their courage. One
+effort more and they would overwhelm both French and English,
+repeating the triumph of Sedan, whose anniversary they were going to
+celebrate in a few days! They were going to enter Paris; it was
+only a matter of a week. Paris! Great shops filled with luxurious
+things, famous restaurants, women, champagne, money. . . . And the
+men, flattered that their commanders were stooping to chat with
+them, forgot fatigue and hunger, reviving like the throngs of the
+Crusade before the image of Jerusalem. "Nach Paris!" The joyous
+shout circulated from the head to the tail of the marching columns.
+"To Paris! To Paris!"
+
+The scarcity of their food supply was here supplemented by the
+products of a country rich in wines. When sacking houses they
+rarely found eatables, but invariably a wine cellar. The humble
+German, the perpetual beer drinker, who had always looked upon wine
+as a privilege of the rich, could now open up casks with blows from
+his weapons, even bathing his feet in the stream of precious liquid.
+Every battalion left as a souvenir of its passing a wake of empty
+bottles; a halt in camp sowed the land with glass cylinders. The
+regimental trucks, unable to renew their stores of provisions, were
+accustomed to seize the wine in all the towns. The soldier, lacking
+bread, would receive alcohol. . . .
+
+This donation was always accompanied by the good counsels of the
+officers--War is war; no pity toward our adversaries who do not
+deserve it. The French were shooting their prisoners, and their
+women were putting out the eyes of the wounded. Every dwelling was
+a den of traps. The simple-hearted and innocent German entering
+therein was going to certain death. The beds were made over
+subterranean caves, the wardrobes were make-believe doors, in every
+corner was lurking an assassin. This traitorous nation, which was
+arranging its ground like the scenario of a melodrama, would have to
+be chastised. The municipal officers, the priests, the
+schoolmasters were directing and protecting the sharpshooters.
+
+Desnoyers was shocked at the indifference with which these men were
+stalking around the burning village. They did not appear to see the
+fire and destruction; it was just an ordinary spectacle, not worth
+looking at. Ever since they had crossed the frontier, smoldering
+and blasted villages, fired by the advance guard, had marked their
+halting places on Belgian and French soil.
+
+When entering Villeblanche the automobile had to lower its speed.
+Burned walls were bulging out over the street and half-charred beams
+were obstructing the way, obliging the vehicle to zigzag through the
+smoking rubbish. The vacant lots were burning like fire pans
+between the houses still standing, with doors broken, but not yet in
+flames. Desnoyers saw within these rectangular spaces partly burned
+wood, chairs, beds, sewing machines, iron stoves, all the household
+goods of the well-to-do countryman, being consumed or twisted into
+shapeless masses. Sometimes he would spy an arm sticking out of the
+ruins, beginning to burn like a long wax candle. No, it could not
+be possible . . . and then the smell of cooking flesh began to
+mingle with that of the soot, wood and plaster.
+
+He closed his eyes, not able to look any longer. He thought for a
+moment he must be dreaming. It was unbelievable that such horrors
+could take place in less than an hour. Human wickedness at its
+worst he had supposed incapable of changing the aspect of a village
+in such a short time.
+
+An abrupt stoppage of the motor made him look around involuntarily.
+This time the obstruction was the dead bodies in the street--two men
+and a woman. They had probably fallen under the rain of bullets
+from the machine gun which had passed through the town preceding the
+invasion. Some soldiers were seated a little beyond them, with
+their backs to the victims, as though ignoring their presence. The
+chauffeur yelled to them to clear the track; with their guns and
+feet they pushed aside the bodies still warm, at every turn leaving
+a trail of blood. The space was hardly opened before the vehicle
+shot through . . . a thud, a leap--the back wheels had evidently
+crushed some very fragile obstacle.
+
+Desnoyers was still huddled in his seat, benumbed and with closed
+eyes. The horror around him made him think of his own fate.
+Whither was this lieutenant taking him? . . .
+
+He soon saw the town hall flaming in the square; the church was now
+nothing but a stone shell, bristling with flames. The houses of the
+prosperous villagers had had their doors and windows chopped out by
+axe-blows. Within them soldiers were moving about methodically.
+They entered empty-handed and came out loaded with furniture and
+clothing. Others, in the upper stories, were flinging out various
+objects; accompanying their trophies with jests and guffaws.
+Suddenly they had to come out flying, for fire was breaking out with
+the violence and rapidity of an explosion. Following their
+footsteps was a group of men with big boxes and metal cylinders.
+Someone at their head was pointing out the buildings into whose
+broken windows were to be thrown the lozenges and liquid streams
+which would produce catastrophe with lightning rapidity.
+
+Out of one of these flaming buildings two men, who seemed but
+bundles of rags, were being dragged by some Germans. Above the blue
+sleeves of their military cloaks Don Marcelo could distinguish
+blanched faces and eyes immeasurably distended with suffering.
+Their legs were dragging on the ground, sticking out between the
+tatters of their red pantaloons. One of them still had on his
+kepis. Blood was gushing from different parts of their bodies and
+behind them, like white serpents, were trailing their loosened
+bandages. They were wounded Frenchmen, stragglers who had remained
+in the village because too weak to keep up with the retreat.
+Perhaps they had joined the group which, finding its escape cut off,
+had attempted that insane resistance.
+
+Wishing to make that matter more clearly understood, Desnoyers
+looked at the official beside him, attempting to speak; but the
+officer silenced him instantly: "French sharpshooters in disguise
+who are going to get the punishment they deserve." The German
+bayonets were sunk deep into their bodies. Then blows with the guns
+fell on the head of one of them . . . and these blows were repeated
+with dull thumps upon their skulls, crackling as they burst open.
+
+Again the old man wondered what his fate would be. Where was this
+lieutenant taking him across such visions of horror? . . .
+
+They had reached the outskirts of the village, where the dragoons
+had built their barricade. The carts were still there, but at one
+side of the road. They climbed out of the automobile, and he saw a
+group of officers in gray, with sheathed helmets like the others.
+The one who had brought him to this place was standing rigidly erect
+with one hand to his visor, speaking to a military man standing a
+few paces in front of the others. He looked at this man, who was
+scrutinizing him with his little hard blue eyes that had carved his
+spare, furrowed countenance with lines. He must be the general.
+His arrogant and piercing gaze was sweeping him from head to foot.
+Don Marcelo felt a presentiment that his life was hanging on this
+examination; should an evil suggestion, a cruel caprice flash across
+this brain, he was surely lost. The general shrugged his shoulders
+and said a few words in a contemptuous tone, then entered his
+automobile with two of his aids, and the group disbanded.
+
+The cruel uncertainty, the interminable moments before the official
+returned to his side, filled Desnoyers with dread.
+
+"His Excellency is very gracious," announced the lieutenant. "He
+might have shot you, but he pardons you and yet you people say that
+we are savages!" . . .
+
+With involuntary contempt, he further explained that he had
+conducted him thither fully expecting that he would be shot. The
+General was planning to punish all the prominent residents of
+Villeblanche, and he had inferred, on his own initiative, that the
+owner of the castle must be one of them.
+
+"Military duty, sir. . . . War exacts it."
+
+After this excuse the petty official renewed his eulogies of His
+Excellency. He was going to make his headquarters in Don Marcelo's
+property, and on that account granted him his life. He ought to
+thank him. . . . Then again his face trembled with wrath. He
+pointed to some bodies lying near the road. They were the corpses
+of Uhlans, covered with some cloaks from which were protruding the
+enormous soles of their boots.
+
+"Plain murder!" he exclaimed. "A crime for which the guilty are
+going to pay dearly!"
+
+His indignation made him consider the death of four soldiers as an
+unheard-of and monstrous outrage--as though in was only the enemy
+ought to fall, keeping safe and sound the lives of his compatriots.
+
+A band of infantry commanded by an officer approached. As their
+ranks opened, Desnoyers saw the gray uniforms roughly pushing
+forward some of the inhabitants. Their clothes were torn and some
+had blood on face and hands. He recognized them one by one as they
+were lined up against the mud wall, at twenty paces from the firing
+squad of soldiers--the mayor, the priest, the forest guard, and some
+rich villagers whose houses he had seen falling in flames.
+
+"They are going to shoot them . . . in order to prevent any doubt
+about it," the lieutenant explained. "I wanted you to see this. It
+will serve as an object lesson. In this way, you will feel more
+appreciative of the leniency of His Excellency."
+
+The prisoners were mute. Their voices had been exhausted in vain
+protest. All their life was concentrated in their eyes, looking
+around them in stupefaction. . . . And was it possible that they
+would kill them in cold blood without hearing their testimony,
+without admitting the proofs of their innocence!
+
+The certainty of approaching death soon gave almost all of them a
+noble serenity. It was useless to complain. Only one rich
+countryman, famous for his avarice, was whimpering desperately,
+saying over and over, "I do not wish to die. . . . I do not want to
+die!"
+
+Trembling and with eyes overflowing with tears, Desnoyers hid
+himself behind his implacable guide. He knew them all, he had
+battled with them all, and repented now of his former wrangling.
+The mayor had a red stain on his forehead from a long skin wound.
+Upon his breast fluttered a tattered tricolor; the municipality had
+placed it there that be might receive the invaders who had torn most
+of it away. The priest was holding his little round body as erect
+as possible, wishing to embrace in a look of resignation the
+victims, the executioners, earth and heaven. He appeared larger
+than usual and more imposing. His black girdle. broken by the
+roughness of the soldiers, left his cassock loose and floating. His
+waving, silvery hair was dripping blood, spotting with its red drops
+the white clerical collar.
+
+Upon seeing him cross the fatal field with unsteady step, because of
+his obesity, a savage roar cut the tragic silence. The unarmed
+soldiers, who had hastened to witness the execution, greeted the
+venerable old man with shouts of laughter. "Death to the
+priest!" . . . The fanaticism of the religious wars vibrated
+through their mockery. Almost all of them were devout Catholics
+or fervent Protestants, but they believed only in the priests of
+their own country. Outside of Germany, everything was despicable--
+even their own religion.
+
+The mayor and the priest changed their places in the file, seeking
+one another. Each, with solemn courtesy, was offering the other the
+central place in the group.
+
+"Here, your Honor, is your place as mayor--at the head of all."
+
+"No, after you, Monsieur le cure."
+
+They were disputing for the last time, but in this supreme moment
+each one was wishing to yield precedence to the other.
+
+Instinctively they had clasped hands, looking straight ahead at the
+firing squad, that had lowered its guns in a rigid, horizontal line.
+Behind them sounded laments--"Good-bye, my children. . . . Adieu,
+life! . . . I do not wish to die! . . . I do not want to die! . . ."
+
+The two principal men felt the necessity of saying something, of
+closing the page of their existence with an affirmation.
+
+"Vive la Republique!" cried the mayor.
+
+"Vive la France!" said the priest.
+
+Desnoyers thought that both had said the same thing. Two uprights
+flashed up above their heads--the arm of the priest making the sign
+of the cross, and the sabre of the commander of the shooters,
+glistening at the same instant. . . . A dry, dull thunderclap,
+followed by some scattering, tardy shots.
+
+Don Marcelo's compassion for that forlorn cluster of massacred
+humanity was intensified on beholding the grotesque forms which many
+assumed in the moment of death. Some collapsed like half-emptied
+sacks; others rebounded from the ground like balls; some leaped like
+gymnasts, with upraised arms, falling on their backs, or face
+downward, like a swimmer. In that human heap, he saw limbs writhing
+in the agony of death. Some soldiers advanced like hunters bagging
+their prey. From the palpitating mass fluttered locks of white
+hair, and a feeble hand, trying to repeat the sacred sign. A few
+more shots and blows on the livid, mangled mass . . . and the last
+tremors of life were extinguished forever.
+
+The officer had lit a cigar.
+
+"Whenever you wish," he said to Desnoyers with ironical courtesy.
+
+They re-entered the automobile in order to return to the castle by
+the way of Villeblanche. The increasing number of fires and the
+dead bodies in the streets no longer impressed the old man. He had
+seen so much! What could now affect his sensibilities? . . . He
+was longing to get out of the village as soon as possible to try to
+find the peace of the country. But the country had disappeared
+under the invasion--soldier's, horses, cannons everywhere. Wherever
+they stopped to rest, they were destroying all that they came in
+contact with. The marching battalions, noisy and automatic as a
+machine were preceded by the fifes and drums, and every now and
+then, in order to cheer their drooping spirits, were breaking into
+their joyous cry, "Nach Paris!"
+
+The castle, too, had been disfigured by the invasion. The number of
+guards had greatly increased during the owner's absence. He saw an
+entire regiment of infantry encamped in the park. Thousands of men
+were moving about under the trees, preparing the dinner in the
+movable kitchens. The flower borders of the gardens, the exotic
+plants, the carefully swept and gravelled avenues were all broken
+and spoiled by this avalanche of men, beasts and vehicles.
+
+A chief wearing on his sleeve the band of the military
+administration was giving orders as though he were the proprietor.
+He did not even condescend to look at this civilian walking beside
+the lieutenant with the downcast look of a prisoner. The stables
+were vacant. Desnoyers saw his last animals being driven off with
+sticks by the helmeted shepherds. The costly progenitors of his
+herds were all beheaded in the park like mere slaughter-house
+animals. In the chicken houses and dovecotes, there was not a
+single bird left. The stables were filled with thin horses who were
+gorging themselves before overflowing mangers. The feed from the
+barns was being lavishly distributed through the avenue, much of it
+lost before it could be used. The cavalry horses of various
+divisions were turned loose in the meadows, destroying with their
+hoofs the canals, the edges of the slopes, the level of the ground,
+all the work of many months. The dry wood was uselessly burning in
+the park. Through carelessness or mischief, someone had set the
+wood piles on fire. The trees, with the bark dried by the summer
+heat, were crackling on being licked by the flame.
+
+The building was likewise occupied by a multitude of men under this
+same superintendent. The open windows showed a continual shifting
+through the rooms. Desnoyers heard great blows that re-echoed
+within his breast. Ay, his historic mansion! . . . The General was
+going to establish himself in it, after having examined on the banks
+of the Marne, the works of the pontoon builders, who had been
+constructing several military bridges for the troops. Don Marcelo's
+outraged sense of ownership forced him to speak. He feared that
+they would break the doors of the locked rooms--he would like to go
+for the keys in order to give them up to those in charge. The
+commissary would not listen to him but continued ignoring his
+existence. The lieutenant replied with cutting amiability:
+
+"It is not necessary; do not trouble yourself!"
+
+After this considerate remark, he started to rejoin his regiment but
+deemed it prudent before losing sight of Desnoyers to give him a
+little advice. He must remain quietly at the castle; outside, he
+might be taken for a spy, and he already knew how promptly the
+soldiers of the Emperor settled all such little matters.
+
+He could not remain in the garden looking at his dwelling from any
+distance, because the Germans who were going and coming were
+diverting themselves by playing practical jokes upon him. They
+would march toward him in a straight line, as though they did not
+see him, and he would have to hurry out of their way to avoid being
+thrown down by their mechanical and rigid advance.
+
+Finally he sought refuge in the lodge of the Keeper, whose good wife
+stared with astonishment at seeing him drop into a kitchen chair
+breathless and downcast, suddenly aged by losing the remarkable
+energy that had been the wonder of his advanced years.
+
+"Ah, Master. . . . Poor Master!"
+
+Of all the events attending the invasion, the most unbelievable for
+this poor woman was seeing her employer take refuge in her cottage.
+
+"What is ever going to become of us!" she groaned.
+
+Her husband was in constant demand by the invaders. His
+Excellency's assistants, installed in the basement apartments of the
+castle were incessantly calling him to tell them the whereabouts of
+things which they could not find. From every trip, he would return
+humiliated, his eyes filled with tears. On his forehead was the
+black and blue mark of a blow, and his jacket was badly torn. These
+were souvenirs of a futile attempt at opposition, during his
+master's absence, to the German plundering of stables and castle
+rooms.
+
+The millionaire felt himself linked by misfortune to these people,
+considered until then with indifference. He was very grateful for
+the loyalty of this sick and humble man, and the poor woman's
+interest in the castle as though it were her own, touched him
+greatly. The presence of their daughter brought Chichi to his mind.
+He had passed near her without noting the transformation in her,
+seeing her just the same as when, with her little dog trot, she had
+accompanied the Master's daughter on her rounds through the parks
+and grounds. Now she was a woman, slender and full grown, with the
+first feminine graces showing subtly in her fourteen-year-old
+figure. Her mother would not let her leave the lodge, fearing the
+soldiery which was invading every other spot with its overflowing
+current, filtering into all open places, breaking every obstacle
+which impeded their course.
+
+Desnoyers broke his despairing silence to admit that he was feeling
+hungry. He was ashamed of this bodily want, but the emotions of the
+day, the executions seen so near, the danger still threatening, had
+awakened in him a nervous appetite. The fact that he was so
+impotent in the midst of his riches and unable to avail himself of
+anything on his estate but aggravated his necessity.
+
+"Poor Master!" again exclaimed the faithful soul.
+
+And the woman looked with astonishment at the millionaire devouring
+a bit of bread and a triangle of cheese, the only food that she
+could find in her humble dwelling. The certainty that he would not
+be able to find any other nourishment, no matter how much he might
+seek it, greatly sharpened his cravings. To have acquired an
+enormous fortune only to perish with hunger at the end of his
+existence! . . . The good wife, as though guessing his thoughts,
+sighed, raising her eyes beseechingly to heaven. Since the early
+morning hours, the world had completely changed its course. Ay,
+this war! . . .
+
+The rest of the afternoon and a part of the night, the proprietor
+kept receiving news from the Keeper after his visits to the castle.
+The General and numerous officers were now occupying the rooms. Not
+a single door was locked, all having been opened with blows of the
+axe or gun. Many things had completely disappeared; the man did not
+know exactly how, but they had vanished--perhaps destroyed, or
+perhaps carried off by those who were coming and going. The chief
+with the banded sleeve was going from room to room examining
+everything, dictating in German to a soldier who was writing down
+his orders. Meanwhile the General and his staff were in the dining
+room drinking heavily, consulting the maps spread out on the floor,
+and ordering the Warden to go down into the vaults for the very best
+wines.
+
+By nightfall, an onward movement was noticeable in the human tide
+that had been overflowing the fields as far as the eye could reach.
+Some bridges had been constructed across the Marne and the invasion
+had renewed its march, shouting enthusiastically. "Nach Paris!"
+Those left behind till the following day were to live in the ruined
+houses or the open air. Desnoyers heard songs. Under the splendor
+of the evening stars, the soldiers had grouped themselves in musical
+knots, chanting a sweet and solemn chorus of religious gravity.
+Above the trees was floating a red cloud, intensified by the dusk--a
+reflection of the still burning village. Afar off were bonfires of
+farms and homesteads, twinkling in the night with their blood-
+colored lights.
+
+The bewildered proprietor of the castle finally fell asleep in a bed
+in the lodge, made mercifully unconscious by the heavy and
+stupefying slumber of exhaustion, without fright nor nightmare. He
+seemed to be falling, falling into a bottomless pit, and on awaking
+fancied that he had slept but a few minutes. The sun was turning
+the window shades to an orange hue, spattered with shadows of waving
+boughs and birds fluttering and twittering among the leaves. He
+shared their joy in the cool refreshing dawn of the summer day. It
+certainly was a fine morning--but whose dwelling was this? . . . He
+gazed dumbfounded at his bed and surroundings. Suddenly the reality
+assaulted his brain that had been so sweetly dulled by the first
+splendors of the day. Step by step, the host of emotions compressed
+into the preceding day, came climbing up the long stairway of his
+memory to the last black and red landing of the night before. And
+he had slept tranquilly surrounded by enemies, under the
+surveillance of an arbitrary power which might destroy him in one of
+its caprices!
+
+When he went into the kitchen, the Warden gave him some news. The
+Germans were departing. The regiment encamped in the park had left
+at daybreak, and after them others, and still others. In the
+village there was still one regiment occupying the few houses yet
+standing and the ruins of the charred ones. The General had gone
+also with his numerous staff. There was nobody in the castle now
+but the head of a Reserve brigade whom his aide called "The Count,"
+and a few officials.
+
+Upon receiving this information, the proprietor ventured to leave
+the lodge. He saw his gardens destroyed, but still beautiful. The
+trees were still stately in spite of the damage done to their
+trunks. The birds were flying about excitedly, rejoicing to find
+themselves again in possession of the spaces so recently flooded by
+the human inundation.
+
+Suddenly Desnoyers regretted having sallied forth. Five huge trucks
+were lined up near the moat before the castle bridge. Gangs of
+soldiers were coming out carrying on their shoulders enormous pieces
+of furniture, like peons conducting a moving. A bulky object
+wrapped in damask curtains--an excellent substitute for sacking--was
+being pushed by four men toward one of the drays. The owner
+suspected immediately what it must be. His bath! The famous tub of
+gold! . . . Then with an abrupt revulsion of feeling, he felt no
+grief at his loss. He now detested the ostentatious thing,
+attributing to it a fatal influence. On account of it he was here.
+But, ay! . . . the other furnishings piled up in the drays! . . .
+In that moment he suffered the extreme agony of misery and
+impotence. It was impossible for him to defend his property, to
+dispute with the head thief who was sacking his castle, tranquilly
+ignoring the very existence of the owner. "Robbers! thieves!" and
+he fled back to the lodge.
+
+He passed the remainder of the morning with his elbow on the table,
+his head in his hands, the same as the day before, letting the hours
+grind slowly by, trying not to hear the rolling of the vehicles that
+were bearing away these credentials of his wealth.
+
+Toward midday, the Keeper announced that an officer who had arrived
+a few hours before in an automobile was inquiring for him.
+
+Responding to this summons, Desnoyers encountered outside the lodge,
+a captain arrayed like the others in sheathed and pointed helmet, in
+mustard-colored uniform, red leather boots, sword, revolver, field-
+glasses and geographic map hanging in a case from his belt. He
+appeared young; on his sleeve was the staff emblem.
+
+"Do you know me? . . . I did not wish to pass through here without
+seeing you."
+
+He spoke in Castilian, and Don Marcelo felt greater surprise at this
+than at the many things which he had been experiencing so painfully
+during the last twenty-four hours.
+
+"You really do not know me?" queried the German, always in Spanish.
+"I am Otto. . . . Captain Otto von Hartrott."
+
+The old man's mind went painfully down the staircase of memory,
+stopping this time at a far-distant landing. There he saw the old
+ranch, and his brother-in-law announcing the birth of his second
+son. "I shall give him Bismarck's name," Karl had said. Then,
+climbing back past many other platforms, Desnoyers saw himself in
+Berlin during his visit to the von Hartrott home where they were
+speaking proudly of Otto, almost as learned as the older brother,
+but devoting his talents entirely to martial matters. He was then a
+lieutenant and studying for admission to the General Staff. "Who
+knows but he may turn out to be another Moltke?" said the proud
+father . . . and the charming Chichi had thereupon promptly bestowed
+upon the warlike wonder a nickname, accepted through the family.
+From that time, Otto was Moltkecito (the baby Moltke) to his
+Parisian relatives.
+
+Desnoyers was astounded by the transformation which had meanwhile
+taken place in the youth. This vigorous captain with the insolent
+air who might shoot him at any minute was the same urchin whom he
+had seen running around the ranch, the beardless Moltkecito who had
+been the butt of his daughter's ridicule. . . .
+
+The soldier, meanwhile, was explaining his presence there. He
+belonged to another division. There were many . . . many! They
+were advancing rapidly, forming an extensive and solid wall from
+Verdun to Paris. His general had sent him to maintain the contact
+with the next division, but finding himself near the castle, he had
+wished to visit it. A family tie was not a mere word. He still
+remembered the days that he had spent at Villeblanche when the
+Hartrott family had paid a long visit to their relatives in France.
+The officials now occupying the edifice had detained him that he
+might lunch with them. One of them had casually mentioned that the
+owner of the castle was somewhere about although nobody knew exactly
+where. This had been a great surprise to Captain von Hartrott who
+had tried to find him, regretting to see him taking refuge in the
+Warden's quarters.
+
+"You must leave this hut; you are my uncle," he said haughtily.
+"Return to your castle where you belong. My comrades will be much
+pleased to make your acquaintance; they are very distinguished men."
+
+He very much regretted whatever the old gentleman might have
+suffered. . . He did not know exactly in what that suffering had
+consisted, but surmised that the first moments of the invasion had
+been cruel ones for him.
+
+"But what else can you expect?" he repeated several times. "That is
+war."
+
+At the same time he approved of his having remained on his property.
+They had special orders to seize the goods of the fugitives.
+Germany wished the inhabitants to remain in their dwellings as
+though nothing extraordinary had occurred. . . . Desnoyers
+protested. . . . "But if the invaders were shooting the innocent
+ones and burning their homes!" . . . His nephew prevented his
+saying more. He turned pale, an ashy hue spreading over his face;
+his eyes snapped and his face trembled like that of the lieutenant
+who had taken possession of the castle.
+
+"You refer to the execution of the mayor and the others. My
+comrades have just been telling me about it; yet that castigation
+was very mild; they should have completely destroyed the entire
+village. They should have killed even the women and children.
+We've got to put an end to these sharpshooters."
+
+His uncle looked at him in amazement. His Moltkecito was as
+formidable and ferocious as the others. . . . But the captain
+brought the conversation to an abrupt close by repeating the
+monstrous and everlasting excuse.
+
+"Very horrible, but what else can you expect! . . . That is war."
+
+He then inquired after his mother, rejoicing to learn that she was
+in the South. He had been uneasy at the idea of her remaining in
+Paris . . . especially with all those revolutions which had been
+breaking out there lately! . . . Desnoyers looked doubtful as if he
+could not have heard correctly. What revolutions were those? . . .
+But the officer, without further explanation, resumed his
+conversation about his family, taking it for granted that his
+relative would be impatient to learn the fate of his German kin.
+
+They were all in magnificent state. Their illustrious father was
+president of various patriotic societies (since his years no longer
+permitted him to go to war) and was besides organizing future
+industrial enterprises to improve the conquered countries. His
+brother, "the Sage," was giving lectures about the nations that the
+imperial victory was bound to annex, censuring severely those whose
+ambitions were unpretending or weak. The remaining brothers were
+distinguishing themselves in the army, one of them having been
+presented with a medal at Lorraine. The two sisters, although
+somewhat depressed by the absence of their fiances, lieutenants of
+the Hussars, were employing their time in visiting the hospitals and
+begging God to chastise traitorous England.
+
+Captain von Hartrott was slowly conducting his uncle toward the
+castle. The gray and unbending soldiers who, until then, had been
+ignoring the existence of Don Marcelo, looked at him with interest,
+now that he was in intimate conversation with a member of the
+General Staff. He perceived that these men were about to humanize
+themselves by casting aside temporarily their inexorable and
+aggressive automatonism.
+
+Upon entering his mansion something in his heart contracted with an
+agonizing shudder. Everywhere he could see dreadful vacancies,
+which made him recall the objects which had formerly been there.
+Rectangular spots of stronger color announced the theft of furniture
+and paintings. With what despatch and system the gentleman of the
+armlet had been doing his work! . . . To the sadness that the cold
+and orderly spoliation caused was added his indignation as an
+economical man, gazing upon the slashed curtains, spotted rugs,
+broken crystal and porcelain--all the debris from a ruthless and
+unscrupulous occupation.
+
+His nephew, divining his thoughts, could only offer the same old
+excuse--"What a mess! . . . But that is war!"
+
+With Moltkecito, he did not have to subside into the respectful
+civilities of fear.
+
+"That is NOT war!" he thundered bitterly. "It is an expedition of
+bandits. . . . Your comrades are nothing less than highwaymen."
+
+Captain von Hartrott swelled up with a jerk. Separating himself
+from the complainant and looking fixedly at him, he spoke in a low
+voice, hissing with wrath. "Look here, uncle! It is a lucky thing
+for you that you have expressed yourself in Spanish, and those
+around you could not understand you. If you persist in such
+comments you will probably receive a bullet by way of an answer.
+The Emperor's officials permit no insults." And his threatening
+attitude demonstrated the facility with which he could forget his
+relationship if he should receive orders to proceed against Don
+Marcelo.
+
+Thus silenced, the vanquished proprietor hung his head. What was he
+going to do? . . . The Captain now renewed his affability as though
+he had forgotten what he had just said. He wished to present him to
+his companions-at-arms. His Excellency, Count Meinbourg, the Major
+General, upon learning that he was a relative of the von Hartrotts,
+had done him the honor of inviting him to his table.
+
+Invited into his own demesne, he finally reached the dining room,
+filled with men in mustard color and high boots. Instinctively, he
+made an inventory of the room. All in good order, nothing broken--
+walls, draperies and furniture still intact; but an appraising
+glance within the sideboard again caused a clutch at his heart. Two
+entire table services of silver, and another of old porcelain had
+disappeared without leaving the most insignificant of their pieces.
+He was obliged to respond gravely to the presentations which his
+nephew was making, and take the hand which the Count was extending
+with aristocratic languor. The adversary began considering him with
+benevolence, on learning that he was a millionaire from a distant
+land where riches were acquired very rapidly.
+
+Soon he was seated as a stranger at his own table, eating from the
+same dishes that his family were accustomed to use, served by men
+with shaved heads, wearing coarse, striped aprons over their
+uniforms. That which he was eating was his, the wine was from his
+vaults; all that adorned the room he had bought: the trees whose
+boughs were waving outside the window also belonged to him. . . .
+And yet he felt as though he were in this place for the first time,
+with all the discomfort and diffidence of a total stranger. He ate
+because he was hungry, but the food and wines seemed to have come
+from another planet.
+
+He continued looking with consternation at those occupying the
+places of his wife, children and the Lacours. . . .
+
+They were speaking in German among themselves, but those having a
+limited knowledge of French frequently availed themselves of that
+language in order that their guest might understand them. Those who
+could only mumble a few words, repeated them to an accompaniment of
+amiable smiles. All were displaying an amicable desire to
+propitiate the owner of the castle.
+
+"You are going to lunch with the barbarians," said the Count,
+offering him a seat at his side. "Aren't you afraid that we may eat
+you alive?"
+
+The Germans burst into roars of laughter at the wit of His
+Excellency. They all took great pains to demonstrate by word and
+manner that barbarity was wrongly attributed to them by their
+enemies.
+
+Don Marcelo looked from one to another. The fatigues of war,
+especially the forced march of the last days, were very apparent in
+their persons. Some were tall and slender with an angular slimness;
+others were stocky and corpulent with short neck and head sunk
+between the shoulders. These had lost much of their fat in a
+month's campaign, the wrinkled and flabby skin hanging in folds in
+various parts of their bodies. All had shaved heads, the same as
+the soldiers. Around the table shone two rows of cranial spheres,
+reddish or dark. Their ears stood out grotesquely, and their jaw
+bones were in strong relief owing to their thinness. Some had
+preserved the upright moustache in the style of the Emperor; the
+most of them were shaved or had a stubby tuft like a brush.
+
+A golden bracelet glistened on the wrist of the Count, stretched on
+the table. He was the oldest of them all and the only one that kept
+his hair, of a frosty red, carefully combed and glistening with
+pomade. Although about fifty years old, he still maintained a
+youthful vigor cultivated by exercise. Wrinkled, bony and strong,
+he tried to dissimulate his uncouthness as a man of battle under a
+suave and indolent laziness. The officers treated him with the
+greatest respect. Hartrott told his uncle that the Count was a
+great artist, musician and poet. The Emperor was his friend; they
+had known each other from boyhood. Before the war, certain scandals
+concerning his private life had exiled him from Court--mere lampoons
+of the socialists and scandal-mongers. The Kaiser had always kept a
+secret affection for his former chum. Everybody remembered his
+dance, "The Caprices of Scheherazade," represented with the greatest
+luxury in Berlin through the endorsement of his powerful friend,
+William II. The Count had lived many years in the Orient. In fact,
+he was a great gentleman and an artist of exquisite sensibility as
+well as a soldier.
+
+Since Desnoyers was now his guest, the Count could not permit him to
+remain silent, so he made an opportunity of bringing him into the
+conversation.
+
+"Did you see any of the insurrections? . . . Did the troops have to
+kill many people? How about the assassination of Poincare? . . .
+
+He asked these questions in quick succession and Don Marcelo,
+bewildered by their absurdity, did not know how to reply. He
+believed that he must have fallen in with a feast of fools. Then he
+suspected that they were making fun of him. Uprisings?
+Assassinations of the President? . . .
+
+Some gazed at him with pity because of his ignorance, others with
+suspicion, believing that he was merely pretending not to know of
+these events which had happened so near him.
+
+His nephew insisted. "The daily papers in Germany have been full of
+accounts of these matters. Fifteen days ago, the people of Paris
+revolted against the Government, bombarding the Palais de l'Elysee,
+and assassinating the President. The army had to resort to the
+machine guns before order could be restored. . . . Everybody knows
+that."
+
+But Desnoyers insisted that he did not know it, that nobody had seen
+such things. And as his words were received in an atmosphere of
+malicious doubt, he preferred to be silent. His Excellency,
+superior spirit, incapable of being associated with the popular
+credulity, here intervened to set matters straight. The report of
+the assassination was, perhaps, not certain; the German periodicals
+might have unconsciously exaggerated it. Just a few hours ago, the
+General of the Staff had told him of the flight of the French
+Government to Bordeaux, and the statement about the revolution in
+Paris and the firing of the French troops was indisputable. "The
+gentleman has seen it all without doubt, but does not wish to admit
+it." Desnoyers felt obliged to contradict this lordling, but his
+negative was not even listened to.
+
+Paris! This name made all eyes glisten and everybody talkative. As
+soon as possible they wished to reach the Eiffel Tower, to enter
+victorious into the city, to receive their recompense for the
+privations and fatigues of a month's campaign. They were devotees
+of military glory, they considered war necessary to existence, and
+yet they were bewailing the hardship that it was imposing upon them.
+The Count exhaled the plaint of the craftsmaster.
+
+"Oh, the havoc that this war has brought in my plans!" he sighed.
+"This winter they were going to bring out my dance in Paris!"
+
+They all protested at his sadness; his work would surely be
+presented after the triumph, and the French would have to recognize
+it.
+
+"It will not be the same thing," complained the Count. "I confess
+that I adore Paris. . . . What a pity that these people have never
+wished to be on familiar terms with us!" . . . And he relapsed into
+the silence of the unappreciated man.
+
+Desnoyers suddenly recognized in one of the officers who was
+talking, with eyes bulging with covetousness, of the riches of
+Paris, the Chief Thief with the band on his arm. He it was who so
+methodically had sacked the castle. As though divining the old
+Frenchman's thought, the commissary began excusing himself.
+
+"It is war, monsieur. . . ."
+
+The same as the others! . . . War had to be paid with the treasures
+of the conquered. That was the new German system; the healthy
+return to the wars of ancient days; tributes imposed on the cities,
+and each house sacked separately. In this way, the enemy's
+resistance would be more effectually overcome and the war soon
+brought to a close. He ought not to be downcast over the
+appropriations, for his furnishings and ornaments would all be sold
+in Germany. After the French defeat, he could place a remonstrance
+claim with his government, petitioning it to indemnify his loss; his
+relatives in Berlin would support his demand.
+
+Desnoyers listened in consternation to his counsels. What kind of
+mentality had these men, anyway? Were they insane, or were they
+trying to have some fun at his expense? . . .
+
+When the lunch was at last ended, the officers arose and adjusted
+their swords for service. Captain von Hartrott rose, too; it was
+necessary for him to return to his general; he had already dedicated
+too much time to family expansion. His uncle accompanied him to the
+automobile where Moltkecito once more justified the ruin and plunder
+of the castle.
+
+"It is war. . . . We have to be very ruthless that it may not last
+long. True kindness consists in being cruel, because then the
+terror-stricken enemy gives in sooner, and so the world suffers
+less."
+
+Don Marcelo shrugged his shoulders before this sophistry. In the
+doorway, the captain gave some orders to a soldier who soon returned
+with a bit of chalk which had been used to number the lodging
+places. Von Hartrott wished to protect his uncle and began tracing
+on the wall near the door:--"Bitte, nicht plundern. Es sind
+freundliche Leute."
+
+In response to the old man's repeated questions, he then translated
+the inscription. "It means, 'Please do not sack this house. Its
+occupants are kind people . . . friendly people.'"
+
+Ah, no! . . . Desnoyers repelled this protection vehemently. He
+did not wish to be kind. He was silent because he could not be
+anything else. . . . But a friend of the invaders of his
+country! . . . No, NO, NO!
+
+His nephew rubbed out part of the lettering, leaving the first
+words, "Bitte, nicht plundern." Then he repeated the scrawled
+request at the entrance of the park. He thought this notice
+advisable because His Excellency might go away and other officials
+might be installed in the castle. Von Hartrott had seen much and
+his smile seemed to imply that nothing could surprise him, no matter
+how outrageous it might be. But his relative continued scorning his
+protection, and laughing bitterly at the impromptu signboard. What
+more could they carry off? . . . Had they not already stolen the
+best?
+
+"Good-bye, uncle! Soon we shall meet in Paris."
+
+And the captain climbed into his automobile, extending a soft, cold
+hand that seemed to repel the old man with its flabbiness.
+
+Upon returning to his castle, he saw a table and some chairs in the
+shadow of a group of trees. His Excellency was taking his coffee in
+the open air, and obliged him to take a seat beside him. Only three
+officers were keeping him company. . . . There was here a grand
+consumption of liquors from his wine cellars. They were talking
+together in German, and for an hour Don Marcelo remained there,
+anxious to go but never finding the opportune moment to leave his
+seat and disappear.
+
+He employed his time in imagining the great stir among the troops
+hidden by the trees. Another division of the army was passing by
+with the incessant, deafening roar of the sea. An inexplicable
+phenomenon kept the luminous calm of the afternoon in a continuous
+state of vibration. A constant thundering sounded afar off as
+though an invisible storm were always approaching from beyond the
+blue horizon line.
+
+The Count, noticing his evident interest in the noise, interrupted
+his German chat to explain.
+
+"It is the cannon. A battle is going on. Soon we shall join in the
+dance."
+
+The possibility of having to give up his quarters here, the most
+comfortable that he had found in all the campaign, put His
+Excellency in a bad humor.
+
+"War," he sighed, "a glorious life, but dirty and deadening! In an
+entire month--to-day is the first that I have lived as a gentleman."
+
+And as though attracted by the luxuries that he might shortly have
+to abandon, he rose and went toward the castle. Two of the Germans
+betook themselves toward the village, and Desnoyers remained with
+the other officer who was delightfully sampling his liquors. He was
+the chief of the battalion encamped in the village.
+
+"This is a sad war, Monsieur!" he said in French.
+
+Of all the inimical group, this man was the only one for whom Don
+Marcelo felt a vague attraction. "Although a German, he appears a
+good sort," meditated the old man, eyeing him carefully. In times
+of peace, he must have been stout, but now he showed the loose and
+flaccid exterior of one who has just lost much in weight. Desnoyers
+surmised that the man had formerly lived in tranquil and vulgar
+sensuousness, in a middle-class happiness suddenly cut short by war.
+
+"What a life, Monsieur!" the officer rambled on. "May God punish
+well those who have provoked this catastrophe!"
+
+The Frenchman was almost affected. This man represented the Germany
+that he had many times imagined, a sweet and tranquil Germany
+composed of burghers, a little heavy and slow perhaps, but atoning
+for their natural uncouthness by an innocent and poetic
+sentimentalism. This Blumhardt whom his companions called
+Bataillon-Kommandeur, was undoubtedly the good father of a large
+family. He fancied him walking with his wife and children under the
+lindens of a provincial square, all listening with religious unction
+to the melodies played by a military band. Then he saw him in the
+beer gardens with his friends, discussing metaphysical problems
+between business conversations. He was a man from old Germany, a
+character from a romance by Goethe. Perhaps the glory of the Empire
+had modified his existence, and instead of going to the beer
+gardens, he was now accustomed to frequent the officers' casino,
+while his family maintained a separate existence--separated from the
+civilians by the superciliousness of military caste; but at heart,
+he was always the good German, ready to weep copiously before an
+affecting family scene or a fragment of good music.
+
+Commandant Blumhardt, meanwhile, was thinking of his family living
+in Cassel.
+
+"There are eight children, Monsieur," he said with a visible effort
+to control emotion. "The two eldest are preparing to become
+officers. The youngest is starting school this year. . . . He is
+just so high."
+
+And with his right hand he measured off the child's diminutive
+stature. He trembled with laughter and grief at recalling the
+little chap. Then he broke forth into eulogies about his wife--
+excellent manager of the home, a mother who was always modestly
+sacrificing herself for her children and husband. Ay, the sweet
+Augusta! . . . After twenty years of married life, he adored her as
+on the day he first saw her. In a pocket of his uniform, he was
+keeping all the letters that she had written him since the beginning
+of the campaign.
+
+"Look at her, Monsieur. . . . There are my children."
+
+From his breast pocket, he had drawn forth a silver medallion,
+adorned with the art of Munich, and touching a spring, he displayed
+the pictures of all the family--the Frau Kommandeur, of an austere
+and frigid beauty, imitating the air and coiffure of the Empress;
+the Frauleine Kommandeur, clad in white, with uplifted eyes as
+though they were singing a musical romance; and at the end, the
+children in the uniforms of the army schools or private
+institutions. And to think that he might lose these beloved beings
+if a bit of iron should hit him! . . . And he had to live far from
+them now that it was such fine weather for long walks in the
+country! . . .
+
+"Sad war!" he again said. "May God punish the English!"
+
+With a solicitude that Don Marcelo greatly appreciated, he in turn
+inquired about the Frenchman's family. He pitied him for having so
+few children, and smiled a little over the enthusiasm with which the
+old gentleman spoke of his daughter, saluting Fraulein Chichi as a
+witty sprite, and expressing great sympathy on learning that the
+only son was causing his parents great sorrow by his conduct.
+
+Tender-hearted Commandant! . . . He was the first rational and
+human being that he had met in this hell of an invasion. "There are
+good people everywhere," he told himself. He hoped that this new
+acquaintance would not be moved from the castle; for if the Germans
+had to stay there, it would better be this man than the others.
+
+An orderly came to summon Don Marcelo to the presence of His
+Excellency. After passing through the salons with closed eyes so as
+to avoid useless distress and wrath, he found the Count in his own
+bedroom. The doors had been forced open, the floors stripped of
+carpet and the window frames of curtains. Only the pieces of
+furniture broken in the first moments now occupied their former
+places. The sleeping rooms had been stripped more methodically,
+everything having been taken that was not required for immediate
+use. Because the General with his suite had been lodging there the
+night before, this apartment had escaped the arbitrary destruction.
+
+The Count received him with the civility of a grandee who wishes to
+be attentive to his guests. He could not consent that HERR
+Desnoyers--a relative of a von Hartrott--whom he vaguely remembered
+having seen at Court, should be staying in the Keeper's lodge. He
+must return to his own room, occupying that bed, solemn as a
+catafalque with columns and plumes, which had had the honor, a few
+hours before, of serving as the resting-place of an illustrious
+General of the Empire.
+
+"I myself prefer to sleep here," he added condescendingly. "This
+other habitation accords better with my tastes."
+
+While saying this, he was entering Dona Luisa's rooms, admiring its
+Louis Quinze furniture of genuine value, with its dull golds and
+tapestries mellowed by time. It was one of the most successful
+purchases that Don Marcelo had made. The Count smiled with an
+artist's scorn as he recalled the man who had superintended the
+official sacking.
+
+"What an ass! . . . To think that he left this behind, supposing
+that it was old and ugly!"
+
+Then he looked the owner of the castle squarely in the face.
+
+"Monsieur Desnoyers, I do not believe that I am committing any
+indiscretion, and even imagine that I am interpreting your desires
+when I inform you that I intend taking this set of furniture with
+me. It will serve as a souvenir of our acquaintance, a testimony to
+the friendship springing up between us. . . . If it remains here,
+it will run the risk of being destroyed. Warriors, of course, are
+not obliged to be artists. I will guard these excellent treasures
+in Germany where you may see them whenever you wish. We are all
+going to be one nation, you know. . . . My friend, the Emperor, is
+soon to be proclaimed sovereign of the French."
+
+Desnoyers remained silent. How could he reply to that look of cruel
+irony, to the grimace with which the noble lord was underscoring his
+words? . . .
+
+"When the war is ended, I will send you a gift from Berlin," he
+added in a patronizing tone.
+
+The old collector could say nothing to that, either. He was looking
+at the vacant spots which many small pictures had left on the walls,
+paintings by famous masters of the XVIII century. The banded
+brigand must also have passed these by as too insignificant to carry
+off, but the smirk illuminating the Count's face revealed their
+ultimate destination.
+
+He had carefully scrutinized the entire apartment--the adjoining
+bedroom, Chichi's, the bathroom, even the feminine robe-room of the
+family, which still contained some of the daughter's gowns. The
+warrior fondled with delight the fine silky folds of the materials,
+gloating over their cool softness.
+
+This contact made him think of Paris, of the fashions, of the
+establishments of the great modistes. The rue de la Paix was the
+spot which he most admired in his visits to the enemy's city.
+
+Don Marcelo noticed the strong mixture of perfumes which came from
+his hair, his moustache, his entire body. Various little jars from
+the dressing table were on the mantel.
+
+"What a filthy thing war is!" exclaimed the German. "This morning I
+was at last able to take a bath after a week's abstinence; at noon I
+shall take another. By the way, my dear sir, these perfumes are
+good, but they are not elegant. When I have the pleasure of being
+presented to the ladies, I shall give them the addresses of my
+source of supply. . . . I use in my home essences from Turkey. I
+have many friends there. . . . At the close of the war, I will send
+a consignment to the family."
+
+While speaking the Count's eyes had been fixed upon some photographs
+upon the table. Examining the portrait of Madame Desnoyers, he
+guessed that she must be Dona Luisa. He smiled before the
+bewitchingly mischievous face of Mademoiselle Chichi. Very
+enchanting; he specially admired her militant, boyish expression;
+but he scrutinized the photograph of Julio with special interest.
+
+"Splendid type of youth," he murmured. "An interesting head, and
+artistic, too. He would create a great sensation in a fancy-dress
+ball. What a Persian prince he would make! . . . A white aigrette
+on his head, fastened with a great jewel, the breast bared, a black
+tunic with golden birds. . . ."
+
+And he continued seeing in his mind's eye the heir of the Desnoyers
+arrayed in all the gorgeous raiment of an Oriental monarch. The
+proud father, because of the interest which his son was inspiring,
+began to feel a glimmer of sympathy with the man. A pity that he
+should select so unerringly and appropriate the choicest things in
+the castle!
+
+Near the head of the bed, Don Marcelo saw lying upon a book of
+devotions forgotten by his wife, a medallion containing another
+photograph. It did not belong to his family, and the Count,
+following the direction of his eyes, wished to show it to him. The
+hands of this son of Mars trembled. . . . His disdainful
+haughtiness had suddenly disappeared. An official of the Hussars of
+Death was smiling from the case; his sharp profile with a beak
+curved like a bird of prey, was surmounted by a cap adorned with
+skull and cross-bones.
+
+"My best friend," said the Count in tremulous tones. "The being
+that I love most in all the world. . . . And to think that at this
+moment he may be fighting, and they may kill him! . . . To think
+that I, too, may die!"
+
+Desnoyers believed that he must be getting a glimpse into a romance
+of the nobleman's past. That Hussar was undoubtedly his natural
+son. His simplicity of mind could not conceive of anything else.
+Only a father's tenderness could so express itself . . . and he was
+almost touched by this tenderness.
+
+Here the interview came to an end, the warrior turning his back as
+he left the room in order to hide his emotion. A few minutes after
+was heard on the floor below the sound of a grand piano which the
+Commissary had not been able to carry off, owing to the general's
+interposition. His voice was soon heard above the chords that he
+was playing. It was rather a lifeless baritone, but he managed to
+impart an impassioned tremolo to his romance. The listening old man
+was now really affected; he did not understand the words, but the
+tears came into his eyes. He thought of his family, of the sorrows
+and dangers about them and of the difficulties surrounding his
+return to them. . . . As though under the spell of the melody,
+little by little, he descended the stairs. What an artist's soul
+that haughty scoffer had! . . . At first sight, the Germans with
+their rough exterior and their discipline which made them commit the
+greatest atrocities, gave one a wrong impression. One had to live
+intimately with them to appreciate their true worth.
+
+By the time the music had ceased, he had reached the castle bridge.
+A sub-officer was watching the graceful movements of the swans
+gliding double over the waters of the moat. He was a young Doctor
+of Laws who just now was serving as secretary to His Excellency--a
+university man mobilized by the war.
+
+On speaking with Don Marcelo, he immediately revealed his academic
+training. The order for departure had surprised the professor in a
+private institute; he was just about to be married and all his plans
+had been upset.
+
+"What a calamity, sir! . . . What an overturning for the world! . . .
+Yet many of us have foreseen that this catastrophe simply had to
+come. We have felt strongly that it might break out any day.
+Capital, accursed Capital is to blame."
+
+The speaker was a Socialist. He did not hesitate to admit his co-
+operation in certain acts of his party that had brought persecutions
+and set-backs to his career. But the Social-Democracy was now being
+accepted by the Emperor and flattered by the most reactionary
+Junkers. All were now one. The deputies of his party were forming
+in the Reichstag the group most obedient to the government. . . .
+The only belief that it retained from its former creed, was its
+anathematization of Capital--responsible for the war.
+
+Desnoyers ventured to disagree with this enemy who appeared of an
+amiable and tolerant character. "Did he not think that the real
+responsibility rested with German militarism? Had it not sought and
+prepared this conflict, by its arrogance preventing any settlement?"
+
+The Socialist denied this roundly. His deputies were supporting the
+war and, therefore, must have good reason. Everything that he said
+showed an absolute submission to discipline--the eternal German
+discipline, blind and obedient, which was dominating even the most
+advanced parties. In vain the Frenchman repeated arguments and
+facts which everybody had read from the beginning of the war. His
+words simply slid over the calloused brains of this revolutionist,
+accustomed to delegating all his reasoning functions to others.
+
+"Who can tell?" he finally said. "Perhaps we have made a mistake.
+But just at this moment all is confused; the premises which would
+enable us to draw exact conclusions are lacking. When the conflict
+ends, we shall know the truly guilty parties, and if they are ours
+we shall throw the responsibility upon them."
+
+Desnoyers could hardly keep from laughing at his simplicity. To
+wait till the end of the war to know who was to blame! . . . And if
+the Empire should come out conqueror, what responsibility could the
+Socialists exact in the full pride of victory, they who always
+confined themselves to electoral battles, without the slightest
+attempt at rebellion?
+
+"Whatever the cause may be," concluded the Socialist, "this war is
+very sad. How many dead! . . . I was at Charleroi. One has to see
+modern warfare close by. . . . We shall conquer; we are going to
+enter Paris, so they say, but many of our men must fall before
+obtaining the final victory."
+
+And as though wishing to put these visions of death out of his mind,
+he resumed his diversion of watching the swans, offering them bits
+of bread so as to make them swing around in their slow and majestic
+course.
+
+The Keeper and his family were continually crossing and recrossing
+the bridge. Seeing their master on such friendly terms with the
+invaders, they had lost some of the fear which had kept them shut up
+in their cottage. To the woman it seemed but natural that Don
+Marcelo's authority should be recognized by these people; the master
+is always the master. And as though she had received a part of this
+authority, she was entering the castle fearlessly, followed by her
+daughter, in order to put in order her master's sleeping room. They
+had decided to pass the night in rooms near his, that he might not
+feel so lonely among the Germans.
+
+The two women were carrying bedding and mattresses from the lodge to
+the top floor. The Keeper was occupied in heating a second bath for
+His Excellency while his wife was bemoaning with gestures of despair
+the sacking of the castle. How many exquisite things had
+disappeared! . . . Desirous of saving the remainder, she besought
+her master to make complaints, as though he could prevent the
+individual and stealthy robberies. The orderlies and followers of
+the Count were pocketing everything they could lay their hands on,
+saying smilingly that they were souvenirs. Later on the woman
+approached Desnoyers with a mysterious air to impart a new
+revelation. She had seen a head officer force open the chiffoniers
+where her mistress was accustomed to keep her lingerie, and he was
+making up a package of the finest pieces, including a great quantity
+of blonde lace.
+
+"That's the one, Master," she said soon after, pointing to a German
+who was writing in the garden, where an oblique ray of sunlight was
+filtering through the branches upon his table.
+
+Don Marcelo recognized him with surprise. Commandant Blumhardt,
+too! . . . But immediately he excused the act. He supposed it was
+only natural that this official should want to take something away
+from the castle, since the Count had set the example. Besides, he
+took into account the quality of the objects which he was
+appropriating. They were not for himself; they were for the wife,
+for the daughters. . . . A good father of his family! For more
+than an hour now, he had been sitting before that table writing
+incessantly, conversing, pen in hand, with his Augusta and all the
+family in Cassel. Better that this good man should carry off his
+stuff than those other domineering officers with cutting voices and
+insolent stiffness.
+
+Desnoyers noticed, too, that the writer raised his head every time
+that Georgette, the Warden's daughter, passed by, following her with
+his eyes. The poor father! . . . Undoubtedly he was comparing her
+with his two girls home in Germany, with all their thoughts on the
+war. He, too, was thinking of Chichi, fearing sometimes, that he
+might never see her again. In one of her trips from the castle to
+her home, Blumhardt called the child to him. She stopped before the
+table, timid and shrinking as though she felt a presentiment of
+danger, but making an effort to smile. The Prussian father
+meanwhile chatted with her, and patted her cheeks with his great
+paws--a sight which touched Desnoyers deeply. The memories of a
+pacific and virtuous life were rising above the horrors of war.
+Decidedly this one enemy was a good man, anyway.
+
+Because of his conclusion, the millionaire smiled indulgently when
+the Commandant, leaving the table, came toward him--after delivering
+his letter and a bulky package to a soldier to take to the battalion
+post-office in the village.
+
+"It is for my family," he explained. "I do not let a day pass
+without sending them a letter. Theirs are so precious to me! . . .
+I am also sending them a few remembrances."
+
+Desnoyers was on the point of protesting. . . . But with a shrug of
+indifference, he concluded to keep silence as if he did not object.
+The Commandant continued talking of the sweet Augusta and their
+children while the invisible tempest kept on thundering beyond the
+serene twilight horizon. Each time the cannonading was more
+intense.
+
+"The battle," continued Blumhardt. "Always a battle! . . . Surely
+it is the last and we are going to win. Within the week, we shall
+be entering Paris. . . . But how many will never see it! So many
+dead! . . . I understand that to-morrow we shall not be here. All
+the Reserves are to combine with the attack so as to overcome the
+last resistance. . . . If only I do not fall!" . . .
+
+Thoughts of the possibility of death the following day contracted
+his forehead in a scowl of hatred. A deep, vertical line was
+parting his eyebrows. He frowned ferociously at Desnoyers as though
+making him responsible for his death and the trouble of his family.
+For a few moments Don Marcelo could hardly recognize this man,
+transformed by warlike passions, as the sweet-natured and friendly
+Blumhardt of a little while before.
+
+The sun was beginning to set when a sub-officer, the one of the
+Social-Democracy, came running in search of the Commandant.
+Desnoyers could not understand what was the matter because they were
+speaking in German, but following the direction of the messenger's
+continual pointing, he saw beyond the iron gates a group of country
+people and some soldiers with guns. Blumhardt, after a brief
+reflection, started toward the group and Don Marcelo behind him.
+
+Soon he saw a village lad in the charge of some Germans who were
+holding their bayonets to his breast. His face was colorless, with
+the whiteness of a wax candle. His shirt, blackened with soot, was
+so badly torn that it told of a hand-to-hand struggle. On one
+temple was a gash, bleeding badly. A short distance away was a
+woman with dishevelled hair, holding a baby, and surrounded by four
+children all covered with black grime as though coming from a coal
+mine.
+
+The woman was pleading desperately, raising her hands appealingly,
+her sobs interrupting her story which she was uselessly trying to
+tell the soldiers, incapable of understanding her. The petty
+officer convoying the band spoke in German with the Commandant while
+the woman besought the intervention of Desnoyers. When she
+recognized the owner of the castle, she suddenly regained her
+serenity, believing that he could intercede for her.
+
+That husky young boy was her son. They had all been hiding since
+the day before in the cellar of their burned house. Hunger and the
+danger of death from asphyxiation had forced them finally to venture
+forth. As soon as the Germans had seen her son, they had beaten him
+and were going to shoot him as they were shooting all the young men.
+They believed that the lad was twenty years old, the age of a
+soldier, and in order that he might not join the French army, they
+were going to kill him.
+
+"It's a lie!" shrieked the mother. "He is not more than eighteen . . .
+not eighteen . . . a little less--he's only seventeen."
+
+She turned to those who were following behind, in order to implore
+their testimony--sad women, equally dirty, their ragged garments
+smelling of fire, poverty and death. All assented, adding their
+outcries to those of the mother. Some even went so far as to say
+that the overgrown boy was only sixteen . . . fifteen! And to this
+feminine chorus was added the wailing of the little ones looking at
+their brother with eyes distended with terror.
+
+The Commandant examined the prisoner while he listened to the
+official. An employee of the township had said carelessly that the
+child was about twenty, never dreaming that with this inaccuracy he
+was causing his death.
+
+"It was a lie!" repeated the mother guessing instinctively what they
+were saying. "That man made a mistake. My boy is robust and,
+therefore, looks older than he is, but he is not twenty. . . . The
+gentleman from the castle who knows him can tell you so. Is it not
+so, Monsieur Desnoyers?"
+
+Since, in her maternal desperation, she had appealed to his
+protection, Don Marcelo believed that he ought to intervene, and so
+he spoke to the Commandant. He knew this youth very well (he did
+not ever remember having seen him before) and believed that he
+really was under twenty.
+
+"And even if he were of age," he added, "is that a crime to shoot a
+man for?"
+
+Blumhardt did not reply. Since he had recovered his functions of
+command, he ignored absolutely Don Marcelo's existence. He was
+about to say something, to give an order, but hesitated. It might
+be better to consult His Excellency . . . and seeing that he was
+going toward the castle, Desnoyers marched by his side.
+
+"Commandant, this cannot be," he commenced saying. "This lacks
+common sense. To shoot a man on the suspicion that he may be twenty
+years old!"
+
+But the Commandant remained silent and continued on his way. As
+they crossed the bridge, they heard the sound of the piano--a good
+omen, Desnoyers thought. The aesthete who had so touched him with
+his impassioned voice, was going to say the saving word.
+
+On entering the salon, he did not at first recognize His Excellency.
+He saw a man sitting at the piano wearing no clothing but a Japanese
+dressing gown--a woman's rose-colored kimono, embroidered with
+golden birds, belonging to Chichi. At any other time, he would have
+burst into roars of laughter at beholding this scrawny, bony warrior
+with the cruel eyes, with his brawny braceleted arms appearing
+through the loose sleeves. After taking his bath, the Count had
+delayed putting on his uniform, luxuriating in the silky contact of
+the feminine tunic so like his Oriental garments in Berlin.
+Blumhardt did not betray the slightest astonishment at the aspect of
+his general. In the customary attitude of military erectness, he
+spoke in his own language while the Count listened with a bored air,
+meanwhile passing his fingers idly over the keys.
+
+A shaft of sunlight from a nearby window was enveloping the piano
+and musician in a halo of gold. Through the window, too, was
+wafting the poetry of the sunset--the rustling of the leaves, the
+hushed song of the birds and the hum of the insects whose
+transparent wings were glowing like sparks in the last rays of the
+sun. The General, annoyed that his dreaming melancholy should be
+interrupted by this inopportune visit, cut short the Commandant's
+story with a gesture of command and a word . . . one word only. He
+said no more. He took two puffs from a Turkish cigarette that was
+slowly scorching the wood of the piano, and again ran his hands over
+the ivory keys, catching up the broken threads of the vague and
+tender improvisation inspired by the gloaming.
+
+"Thanks, Your Excellency," said the gratified Desnoyers, surmising
+his magnanimous response.
+
+The Commandant had disappeared, nor could the Frenchman find him
+outside the castle. A soldier was pacing up and down near the iron
+gates in order to transmit commands, and the guards were pushing
+back with blows from their guns, a screaming group of women and tiny
+children. The entrance was entirely cleared! undoubtedly the crowds
+were returning to the village after the General's pardon. . . .
+Desnoyers was half way down the avenue when he heard a howling sound
+composed of many voices, a hair-raising shriek such as only womanly
+desperation can send forth. At the same time, the air was vibrating
+with snaps, the loud cracking sound that he knew from the day
+before. Shots! . . . He imagined that on the other side of the
+iron railing there were some writhing bodies struggling to escape
+from powerful arms, and others fleeing with bounds of fear. He saw
+running toward him a horror-stricken, sobbing woman with her hands
+to her head. It was the wife of the Keeper who a little while
+before had joined the desperate group of women.
+
+"Oh, don't go on, Master," she called stopping his hurried step.
+"They have killed him. . . . They have just shot him."
+
+Don Marcelo stood rooted to the ground. Shot! . . . and after the
+General's pardon! . . . Suddenly he ran back to the castle, hardly
+knowing what he was doing, and soon reached the salon. His
+Excellency was still at the piano. humming in low tones, his eyes
+moistened by the poesy of his dreams. But the breathless old
+gentleman did not stop to listen.
+
+"They have shot him, Your Excellency. . . . They have just killed
+him in spite of your order."
+
+The smile which crossed the Count's face immediately informed him of
+his mistake.
+
+"That is war, my dear sir," said the player, pausing for a moment.
+"War with its cruel necessities. . . . It is always expedient to
+destroy the enemy of to-morrow."
+
+And with a pedantic air as though he were giving a lesson, he
+discoursed about the Orientals, great masters of the art of living.
+One of the personages most admired by him was a certain Sultan of
+the Turkish conquest who, with his own hands, had strangled the sons
+of the adversary. "Our foes do not come into the world on horseback
+and brandishing the lance," said that hero. "All are born as
+children, and it is advisable to wipe them from the face of the
+earth before they grow up."
+
+Desnoyers listened without taking it in. One thought only was
+occupying his mind. . . . That man that he had supposed just, that
+sentimentalist so affected by his own singing, had, between two
+arpeggios, coldly given the order for death! . . .
+
+The Count made a gesture of impatience. He might retire now, and he
+counselled him to be more discreet in the future, avoiding mixing
+himself up in the affairs of the service. Then he turned his back,
+running his hands over the piano, and giving himself up to
+harmonious melancholy.
+
+For Don Marcelo there now began an absurd life of the most
+extraordinary events, an experience which was going to last four
+days. In his life history, this period represented a long
+parenthesis of stupefaction, slashed by the most horrible visions.
+
+Not wishing to meet these men again, he abandoned his own bedroom,
+taking refuge on the top floor in the servants' quarters, near the
+room selected by the Warden and his family. In vain the good woman
+kept offering him things to eat as the night came on--he had no
+appetite. He lay stretched out on the bed, preferring to be alone
+with his thoughts in the dark. When would this martyrdom ever come
+to an end? . . .
+
+There came into his mind the recollection of a trip which he had
+made to London some years ago. In his imagination he again saw the
+British Museum and certain Assyrian bas-reliefs--relics of bestial
+humanity, which had filled him with terror. The warriors were
+represented as burning the towns; the prisoners were beheaded in
+heaps; the pacific countrymen were marching in lines with chains on
+their necks, forming strings of slaves. Until that moment he had
+never realized the advance which civilization had made through the
+centuries. Wars were still breaking out now and then, but they had
+been regulated by the march of progress. The life of the prisoner
+was now held sacred; the captured towns must be respected; there
+existed a complete code of international law to regulate how men
+should be killed and nations should combat, causing the least
+possible harm. . . . But now he had just seen the primitive
+realities of war. The same as that of thousands of years ago! The
+men with the helmets were proceeding in exactly the same way as
+those ferocious and perfumed satraps with blue mitre and curled
+beard. The adversary was shot although not carrying arms; the
+prisoner died of shot or blow from the gun; the civilian captives
+were sent in crowds to Germany like those of other centuries. Of
+what avail was all our so-called Progress? Where was our boasted
+civilization? . . .
+
+He was awakened by the light of a candle in his eyes. The Warden's
+wife had come up again to see if he needed anything.
+
+"Oh, what a night, Master! Just hear them yelling and singing! The
+bottles that they have emptied! . . . They are in the dining room.
+You better not see them. Now they are amusing themselves by
+breaking the furniture. Even the Count is drunk; drunk, too, is
+that Commandant that you were talking with, and all the rest. . . .
+Some of them are dancing half-naked."
+
+She evidently wished to keep quiet about certain details, but her
+love of talking got the better of her discretion. Some of the
+officers had dressed themselves up in the hats and gowns of her
+mistress and were dancing and shouting, imitating feminine
+seductiveness and affectations. . . . One of them had been greeted
+with roars of enthusiasm upon presenting himself with no other
+clothing than a "combination" of Mademoiselle Chichi's. Many were
+taking obscene delight in soiling the rugs and filling the sideboard
+drawers with indescribable filth, using the finest linens that they
+could lay their hands on.
+
+Her master silenced her peremptorily. Why tell him such vile,
+disgusting things? . . .
+
+"And we are obliged to wait on them!" wailed the woman. "They are
+beside themselves; they appear like different beings. The soldiers
+are saying that they are going to resume their march at daybreak.
+There is a great battle on, and they are going to win it; but it is
+necessary that everyone of them should fight in it. . . . My poor,
+sick husband just can't stand it any longer. So many humiliations . . .
+and my little girl . . . . My little girl!"
+
+The child was her greatest anxiety. She had her well hidden away,
+but she was watching uneasily the goings and comings of some of
+these men maddened with alcohol. The most terrible of them all was
+that fat officer who had patted Georgette so paternally.
+
+Apprehension for her daughter's safety made her hurry restlessly
+away, saying over and over:
+
+"God has forgotten the world. . . . Ay, what is ever going to
+become of us!"
+
+Don Marcelo was now tinglingly awake. Through the open window was
+blowing the clear night air. The cannonading was still going on,
+prolonging the conflict way into the night. Below the castle the
+soldiers were intoning a slow and melodious chant that sounded like
+a psalm. From the interior of the edifice rose the whoopings of
+brutal laughter, the crash of breaking furniture, and the mad chase
+of dissolute pursuit. When would this diabolical orgy ever wear
+itself down? . . . For a long time he was not at all sleepy, but
+was gradually losing consciousness of what was going on around him
+when he was roused with a start. Near him, on the same floor, a
+door had fallen with a crash, unable to resist a succession of
+formidable batterings. This was followed immediately by the screams
+of a woman, weeping, desperate supplications, the noise of a
+struggle, reeling steps, and the thud of bodies against the wall.
+He had a presentiment that it was Georgette shrieking and trying to
+defend herself. Before he could put his feet to the floor he heard
+a man's voice, which he was sure was the Keeper's; she was safe.
+
+"Ah, you villain!" . . .
+
+Then the outbreak of a second struggle . . . a shot . . . silence!
+
+Rushing down the hallway that ended at the stairway Desnoyers saw
+lights, and many men who came trooping up the stairs, bounding over
+several steps at a time. He almost fell over a body from which
+escaped a groan of agony. At his feet lay the Warden, his chest
+moving like a pair of bellows, his eyes glassy and unnaturally
+distended, his mouth covered with blood. . . . Near him glistened a
+kitchen knife. Then he saw a man with a revolver in one hand, and
+holding shut with the other a broken door that someone was trying to
+open from within. Don Marcelo recognized him, in spite of his
+greenish pallor and wild look. It was Blumhardt--another Blumhardt
+with a bestial expression of terrifying ferocity and lust.
+
+Don Marcelo could see clearly how it had all happened--the debauchee
+rushing through the castle in search of his prey, the anxious father
+in close pursuit, the cries of the girl, the unequal struggle
+between the consumptive with his emergency weapon and the warrior
+triumphant. The fury of his youth awoke in the old Frenchman,
+sweeping everything before it. What did it matter if he did
+die? . . .
+
+"Ah, you villain!" he yelled, as the poor father had done.
+
+And with clenched fists he marched up to the German, who smiled
+coldly and held his revolver to his eyes. He was just going to
+shoot him . . . but at that instant Desnoyers fell to the floor,
+knocked down by those who were leaping up the stairs. He received
+many blows, the heavy boots of the invaders hammering him with their
+heels. He felt a hot stream pouring over his face. Blood! . . .
+He did not know whether it was his own or that of the palpitating
+mortal slowly dying beside him. Then he found himself lifted from
+the floor by many hands which pushed him toward a man. It was His
+Excellency, with his uniform burst open and smelling of wine. Eyes
+and voice were both trembling.
+
+"My dear sir," he stuttered, trying to recover this suave irony, "I
+warned you not to interfere in our affairs and you have not obeyed
+me. You may now take the consequences of your lack of discretion."
+
+He gave an order, and the old man felt himself pushed downstairs to
+the cellars underneath the castle. Those conducting him were
+soldiers under the command of a petty officer whom he recognized as
+the Socialist. This young professor was the only one sober, but he
+maintained himself erect and unapproachable with the ferocity of
+discipline.
+
+He put his prisoner into an arched vault without any breathing-place
+except a tiny window on a level with the floor. Many broken bottles
+and chests with some straw were all that was in the cave.
+
+"You have insulted a head officer!" said the official roughly, "and
+they will probably shoot you to-morrow. Your only salvation lies in
+the continuance of the revels, in which case they may forget you."
+
+As the door of this sub-cellar was broken, like all the others in
+the building, a pile of boxes and furniture was heaped in the
+entrance way.
+
+Don Marcelo passed the rest of the night tormented with the cold--
+the only thing which worried him just then. He had abandoned all
+hope of life; even the images of his family seemed blotted from his
+memory. He worked in the dark in order to make himself more
+comfortable on the chests, burrowing down into the straw for the
+sake of its heat. When the morning breeze began to sift in through
+the little window he fell slowly into a heavy, overpowering sleep,
+like that of criminals condemned to death, or duellists before the
+fatal morning. He thought he heard shouts in German, the galloping
+of horses, a distant sound of tattoo and whistle such as the
+battalions of the invaders made with their fifes and drums. . . .
+Then he lost all consciousness of his surroundings.
+
+On opening his eyes again a ray of sunlight, slipping through the
+window, was tracing a little golden square on the wall, giving a
+regal splendor to the hanging cobwebs. Somebody was removing the
+barricade before the door. A woman's voice, timid and distressed,
+was calling repeatedly:
+
+"Master, are you here?"
+
+He sprang up quickly, wishing to aid the worker outside, and pushing
+vigorously. He thought that the invaders must have left. In no
+other way could he imagine the Warden's wife daring to try to get
+him out of his cell.
+
+"Yes, they have gone," she said. "Nobody is left in the castle."
+
+As soon as he was able to get out Don Marcelo looked inquiringly at
+the woman with her bloodshot eyes, dishevelled hair and sorrow-drawn
+face. The night had weighed her down pitilessly with the pressure
+of many years. All the energy with which she had been working to
+free Desnoyers disappeared on seeing him again. "Oh, Master . . .
+Master," she moaned convulsively; and she flung herself into his
+arms, bursting into tears.
+
+Don Marcelo did not need to ask anything further; he dreaded to know
+the truth. Nevertheless, he asked after her husband. Now that he
+was awake and free, he cherished the fleeting hope that what he had
+gone through the night before was but another of his nightmares.
+Perhaps the poor man was still living. . . .
+
+"They killed him, Monsieur. That man who seemed so good murdered
+him. . . . And I don't know where his body is; nobody will tell
+me."
+
+She had a suspicion that the corpse was in the fosse. The green and
+tranquil waters had closed mysteriously over this victim of the
+night. . . . Desnoyers suspected that another sorrow was troubling
+the mother still more, but he kept modestly silent. It was she who
+finally spoke, between outbursts of grief. . . . Georgette was now
+in the lodge. Horror-stricken and shuddering, she had fled there
+when the invaders had left the castle. They had kept her in their
+power until the last minute.
+
+"Oh, Master, don't look at her. . . . She is trembling and sobbing
+at the thought that you may speak with her about what she has gone
+through. She is almost out of her mind. She longs to die! Ay, my
+little girl! . . . And is there no one who will punish these
+monsters?"
+
+They had come up from the cellars and crossed the bridge, the woman
+looking fixedly into the silent waters. The dead body of a swan was
+floating upon them. Before their departure, while their horses were
+being saddled, two officers had amused themselves by chasing with
+revolver shots the birds swimming in the moat. The aquatic plants
+were spotted with blood; among the leaves were floating some tufts
+of limp white plumage like a bit of washing escaped from the hands
+of a laundress.
+
+Don Marcelo and the woman exchanged a compassionate glance, and then
+looked pityingly at each other as the sunlight brought out more
+strongly their aging, wan appearance.
+
+The passing of these people had destroyed everything. There was no
+food left in the castle except some crusts of dry bread forgotten in
+the kitchen. "And we have to live, Monsieur!" exclaimed the woman
+with reviving energy as she thought of her daughter's need. "We
+have to live, if only to see how God punishes them!" The old man
+shrugged his shoulders in despair; God? . . . But the woman was
+right; they had to live.
+
+With the famished audacity of his early youth, when he was
+travelling over boundless tracts of land, driving his herds of
+cattle, he now rushed outside the park, hunting for some form of
+sustenance. He saw the valley, fair and green, basking in the sun;
+the groups of trees, the plots of yellowish soil with the hard
+spikes of stubble; the hedges in which the birds were singing--all
+the summer splendor of a countryside developed and cultivated during
+fifteen centuries by dozens and dozens of generations. And yet--
+here he was alone at the mercy of chance, likely to perish with
+hunger--more alone than when he was crossing the towering heights of
+the Andes--those irregular slopes of rocks and snow wrapped in
+endless silence, only broken from time to time by the flapping of
+the condor's wings. Nobody. . . . His gaze could not distinguish a
+single movable point--everything fixed, motionless, crystallized, as
+though contracted with fear before the peals of thunder which were
+still rumbling around the horizon.
+
+He went on toward the village--a mass of black walls with a few
+houses still intact, and a roofless bell tower with its cross
+twisted by fire. Nobody in the streets sown with bottles, charred
+chunks of wood, and soot-covered rubbish. The dead bodies had
+disappeared, but a nauseating smell of decomposing and burned flesh
+assailed his nostrils. He saw a mound of earth where the shooting
+had taken place, and from it were protruding two feet and a hand.
+At his approach several black forms flew up into the air from a
+trench so shallow that the bodies within were exposed to view. A
+whirring of stiff wings beat the air above him, flying off with the
+croakings of wrath. He explored every nook and corner, even
+approaching the place where the troopers had erected their
+barricade. The carts were still by the roadside.
+
+He then retraced his steps, calling out before the least injured
+houses, and putting his head through the doors and windows that were
+unobstructed or but half consumed. Was nobody left in Villeblanche?
+He descried among the ruins something advancing on all fours,
+a species of reptile that stopped its crawling with movements of
+hesitation and fear, ready to retreat or slip into its hole under
+the ruins. Suddenly the creature stopped and stood up. It was a
+man, an old man. Other human larvae were coming forth conjured by
+his shouts--poor beings who hours ago had given up the standing
+position which would have attracted the bullets of the enemy, and
+had been enviously imitating the lower organisms, squirming through
+the dirt as fast as they could scurry into the bosom of the earth.
+They were mostly women and children, all filthy and black, with
+snarled hair, the fierceness of animal appetite in their eyes--the
+faintness of the weak animal in their hanging jaws. They were all
+living hidden in the ruins of their homes. Fear had made them
+temporarily forget their hunger, but finding that the enemy had
+gone, they were suddenly assailed by all necessitous demands,
+intensified by hours of anguish.
+
+Desnoyers felt as though he were surrounded by a tribe of brutalized
+and famished Indians like those he had often seen in his adventurous
+voyages. He had brought with him from Paris a quantity of gold
+pieces, and he pulled out a coin which glittered in the sun. Bread
+was needed, everything eatable was needed; he would pay without
+haggling.
+
+The flash of gold aroused looks of enthusiasm and greediness, but
+this impression was short-lived, all eyes contemplating the yellow
+discs with indifference. Don Marcelo was himself convinced that the
+miraculous charm had lost its power. They all chanted a chorus of
+sorrow and horrors with slow and plaintive voice, as though they
+stood weeping before a bier: "Monsieur, they have killed my
+husband." . . . "Monsieur, my sons! Two of them are missing." . . .
+Monsieur, they have taken all the men prisoners: they say it is
+to work the land in Germany." . . . "Monsieur, bread! . . . My
+little ones are dying of hunger!"
+
+One woman was lamenting something worse than death. "My girl! . . .
+My poor girl!" Her look of hatred and wild desperation revealed the
+secret tragedy; her outcries and tears recalled that other mother
+who was sobbing in the same way up at the castle. In the depths of
+some cave, was lying the victim, half-dead with fatigue, shaken with
+a wild delirium in which she still saw the succession of brutal
+faces, inflamed with simian passion.
+
+The miserable group, forming themselves into a circle around him,
+stretched out their hands beseechingly toward the man whom they knew
+to be so very rich. The women showed him the death-pallor on the
+faces of their scarcely breathing babies, their eyes glazed with
+starvation. "Bread! . . . bread!" they implored, as though he could
+work a miracle. He gave to one mother the gold piece that he had in
+his hand and distributed more to the others. They took them without
+looking at them, and continued their lament, "Bread! . . . Bread!"
+And he had gone to the village to make the same supplication! . . .
+He fled, recognizing the uselessness of his efforts.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE BANNER OF THE RED CROSS
+
+
+Returning in desperation to his estate, Don Marcelo Desnoyers saw
+huge automobiles and men on horseback, forming a very long convoy
+and completely filling the road. They were all going in his
+direction. At the entrance to the park a band of Germans was
+putting up the wires for a telephone line. They had just been
+reconnoitering the rooms befouled with the night's saturnalia, and
+were ha-haing boisterously over Captain von Hartrott's inscription,
+"Bitte, nicht plundern." To them it seemed the acme of wit--truly
+Teutonic.
+
+The convoy now invaded the park with its automobiles and trucks
+bearing a red cross. A war hospital was going to be established in
+the castle. The doctors were dressed in grayish green and armed the
+same as the officers; they also imitated their freezing hauteur and
+repellent unapproachableness. There came out of the drays hundreds
+of folding cots, which were placed in rows in the different rooms.
+The furniture that still remained was thrown out in a heap under the
+trees. Squads of soldiers were obeying with mechanical promptitude
+the brief and imperious orders. An odor of an apothecary shop, of
+concentrated drugs, now pervaded the quarters, mixed with the strong
+smell of the antiseptics with which they were sprinkling the walls
+in order to disinfect the filthy remains of the nocturnal orgy.
+
+Then he saw women clad in white, buxom girls with blue eyes and
+flaxen hair. They were grave, bland, austere and implacable in
+appearance. Several times they pushed Desnoyers out of their way as
+if they did not see him. They looked like nuns, but with revolvers
+under their habits.
+
+At midday other automobiles began to arrive, attracted by the
+enormous white flag with the red cross, which was now waving from
+the castle tower. They came from the division battling beyond the
+Marne. Their metal fittings were dented by projectiles, their wind-
+shields broken by star-shaped holes. From their interiors appeared
+men and more men; some on foot, others on canvas stretchers--faces
+pale and rubicund, profiles aquiline and snubby, red heads and
+skulls wrapped in white turbans stiff with blood; mouths that
+laughed with bravado and mouths that groaned with bluish lips; jaws
+supported with mummy-like bandages; giants in agony whose wounds
+were not apparent; shapeless forms ending in a head that talked and
+smoked; legs with hanging flesh that was dyeing the First Aid
+wrappings with their red moisture; arms that hung as inert as dead
+boughs; torn uniforms in which were conspicuous the tragic vacancies
+of absent members.
+
+This avalanche of suffering was quickly distributed throughout the
+castle. In a few hours it was so completely filled that there was
+not a vacant bed--the last arrivals being laid in the shadow of the
+trees. The telephones were ringing incessantly; the surgeons in
+coarse aprons were going from one side to the other, working
+rapidly; human life was submitted to savage proceedings with
+roughness and celerity. Those who died under it simply left one
+more cot free for the others that kept on coming. Desnoyers saw
+bloody baskets filled with shapeless masses of flesh, strips of
+skin, broken bones, entire limbs. The orderlies were carrying these
+terrible remnants to the foot of the park in order to bury them in a
+little plot which had been Chichi's favorite reading nook.
+
+Pairs of soldiers were carrying out objects wrapped in sheets which
+the owner recognized as his. These were the dead, and the park was
+soon converted into a cemetery. No longer was the little retreat
+large enough to hold the corpses and the severed remains from the
+operations. New grave trenches were being opened near by. The
+Germans armed with shovels were pressing into service a dozen of the
+farmer-prisoners to aid in unloading the dead. Now they were
+bringing them down by the cartload, dumping them in like the rubbish
+from some demolished building. Don Marcelo felt an abnormal delight
+in contemplating this increasing number of vanquished enemies, yet
+he grieved at the same time that this precipitation of intruders
+should be deposited forever on his property.
+
+At nightfall, overwhelmed by so many emotions, he again suffered the
+torments of hunger. All day long he had eaten nothing but the crust
+of bread found in the kitchen by the Warden's wife. The rest he had
+left for her and her daughter. A distress as harrowing to him as
+his hunger was the sight of poor Georgette's shocked despondency.
+She was always trying to escape from his presence in an agony of
+shame.
+
+"Don't let the Master see me!" she would cry, hiding her face.
+Since his presence seemed to recall more vividly the memory of her
+assaults, Desnoyers tried, while in the lodge, to avoid going near
+her.
+
+Desperate with the gnawings of his empty stomach, he accosted
+several doctors who were speaking French, but all in vain. They
+would not listen to him, and when he repeated his petitions they
+pushed him roughly out of their way. . . . He was not going to
+perish with hunger in the midst of his riches! Those people were
+eating; the indifferent nurses had established themselves in his
+kitchen. . . . But the time passed on without encountering anybody
+who would take pity on this old man dragging himself weakly from one
+place to another, in the misery of an old age intensified by
+despair, and suffering in every part of the body, the results of the
+blows of the night before. He now knew the gnawings of a hunger far
+worse than that which he had suffered when journeying over the
+desert plains--a hunger among men, in a civilized country, wearing a
+belt filled with gold, surrounded with towers and castle halls which
+were his, but in the control of others who would not condescend to
+listen to him. And for this piteous ending of his life he had
+amassed millions and returned to Europe! . . . Ah, the irony of
+fate! . . .
+
+He saw a doctor's assistant leaning up against a tree, about to
+devour a slab of bread and sausage. His envious eyes scrutinized
+this fellow, tall, thick-set, his jaws bristling with a great red
+beard. The trembling old man staggered up to him, begging for the
+food by signs and holding out a piece of money. The German's eyes
+glistened at the sight of the gold, and a beatific smile stretched
+his mouth from ear to ear.
+
+"Ya," he responded, and grabbing the money, he handed over the food.
+
+Don Marcelo commenced to swallow it with avidity. Never had he so
+appreciated the sheer ecstasy of eating as at that instant--in the
+midst of his gardens converted into a cemetery, before his despoiled
+castle where hundreds of human beings were groaning in agony. A
+grayish arm passed before his eyes; it belonged to the German, who
+had returned with two slices of bread and a bit of meat snatched
+from the kitchen. He repeated his smirking "Ya?" . . . and after
+his victim had secured it by means of another gold coin, he was able
+to take it to the two women hidden in the cottage.
+
+During the night--a night of painful watching, cut with visions of
+horror, it seemed to him that the roar of the artillery was coming
+nearer. It was a scarcely perceptible difference, perhaps the
+effect of the silence of the night which always intensifies sound.
+The ambulances continued coming from the front, discharging their
+cargoes of riddled humanity and going back for more. Desnoyers
+surmised that his castle was but one of the many hospitals
+established in a line of more than eighty miles, and that on the
+other side, behind the French, were many similar ones in which the
+same activity was going on--the consignments of dying men succeeding
+each other with terrifying frequency. Many of the combatants were
+not even having the satisfaction of being taken from the battle
+field, but were lying groaning on the ground, burying their bleeding
+members in the dust or mud, and weltering in the ooze from their
+wounds. . . . And Don Marcelo, who a few hours before had been
+considering himself the unhappiest of mortals, now experienced a
+cruel joy in reflecting that so many thousands of vigorous men at
+the point of death could well envy him for his hale old age, and for
+the tranquillity with which he was reposing on that humble bed.
+
+The next morning the orderly was waiting for him in the same place,
+holding out a napkin filled with eatables. Good red-bearded man,
+helpful and kind! . . . and he offered him the piece of gold.
+
+"Nein," replied the fellow, with a broad, malicious grin. Two
+gleaming gold pieces appeared between Don Marcelo's fingers.
+Another leering "Nein" and a shake of the head. Ah, the robber!
+How he was taking advantage of his necessity! . . . And not until
+he had produced five gold coins was he able to secure the package.
+
+He soon began to notice all around him a silent and sly conspiracy
+to get possession of his money. A giant in a sergeant's uniform put
+a shovel in his hand. pushing him roughly forward. He soon found
+himself in a corner of the park that had been transformed into a
+graveyard, near the cart of cadavers; there he had to shovel dirt on
+his own ground in company with the indignant prisoners.
+
+He averted his eyes so as not to look at the rigid and grotesque
+bodies piled above him at the edge of the pit, ready to be tumbled
+in. The ground was sending forth an insufferable odor, for
+decomposition had already set in in the nearby trenches. The
+persistence with which his overseers accosted him, and the crafty
+smile of the sergeant made him see through the deep-laid scheme.
+The red-beard must be at the bottom of all this. Putting his hand
+in his pocket he dropped the shovel with a look of interrogation.
+"Ya," replied the sergeant. After handing over the required sum,
+the tormented old man was permitted to stop grave-digging and wander
+around at his pleasure; he knew, however, what was probably in store
+for him--those men were going to submit him to a merciless
+exploitation.
+
+Another day passed by, like its predecessor. In the morning of the
+following day his perceptions, sharpened by apprehension, made him
+conjecture that something extraordinary had occurred. The
+automobiles were arriving and departing with greater rapidity, and
+there was greater disorder and confusion among the executive force.
+The telephone was ringing with mad precipitation; and the wounded
+arrivals seemed more depressed. The day before they had been
+singing when taken from the vehicles, hiding their woe with laughter
+and bravado, all talking of the near victory and regretting that
+they would not be able to witness the triumphal entry into Paris.
+Now they were all very silent, with furrowed brows, thinking no
+longer about what was going on behind them, wondering only about
+their own fate.
+
+Outside the park was the buzz of the approaching throng which was
+blackening the roads. The invasion was beginning again, but with a
+refluent movement. For hours at a time great strings of gray trucks
+went puffing by; then regiments of infantry, squadrons, rolling
+stock. They were marching very slowly with a deliberation that
+puzzled Desnoyers, who could not make out whether this recessional
+meant flight or change of position. The only thing that gave him
+any satisfaction was the stupefied and downcast appearance of the
+soldiers, the gloomy sulks of the officers. Nobody was shouting;
+they all appeared to have forgotten their "Nach Paris!" The
+greenish gray monster still had its armed head stretched across the
+other side of the Marne, but its tail was beginning to uncoil with
+uneasy wrigglings.
+
+After night had settled down the troops were still continuing to
+fall back. The cannonading was certainly coming nearer. Some of
+the thunderous claps sounded so close that they made the glass
+tremble in the windows. A fugitive farmer, trying to find refuge in
+the park, gave Don Marcelo some news. The Germans were in full
+retreat. They had installed some of their batteries on the banks of
+the Marne in order to attempt a new resistance. . . . And the new
+arrival remained without attracting the attention of the invaders
+who, a few days before, would have shot him on the slightest
+suspicion.
+
+The mechanical workings of discipline were evidently out of gear.
+Doctors and nurses were running from place to place, shouting orders
+and breaking out into a volley of curses every time a fresh
+ambulance load arrived. The drivers were commanded to take their
+patients on ahead to another hospital near the rear-guard. Orders
+had been received to evacuate the castle that very night.
+
+In spite of this prohibition, one of the ambulances unloaded its
+relay of wounded men. So deplorable was their state that the
+doctors accepted them, judging it useless for them to continue their
+journey. They remained in the garden, lying on the same stretchers
+that they had occupied within the vehicle. By the light of the
+lanterns Desnoyers recognized one of the dying. It was the
+secretary to His Excellency, the Socialist professor who had shut
+him in the cellar vaults.
+
+At the sight of the owner of the castle he smiled as though he had
+met a comrade. His was the only familiar face among all those
+people who were speaking his language. He was ghastly in hue, with
+sunken features and an impalpable glaze spreading over his eyes. He
+had no visible wounds, but from under the cloak spread over his
+abdomen his torn intestines exhaled a fatal warning. The presence
+of Don Marcelo made him guess where they had brought him, and little
+by little he co-ordinated his recollections. As though the old
+gentleman might be interested in the whereabouts of his comrades, he
+told him all he knew in a weak and strained voice. . . . Bad luck
+for their brigade! They had reached the front at a critical moment
+for the reserve troops. Commandant Blumhardt had died at the very
+first, a shell of '75 taking off his head. Dead, too, were all the
+officers who had lodged in the castle. His Excellency had had his
+jaw bone torn off by a fragment of shell. He had seen him on the
+ground, howling with pain, drawing a portrait from his breast and
+trying to kiss it with his broken mouth. He had himself been hit in
+the stomach by the same shell. He had lain forty-two hours on the
+field before he was picked up by the ambulance corps. . . .
+
+And with the mania of the University man, whose hobby is to see
+everything reasoned out and logically explained, he added in that
+supreme moment, with the tenacity of those who die talking:
+
+"Sad war, sir. . . . Many premises are lacking in order to decide
+who is the culpable party. . . . When the war is ended they will
+have to . . . will have to . . ." And he closed his eyes overcome
+by the effort. Desnoyers left the dead man, thinking to himself.
+Poor fellow! He was placing the hour of justice at the termination
+of the war, and meanwhile hundreds like him were dying, disappearing
+with all their scruples of ponderous and disciplined reasoning.
+
+That night there was no sleep on the place. The walls of the lodge
+were creaking, the glass crashing and breaking, the two women in the
+adjoining room crying out nervously. The noise of the German fire
+was beginning to mingle with that of other explosives close at hand.
+He surmised that this was the smashing of the French projectiles
+which were coming in search of the enemy's artillery above the
+Marne.
+
+For a few minutes his hopes revived as the possibility of victory
+flashed into his mind, but he was so depressed by his forlorn
+situation that such a hope evaporated as quickly as it had come.
+His own troops were advancing, but this advance did not, perhaps,
+represent more than a local gain. The line of battle was so
+extensive! . . . It was going to be as in 1870; the French would
+achieve partial victories, modified at the last moment by the
+strategy of the enemies until they were turned into complete defeat.
+
+After midnight the cannonading ceased, but silence was by no means
+re-established. Automobiles were rolling around the lodge midst
+hoarse shouts of command. It must be the hospital convoy that was
+evacuating the castle. Then near daybreak the thudding of horses'
+hoofs and the wheels of chugging machines thundered through the
+gates, making the ground tremble. Half an hour afterwards sounded
+the tramp of multitudes moving at a quick pace, dying away in the
+depths of the park.
+
+At dawn the old gentleman leaped from his bed, and the first thing
+he spied from the cottage window was the flag of the Red Cross still
+floating from the top of the castle. There were no more cots under
+the trees. On the bridge he met one of the doctors and several
+assistants. The hospital force had gone with all its transportable
+patients. There only remained in the castle, under the care of a
+company, those most gravely wounded. The Valkyries of the health
+department had also disappeared.
+
+The red-bearded Shylock was among those left behind, and on seeing
+Don Marcelo afar off, he smiled and immediately vanished. A few
+minutes after he returned with full hands. Never before had he been
+so generous. Foreseeing pressing necessity, the hungry man put his
+hands in his pockets as usual, but was astonished to learn from the
+orderly's emphatic gestures that he did not wish any money.
+
+"Nein. . . . Nein!"
+
+What generosity was this! . . . The German persisted in his
+negatives. His enormous mouth expanded in an ingratiating grin as
+he laid his heavy paws on Marcelo's shoulders. He appeared like a
+good dog, a meek dog, fawning and licking the hands of the passer-
+by, coaxing to be taken along with him. "Franzosen. . . .
+Franzosen." He did not know how to say any more, but the Frenchman
+read in his words the desire to make him understand that he had
+always been in great sympathy with the French. Something very
+important was evidently transpiring--the ill-humored air of those
+left behind in the castle, and the sudden servility of this plowman
+in uniform, made it very apparent. . . .
+
+Some distance beyond the castle he saw soldiers, many soldiers. A
+battalion of infantry had spread itself along the walls with trucks,
+draught horses and swift mounts. With their pikes the soldiers were
+making small openings in the mud walls, shaping them into a border
+of little pinnacles. Others were kneeling or sitting near the
+apertures, taking off their knapsacks in order that they might be
+less hampered. Afar off the cannon were booming, and in the
+intervals between their detonations could be heard the bursting of
+shrapnel, the bubbling of frying oil, the grinding of a coffee-mill,
+and the incessant crackling of rifle-fire. Fleecy clouds were
+floating over the fields, giving to near objects the indefinite
+lines of unreality. The sun was a faint spot seen between curtains
+of mist. The trees were weeping fog moisture from all the cracks in
+their bark.
+
+A thunderclap rent the air so forcibly that it seemed very near the
+castle. Desnoyers trembled, believing that he had received a blow
+in the chest. The other men remained impassive with their customary
+indifference. A cannon had just been discharged but a few feet away
+from him, and not till then did he realize that two batteries had
+been installed in the park. The pieces of artillery were hidden
+under mounds of branches, the gunners having felled trees in order
+to mask their monsters more perfectly. He saw them arranging the
+last; with shovels, they were forming a border of earth, a foot in
+width, around each piece. This border guarded the feet of the
+operators whose bodies were protected by steel shields on both sides
+of them. Then they raised a breastwork of trunks and boughs,
+leaving only the mouth of the cylindrical mortar visible.
+
+By degrees Don Marcelo became accustomed to the firing which seemed
+to be creating a vacuum within his cranium. He ground his teeth and
+clenched his fists at every detonation, but stood stock-still with
+no desire to leave, dominated by the violence of the explosions,
+admiring the serenity of these men who were giving orders, erect and
+coolly, or moving like humble menials around their roaring metal
+beasts.
+
+All his ideas seemed to have been snatched away by that first
+discharge of cannon. His brain was living in the present moment
+only. He turned his eyes insistently toward the white and red
+banner which was waving from the mansion.
+
+"That is treachery," he thought, "a breach of faith."
+
+Far away, on the other side of the Marne, the French artillery were
+belching forth their deadly fire. He could imagine their handiwork
+from the little yellowish clouds that were floating in the air, and
+the columns of smoke which were spouting forth at various points of
+the landscape where the German troops were hidden, forming a line
+which appeared to lose itself in infinity. An atmosphere of
+protection and respect seemed to be enveloping the castle.
+
+The morning mists had dissolved; the sun was finally showing its
+bright and limpid light, lengthening the shadows of men and trees to
+fantastic dimensions. Hills and woods came forth from the haze,
+fresh and dripping after their morning bath. The entire valley was
+now completely exposed, and Desnoyers was surprised to see the river
+from the spot to which he had been rooted--the cannon having opened
+great windows in the woods that had hid it from view. What most
+astonished him in looking over this landscape, smiling and lovely in
+the morning light, was that nobody was to be seen--absolutely
+nobody. Mountain tops and forests were bellowing without anyone's
+being in evidence. There must be more than a hundred thousand men
+in the space swept by his piercing gaze, and yet not a human being
+was visible. The deadly boom of arms was causing the air to vibrate
+without leaving any optical trace. There was no other smoke but
+that of the explosions, the black spirals that were flinging their
+great shells to burst on the ground. These were rising on all
+sides, encircling the castle like a ring of giant tops, but not one
+of that orderly circle ventured to touch the edifice. Don Marcelo
+again stared at the Red Cross flag. "It is treachery!" he kept
+repeating; yet at the same time he was selfishly rejoicing in the
+base expedient, since it served to defend his property.
+
+The battalion was at last completely installed the entire length of
+the wall, opposite the river. The soldiers, kneeling, were
+supporting their guns on the newly made turrets and grooves, and
+seemed satisfied with this rest after a night of battling retreat.
+They all appeared sleeping with their eyes open. Little by little
+they were letting themselves drop back on their heels, or seeking
+the support of their knapsacks. Snores were heard in the brief
+spaces between the artillery fire. The officials standing behind
+them were examining the country with their field glasses, or talking
+in knots. Some appeared disheartened, others furious at the
+backward flight that had been going on since the day before. The
+majority appeared calm, with the passivity of obedience. The battle
+front was immense; who could foresee the outcome? . . . There they
+were in full retreat, but in other places, perhaps, their comrades
+might be advancing with decided gains. Until the very last moment,
+no soldier knows certainly the fate of the struggle. What was most
+grieving this detachment was the fact that it was all the time
+getting further away from Paris.
+
+Don Marcelo's eye was caught by a sparkling circle of glass, a
+monocle fixed upon him with aggressive insistence. A lank
+lieutenant with the corseted waist of the officers that he had seen
+in Berlin, a genuine Junker, was a few feet away, sword in hand
+behind his men, like a wrathful and glowering shepherd.
+
+"What are you doing here?" he said gruffly.
+
+Desnoyers explained that he was the owner of the castle. "French?"
+continued the lieutenant. "Yes, French." . . . The official
+scowled in hostile meditation, feeling the necessity of saying
+something against the enemy. The shouts and antics of his
+companions-at-arms put a summary end to his reflections. They were
+all staring upward, and the old man followed their gaze.
+
+For an hour past, there had been streaking through the air frightful
+roarings enveloped in yellowish vapors, strips of cloud which seemed
+to contain wheels revolving with frenzied rotation. They were the
+projectiles of the heavy German artillery which, fired from various
+distances, threw their great shells over the castle. Certainly that
+could not be what was interesting the officials!
+
+He half shut his eyes in order to see better, and finally near the
+edge of a cloud, he distinguished a species of mosquito flashing in
+the sunlight. Between brief intervals of silence, could be heard
+the distant, faint buzz announcing its presence. The officers
+nodded their heads. "Franzosen!" Desnoyers thought so, too. He
+could not believe that the enemy's two black crosses were between
+those wings. Instead he saw with his mind's eye, two tricolored
+rings like the circular spots which color the fluttering wings of
+butterflies.
+
+This explained the agitation of the Germans. The French air-bird
+remained motionless for a few seconds over the castle, regardless of
+the white bubbles exploding underneath and around it. In vain the
+cannon nearest hurled their deadly fire. It wheeled rapidly, and
+returned to the place from which it came.
+
+"It must have taken in the whole situation," thought the old
+Frenchman. "It has found them out; it knows what is going on here."
+
+He guessed rightly that this information would swiftly change the
+course of events. Everything which had been happening in the early
+morning hours was going to sink into insignificance compared with
+what was coming now. He shuddered with fear, the irresistible fear
+of the unknown, and yet at the same time, he was filled with
+curiosity, impatience and nervous dread before a danger that
+threatened and would not stay its relentless course.
+
+Outside the park, but a short distance from the mud wall, sounded a
+strident explosion like a stupendous blow from a gigantic axe--an
+axe as big as his castle. There began flying through the air entire
+treetops, trunks split in two, great chunks of earth with the
+vegetation still clinging, a rain of dirt that obscured the heavens.
+Some stones fell down from the wall. The Germans crouched but with
+no visible emotion. They knew what it meant; they had been
+expecting it as something inevitable after seeing the French
+aeroplane. The Red Cross flag could no longer deceive the enemy's
+artillery.
+
+Don Marcelo had not time to recover from his surprise before there
+came a second explosion nearer the mud wall . . . a third inside the
+park. It seemed to him that he had been suddenly flung into another
+world from which he was seeing men and things across a fantastic
+atmosphere which roared and rocked and destroyed with the violence
+of its reverberations. He was stunned with the awfulness of it all,
+and yet he was not afraid. Until then, he had imagined fear in a
+very different form. He felt an agonizing vacuum in his stomach.
+He staggered violently all the time, as though some force were
+pushing him about, giving him first a blow on the chest, and then
+another on the back to straighten him up.
+
+A strong smell of acids penetrated the atmosphere, making
+respiration very difficult, and filling his eyes with smarting
+tears. On the other hand, the uproar no longer disturbed him, it
+did not exist for him. He supposed it was still going on from the
+trembling air, the shaking of things around him, in the whirlwind
+which was bending men double but was not reacting within his body.
+He had lost the faculty of hearing; all the strength of his senses
+had concentrated themselves in looking. His eyes appeared to have
+acquired multiple facets like those of certain insects. He saw what
+was happening before, beside, behind him, simultaneously witnessing
+extraordinary things as though all the laws of life had been
+capriciously overthrown.
+
+An official a few feet away suddenly took an inexplicable flight.
+He began to rise without losing his military rigidity, still
+helmeted, with furrowed brow, moustache blond and short, mustard-
+colored chest, and gloved hands still holding field-glasses and map--
+but there his individuality stopped. The lower extremities, in
+their grayish leggings remained on the ground, inanimate as
+reddening, empty moulds. The trunk, in its violent ascent, spread
+its contents abroad like a bursting rocket. Further on, some
+gunners, standing upright, were suddenly stretched full length,
+converted into a motionless row, bathed in blood.
+
+The line of infantry was lying close to the ground. The men had
+huddled themselves together near the loopholes through which they
+aimed their guns, trying to make themselves less visible. Many had
+placed their knapsacks over their heads or at their backs to defend
+themselves from the flying bits of shell. If they moved at all, it
+was only to worm their way further into the earth, trying to hollow
+it out with their stomachs. Many of them had changed position with
+mysterious rapidity, now lying stretched on their backs as though
+asleep. One had his uniform torn open across the abdomen, showing
+between the rents of the cloth, slabs of flesh, blue and red that
+protruded and swelled up with a bubbling expansion. Another had his
+legs shot away, and was looking around with surprised eyes and a
+black mouth rounded into an effort to howl, but from which no sound
+ever came.
+
+Desnoyers had lost all notion of time. He could not tell whether he
+had been rooted to that spot for many hours or for a single moment.
+The only thing that caused him anxiety was the persistent trembling
+of his legs which were refusing to sustain him. . . .
+
+Something fell behind him. It was raining ruin. Turning his head,
+he saw his castle completely transformed. Half of the tower had
+just been carried off. The pieces of slate were scattered
+everywhere in tiny chips; the walls were crumbling; loose window
+frames were balancing on edge like fragments of stage scenery, and
+the old wood of the tower hood was beginning to burn like a torch.
+
+The spectacle of this instantaneous change in his property impressed
+him more than the ravages of death, making him realize the Cyclopean
+power of the blind, avenging forces raging around him. The vital
+force that had been concentrated in his eyes, now spread to his
+feet . . . and he started to run without knowing whither, feeling
+the same necessity to hide himself as had those men enchained by
+discipline who were trying to flatten themselves into the earth in
+imitation of the reptile's pliant invisibility.
+
+His instinct was pushing him toward the lodge, but half way up the
+avenue, he was stopped by another lot of astounding transformations.
+An unseen hand had just snatched away half of the cottage roof. The
+entire side wall doubled over, forming a cascade of bricks and dust.
+The interior rooms were now exposed to view like a theatrical
+setting--the kitchen where he had eaten, the upper floor with the
+room in which he descried his still unmade bed. The poor women! . . .
+
+He turned around, running now toward the castle, trying to make the
+sub-cellar in which he had been fastened for the night; and when he
+finally found himself under those dusty cobwebs, he felt as though
+he were in the most luxurious salon, and he devoutly blessed the
+good workmanship of the castle builders.
+
+The subterranean silence began gradually to bring back his sense of
+hearing. The cannonading of the Germans and the bursting of the
+French shells sounded from his retreat like a distant tempest.
+There came into his mind the eulogies which he had been accustomed
+to lavish upon the cannon of '75 without knowing anything about it
+except by hearsay. Now he had witnessed its effects. "It shoots
+TOO well!" he muttered. In a short time it would finish destroying
+his castle--he was finding such perfection excessive.
+
+But he soon repented of these selfish lamentations. An idea,
+tenacious as remorse, had fastened itself in his brain. It now
+seemed to him that all he was passing through was an expiation for
+the great mistake of his youth. He had evaded the service of his
+country, and now he was enveloped in all the horrors of war, with
+the humiliation of a passive and defenseless being, without any of
+the soldier's satisfaction of being able to return the blows. He
+was going to die--he was sure of that--but a shameful death, unknown
+and inglorious. The ruins of his mansion were going to become his
+sepulchre. . . . And the certainty of dying there in the darkness,
+like a rat that sees the openings of his hole being closed up, made
+this refuge intolerable.
+
+Above him the tornado was still raging. A peal like thunder boomed
+above his head, and then came the crash of a landslide. Another
+projectile must have fallen upon the building. He heard shrieks of
+agony, yells and precipitous steps on the floor above him. Perhaps
+the shell, in its blind fury, had blown to pieces many of the dying
+in the salons.
+
+Fearing to remain buried in his retreat, he bounded up the cellar
+stairs two steps at a time. As he scudded across the first floor,
+he saw the sky through the shattered roofs. Along the edges were
+hanging sections of wood, fragments of swinging tile and furniture
+stopped halfway in its flight. Crossing the hall, he had to clamber
+over much rubbish. He stumbled over broken and twisted iron, parts
+of beds rained from the upper rooms into the mountain of debris in
+which he saw convulsed limbs and heard anguished voices that he
+could not understand.
+
+He leaped as he ran, feeling the same longing for light and free air
+as those who rush from the hold to the deck of a shipwreck. While
+sheltered in the darkness more time had elapsed than he had
+supposed. The sun was now very high. He saw in the garden more
+corpses in tragic and grotesque postures. The wounded were doubled
+over with pain or lying on the ground or propping themselves against
+the trees in painful silence. Some had opened their knapsacks and
+drawn out their sanitary kits and were trying to care for their
+cuts. The infantry was now firing incessantly. The number of
+riflemen had increased. New bands of soldiers were entering the
+park--some with a sergeant at their head, others followed by an
+officer carrying a revolver at his breast as though guiding his men
+with it. This must be the infantry expelled from their position
+near the river which had come to reinforce the second line of
+defense. The mitrailleuses were adding their tac-tac to the cracks
+of the fusileers.
+
+The hum of the invisible swarms was buzzing incessantly. Thousands
+of sticky horse-flies were droning around Desnoyers without his even
+seeing them. The bark of the trees was being stripped by unseen
+hands; the leaves were falling in torrents; the boughs were shaken
+by opposing forces, the stones on the ground were being crushed by a
+mysterious foot. All inanimate objects seemed to have acquired a
+fantastic life. The zinc spoons of the soldiers, the metallic parts
+of their outfit, the pails of the artillery were all clanking as
+though in an imperceptible hailstorm. He saw a cannon lying on its
+side with the wheels broken and turned over among many men who
+appeared asleep; he saw soldiers who stretched themselves out
+without a contraction, without a sound, as though overcome by sudden
+drowsiness. Others were howling and dragging themselves forward in
+a sitting position.
+
+The old man felt an extreme sensation of heat. The pungent perfume
+of explosive drugs brought the tears to his eyes and clawed at his
+throat. At the same time he was chilly and felt his forehead
+freezing in a glacial sweat.
+
+He had to leave the bridge. Several soldiers were passing bearing
+the wounded to the edifice in spite of the fact that it was falling
+in ruins. Suddenly he was sprinkled from head to foot, as if the
+earth had opened to make way for a waterspout. A shell had fallen
+into the moat, throwing up an enormous column of water, making the
+carp sleeping in the mud fly into fragments, breaking a part of the
+edges and grinding to powder the white balustrades with their great
+urns of flowers.
+
+He started to run on with the blindness of terror, when he suddenly
+saw before him the same little round crystal, examining him coolly.
+It was the Junker, the officer of the monocle. . . . With the end
+of his revolver, the German pointed to two pails a short distance
+away, ordering Desnoyers to fill them from the lagoon and give the
+water to the men overcome by the sun. Although the imperious tone
+admitted of no reply, Don Marcelo tried, nevertheless, to resist.
+He received a blow from the revolver on his chest at the same time
+that the lieutenant slapped him in the face. The old man doubled
+over, longing to weep, longing to perish; but no tears came, nor did
+life escape from his body under this affront, as he wished. . . .
+With the two buckets in his hands, he found himself dipping up water
+from the canal, carrying it the length of the file, giving it to men
+who, each in his turn, dropped his gun to gulp the liquid with the
+avidity of panting beasts.
+
+He was no longer afraid of the shrill shrieks of invisible bodies.
+His one great longing was to die. He was strongly convinced that he
+was going to die; his sufferings were too great; there was no longer
+any place in the world for him.
+
+He had to pass by breaches opened in the wall by the bursting
+shells. There was no natural object to arrest the eye looking
+through these gaps. Hedges and groves had been swept away or
+blotted out by the fire of the artillery. He descried at the foot
+of the highway near his castle, several of the attacking columns
+which had crossed the Marne. The advancing forces were coming
+doggedly on, apparently unmoved by the steady, deadly fire of the
+Germans. Soon they were rushing forward with leaps and bounds, by
+companies, shielding themselves behind bits of upland in bends of
+the road, in order to send forth their blasts of death.
+
+The old man was now fired with a desperate resolution;--since he had
+to die, let a French ball kill him! And he advanced very erect with
+his two pails among those men shooting, lying down. Then, with a
+sudden fear, he stood still hanging his head; a second thought had
+told him that the bullet which he might receive would be one danger
+less for the enemy. It would be better for them to kill the
+Germans . . . and he began to cherish the hope that he might get
+possession of some weapon from those dying around him, and fall
+upon that Junker who had struck him.
+
+He was filling his pails for the third time, and murderously
+contemplating the lieutenant's back when something occurred so
+absurd and unnatural that it reminded him of the fantastic flash of
+the cinematograph;--the officer's head suddenly disappeared; two
+jets of blood spurted from his severed neck and his body collapsed
+like an empty sack.
+
+At the same time, a cyclone was sweeping the length of the wall,
+tearing up groves, overturning cannon and carrying away people in a
+whirlwind as though they were dry leaves. He inferred that Death
+was now blowing from another direction. Until then, it had come
+from the front on the river side, battling with the enemy's line
+ensconced behind the walls. Now, with the swiftness of an
+atmospheric change, it was blustering from the depths of the park.
+A skillful manoeuver of the aggressors, the use of a distant road, a
+chance bend in the German line had enabled the French to collect
+their cannon in a new position, attacking the occupants of the
+castle with a flank movement.
+
+It was a lucky thing for Don Marcelo that he had lingered a few
+moments on the bank of the fosse, sheltered by the bulk of the
+edifice. The fire of the hidden battery passed the length of the
+avenue, carrying off the living, destroying for a second time the
+dead, killing horses, breaking the wheels of vehicles and making the
+gun carriages fly through the air with the flames of a volcano in
+whose red and bluish depths black bodies were leaping. He saw
+hundreds of fallen men; he saw disembowelled horses trampling on
+their entrails. The death harvest was not being reaped in sheaves;
+the entire field was being mowed down with a single flash of the
+sickle. And as though the batteries opposite divined the
+catastrophe, they redoubled their fire, sending down a torrent of
+shells. They fell on all sides. Beyond the castle, at the end of
+the park, craters were opening in the woods, vomiting forth the
+entire trunks of trees. The projectiles were hurling from their
+pits the bodies interred the night before.
+
+Those still alive were firing through the gaps in the walls. Then
+they sprang up with the greatest haste. Some grasped their
+bayonets, pale, with clamped lips and a mad glare in their eyes;
+others turned their backs, running toward the exit from the park,
+regardless of the shouts of their officers and the revolver shots
+sent after the fugitives.
+
+All this occurred with dizzying rapidity, like a nightmare. On the
+other side of the wall came a murmur, swelling in volume, like that
+of the sea. Desnoyers heard shouts, and it seemed to him that some
+hoarse, discordant voices were singing the Marseillaise. The
+machine-guns were working with the swift steadiness of sewing
+machines. The attack was going to be opposed with furious
+resistance. The Germans, crazed with fury, shot and shot. In one
+of the breaches appeared a red kepis followed by legs of the same
+color trying to clamber over the ruins. But this vision was
+instantly blotted out by the sprinkling from the machine guns,
+making the invaders fall in great heaps on the other side of the
+wall. Don Marcelo never knew exactly how the change took place.
+Suddenly he saw the red trousers within the park. With irresistible
+bounds they were springing over the wall, slipping through the
+yawning gaps, and darting out from the depths of the woods by
+invisible paths. They were little soldiers, husky, panting,
+perspiring, with torn cloaks; and mingled with them, in the disorder
+of the charge, African marksmen with devilish eyes and foaming
+mouths, Zouaves in wide breeches and chasseurs in blue uniforms.
+
+The German officers wanted to die. With upraised swords, after
+having exhausted the shots in their revolvers, they advanced upon
+their assailants followed by the soldiers who still obeyed them.
+There was a scuffle, a wild melee. To the trembling spectator, it
+seemed as though the world had fallen into profound silence. The
+yells of the combatants, the thud of colliding bodies, the clang of
+arms seemed as nothing after the cannon had quieted down. He saw
+men pierced through the middle by gun points whose reddened ends
+came out through their kidneys; muskets raining hammer-like blows,
+adversaries that grappled in hand-to-hand tussles, rolling over and
+over on the ground, trying to gain the advantage by kicks and bites.
+
+The mustard-colored fronts had entirely disappeared, and he now saw
+only backs of that color fleeing toward the exit, filtering among
+the trees, falling midway in their flight when hit by the pursuing
+balls. Many of the invaders were unable to chase the fugitives
+because they were occupied in repelling with rude thrusts of their
+bayonets the bodies falling upon them in agonizing convulsions.
+
+Don Marcelo suddenly found himself in the very thick of these mortal
+combats, jumping up and down like a child, waving his hands and
+shouting with all his might. When he came to himself again, he was
+hugging the grimy head of a young French officer who was looking at
+him in astonishment. He probably thought him crazy on receiving his
+kisses, on hearing his incoherent torrent of words. Emotionally
+exhausted, the worn old man continued to weep after the officer had
+freed himself with a jerk. . . . He needed to give vent to his
+feelings after so many days of anguished self-control. Vive la
+France! . . .
+
+His beloved French were already within the park gates. They were
+running, bayonets in hand, in pursuit of the last remnants of the
+German battalion trying to escape toward the village. A group of
+horsemen passed along the road. They were dragoons coming to
+complete the rout. But their horses were fagged out; nothing but
+the fever of victory transmitted from man to beast had sustained
+their painful pace. One of the equestrians came to a stop near the
+entrance of the park, the famished horse eagerly devouring the
+herbage while his rider settled down in the saddle as though asleep.
+Desnoyers touched him on the hip in order to waken him, but he
+immediately rolled off on the opposite side. He was dead, with his
+entrails protruding from his body, but swept on with the others, he
+had been brought thus far on his steady steed.
+
+Enormous tops of iron and smoke now began falling in the
+neighborhood. The German artillery was opening a retaliatory fire
+against its lost positions. The advance continued. There passed
+toward the North battalions, squadrons and batteries, worn, weary
+and grimy, covered with dust and mud, but kindled with an ardor that
+galvanized their flagging energy.
+
+The French cannon began thundering on the village side. Bands of
+soldiers were exploring the castle and the nearest woods. From the
+ruined rooms, from the depths of the cellars, from the clumps of
+shrubbery in the park, from the stables and burned garage, came
+surging forth men dressed in greenish gray and pointed helmets.
+They all threw up their arms, extending their open hands:--
+"Kamarades . . . kamarades, non kaput." With the restlessness of
+remorse, they were in dread of immediate execution. They had
+suddenly lost all their haughtiness on finding that they no longer
+had any official powers and were free from discipline. Some of
+those who knew a little French, spoke of their wives and children,
+in order to soften the enemies that were threatening them with their
+bayonets. A brawny Teuton came up to Desnoyers and clapped him on
+the back. It was Redbeard. He pressed his heart and then pointed
+to the owner of the castle. "Franzosen . . . great friend of the
+Franzosen" . . . and he grinned ingratiatingly at his protector.
+
+Don Marcelo remained at the castle until the following morning, and
+was astounded to see Georgette and her mother emerge unexpectedly
+from the depths of the ruined lodge. They were weeping at the sight
+of the French uniforms.
+
+"It could not go on," sobbed the widow. "God does not die."
+
+After a bad night among the ruins, the owner decided to leave
+Villeblanche. What was there for him to do now in the destroyed
+castle? . . . The presence of so many dead was racking his nerves.
+There were hundreds, there were thousands. The soldiers and the
+farmers were interring great heaps of them wherever he went, digging
+burial trenches close to the castle, in all the avenues of the park,
+in the garden paths, around the outbuildings. Even the depths of
+the circular lagoon were filled with corpses. How could he ever
+live again in that tragic community composed mostly of his
+enemies? . . . Farewell forever, castle of Villeblanche!
+
+He turned his steps toward Paris, planning to get there the best way
+he could. He came upon corpses everywhere, but they were not all
+the gray-green uniform. Many of his countrymen had fallen in the
+gallant offensive. Many would still fall in the last throes of the
+battle that was going on behind them, agitating the horizon with its
+incessant uproar. Everywhere red pantaloons were sticking up out of
+the stubble, hobnailed boots glistening in upright position near the
+roadside, livid heads, amputated bodies, stray limbs--and, scattered
+through this funereal medley, red kepis and Oriental caps, helmets
+with tufts of horse hair, twisted swords, broken bayonets, guns and
+great mounds of cannon cartridges. Dead horses were strewing the
+plain with their swollen carcasses. Artillery wagons with their
+charred wood and bent iron frames revealed the tragic moment of the
+explosion. Rectangles of overturned earth marked the situation of
+the enemy's batteries before their retreat. Amidst the broken
+cannons and trucks were cones of carbonized material, the remains of
+men and horses burned by the Germans on the night before their
+withdrawal.
+
+In spite of these barbarian holocausts corpses were every where in
+infinite numbers. There seemed to be no end to their number; it
+seemed as though the earth had expelled all the bodies that it had
+received since the beginning of the world. The sun was impassively
+flooding the fields of death with its waves of light. In its
+yellowish glow, the pieces of the bayonets, the metal plates, the
+fittings of the guns were sparkling like bits of crystal. The damp
+night, the rain, the rust of time had not yet modified with their
+corrosive action these relics of combat.
+
+But decomposition had begun to set in. Graveyard odors were all
+along the road, increasing in intensity as Desnoyers plodded on
+toward Paris. Every half hour, the evidence of corruption became
+more pronounced--many of the dead on this side of the river having
+lain there for three or four days. Bands of crows, at the sound of
+his footsteps, rose up, lazily flapping their wings, but returning
+soon to blacken the earth, surfeited but not satisfied, having lost
+all fear of mankind.
+
+From time to time, the sad pedestrian met living bands of men--
+platoons of cavalry, gendarmes, Zouaves and chasseurs encamped
+around the ruined farmsteads, exploring the country in pursuit of
+German fugitives. Don Marcelo had to explain his business there,
+showing the passport that Lacour had given him in order to make his
+trip on the military train. Only in this way, could he continue his
+journey. These soldiers--many of them slightly wounded--were still
+stimulated by victory. They were laughing, telling stories, and
+narrating the great dangers which they had escaped a few days
+before, always ending with, "We are going to kick them across the
+frontier!" . . .
+
+Their indignation broke forth afresh as they looked around at the
+blasted towns--farms and single houses, all burned. Like skeletons
+of prehistoric beasts, many steel frames twisted by the flames were
+scattered over the plains. The brick chimneys of the factories were
+either levelled to the ground or, pierced with the round holes made
+by shells, were standing up like giant pastoral flutes forced into
+the earth.
+
+Near the ruined villages, the women were removing the earth and
+trying to dig burial trenches, but their labor was almost useless
+because it required an immense force to inter so many dead. "We are
+all going to die after gaining the victory," mused the old man.
+"The plague is going to break out among us."
+
+The water of the river must also be contaminated by this contagion;
+so when his thirst became intolerable he drank, in preference, from
+a nearby pond. . . . But, alas, on raising his head, he saw some
+greenish legs on the surface of the shallow water, the boots sunk in
+the muddy banks. The head of the German was in the depths of the
+pool.
+
+He had been trudging on for several hours when he stopped before a
+ruined house which he believed that he recognized. Yes, it was the
+tavern where he had lunched a few days ago on his way to the castle.
+He forced his way in among the blackened walls where a persistent
+swarm of flies came buzzing around him. The smell of decomposing
+flesh attracted his attention; a leg which looked like a piece of
+charred cardboard was wedged in the ruins. Looking at it bitterly
+he seemed to hear again the old woman with her grandchildren
+clinging to her skirts--"Monsieur, why are the people fleeing? War
+only concerns the soldiers. We countryfolk have done no wrong to
+anybody, and we ought not to be afraid."
+
+Half an hour later, on descending a hilly path, the traveller had
+the most unexpected of encounters. He saw there a taxicab, an
+automobile from Paris. The chauffeur was walking tranquilly around
+the vehicle as if it were at the cab stand, and he promptly entered
+into conversation with this gentleman who appeared to him as
+downcast and dirty as a tramp, with half of his livid face
+discolored from a blow. He had brought out here in his machine some
+Parisians who had wanted to see the battlefield; they were
+reporters; and he was waiting there to take them back at nightfall.
+
+Don Marcelo buried his right hand in his pocket. Two hundred francs
+if the man would drive him to Paris. The chauffeur declined with
+the gravity of a man faithful to his obligations. . . . "Five
+hundred?" . . . and he showed his fist bulging with gold coins. The
+man's only response was a twirl of the handle which started the
+machine to snorting, and away they sped. There was not a battle in
+the neighborhood of Paris every day in the year! His other clients
+could just wait.
+
+And settling back into the motor-car, Desnoyers saw the horrors of
+the battle field flying past at a dizzying speed and disappearing
+behind him. He was rolling toward human life . . . he was returning
+to civilization!
+
+As they came into Paris, the nearly empty streets seemed to him to
+be crowded with people. Never had he seen the city so beautiful.
+He whirled through the avenue de l'Opera, whizzed past the place de
+la Concorde, and thought he must be dreaming as he realized the
+gigantic leap that he had taken within the hour. He compared all
+that was now around him with the sights on that plain of death but a
+few miles away. No; no, it was not possible. One of the extremes
+of this contrast must certainly be false!
+
+The automobile was beginning to slow down; he must be now in the
+avenue Victor Hugo. . . . He couldn't wake up. Was that really his
+home? . . .
+
+The majestic concierge, unable to understand his forlorn appearance,
+greeted him with amazed consternation. "Ah. Monsieur! . . . Where
+has Monsieur been?" . . .
+
+"In hell!" muttered Don Marcelo.
+
+His wonderment continued when he found himself actually in his own
+apartment, going through its various rooms. He was somebody once
+more. The sight of the fruits of his riches and the enjoyment of
+home comforts restored his self-respect at the same time that the
+contrast recalled to his mind the recollection of all the
+humiliations and outrages that he had suffered. . . . Ah, the
+scoundrels! . . .
+
+Two mornings later, the door bell rang. A visitor!
+
+There came toward him a soldier--a little soldier of the infantry,
+timid, with his kepis in his hand, stuttering excuses in Spanish:--
+"I knew that you were here . . . I come to . . ."
+
+That voice? . . . Dragging him from the dark hallway, Don Marcelo
+conducted him to the balcony. . . . How handsome he looked! . . .
+The kepis was red, but darkened with wear; the cloak, too large, was
+torn and darned; the great shoes had a strong smell of leather. Yet
+never had his son appeared to him so elegant, so distinguished-
+looking as now, fitted out in these rough ready-made clothes.
+
+"You! . . . You! . . ."
+
+The father embraced him convulsively, crying like a child, and
+trembling so that he could no longer stand.
+
+He had always hoped that they would finally understand each other.
+His blood was coursing through the boy's veins; he was good, with no
+other defect than a certain obstinacy. He was excusing him now for
+all the past, blaming himself for a great part of it. He had been
+too hard.
+
+"You a soldier!" he kept exclaiming over and over. "You defending
+my country, when it is not yours!" . . .
+
+And he kissed him again, receding a few steps so as to get a better
+look at him. Decidedly he was more fascinating now in his grotesque
+uniform, than when he was so celebrated for his skill as a dancer
+and idolized by the women.
+
+When the delighted father was finally able to control his emotion,
+his eyes, still filled with tears, glowed with a malignant light. A
+spasm of hatred furrowed his face.
+
+"Go," he said simply. "You do not know what war is; I have just
+come from it; I have seen it close by. This is not a war like other
+wars, with rational enemies; it is a hunt of wild beasts. . . .
+Shoot without a scruple against them all. . . . Every one that you
+overcome, rids humanity of a dangerous menace."
+
+He hesitated a few seconds, and then added with tragic calm:
+
+"Perhaps you may encounter familiar faces. Family ties are not
+always formed to our tastes. Men of your blood are on the other
+side. If you see any one of them . . . do not hesitate. Shoot! He
+is your enemy. Kill him! . . . Kill him!"
+
+
+
+PART III
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+AFTER THE MARNE
+
+
+At the end of October, the Desnoyers family returned to Paris. Dona
+Luisa could no longer live in Biarritz, so far from her husband. In
+vain la Romantica discoursed on the dangers of a return. The
+Government was still in Bordeaux, the President of the Republic and
+the Ministry making only the most hurried apparitions in the
+Capital. The course of the war might change at any minute; that
+little affair of the Marne was but a momentary relief. . . . But
+the good senora, after having read Don Marcelo's letters, opposed an
+adamantine will to all contrary suggestions. Besides, she was
+thinking of her son, her Julio, now a soldier. . . . She believed
+that, by returning to Paris, she might in some ways be more in touch
+with him than at this seaside resort near the Spanish frontier.
+
+Chichi also wished to return because Rene was now filling the
+greater part of her thoughts. Absence had shown her that she was
+really in love with him. Such a long time without seeing her little
+sugar soldier! . . . So the family abandoned their hotel life and
+returned to the avenue Victor Hugo.
+
+Since the shock of the first September days, Paris had been
+gradually changing its aspect. The nearly two million inhabitants
+who had been living quietly in their homes without letting
+themselves be drawn into the panic, had accepted the victory with
+grave serenity. None of them could explain the exact course of the
+battle; they would learn all about it when it was entirely finished.
+
+One September Sunday, at the hour when the Parisians are accustomed
+to take advantage of the lovely twilight, they had learned from the
+newspapers of the great triumph of the Allies and of the great
+danger which they had so narrowly escaped. The people were
+delighted, but did not, however, abandon their calm demeanor. Six
+weeks of war had radically changed the temperament of turbulent and
+impressionable Paris.
+
+The victory was slowly restoring the Capital to its former aspect.
+A street that was practically deserted a few weeks before was now
+filled with transients. The shops were reopening. The neighbors
+accustomed to the conventional silence of their deserted apartment
+houses, again heard sounds of returning life in the homes above and
+below them.
+
+Don Marcelo's satisfaction in welcoming his family home was
+considerably clouded by the presence of Dona Elena. She was Germany
+returning to the encounter, the enemy again established within his
+tents. Would he never be able to free himself from this
+bondage? . . . She was silent in her brother-in-law's presence
+because recent events had rather bewildered her. Her countenance
+was stamped with a wondering expression as though she were gazing
+at the upsetting of the most elemental physical laws. In reflective
+silence she was puzzling over the Marne enigma, unable to understand
+how it was that the Germans had not conquered the ground on which
+she was treading; and in order to explain this failure, she
+resorted to the most absurd suppositions.
+
+One especially engrossing matter was increasing her sadness. Her
+sons. . . . What would become of her sons! Don Marcelo had never
+told her of his meeting with Captain von Hartrott. He was
+maintaining absolute silence about his sojourn at Villeblanche. He
+had no desire to recount his adventures at the battle of the Marne.
+What was the use of saddening his loved ones with such miseries? . . .
+He simply told Dona Luisa, who was alarmed about the possible
+fate of the castle, that they would not be able to go there for many
+years to come, because the hostilities had rendered it
+uninhabitable. A covering of zinc sheeting had been substituted for
+the ancient roof in order to prevent further injury from wind and
+rain to the wrecked interior. Later on, after peace had been
+declared, they would think about its renovation. Just now it had
+too many inhabitants. And all the ladies, including Dona Elena,
+shuddered in imagining the thousands of buried bodies forming their
+ghastly circle around the building. This vision made Frau von
+Hartrott again groan, "Ay, my sons!"
+
+Finally, for humanity's sake, her brother-in-law set her mind at
+rest regarding the fate of one of them, the Captain von Hartrott.
+He was in perfect health at the beginning of the battle. He knew
+that this was so from a friend who had conversed with him . . . and
+he did not wish to talk further about him.
+
+Dona Luisa was spending a part of each day in the churches, trying
+to quiet her uneasiness with prayer. These petitions were no longer
+vague and generous for the fate of millions of unknown men, for the
+victory of an entire people. With maternal self-centredness they
+were focussed on one single person--her son, who was a soldier like
+the others, and perhaps at this very moment was exposed to the
+greatest danger. The tears that he had cost her! . . . She had
+implored that he and his father might come to understand each other,
+and finally just as God was miraculously granting her supplication,
+Julio had taken himself off to the field of death.
+
+Her entreaties never went alone to the throne of grace. Someone was
+praying near her, formulating identical requests. The tearful eyes
+of her sister were raised at the same time as hers to the figure of
+the crucified Savior. "Lord, save my son! . . . When uttering
+these words, Dona Luisa always saw Julio as he looked in a pale
+photograph which he had sent his father from the trenches--with
+kepis and military cloak, a gun in his right hand, and his face
+shadowed by a growing beard. "O Lord have mercy upon us!" . . . and
+Dona Elena was at the same time contemplating a group of officers
+with helmets and reseda uniforms reinforced with leather pouches for
+the revolver, field glasses and maps, with sword-belt of the same
+material.
+
+Oftentimes when Don Marcelo saw them setting forth together toward
+Saint Honore d'Eylau, he would wax very indignant.
+
+"They are juggling with God. . . . This is most unreasonable! How
+could He grant such contrary petitions? . . . Ah, these women!"
+
+And then, with that superstition which danger awakens, he began to
+fear that his sister-in-law might cause some grave disaster to his
+son. Divinity, fatigued with so many contradictory prayers was
+going to turn His back and not listen to any of them. Why did not
+this fatal woman take herself off? . . .
+
+He felt as exasperated at her presence in his home as he had at the
+beginning of hostilities. Dona Luisa was still innocently repeating
+her sister's statements, submitting them to the superior criticism
+of her husband. In this way, Don Marcelo had learned that the
+victory of the Marne had never really happened; it was an invention
+of the allies. The German generals had deemed it prudent to retire
+through profound strategic foresight, deferring till a little later
+the conquest of Paris, and the French had done nothing but follow
+them over the ground which they had left free. That was all. She
+knew the opinions of military men of neutral countries; she had been
+talking in Biarritz with some people of unusual intelligence; she
+knew what the German papers were saying about it. Nobody over there
+believed that yarn about the Marne. The people did not even know
+that there had been such a battle.
+
+"Your sister said that?" interrupted Desnoyers, pale with wrath and
+amazement.
+
+But he could do nothing but keep on longing for the bodily
+transformation of this enemy planted under his roof. Ay, if she
+could only be changed into a man! If only the evil genius of her
+husband could but take her place for a brief half hour! . . .
+
+"But the war still goes on," said Dona Luisa in artless perplexity.
+"The enemy is still in France. . . . What good did the battle of
+the Marne do?"
+
+She accepted his explanations with intelligent noddings of the head,
+seeming to take them all in, and an hour afterwards would be
+repeating the same doubts.
+
+She, nevertheless, began to evince a mute hostility toward her
+sister. Until now, she had been tolerating her enthusiasms in favor
+of her husband's country because she always considered family ties
+of more importance than the rivalries of nations. Just because
+Desnoyers happened to be a Frenchman and Karl a German, she was not
+going to quarrel with Elena. But suddenly this forbearance had
+vanished. Her son was now in danger. . . . Better that all the von
+Hartrotts should die than that Julio should receive the most
+insignificant wound! . . . She began to share the bellicose
+sentiments of her daughter, recognizing in her an exceptional talent
+for appraising events, and now desiring all of Chichi's dagger
+thrusts to be converted into reality.
+
+Fortunately La Romantica took herself off before this antipathy
+crystallized. She was accustomed to pass the afternoons somewhere
+outside, and on her return would repeat the news gleaned from
+friends unknown to the rest of the family.
+
+This made Don Marcelo wax very indignant because of the spies still
+hidden in Paris. What mysterious world was his sister-in-law
+frequenting? . . .
+
+Suddenly she announced that she was leaving the following morning;
+she had obtained a passport to Switzerland, and from there she would
+go to Germany. It was high time for her to be returning to her own;
+she was most appreciative of the hospitality shown her by the
+family. . . . And Desnoyers bade her good-bye with aggressive
+irony. His regards to von Hartrott; he was hoping to pay him a
+visit in Berlin as soon as possible.
+
+One morning Dona Luisa, instead of entering the neighboring church
+as usual, continued on to the rue de la Pompe, pleased at the
+thought of seeing the studio once more. It seemed to her that in
+this way she might put herself more closely in touch with her son.
+This would be a new pleasure, even greater than poring over his
+photograph or re-reading his last letter.
+
+She was hoping to meet Argensola, the friend of good counsels, for
+she knew that he was still living in the studio. Twice he had come
+to see her by the service stairway as in the old days, but she had
+been out.
+
+As she went up in the elevator, her heart was palpitating with
+pleasure and distress. It occurred to the good lady that the
+"foolish virgins" must have had feelings like this when for the
+first time they fell from the heights of virtue.
+
+The tears came to her eyes when she beheld the room whose
+furnishings and pictures so vividly recalled the absent. Argensola
+hastened from the door at the end of the room, agitated, confused,
+and greeting her with expressions of welcome at the same time that
+he was putting sundry objects out of sight. A woman's sweater lying
+on the divan, he covered with a piece of Oriental drapery--a hat
+trimmed with flowers, he sent flying into a far-away corner. Dona
+Luisa fancied that she saw a bit of gauzy feminine negligee
+embroidered in pink, flitting past the window frame. Upon the divan
+were two big coffee cups and bits of toast evidently left from a
+double breakfast. These artists! . . . The same as her son! And
+she was moved to compassion over the bad life of Julio's counsellor.
+
+"My honored Dona Luisa. . . . My DEAR Madame Desnoyers. . . ."
+
+He was speaking in French and at the top of his voice, looking
+frantically at the door through which the white and rosy garments
+had flitted. He was trembling at the thought that his hidden
+companion, not understanding the situation, might in a jealous fit,
+compromise him by a sudden apparition.
+
+Then he spoke to his unexpected guest about the soldier, exchanging
+news with her. Dona Luisa repeated almost word for word the
+paragraphs of his letters so frequently read. Argensola modestly
+refrained from displaying his; the two friends were accustomed to an
+epistolary style which would have made the good lady blush.
+
+"A valiant man!" affirmed the Spaniard proudly, looking upon the
+deeds of his comrade as though they were his own. "A true hero! and
+I, Madame Desnoyers, know something about what that means. . . .
+His chiefs know how to appreciate him." . . .
+
+Julio was a sergeant after having been only two months in the
+campaign. The captain of his company and the other officials of the
+regiment belonged to the fencing club in which he had had so many
+triumphs.
+
+"What a career!" he enthused. "He is one of those who in youth
+reach the highest ranks, like the Generals of the Revolution. . . .
+And what wonders he has accomplished!"
+
+The budding officer had merely referred in the most casual way to
+some of exploits, with the indifference of one accustomed to danger
+and expecting the same attitude from his comrades; but his chum
+exaggerated them, enlarging upon them as though they were the
+culminating events of the war. He had carried an order across an
+infernal fire, after three messengers, trying to accomplish the same
+feat, had fallen dead. He had been the first to attack many
+trenches and had saved many of his comrades by means of the blows
+from his bayonet and hand to hand encounters. Whenever his superior
+officers needed a reliable man, they invariably said, "Let Sergeant
+Desnoyers be called!"
+
+He rattled off all this as though he had witnessed it, as if he had
+just come from the seat of war, making Dona Luisa tremble and pour
+forth tears of joy mingled with fear over the glories and dangers of
+her son. That Argensola certainly possessed the gift of affecting
+his hearers by the realism with which he told his stories!
+
+In gratitude for these eulogies, she felt that she ought to show
+some interest in his affairs. . . . What had he been doing of late?
+
+"I, Madame, have been where I ought to be. I have not budged from
+this spot. I have witnessed the siege of Paris."
+
+In vain, his reason protested against the inexactitude of that word,
+"siege." Under the influence of his readings about the war of 1870,
+he had classed as a siege all those events which had developed near
+Paris during the course of the battle of the Marne.
+
+He pointed modestly to a diploma in a gold frame hanging above the
+piano against a tricolored flag. It was one of the papers sold in
+the streets, a certificate of residence in the Capital during the
+week of danger. He had filled in the blanks with his name and
+description of his person; and at the foot were very conspicuous the
+signatures of two residents of the rue de la Pompe--a tavern-keeper,
+and a friend of the concierge. The district Commissary of Police,
+with stamp and seal, had guaranteed the respectability of these
+honorable witnesses. Nobody could remain in doubt, after such
+precautions, as to whether he had or had not witnessed the siege of
+Paris. He had such incredulous friends! . . .
+
+In order to bring the scene more dramatically before his amiable
+listener, he recalled the most striking of his impressions for her
+special benefit. Once, in broad daylight, he had seen a flock of
+sheep in the boulevard near the Madeleine. Their tread had
+resounded through the deserted streets like echoes from the city of
+the dead. He was the only pedestrian on the sidewalks thronged with
+cats and dogs.
+
+His military recollections excited him like tales of glory.
+
+"I have seen the march of the soldiers from Morocco. . . . I have
+seen the Zouaves in automobiles!"
+
+The very night that Julio had gone to Bordeaux, he had wandered
+around till sunrise, traversing half of Paris, from the Lion of
+Belfort, to the Gare de l'Est. Twenty thousand men, with all their
+campaign outfit, coming from Morocco, had disembarked at Marseilles
+and arrived at the Capital, making part of the trip by rail and the
+rest afoot. They had come to take part in the great battle then
+beginning. They were troops composed of Europeans and Africans.
+The vanguard, on entering through the Orleans gate, had swung into
+rhythmic pace, thus crossing half Paris toward the Gare de l'Est
+where the trains were waiting for them.
+
+The people of Paris had seen squadrons from Tunis with theatrical
+uniforms, mounted on horses, nervous and fleet, Moors with yellow
+turbans, Senegalese with black faces and scarlet caps, colonial
+artillerymen, and light infantry from Africa. These were
+professional warriors, soldiers who in times of peace, led a life of
+continual fighting in the colonies--men with energetic profiles,
+bronzed faces and the eyes of beasts of prey. They had remained
+motionlesss in the streets for hours at a time, until room could be
+found for them in the military trains. . . . And Argensola had
+followed this armed, impassive mass of humanity from the boulevards,
+talking with the officials, and listening to the primitive cries of
+the African warriors who had never seen Paris, and who passed
+through it without curiosity, asking where the enemy was.
+
+They had arived in time to attack von Kluck on the banks of the
+Ourq, obliging him to fall back or be completely overwhelmed.
+
+A fact which Argensola did not relate to his sympathetic guest was
+that his nocturnal excursion the entire length of this division of
+the army had been accompanied by the amiable damsel within, and two
+other friends--an enthusiastic and generous coterie, distributing
+flowers and kisses to the swarthy soldiers, and laughing at their
+consternation and gleaming white teeth.
+
+Another day he had seen the most extraordinary of all the spectacles
+of the war. All the taxicabs, some two thousand vehicles, conveying
+battalions of Zouaves, eight men to a motor car, had gone rolling
+past him at full speed, bristling with guns and red caps. They had
+presented a most picturesque train in the boulevards, like a kind of
+interminable wedding procession. And these soldiers got out of the
+automobiles on the very edge of the battle field, opening fire the
+instant that they leaped from the steps. Gallieni had launched all
+the men who knew how to handle a gun against the extreme right of
+the adversary at the supreme moment when the most insignificant
+weight might tip the scales in favor of the victory which was
+hanging in the balance. The clerks and secretaries of the military
+offices, the orderlies of the government and the civil police, all
+had marched to give that final push, forming a mass of heterogenous
+colors.
+
+And one Sunday afternoon when, with his three companions of the
+"siege" he was strolling with thousands of other Parisians through
+the Bois de Boulogne, he had learned from the extras that the combat
+which had developed so near to the city was turning into a great
+battle, a victory.
+
+"I have seen much, Madame Desnoyers. . . . I can relate great
+events."
+
+And she agreed with him. Of course Argensola had seen much! . . .
+And on taking her departure, she offered him all the assistance in
+her power. He was the friend of her son, and she was used to his
+petitions. Times had changed; Don Marcelo's generosity now knew no
+bounds . . . but the Bohemian interrupted her with a lordly gesture;
+he was living in luxury. Julio had made him his trustee. The draft
+from America had been honored by the bank as a deposit, and he had
+the use of the interest in accordance with the regulations of the
+moratorium. His friend was sending him regularly whatever money was
+needed for household expenses. Never had he been in such prosperous
+condition. War had its good side, too . . . but not wishing to
+break away from old customs, he announced that once more he would
+mount the service stairs in order to bear away a basket of bottles.
+
+After her sister's departure, Dona Luisa went alone to the churches
+until Chichi in an outburst of devotional ardor, suddenly surprised
+her with the announcement:
+
+"Mama, I am going with you!"
+
+The new devotee was no longer agitating the household by her
+rollicking, boyish joy; she was no longer threatening the enemy with
+imaginary dagger thrusts. She was pale, and with dark circles under
+her eyes. Her head was drooping as though weighed down with a set
+of serious, entirely new thoughts on the other side of her forehead.
+
+Dona Luisa observed her in the church with an almost indignant
+jealousy. Her headstrong child's eyes were moist, and she was
+praying as fervently as the mother . . . but it was surely not for
+her brother. Julio had passed to second place in her remembrance.
+Another man was now completely filling her thoughts.
+
+The last of the Lacours was no longer a simple soldier, nor was he
+now in Paris. Upon her return from Biarritz, Chichi had listened
+anxiously to the reports from her little sugar soldier. Throbbing
+with eagerness, she wanted to know all about the dangers which he
+had been experiencing; and the young warrior "in the auxiliary
+service" told her of his restlessness in the office during the
+interminable days in which the troops were battling around Paris,
+hearing afar off the boom of the artillery. His father had wished
+to take him with him to Bordeaux, but the administrative confusion
+of the last hour had kept him in the capital.
+
+He had done something more. On the day of the great crisis, when
+the acting governor had sent out all the available men in
+automobiles, he had, unasked, seized a gun and occupied a motor with
+others from his office. He had not seen anything more than smoke,
+burning houses, and wounded men. Not a single German had passed
+before his eyes, excepting a band of Uhlan prisoners, but for some
+hours he had been shooting on the edge of the road . . . and nothing
+more.
+
+For a while, that was enough for Chichi. She felt very proud to be
+the betrothed of a hero of the Marne, even though his intervention
+had lasted but a few hours. In a few days, however, her enthusiasm
+became rather clouded.
+
+It was becoming annoying to stroll through the streets with Rene, a
+simple soldier and in the auxiliary service, besides. . . . The
+women of the town, excited by the recollection of their men fighting
+at the front, or clad in mourning because of the death of some loved
+one, would look at them with aggressive insolence. The refinement
+and elegance of the Republican Prince seemed to irritate them.
+Several times, she overheard uncomplimentary words hurled against
+the "embusques."
+
+The fact that her brother who was not French was in the thick of the
+fighting, made the Lacour situation still more intolerable. She had
+an "embusque" for a lover. How her friends would laugh at her! . . .
+
+The senator's son soon read her thoughts and began to lose some of
+his smiling serenity. For three days he did not present himself at
+the Desnoyers' home, and they all supposed that he was detained by
+work at the office.
+
+One morning as Chichi was going toward the Bois de Boulogne,
+escorted by one of the nut-brown maids, she noticed a soldier coming
+toward her. He was wearing a bright uniform of the new gray-blue,
+the "horizon blue" just adopted by the French army. The chin strap
+of his kepi was gilt, and on his sleeve there was a little strip of
+gold. His smile, his outstretched hands, the confidence with which
+he advanced toward her made her recognize him. Rene an officer!
+Her betrothed a sub-lieutenant!
+
+"Yes, of course! I could do nothing else. . . . I had heard
+enough!"
+
+Without his father's knowledge, and assisted by his friends, he had
+in a few days, wrought this wonderful transformation. As a graduate
+of the Ecole Centrale, he held the rank of a sub-lieutenant of the
+Reserve Artillery, and he had requested to be sent to the front.
+Good-bye to the auxiliary service! . . . Within two days, he was
+going to start for the war.
+
+"You have done this!" exclaimed Chichi. "You have done this!"
+
+Although very pale, she gazed fondly at him with her great eyes--
+eyes that seemed to devour him with admiration.
+
+"Come here, my poor boy. . . . Come here, my sweet little
+soldier! . . . I owe you something."
+
+And turning her back on the maid, she asked him to come with her
+round the corner. It was just the same there. The cross street was
+just as thronged as the avenue. But what did she care for the stare
+of the curious! Rapturously she flung her arms around his neck,
+blind and insensible to everything and everybody but him.
+
+"There. . . . There!" And she planted on his face two vehement,
+sonorous, aggressive kisses.
+
+Then, trembling and shuddering, she suddenly weakened, and fumbling
+for her handkerchief, broke down in desperate weeping.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+IN THE STUDIO
+
+
+Upon opening the studio door one afternoon, Argensola stood
+motionless with surprise, as though rooted to the ground.
+
+An old gentleman was greeting him with an amiable smile.
+
+"I am the father of Julio."
+
+And he walked into the apartment with the confidence of a man
+entirely familiar with his surroundings.
+
+By good luck, the artist was alone, and was not obliged to tear
+frantically from one end of the room to the other, hiding the traces
+of convivial company; but he was a little slow in regaining his
+self-control. He had heard so much about Don Marcelo and his bad
+temper, that he was very uncomfortable at this unexpected appearance
+in the studio. . . . What could the fearful man want?
+
+His tranquillity was restored after a furtive, appraising glance.
+His friend's father had aged greatly since the beginning of the war.
+He no longer had that air of tenacity and ill-humor that had made
+him unapproachable. His eyes were sparkling with childish glee; his
+hands were trembling slightly, and his back was bent. Argensola,
+who had always dodged him in the street and had thrilled with fear
+when sneaking up the stairway in the avenue home, now felt a sudden
+confidence. The transformed old man was beaming on him like a
+comrade, and making excuses to justify his visit.
+
+He had wished to see his son's home. Poor old man! He was drawn
+thither by the same attraction which leads the lover to lessen his
+solitude by haunting the places that his beloved has frequented.
+The letters from Julio were not enough; he needed to see his old
+abode, to be on familiar terms with the objects which had surrounded
+him, to breathe the same air, to chat with the young man who was his
+boon companion.
+
+His fatherly glance now included Argensola. . . . "A very
+interesting fellow, that Argensola!" And as he thought this, he
+forgot completely that, without knowing him, he had been accustomed
+to refer to him as "shameless," just because he was sharing his
+son's prodigal life.
+
+Desnoyers' glance roamed delightedly around the studio. He knew
+well these tapestries and furnishings, all the decorations of the
+former owner. He easily remembered everything that he had ever
+bought, in spite of the fact that they were so many. His eyes then
+sought the personal effects, everything that would call the absent
+occupant to mind; and he pored over the miserably executed
+paintings, the unfinished dabs which filled all the corners.
+
+Were they all Julio's? . . . Many of the canvases belonged to
+Argensola, but affected by the old man's emotion, the artist
+displayed a marvellous generosity. Yes, everything was Julio's
+handiwork . . . and the father went from canvas to canvas, halting
+admiringly before the vaguest daubs as though he could almost detect
+signs of genius in their nebulous confusion.
+
+"You think he has talent, really?" he asked in a tone that implored
+a favorable reply. "I always thought him very intelligent . . . a
+little of the diable, perhaps, but character changes with
+years. . . . Now he is an altogether different man."
+
+And he almost wept at hearing the Spaniard, with his ready,
+enthusiastic speech, lauding the departed "diable," graphically
+setting forth the way in which his great genius was going to take
+the world when his turn should come.
+
+The painter of souls finally worked himself up into feeling as much
+affected as the father, and began to admire this old Frenchman with
+a certain remorse, not wishing to remember how he had ranted against
+him not so very long ago. What injustice! . . .
+
+Don Marcelo clasped his hand like an old comrade. All of his son's
+friends were his friends. He knew the life that young men lived. . . .
+If at any time, he should be in any difficulties, if he needed
+an allowance so as to keep on with his painting--there he was,
+anxious to help him! He then and there invited him to dine at his
+home that very night, and if he would care to come every evening, so
+much the better. He would eat a family dinner, entirely informal.
+War had brought about a great many changes, but he would always be
+as welcome to the intimacy of the hearth as though he were in his
+father's home.
+
+Then he spoke of Spain, in order to place himself on a more
+congenial footing with the artist. He had never been there but
+once, and then only for a short time; but after the war, he was
+going to know it better. His father-in-law was a Spaniard, his wife
+had Spanish blood, and in his home the language of the family was
+always Castilian. Ah, Spain, the country with a noble past and
+illustrious men! . . .
+
+Argensola had a strong suspicion that if he had been a native of any
+other land, the old gentleman would have praised it in the same way.
+All this affection was but a reflex of his love for his absent son,
+but it so pleased the impressionable fellow that he almost embraced
+Don Marcelo when he took his departure.
+
+After that, his visits to the studio were very frequent. The artist
+was obliged to recommend his friends to take a good long walk after
+lunch, abstaining from reappearing in the rue de la Pompe until
+nightfall. Sometimes, however, Don Marcelo would unexpectedly
+present himself in the morning, and then the soulful impressionist
+would have to scurry from place to place, hiding here, concealing
+there, in order that his workroom should preserve its appearance of
+virtuous labor.
+
+"Youth . . . youth!" the vistor would murmur with a smile of
+tolerance.
+
+And he actually had to make an effort to recall the dignity of his
+years, in order not to ask Argensola to present him to the fair
+fugitives whose presence he suspected in the interior rooms.
+Perhaps they had been his boy's friends, too. They represented a
+part of his past, anyway, and that was enough to make him presume
+that they had great charms which made them interesting.
+
+These surprises, with their upsetting consequences, finally made the
+painter rather regret this new friendship; and the invitations to
+dinner which he was constantly receiving bored him, too. He found
+the Desnoyers table most excellent, but too tedious--for the father
+and mother could talk of nothing but their absent son. Chichi
+scarcely looked at her brother's friend. Her attention was entirely
+concentrated on the war. The irregularity in the mails was
+exasperating her so that she began composing protests to the
+government whenever a few days passed by without bringing any letter
+from sub-Lieutenant Lacour.
+
+Argensola excused himself on various pretexts from continuing to
+dine in the avenue Victor Hugo. It pleased him far more to haunt
+the cheap restaurants with his female flock. His host accepted his
+negatives with good-natured resignation.
+
+"Not to-day, either?"
+
+And in order to compensate for his guest's non-appearance, he would
+present himself at the studio earlier than ever on the day
+following.
+
+It was an exquisite pleasure for the doting father to let the time
+slip by seated on the divan which still seemed to guard the very
+hollow made by Julio's body, gazing at the canvases covered with
+color by his brush, toasting his toes by the beat of a stove which
+roared so cosily in the profound, conventual silence. It certainly
+was an agreeable refuge, full of memories in the midst of monotonous
+Paris so saddened by the war that he could not meet a friend who was
+not preoccupied with his own troubles.
+
+His former purchasing dissipations had now lost all charm for him.
+The Hotel Drouot no longer tempted him. At that time, the goods of
+German residents, seized by the government, were being auctioned
+off;--a felicitous retaliation for the enforced journey which the
+fittings of the castle of Villeblanche had taken on the road to
+Berlin; but the agents told him in vain of the few competitors which
+he would now meet. He no longer felt attracted by these
+extraordinary bargains. Why buy anything more? . . . Of what use
+was such useless stuff? Whenever he thought of the hard life of
+millions of men in the open field, he felt a longing to lead an
+ascetic life. He was beginning to hate the ostentatious splendors
+of his home on the avenue Victor Hugo. He now recalled without a
+regretful pang, the destruction of the castle. No, he was far
+better off there . . . and "there" was always the studio of Julio.
+
+Argensola began to form the habit of working in the presence of Don
+Marcelo. He knew that the resolute soul abominated inactive people,
+so, under the contagious influence of dominant will-power, he began
+several new pieces. Desnoyers would follow with interest the
+motions of his brush and accept all the explanations of the soulful
+delineator. For himself, he always preferred the old masters, and
+in his bargains had acquired the work of many a dead artist; but the
+fact that Julio had thought as his partner did was now enough for
+the devotee of the antique and made him admit humbly all the
+Spaniard's superior theories.
+
+The artist's laborious zeal was always of short duration. After a
+few moments, he always found that he preferred to rest on the divan
+and converse with his guest.
+
+The first subject, of course, was the absentee. They would repeat
+fragments of the letters they had received, and would speak of the
+past with the most discreet allusions. The painter described
+Julio's life before the war as an existence dedicated completely to
+art. The father ignored the inexactitude of such words, and
+gratefully accepted the lie as a proof of friendship. Argensola was
+such a clever comrade, never, in his loftiest verbal flights, making
+the slightest reference to Madame Laurier.
+
+The old gentleman was often thinking about her nowadays, for he had
+seen her in the street giving her arm to her husband, now recovered
+from his wounds. The illustrious Lacour had informed him with great
+satisfaction of their reconciliation. The engineer had lost but one
+eye. Now he was again at the head of his factory requisitioned by
+the government for the manufacture of shells. He was a Captain, and
+was wearing two decorations of honor. The senator did not know
+exactly how this unexpected agreement had come about. He had one
+day seen them coming home together, looking affectionately at each
+other, in complete oblivion of the past.
+
+"Who remembers things that happened before the war said the politic
+sage. "They and their friends have completely forgotten all about
+their divorce. Nowadays we are all living a new existence. . . . I
+believe that the two are happier than ever before."
+
+Desnoyers had had a presentiment of this happiness when he saw them
+together. And the man of inflexible morality who was, the year
+before, anathematizing his son's behavior toward Laurier,
+considering it the most unpardonable of his adventures, now felt a
+certain indignation in seeing Marguerite devoted to her husband, and
+talking to him with such affectionate interest. This matrimonial
+felicity seemed to him like the basest ingratitude. A woman who had
+had such an influence over the life of Julio! . . . Could she thus
+easily forget her love? . . .
+
+The two had passed on as though they did not recognize him. Perhaps
+Captain Laurier did not see very clearly, but she had looked at him
+frankly and then hastily averted her eyes so as to evade his
+greeting. . . . The old man felt sad over such indifference, not on
+his own account, but on his son's. Poor Julio! . . . The unbending
+parent, in complete mental immorality, found himself lamenting this
+indifference as something monstrous.
+
+The war was the other topic of conversation during the afternoons
+passed in the studio. Argensola was not now stuffing his pockets
+with printed sheets as at the beginning of hostilities. A serene
+and resigned calm had succeeded the excitement of those first
+moments when the people were daily looking for miraculous
+interventions. All the periodicals were saying about the same
+thing. He was content with the official report, and he had learned
+to wait for that document without impatience, foreseeing that with
+but few exceptions, it would say the same thing as the day before.
+
+The fever of the first months, with its illusions and optimisms, now
+appeared to Argensola somewhat chimerical. Those not actually
+engaged in the war were returning gradually to their habitual
+occupations. Life had recovered its regular rhythm. "One must
+live!" said the people, and the struggle for existence filled their
+thoughts with its immediate urgency. Those whose relatives were in
+the army, were still thinking of them, but their occupations were so
+blunting the edge of memory, that they were becoming accustomed to
+their absence, regarding the unusual as the normal condition. At
+first, the war made sleep out of the question, food impossible to
+swallow, and embittered every pleasure with its funereal pall. Now
+the shops were slowly opening, money was in circulation, and people
+were able to laugh; they talked of the great calamity, but only at
+certain hours, as something that was going to be long, very long and
+would exact great resignation to its inevitable fatalism.
+
+"Humanity accustoms itself easily to trouble," said Argensola,
+"provided that the trouble lasts long enough. . . . In this lies
+our strength."
+
+Don Marcelo was not in sympathy with the general resignation. The
+war was going to be much shorter than they were all imagining. His
+enthusiasm had settled on a speedy termination;--within the next
+three months, the next Spring probably; if peace were not declared
+in the Spring, it surely would be in the Summer.
+
+A new talker took part in these conversations. Desnoyers had become
+acquainted with the Russian neighbor of whom Argensola had so
+frequently spoken. Since this odd personage had also known his son,
+that was enough to make Tchernoff arouse his interest.
+
+In normal times, he would have kept him at a distance. The
+millionaire was a great believer in law and order. He abominated
+revolutionists, with the instinctive fear of all the rich who have
+built up a fortune and remember their humble beginnings.
+Tchernoff's socialism and nationality brought vividly to his mind a
+series of feverish images--bombs, daggers, stabbings, deserved
+expiations on the gallows, and exile to Siberia. No, he was not
+desirable as a friend. . . .
+
+But now Don Marcelo was experiencing an abrupt reversal of his
+convictions regarding alien ideas. He had seen so much! . . . The
+revolting proceedings of the invasion, the unscrupulous methods of
+the German chiefs, the tranquillity with which their submarines were
+sinking boats filled with defenseless passengers, the deeds of the
+aviators who were hurling bombs upon unguarded cities, destroying
+women and children--all this was causing the events of revolutionary
+terrorism which, years ago, used to arouse his wrath, to sink into
+relative unimportance.
+
+"And to think," he said "that we used to be as infuriated as though
+the world were coming to an end, just because someone threw a bomb
+at a grandee!"
+
+Those titled victims had had certain reprehensible qualities which
+had justified their execution. They had died in consequence of acts
+which they undertook, knowing well what the punishment would be.
+They had brought retribution on themselves without trying to evade
+it, rarely taking any precautions. While the terrorists of this
+war! . . .
+
+With the violence of his imperious character, the old conservative
+now swung to the opposite extreme.
+
+"The true anarchists are yet on top," he said with an ironical
+laugh. "Those who terrified us formerly, all put together, were but
+a few miserable creatures. . . . In a few seconds, these of our day
+kill more innocent people than those others did in thirty years."
+
+The gentleness of Tchernoff, his original ideas, his incoherencies
+of thought, bounding from reflection to word without any
+preparation, finally won Don Marcelo so completely over that he
+formed the habit of consulting him about all his doubts. His
+admiration made him, too, overlook the source of certain bottles
+with which Argensola sometimes treated his neighbor. He was
+delighted to have Tchernoff consume these souvenirs of the time when
+he was living at swords' points with his son.
+
+After sampling the wine from the avenue Victor Hugo, the Russian
+would indulge in a visionary loquacity similar to that of the night
+when he evoked the fantastic cavalcade of the four horsemen of the
+Apocalypse.
+
+What his new convert most admired was his facility for making things
+clear, and fixing them in the imagination. The battle of the Marne
+with its subsequent combats and the course of both armies were
+events easily explained. . . . If the French only had not been so
+fatigued after their triumph of the Marne! . . .
+
+"But human powers," continued Tchernoff, "have their limits, and the
+French soldier, with all his enthusiasm, is a man like the rest. In
+the first place, the most rapid of marches from the East to the
+North, in order to resist the invasion of Belgium; then the combats;
+then the swift retreat that they might not be surrounded; finally a
+seven days' battle--and all this in a period of three weeks, no
+more. . . . In their moment of triumph, the victors lacked the legs
+to follow up their advantage, and they lacked the cavalry to pursue
+the fugitives. Their beasts were even more exhausted than the men.
+When those who were retreating found that they were being spurred on
+with lessening tenacity, they had stretched themselves, half-dead
+with fatigue, on the field, excavating the ground and forming a
+refuge for themselves. The French also flung themselves down,
+scraping the soil together so as not to lose what they had
+gained. . . . And in this way began the war of the trenches."
+
+Then each line, with the intention of wrapping itself around that of
+the enemy, had gone on prolonging itself toward the Northeast, and
+from these successive stretchings had resulted the double course
+toward the sea--forming the greatest battle front ever known to
+history.
+
+When Don Marcelo with optimistic enthusiasm announced the end of the
+war in the following Spring or Summer--in four months at the
+outside--the Russian shook his head.
+
+"It will be long . . . very long. It is a new war, the genuine
+modern warfare. The Germans began hostilities in the old way as
+though they had observed nothing since 1870--a war of involved
+movements, of battles in the open field, the same as Moltke might
+have planned, imitating Napoleon. They were desirous of bringing it
+to a speedy conclusion, and were sure of triumph. Why employ new
+methods? . . . But the encounter of the Marne twisted their plans,
+making them shift from the aggressive to the defensive. They then
+brought into service all that the war staff had learned in the
+campaigns of the Japanese and Russians, beginning the war of the
+trenches, the subterranean struggle which is the logical outcome of
+the reach and number of shots of the modern armament. The conquest
+of half a mile of territory to-day stands for more than did the
+assault of a stone fortress a century ago. Neither side is going to
+make any headway for a long time. Perhaps they may never make a
+definite advance. The war is bound to be long and tedious, like the
+athletic conquests between opponents who are equally matched."
+
+"But it will have to come to an end, sometime," interpolated
+Desnoyers.
+
+"Undoubtedly, but who knows when? . . . And in what condition will
+they both be when it is all over?" . . .
+
+He was counting upon a rapid finale when it was least expected,
+through the exhaustion of one of the contestants, carefully
+dissimulated until the last moment.
+
+"Germany will be vanquished," he added with firm conviction. "I do
+not know when nor how, but she will fall logically. She failed in
+her master-stroke in not entering Paris and overcoming its
+opposition. All the trumps in her pack of cards were then played.
+She did not win, but continues playing the game because she holds
+many cards, and she will prolong it for a long time to come. . . .
+But what she could not do at first, she will never be able to do."
+
+For Tchernoff, the final defeat did not mean the destruction of
+Germany nor the annihilation of the German people.
+
+"Excessive patriotism irritates me," he pursued. "Hearing people
+form plans for the definite extinction of Germany seems to me like
+listening to the Pan-Germanists of Berlin when they talk of dividing
+up the continents."
+
+Then he summed up his opinion.
+
+"Imperialism will have to be crushed for the sake of the
+tranquillity of the world; the great war machine which menaces the
+peace of nations will have to be suppressed. Since 1870, we have
+all been living in dread of it. For forty years, the war has been
+averted, but in all that time, what apprehension!" . . .
+
+What was most irritating Tchernoff was the moral lesson born of this
+situation which had ended by overwhelming the world--the
+glorification of power, the sanctification of success, the triumph
+of materialism, the respect for the accomplished fact, the mockery
+of the noblest sentiments as though they were merely sonorous and
+absurd phrases, the reversal of moral values . . . a philosophy of
+bandits which pretended to be the last word of progress, and was no
+more than a return to despotism, violence, and the barbarity of the
+most primitive epochs of history.
+
+While he was longing for the suppression of the representatives of
+this tendency, he would not, therefore, demand the extermination of
+the German people.
+
+"This nation has great merits jumbled with bad conditions inherited
+from a not far-distant, barbarous past. It possesses the genius of
+organization and work, and is able to lend great service to
+humanity. . . . But first it is necessary to give it a douche--the
+douche of downfall. The Germans are mad with pride and their
+madness threatens the security of the world. When those who have
+poisoned them with the illusion of universal hegemony have
+disappeared, when misfortune has freshened their imagination and
+transformed them into a community of humans, neither superior nor
+inferior to the rest of mankind, they will become a tolerant people,
+useful . . . and who knows but they may even prove sympathetic!"
+
+According to Tchernoff, there was not in existence to-day a more
+dangerous nation. Its political organization was converting it into
+a warrior horde, educated by kicks and submitted to continual
+humiliations in order that the willpower which always resists
+discipline might be completely nullified.
+
+"It is a nation where all receive blows and desire to give them to
+those lower down. The kick that the Kaiser gives is transmitted
+from back to back down to the lowest rung of the social ladder. The
+blows begin in the school and are continued in the barracks, forming
+part of the education. The apprenticeship of the Prussian Crown
+Princes has always consisted in receiving fisticuffs and cowhidings
+from their progenitor, the king. The Kaiser beats his children, the
+officer his soldiers, the father his wife and children, the
+schoolmaster his pupils, and when the superior is not able to give
+blows, he subjects those under him to the torment of moral insult."
+
+On this account, when they abandoned their ordinary avocations,
+taking up arms in order to fall upon another human group, they did
+so with implacable ferocity.
+
+"Each one of them," continued the Russian, "carries on his back the
+marks of kicks, and when his turn comes, he seeks consolation in
+passing them on to the unhappy creatures whom war puts into his
+power. This nation of war-lords, as they love to call themselves,
+aspires to lordship, but outside of the country. Within it, are the
+ones who least appreciate human dignity and, therefore, long
+vehemently to spread their dominant will over the face of the earth,
+passing from lackeys to lords."
+
+Suddenly Don Marcelo stopped going with such frequency to the
+studio. He was now haunting the home and office of the senator,
+because this friend had upset his tranquillity. Lacour had been
+much depressed since the heir to the family glory had broken through
+the protecting paternal net in order to go to war.
+
+One night, while dining with the Desnoyers family, an idea popped
+into his head which filled him with delight. "Would you like to see
+your son?" He needed to see Rene and had begun negotiating for a
+permit from headquarters which would allow him to visit the front.
+His son belonged to the same army division as Julio; perhaps their
+camps were rather far apart, but an automobile makes many
+revolutions before it reaches the end of its journey.
+
+It was not necessary to say more. Desnoyers instantly felt the most
+overmastering desire to see his boy, since, for so many months, he
+had had to content himself with reading his letters and studying the
+snap shot which one of his comrades had made of his soldier son.
+
+From that time on, he besieged the senator as though he were a
+political supporter desiring an office. He visited him in the
+mornings in his home, invited him to dinner every evening, and
+hunted him down in the salons of the Luxembourg. Before the first
+word of greeting could be exchanged, his eyes were formulating the
+same interrogation. . . . "When will you get that permit?"
+
+The great man could only reply by lamenting the indifference of the
+military department toward the civilian element; it always had been
+inimical toward parliamentarism.
+
+"Besides, Joffre is showing himself most unapproachable; he does not
+encourage the curious. . . . To-morrow I will see the President."
+
+A few days later, he arrived at the house in the avenue Victor Hugo,
+with an expression of radiant satisfaction that filled Don Marcelo
+with joy.
+
+"It has come?"
+
+"It has come. . . . We start the day after to-morrow."
+
+Desnoyers went the following afternoon to the studio in the rue de
+la Pompe.
+
+"I am going to-morrow!"
+
+The artist was very eager to accompany him. Would it not be
+possible for him to go, too, as secretary to the senator? . . . Don
+Marcelo smiled benevolently. The authorization was only for Lacour
+and one companion. He was the one who was going to pose as
+secretary, valet or utility man to his future relative-in-law.
+
+At the end of the afternoon, he left the studio, accompanied to the
+elevator by the lamentations of Argensola. To think that he could
+not join that expedition! . . . He believed that he had lost the
+opportunity to paint his masterpiece.
+
+Just outside of his home, he met Tchernoff. Don Marcelo was in high
+good humor. The certainty that he was soon going to see his son
+filled him with boyish good spirits. He almost embraced the Russian
+in spite of his slovenly aspect, his tragic beard and his enormous
+hat which made every one turn to look after him.
+
+At the end of the avenue, the Arc de Triomphe stood forth against a
+sky crimsoned by the sunset. A red cloud was floating around the
+monument, reflected on its whiteness with purpling palpitations.
+
+Desnoyers recalled the four horsemen, and all that Argensola had
+told him before presenting him to the Russian.
+
+"Blood!" shouted jubilantly. "All the sky seems to be blood-red. . . .
+It is the apocalyptic beast who has received his death-wound.
+Soon we shall see him die."
+
+Tchernoff smiled, too, but his was a melancholy smile.
+
+"No; the beast does not die. It is the eternal companion of man.
+It hides, spouting blood, forty . . . sixty . . . a hundred years,
+but eventually it reappears. All that we can hope is that its wound
+may be long and deep, that it may remain hidden so long that the
+generation that now remembers it may never see it again."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+WAR
+
+
+Don Marcelo was climbing up a mountain covered with woods.
+
+The forest presented a tragic desolation. A silent tempest had
+installed itself therein, placing everything in violent unnatural
+positions. Not a single tree still preserved its upright form and
+abundant foliage as in the days of peace. The groups of pines
+recalled the columns of ruined temples. Some were still standing
+erect, but without their crowns, like shafts that might have lost
+their capitals; others were pierced like the mouthpiece of a flute,
+or like pillars struck by a thunderbolt. Some had splintery threads
+hanging around their cuts like used toothpicks.
+
+A sinister force of destruction had been raging among these beeches,
+spruce and oaks. Great tangles of their cut boughs were cluttering
+the ground, as though a band of gigantic woodcutters had just passed
+by. The trunks had been severed a little distance from the ground
+with a clean and glistening stroke, as though with a single blow of
+the axe. Around the disinterred roots were quantities of stones
+mixed with sod, stones that had been sleeping in the recesses of the
+earth and had been brought to the surface by explosions.
+
+At intervals--gleaming among the trees or blocking the roadway with
+an importunity which required some zigzagging--was a series of
+pools, all alike, of regular geometrical circles. To Desnoyers,
+they seemed like sunken basins for the use of the invisible Titans
+who had been hewing the forest. Their great depth extended to their
+very edges. A swimmer might dive into these lagoons without ever
+touching bottom. Their water was greenish, still water--rain water
+with a scum of vegetation perforated by the respiratory bubbles of
+the little organisms coming to life in its vitals.
+
+Bordering the hilly pathway through the pines, were many mounds with
+crosses of wood--tombs of French soldiers topped with little
+tricolored flags. Upon these moss-covered graves were the old kepis
+of the gunners. The ferocious wood-chopper, in destroying this
+woods, had also blindly demolished many of the ants swarming around
+the trunks.
+
+Don Marcelo was wearing leggings, a broad hat, and on his shoulders,
+a fine poncho arranged like a shawl--garments which recalled his
+far-distant life on the ranch. Behind him came Lacour trying to
+preserve his senatorial dignity in spite of his gasps and puffs of
+fatigue. He also was wearing high boots and a soft hat, but he had
+kept to his solemn frock-coat in order not to abandon entirely his
+parliamentary uniform. Before them marched two captains as guides.
+
+They were on a mountain occupied by the French artillery, and were
+climbing to the top where were hidden cannons and cannons, forming a
+line some miles in length. The German artillery had caused the
+woodland ruin around the visitors, in their return of the French
+fire. The circular pools were the hollows dug by the German shells
+in the limy, non-porous soil which preserved all the runnels of
+rain.
+
+The visiting party had left their automobile at the foot of the
+mountain. One of the officers, a former artilleryman, explained
+this precaution to them. It was necessary to climb this roadway
+very cautiously. They were within reach of the enemy, and an
+automobile might attract the attention of their gunners.
+
+"A little fatiguing, this climb," he continued. "Courage, Senator
+Lacour! . . . We are almost there."
+
+They began to meet artillerymen, many of them not in uniform but
+wearing the military kepis. They looked like workmen from a metal
+factory, foundrymen with jackets and pantaloons of corduroy. Their
+arms were bare, and some had put on wooden shoes in order to get
+over the mud with greater security. They were former iron laborers,
+mobilized into the artillery reserves. Their sergeants had been
+factory overseers, and many of them officials, engineers and
+proprietors of big workshops.
+
+Suddenly the excursionists stumbled upon the iron inmates of the
+woods. When these spoke, the earth trembled, the air shuddered, and
+the native inhabitants of the forest, the crows, rabbits,
+butterflies and ants, fled in terrified flight, trying to hide
+themselves from the fearful convulsion which seemed to be bringing
+the world to an end. Just at present, the bellowing monsters were
+silent, so that they came upon them unexpectedly. Something was
+sticking up out of the greenery like a gray beam; at other times,
+this apparition would emerge from a conglomeration of dry trunks.
+Around this obstacle was cleared ground occupied by men who lived,
+slept and worked about this huge manufactory on wheels.
+
+The senator, who had written verse in his youth and composed
+oratorical poetry when dedicating various monuments in his district,
+saw in these solitary men on the mountain side, blackened by the sun
+and smoke, with naked breasts and bare arms, a species of priests
+dedicated to the service of a fatal divinity that was receiving from
+their hands offerings of enormous explosive capsules, hurling them
+forth in thunderclaps.
+
+Hidden under the branches, in order to escape the observation of the
+enemy's birdmen, the French cannon were scattered among the hills
+and hollows of the highland range. In this herd of steel, there
+were enormous pieces with wheels reinforced by metal plates,
+somewhat like the farming engines which Desnoyers had used on his
+ranch for plowing. Like smaller beasts, more agile and playful in
+their incessant yelping, the groups of '75 were mingled with the
+terrific monsters.
+
+The two captains had received from the general of their division
+orders to show Senator Lacour minutely the workings of the
+artillery, and Lacour was accepting their observations with
+corresponding gravity while his eyes roved from side to side in the
+hope of recognizing his son. The interesting thing for him was to
+see Rene . . . but recollecting the official pretext of his journey,
+he followed submissively from cannon to cannon, listening patiently
+to all explanations.
+
+The operators next showed him the servants of these pieces, great
+oval cylinders extracted from subterranean storehouses called
+shelters. These storage places were deep burrows, oblique wells
+reinforced with sacks of stones and wood. They served as a refuge
+to those off duty, and kept the munitions away from the enemy's
+shell. An artilleryman exhibited two pouches of white cloth, joined
+together and very full. They looked like a double sausage and were
+the charge for one of the large cannons. The open packet showed
+some rose-colored leaves, and the senator greatly admired this
+dainty paste which looked like an article for the dressing table
+instead of one of the most terrible explosives of modern warfare.
+
+"I am sure," said Lacour, "that if I had found one of these delicate
+packets on the street, I should have thought that it had been
+dropped from some lady's vanity bag, or by some careless clerk from
+a perfumery shop . . . anything but an explosive! And with this
+trifle that looks as if it were made for the lips, it is possible to
+blow up an edifice!" . . .
+
+As they continued their visit of investigation, they came upon a
+partially destroyed round tower in the highest part of the mountain.
+This was the most dangerous post. From it, an officer was examining
+the enemy's line in order to gauge the correctness of the aim of the
+gunners. While his comrades were under the ground or hidden by the
+branches, he was fulfilling his mission from this visible point.
+
+A short distance from the tower a subterranean passageway opened
+before their eyes. They descended through its murky recesses until
+they found the various rooms excavated in the ground. One side of
+the mountain cut in points formed its exterior facade. Narrow
+little windows, cut in the stone, gave light and air to these
+quarters.
+
+An old commandant in charge of the section came out to meet them.
+Desnoyers thought that he must be the floorwalker of some big
+department store in Paris. His manners were so exquisite and his
+voice so suave that he seemed to be imploring pardon at every word,
+or addressing a group of ladies, offering them goods of the latest
+novelty. But this impression only lasted a moment. This soldier
+with gray hair and near-sighted glasses who, in the midst of war,
+was retaining his customary manner of a building director receiving
+his clients, showed on moving his arms, some bandages and surgical
+dressings within his sleeves, He was wounded in both wrists by the
+explosion of a shell, but he was, nevertheless, sticking to his
+post.
+
+"A devil of a honey-tongued, syrupy gentleman!" mused Don Marcelo.
+"Yet he is undoubtedly an exceptional person!"
+
+By this time, they had entered into the main office, a vast room
+which received its light through a horizontal window about ten feet
+wide and only a palm and a half high, reminding one of the open
+space between the slats of a Venetian blind. Below it was a pine
+table filled with papers and surrounded by stools. When occupying
+one of these seats, one's eyes could sweep the entire plain. On the
+walls were electric apparatus, acoustic tubes and telephones--many
+telephones.
+
+The Commandant sorted and piled up the papers, offering the stools
+with drawing-room punctilio.
+
+"Here, Senator Lacour."
+
+Desnoyers, humble attendant, took a seat at his side. The
+Commandant now appeared to be the manager of a theatre, preparing to
+exhibit an extraordinary show. He spread upon the table an enormous
+paper which reproduced all the features of the plain extended before
+them--roads, towns, fields, heights and valleys. Upon this map was
+a triangular group of red lines in the form of an open fan; the
+vertex represented the place where they were, and the broad part of
+the triangle was the limit of the horizon which they were sweeping
+with their eyes.
+
+"We are going to fire at that grove," said the artilleryman,
+pointing to one end of the map. "There it is," he continued,
+designating a little dark line. "Take your glasses."
+
+But before they could adjust the binoculars, the Commandant placed a
+new paper on top of the map. It was an enormous and somewhat hazy
+photograph upon whose plan appeared a fan of red lines like the
+other one.
+
+"Our aviators," explained the gunner courteously, "have taken this
+morning some views of the enemy's positions. This is an enlargement
+from our photographic laboratory. . . . According to this
+information, there are two German regiments encamped in that wood."
+
+Don Marcelo saw on the print the spot of woods, and within it white
+lines which represented roads, and groups of little squares which
+were blocks of houses in a village. He believed he must be in an
+aeroplane contemplating the earth from a height of three thousand
+feet. Then he raised the glasses to his eyes, following the
+direction of one of the red lines, and saw enlarged in the circle of
+the glass a black bar, somewhat like a heavy line of ink--the grove,
+the refuge of the foe.
+
+"Whenever you say, Senator Lacour, we will begin," said the
+Commandant, reaching the topmost notch of his courtesy. "Are you
+ready?"
+
+Desnoyers smiled slightly. For what was his illustrious friend to
+make himself ready? What difference could it possibly make to a
+mere spectator, much interested in the novelty of the show? . . .
+
+There sounded behind them numberless bells, gongs that called and
+gongs that answered. The acoustic tubes seemed to swell out with
+the gallop of words. The electric wire filled the silence of the
+room with the palpitations of its mysterious life. The bland Chief
+was no longer occupied with his guests. They conjectured that he
+was behind them, his mouth at the telephone, conversing with various
+officials some distance off. Yet the urbane and well-spoken hero
+was not abandoning for one moment his candied courtesy.
+
+"Will you be kind enough to tell me when you are ready to begin?"
+they heard him saying to a distant officer. "I shall be much
+pleased to transmit the order."
+
+Don Marcelo felt a slight nervous tremor near one of his legs; it
+was Lecour, on the qui vive over the approaching novelty. They were
+going to begin firing; something was going to happen that he had
+never seen before. The cannons were above their heads; the roughly
+vaulted roof was going to tremble like the deck of a ship when they
+shot over it. The room with its acoustic tubes and its vibrations
+from the telephones was like the bridge of a vessel at the moment of
+clearing for action. The noise that it was going to make! . . . A
+few seconds flitted by that to them seemed unusually long . . . and
+then suddenly a sound like a distant peal of thunder which appeared
+to come from the clouds. Desnoyers no longer felt the nervous
+twitter against his knee. The senator seemed surprised; his
+expression seemed to say, "And is that all? . . . The heaps of
+earth above them had deadened the report, so that the discharge of
+the great machine seemed no more than the blow of a club upon a
+mattress. Far more impressive was the scream of the projectile
+sounding at a great height but displacing the air with such violence
+that its waves reached even to the window.
+
+It went flying . . . flying, its roar lessening. Some time passed
+before they noticed its effects, and the two friends began to
+believe that it must have been lost in space. "It will not
+strike . . . it will not strike," they were thinking. Suddenly
+there surged up on the horizon, exactly in the spot indicated
+over the blur of the woods, a tremendous column of smoke, a
+whirling tower of black vapor followed by a volcanic explosion.
+
+"How dreadful it must be to be there!" said the senator.
+
+He and Desnoyers were experiencing a sensation of animal joy, a
+selfish hilarity in seeing themselves in such a safe place several
+yards underground.
+
+"The Germans are going to reply at any moment," said Don Marcelo to
+his friend.
+
+The senator was of the same opinion. Undoubtedly they would
+retaliate, carrying on an artillery duel.
+
+All of the French batteries had opened fire. The mountain was
+thundering, the shell whining, the horizon, still tranquil, was
+bristling with black, spiral columns. The two realized more and
+more how snug they were in this retreat, like a box at the theatre.
+
+Someone touched Lacour on the shoulder. It was one of the captains
+who was conducting them through the front.
+
+"We are going above," he said simply. "You must see close by how
+our cannons are working. The sight will be well worth the trouble."
+
+Above? . . . The illustrious man was as perplexed, as astonished as
+though he had suggested an interplanetary trip. Above, when the
+enemy was going to reply from one minute to another? . . .
+
+The captain explained that sub-Lieutenant Lacour was perhaps
+awaiting his father. By telephone they had advised his battery
+stationed a little further on; it would be necessary to go now in
+order to see him. So they again climbed up to the light through the
+mouth of the tunnel. The senator then drew himself up, majestically
+erect.
+
+"They are going to fire at us," said a voice in his interior, "The
+foe is going to reply."
+
+But he adjusted his coat like a tragic mantle and advanced at a
+circumspect and solemn pace. If those military men, adversaries of
+parliamentarism, fancied that they were going to laugh up their
+sleeve at the timidity of a civilian, he would show them their
+mistake!
+
+Desnoyers could not but admire the resolution with which the great
+man made his exit from the shelter, exactly as if he were going to
+march against the foe.
+
+At a little distance, the atmosphere was rent into tumultuous waves,
+making their legs tremble, their ears hum, and their necks feel as
+though they had just been struck. They both thought that the
+Germans had begun to return the fire, but it was the French who were
+shooting. A feathery stream of vapor came up out of the woods a
+dozen yards away, dissolving instantly. One of the largest pieces,
+hidden in the nearby thicket, had just been discharged. The
+captains continued their explanations without stopping their
+journey. It was necessary to pass directly in front of the spitting
+monster, in spite of the violence of its reports, so as not to
+venture out into the open woods near the watch tower. They were
+expecting from one second to another now, the response from their
+neighbors across the way. The guide accompanying Don Marcelo
+congratulated him on the fearlessness with which he was enduring the
+cannonading.
+
+"My friend is well acquainted with it," remarked the senator
+proudly. "He was in the battle of the Marne."
+
+The two soldiers evidently thought this very strange, considering
+Desnoyers' advanced age. To what section had he belonged? In what
+capacity had he served? . . .
+
+"Merely as a victim," was the modest reply.
+
+An officer came running toward them from the tower side, across the
+cleared space. He waved his kepi several times that they might see
+him better. Lacour trembled for him. The enemy might descry him;
+he was simply making a target of himself by cutting across that open
+space in order to reach them the sooner. . . . And he trembled
+still more as he came nearer. . . . It was Rene!
+
+His hands returned with some astonishment the strong, muscular
+grasp. He noticed that the outlines of his son's face were more
+pronounced, and darkened with the tan of camp life. An air of
+resolution, of confidence in his own powers, appeared to emanate
+from his person. Six months of intense life had transformed him.
+He was the same but broader-chested and more stalwart. The gentle
+and sweet features of his mother were lost under the virile mask. . . .
+Lacour recognized with pride that he now resembled himself.
+
+After greetings had been exchanged, Rene paid more attention to Don
+Marcelo than to his father, because he reminded him of Chichi. He
+inquired after her, wishing to know all the details of her life, in
+spite of their ardent and constant correspondence.
+
+The senator, meanwhile, still under the influence of his recent
+emotion, had adopted a somewhat oratorical air toward his son. He
+forthwith improvised a fragment of discourse in honor of that
+soldier of the Republic bearing the glorious name of Lacour, deeming
+this an opportune time to make known to these professional soldiers
+the lofty lineage of his family.
+
+"Do your duty, my son. The Lacours inherit warrior traditions.
+Remember our ancestor, the Deputy of the Convention who covered
+himself with glory in the defense of Mayence!"
+
+While he was discoursing, they had started forward, doubling a point
+of the greenwood in order to get behind the cannons.
+
+Here the racket was less violent. The great engines, after each
+discharge, were letting escape through the rear chambers little
+clouds of smoke like those from a pipe. The sergeants were
+dictating numbers, communicated in a low voice by another gunner who
+had a telephone receiver at his ear. The workmen around the cannon
+were obeying silently. They would touch a little wheel and the
+monster would raise its grey snout, moving it from side to side with
+the intelligent expression and agility of an elephant's trunk. At
+the foot of the nearest piece, stood the operator, rod in hand, and
+with impassive face. He must be deaf, yet his facial inertia was
+stamped with a certain authority. For him, life was no more than a
+series of shots and detonations. He knew his importance. He was
+the servant of the tempest, the guardian of the thunderbolt.
+
+"Fire!" shouted the sergeant.
+
+And the thunder broke forth in fury. Everything appeared to be
+trembling, but the two visitors were by this time so accustomed to
+the din that the present uproar seemed but a secondary affair.
+
+Lacour was about to take up the thread of his discourse about his
+glorious forefather in the convention when something interfered.
+
+"They are firing," said the man at the telephone simply.
+
+The two officers repeated to the senator this news from the watch
+tower. Had he not said that the enemy was going to fire? . . .
+Obeying a sane instinct of preservation, and pushed at the same time
+by his son, he found himself in the refuge of the battery. He
+certainly did not wish to hide himself in this cave, so he remained
+near the entrance, with a curiosity which got the best of his
+disquietude.
+
+He felt the approach of the invisible projectile, in spite of the
+roar of the neighboring cannon. He perceived with rare sensibility
+its passage through the air, above the other closer and more
+powerful sounds. It was a squealing howl that was swelling in
+intensity, that was opening out as it advanced, filling all space.
+Soon it ceased to be a shriek, becoming a rude roar formed by divers
+collisions and frictions, like the descent of an electric tram
+through a hillside road, or the course of a train which passes
+through a station without stopping.
+
+He saw it approach in the form of a cloud, bulging as though it were
+going to explode over the battery. Without knowing just how it
+happened, the senator suddenly found himself in the bottom of the
+shelter, his hands in cold contact with a heap of steel cylinders
+lined up like bottles. They were projectiles.
+
+"If a German shell," he thought, "should explode above this
+burrow . . . what a frightful blowing up!" . . .
+
+But he calmed himself by reflecting on the solidity of the arched
+vault with its beams and sacks of earth several yards thick.
+Suddenly he was in absolute darkness. Another had sought refuge in
+the shelter, obstructing the light with his body; perhaps his friend
+Desnoyers.
+
+A year passed by while his watch was registering a single second,
+then a century at the same rate . . . and finally the awaited
+thunder burst forth, making the refuge vibrate, but with a kind of
+dull elasticity, as though it were made of rubber. In spite of its
+thud, the explosion wrought horrible damage. Other minor
+explosions, playful and whistling, followed behind the first. In
+his imagination, Lacour saw the cataclysm--a writhing serpent,
+vomiting sparks and smoke, a species of Wagnerian monster that upon
+striking the ground was disgorging thousands of fiery little snakes,
+that were covering the earth with their deadly contortions. . . .
+The shell must have burst nearby, perhaps in the very square
+occupied by this battery.
+
+He came out of the shelter, expecting to encounter a sickening
+display of dismembered bodies, and he saw his son smiling, smoking a
+cigar and talking with Desnoyers. . . . That was a mere nothing!
+The gunners were tranquilly finishing the charging of a huge piece.
+They had raised their eyes for a moment as the enemy's shell went
+screaming by, and then had continued their work.
+
+"It must have fallen about three hundred yards away," said Rene
+cheerfully.
+
+The senator, impressionable soul, felt suddenly filled with heroic
+confidence. It was not worth while to bother about his personal
+safety when other men--just like him, only differently dressed--were
+not paying the slightest attention to the danger.
+
+And as the other projectiles soared over his head to lose themselves
+in the woods with the explosions of a volcano, he remained by his
+son's side, with no other sign of tension than a slight trembling of
+the knees. It seemed to him now that it was only the French
+missiles--because they were on his side--that were hitting the
+bull's eye. The others must be going up in the air and losing
+themselves in useless noise. Of just such illusions is valor often
+compounded! . . . "And is that all?" his eyes seemed to be asking.
+
+He now recalled rather shamefacedly his retreat to the shelter; he
+was beginning to feel that he could live in the open, the same as
+Rene.
+
+The German missiles were getting considerably more frequent. They
+were no longer lost in the wood, and their detonations were sounding
+nearer and nearer. The two officials exchanged glances. They were
+responsible for the safety of their distinguished charge.
+
+"Now they are warming up," said one of them.
+
+Rene, as though reading their thoughts, prepared to go. "Good-bye,
+father!" They were needing him in his battery. The senator tried
+to resist; he wished to prolong the interview, but found that he was
+hitting against something hard and inflexible that repelled all his
+influence. A senator amounted to very little with people accustomed
+to discipline. "Farewell, my boy! . . . All success to you! . . .
+Remember who you are!"
+
+The father wept as he embraced his son, lamenting the brevity of the
+interview, and thinking of the dangers awaiting him.
+
+When Rene had disappeared, the captains again recommended their
+departure. It was getting late; they ought to reach a certain
+cantonment before nightfall. So they went down the hill in the
+shelter of a cut in the mountain, seeing the enemy's shells flying
+high above them.
+
+In a hollow, they came upon several groups of the famed seventy-
+fives spread about through the woods, hidden by piles of underbrush,
+like snapping dogs, howling and sticking up their gray muzzles. The
+great cannon were roaring only at intervals, while the steel pack of
+hounds were yelping incessantly without the slightest break in their
+noisy wrath--like the endless tearing of a piece of cloth. The
+pieces were many, the volleys dizzying, and the shots uniting in one
+prolonged shriek, as a series of dots unite to form a single line.
+
+The chiefs, stimulated by the din, were giving their orders in
+yells, and waving their arms from behind the pieces. The cannon
+were sliding over the motionless gun carriages, advancing and
+receding like automatic pistols. Each charge dropped an empty
+shell, and introduced a fresh one into the smoking chamber.
+
+Behind the battery, the air was racking in furious waves. With
+every shot, Lacour and his companion received a blow on the breast,
+the violent contact with an invisible hand, pushing them backward
+and forward. They had to adjust their breathing to the rhythm of
+the concussions. During the hundredth part of a second, between the
+passing of one aerial wave and the advance of the next, their chests
+felt the agony of vacuum. Desnoyers admired the baying of those
+gray dogs. He knew well their bite, extending across many
+kilometres. Now they were fresh and at home in their own kennels.
+
+To Lacour it seemed as though the rows of cannon were chanting a
+measure, monotonous and fiercely impassioned that must be the
+martial hymn of the humanity of prehistoric times. This music of
+dry, deafening, delirious notes was awakening in the two what is
+sleeping in the depths of every soul--the savagery of a remote
+ancestry. The air was hot with acrid odors, pungent and brutishly
+intoxicating. The perfumes from the explosions were penetrating to
+the brain through the mouth, the eyes and the ears.
+
+They began to be infected with the same ardor as the directors,
+shouting and swinging their arms in the midst of the thundering.
+The empty capsules were mounting up in thick layers behind the
+cannon. Fire! . . . always, fire!
+
+"We must sprinkle them well," yelled the chiefs. "We must give a
+good soaking to the groves where the Boches are hidden."
+
+So the mouths of '75 rained without interruption, inundating the
+remote thickets with their shells.
+
+Inflamed by this deadly activity, frenzied by the destructive
+celerity, dominated by the dizzying sway of the ruby leaves, Lacour
+and Desnoyers found themselves waving their hats, leaping from one
+side to another as though they were dancing the sacred dance of
+death, and shouting with mouths dry from the acrid vapor of the
+powder. . . . "Hurrah! . . . Hurrah!"
+
+The automobile rode all the afternoon long, stopping only when it
+met long files of convoys. It traversed uncultivated fields with
+skeletons of dwellings, and ran through burned towns which were no
+more than a succession of blackened facades.
+
+"Now it is your turn," said the senator to Desnoyers. "We are going
+to see your son."
+
+At nightfall, they ran across groups of infantry, soldiers with long
+beards and blue uniforms discolored by the inclemency of the
+weather. They were returning from the intrenchments, carrying over
+the hump of their knapsacks, spades, picks and other implements for
+removing the ground, that had acquired the importance of arms of
+combat. They were covered with mud from head to foot. All looked
+old in full youth. Their joy at returning to the cantonment after a
+week in the trenches, made them fill the silence of the plain with
+songs in time to the tramp of their nailed boots. Through the
+violet twilight drifted the winged strophes of the Marseillaise, or
+the heroic affirmations of the Chant du Depart.
+
+"They are the soldiers of the Revolution," exclaimed Lacour with
+enthusiasm. "France has returned to 1792."
+
+The two captains established their charges for the night in a half-
+ruined town where one of their divisions had its headquarters, and
+then took their leave. Others would act as their escort the
+following morning.
+
+The two friends were lodging in the Hotel de la Siren, an old inn
+with its front gnawed by shell-fire. The proprietor showed them
+with pride a window broken in the form of a crater. This window had
+made the old tavern sign--a woman of iron with the tail of a fish--
+sink into insignificance. As Desnoyers was occupying the room next
+to the one that had received the mark of the shell, the inn-keeper
+was anxious to point it out to them before they went to bed.
+
+Everything was broken--walls, floor, roof. The furniture, a pile of
+splinters in the corner; the flowered wall paper, a fringe of
+tatters hanging from the walls. Through an enormous hole they could
+see the stars and feel the chill of the night. The owner stated
+that this destruction was not the work of the Germans, but was
+caused by a projectile from one of the seventy-fives when repelling
+the invaders from the village. And he beamed on the ruin with
+patriotic pride, repeating:
+
+"There's a sample of French marksmanship for you! How do you like
+the workings of the seventy-fives? . . . What do you think of that
+now? . . ."
+
+In spite of the fatigue of the journey, Don Marcelo slept badly,
+excited by the thought that his son was not far away.
+
+An hour before daybreak, they left the village, in an automobile,
+guided by another official. On both sides of the road, they saw
+camps and camps. They left behind the parks of munitions, passed
+the third line of troops, and then the second. Thousands and
+thousands of men were bivouacking there in the open, improvising as
+best they could their habitations. These human ant-hills seemed
+vaguely to recall, with the variety of uniforms and races, some of
+the mighty invasions of history; but it was not a nation en marche.
+The exodus of people takes with it the women and children. Here
+there were nothing but men, men everywhere.
+
+All kinds of housing ever used by humanity were here utilized, these
+military assemblages beginning with the cave. Caverns and quarries
+were serving as barracks. Some low huts recalled the American
+ranch; others, high and conical, were facsimiles of the gurbi of
+Africa. Many of the soldiers had come from the colonies; some had
+been living as business men in the new world, and upon having to
+provide a house more stable than the canvas tent, had recalled the
+architecture of the tribes with which they had had dealings. In
+this conglomerate of combatants, there were also Moors, blacks and
+Asiatics who were accustomed to live outside the cities and had
+acquired in the open a physical superiority which made them more
+masterful than the civilized peoples.
+
+Near the river beds was flapping white clothing hung out to dry.
+Rows of men with bared breasts were out in the morning freshness,
+leaning over the streams, washing themselves with noisy ablutions
+followed by vigorous rubbings. . . . On a bridge was a soldier
+writing, utilizing a parapet as a table. . . . The cooks were
+moving around their savory kettles, and a warm exhalation of morning
+soup was mixed with the resinous perfume of the trees and the smell
+of the damp earth.
+
+Long, low barracks of wood and zinc served the cavalry and artillery
+for their animals and stores. In the open air, the soldiers were
+currying and shoeing the glossy, plump horses which the trench-war
+was maintaining in placid obesity.
+
+"If they had only been like that at the battle of the Marne!" sighed
+Desnoyers to his friend.
+
+Now the cavalry was leading an existence of interminable rest. The
+troopers were fighting on foot, and finding it necessary to exercise
+their steeds to keep them from getting sick with their full mangers.
+
+There were spread over the fields several aeroplanes, like great,
+gray dragon flies, poised for the flight. Many of the men were
+grouped around them. The farmers, transformed into soldiers, were
+watching with great admiration their comrade charged with the
+management of these machines. They looked upon him as one of the
+wizards so venerated and feared in all the countryside.
+
+Don Marcelo was struck by the general transformation in the French
+uniforms. All were now clad in gray-blue, from head to foot. The
+trousers of bright scarlet cloth, the red kepis which he had hailed
+with such joy in the expedition of the Marne, no longer existed.
+All the men passing along the roads were soldiers. All the
+vehicles, even the ox-carts, were guided by military men.
+
+Suddenly the automobile stopped before some ruined houses blackened
+by fire.
+
+"Here we are," announced the official. "Now we shall have to walk a
+little."
+
+The senator and his friend started along the highway.
+
+"Not that way, no!" the guide turned to say grimly. "That road is
+bad for the health. We must keep out of the currents of air."
+
+He further explained that the Germans had their cannon and
+intrenchments at the end of this highroad which sloped suddenly and
+again appeared as a white ribbon on the horizon line between two
+rows of trees and burned houses. The pale morning light with its
+hazy mist was sheltering them from the enemy's fire. On a sunny
+day, the arrival of their automobile would have been saluted with a
+shell. "That is war," he concluded. "One is always near to death
+without seeing it."
+
+The two recalled the warning of the general with whom they had dined
+the day before: "Be very careful! The war of the trenches is
+treacherous."
+
+In the sweep of plains unrolled before them, not a man was visible.
+It seemed like a country Sunday, when the farmers are in their
+homes, and the land scene lying in silent meditation. Some
+shapeless objects could be seen in the fields, like agricultural
+implements deserted for a day of rest. Perhaps they were broken
+automobiles, or artillery carriages destroyed by the force of their
+volleys.
+
+"This way," said the officer who had added four soldiers to the
+party to carry the various bags and packages which Desnoyers had
+brought out on the roof of the automobile.
+
+They proceeded in a single file the length of a wall of blackened
+bricks, down a steep hill. After a few steps the surface of the
+ground was about to their knees; further on, up to their waists, and
+thus they disappeared within the earth, seeing above their heads,
+only a narrow strip of sky. They were now under the open field,
+having left behind them the mass of ruins that hid the entrance of
+the road. They were advancing in an absurd way, as though they
+scorned direct lines--in zig-zags, in curves, in angles. Other
+pathways, no less complicated, branched off from this ditch which
+was the central avenue of an immense subterranean cavity. They
+walked . . . and walked . . . and walked. A quarter of an hour went
+by, a half, an entire hour. Lacour and his friend thought longingly
+of the roadways flanked with trees, of their tramp in the open air
+where they could see the sky and meadows. They were not going
+twenty steps in the same direction. The official marching ahead was
+every moment vanishing around a new bend. Those who were coming
+behind were panting and talking unseen, having to quicken their
+steps in order not to lose sight of the party. Every now and then
+they had to halt in order to unite and count the little band, to
+make sure that no one had been lost in a transverse gallery. The
+ground was exceedingly slippery, in some places almost liquid mud,
+white and caustic like the drip from the scaffolding of a house in
+the course of construction.
+
+The thump of their footsteps, and the friction of their shoulders,
+brought down chunks of earth and smooth stones from the sides.
+Little by little they climbed through the main artery of this
+underground body and the veins connected with it. Again they were
+near the surface where it required but little effort to see the blue
+above the earth-works. But here the fields were uncultivated,
+surrounded with wire fences, yet with the same appearance of Sabbath
+calm. Knowing by sad experience, what curiosity oftentimes cost,
+the official would not permit them to linger here. "Keep right
+ahead! Forward march!"
+
+For an hour and a half the party kept doggedly on until the senior
+members became greatly bewildered and fatigued by their serpentine
+meanderings. They could no longer tell whether they were advancing
+or receding, the sudden steeps and the continual turning bringing on
+an attack of vertigo.
+
+"Have we much further to go?" asked the senator.
+
+"There!" responded the guide pointing to some heaps of earth above
+them. "There" was a bell tower surrounded by a few charred houses
+that could be seen a long ways off--the remains of a hamlet which
+had been taken and retaken by both sides.
+
+By going in a direct line on the surface they would have compassed
+this distance in half an hour. To the angles of the underground
+road, arranged to impede the advance of an enemy, there had been
+added the obstacles of campaign fortification, tunnels cut with wire
+lattice work, large hanging cages of wire which, on falling, could
+block the passage and enable the defenders to open fire across their
+gratings.
+
+They began to meet soldiers with packs and pails of water who were
+soon lost in the tortuous cross roads. Some, seated on piles of
+wood, were smiling as they read a little periodical published in the
+trenches.
+
+The soldiers stepped aside to make way for the visiting procession,
+bearded and curious faces peeping out of the alleyways. Afar off
+sounded a crackling of short snaps as though at the end of the
+winding lanes were a shooting lodge where a group of sportsmen were
+killing pigeons.
+
+The morning was still cloudy and cold. In spite of the humid
+atmosphere, a buzzing like that of a horsefly, hummed several times
+above the two visitors.
+
+"Bullets!" said their conductor laconically.
+
+Desnoyers meanwhile had lowered his head a little. he knew
+perfectly well that insectivorous sound. The senator walked on more
+briskly, temporarily forgetting his weariness.
+
+They came to a halt before a lieutenant-colonel who received them
+like an engineer exhibiting his workshops, like a naval officer
+showing off the batteries and turrets of his battleships. He was
+the Chief of the battalion occupying this section of the trenches.
+Don Marcelo studied him with special interest, knowing that his son
+was under his orders.
+
+To the two friends, these subterranean fortifications bore a certain
+resemblance to the lower parts of a vessel. They passed from trench
+to trench of the last line, the oldest--dark galleries into which
+penetrated streaks of light across the loopholes and broad, low
+windows of the mitrailleuse. The long line of defense formed a
+tunnel cut by short, open spaces. They had to go stumbling from
+light to darkness, and from darkness to light with a visual
+suddenness very fatiguing to the eyes. The ground was higher in the
+open spaces. There were wooden benches placed against the sides so
+that the observers could put out the head or examine the landscape
+by means of the periscope. The enclosed space answered both for
+batteries and sleeping quarters.
+
+As the enemy had been repelled and more ground had been gained, the
+combatants who had been living all winter in these first quarters,
+had tried to make themselves more comfortable. Over the trenches in
+the open air, they had laid beams from the ruined houses; over the
+beams, planks, doors and windows, and on top of the wood, layers of
+sacks of earth. These sacks were covered by a top of fertile soil
+from which sprouted grass and herbs, giving the roofs of the
+trenches, an appearance of pastoral placidity. The temporary arches
+could thus resist the shock of the obuses which went ploughing into
+the earth without causing any special damage. When an explosion was
+pounding too noisily and weakening the structure, the troglodytes
+would swarm out in the night like watchful ants, and skilfully
+readjust the roof of their primitive dwellings.
+
+Everything appeared clean with that simple and rather clumsy
+cleanliness exercised by men living far from women and thrown upon
+their own resources. The galleries were something like the
+cloisters of a monastery, the corridors of a prison, and the middle
+sections of a ship. Their floors were a half yard lower than that
+of the open spaces which joined the trenches together. In order
+that the officers might avoid so many ups and downs, some planks had
+been laid, forming a sort of scaffolding from doorway to doorway.
+
+Upon the approach of their Chief, the soldiers formed themselves in
+line, their heads being on a level with the waist of those passing
+over the planks. Desnoyers ran his eye hungrily over the file of
+men. Where could Julio be? . . .
+
+He noticed the individual contour of the different redoubts. They
+all seemed to have been constructed in about the same way, but their
+occupants had modified them with their special personal decorations.
+The exteriors were always cut with loopholes in which there were
+guns pointed toward the enemy, and windows for the mitrailleuses.
+The watchers near these openings were looking over the lonely
+landscape like quartermasters surveying the sea from the bridge.
+Within were the armories and the sleeping rooms--three rows of
+berths made with planks like the beds of seamen. The desire for
+artistic ornamentation which even the simplest souls always feel,
+had led to the embellishment of the underground dwellings. Each
+soldier had a private museum made with prints from the papers and
+colored postcards. Photographs of soubrettes and dancers with their
+painted mouths smiled from the shiny cardboard, enlivening the
+chaste aspect of the redoubt.
+
+Don Marcelo was growing more and more impatient at seeing so many
+hundreds of men, but no Julio. The senator, complying with his
+imploring glance, spoke a few words to the chief preceding him with
+an aspect of great deference. The official had at first to think
+very hard to recall Julio to mind, but he soon remembered the
+exploits of Sergeant Desnoyers. "An excellent soldier," he said.
+"He will be sent for immediately, Senator Lacour. . . . He is on
+duty now with his section in the first line trenches."
+
+The father, in his anxiety to see him, proposed that they betake
+themselves to that advanced site, but his petition made the Chief
+and the others smile. Those open trenches within a hundred or fifty
+yards from the enemy, with no other defence but barbed wire and
+sacks of earth, were not for the visits of civilians. They were
+always filled with mud; the visitors would have to crawl around
+exposed to bullets and under the dropping chunks of earth loosened
+by the shells. None but the combatants could get around in these
+outposts.
+
+"It is always dangerous there," said the Chief. "There is always
+random shooting. . . . Just listen to the firing!"
+
+Desnoyers indeed perceived a distant crackling that he had not noted
+before, and he felt an added anguish at the thought that his son
+must be in the thick of it. Realization of the dangers to which he
+must be daily exposed, now stood forth in high relief. What if he
+should die in the intervening moments, before he could see him? . . .
+
+Time dragged by with desperate sluggishness for Don Marcelo. It
+seemed to him that the messenger who had been despatched for him
+would never arrive. He paid scarcely any attention to the affairs
+which the Chief was so courteously showing them--the caverns which
+served the soldiers as toilet rooms and bathrooms of most primitive
+arrangement, the cave with the sign, "Cafe de la Victoire," another
+in fanciful lettering, "Theatre." . . . Lacour was taking a lively
+interest in all this, lauding the French gaiety which laughs and
+sings in the presence of danger, while his friend continued brooding
+about Julio. When would he ever see him?
+
+They stopped near one of the embrasures of a machine-gun position
+stationing themselves at the recommendations of the soldiers, on
+both sides of the horizontal opening, keeping their bodies well
+back, but putting their heads far enough forward to look out with
+one eye. They saw a very deep excavation and the opposite edge of
+ground. A short distance away were several rows of X's of wood
+united by barbed wire, forming a compact fence. About three hundred
+feet further on, was a second wire fence. There reigned a profound
+silence here, a silence of absolute loneliness as though the world
+was asleep.
+
+"There are the trenches of the Boches," said the Commandant, in a
+low tone.
+
+"Where?" asked the senator, making an effort to see.
+
+The Chief pointed to the second wire fence which Lacour and his
+friend had supposed belonged to the French. It was the German
+intrenchment line.
+
+"We are only a hundred yards away from them," he continued, "but for
+some time they have not been attacking from this side."
+
+The visitors were greatly moved at learning that the foe was such a
+short distance off, hidden in the ground in a mysterious
+invisibility which made it all the more terrible. What if they
+should pop out now with their saw-edged bayonets, fire-breathing
+liquids and asphyxiating bombs to assault this stronghold! . . .
+
+From this window they could observe more clearly the intensity of
+the firing on the outer line. The shots appeared to be coming
+nearer. The Commandant brusquely ordered them to leave their
+observatory, fearing that the fire might become general. The
+soldiers, with their customary promptitude, without receiving any
+orders, approached their guns which were in horizontal position,
+pointing through the loopholes.
+
+Again the visitors walked in single file, going down into cavernous
+spaces that had been the old wine-cellars of former houses. The
+officers had taken up their abode in these dens, utilizing all the
+residue of the ruins. A street door on two wooden horses served as
+a table; the ceilings and walls were covered with cretonnes from the
+Paris warehouses; photographs of women and children adorned the side
+wall between the nickeled glitter of telegraphic and telephonic
+instruments.
+
+Desnoyers saw above one door an ivory crucifix, yellowed with years,
+probably with centuries, transmitted from generation to generation,
+that must have witnessed many agonies of soul. In another den he
+noticed in a conspicuous place, a horseshoe with seven holes.
+Religious creeds were spreading their wings very widely in this
+atmosphere of danger and death, and yet at the same time, the most
+grotesque superstitions were acquiring new values without any one
+laughing at them.
+
+Upon leaving one of the cells, in the middle of an open space, the
+yearning father met his son. He knew that it must be Julio by the
+Chief's gesture and because the smiling soldier was coming toward
+him, holding out his hands; but this time his paternal instinct
+which he had heretofore considered an infallible thing, had given
+him no warning. How could he recognize Julio in that sergeant whose
+feet were two cakes of moist earth, whose faded cloak was a mass of
+tatters covered with mud, even up to the shoulders, smelling of damp
+wool and leather? . . . After the first embrace, he drew back his
+head in order to get a good look at him without letting go of him.
+His olive pallor had turned to a bronze tone. He was growing a
+beard, a beard black and curly, which reminded Don Marcelo of his
+father-in-law. The centaur, Madariaga, had certainly come to life
+in this warrior hardened by camping in the open air. At first, the
+father grieved over his dirty and tired aspect, but a second glance
+made him sure that he was now far more handsome and interesting than
+in his days of society glory.
+
+"What do you need? . . . What do you want?"
+
+His voice was trembling with tenderness. He was speaking to the
+tanned and robust combatant in the same tone that he was wont to use
+twenty years ago when, holding the child by the hand, he had halted
+before the preserve cupboards of Buenos Aires.
+
+"Would you like money? . . ."
+
+He had brought a large sum with him to give to his son, but the
+soldier gave a shrug of indifference as though he had offered him a
+plaything. He had never been so rich as at this moment; he had a
+lot of money in Paris and he didn't know what to do with it--he
+didn't need anything.
+
+"Send me some cigars . . . for me and my comrades."
+
+He was constantly receiving from his mother great baskets full of
+choice goodies, tobacco and clothing. But he never kept anything;
+all was passed on to his fellow-warriors, sons of poor families or
+alone in the world. His munificence had spread from his intimates
+to the company, and from that to the entire battalion. Don Marcelo
+divined his great popularity in the glances and smiles of the
+soldiers passing near them. He was the generous son of a
+millionaire, and this popularity seemed to include even him when the
+news went around that the father of Sergeant Desnoyers had arrived--
+a potentate who possessed fabulous wealth on the other side of the
+sea.
+
+"I guessed that you would want cigars," chuckled the old man.
+
+And his gaze sought the bags brought from the automobile through the
+windings of the underground road.
+
+All of the son's valorous deeds, extolled and magnified by
+Argensola, now came trooping into his mind. He had the original
+hero before his very eyes.
+
+"Are you content, satisfied? . . . You do not repent of your
+decision?"
+
+"Yes, I am content, father . . . very content."
+
+Julio spoke without boasting, modestly. His life was very hard, but
+just like that of millions of other men. In his section of a few
+dozens of soldiers there were many superior to him in intelligence,
+in studiousness, in character; but they were all courageously
+undergoing the test, experiencing the satisfaction of duty
+fulfilled. The common danger was helping to develop the noblest
+virtues of these men. Never, in times of peace, had he known such
+comradeship. What magnificent sacrifices he had witnessed!
+
+"When all this is over, men will be better . . . more generous.
+Those who survive will do great things."
+
+Yes, of course, he was content. For the first time in his life he
+was tasting the delights of knowing that he was a useful being, that
+he was good for something, that his passing through the world would
+not be fruitless. He recalled with pity that Desnoyers who had not
+known how to occupy his empty life, and had filled it with every
+kind of frivolity. Now he had obligations that were taxing all his
+powers; he was collaborating in the formation of a future. He was a
+man at last!
+
+"I am content," he repeated with conviction.
+
+His father believed him, yet he fancied that, in a corner of that
+frank glance, he detected something sorrowful, a memory of a past
+which perhaps often forced its way among his present emotions.
+There flitted through his mind the lovely figure of Madame Laurier.
+Her charm was, doubtless, still haunting his son. And to think that
+he could not bring her here! . . . The austere father of the
+preceding year contemplated himself with astonishment as he caught
+himself formulating this immoral regret.
+
+They passed a quarter of an hour without loosening hands, looking
+into each other's eyes. Julio asked after his mother and Chichi.
+He frequently received letters from them, but that was not enough
+for his curiosity. He laughed heartily at hearing of Argensola's
+amplified and abundant life. These interesting bits of news came
+from a world not much more than sixty miles distant in a direct
+line . . . but so far, so very far away!
+
+Suddenly the father noticed that his boy was listening with less
+attention. His senses, sharpened by a life of alarms and ambushed
+attacks, appeared to be withdrawing itself from the company,
+attracted by the firing. Those were no longer scattered shots; they
+had combined into a continual crackling.
+
+The senator, who had left father and son together that they might
+talk more freely, now reappeared.
+
+"We are dismissed from here, my friend," he announced. "We have no
+luck in our visits."
+
+Soldiers were no longer passing to and fro. All had hastened to
+their posts, like the crew of a ship which clears for action. While
+Julio was taking up the rifle which he had left against the wall, a
+bit of dust whirled above his father's head and a little hole
+appeared in the ground.
+
+"Quick, get out of here!" he said pushing Don Marcelo.
+
+Then, in the shelter of a covered trench, came the nervous, very
+brief farewell. "Good-bye, father," a kiss, and he was gone. He
+had to return as quickly as possible to the side of his men.
+
+The firing had become general all along the line. The soldiers were
+shooting serenely, as though fulfilling an ordinary function. It
+was a combat that took place every day without anybody's knowing
+exactly who started it--in consequence of the two armies being
+installed face to face, and such a short distance apart. . . . The
+Chief of the battalion was also obliged to desert his guests,
+fearing a counter-attack.
+
+Again the officer charged with their safe conduct put himself at the
+head of the file, and they began to retrace their steps through the
+slippery maze. Desnoyers was tramping sullenly on, angry at the
+intervention of the enemy which had cut short his happiness.
+
+Before his inward gaze fluttered the vision of Julio with his black,
+curly beard which to him was the greatest novelty of the trip. He
+heard again his grave voice, that of a man who has taken up life
+from a new viewpoint.
+
+"I am content, father . . . I am content."
+
+The firing, growing constantly more distant, gave the father great
+uneasiness. Then he felt an instinctive faith, absurd, very firm.
+He saw his son beautiful and immortal as a god. He had a conviction
+that he would come out safe and sound from all dangers. That others
+should die was but natural, but Julio! . . .
+
+As they got further and further away from the soldier boy, Hope
+appeared to be singing in his ears; and as an echo of his pleasing
+musings, the father kept repeating mentally:
+
+"No one will kill him. My heart which never deceives me, tells me
+so. . . . No one will kill him!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+"NO ONE WILL KILL HIM"
+
+
+Four months later, Don Marcelo's confidence received a rude shock.
+Julio was wounded. But at the same time that Lacour bought him this
+news, lamentably delayed, he tranquilized him with the result of his
+investigations in the war ministry. Sergeant Desnoyers was now a
+sub-lieutenant, his wound was almost healed and, thanks to the wire-
+pulling of the senator, he was coming to pass a fortnight with his
+family while convalescing.
+
+"An exceptionally brave fellow," concluded the influential man. "I
+have read what his chiefs say about him. At the head of his
+platoon, he attacked a German company; he killed the captain with
+his own hand; he did I don't know how many more brave things
+besides. . . . They have presented him with the military medal and
+have made him an officer. . . . A regular hero!"
+
+And the rapidly aging father, weeping with emotion, but with
+increasing enthusiasm, shook his head and trembled. He repented now
+of his momentary lack of faith when the first news of his wounded
+boy reached him. How absurd! . . . No one would kill Julio; his
+heart told him so.
+
+Soon after, he saw him coming home amid the cries and delighted
+exclamations of the women. Poor Dona Luisa wept as she embraced
+him, hanging on his neck with sobs of emotion. Chichi contemplated
+him with grave reflection, putting half of her mind on the recent
+arrival while the rest flew far away in search of the other warrior.
+The dusky, South American maids fought each other for the opening in
+the curtains, peering through the crack with the gaze of an
+antelope.
+
+The father admired the little scrap of gold on the sleeve of the
+gray cloak, with the skirts buttoning behind, examining afterwards
+the dark blue cap with its low brim, adopted by the French for the
+war in the trenches. The traditional kepi had disappeared. A
+suitable visor, like that of the men in the Spanish infantry, now
+shadowed Julio's face. Don Marcelo noted, too, the short and well-
+cared-for beard, very different from the one he had seen in the
+trenches. The boy was coming home, groomed and polished from his
+recent stay in the hospital.
+
+"Isn't it true that he looks like me?" queried the old man proudly.
+
+Dona Luisa responded with the inconsequence that mothers always show
+in matters of resemblance.
+
+"He has always been the living image of you!"
+
+Having made sure that he was well and happy, the entire family
+suddenly felt a certain disquietude. They wished to examine his
+wound so as to convince themselves that he was completely out of
+danger.
+
+"Oh, it's nothing at all," protested the sub-lieutenant. "A bullet
+wound in the shoulder. The doctor feared at first that I might lose
+my left arm, but it has healed well and it isn't worth while to
+think any more about it."
+
+Chichi's appraising glance swept Julio from head to foot; taking in
+all the details of his military elegance. His cloak was worn thin
+and dirty; the leggings were spatter-dashed with mud; he smelled of
+leather, sweaty cloth and strong tobacco; but on one wrist he was
+wearing a watch, and on the other, his identity medal fastened with
+a gold chain. She had always admired her brother for his natural
+good taste, so she stowed away all these little details in her
+memory in order to pass them on to Rene. Then she surprised her
+mother with a demand for a loan that she might send a little gift to
+her artilleryman.
+
+Don Marcelo gloated over the fifteen days of satisfaction ahead of
+him. Sub-lieutenant Desnoyers found it impossible to go out alone,
+for his father was always pacing up and down the reception hall
+before the military cap which was shedding modest splendor and glory
+upon the hat rack. Scarcely had Julio put it on his head before his
+sire appeared, also with hat and cane, ready to sally forth.
+
+"Will you permit me to accompany you? . . . I will not bother you."
+
+This would be said so humbly, with such an evident desire to have
+his request granted, that his son had not the heart to refuse him.
+In order to take a walk with Argensola, he had to scurry down the
+back stairs, or resort to other schoolboy tricks.
+
+Never had the elder Desnoyers promenaded the streets of Paris with
+such solid satisfaction as by the side of this muscular youth in his
+gloriously worn cloak, on whose breast were glistening his two
+decorations--the cross of war and the military medal. He was a
+hero, and this hero was his son. He accepted as homage to them both
+the sympathetic glances of the public in the street cars and
+subways. The interest with which the women regarded the fine-
+looking youth tickled him immensely. All the other military men
+that they met, no matter how many bands and crosses they displayed,
+appeared to the doting father mere embusques, unworthy of comparison
+with his Julio. . . . The wounded men who got out of the coaches by
+the aid of staffs and crutches inspired him with the greatest pity.
+Poor fellows! . . . They did not bear the charmed life of his son.
+Nobody could kill him; and when, by chance, he had received a wound,
+the scars had immediately disappeared without detriment to his
+handsome person.
+
+Sometimes, especially at night, Desnoyers senior would show an
+unexpected magnanimity, letting Julio fare forth alone. Since
+before the war, his son had led a life filled with triumphant love-
+affairs, what might he not achieve now with the added prestige of a
+distinguished officer! . . .
+
+Passing through his room on his way to bed, the father imagined the
+hero in the charming company of some aristocratic lady. None but a
+feminine celebrity was worthy of him; his paternal pride could
+accept nothing less. . . . And it never occurred to him that Julio
+might be with Argensola in a music-hall or in a moving-picture show,
+enjoying the simple and monotonous diversions of a Paris sobered by
+war, with the homely tastes of a sub-lieutenant whose amorous
+conquests were no more than the renewal of some old friendships.
+
+One evening as Don Marcelo was accompanying his son down the Champs
+Elysees, he started at recognizing a lady approaching from the
+opposite direction. It was Madame Laurier. . . . Would she
+recognize Julio? He noted that the youth turned pale and began
+looking at the other people with feigned interest. She continued
+straight ahead, erect, unseeing. The old gentleman was almost
+irritated at such coldness. To pass by his son without feeling his
+presence instinctively! Ah, these women! . . . He turned his head
+involuntarily to look after her, but had to avert his inquisitive
+glance immediately. He had surprised Marguerite motionless behind
+them, pallid with surprise, and fixing her gaze earnestly on the
+soldier who was separating himself from her. Don Marcelo read in
+her eyes admiration, love, all of the past that was suddenly surging
+up in her memory. Poor woman! . . . He felt for her a paternal
+affection as though she were the wife of Julio. His friend Lacour
+had again spoken to him about the Lauriers. He knew that Marguerite
+was going to become a mother, and the old man, without taking into
+account the reconciliation nor the passage of time, felt as much
+moved at the thought of this approaching maternity as though the
+child were going to be Julio's.
+
+Meanwhile Julio was marching right on, without turning his head,
+without being conscious of the burning gaze fixed upon him,
+colorless, but humming a tune to hide his emotion. He always
+believed that Marguerite had passed near him without recognizing
+him, since his father did not betray her.
+
+One of Don Marcelo's pet occupations was to make his son tell about
+the encounter in which he had been hurt. No visitor ever came to
+see the sub-lieutenant but the father always made the same petition.
+
+"Tell us how you were wounded. . . . Explain how you killed that
+German captain."
+
+Julio tried to excuse himself with visible annoyance. He was
+already surfeited with his own history. To please his father, he
+had related the facts to the senator, to Argensola and to Tchernoff
+in his studio, and to other family friends. . . . He simply could
+not do it again.
+
+So the father began the narration on his own account, giving the
+relief and details of the deed as though seen with his own eyes. . . .
+
+He had to take possession of the ruins of a sugar refinery in front
+of the trench. The Germans had been expelled by the French cannon.
+A reconnoitring survey under the charge of a trusty man was then
+necessary. And the heads, as usual, had selected Sergeant
+Desnoyers.
+
+At daybreak, the platoon had advanced stealthily without
+encountering any difficulty. The soldiers scattered among the
+ruins. Julio then went on alone, examining the positions of the
+enemy; on turning around a corner of the wall, he had the most
+unexpected of encounters. A German captain was standing in front of
+him. They had almost bumped into each other. They looked into each
+other's eyes with more suspense than hate, yet at the same time,
+they were trying instinctively to kill each other, each one trying
+to get the advantage by his swiftness. The captain had dropped the
+map that he was carrying. His right hand sought his revolver,
+trying to draw it from its case without once taking his eyes off his
+enemy. Then he had to give this up as useless--it was too late.
+With his eyes distended by the proximity of death, he kept his gaze
+fixed upon the Frenchman who had raised his gun to his face. A
+shot, from a barrel almost touching him . . . and the German fell
+dead.
+
+Not till then did the victor notice the captain's orderly who was
+but a few steps behind. He shot Desnoyers, wounding him in the
+shoulder. The French hurried to the spot, killing the corporal.
+Then there was a sharp cross-fire with the enemy's company which had
+halted a little ways off while their commander was exploring the
+ground. Julio, in spite of his wound, continued at the head of his
+section, defending the factory against superior forces until
+supports arrived, and the land remained definitely in the power of
+the French.
+
+"Wasn't that about the way of it?" Don Marcelo would always wind up.
+
+The son assented, desirous that his annoyance with the persistent
+story should come to an end as soon as possible. Yes, that was the
+way of it. But what the father didn't know, what Julio would never
+tell, was the discovery that he had made after killing the captain.
+
+The two men, during the interminable second in which they had
+confronted each other, had showed in their eyes something more than
+the surprise of an encounter, and the wish to overcome the other.
+Desnoyers knew that man. The captain knew him, too. He guessed it
+from his expression. . . . But self-preservation was more insistent
+than recollection and prevented them both from co-ordinating their
+thoughts.
+
+Desnoyers had fired with the certainty that he was killing someone
+that he knew. Afterwards, while directing the defense of the
+position and guarding against the approach of reinforcements, he had
+a suspicion that the enemy whose corpse was lying a few feet away
+might possibly be a member of the von Hartrott family. No, he
+looked much older than his cousins, yet younger than his Uncle Karl
+who at his age, would be no mere captain of infantry.
+
+When, weakened by the loss of blood, they were about to carry him to
+the trenches, the sergeant expressed a wish to see again the body of
+his victim. His doubt continued before the face blanched by death.
+The wide-open eyes still seemed to retain their startled expression.
+The man had undoubtedly recognized him. His face was familiar. Who
+was he? . . . Suddenly in his mind's eye, Julio saw the heaving
+ocean, a great steamer, a tall, blonde woman looking at him with
+half-closed eyes of invitation, a corpulent, moustached man making
+speeches in the style of the Kaiser. "Rest in peace, Captain
+Erckmann!" . . . Thus culminated in a corner of France the
+discussions started at table in mid-ocean.
+
+He excused himself mentally as though he were in the presence of the
+sweet Bertha. He had had to kill, in order not to be killed. Such
+is war. He tried to console himself by thinking that Erckmann,
+perhaps, had failed to identify him, without realizing that his
+slayer was the shipmate of the summer. . . . And he kept carefully
+hidden in the depths of his memory this encounter arranged by Fate.
+He did not even tell Argensola who knew of the incidents of the
+trans-atlantic passage.
+
+When he least expected it, Don Marcelo found himself at the end of
+that delightful and proud existence which his son's presence had
+brought him. The fortnight had flown by so swiftly! The sub-
+lieutenant had returned to his post, and all the family, after this
+period of reality, had had to fall back on the fond illusions of
+hope, watching again for the arrival of his letters, making
+conjectures about the silence of the absent one, sending him packet
+after packet of everything that the market was offering for the
+soldiery--for the most part, useless and absurd things.
+
+The mother became very despondent. Julio's visit home but made her
+feel his absence with greater intensity. Seeing him, hearing those
+tales of death that her husband was so fond of repeating, made her
+realize all the more clearly the dangers constantly surrounding her
+son. Fatality appeared to be warning her with funereal
+presentiments.
+
+"They are going to kill him," she kept saying to Desnoyers. "That
+wound was a forewarning from heaven."
+
+When passing through the streets, she trembled with emotion at sight
+of the invalid soldiers. The convalescents of energetic appearance,
+filled her with the greatest pity. They made her think of a certain
+trip with her husband to San Sebastian where a bull fight had made
+her cry out with indignation and compassion, pitying the fate of the
+poor, gored horses. With entrails hanging, they were taken to the
+corrals, and submitted to a hurried adjustment in order that they
+might return to the arena stimulated by a false energy. Again and
+again they were reduced to this makeshift cobbling until finally a
+fatal goring finished them. . . . These recently cured men
+continually brought to her mind those poor beasts. Some had been
+wounded three times since the beginning of the war, and were
+returning surgically patched together and re-galvanized to take
+another chance in the lottery of Fate, always in the expectation of
+the supreme blow. . . . Ay, her son!
+
+Desnoyers waxed very indignant over his wife's low spirits,
+retorting:
+
+"But I tell you that Nobody will kill Julio! . . . He is my son.
+In my youth I, too, passed through great dangers. They wounded me,
+too, in the wars in the other world, and nevertheless, here I am at
+a ripe old age."
+
+Events seemed to reinforce his blind faith. Calamities were raining
+around the family and saddening his relatives, yet not one grazed
+the intrepid sub-lieutenant who was persisting in his daring deeds
+with the heroic nerve of a musketeer.
+
+Dona Luisa received a letter from Germany. Her sister wrote from
+Berlin, transmitting her letters through the kindness of a South
+American in Switzerland. This time, the good lady wept for some one
+besides her son; she wept for Elena and the enemies. In Germany
+there were mothers, too, and she put the sentiment of maternity
+above all patriotic differences.
+
+Poor Frau von Hartrott! Her letter written a month before, had
+contained nothing but death notices and words of despair. Captain
+Otto was dead. Dead, too, was one of his younger brothers. The
+fact that the latter had fallen in a territory dominated by their
+nation, at least gave the mother the sad comfort of being able to
+weep near his grave. But the Captain was buried on French soil,
+nobody knew where, and she would never be able to find his remains,
+mingled with hundreds of others. A third son was wounded in Poland.
+Her two daughters had lost their promised lovers, and the sight of
+their silent grief, was intensifying the mother's suffering. Von
+Hartrott continued presiding over patriotic societies and making
+plans of expansion after the near victory, but he had aged greatly
+in the last few months. The "sage" was the only one still holding
+his own. The family afflictions were aggravating the ferocity of
+Professor Julius von Hartrott. He was calculating, in a book he was
+writing, the hundreds of thousands of millions that Germany must
+exact after her triumph, and the various nations that she would have
+to annex to the Fatherland.
+
+Dona Luisa imagined that in the avenue Victor Hugo, she could hear
+the mother's tears falling in her home in Berlin. "You will
+understand, Luisa, my despair. . . . We were all so happy! May God
+punish those who have brought such sorrow on the world! The Emperor
+is innocent. His adversaries are to blame for it all . . ."
+
+Don Marcelo was silent about the letter in his wife's presence. He
+pitied Elena for her losses, so he overlooked her political
+connections. He was touched, too, at Dona Luisa's distress about
+Otto. She had been his godmother and Desnoyers his godfather. That
+was so--Don Marcelo had forgotten all about it; and the fact
+recalled to his mental vision the placid life of the ranch, and the
+play of the blonde children that he had petted behind their
+grandfather's back, before Julio was born. For many years, he had
+lavished great affection on these youngsters, when dismayed at
+Julio's delayed arrival. He was really affected at thinking of what
+must be Karl's despair.
+
+But then, as soon as he was alone, a selfish coldness would blot out
+this compassion. War was war, and the Germans had sought it.
+France had to defend herself, and the more enemies fell the
+better. . . . The only soldier who interested him now was Julio.
+And his faith in the destiny of his son made him feel a brutal joy,
+a paternal satisfaction almost amounting to ferocity.
+
+"No one will kill HIM! . . . My heart tells me so."
+
+A nearer trouble shook his peace of mind. When he returned to his
+home one evening, he found Dona Luisa with a terrified aspect
+holding her hands to her head.
+
+"The daughter, Marcelo . . . our daughter!"
+
+Chichi was stretched out on a sofa in the salon, pale, with an olive
+tinge, looking fixedly ahead of her as if she could see somebody in
+the empty air. She was not crying, but a slight palpitation was
+making her swollen eyes tremble spasmodically.
+
+"I want to see him," she was saying hoarsely. "I must see him!"
+
+The father conjectured that something terrible must have happened to
+Lacour's son. That was the only thing that could make Chichi show
+such desperation. His wife was telling him the sad news. Rene was
+wounded, very seriously wounded. A shell had exploded over his
+battery, killing many of his comrades. The young officer had been
+dragged out from a mountain of dead, one hand was gone, he had
+injuries in the legs, chest and head.
+
+"I've got to see him!" reiterated Chichi.
+
+And Don Marcelo had to concentrate all his efforts in making his
+daughter give up this dolorous insistence which made her exact an
+immediate journey to the front, trampling down all obstacles, in
+order to reach her wounded lover. The senator finally convinced her
+of the uselessness of it all. She would simply have to wait; he,
+the father, had to be patient. He was negotiating for Rene to be
+transferred to a hospital in Paris.
+
+The great man moved Desnoyers to pity. He was making such heroic
+efforts to preserve the stoic serenity of ancient days by recalling
+his glorious ancestors and all the illustrious figures of the Roman
+Republic. But these oratorical illusions had suddenly fallen flat,
+and his old friend surprised him weeping more than once. An only
+child, and he might have to lose him! . . . Chichi's dumb woe made
+him feel even greater commiseration. Her grief was without tears or
+faintings. Her sallow face, the feverish brilliancy of her eyes,
+and the rigidity that made her move like an automaton were the only
+signs of her emotion. She was living with her thoughts far away,
+with no knowledge of what was going on around her.
+
+When the patient arrived in Paris, his father and fiancee were
+transfigured. They were going to see him, and that was enough to
+make them imagine that he was already recuperated.
+
+Chichi hastened to the hospital with her mother and the senator.
+Then she went alone and insisted on remaining there, on living at
+the wounded man's side, waging war on all regulations and clashing
+with Sisters of Charity, trained nurses, and all who roused in her
+the hatred of rivalry. Soon realizing that all her violence
+accomplished nothing, she humiliated herself and became suddenly
+very submissive, trying with her wiles, to win the women over one by
+one. Finally, she was permitted to spend the greater part of the
+day with Rene
+
+When Desnoyers first saw the wounded artilleryman in bed, he had to
+make a great effort to keep the tears back. . . . Ay, his son, too,
+might be brought to this sad pass! . . . The man looked to him like
+an Egyptian mummy, because of his complete envelopment in tight
+bandage wrappings. The sharp hulls of the shell had fairly riddled
+him. There could only be seen a pair of sweet eyes and a blond bit
+of moustache sticking up between white bands. The poor fellow was
+trying to smile at Chichi, who was hovering around him with a
+certain authority as though she were in her own home.
+
+Two months rolled by. Rene was better, almost well. His betrothed
+had never doubted his recovery from the moment that they permitted
+her to remain with him.
+
+"No one that I love, ever dies," she asserted with a ring of her
+father's self-confidence. "As if I would ever permit the Boches to
+leave me without a husband!"
+
+She had her little sugar soldier back again, but, oh, in what a
+lamentable state! . . . Never had Don Marcelo realized the de-
+personalizing horrors of war as when he saw entering his home this
+convalescent whom he had known months before--elegant and slender,
+with a delicate and somewhat feminine beauty. His face was now
+furrowed by a network of scars that had transformed it into a
+purplish arabesque. Within his body were hidden many such. His
+left hand had disappeared with a part of the forearm, the empty
+sleeve hanging over the remainder. The other hand was supported on
+a cane, a necessary aid in order to be able to move a leg that would
+never recover its elasticity.
+
+But Chichi was content. She surveyed her dear little soldier with
+more enthusiasm than ever--a little deformed, perhaps, but very
+interesting. With her mother, she accompanied the convalescent in
+his constitutionals through the Bois de Boulogne. When, in crossing
+a street, automobilists or coachmen failed to stop their vehicles in
+order to give the invalid the right of way, her eyes shot lightning
+shafts, as she thundered, "Shameless embusques!" . . . She was now
+feeling the same fiery resentment as those women of former days who
+used to insult her Rene when he was well and happy. She trembled
+with satisfaction and pride when returning the greetings of her
+friends. Her eloquent eyes seemed to be saying, "Yes, he is my
+betrothed . . . a hero!" She was constantly arranging the war cross
+on his blouse of "horizon blue," taking pains to place it as
+conspicuously as possible. She also spent much time in prolonging
+the life of his shabby uniform--always the same one, the old one
+which he was wearing when wounded. A new one would give him the
+officery look of the soldiers who never left Paris.
+
+As he grew stronger, Rene vainly tried to emancipate himself from
+her dominant supervision. It was simply useless to try to walk with
+more celerity or freedom.
+
+"Lean on me!"
+
+And he had to take his fiancee's arm. All her plans for the future
+were based on the devotion with which she was going to protect her
+husband, on the solicitude that she was going to dedicate to his
+crippled condition.
+
+"My poor, dear invalid," she would murmur lovingly. "So ugly and so
+helpless those blackguards have left you! . . . But luckily you
+have me, and I adore you! . . . It makes no difference to me that
+one of your hands is gone. I will care for you; you shall be my
+little son. You will just see, after we are married, how elegant
+and stylish I am going to keep you. But don't you dare to look at
+any of the other women! The very first moment that you do, my
+precious little invalid, I'll leave you alone in your helplessness!"
+
+Desnoyers and the senator were also concerned about their future,
+but in a very definite way. They must be married as soon as
+possible. What was the use of waiting? . . . The war was no longer
+an obstacle. They would be married as quietly as possible. This
+was no time for wedding pomp.
+
+So Rene Lacour remained permanently in the house on the avenida
+Victor Hugo, after the nuptial ceremony witnessed by a dozen people.
+
+Don Marcelo had had dreams of other things for his daughter--a grand
+wedding to which the daily papers would devote much space, a son-in-
+law with a brilliant future . . . but ay, this war! Everybody was
+having his fondest hopes dashed to pieces every few hours.
+
+He took what comfort he could out of the situation. What more did
+they want? Chichi was happy--with a rollicking and selfish
+happiness which took no interest in anything but her own love-
+affairs. The Desnoyers business returns could not be improved
+upon;--after the first crisis had passed, the necessities of the
+belligerents had begun utilizing the output of his ranches, and
+never before had meat brought such high prices. Money was flowing
+in with greater volume than formerly, while the expenses were
+diminishing. . . . Julio was in daily danger of death, but the old
+ranchman was buoyed up by his conviction that his son led a charmed
+life--no harm could touch him. His chief preoccupation, therefore,
+was to keep himself tranquil, avoiding all emotional storms. He had
+been reading with considerable alarm of the frequency with which
+well-known persons, politicians, artists and writers, were dying in
+Paris. War was not doing all its killing at the front; its shocks
+were falling like arrows over the land, causing the fall of the
+weak, the crushed and the exhausted who, in normal times, would
+probably have lived to a far greater age.
+
+"Attention, Marcelo!" he said to himself with grim humor. "Keep
+cool now! . . . You must avoid Friend Tchernoff's four horsemen,
+you know!"
+
+He spent an afternoon in the studio going over the war news in the
+papers. The French had begun an offensive in Champagne with great
+advances and many prisoners.
+
+Desnoyers could not but think of the loss of life that this must
+represent. Julio's fate, however, gave him no uneasiness, for his
+son was not in that part of the front. But yesterday he had
+received a letter from him, dated the week before; they all took
+about that length of time to reach him. Sub-lieutenant Desnoyers
+was as blithe and reckless as ever. They were going to promote him
+again--he was among those proposed for the Legion d'Honneur. These
+facts intensified Don Marcelo's vision of himself as the father of a
+general as young as those of the revolution; and as he contemplated
+the daubs and sketches around him, he marvelled at the extraordinary
+way in which the war had twisted his son's career.
+
+On his way home, he passed Marguerite Laurier dressed in mourning.
+The senator had told him a few days before that her brother, the
+artilleryman, had just been killed at Verdun.
+
+"How many are falling!" he said mournfully to himself. "How hard it
+will be for his poor mother!"
+
+But he smiled immediately after at the thought of those to be born.
+Never before had the people been so occupied in accelerating their
+reproduction. Even Madame Laurier now showed with pride the very
+visible curves of her approaching maternity, and Desnoyers noted
+sympathetically the vital volume apparent beneath her long mourning
+veil. Again he thought of Julio, without taking into account the
+flight of time. He felt as interested in the little newcomer as
+though he were in some way related to it, and he promised himself to
+aid generously the Laurier baby if he ever had the opportunity.
+
+On entering his house, he was met in the hall by Dona Luisa, who
+told him that Lacour was waiting for him.
+
+"Very good!" he responded gaily. "Let us see what our illustrious
+father-in-law has to say."
+
+His good wife was uneasy. She had felt alarmed without knowing
+exactly why at the senator's solemn appearance; with that feminine
+instinct which perforates all masculine precautions, she surmised
+some hidden mission. She had noticed, too, that Rene and his father
+were talking together in a low tone, with repressed emotion.
+
+Moved by an irresistible impulse, she hovered near the closed door,
+hoping to hear something definite. Her wait was not long.
+
+Suddenly a cry . . . a groan . . . the groan that can come only from
+a body from which all vitality is escaping.
+
+And Dona Luisa rushed in just in time to support her husband as he
+was falling to the floor.
+
+The senator was excusing himself confusedly to the walls, the
+furniture, and turning his back in his agitation on the dismayed
+Rene, the only one who could have listened to him.
+
+"He did not let me finish. . . . He guessed from the very first
+word. . . ."
+
+Hearing the outcry, Chichi hastened in in time to see her father
+slipping from his wife's arms to the sofa, and from there to the
+floor, with glassy, staring eyes, and foaming at the mouth.
+
+From the luxurious rooms came forth the world-old cry, always the
+same from the humblest home to the highest and loneliest:--
+
+"Oh, Julio! . . . Oh, my son, my son! . . .
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE BURIAL FIELDS
+
+
+The automobile was going slowly forward under the colorless sky of a
+winter morning.
+
+In the distance, the earth's surface seemed trembling with white,
+fluttering things resembling a band of butterflies poised on the
+furrows. On one of the fields the swarm was of great size, on
+others, it was broken into small groups.
+
+As the machine approached these white butterflies, they seemed to be
+taking on other colors. One wing was turning blue, another flesh-
+colored. . . . They were little flags, by the hundreds, by the
+thousands which palpitated night and day, in the mild, sunny,
+morning breeze, in the damp drip of the dull mornings, in the biting
+cold of the interminable nights. The rains had washed and re-washed
+them, stealing away the most of their color. Some of the borders of
+the restless little strips were mildewed by the dampness while
+others were scorched by the sun, like insects which have just grazed
+the flames.
+
+In the midst of the fluttering flags could be seen the black crosses
+of wood. On these were hanging dark kepis, red caps, and helmets
+topped with tufts of horsehair, slowly disintegrating and weeping
+atmospheric tears at every point.
+
+"How many are dead!" sighed Don Marcelo's voice from the automobile.
+
+And Rene, who was seated in front of him, sadly nodded his head.
+Dona Luisa was looking at the mournful plain while her lips trembled
+slightly in constant prayer. Chichi turned her great eyes in
+astonishment from one side to the other. She appeared larger, more
+capable in spite of the pallor which blanched her olive skin.
+
+The two ladies were dressed in deepest mourning. The father, too,
+was in mourning, huddled down in the seat in a crushed attitude, his
+legs carefully covered with the great fur rugs. Rene was wearing
+his campaign uniform under his storm coat. In spite of his
+injuries, he had not wished to retire from the army. He had been
+transferred to a technical office till the termination of the war.
+
+The Desnoyers family were on the way to carry out their long-
+cherished hope.
+
+Upon recovering consciousness after the fatal news, the father had
+concentrated all his will power in one petition.
+
+"I must see him. . . . Oh, my son! . . . My son!"
+
+Vain were the senator's efforts to show him the impossibility of
+such a journey. The fighting was still going on in the zone where
+Julio had fallen. Later on, perhaps, it might be possible to visit
+it. "I want to see it!" persisted the broken-hearted old man. It
+was necessary for him to see his son's grave before dying himself,
+and Lacour had to requisition all his powers, for four long months
+formulating requests and overcoming much opposition, in order that
+Don Marcelo might be permitted to make the trip.
+
+Finally a military automobile came one morning for the entire
+Desnoyers family. The senator could not accompany them. Rumors of
+an approaching change in the cabinet were floating about, and he
+felt obliged to show himself in the senate in case the Republic
+should again wish to avail itself of his unappreciated services.
+
+They passed the night in a provincial city where there was a
+military post, and Rene collected considerable information from
+officers who had witnessed the great combat. With his map before
+him, he followed the explanations until he thought he could
+recognize the very plot of ground which Julio's regiment had
+occupied.
+
+The following morning they renewed their expedition. A soldier who
+had taken part in the battle acted as their guide, seated beside the
+chauffeur. From time to time, Rene consulted the map spread out on
+his knees, and asked questions of the soldier whose regiment had
+fought very close to that of Desnoyers', but he could not remember
+exactly the ground which they had gone over so many months before.
+The landscape had undergone many transformations and had presented a
+very different appearance when covered with men. Its deserted
+aspect bewildered him . . . and the motor had to go very slowly,
+veering to the north of the line of graves, following the central
+highway, level and white, entering crossroads and winding through
+ditches muddied with deep pools through which they splashed with
+great bounds and jar on the springs. At times, they drove across
+fields from one plot of crosses to another, their pneumatic tires
+crushing flat from the furrows opened by the plowman.
+
+Tombs . . . tombs on all sides! The white locusts of death were
+swarming over the entire countryside. There was no corner free from
+their quivering wings. The recently plowed earth, the yellowing
+roads, the dark woodland, everything was pulsating in weariless
+undulation. The soil seemed to be clamoring, and its words were the
+vibrations of the restless little flags. And the thousands of
+cries, endlessly repeated across the days and nights, were intoning
+in rhythmic chant the terrible onslaught which this earth had
+witnessed and from which it still felt tragic shudderings.
+
+"Dead . . . dead," murmured Chichi, following the rows of crosses
+incessantly slipping past the sides of the automobile.
+
+"O Lord, for them! . . . for their mothers," moaned Dona Luisa,
+renewing her prayers.
+
+Here had taken place the fiercest part of the battle--the fight in
+the old way, man to man outside of the trenches, with bayonets, with
+guns, with fists, with teeth.
+
+The guide who was beginning to get his bearings was pointing out the
+various points on the desolate horizon. There were the African
+sharpshooters; further on, the chasseurs. The very large groups of
+graves were where the light infantry had charged with their bayonets
+on the sides of the road.
+
+The automobile came to a stop. Rene climbed out after the soldier
+in order to examine the inscriptions on a few of the crosses.
+Perhaps these might have belonged to the regiment they were seeking.
+Chichi also alighted mechanically with the irresistible desire of
+aiding her husband.
+
+Each grave contained several men. The number of bodies within could
+be told by the mouldering kepis or rusting helmets hanging on the
+arms of the cross; the number of the regiments could still be
+deciphered between the rows of ants crawling over the caps. The
+wreaths with which affection had adorned some of the sepulchres were
+blackened and stripped of their leaves. On some of the crucifixes,
+the names of the dead were still clear, but others were beginning to
+fade out and soon would be entirely illegible.
+
+"What a horrible death! . . . What glory!" thought Chichi sadly.
+
+Not even the names of the greater part of these vigorous men cut
+down in the strength of their youth were going to survive! Nothing
+would remain but the memory which would from time to time overwhelm
+some old countrywoman driving her cow along the French highway,
+murmuring between her sobs. "My little one! . . . I wonder where
+they buried my little one!" Or, perhaps, it would live in the heart
+of the village woman clad in mourning who did not know how to solve
+the problem of existence; or in the minds of the children going to
+school in black blouses and saying with ferocious energy--"When I
+grow up I am going to kill the Boches to avenge my father's death!"
+
+And Dona Luisa, motionless in her seat, followed with her eyes
+Chichi's course among the graves, while returning to her interrupted
+prayer--"Lord, for the mothers without sons . . . for the little
+ones without fathers! . . . May thy wrath not be turned against us,
+and may thy smile shine upon us once more!"
+
+Her husband, shrunken in his seat, was also looking over the
+funereal fields, but his eyes were fixed most tenaciously on some
+mounds without wreaths or flags, simple crosses with a little board
+bearing the briefest inscription. These were the German bodies
+which seemed to have a page to themselves in the Book of Death. On
+one side, the innumerable French tombs with inscriptions as small as
+possible, simple numbers--one, two, three dead. On the other, in
+each of the spacious, unadorned sepulchres, great quantities of
+soldiers, with a number of terrifying terseness. Fences of wooden
+strips, narrow and wide, surrounded these latter ditches filled to
+the top with bodies. The earth was as bleached as though covered
+with snow or saltpetre. This was the lime returning to mix with the
+land. The crosses raised above these huge mounds bore each an
+inscription stating that it contained Germans, and then a number--
+200 . . . 300 . . . 400.
+
+Such appalling figures obliged Desnoyers to exert his imagination.
+It was not easy to evoke with exactitude the vision of three hundred
+carcasses in helmets, boots and cloaks, in all the revolting aspects
+of death, piled in rows as though they were bricks, locked forever
+in the depths of a great trench. . . . And this funereal alignment
+was repeated at intervals all over the great immensity of the plain!
+
+The mere sight of them filled Don Marcelo with a kind of savage joy,
+as his mourning fatherhood tasted the fleeting consolation of
+vengeance. Julio had died, and he was going to die, too, not having
+strength to survive his bitter woe; but how many hundreds of the
+enemy wasting in these awful trenches were also leaving in the world
+loved beings who would remember them as he was remembering his
+son! . . .
+
+He imagined them as they must have been before the death call
+sounded, as he had seen them in the advance around his castle.
+
+Some of them, the most prominent and terrifying, probably still
+showed on their faces the theatrical cicatrices of their university
+duels. They were the soldiers who carried books in their knapsacks,
+and after the fusillade of a lot of country folk, or the sacking and
+burning of a hamlet, devoted themselves to reading the poets and
+philosophers by the glare of the blaze which they had kindled. They
+were bloated with science as with the puffiness of a toad, proud of
+their pedantic and all-sufficient intellectuality. Sons of
+sophistry and grandsons of cant, they had considered themselves
+capable of proving the greatest absurdities by the mental capers to
+which they had accustomed their acrobatic intellects.
+
+They had employed the favorite method of the thesis, antithesis and
+synthesis in order to demonstrate that Germany ought to be the
+Mistress of the World; that Belgium was guilty of her own ruin
+because she had defended herself; that true happiness consisted in
+having all humanity dominated by Prussia; that the supreme idea of
+existence consisted in a clean stable and a full manger; that
+Liberty and Justice were nothing more than illusions of the
+romanticism of the French; that every deed accomplished became
+virtuous from the moment it triumphed, and that Right was simply a
+derivative of Might. These metaphysical athletes with guns and
+sabres were accustomed to consider themselves the paladins of a
+crusade of civilization. They wished the blond type to triumph
+definitely over the brunette; they wished to enslave the worthless
+man of the South, consigning him forever to a world regulated by
+"the salt of the earth," "the aristocracy of humanity." Everything
+on the page of history that had amounted to anything was German.
+The ancient Greeks had been of Germanic origin; German, too, the
+great artists of the Italian Renaissance. The men of the
+Mediterranean countries, with the inherent badness of their
+extraction, had falsified history. . . .
+
+"That's the best place for you. . . You are better where you are
+buried, you pitiless pedants!" thought Desnoyers, recalling his
+conversations with his friend, the Russian.
+
+What a shame that there were not here, too, all the Herr Professors
+of the German universities--those wise men so unquestionably skilful
+in altering the trademarks of intellectual products and changing the
+terminology of things! Those men with flowing beards and gold-
+rimmed spectacles, pacific rabbits of the laboratory and the
+professor's chair that had been preparing the ground for the present
+war with their sophistries and their unblushing effrontery! Their
+guilt was far greater than that of the Herr Lieutenant of the tight
+corset and the gleaming monocle, who in his thirst for strife and
+slaughter was simply and logically working out the professional
+charts.
+
+While the German soldier of the lower classes was plundering what he
+could and drunkenly shooting whatever crossed his path, the warrior
+student was reading by the camp glow, Hegel and Nietzsche. He was
+too enlightened to execute with his own hands these acts of
+"historical justice," but he, with the professors, was rousing all
+the bad instincts of the Teutonic beast and giving them a varnish of
+scientific justification.
+
+"Lie there, in your sepulchre, you intellectual scourge!" continued
+Desnoyers mentally.
+
+The fierce Moors, the negroes of infantile intelligence, the sullen
+Hindus, appeared to him more deserving of respect than all the
+ermine-bordered togas parading haughtily and aggressively through
+the cloisters of the German universities. What peacefulness for the
+world if their wearers should disappear forever! He preferred the
+simple and primitive barbarity of the savage to the refined,
+deliberate and merciless barbarity of the greedy sage;--it did less
+harm and was not so hypocritical.
+
+For this reason, the only ones in the enemy's ranks who awakened his
+commiseration were the lowly and unlettered dead interred beneath
+the sod. They had been peasants, factory hands, business clerks,
+German gluttons of measureless (intestinal) capacity, who had seen
+in the war an opportunity for satisfying their appetites, for
+beating somebody and ordering them about after having passed their
+lives in their country, obeying and receiving kicks.
+
+The history of their country was nothing more than a series of
+raids--like the Indian forays, in order to plunder the property of
+those who lived in the mild Mediterranean climes. The Herr
+Professors had proved to their countrymen that such sacking
+incursions were indispensable to the highest civilization, and that
+the German was marching onward with the enthusiasm of a good father
+sacrificing himself in order to secure bread for his family.
+
+Hundreds of thousands of letters, written by their relatives with
+tremulous hands, were following the great Germanic horde across the
+invaded countries. Desnoyers had overheard the reading of some of
+these, at nightfall before his ruined castle. These were some of
+the messages found in the pockets of the imprisoned or dead:--"Don't
+show any pity for the red pantaloons. Kill WHOMEVER YOU CAN, and
+show no mercy even to the little ones." . . . "We would thank you
+for the shoes, but the girl cannot get them on. Those French have
+such ridiculously small feet!" . . . "Try to get hold of a
+piano.". . . "I would very much like a good watch." . . . "Our
+neighbor, the Captain, has sent his wife a necklace of pearls. . . .
+And you send only such insignificant things!"
+
+The virtuous German had been advancing heroically with the double
+desire of enlarging his country and of making valuable gifts to his
+offspring. "Deutschland uber alles!" But their most cherished
+illusions had fallen into the burial ditch in company with thousands
+of comrades-at-arms fed on the same dreams.
+
+Desnoyers could imagine the impatience on the other side of the
+Rhine, the pitiful women who were waiting and waiting. The lists of
+the dead had, perhaps, overlooked the missing ones; and the letters
+kept coming and coming to the German lines, many of them never
+reaching their destination. "Why don't you answer! Perhaps you are
+not writing so as to give us a great surprise. Don't forget the
+necklace! Send us a piano. A carved china cabinet for the dining
+room would please us greatly. The French have so many beautiful
+things!" . . .
+
+The bare cross rose stark and motionless above the lime-blanched
+land. Near it the little flags were fluttering their wings, moving
+from side to side like a head shaking out a smiling, ironical
+protest--No! . . . No!
+
+The automobile continued on its painful way. The guide was now
+pointing to a distant group of graves. That was undoubtedly the
+place where the regiment had been fighting. So the vehicle left the
+main road, sinking its wheels in the soft earth, having to make wide
+detours in order to avoid the mounds scattered about so capriciously
+by the casualties of the combat.
+
+Almost all of the fields were ploughed. The work of the farmer
+extended from tomb to tomb, making them more prominent as the
+morning sun forced its way through the enshrouding mists.
+
+Nature, blind, unfeeling and silent, ignoring individual existence
+and taking to her bosom with equal indifference, a poor little
+animal or a million corpses, was beginning to smile under the late
+winter suns.
+
+The fountains were still crusted with their beards of ice; the earth
+snapped as the feet weighed down its hidden crystals; the trees,
+black and sleeping, were still retaining the coat of metallic green
+in which the winter had clothed them; from the depths of the earth
+still issued an acute, deadly chill, like that of burned-out
+planets. . . . But Spring had already girded herself with flowers
+in her palace in the tropics, and was saddling with green her trusty
+steed, neighing with impatience. Soon they would race through the
+fields, driving before them in disordered flight the black goblins
+of winter, and leaving in their wake green growing things and
+tender, subtle perfumes. The wayside greenery, robing itself in
+tiny buds, was already heralding their arrival. The birds were
+venturing forth from their retreats in order to wing their way among
+the crows croaking wrathfully above the closed tombs. The landscape
+was beginning to smile in the sunlight with the artless, deceptive
+smile of a child who looks candidly around while his pockets are
+stuffed with stolen goodies.
+
+The husbandmen had ploughed the fields and filled the furrows with
+seed. Men might go on killing each other as much as they liked; the
+soil had no concern with their hatreds, and on that account, did not
+propose to alter its course. As every year, the metal cutter had
+opened its usual lines, obliterating with its ridges the traces of
+man and beast, undismayed and with stubborn diligence filling up the
+tunnels which the bombs had made.
+
+Sometimes the ploughshare had struck against an obstacle
+underground . . . an unknown, unburied man; but the cultivator
+had continued on its way without pity. Every now and then, it
+was stopped by less yielding obstructions, projectiles which
+had sunk into the ground intact. The rustic had dug up these
+instruments of death which occasionally had exploded their
+delayed charge in his hands.
+
+But the man of the soil knows no fear when in search of sustenance,
+and so was doggedly continuing his rectilinear advance, swerving
+only before the visible tombs; there the furrows had curved
+mercifully, making little islands of the mounds surmounted by
+crosses and flags. The seeds of future bread were preparing to
+extend their tentacles like devil fish among those who, but a short
+time before, were animated by such monstrous ambition. Life was
+about to renew itself once more.
+
+The automobile came to a standstill. The guide was running about
+among the crosses, stooping over in order to examine their weather-
+stained inscriptions.
+
+"Here we are!"
+
+He had found above one grave the number of the regiment.
+
+Chichi and her husband promptly dismounted again. Then Dona Luisa,
+with sad resolution, biting her lips to keep the tears back. Then
+the three devoted themselves to assisting the father who had thrown
+off his fur lap-robe. Poor Desnoyers! On touching the ground, he
+swayed back and forth, moving forward with the greatest effort,
+lifting his feet with difficulty, and sinking his staff in the
+hollows.
+
+"Lean on me, my poor dear," said the old wife, offering her arm.
+
+The masterful head of the family could no longer take a single step
+without their aid.
+
+Then began their slow, painful pilgrimage among the graves.
+
+The guide was still exploring the spot bristling with crosses,
+spelling out the names, and hesitating before the faded lettering.
+Rene was doing the same on the other side of the road. Chichi went
+on alone, the wind whirling her black veil around her, and making
+the little curls escape from under her mourning hat every time she
+leaned over to decipher a name. Her daintily shod feet sunk deep
+into the ruts, and she had to gather her skirts about her in order
+to move more comfortably--revealing thus at every step evidences of
+the joy of living, of hidden beauty, of consummated love following
+her course through this land of death and desolation.
+
+In the distance sounded feebly her father's voice:
+
+"Not yet?"
+
+The two elders were growing impatient, anxious to find their son's
+resting place as soon as possible.
+
+A half hour thus dragged by without any result--always unfamiliar
+names, anonymous crosses or the numbers of other regiments. Don
+Marcelo was no longer able to stand. Their passage across the
+irregularities of the soft earth had been torment for him. He was
+beginning to despair. . . . Ay, they would never find Julio's
+remains! The parents, too, had been scrutinizing the plots nearest
+them, bending sadly before cross after cross. They stopped before a
+long, narrow hillock, and read the name. . . . No, he was not
+there, either; and they continued desperately along the painful path
+of alternate hopes and disappointments.
+
+It was Chichi who notified them with a cry, "Here. . . . Here it
+is!" The old folks tried to run, almost falling at every step. All
+the family were soon grouped around a heap of earth in the vague
+outline of a bier, and beginning to be covered with herbage. At the
+head was a cross with letters cut in deep with the point of a knife,
+the kind deed of some of his comrades-at-arms--"DESNOYERS." . . .
+Then in military abbreviations, the rank, regiment and company.
+
+A long silence. Dona Luisa had knelt instantly, with her eyes fixed
+on the cross--those great, bloodshot eyes that could no longer weep.
+Till then, tears had been constantly in her eyes, but now they
+deserted her as though overcome by the immensity of a grief
+incapable of expressing itself in the usual ways.
+
+The father was staring at the rustic grave in dumb amazement. His
+son was there, there forever! . . . and he would never see him
+again! He imagined him sleeping unshrouded below, in direct contact
+with the earth, just as Death had surprised him in his miserable and
+heroic old uniform. He recalled the exquisite care which the lad
+had always given his body--the long bath, the massage, the
+invigorating exercise of boxing and fencing, the cold shower, the
+elegant and subtle perfume . . . all that he might come to this! . . .
+that he might be interred just where he had fallen in his tracks,
+like a wornout beast of burden!
+
+The bereaved father wished to transfer his son immediately from the
+official burial fields, but he could not do it yet. As soon as
+possible it should be done, and he would erect for him a mausoleum
+fit for a king. . . . And what good would that do? He would merely
+be changing the location of a mass of bones, but his body, his
+physical semblance--all that had contributed to the charm of his
+personality would be mixed with the earth. The son of the rich
+Desnoyers would have become an inseparable part of a poor field in
+Champagne. Ah, the pity of it all! And for this, had he worked so
+hard and so long to accumulate his millions? . . .
+
+He could never know how Julio's death had happened. Nobody could
+tell him his last words. He was ignorant as to whether his end had
+been instantaneous, overwhelming--his idol going out of the world
+with his usual gay smile on his lips, or whether he had endured long
+hours of agony abandoned in the field, writhing like a reptile or
+passing through phases of hellish torment before collapsing in
+merciful oblivion. He was also ignorant of just how much was
+beneath this mound--whether an entire body discreetly touched by the
+hand of Death, or an assemblage of shapeless remnants from the
+devastating hurricane of steel! . . . And he would never see him
+again! And that Julio who had been filling his thoughts would
+become simply a memory, a name that would live while his parents
+lived, fading away, little by little, after they had disappeared! . . .
+
+He was startled to hear a moan, a sob. . . . Then he recognized
+dully that they were his own, that he had been accompanying his
+reflections with groans of grief.
+
+His wife was still at his feet, kneeling, alone with her
+heartbreak, fixing her dry eyes on the cross with a gaze of
+hypnotic tenacity. . . . There was her son near her knees,
+lying stretched out as she had so often watched him when sleeping
+in his cradle! . . . The father's sobs were wringing her heart,
+too, but with an unbearable depression, without his wrathful
+exasperation. And she would never see him again! . . . Could
+it be possible! . . .
+
+Chichi's presence interrupted the despairing thoughts of her
+parents. She had run to the automobile, and was returning with an
+armful of flowers. She hung a wreath on the cross and placed a
+great spray of blossoms at the foot. Then she scattered a shower of
+petals over the entire surface of the grave, sadly, intensely, as
+though performing a religious rite, accompanying the offering with
+her outspoken thoughts--"For you who so loved life for its beauties
+and pleasures! . . . for you who knew so well how to make yourself
+beloved!" . . . And as her tears fell, her affectionate memories
+were as full of admiration as of grief. Had she not been his
+sister, she would have liked to have been his beloved.
+
+And having exhausted the rain of flower-petals, she wandered away so
+as not to disturb the lamentations of her parents.
+
+Before the uselessness of his bitter plaints, Don Marcelo's former
+dominant character had come to life, raging against destiny.
+
+He looked at the horizon where so often he had imagined the
+adversary to be, and clenched his fists in a paroxysm of fury. His
+disordered mind believed that it saw the Beast, the Nemesis of
+humanity. And how much longer would the evil be allowed to go
+unpunished? . . .
+
+There was no justice; the world was ruled by blind chance;--all
+lies, mere words of consolation in order that mankind might exist
+unterrified by the hopeless abandon in which it lived!
+
+It appeared to him that from afar was echoing the gallop of the four
+Apocalyptic horsemen, riding rough-shod over all his fellow-
+creatures. He saw the strong and brutal giant with the sword of
+War, the archer with his repulsive smile, shooting his pestilential
+arrows, the bald-headed miser with the scales of Famine, the hard-
+riding spectre with the scythe of Death. He recognized them as only
+divinities, familiar and terrible-which had made their presence felt
+by mankind. All the rest was a dream. The four horsemen were the
+reality. . . .
+
+Suddenly, by the mysterious process of telepathy, he seemed to read
+the thoughts of the one grieving at his feet.
+
+The mother, impelled by her own sorrow, was thinking of that of
+others. She, too, was looking toward the distant horizon. There
+she seemed to see a procession of the enemy, grieving in the same
+way as were her family. She saw Elena with her daughters going in
+and out among the burial grounds, seeking a loved one, falling on
+their knees before a cross. Ay, this mournful satisfaction, she
+could never know completely! It would be forever impossible for her
+to pass to the opposite side in search of the other grave, for, even
+after some time had passed by, she could never find it. The beloved
+body of Otto would have disappeared forever in one of the nameless
+pits which they had just passed.
+
+"O Lord, why did we ever come to these lands? Why did we not
+continue living in the land where we were born?" . . .
+
+Desnoyers, too, uniting his thoughts with hers, was seeing again the
+pampas, the immense green plains of the ranch where he had become
+acquainted with his wife. Again he could hear the tread of the
+herds. He recalled Madariaga on tranquil nights proclaiming, under
+the splendor of the stars, the joys of peace, the sacred brotherhood
+of these people of most diverse extraction, united by labor,
+abundance and the lack of political ambition.
+
+And as his thoughts swung back to the lost son he, too, exclaimed
+with his wife, "Oh, why did we ever come? . . ." He, too, with the
+solidarity of grief, began to sympathize with those on the other
+side of the battle front. They were suffering just as he was; they
+had lost their sons. Human grief is the same everywhere.
+
+But then he revolted against his commiseration. Karl had been an
+advocate of this war. He was among those who had looked upon war as
+the perfect state for mankind, who had prepared it with their
+provocations. It was just that War should devour his sons; he ought
+not to bewail their loss. . . . But he who had always loved Peace!
+He who had only one son, only one! . . . and now he was losing him
+forever! . . .
+
+He was going to die; he was sure that he was going to die. . . .
+Only a few months of life were left in him. And his pitiful,
+devoted companion kneeling at his feet, she, too, would soon pass
+away. She could not long survive the blow which they had just
+received. There was nothing further for them to do; nobody needed
+them any longer.
+
+Their daughter was thinking only of herself, of founding a separate
+home interest--with the hard instinct of independence which
+separates children from their parents in order that humanity may
+continue its work of renovation.
+
+Julio was the only one who would have prolonged the family, passing
+on the name. The Desnoyers had died; his daughter's children would
+be Lacour. . . . All was ended.
+
+Don Marcelo even felt a certain satisfaction in thinking of his
+approaching death. More than anything else, he wished to pass out
+of the world. He no longer had any curiosity as to the end of this
+war in which he had been so interested. Whatever the end might be,
+it would be sure to turn out badly. Although the Beast might be
+mutilated, it would again come forth years afterward, as the eternal
+curse of mankind. . . . For him the only important thing now was
+that the war had robbed him of his son. All was gloomy, all was
+black. The world was going to its ruin. . . . He was going to
+rest.
+
+Chichi had clambered up on the hillock which contained, perhaps,
+more than their dead. With furrowed brow, she was contemplating the
+plain. Graves . . . graves everywhere! The recollection of Julio
+had already passed to second place in her mind. She could not bring
+him back, no matter how much she might weep.
+
+This vision of the fields of death made her think all the more of
+the living. As her eyes roved from side to side, she tried, with
+her hands, to keep down the whirling of her wind-tossed skirts.
+Rene was standing at the foot of the knoll, and several times after
+a sweeping glance at the numberless mounds around them, she looked
+thoughtfully at him, as though trying to establish a relationship
+between her husband and those below. And he had exposed his life in
+combats just as these men had done! . . .
+
+"And you, my poor darling," she continued aloud. "At this very
+moment you, too, might be lying here under a heap of earth with a
+wooden cross at your head, just like these poor unfortunates!"
+
+The sub-lieutenant smiled sadly. Yes, it was so.
+
+"Come here; climb up here!" said Chichi impetuously. "I want to
+give you something!"
+
+As soon as he approached her, she flung her arms around his neck,
+pressed him against the warm softness of her breast, exhaling a
+perfume of life and love, and kissed him passionately without a
+thought of her brother, without seeing her aged parents grieving
+below them and longing to die. . . . And her skirts, freed by the
+breeze, molded her figure in the superb sweep of the curves of a
+Grecian vase.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
+
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