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第109章

zanoni-第109章

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drunkard at their head; and mark my words; Fouquier; if the

struggle come; it is that man's incapacity and cowardice that

will destroy us。  Yes; thou mayst live thyself to accuse thy

beloved Robespierre; and to perish in his fall。〃



〃For all that; we must keep well with Henriot till we can find

the occasion to seize and behead him。  To be safe; we must fawn

on those who are still in power; and fawn the more; the more we

would depose them。  Do not think this Henriot; when he wakes to…

morrow; will forget thy threats。  He is the most revengeful of

human beings。  Thou must send and soothe him in the morning!〃



〃Right;〃 said Dumas; convinced。  〃I was too hasty; and now I

think we have nothing further to do; since we have arranged to

make short work with our fournee of to…morrow。  I see in the list

a knave I have long marked out; though his crime once procured me

a legacy;Nicot; the Hebertist。〃



〃And young Andre Chenier; the poet?  Ah; I forgot; we be headed

HIM to…day!  Revolutionary virtue is at its acme。  His own

brother abandoned him。〃 (His brother is said; indeed; to have

contributed to the condemnation of this virtuous and illustrious

person。  He was heard to cry aloud; 〃Si mon frere est coupable;

qu'il perisse〃 (If my brother be culpable; let him die)。  This

brother; Marie…Joseph; also a poet; and the author of 〃Charles

IX。;〃 so celebrated in the earlier days of the Revolution;

enjoyed; of course; according to the wonted justice of the world;

a triumphant career; and was proclaimed in the Champ de Mars 〃le

premier de poetes Francais;〃 a title due to his murdered

brother。)



〃There is a foreigner;an Italian woman in the list; but I can

find no charge made out against her。〃



〃All the same we must execute her for the sake of the round

number; eighty sounds better than seventy…nine!〃



Here a huissier brought a paper on which was written the request

of Henriot。



〃Ah! this is fortunate;〃 said Tinville; to whom Dumas chucked the

scroll;〃grant the prayer by all means; so at least that it does

not lessen our bead…roll。  But I will do Henriot the justice to

say that he never asks to let off; but to put on。  Good…night!  I

am worn outmy escort waits below。  Only on such an occasion

would I venture forth in the streets at night。〃  (During the

latter part of the Reign of Terror; Fouquier rarely stirred out

at night; and never without an escort。  In the Reign of Terror

those most terrified were its kings。)  And Fouquier; with a long

yawn; quitted the room。



〃Admit the bearer!〃 said Dumas; who; withered and dried; as

lawyers in practice mostly are; seemed to require as little sleep

as his parchments。



The stranger entered。



〃Rene…Francois Dumas;〃 said he; seating himself opposite to the

president; and markedly adopting the plural; as if in contempt of

the revolutionary jargon; 〃amidst the excitement and occupations

of your later life; I know not if you can remember that we have

met before?〃



The judge scanned the features of his visitor; and a pale blush

settled on his sallow cheeks; 〃Yes; citizen; I remember!〃



〃And you recall the words I then uttered!  You spoke tenderly and

philanthropically of your horror of capital executions; you

exulted in the approaching Revolution as the termination of all

sanguinary punishments; you quoted reverently the saying of

Maximilien Robespierre; the rising statesman; 'The executioner is

the invention of the tyrant:' and I replied; that while you

spoke; a foreboding seized me that we should meet again when your

ideas of death and the philosophy of revolutions might be

changed!  Was I right; Citizen Rene…Francois Dumas; President of

the Revolutionary Tribunal?〃



〃Pooh!〃 said Dumas; with some confusion on his brazen brow; 〃I

spoke then as men speak who have not acted。  Revolutions are not

made with rose…water!  But truce to the gossip of the long…ago。

I remember; also; that thou didst then save the life of my

relation; and it will please thee to learn that his intended

murderer will be guillotined to…morrow。〃



〃That concerns yourself;your justice or your revenge。  Permit

me the egotism to remind you that you then promised that if ever

a day should come when you could serve me; your lifeyes; the

phrase was; 'your heart's blood'was at my bidding。  Think not;

austere judge; that I come to ask a boon that can affect

yourself;I come but to ask a day's respite for another!〃



〃Citizen; it is impossible!  I have the order of Robespierre that

not one less than the total on my list must undergo their trial

for to…morrow。  As for the verdict; that rests with the jury!〃



〃I do not ask you to diminish the catalogue。  Listen still!  In

your death…roll there is the name of an Italian woman whose

youth; whose beauty; and whose freedom not only from every crime;

but every tangible charge; will excite only compassion; and not

terror。  Even YOU would tremble to pronounce her sentence。  It

will be dangerous on a day when the populace will be excited;

when your tumbrils may be arrested; to expose youth and innocence

and beauty to the pity and courage of a revolted crowd。〃



Dumas looked up and shrunk from the eye of the stranger。



〃I do not deny; citizen; that there is reason in what thou

urgest。  But my orders are positive。〃



〃Positive only as to the number of the victims。  I offer you a

substitute for this one。  I offer you the head of a man who knows

all of the very conspiracy which now threatens Robespierre and

yourself; and compared with one clew to which; you would think

even eighty ordinary lives a cheap purchase。〃



〃That alters the case;〃 said Dumas; eagerly; 〃if thou canst do

this; on my own responsibility I will postpone the trial of the

Italian。  Now name the proxy!〃



〃You behold him!〃



〃Thou!〃 exclaimed Dumas; while a fear he could not conceal

betrayed itself through his surprise。  〃Thou!and thou comest to

me alone at night; to offer thyself to justice。  Ha!this is a

snare。  Tremble; fool!thou art in my power; and I can have

BOTH!〃



〃You can;〃 said the stranger; with a calm smile of disdain; 〃but

my life is valueless without my revelations。  Sit still; I

command you;hear me!〃 and the light in those dauntless eyes

spell…bound and awed the judge。  〃You will remove me to the

Conciergerie;you will fix my trial; under the name of Zanoni;

amidst your fournee of to…morrow。  If I do not satisfy you by my

speech; you hold the woman I die to save as your hostage。  It is

but the reprieve for her of a single day that I demand。  The day

following the morrow I shall be dust; and you may wreak your

vengeance on the life that remains。  Tush! judge and condemner of

thousands; do you hesitate;do you imagine that the man who

voluntarily offers himself to death will be daunted into uttering

one syllable at your Bar against his will?  Have you not had

experience enough of the inflexibility of pride and courage?

President; I place before you the ink and implements!  Write to

the jailer a reprieve of one day for the woman whose life can

avail you nothing; and I will bear the order to my own prison:

I; who can now tell this much as an earnest of what I can

communicate;while I speak; your own name; judge; is in a list

of death。  I can tell you by whose hand it is written down; I can

tell you in what quarter to look for danger; I can tell you from

what cloud; in this lurid atmosphere; hangs the storm that shall

burst on Robespierre and his reign!〃



Dumas grew pale; and his eyes vainly sought to escape the

magnetic gaze that overpowered and mastered him。  Mechanically;

and as if under an agency not his own; he wrote while the

stranger dictated。



〃Well;〃 he said then; forcing a smile to his lips; 〃I promised I

would serve you; see; I am faithful to my word。  I suppose that

you are one of those fools of feeling;those professors of anti…

revolutionary virtue; of whom I have seen not a 

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