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History of a Crime, The
The Third Day - The Massacre   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 1. Those who sleep and He who does not sleep
Victor Hugo
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       _ CHAPTER I. THOSE WHO SLEEP AND HE WHO DOES NOT SLEEP
       During this night of the 3d and 4th of December, while we who were overcome with fatigue and betrothed to calamity slept an honest slumber, not an eye was closed at the Elysee. An infamous sleeplessness reigned there. Towards two o'clock in the morning the Comte Roguet, after Morny the most intimate of the confidants of the Elysee, an ex-peer of France and a lieutenant-general, came out of Louis Bonaparte's private room; Roguet was accompanied by Saint-Arnaud. Saint-Arnaud, it may be remembered, was at that time Minister of War.
       Two colonels were waiting in the little ante-room.
       Saint-Arnaud was a general who had been a supernumerary at the Ambigu Theatre. He had made his first appearance as a comedian in the suburbs. A tragedian later on. He may be described as follows:--tall, bony, thin, angular, with gray moustaches, lank air, a mean countenance. He was a cut-throat, and badly educated. Morny laughed at him for his pronunciation of the "Sovereign People." "He pronounces the word no better than he understands the thing," said he. The Elysee, which prides itself upon its refinement, only half-accepted Saint-Arnaud. His bloody side had caused his vulgar side to be condoned. Saint-Arnaud was brave, violent, and yet timid; he had the audacity of a gold-laced veteran and the awkwardness of a man who had formerly been "down upon his luck." We saw him one day in the tribune, pale, stammering, but daring. He had a long bony face, and a distrust-inspiring jaw. His theatrical name was Florivan. He was a strolling player transformed into a trooper. He died Marshal of France. An ill-omened figure.
       The two colonels who awaited Saint-Arnaud in the anteroom were two business-like men, both leaders of those decisive regiments which at critical times carry the other regiments with them, according to their instructions, into glory, as at Austerlitz, or into crime, as on the Eighteenth Brumaire. These two officers belonged to what Morny called "the cream of indebted and free-living colonels." We will not mention their names here; one is dead, the other is still living; he will recognize himself. Besides, we have caught a glimpse of them in the first pages of this book.
       One, a man of thirty-eight, was cunning, dauntless, ungrateful, three qualifications for success. The Duc d'Aumale had saved his life in the Aures. He was then a young captain. A ball had pierced his body; he fell into a thicket; the Kabyles rushed up to cut off and carry away his head, when the Duc d'Aumale arriving with two officers, a soldier, and a bugler, charged the Kabyles and saved this captain. Having saved him, he loved him. One was grateful, the other was not. The one who was grateful was the deliverer. The Duc d'Aumale was pleased with this young captain for having given him an opportunity for a deed of gallantry. He made him a major; in 1849 this major became lieutenant-colonel, and commanded a storming column at the siege of Rome; he then came back to Africa, where Fleury bought him over at the same time as Saint-Arnaud. Louis Bonaparte made him colonel in July, 1851, and reckoned upon him. In November this colonel of Louis Bonaparte wrote to the Duc d'Aumale, "Nothing need be apprehended from this miserable adventurer." In December he commanded one of the massacring regiments. Later on, in the Dobrudscha, an ill-used horse turned upon him and bit off his cheek, so that there was only room on his face for one slap.
       The other man was growing gray, and was about forty-eight. He also was a man of pleasure and of murder. Despicable as a citizen; brave as a soldier. He was one of the first who had sprung into the breach at Constantine. Plenty of bravery and plenty of baseness. No chivalry but that of the green cloth. Louis Bonaparte had made him colonel in 1851. His debts had been twice paid by two Princes; the first time by the Duc d'Orleans, the second time by the Duc de Nemours.
       Such were these colonels.
       Saint-Arnaud spoke to them for some time in a low tone. _
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The First Day - The Ambush
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 1. "Security"
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 2. Paris Sleeps--The Bell Rings
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 3. What Had Happened During The Night
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 4. Other Doings Of The Night
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 5. The Darkness Of The Crime
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 6. "Placards"
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 7. No. 70, Rue Blanche
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 8. "Violation Of The Chamber"
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 9. An End Worse Than Death
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 10. The Black Door
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 11. The High Court Of Justice
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 12. The Mairie Of The Tenth Arrondissement
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 13. Louis Bonaparte's Side-Face
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 14. The D'orsay Barracks
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 15. Mazas
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 16. The Episode Of The Boulevard St. Martin
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 17. The Rebound Of The 24th June, 1848, On The 2d December, 1851
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 18. The Representatives Hunted Down
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 19. One Foot In The Tomb
   The First Day - The Ambush - Chapter 20. The Burial Of A Great Anniversary
The Second Day - The Struggle
   The Second Day - The Struggle - Chapter 1. They Come To Arrest Me
   The Second Day - The Struggle - Chapter 2. From The Bastille To The Rue De Cotte
   The Second Day - The Struggle - Chapter 3. The St. Antoine Barricade
   The Second Day - The Struggle - Chapter 4. The Workmen's Societies Ask Us For The Order To Fight
   The Second Day - The Struggle - Chapter 5. Baudins's Corpse
   The Second Day - The Struggle - Chapter 6. The Decrees Of The Representatives Who Remained Free
   The Second Day - The Struggle - Chapter 7. The Archbishop
   The Second Day - The Struggle - Chapter 8. Mount Valerien
   The Second Day - The Struggle - Chapter 9. The Lightning Begins To Flash Amongst The People
   The Second Day - The Struggle - Chapter 10. What Fleury Went To Do At Mazas
   The Second Day - The Struggle - Chapter 11. The End Of The Second Day
The Third Day - The Massacre
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 1. Those who sleep and He who does not sleep
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 2. The Proceedings Of The Committee
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 3. Inside The Elysee
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 4. Bonaparte's Familiar Spirits
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 5. A Wavering Ally
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 6. Denis Dussoubs
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 7. Items And Interviews
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 8. The Situation
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 9. The Porte Saint Martin
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 10. My Visit To The Barricade
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 11. The Barricade Of The Rue Meslay
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 12. The Barricade Of The Mairie Of The Fifth Arrondissement
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 13. The Barricade Of The Rue Thevenot
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 14. Ossian And Scipio
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 15. The Question Presents Itself
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 16. The Massacre
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 17. The Appointment Made With The Workmen's Societies
   The Third Day - The Massacre - Chapter 18. The Verification Of Moral Laws
The Fourth Day - The Victory
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 1. What Happened During The Night--The Rue Tiquetonne
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 2. What Happened During The Night--The Market Quarter
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 3. What Happened During The Night.--The Petit Carreau
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 4. What Was Done During The Night--The Passage Du Saumon
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 5. Other Deeds Of Darkness
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 6. The Consultative Committee
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 7. The Other List
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 8. David D'angers
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 9. Our Last Meeting
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 10. Duty Can Have Two Aspects
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 11. The Combat Finished, The Ordeal Begins
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 12. The Exiled
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 13. The Military Commissions And The Mixed Commissions
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 14. A Religious Incident
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 15. How They Came Out Of Ham
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 16. A Retrospect
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 17. Conduct Of The Left
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 18. Page Written At Brussels
   The Fourth Day - The Victory - Chapter 19. The Infallible Benediction
Conclusion - The Fall
   Conclusion - The Fall - Chapter 1
   Conclusion - The Fall - Chapter 2
   Conclusion - The Fall - Chapter 3
   Conclusion - The Fall - Chapter 4
   Conclusion - The Fall - Chapter 5
   Conclusion - The Fall - Chapter 6
   Conclusion - The Fall - Chapter 7
   Conclusion - The Fall - Chapter 8
   Conclusion - The Fall - Chapter 9
   Conclusion - The Fall - Chapter 10