The History of a Crime


google search for The History of a Crime

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
177 178 179 180 181

Quick Jump
1 171 343 514 685

CHAPTER XVII.  
THE REBOUND OF THE 24TH JUNE, 1848, ON THE 2D DECEMBER, 1851  
On Sunday, 26th June, 1848, that four days' combat, that gigantic combat  
so formidable and so heroic on both sides, still continued, but the  
insurrection had been overcome nearly everywhere, and was restricted to  
the Faubourg St. Antoine. Four men who had been amongst the most  
dauntless defenders of the barricades of the Rue Pont-aux-Choux, of the  
Rue St. Claude, and of the Rue St. Louis in the Marais, escaped after the  
barricades had been taken, and found safe refuge in a house, No. 12, Rue  
St. Anastase. They were concealed in an attic. The National Guards and  
the Mobile Guards were hunting for them, in order to shoot them. I was  
told of this. I was one of the sixty Representatives sent by the  
Constituent Assembly into the middle of the conflict, charged with the  
task of everywhere preceding the attacking column, of carrying, even at  
the peril of their lives, words of peace to the barricades, to prevent  
the shedding of blood, and to stop the civil war. I went into the Rue St.  
Anastase, and I saved the lives of those four men.  
Amongst those men there was a poor workman of the Rue de Charonne, whose  
wife was being confined at that very moment, and who was weeping. One  
could understand, when hearing his sobs and seeing his rags, how he had  
cleared with a single bound these three steps--poverty, despair,  
rebellion. Their chief was a young man, pale and fair, with high cheek  
bones, intelligent brow, and an earnest and resolute countenance. As soon  
179  


Page
177 178 179 180 181

Quick Jump
1 171 343 514 685