The History of a Crime


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He received at the Elysée the same news that we received in the Rue  
Richelieu; bad for him, good for us. In one of the regiments which had  
just voted, there were 170 "Noes:" This regiment has since been  
dissolved, and scattered abroad in the African army.  
They had counted on the 14th of the line which had fired on the people  
in February. The Colonel of the 14th of the line had refused to  
recommence; he had just broken his sword.  
Our appeal had ended by being heard. Decidedly, as we have seen, Paris  
was rising. The fall of Bonaparte seemed to be foreshadowed. Two  
Representatives, Fabvier and Crestin, met in the Rue Royale, and  
Crestin, pointing to the Palace of the Assembly, said to Fabvier, "We  
shall be there to-morrow."  
One noteworthy incident. Mazes became eccentric, the prison unbent  
itself; the interior experienced an undefinable reverberation from the  
outside. The warders, who the preceding evening had been insolent to  
the Representatives when going for their exercise in the courtyard, now  
saluted them to the ground. That very morning of Thursday, the 4th, the  
governor of the prison had paid a visit to the prisoners, and had said  
to them, "It is not my fault." He brought them books and writing-paper,  
a thing which up to that time he had refused. The Representative  
Valentin was in solitary confinement; on the morning of the 4th his  
warder suddenly became amiable, and offered to obtain for him news from  
outside, through his wife, who, he said, had been a servant in General  
Leflô's household. These were significant signs. When the jailer smiles  
it means that the jail is half opening.  
435  


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