LAST LEAFLETS.

Hungry birds come for food

January3rd.

. . . A fine drifting snow has been falling for the last few days.  The forest is completely covered.  Around me the silence was so deep that I could even hear the fall of the thickening flakes.  It is impossible to go out.  I watch the snow falling from the murky sky and whitening all things.  The famished birds come to my very doorstep.  The roedeer have taken refuge in the stable in place of my poor Colaquet, of whom I have heard nothing…

Deer sheltering in the stable

“They blew out his brains with a revolver.”

Robert hears bad news from the Doctor

January10th.

. . . The Doctor came to see me.  Bad news: Paris still shut up, disasters in the provinces!  The conquerors, worn out by such a tardy victory, redouble the humiliations and brutalities . . .  At Draveil, on Christmas night, five or six Bavarians, after sitting up late drinking with old Rabot, the forester, in a public-house, blew out his brains with a revolver.  The unhappy man’s brother, who lived opposite, ran in on hearing the report of the shot, and in his turn fell mortally wounded.  Another man of the samefamily was seriously wounded.  The wretches would have massacred all comers!  The affair created a great sensation: a fictitious inquiry was made, and concluded by the district of Draveil being condemned to pay an indemnity ofsixteen hundred poundsto the Bavarians! . . .

Bavarian preparing for the party

Game-shooting party in the forest

January15th.

. . . This morning the Prince of Saxony’s staff had a large shooting-party in the forest.  On hearing the firing so near me, I was seized with a terrible anxiety.  I thought it was the arrival of some French advanced-guard; but from the windows of the studio overlooking the woods, I saw between the leafless branches, crowds of beaters wearing the Saxon forage-caps running and shouting through the thickets, whileplumed and gilded sportsmen watched at every turn of the drives.  In the circle round theGreat Oakan enormous bivouac-fire blazed in front of a tent.  Here, called by a flourish of trumpets, the shooters came to breakfast.  I heard the clinking of glasses, the uncorking of bottles, and the cheering of the revellers.  Then the slaughter of deer and pheasants recommenced.  Ah! if old Guillard had been there! he who kept such an account of his game, watched over his coveys and his rabbit-holes, knew the favourite haunts of the deer.  How he would have grieved to see this sacrilege!  The bewildered birds knew not where to seek safety from the cruel guns.  The startled hares and rabbits ran under the legs of the sportsmen, and in the midst of all the confusion a wounded deer took refuge in the courtyard of the Hermitage.  The eyes of hunted animals have a look of piteous astonishment which is truly heart-rending.  This one excited my compassion, pressing against the low wall round the well, sniffing the air, and pawing the ground with its little bleeding feet.  My indignation redoubled against the plundering race that swarmed over vanquished France with the voracity of locusts, destroying its vineyards, its houses, its cornfields, its forests, and, when the country was laid bare,exterminating even the game, leaving nothing alive.

“I heard the clinking of glasses.”

I shall never forget that day’s sport in the midst of the war, under that dark, lowering sky, with the landscape whitened with hoar-frost, and the glitter of the gold on the helmets and the hunting-horns passing beneath the branches; while the galloping of the horses, the who-hoops of the men, reminded me of the Black Huntsman in the German ballads.  At dusk, lines of carts came to gather up from the edge of the roads all the wounded and dying game.  It was like the evening after a battle.

Taking home the day’s spoils

Depressed troops after the capitulation.

January19th.

…They have fought all day under the walls of Paris.  But the noise of the mitrailleuses was not so distinct as on the 2nd of December.  There was something in the sound of that distant battle which gave me the impression of lassitude and discouragement.

January30th.

…All is over.  Paris has capitulated.  The armistice is signed.

Abandoned equipment

Robert finishing his Diary

I end here my diary, in which I have tried to give the experiences of my five months of solitude.  To-day I returned to Draveil in the Doctor’s carriage, but without hiding this time.  The roads were full of peasants returning home.  Many are already at work again on the land.  All faces are sad, but no complaints are heard.  Is it fatalism or resignation?

The Prussians still occupy the village, enforcing their triumph with cool insolence.  They, however, appear less brutal with the inhabitants.  I saw some walking about hand-in-hand with little children.  It was like the beginning of a return to their forsaken hearths, to their sedentary lives, so long disturbed bythis war . . .  When I came home in the evening, I saw on the doorstep of the keeper’s house, old Guillard’s widow, dressed in deep mourning and hardly recognisable.  Poor woman! her husband dead and her home a wreck.  Her misfortunes are complete.  I heard her weeping as she tried to put in order the remains of her household goods.

PapersSilence reigns at the Hermitage.  It is a clear night and the air is balmy.  Already the presence of spring is beginning to be felt under the fast melting snow.  The forest will soon bud forth, and I shall watch to see the grass blades pushing aside the dead leaves.  From the distant quiet plains rises a misty vapour like the smoke of an inhabited village; and if anything can impart consolation after a cruel war, it is this repose of all Nature and mankind, this universal calm which rests upon a shattered country—a country recruiting its strength by sleep, forgetful of the lost harvest in preparing for that of the future!

Commencing tilling the fields

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