Jean-Christophe, vol 1 by Romain Rolland (fb2 epub reader .txt) đź“•
He waited for contradiction, and spat on the fire. Then, as neither mother nor child raised any objection, he was for going on, but relapsed into silence.
* * * * *
They said no more. Both Jean Michel, sitting by the fireside, and Louisa, in her bed, dreamed sadly. The old man, in spite of what he had said, had bitter thoughts about his son's marriage, and Louisa was thinking of it also, and blaming herself, although she had nothing wherewith to reproach herself.
She had been a servant when, to everybody's surprise, and her own especially, she married Melchior Krafft, Jean Michel's son. The Kraffts were without fortune, but were considerable people in the little Rhine town in which the old man had settled down more than fifty years before. Both father and son were musicians, and known to all the musicians of the country from Cologne to Mannheim. Melchior played the violin at the Hof-Theater, and Jean Michel had formerly been director of the grand-ducal concerts. The o
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saber. Before he could make use of it Christophe felled him with a stool.
The whole thing had been So sudden that none of the spectators had time to
think of interfering. The other soldiers ran to Christophe drawing their
sabers. The peasants flung themselves at them. The uproar became general.
Mugs flew across the room; the tables were overturned. The peasants woke
up; they had old scores to pay off. The men rolled about on the ground and
bit each other savagely. Lorchen’s partner, a stolid farm-hand, had caught
hold of the head of the soldier who had just insulted him and was banging
it furiously against the wall. Lorchen, armed with a cudgel, was striking
out blindly. The other girls ran away screaming, except for a few wantons
who joined in heartily. One of them—a fat little fair girl—seeing a
gigantic soldier—the same who had sat at Christophe’s table—crushing in
the chest of his prostrate adversary with his boot, ran to the fire, came
back, dragged the brute’s head backwards and flung a handful of burning
ashes into his eyes. The man bellowed. The girl gloated, abused the
disarmed enemy, whom the peasants now thwacked at their ease. At last the
soldiers finding themselves on the losing side rushed away leaving two of
their number on the floor. The fight went on in the village street. They
burst into the houses crying murder, and trying to smash everything. The
peasants followed them with forks, and set their savage dogs on them. A
third soldier fell with his belly cleft by a fork. The others had to fly
and were hunted out of the village, and from a distance they shouted as
they ran across the fields that they would fetch their comrades and come
back immediately.
The peasants, left masters of the field, returned to the inn; they were
exultant; it was a revenge for all the outrages they had suffered for so
long. They had as yet no thought of the consequences of the affray. They
all talked at once and boasted of their prowess. They fraternized with
Christophe, who was delighted to feel in touch with them. Lorchen came and
took his hand and held it for a moment in her rough paw while she giggled
at him. She did not think him ridiculous for the moment.
They looked to the wounded. Among the villagers there were only a few teeth
knocked out, a few ribs broken and a few slight bruises and scars. But it
was very different with the soldiers. They were seriously injured: the
giant whose eyes had been burned had had his shoulder half cut off with a
hatchet; the man whose belly had been pierced was dying; and there was the
officer who had been knocked down by Christophe. They were laid out by the
hearth. The officer, who was the least injured of the three, had just
opened his eyes. He took a long look at the ring of peasants leaning over
him, a look filled with hatred. Hardly had he regained consciousness of
what had happened than he began to abuse them. He swore that he would be
avenged and would settle their hash, the whole lot of them; he choked with
rage; it was palpable that if he could he would exterminate them. They
tried to laugh, but their laughter was forced. A young peasant shouted to
the wounded man:
“Hold your gab or I’ll kill you.”
The officer tried to get up, and he glared at the man who had just spoken
to him with blood-shot eyes:
“Swine!” he said. “Kill me! They’ll cut your heads off.”
He went on shouting. The man who had been ripped up screamed like a
bleeding pig. The third was stiff and still like a dead man. A crushing
terror came over the peasants. Lorchen and some women carried the wounded
men to another room. The shouts of the officer and the screams of the dying
man died away. The peasants were silent; they stood fixed in the circle as
though the three bodies were still lying at their feet; they dared not
budge and looked at each other in panic. At last Lorchen’s father said:
“You have done a fine piece of work!”
There was an agonized murmuring; their throats were dry. Then they began
all to talk at once. At first they whispered as though they were afraid of
eavesdroppers, but soon they raised their voices and became more vehement;
they accused each other; they blamed each other for the blows they had
struck. The dispute became acrid; they seemed to be on the point of going
for each other. Lorchen’s father brought them to unanimity. With his arms
folded he turned towards Christophe and jerked his chin at him:
“And,” he said, “what business had this fellow here?”
The wrath of the rabble was turned on Christophe:
“True! True!” they cried. “He began it! But for him nothing would have
happened.”
Christophe was amazed. He tried to reply:
“You know perfectly that what I did was for you, not for myself.”
But they replied furiously:
“Aren’t we capable of defending ourselves? Do you think we need a gentleman
from the town to tell us what we should do? Who asked your advice? And
besides who asked you to come? Couldn’t you stay at home?”
Christophe shrugged his shoulders and turned towards the door. But
Lorchen’s father barred the way, screaming:
“That’s it! That’s it!” he shouted. “He would like to cut away now after
getting us all into a scrape. He shan’t go!”
The peasants roared:
“He shan’t go! He’s the cause of it all. He shall pay for it all!”
They surrounded him and shook their fists at him. Christophe saw the circle
of threatening faces closing in upon him; fear had infuriated them. He said
nothing, made a face of disgust, threw his hat on the table, went and sat
at the end of the room, and turned his back on them.
But Lorchen was angry and flung herself at the peasants. Her pretty face
was red and scowling with rage. She pushed back the people who were
crowding round Christophe:
“Cowards! Brute beasts!” she cried. “Aren’t you ashamed? You want to
pretend that he brought it all on you! As if they did not see you all! As
if there was a single one of you who had not hit out his hand as he
could!… If there had been a man who had stayed with his arms folded while
the others were fighting I would spit in his face and call him: Coward!
Coward!…”
The peasants, surprised by this unexpected outburst, stayed for a moment in
silence; they began to shout again:
“He began it! Nothing would have happened but for him.”
In vain did Lorchen’s father make signs to his daughter. She went on:
“Yes. He did begin it! That is nothing for you to boast about. But for him
you would have let them insult you. You would have let them insult you. You
cowards! You funks!”
She abused her partner:
“And you, you said nothing. Your heart was in your mouth; you held out your
bottom to be kicked. You would have thanked them for it! Aren’t you
ashamed?… Aren’t you all ashamed? You are not men! You’re as brave as
sheep with your noses to the ground all the time! He had to give you an
example!—And now you want to make him bear everything?… Well, I tell
you, that shan’t happen! He fought for us. Either you save him or you’ll
suffer along with him. I give you my word for it!”
Lorchen’s father caught her arm. He was beside himself and shouted:
“Shut up! Shut up!… Will you shut up, you bitch!”
But she thrust him away and went on again. The peasants yelled. She shouted
louder than they in a shrill, piercing scream:
“What have you to say to it all? Do you think I did not see you just now
kicking the man who is lying half dead in the next room? And you, show me
your hands!… There’s blood on them. Do you think I did not see you with
your knife? I shall tell everything I saw if you do the least thing against
him. I will have you all condemned.”
The infuriated peasants thrust their faces into Lorchen’s and bawled at
her. One of them made as though to box her ears, but Lorchen’s lover seized
him by the scruff of the neck and they jostled each other and were on the
point of coming to blows. An old man said to Lorchen:
“If we are condemned, you will be too.”
“I shall be too,” she said, “I am not so cowardly as you.”
And she burst out again.
They did not know what to do. They turned to her father:
“Can’t you make her be silent?”
The old man had understood that it was not wise to push Lorchen too far. He
signed to them to be calm. Silence came. Lorchen went on talking alone;
then as she found no response, like a fire without fuel, she stopped. After
a moment her father coughed and said:
“Well, then, what do you want? You don’t want to ruin us.”
She said:
“I want him to be saved.”
They began to think. Christophe had not moved from where he sat; he was
stiff and proud and seemed not to understand that they were discussing him;
but he was touched by Lorchen’s intervention. Lorchen seemed not to be
aware of his presence; she was leaning against the table by which he was
sitting, and glaring defiantly at the peasants, who were smoking and
looking down at the ground. At last her father chewed his pipe for a little
and said:
“Whether we say anything or not,—if he stays he is done for. The sergeant
major recognized him; he won’t spare him. There is only one thing for him
to do—to get away at once to the other side of the frontier.”
He had come to the conclusion it would be better for them all If Christophe
escaped; in that way he would admit his guilt, and when he was no longer
there to defend himself it would not be difficult to put upon him the
burden of the affair. The others agreed. They understood each other
perfectly.—Now that they had come to a decision they were all in a hurry
for Christophe to go. Without being in the least embarrassed by what they
had been saying a moment before they came up to him and pretended to be
deeply interested in his welfare.
“There is not a moment to lose, sir,” said Lorchen’s father. “They will
come back. Half an hour to go to the fortress. Half an hour to come
back…. There is only just time to slip away.”
Christophe had risen. He too had been thinking. He knew that if he stayed
he was lost. But to go, to go without seeing his mother?… No. It was
impossible. He said that he would first go back to the town and would still
have time to go during the night and cross the frontier. But they protested
loudly. They had barred the door just before to prevent his going; now they
wanted to prevent his not going. If he went back to the town he was certain
to be caught; they would know at the fortress before he got there; they
would await him at home.—He insisted. Lorchen had understood him:
“You
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