White Lies eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 452 pages of information about White Lies.

White Lies eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 452 pages of information about White Lies.

“Take this line to Colonel Raynal.  You will find him with the 12th brigade.”

He wrote a few lines in pencil, folded them, and Dard went off with them, little dreaming that the colonel of his brigade was taking the trouble to save his life, because he came from Beaurepaire.  Colonel Dujardin then went into his tent, and closed the aperture, and took the good book the priest had given him, and prayed humbly, and forgave all the world.

Then he sat down, his head in his hands, and thought of his child, and how hard it was he must die and never see him.  Then he lighted a candle, and sealed up his orders of valor, and wrote a line, begging that they might be sent to his sister.  He also sealed up his purse, and left a memorandum that the contents should be given to disabled soldiers of his brigade upon their being invalided.

Then he took out Josephine’s letter.  “Poor coward,” he said, “let me not be unkind.  See, I burn your letter, lest it should be found, and disturb the peace you prize so highly.  I, too, shall soon be at peace.”  He lighted the letter, and dropped it on the ground:  it burned slowly away.  He eyed it, despairingly.  “Ay,” said he, “you perish, last record of an unhappy love:  and even so pass away my life; my hopes of glory, and my dreams of love; it all ends to-day:  at nine and twenty.”

He put his white handkerchief to his eyes.  Josephine had given it him.  He cried a little.

When he had done crying, he put his white handkerchief in his bosom, and the whole man was transformed beyond language to express.  Powder does not change more when it catches fire.  He rose that moment and went like a flash of lightning out of the tent.  The next, he came down between the lines of the strong column that stood awaiting orders in Death’s Alley.

“Attention!” cried the sergeants; “the colonel!”

There was a dead silence, for the bare sight of that erect and inspired figure made the men’s bosoms thrill with the certainty of great deeds to come:  the light of battle was in his eye.  No longer the moody colonel, but a thunderbolt of war, red-hot, and waiting to be launched.

“Officers, sergeants, soldiers, a word with you!”

La Croix.  Attention!

“Do you know what passed here five minutes ago?”

“The attack of the bastion was settled!” cried a captain.

“It was; and who was to lead the assault? do you know that?”

“No.”

“A colonel from Egypt.”

At that there was a groan from the men.

“With detachments from the other brigades.”

Ah!” an angry roar.

Colonel Dujardin walked quickly down between the two lines, looking with his fiery eye into the men’s eyes on his right.  Then he came back on the other side, and, as he went, he lighted those men’s eyes with his own.  It was a torch passing along a line of ready gas-lights.

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Project Gutenberg
White Lies from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.