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This shows us plainly that the Lord favors orderly and peaceable men, provided they know how to make the best use of their opportunities.
At length, as we could not do more, we were obliged to close the shop, in spite of the protestations of the soldiers, and defer business till to-morrow.
About nine o'clock, after supper, we all sat down together around the large lamp, to count our gains. I made rolls of three francs each, and on the chair next me the pile reached almost to the top of the table.
Little Safel put the white pieces in a wooden bowl. It was a pleasant sight to us all, and Sorle said: "We have sold twice as much as usual.
The more we raise the price the better it sells."
I was going to reply that still we must use moderation in all things--for these women, even the best of them, do not know that--when the sergeant came in to take his little gla.s.s. He wore his foraging coat, and carried hung across his cape a kind of bag of red leather.
"He, he, he!" said he, as he saw the rolls. "The devil! the devil!
You ought to be satisfied with this day's work, Father Moses?"
"Yes, not bad, sergeant," I joyfully replied.
"I think," said he, as he sat down and tasted the little gla.s.s of cherry-brandy, which Zeffen had just poured out for him, "I think that after one or two sorties more, you will do for colonel of the shopkeepers' regiment. So much the better; I am very glad of it!"
Then, laughing heartily, he said,
"He, Father Moses! see what I have here; these rascals of kaiserlichs deny themselves nothing."
At the same time he opened his bag, and began to draw out a pair of mittens lined with fox-skin, then some good woollen stockings, and a large knife with a horn handle and blades of very fine steel. He opened the blades:
"There is everything here," said he, "a pruning-knife, a saw, small knives and large ones, even to a file for nails."
"For finger-nails, sergeant!" said I.
"Ah! very likely!" said he. "This big landwehr was as nice as a new crown-piece. He would be likely to file his finger-nails. But wait!"
My wife and children, leaning over us, looked on with eager eyes.
Thrusting his hand into a sort of portfolio in the side of the bag, he drew out a handsome miniature, surrounded with a circle of gold in the shape of a watch, but larger.
"See! What ought this to be worth?"
I looked, then Sorle, then Zeffen, and Safel. We were all surprised at seeing a work of such beauty, and even touched, for the miniature represented a fair young woman and two lovely children, as fresh as rose-buds.
"Well, what do you think of that?" asked the sergeant.
"It is very beautiful," said Sorle.
"Yes, but what is it worth?"
I took the miniature and examined it.
"To any one else, sergeant," said I, "I should say that it was worth fifty francs; but the gold alone is worth more, and I should estimate it at a hundred francs; we can weigh it."
"And the portrait, Father Moses?"
"The portrait is worth nothing to me, and I will give it back to you.
Such things do not sell in this country; they are of no value except to the family."
"Very well," said he, "we will talk about that by and by."
He put back the miniature into the bag.
"Do you read German?" he asked.
"Very well."
"Ah, good! I am curious to hear what this kaiserlich had to write.
See, it is a letter! He was keeping it doubtless for the baggage-master to send it to Germany. But we came too soon! What does it say?"
He handed me a letter addressed to Madame Roedig, Stuttgart, No. 6 Bergstra.s.se. That letter, Fritz, here it is. Sorle has kept it; it will tell you more about the landwehr than I can.
"b.i.+.c.helberg, Feb. 25, 1814.
"Dear Aurelia: Thy good letter of January 29th reached Coblentz too late; the regiment was on its way to Alsace.
"We have had a great many discomforts, from rain and snow. The regiment came first to b.i.t.c.he, one of the most terrible forts possible, built upon rocks up in the sky. We were to take part in blockading it, but a new order sent us on farther to the fort of Lutzelstein, on the mountain, where we remained two days at the village of Petersbach, to summon that little place to surrender. The veterans who held it having replied by cannon, our colonel did not judge it necessary to storm it, and, thank G.o.d! we received orders to go and blockade another fortress surrounded by good villages which furnish us provisions in abundance; this is Phalsburg, a couple of leagues from Saverne. We relieve, here, the Austrian regiment of Vogelgesang, which has left for Lorraine.
"Thy good letter has followed me everywhere, and it fills me now with joy. Embrace little Sabrina and our dear little Henry for me a hundred times, and receive my embraces yourself, too, thou dear, adored wife!
"Ah! when shall we be together again in our little pharmacy? When shall I see again my vials nicely labelled upon their shelves, with the heads of aesculapius and Hippocrates above the door? When shall I take my pestle, and mix my drugs again after the prescribed formulas? When shall I have the joy of sitting again in my comfortable arm-chair, in front of a good fire, in our back shop, and hear Henry's little wooden horse roll upon the floor,--Henry whom I so long for? And thou, dear, adored wife, when wilt thou exclaim: 'It is my Henry!' as thou seest me return crowned with palms of victory."
"These Germans," interrupted the sergeant, "are blockheads as well as a.s.ses! They are to have 'palms of victory!' What a silly letter!"
But Sorle and Zeffen listened as I read, with tears in their eyes.
They held our little ones in their arms, and I, too, thinking that Baruch might have been in the same condition as this poor man, was greatly moved.
Now, Fritz, hear the end:
"We are here in an old tile-kiln, within range of the cannon of the fort. A few sh.e.l.ls are fired upon the city every evening, by order of the Russian general, Berdiaiw, with the hope of making the inhabitants decide to open the gates. That must be before long; they are short of provisions! Then we shall be comfortably lodged in the citizens'
houses, till the end of this glorious campaign; and that will be soon, for the regular armies have all pa.s.sed without resistance, and we hear daily of great victories in Champagne. Bonaparte is in full retreat; field-marshals Blucher and Schwartzenberg have united their forces, and are only five or six days' march from Paris----"
"What? What? What is that? What does he say?" stammered out the sergeant, leaning over toward the letter. "Read that again!"
I looked at him; he was very pale, and his cheeks shook with anger.
"He says that generals Blucher and Schwartzenberg are near Paris."
"Near Paris! They! The rascals!" he faltered out.
Suddenly, with a bad look on his face, he gave a low laugh and said:
"Ah! thou meanest to take Phalsburg, dost thou? Thou meanest to return to thy land of sauerkraut with palms of victory? He! he! he! I have given thee thy palms of victory!"