[The Battle Of The Strong<br> Complete by Gilbert Parker]@TWC D-Link book
The Battle Of The Strong
Complete

CHAPTER VIII
19/27

One young nobleman preserved to France may yet be the great unit that will save her.
"Greet my poor countrymen yonder in the name of one who still waits at a desecrated altar; and for myself you must take me as I am, with the remembrance of what I was, even "Your faithful friend and loving kinsman, "CHANIER." "All this, though in the chances of war you read it not till wintertide, was told you at Rouen this first day of September 1792." During the reading, broken by feeling and reflective pauses on the chevalier's part, the listeners showed emotion after the nature of each.
The Sieur de Mauprat's fingers clasped and unclasped on the top of his cane, little explosions of breath came from his compressed lips, his eyebrows beetled over till the eyes themselves seemed like two glints of flame.

Delagarde dropped a fist heavily upon the table, and held it there clinched, while his heel beat a tattoo of excitement upon the floor.

Guida's breath came quick and fast--as Ranulph said afterwards, she was "blanc comme un linge." She shuddered painfully when the slaughter and burning of the Swiss Guards was read.

Her brain was so swimming with the horrors of anarchy that the latter part of the letter dealing with the vanished Count of Tournay passed by almost unheeded.
But this particular matter greatly interested Ranulph and de Mauprat.
They leaned forward eagerly, seizing every word, and both instinctively turned towards Detricand when the description of de Tournay was read.
As for Detricand himself, he listened to the first part of the letter like a man suddenly roused out of a dream.

For the first time since the Revolution had begun, the horror of it and the meaning of it were brought home to him.


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