[A Short History of France by Mary Platt Parmele]@TWC D-Link bookA Short History of France CHAPTER XIX 9/206
That of public opinion was different.
It was the unanimous belief among other nations that the case against this unfortunate man had completely collapsed. But in order to protect the French army from the disgrace which was inseparable from a vindication of Dreyfus, he must be sacrificed. The sentence pronounced at the conclusion of the second trial was imprisonment in a French fortress for ten years. This sentence was remitted by President Loubet; and, with the brand of two convictions and the memory of his "degradation" and of Devil's Island burned deep into his soul, a broken man was sent forth free. Not the least dramatic incident in this affair was the impassioned championship of M.Zola, the great novelist, who hurled defamatory charges at the court, in the hope of being placed under arrest for libel, and thus be given opportunity to establish facts repressed by the military court.
By the French law, the accused must justify his defamatory words, and this was the opportunity sought. The heroic effort was not in vain.
Zola was found guilty and sentenced to a year's imprisonment, which he avoided by going into exile.
But light had been thrown upon the "_Affaire._" And he was content. Upon the sudden death of M.Faure in 1899, Emile Loubet, a lawyer of national reputation, was chosen to succeed him, and his administration commenced while this storm was reaching its final culmination. With the release of Captain Dreyfus the agitation subsided.
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