[Massacres Of The South (1551-1815) I by Alexandre Dumas Pere]@TWC D-Link book
Massacres Of The South (1551-1815) I

CHAPTER II
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For a moment the judges hesitated to condemn so young a boy to death, but a witness presented himself who testified that the little fellow was employed by the fanatics to strangle Catholic children.

Although no one believed the evidence, yet it was seized-on as a pretext: the unfortunate boy was condemned to death, and hanged without mercy an hour later.
A great many people from the parishes devastated by M.de Julien had taken refuge in Aussilargues, in the parish of St.Andre.Driven by hunger and misery, they went beyond the prescribed limits in search of means of subsistence.

Planque hearing of this, in his burning zeal for the Catholic faith resolved not to leave such a crime unpunished.

He despatched a detachment of soldiers to arrest the culprits: the task was easy, for they were all once more inside the barrier and in their beds.
They were seized, brought to St.Andre's Church and shut in; then, without trial of any kind,--they were taken, five at a time, and massacred: some were shot and some cut down with sword or axe; all were killed without exception--old and young women and children.

One of the latter, who had received three shots was still able to raise his head and cry, "Where is father?
Why doesn't he come and take me away." Four men and a young girl who had taken refuge in the town of Lasalle, one of the places granted to the houseless villagers as an asylum, asked and received formal permission from the captain of the Soissonais regiment, by name Laplace, to go home on important private business, on condition that they returned the same night.


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