Twenty Years Later by Dumas, Alexandre. Part one

at the appointed place. The prince awaited him there. As he

had foreseen, Lens had fallen into the hands of the enemy

immediately after Raoul’s departure. The event was announced

by the cessation of the firing.

As the shadows of night deepened the troops summoned by the

prince arrived in successive detachments. Orders were given

that no drum should be beaten, no trumpet sounded.

At nine o’clock the night had fully come. Still a last ray

of twilight lighted the plain. The army marched silently,

the prince at the head of the column. Presently the army

came in sight of Lens; two or three houses were in flames

and a dull noise was heard which indicated what suffering

was endured by a town taken by assault.

The prince assigned to every one his post. Marshal de

Grammont was to hold the extreme left, resting on Mericourt.

The Duc de Chatillon commanded the centre. Finally, the

prince led the right wing, resting on Aunay. The order of

battle on the morrow was to be that of the positions taken

in the evening. Each one, on awaking, would find himself on

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the field of battle.

The movement was executed in silence and with precision. At

ten o’clock every one was in his appointed position; at

half-past ten the prince visited the posts and gave his

final orders for the following day.

Three things were especially urged upon the officers, who

were to see that the soldiers observed them scrupulously:

the first, that the different corps should so march that

cavalry and infantry should be on the same line and that

each body should protect its gaps; the second, to go to the

charge no faster than a walk; the third, to let the enemy

fire first.

The prince assigned the Count de Guiche to his father and

kept Bragelonne near his own person; but the two young men

sought the privilege of passing the night together and it

was accorded them. A tent was erected for them near that of

the marshal.

Although the day had been fatiguing, neither of them was

inclined to sleep. And besides, even for old soldiers the

evening before a battle is a serious time; it was so with

greater reason to two young men who were about to witness

for the first time that terrible spectacle. On the evening

before a battle one thinks of a thousand things forgotten

till then; those who are indifferent to one another become

friends and those who are friends become brothers. It need

not be said that if in the depths of the heart there is a

sentiment more tender, it reaches then, quite naturally, the

highest exaltation of which it is capable. Some sentiment of

this kind must have been cherished by each one of these two

friends, for each of them almost immediately sat down by

himself at an end of the tent and began to write.

The letters were long — the four pages were covered with

closely written words. The writers sometimes looked up at

each other and smiled; they understood without speaking,

their organizations were so delicate and sympathetic. The

letters being finished, each put his own into two envelopes,

so that no one, without tearing the first envelope, could

discover to whom the second was addressed; then they drew

near to each other and smilingly exchanged their letters.

“In case any evil should happen to me,” said Bragelonne.

“In case I should be killed,” said De Guiche.

They then embraced each other like two brothers, and each

wrapping himself in his cloak they soon passed into that

kindly sleep of youth which is the prerogative of birds,

flowers and infants.

35

A Dinner in the Old Style.

The second interview between the former musketeers was not

so formal and threatening as the first. Athos, with his

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superior understanding, wisely deemed that the supper table

would be the most complete and satisfactory point of

reunion, and at the moment when his friends, in deference to

his deportment and sobriety, dared scarcely speak of some of

their former good dinners, he was the first to propose that

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