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<h2> CHAPTER XXII—FOOT TO FOOT </h2>
<p>When there were no longer any of the leaders left alive, except Enjolras
and Marius at the two extremities of the barricade, the centre, which had
so long sustained Courfeyrac, Joly, Bossuet, Feuilly and Combeferre, gave
way. The cannon, though it had not effected a practicable breach, had made
a rather large hollow in the middle of the redoubt; there, the summit of
the wall had disappeared before the balls, and had crumbled away; and the
rubbish which had fallen, now inside, now outside, had, as it accumulated,
formed two piles in the nature of slopes on the two sides of the barrier,
one on the inside, the other on the outside. The exterior slope presented
an inclined plane to the attack.</p>
<p>A final assault was there attempted, and this assault succeeded. The mass
bristling with bayonets and hurled forward at a run, came up with
irresistible force, and the serried front of battle of the attacking
column made its appearance through the smoke on the crest of the
battlements. This time, it was decisive. The group of insurgents who were
defending the centre retreated in confusion.</p>
<p>Then the gloomy love of life awoke once more in some of them. Many,
finding themselves under the muzzles of this forest of guns, did not wish
to die. This is a moment when the instinct of self-preservation emits
howls, when the beast re-appears in men. They were hemmed in by the lofty,
six-story house which formed the background of their redoubt. This house
might prove their salvation. The building was barricaded, and walled, as
it were, from top to bottom. Before the troops of the line had reached the
interior of the redoubt, there was time for a door to open and shut, the
space of a flash of lightning was sufficient for that, and the door of
that house, suddenly opened a crack and closed again instantly, was life
for these despairing men. Behind this house, there were streets, possible
flight, space. They set to knocking at that door with the butts of their
guns, and with kicks, shouting, calling, entreating, wringing their hands.
No one opened. From the little window on the third floor, the head of the
dead man gazed down upon them.</p>
<p>But Enjolras and Marius, and the seven or eight rallied about them, sprang
forward and protected them. Enjolras had shouted to the soldiers: "Don't
advance!" and as an officer had not obeyed, Enjolras had killed the
officer. He was now in the little inner court of the redoubt, with his
back planted against the Corinthe building, a sword in one hand, a rifle
in the other, holding open the door of the wine-shop which he barred
against assailants. He shouted to the desperate men:—"There is but
one door open; this one."—And shielding them with his body, and
facing an entire battalion alone, he made them pass in behind him. All
precipitated themselves thither. Enjolras, executing with his rifle, which
he now used like a cane, what single-stick players call a "covered rose"
round his head, levelled the bayonets around and in front of him, and was
the last to enter; and then ensued a horrible moment, when the soldiers
tried to make their way in, and the insurgents strove to bar them out. The
door was slammed with such violence, that, as it fell back into its frame,
it showed the five fingers of a soldier who had been clinging to it, cut
off and glued to the post.</p>
<p>Marius remained outside. A shot had just broken his collar bone, he felt
that he was fainting and falling. At that moment, with eyes already shut,
he felt the shock of a vigorous hand seizing him, and the swoon in which
his senses vanished, hardly allowed him time for the thought, mingled with
a last memory of Cosette:—"I am taken prisoner. I shall be shot."</p>
<p>Enjolras, not seeing Marius among those who had taken refuge in the
wine-shop, had the same idea. But they had reached a moment when each man
has not the time to meditate on his own death. Enjolras fixed the bar
across the door, and bolted it, and double-locked it with key and chain,
while those outside were battering furiously at it, the soldiers with the
butts of their muskets, the sappers with their axes. The assailants were
grouped about that door. The siege of the wine-shop was now beginning.</p>
<p>The soldiers, we will observe, were full of wrath.</p>
<p>The death of the artillery-sergeant had enraged them, and then, a still
more melancholy circumstance. During the few hours which had preceded the
attack, it had been reported among them that the insurgents were
mutilating their prisoners, and that there was the headless body of a
soldier in the wine-shop. This sort of fatal rumor is the usual
accompaniment of civil wars, and it was a false report of this kind which,
later on, produced the catastrophe of the Rue Transnonain.</p>
<p>When the door was barricaded, Enjolras said to the others:</p>
<p>"Let us sell our lives dearly."</p>
<p>Then he approached the table on which lay Mabeuf and Gavroche. Beneath the
black cloth two straight and rigid forms were visible, one large, the
other small, and the two faces were vaguely outlined beneath the cold
folds of the shroud. A hand projected from beneath the winding sheet and
hung near the floor. It was that of the old man.</p>
<p>Enjolras bent down and kissed that venerable hand, just as he had kissed
his brow on the preceding evening.</p>
<p>These were the only two kisses which he had bestowed in the course of his
life.</p>
<p>Let us abridge the tale. The barricade had fought like a gate of Thebes;
the wine-shop fought like a house of Saragossa. These resistances are
dogged. No quarter. No flag of truce possible. Men are willing to die,
provided their opponent will kill them.</p>
<p>When Suchet says:—"Capitulate,"—Palafox replies: "After the
war with cannon, the war with knives." Nothing was lacking in the capture
by assault of the Hucheloup wine-shop; neither paving-stones raining from
the windows and the roof on the besiegers and exasperating the soldiers by
crushing them horribly, nor shots fired from the attic-windows and the
cellar, nor the fury of attack, nor, finally, when the door yielded, the
frenzied madness of extermination. The assailants, rushing into the
wine-shop, their feet entangled in the panels of the door which had been
beaten in and flung on the ground, found not a single combatant there. The
spiral staircase, hewn asunder with the axe, lay in the middle of the
tap-room, a few wounded men were just breathing their last, every one who
was not killed was on the first floor, and from there, through the hole in
the ceiling, which had formed the entrance of the stairs, a terrific fire
burst forth. It was the last of their cartridges. When they were
exhausted, when these formidable men on the point of death had no longer
either powder or ball, each grasped in his hands two of the bottles which
Enjolras had reserved, and of which we have spoken, and held the scaling
party in check with these frightfully fragile clubs. They were bottles of
aquafortis.</p>
<p>We relate these gloomy incidents of carnage as they occurred. The besieged
man, alas! converts everything into a weapon. Greek fire did not disgrace
Archimedes, boiling pitch did not disgrace Bayard. All war is a thing of
terror, and there is no choice in it. The musketry of the besiegers,
though confined and embarrassed by being directed from below upwards, was
deadly. The rim of the hole in the ceiling was speedily surrounded by
heads of the slain, whence dripped long, red and smoking streams, the
uproar was indescribable; a close and burning smoke almost produced night
over this combat. Words are lacking to express horror when it has reached
this pitch. There were no longer men in this conflict, which was now
infernal. They were no longer giants matched with colossi. It resembled
Milton and Dante rather than Homer. Demons attacked, spectres resisted.</p>
<p>It was heroism become monstrous.</p>
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