The Old Wives' Tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 811 pages of information about The Old Wives' Tale.

The Old Wives' Tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 811 pages of information about The Old Wives' Tale.

From the little street at the rear of the guillotine appeared a priest, walking backwards, and holding a crucifix high in his right hand, and behind him came the handsome hero, his body all crossed with cords, between two warders, who pressed against him and supported him on either side.  He was certainly very young.  He lifted his chin gallantly, but his face was incredibly white.  Sophia discerned that the priest was trying to hide the sight of the guillotine from the prisoner with his body, just as in the story which she had heard at dinner.

Except the voice of the priest, indistinctly rising and falling in the prayer for the dying, there was no sound in the square or its environs.  The windows were now occupied by groups turned to stone with distended eyes fixed on the little procession.  Sophia had a tightening of the throat, and the hand trembled by which she held the curtain.  The central figure did not seem to her to be alive; but rather a doll, a marionette wound up to imitate the action of a tragedy.  She saw the priest offer the crucifix to the mouth of the marionette, which with a clumsy unhuman shoving of its corded shoulders butted the thing away.  And as the procession turned and stopped she could plainly see that the marionette’s nape and shoulders were bare, his shirt having been slit.  It was horrible.  “Why do I stay here?” she asked herself hysterically.  But she did not stir.  The victim had disappeared now in the midst of a group of men.  Then she perceived him prone under the red column, between the grooves.  The silence was now broken only by the tinkling of the horses’ bits in the corners of the square.  The line of gendarmes in front of the scaffold held their swords tightly and looked over their noses, ignoring the privileged groups that peered almost between their shoulders.

And Sophia waited, horror-struck.  She saw nothing but the gleaming triangle of metal that was suspended high above the prone, attendant victim.  She felt like a lost soul, torn too soon from shelter, and exposed for ever to the worst hazards of destiny.  Why was she in this strange, incomprehensible town, foreign and inimical to her, watching with agonized glance this cruel, obscene spectacle?  Her sensibilities were all a bleeding mass of wounds.  Why?  Only yesterday, and she had been, an innocent, timid creature in Bursley, in Axe, a foolish creature who deemed the concealment of letters a supreme excitement.  Either that day or this day was not real.  Why was she imprisoned alone in that odious, indescribably odious hotel, with no one to soothe and comfort her, and carry her away?

The distant bell boomed once.  Then a monosyllabic voice sounded, sharp, low, nervous; she recognized the voice of the executioner, whose name she had heard but could not remember.  There was a clicking noise.

She shrank down to the floor in terror and loathing, and hid her face, and shuddered.  Shriek after shriek, from various windows, rang on her ears in a fusillade; and then the mad yell of the penned crowd, which, like herself, had not seen but had heard, extinguished all other noise.  Justice was done.  The great ambition of Gerald’s life was at last satisfied.

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Project Gutenberg
The Old Wives' Tale from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.