necessary
that he should unveil to us the mysterious circumstances by the aid of
which he has shamelessly betrayed my good faith."
"To what good? 'Dead the beast, dead the venom,'" cried Mortimer
roughly.
"I tell you that you reason as ingeniously as a bulldog which leaps at
the throat of a bull," cried Croustillac.
"Patience, patience; it is a cravat of good hemp which will stop your
preaching very soon," responded Mortimer.
"Believe me, my lords," replied De Chemerant, "a council will be formed;
they will interrogate this rascal; if he does not answer, we shall have
plenty of means to force him to it; there is more than one kind of
torture."
"Ah, so far I am of your mind," said Mortimer; "I consent that he shall
not be hanged before being put to the rack; this will be to do two
things instead of one."
"You are generous, my lord," said the Gascon.
In thinking of the fury which must have possessed the soul of De
Chemerant, who saw the enterprise which he thought he had so skillfully
conducted a complete failure, one understands, without excusing it, the
cruelty of his resolution in regard to Croustillac.
Their minds were so excited, the disappointment had been so irritating,
so distressing even, for the greater part of the adherents of Monmouth,
that these gentlemen, humane enough otherwise, allowed themselves on
this occasion to be carried away by blind anger, and but little more was
needed to bring it about that the unfortunate Croustillac should not
even be cited before a species of council of war, whose meeting might at
least give an appearance of legality to the violence of which he was the
victim.
Five noblemen and five officers assembled immediately under the
presidency of the captain of the frigate.
De Chemerant placed himself on the right, the chevalier stood on the
left. The session commenced.
De Chemerant said briefly, and with a voice still trembling with anger:
"I accuse the man here present with having falsely and wickedly taken
the names and titles of his grace the Duke of Monmouth, and with having
thus, by his odious imposture, ruined the designs of the king, my
master, and under such circumstances the crime of this man should be
considered as an attack upon the safety of the state. In consequence, I
demand that the accused here present be declared guilty of high treason,
and be condemned to death."
"'Sdeath, sir, you draw your conclusions quickly and well; here is
something
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