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That Pyrot had stolen the eighty thousand trusses of hay nobody hesitated
for a moment to believe. No one doubted because the general ignorance in which
everybody was concerning the affair did not allow of doubt, for doubt is a
thing that demands motives. People do not doubt without reasons in the same way
that people believe without reasons. The thing was not doubted because it was
repeated everywhere and, with the public, to repeat is to prove. It was not
doubted because people wished to believe Pyrot guilty and one believes what one
wishes to believe. Finally, it was not doubted because the faculty of doubt is
rare amongst men; very few minds carry in them its germs and these are not
developed without cultivation. Doubt is singular, exquisite, philosophic,
immoral, transcendent, monstrous, full of malignity, injurious to persons and
to property, contrary to the good order of governments, and to the prosperity
of empires, fatal to humanity, destructive of the gods, held in horror by
heaven and earth. The mass of the Penguins were ignorant of doubt: it believed
in Pyrot's guilt and this conviction immediately became one of its chief
national beliefs and an essential truth in its patriotic creed.
Pyrot was tried secretly and condemned.
General Panther immediately went to the Minister of War to tell him the
result.
"Luckily," said he, "the judges were certain, for they had no
proofs."
"Proofs," muttered Greatauk, "Proofs, what do they prove?
There is only one certain, irrefragable proof--the confession of the guilty
person. Has Pyrot confessed?"
"No, General."
"He will confess, he ought to. Panther, we must induce him; tell him it
is to his interest. Promise him that, if he confesses, he will obtain favours,
a reduction of his sentence, full pardon; promise him that if he confesses his
innocence will be admitted, that he will be decorated. Appeal to his good feelings.
Let him confess from patriotism, for the flag, for the sake of order, from
respect for the hierarchy, at the special command of the Minister of War
militarily. . . . But tell me, Panther, has he not confessed already? There are
tacit confessions; silence is a confession."
"But, General, he is not silent; he keeps on squealing like a pig that
he is innocent."
"Panther, the confessions of a guilty man sometimes result from the
vehemence of his denials. To deny desperately is to confess. Pyrot has confessed;
we must have witnesses of his confessions, justice requires them."
There was in Western Penguinia a seaport called La Cirque, formed of three
small bays and formerly greatly frequented by ships, but now solitary and
deserted. Gloomy lagoons stretched along its low coasts exhaling a pestilent
odour, while fever hovered over its sleepy waters. Here, on the borders of the
sea, there was built a high square tower, like the old Campanile at Venice,
from the side of which, close to the summit hung an open cage which was
fastened by a chain to a transverse beam. In the times of the Draconides the
Inquisitors of Alca used to put heretical clergy into this cage. It had been
empty for three hundred years, but now Pirot was imprisoned in it under the
guard of sixty warders, who lived in the tower and did not lose sight of him
night or day, spying on him for confessions that they might afterwards report
to the Minister of War. For Greatauk, careful and prudent, desired confessions
and still further confessions. Greatauk, who was looked upon as a fool, was in
reality a man of great ability and full of rare foresight.
In the mean time Pyrot, burnt by the sun, eaten by mosquitoes, soaked in the
rain, hail and snow, frozen by the cold, tossed about terribly by the wind,
beset by the sinister croaking of the ravens that perched upon his cage, kept
writing down his innocence on pieces torn off his shirt with a tooth-pick
dipped in blood. These rags were lost in the sea or fell into the hands of the
gaolers. But Pyrot's protests moved nobody because his confessions had been
published.
III. COUNT DE MAUBEC DE LA DENTDULYNX
The morals of the Jews were not always pure; in most cases they were averse from
none of the vices of Christian civilization, but they retained from the
Patriarchal age a recognition of family, ties and an attachment to the
interests of the tribe. Pyrot's brothers, half-brothers, uncles, great-uncles,
first, second, and third cousins, nephews and great-nephews, relations by blood
and relations by marriage, and all who were related to him to the number of
about seven hundred, were at first overwhelmed by the blow that had struck
their relative, and they shut themselves up in their houses, covering
themselves with ashes and blessing the hand that had chastised them. For forty
days they kept a strict fast. Then they bathed themselves and resolved to
search, without rest, at the cost of any toil and at the risk of eve danger,
for the demonstration of an innocence which they did not doubt. And how could
they have doubted? Pyrot's innocence had been revealed to them in the same way
that his guilt had been revealed to Christian Penguinia's; for these things,
being hidden, assume a mystic character and take on the authority of religious
truths. The seven hundred Pyrotists set to work with as much zeal as prudence,
and made the most thorough inquiries in secret. They were everywhere; they were
seen nowhere. One would have said that, like the pilot of Ulysses, they
wandered freely over the earth. They penetrated into the War Office and
approached, under different disguises, the judges, the registrars, and the
witnesses of the affair. Then Greatauk's cleverness was seen. The witnesses
knew nothing; the judges and registrars knew nothing. Emissaries reached even
Pyrot and anxiously questioned him in his cage amid the prolonged moanings of
the sea and the hoarse croaks of the ravens. It was in vain; the prisoner knew
nothing. The seven hundred Pyrotists could not subvert the proofs of the
accusation because they could not know what they were, and they could not know
what they were because there were none. Pyrot's guilt was indefeasible through
its very nullity. And it was with a legitimate pride that Greatauk, expressing
himself as a true artist, said one day to General Panther: "This case is a
master-piece: it is made out of nothing." The seven hundred Pyrotists
despaired of ever clearing up this dark business, when suddenly they discovered,
from a stolen letter, that the eighty thousand trusses of hay had never
existed, that a most distinguished nobleman, Count de Maubec, had sold them to
the State, that he had received the price but had never delivered them. Indeed
seeing that he was descended from the richest landed proprietors of ancient
Penguinia, the heir of the Maubecs of Dentdulynx, once the possessors of four
duchies, sixty counties, and six hundred and twelve marquisates, baronies, and
viscounties, he did not possess as much land as he could cover with his hand,
and would not have been able to cut a single day'S mowing of forage off his own
domains. As to his getting a single rush from a land-owner or a merchant, that
would have been quite impossible, for everybody except the Ministers of State
and the Government officials knew that it would be easier to get blood from a
stone than a farthing from a Maubec.
The seven hundred Pyrotists made a minute inquiry concerning the Count
Maubec de la Dentdulynx's financial resources, and they proved that that
nobleman was chiefly supported by a house in which some generous ladies were
ready to furnish all comers with the most lavish hospitality. They publicly
proclaimed that he was guilty of the theft of the eighty thousand trusses of
straw for which an innocent man had been condemned and was now imprisoned in
the cage.
Maubec belonged to an illustrious family which was allied to the Draconides.
There is nothing that a democracy esteems more highly than noble birth. Maubec
had also served in the Penguin army, and since the Penguins were all soldiers,
they loved their army to idolatry. Maubec, on the field of battle, had received
the Cross, which is a sign of honour among the Penguins and which they valued
even more highly than the embraces of their wives. All Penguinia declared for
Maubec, and the voice of the people which began to assume a threatening tone,
demanded severe punishments for the seven hundred calumniating Pyrotists.
Maubec was a nobleman; he challenged the seven hundred Pyrotists to combat with
either sword, sabre, pistols, carabines, or sticks.
"Vile dogs," he wrote to them in a famous letter, "you have
crucified my God and you want my life too; I warn you that I will not be such a
duffer as He was and that I will cut off your fourteen hundred ears. Accept my
boot on your seven hundred behinds."
The Chief of the Government at the time was a peasant called Robin Mielleux,
a man pleasant to the rich and powerful, but hard towards the poor, a man of
small courage and ignorant of his own interests. In a public declaration he
guaranteed Maubec's innocence and honour, and presented the seven hundred
Pyrotists: to the criminal courts where they were condemned, as libellers, to
imprisonment, to enormous fines, and to all the damages that were claimed by
their innocent victim.
It seemed as if Pyrot was destined to remain for ever shut in the cage on
which the ravens perched. But all the Penguins being anxious to know and prove
that this Jew was guilty, all the proofs brought forward were found not to be
good, while some of them were also contradictory. The officers of the Staff
showed zeal but lacked prudence. Whilst Greatauk kept an admirable silence,
General Panther made inexhaustible speeches and every morning demonstrated in
the newspapers that the condemned man was guilty. He would have done better,
perhaps, if he had said nothing. The guilt was evident and what is evident
cannot be demonstrated. So much reasoning disturbed people's minds; their
faith, though still alive, became less serene. The more proofs one gives a
crowd the more they ask for.
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