There are few who have not heard something
of the sufferings of a siege. Whether within
or without, it is the most terrible of all the experiences
of war. I am old enough to recollect the trenches
before Sebastopol, and all that my countrymen and
the English endured there. Sometimes I endeavoured
to think of this to distract me from what we ourselves
endured. But how different was it! We had
neither shelter nor support. We had no weapons,
nor any against whom to wield them. We were cast
out of our homes in the midst of our lives, in the
midst of our occupations, and left there helpless,
to gaze at each other, to blind our eyes trying to
penetrate the darkness before us. Could we have
done anything, the oppression might have been less
terrible but what was there that we could
do? Fortunately (though I do not deny that I felt
each desertion) our band grew less and less every day.
Hour by hour some one stole away first
one, then another, dispersing themselves among the
villages near, in which many had friends. The
accounts which these men gave were, I afterwards learnt,
of the most vague description. Some talked of
wonders they had seen, and were laughed at and
some spread reports of internal division among us.
Not till long after did I know all the reports that
went abroad. It was said that there had been
fighting in Semur, and that we were divided into two
factions, one of which had gained the mastery, and
driven the other out. This was the story current
in La Rochette, where they are always glad to hear
anything to the discredit of the people of Semur; but
no credence could have been given to it by those in
authority, otherwise M. le Prefet, however
indifferent to our interests, must necessarily have
taken some steps for our relief. Our entire separation
from the world was indeed one of the strangest details
of this terrible period. Generally the diligence,
though conveying on the whole few passengers, returned
with two or three, at least, visitors or commercial
persons, daily-and the latter class frequently arrived
in carriages of their own; but during this period
no stranger came to see our miserable plight.
We made shelter for ourselves under the branches of
the few trees that grew in the uncultivated ground
on either side of the road and a hasty
erection, half tent half shed, was put up for a place
to assemble in, or for those who were unable to bear
the heat of the day or the occasional chills of the
night. But the most of us were too restless to
seek repose, and could not bear to be out of sight
of the city. At any moment it seemed to us the
gates might open, or some loophole be visible by which
we might throw ourselves upon the darkness and vanquish
it. This was what we said to ourselves, forgetting
how we shook and trembled whenever any contact had
been possible with those who were within. But
one thing was certain, that though we feared, we could
not turn our eyes from the place. We slept leaning
against a tree, or with our heads on our hands, and
our faces toward Semur. We took no count of day
or night, but ate the morsel the women brought to
us, and slept thus, not sleeping, when want or weariness
overwhelmed us. There was scarcely an hour in
the day that some of the women did not come to ask
what news. They crept along the roads in twos
and threes, and lingered for hours sitting by the
way weeping, starting at every breath of wind.
Meanwhile all was not silent within
Semur. The Cathedral bells rang often, at first
filling us with hope, for how familiar was that sound!
The first time, we all gathered together and listened,
and many wept. It was as if we heard our mother’s
voice. M. de Bois-Sombre burst into tears.
I have never seen him within the doors of the Cathedral
since his marriage; but he burst into tears. ‘Mon
Dieu! if I were but there!’ he said.
We stood and listened, our hearts melting, some falling
on their knees. M. le Cure stood up in the
midst of us and began to intone the psalm: [He
has a beautiful voice. It is sympathetic, it goes
to the heart.] ‘I was glad when they said to
me, Let us go up ’ And though there
were few of us who could have supposed themselves capable
of listening to that sentiment a little while before
with any sympathy, yet a vague hope rose up within
us while we heard him, while we listened to the bells.
What man is there to whom the bells of his village,
the carillon of his city, is not most dear?
It rings for him through all his life; it is the first
sound of home in the distance when he comes back the
last that follows him like a long farewell when he
goes away. While we listened, we forgot our fears.
They were as we were, they were also our brethren,
who rang those bells. We seemed to see them trooping
into our beautiful Cathedral. All! only to see
it again, to be within its shelter, cool and calm
as in our mother’s arms! It seemed to us
that we should wish for nothing more.
When the sound ceased we looked into
each other’s faces, and each man saw that his
neighbour was pale. Hope died in us when the sound
died away, vibrating sadly through the air. Some
men threw themselves on the ground in their despair.
And from this time forward many voices
were heard, calls and shouts within the walls, and
sometimes a sound like a trumpet, and other instruments
of music. We thought, indeed, that noises as of
bands patrolling along the ramparts were audible as
our patrols worked their way round and round.
This was a duty which I never allowed to be neglected,
not because I put very much faith in it, but because
it gave us a sort of employment. There is a story
somewhere which I recollect dimly of an ancient city
which its assailants did not touch, but only marched
round and round till the walls fell, and they could
enter. Whether this was a story of classic times
or out of our own remote history, I could not recollect.
But I thought of it many times while we made our way
like a procession of ghosts, round and round, straining
our ears to hear what those voices were which sounded
above us, in tones that were familiar, yet so strange.
This story got so much into my head (and after a time
all our heads seemed to get confused and full of wild
and bewildering expedients) that I found myself suggesting I,
a man known for sense and reason that we
should blow trumpets at some time to be fixed, which
was a thing the ancients had done in the strange tale
which had taken possession of me. M. le Cure
looked at me with disapproval. He said, ’I
did not expect from M. le Maire anything that
was disrespectful to religion.’ Heaven forbid
that I should be disrespectful to religion at any
time of life, but then it was impossible to me.
I remembered after that the tale of which I speak,
which had so seized upon me, was in the sacred writings;
but those who know me will understand that no sneer
at these writings or intention of wounding the feelings
of M. le Cure was in my mind.
I was seated one day upon a little
inequality of the ground, leaning my back against
a half-withered hawthorn, and dozing with my head in
my hands, when a soothing, which always diffuses itself
from her presence, shed itself over me, and opening
my eyes, I saw my Agnes sitting by me. She had
come with some food and a little linen, fresh and soft
like her own touch. My wife was not gaunt and
worn like me, but she was pale and as thin as a shadow.
I woke with a start, and seeing her there, there suddenly
came a dread over me that she would pass away before
my eyes, and go over to Those who were within Semur.
I cried ’Non, mon Agnes; non, mon Agnes:
before you ask, No!’ seizing her and holding
her fast in this dream, which was not altogether a
dream. She looked at me with a smile, that smile
that has always been to me as the rising of the sun
over the earth.
‘Mon ami,’ she
said surprised, ’I ask nothing, except that you
should take a little rest and spare thyself.’
Then she added, with haste, what I knew she would
say, ’Unless it were this, mon ami.
If I were permitted, I would go into the city I
would ask those who are there what is their meaning:
and if no way can be found no act of penitence. Oh!
do not answer in haste! I have no fear; and it
would be to save thee.’
A strong throb of anger came into
my throat. Figure to yourself that I looked at
my wife with anger, with the same feeling which had
moved me when the deserters left us; but far more
hot and sharp. I seized her soft hands and crushed
them in mine. ‘You would leave me!’
I said. ’You would desert your husband.
You would go over to our enemies!’
‘O Martin, say not so,’
she cried, with tears. ’Not enemies.
There is our little Marie, and my mother, who died
when I was born.’
‘You love these dead tyrants.
Yes,’ I said, ’you love them best.
You will go to the majority, to the strongest.
Do not speak to me! Because your God is on their
side, you will forsake us too.’
Then she threw herself upon me and
encircled me with her arms. The touch of them
stilled my passion; but yet I held her, clutching her
gown, so terrible a fear came over me that she would
go and come back no more.
‘Forsake thee!’ she breathed
out over me with a moan. Then, putting her cool
cheek to mine, which burned, ‘But I would die
for thee, Martin.’
‘Silence, my wife: that
is what you shall not do,’ I cried, beside myself.
I rose up; I put her away from me. That is, I
know it, what has been done. Their God does this,
they do not hesitate to say takes from
you what you love best, to make you better you!
and they ask you to love Him when He has thus despoiled
you! ‘Go home, Agnes,’ I said, hoarse
with terror. ’Let us face them as we may;
you shall not go among them, or put thyself in peril.
Die for me! Mon Dieu! and what then, what should
I do then? Turn your face from them; turn from
them; go! go! and let me not see thee here again.’
My wife did not understand the terror
that seized me. She obeyed me, as she always
does, but, with the tears falling from her white cheeks,
fixed upon me the most piteous look. ‘Mon
ami,’ she said, ’you are disturbed,
you are not in possession of yourself; this cannot
be what you mean.’
‘Let me not see thee here again!’
I cried. ’Would you make me mad in the
midst of my trouble? No! I will not have
you look that way. Go home! go home!’ Then
I took her into my arms and wept, though I am not a
man given to tears. ‘Oh! my Agnes,’
I said, ’give me thy counsel. What you
tell me I will do; but rather than risk thee, I would
live thus for ever, and defy them.’
She put her hand upon my lips.
‘I will not ask this again,’ she said,
bowing her head; ’but defy them why
should you defy them? Have they come for nothing?
Was Semur a city of the saints? They have come
to convert our people, Martin thee too,
and the rest. If you will submit your hearts,
they will open the gates, they will go back to their
sacred homes and we to ours. This has been borne
in upon me sleeping and waking; and it seemed to me
that if I could but go, and say, “Oh! my fathers,
oh! my brothers, they submit,” all would be well.
For I do not fear them, Martin. Would they harm
me that love us? I would but give our Marie one
kiss ’
‘You are a traitor!’ I
said. ’You would steal yourself from me,
and do me the worst wrong of all ’
But I recovered my calm. What
she said reached my understanding at last. ‘Submit!’
I said, ’but to what? To come and turn us
from our homes, to wrap our town in darkness, to banish
our wives and our children, to leave us here to be
scorched by the sun and drenched by the rain, this
is not to convince us, my Agnes. And to what then
do you bid us submit?’
’It is to convince you, mon
ami, of the love of God, who has permitted this
great tribulation to be, that we might be saved,’
said Agnes. Her face was sublime with faith.
It is possible to these dear women; but for me the
words she spoke were but words without meaning.
I shook my head. Now that my horror and alarm
were passed, I could well remember often to have heard
words like these before.
‘My angel!’ I said, ’all
this I admire, I adore in thee; but how is it the
love of God? and how shall we be saved by
it? Submit! I will do anything that is reasonable;
but of what truth have we here the proof?’
Some one had come up behind as we
were talking. When I heard his voice I smiled,
notwithstanding my despair. It was natural that
the Church should come to the woman’s aid.
But I would not refuse to give ear to M. le Cure,
who had proved himself a man, had he been ten times
a priest.
’I have not heard what Madame
has been saying, M. le Maire, neither would I
interpose but for your question. You ask of what
truth have we the proof here? It is the Unseen
that has revealed itself. Do we see anything,
you and I? Nothing, nothing, but a cloud.
But that which we cannot see, that which we know not,
that which we dread look! it is there.’
I turned unconsciously as he pointed
with his hand. Oh, heaven, what did I see!
Above the cloud that wrapped Semur there was a separation,
a rent in the darkness, and in mid heaven the Cathedral
towers, pointing to the sky. I paid no more attention
to M. le Cure. I sent forth a shout that
roused all, even the weary line of the patrol that
was marching slowly with bowed heads round the walls;
and there went up such a cry of joy as shook the earth.
‘The towers, the towers!’ I cried.
These were the towers that could be seen leagues off,
the first sign of Semur; our towers, which we had
been born to love like our father’s name.
I have had joys in my life, deep and great. I
have loved, I have won honours, I have conquered difficulty;
but never had I felt as now. It was as if one
had been born again.
When we had gazed upon them, blessing
them and thanking God, I gave orders that all our
company should be called to the tent, that we might
consider whether any new step could now be taken:
Agnes with the other women sitting apart on one side
and waiting. I recognised even in the excitement
of such a time that theirs was no easy part. To
sit there silent, to wait till we had spoken, to be
bound by what we decided, and to have no voice yes,
that was hard. They thought they knew better than
we did: but they were silent, devouring us with
their eager eyes. I love one woman more than
all the world; I count her the best thing that God
has made; yet would I not be as Agnes for all that
life could give me. It was her part to be silent,
and she was so, like the angel she is, while even
Jacques Richard had the right to speak. Mon Dieu!
but it is hard, I allow it; they have need to be angels.
This thought passed through my mind even at the crisis
which had now arrived. For at such moments one
sees everything, one thinks of everything, though it
is only after that one remembers what one has seen
and thought. When my fellow-citizens gathered
together (we were now less than a hundred in number,
so many had gone from us), I took it upon myself to
speak. We were a haggard, worn-eyed company,
having had neither shelter nor sleep nor even food,
save in hasty snatches. I stood at the door of
the tent and they below, for the ground sloped a little.
Beside me were M. le Cure, M. de Bois-Sombre,
and one or two others of the chief citizens.
‘My friends,’ I said, ’you have seen
that a new circumstance has occurred. It is not
within our power to tell what its meaning is, yet it
must be a symptom of good. For my own part, to
see these towers makes the air lighter. Let us
think of the Church as we may, no one can deny that
the towers of Semur are dear to our hearts.’
‘M. le Maire,’ said
M. de Bois-Sombre, interrupting, ’I speak I am
sure the sentiments of my fellow-citizens when I say
that there is no longer any question among us concerning
the Church; it is an admirable institution, a universal
advantage ’
‘Yes, yes,’ said the crowd,
‘yes, certainly!’ and some added, ’It
is the only safeguard, it is our protection,’
and some signed themselves. In the crowd I saw
Riou, who had done this at the octroi.
But the sign did not surprise me now.
M. le Cure stood by my side,
but he did not smile. His countenance was dark,
almost angry. He stood quite silent, with his
eyes on the ground. It gave him no pleasure,
this profession of faith.
‘It is well, my friends,’
said I, ’we are all in accord; and the good
God has permitted us again to see these towers.
I have called you together to collect your ideas.
This change must have a meaning. It has been
suggested to me that we might send an ambassador a
messenger, if that is possible, into the city ’
Here I stopped short; and a shiver
ran through me a shiver which went over
the whole company. We were all pale as we looked
in each other’s faces; and for a moment no one
ventured to speak. After this pause it was perhaps
natural that he who first found his voice should be
the last who had any right to give an opinion.
Who should it be but Jacques Richard? ‘M.
le Maire,’ cried the fellow, ’speaks
at his ease but who will thus risk himself?’
Probably he did not mean that his grumbling should
be heard, but in the silence every sound was audible;
there was a gasp, a catching of the breath, and all
turned their eyes again upon me. I did not pause
to think what answer I should give. ‘I!’
I cried. ’Here stands one who will risk
himself, who will perish if need be ’
Something stirred behind me.
It was Agnes who had risen to her feet, who stood
with her lips parted and quivering, with her hands
clasped, as if about to speak. But she did not
speak. Well! she had proposed to do it.
Then why not I?
‘Let me make the observation,’
said another of our fellow-citizens, Bordereau the
banker, ’that this would not be just. Without
M. le Maire we should be a mob without a head.
If a messenger is to be sent, let it be some one not
so indispensable ’
‘Why send a messenger?’
said another, Philip Leclerc. ’Do we know
that these Messieurs will admit any one? and how can
you speak, how can you parley with those ’
and he too, was seized with a shiver ’whom
you cannot see?’
Then there came another voice out
of the crowd. It was one who would not show himself,
who was conscious of the mockery in his tone.
’If there is any one sent, let it be M. le
Cure,’ it said.
M. le Cure stepped forward.
His pale countenance flushed red. ’Here
am I,’ he said, ’I am ready; but he who
spoke speaks to mock me. Is it befitting in this
presence?’
There was a struggle among the men.
Whoever it was who had spoken (I did not wish to know),
I had no need to condemn the mocker; they themselves
silenced him; then Jacques Richard (still less worthy
of credit) cried out again with a voice that was husky.
What are men made of? Notwithstanding everything,
it was from the cabaret, from the wine-shop,
that he had come. He said, ’Though M. le
Maire will not take my opinion, yet it is this.
Let them reopen the chapel in the hospital. The
ladies of St. Jean ’
‘Hold thy peace,’ I said,
‘miserable!’ But a murmur rose. ’Though
it is not his part to speak, I agree,’ said
one. ‘And I.’ ‘And I.’
There was well-nigh a tumult of consent; and this
made me angry. Words were on my lips which it
might have been foolish to utter, when M. de Bois-Sombre,
who is a man of judgment, interfered.
‘M. le Maire,’ he
said, ’as there are none of us here who would
show disrespect to the Church and holy things that
is understood it is not necessary to enter
into details. Every restriction that would wound
the most susceptible is withdrawn; not one more than
another, but all. We have been indifferent in
the past, but for the future you will agree with me
that everything shall be changed. The ambassador whoever
he may be ’ he added with a catching
of his breath, ’must be empowered to promise everything submission
to all that may be required.’
Here the women could not restrain
themselves; they all rose up with a cry, and many
of them began to weep. ‘Ah!’ said
one with a hysterical sound of laughter in her tears.
’Sainte Mere! it will be heaven upon
earth.’
M. le Cure said nothing; a keen
glance of wonder, yet of subdued triumph, shot from
under his eyelids. As for me, I wrung my hands:
’What you say will be superstition; it will
be hypocrisy,’ I cried.
But at that moment a further incident
occurred. Suddenly, while we deliberated, a long
loud peal of a trumpet sounded into the air. I
have already said that many sounds had been heard
before; but this was different; there was not one
of us that did not feel that this was addressed to
himself. The agitation was extreme; it was a summons,
the beginning of some distinct communication.
The crowd scattered; but for myself, after a momentary
struggle, I went forward resolutely. I did not
even look back at my wife. I was no longer Martin
Dupin, but the Maire of Semur, the saviour of the
community. Even Bois-Sombre quailed: but
I felt that it was in me to hold head against death
itself; and before I had gone two steps I felt rather
than saw that M. le Cure had come to my side.
We went on without a word; gradually the others collected
behind us, following yet straggling here and there
upon the inequalities of the ground.
Before us lay the cloud that was Semur,
a darkness defined by the shining of the summer day
around, the river escaping from that gloom as from
a cavern, the towers piercing through, but the sunshine
thrown back on every side from that darkness.
I have spoken of the walls as if we saw them, but
there were no walls visible, nor any gate, though we
all turned like blind men to where the Porte St. Lambert
was. There was the broad vacant road leading
up to it, leading into the gloom. We stood there
at a little distance. Whether it was human weakness
or an invisible barrier, how can I tell? We stood
thus immovable, with the trumpet pealing out over
us, out of the cloud. It summoned every man as
by his name. To me it was not wonderful that this
impression should come, but afterwards it was elicited
from all that this was the feeling of each. Though
no words were said, it was as the calling of our names.
We all waited in such a supreme agitation as I cannot
describe for some communication that was to come.
When suddenly, in a moment, the trumpet
ceased; there was an interval of dead and terrible
silence; then, each with a leap of his heart as if
it would burst from his bosom, we saw a single figure
slowly detach itself out of the gloom. ‘My
God!’ I cried. My senses went from me; I
felt my head go round like a straw tossed on the winds.
To know them so near, those mysterious
visitors to feel them, to hear them, was
not that enough? But, to see! who could bear it?
Our voices rang like broken chords, like a tearing
and rending of sound. Some covered their faces
with their hands; for our very eyes seemed to be drawn
out of their sockets, fluttering like things with a
separate life.
Then there fell upon us a strange
and wonderful calm. The figure advanced slowly;
there was weakness in it. The step, though solemn,
was feeble; and if you can figure to yourself our
consternation, the pause, the cry our hearts
dropping back as it might be into their places the
sudden stop of the wild panting in our breasts:
when there became visible to us a human face well
known, a man as we were. ‘Lecamus!’
I cried; and all the men round took it up, crowding
nearer, trembling yet delivered from their terror;
some even laughed in the relief. There was but
one who had an air of discontent, and that was M. le
Cure. As he said ‘Lecamus!’ like
the rest, there was impatience, disappointment, anger
in his tone.
And I, who had wondered where Lecamus
had gone; thinking sometimes that he was one of the
deserters who had left us! But when he came nearer
his face was as the face of a dead man, and a cold
chill came over us. His eyes, which were cast
down, flickered under the thin eyelids in which all
the veins were visible. His face was gray like
that of the dying. ‘Is he dead?’
I said. But, except M. le Cure, no one knew
that I spoke.
‘Not even so,’ said M.
le Cure, with a mortification in his voice, which
I have never forgotten. ’Not even so.
That might be something. They teach us not by
angels by the fools and offscourings of
the earth.’
And he would have turned away.
It was a humiliation. Was not he the representative
of the Unseen, the vice-gerent, with power over heaven
and hell? but something was here more strong than he.
He stood by my side in spite of himself to listen
to the ambassador. I will not deny that such
a choice was strange, strange beyond measure, to me
also.
‘Lecamus,’ I said, my
voice trembling in my throat, ’have you been
among the dead, and do you live?’
‘I live,’ he said; then
looked around with tears upon the crowd. ’Good
neighbours, good friends,’ he said, and put out
his hand and touched them; he was as much agitated
as they.
‘M. Lecamus,’ said
I, ’we are here in very strange circumstances,
as you know; do not trifle with us. If you have
indeed been with those who have taken the control
of our city, do not keep us in suspense. You will
see by the emblems of my office that it is to me you
must address yourself; if you have a mission, speak.’
‘It is just,’ he said,
’it is just but bear with me one moment.
It is good to behold those who draw breath; if I have
not loved you enough, my good neighbours, forgive
me now!’
‘Rouse yourself, Lecamus,’
said I with some anxiety. ’Three days we
have been suffering here; we are distracted with the
suspense. Tell us your message if
you have anything to tell.’
‘Three days!’ he said,
wondering; ’I should have said years. Time
is long when there is neither night nor day.’
Then, uncovering himself, he turned towards the city.
’They who have sent me would have you know that
they come, not in anger but in friendship: for
the love they bear you, and because it has been permitted ’
As he spoke his feebleness disappeared.
He held his head high; and we clustered closer and
closer round him, not losing a half word, not a tone,
not a breath.
’They are not the dead.
They are the immortal. They are those who dwell elsewhere.
They have other work, which has been interrupted because
of this trial. They ask, “Do you know now do
you know now?” this is what I am bidden to say.’
’What’ I said
(I tried to say it, but my lips were dry), ’What
would they have us to know?’
But a clamour interrupted me.
‘Ah! yes, yes, yes!’ the people cried,
men and women; some wept aloud, some signed themselves,
some held up their hands to the skies. ‘Nevermore
will we deny religion,’ they cried, ’never
more fail in our duties. They shall see how we
will follow every office, how the churches shall be
full, how we will observe the feasts and the days
of the saints! M. Lecamus,’ cried two or
three together; ’go, tell these Messieurs that
we will have masses said for them, that we will obey
in everything. We have seen what comes of it when
a city is without piety. Never more will we neglect
the holy functions; we will vow ourselves to the holy
Mother and the saints ’
‘And if those ladies wish it,’
cried Jacques Richard, ’there shall be as many
masses as there are priests to say them in the Hospital
of St. Jean.’
‘Silence, fellow!’ I cried;
’is it for you to promise in the name of the
Commune?’ I was almost beside myself. ’M.
Lecamus. is it for this that they have come?’
His head had begun to droop again,
and a dimness came over his face. ’Do I
know?’ he said. ’It was them I longed
for, not to know their errand; but I have not yet
said all. You are to send two two whom
you esteem the highest to speak with them
face to face.’
Then at once there rose a tumult among
the people an eagerness which nothing could
subdue. There was a cry that the ambassadors were
already elected, and we were pushed forward, M. le
Cure and myself, towards the gate. They would
not hear us speak. ‘We promise,’ they
cried, ’we promise everything; let us but get
back.’ Had it been to sacrifice us they
would have done the same; they would have killed us
in their passion, in order to return to their city and
afterwards mourned us and honoured us as martyrs.
But for the moment they had neither ruth nor fear.
Had it been they who were going to reason not with
flesh and blood, it would have been different; but
it was we, not they; and they hurried us on as not
willing that a moment should be lost. I had to
struggle, almost to fight, in order to provide them
with a leader, which was indispensable, before I myself
went away. For who could tell if we should ever
come back? For a moment I hesitated, thinking
that it might be well to invest M. de Bois-Sombre
as my deputy with my scarf of office; but then I reflected
that when a man goes to battle, when he goes to risk
his life, perhaps to lose it, for his people, it is
his right to bear those signs which distinguish him
from common men, which show in what office, for what
cause, he is ready to die.
Accordingly I paused, struggling against
the pressure of the people, and said in a loud voice,
’In the absence of M. Barbou, who has forsaken
us, I constitute the excellent M. Felix de Bois-Sombre
my representative. In my absence my fellow-citizens
will respect and obey him as myself.’ There
was a cry of assent. They would have given their
assent to anything that we might but go on. What
was it to them? They took no thought of the heaving
of my bosom, the beating of my heart. They left
us on the edge of the darkness with our faces towards
the gate. There we stood one breathless moment.
Then the little postern slowly opened before us, and
once more we stood within Semur.