at the smith spoke of?” Darnay asked the
postmaster, when he had thanked him, and stood beside him in
the yard.
“Truly, a decree for selling the property of emigrants.”
“When passed?”
“On the fourteenth.”
“The day I left England!”
“Everybody says it is but one of several, and that there will be
othersif there are not alreadybanishing all emigrants, and
condemning all to death who return. That is what he meant when
he said your life was not your own.”
“But there are no such decrees yet?”
“What do I know!” said the postmaster, shrugging his
shoulders; “there may be, or there will be. It is all the same. What
would you have?”
They rested on some straw in a loft until the middle of the
night, and then rode forward again when all the town was asleep.
Among the many wild changes observable on familiar things
which made this wild ride unreal, not the least was the seeming
rarity of sleep. After long and lonely spurring over dreary roads,
they would come to a cluster of poor cottages, not steeped in
darkness, but all glittering with lights, and would find the people,
in a ghostly manner in the dead of the night, circling hand in hand
Charles Dickens ElecBook Classics
round a shrivelled tree of Liberty, or all drawn up together singing
a Liberty song. Happily, however, there was sleep in Beauvais that