ask you to risk for my
sake a professional ambition which is very dear to you, but certainly
not to imperil your young soul by a falsehood. No, sir, if you will
deliver me to the Governor of Bayonne as a prisoner on honourable
parole--which I will renew here and extend to the gates of that city
only--and will then request an interview for the purpose of delivering
your letter and explaining how the seal came to be broken, with Joly'--
this was the trooper--'for witness, you will gain me all the time I hope
to need.' 'That will be little enough,' objected he. 'I must make the
most of it,' said I; 'and we must manage to time our arrival for the
evening, when the Governor will either be supping or at the theatre,
that the delay, if possible, may be of his creating.' 'I owe you more
than this,' said the ingenuous youth. 'And I, sir, am even ashamed of
myself for asking so much,' I answered.
"Well, so we contrived it; entered Bayonne at nightfall, presented
ourselves at the Citadel, and were, to our inexpressible joy, received
by the Deputy-Governor, who heard the Lieutenant's report and endorsed
the false paper of parole which Marmont had given me, and which, in
fact, had now expired. The fatal letter Lieutenant Gerard kept in his
pocket, while demanding an interview with the Governor himself.
This (he was told) could not be granted until the morning--'the Governor
was entertaining that night'--and with a well-feigned reluctance he
saluted and withdrew. Outside the Deputy's door we parted without a
word, and at the Citadel gate, having shown my pass, which left me free
to seek lodgings in the city, I halted, and, under the sentry's nose,
dropped a note into the Governor's letter-box. I had written it at
Hendaye, and addressed it to the Duke of Ragusa; and it ran--
"MONSIEUR LE MARECHAL,--I send this under cover of the Governor from
the city of Bayonne, out of which I hope to escape to-night,
having come so far in obedience to my word, which appears to be
more sacred than that of a Marshal of France. My escort having
been overpowered between Vittoria and Tolosa, I declined the
rescue offered me, but not before your letter to the Governor had
been broken open and its contents read, in my presence.
This letter also I saw restored to its bearer, who during its
perusal lay unconscious, of a severe and painful wound in his
sword-arm. I beg to assure you that he has behaved in a
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