‘Just at the self-same beat of Time’s wide wings.’
| 
   
15
  September 1813 
It
  is seven o’clock in the morning and Elizabeth is worried about the rain. She
  had consulted every barometer in Pemberley and they all seemed
  undecided.  The most precise forecast that
  any of them would risk was ‘Sunny periods with showers at times’.  Elizabeth had already forecast that herself
  after a quick glance at the sky. However, she could not be sure.  The skies of Derbyshire were still new to
  her and she had not yet had time to get to know them.   
At
  all costs the excursion to Bakewell must go ahead.  She must get her mother and father out of
  the house. Darcy was to accompany them. Perhaps they could have some Bakewell
  Tart in the inn but then her mother would probably come out with, ‘Well, Mr
  Darcy, this Bakewell Tart is very fine but don’t you think it is not quite as
  tasty as the pudding you were served at the last meal we all enjoyed together
  at Longbourne?’  
No
  perhaps they should not risk the Bakewell Tart.  But at least when walking around Bakewell
  she could make sure that her mother was not always close by to bother Darcy
  too much.  She was not concerned about
  her father.  He could be pleasant and
  entertaining if he wished it.  And now
  he did wish it.  What a pity, though,
  that her uncle and aunt could not come. 
The
  sun showed for a few seconds from behind a cloud, and Elizabeth, ever
  optimistic, ordered the carriage to be ready at 10 o’clock.  
If
  it rained, they would have to stay inside at home, and enormous though the
  house was, they would all be forced to spend several hours together in the
  same room listening to each other and looking at the raindrops trickling down
  the window pane.  What could be worse
  than that?   
 | 
  
   
‘Just
  at the self-same beat of Time’s wide wings.’  
John
  Keats.   
‘Hyperion’
    
Spring
  1819 
 | 
  
   
15
  September 1813 
It
  is seven o’clock in the morning on the Island of Cabrera, just south of
  Mallorca.   It is a prisoner of war
  camp for French soldiers. There is no wall and no fence. There is just the
  sea around a barren island. 
Temperature
  today. Maximum 34 degrees Centigrade. 
Minimum
  21 degrees Centigrade. 
My
  name is Henri Dupuis. I have been on this island for three years now.   Ten thousand of us came here, survivors of
  the Battle of Bailén where we were defeated by the Spanish. That was in July,
  1808. They put us on ships in Cadiz and we thought we were going back to
  France.  Instead they brought us here to
  hell and left us. And here half of us will die through hunger or through
  thirst or through losing interest in the struggle for life. We are now five
  thousand. Five thousand men have died, not fighting for France in battle but from
  thirst and hunger and despair.  
The rabbits were all eaten long ago. There are some lizards
  but they are impossible to eat. The birds come and go, out of reach.  There is only one source of fresh water.   
Sometimes
  they bring us food from Palma.  It is
  always too little and too late.   
Some
  of us have died while digging the graves of those who died just before them.
  This is the truth.   
I
  dream of returning to France.  I was
  born in Ile de Ré.  My father and my
  mother have had no news from me or of me for three years. I dream of taking
  the boat from La Rochelle and landing in Sablanceaux once more.  I dream of walking up the lane to Rivedoux.  If I do, I will never leave Rivedoux again.
  I promise myself that. My promise keeps me alive. 
Today
  I will look out for the supply boat. 
  It should have come three days ago. 
  It may come today.  Or it may
  not. 
 | 
 
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