DANIEL DE LEON

NEW YORK LABOR NEWS COMPANY, 1907

Copyright, 1908, by the
New York Labor News Company

INDEX.

[Translator's Preface][5]
[PART I. THE KORRIGANS.]
CHAP.[I.]ARAIM [9]
[II.]FAIRIES AND HOBGOBLINS[15]
[III.]HEVIN, THE PEDDLER[25]
[IV.]OFF TO THE BAGAUDY![37]
[PART II. THE VAGRES.]
CHAP.[I.]"WOLVES'-HEADS"[45]
[II.]BISHOP AND COUNT[49]
[III.]AT THE CHAPEL OF ST. LOUP[61]
[IV.]THE DEMONS! THE DEMONS![66]
[V.]VAGRES IN JUDGMENT[71]
[VI.]TO THE FASTNESS OF ALLANGE[85]
[VII.]THE VAGRES AT FEAST[101]
[VIII.]THE MIRACLE OF ST. MARTIN[107]
[IX.]LOYSIK AND RONAN[114]
[X.]THE MIRACLE OF ST. CAUTIN[129]
[PART III. THE BURG OF NEROWEG.]
CHAP.[I.]LEUDES AT HOME[139]
[II.]THE MAHL[151]
[III.]THE SPECTRE OF WISIGARDE[161]
[IV.]THE LION OF POITIERS[170]
[V.]IN THE TREASURE-CHAMBER[184]
[VI.]THE BEAR OF MONT-DORE[194]
[VII.]IN THE ERGASTULA[203]
[VIII.]IN THE BANQUET HALL[211]
[IX.]THE RESCUE[235]
[X.]COUNT AND VAGRE[242]
[PART IV. GHILDE.]
CHAP.[I.]AT THE HEARTH OF JOEL[251]
[II.]ON THE HILL NEAR MARCIGNY[258]
[III.]THE DEATH OF CHRAM[272]
[EPILOGUE][281]

TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE

The invasion of Gaul by Clovis introduced feudalism in France, which is equivalent to saying in Europe, France being the teeming womb of the great historic events of that epoch. It goes without saying that so vast a social system as that of feudalism could not be perfected in a day, or even during one reign. Indeed, generations passed, and it was not until the Age of Charlemagne that feudalism can be said to have taken some measure of shape and form. Between the Ages of Clovis and Charlemagne a period of turbulence ensued altogether peculiar to the combined circumstances that feudalism was forced to struggle with two foes—one internal, the disintegrating forces that ever accompany a new movement; the other external, the stubborn and inspiring resistance, on the part of the native masses, to the conqueror from the wilds of Germania. Historians, with customary levity, have neglected to reproduce this interesting epoch in the annals of that social structure that is mother to the social structure now prevalent. The task was undertaken and successfully accomplished by Eugene Sue in this boisterous historic novel entitled The Poniard's Hilt; or, Karadeucq and Ronan, the sixth of his majestic series of historic novels, The Mysteries of the People; or, History of a Proletarian Family Across the Ages. The leading characters are all historic. It required the genius, the learning, the poetry, the tact, withal the daring of a Sue to weave these characters into a fascinating tale and draw a picture as vivid as the quartos, from which the facts are gathered, are musty with old age.

Daniel De Leon.

January, 1908.