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Notebook

November 1996

Dumas “fils”

by Louis Auchincloss

There are occasional events and personages in French history that make one wonder whether the nation can ever be fully understood by a foreigner. One such is the Dreyfus affair. That a man should be falsely condemned for espionage is not in itself so strange—what country has not witnessed the miscarriage of justice? But that the people of the supposed most cultivated of nations should be so divided by the effort to rehabilitate the accused that a goodly portion of its conservative element should wish the conviction to stand even if it were proven wrong seems something that could not happen, at least in the United Kingdom or the United States. We had our Sacco and Vanzetti, but did even those furthest to the right wish to see innocent men electrocuted? If any did, they were careful not to say so. Yet in France there were many who did not hesitate to voice the opinion that the reputation of the army had to be maintained, even at the cost of i ...

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Louis Auchinclosss most recent novel is Last of the Old Guard
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 15 November 1996, on page 73
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