The Two Chiefs of the Detective Force
From the Memoirs of M. Claude, Chief of the Detective Force Under the Second Empire
by M. Claude
In 1867, the year of the Exposition—of the interview of the two Emperors and the King of Prussia—the sun of Austerlitz shone for the last time in the heaven of the Second Empire.
Napoleon III., inviting Europe to his fêtes, was startled in the midst of his theatrical glory by the spectre of Maximilian. The Prussians returned to their country, their hearts bitter with envy. All Europe was dazed by the splendor of the Paris of 1867.
One day I was walking in the cylindrical departments of the Exposition, on the lookout for the numerous pickpockets who ran over from London with a view to picking every well-lined pocket in gay and festive Lutetia.
After having strolled through the numerous and splendid cafés of all nations, conducted by schemers gathered together from the four quarters of the world, I struck the department reserved for German industry.
In this there was but a gigantic tube of metal stretched on planks, its open mouth grinning at the sun.
It was the Krupp gun. Somehow or other the sight of this cannon plunged me into a profound reverie. Scarcely had it been placed in position than it became the subject of a joke to the Parisians—they treated the Krupp gun as the armament of another age.
They laughed at a cannon that was loaded at the breech, and pretended that it was a great toy from Nuremberg that the good King William had sent as a gift to his dear little cousin, Napoleon.
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