In M—, an important town in Northern
 Italy, the widowed Marquise of O—, a woman of
 impeccable reputation and mother of well-broughtup
 children, made it known through the newspapers
 that she had inexplicably found herself in a certain
 condition, that the father of the child she would bear
 should make himself known, and that out of regard
 for her family she was resolved to marry him. The
 woman who under the pressure of irremediable circumstances
 took such a strange step, risking universal
 derision with such fortitude, was the daughter of
 Colonel G—, Commandant of the citadel outside
 M—. Some three years before, she had lost her
 husband, to whom she had been most ardently and
 tenderly devoted, during a journey he had made on
 family business to Paris. At the behest of her excellent
 mother, the Marquise had, after her husband’s death,
 left her house in the country where she had lived
 outside V—, and returned with both her children to
 her father in the Commandant’s house. The following
 years she spent in deep seclusion, devoted to the care
 of her parents and the pursuit of art, literature and
 the education of her children, until the — War filled
 the surrounding region with the soldiers of almost
 all the European powers, even Russians. Ordered to
 defend the citadel, the Commandant urged his wife
 and daughter to withdraw either to the Marquise’s
 country house or to his son’s, near V—. However,
 before the women could weigh up the choice between
 the danger of remaining and the horror of what
 they might be subjected to in open country, the
 citadel was overrun by Russian troops and called
 upon to surrender. The Commandant told his family
 that from now on he would act as if they were not
 there, and responded with bullets and grenades. The
 enemy in turn bombarded the citadel, set fire to the
 magazine and captured an outwork; and when the
 Commandant, once more challenged to surrender,
 hesitated to do so, orders were given for a night attack
 and the fortress was captured by storm.
 Just as the Russian troops, covered by heavy siege
 artillery, forced their way into the Commandant’s
 house, its left wing caught fire and the women were
 forced to leave. His wife, hurrying after their daughter,
 who had gone down the steps with her children,
 shouted that they should keep together and take
 shelter in the lower vaults, but a grenade exploding
 on the house at that precise moment caused total
 confusion inside. The Marquise came with her two
 children to the forecourt of the castle where the shooting,
 now at its heaviest, was already lighting up the
 night, forcing her, out of her mind where she should
 turn next, back into the burning building. Here she
 was unfortunate enough to meet a band of hostile
 riflemen just as she was intending to slip out by the
 back door. At the sight of her they suddenly fell silent,
 slung their weapons over their shoulders and took
 her with them while making the most abominable
 gestures. Tugged and pulled this way and that by
 the terrifying pack fighting among themselves, the
 Marquise vainly shouted for help to her trembling
 women servants, who were escaping through the door.
 She was dragged into the rear courtyard of the castle
 where, subject to the most shameful mishandling, she
 was about to sink to the ground when, at the sound
 of her screams for help, a Russian officer appeared
 and with angry thrusts scattered the dogs lusting after
 their booty. To the Marquise he seemed like an angel
 from heaven. He struck the murderous beast who was
 embracing her slender body in the face with the hilt
 of his sword so that blood poured out of his mouth
 and he staggered back; then, politely addressing her in
 French, he offered her his arm and led her, rendered
 speechless by all she had witnessed, into the other
 wing of the palace not yet consumed by the flames,
 where she proceeded to sink to the ground completely
 unconscious. There – when her frightened women
 reappeared, he took steps to send for a doctor, made
 assurances as he put on his hat that she would soon
 recover, and returned to the fighting.								
									Copyright © 2020 by Heinrich von Kleist. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.