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Introduction to M. de I’ Aube pine M. de I’ Aubepine is unknown to many of his countrymen, as well as to the students of foreign literature. As a writer, he occupied a (n) [1] ______ ______ place between the Transcendentalists and the great body of pen - and - ink men who address the intellect and sympathies of the multitude. [2] ______ His writings, to do them ______ , are not all together destitute of fancy [3] ______ and ______ ;they might have won him greater reputation but for an invet- [4] ______ erate love of ______. His fictions are sometimes historical, sometimes of the present day, and sometimes have little or no reference either to time or [5] ______ space. In any case, he consents himself with the slightest possible counter- [6] ______ felt of real life and endeavors to interest his readers with the pecularity of [7] ______ the ______ . M. de I’ Aube’ pine’s productions, if you read it in the [8] ______ point of view, may amuse a leisure hour; if ______ , they can hardly fail to look like nonsense. [9] ______ M - de I’ Aubepine is ______;he continues to write and publish. [10] ______ His first appearance was by a collection of stories, in a long series of vol- umes, ______: " Contesdeur fois racontees". Our wearisome perusal of the titles of some of his recent works showed a certain personal affection and ______, though by no means admiration for the writer; and we would fain do the little in our power ______ introducing him favourably to the American public.

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It was not hot that day, but many were sweltering.Julius Streicher, the Jew - baiter of Nuremberg, was there. This sadist and pornographer, whom I had once seen striding through the streets of the old town brandishing a whip, seemed to have Wilted. A bald, decrepit- looking old man, he sat perspiring profusely, glaring at the .judges and convincing himself--so a guard later told me--that they were all Jew. There was Fritz Sauckel, the boss of slave labor in the Third Reich, his narrow little slit eyes giving him a porcine appearance. He seemed nervous, swaying to and fro. Next to him was Boldur von Schacht, the first Hitler Youth Leader and later Gauleiter of Vienna, more American by birth than German and looking like a country college boy who has been kicked out of school for some folly. There was Wahher Funk, the shifty - eyed nonentity who had succeeded Schacht. And there was Dr. Schacht himself, who had spent the last months of the Third Reich as a prisoner of his once revered Fuehrer in a concentration camp, fearing execution any day, and who now bristled with indignation that the Allies should try him as a war criminal. Franz yon Papen, more responsible than any other individual in Germany for Hitler’s coming to power, had been rounded up and made a defendant. He seemed much aged, but the look of the old fox, who had escaped from so many tight fixes, was still imprinted on his wizened face. There were still others who once had their days were nervous, fearing to be put to death some day.