Chapter

 1      XIX|   placing him in command of the military department of Montaignac.~ ~
 2      XIX|         of the commander of the military forces at Montaignac, and
 3       XX| appointed to the command of the military forces, and the marquis,
 4    XXIII|     provost-marshal or before a military commission.~ ~He, therefore,
 5      XXV|        will be handed over to a military commission for~ trial.~ ~“
 6     XXVI|        in a state of siege. The military~ ~authorities have been
 7     XXVI|  granted discretionary power. A military commission will exercise
 8     XXVI|       was the substitution of a military commission for a court-martial.~ ~
 9     XXVI|         before it condemns.~ ~A military commission would infallibly
10     XXVI|       had just learned that the military commission had been organized.~ ~
11     XXVI|  members of the commission were military men.~ ~“And when does the
12    XXVII|       for the assembling of the military commission.~ ~On first entering
13    XXVII|    shouted, “Present arms!” The military commission entered, followed
14    XXVII|         de Sairmeuse.~ ~But the military commission considered such
15    XXVII|        heard. He must be heard! Military commissions are not above
16   XXVIII|     know that the sentence of a military commission is executed in
17     XXIX|         from the fate which the military commission will pronounce
18     XXXI|      who was presiding over the military commission.~ ~Five minutes
19    XXXII|      for pardons, signed by the Military Commission.~ ~Chanlouineau
20     XXXV|       take them safely past the military posts; but that he would
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