Character List |
|
Jean Valjean | The protagonist of the novel. Hugo depicts the character's 19-year-long struggle to lead a normal life after serving a prison sentence for stealing bread to feed his sister's children during a time of economic depression and various attempts to escape from prison. Valjean is also known in the novel as Monsieur Madeleine, Ultime Fauchelevent, Monsieur Leblanc, and Urbain Fabre. |
Cosette | (formally Euphrasie, also known as "the Lark", Mademoiselle Lanoire, Ursula) The illegitimate daughter of Fantine and Tholomyes. From approximately the age of three to the age of eight, she is beaten and forced to work as a drudge for the Thenardiers. After her mother Fantine dies, Valjean ransoms Cosette from the Thenardiers and cares for her as if she were his daughter. Nuns in a Paris convent educate her. She grows up to become very beautiful. She falls in love with Marius Pontmercy. |
Marius Pontmercy | A young law student loosely associated with the Friends of the ABC. He shares the political principles of his father and has a tempestuous relationship with his royalist grandfather, Monsieur Gillenormand. He falls in love with Cosette and fights on the barricades in the 1832 June Rebellion. |
Javert | A fanatic police inspector in pursuit to recapture Valjean. Born in the prisons to a convict father and a fortune teller mother, he renounces both of them and starts working as a guard in the prison, including one stint as the overseer for the chain gang of which Valjean is part (and here witnesses firsthand Valjean's enormous strength and just what he looks like). Eventually he joins the police force in the small town identified only as M----- sur-M---. His character is defined by his legalist tendencies and lack of empathy for criminals of all forms. |
Monsieur Thenardier & Madame Thenardier |
Ordinary working-class people who blame society for their sufferings. Early in the novel, they own an inn and cheat their customers. As innkeepers, they abuse Cosette as a child and extort payment from Fantine for her support, until Valjean takes Cosette away. After they lose the inn in bank- ruptcy, they change their name to "Jondrette" and live by begging and petty thievery. They serve, alongside Javert, as one of the two arch-nemeses of the story's protagonist, Jean Valjean. While Javert represents the justice system that would punish Valjean, the Thenardiers represent the lawless subculture of society that would blackmail him. The novel portrays them as brutal and abusive figures |
Eponine | The Thenardiers' elder daughter. As a child, she is pampered and spoiled by her parents, but ends up a street urchin when she reaches adolescence. She
participates in her father's crimes and begging schemes to obtain money. She is blindly in love with Marius. After disguising herself as a boy, she manipulates Marius into going to the barricades, hoping that she and Marius will die there together. |
Gavroche | The unloved middle child and eldest son of the Thénardiers. He lives on his own as a street urchin and sleeps inside an elephant statue outside the Bastille. He briefly takes care of his two younger brothers, unaware they are related to him. He takes part in the barricades. |
Fantine | A beautiful Parisian grisette abandoned with a small child by her lover
Felix Tholomyes. Fantine leaves her daughter Cosette in the care of the
Then- ardiers, innkeepers in the village of Montfermeil. Mme. Thenardier
spoils her own daughters and abuses Cosette. Fantine finds work at Monsieur
Madeleine's factory. Illiterate, she has others write letters to the Thenardiers
on her behalf. A female supervisor discovers that she is an unwed mother
and dismisses her. To meet the Thenardiers' repeated demands for money,
she sells her hair and two front teeth, and turns to prostitution. |
Bishop Myriel | The Bishop of Digne (also called Monseigneur Bienvenu) A kindly old priest promoted to bishop after a chance encounter with Napoleon. After Valjean steals some silver from him, he saves Valjean from being arrested and inspires Valjean to change his ways. The Bishop is a heroic figure who personifies compassion and mercy. |
Monsieur Gillenormand | Marius' 90-year-old grandfather. A monarchist, he disagrees sharply with Marius on political issues, and they have several arguments. He attempts to keep Marius from being influenced by his father, Colonel Georges Pontmercy. While in perpetual conflict over ideas, he does demonstrate his love for his grandson. |
Enjolras | The leader of Les Amis de l'ABC (Friends of the ABC) in the Paris uprising. A resolute and charismatic youth, he is passionately committed to republican principles and the idea of progress and fights for a France with more rights for the poor and oppressed masses. |
Grantaire | A student revolutionary with little interest in the cause. He reveres Enjolras, and his admiration is the main reason that Grantaire spends time with Les Amis de l'ABC (Friends of the ABC), despite Enjolras's occasional scorn for him. Grantaire is often drunk and is unconscious for the majority of the June Rebellion. Despite his pessimism, he eventually declares himself a believer in the Republic. |
Patron-Minette | A quartet of bandits who assist in the Thenardiers' ambush of Valjean at Gorbeau House and the attempted robbery at the Rue Plumet. The gang consists of Montparnasse, Claquesous, Babet, and Gueulemer. Claquesous, who escaped from the carriage transporting him to prison after the Gorbeau Robbery, joins the revolution under the guise of "Le Cabuc."Hugo explains that the name "Patron-Minette" is an old-fashioned slang expression for the early dawn, "the hour at which their work ended, the dawn being the vanishing moment for phantoms and for the separation of ruffians". |
Mabeuf | An elderly churchwarden, friend of Colonel Pontmercy, who after the Colonel's death befriends his son Marius and helps Marius realize his father loved him. Mabeuf loves plants and books, but sells his books and prints in order to pay for a friend's medical care. When Mabeuf finds a purse in his yard, he takes it to the police. After selling his last book, he joins the students in the insurrection. |
Colonel Georges Pontmercy | Marius's father and an officer in Napoleon's army. Wounded at Waterloo, Pontmercy erroneously believes M. Thenardier saved his life. He tells Marius of this great debt. He loves Marius and although M. Gillenormand does not allow him to visit, he continually hid behind a pillar in the church on Sunday so that he could at least look at Marius from a distance. Napoleon made him a baron, but the next regime refused to recognize his barony or his status as a colonel, instead referring to him only as a commandant. |
Fauchelevent | A failed businessman whom Valjean (as M. Mad- eleine) saves from being crushed under a carriage. Valjean gets him a position as gardener at a Paris convent, where Fauchelevent later provides sanctuary for Valjean and Cosette and allows Valjean to pose as his brother. |
Sister Simplice | A famously truthful nun who cares for Fantine on her sickbed and lies to Javert to protect Valjean. |
Mother Innocente | The prioress of the Petit-Picpus convent. |
Felix Tholomyes | Fantine's lover and Cosette's biological father. A wealthy, self-centered student in Paris originally from Toulouse, he eventually abandons Fantine when their daughter is two years old. |
Favourite | A young grisette in Paris and leader of Fantine's group of seamstress friends (including Zephine and Dahlia). She is independent and well versed in the ways of the world and had previously been in England. Although she cannot stand Felix Tholomyes' friend Blachevelle and is in love with some- one else, she endures a relationship with him so she can enjoy the perks of courting a wealthy man. |
Champmathieu | A vagabond who is misidentified as Valjean after being caught stealing apples. |
Courfeyrac | A law student who is described as the centre of the group of Friends. He is honorable and warm and is Marius' closest companion. |
Combeferre | A medical student who is described as representing the philosophy of the revolution. |
Jean Prouvaire | (also Jehan) A Romantic with knowledge of Italian, Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, and an interest in the
Middle Ages. |
Azelma | The younger daughter of the Thenardiers. Like her sister Eponine, she is spoiled as a child, impov- erished when older. She abets her father's failed robbery of Valjean. On Marius and Cosette's wedding day, she tails Valjean on her father's orders. She travels to America with her father at the end of the novel. |
Mademoiselle Gillenormand | Daughter of M. Gillenormand, with whom she lives. Her late half-sister (M. Gillenormand's daughter from another marriage), was Marius' mother. |
Toussaint | Valjean and Cosette's servant in Paris. She has a slight stutter. |
Petit Gervais | A travelling Savoyard boy who drops a coin. Valjean, still a man of criminal mind, places his foot on the coin and refuses to return it. |
Bamatabois | An idler who harasses Fantine. Later a juror at Champmathieu's trial. |
Two little boys | The two unnamed youngest sons of the Thenar- diers, whom they send to Magnon to replace her two dead sons. Living on the streets, they encounter Gavroche, who is unaware they are his siblings but treats them like they are his brothers. After Gavroche's death, they retrieve bread tossed by a bourgeois man to geese in a fountain at the Luxembourg Garden. |
Magnon | Former servant of M. Gillenormand and friend of the Thenardiers. She had been receiving child support
payments from M. Gillenormand for her two illegitimate sons, who she claimed were fathered by him. When her sons died in an epidemic, she had them replaced with the Thenardiers' two youngest sons so that she could protect her income. The Thenardiers get a portion of the payments. |
Brevet | An ex-convict from Toulon who knew Valjean there; released one year after Valjean. In 1823, he is serving time in the prison in Arras for an unknown crime. He is the first to claim that Champmathieu is really Valjean. |
The narrator |
Hugo does not give the narrator a name and allows the reader to identify the narrator with the novel's author. The narrator occasionally injects himself into the narrative or reports facts outside the time of the narrative to emphasize that he is recount- ing historical events, not entirely fiction. He introduces his recounting of Waterloo with several paragraphs describing the narrator's recent approach to the battlefield. |
CONTENTS
FANTINE
I. AN UPRIGHT MAN
II. THE FALL
III. THE YEAR 1817
IV. TO ENTRUST IS SOMETIMES TO ABANDON
V. THE DESCENT
VI. JAVERT
VII. THE CHAMPMATHIEU AFFAIR
VIII. COUNTER-STROKE
COSETTE
I. WATERLOO
II. THE SHIP ORION
III. FULFILMENT OF THE PROMISE TO THE DEPARTED
IV. THE OLD GORBEAU HOUSE
V. A DARK CHASE NEEDS A SILENT HOUND
VI. PETIT PICPUS
VII. A PARENTHESIS
VIII. CEMETARIES TAKE WHAT IS GIVEN THEM
MARIUS
I. PARIS ATOMISED
II. THE GRAND BOURGEOIS
III. THE GRANDFATHER AND THE GRANDSON
IV. THE FRIENDS OF THE ABC
V. THE EXCELLENCE OF MISFORTUNE
VI. THE CONJUNCTION OF TWO STARS
VII. PATRON MINETTE
VIII. THE NOXIOUS POOR
ST. DENIS
I. A FEW PAGES OF HISTORY
II. Eponine
Ill. THE HOUSE IN THE RUE PLUMET
IV. AID FROM BELOW MAY BE AID FROM ABOVE
V. THE END OF WHICH IS UNLIKE THE BEGINNING
VI. LITTLE GAVROCHE
VII. ARGOT
VIII. ENCHANTMENTS AND DESOLATIONS
IX. WHERE ARE THEY GOING?
X. JUNE 5TH, 1832
XI. THE ATOM FRATERNISES WITH THE HURRICANE
XII. CORINTH
XIII. MARIUS ENTERS THE SHADOW
X1V. THE GRANDFURS OF DESPAIR
XV. THE RUE DE L'HOMME ARME
JEAN VALJEAN
I. WAR BETWEEN FOUR WALLS
II. THE INTESTINE OF LEVIATHAN
III. MIRE, BUT SOUL
IV. JAVERT OFF THE TRACK
V. THE GRANDSON AND THE GRANDFATHER .
VI. THE WHITE NIGHT
VII. THE LAST DROP IN THE CHALICE
VIII. THE TWILIGHT WANE
IX. SUPREME SHADOW, SUPREME DAWN
PREFACE
So long as there shall exist, by reason of law
and custom, a social condemnation, which, in
the face of civilisation, artificially creates
hells on earth, and complicates a destiny that
is divine, with human fatality; so long as the
three problems of the age--the degradation
of man by poverty, the ruin of woman lw
starvation, and the dwarfing of childhood by
physical and spiritual night--are not solved;
so long as, in certain regions, social asphyxia
shall be possible; in other words, and from
a yet more extended point of view, so long
as ignorance and misery remain on earth,
books like this cannot be useless.
Hauteville House, 1862.
FANTINE
BOOK FIRST
AN UPRIGHT MAN
I. M. MYRIEL,
IN 1815, M. Charles Francois-Bienvenu Myriel was Bishop of D---. He was a man of
seventy-five, and had occupied the bishopric of D--- since 1806. Although it in no
manner concerns, even in the remotest degree, what we have to relate, it
may not
be useless, were it only for the sake of exactness in all things, to notice
here the
reports and gossip which had arisen on his account fn an the time of his arrival in
the diocese.
Be it true or false, what is said about men often has as much influence upon their
lives, and especially upon their destinies, as what they do.
M. Myriel was the son of a counsellor of the Parlement cif Aix; of the rank given
to the legal profession. His father, intending him to inherit his place, had con-
tracted a marriage for him at the early age of eighteen or twenty, according to a
widespread custom anumg parliamentary families. Charles Myriel. notwithstanding
this marriage, had, it was said, been an object of much attention. His person
was admirably moulded; although of slight figure, he was elegant and graceful; all
the earlier part of his life had been devoted to the world and to its pleasures.
The revolution came, events crowded upon each other; the parliamentary
families,
decimated, hunted, and pursued, were soon dispersed. M. Charles Myriel, on the
first outbreak of the revolution, emigrated to Italy. His wife died there of a
lung complaint with which she had been long threatened. They had no children.
What followed in the fate of M. Myriel? The decay of the old French society, the
fall of his own family, the tragic sights of '93, still more fearful, perhaps,
to the exiles who beheld them from afar, magnified by fright--did these arouse
in him ideas of renunciation and of solitude? Was he, in the midst of one of the
reveries or emotions which then consumed his life, suddenly attacked by one of
those mysterious and terrible blows which sometimes overwhelm, by smiting
to the
heart, the man whom public disasters could not shake, by aiming at life or for-
tune? No one could have answered; alt that was known was that when he returned
from Italy he was a priest.
In 1804, M. Myriel was cure of B--(Brignolles). He was then an old man,
and lived
in the deepest seclusion.
Near the time of the coronation, a trifling matter of business be-longing to his
curacy--what it was, is not now known precisely--took him to Paris.
Among other personages of authority he went to Cardinal Pesch on behalf
of
his parishioners.
One day, when the emperor had come to visit his uncle, the worthy cure, who was
waiting in the ante-room, happened to be on the way of his Majesty. Napoleon not-
icing that the old man looked at him with a certain curiousness, turned around
and said brusquely:
"Who is this goodman who looks at me?"
"Sire," said M. Myriel, "you behold a good man, and I a great man. Each of us
may profit by it."
That evening the emperor asked the cardinal the name of the cure, and some time
afterwards M. Myriel was overwhelmed with surprise on learning that he
had been
appointed Bishop of D--.
Beyond this, no one knew how much truth there was in the stories which passed
current concerning the first portion of M. Myriel's life. But few families
had
known the Myriels before the revolution.
M. Myriel had to submit to the fate of every new-comer in a small town,
where
there are many tongues to talk, and but few heads to think. He had to submit,
although he was bishop, and because he was bishop. But after all, the gossip
with which his name was connected, was only gossip: noise, talk, words, less
than words--palabres,. as they say in the forcible language of the South.
Be that as it may, after nine years of episcopacy, and of residence in D--,
all these stories, topics of talk, which engross at first petty towns and
petty people, were entirely forgotten. Nobody would have dared to speak of,
or even to remember them.
When Myriel came to D-- he was accompanied by an old lady, Mademoiselle
Baptistine, who was his sister, ten years younger than himself.
Their only domestic was a woman of about the same age as Made-moiselle Bap-
tistine, who was called Madame Magloire, and who, after having been the ser-
vant of M. le cure, now took the double title of femme de chambre of Madem-
oiselle and housekeeper of Monseig-neur.
Mademoiselle Baptistine was a tall, pale, thin, sweet person. She fully
realised the idea which is expressed by the word "respectable;" for it seems
as if it were necessary that a woman should be a mother to be venerable.
She had never been pretty; her whole life, which had been but a succession
of pious works, had produced upon her a kind of transparent whiteness, and
in growing old she had acquired what may be called the beauty of goodness.
What had been thinness in her youth had become in maturity transparency,
and this etherialness permitted gleams of the angel within. She was more
a
spirit than a virgin mortal. Her form was shadow-like, hardly enough body
to
convey the thought of sex--a little earth containing a spark--large eyes, al-
ways cast down; a pretext for a soul to remain on earth.
Madame Magloire was a little, white, fat, jolly, bustling old woman, always
out
of breath, caused first by her activity, and then by the asthma.
M. Myriel, upon his arrival, was installed in his episcopal palace with
the hon-
ours ordained by the imperial decrees, which class the bishop next in rank
to
the field-marshal. The mayor and the president made him the first visit,
and
he, on his part, paid like honour to the general and the prefect. The installation
being completed, the town was curious to see its bishop at work.
II. M. MYRIEL BECOMES MONSEIGNEUR BIENVENU
THE bishop's palace at D-- was contiguous to the hospital: the palace was
a spacious and beautiful edifice, built of stone near the beginning of the last
century by Monseigneur Henri Pujct, a doc-tor of theology of the Faculty
of
Paris, abbe of Simnre, who was bishop of D-- in 1712. The palace was in truth
a lordly dwelling: there was an air of grandeur about everything, the apart-
ments of the bishop, the saloons, the chambers, the court of honour, which
was very large, with arched walks after the antique Florentine style; and
a
garden planted with magnificent trees.
In the dining hall was a long, superb gallery, which was level with the
ground,
opening upon the garden; Monseigneur Henri Pujet had given a grand banquet
on the 29th of July, 1714, to Monseigneur Charles Brulart de Geniis, arch-
bishop, Prince d'Embrun, Antoine de Mesgrigny, capuchin, bishop of Grasse.
Philippe de Vendome, grand-prior de France, the Abbe de Saint Honore de
Lerins, Francois de Berton de Grillon, lord bishop of Vence, Cesar de Sabran
de Forcalquier, lord bishop of Glandeve, and Jean Soanen, priest of the
oratory, preacher in ordinary to the king, lord bishop of Senez; the portraits
of these seven reverend personages decorated the hall. and this memorable
date, July-29th, 1714, appeared in letters of gold on a white marble tablet.
The hospital was a low, narrow. one story building with a small garden.
Three days after the bishop's advent he visited the hospital; when the visit
was ended, he invited the director to oblige him by coming to the palace.
"Monsieur." he said to the director of the hospital, "how
many patients
have you?"
"Twenty-six, monseigneur."
"That is as I counted them," said the bishop.
"The beds," continued the director, "are very much crowded."
"I noticed it."
"The wards are but small chambers, and are not easily ventilated."
"It seems so to me."
"And then, when the sun does shine, the garden is very small for the
conval-
escents."
"That was what I was thinking."
"Of epidemics we have had typhus fever this year; two years ago we had mili-
tary fever, sometimes one hundred patients, and we did not know what to do."
"That occurred to me."
"What can we do, monseigneur?" said the director; "we must be resigned."
This conversation took place in the dining gallery on the ground floor.
The bishop was silent a few moments: then he turned 'suddenly towards the
director.
"Monsieur," he said, "how many beds do you think this hall alone would con-
tain?"
"The dining hall of monseigneur!" exclaimed the director, stupefied.
The bishop ran his eyes over the hall, seemingly taking measure and making
calculations.
"It will hold twenty beds," said he to himself; then raising his voice, he
said
"Listen, Monsieur Director, to what I have to say. There is evidently
a
mistake here. There are twenty-six of you in five or six small rooms: there
are only three of us, and space for sixty. There is a mistake, I tell you.
You have my house and I have yours. Restore mine to me; you are at home."
Next day the twenty-six poor invalids were installed in the bishop's palace
and the bishop was in the hospital.
M. Myriel had no property, his family having been impoverished by the rev-
olution. His sister had a life estate of five hundred francs, which in the
vicarage sufficed for her personal needs. M. Myriel received from the gov-
ernment as bishop a salary of fifteen thousand francs. The day on which he
took up his residence in the hospital building, he resolved to appropriate
this sum once for all to the following uses. We copy the schedule then writ-
ten by him.
Schedule for the Regulation of my Household Expenses
"For the little seminary, fifteen hundred lines.
Mission congregation, one hundred livres.
For the Lazaristes of Montdidier, one hundred lines.
Congregation of the Saint-Esprit. one hundred and fifty livre:.
Seminary of foreign missions in Paris, two hundred livres.
Religious establishments in the Holy Land, one hundred livres.
Maternal charitable societies, three hundred livres.
For that of Arles, fifty livres.
For the amelioration of prisons, four hundred livres
For the relief and deliverance of prisoners, five hundred livres.
For the liberation of fathers of families imprisoned for debt, one thousand
livres.
Additions to the salaries of poor schoolmasters of the diocese. two thousand
livres.
Public storehouse of Hautes-Alpes, one hundred livres.
Association of the ladies of D--- of Manosque and Sisteron for the gratuitous
instruction of poor girls, fifteen hundred livres.
For the poor, six thousand livres.
My personal expenses, one thousand livres.
Total, fifteen thousand livres.
M. Myriel made no alteration in this plan during the time he held the see of
D---; he called it, as will be seen, the regulation of his household expenses.
Mademoiselle Baptistine accepted this arrangement with entire submission; M.
Myriel was to her at once her brother and her bishop, her companion by ties
of blood and her superior by ecclesiastical authority. She loved and vener-
ated him unaffectedly; when he spoke, she listened; when he acted, she gave
him her co-operation. Madame Magloire, however, their servant, grumbled a
little. The bishop, as will be seen, had reserved but a thousand francs; this,
added to the income of Mademoiselle Baptistine, gave them a yearly independence
of fifteen hundred francs, upon which the three old people subsisted.
Thanks, however, to the rigid economy of Madame Magloire, and the excellent
management of Mademoiselle Baptistine, whenever a curate came to D--- the
bishop found means to extend to him his hospitality.
About three months after the installation, the bishop said one day, "With
all this
I am very much cramped." "I think so too," said Madame Magloire: "Monseigneur
has not even asked for the sum due him by the department for his carriage
ex-
penses in town, and in his circuits in the diocese. It was formerly the custom with
all bishops."
"Yes!" said the bishop; "you are right, Madame Magloire."
He made his application.
Some time afterwards the conseil-general took his claim into consideration and
voted him an annual stipend of three thousand francs under this head: "Allow-
ance to the bishop for carriage expenses, and travelling evenses for pastoral
visits."
The bourgeoisie of the town were much excited on the subject, and in regard to
it a senator of the empire, formerly a member of the Council of Five Hundred,
an advocate of the Eighteenth Brumaire, now provided with a rich senatorial
seat near D---, wrote to M. Bigot de Preameneu, Minister of Public Worship, a
fault-finding, confidential epistle, from which we make the following extract:--
"Carriage expenses! What can he want of it in a town of less than 4000 inhabi-
tants? Expenses of pastoral visits I And what good do they do, in the first
place; and then, how is it possible to travel by post in this mountain region?
There are no roads; he can go only on horseback. Even the bridge over the Dur-
ance at Chfiteau-Arnoux is scarcely passable for oxcarts. These priests are
always so; avaricious and miserly.This one played the good apostle at the out-
set: now he acts like the rest; he must have a carriage and post-chaise. He
must have luxury like the old bishops. Bah! this whole priesthood! Monsieur
le Comte, things will never be better till the emperor delivers us from these
macaroni priests. Down with the pope! (Matters were getting embroiled with Rome.)
As for me, I am for Casar alone," etc., etc., etc.
This application, on the other hand, pleased Madame Magloire exceedingly.
"Good,"
said she to Mademoiselle Baptistine; "Monseigneur began with others,
but he
has found at last that he must end by taking care of himself. He has arranged
all his charities, and so now here are three thousand francs for us."
The same evening the bishop wrote and gave to his sister a note couched in
these terms:
Carriage and Travelling Expenses
"For beef broth for the hospital, fifteen hundred livres.
For the Aix Maternal Charity Association, two hundred and fifty livres.
For the Draguignan Maternal Charity Association, two hundred and fifty livres.
For Foundlings, five hundred livres.
For Orphans, five hundred lines.
Total, three thousand lines."
Such was the budget of M. Myriel.
In regard to the official perquisites, marriage licenses, dispensations, private
baptisms, 'and preaching, consecrations of churches or chapels, marriages, etc.,
the bishop gathered them from the wealthy with as much exactness as he dispensed
them to the poor.
In a short time donations of money began to come in; those who had and those who
had not, knocked at the bishop's door; some came to receive alms and others to
bestow them, and in less than a year he had become the treasurer of all the ben-
evolent, and the dispenser to all the needy. Large sums passed through his hands;
nevertheless he changed in no wise his mode of life, nor added the least luxury
to his simple fare.
On the contrary, as there is always more misery among the lower classes than
there is humanity in the higher, everything was given away, so to speak, before
it was received, like water on thirsty soil; it was well that money came to him,
for he never kept any; and besides he robbed himself. It being the custom that
all bishops should put their baptismal names at the head of their orders and
pastoral letters, the poor people of the district had chosen by a sort of af-
fectionate instinct, from among the names of the bishop, that which was expres-
sive to them, and they always called him Monseigneur Bienvenu. We shall follow
their example and shall call him thus; besides, this pleases him. "I like this
name," said he; "Bienvenu counterbalances Monseigneur."
We do not claim that the portrait which we present here is a true one;
we say only that it resembles him.
III. GOOD BISHOP--HARD BISHOPRIC
THE BISHOP, after converting his carriage into alms, none the less regularly made
his round of visits, and in the diocese of D--- this was a wearisome task.
There was
very little plain, a good deal of mountain; and hardly any roads, as a matter of
course; thirty-two curacies, forty-one vicarages, and two hundred and eighty-five
sub-curacies. To visit all these is a great labour, but the bishop went through
with it. He travelled on foot in his own neighbourhood, in a cart when he was in
the plains, and in a cacolet, a basket strapped on the back of a mule, when in
the mountains. The two women usually accompanied him, but when the journey was
too difficult for them he went alone.
One day he arrived at Senez, formerly the seat of a bishopric, mounted on an ass.
His purse was very empty at the time, and would not permit any better conveyance.
The mayor of the city came to receive him at the gate of the episcopal residence,
and saw him dismount from his ass with astonishment and mortification.
Several
of the citizens stood near by, laughing. "Monsieur Mayor," said the bishop, "and
Messieurs citizens, I see what astonishes you; you think that it shows a good
deal of pride for a poor priest to use the same conveyance which was used by
Jesus Christ. I have done it from necessity, I assure you, and not from vanity."
In his visits he was indulgent and gentle, and preached less than he talked. He
never used far-fetched reasons or examples. To the inhabitants of one region he
would cite the example of a neighbouring region. In the cantons where the
nece-
ssitous were treated with severity he would say, "Look at the people of Briancon.
They have given to the poor, and to widows and orphans, the right to mow their
meadows three days before any one else. When their houses are in ruins they
rebuild them without cost. And so it is a country blessed of God. For a whole
century they have not had a single murderer."
In villages where the people were greedy for gain at harvest time he would say,
"Look at Embrun. If a father of a family, at harvest time, has his sons in the
army, and his daughters at service in the city, and he is sick, the priest rec-
ommends him in his sermons, and on Sunday, after mass, the whole population of
the village, men, women, and children, go into the poor man's field and harvest
his crop, and put the straw and the grain into his granary." To families divid-
ed by questions of property and inheritance, he would say, "See the mountaineers
of Devolny, a country so wild that the nightingale is not heard there once in
fifty years. Well now, when the father dies, in a family, the boys go away to
seek their fortunes, and leave the property to the girls, so that they may get
husbands." In those cantons where there was a taste for the law, and where the
farmers were ruining themselves with stamped paper, he would say, "Look at those
good peasants of the valley of Queyras. There are three thousand souls there.
Why, it is like a little republic! Neither judge nor constable is known there.
The mayor does everything. He apportions the impost, taxes each one according
to his judgment, decides their quarrels without charge, distributes their pat-
rimony without fees, gives judgment without expense; and he is obeyed because
he is a just man among simple-hearted men." In the villages which he found
without a schoolmaster, he would again hold up the valley of Queyras. "Do you
know how they do?" he would say. "As a little district of twelve or fifteen
houses cannot always support a teacher, they have schoolmasters that are payed
by the whole valley, who go around from village to village, passing a week in
this place, and ten days in that, and give instruction. These masters attend
the fairs, where I have seen them. They are known by quills which they wear
in their hatband. Those who teach only how to read have one quill; those who
teach reading and arithmetic have two; and those who teach reading, arithmetic,
and Latin, have three; the latter are esteemed great scholars; But what a
shame to be ignorant! Do like the people of Queyras."
In such fashion would he talk, gravely and paternally, in default of
examples he would invent parables, going straight to his object, with few
phrases and many images, which was the very eloquence of Jesus Christ,
convincing and persuasive.
IV. WORKS ANSWERING WORDS
HIS CONVERSATION was affable and pleasant. He adapted himself to the capacity
of the two old women who lived with him, but when he laughed, it was the laugh
of a school-boy.
Madame Magloire usually called him Your Greatness. One day he rose from his arm-
chair, and went to his library for a book. It was upon one of the upper shelves,
and as the bishop was rather short, he could not reach it. "Madame Magloire,"
said he, "bring me a chair. My greatness does not extend to this shelf."
One of his distant relatives, the Countess of Lo, rarely let an occasion
escape
of enumerating in his presence what she called "the expectations" of her three
sons. She had several relatives, very old and near their death, of whom her sons
were the legal heirs. The youngest of the three was to receive from a great-aunt
a hundred thousand livres in the funds; the second was to take the title of duke
from his uncle; the eldest would succeed to the peerage of his grandfather.
The
bishop commonly listened in silence to these innocent and pardonable maternal
displays. Once, however, he appeared more dreamy than was his custom, while
Madame de Lo rehearsed the detail of all these successions and all these "ex-
pectations." Stopping suddenly, with some impatience, she exclaimed, "My good-
ness, cousin, what are you thinking about?" "I am thinking," said the bishop,
"of a strange thing which is, I beheve, in St. Augustine: 'Place your expect-
ations on him to whom there is no succession!"
On another occasion, when he received a letter announcing the decease of a gen-
tleman of the country, in which were detailed, at great length, not only the
dignities of the departed, but the feudal and titular honours of all his rel-
atives, he exclaimed: "What a broad back has death! What a wondrous load of
titles will he cheerfully carry, and what hardihood must men have who will thus
use the tomb to feed their vanity!"
At times he made use of gentle raillery, which was almost always charged with
serious ideas. Once, during Lent, a young vicar came to D-- ,and preached in
the cathedral. The subject of his sermon was charity, and he treated it very
eloquently. He called upon the rich to give alms to the poor, if they would
escape the tortures of hell, which he pictured in the most fearful colours,
and enter that paradise which he painted as so desirable and inviting. There
was a retired merchant of wealth in the audience, a little given to usury, M.
Geborand, who had accumulated an estate of two millions in the manufacture of
coarse cloths and serges. Never, in the whole course of his life, had M.
Geborand given alms to the unfortunate; but from the date of this sermon it
was noticed that he gave regularly, every Sunday, a penny to the old beggar
women at the door of the cathedral. There were six of them to share it. The
bishop chanced to see him one day, as he was performing this act of charity,
and said to his sister, with a smile, "See Monsieur Geborand, buying a penny-
worth of paradise."
When soliciting aid for any charity, he was not silenced by a refusal; he was
at no loss for words that would set the hearers thinking. One day, ,he was
receiving alms for the poor in a parlour in the city, where the Marquis of
Champtercier, who was old, rich, and miserly, was present. The marquis man-
aged to be, at the same time, an ultra-royalist and an ultra-Voltairian, a
species of which he was not the only representative. The bishop coming to
him in turn, touched his arm and said, "Monsieur le Marquis, you must give
me something." The marquis turned and answered drily, "Monseigneur, I have
my own poor." "Give them to me," said the bishop.
One day he preached this sermon in the cathedral:--
"My very dear brethren, my good friends, there are in France thirteen hun-
dred and twenty thousand peasants' cottages that have but three openings;
eighteen hundred and seventeen thousand that have two, the door and one
window; and finally, three hundred and forty-six thousand cabins, with
only one opening--the door. And this is in consequence of what is called
the excise upon doors and windows. In these poor families, among the aged
women and the little children, dwelling in these huts, how abundant is
fever and disease? Alas! God gives light to men; the law sells it. I do
not blame the law, but I bless God. In Isere, in Var, and in the Upper
and the Lower Alps, the peasants have not even wheelbarrows, they carry
the manure on their backs; they have no candles, but burn pine knots,
and bits of rope soaked in pitch. And the same is the case all through
the upper part of Dauphine. They make bread once in six months, and bake
it with the refuse of the fields. In the winter it becomes so hard that
they cut it up with an axe, and soak it for twenty-four hours, before they
can eat it. My brethren, be compassionate; behold how much suffering there
is around you."
Born a Provencal, he had easily made himself familiar with all the patois
of the south. He would say, "Eh, be! inoussu, ses sage?" i as in Lower
Languedoc; "Onto anaras passe" as in the Lower Alps; "Piterte no bonen
ittontoa cozbc aw bons,: frozonagc grasc," as in Upper Dauphine. This
pleased the people greatly, and contributed not a little to giving him
ready access to their hearts. He was the same in a cottage and on the
mountains as in his own house. He could say the grandest things in the
most common language; and as he spoke all dialects. his words entered
the souls of all.
Moreover, his manners with the rich were the same as with the poor.
He condemned nothing hastily, or without taking account of circumstances.
He would say, "Let us see the way in which the fault came to pass."
Being, as he smilingly described himself, an ex-sinner, he had in one
of the inaccessibility of a rigorist, and boldly professed, even under
the frowning eyes of the ferociously virtuous, a doctrine which may be
stated nearly as follows:--
"Man has a body which is at once his burden and his temptation. He drags
it along, and yields to it.
"He ought to watch over it, to keep it in bounds; to repress it. and only
to obey it at the last extremity. It may be wrong to obey even then, but
if so, the fault is venial. It is a fall, but a fall upon the knees, which
may end in prayer.
"To be a saint is the exception; to be upright is the rule. Err, falter,
sin, but be upright.
"To commit the least possible sin k the law for man To live with-out sin
is the dream of an angel. Everything terrestrial is subject to sin. Sin
is a gravitation."
When he heard many exclaiming, and expressing great indigna-tion against
anything, "Oh!!" he would say, sintimg. "It would seem that
this is a
great crime, of which they are all guilty. How frightened hypocrisy hast-
ens to defend itself, and to get under cover."
He was indulgent towards women. and towards the p.r, upon whom the weight
of society falls most heavily; and sm.!: el he faults of women, children,
and servants, of the feeble, the indigent and the ignorant, are the faults
of their husbands, fathers, and masters, of the strong, the rich, and the
wise." At other time', he said, "Teach the ignorant as much as you can;
society is culpable in not providing instruction for all, and it must
answer for the night which it produces. if the soul is left in darkness,
sins will be committed. The guilty one is not he who commits the sin, but
he who causes the darkness."
As we see, he had a strange and peculiar way of judging things. I suspect
that he acquired it from the Gospel.
In company one day he heard an account of a criminal ease that was about
to be tried. A miserable man. through hive for a woman and for the child
she had borne him, had been making false coin, his means being exhausted.
At that time counterfeiting was still punished with death. The woman was
arrested for passing the first piece that he had made. She was held a pri-
soner, but there: was no proof against her lover. She alone could testify
against him, arnl convict him by her confession. She denied his guilt.
They insisted. but she was obstinate in her denial. In this state of the
case, the procureur du roi devised a shrewd plan. He represented to her
that her lover was unfaithful, and by means of fragments of lettets skill-
fully put together, succeeded in persuading the unfortunate womnan that
she had a rival, and that this man had deceived her. At once exasperated
by jealousy, she denounced her lover, confessed all, and proved his guilt.
He was to be tried in a few days, at Aix, with his accomplice, and his con-
viction was certain. The story was told, and everybody was in ecstasy
at the adroitness of the officer. In bringing jealousy into play, he had
brought truth to light by means of anger, and justice had sprung from
revenge. The bishop listened to all this in silence. When it was finished
he asked:
"Where are this man and woman to be tried?"
"At the Assizes."
"And where is the procurceur du roi to be tried?
A tragic event occurred at D---. A man had been condemned to death for
murder. The unfortunate prisoner was a'poorly educated, but not entirely
ignorant man, who had been a juggler at fairs, and a public letter-writer.
The people were greatly interested in the trial. The evening before the
day fixed for the execution of the condemned, the almoner of the pri-
son fell ill. A priest was needed to attend the prisoner in his last
moments. The cure was sent, for, but he refused to go, saying, "That
does not concern me. I have nothing to do with such drudgery, or with that
mountebank; besides; I am sick myself; and moreover it is not my place."
When this reply was reported to the bishop, he said, "The cure is right.
It is not 'his place, it is mine."
He went, on the instant, to the prison, went down into the dungeon of the
"mountebank," called him by his name, took him by the hand, and talked
with him. He passed the whole day with him, forgetful of food and sleep,
praying to God for the soul of the condemned, and exhorting the condemned
to join with hint. He spoke to him the best truths, which are the simplest.
He was 'father, brother, friend; bishop for blessing only. He taught him
everything, by encouraging and consoling him. This man would have died
in despair. Death, for him, was like an abyss. Standing shivering upon
the dreadful brink, he recoiled with horror. He was not ignorant enough
to be indifferent. The terrible shock of his condemnation had in some
sort broken here and there that wall which separates us from the mystery
of things beyond, and 'which we call life.. Through these fatal breaches,
he was constantly looking beyond this world, and he could see nothing
but darkness; the bishop showed him the light.
On the morrow when they came for the poor man, the bishop was with him.
He followed him, and showed himself to the eyes of the crowd in his violet
camail, with his bishop's cross about his neck,: side by side with the
miserable being, who was bound with cords.
He mounted the cart with him, he ascended the scaffold with him:. The
sufferer, so gloomy and so horror-stricken in the evening, was now
radiant with hope. He felt that his soul was reconciled, and he trusted
in God. The bishop embraced him, and at the moment when the axe was
about to fall he said to him, "whom man kills, him God restoreth to
life,
whom his brethern put away, he findeth the Father Pray, beheve, enter
into life! The Father is there." When he descended from the scaffold,
something in his look made the people fall back. It would be hard to say
which was the most wonderful, his paleness or his serenity. As he entered
the humble dwelling which he smilingly called his palace; e said to his
sister,
"I have been officiating pontifically."
As the most sublime things are often least comprehended, there were
those in the city who said, in commenting upon the bishop's conduct that it
was affectation, but such ideas were confined to the upper classes. Tihe
peo-
ple, who do not look for unworthy motives in holy works, admired and
were softened.
As to the bishop, the sight of the guillotine was a shock to him,)from
which it was long before he recovered.
The scaffold, indeed, when it is prepared and set up, has the effect of
a hallucination. We may be indifferent to the death penalty, and may not
declare ourselves, yes or no, so long as we have not seen a guillotine with
our own eyes. But when we see one, the shock is violent, and we are com-
pelled to decide and take part, for or against. Some admire it, like Le
Maistre; others execrate it, like Beccaria. The guillotine is the con-
cretion of the law; it is called the Avenger; it is not neutral and does
not permit you to remain neutral. He who sees it quakes with the most
mysterious of tremblings. All social questions set up their points of
interrogation about this axe. The scaffold is vision. The scaffold is
not a mere frame, the scaffold is not a machine, the scaffold is not an
inert piece of mechanism made of wood, of iron, and of ropes. It seems
a sort of being which had some sombre origin of which we can have no idea;
one would say that this frame sees, that this machine understands, that
this mechanism comprehends; that this wood, this iron, and these ropes,
have a will. In the fearful reverie into which its presence casts the soul,
the awful apparition of the scaffold confounds itself with its horrid work.
The scaffold becomes the accomplice of the executioner; it devours, it
eats flesh, and it drinks blood. The scaffold is a sort of monster cre-
ated by the judge and the workman, a spectre which seems to live with a
kind of unspeakable life, drawn from all the death which it has wrought.
Thus the impression was horrible and deep, on the morrow of the exe-
cution, and for many days, the bishop appeared to be overwhelmed. The
almost violent calmness of the fatal moment had disappeared; the phantom
of social justice took possession of him. He, who ordinarily looked back
upon all his actions with a satisfaction so radiant, now seemed to be a
subject of self-reproach. By times he would talk to himself, and in an
undertone mutter dismal monologues. One evening his sister overheard
and preserved the following: "I did not beheve that it could be so
mon-
strous. It is wrong to be so absorbed in the divine law as not to perceive
the human law. Death belongs to God alone. By what right do men touch that
unknown thing?"
With the lapse of time these impressions faded away, and were probably
effaced. Nevertheless it was remarked that the bishop ever after avoided
passing by the place of execution.
M. Myriel could be called at all hours to the bedside of the sick and the
dying. He well knew that there was his highest duty and his greatest work.
Widowed or orphan families had no need to send for him; he came of himself.
He would sit silent for long hours by the side of a man who had lost the
wife whom he loved, or of a mother who had lost her child. As he knew the
time for silence, he knew also the time for speech. Oh, admirable consoler!
he did not seek to drown grief in oblivion, but to exalt and to dignify it
by hope. He would say, "Be careful of the way in which you think of the
dead. Think not of what might have been. Look steadfastly and you shall
see the living glory of your well-beloved dead in the depths of heaven."
He believed that faith is healthful. He sought to counsel and to calm the
despairing man by pointing out to him the man of resignation, and to
transform the grief which looks down into the grave by showing it the
grief which looks up to the stars.
V. HOW MONSEIGNEUR BIENVENU MADE HIS CASSOCK LAST SO LONG
The private life of M. Myriel was full of the same thoughts as his
public life. To one who could have seen it on the spot, the voluntary
poverty in which the Bishop of D---lived, would have been a serious
as well as a pleasant sight.
Like all old men, and like most thinkers, he slept but little, but
that little was sound. In the morning he devoted an hour to medita-
tion, and then said mass, either at the cathedral, or in his own house.
After mass he took his breakfast of rye bread and milk, and then
went to work.
A bishop is a very busy man; he must receive the report of the
clerk of the diocese, ordinarily a prebendary, every day; and nearly
every day his grand vicars. He has congregations to superintend,
licenses to grant, all ecclesiastical bookselling to examine, parish
and diocesan catechisms, prayer-books, etc., charges to write, preach-
ings to authorise, cures and mayors to make peace between, a clerical
correspondence, an administrative correspondence, on the one hand
the government, on the other the Holy See, a thousand matters of
business.
What time these various affairs and his devotions and his breviary left
him, he gave first to the needy, the sick, and the afflicted; what time the
afflicted, the sick, and the needy left him, he gave to labour. Sometimes
he used a spade in his garden, and sometimes he read and wrote. He had but
one name for these two kinds of labour; he called them gardening. "The
spirit is a garden," said he.
Towards noon, when the weather was good, he would go out and walk in the
fields, or in the city, often visiting the cottages and cabins He would
be seen plodding along, wrapt in his thoughts, his eyes bent down, resting
upon his long cane, wearing his violet doublet, wadded so as to be very
warm, violet stockings and heavy shoes, and his flat hat, from the three
corners of which hung the three golden grains of spikenard.
His coming made a fete. One would have said that he dispersed warmth
and light as he passed along. Old people and children would come to their
doors for the bishop as they would for the sun. He blessed, and was
blessed in return. Whoever was in need of anything was shown the way to
his house.
Now and then he would stop and talk to the little boys and girls --and
give a smile to their mothers. When he had money his visits were to the
poor; when he had none, he visited the rich.
As he made his cassock last a very long time, in order that it might not
be perceived, he never went out into the city without his violet doublet.
In summer this was rather irksome.
On his return he dined. His dinner was like his breakfast.
At half-past eight in the evening he took supper with his sister, Madame
Magloire standing behind them and waiting on the table. Nothing could be
more frugal than this meal. If, however, the bishop had one of his cures
to supper, Madame Magloire improved the occasion to serve her master with
some excellent fish from the lakes, or some fine game from the mountain.
Every cure was a pretext for a fine meal, the bishop did not interfere.
With these exceptions there was rarely seen upon his table more than boiled
vegetables, or bread warmed with oil. And so it came to be a saying in
the city, "When the bishop does not entertain a cure, he entertains a
Trappist."
After supper he would chat for half an hour with Mademoiselle Baptis-
tine and Madame Magloire, and then go to his own room and write, sometimes
upon loose sheets, sometimes on the margin of one of his folios. He was a
well-read and even a learned man. He has left five or six very curious
Mariuscripts behind him; among them is a dissertation upon this passage
in Genesis: In the beginning the spirit of Cod moved upon the face of the
waters. He contrasts this with three other versions; the Arabic, which
has: the winds of God blew; Flavius Josephus, who says: a wind from on high
fell upon all the earth; and finally the Chaldean paraphrase of Onkelos,
which reads: a wind coming from God blew upon the face of the waters. In
another dissertation, he examines the theological works of Hugo, Bislop of
Ptolemais, a distant relative of the writer of this book, and proves that
sundry little tracts, published in the last century under the pseudonym of
Barleycourt, should be attributed to that prelate.
Sometimes in the midst of his reading, no matter what book he might have in
his hands, he would suddenly fall into deep meditation, and when it was over,
would write a few lines on whatever page was open before him. These lines
often have no connection with the book in which they are written. We have
under our own eyes a note written by him upon the margin of a quarto volume
entitled: "Correpondance du Lord Germain avec les gereraux Clinton, Cornwal-
lis, et les amiraux de la Station de l'Amerique. A Versailles, chez Poinfot,
Libraire, et a Paris, chez Pissot, Quai des Augustins."
And this is the note:
"Oh Thou who art!
"Ecclesiastes names thee the Almighty; Maccabees names thee Creator; the
Epistle to the Ephesians names thee Liberty; Baruch names thee Immensity;
the Psalms name thee Wisdom and Truth; John names thee Light; the book of
Kings names thee Lord; Exodus calls thee Providence; Leviticus, Holiness;
Esdras, Justice; Creation calls thee God; man names thee Father; but Sol-
omon names thee Compassion, and that is the most beautiful of all thy
names."
Towards nine o'clock in the evening the two women were accustomed
to retire to their chambers in the second story, leaving him until morning
alone upon the lower floor.
Here it is necessary that we should give an exact idea of the dwelling of
the Bishop of D---.
VI. HOW HE PROTECTED HIS HOUSE
THE HOUSE WHICH HE OCCUPIED consisted, as we have said, of a ground floor
and a second story; three rooms on the ground floor, three on the second
story, and an attic above. Behind the house was a garden of about a quar-
ter of an acre. The two women occupied the upper floor; the bishop lived
below. The first room, which opened upon the street, was his dining-room,
the second was his bedroom, and the third his oratory. You could not leave
the oratory without passing through the bedroom, and to leave the bedroom
you must pass through the dining-room. At one end of the oratory there was
an alcove closed in, with a bed for occasions of hospital-ity. The Bishop
kept this bed for the country cures when business or the wants of their
parish brought them to D---,
The pharmacy of the hospital, a little building adjoining the house and
extending into the garden, had been transformed into a kitchen and cellar.
There was also a stable in the garden, which was formerly the hospital
kitchen, where the bishop now kept a couple of cows, and invariably, ev-
ery morning, he sent half the milk they gave to the sick at the hospital.
"I pay my tithes," said he.
His room was quite large, and was difficult to warm in bad weather. As
wood is very dear at D , he conceived the idea of having a room parti-
tioned off from the cow-stable with a tight plank ceiling In the coldest
weather he passed his evenings there, and called it his winter parlour.
In this winter parlour, as in the dining-room, the only furniture was a
square white wooden table, and four straw chairs. The dining-room, how-
ever, was furnished with an old sideboard stained red. A similar sideboard,
suitably draped with white linen and imitation lace, served for the altar
wh.c decorated the oratory.
His rich penitents and the pious women of D---- had often contributed the
money for a beautiful new altar for monseigneur's oratory; he had always
taken the money and given it to the poor. "The most beautiful of altars,"
said he, "is the soul of an unhappy man who is comforted and thanks
God."
In his oratory he had two prie-dieu straw chairs, and an armchair, also
of straw, in the bedroom. When he happened to have seven or eight visitors
at once, the prefect, or the general, or the major of the regiment in the
garrison, or some of the pupils of the little seminary, he was obliged to
go to the stable for the chairs that were in the winter parlour, to the
oratory for an the prie-dieu, and to the bedroom for the arm-chair; in
this way he could get together as many as eleven seats for his visitors.
At each new visit a room was stripped.
It happened sometimes that there were twelve; then the bishop concealed
the embarrassment of the situation by standing before the fire if it were
were winter, or by walking in the garden if it were summer.
There was another chair in the stranger's alcove, but it had lost half its
straw, and had but three legs, so that it could be used only when standing
gainst the wall. Mademoiselle Baptistine had also, in her room, a very large
wooden easy-chair, that had once been gilded and covered with flowered silk,
but as it had to be taken into her room through the window, the stairway
being too narrow, it could not be counted among the movable furniture.
It had been the ambition of Mademoiselle Baptistine to be able to buy a
parlour lounge, with cushions of Utrecht velvet, roses on a yellow ground,
while the mahogany should be in the form of swans' necks. But this would
have cost at least five hundred francs, and as she had been able to save
only forty-two francs and ten sous for the purpose in five years, she had
finally given it up. But who ever does attain to his ideal?
Nothing could be plainer in its arrangements than the bishop's bed-chamber.
A window, which was also a door, opening upon the garden; facing this,
the bed, an iron hospital-bed, with green serge curtains; in the shadow
of the bed, behind a screen, the toilet utensils, still betraying the el-
egant habits of the man of the world; two doors, one near the chimney,
leading into the oratory, the other near the book-case, opening into the
dining-room. The book-case, a large closet with glass doors, filled with
books; the fire-place, cased with wood painted to imitate marble, usually
without fire; in the fireplace, a pair of andirons ornamented with two
vases of flowers, once plated with silver, which was a kind of episcopal
luxury; above the fire-place, a copper crucifix, from which the silver
was worn off, fixed upon a piece of thread-bare black velvet in a wooden
frame from which the gilt was almost gone; near the window, a large table
with an inkstand, covered with confused papers and heavy volumes. In front
of the table was the straw arm-chair, and before the bed, a prie-dieu from
the oratory.
Two portraits in oval frames hung on the wall on either side of the bed.
Small gilt inscriptions upon the background of the canvas indicated that
the portraits represented, one, the Abbe de Chaliot, bishop of Saint
Claude, the other, the Abbe Tourteau, vicar-general of Agde, abbe of
Grandchamps, order of Citeaux, diocese of Chartres. The bishop found
these portraits when he succeeded to the hospital patients in this chamber,
and left them untouched. They were priests, and probably donors to the
hospital--two reasons why he should respect them. All that he knew of these
two personages was that they had been named by the king, the one to his
bishopric, the other to his living,. on the same day, the 27th of April,
1785. Madame Magloire having taken down the pictures to wipe off the dust,
the bishop had found this circumstance written in a faded ink upon a lit-
tle square piece of paper, yellow with time, stuck with four wafers on
the back of the portrait of the Abbe of Grandchamps.
He had at his window an antique curtain of coarse woolen stuff, which fin-
ally became so old that, to save the expense of a new one, Madame Magloire
was obliged to put a large patch in the very middle of it. This patch was
in the form of a cross. The bishop often called attention to it. "How for-
tunate that is," he would say.
Every room in the house, on the ground floor as well as in the upper story,
without exception, was white-washed, as is the custom in barracks and in
hospitals.
However, in later years, as we shall see by-and-by, Madame Magloire found,
under the wall paper, some paintings which decorated the apartment of
Mademoiselle BaP tistilnacee. Before it was a hospital, the house had
been a sort of gathering-place for the citizens, at which time these
decorations were introduced. The floors of the chambers were paved with
red brick, which were scoured every week, and before the beds straw mat-
ting was spread. In all respects the house was kept by the two women ex-
quisitely neat from top to bottom. This was the only luxury that the bi-
shop would permit. He would say, "That takes nothing from the poor."
We must confess that he still retained of what he had formerly, six
silver dishes and a silver soup ladle, which Madame Magloire contem-
plated every day with new joy as they shone on the coarse, white,
linen table-cloth. And as we are drawing the portrait of the Bishop
of D-- just as he was, we must add that he had said, more than once,
"It would be difficult for me to give up eating from silver."
With this silver ware should be counted two large, massive silver
candlesticks which he inherited from a great-aunt. These candlesticks
held two wax-candles, and their place was upon the bishop's mantel.
When he had any one to dinner, Madame Magloire lighted the two can-
dles and placed the two candlesticks upon the table.
There was in the bishop's chamber, at the head of his bed, a small
cupboard in which Madame Magloire placed the six silver dishes and
the great ladle every evening. But the key was never taken out of
it.
The garden, which was somewhat marred by the unsightly structures
of which we have spoken, was laid out with four walks, crossing at
the drain-well in the centre. There was another walk round the gar-
den, along the white wall which enclosed it. These walks left four
square plats which were bordered with box. In three of them Madame
Magloire cultivated vegetables; in the fourth the bishop had plant-
ed flowers, and here and there were a few fruit trees. Madame Mag-
loire once said to-him with a kind of gentle reproach: "Monseigneur,
you are always anxious to make everything useful, but yet here is
a plat that is of no use. It would be much better to have salads
there than bouquets." "Madame Magloire," rephed the bishop,
"you
are 'mistaken. The beautiful is as useful as the useful." He added
after a moment's silence, "perhaps more so."
This plat, consisting of three or four beds, occupied the bishop
nearly as much as his books. He usually passed an hour or two there,
trimming, weeding, and making holes here and there in the ground,
and planting seeds. He was as much averse to insects as a gardener
would have wished. He made no pretentions to botany, and knew no-
thing of groups or classification; he did not care in the least to
decide between Tournefort and the natural method; he took no part,
either for the utrides against the cotyledons, or for Jussieu a-
gainst Linnmus. He did not study plants, he loved flowers. He had
much respect for the learned, but still more for the ignorant; and,
while he fulfilled his duty in both these respects, he watered his
beds every summer evening with a tin watering-pot painted green.
Not a door in the house had a lock. The door of the dining-room
which, we have mentioned, opened into the cathedral grounds, was fo-
rmerly loaded with bars and bolts like the door of a prison. The
bishop had had all this iron-work taken off, and the door, by night
as well as by day, was dosed only with a latch: The passer-by,
whatever might be the hour, could open it with a simple push. At
first the two women had been very much troubled at the door being
never locked; but Monseigneur de D-- said to them: "Have bolts on.
your own doors, if you like." They shared his confidence at list,
or at least acted as if they shared it. Madame Magloire alone had
occasional attacks of fear. As to the bishop, the reason for this
is explained, or at least pointed at in these three lines written
by him on the margin of a Bible: "This is the shade of meaning;
the door of a physician should never be closed; the door of a
priest shouldalways be open."
In another book, entitled Philosophil de la Science Medicale, he
wrote this further note: "Am I not a physician as well as they?
I also have my patients; first I have theirs, whom they call the
sick; and then I have my own, whom I call the unfortunate?'
Yet again he had written: "Ask not the name of him who asks you
for a bed. It is especially he whose name is a burden to him, who
has need of an asylum?'
It occurred to a worthy cure, I am not sure whether it was the
cure of Couloubroux or the cure of Pomprierry, to ask him one
day, probably at the instigation of Madame Magloire, if monseigneur
were quite sure that there was not a degree of imprudence in leav-
ing his door, day and night, at the mercy of whoever might wish to
enter, and if he did not fear that some evil would befall a house
so poorly defended. The bishop touched him gently on the shoulder,
and said:' "Nisi Dominus custodierit domum, in vanum vigilant qui
cuelodiunt cam?'
And then he changed the subject.
He very often said: "There is a bravery for the priest asw ell as
a bravery for the colonel of dragoons " "Only," added he, "ours
should be quiet."
VII. CRAVATTE
This is the proper place for an incident which we must not omit,
for it is one of those which most clearly shows what manner of man
the Bishop of D-- was.
After the destruction of the band of Gaspard Bes, which had in-
fested the gorges of Ollivohes, one of his heutenants, Cravatte,
took refuge in the mountains. He concealed himself for some time
with his bandits, the remnant of the troop of Gaspard BM, in the
county of Nice, then made his way to Piedmont, and suddenly reap-
peared in France in the neighbourhood of Barcelonnette. He was
first seen at Jauziers, then at Tuiles. He concealed himself in
the caverns of the Jong de l'Aigle, from which he made descents
upon the hamlets andvillages by the ravines.of Ubaye and Ubayette.
He even pushed as far as Embrun, and one night broke into the cath-
edral and stripped the sacristy. His robberies desolated the country.
The gendarmes were put upon his trail, but in vain. He always escap-
ed; sometimes by forcible resistance. He was a bold wretch. In the
midst of all this terror, the bishop arrived. He was making his visit
to Chastelar. The mayor came to see him and urged him to turn back.
Cravatte held the mountains as far as Arctic and beyond; it would be
dangerous even with an escort. It would expose three or four poor
gendarmes to useless danger.
"And so," said the bishop, "I intend to go without an escort."
"Do not think of such a thing," exclaimed the mayor.
"I think so much of it, that I absolutely refuse the gendarmes, and I
am going to start in an hour."
"To start?"
"To start."
"Alone?"
"Alone."
"Monseigneur, you will not do it."
"There is on the mountain," rephed the bishop, "a humble little
commune, that I have not seen for three years; and they are good
friends of mine, kind and honest peasants. They own one goat out
of thirty that they pasture. They make pretty woolen thread of
various colours, and they play their mountain airs upon small six-
holed flutes. They need some one occasionally to tell them of the
goodness of God. What would they say of a bishop who was afraid?
What would they say, if I should not go there?"
"But, monseigneur, the brigands?"
"True," said the bishop, "I am thinking of that. You are right. I
may meet them. They too must need some one to tell them of the
goodness of God."
"Monseigneur, but it is a band! a pack of wolves!"
"Monsieur Mayor, perhaps Jesus has made me the keeper of that
very flock. Who knows the ways of providence?"
"Monseigneur, they will rob you."
"I have nothing:
'They will kill you."
"A simple old priest who passes along muttering his prayer? No,
no; what good would it do them?"
"Oh, my good sir, suppose you should meet them!"
"I should ask them for alms for my poor."
"Monseigneur, do not go. In the name of heaven! you are expos-
ing your life."
"Monsieur Mayor," said the bishop, "that is just it. I am not in
the world to care for my life, but for souls."
He would not be dissuaded. He set out, accompanied only by a child,
who offered to go as his guide. His obstinacy was the talk of The
country, and all dreaded the result.
He would not take along his sister, or Madame Magloire. He crossed
the mountain on a mule, met no one: and arrived safe and sound a-
mong his "good friends" the shepherds. He remained there a fortnight,
preaching, administering the holy rites, teaching and exhorting.
When he was about to leave, he resolved to chant a Te Deum with pon-
tifical ceremonies. He talked with the cure about it. But what could
be done? there was no episcopal furniture. They could only place at
his disposal a paltry village sacristy with a few old robes of worn-
out damask, trimmed with imitation-galloon.
"No matter," said the bishop. "Monsieur le cure, at the sermon an-
nounce our Te Deum. That will take care of itself."
All the neighbouring churches were ransacked, but the assembled mag-
nificence of these humble parishes could not have suitably clothed
a single cathedral singer.
While they were in this embarrassment, a large chest was brought to
the parsonage, and left for the bishop by two unknown horsemen,
immediately mmediately rode away. The chest was opened; it contained
a cope of cloth of gold, a mitre ornamented with diamonds, an arch-
bishop's cross, a magnificent crosier, all the pontifical raiment
stolen a month before from the treasures of Our Lady of Embrun. In
the chest was a paper on which were written these words: "Cravatte
to Monseigneur Bienveini."
"I said that it would take care of itself," said the bishop.
Then he
added with a smile: "To him who is contented with a cure's surplice,
God sends an archbishop's cope."
"Monseigneur," murmured the cure, with a shake of the head and a smile,
'God--or the devil."
The bishop looked steadily upon the cure, and rephed with authority:
"God!"
When he returned to Chastelar, all along the road, the pebple came with
curiosity to see him. At the parsonage in Chastelar he found Mademoi-
selle Baptistine and Madame Magloire waiting for him, and he said to
his sister, "Well, was I not right? the poor oor priest went among those
poor mountaineers with empty hands; he comes back with hands filled. I
went forth placing my trust in God alone; I bring back the treasures of
a cathedral."
In the evening before going to bed he said further: "Have no fear of
robbers or murderers. Such dangers are without, and are but petty. We
should fear ourselves. Prejudices are the real robbers; vices the real
murderers. The great dangers are within us. What matters it what threat-
ens our heads or our purses? Let us think only of what our souls."
Then turning to his sister: "My sister, a priest should never take any
precaution against a neighbour. What his neighbour does, God permits.
Let us confine ourselves to prayer to God when we think that danger
hangs over us. Let us beseech him, not for ourselves, but that our
brother may not fall into crime on our account."
To sum up, events were rare in his life. We relate those we know of;
but usually he passed his life in always doing the same things at the
same hours. A. month of his year was like an hour of his day.
As to what became of the "treasures" of the Cathedral of Embrun, it
would embarrass us to be questioned on that point. There were 'among
them very fine things, and very tempting, and very good to steal for
the benefit of the unfortunate. Stolen they had already been by others.
Half the work was done; it only remained to change the course of the
theft, and to make it turn to the side of the poor. We can say nothing
more on the subject. Except that, there was found among the bishop's
papers a rather obscure note, which is possibly connected with this
affair, that reads as follows: "The question is, whether this ought
to be returned to the cathedral or to the hospital."
VIII. AFTER DINNER PHILOSOPHY
THE senator heretofore referred to was an intelligent man, who had
made his way in life with a directness of purpose which paid no at-
tention to all those stumbling-blocks which constitute obstacles in
men's path, known as conscience, sworn faith, justice, and duty; he
had advanced straight to his object without once swerving in the
line of his advancement and his interest. He had been formerly a
procureur, mollified by success, and was not a bad man at all, doing
all the little kindnesses that he could to his sons, sons-in-law,
and relatives generally, and even to his friends; having prudently
taken the pleasant side of life, and availed himself of all the ben-
efits which were thrown in his way. Everything else appeared to him
very stupid. He was sprightly, and just enough of a scholar to think
himself a disciple of Epicurus, while possibly he was only a product
of Pigault-Lebrun. He laughed readily and with gusto at infinite and
eternal things, and at the "crotchets of the good bishop." He laughed
at them sometimes, with a patronising air, before M. Myriel himself,
who listened.
At some-semi-official ceremony, Count * * * (this senator) and M.
Myriel remained to dinner with the prefect. At dessert, the senator,
a little elevated, though always dignified, exclaimed:
"Parbleu, Monsieur Bishop; let us talk. It is difficult for a sena-
tor and a bishop to look each other in the eye without winking.
two augurs. I have a confession to make to you; I have my philosophy."
"And you are right," answered the bishop. "As one makes his
philosophy, so he rests. You are on a purple bed, Monsieur Senator."
?
The senator, encouraged by this, proceeded:--
"Let us be good fellows?
"Good devils, even," said the bishop.
"I assure you," resumed the senator, "that the Marquis d'Argens, Pyrrho,
Hobbes, and M. Naigeon are not rascals. I have all my philosophers in
my library, gilt-edged."
"Like yourself, Monsieur le Comte," interrupted the bishop. The senator
went on:--
"I hate Diderot; he is an idealogist, a demagogue, and w revolu-
tionist, at heart beheving in God, and more bigoted than Voltaire.
Voltaire mocked at Needham, and he was wrong; for Needham's
eels prove that God is useless. A drop of vinegar in a spoonful of
flour supplied the fiat lux. Suppose the drop greater and the spoonful
larger, and you have the world. Man is the eel. Then what is the use of
an eternal Father? Monsieur Bishop, the Jehovah hypothesis tires me.
It is good for nothing except to produce people with scraggy bodies and
empty heads. Down with this great All, who torments me! Hail, Zero who
leaves me quiet. Between us, to open my heart, and confess to my pastor,
as I ought, I will confess that I have common sense. My head is not
turned with your Jesus, who preaches in every corn-field renunciation
and self-sacrifice. It is the advice of a miser to beggers. Renuncia-
tion, for what? Self-sacrifice, to what? I do not see that one wolf im-
molates himself for the benefit of another wolf. Let us dwell, then,
with nature. We are at the summit, and let us have a higher philosophy.
What is the use of being in a higher position if we can't see further
than another man's nose? Let us live gaily; for life is all we have.
That man has another life, elsewhere, above, below, anywhere--I don't
beheve a single word of it. Ah! I am recommended to self-sacrifice
and renunciation, that I should take care what I do; that I must break
my head over questions of good and evil, justice and injustice; over
the fas and the nefas. Why? Because I shall have to render an account
for my acts. When? After death. What a fine dream! After I am dead
it will take fine fingers to pinch me. I should like to see a shade
grasp a handful of ashes. Let us who are initiated, and have raised
the skirt of Isis, speak the truth; there is neither good nor evil;
there is only vegetation. Let us seek for the real; let us dig into
everything. Let us go to the bottom. We should scent out the truth,
dig in the earth for it, and seize upon it. Then it gives you exqui-
site joy; then you grow strong, and laugh. I am firmly convinced,
Monsieur Bishop, that the immortality of man is a will-o'-the-wisp.
Oh! charming promise. Trust it if you will! Adam's letter of recom-
mendation! We have souls, and are to become angels, with blue wings
to our shoulders. Tell me, now, isn't it Tertullian who says that the
blessed will go from one star to another? Well, we shall be the grass-
hoppers of the skies. And then we shall see God. Tut tut tut. All these
heavens are silly. God is a monstrous myth. I shouldn't say that in
the Moniteur, of course, but I whisper it among my friends. Inter
pacula. To sacrifice earth to paradise is to leave the substance for
the shadow. I am not so stupid as to be the dupe of the Infinite. I am
nothing; I call myself Count Nothing, senator. Did I exist before my
birth? No. Shall I, after my death? No. What am I? A little dust, ag-
gregated by an organism. What have I to do on this earth! I have the
choice to suffer or to enjoy. Where will suffering lead me? To nothing.
But I shall have suffered. Where will enjoyment lead me? To nothing.
But I shall have enjoyed. My choice is made. I must eat or be eaten,
and I choose to eat. It is better to be the tooth than the grass. Such
is my philosophy. After which, as I tell you, there is the grave-dig-
ger--the pantheon for us--but all fall into the great gulf--the end;
finis; total liquidation. This is the vanishing point. Death is dead,
beheve me. I laugh at the idea that there is any one there that has
anything to say to me. It is an invention of nurses Bugaboo for chil-
dren; Jehovah for men. No, our morrow is night. Beyond the tomb are
only equal nothings. You have been Sardanapalus, or you have been Vin-
cent de Paul--that amounts to the same nothing. That is the truth of it.
Let us live, then, above all things; use your personality while you
have it. In fact, I tell you. Monsieur Bishop, I have my philosophy,
and I have my philosophers. I do not allow myself to be entangled with
nonsense. But it is necessary there should be something for those who
are below us, the bare-foots, knife-grinders, and other wretches. Leg-
ends and chimeras are given them to swallow, about the soul, immorta-
lity, paradise, and the stars. They munch that; they spread it on their
dry bread. He who has nothing besides, has the good God--that is the
least good he can have. I make no objection to it, but I keep Monsieur
Naigeon for myself. The good God is good for the people."
The bishop clapped his hands.
"That is the idea," he exclaimed. "This materialism is an excellent thing,
and truly marvellous; reject it who will. Ah! when one has it, he is a
dupe
no more; he does not stupidly allow himself to be exiled like Cato, or
stoned like Stephen, or burnt alive like Joan of Arc. Those who have
succeeded in procuring this admirable materialism have the happiness
of feeling that they are irresponsible, and of thinking that they can devour
everything in quietness--places, sinecures, honours, power rightly or
wrongly acquired, lucrative recantations, useful treasons, savoury capit-
ulations of conscience and that they will enter their graves with their
digestion completed. How agreeable it is! I do not say that for you, Mon-
sieur Senator. Nevertheless, I cannot but felicitate you. You great lords
have, you say, a philosophy of your own, for your special benefit--exqui-
site, refined, accessible to the rich alone; good with all sauces, admirably
seasoning the pleasures of life. This philosophy is found at great depths,
and brought up by special search. But you are good princes, and you are
quite willing that the belief in the good God should be the philosophy
of
the people, much as goose with onions is the turkey with truffles of the
poor."
IX. THE BROTHER PORTRAYED BY THE SISTER
To afford an idea of the household of the Bishop of D--, and the manner in
which these two good women subordinated their actions, thoughts, even their
womanly instincts, so liable to disturbance, to the habits and projects of
the bishop, so that he had not even to speak, in order to express them; we
cannot do better than to copy here a letter from Mademoiselle Baptistine to
Madame la Viscontesse de Boischevron, the friend of her childhood. This let-
ter is in our possession:--
D--, Dec. 16th, 18--.
"MY DEAR MADAME: Not a day passes that we do not speak of you; that is cust-
omary enough with us; but we have now another reason. Would you beheve
that
in washing and dusting the ceilings and walls, Madame Magloire has made some
discoveries? At present, our two chambers, which were hung with old paper,
whitewashed, would not disparage a chateau in the style of your own. Madame
Magloire has torn off all the paper: it had something underneath. My parlour,
where there is no furniture and which we use to dry clothes in, is fifteen
feet high, eighteen feet square, and has a ceiling, once painted and gilded,
with beams like those of your house. This was covered with canvas during the
time it was used as a hospital; and then we have wainscoating of the time of
our grandmothers. But it is my own room which you ought to see. Madame Maglo-
ire has discovered beneath at least ten thicknesses of paper some pictures,
which, though not good, are quite endurable. Telemachus received on horseback,
by Minerva, is one; and then again, he is in the gardens--I forget their name;
another is where the Roman ladies resorted for a single night. I could say much
more; I have Romans, men and women [here a word is illegible], and all their
retinue. Madame Magloire has cleaned it all, and this summer she is going to
repair some little damages, and varnish it, and my room will be a veritable
museum. She also found in a corner of the storehouse two pier tables of
antique style; they asked two crowns of six livres to regild them, but it is
to give that to the poor; besides that they are very ugly, and I far better
much prefer a round mahogany table.
"I am always happy: my brother is so good: he gives all he has to the poor
and sick. We are full of cares: the weather is very severe in the winter,
and one must do something for those who lack. We at least are warmed and
lighted, and you know those are great comforts.
"My brother has his peculiarities; when he talks he says that a bishop ought
to be thus. Just think of it that the door is never closed. Come in who will,
he is at once my brother's guest; he fears nothing, not even in the night; he
says that is his form of bravery.
"He wishes me not to fear for him; nor that Madame Magloire should;
he exposes
himself to every danger, and prefers that we should not even seem to be aware
of it; one must know how to understand him.
"He goes out in the rain, walks through the water, travels in winter, he has no
fear of darkness, or dangerous roads, or of those he may meet.
"Last year he went all alone into a district infested with robbers. He would not
take us. He was gone a fortnight, and when he came back, though we had thought
him dead, nothing had happened to him, and he was quite well. He said: 'See, how
they have robbed me!' And he opened a trunk in which he had the jewels
of the
Embrun Cathedral which the robbers had given him.
"Upon that occasion, on the return, I could not keep from scolding him a little,
taking care only to speak while the carriage made a noise, so that no one could
hear us.
"At first I used to say to myself, he stops for no danger, he is incorrigible.
But now I have become used to it. I make signs to Madame Magloire that she shall
not oppose him, and he runs what risks he chooses. I call away Madame Magloire,
I go to my room, pray for him, and fall asleep. I am calm, for I know very well
that if any harm happened to him, it would be my death: I should go away to the
good Father with my brother and my bishop. Madame Magloire has had more diffi-
culty in getting used to what. Should Satan even come into the she calls his
imprudence. Now the thin is settled: we pray together; we are afraid together,
and we go to sleep house, no one would interfere. After all what is there to
fear in this house? There is always One with us who is the strongest: Satan
may visit our house, but the good God inhabits it.
"That is enough for me. My brother has no need now even to speak a word. I
understand him without his speaking, and we commend ourselves to Providence.
"It must be so with a man whose soul is so noble.
"I asked my brother for the information which you requested respecting the
Faux family. Volt know how well he knows about it, and how much he remembers,
for he was always a very good royalist, and this is really a very old Norman
family, of the district of Caen. There are five centuries of a Raoul de Faux,
Jean de Faux, and Thomas de Faux, who were of the gentry, one of whom was a
lord of Rochefort. The last was Guy Etienne Alexandre, who was a cavalry
colonel, and held some rank in the light horse of Brittany:. His daughter
Marie Louise married Adrien Charles de Gramont, son of Duke Louis de Gramont,
a peer of France, colonel of. the Gerdes Francaises, and heutenant-general
of the army. It is writtein Faux, Fauq, and Faouq.
"Will you not, my dear madame, ask for us the prayers of your holy relative,
Monsieur it Cardinal? As to your precious Sylvanie, she has done 'Well not
to waste the short time that she is with You in writing to me. She is well,
you say; studies according to your wishes, and loves me still. That is all
I could desire. Her remembrance, through you, reached me, and I was glad to
receive it. My health is tolerably good; still I grow thinner every day.
"Farewell: my paper is filled and I must stop. With a thousand good wishes,
"BAPTISTINE.
"P.S.--Your little nephew is charming; do you remember that he will soon be
five years old? He saw a horse pass yesterday on which they had put knee-caps,
and he cried out: 'What is that he has got on his knees?' The child is so
pretty. His little brother drags an old broom about the room for a carriage,
and says, hi!"
As this letter shows, these two women knew how to conform to the bishop's
mode of life, with that woman's tact which understands a man better than he
can comprehend himself. Beneath the gentle and frank manner of the Bishop of
D--, which never changed, he sometimes performed great, daring, even grand
acts, without seeming to he aware of it himself. They trembled, but did not
interfere: Sometimes Madame Magloire would venture a remonstrance beforehand:
never at the time, or afterwards; no one ever disturbed. him by word or token
in an action once begun. At certain times, when he had no need to say it,
when, perhaps, he was hardly conscious of it, so complete was his art-
lessness, they vaguely felt that he was acting as bishop, and at such per-
iods they were only two shadows in the house. They waited on him passively,
and if to obey was to disappear, they disappeared. With charming and in-
stinctive delicacy they knew that obtrusive attentions would annoy him; so
even when they thought him in danger, they understood, I will not say his
thought, but his nature rather, to the degree of ceasing to watch over
him.
They entrusted him to God's keeping.
Besides, Baptistine said, as we have seen, that his death would be hers.
Madame Magloire did not say so, but she knew it.
X. THE BISHOP IN THE PRESENCE OF AN UNKNOWN LIGHT
A LITTLE while before the date of the letter quoted in the preceding pages,
the bishop performed an act, which the whole town thought far more perilous
than his excursion across the mountains infested by the bandits.
In the country near D--, there was a man who lived alone. This man, to state
the startling fact without preface, had been a member of the National Conven-
tion. His name was G--.
The little circle of D-- spoke of the conventionist with a certain sort of
horror. A conventionist, think of it; that was in the time when folks thee-
and-thoued one another, and said "citizen." This man came very near being a
monster; he had not exactly voted for the execution of the king, but almost;
he was half a regicide, and had been a terrible creature altogether. How was
it, then, on the return of the legitimate princes, that they had not arraigned
this man before the provost court? He would not, have been beheaded, perhaps,
but even if clemency were necessary he might have been banished for life; in
fact, an example, etc. etc. Besides, he was an atheist, as all those people
are. Babblings of geese against a vulture.
But was this G-- a vulture? Yes, if one should judge him by the savageness
of
his solitude. As he had not voted for the King's execution, he was not includ-
ed in the sentence of exile, and could remain in France.
He lived about an hour's walk from the town, far from any hamlet or road, in
a secluded ravine of a very wild valley. It was said he had a sort of resting-
place there, a hole, a den. He had no neighbours or even passers-by. Since he
had lived there the path which led to the place had become overgrown, and peo-
ple spoke of it as of the house of a hangman.
From time to time, owever, the bishop reflectingly gazed upon the horizon at
the spot where a clump of trees indicated the ravine of the aged conventionist,
and he would say: "There lives a soul Which is alone." And in the depths of
his thought he would add "I owe him a visit."
But this idea, we must confess, though it appeared natural at first, yet,
after
a few moments' reflection, seemed strange, impracticable and almost repulsive.
For at heart he shared the general impression, and the conventionist inspired
him, he knew not how, with that sentiment which is the fringe of hatred, and
which the word "aversion" so well expresses.
However, the shepherd should not recoil from the diseased sheep. Ah! but what
a sheep
The good bishop was perplexed: sometimes he walked in that direction, but he
returned.
At last, one day the news was circulated in the town that the young herdsboy
who served the conventionist G-- in his retreat, had come for a doctor that
the old wretch was dying, that he was motionless, and could live through the
night. "Thank God!" added many.
The bishop took his cane, put on his overcoat, because his cassock was badly
worn, as we have said, and besides the night wind was evidently rising, and
set out.
The sun was setting; it had nearly touched the horizon when the bishop
reached the accursed spot. He felt a certain quickening of the pulse as he
drew near the den. He jumped over a ditch, cleared a hedge, made his way
through a brush fence, found himself in a dilapidated garden, and after a
bold advance across the open. ground, suddenly, behind some high brushwood,
he discovered the retreat.
It was a low, poverty-stricken hut, small and clean, with a little vine
nailed up m front.
Before the door in an old chair on rollers, there sat a man with white hair,
looking with smiling gaze upon the setting sun.
The young herdsboy stood near him, handing him a bowl of milk. While the
bishop was looking, the old man raised his voice.
"Thank you," he said, "I shall need nothing more;"
and his smile changed
from the sun to rest upon the boy.
The bishop stepped forward. At the sound of his footsteps the old man turn-
ed his head, and his face expressed as much surprise as one can feel after
a long life.
"This is the first time since I have lived here," said he, "that
I have had
a visitor. Who are you, monsieur?"
"My name is Bienvenu-Myriel," the bishop rephed.
"Bienvenu-Myriel? I have heard that name before. Are you he whom the people
call Monseigneur Bienvenu?"
"I am."
The old man continued half-smiling. "Then you are my bishop?"
"Possibly."
"Come in, monsieur."
The conventionist extended his hand to the bishop, but he did not take it.
He only said: "I am glad to find that I have been misinformed. You do not
appear to me very ill."
"Monsieur," rephed the old man, "I shall soon be better." He paused and
said:
"I shall be dead in three hours."
Then he continued:
"I am something of a physician; I know the steps by which death approaches;
yesterday my feet only were cold; today the cold has crept to my knees,
now
it has reached the waist; when it touches the heart, all will be over. The
sunset is lovely, is it not? I bad myself wheeled out to get a final look at
nature. You can speak to me; that will not tire me. You do well to come to see
a man who is dying. It is good that these moments should have witnesses. Every
one has his fancy; I should like to live until the dawn, but I know I have
scarcely life for three hours. It will be night, but what matters it: to fin-
ish is a very simple thing. One does not need morning for that. Be it so:
I
shall die in the starlight."
The old man turned towards the herdsboy:
"Little one, go to bed: thou didst watch the other night: thou art
weary."
The child went into the hut.
The old man followed him with his eyes, and added, as if speaking to himself:
"While he is sleeping, I shall die: the two slumbers keep fit company."
The bishop was not as much affected as he might have been: it was not his
idea of godly death; we must tell all for the little inconsistencies of great
souls should be mentioned; he who had laughed so heartily at "His Highness,"
was still slightly shocked at not being called monseigneur, and was almost
tempted to answer "citizen." He felt a desire to use the brusque familiarity
common enough with doctors and priests, but which was not customary with him.
This conventionist after all, this representative of the people, had been a
power on the earth; and perhaps for the first time in his life the bishop felt
himself in a humour to be severe. The conventionist, however, treated him
with a modest consideration and cordiality, in 'which perhaps might have been
discerned that humility which is befitting to one so nearly dust unto dust.
The bishop, on his part, although he generally kept himself free from curi-
osity, which to his idea was almost offensive, could not avoid examining the
conventionist with an attention for which, as it had not its source in sympathy,
his conscience would have condemned him as to any other man; but a convention-
ist he looked upon as an outlaw, even to the law of charity.
G--, with his self-possessed manner, erect figure, and vibrating voice,
was one of those noble octogenarians who are the marvel of the physiologist.
The revolution produced many of these men equal to the epoch: one felt
that
here was a tested man. Though so near death, he preserved all the appearance
of health. His bright glances, his firm accent, and the muscular movements
of his shoulders seemed almost sufficient to disconcert death. Azrael, the Ma-
hometan angel of the sepulchre, would have turned back, thinking he had mis-
taken the door. G--- appeared to be dyingbecause he wished to die. There
was
freedom in his agony; his legs only were paralysed; his feet were cold and
dead, but his head lived in full rk the king life and light. At this solemn
moment G-- stifled e king in the oriental tale, flesh above and marble below.
The bishop seated himself upon a stone near by, The beginning of their con-
versation was ex abrupto:
"I congratulate you " he said, in a tone of renrimand. "At
least you did not
vote for the execution of the king.
The conventionist did not seem to notice the bitter emphasis placed upon the
words "at least." 'The smiles vanished from his face, and he rephed:
"Do not congratulate me too much, monsieur; I did vote for the destruction
of the tyrant."
And the tone of austerity confronted the tone of severity.
"What do you mean?" asked the bishop.
"I mean that man has a tyrant, Ignorance. I voted for the abolition of that
tyrant. That tyrant has begotten royalty, which is authoritv springing
from
the False, while science is authority springing from the True. Man should
he governed by science.'
"And conscience," added the bishop,
"The same thing: conscience is innate knowledge that we have."
Monsieur Bienvetm listened with some amazement to this language, novel
as
it was to him,
The conventionist went on:
"As to Louis XVI.; I said no. I do not beheve that I have the right
to kill a
man, but I feel it a duty to exterminate evil. I voted for the downfall of the
tyrant; that is to say, for the abolition of prostitution for woman, of slavery
for man, of night for the child. In voting for the republic I voted for
that:
I voted for fraternity, for harmony, for light. I assisted in casting down
prejudices and errors: their downfall brings light! We caused the old world to
fall; the old world, a vase of misery, reversed, becomes an urn of joy to the
human race."
"Joy alloyed," said the bishop.
"You might say joy troubled, and, at present, after this fatal return of the
blast which we call 1814, joy disc .sappeared. Alas I the work was imperfect I
admit: we demolished the ancient order of things physically. but ot entirely
in the idea. To destroy abuses is not enough (habits must be changed. The wind-
mill has gone, but the wind is there yet."
"You have demolished. To demolish may be useful, but I distrust a demolition
effected in anger!"
"Justice has its anger, Monsieur Bishop, and the wrath of justice is an element
of progress. Whatever may be said matters not, the French revolution is the
greatest step in advance taken by mankind since the advent of Christ; incom-
plete it may be, but it is sublime. It loosened all the secret bonds of society,
it softened all hearts, it calmed, appeased, enlightened; it made the waves of
civilisation to flow over the earth; it was good. The French revolution is the
consecration of humanity."
The bishop could not help murmuring: "Yes, '93!"
The conventionist raised himself in his chair with a solemnity well nigh mournful,
and as well as a dying person could exclaim, he exclaimed:
"Ah! you are there! '93! I was expecting that. A cloud had been forming for
fifteen hundred years; at the end of fifteen centuries it burst. You condemn the
thunderbolt."
Without perhaps acknowledging it to himself, the bishop felt that he had been
touched; however, he made the best of it, and rephed:
"The judge 'speaks in the name of justice, the priest in the name of pity, which
is only a more exalted justice. A thunderbolt should not be mistaken."
And he added, looking fixedly at the conventionist; "Louis XVII?"
The conventionist stretched out his hand and seized the bishop's arm.
"Louis XVII. Let us see! For whom do you weep? For the innocent child?
It is
well; I weep with you. For the royal child? I ask time to reflect. To my view the
brother of Cartouche, an innocent child, hung by a rope under his arms in the
Place de Grave till he died, for the sole crime of being the brother of Cartouche,
is no less sad sight than the'grandson of Louis XV., an innocent child, murdered
in the tower of the Temple for the sole crime of being the grandson of Louis XV."
"Monsieur," said the bishop, "I dislike this coupling of names."
"Cartouche or Louis XV.; for which are you concerned?"
There was a moment of silence; the bishop regretted almost that he had come, and
yet he felt strangely and inexplicably moved.
The conventionist resumed: "Oh, Monsieur' Priest! you do not love
the harshness
of the truth, but Christ loved it. He took a scourge and purged the temple; his
flashing whip was a rude speaker of truths; when he said 'Sinite parvulos,' he
made no distinctions among the little ones. He was not pained at coupling the
dauphin of Barabbas with the dauphin of Herod. Monsieur, innocence is its own
crown! Innocence has only to act to be noble! She is as august in rags as in the
fleur de lys."
"That is true," said the bishop, in a low tone.
"I repeat," continued the old man; "you have mentioned Louis XVII. Let us weep
together for all the innocent, for all the martyrs, for all the children, for
the low as well as for the high. I am one of 'hem, but then, as I have told you,
we must go further back than '93, and our tears must begin before Louis XVII. I
will weep for the children of kings with you, if you will weep with me for the
little ones of the people."
"I weep for all," said the bishop.
"Equally," exclaimed G--, "and if the balance inclines, let it be on the side of
the people; they have suffered longer."
There was silence again, broken at last by the old man. He raised himself upon
one elbow, took a pinch of his check between his thumb and his bent forefinger,
as one does mechanically in questioning and forming an opinion, and addressed
the bishop with a look full of all the energies of agony. It was almost an an-
athema.
"Yes, Monsieur, it is for a long time that the people have been suffering, and
then, sir, that is not all; why do you come to question me and to speak to me
of Louis XVII.? I do not know you. Since I have been in this region I have
lived within these walls alone, never passing beyond them, seeing none but
this child who helps me. Your name, has, it is true, reached me confusedly,
and I must say not very indistinctly, but that matters not. Adroit men have
so many ways of imposing upon this good simple people. For instance I did not
hear the sound of your carriage. You left it doubtless behind the thicket,
down there at the branching of the road. You have told me that you were the
bishop, but that tells me nothing about your moral personality. Now, then, I
repeat my question--Who are you? You are a bishop, a prince of the church,
one
of those men who are covered with gold, with insignia, and with wealth, who
have fat livings--the see of a--, fifteen thousand francs regular, ten thousand
francs contingent, total twenty-five thousand francs--who have kitchens, who
have retinues, who give good dinners, who cat moor-hens on Friday, who strut
about in your gaudy coach, like peacocks, with lackeys before and lackeys be-
hind, and who have palaces, ant who roll in your carriages in the name of
Jesus Christ who went bare-footed. You are a prelate; rents, palaces, horses,
valets, a good table, all the sensualities of life, you have these like all
the rest, and you enjoy them like all the rest; very well, but that says too
much or not enough; that does not enlighten me as to your intrinsic worth,
that which is peculiar to yourself, you who come probably with the claim of
bringing me wisdom. To whom am I speaking? Who are you?"
The bishop bowed his head and rephed, "Vermis sum."
"A worm of the earth in a carriage!" grumbled the old man.
It was the turn of the conventionist to be haughty, and of the bishop to be
humble.
The bishop rephed with mildness:
"Monsieur, be it so. But explain to me how my carriage, which is there a
few steps behind the trees, how my good table and the moor-fowl that I
eat on Friday, how my twenty-five thousand livres of income, how my
palace and my lackeys prove that pity is not a virtue, that kindness
is not a duty, and that '93 was not inexorable?"
The old man passed his hand across his forehead as if to dispel a cloud.
"Before answering you," said he, "I beg your pardon. I have done wrong,
monsieur; you are in my house, you are my guest. I owe you courtesy. You
are discussing my ideas; it is fitting that I confine myself to combating
your reasoning. Your riches and your enjoyments are advantages that I have
over you in the debate, but it is not in good taste to avail myself of them.
I promise you to use them no more."
"I thank you," said the bishop.
G-- went on:
"Let us get back to the explanation that you asked of me, Where were we?
What were you saying to me? that '93 was inexorable?"
"Inexorable, yes," said the bishop. "What do you think of Marat clapping
his hands at the guillotine?"
"What do you think of Bossuet chanting the Te Deum over the dragonnades?"
The answer was severe, but it reached its aim with the keenness of a dag-
ger. The bishop was staggered, no reply presented itsel f; but it shocked
him to hear Bossuet spoken of in that manner. The best men have their fet-
ishes, and sometimes they feel almost crushed at the little respect that
logic shows them.The conventionist began to gasp; the agonising asthma,
which mingles with the latest breath, made his yoke broken; nevertheless,
his soul yet appeared perfectly lucid in his eyes. He continued:
"Let us have a few more words here and there--I would like it. Outside of
the revolution which, taken as a whole, is an immense human affirmation,
'93, alas! is a reply. You think it inexorable, but the whole monarchy,
monsieur? Carrier is a bandit; but what name do you give to Montrevel?
Fouquier-Tainville is a wretch; but what is your opinion of Lamoignon
Baville? Maillard is frightful, but Saulx Tavannes, if you please? Le
pere Duchene is ferocious, but what epithet will you furnish me for le
pere Letel-her? Jourdan-Coupe-Tete is a monster, but less than the Mar-
quis of Louvols. Monsieur, monsieur, I lament Marie Antoinette, arch-
duchess and queen, but I lament also that poor Huguenot woman who, in
1685, under Louis le Grand, monsieur, while nursing her child, was
stripped to the waist and tied to a post, while her child was held be-
fore her; her breast swelled with milk, and her heart with anguish;
the little one, weak and famished, seeing the breast, cried with agony;
and the executioner said to the woman, to the nursing mother, 'Recant!'
giving her the choice between the death of Lerchild and the death of
her conscience. What say you to this Tantalus torture adapted to a
mother? Monsieur, forget not this; the French revolution had its rea-
sons. Its wrath will be pardoned by the future; its result is. a bet-
ter world. From its most terrible blows comes a caress for the.human
race. I must be brief. I must stop. I have too good a cause; and I am
dying."
And, ceasing to look at the bishop, the old man completed his idea in
these few tranquil words; .
"Yes, the brutalities of progress are called revolutions. When they are
over, this'is recognised: that the human race has been harshly treated,
but that-it has advanced."
The conventionist thought that he had borne down successively one after
the other all the interior intrenchments of the bishop. There was one
left, however, and from this, the last resource. of Monseigneur Bienvenu's
resistance, came forth these words, in which nearly all the rudeness of
the exordium reappeared.
"Progress ought to beheve in God. The good cannot have an impious
serv-
itor. An atheist is an evil leader of the human race."
The old representative of the people did not answer. He was trembling. He
looked up into the sky, and a tear gathered slowly in his eye. When the
lid was full, the tear rolled down his livid cheek, and be said, almost
stammering, low, and talking to himself, his eye lost in the depths:
"O thou! O ideal! thou alone dost exist!"
The bishop felt a kind of inexpressible emotion.
After brief silence, the old man raised his finger towards heaven, and
said:
"The infinite exists. It is there. If the infinite had no me, the me
would be its limit; it would not be the infinite; in other words, it
would not be. But it is. Then it has a me. This me of the infinite
is God."
The dying man pronounced these last words in a loud voice, and with a
shudder of ecstasy, as if he saw some one. When he ceased, his eyes
closed. The effort had exhausted him. It was evident that he had lived
through in one minute the few hours that remained to him. What he had
said had brought him near to him who is in death. The last moment was
at hand.
The bishop perceived it, time was pressing. He had come as a priest;
from extreme coldness he had passed by degrees to extreme emotion; he
looked upon those closed eyes, he took that old, wrinkled and icy hand,
and drew closer to the dying man.
This hour is the hour of God. Do you not think it would be a source of
regret, if we should have met in vain?"
The conventionist re-opened his eyes. Calmness was imprinted upon his
face, where there had been a cloud.
"Monsieur Bishop," said he, with a deliberation which perhaps
came still more from the dignity of his soul than from the ebb of his
strength, "I have passed my life in meditation, study, and contemplation.
I was sixty years old when my country called me, and ordered me to take
part in her affairs. I obeyed. There were abuses, I fought them; there
were tyrannies, I destroyed them; there were rights and principles, I
proclaimed and confessed them. The soil was invaded, I defended it;
France was threatened, I offered her my breast. I was not rich; I am
poor. I was one of the masters of the state, the vaults of the bank
were piled with specie, so that we had to strengthen the walls or they
would have fallen under the weight of gold and of silver; I dined in
the Rue de l'Arbre-see at twenty-two sous for the meal. I succoured the
oppressed, I solaced the suffering. True, I tore the drapery from the
altar; but it was to staunch the wounds of the country. I have always
supported the forward march of the human race towards the light, and I
have sometimes resisted a progress which was without pity. I have, on
occasion, protected my own adversaries, your friends. There is at Pet-
eghem in Flanders, at the very place where the Merovingian kings had
their summer palace, a monastery of Urbanists, the Abbey of Sainte
Claire in Beauheu, which I saved in 1793; I have done my duty accor-
ding to my strength, and the good that I could. After which I was
hunted, hounded, pursued, persecuted, slandered, railed at, spit upon,
cursed, proscribed. For many years now, with my white hairs, I have
perceived that many people believed they had a right to despise me;
to the poor, ignorant crowd I have the face of the damned, and I ac-
cept, hating no man myself, the isolation of hatred. Now I am eighty-
six years old; I am about to die. What have you come to ask of me?"
"Your benediction," said the bishop. And he fell upon his knees. When
the bishop raised his head, the face of the old man had become august.
He had expired.
The bishop went home deeply absorbed in thought. He spent the whole
night in prayer. The next day, some persons, emboldened by curiosity,
tried to talk with him of the conventionist C; he merely pointed to
Heaven.
From that moment he redoubled his tenderness and brotherly love for
the weak and the suffering.
Every allusion to "that old scoundrel G--," threw him into a strange
reverie. No one could say that the passage of that soul before his own,
and the reflex of that grand conscience upon his own had not had its
effect upon his approach to perfection.
This "pastoral visit" was of course an occasion for criticism by the
little local coteries of the place.
"Was the bed-side of such a man as that the place for a bishop? Of
course he could expect no conversion there. All these revolutionists
are backsliders. Then why go there? What had he been there to
see? He must have beevery curious to see a soul:carried away by
the devil."
One day a dowager, of that impertinent variety,who think themselves witty,
addressed this sally to him. "Monseigneur, people ask when your Grandeur
will have the red bonnet." "Oh! ho I that is a . high colour,"
rephed the
bishop. "Luckily those who despise it in a bonnet, venerate it in a hat."
XI. A QUALIFICATION
WE should be very much deceived if we supposed from this that Monseigneur
Bienvenu was "a philosopher bishop," or "a patriot cure." His meeting, which
we might almost call his communion with the conventionist left him in a
state of astonishment which rendered him still more charitable; that was
all.
Although Monsiegneur Bienvenu was anything but a politician, we ought here
perhaps to point out very briefly his position in relation to the events
of
the day, if we may suppose that Monseigneur Bienvenu ever thought of having
a position.
For this we must go back a few years.
Some time after the elevation of M. Myriel to the episcopacy, the emperor
made him a baron of the empire, at the same time with several other bishops.
The arrest of the pope took place, as we know, on the night of the 5th of
July, 18O9; on that occasion, M. Myriel was called by Napoleon to the synod
of the bishops of France and Italy, convoked at Paris. This synod was held
at Notre Dame, and commenced its sessions on the 15th of June, 1811, under
the presidency of Cardinal Pesch. M. Myriel was one of the ninety-five bishops
who were present. But he attended only one sitting, and three or four
private conferences. Bishop of a mountain diocese, living so near to nature,
in rusticity and privation, he seemed to bring among these eminent personages
ideas that changed the temperature of the synod. He returned very soon
to D--.
When asked about this sudden return, he answered: "I annoyed them. The free
air went in with me. I had the effect of an open door."
Another time, he said: "What would you have? Those prelates are princes. I am
only a poor peasant bishop."
The fact is, that he was disliked. Among other strange things, he had drop-
ped the remark one evening when he happened to be at the house of one of
his
colleagues of the highest rank: "What fine clocks! fine carpets! fine liveries!
This must be very uncomfortable. Oh! how unwilling I should be to have all
these superfluities crying for ever in my ears: 'There are people who hunger!
there are people who are cold! there are poor! there are poor!'"
We must say, by the way, that the hatred of luxury is not an intelligent
hatred. It implies a hatred of the arts. Nevertheless, among churchmen,
beyond their rites and ceremonies, luxury is a crime. It seems to disclose
habits which are not truly charitable. A wealthy priest is a contradiction.
He ought to keep himself near the poor. But, who can be in contact contin-
ually, by night as well as day, with all distresses, all misfortunes, all
privations, without taking upon himself a little of that holy poverty,
like the dust of a journey? Can you imagine a man near a fire, who does
not feel warm? Can you imagine a labourer working constantly at a furnace,
who has not a hair burned, nor a nail blackened, nor a drop of sweat, nor
a speck of ashes on his face? The first proof of charity in a priest, and
especially a bishop, is poverty.
That is doubtlesss the view which the Bishop of D-- took of it. It must
not be thought, however, that he took part in the delicate matters which
would be called "the ideas of the age." He had little to do with the the-
ological quarrels of the moment, and kept his peace on questions where the
church and the state were compromised; but if he had been pressed, he would
have been found rather Ultramontane than Gallican. As we are drawing a por-
trait, and can make no concealment, we are compelled to add that he was
very cool. towards Napoleon in the decline of his power. After 1813, he
acquiesced in, or applauded all the hostile manifestations. He refused to
see him as he passed on his return from the island of Elba, and declined
to order in his diocese public prayers for the emperor during the Hundred
Days.
Besides his sister, Mademoiselle Baptistine, he had two brothers; one, a
general, the other, a prefect. He wrote occasionally to both. He felt a
coolness towards the first, because, being in a command in Provence, at
the time of the landing at Cannes, the general placed hithself at the head
of twelve hundred men, and pursued the emperor as if he wished to let him
escape. His correspondence was more affectionate with the other brother,
the ex-prefect, a brave and worthy man, who lived in retirement at Paris
in the Rue Cassette.
Even Monseigneur Bienvenu then had his hour of party spirit, his hour of
bitterness, his clouds. The shadow of the passions of the moment passed
over this great and gentle spirit in its occupation with eternal things.
Certainly, such a man deserved to escape political opinions. Let no one
misunderstand our idea; we do not confound what are called "political
opinions" with that grand aspiration after progress, with that sublime
patriotic, democratic, and human faith, which, in our days, should be the
very foundation of all generous intelligence. Without entering into ques-
tions which have only an indirect bearing upon the subject of this book,
we simply say: it would have been well if Monseigneur Bienvenu had not been
a royalist, and if his eyes had never been turned for a single instant
from that serene contemplation where, steadily shining, above the fictions
and the hatreds of this world, above the stormy ebb and flow of human af-
fairs are seen those three pure luminaries, Truth, Justice, and Charity.
Although we hold that it was not for a political function that God created
Monseigneur Bienvenu, we could have understood and admired a protest in
the name of right and liberty, a fierce opposition, a perilous and just
resistance to Napoleon when he was all-powerful. But what is pleasing to
us towards those who are rising, is less pleasing towards those who are
falling. We do not admire the combat when there is no danger; and in
any case, the combatants of the first hour have alone the right to be the
exterminators in the last. He who has not been a determined accuser during
prosperity, ought to hold his peace in the presence of adversity. He only
who denounces the success at one time has a right to proclaim the justice
of the downfall. As for ourselves, when providence intervened and struck
the blow, we took no part; 1812 began to disarm us. In 1813, the cowardly
breach of silence on the part of that taciturn Corps Legislatif, emboldened
by catastrophe, was worthy only of indignation, and it was base to applaud
it; in 1814, from those traitorous marshals, from that senate passing from
one baseness to another, insulting where they had deified, from that idol-
atry recoiling and spitting upon its idol, it was a duty to turn away in
disgust; in 1815, when the air was filled with the final disasters, when
France felt the thrill of their sinister approach, when Waterloo could
al-
ready be dimly perceived opening before Napoleon, the sorrowful acclama-
tions of the army and of the people to the condemned of destiny, were no
subjects for laughter; and making every reservation as to the despot, a
heart like that of the Bishop of A-- ought not perhaps to have refused to
see what was august and touching, on the brink of the abyss, in the last
embrace of a great nation and a great man.
To conclude: he was always and in everything just, true, equitable, intel-
ligent, humble, and worthy, beneficent, and benevolent, which is another
beneficence. He was a priest, a sage, and a man. We must say even that in
those political opinions which we have been criticising, and which we are
disposed to judge almost severely, he was tolerant and yielding, perhaps
more than we, who now speak. The doorkeeper of the City Hall had been
placed there by the emperor. He was an old subaltern officer of the Old
Guard, a legionary of Austerlitz, and as staunch a Bonapartist as the ea-
gle. This poor fellow sometimes thoughtlessly allowed words to escape him
which the law at that time defined as seditious matters. Since the profile
of the emperor had disappeared front the Legion of Honour, he had never
worn his badge, as he said, that he might not be compelled to bear his
cross. In his devotion he had himself moved the imperial effigy from the
cross that Napoleon had given him; it left a hole, and he would put nothing
in its place. "Better die," said he, "than wear the three toads over my heart."
He was always railing loudly at Louis XVIII. "Old gouty-foot with his English
spatterdashes!" he would say, "let him go to Prussia with his goat beard,"
happy to unite in the same imprecation the two things the most detested,
Prussia and England. He said so much that I lost his place. There he was
without bread, and in the street with h wife and children. The bishop sent
for him, scolded him a littl and made him doorkeeper in the cathedral.
In nine years, by dint of holy works and gentle manners, Monseigneur
Bienvenu had filled the City of D-- with a kind of tender and filial ven-
eration. Even his conduct towards Napoleon had been accepted and pardoned
in silence by the people, a good, weak flock, who adored their emperor,
but who loved their bishop.
XII. SOLITUDE OF MONSEIGNEUR DIENVENU
THERE is almost always a squad of young abbes about a bishop as there is
a
flock of young officers about a general. They are what the charming St.
Francis de Sales somewhere calls "white-billed priests." Every profession
has its aspirants who make up the cortege of those who are at the summit.
No power is without its worshippers, no fortune without its court. The
seekers of the future revolve about the splendid present. Every capital,
like every general, has its staff. Every bishop of influence has his patrol
of undergraduates, cherubs who go the rounds and keep order in the episcopal
palace, and who mount guard over monseigneur's smile. To please a bishop is
a foot in the stirrup for a sub-deacon. One must make his own way; the apos-
tolate never disdains the canonicate.
And as there are elsewhere rich coronets so there are in the church rich
mitres. There are bishops who stand well at court, rich, well endowed,
adroit, accepted of the world, knowing how to pray, doubtless, but know-
ing also how to ask favours; making themselves without scruple the via-
duct of advancement for a whole diocese; bonds of union between the sac-
risty and diplomacy; rather abbes than priests, prelates rather than bish-
ops. Lucky are they who can get near them. Men of influence as they are,
they rain about them, on their families and favourites, and upon all of
these young men who please them, fat parishes, livings, arch-deaconates,
almonries, and cathedral functions--steps towards episcopal dignities.
In advancing themselves they advance their satellites; it is a whole solar-
system in motion. The rays of their glory empurple their suite. Their pros-
perity scatters its crumbs to those who are behind' the scenes, in the
shape of nice little promotions. The larger the diocese of the patron,
the larger the curacy for the favourite. And then there is Rome. A
bishop who can become an archbishop, an archbishop who can become
a cardinal, leads you to the conclave; you enter into the rota, you have
the pallium, you are auditor, you are chamberlain,: you are monseigneur,
and from grandeur to eminence there is only a step, and between.eminence
and holiness there is nothing but the whiff of a ballot. Every cowl may
dream of the tiara. The priest is, in our days, the only man who can reg-
ularly become a king; and what a king! the supreme king. So, what a nur-
sery of aspirations is a seminary. How many blushing chorus boys, how
many young abbes, have the ambitious dairymaid's pail of milk on their
heads! Who knows how easily ambition disguises itself under the name
of a calling, possibly in good faith, and deceiving itself, saint that
it is!
Monseigneur Bienvenu, an humble, poor, private person, was not count-
ed among the rich mitres. This was plain from the entire absence of
young priests about him. We have seen that at Paris "he did not take."
No glorious future dreamed of alighting upon this solitary old man.
No young ambition was foolish enough to ripen in his shadow. His can-
ons and his grand-vicars were good old men, rather common like himself,
and like him immured in that diocese from which there was no road to
promotion, and they resembled their bishop, with this difference,
that they were finished, and he was perfected. The impossibility of
getting on under Monseigneur Bienvenu was so plain, that as soon as
they were out of the seminary, the young men ordained by him procured
recommendations to the Archbishop of Aix or of Auch, and went immedi-
ately to present them. For, we repeat, men like advancement. A saint
who is addicted to abnegation is a dangerous neighbour; he is very
likely to communicate to you by contagion an incurable poverty, an
anchylosis of the articulations necessary to advancement; and, in fact,
more renunciation than you would like; and men flee from this conta-
gious virtue. Hence the isolation of Monseigneur Bienvenu. We live in
a sad society. Succeed; that is the advice which falls drop by drop,
from the overhanging corruption.
We may say, by the way, that success is a hideous thing. Its counterfeit
of merit deceives men. To the mass, success has almost the same appear-
ance as supremacy. Success, that pretender to talent; has a dupe.--his-
tory: Juvenal and Tacitus only reject it. In our days, a philosophy which
is almost an official has entered into its service, wears its livery, and
waits in its antechamber. Success; that is the theory. Prosperity sup-
poses capacity. Win in the lottery, and you are an able man. The victor
is venerated. To be born with a caul is everything. Have but luck, and
you will have the rest; be fortunate, and you will be thought great. Beyond
the five or six great exceptions, which are the wonder of their age, contem-
porary admiration is nothing but shortsightedness. Gilt is gold. To be a chance
corner is no drawback, provided you have improved your chances. The com-
mon herd is an old Narcissus, who adores himself, and who applauds the
com-
mon. That mighty genius, by which one becomes a Moses, an )Eschylus, a
Dante, a Michael Angelo, or a Napoleon, the multitude assigns at once and
by acclamation to whoever succeeds in his object, whatever it may be. Let
a notary rise to be a deputy; let a sham Corneille write Tiridate; let a eunuch
come into the possession of a harem; let a military Prudhomme accidentally
win the decisive battle of an epoch; let an apothecary invent pasteboard
soles
for army shoes, and lay up, by selling this pasteboard instead of leather
for
the army of the Sambre-et-Meuse, four hundred thousand livres in the funds;
let a pack-pedlar espouse usury and bring her to bed of seven or eight
millions,
of which he is the father and she the mother; let a preacher become a bishop
by talking through his nose; let the steward of a good house become so rich on
leaving service that he is made Minister of Finance;--men call that Genius,
just as they call the face of Mousqueton, Beauty, and. the bearing of Claude,
Majesty. They confound the radiance of the stars of heaven with the radiations
which a duck's foot leaves in the mud.
XIII. WHAT HE BEheVED
WE need not examine the Bishop of D-- from an orthodox point of view. Before
such a soul, we feel only in the humour of respect. The conscience of an upright
man should be taken for granted. Moreover, given certain natures, and we admit
the possible development of all the beauties of human virtues in a faith dif-
ferent from our own.
What he thought of this dogma or that mystery, are secrets of the interior
faith known only in the tomb where souls enter stripped of all externals. But
we are sure that religious difficulties never resulted with him in hypocrisy.
No corruption is possible with the diamond. He beheved as much as he could.
Credo in Patrem, he often exclaimed; and, besides, he derived from his good
deeds that measure of satisfaction which meets the demands of conscience,
and which says in a low voice, "thou art with God."
We think it our duty to notice that, outside of and, so to say, beyond his
faith, the bishop had an excess of love. It is on that account, quia multum
amavit, that he was deemed vulnerable by "serious men." "sober
persons,"
and "reasonable people;" favourite phrases in our sad world, where egotism
receives its key-note from pedantry. What was this excess of love? It was
a
serene benevolence, overflowing men, as we have already indicated, and,
on
occasion, extending to inanimate things.He lived without disdain. He was
indul-
gent to God's creation. Every man, even the best, has some inconsiderate
severity which he holds in reserve for animals. The Bishop of a-- had none
of
this severity peculiar to most priests. He did not go as far as the Brahmin,
but he appeared to have pondered over these words of Ecclesiastes: "who
knows whither goeth the spirit of the beast?" Ugliness of aspect, monstro-
sities of instinct, did not trouble or irritate him. He was moved and afflicted
by it. He seemed to be thoughtfully seeking, beyond the apparent life,
for its
cause, its explanation, or its excuse. He seemed at times to ask changes of
God. He examined without passion, and with the eye of a linguist decyphering
a palimpsest, the portion of chaos which there is yet in nature. These
reveries
sometimes drew from him strange words. One morning, he was in his garden,
and thought himself alone; but his sister was walking behind him; all at
once
he stopped and looked at something on the ground: it was a large, black,
hairy, horrible spider. His sister heard him say:
"Poor thing! it is not his fault."
Why not relate this almost divine childlikeness of goodness? Puerilities,
perhaps, but these sublime puerilities were those of St. Francis of Assisi
and of Marcus Aurelius. One day he received a sprain rather than crush an ant.
So lived this upright man. Sometimes he went to sleep in his garden, and then
there was nothing more venerable.
Monseigneur Bienvenu had been formerly, according to the ac-counts of his youth
and even of his early manhood, a passionate, perhaps a violent, man. His univer-
sal tenderness was less an instinct of nature than the result of a strong con-
viction filtered through life into his heart, slowly dropping in upon him,
thought by thought; for a character, as well as a rock, may be worn into by
drops of water. Such marks are ineffaceable; such formations are indestructible.
In 1815, we think we have already said, he attained his seventy-sixth year, but
he did not appear to be more than sixty. He was not tall; he was somewhat fleshy,
and frequently took long walks that he might not become more so; he had a firm
step, and was but little bowed; a circumstance from which we do not claim to
draw any conclusion.--Gregory XVI., at eighty years, was erect and smiling.
which
did not prevent him from being a bad bishop. Monseigneur Bienvenu had what peo-
ple call "a fine head," but so benevolent that you forgot that
it was fine.
When be talked with that infantile gaiety that was one of graces, and of which
we have already spoken, all felt at ease in his presence, and from his
whole
person joy seemed to radiate, His ruddy and fresh complexion, and his white
teeth,
all of which were well preserved, and which he showed when he laughed,
gave him
that open and easy air which makes us say of a man: he is a good fellow;
and of
an old man: he is a good man. This was, we remember, the effect he produced on
Napoleon. At the first view, and to one who saw him for the first time, he was
nothing more than a good man. But if one spent a few hours with him, and saw
him in a thoughtful mood, little by little the good man became transfigured, and
became ineffably imposing; his large and serious forehead, rendered. noble by his
white hair, became noble also by meditation; majesty was developed from this good-
ness, yet the radiance of goodness remained; and one felt something of the emotion
that he would experience in seeing a smiling angel slowly spread his wings without
ceasing to smile. Respect, unutterable respect, penetrated you by degrees, and
made its way to your heart; and you felt that you had before you one of those
strong, tried, and indulgent souls, where the thought is so great that it cannot
be other than gentle.
As we have seen, prayer, celebration of the religious offices, alms, consoling
the afflicted, the cultivation of a little piece of ground, fraternity, frugality,
self-sacrifice, confidence, study, and work, filled up each day of his life. Fill-
ed up is exactly the word and in fact, the Bishop's day was full to the brim with
good thoughts, good words, and good actions. Nevertheless it was not complete if
cold or rainy weather prevented his passing an hour or two in the evening, when
the two women had retired, in his garden before going to sleep. It seemed as if
it were a sort of rite with him, to prepare himself for sleep by meditating in
presence of the great spectacle of the starry firmament. Sometimes at a late hour
of the night, if the two women were awake, they would hear him slowly promenading
the walks. He was there alone with himself, collected, tranquil, adoring, compar-
ing the serenity of his heart with the serenity of the skies, moved in the dark-
ness by the visible splendours of the constellations, and the invisible splendour
of God, opening his soul to the thoughts which fall from the Unknown. In such mo-
ments, offering up his heart at the hour when the flowers of night inhale their
perfume, lighted like a lamp in the centre of the starry night, expanding his soul
in ecstasy in the midst of the universal radiance of creation, he could not himself
perhaps have told what was passing in his own mind; he felt something depart from
him, and something descend upon him; mysterious interchanges of the depths of the
soul with the depths of the universe.
He contemplated the grandeur, and the presence of God; the eternity of the future,
strange mystery; the eternity of the past, mystery yet more strange; all the infin-
ities deep-hidden in every direction about him; and, without essaying to comprehend
the incomprehensible, he saw it. He did not study God; he was dazzled by the thought.
He reflected, upon these magnificent unions of atoms, which give visible forms to
Nature, revealing forces in establishing them, creating individualities in unity,
proportions in extension, the innumerable in the infinite, and through light produ-
cing beauty. These unions are forming and 'dissolving continually; thence life
and death.
He would sit upon a wooden bench leaning against a broken trellis. and look at the
stars through the irregular outlines of his fruit trees. This quarter of an acre of
ground, so poorly cultivated; So cumbered with shed and ruins, was dear
to him,
and satisfied him.
What was more needed by this old man who divided the leisure hours of his
life,
where he bad so little leisure, between gardenint in the day time, and contempla-
tion at night? Was not this narrow inclosure, with the sky for a background,
enough
to enable him to adore God in his most beautiful as well as in his most sublime
works? Indeed, is not that all, and what more can be desired? A little garden to
walk, and immensity to reflect upon. At his feet something to cultivate and gather;
above his head something to study an meditate upon; a few flowers on the earth, and
all the stars the sky.
XIV. WHAT HE THOUGHT
A FINAL WORD.
As these details may, particularly hi the times in which we live, and to use an
expression now in fashion,--give the Bishop of D--:a certain "pantheistic"
physiognomy, and give rise to the behef, whether to his blame or to his praise,
that he had one of those personal philosophies peculiar to our age, which some-
times spring up in solitary minds, and gather materials and grow until they
replace religion, we insist upon it that no one who knew Monseigneur Bienvenu
would have felt justified in any such idea. What enlightened this man was the
heart. His wisdom was formed from the light that came thence.
He had no systems; but many deeds. Abstruse speculations are full of headaches;
nothing indicates that he would risk his mind in mvsticisms. The apostle may be
bold, but the bishop should be timid. He would probably have scrupled to
sound
too deeply certain problems, reserved in some sort for grand and terrible minds.
There is a sacred horror in the approaches to mysticism; sombre openings are
yawning there, but something tells you, as you near the brink --enter not. Woe
to him who does!
There are geniuses who, in the fathomless depths of abstraction and pure
specu-
lation--situated, so to say, above all dogmas, present their ideas to God. Their
prayer audaciously offers a discussion. Their worship is questioning. This is
direct religion, full of anxiety and of responsibility for him who would scale
its walls.
Human thought has no limit. At its risk and peril, it analyses and dissects its
own fascination. We could almost say that, by a sort of splendid reaction,
it
fascinates nature; the mysterious world which surrounds us returns what it re-
ceives; it is probable that the contemplators are contemplated. However that may
be, there are men on the earth--if they are nothing more--who distinctly
perceive
the heights of the absolute in the horizon of their contemplation, and who have
the terrible vision of the infinite mountain. Monseigneur Bienvenu was not one of
those men; Monseigneur Bienvenu was not a genius. He would have dreaded those sub-
limities from which some very great men even, like Swedenborg and Pascal, have
glided into insanity. Certainly. these tremendous reveries have their moral use;
and by these arduous routes there is an approach to ideal perfection. But for his
part. he took the straight road, which is short--the Gospel.
He did not attempt to make his robe assume the folds of Elijah's mantle; he cast
no ray of the future upon the dark scroll of events; he sought not to condense
into a flame the glimmer of things; he had nothing of the prophet and nothing of
the magician. His humble soul loved; that was all.
That he raised his prayer to a superhuman aspiration. is probable; but one can no
more pray too much than hive to.much; and, if it was a heresy to pray beyond the
written form, St. Theresa and St. Jerome were heretics.
He inclined towards the distressed and the repentant. The universe appeared to him
like a vast disease; he perceived fever every-where, he auscultated suffering ev-
erywhere, and, without essaj ing to solve the enigma, he endeavoured to staunch
the wound. The formidable spectacle of created things developed a tenderness in
him; he was always busy in finding for himself, and inspiring others with the best
way of sympathising and solacing; the whole world was to this good and
rare priest
a permanent subject of sadness seeking to be consoled.
There are men who labour for the extraction of gold; he worked for the extraction
of pity. The misery of the universe was his mine. Grief everywhere was only an oc-
casion for good always. Love one another; he declared that to be complete; he de-
sired nothing more. and it was his whole doctrine. One day, this man, who counted
himself "a philosopher," this senator before mentioned, said
to the bishop: "See
now, what the world shows; each fighting against all others; the strongest man is
the best man. Your love one another is a stupidity." "Well," rephed Monseigneur Bien-
venu, without discussion, "if it be a stupidity, the soul ought to shut itself up
in it, Mr the pearl in tlw oyster." And he shut himself up in a, he lived in if he
was satisfied absolutely with it; laying aside the mysterious questions which at-
tract and which dishearten, the unfathomable depths of abstraction, the precipices
of metaphysics--all those profundities, to the apostle converging. upon God, to
the atheist upon. annihilation; destiny, good and evil, the war of being against
being, the conscience of man, the thought-like dreams of the animal, the trans-
formation of death, the recapitulation of existences contained in the tomb,
the
incomprehensible engrafting of successive affections upon the enduring me, the
essence, the substance, the Nothing and the Something, the soul, nature, liberty,
necessity; difficult problems, sinister depths, towards which are drawn the gigantic
archangels of the human race; fearful abyss, that Lucretius, Manou, St. Paul, and
Dante contemplate with that flaming eye which seems, looking steadfastly
into the
infinite, to enkindle the very stars.
Monsieur Bienvenu was simply a man who accepted these mysterious questions
with-
out examining them, without agitating them. and without troubling his own mind
with them; and who had in his soul a deep respect for the mystery which
envel-
oped them.
BOOK SECOND
THE FALL
I. THE NIGHT OF A DAY'S TRAMP
AN hour before sunset, on the evening of a day in the beginning of October,
1815, a man travelling afoot entered the little town of D----. The few persons
who at the time were at their windows or their doors, regarded this traveller
with a sort of distrust. It would have been hard to find a passer-by more
wretched in appearance. He was a man of middle height, stout and hardy,
in
the strength of maturity; he might have been forty-six seven. A slouched
lea-
ther cap half hid his face, bronzed by the sun and wind, and dripping with
sweat. His shaggy breast was seen through the coarse yellow shirt which
at the neck was fastened by a small silver anchor; he wore a cravat twisted
like a rope; coarse blue trousers, worn and shabby, white on one knee, and
with holes in the other; an old, ragged grey blouse, patched on one side
with a piece of green cloth sewed with twine: upon his back was a well-filled
knapsack, strongly buckled and quite new. In his hand he carried an enormous
knotted stick: his stockingless feet were in hobnailed shoes; his hair was
cropped and his beard long.
The sweat, the heat, his long walk, and the dust, added an indescribable
meanness to his tattered appearance.
His hair was shorn, but bristly. for it had begun to grow a little, and
seemingly had not been cut for some time. Nobody knew him; he was evident-
ly a traveller. Whence had he come? From the south--perhaps from the sea;
for he was making his entrance into I)--by the same road by which, seven months
before, the Emperor Napoleon went from Cannes to Paris. This man must have
walked all day long; for he appeared very weary. Some women of the old city
which is at the lower part of the town, had seen him stop under the trees of
the boulevard Gassendi, and drink at the fountain which is at the end of the
promenade. He must have been very thirsty, for some children who followed him,
saw him stop not two hundred steps further on and drink again at the fountain
in the market-place.
When he reached the corner of the Rue Poichevert he turned to the left and
went towards the mayor's office. He went in, and a quarter of an hour after-
wards he came out.
The man raised his cap humbly and saluted a gendarme who was seated near
the door, upon the stone bench which General Drouot mounted on the fourth
of March, to read to the terrified inhabitants of D---the proclamaion of
the
Golfe Juan.
Without returning his salutation, the gendarme looked at him attentively,
watched him for some distance, and then went into the city hall.
There was then is D--, a good inn called La Croix de Colbas; its host was
named Jacquin Labarre, a man held in. some consideration in the town on ac-
count of his relationship with another Labarre, who kept an inn at Grenoble
called Trois Dauphins, and who had served in the Guides. At the time of the
landing of the emperor there had been much noise in the country about this
inn of the Trois Dauphins. It was said that General Bertrand, disguised as
a wagoner, had made frequent journeys thither in the month of January, and
that he had distributed crosses of honour to the soldiers, and handfuls of
Napoleons to the country-folks. The truth is, that the emperor when he ent-
ered Grenoble, refused to take up his quarters at the prefecture, saying to
the monsieur, after thanking him, "I am going to the house of a brave man,
with whom I am acquainted," and he went to the Trois Dauphins. This glory
of Labarre of the Trois Dauphins was reflected twenty-five miles to Labarre
of the Croix de Colbas. It was a common saying in the town: "He is the
cousin of the Grenoble man!"
The traveller turned his steps towards this inn, which was the best in the
place, and went at once into the kitchen, which opened out of the street.
All the ranges were fuming, and a great fire was burning briskly in the
chimney-place. Mine host, who was at the same time head cook, was going
from the fire-place to the saucepans, very busy superintending an excellent
dinner for some wagoners who were laughing and talking noisily in the next
room. Whoever has travelled knows that nobody lives better than wagoners.
A fat marmot, flanked by white partridges and goose, was turning on a long
spit before the fire; upon the ranges were cooking two large carps from
Lake
Lauzet, and a trout from Lake Alloz.
The host, hearing the door open, and a newcomer enter, said, without rais-
ing his eyes from his ranges--
"What will monsieur have?"
"Something to eat and lodging."
"Nothing more easy," said mine host, but on turning his head and taking an
observation of the traveller, he added, "for pay."
The man drew from his pocket a large leather purse, and answered,
"I have money."
"Then," said mine host, "I am at your service."
The man put his purse back into his pocket, took off his knapsack and put
it down hard by the door, and holding his stick in his hand, sat down on
a low stool by the fire, D--- being in the mountains, the evenings of
October are cold there.
However, as the host passed backwards and forwards, he kept a careful eye
on the traveller.
"Is dinner almost ready?" said the man.
"Directly," said mine host.
While the new-comer was warming himself, with his back turned, the worthy
innkeeper, Jacquin Labarre, took a pencil from his pocket, and then tore
off the corner of an old paper which he pulled from a little table near
the window. On the margin he wrote a line or two, folded it, and handed
the scrap of paper to a child, who appeared to serve him as Tacquey and
scullion at the same time. The innkeeper whispered a word to the boy and
he ran off in the direction of the mayor's office.
The traveller saw nothing of this,
He asked a second time: "Is dinner ready?"
"Yes; in a few moments," said the host.
The boy came back with the paper. The host unfolded it hurriedly as one
who is expecting an answer. He seemed to read with attention, then
throwing his head on one side, thought for a moment. Then he took a step
towards the traveller, who seemed drowned in troublous thought.
"Monsieur? said he, "I cannot receive you?
The traveller half rose from his seat.
"Why? Are you afraid I shall not pay you, or do you want me to pay in
advance? I have money, I tell you."
"It is not that."
"What then?"
"You have money--"
"Yes," said the man.
"And I," said the host; "I have no room."
"Well, put me in the stable," quietly rephed the man.
"I cannot."
"Why?"
"Because the horses take all the room."
"Well? responded the man, "a corner in the pro; a truss of straw: we will
see about that after dinner."
"I cannot give you any dinner."
This declaration, made in a measured but firm tone, appeared serious to
the traveller. He got up.
"Ah, bah! but I am dying with hunger. I have walked since sunrise;
I
have travelled twelve leagues. I will pay, and I want something to eat."
"I have nothing," said the host.
The man burst into a laugh, and turned towards the fire-place and the
ranges.
"Nothing.l and all that?"
"All that is engaged."
"By whom?"
"By those persons, the wagoners."
"How many are there of them?"
"Twelve."
"There is enough there for twenty!'
"They have engaged and paid for it all in advance."
The man sat down again and said, without raising his voice: "I am
at an
inn. I am hungry, and I shall stay?'
The host bent down his ear, and said in a voice which made him tremble:
"Go away!"
At these words the traveller, who was bent over, poking tome embers in
the fire with the iron-shod end of his stick, turned suddenly around,
and opened his mouth, as if to reply, when the host, looking steadily at
him, added in the same low tone: "Stop, no More of that. Shall I tell
you your name? your name is Jean Valjean, now shall I tell you who you
are? When I saw you enter, I suspected something. I sent to the mayor's
office, and here is the reply. Can you read?" So saying, he held to-
wards him the open paper, which had just come from the mayor. The man
cast a look upon it; the inn-keeper, after a short silence, said: "It
is my custom to be polite to all: Go!"
The man bowed his bead, picked up his knapsack, and went out.
He took the principal street; be walked at random, slinking near the
houses like a sad and humiliated man; he did not once turn around. If
he had turned, he would have seen the innkeeper of the Croix do Collins,
standing in his doorway with all his guests, and the passers-by gathered
about him, speaking excitedly, and pointing him out; and from the looks
of fear and distrust which were exchanged, he would have guessed that
before long his arrival would be the talk of the whole town.
He saw nothing of all this: people overwhelmed with trouble do not look
behind; they know only too well that misfortune follows them.
He walked along in this way some time, going by chance down. streets un-
known to him, and forgetting fatigue, as is the case in sorrow. Suddenly
he felt a pang of hunger; night was at hand, and be looked around to see
if he could not discover a lodging. '
The good inn was closed against him: he sought some humble tavern, some
poor cellar.
Just then a light shone at the end of the street; he saw a pine branch,
hanging by an iron bracket, against the white sky of the twilight. He
went thither.
It was a tavern in the Rue Chaffaut.
The traveller stopped a moment and looked in at the little window upon the
low hall of the tavern, lighted by a small lamp upon a table, and a great
fire in the chimney-place. Some men were drinking and the host was warming
himself; an iron-pot hung over the fire seething in the blaze.
Two doors lead into this tavern, which is also a sort of eating-house--one
from the street, the other from a small court full of rubbish.
The traveller did not dare to enter by the street door; he slipped into the
court, stopped again, then timidly raised the latch, and pushed open the
door.
"Who is it?" said the host.
"One who wants supper and a bed."
"All right: here you can sup and sleep."
He went in, all the men who were drinking turned towards him; the lamp shin-
ing on one side of his face, the firelight on the other, they examined him
for some time as he was taking his knapsack.
The host said to him: "There is the fire; the supper is cooking in the pot;
come and warm yourself. comrade."
He seated himself near the fireplace and stretched his feet out towards
the
fire, half dead with fatigue: an inviting odour came from the pot. All that
could be seen of his face under his. slouched cap assumed a vague appearance
of comfort, which tempered the sorrowful aspect given him by long-continued
suffering. His profile was strong, energetic, and sad; a physiognomy strangely
marked: at first it appeared humble, but it soon became severe. His eye shone
beneath his eyebrows like a fire beneath a thicket.
However, one of the men at the table was a fisherman who had put up his horse
at the stable of labarre's inn before entering the tavern of the Rue de Chat-
iaut. It so happened that he had met, that same morning, this suspicious-look-
ing stranger travelling between Bras d'Asse and--I forget the place. I think it
is Escoublon. Now, on meeting him, the man, who seemed already very much
fatigued, had asked him to take him on behind, to which the fisherman responded
only by doubling his pace. The fisherman, half an hour before, had been one
of the throng about Jacquin Labarre, and had himself related his unpleasant
meet-
ing with him to the people of the Croix de Colbas. He beckoned to the tavern-
keeper to come to him, which he did. They exchanged a few words in a low voice;
the traveller bad again relapsed into thought.
The tavern-keeper returned to the fire, and laying his hand roughly on his
shoulder, said harshly:
"You are going to clear out from here!"
The stranger turned round and said mildly,
"Ah! Do you know?"
"Yes."
"They sent me away from the other inn."
"And we turn you out of this."
"Where would you have me go?"
"Somewhere else."
The man took up his stick and knapsack,. and went off. As he went out, some
children who had followed him from the Croix dcColbas, and seemed to be waiting
for him, threw stones at him. He turned angrily and threatened them with his
stick, and they scattered like a flock of birds.
He passed the prison: an iron chain hung from the door attached to a bell. He
rang.
The grating opened.
"Monsieur Turnkey," said he, taking off his cap respectfully, "will you open
and let me stay here tonight?"
A voice answered:
"A prison is not a tavern: get yourself arrested and we will open."
The grating closed.
He went into a small street where there are many gardens; some of them are
enclosed only by hedges, which enliven the street. Among them he saw a pretty
little one-story house, where there was a light in the window. He looked
in
as he had done at the tavern. It was a large whitewashed room, with a bed
draped with calico, and a cradle in the corner, some wooden chairs, and a
double-barrelled gun hung against the wall. A table was set in the centre of
the room; a brass lamp lighted the coarse white table-cloth; a tin mug full
of wine shone like silver, and the brown soup-dish was smoking. At this table
sat a man about forty years old, with a joyous, open countenance, who was
trotting a little child upon his knee. Near by him a young woman was suck-
ling another child; the father was laughing, the child was laughing, and the
mother was smiling.
The traveller remained a moment contemplating this sweet and touching scene.
What were his thoughts? He only could have told: probably he thought that this
happy home would be hospitable, and that where he beheld so much happiness,
he might perhaps find a little pity.
He rapped faintly on the window.
No one heard him.
He rapped a second time.
He heard the woman say, "Husband, I think I hear some one rap."
'No," rephed the husband.
He rapped a third time. The husband got up, took the lamp, and opened the
door.
He was a tall man, half peasant, hall mechanic. He wore a large leather apron
that reached to his left shoulder, and formed a pocketcontaining a hammer, a
red handkerchief, a powder-horn, and all sorts of things which the girdle
held up. He turned his head; his shirt, wide and open, showed his bull-like
throat, white and naked; he had thick brows, enormous black whiskers, and
prominent eyes; the lower part of the face was covered, and had withal that
air of being at home which is quite indescribable.
"Monsieur," said the traveller, "I beg your pardon; for pay can you give me
a plate of soup and a corner of the shed in your garden to sleep in? Tell
me; can you, for pay?"
"Who are you?" demanded the master of the house.
The man rephed: "I have come from Puy-Moisson; I have walked all day;
I
have come twelve leagues. Can you, if I pay?"
"I wouldn't refuse to lodge any proper person who would pay," said the pea-
sant; "but why do you not go to the inn?"
"There is no room."
"Bah! That is not possible. It is neither a fair nor a market-day.
Have you been to Labarre's house?" ayes!,
"Well?"
The traveller rephed hesitatingly: "I don't know; he didn't take me."
"Have you been to that place in the Rue Chaffaut?"
The embarrassment of the stranger increased; he stammered: "They didn't take
me either."
The peasant's face assumed an expression of distrust: he looked over the new-
comer from head to foot, and suddenly exclaimed, with a sort of shudder: "Are
you the man!"
He looked again at the stranger, stepped back, put the lamp on the table, and
took down his gun.
His wife, on hearing the words, "are you the man," started up,
and, clasping
her two children, precipitately took refuge behind her husband; she looked at
the stranger with affright, her neck bare, her eyes dilated, murmuring in a
low tone: "Tso marauder!"
All this happened in less time than it takes to read it; after examining the
man for a moment, as one would a viper, the man advanced to the door and said:
"Get out!"
"For pity's sake, a glass of water," said the man.
"A gun shot," said the peasant, and then he closed the door violently, and the
man heard two heavy bolts drawn. A moment afterwards the window-shutters were
shut, and noisily barred.
Night came on apace; the cold Alpine winds were blowing; by the light of the
expiring day the stranger perceived in one of the gardens which fronted the street
a kind of but which seemed to be made of turf; he boldly cleared a wooden
fence and found himself in the garden. He neared the hut; its door lvastea snar-
row, low entrance; it resembled, in its construction, the shanties which the
road-labourers put up for their temporary accommodation. He, doubtless, thought
that it was, in fact, the lodging of a road-labourer. He was suffering both
from cold and hunger. He had resigned himself to the latter; but there at least
was a shelter from the cold. These huts are not usually occupied at night. He
got down and crawled into the hut. It was warm there and he found a good bed of
straw. He ke rested a moment upon his bed motionless from fatigue; then, as his
knapsack on his back troubled him, and it would make a good pillow, he began to
unbuckle the straps. Just then he heard a ferocious growling and looking up saw
the head of an enormous bull-dog at the opening of the hut.
It was a dog-kennel!
He was himself vigorous and formidable; seizing his stick, he made a shield
of
his knapsack, and got out of the but as best he could, but not without enlarging
the rents of his already tattered garments.
He made his way also out of the garden, but backwards; being obliged, out of res-
pect to the dog, to have recourse to that kind of manoeuvre with his stick, which
adepts in this sort of fencing call la rose converte.
When he had, not without difficulty, got over the fence, he again found himself
alone in the street without lodging, roof, or shelter, driven even from the straw-
bed of that wretched dog-kennel. He threw himself rather than seated himself on a
stone, and it appears that some one who was passing heard him exclaim, "I am not
even a dog!"
Then he arose, and began to tramp again, taking his way out of the town, hoping to
find some tree or haystack beneath which he could shelter himself. He walked on for
some time, his head bowed down. When he thought he was far away from all
human
habitation he raised his eyes, and looked about him inquiringly. He was
in a field:
before him was a low hillock covered with stubble, which after the harvest looks
like a shaved head. The sky was very dark; it was not simply the darkness of night,
but there were very low clouds, which seemed to rest upon the hills, and covered
the whole heavens. A little of the twilight, however, lingered in the zenith; and
as the moon was about to rise these clouds formed in mid-heaven a vault of whitish
light, from which a glimmer fell upon the earth.
The earth was then lighter than the sky, which produces a peculiarly sinister
ef-
fect, and the hill, poor and mean in contour, loomed out dim and pale upon the
gloomy horizon: the whole prospect was hideous, mean, lugubrious, and insignificant.
There was nothing in the field nor upon the hill, but one ugly tree, a
few steps from
the traveller, which seemed to be twisting and contorting itself.
This man was evidently far from possessing those delicate perceptions of
intelligence and feeling which produce a sensitiveness to the mysterious
aspects of nature; still, there was in the sky, in this hillock, plain,
and tree, something so profoundly desolate, that after a moment of motion-
less contemplation. he turned hark hastily to the road. There are moments
when nature appears hostile.
He retraced his steps; the gates of D-- were closed. D--, which sustained
sieges in the religion, wars, was still surrounded, in 1815, by old walls
flanked by square towers, since demolished. He passed through a breach
and
entered the town.
It was about eight o'clock in the evening: as he did not know the streets,
he walked at hazard.
So he came to the prefecture, then to the seminary; on passing by the
Cathedral square, he shook his fist at the church.
At the corner of this square stands a printing-office: there were first
printed the proclamations of the emperor, and the Imperial Guard to the
army, brought from the island of Elba. and dictated by Napoleon himself.
Exhausted with fatigue, and hoping for nothing better, he lay down on a
stone bench in front of this printing-office.
Just then an old woman came not of the church. She saw the man lying there
in the dark and said:
"What are you doing there. my friend?"
He rephed harshly, and with anger in his tone:
"You see, my good woman, I am going to sleep."
The good woman, who really merited the name, was Madame la Marquise de
R--.
"Upon the bench?" said she.
"For nineteen years I have had a wooden mattress," said the man; "tonight
I have a stone one."
"You have been a soldier?"
"Yes, my good woman, a soldier."
"Why don't you go to the inn?"
"Because I have no money."
"Alas!" said Madame de, "I have only four sous in my purse."
"Give them then." The man took the four sous, and Madame de R--
continued:
"You cannot find lodging for so little in an inn. But have you tried? You
cannot pass the night so. You must be cold and hungry. They should give you
lodging for charity."
"I have knocked at every door."
"Well, what then?"
"Everybody has driven me away."
The good woman touched the man's arm and pointed out to him, on the other
side of the square, a little low house beside the bishop's
palace.
"You have knocked at every door?" she asked.
"Yes"
"Have you knocked at that one there?"
"No."
"Knock there."
II. PRUDENCE COMMENDED TO WISDOM
That evening, after his walk in the town, the Bishop of D--- remained quite
late in his room. He was busy with his great work on Duty, which unfortunately
is left incomplete. He carefully dissected all that the Fathers and Doctors
have said on this serious topic. His book was divided into two parts: First,
the duties of all: Secondly, the duties of each, according to his position in
life. The duties of all are the principal duties; there are four of them, as
set forth by St. Matthew: duty towards God '(Matt. vi.); duty towards ourselves
(Matt. v.29, 30); duty towards our neighbour (Matt, vii. 12); and duty towards
animals (Matt. vi. 20, 25). As to other duties the bishop found them defined
and prescribed elsewhere; those of sovereigns and subjects in the Epistle to
the Romans; those of magistrates, wives, mothers, and young men, by St. Peter;
those of husbands, fathers, children, and servants, in the Epistle to the Ephe-
sians; those of the faithful in the Epistle to the Hebrews; and those of vir-
gins in the Epistle to the Corinthians. He collated with much labour these
injunctions into a harmonious whole, which he wished to offer to souls.
At eight o'clock he was still at work, writing with some inconvenience on lit-
tle slips of paper, with a large book open on his knees, when Madame Magloire,
as usual, came in to take the silver from the panel near the bed. A moment after,
the bishop, knowing that the table was laid, and that his sister was perhaps
waiting, closed his hook and went into the dining room.
This dining-room was an oblong apartment, with a fireplace, and with a door u-
pon the street, as we have said, and a window opening into the garden.
Madame Magloire had just finished placing the plates.
While she was arranging the table, she was talking with Mademoiselle Baptistine.
The lamp was on the table, which was near the fireplace, where a good fire
was
burning.
One can readily fancy these two women, both past their sixtieth year: Madame
Magloire, small, fat, and quick in her movements; Mademoiselle Baptistine, sweet,
thin, fragile, a little taller than her brother, wore a silk puce colour dress,
in the style of 1806, which she had bought at that time in Paris, anti which still
lasted her. To borrow a common mode of expression, which has the merit of saying
in .a single word what a page would hardly express, Madame Magloire had the air
of a peasant, and Mademoiselle Baptistine that of a lady. Madame Magloire wore
a white funnel-shaped cap: a gold jeannete at her neck, the only bit of feminine
jewellery in the house, a snowy fichu just peering out above a black frieze
dress, with wide short sleeves, a green and red checked calico apron hed at
the waist with a green ribbon, with a stomacher of the same pinned up in front;
on her feet, she wore coarse shoes and yellow &tucking, like the women of Mar-
seilles. Madamoiselle Baptistine's dress was cut after the fashion of 1806,
short waist. narrow skirt, sleeves with epaulettes, and with flaps and buttons.
I ler grey hair was hid, under a frizzed front called a l'enfant. Madame Magloire
had an intelligent, clever, and lively air; the two corners of her mouth
unequal-
ly raised, and the upper lip projecting beyond the under one, gave something
mo-
rose and imperious to her expression. So long as Monseigner was silent, she talked
to him with. on reserve. and will a mingled respect and freedom; but from the
time that he opened his moult as we have seen, she itnplicitly obeyed like mad-
emoiselle.:Mademoiselle Baptistine, however, did not speak. She confined herself
to obeying, and endeavouring to please. Even when she was young, she was not
pretty; she had large and very prominent blue eyes. and a long pinched
nose, but
her whole face and person, as we said in the outset, breathed an ineffable
good-
ness. She had been fore-ordained to meekness, but faith, charity, hope, these
three virtues which gently warm the heart, had gradually sublimated this meekness
into sanctity. Nature had made her a lamb; religion had made her an angel. Poor,
sainted woman! gentle. but lost souvenir.
Mademoiselle Baptistine has so often related what occurred at the bishop's house
that evening, that many persons are still living who can recall the minutest details.
Just as the bishop entered. Madame Magloire was speaking with some warmth.
She
was talking to Mademniselle upon a familiar subject, and one to which the bishop was
quite accustomed. It was a discussion on the means of fastening the front door.
It seems that while Madame Magloire was out making provision for supper, she had
heard the news in sundry places. There was talk that an ill-favoured runaway, a
suspicious vagaix Ind, had arrived and was lurking somewhere in the town, and that
some unpleasant adventures might befall those who should conic home late that night;
besides, that the police was very bad, as the prefect and the mayor did not like
one another, and were hoping to injure each other by pan o wise people to be their
own police, and to protect their own persons; and that every one ought,to be careful
to shut up, bolt, and bar his house properly, and secure his door thoroughly.
Madame Magloire dwelt upon these last words; but the bishop, having come from a
cold room, seated himself before the fire and began to warm himself, and then, he
was thinking of something else. He did not hear a word of what was let fall by
Madame Magloire, and she repeated it. Then Mademoiselle Bapttstme, endeavouring
to satisfy Madame Magloire without displeasing her brother, ventured to say tim-
idly:
"Brother, do you hear what Madame Magloire says?"
"I heard something of it indistinctly," said the bishop. Then turning his chair
half round, putting his hands on his knees, and raising towards the old servant
his cordial and good-humoured face,which the firelight shone upon, he said: "Well,
well what is the matter? Are we in any great danger?"
Then Madame Magloire began her story again, unconsciously exaggerating it a lit-
tle. It appeared that a bare-footed gipsy man, a sort of dangerous beggar, was
in the town. He had gone for lodging to Jacquin Labarre, who had refused to re-
ceive him; he had been seen to enter the town by the boulevard Gassendi, and to
roam through the street at dusk. A man with a knapsack and a rope, and a ter-
rible-looking face.
"Indeed!" said the bishop.
This readiness to question her encouraged Madame Magloire; it seemed to indicate
that the bishop was really well-nigh alarmed. She continued triumphantly: "Yes,
monseigneur; it is.true. There will something happen tonight in the town:
ever-
ybody says so. The police is so badly organised ( a convenient repetition). To
live in this mountainous country, and not even to have street lamps! If one goes
out, it is dark as a pocket. And I say, monseigneur, and mademoiselle says also--"
"Me?" interrupted the sister; "I say nothing. Whatever my brother does is well
done."
Madame Magloire went on as if site had not heard this protestation:
"We say that this house is not safe at all; and if monseigneur will permit me,
I will go and tell Paulin Musebois, the locksmith, to come and put the old bolts
in the door again; they are there, and it will take but a minute. I say we must
have bolts, were it only for tonight; for I say that a door which opens
by a
latch on the outside to the first comer, nothing could be more horrible: and
then monseigner has the habit of always saying 'Come in,' even at midnight.
But, nw. goodness! there is no need even to ask leave-"
At this moment there was a violent knock on the door.
"Come in!" said the bishop.
III. THE HEROISM OF PASSIVE OBEDIENCE
THE door opened.
It opened quickly, quite wide, as if pushed by some one boldly and with energy.
A man entered.
That man, we know already; it was the traveller we have seen wandering about in
search of a lodging.
He came in, took one step, and paused, leaving the door open behind him. He had
his knapsack on his back, his stick in his hand, and a rough, hard, tired, and
fierce look in his eyes as seen by the firelight. He was hideous. It was an ap-
parition of ill omen.
Madame Magloire had not even the strength to scream. She stood trembling with
her mouth open.
Mademoiselle Baptistine turned, saw the man enter, and started up half alarmed;
then, slowly turning back again towards the fire. she looked at her brother,
and
her face resumed its usual calmness and serenity.
The bishop looked upon the man with a tranquil eye.
As he was opening his mouth to speak, doubtless to ask the stranger what he
wanted, the man, leaning with both hands on his club, glanced from one
to
another in turn, and without waiting for the bishop to speak, said in a loud
voice.
"See here! My name is Jean Valjean. I am a convict; I have been nineteen years
in the galleys. Four days ago I was set free, and started for Pontarher,
which
is my destination; during those four days I have walked from Toulon. Today
I
have walked twelve leagues. When I reached this place this evening I went
to
an inn, and they sent me away on account of my yellow passport, which I had
shown at the mayor's office, as was necessary. I went to another inn; they said:
'Get out!' It was the same with one as with another; nobody would have
me. I
went to the prison, and the turnkey would not let me in. I crept into a dog-
kennel, the dog bit me, and drove me away as if he had been a man; you would
have said that he knew who I was. I went into the fields to sleep beneath the
stars: there were no stars; I thought it would rain, and there was no good God
to stop the drops, so I came back to the town to get the shelter of some door-
way. There in the square I lay down upon a stone; a good woman showed me
your
house, and said: 'Knock there!' I have knocked. What is this place? Are you an
inn? I have money; my savings, one hundred and nine francs and fifteen sous
which I have earned in the galleys by my work for nineteen years. I will pay.
What do I care? I have money. I am very tired--twelve leagues on foot, and I
am so hungry. Can I stay?"
"Madame Magloire," said the bishop, "put on another plate."
The man took three steps, and came near the lamp which stood on the table.
"Stop," he exclaimed; as if he had not been understood, "not that, did you
understand me? I am a galley-slave--a convict--I am just from the galleys."
He drew from his pocket a large sheet of yellow paper, which he unfolded.
"There is my passport, yellow as you see. That is enough to have me
kick-
ed out wherever I go. Will you read it? I know how to read, I do. I learned
in the galleys. There is a school there for those who care for it. See,
here
is what they have put in the passport: 'Jean Valjean, a liberated convict,
native of---, you don't care for that, 'has been nineteen years in the
galleys;
five years for burglary; fourteen years for having attempted four times to
escape. This man is very dangerous.' There you have it! Everybody has thrust
me out; will you receive me? Is this an inn? Can you give me something
to
eat, and a place to sleep Have you a stable?"
"Madame Magloire," said the bishop, "put some sheets on the bed in the alcove."
We have already described the kind of obedience yielded by these two women.
Madame Magloire went out to fulfil her orders.
The bishop turned to the man:
"Monsieur, sit down and warm yourself: we are going to take supper presently,
and your bed will be made ready while you sup.
At last the man quite understood; his face, the expression of which till then
had been gloomy and hard, now expressed stupefaction, doubt, and joy, and
became absolutely wonderful. He began to stutter like a madman.
"True? What! You will keep me? you won't drive me away? a convict! You call me
Monsieur and don't say 'Get out, dog!' as everybody else does. I thought that
you would send me away, so I told first off who I am. Oh! the fine woman who
sent me here! I shall have a supper! a bed like other people with mattress
and
sheets --a bed It is nineteen years that I have not slept on a bed. You
are
really willing that I should stay? You are good people! Besides I have
money: I
will pay well. I beg your pardon, Monsieur Innkeeper, what is your name? I will
pay all you say. You are a fine man. You are an innkeeper, an't you?"
"I am a priest who lives here," said the bishop.
"A priest," said the man. "Oh, noble priest! Then you do
not ask any money?
You are the cure, an't you? the cure of this big church? Yes, that's it. How
stupid I am; I didn't notice your cap."
While speaking, he had deposited his knapsack and stick in the corner, re-
placed his passport in his pocket, and sat down. Mademoiselle Baptistine
looked at him pleasantly. He continued:
"You are humane, Monsieur Cure; you don't despise me. A good priest is a
good thing. Then you don't want me to pay you?"
"No," said the bishop, "keep your money. How much have you? You said a hundred
and nine francs, I think."
"And fifteen sous." added the man.
"One hundred and nine francs and fifteen sous. And how long did it take you to
earn that?"
"Nineteen years."
"Nineteen years!"
The bishop sighed deeply.
The man continued: "I have all my money yet. In four days I have spent only twenty-
five sous which I earned by unloading wagons at Grasse. As you are an abbe. I must
tell you. we have an almoner in the galleys. And then one day I saw a bishop; mon-
seigneur, they called him. It was the Bishop of Majore from Marseilles. He is the
cure who is over the cures. You see--beg pardon, how I bungle saying it,
but for me.
it is so far off! You know what we are. He said mass in the centre of the place
on an altar; he had a pointed gold thing on his head, that shone in the
sun; it was
noon. We were drawn up in line on three sides, with cannons and matches lighted before
us. We could not see him well. He spoke to us but he was not near enough,
we did
not understand him. That is what a bishop is."
While he was talking, the bishop shut the door, which he had left wide open.
Madame Magloire brought in a plate and set it on the table.
"Madame Magloire." said the bishop. "put this plate as near the fire as you can."
Then turning towards his guest. he added: "The night wind is raw in the Alps; you
must be cold, monsieur."
Every time he said this word monsieur, with his gently solemn, and heartily
hos-
pitable voice, the man's countenance lighted up. Monsieur to a convict, is a glass
of water to a man dying of thirst at sea. Ignominy thirsts for respect.
"The lamp," said the bishop. "gives a very poor light."
Madame Magloire understood him, and going to his bedchamber, took from
the mantel
the two silver candlesticks, lighted the candles, and placed them on the table.
"Monsieur Cure." said the man, "you are good; you don't despise me. You take me
into your house: you light your candles for me, and I haven't hid from
you where
I come from, and how miserable I am."
The bishop, who was sitting near him, touched his hand gently and said: "You need
not tell me who you are. This is not my house; it is the house of Christ.
It does
not ask any comer whether he has a name, but whether he has an affliction. You
are suffering; you are hungry and thirsty; be welcome. And do not thank
me; do not
tell me that I take you into my house. This is the home of no man, except him who
needs an asylum. I tell you, who are a traveller, that you are more at
home here
than I; whatever is here is yours. What need have I to know your name?
Besides,
before you told me, I knew it.'
The man opened his eyes in astonishment:
"Really? You knew my name?"
"Yes," answered the bishop: "your name is my brother."
"Stop, stop, Monsieur Cure," exclaimed atmed the man. "I was famished when I came
in, but you are so kind that now I don't know what I am; that is all gone."
The bishop looked at him again and said:
"You have seen much suffering?"
"Oh, the red blouse, the ball and chain, the plank to sleep on, the heat, the cold,
the galley's crew, the lash, the double chain for nothing, the dungeon
for a word,
even when sick in bed, the chain. The dogs, the dogs are happier! nineteen
years!
and I am forty-six, and now a yellow passport. That is all:'
"Yes," answered the bishop, "you have left a place of suffering. But listen, there
will be more joy in heaven over the tears of a repentant sinner, than over the
white robes of a hundred good men. If you are leaving that sorrowful place with
hate and anger against men, you are worthy of compassion; if you leave it with
goodwill, gentleness, and peace, you are better than any of us."
Meantime Madame Magloire had served up supper; it consisted of soup made
of
water, oil, bread, and salt, a little pork, a scrap of mutton, a few figs, a green
cheese, and a large loaf of rye bread. She had, without asking, added to the u-
sual dinner of the bishop a bottle of fine old Matins wine.
The bishop's countenance was lighted up with this expression of pleasure, peculiar
to hospitable natures. "To supper!" he said briskly, as was his habit when he had
a guest. He seated the man at his right. Mademoiselle Baptistine, perfectly quiet
and natural, took her place at his left.
The bishop said the blessing, and then served the soup himself, according to his
usual custom. The man fell to, eating greedily.
Suddenly the bishop said: "It seems to me something is lacking on the table."
The fact was, that Madame Magloire had set out only the three plates which were
necessary. Now it was the custom of the house, when the bishop had any one to sup-
per, to set all six of the silver plates on the table, an innocent display. This
graceful appearance of luxury was a sort of childlikeness which was full of charm
in this gentle but austere household, which elevated poverty to dignity.
Madame Magloire understood the remark; without a word she went out. and a moment
afterwards the three plates for which the bishop had asked were shining on the
cloth, symmetrically arranged before each of the three guests.
IV. SOME ACCOUNT OF THE DAIRIES OF PONTARLIER
Now, in order to give an idea of what passed at this table, we cannot do better
than to transcribe here a passage in a letter from Mademoiselle Baptistine to Madame
de Boischevron, in which the conversation between the convict and the bishop
is related with charming minuteness.
"This man paid no intention to any one. Ile ate with the viiracity of a starving
man. After supper, however, he said;
"'Monsieur Cure, all this is too good for me, but I must say that the wagoners,
who wouldn't have me eat with them, live better than you.'
"Between us, the remark shocked me a little. My brother answered:
"'They are more fatigued than I am.'
"`No,' responded this man: 'they have more money. You are poor, I can see. Per-
haps you are not a cure; even. Are you only a cure? Ah! if God is just.
you well
deserve to he a cure,'
"'God is more than just,' said my brother.
"A moment after he added:
"'Monsieur Jean Valjean, you are going to Pontarher''
"'A compulsory journey.'
"I am pretty sure that is the expression the man used. Then he continued:
"'I must be on the road to-morrow morning at da, break It is a hard journey. If
the nights are cold, the days are warm.'
"'You are going,' said my brother, 'to a fine country. During the
revolution,
when my family was ruined, I took refuge first in Franche-Comte. and supported
myself there for some time by the labour of my hands. There I found plenty
of
work, and had only to make my choice. There are paper-mills, tanneries, distil-
leries, oil-factories, large clock-making establishments. steel manufactories,
copper foundries, at least twenty iron foundries, four of which, at Loris, Chal-
illion, Audincourt, and Henry, are very large.'
"I think I am not mistaken, and that these are the names that my brother men-
tioned. Then he broke off and addressed me:
"'Dear sister, have we not relatives in that part of the country?'
"I answered:
" 'We had; among others Monsieur Lucenet, who was captain of the gates at Pont-
arher under the old regime.'
" 'Yes,' rephed my brother, 'but in '93. no one had relatives: every one de-
pended upon his hands. I laboured, They have, in the region of Pontarher, where
you are going, Monsieur Valjean, a business which is quite patriarchal and very
charming, sister. It is their dairies, which they call fruittares.
"Then my brother, while helping this man at table, explained to him in detail
what these fruitieres were;--that they were divided into two kinds: the great
barns, belonging to the rich, and where there are forty or fifty cows, which
produce from seven to eight thousand cheeses during the summer; and the associ-
ated fruitieres, which belong to the poor; these comprise the peasants inhab-
iting the mountains, who put their cows into a common herd, and divide the pro-
ceeds. They hire a cheese-maker, whom they call a grurin, the grurin receives
the milk of the associates three times a day, and notes the quantities in dup-
licate. Towards the end of April--the dairy work commences, and about the mid-
dle of June the cheese-makers drive their cows into the mountains.
"The man became animated even while he was eating. My brother gave him some
good Mauves wine, which he does not drink himself, because he says it is too
dear. My brother gave him all these details with that easy gaiety which you
know is peculiar to him, intermingling his words with compliments for me. He
dwelt much upon the good condition of a Drum, as if he wished that this man
should understand, without advising him directly, and abruptly, that it would
be an asylum for him. One think struck me. This man was what I have told you.
Well I my brother, during the supper, and during the entire evening, with the
exception of a few words about Jesus, when he entered, did not say a word which
could recall to this man who be himself was, nor indicate to him who my brother
was. It was apparently a fine occasion to get in a little sermon, and to set
up the bishop above the convict in order to make an impression upon his mind.
It would, perhaps, have appeared to some to be a duty, having this unhappy man
in hand, to feed the mind at the same time with the body, and to administer re-
proof, seasoned with morality and advice, or at least a little pity accompanied
by an exhortation to conduct himself better in future. My brother asked him nei-
ther his country nor his history; for his crime lay in his history, and my brother
seemed to avoid everything which could recall it to him. At one time, as my brother
was speaking of the mountaineers of Pontarher, who have a pleasant labour near
heaven, and who, he added, are happy, because they are innocent, he stopped
short,
fearing there might have been in this word which had escaped him something which
could wound the feelings of this man. Upon reflection, I think I understand what
was passing in my brother's mind. He thought, doubtless, that this man, who called
himself Jean Valjean, had his wretchedness too constantly before his mind; that it
was best not to distress him by referring to it, and to make him think, if it
were only for a moment, that he was a common person like any one else, by treat-
ing him thus in the ordinary way. Is not this really understanding charity? Is
there not, dear madame, something truly evangelical in this delicacy, which ab-
stains from sermonising, moralising, and making allusions, and is it not
the
wisest svmpathv, when a man has a suffering point, not to touch upon it
at all?
It seems to me that this was my brother's inmost thought. At any rate, all I can
say is, if he had all these ideas, he did not show them even to me: he was, from
beginning to end, the same as on other evenings, anti he took supper with this Jean
Valjean with the same air awl manner that he would have supped with Monsieur Wykon,
the provost, or with the cure of the parish.
"Towards the end, as we were at dessert, someone pushed the door open. It was Mo-
ther Gerbaud with her child in her arm:. My brother kissed the child, and borrowed
fifteen sous that I had with me to give to Mother Gerhaud. The man, during this time.
paid but little attention to what passed. He did not speak, and appeared
to be very
tired. The poor old lady left, and my brother said grace, after which he
turned to-
wards this man and said: "You must be in great need of sleep.' Madame
Magloire quickly
removed the cloth. I understood that we ought to retire in order that this
traveller
might sleep, and we both went to our rooms. However, in a few moments afterwards,
I sent Madame Magloire to put on the bed of this man a roebuck skin from the Black
Forest, which is in my chamber. The nights are quite cold, and this skin
retains
the warmth. It is a pity that it is quite old, and all the hair is gone. My brother
bought it when he was in Germany, at Torlingen, near the sources of the Danube, as
also the little ivory-handled knife, which I the at table.
"Madame Magloire came hack immediately, we said our prayers in the parlour which we
use as a drying-room, and then we retired to our chambers without saying a word?'
V. TRANQUILITY
AFTER having said good-night to his sister, Monseigneur Rienvenu took one of the
silver candlesticks from the table, handed the other to his guest, and said to him:
"Monsieur, I will show you to your room."
The man followed him.
As may have been understood from what has been said before. the house was so ar-
ranged that one could reach the alcove in the oratory only by passing through the
bishop's sleeping chamber, just as they were passing through this room Madame
Magloire was putting up the silver in the cupboard at the head of the bed. It was
the last thing she did every night before going to bed.
The bishop left his guest in the alcove, before a clean white bed. The man
set down the candlestick upon a small table.
"Come," said the bishop, "a good night's rest to you: tomorrow
morning,
before you go, you shall have a cup of warm milk from our cows."
"Thank you, Monsieur l'Abbe," said the man.
Scarcely had he pronounced these words of peace, when suddenly he made a
singular motion which would have chilled the two good women of the house
with horror, had they witnessed it. Even now it is hard for us to under-
stand what impulse he obeyed at that moment. Did he intend to give a warn-
ing or to throw out a menace? Or was he simply obeying a sort of instinct-
ive impulse, obscure ever to himself? He turned abruptly towards the old
man, crossed his arms, and casting a wild look upon his host, exclaimed
in a harsh voice:
"Ah, now, indeed! You lodge me in your house, as near you as that!"
He checked himself, and added, with a laugh, in which there was something
horrible;
"Have you reflected upon it? Who tells you that I am not a murderer?"
The bishop responded:
"God will take care of that."
Then with gravity, moving his lips like one praying or talking to himself,
he raised two fingers of his right hand and blessed the man, who, however,
did not bow; and without turning his head or looking behind him, went into
his chamber.
'When the alcove was occupied, a heavy serge curtain was drawn in the or-
atory, concealing the altar. Before this curtain the bishop knelt as he
passed out, and offered a short prayer.
A moment afterwards he was walking in the garden, surrendering mind and
soul to a dreamy contamination of these grand and mysterious works of God,
which night makes visible to the eye.
As to the man, he was so completely exhausted that he did not even avail
himself of the clean white sheets; he blew out the candle with his nostril,
after the manner of convicts, and fell on the bed, dressed as he was, into
a sound sleep.
Midnight struck as the bishop came back to his chamber.
A few moments afterwards all in the little house slept.
VI. JEAN Valjean
TOWARD the middle of the night. Jean 'Valjean awoke.
Jean Valjean was born of a poor peasant family of Brie. In his child-
hood he had not been taught to read: when he was grown up. he chose
the occupation of a pruner at Faverolles. I Hs mother's name was Jeanne
Mathieu, his father's Jean Valjean or Vlajean, probably a nickname, a con-
traction of Voila Jean.
Jean Valjean was of a thoughtful disposition, but not sad, which is char-
acteristic of affectionate natures. Upon the whole, however. there was some-
thing torpid and insignificant, in the appearance at least, of Jean Valjean.
He had lost his parents when very young. His mother died of malpractice
in
a milkfever his father, a pruner before him, was killed by a fall from
a
tree. Jean Valjean now had but one relative left, his sister, a widow with
seven children, girls and boys. This sister had brought up Jean, and,
as long as her husband lived, she had taken care of her younger brother.
Her husband died, leaving the eldest of these children eight, the youngest
one year old. Jean Valjean had just reached his twenty-fifth year he took
the father's place, and, in his turn, supported the sister who reared him.
This he did naturally, as a duty, and even with a sort of moroseness on
his part. His youth was spent in rough and ill-recompensed "labour:
he
never was known to have a sweetheart; he had not time to be in love.
At night he came in weary and ate his soup without saying a word.
While he was eating, his sister, Mere Jeanne, frequently took from his por-
ringer the best of his meal, a bit of meat, a slice of pork, the heart of
the cabbage, to give to one of her children. He went on eating, his head
bent down nearly into the soup, his long hair falling over his dish, hiding
his eyes, he did not seem to notice anything that was done. At Faverolles,
not far from the house of the Valjeans, there was on the other side of the
road a farmer's wife named Marie Claude; the Valjean children, who were always
famished, sometimes went in their mother's name to borrow a pint of milk,
which they would drink behind a hedge, or in some corner of the lane, snatch-
ing away the pitcher so greedily one from another, that the little girls
would spill it upon their aprons and their necks; if their mother had known
of this exploit she would have punished the delinquents severely. Jean Val-
jean, rough and grumbler as he was, paid Marie Claude; their mother never
knew it, and so the children escaped.
He earned in the pruning season eighteen sous a day: after that he hired out
as a reaper, workman, teamster, or labourer. He did whatever he Could find to
do. His sister worked also, but what could she do with seven little children?
It was a sad group, which misery was grasping and closing upon, little by
little. There was a very severe winter; Jean had no work, the family had no
bread; literally, no bread, and seven children.
One Sunday night, Maubert Isabeau, the baker on the Place de l'Eglise,
in Fave-
rolles, was just going to bed when he heard a violent blow against the barred
window ndow of his shop. He got down in time to see an arm through the aper-
ture made by the blow of a fist on the glass. The arm seized a loaf of
bread and took it out. Isabeau rushed out; the thief used legs valiantly; Isa-
beau pursued him and caught him. The thief had thrown in away the bread, but
his arm was still bleeding. It was Jean Valjean.
All that happened in 1795. Jean Valjean was brought before the tribunals
of the time for "burglary at night, in an inhabited house." He
had a gun which
he used as well as any marksman in the world and was something of a poacher,
which hurt him, there being a natural prejudice against poachers. The poacher,
like the smuggler, approaches very nearly to the brigand. We must say, however,
by the way, that there is yet a deep gulf between this race of men and the hid-
eous assassin of the city. The poacher dwells in the forest, and the smuggler
in the mountains or upon the sea; cities produce ferocious men, because they
produce corrupt men; the mountains, the forest, and the sea, render men sav-
age; they develop the fierce, but yet do not destroy the human.
Jean Valjean was found guilty: the terms of the code were explicit; in
our civilisation there are fearful hours; such are those when the criminal law
pronounces shipwreck upon a man. What a mournful moment is that in
which society withdraws itself and gives up a thinking being for ever.
Jean
Valjean was sentenced to five years in the galleys.
On the 22nd of April, 1796, there was announced in Paris the victory
of Montenotte, achieved by the commanding-general of the army of Italy,
whom the message of the Directory, to the Five Hundred, of the 2nd
Floreal, year IV., called Buonaparte; that same day a great chain was riveted
at the Bicetre. Jean Valjean was a part of this chain. An old turnkey of the
prison, now nearly ninety, well remembers this miserable man, who was
ironed at the end of the fourth plinth in the north angle of the court. Sit-
ting on the ground like the rest, he seemed to comprehend nothing of his
position, except its horror: probably there was also mingled with the vague
ideas of a poor ignorant man a notion that there was something excessive in
the penalty. While they were with heavy hammer-strokes behind his head
riveting the bolt of his iron collar, he was weeping. The tears choked his
words, and he only succeeded in saying from time to time: "I was a pruner
at Faverolles." Then sobbing as he was, he raised his right hand and low-
ered it seven times, as if he was touching seven heads of unequal height,
and at this gesture one could guess that whatever he had done, had been
to feed and clothe seven little children.
He was taken to Toulon, at which place he arrived after a journey of
twenty-seven days, on a cart, the chain still about his neck. At Toulon he
was dressed in a red blouse, all his past life was effaced, even to his
name. He was no longer Jean Valjean: he was Number 24,601. What became of
the sister? What became of the seven children? Who troubled himself about
that? What becomes of the handful of leaves of the young tree when it is
sawn at the trunk?
It is the old story. These poor little lives. these creatures of God,
henceforth without support, or guide, or asylum; they passed away where-
ver chance led, who knows even? Each took a different path, it may be,
and sank little by little into the chilling dark which engulfs solitary
destinies; that sullen gloom where are lost so many ill-fated souls in
the sombre advance of the human race. They left that region; the church
of what had been their village forgot: them; the stile of what had been
their field forgot them; after a few years in the galleys, even Jean
Valjean forgot them. In that heart in which there had been a wound, there
was a scar; that was all. During the time he was at Toulon, he heard but
confinement. I do not know how the news reached him; some one who had
known him at home had seen his sister. She was in Paris, living in a poor
street near Saint Sulpice, the Rue du Geindre. She had with her but one
child, the youngest, a little boy. Where were the other six? She did not
know herself, perhaps Every mornirg she went to a bindery, .No. 3 Rue
du Sabot, where she was employed as a folder and book-stitcher. She had
to be there by six in the morning, long before the dawn in the winter. In
the same building with the bindery, there was a school, where she sent her
little boy, seven years old. As the school did not open until seven, and she
must be at her work at six. her boy had to wait in the yard an hour, un-
til the school opened--an hour of cold and darkness in the winter. They
would not let the child wait in the bindery, because he was troublesome.
they said. The workmen, as they passed in the morning, saw the poor little
fellow sometimes sitting on the pavement nodding with weariness, and often
sleeping in the dark, crouched and bent over his. basket. When it rained,
an old woman, the portress,:. took pity on him; she let him come into her
lodge, the furniture of which was only a pallet bed, a spinning-wheel, and
two wooden chairs; and the little one slept there in a corner, hugging the
cat to keep himself warm. At seven o'clock the school opened and he went
in. That is what was told Jean Valjean. It was as if a window had sudden-
ly been opened, looking upon the destiny of those he had loved, and then
all was closed again, and he heard nothing more for ever. Nothing more
came to him; he had not seen them, never will he see them again! and
through the remainder of this sad history we shall not meet them again.
Near the end of this fourth year, his chance of liberty came to Jean Val-
jean. His comrades helped him as they always do in that dreary place, and
he escaped. He wandered two days in freedom through the fields; if it is
freedom to be hunted, to turn your head each moment, to tremble at the
least noise, to be afraid of everything, of the smoke of a chimney, the
passing of a man, the baying of a dog, the gallop of a horse, the striking
of a clock, of the day because you see, and of the night because you do
not; of the road, of the path, the bush, of sleep. During the evening of
the second day he was retaken; he had neither eaten nor slept for thir-
ty-six hours. The maritime tribunal extended his sentence three years for
this attempt, which made eight. In the sixth year his turn of escape came
again; he tried it, but failed again. He did not answer at roll-call, and
the
alarm cannon Was fired. At night the people of the vicinity discovered
him hidden beneath the keel of a vessel on the stocks; he resisted the
gal-
ley guard which seized him. Escape and resistance. This the provisions of
the special code punished by an addition of five years, two with the double
chain, thirteen years. The tenth year his turn came round again; he made
another attempt with no better success. Three years for this new attempt.
Sixteen years. And finally, I think it was in the thirteenth year, he made
yet another, and was retaken after an absence of only four hours. Three
years for these four hours. Nineteen years. In October, 1815, he was set
at large: he bad entered in 1796 for having broken a pane of tglass, and
taken a loaf of bread.
This is a place for a short parenthesis. This is the second time; in his
studies on the penal question and on the sentences of the law, that the
author of this book has met with the theft of a loaf of bread as the
starting-point of the ruin of a destiny. Claude Gueux stole a loaf of
bread; Jean Valjean stole a loaf of bread; English statistics show that
in London starvation is the immediate cause of four thefts out of five.
Jean Valjean entered the galleys sobbing and shuddering: he went out
hardened; he entered in despair: he went out sullen.
What had been the life of this soul?
VII. THE DEPTHS OP DESPAIR
Let us endeavour to tell.
It is an imperative necessity that society should look into these things:
they are its own work.
He was, as we have said, ignorant; but he was not imbecile. The natural
light was enkindled in him. Misfortune, which has also its illumination,
added to the few rays that he had in his mind. Under the whip, under the
chain, in the cell, in fatigue, under the burning sun of the galleys, upon
the convict's bed of plank, he turned to his own conscience, and he re-
flected.
He constituted himself a tribunal.
He began by arraigning himself.
He recognised, that he was not an innocent man, unjustly punished. He ac-
knowledged that he had committed an extreme and a blamable action; that the
loaf perhaps would not have been refused him, had he asked for it; that at
all events it would have been better to wait, either for pity, or for work;
that it is not altogether an unanswerable reply to say: "could I wait when I
was hungry?" that, in the first place, it is very rare that any one
dies
of actual hunger; and that, fortunately or unfortunately, man is so made
that
he can suffer long and much, morally and physically, without dying; that
he should, therefore, have had patience; that that would have been better
even for those poor little ones; that it was an act of folly in him, poor,
worthless man, to seize society, in all its strength, forcibly by the collar,
and imagine that he could escape from misery by theft: that that was, at
all events, a bad door for getting out of misery by which one entered into
infamy; in short, that he had done wrong.
Then he asked himself;
If he were the only one who had done wrong in the course of his fatal his-
tory? If, in the first place, it were not a grievous thing that he, a work-
man, should have been in want of work; that he, an industrious man,
should have lacked bread. If, moreover, the fault having been committed
and
avowed, the punishment had not been savage and excessive. If there were
not a greater abuse on the part of the law, in the penalty, than there
had
been on the part of the guilty, in the crime. If there were not an excess
of weight in one of the scales of the balance----on the side of the
expiation. If the discharge of the penalty were not the effacement of the
crime; and if the result were not to reverse that situation, to replace the
wrong of the delinquent by the wrong of the repression, to make a victim of
the guilty, and a creditor of the debtor, and actually to put the right
on
the side of him who had violated it. If that penalty. taken in connection
with its successive extensions for his attempts to escape, had not at last
come to be a sort of outrage of the stronger on the weaker, a crime of
so-
ciety towards the individual, a crime which was committed afresh every day,
a crime which had endured for nineteen years.
He questioned himself if human society could have the right alike to crush
its members, in the one case by its unreasonable carelessness, and in the
other by its pitiless care; and to keep a poor man for ever between a lack
and an excess, a lack of work, an excess of punishment.
If it were not outrageous that society should treat with such rigid preci-
sion those of its members who were most poorly endowed in the distribution
of wealth that chance had made, and who were, therefore, most worthy of
indulgence.
These questions asked and decided, he condemned society and sentenced it.
He sentenced it to his hatred.
He made it responsible for the doom which he had undergone, and promised
himself that he, perhaps, would not he itate some day to call it to an ac-
count. He declared to himself that there was no equity between the injury
that he had committed and the injury that had been committed on him; he
concluded, in short, that his punislunent was not, really, an injustice,
but that beyond all doubt it was an iniquity.
Anger may be foolish and absurd, and one may be in:hated-when in the wrong;
but a man never feels outraged unless in some respect he is at bottom right.
Jean Valjean felt outraged.
And then, human society had done him nothing but injury; never had he seen
anything of her, but this wrathful face which she calls justice, and which
she shows to those whom she strikes down. No man had ever touched him but
to bruise him. All his contact with men had been by blows. Never, since his
infancy, since his mother, since his sister, never had he been greeted with
a friendly word or a kind regard. Through suffering on suffering he came
little by little to the conviction, that life was a war; and that in that
war he was the vanquished. He had no weapon but his hate. He resolved to
sharpen it in the galleys and to take it with him when he went out.
There was at Toulon a school for the prisoners conducted by some not very
skilful friars, where the most essential branches were taught to such of
these poor men as were willing. He was one of the willing ones. He went to
school at forty and learned to read, write, and cipher. He felt that to
increase his knowledge was to strengthen his hatred. Under certain circum-
stances, instruction and enlightenment may serve as rallying-points for evil.
It is sad to tell; but after having tried society, which had caused his
misfortunes, he tried Providence which created society, and condemned it
also.
Thus, during those nineteen years of torture and slavery, did this soul
rise and fall at the same time. Light entered on the one side, and dark-
ness on the other.
Jean Valjean was not, we have seen, of an evil nature. His heari was still
right when he arrived at the galleys. While there he con-demned society,
and felt that he became wicked; he condemned Providence. and felt that
he
became impious.
It is difficult not to reflect for a moment here.
Can human nature be so entirely transformed from top to bottom? Can man,
created good by God, be made wicked by man? Can the soul be changed to
keep pace with its destiny, and become evil when its destiny is evil? Can
the
heart become distorted and contract deformities and infirmities that are
incurable, under the pressure of disproportionate woe, like the vertebral
column under a too heavy brain? Is there not in every human soul; was there
not in the particular soul of Jean Valjean, a primitive spark, a divine ele-
ment, incorruptible in this world, immortal in the next, which can be develop-
ed by good, kindled, lit up, and made resplendently radiant, and which evil
can never entirely extinguish.
Grave and obscure questions, to the last of which every physiologist would
probably, without hesitation, have answered no, had he seen at Toulon, during
the hours of rest, which to Jean Valjean were hours of thought, this gloomy
galley-slave, seated, with folded arms, upon the bar of some windlass, the
end of his chain stuck into his pocket that it might not drag, serious, sil-
ent, and thoughtful, a pariah of the law which views man with wrath, condemned
by civilisation which views heaven with severity.
Certainly, we will not conceal it, such a physiologist would have seen in Jean
Valjean an irremediable misery; he would perhaps have lamented the disease
occasioned by the law; but he would not even have attempted a cure; he would
have turned from the sight of the caverns which he would have beheld in that
soul; and, like Dante at the gate of Hell, he would have wiped out from that
existence the word which the finger of God has nevertheless written upon the
brow of every man--Hope!
Was that state of mind which we have attempted to analyse as perfectly clear
to Jean Valjean as we have tried to render it to our readers? Did Jean Valjean
distinctly see, after their formation, and had he distinctly seen, while
they
were forming, all the elements of which his moral misery was made up? Had
this
rude and unlettered man taken accurate account of the succession of ideas
by which he had, step by step, risen and fallen, till he had reached that mourn-
ful plane which for so many years already had marked the internal horizon of
his mind? Had he a clear consciousness of all that was passing within him, and
of all that was moving him? This we dare not affirm; we do not, in fact,
beheve
it. Jean Valjean was too igno-rant, even after so much ill fortune, for nice dis-
crimination in these matters. Af times he did not even know exactly what
were
his feelings. Jean Valjean was in the dark; he suffered in the dark; he hated
in the dark; we might say that he hated in his own sight. He lived constantly
in the darkness, groping blindly and as in a dream. Only, at intervals,
there
broke over him suddenly, from within or from without, a shock of anger, an over-
flow of suffering, a quick pallid flash which lit up his whole soul, and showed
all around him, before and behind, in the glare of a hideous light, the
fearful
precipices and the sombre perspectives of his fate.
The flash passed away; the night fell, and where was he? He no longer knew.
The peculiarity of punishment of this kind, in which what is pitiless, that is
to say, what is brutalising, predominates, is to transform little by little, by
a slow stupefaction, a man into an animal, sometimes into a wild beast.
Jean Val-
jean's repeated and obstinate attempts to escape are enough to prove that such
is the strange effect of the law upon a human soul. Jean Valjean had renewed
these attempts, so wholly useless and foolish, as often as an opportunity offer-
ed, without one moment's thought of the result, or of experience already
un-
dergone. He escaped wildly, like a wolf on seeing his cage-door open. Instinct
said to him: "Away!" Reason said to him: "Stay!" But
before a temptation so
mighty, reason fled; instinct alone remained. The beast alone was in play. When
he was retaken, the new severities that were inflicted upon' him only made
him still more fierce.
We must not omit one circumstance, which is, that in physical strength be far
surpassed all the other inmates of the prison. At hard work, at twisting a cable,
or turning a windlass, Jean Valjean was equal to four men. He would sometimes
lift and hold enormous weights on his back, and would occasionally act the part
of what is called a jack, or what was called in old French an orgeuil, whence
came the name, we may say by the way, of the Rue Montorgeuil near the Halles
of Paris. His comrades had nicknamed him Jean' the Jack. At one time, while the
balcony of the City Hall of Toulon was undergoing repairs, one of Puget's ad-
mirable caryatides, which support the balcony, slipped from its place, and was
about to fall, when jean Valjean, who happened to be there, held it up oh his
shoulder till the workmen came.
His suppleness surpassed his strength. Certain convicts, always planning escape,
have developed a veritable science of strength and skill combined,--the science
of the muscles. A mysterious system of statics is practised throughout daily by
prisoners, who are eternally envying the birds and flies. To scale a wall, and
to find a foothold where you could hardly see a projection, was play for Jean
Valjean. Given an angle in a wall, with the tension of his back and his' knees,
with elbows and hands braced against the rough face of the stone, he would as-
cend, as if by magic, to a third story. Sometimes he climbed up in this
manner
to the roof of the galleys.
He talked but little, and never laughed. Some extreme emotion was required to
draw from him, once or twice a year, that lugubrious sound of the convict,
which is like the echo of a demon's laugh. To those who saw him, he seemed
to
be absorbed in continually looking upon something terrible.
He was absorbed, in fact.
Through the diseased perceptions of an incomplete nature and a smothered
intelligence, he vaguely felt that a monstrous weight was over him. In that
pallid and sullen shadow in which he crawled, whenever he turned his head
and endeavoured to raise his eyes, he saw, with mingled rage and terror,
forming,
massing, and mounting up out of view above him with horrid ecarpments,
a kind
of frightful accumulation of things, of laws, of prejudices, of men, and
of acts,
the outlines of which escaped him, the weight of which appalled him, and which
was no other than that prodigious pyramid that we call civilisation. Here and
there in that shapeless and crawling mass, sometimes near at hand, sometimes
afar off, and upon inaccessible heights, he distinguished some group, some
de-
tail vividly clear, here the jailer with his staff, here the gendarme with
his
sword, yonder the mitred archbishop: and on high, in a sort of blaze of glory,
the emperor crowned and resplendent. It seemed to him that these distant
splen-
dours, far from dissipating his night, made it blacker and more deathly. All
this, laws, prejudices, acts, men, things, went and came above him, according
to the complicated and mysterious movement that God impresses upon civiliz-
ation, marching over him and crushing him with an indescribably tranquil
cruelty
and inexorable indifference. Souls sunk to the bottom of possible misfortune,
and
unfortunate men lost in the lowest depths, where they are no longer seen, the
rejected of the law, feel upon their heads the whole weight of that human so-
ciety, so formidable to him who is without it, so terrible to him who is
beneath
it.
In such a situation Jean Valjean mused, and what could be the nature of his
reflections?
If a millet seed under a millstone had thought, doubtless it would think
what
Jean Valjean thought.
All these things, realities full of spectres, phantasmagoria full of realities,
had at last produced within him a condition which was almost inexpressible.
Sometimes in the midst of his work in the galleys he would stop and begin
to
think. His reason, more mature, and, at the same time, perturbed more than
formerly, would revolt. All that had happened to him would appear absurd;
all that surrounded him would appear impossible. He would say to himself:
"it is a dream." He would look at the jailer standing a few steps
from him;
the jailer would seem to be a phantom; all at once the phantom would give
him a blow with a stick.
For him the external world had scarcely an existence. It would be almost
true to say that for Jean Vaijtan there was no sun, no beautiful summer
days, no radiant sky, no fresh April dawn. Some dim window light was all that
shone in his soul.
To sum up, in conclusion, what can be summed up and reduced to positive
results, of all that we have keen showing, we will make sure only of this,
that
in the course of nineteen years, Jean Valjean, the inoffensive pruner of
Faverolles, the terrible galley-slave of Toulon, had become capable, thanks
to the training he had received in the galleys, of two species of crime; first,
a sudden, unpremeditated action, full of rashness, all instinct, a sort
of
reprisal for the wrong he had suffered; secondly, a serious, premeditated
act, discussed by his conscience, and pondered over with the false ideas
which such a fate will give. His premeditations passed through the three
successive phases to which natures of a certain stamp are limited--reason,
will, and obstinacy. He had as motives, habitual indignation, bitterness
of
soul, a deep sense of injuries suffered, a reaction even against the good,
the innocent, and the upright, if any such there are, The beginning as well
as the end of all his thoughts was hatred of human law; that hatred which,
if it be not checked in its growth by some providential event, becomes,
in
a certain time, hatred of society, then hatred of the human race, and then:
hatred of creation, and reveals itself by a vague and incessant desire
to injure
some living being, it matters not who. So, the passport was right which
described Jean Valjean as a very dangerous men.
From year to year this soul had withered more and more, slowly, but fat-
ally. With this withered heart, he had a dry eye. When he left the galleys,
he had not shed a tear for nineteen years.
VIII. THE WATERS AND THE SHADOW
A MAN overboard!
What matters it! the ship does not stop. The wind is blowing, that dark
ship must keep on her destined course. She passes away.
The man disappears, then reappears, he plunges and rises again to the
surface, he calls, be stretches out his hands, they hear him not; the ship,
staggering under the gale, is straining every rope, the sailors and pass-
engers see the drowning man no longer; his miserable head is but a point
in the vastness of the billows.
He hurls cries of despair into the depths. What a spectre is that disappear-
ing sail! He looks upon it, he looks upon it with frenzy. It moves away; it
grows dim; it diminishes. He was there but just now, he was one of the crew,
he went and Caine upon the deck with the rest, he had his share of the air
and of the sunlight, be was a living man. Now, what has become of him? He
slipped, he fell; and it is finished.
He is in the monstrous deep. He has nothing under his feet but the yielding,
fleeing element. The waves, torn and scattered by the wind, close round
him
hideously; the rolling of the abyss bears him along; shreds of water are
fly-
ing about his head; a populace of waves spit upon him; confused openings half
swallow him; when he sinks he catches glimpses of yawning precipices full of
darkness; fearful. unknown vegetations seize upon him, bind his feet, and draw
him to themselves; he feels that he is becoming the great deep; he makes
part
of the foam; the billows toss him from one to the other; he tastes the bitter-
ness; the greedy ocean is eager to devour him; the monster plays with his agony.
It seems as if all this were liquid hate.
He tries to defend himself; he tries to sustain himself; he struggles; be swims.
He--that poor strength that fails so soon--he combats the unfailing. But yet
he struggles.
Where now is the ship? Far away yonder. Hardly visible in the pallid gloom of
the horizon.
The wind blows in gusts; the billows overwhelm him. He raises his eyes, but sees
only the livid clouds. He, in his dying agony, makes part of this immense
in-
sanity of the sea. He is tortured to his death by its immeasurable madness. He
hears sounds, which are strange to man; sounds which seem to come not from
earth, but from some frightful realm beyond.
There are birds in the clouds, even as there are angels above human distresses,
but what can they do for him? They fly, sing. float, while he is gasping.
He feels that he is buried at once by those two infinities, the ocean and the
sky; the one is a tomb, the other a pall.
Night descends, he has been swimming for hours, his strength is almost exhaust-
ed; that ship, that far off thing. where there were men, is gone; he is alone
in the terrible gloom of the abyss; be sinks, he strains, be struggles. he feels
beneath him the shadowy monsters of the unseen; he shouts.
Men are no more. Where is God?
He shouts. Help! Help! He shouts incessantly.
Nothing in the horizon. Nothing in the sky.
He implores the blue vault, the waves, the rocks; all are deaf. He supplicates
the tempest; the imperturable tempest obeys only the infinite.
Around him are darkness, storm, solitude, wild and uncon-scious tumult, the
ceaseless tumbling of the fierce waters; within him, horror and exhaustion.
Beneath him the engulfing abyss. No resting place. He thinks of the shadowy
adventures of his lifeless body in the limitless gloom. The biting cold paral-
yses him. hlis hands clutch spasmodically, and grasp at nothing. \N. me's.
clouds, whirlwinds, blasts, stars. all useless! What shall he do? He yields
to despair; worn out, he seeks death; he no longer resists; he gives himself
up; he abandons. the contest, and he is rolled awav into the dismal depths of
the abyss forever.
0 implacable march of human society! Destruction of men and of souls marking
its path! Ocean, where fall all that the law lets fall! Ominous disappearance
of aid! 0 moral death!
The sea is the inexorable night into which the penal law casts its victims. The
sea is the measureless misery.
The soul drifting in that sea may become a corpse. Who shall restore it
to life?
IX. NEW GRIEFS
When the time for leaving the galleys came, and when there sounded in the car
of Jean Valjean the strange words: You are free! the moment seemed improbable
and unreal; a ray of liying light, a ray of the true light of living men, sud-
denly penetrated his soul. But this ray quickly faded away. Jean Valjean had
been dazzled with the idea of liberty. He had believed in a new life. He soon
saw what sort of liberty that is which has a yellow passport.
And along with that there were many bitter experiences. He had calculated that
his savings, during his stay at the galleys, would amount to a hundred and sev-
enty-one francs. It is proper to say that he had forgotten to take into account
the compulsory rest on Sundays and holydays, which, in nineteen years, required
a deduction of about twenty-four francs. However that might be, his savings had
been reduced, by various local charges, to the sum of a hundred and nine francs
and fifteen sous, which was counted out to him on his departure.
He understood nothing of this, and thought himself wronged, or to speak plainly,
robbed.
The day after his liberation, he saw before the door of an orange flower distil-
lery at Grasse, some men who were unloading hags. He offered his services. They
were in need of help and accepted them. He set at work. He was intelligent, ro-
bust, and handy; he did his best; the foreman appeared to be satisfied. While he
was at work, a gendarme passed, noticed him, and asked for his papers.
He was com-
pelled to show the yellow passport. That done, Jean Valjean, resumed his work. A
little whHe before, he had asked one of the labourers how much alley were paid
per day for this work, and the reply was: thirty sous. At night, as he was ob-
liged to leave lie town next morning, he went to the foreman of the distillery,
and asked for his pay. The foreman did not say a word, but handed him fifteen
sous. lie remonstrated. The man replied: "That is good enough for you." He in-
sisted. The foreman looked him in the eyes and said: "Look out for the lock-up!"
There again he thought himself robbed.
Society, the state, in reducing his savings, had robbed him by wholesale. Now it
was the turn of the individual, who was robbing him by retail.
Liberation is not deliverance. A convict may leave the galleys behind, but not
his condemnation.
This was what befell him at Grasse. We have seen how he was received at D-.
X. THE MAN AWAKES
As the cathedral clock struck two, Jean Vaijean awoke.
What awakened him was, too good a bed. For nearly twenty years he had not slept
in a bed, and, although he had not undressed. the sensation was too novel not to
disturb his sleep.
He had slept something more than four hours. His fatigue had passed away.
He
was not accustomed to give many hours to repose. He opened his eyes, and looked
for a moment into the obscurity about him, then he closed them to go to sleep
again.
When many diverse sensations have disturbed the clay, when the mind is preoccu-
pied, we can fall asleep once, but not a second time. Sleep comes at first much
more readily than it comes again. Such was the case with Jean Valjean. He could
not get to sleep again, and so he began to think.
He was in one of those moods in which the ideas we have in our minds are perturbed.
There was a kind of vague ebb and flow in his brain. His oldest and his latest mem-
ories floated about pell mell and crossed each other confusedly, losing
their own shapes,
swelling beyond measure, then disappearing all at once, as if in a muddy and trou-
bled stream. Many thoughts came to him, but there was one which continually pre-
sented itself, and which drove away all others. What that thought was, we shall
tell directly. He had noticed the six silver plates and the large ladle
that Madame
Magloire had put on the table.
Those six silver plates took possession of him. There they were, within a few
steps. At the very moment that he passed through the middle room to reach the
One he was now in, the old servant was placing them in a little cupboard at the
head of the bed. He bad marked that cupboard well: on the right, coming from the
dining-room. They were solid; and old silver. With the big ladle, they would
bring at least two hundred francs, double what he had got for nineteen years'
labour. True; he would have got more if them "governent" had not "robbed" him.
His mind wavered a whole hour, and a long one, in fluctuation and in struggle.
The clock struck three, He opened his eyes, race hastily in bed, reached out his
arm and felt his haversack, which he had put into the corner of the alcove,
then he. thrust out his legsand placed his feet on the ground; and found himself,
he knew not how, seated on his bed.
He remained for some time lost in thought in that attitude, which would have had
a rather ominous look, had any one seen him therein the dusk--he only awake in
the slumbering house. All at once he . stooped down, took off his shoes, and put
them softly upon the.mat in front of the bed, then he resumed his thinking pos-
ture, and was still again.
In that hideous meditation, the ideas which we have been point-ing out,
troubled
his brain without ceasing, entered, departed, re-turned, and became a sort of
weight upon him; and then he thought, too, he knew not why, and with that mech-
anical obstinacy that belongs to reverie, of a convict named Brevet, whom he had
known in the galleys, and whose trousers were only held up by a single knit cotton
suspender. The checked pattern of that suspender came continually before his mind.
He continued in this situation, and would perhaps have remained there until day-
break, if the clock had not struck the quarter or the half-hour. The clock seemed
to say to him: "Come along!"
He rose to his feet, hesitated for a moment longer, and listened; all was still in
the house; he walked straight and cautiously towards the window, which he could
discern. The night was not very dark; there was a full moon, across which large
clouds were driving before the wind. This produced alternations of light and shade,
out-of-doors eclipses and illuminations, and in-doors a kind of glimmer. This
glimmer, enough to enable him to find his way, changing with the passing clouds,
resembled that sort of livid light, which falls through the window of a dungeon
before which men are passing. and repassing. On reaching the window, jean Valjean
examined it. It had no bars, opened into the garden, and was fastened, according
to the fashion of the country, with a little wedge only. He opened it; but as the
cold, keen air rushed into the room, he closed it again immediately. He looked
into the garden with that absorbed look which studies rather Than sees. The garden
was enclosed with a white wall, quite low, and readily scaled. Beyond, against the
sky, he distinguished the tops of trees at equal distances apart, which showed
that this wall separated the garden from an avenue or a lane planted with trees.
When he had taken this observation, he turned like a man whose mind is made up,
went to his alcove, took his haversack, opened it, fumbled in it, took out some-
thing which lie laid upon the bed, put his shoes into one of his pockets, tied up
his bundle, swung it upon his shoulders, put on his cap, and pulled the vizor down
over his eyes, felt for his stick, and went and put it in the corner of the window,
then returned to the bed, and resolutely took up the object which he had laid on
it. It looked like a short iron bar, pointed at one end like a spear.
It would have been hard to distinguish in the darkness for what use this piece of
iron had been made. Could it be a lever? Could it be a club?
In the day-time, it would have been seen to be nothing but a miner's drill. At
that time, the convicts were sometimes employed in quarrying stone on the high
hills that surround Toulon. and they often had miners' tools in their possession.
Miners' drills are of solid iron, terminating at the lower end in a point,
by
means of which they are sunk into the rock.
Hc took the drill in his right hand, and holding his breath, with stealthy steps,
he moved towards the door of the next room, which was the bishop's, as we know.
On reaching the door, he found it unlatched. The bishop had not closed it.
XI. WHAT HE DOES
JEAN Valjean listened. Not a sound.
He pushed the door.
He pushed it lightly with the end of his finger, with the meant' and timorous
carefulness of a cat. The door yielded to the pressure with a silent, imperceptible
movement, which made the opening a little wider.
He waited a moment, and then pushed the door again more boldly.
It yielded gradually and silently. The opening was now wide enough for
him to pass
through; but there was a small table near the door which with it formed a trouble-
some angle, and which barred the entrance.
Jean Valjean saw the obstacle. At all hazards the opening must be made still wider.
He so determined, and pushed the door a third time, harder than before.
This time a
rusty hinge suddenly sent out into the darkness a harsh and prolonged creak.
Jean Valjetin shivered. The noise of this binge sounded in his ears as clear and
terrible as the trumpet of the Judgment Day.
In the fantastic exaggeration of the first moment, he almost imagined that this
hinge had become animate, and suddenly endowed with a terrible life: and that it
was barking like a dog to warn everybody, and rouse the sleepers.
He stopped, shuddering and distracted. and dripped from his tiptoes to his feet. He
felt the pulses of his temples beat like trip-hammers, and it appeared to him that
his breath came from his chest with the roar of wind from a cavern. It
seemed
impossible that the horrible sound of this incensed hinge had not shaken
the whole
house with the shock of an earthquake: the door pushed by him had taken the alarm,
and had called out; the old man would arise; the two old women would scream; help
would come; in a quarter of an hour the town would be alive with it, and
the gen-
darmes in pursuit. For a moment he thought he was lost.
He stood still, petrified like the pillar of salt, not daring to stir. Some minutes pass-
ed. The door was wide open; he ventured a look into the room. Nothing had
moved.
He listened. Nothing was stirring in the house. The noise of the rusty hinge had
wakened nobody.
This first danger was over, but still he felt within him a frightful tumult.
Nevertheless
he did not flinch. Not even when he thought he was lost had he flinched. His only
thought was to make an end of it quickly. He took one step and was in the
room.
A deep calm filled the chamber. Here and there indistinct, confused forms could be
distinguished; which by day, were papers scattered over a table, open folios, books
piled on a stool, an armchair with clothes on it, a pric-dieu, but now were only dark
corners and whitish spots. Jean Valjean advanced, carefully avoiding the furniture.
At the further end of the room he could hear the equal and quiet breathing of the
sleeping bishop.
Suddenly he stopped: he was near the bed, he had reached it sooner than he thought.
Nature sometimes joins her effects and her appearances to our acts with a sort of
serious and intelligent appropriateness, as if she would compel us to reflect. For
nearly a half hour a great cloud had darkened the sky. At the moment when Jean Val-
jean paused before the bed the cloud broke as if purposely, and a ray of moonlight
crossing the high window, suddenly lighted up the bishop's pale face. He slept tran-
quilly. He was almost entirely dressed, though in bed, on account of the cold nights
of the lower Alps, with a dark woollen garment which covered his arms to the wrists.
His head had fallen on the pillow in the unstudied attitude of slumber; over the side
of the bed hung his hand, ornamented with the pastoral ring, and which had done so
many good deeds, so many pious acts. His entire countenance was lit up with a
vague expression of content, hope, and happiness. It was more than a smile
and al-
most a radiance. On his forehead rested the indescribable reflection of an unseen
light. The souls of the upright in sleep have vision of a mysterious heaven. A re-
flection from this heaven shone upon the bishop.
But it was also a luminous transparency, for this heaven was within him; this heaven
was his conscience.
At the instant when the moonbeam overlay, so to speak, this inward radiance, the
sleeping bishop appeared as if in a halo. But it was very mild, and veiled
in an
ineffable twilight. The moon in the sky, nature drowsing, the garden without a pulse
the quiet house, the hour, the moment, the silence, added something strangely
solemn
and unutterable to the venerable repose of this man, and enveloped his white locks
and his closed eyes with a serene and majestic glory, this face where all was hope
and confidence--this old man's head and infant's slumber.
There was something of divinity almost in this man, thus unconsciously
august.
Jean Valjean was in the shadow with the iron drill in his hand, erect, motionless,
terrified, at this radiant figure. He had never seen anything comparable to it. This
confidence filled him with fear. The moral world has no greater spectacle than this;
a troubled and restless conscience on the verge of committing an evil deed, contem-
plating the sleep of a good man.
This sleep in this solitude, with a neighbour such as he, contained a touch of the
sublime, which he felt vaguely but powerfully.
None could.have told what was within him, not even himself. To attempt to realise
it, the utmost violence must be imagined in the presence of the most extreme mildness.
In his face nothing could be distinguished with certainty. It was a sort of haggard
astonishment. He saw it; that was all. But what were his thoughts; it would have been
impossible to guess. It was clear that he was moved and agitated. But of what nature
was this emotion?
He did not remove his eyes from the old man. The only thing which was plain from his
attitude and his countenance was a strange indecision. You would have said he was
hesitating between two realms, that of the doomed and that of the saved. He appeared
ready either to cleave this skull, or to kiss this hand.
In a few moments he raised his left hand slowly to his forehead and took off his hat;
then, letting his hand fall with the same slowness. Jean Valjean resumed his contem-
plations, his cap in his left hand, his club in his right, and his hair bristling on
his fierce-looking head.
Under this frightful gaze the bishop still slept in profoundest peace.
The crucifix above the mantelpiece was dimly visible in the moonlight,
apparently
extending its arms towards both, with a benediction for one and a pardon for the
other.
Suddenly Jean Valjeatt put on his cap, then passed quickly, without looking at the
bishop, along the bed, straight in the cupboard which he perceived near its head; he
raised the drill to force the lock; the key was in it; he opened it; the first thing
he saw was the basket of silver, he took it, crossed the room with hasty stride,
carless: of noise, reached the door, entered the oratory. took his stick,
stepped
out, put the silver in his knapsack. threw away the basket, ran across the garden,
leaped over the wall like a tiger, and fled.
XII. THE BISHOP AT WORK
THE next day at sunrise, Monseigneur Bienvenu was walking in the garden
Mad-
ame Magloire ran towards him quite beside herself "Monseigneur, monseigneur,"
cried she, "does your greatness know where the silver basket is?"
.
"Yes," said the bishop.
"God be praised!" said she, "I did not know what had become
of it."
The bishop had just found the basket on a flower-bed. He gave it to Madame
Maglowe and said: "There it is."
"Yes," said she, "but there is nothing in it. The silver?"
"Ah!" said the bishop, " it is the silver then that troubles you.
I do not know
where that is."
"Good heavens! it is stolen. That man who came last night stole it."
And in the twinkling of an eye, with all the agility of which her age was
capable,
Madame Magloire ran to the oratory, went into the alcove, and came back
to
the bishop. The bishop was bending with some sadness over a cochlearia des
Guillons, which the basket had broken in falling. He looked up at Madame
Magloire's cry:
"Monseigneur, the man has gone! the silver is stolen!"
While she was uttering this exclamation her eyes fell on an angle of the
garden
where she saw traces of an escalade. A capstone of the wall had been thrown
down.
"See, there is where he got out; he jumped into CochefHet lane. The abominable
fellow! he has stolen our silver!"
The bishop was silent for a moment, then raising his serious eyes, he said mild-
ly to Madame Magloire:
"Now first, did this silver belong to us?"
Madame Magloire did not answer; after a moment the bishop continued:
"Madame Magloire, I have for a long time wrongfully withheld this silver: it
belonged to the poor. Who was this man? A. poor man evidently."
"Alas! alas!" returned Madame Magloire. "It is not on my
account or mademoi-
selle's: it is all the same to us. But it is on yours, monseigneur. What is
monsieur going to eat from now?"
The bishop looked at her with amazement:
"How so! have we no tin plates?"
Madame Magloire shrugged her shoulders.
"Tin smells."
"Well. then, iron plates."
Madame Magloire made an expressive gesture.
"Iron tastes."
"Well," said the bishop, "then, wooden plates."
In a few minutes he was breakfasting at the same table at which Jean Valjean sat
the night before. While breakfasting, Monseigneur Bienvenu pleasantly remarked
to
his sister who said nothing, and Madame Magloire who was grumbling to herself,
that there was really no need even of a wooden spoon or fork to dip a piece of
bread into a cup of milk.
"Was there ever such an idea?" said Madame Magloire to herself, as she went back-
wards and forwards: "to take in a man like that, and to give him a bed beside
him; and yet what a blessing it was that he did nothing but steal! Oh, my stars!
it makes the chills run over me when I think of it!"
Just as the brother and sister were rising from the table, there was a: knock at
the door.
"Come in," said the bishop.
The door opened. A strange, fierce group appeared on the threshold. Three men
were holding a fourth by the collar. The three men were gendarmes; the fourth
Jean Valjean.
A brigadier of gendarmes, who appeared to head the group, was near the door. He
advanced towards the bishop, giving a military salute.
"Monseigneur." said he--
At this word Jean Valjean, who was sullen and seemed entirely cast down, raised
his head with a stupefied air--
"Monseigneur!" he murmured, "then it is not the cure!" "SHence!" said a gendarme,
"it is monseigneur, the bishop."
In the meantime Monsieur Bienvenu had approached as quickly
as his great age permitted:
"Ah, there you are!" said he, looking towards Jean Valjean, "I am glad to see you.
But! I gave you the candlesticks also, which are silver like the rest, and would
bring two hundred francs. Why did you not take them along with your plates?"
Jean Valjean opened his eyes and looked at the bishop with an expression which no
human tongue could describe.
"Monseigneur," said the brigadier, "then what this man said
was true? We met him.
He was going like a man who was running away, and we arrested him in order to
see. He had this silver."
"And he told you," interrupted the bishop. with a smile. "that
it had been given
him by a good old priest with whom he had passed the night. I see it all. And you
brought him back here? It is all a mistake."
"If that is so," said the brigadier, "we can let him go.“
"Certainly," replied the bishop.
The gendarmes released Jean Valjean, who shrank back--
"Is it true that they let me go?" he said in a voice almost inarticulate,
as if he were speaking in his sleep.
"Yes! you can go. Do you not understand?" said a gendarme.
"My friend," said the bishop, "before you go away, here are your candlesticks;
take them."
He went to the mantelpiece, took the two candlesticks,and brought them to Jean
Valjean. The two women beheld the action without a word, or gesture, or look,
that might disturb the bishop.
Jean Valjean was trembling in every limb. He took the two canal& sticks mech-
anically, and with a wild appearance.
"Now," said the Bishop, "go in peace. By the way, my friend, when you come again,
you need not come through the garden. You can always come in and go out by the
front door. It is dosed only. with a latch, day or night.'
Then turning to the gendarmes, he said:
"Messieurs, you can retire." The gendarmes withdrew.
Jean Valjean felt like a man who is just about to faint.
The bishop approached him, and said, in a low voice:
"Forget not, never forget that you have promised me to use this silver to become
an honest man."
Jean Valjean, who had no recollection of this promise, stood confounded. The bishop
had laid much stress upon these words as he uttered them. He continued, solemnly:
"Jean Valjean, my brother: you belong no longer to evil, but to good. It is your soul
that I am buying for you. I withdraw it from dark thoughts and from the
spirit of
perdition, and I give it to God!"
XIII. PETIT GERVAIS
JEAN Valjean went out of the city as if he were escaping. He made all haste to get
into the open country, taking the first lanes and by-paths that offered, without
noticing that he was every moment retracing his steps. He wandered thus
all the
morning. He had eaten nothing, but he felt no hunger. He was the prey of a multi-
tude of new sensations. He felt somewhat angry, he knew not against whom.
He could
not have told whether he were touched or humiliated. There came over him, at times,
a strange relenting which he struggled with, and to which he opposed the hardening
of his past twenty years. This condition wearied him. He saw, with disquietude,
shaken within him that species of frightful calm which the injustice of his fate
had given him. He asked himself what should replace it. At times he would really
have liked better to he in prison with the gendarmes, and that things had
not hap-
pened thus; that would have given him less agitation. Although the season was well
advanced, there were yet here and there a few late flowers in the hedges, the odour
of which, as it met him in his walk. recalled the memories of his childhood.
These
memories were almost insupportable, it was so long since they had occurred to him.
Unspeakable thoughts thus gathered in his mind the whole day.
As the sun was sinking towards the horizon, lengthening the shadow on the ground of
the smallest pebble, Jean Valjean was ' seated behind a thicket in a large reddish
plain, an absolute desert. There was no horizon but the Alps. Not even the steeple
of a village church. Jean Valjean might have been three leagues from a by-path which
crossed the plain passed a few steps from the thicket.
In the midst of this meditation, which would have heightened not a little the fright-
ful effect of his rags to any one who might have met him, he heard a joyous sound.
He turned his head, and saw coming along the path a little Savoyard, a dozen years
old, singing, with his hurdygurdy at his side, and his marmot box on his back.
One of those pleasant and gay youngsters who go from place to place, with their knees
sticking through their trousers.
Always singing, the boy stopped from time to time, and played at tossing up some pieces
of money that he had in his hand, probably his whole fortune. Among them there was one
forty-sous piece.
The boy stopped by the side of the thicket without seeing Jean Valjean, and tossed up
his handful of sous; until this time he had skilfully caught the whole of them upon
the back of his hand.
This time the forty-sons piece escaped hint, and rolled towards the thicket, near Jean
Valjean.
Jean Valjean put his foot upon it.
The boy, however, had followed the piece with his eye, and had seen where it went.
He was not frightened, and walked straight to the man.
It was an entirely solitary place. Far as the eye could reach there was no one on the
plain or in the path. Nothing could be heard, but the faint cries of a flock of birds
of passage, that were flying across the sky at an immense height. The child turned his
back to the sun, which made his hair like threads of gold, and flushed
the savage face
of Jean Valjean with a lurid glow.
"Monsieur," said the little Savoyard. with that childish confidence which is made up
of ignorance and innocence, "my piece?"
"What is your name:" said Jean Valjean.
"Petit Gervais, monsieur."
"Get out," said Jean Valjean.
"Monsieur," continued the boy, "give me my piece."
Jean Valjean dropped his head and did not answer.
The child began again:
"My piece, monsieur?'
Jean Valjean's eye remained fixed on the ground.
"My piece!" exclaimed the boy, "my white piece! my silver!"
Jean Valjean did not appear to understand. The boy took him by the collar of his blouse
and shook him. And at the same time he made an effort to move the big,
iron-soled shoe
which was placed upon his treasure.
"I want my piece! my forty-sous piece!"
The child began to cry. Jean Valjean raised his head. He still kept his seat. His look
was troubled. He looked upon the boy with an air of wonder, then reached out his hand
towards his stick, and exclaimed in a terrible voice: "Who is there?"
"Me, monsieur," answered the boy. "Petit Gervais! me! me! give me my forty sous, if you
please! Take away your foot, monsieur, if you please!" Then becoming angry, small as he
was, and almost threatening:
"Come, now, will you take away your foot? Why don't you take away your foot?"
"Ah! you here yet?' said Jean Valjean, and rising hastily to his feet, without releasing
the piece of money, he added: "You'd better take care of yourself!"
The boy looked at him in terror, then began to tremble from head to foot, and after a few
seconds of stupor, took to flight and ran with all his might without daring to turn his
head or to utter a cry.
At a little distance, however, he stopped for want of breath, and Jean Valjean in his
reverie heard him sobbing,
In a few minutes the boy was gone.
The sun had gone down.
The shadows were deepening around Jean Valjean. He had not eaten during the day; probably
he had some fever.
He had remained standing, and had not changed his attitude since the child fled. His breath-
ing was at long and unequal intervals. His eyes were fixed on a spot ten or twelve steps
before him, and seemed to be studying with profound attention the form of an old piece of
blue crockery that was lying in the grass. All at once he shivered; he behein to feel the
cold night air.
He pulled his cap down over his forehead, sought mechanically to fold and button his blouse
around him, stepped forward and stooped to pick up his stick.
At that instant he perceived the forty-sous piece which his foot had half
buried in the
ground, and which glistened among the pebbles. It was like an electric shock. "What is that?"
said he, between his teeth. He drew back a step or two, then stopped without the power to
withdrav his gaze from this point which his foot had covered the instant
before, as if the
thing that glistened there in the obscurity had been an open eye fixed
upon him.
After a few minutes, he sprang convulsively towards the piece of money,
seized it, and, thing,
looked away over the plain, straining his eyes towards all points of the
horizon. standing and
trembling like a frightened deer which is seeking a place of refuge.
He saw nothing. Night was falling, the plain was cold and bare, thick purple
mists were ris-
ing in the glimmering twilight.
He said: "Oh!" and began to walk rapidly in the direction in which the child had gone. After
some thirty steps, he stopped. looked about, and saw nothing.
Then he called with all his might "Petit Gervais! Petit Gervais!" And then he listened.
There was no answer.
The country was desolate and gloomy. On all sides was space. There was nothing about him but
a shadow in which his gaze was lost, and a silence in which his voice was lost.
A biting norther was blowing, which gave a kind of dismal life to everything about him. The
bushes shook their little thin arms with an incredible fury. One would have said that they
were threatening and pursuing somebody.
He began to walk again, then quickened his pace to a run, and from time to time stopped and
called out in that solitude, in a most desolate and terrible voice:
"Petit Gervais! Petit Gervais!"
Surely, if the child had heard him, he would have been frightened, and
would have hid him-
self. But doubtless the boy was already far away.
He met a priest on horseback. He went up to him and said: "Monsieur cure, have you seen a
child go by?"
"No," said the priest.
"Petit Gervais was his name?"
"I have seen nobody."
He took two five-franc pieces from his bag, and gave them to the priest.
"Monsieur cure, this is for your poor. Monsieur curt:. he is a little fellow, about ten years
old, with a marmot. I think and a burdygurdy. He went this way. One of
these Savoyards,
you know:"
"I have not seen him."
"Petit Gervais? is his village near here: can you tell me?"
"If it be as you say. my friend, the little fellow is a foreigner. They roam about this
country. Nobody knows them."
Jean Valjean hastily took out two more five-franc pieces. and gave them to the priest.
"For your poor." said he.
Then he added wildly:
"Monsieur abbe, have me arrested. I am a robber."
The priest put spurs to his horse, and fled in great fear.
Jean Valjean began to run again in the direction which he ha first taken.
He went on in this wise for a considerable distance, looking around, calling and shouting,
but met nobody else. Two or three times he left the path to look at what seemed to be some-
body lying down or crouching; it was only low bushes or rocks. Finally, at a place where
three paths met, he stopped. The moon had risen. He strained his eyes in
the distance,
and called out once more "Petit Gervais! Petit Gervais! Petit Gervais!" His cries died away
into the mist, without even awakening an echo. Again he murmured: "Petit
Gervais!" but
with a feeble, and almost inarticulate voice. That was his last effort;
his knees suddenly bent
under him, as if an invisible power overwhelmed him at a blow, with the weight, of his bad
conscience; he fell exhausted upon a great stone, his hands clenched in
his hair, and his
face on his knees, and exclaimed: "What a wretch I am!"
Then his heart swelled, and he burst into tears. It was the first time he bad wept for
nineteen years.
When Jean Valjean left the bishop's house, as we have seen, his mood was one that he had
never known before. He could understand nothing of what was passing within
him. He set himself
stubbornly in opposition to the angelic deeds and the gentle words of the old man, "you have
promised me to become an honest man. I am purchasing your soul, I withdraw it from the spir-
it of perversity, and I give it to God Almighty." This came back to
him incessantly. To this
celestial tenderness, he opposed pride, which is the fortress of evil in man. He felt dimly
that the pardon of this priest was the hardest assault, and the most formidable attack which
he had yet sustained; that his hardness of heart would be complete, if
it resisted this kind-
ness; that if he yielded, be must renounce that hatred with which the acts of other men had
for so many years filled his soul, and in which he found satisfaction; that, this time, he
must conquer or be conquered, and that the struggle, a gigantic and decisive
struggle, had
begun between his own wickedness, and the goodness of this man.
In view of all these things, he moved like a drunken man. While thus walking
on with haggard
look, had he a distinct perception of what might be to him the result of his adventure at D--?
Did he hear those mysterious murmurs which warn or entreat the spirit at certain moments of
life? Did a voice whisper in his ear that he had just passed through the decisive hour of his
destiny, that there was no longer a middle course for him, that if, thereafter,
he should not
be the best of men, he would be the worst, that he must now, so to speak,
mount higher than the
bishop, or fall lower than the galley slave; that, if he would become good, he must become an
angel; that, if he would remain wicked, he must become a monster?
Here we must again ask those questions, which we have already proposed elsewhere: was some
confused shadow of all this formed in his mind? Certainly, misfortune,
we have said, draws
out the intelligence; it is doubtful, however, if Jean Valjean was in a condition to discern
all that we here point out. If these ideas occurred to him, he but caught
a glimpse, he did
not see; and the only effect was to throw him into an inexpressible and
distressing confusion.
Being just out of that misshapen and gloomy thing which is called the galleys, the bishop
had hurt his soul, as a too vivid light would have hurt his eyes on coming
out of the dark.
The future life, the possible life that was offered to him thenceforth, all pure and radiant,
filled him with trembling and anxiety. He no longer knew really where he was. Like an owl
who should see the sun suddenly rise, the convict had been dazzled and
blinded by virtue.
One thing was certain, nor did he himself doubt it, that he was no longer the same man, that
all was changed in hint, that it was no longer in his power to prevent the bishop from having
talked to him and having touched him.
In this frame of mind, he had met Petit Gervais, and stolen his forty sous. Why? He could not
have explained it, surely; was it the final effect, the final effort of the evil thoughts he
had brought front the galleys, a remnant of impulse, a result of what is called in physics
acquired force? It was that, and it was also perhaps even less than that. We will say plainly,
it was not he who had stolen, it was not the man, it was the beast which, from habit and in-
stinct. had stupidly set its foot upon that money, while the intellect was struggling in the
midst of so many new and unknown influences. When the intellect awoke and saw this act of the
brute, Jean Valjean recoiled in anguish and uttered a cry of horror.
It was a strange phenomenon, possible only in the condition in which he then was, but the fact
is, that in stealing this money from that child, he had done a thing of which he was no longer
capable.
However that may be, this last misdeed had a decisive effect upon him; it rushed across
the chaos of his intellect and dissipated it, set the light on one side and the dark clouds
on the other, and acted upon his soul, in the condition it was in, as certain chemical rea-
gents act upon a turbid mixture, by precipitating one element and producing a clear solu-
tion of the other.
At first, even before self-examination and reflection, distractedly, like
one who seeks to
escape, he endeavoured to find the boy to give him back his money: then, when he found that
that was useless and impossible, he stopped in despair. At the very moment
when in; exclaimed:
"What a wretch I am!" he saw himself as he was, ard was already so far separated from himself
that it seemed to him that he was only a phantom, and that he had there before him, in
flesh and bone, with his stick in his hand, his blouse on his back, his
knapsack filled with stol-
en articles on his shoulders, with his stern and gloomy face, and his thoughts full of abom-
inable projects, the hideous galley slave, Jean Valjean.
Excess of misfortune, we have remarked, had made him, in some sort, a visionary. This then
was like a vision. He veritably saw this Jean Valjean, this ominous face, before him. He was
on the point of asking himself who that man was, and he was horror-stricken
by it.
His brain was in one of those violent, and yet frightfully calm, conditions where reverie
is so profound that it swallows up reality. We no longer see the objects
that are before us,
but we see, as if outside of ourselves, the forms that we have in our minds.
He beheld himself then, so to speak, face to face, and at the same time, across that hallu-
cination, he saw, at a mysterious distance, a sort of light which he took at first to be a
torch. Examining more attentively this light which dawned upon his conscience, he recognised
that it had a human form, and that this torch was the bishop.
His conscience weighed in turn these two men thus placed before it, the bishop and Jean Val-
jean. Anything less than the first would have failed to soften the second. By one of those
singular effects which are peculiar to this kind of ecstasy, as his reverie continued, the
bishop grew grander and more resplendent in his eyes; Jean Valjean shrank and faded away.
At one moment he was but a shadow. Suddenly he disappeared. The bishop alone remained.
He filled the whole soul of this wretched man with a magnificent radiance.
Jean Valjean wept long. He shed hot tears, he wept bitterly, with more weakness than a woman,
with more terror than a child.
While he wept, the light grew brighter and brighter in his mind--an extraordinary light, a
light at once transporting and terrible. His past life, his first offence, his long expiation,
his brutal exterior, his hardened interior, his release made glad by so many schemes of ven-
geance, what had happened to him at the bishop's, his last action, this theft of forty sous
from a child, a crime meaner and the more monstrous that it came after the bishop's pardon,
all this returned and appeared to him, clearly, but in a light that he
had never seen before.
He beheld his life, and it seemed to him horrible; his soul, and it seemed to him frightful.
There was, however, a softened light upon that life and upon that soul. It seemed to him
that he was looking upon Satan by the light of Paradise.
How long did he weep thus? What did he do after weeping? Where did lie go? Nobody ever knew.
It is known simply that. on that very night. the stage-driver who drove at that time on the
Grenoble route, and arrived at D-- about three o'clock in the morning.
saw, as he passed
through the bishop's street, a man in the attitude of prayer. kneel upon the pavement in the
shadow, before the door of Monseigneur Bienvenu.
BOOK THIRD
IN THE YEAR 1817
I. THE YEAR 1817
THE year 1817 was that which Louis XVIII., with a certain royal assumation not devoid of
stateliness, styled the twenty-second year of his reign. It was the year when M. Bruguiere
de Sorsum was famous. All the hair-dressers' shops, hoping for the return of powder and
birds of Paradise, were bedizened with azure and fleurs-de-lis. It was the honest time when
Count Lynch sat every Sunday as churchwarden on the official bench at Saint
Germain des
Pres, in the dress of a peer of France, with his red ribbon and long nose, and that majesty of
profile peculiar to a man who has done a brilliant deed. The brilliant deed committed by M.
Lynch was that, being mayor of Bordeaux on the 12th of March, 1814, he
had surrendered
the city a little too soon to the Duke of Angouleme. I fence his peerage. In 1817 it was
the fashion to swallow up little boys from four to six years old in great morocco caps with
ears, strongly resembling the chimney-pots of the Esquimaux. The French army was dressed
in white after the Austrian style; regiments were called legions, and wore, instead of num-
bers, the names of the departments. Napoleon was at St Helena, and as England
would not
give him green cloth, had had his old coats turned. In 1817, Pellegrini sang; Mademoiselle
Bigottini danced; Potier reigned; Odry was not yet in existence. Madame Saqui succeeded to
Forioso. There were Prussians still in France. M. Delalot was a personage.
Legitimacy had
just asserted itself by cutting of the fist and then the head of Picignier, Carbonneau,
and Tolleron. Prince Talkvrand, the grand chamberlain, and Abbe Louis, the designated min-
ister of the finances, looked each other in the face. laughing like two augurs; both had
celebrated the mass of the Federation in the Champ-de-Mars on the 14th
of July, 1790; Tall-
eyrand had said it as bishop, Louis had served hint as deacon. In 1817, in the cross-walks
of this same Champ-de-Mars, were seen huge wooden cylinders, painted blue,
with traces of
eagles and bees, that had lost their gilding, lying in the rain, and rotting
in the grass. There
were the columns which, two years before, had supported the estrade of the emperor in the
Champ-de-Mai. They were blackened here and there from the bivouac-fires of the Austrians
in barracks near the Gros-Caillou. Two or three of these columns had disappeared in the the:
fires of these bivouacs, and had warmed the huge hands of the kaiserlics. The Champ-de-Mai
was remarkable from the fact of having been held in the month of June,
and on the Champ-
de-Mars. In the year 1817, two things were popular--Voltaire-Touquet and Chartist
snuff-
boxes. The latest Parisian sensation was the crime of Dautun, who had thrown his brother's
head into the fountain of the Marche-aux.-Fleurs. People were beginning to find fault
with the minister of the navy for having no news of that fated frigate,
La Meduse, which
was to cover Chaumareix with shame, and Gericault with glory. Colonel Selves went to Egypt,
there to become Soliman-Pacha. The palace of the Thermes, Rue de La Harpe, was turned into
a cooper's shop. On the platform of the octagonal tower of the hotel de Cluny, the little
board shed was still to be seen, which had served as observatory to Messier, the astronomer
of the navy under LouisXVI. The Duchess of Duras read to three or four friends, in her
boudoir, furnished in sky-blue satin, the Mariuscript of Ourika. The N's were erased from
the Louvre. The bridge of Austerlitz abdicated its name, and became the bridge of the
Jardin-du-Roi,. an enigma which disguised at once the bridge of Austerlitz and the
Jardin-des-Plantes. Louis XVIII., absently annotating Horace with his finger-nail
while thinking about heroes that had become emperors, and shoemakers that had become
dauphins, had two cares, Napoleon and Mathurin Bruneau. The French Academy gave as
a
prize theme, The happiness which Study procures. M. Belled was eloquent, officially.
In his shadow was seen taking root the futtire Attorney-General, de Broe, promised
to the sarcasms of Paul Louis Courier. There was a counterfeit Chateaubriand called
Marchangy, as there was to be later a counterfeit Marchangy called d'Arlincourt.
Claire
d'Alba and Malek Adel were masterpieces; Madame Cottin was declared the first writ-
er of the age. The Institute struck from its list the academician, 'Napoleon Bonapart.
A royal ordinance established a naval school at Angouleme for the Duke of Angouleme
being Grand Admiral, it was evident that the town of Angouleme had by right all the
qualities of a seaport, without which the monarchical principle would have been as-
sailed. The question whether the pictures. representing acrobats, which spiced
the
placards of Franconi, and drew together the blackguards of the streets, should be
tolerated, was agitated in the cabinet councils. M. Paer, the author of
l 'Agnese,
an honest man with square jaws and a wart on his cheek, directed the small, select
concerts of the Marchioness de Sassenaye, Rue de la Ville-ltveque. All the young
girls sang l'Ermite de Saint Avelle, words by Edmond Geraud. The Nain juane was
transformed into the Miroir The Cafe Lemblin stood out for the emperor in opposition
to the Cafe Valois, which was in favour of the Bourbons. A marriage had
just been
made with a Sicilian inincess for the Duke of Berry, who was already in reality re-
garded with suspicion by Laurel. Madame de Stael had been dead a year. Madem-
oiselle Mars was hissed by the body-guards. The great a journals were all small.
The form was limited, but the liberty was large. Le Constitutionnel was constitu-
tional; La ilinerre called Chateaubriand, Chateaubriant. 'This excited great laughter
among the citizens at the expense of the great writer.
In purchased journals, prostituted journalists insulted the outlaws of 1815; David no
longer hail talent, Annuli no longer had ability, Carnot no longer had
probity, Soult
had never gained a victory; it is true that Napoleon no longer had genius. Everybody
knows that letters sent through the post to an exile rarely reach their destination,
the police making it a religious duty to intercept them. This fact is by
no means a
new one; Descartes complained of it in his banishment. Now, David having shown some
feeling in a Belgian journal at not receiving the letters addressed to
hint, this seemed
ludicrous to the royalist papers, who seized the occasion to ridicule the
exile. To say,
regicides, instead of voters, enemies instead of allies, Napoleon instead of Buona-
parte, separated two men more than an abyss. All people of common sense agreed
that the era of revolutions had been for ever closed by King Louis XVIII.,
surnamed
"The immortal author of the Charter." At the terreplain of the Pont Neuf, the word
Redivivus was sculptured on the pedestal width awaited the statue of Henri
IV, M. Piet
at Rue Therese, No. 4, was sketching the plan of his cabal to consolidate the monarchy.
The leaders of the Right said, in grave dilemmas, "We must write to Bacol." Messrs.
Camel O'Mahony and Chappedelaine made a beginning, not altogether without the appro-
bation of Moncteur. of what was afterwards to become the "conspiracy of the ford de
YEau." L'Epinglc Noire plotted on its side; Delaverderie held intei.- views with Tro-
goff; M. Decazes, a mind in some degree liberal, prevailed. Chateaubriand, standing
every morning at his window in the Rue Saint Dominique, No. 27, in stocking pantaloons
and slippers, his grey hair covered with a Madras handkerchief, a mirror before his
eyes, and a complete case of dental instruments open before him, cleaned his teeth,
which were excellent. while dictating La Monarchtie scion la Charge to M. Pilorge,
his secretary. The critics in authority preferred Lafon to Talon. M. de Feletz signed
himself A.: M. Hoffman signed himself a Charles Norlier was writing Th&esc Albert.
Divorce was abolished. The lyceums called themselves colleges. The students, decora-
ted on the collar with a golden fleur-de-lis. pommelled each other over
the King of
Rome. The secret police of the palace denounced to her royal highness. Madame. the
portrait of the Duke of Orleans. which was everywhere to be seen. and which looked
better in the uniform of colonel-general of hussars than the Duke of Berry in the un-
iform of colonel-general of dragoons--a serious matter. The city of Paris regilded the
dome of the lnyalides at its expense. Grave citizens asked each other what M. de
Trinquelague would do in such or such a case; M. Clausel de Montals differed
on
sundry points from M. Clausel de Coussergues; M. de Salaberry was not satisfied.
Comedy-writer Picard, of the Academy to which comedy-writer Moliere could not
belong, had Les deu Philiberts played at the Odeon, on the pediment of which,
the removal of the letters still permitted the inscription to be read distinctly:
THEATRE DE L'IPMPERATTICE. People took sides for or against Cugnet de Mon-
tarlot. Fabvier was factious; Bavoux was revolutionary. The bookseller Pelicier
published an edition of Voltaire under the title, Works of Voltaire, of
the French
Academy. "That will attract buyers," said the naive publisher.
The general opin-
ion was that M. Charles Loyson would be the genius of the age; envy was begin-
ning to nibble at him, a sign of glory, and the line was made on him--
"Meme quand Loyson vole, on sent gull. a despattes."
Cardinal Pesch refusing to resign, Monsieur de Pins, Archbishop of Amasie,
administered the diocese of Lyons. The quarrel of the Vallee des Dappes
commenced between France and Switzerland by a memorial from Captain, af-
terwards General Dufour. Saint-Simon, unknown, was building up his sublime
dream. There was a celebrated Fourier in the Academy of Sciences whom
posterity has forgotten, and an obscure Fourier in some unknown garret whom
the future will remember. Lord Byron was beginning to dawn; a note to a poem
of Millevoye introduced him to France as a certain Lord Baron. David d'Angers
was endeavouring to knead marble. The Abbe Caron spoke with praise, in a
small party of Seminarists in the cul-de-sac of the Peuillantines, of an
unknown priest, Palette Robert by name, who was afterwards Lamennais. A
thing which smoked and clacked on the Seine, making the noise of a swimming
dog, went and came beneath the windows of the Tuileries, from the Pont
Royal to the Pont Louis XV.; it was a piece of mechanism of no great val-
ue, a sort of toy, the day-dream of a visionary, a Utopia--a steamboat.
The Parisians looked upon the useless thing with indifference. Monsieur
Vaublanc, wholesale reformer of the Institute by royal ordinance and dis-
tinguished author of several academicians, after having made them, could
not make himself one. The Faubourg Saint-Germain and the Pavillon Marsan
desired Monsieur Delaveau for prefectof police, on account of his piety.
Dupuytren and Recanner quarrelled in the amphitheatre of the Ernie de '
Medicine, and shook their fists in each other's faces, over the divinity
of Christ. Cuvier, with one eye on the book of Genesis and the other on
nature, was endeavouring to please the bigoted reaction by reconciling
fossils with texts and making the mastodons support Moses. Monsieur
Francois de Neufchateau, the praiseworthy cultivator of the memory of
Parmentier, was making earnest efforts to have pomme de terre pro-
nounced parmentiere, without success. Abbe Gregoire, ex-bishop, ex-
member of the National Convention, and ex-senator, had passed to the
condition of the "infamous Gregoire," in royalist polemics. The expression
which we have just employed, "passed to the condition," was denounced
as a neologism by Monsieur Royer-Collard. The new stone could still be
distinguished by its whiteness under the third arch of the bridge of Jena,
which, two years before, had been used to stop up the entrance of the
mine bored by Blucher to blow up the bridge. Justice summoned to her
bar a man who had said aloud, on seeing Count d'Artois entering Notre-
Dame, "Sapristi! I regret the time when I saw Bonaparte and Tatum en-
tering the flat-Savage, arm in arm." Seditious language. Six months' im-
prisonment.
Traitors showed themselves stripped even of hypocrisy; men who had gone
over to the enemy on the eve of a battle made no concealment of their bribes,
and shamelessly walked abroad in daylight in the cynicism of wealth and dig-
nities; deserters of Ligny and Quatre-Bras, in the brazenness of their pur-
chased shame, exposed the nakedness of their devotion to monarchy, forget-
ting the commonest requirements of public decency.
Such was the confused mass of events that floated pell-mell on the surface
of the year 1817, and is now forgotten. History neglects almost all these
peculiarities, nor can it do otherwise; it is under the dominion of infinity.
Nevertheless, these details, which are wrongly called little--there are
nei-
ther little facts in humanity nor little leaves in vegetation--are useful.
The physiognomy of the year makes up the face of the century:
In this year, 1817, four young Parisians played "a good farce."
II. DOUBLE QUATUOR
These Parisians were, one from Toulouse, another from Limoges. the third
from Cahors, and the fourth from Montauban; but they were students, and to
say student is to say Parisian; to study in Paris is to be born in Paris.
These young men were remarkable for nothing; everybody hag seen such per-
sons; the four first comers will serve as samples; neither good nor bad, neither
learned nor ignorant, neither talented nor stupid; handsome in that charming
April of life which we call twenty. They were four Oscars; for at this time,
Arthurs were not vet in existence. Burn the perfumes of Arabia in his hon-
our, exclaims the romance. Oscar approaches! Oscar, I am about to see
him! Ossian was in fashion, elegance was Scandavian and Caledonian; the
pure English did not prevail till later, and the first of the Arthurs,
Wellington,
had but just won the victory of Waterloo.
The first of these Oscars was called Felix Tholomyes, of Toulouse; the
second,
Listolier, of Cahors; the third, Fameuil, of Limoges; and the last, Blache-
ville, of Montauban. Of course each had his mistress. Blacheville loved
Favourite, so called, because she had been in England; Listolier adored
Dah-
lia, who had taken the name of a flower as her lions de guerre; Fameuil id-
olised Zephine, the diminutive of Josephine, and Tholomyes had Fantine,
called the Blonde, on account of her beautiful hair, the colour of the sun:
Favourite, Dahlia, Zephine, and Fantine were four enchanting girls, perfumed
and sparkling, something of workwomen still, since they bad not wholly giv-
en up the needle, agitated by love-affairs, yet preserving on their counte-
nances a remnant of the serenity of labour, and in their souls that flower
of purity, which in woman survives the first fall. One of the four was
called the child, because she was the youngest; and another was called the
old one--the Old One was twenty-three. To conceal nothing, the three first
were more experienced, more careless, and better versed in the ways of the
world than Fantine, the Blonde, who was still in her first illusion.
Dahlia, Zephine, and Favourite especially, could not say as much; There
had
been already more than one episode in their scarcely commenced romance,
and the lover called Adolphe in the first chapter, was found as Alphonse
in the second, and Gustave in the third. Poverty and coquetry are fatal
counsellors; the one grumbles, the other flatters, and the beautiful dau-
ghters of the people have both whispering in their ear, each on its side.
Their ill-guarded souls listen. Thence their fall, and the stones that
are
cast at them. They are overwhelmed with the splendour of all that is im-
maculate and inaccessible. Alas! was the Jungfrau ever hungry?
Favourite, having been in England, was the admiration of Zephine and Dahlia.
She had had at a very early age a home of her own. Her father was a brutal,
boasting old professor of mathematics, never married, and a rake, despite
his years. When young, he one day saw the dress of a chambermaid catch in
the fender, and fell in love through the accident. Favourite was the result.
Occasionally she met her father, who touched his hat to her. One morning,
an old woman with a fanatical air entered her rooms, and asked, "you do
not know me, mademoiselle?"---"No."--"I am your mother.'--The
old woman
directly opened the buffet, ate and drank her fill, sent for a bed that
she had, and made herself at home. This mother was a devotee and a grum-
bler; she never spoke to Favourite, remained for hours without uttering a
word, breakfasted, dined and supped for four, and went down to the por-
ter's lodge to see visitors and talk ill of her daughter.
What had attracted Dahlia to Listolier, to others perhaps, to indolence,
was
her beautiful, rosy finger-nails. How could such nails work! She who will
remain
virtuous must have no compassion for her hands. As to Zephine, she had con-
quered Fauteuil by her rebellious yet caressing little way of saying "yes,
sir."
The young men were comrades, the young girls were friends. Such loves are
always accompanied by such friendships.
Wisdom and philosophy are two things; a proof of which is that, with all
necessary reservations for these little, irregular households, Favourite,
Zephtne, and Dahlia, were philosophic, and Fantine was wise.
"Wise!" you will say, and Tholomyes? Solomon would answer that love is a
part of wisdom. We content ourselves with saying that the love of Fantine
was a first, an only, a faithful love.
She was the only one of the four who had been petted by but one.
Fantine was one of those beings which are brought forth from the heart of
the people. Sprung from the most unfathomable depths of social darkness,
she bore on her brow the mark of the anonymous and unknown. She was horn
at M on M--. Who were her parents? None could tell, she had never known ei-
ther father or mother. She was called Fantine--why so? because she had
never
been known by any other name. At the time of her birth, the Director was
still in existence. She could have no family name, for she had no family;
she could have no baptismal name, for then there was no church. She was
named after the pleasure of the first passer-by who found her, a mere in-
fant, straying barefoot;in the streets. Nobody knew anything more of her.
Such was the manner in which this human being had come into life. At the
age of ten, Fantine left the city and went to service among the farmers of
the suburbs. At fifteen, she came to Paris, to "seek her fortune."
Fantine
was beautiful and remained pure as long as she could. She was a pretty
blonde with fine teeth. She had gold and pearls for her dowry; but the gold
was on her head and the pearls in her mouth.
She worked to live; then, also to live, for the heart too has its hunger,
she loved.
She loved Tholomyes.
To him, it was an amour; to her a passion. The streets of the Latin Quarter.
which swarm with students and grisettes, saw the beginning of this dream.
Fantine, in those labyrinths of the hill of the Pantheon, where so many ties
are knotted and unloosed, long fled from Tholomyes, but in such a way as al-
ways to meet him again. There is a way of avoiding a person which resembles
a search. In short, the eclogue took place.
Blacheville, Listolier, and Fluveuil formed a sort of group of which Tholomyes
was the head. He was the wit of the company.
Tholomyes was an old student of the old style; he was rich,_iliatr an in-
come of four thousand francs- a splendid scandal ol the iontagne Sainte-
Genevieve. He was a good liver, thirty years old, and ill preserved. He
was wrinkled, his teeth were broken, and he was beginning to show signs
of baldness, of which he said, gaily: 'The head at thirty, the knees
at forty.' His digestion was not good, and he had a weeping eye. But in
proportion as his youth died out, his gaiety increased; he replaced his
teeth by jests, his hair by joy, his health by irony, and his weeping eye
was always laughing. He was dilapidated, but covered with flowers. His
youth, decamping long before its time, was beating a retreat in good or-
der, bursting with laughter, and displaying no loss of fire. He had had
a piece refused at the Vaudeville; he made verses now and then on any
subject; moreover, he doubted everything with an air of superiority--a
great power in the eyes of the weak. So, being bald and ironical, he was
the chief. Can the word iron be the root from which irony is derived?
One day, Tholomyes took the other three aside, and said to than with an
oracular gesture:
"For nearly a year, Fantine, Dahlia, Zephine, and Favourite have been
asking us to give them a surprise; we have solemnly promised them one.
They are constantly reminding us of it, me especially. Just as the old
women at Naples cry to Saint January, 'Faccia galliuta, fa o miracolo,
yellow face, do your miracle,' our pretty ones are always saying':
'Tholomyes, when are you going to be delivered of your surprise? At the
same time our parents are writing for us. Two birds with one stone.
It seems to me the time has come. Let us talk it over."
Upon this, Tholomyes lowered his voice, and mysteriously articulated some-
thing so ludicrous that a prolonged and enthusiastic giggling arose from
the four throats at once, and Blacheville exclaimed: "What an idea!"
An ale-house, filled with smoke, was before them; they entered, and the
rest of their conference was lost in its shade.
The result of this mystery was a brilliant pleasure party, which took
place on the following Sunday, the four young men inviting the four
young girls.
III. FOUR TO FOUR
IT is difficult to picture to one's self, at this day, a country party of
students and grisettes as it was forty-five years ago. Paris has no longer
the same environs; the aspect of what we might call circum-Parisian life
has
completely changed in half a century; in place of the rude, one-horse chaise,
we have now the railroad car; in place of the pinnace, we have now the
steam-
boat; we say Fecamp today, as we then said Saint Cloud. The Paris of 1862
is a city which has France for its suburbs.
The four couples scrupulously accomplished all the country follies then pos-
sible. It was in the beginning of the holidays, and a warm, clear summer's day.
The night before, Favourite, the only one who knew how to write, had written
to Tholomyes in the name of the four: "It is lucky to go out early." For this
reason, they rose at five in the morning. Then they went to Saint Cloud by the
coach, looked at the dry cascade and exclaimed: "How beautiful it must be when
there is any water!" breakfasted at the Tete Noire, which Castaing had not yet
passed, amused themselves with a game of rings at the quincunx of the great
basin, ascended to Diogenes' lantern, played roulette with macaroons on the
Sevres bridge, gathered bouquets at Puteaux, bought reed pipes at Neuilly,
ate apple puffs everywhere, and were perfectly happy.
The young girls rattled and chattered like uncaged warblers. They were delir-
ious with joy. Now and then they would playfully box the ears of the young men.
Intoxication of the morning of life! Adorable years! The wing of the dragon-
fly trembles! Oh, ye, whoever you may be, have you memories of the past? Have
you walked in the brushwood, thrusting aside the branches for the charming head
behind you? Have you glided laughingly down some slope wet with rain, with the
woman of your love, who held you back by the hand, exclaiming: "Oh, my new
boots! what a condition they are in!"
Let us hasten to say that that joyous annoyance, a shower, was, wanting to this
good-natured company, although Favourite had said on setting out, with a magi-
sterial and maternal air: "The snails are crawling in the paths. A sign of rain,
children."
All four were ravishingly beautiful. A good old classic poet, then in renown,
a good man who had an Eleanore, the Chevalier de Labouisse, who was walking
that day under the chestnut trees of Saint Cloud, saw them pass about ten o'clock
in the morning, and exclaimed, thinking of the Graces: "There is one too many!"
Favourite, the friend of Blacheville, the Old One of twenty-three, ran forward
under the broad green branches, leaped across ditches, madly sprang over bushes,
and took the lead in the gaiety with the verve of a young faun. Zephine and Dah-
lia, whom chance had endowed with a kind of beauty that was heightened and per-
fected by contrast, kept together through the instinct of coquetry still more
than through friendship, and, leaning on each other, affected English attitudes;
the first keepstakes had just appeared, melancholy was in vogue for women, as
Byronism was afterwards for men. and the locks of the tender sex were beginning
to fall dishevelled. Zephine and Dahlia wore their hair in rolls. Listolier
are
engaged in a discussion on their professors, explained to Fantine the difference
between M. Delvincourt and M. Blondeau.
Blacheville seemed to have been created expressly to carry Favourite's dead-leaf
coloured shawl upon his arm on Sunday.
Tholomyes followed, ruling, presiding over the group. He was excessively gay, but
one felt the governing power in him. The dictatorship in his joviality; his prin-
cipal adornment was a pair of. nankeen pantaloons, cut in the elephant-leg fashion,
withnder:. stockings of copper-coloured braid; he had a huge ratten, worth two
hundred francs, in his hand, and as he denied himself nothing, a strange thing
called cigar in his mouth. Nothing being sacred to him, he was smoking.
"This Tholomyes is astonishing," said the others, with veneration. "What panta-
loons! what energy!"
As to Fantine, she was joy itself. Her splendid teeth had evidently been endowed
by God with one function--that of laughing. She carried in her hand rather than
on her head, her little bat of sewed straw, with long, white strings. Her thick
blond tresses, inclined to wave, and easily escaping from their confinement, ob-
liging her to fasten them continually, seemed designed for the flight of
Gala-
tea under the willows. Her rosy lips babbled with enchantment. The corners of
her mouth, turned, up voluptuously like the antique masks of rigone, seemed to
encourage audacity; but her long, shadowy eyelashes were cast discreetly down
towards the lower part of her face as if to check its festive tendencies.
Her
whole toilette was indescribably harmonious and enchanting. She wore a dress
of mauve ....,barege, little reddish-brown buskins, the strings of which
were
'Arossed over her fine, white, open-worked stockings, and that species
of spencer, invented at Marseilles, the name of which, canezou, a corruption
of the words quinze aout in the Canebiere dialect, signifies fine weather,
warmth, and noon. The three others, less timid as we have said, wore low-
necked dresses, which in summer, beneath bonnets covered with flowers, are
full of grace and allurement; but by the side of this daring toilette, the
canezou of the blond Fantine, with its transparencies, indiscretions, and
concealments, at once hiding and disclosing, seemed a provoking godsend of
decency; and the famous court of love, presided over by the Viscountess de
Cette, with the sea-green eyes, would probably have given the prize for
co-
quetry to this canezou, which had entered the lists for that of modesty.
The
simplest is sometimes the wisest. So things go.
A brilliant face, delicate profile, eyes of a deep blue, heavy eve-lashes,
small, arching feet, the wrists and ankles neatly encased, the white skin
showing here and there the azure aborescence of the veins; a cheek small
and
fresh, a neck robust as that of Egean Juno; the nape firm and supple, shoul-
ders modelled as if by Coustou, with a voluptuous dimple in the centre, just
visible through the muslin; a gaiety tempered with reverie, sculptured and
exquisite--such was Fantine, and you divined beneath this dress and these
ribbons a statue, and in this statue a soul.
Fantine was beautiful, without being too conscious of it. Those rare dreamers,
the mysterious priests of the beautiful, who silently compare all things with
perfection, would have had a dim vision in this little work-woman, through the
transparency of Parisian grace, of the ancient sacred Euphony. This daughter of
obscurity had race. She possessed both types of beauty--style and rhythm. Style
is the force of the ideal, rhythm is its movement.
We have said that Fantine was joy; Fantine also was modesty.
For an observer who had studied her attentively would have found through all
this intoxication of age, of season, and of love, an unconquerable expression
of reserve and modesty. She was somewhat restrained. This chaste restraint is
the shade which separates Psyche from Venus. Fantine had the long, white, slen-
der fingers of the vestals that stir the ashes of the sacred fire with a golden
rod. Although she would have refused nothing to Tholomyes, as might be seen but
too well, her face, in repose, was in the highest degree maidenly; a kind
of
serious and almost austere dignity suddenly possessed it at times, and nothing
could be more strange or disquieting than to see gaiety vanish there so quickly,
and reflection instantly succeed to delight. This sudden seriousness, sometimes
strangely marked, resembled the disdain of a goddess. Her forehead, nose, and
chin presented that equilibrium of line, quite distinct from the equilibrium
of
proportion, which produces harmony of features; in the characteristic interval
which separates the base of the nose from thef upper lip, she had that almost
imperceptible but charming fold, the mysterious sign of chastity, which enam-
oured Barbarossa with a Diana, found in the excavations of Iconium.
Love is a fault; be it so. Fantine was innocence floating upon the surface
of
this fault.
IV. THOLOMYLS IS SO MERRY THAT HE SINGS A SPANISH SONG
THAT day was sunshine from one end to the other. All nature seemed to be out
on a holiday. The parterres of Saint Cloud were balmy with perfumes; the breeze
from the Seine gently waved the leaves; the boughs were gesticulating in
the wind;
the bees were pillaging the jessamine; a whole crew of butterflies had settled
in the milfoil, clover, and wild oats. The august park of the King of France was
invaded by a swarm of vagabonds, the birds. The four joyous couples shone res-
plendently in concert with the sunshine, the flowers, the fields, and the
trees.
And in this paradisaical community, speaking, singing, running, dancing, chasing
butterflies, gathering bindweed, wetting their open-worked stockings in
the
high grass, fresh, wild, but not wicked, stealing kisses from each other indis-
criminately now and then, all except Fantine, who was shut up in her vague,
dreary, severe resistance, and who was in love. “You always have the air of
being out of sorts,” said Favourite to her.
These are true pleasures. These passages in the lives of happy couples are
a profound appeal to life and nature, and call forth endearment and light
from
everything. There was once upon a time a fairy, who created meadows and
trees
expressly for lovers. Hence, comes that eternal school among the groves for
lovers, always in session. Hence comes the popularity of spring among thinkers.
The patrician and the knife-grinder, the duke and peer, and the peasnt,
the
men of the court, and the men of the town, as was said in olden times,
are all
subjects of this fairiy. They laugh, they seek each other, the air seems filled
with a new brightness; what a transfiguration is it to love! Notary clerks
are
gods. And the little shrieks, the pursuits among the grass, the waists
encircled
by stealth, that jargon which is melody, that adoration which breaks forth in
a syllable, those cherries snatched from one pair of lips by another--all
kindle
up, and become transformed into celestial glories. Beautiful girls lavish their
charms with sweet prodigality. We fancy that it will never end. Philosophers,
poets, painters behold these ecstasies and know not what to make of them.
So dazzling are they. The departure for Cythera! exclaims Watteau; Lancret,
the painter of the common man, contemplates his bourgeois soaring in the
sky;
Diderot stretches out his arms to all these loves, and d‘Urfe associates
them
with the Druids.
After breakfast, the four couples went to see, in what was then called the
king's garden plot, a plant newly arrived from the Indies, the name of which
escapes us at present, and which at this time was attracting all Paris to Saint
Cloud: it was a strange and beautiful shrub with a long stalk, the innumerable
branches of which, fine as threads, tangled, and leafless, were covered with
millions of little white blossoms, which gave it the appearance of flowing hair,
powdered with flowers. There was always a crowd admiring it.
When they had viewed the shrub, Tholomyes exclaimed, “I propose donkeys,”
and making a bargainwith a donkey-driver, they returned through Vanvres and
Issy. At Issy, they had an adventure. The park, a National Preserve, owned
at this time by the munitions manufacturer Bourguin, was by sheer good luck
open. They passed through the grating, visited the mannikin anchorite in his
grotto, and tried the little, mysterious effects of the famous cabinet of
mirrors--a wanton trap, worthy of a satyr become a millionaire, or Turcaret
metamorphosed into Priapus. They swung stoutly in the great swing, attached
to the two chestnut trees, celebrated by the Abbe de Bernis. While swinging
the girls, one after the other, and making folds of flying crinoline that Greuze
would have found worth his study, the Toulousian Tholomyes, who was some-
thing of a Spaniard--Toulouse is cousin to Tolosa--sang in a melancholy
key, the old gallega song, probably inspired by some beautiful damsel swing-
ing in the air between two trees.
Soy de Badaioz.
Amor me llama.
Toda mi alma
Es en mi ojos
Porque ensenas
A tus piernas.
Fantine alone refused to swing.
“I do not like that kind of air,” murmured Favourite, rather sharply.
They left the donkeys for a new pleasure, crossed the Seine in a boat,
and walked from Passy to the Barriere de l‘Etoile. They had been on their
feet, it will be remembered, since five in the morning, but bah! there is no
weariness on Sunday, said Favourite; on Sunday fatigue has a holiday. Towards
three o‘clock, the four couples, wild with happiness, were running down
to
the Russian mountains, a singular edifice which then occupied the heights
of
Beaujon, and the serpentine line of which might have been perceived above
the trees of the Champs-Elysees.
From time to time Favourite exclaimed:
“But the surprise? I want the surprise.”
“Be patient,” answered Tholomyes.
V. AT BOMBARDA'S
THE Russian mountains exhausted, they thought of dinner, and the happy eight a
little weary at last, stranded on Bombarda's, a branch establishment, set up
in the Champs Elysees by the celebrated restaurateur, nombarda, whose sign was
then seen on the Rue de Rival, near the Delorme arcade,
A large but plain apartment, with an alcove containing a bed at the bottom
(the place was so full on Sunday that it was necessary to take up with this
lodging-room); two windows from which they could see, through the elms, the
quai and the river; a magnificent August sunbeam glancing over the windows;
two tables; one loaded with a triumphant mountain of bouquets, interspersed
with hats and bonnets, while at the other, the four couples were gathered
round
a pile of plates, napkins, glasses, and bottles; jugs of beer a of wine; little
order on the table, and some disorder under it.
Says Moliere:
Its faisaient sous la table.
Un bruit, un trique-trac epouvantable.
(And under the table they beat
A fearful tattoo with their feet.)
Here was where the pastoral, commenced at five o'clock in the morning,
was to be
found at half-past four in the afternoon. The sun as declining, and their
appetite
with it.
The Champs Elysees, full of sunshine and people, was nothing but glare and dust,
the two elements of glory. The horses of Marty, those neighing marbles, were
curveting in a golden cloud. Carriages were coming and going.. A magnificent
squadron of body-guards, with the trumpet at their head, were coming down the.
avenue of Neuilly; the white flag, faintly tinged with red by the setting sun,
was floating over the dome of the Tuileries. The Place de la Concorde, then be-
come Place Louis XV. again, was overflowing with pleased promenaders. Many wore
the silver fleur-de-lis suspended from the watered white ribbon which, in 1817,
had not wholly disappeared from the buttonholes. Here and there in the midst
of groups of applauding spectators, circles of little girls gave to the
winds Bour-
bon doggerel rhyme, intended to overwhelm the Hundred Days, and the chorus
of which ran:
Rendez-noes notre pere de Gand,
Rendez-nous notre pere,
Crowds of the inhabitants of the faubourgs in their Sunday clothes, sometimes
even decked with fleurs-de-lis like the citizens, were scattered over the great
square and the square Marigny, playing games and going around on wooden horses;
others were drink. ling; a few, printer apprentices, had on paper caps; their
laughter resounded through the air. Everything was radiant. It was a time
of undoubted peace and profound royal security; it was the time when a
private
and special report of Prefect of Police Angles to the king on the faubourgs of
Paris, ended with these lines: "Everything considered, sire, there is nothing
to fear from these people. They are as careless and indolent as cats. The lower
people of the provinces are restless, those of Paris are not so. They are all
small men, sire, and it would take two of them, one upon the other, to make one
of you grenadiers. There is nothing at all to fear on the side of the populace
of the capital. It is remarkable that this part of the population has also de-
creased in stature during the last fifty years; and the people of the faubourgs
of Paris are smaller than before the Revolution. They are not dangerous. In short,
they are good canaille."
That a cat may become changed into a lion, prefects of police do not believe
possible; nevertheless, it may be, and this is the miracle of the people
of
Paris. Besides, the cat, so despised by the Count Angles, had the esteem of the
republics of antiquity; it was the incarnation of liberty in their sight, and,
as if to serve as a pendant to the wingless Minerva of the Piraeus, there was,
in the public square at Corinth, the bronze colossus of a cat. The simple po-
lice of the Restoration looked too hopefully on the people of Paris. They are
by no means such good canaille as is believed. The Parisian is among Frenchmen
what the Athenian was among Greeks. Nobody sleeps better than he, nobody is
more frankly frivolous and idle than he, nobody seems to forget things more
easily than he; but do not trust him, notwithstanding; he is apt at all sorts
of nonchalance, but when there is glory to be gained, he is wonderful in every
species of fury. Give him a pike, and he will play the tenth of August;
give
him a musket, and you shall have an Austerlitz. He is the support of Napoleon,
and the resource of Danton. Is France in question? he enlists; is liberty in
question? he tears up the pavement. Beware! his hair rising with rage is epic;
his blouse drapes itself into a chlamys about him. Take care! At the first corner,
Grenetat will make a Caudine Forks. When the tocsin sounds, this dweller
in the
faubourgs will grow; this little man will arise, his look will be terrible, his
breath will become a tempest, and a blast will go forth from his poor, frail
breast that might shake the wrinkles out of the Alps. Thanks to the men of the
Paris faubourgs, the Revolution infused into armies, conquers Europe. He sings,
it is his joy. Proportion his song to his nature, and you shall see! So long as
he had the Carmagnole merely for his chorus, he overthrew only Louis XVI.; let
him sing the Marseillaise, and he wilt deliver the world.
Writing this note in the margin of the Angles report, we will return to our
four couples. The dinner, as we have said, was over.
VI. A CHAPTER OF SELF-ADMIRATION
TABLE TALK and lovers' talk equally elude the grasp; lovers' talk is clouds,
table talk is smoke.
Fameuil and Dahlia hummed airs; Tholomyes drank, Zephine laughed, Fantine
smiled. Listolier blew a wooden trumpet that he had bought at Saint Cloud.
Favourite looked tenderly at Blacheville and said:
“Blacheville, I adore you.”
This brought forth a question from Blacheville:
“What would you do, Favourite, if I should leave you?”
“Me!” cried Favourite. “Oh! do not say that, even in sport! If you should
leave me, I would run after you, I would scratch you, I would pull your hair,
I would throw water on you, I would have you arrested.”
Blacheville smiled with the effeminate foppery of a man whose self-love is
tickled. Favourite continued:
“Yes! I would call the police! I wouldn't hold back! I would scream, for
example: scoundrel!”
Blacheville, in ecstasy, leaned back in his chair, and closed both eyes with
a satisfied air.
Dahlia, still eating, whispered to Favourite in the hubbub:
“Are you really so fond of your Blacheville, then?”
“I detest him,” whispered Favourite, taking up her fork. “He is stingy;
I
am in love with the little fellow over the way from where I live. He is a nice
young man; do you know him? Anybody can see that he was born to be an
actor! I love actors. As soon as he comes into the house, his mother cries
out: ‘Oh, dear! my peace is all gone. There, he is going to hallo! You will
split my head;' just because he goes into the garret among the rats, into
the dark corners, as high as he can go, and sings and declaims--something
or other so loud that they can hear him below! He already makes twenty
sous a day by writing for a petifogger. He is the son of an old chorister
of Saint-Jacques du Haut-Pas! Oh, he is a nice young man! He is so fond of
me that he said one day, when he saw me making dough for pancakes: ‘Mam-
selle, make your gloves into fritters and I will eat them.' Nobody but
artists can say things like these; I am on the high road to go crazy about
this little fellow. It is all the same, I tell Blacheville that I adore him.
How I lie! Oh, how I lie!”
Favourite paused, then continued:
“Dahlia, you see I am melancholy. It has done nothing but rain all summer;
the wind makes me nervous and freckles me. Blacheville is very mean;
there are hardly any green peas in the market yet, people care for nothing
but eating; I have the spleen, as the English say; butter is so dear! and
then, just think of it--it is horrible! We are dining in a room with a bed
in it. I am disgusted with life.”
VII. THE WISDOM OF THOLOMYES
MEANTIME, while some were singing, the rest were all noisily talking at the
same time. There was a perfect uproar. Tholomyes interfered.
"Do not talk at random, nor too fast!" exclaimed he; "we must take time
for reflection, if we would be brilliant. Too much improvisation leaves
the
mind stupidly void. Running beer gathers no foam. Gentlemen, no haste.
Mingle dignity with festivity, eat with deliberation, feast slowly. Take
your
time. See the spring; if it hastens forward, it is ruined; that is, frozen.
Ex-
cess of zeal kills peach and apricot trees. Excess of zeal kills the grace
and
joy of good dinners. No zeal, gentlemen! Grimod de la Reyniere is of Talley-
rand's opinion."
"Tholomyes, let us alone," said Blacheville.
"Down with the tyrant!" cried Fauteuil.
"Bombarda, Bombance, and Bamboche!" exclaimed Listolier. "Sunday still exists,"
resumed Listolier.
"We are sober," added Fauteuil.
"Tholomyes," said Blacheville, "behold my calmness (mon mime),"
"You are its marquis," replied Tholornyes.
This indifferent play on words had the effect of a strone thrown into a pool.
The Marquis de Montcalm was a celebrated royalist of the time. All the frogs
were silent.
"My friends!" exclaimed Tholomyes, in the tone of a man resuming
his sway.
"Collect yourselves. This pun, though it falls front heaven, should not be
welcomed with too much wonder. Everything that falls in this wise is not nec-
essarily worthy of enthusiasm and respect. The pun is the dropping of the
soaring spirit. The jest falls, it matters not where. And the spirit, after
freeing itself from the folly, plunges into the clouds. A white spot settling
upon a rock does not prevent the condor from hovering above. Far be it from
me to insult the pun I I honour it in proportion to its merits--no more. The
most august, most sublime, and most charming in humanity and perhaps out of
humanity, have made plays on words. Jesus Christ made a pun on St. Peter,
Moses on Isaac, Eschylus on Polynices, Cleopatra on Octavius. And mark, that
this pun of Cleopatra preceded the battle of Actium, and that, without it,
no one would have remembered the city of Toryne, a Greek name signifying
dipper. This conceded, I return to my exhortation. My brethren, I repeat, no
zeal, no noise, no excess, even in witticisms, mirth. gaiety and plays on
words. Listen to me; have the prudence of Amphiavails, and the boldness of
Caesar. There must be a limit, even to rebuses; Est modus in rebus. There
must be a limit even to dinners. You like apple-puffs, ladies; do not abuse
them. There must be, even in puffs, good sense and art.. Gluttony punishes
the glutton. Gula punishes Gulax. indigestion is charged by God with enforcing
morality on the stomach. And remember this: each of our passions, even love,
has a stomach that must not be overloaded. We must in everything write the
word finis in time; we must restrain ourselves, when it becomes urgent; we must
draw the bolt on the appetite, play a fantasia on the violin, then break the
strings with our own hand.
"The wise man is he who knows when and how to stop. Have some confidence
in
me. Because I have studied law a little, as my examinations prove, because
I know
the difference between the question mue and the question pendante, because I
have written a Latin thesis on the method of torture in Rome at the time when
Munatius Demons was quaestor of the Parricide; because I am about to become
doctor, as it seems, it does not follow necessarily that I am a fool. I reco-
mmend to you moderation in all your desires. As sure as my name is Felix Tho-
lonwes, I speak wisely. Happy is he who, when the hour comes, takes a heroic
resolve, and abdicates like Sylla or Origettes"
Favourite listened with profound attention. "Felix!" said she,
"what a pretty
word. I like this name. It is Latin. It means prosperous."
Tholomyes continued:
"Quirites, gentlemen, caballeros, mes amis, would you feel no passion, dis-
pense with the nuptial couch and set love at defiance? Nothing is easier. Here
is a recipe: lemonade, over exercise, hard labour; tire yourselves out, draw
logs, do not sleep, keep watch; gorge yourselves with nitrous drinks and
ptisans of water-lilies; drink emulsions of poppies and agnus-castus; enliven
this with a rigid diet, starve yourselves, and add cold baths, girdles
of herbs,
the application of a leaden plate, lotions of solution of lead and fomenta-
tions with vinegar and water."
"I prefer a woman," said Listolier.
"Woman!" resumed Tholomyes, "distrust the sex. Unhappy is
he who surrenders
himself to the changing heart of woman! Woman is perfidious and tortuous. She
detests the serpent through rivalry of trade. The serpent is the shop across
the
way."
"Tholomyes:" cried Blacheville, "you are drunk."
"The deuce I am!" said Tholomyes.
"Then be gay," resumed Blacheville.
"I agree' replied Tholonlya
Then, filling his glass, he arose.
"Honour to wine! Nunct te, Bacche canam, Pardon, ladies, that is Spanish. And
here is the proof, senoras; like wine-measure, like people. The arroba of Castile
contains sixteen litres, the cantaro of Alicante twelve, the almuda of
the Can-
aries twenty-five, the cuartin of the Baleares twenty-six, and the boot
of Czar
Peter thirty. Long live the czar, who was great, and long live his boot, which was
still greater! Ladies, a friendly counsel! deceive your neighbours, if
it seems good
to you. The characteristic of love is to rove. Love was not made to cower and
crouch like an English housemaid whose knees are callused with scrubbing. Gentle
love was made but to rove gaily! It has been said to err is human; I say,
to err is
loving. Ladies, I idolise you all. O Zephine, or Josephine, with face more
than wrin-
kled, you would be charming if you were not cross. Yours is like a beautiful
face,
upon which some one has sat down by mistake. As to Favourite, oh, nymphs and
muses, one day, as Blacheville. was crossing the Rue Guerin-Boisseau, he saw a
beautiful girl with white, well-gartered stockings, who was showing them. The pro-
logue pleased him, and Blacheville loved. She whom he loved was Favourite. Oh,
Favourite! Thou hast Ionian lips. There was a Greek painter, Euphonon, who was
surnamed painter of lips. This Greek alone would have been worthy to paint thy
mouth. Listen! before thee, there was no creature worthy the name. Thou wert
made to receive the apple like Venus, or to eat it like Eve. Beauty begins with
thee. I have spoken of Eve; she was of thy creation. Thou deservest the patent
for the invention of beautiful women. Oh, Favourite, I cease to thou you, for I
pass from poetry to prose. You spoke' just now of my name. It moved me; but,
whatever we do, let us not trust to names, they may be deceitful. I am called
Felix, I am not happy. Words are deceivers. Do not blindly accept the indications
which they give. It would he a mistake to write to Liege for corks or to Pau for
gloves. Miss Dahlia, in your place, I should call myself Rose. The flower
should
have fragrance, and woman should have wit. I say nothing of Fantine. she is vision-
ary, dreamy, pensive, sensitive; she is a phantom with the form of a nymph, and the
modesty of a nun, who has strayed into the life of a grisette, but who takes refuge
in illusions, and who sings, and prays, and gazes at the sky without knowing clear-
ly what she sees nor what she does, and who, with eyes fixed on heaven, wanders in
a garden among more birds than exist there. Oh, Fanzine, know this: I, Tholomyes,
am an illusion--but she does not even hear me--the fair daughter of chimeras! Nev-
ertheless, everything on her is freshness, gentleness, youth, soft, matinal clear-
ness. Oh, Fantine, worthy to be called Marguerite or Pearl, you are a jewel
of the
purest water. Ladies, a second counsel, do not marry; marriage is a graft; it may
take well or ill. Shun the risk. But what do I say? I am wasting my words. Women
are incurable on the subject of weddings, and all that we wise men can say will
not hinder vestmakers and gaiter-binders from dreaming about husbands loaded with
diamonds. Well, be it so; but, beauties, remember this: you eat too much sugar.
You have but one fault, oh, women! it is that of nibbling sugar. Oh, consuming
sex, the pretty, little white teeth adore sugar. Now, listen attentively!
Sugar is
a salt. Every salt is desiccating. Sugar is the most desiccating of all salts.
It sucks up the liquids from the blood through the veins; thence comes the coa-
gulation, then the solidification of the blood; thence tubercles in the lungs;
thence death. And this is why diabetes borders on consumption. Crunch no sugar,
therefore, and you shall live! I turn towards the men: gentlemen, make conquests.
Rob each other without remorse of your beloved. Chassez and cross over.
There
are no friends in love. Wherever there is a pretty woman, hostility is
open.:
No quarter; war to the knife. A pretty woman is a casus belli; a pretty woman
is a flagrans delictum. All the invasions of history have been determined by pet-
ticoats. Woman is the right of man. Romulus carried off the Sabine women; Will-
iam carried off the Saxon women; Caesar carried off the Roman women. The man
who is not loved hovers like a culture over the sweethearts of others; and for my
part, to all unfortunate widowers, I issue the sublime proclamation of Bona-
parte to the army of Italy, "Soldiers, you lack for everything. The enemy has
everything."
Tholomyes checked himself.
"Take breath, Tholomyes," said Blacheville.
At the same time, Blacheville, aided by Listolier and Fameuil, with an air of
lamentation hummed one of those workshop songs, made up of the first words that
came, rhyming richly and not at all, void of sense as the movement of the trees
and the sound of the winds, and which are borne from the smoke of the pipes, and
dissipate and take flight with it. This is the couplet by which the group replied
to the harangue of Tholomyes:
Les pares dindons donnarent
De l'argatt a un agent
Pour nue mons Clermont-Tonnerre
Fat fait pape a la Saint-jean;
Mai; Clermont;le put pas etre
Fait pape, n'etant pas pretre;
Alors tear agent rageant
Lcur rapporta lair argent.
This was not likely to calm the inspiration of Tholomyes; he emptied his
glass, filled
it, and again began:
"Down with wisdom! forget all that I have said: Let us be neither
prudes, nor prudent,
nor prud'hommes I drink to jollity; let us is be jolly. Let us finish our
course of
study by folly and prating. Indigestion and the Digest. Let Justinian be
the male,
and festivity the female. There is joy in the abysses: Behold, oh, creation!
The world
is a huge diamond! I am happy. The birds are marvellous. What a festival everywhere!
The nightingale is an Elleviou gratis. Summer, I salute thee. Oh, Luxembourg! Oh,
Georgics of the Rue Madame, and the Alle de l'Observatoire! Oh, entranced dreamers!
the pampas of America would delight me, if I had not the arcades of the Odeon. My
soul goes out towards virgin forests and savannahs. Everything is beautiful; the
flies hum in the sunbeams. The humming-birds whizz in the sunshine. Kiss me, Fantine!"
And, by mistake, he kissed Favourite.
VIII. DEATH OF A HORSE
"THE dinners are better at Edon's than at Bombarda's," exclaimed Zephine.
"I like Bombarda better than Edon," said Blacheville. "There is more luxury. It is
more Asiatic. See the lower hall. There are mir-rors (glaces) on the walls."
"I prefer ices (glaces) on my plate," said Favourite.
Blacheville persisted.
"Look at the knives. The handles are silver at Bombarda's, and bone at Edon's.
Now silver is more precious than bone."
"Except when it is on the chin," observed Tholomyes.
He looked out at this moment at the dome of the Invalides, which was visible
from Bombarda's windows.
There was a pause.
"Tholomyes," cried Fameuil, "Listolier and I have just had
a discussion."
"A discussion is good," replied Tholomyes, "a quarrel is better." "We were dis-
cussing philosophy."
"I have no objection."
"Which do you prefer, Descartes or Spinoza?"
"Desaugiers," said Tholomyes.
This decision rendered, he drank, and resumed:
"I consent to live. All is not over on earth, since we can yet reason
falsely.
I render thanks for this to the immortal gods. We lie, but we laugh. We affirm,
but we doubt. The unexpected shoots forth from a syllogism. It is fine. There are
men still on earth who know how to open and shut pleasantly the surprise boxes of
paradox. Know, ladies, that this wine you are drinking so calmly, is Madeira from
the vineyard of Coural das Frerras, which is three hundred and seventeen fathoms
above the level of the sea. Attention while you drink! three hundred and seven-
teen fathoms! and M. Bombarda, this magnificent restaurateur, gives you these
three hundred and seventeen fathoms for four francs, fifty centimes.
Fameuil interrupted again.
"Tholomyes, Your opinions are law. Who is your favourite author?"
"Quin?"
"No. Choux."
And Tholomyes continued.
"Honour to Bombarda! he would equal Munophis of Elephanta if he could
procure
me an almee and Thygelion of Claeronea if he could bring me a hetairia!
for, oh,
ladies, there were Bombardas in Greece and Egypt; this Apuletus teaches us. Alas!
always the same thing and nothing new. Nothing more unpublished in the creation
of the Creator! Nil sub sole novum, says Solomon; amor omnibus idem, says Virgil;
and Carabinc mounts with Carabin in the galliot at Saint Cloud, as Aspasia embarked
with Pericles on the:fleet of. Samos. A last word. Do you know who this Aspasia was,
ladies? Although she lived in a time when women had not yet a soul, she was a soul;
a soul of a rose and purple shade, more glowing than fire, fresher than the dawn.
Aspasia was a being who touched the two extremes of woman, the prostitute goddess.
She was Socrates,plus lianon Lescaut. Aspasia was created in case Prometheus
might need a wanton."
Tholomyes, now that he was started would have been stopped with difficulty,
had
not a horse fallen down at this moment.on the quai. The shock stopped short both
the cart and the orator. It was an old, meagre mare, worthy of the knacker, har-
nessed to a very heavy cart. On reaching Bombarda's, the beast, worn and exhausted,
had refused to go further. This incident attracted a crowd. Scarcely had the carman,
swearing and indignant, had time to utter. with fitting energy the decisive word,
"matin!" backed by a. terrible stroke of the whip, when the hack fell, to
rise no
more. At the hubbub of the passers-by, the merry auditors of Tholomyes turned
their heads, and Tholomyes profited by it to close his address by this melancholy
strophe:
Elie etait de ce monde ou couscous et carrosses
Ont le meme destin;
Et, rosse, elle a vecu ce que vivent les rosses,
L'espace d'un matin!
"Poor horse!" sighed Pantine.
Dahlia exclaimed:
"Here is Fantine pitying horses! was there ever anything so absurd?"
At this moment, Favourite, crossing her arms and turning round her head,
looked fixedly at Tholomyes and said:
"Come! the surprise:"
"Precicely. The moment has come," replied Tholomyes. "Gentlemen, the hour
has come for surprising these ladies. Ladies, wait for us a moment."
"It begins with a kiss," said Blacheville.
"On the forehead," added Tholomyes.
Each one gravely placed a kiss on the forehead of his mistress; after which
they directed their steps towards the door, all four in file, laying their
fingers on their lips.
Favourite clapped her hands as they went out.
"It is amusing already," said she.
"Do not be too long," murmured Fantine. "We are waiting
for you.',
IX. JOYOUS END OF JOY
THE girls, left alone, leaned their elbows on the window sills in couples, and
chattered together, bending their heads and speaking from one window to the
other.
They saw the young men go out of Bombarda's, arm in arm; they turned round,
made signals to them laughingly, then disappeared in the dusty Sunday crowd
which takes possession of the Champs-Elysees once a week.
"Do not be long!" cried Fantine.
"What are they going to bring us?" said Zephine.
"Surely something pretty," said Dahlia.
"I hope it will be gold," resumed Favourite.
They were soon distracted by the stir on the water's edge, which they distin-
guished through the branches of the tall trees, and which diverted them greatly.
It was the hour for the departure of the mails and diligences. Almost all the
stagecoaches to the south and west, passed at that time by the Champs-Elysies.
The greater part followed the quaff and went out through the Barriere Passy.
Every minute some huge vehicle, painted yellow and black, heavily loaded,
noisily harnessed, distorted with mails, awnings, and valises, full of heads
that were constantly disappearing, grinding the curbstones, turning the pave-
ments into flints, rushed through the crowd, throwing out sparks like a forge,
with dust for smoke, and. an air of fury. This hubbub delighted the young
girls. Favounte exclaimed:
"What an uproar; one would say that heaps of chains were taking flight."
It so happened that one of these vehicles which could be distinguished with
difficulty through the obscurity of the elms, stopped for a moment, then set
out again on a gallop. This surprised Fantine.
"It is strange," said she. "I thought the diligences never stopped."
Favourite shrugged her shoulders:
"This Fantine is surprising; I look at her with curiosity. She wonders at
the most simple things. Suppose that I ant a traveller, and say to the dil-
igence; 'I am going on; you can take me up on the quaff in passing.' The
diligence passes, sees me, stops and takespe up. This happens every day.
You know nothing of life, my dear.
Some time passed in this manner. Suddenly Favourite started as if from
sleep.
"Well!" said she, "and the surprise?"
"Yes," returned Dahlia, "the famous surprise."
"They are very long!" said Fantine.
As Fantine finished the sigh, the boy who had waited at dinner entered. He had in
his hand something that looked like a letter. "What is that?" asked Favourite.
"It is a paper that the gentlemen left for these ladies," he replied. "Why did you
not bring it at once?"
"Because the gentlemen ordered me not to give it to .the ladies before an hour,"
returned the boy.
Favourite snatched the paper from his hands. It was really a letter.
"Stop!" said she. "There is no address; but see what is written on it:
"THIS IS THE SURPRISE."
She hastilv unsealed the letter, opened it, and read (she knew bow to read):
"Oh, our lovers!
"Know that we have parents. Parents--you scarcely know the meaning of the word,
they are what are called fathers and mothers in the civil code, simple but honest.
Now these parents bemoan us, these old men claim us, these good men and women call
us prodigal Sans, desire our return and offer to kill for us the fatted calf. We
obey them, being virtuous. At the moment when you read this, five mettlesome
hor-
ses will be bearing us back to our papas and mammas. We are pitching our
camps,
as Bossuet says. We are going, we are gone. We fly in the arms of Lafitte,
and
on the wings of Caillard. The Toulouse diligence snatches us from the abyss, and
you are this abyss, our beautiful darlings! We are returning to society,
to duty
and order, on a full trot, at the rate of three leagues an hour. It is necessary
to the country that we become, like everybody else, prefects, fathers of families,
rural guards, and councillors of state. Venerate us. We sacrifice ourselves.
Mourn for us rapidly, and replace us speedily. If this letter rends you, rend it
in turn.
Adieu.
"For nearly two years we have made you happy. Bear us no ill will for it."
"Signed: BLACHEVILLE,
FAMEUIL,
LISTOLTER,
FELIX THOLOMYES.
"P. S. The dinner is paid for."
The.four girls gazed at each other.
Favourite was the first to break silence.
"Well!" said she, "it is a good farce all the same."
"It is very droll," said Zephine.
"It must have been Blacheville that had the idea," resumed Favourite. "This
makes me in love with him. Soon loved, soon gone. That is the story."
"No," said Dahlia, "it is an idea of Tholomyes. This is clear."
"In that case," returned Favourite, "down with Blacheville, and long live
Tholotnyes!"
"Long live Tholomyes!" cried Dahlia and Zephine.
And they burst into laughter.
Fantine laughed like the rest.
An hour afterwards, when site had re-entered her chamber, she wept. If was
her first love, as we have said; she had given herself to this Tholornyes
as to a husband, and the poor girl had a child.
BOOK FOURTH
TO ENTRUST IS SOMETIMES TO ABANDON
I. ONE MOTHER MEETS ANOTHER
There was, during the first quarter of the present century, at Mont f ermeil,
near Paris, a sort of chop-house; tt is not there no,. It was kept by a man and
his wife, named Thenarther, and was situated in the Lane Boulanger. Above the
door, nailed flat against the wall, was a board, upon which something was paint-
ed that looked like a man carrying on his back another man wearing the heavy
epaulettes of a general, gilt and with large silver stars; red blotches typi-
fied blood; the remainder of the picture was smoke, and probably represented
a battle. Beneath was this inscription: To THE SERGEANT OF WATERLOO.
Nothing is commoner than a cart or wagon before the door of an inn; nevertheless
the vehicle, or more properly speaking, the fragmen; of a vehicle which
ob-
structed the street in front of the Sergeant of Waterloo one evening in the
spring of 1815, certainly would have attracted by its bulk the attention of any
painter who might have been passing.
It was the fore-carriage of one of those drays for carrying heavy articles, used
in wooded countries for transporting joists and trunks of trees: it consisted of
a massive iron axle-tree with a pivot to which a heavy pole was attached, and
which was supported by two enormous wheels. As a whole, it was squat, crushing,
and misshapen: it might have been fancied a gigantic gun-carriage.
The roads had covered the wheels, felloes, limbs, axle, and the pole with a coat-
ing of hideous yellow-hued mud, similar in tint to that with which cathedrals are
sometimes decorated. The wood had disappeared beneath mud; and the iron beneath
rust.
Under the axle-tree hung festooned a huge chain fit for a Goliath of the galleys.
This chain recalled, not the beams which it was used to carry, but the mastodons
and mammoths which it might have harnessed; it reminded one of the galleys, but
of cyclopean and superhuman galleys, and seemed as if unriveted from some
monster.
With it Homer could have bound Polyphemus, or Shakspeare Caliban.
Why was this vehicle in this place in the street, one may ask?
First to obstruct the lane, and then to complete its work of rust. There is in the
old social order a host of institutions which we find like this acrqss our path
in the full light of day, and which present no other reasons for being there.
The middle of the chain was hanging quite near the ground, under the axle; and upon
the bend, as on a swinging rope, two little girls were seated that evening in exqui-
site grouping, the smaller, eighteen months old, in the lap of the larger, who was
two years and a half old.
A handkerchief carefully knotted kept them from falling. A mother, looking upon
this frightful chain, had said: "AM there is a plaything for my children!"
The radiant children, picturesquely and tastefully decked, might be fancied two
roses twining the rusty iron, with their triumphantly sparkling eyes, and their
blooming, laughing faces. One was a rosy blonde, the other a brunette; their art-
less faces were two ravishing surprises; the perfume that was shed upon the air
by a flowering shrub near by seemed their own out-breathings; the smaller one was
showing her pretty little body with the chaste indecency of babyhood. Above and
around these delicate heads, moulded in happiness and bathed in light, the gigan-
tic carriage, black with rust and almost frightful with its entangled curves and
abrupt angles, arched like the mouth of a cavern.
The mother, a woman whose appearance was rather forbidding, but touching at this
moment, was seated on the sill of the inn, swinging the two children by a long
string, while she brooded them with her eyes for fear of accident with that animal
but heavenly expression peculiar to maternity. At each vibration the hideous links
uttered a creaking noise like an angry cry; the little ones were in ecstasies,
the setting sun mingled in the joy, and nothing could be more charming than this
caprice of chance which made of a Titan's chain a swing for cherubim.
While rocking the babes the mother sang with a voice out of tune a then popular
song:
"II le faut, disait un guerrier."
Her song and watching her children prevented her hearing and seeing what was pass-
ing in the street.
Someone, however, had approached her as she was beginning the first couplet of
the song, and suddenly she heard a voice say quite near her ear:
"You have two pretty children there, madame."
"A la belle et tendre Imogine,"
answered the mother, continuing her song; then she turned her head.
A woman was before her at a little distance; she also had a child, which
she bore
in her arms.
She was carrying in addition a large carpet-bag, which seemed heavy.
This woman's child was one of the divinest beings that can be imagined: a little
girl of two or three years. She might have entered the lists with the other
little ones for coquetry of attire, she wore a head-dress of fine linen; ribbons
at her shoulders and Valenciennes lace on her cap. The folds of her skirt were
raised enough to show her plump fine white leg; she was charmingly rosy and health-
ful. The pretty little creature gave one a desire to bite her cherry cheeks. We
can say nothing of her eyes except that they must have been very large, and were
fringed with superb lashes. She was asleep.
She was sleeping in the absolutely confiding slumber peculiar to her age. Mothers'
arms are made of tenderness, and sweet sleep blesses the child who lies therein.
As to the mother, she seemed poor and sad; she had the appearance of a work-
ing woman who is seeking to return to the life of a peasant. She was young,--
and pretty? it was possible, but in that garb beauty could not be displayed.
Her hair, one blonde mesh of which had fallen, scented very thick, but it was
severely fastened up beneath an ugly, close, narrow nun's head-dress, tied
under the chin. Laughing shows fine teeth when one has them, but she did not
laugh. Her eyes seemed not to have been tearless for a long, time. She was
pale, and looked very weary, and somewhat sick. She gazed upon her child,
sleeping in her arms, with that peculiar look which only a mother possesses
who nurses her own child. Her form was clumsily masked by a large blue hand-
erchief folded across her bosom. Her hands were tanned and spotted with freck-
les, the fore-finger hardened and pricked with the needle; she wore a coarse
brown delaine mantle, a calico dress, and large heavy shoes. It was Fantine.
Yes, Fantine, Hard to recognise, yet on looking attentively, you saw that she
still retained her beauty. A sad line, such as is formed by irony, had marked
her right cheek. As to her toilette--that airy toilette of muslin and ribbons
which seemed as if made of gaiety, folly, and music, full of baubles and per-
fumed with lilacs--that had vanished like the beautiful sparkling hoarfrost,
which we take for diamonds in the sun; they melt, and leave the branch dreary
and black.
Ten months had slipped away since "the good farce."
What had passed during these ten months? We can guess.
After recklessness, trouble. Fantine had lost sight of Favourite, Zephine, and
Dahlia; the tie, broken on the part of the men, was unloosed on the part of the
women; they would have been astonished if any one had said a fortnight after-
wards they were friends; they had no longer cause to be so. Fantine was left a-
lone. The father of her child gone--Alas! such partings are irrevocable--she
found herself absolutely isolated, with the habit of labour lost, and the taste
for pleasure acquired. Led by her liaison with Tholomyes to disdain the small
business that she knew how to do, she had neglected her opportunities, they
were all gone. No resource. Fantine could scarcely read, and did not know bow
to write. She had only been taught in childhood how to sign her name. She had
a letter written by a public letter-writer to Tholomyes, then a second, then a
third. Tholomyes had replied to none of them. One day, Fantine heard some old
women saying as they saw her child: "Do people ever take such children to heart?
They only shrug their shoulders at such children!" Then she thought of Tholomyes,
who shrugged his shoulders at his child, and who did not take this innocent
child to heart, and her heart became dark in the place that was his. What should
she do? She had no one to ask. She had committed a fault; but, in the depths of
her nature, we know dwelt modesty and virtue. She had a vague feeling that she
was on the eve of falling into distress, of slipping into the street. She must
have courage; she had it, and bore up bravely. The idea occurred to her of re-
turning to her native village M-- sur M--, there perhaps some one would know
her, and give her work. Yes, but she must hide her fault. And she had a confused
glimpse of the possible necessity of a separation still more painful than the
first. Her heart ached, but she took her resolution. It will be seen that Fan-
tine possessed the stern courage of life. She had already valiantly renounced
her finery, was draped in calico, and had put all her silks, her gew-gaws, her
ribbons, and laces on her daughter--the only vanity that remained, and that a
holy one. She sold all she had, which gave her two hundred francs; when her
little debts were paid, she had but about eighty left. At twenty-two years of
age, on a fine spring morning, she left Paris, carrying her child on her back.
He who bad seen the two passing, must have pitied them. The woman had no-
thing in the world but this child, and this child had nothing in the world but this
woman. Fantine had nursed her child; that had weakened her chest somewhat,
and she coughed slightly.
We shall have no further need to speak of M. Felix Tholomyes. We will only
say here, that twenty years later, under King Louis Philippe, he was a fat
provincial attorney, rich and influential, a wise elector and rigid juryman;
always, however, a man of pleasure.
Towards noon, after having, for the sake of rest, travelled front time to
time at a cost of three or four cents a league, in what they called then
the Petites Voitures of the environs of Paris, Fantine reached Montferineil,
and stood in Boulanger Lane.
As she was passing by the Thenardier chop-house, the two little children
sitting in delight on their monstrous swing, had a sort of dazzling effect
upon her, and she paused before this joyous vision.
There are charms. These two little girls were one for this mother.
She beheld them with emotion. The presence of angels is a herald of paradise.
She thought she saw above this inn the mysterious "HERE" of Providence. These
children were evidently happy: she gazed upon them, she admired them, so much
affected that at tle. moment when the mother was taking breath between the
verses of her song, she could not help saying what we have. been reading.
"You have two pretty children there, madame."
The most ferocious animals are disarmed by caresses to their young.
The mother raised her head and thanked her, and made the stranger sit down on
the stone step, she herself being on the doorsill: the two women began to talk
together.
"My name is Madame Thenardier," said the mother of the two girls "we keep this
inn."
Then going on with her song, she sang between her teeth:
"Il le faut, je suis chevalier
Et je pars pour la Palestine."
This Madame Thenardier was a red-haired, brawny, angular woman, of the
sol-
dier's wife type in all its horror, and, singularly enough, she had a lolling
air which she had gained from novel-reading. She was a masculine lackadaisi-
calness. Old romances impressed on the imaginations of mistresses of chop-
houses have such effects. She was still young, scarcely thirty years old.
If this woman, who was seated stooping, had been upright, perhaps her tower-
ing form and her broad shoulders, those of a movable colossus, fit for a
market-woman, would have dismayed the traveller, disturbed her confidence,
and prevented what we have to relate. A person seated instead of standing;
fate hangs on such a thread as that.
The traveller told her story, a little modified.
She said she was a working woman, and her husband was dead. Not being able
to procure work in Paris she was going in search of it elsewhere; in her own
province; that she had left Pans that morning on foot; that carrying her child
she had become tired, and meeting. the Villemomble stage had got in; that from
Villemomble she had come on foot to Montfermeil; that the child bad walked a
little, but not much, she was so young; that she was compelled to carry her,
and the jewel had fallen asleep.
And at these words she gave her daughter a passionate kiss, which wakened her.
The child opened its large blue eyes, like its mother's, and saw--what? No-
thing, everything, with that serious and sometimes severe air of little child-
ren, which is one of the mysteries of their shining innocence before our sha-
dowy virtues. One would say that they felt themselves to be angels, and knew
us to be:human. Then the child began to laugh, and, although the' mother
restrained her, shoed to the ground, with the indomitable energy of a little
one that wants to run about. All at once she perceived the two others in their
swing, stopped short, and put out her tongue in token of admiration.
Mother Thenardier untied the children and took them from the swing saying:.
"Play together, all three of you."
At that age acquaintance is easy, and in a moment the little Thenardiers were
playing with the new-comer, making holes in the ground to their intense
delight.
This new-comer was very sprightly: the goodness of the mother is written in
the gaiety of the child; she had taken a splinter of wood, which she used as
a spade, and was stoutly digging a hole fit for a fly. The gravedigger's work
is charming when done by a child.
The two women continued to chat.
"What do your call your brat?"
"Cosette."
For Cosette read Euphrasie. The name of the little one was Euphrasie. But
the
mother had made Cosette out of it, by that sweet and charming instinct of mo-
thers and of the people, who change Josefa into Pepita, and Francoise into
Sillette. That is a kind of derivation which deranges and disconcerts all the
science of etymologists. We knew a grandmother who succeeded in making from
Theodore, Gnon.
"How old is she?"
"She is going on three years."
"The age of my oldest.
The three girls were grouped in an attitude of deep anxiety and bliss; a great
event had occurred; a large worm had come out of the ground; they were afraid
of it, and yet in ecstasies over it.
Their bright foreheads touched each other: three heads in one halo of glory.
"Children," exclaimed the Thenardier mother; "how soon they know one another.
See them I one would swear they were three sisters."
These words were the spark which the other mother was probably awaiting.
She seized the hand of Madame Thenardier and said:
"Will you keep my child for me?"
Madame Thenardier made a motion of surprise, which was neither consent nor
refusal.
.Cosette's mother continued:
"You see I cannot take my child into the country. Work forbids it. With a
child I could not find a place there; they are so absurd in that district.
It is God who has led me before your inn. The sight of your little ones,
so pretty, and clean, and happy, has overwhelm me. I said: there is a good
mother; they will be like three siste and then it will not be long before I
come back. Will you keep: child for me?"
"I must think over it," said Thenardier.
"I will give six francs a month."
Here a man's voice was heard from within:
"Not less than seven francs, and six months paid in advance." "Six times seven
are forty-two," said Thenardier.
"I will give it," said the mother.
"And fifteen francs extra for the first expenses," added the man.
"That's fifty-seven francs," said Madame Thenardier, and in the Midst of her
reckoning she sang indistinctly:
"It It hut, disait un guerrier."
"I will give it," said the mother; "I have eighty francs. That will leave me
enough to go into the country if I walk. I will earn some money there, and as
soon as 1 have I will come for my little love."
The man's voice returned:
"Has the child a wardrobe?"
"That is my husband," said Thenardier.
"Certainly she has, the poor darling. I knew it was your husband; And a fine
wardrobe it is too, an extravagant wardrobe, everything in dozens, and silk
dresses like a lady. They are there in my carpetbag."
"You must leave that here," put in the man's voice.
"Of course I shall give it to you," said the mother; "it would be strange if
I should leave my child naked."
The face of the master appeared.
"It is all right," said he.
The bargain was concluded. The mother passed the night at the inn, gave her
money and left her child, fastened again her carpetbag, diminished by her
child's wardrobe, and very light now, and set off next morning, expecting
soon to return. These partings are arranged tranquilly, but they are full
of despair.
A neighbour of the Thenardiers met this mother on her way, and came in,
saving:
"I have just met a woman in the street, who was crying as if her heart
would break."
When Cosette's mother had gone, the man said to his wife:
"That will do me for my note of 110 francs which falls due tomorrow .
I was fifty francs short. Do you know I should have had a sheriff and
a protest? You have proved a good mousetrap with your little ones."
"Without knowing it," said the woman.
II. FIRST SKETCH OF TWO EQUIVOCAL FACES
THE captured mouse was a very puny on; but the cat exulted even over a
lean mouse.
What were the Thenardiers?
We will say but a word just here; by-and-by the sketch shall be completed.
They belonged to that bastard class formed of low people who have risen, and
intelligent people who have fallen, which lies between the classes called mid-
dle and lower, and which unites some of the faults of the latter with nearly
all the vices of the former, without possessing the generous impulses of the
workman, or the respectability of the bourgeois.
They were of those dwarfish natures, which, if perchance heated by some sullen
fire, easily become monstrous. The woman was at heart a brute; the man a black-
guard: both in the highest degree capable of that hideous species of progress
which can be made to' wards evil. There are souls which, crablike, crawl con-
tinually towards darkness, going back in life rather than advancing in it; us-
ing what'experience they have to increase their deformity; growing worse without
ceasing, and becoming steeped more and more thoroughly in an intensifying wick-
edness. Such souls were this man and this woman.
The man especially would have been a puzzle to a physiognomist. We have only to
look at some men to distrust them, for we feel the darkness of their souls in
two ways. They are restless as to what is behind them, and threatening as to
what is before them. They are full of mystery. We can no more answer for what
they have done, than for what they will do. The shadow in their looks denounces
them. If we hear them utter a word, or see them make a gesture, we catch
glimpses of guilty secrets in their past, and dark mysteries in their future.
This Thenardier, if we may believe him, had been a soldier, a sergeant he said;
he probably had made the campaign of 1815, and had even borne himself bravely
according to all that appeared. We shall see hereafter in what his bravery con-
sisted. The sign of his inn was an allusion to one of his feats of arms. He had
painted it himself, for he knew how to do a little of everything--badly.
It was the time when the antique classical romance, which, after having been
Clelie, sank to Lodoiska, always noble, but becoming more and more vulgar,
falling front Mdlle. de Sater; to Madame Bournon-Malarme, and from Madame de
Lafayette to Madame Barthelemy-Hadot, was firing the loving souls of the
portresscs of Paris, and making some ravages even in the suburbs. Madame
Thenardier was just intelligent enough to read that sort he fed on them. She
drowned what little brain she had in them; and that had given her, while she was
yet young, and even in later life, a kind of pensive attitude towards her husband,
a knave of some calibre; a ruffian, educated almost to the extent of grammar;
at once coarse and fine, but so far as sentimentalism was concerned, reading
Pigault Lebrun, and in "all which related to the sex," as he
said in his jargon, a
correct dolt without adulteration. His wife was twelve or fifteen years younger
than he. At a later period, when the hair of the romantic weepers began to grow
grey, when Megere parted company with Pamela, Madame Thenardier was only a
gross bad woman who had relished stupid novels. Now, people do not read stu-
pidities with impunity. The result was, that her eldest child was named Eponine,
and the youngest, who had just escaped being called Gulnare, owed to some
happy diversion made by a novel of Ducray Domini', the mitigation of Azelma.
However, let us say by the way, all things are not ridiculous and superficial
in this singular epoch to which we allude, and which might be termed the anar-
chy of baptismal names. Besides this romantic element which we have noticed,
there is the social symptom. Today it is not infrequent to see herdsboys
named Arthur, Alfred, and Alphonse, and viscounts--if there be any remaining--
named Thomas, Peter, or James. This change, which places the "elegant" name on
the plebeian and the country appellation on the aristocrat, is only an eddy in
the tide of equality. The irresistible penetration of a new inspiration is there
as well as in everything else: beneath this apparent discordance there
is a
reality grand and deep--the French Revolution.
III. THE LARK
To be wicked does not insure prosperity--for the inn did not succeed well.
Thanks to Fantine's fifty-seven francs. Thenardier had been able to avoid
a
protest and to honour his signature. The next month the were still in need
of money, and the woman carried Cosette's war' robe to Paris and pawned it
for sixty francs. When this sum w spent, the Thenardiers began to look upon
the little girl as a child which they sheltered for charity, and treated
her as
such. Her clothes being gone, they dressed her in the cast-off garments of
the little Thenardiers, that is in rags. They fed her on the orts and et
a little
better than the dog, and a little worse than the cat. The and cat were her
messmates. Cosette ate with them under the in a wooden dish like theirs.
Her mother, as we shall see hereafter, who had found a place at M.--sur
M
wrote, or rather had some one write for her, every month, inquiring news
of her child. The Thenardiers replied invariably: .
"Cossette is doing wonderfully well."
The six months passed away: the mother sent seven francs for the seventh
month, and continued to send this sum regularly month after month. The year
was not ended before Thenardier said: "A pretty price that is. What does
she expect us to do for her seven francs?? And he wrote demanding twelve
francs. The mother, whom he persuaded that her child was happy and doing well,
assented, and forwarded the twelve francs.
There are certain natures which cannot have love on one side without hatred
on the other. This Thenardier mother passionately loved her own little ones:
this made her detest the young stranger. It is sad to think that a mother's
love can have such a dark side. Little as was the place Cosette occupied in
the house, it seemed to her that this little was taken from her children,
and that the little one lessened the air hers breathed. This woman, like many
women of her kind, had a certain amount of caresses, and blows, and hard
words to dispense each day. If she had not had Cosette, it is certain that
her daughters, idolised as they were, would have received all, but the lit-
tle stranger did them the service to attract the blows to herself; her child-
ren had only the caresses. Cosette could not stir that she did not draw down
upon herself a hailstorm of undeserved and severe chastisements. A weak, soft
little one who knew nothing of this world, or of God, continually ill-treated,
scolded, punished, beaten, she saw beside her two other young things like her-
self, who lived in a halo of glory!
The woman was unkind to Cosette, Eponine and Azelma were unkind also. Children
at that age are only copies of the mother; the size is reduced, that is all.
A year passed and then another.
People used to say in the village:
"What good people these Thenardiers are! They are not rich, and yet they bring
up a poor child, that has been left with them."
They thought Cosette was forgotten by her mother.
Meantime Thenardier, having learned in some obscure way that the child was prob-
ably illegitimate, and that its mother could not acknowledge it, demanded fifteen
francs a month, saying "that the 'creature' was growing and eating," and threat-
ening to send her away. "She won't humbug me," he exclaimed, "I will confound her
with the brat in the midst of her concealment. I must have more money." The mother
paid the fifteen francs.
From year to year the child grew, and her misery also.
So long as Cosette was very small, she was the scapegoat of the two other child-
ren; as soon as she began to grow a little, that is to say, before she was five
years old, she became the servant of the house.
Five years' old, it will be said, that is improbable. Alas! it is true,
social suffering
begins at all ages. Have we not seen lately the trial of Dumollard, an orphan be-
come a bandit, who, from the age of five, say the official documents, being
alone
in the world, "worked for his living and stole!"
Cosette was made to run of errands, sweep the rooms, the yard, the street, wash
the dishes, and even carry burdens. The Thenardiers felt doubly authorised to
treat her thus, as the mother, who still remained at M.--sur M --, began to
be remiss in her payments. Some months remained due.
Had this mother returned to Montfertnell, at the end of these three years, she
would not have known her child, Cosette, so fresh and pretty when she came to
that house, was now thin and wan. She had a peculiar restless air. Sly! said
the Thenardiers.
Injustice had made her sullen, and misery had made her ugly. Her fine eyes
only
remained to her, and they were painful to look at, for, large as they were, they
seemed to increase the sadness.
It was a harrowing sight to see in the winter time the poor child, not yet six
years old, shivering under the tatters of what was once a calico dress, sweeping
the street before daylight with an enormous broom in her little red hands and
tears in her large eyes.
In the place she was called the Lark. People like figurative names and were
pleased thus to name this little being, not larger than a bird, trembling,
frightened, and shivering, awake every morning first of all in the house and
the village, always in the street or in the fields before dawn.
Only the poor lark never sang.
BOOK FIFTH
THE DESCENT
I. HISTORY OF AN IMPROVEMENT IN JET-WORK
WHAT had become of this mother, in the meanwhile, who, according to the people
of Montfermeil, seemed to have abandoned her child? where was she? what was she
doing?
After leaving her little Cosette with the Thenardiers, she went on her way and
arrived at M-- sur M--.
This, it will be remembered, was in 1818.
Fantine had left the province some twelve years before, and M-- sur M-- had
greatly changed in appearance. While Fantine had been slowly sinking deeper
and deeper into misery, her native village had been prosperous.
Within about two years there had been accomplished there one of those indus-
trial changes which are the great events of small communities.
This circumstance is important and we think it well to relate it, we might even
say to italicise it.
From time immemorial the special occupation of the inhabitants of M-- sur
M--
had been the imitation of English jets and German black glass trinkets. The
business had always been dull in consequence of the high price of the raw
material, which reacted upon the manufacture. At the time of Fantine's return
to M-- sur M-- an entire transformation had been effected in the production
of these 'black goods.' Towards the end of the year 1815, an unknown man
had established himself in the city. and had conceived the idea of substitu-
ting gum-lac for resin in the manufacture; and for bracelets, in particular,
he made the clasps by simply bending the ends of the metal together instead
of soldering them.
This very slight change had worked a revolution.
This very slight change had in fact reduced the price of the raw material
enormously, and this had rendered it possible, first, to raise the wages of
the labourer--a benefit to the country--secondly, to improve the quality of
the goods--an advantage for the consumer--and thirdly, to sell them at a
lower price even while making three times the profit--a gain for the manu-
facturer.
Thus we have three results from one idea.
In less than three years the inventor of this process had become rich, which
was well, and bad made all around him rich, which was better. He was a stranger
in the Department. Nothing was known of his birth, and but little of his early
history.
The story went that he came to the city with very little money, a few hundred
francs at most. .
From this slender capital, under the inspiration of an ingenious idea, made
fruitful by order and care, he had drawn a fortune for himself, and a fortune
for the whole region.
On his arrival at M---, sur M--- he had the dress,the manners, and the lan-
guage of a labourer only.
It seems that the very day on which he thus obscurely entered the little city
of M--sur M.--, just at dusk on a December evening, with his bundle on his
back, and a thorn stick in his hand, a great fire had broken out in the town-
house. This man rushed into the fire, and saved, at the peril of his life, two
children, who proved to be those of the captain of the gendarmerie, and in the
hurry and grati tuck of the moment no one thought to ask him for his passport.
He was known from that time by the name of Father Madeleine.:
II.MADELEINE
HE was a man of about fifty, who always appeared to be preoccupied in mind,
and who was good-natured; this was all that could be said about him,
Thanks to the rapid progress of this manufacture, to which be had given such
wonderful life, M-- sur M-- had become a considerable centre of business. Im-
mense purchases were made there every year for the Spanish markets, where
there is a large demand for jet work, and M-- sur M-- in this branch of
trade, al-
most competed with London and Berlin. The profits. of Father Madeleine
were so
great that by the end of the second year be was able to build a large factory,
in
which there were two immense workshops, one for men and the other for women:
whoever was needy could go there and be sure of finding work and wages. Father
Madeleine required the men to be willing, the women to be of good morals, and
all to be honest. Ile divided the workshops, and separated the sexes in order
that the girls and the women might not lose their modesty. On this point he
was inflexible, although it was the only one in which he was in any degree
rigid. He was confirmed in this severity by the oppcirtunities for corruption
that abounded in M-- sur M--, it being a garrisoned city. Finally his coming
had been a beneficience, and his presence was a providence. Before the arrival
of Father Madeleine, the whole region was languishing; now it was all alive with
the healthy strength of labour. An active circulation kindled everything
and
penetrated everywhere. Idleness and misery were unknown. There was no pocket
so obscure that it did not contain some money and no dwelling so poor that it
was not the abode of some joy.
Father Madeleine employed everybody; he had only one condition, "Be
an honest
man!" "Be an honest woman!"
As we have said, in the midst of this activity, of which he was the cause and
the pivot, Father Madeleine had made his fortune, but, very strangely for a mere
man of business, that did not appear to be his principal care. It seemed that he
thought much for others, and little for himself. In 1820, it was known that he
had six hundred and thirty thousand francs standing to his credit in the banking-
house of Laffitte; but before setting aside this six hundred and thirty thousand
francs for himself, he had expended more than a million for the city and for the
poor.
The hospital was poorly endowed, and he made provision for ten additional
beds.
M-- sur M-- is divided into the upper City and the lower city. The lower city,
where he lived, had only one school-house, a miserable hovel which was fast go-
ing to ruin; he built two, one for girls, and the other for boys, and paid the
two teachers, from his own pocket, double the amount of their meagre salary from
the government; and one day, he said to a neighbour who expressed surprise at
this: "The two highest functionaries, of the state are the nurse and
the school-
master." He built, at his own expense, a house of refuge, an institution then
almost unknown in France, and provided a fund for old and infirm labourers. About
his factory, as a centre, a new quarter of the city had rapidly grown up,
con-
taining many indigent families, and he established a pharmacy that was free
to all.
At first, when he began to attract the public attention, the good people would
say: "This is a fellow who wishes to get rich." When they saw him enrich the
country before he enriched himself. the same good people said: "This
man is
ambitious." This seemed the more probable, since he was religious and observed
the forms of the church, to a certain extent, a thing much approved in those
days. He went regularly to hear mass every Sunday. The local deputy, who scented
rivalry everywhere, was not slow to borrow trouble on account of Madeleine's
religion. This deputy, who had ' been a member of the Corps l.egislatif of the
Empire, partook of the religious ideas of a Father of the Oratory, known by the
name of Fouche, Duke of Otranto, whose creature and friend he had been.
In private
he jested a little about God. But when he saw the rich manufacturer, Madeleine,
go to low mass at seven o'clock, he foresaw a possible candidate in opposition
to himself, and he resolved to outdo him. He took a Jesuit confessor, and went
both to high mass and to vespers. Ambition at that time was, as the word itself
imports, of the nature of a steeplechase. The poor, as well as God, gained by the
terror of the honourable deputy, for he also established two beds at the hospital,
which made twelve.
At length, in 1819, it was reported in the city one morning, that upon the recom-
mendation of the prefect, and in consideration of the services he had rendered to
the country, Father Madeleine had.been appointed by the king, Mayor of M-- sur M--.
Those who had pronounced the new-corner an ambitious man," eagerly seized this op-
portunity, which all men desire, to exclaim:
"There? what did I tell you?"
M-- sur M-- was filled with the rumour, and the report proved to be well
founded,
for, a few days afterwards, the nation appeared in the Monitieur. The next day
Father Aadirlerniin; declined.
In the same year, 1819, the results of the new process invented by Madeleine had
a place in the Industrial Exhibition, and upon the report of the jury, the king
named the inventor a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour. Here was a new rumour for
the little city; "Well it was the Cross of the Legion of Honour that he wanted:
Father Madeleine declined the Cross. .
Decidedly this man was an enigma, and the good people gave up the field, saying,
"After all, he is a sort of an adventurer:
As we have seen, the country owed a great deal to this man, and the poor owed him
everything; he was so useful that all were compelled to honour him, and so kind
that none could help loving him*, his workmen in particular adored him, and he
received their adoration with a sort of melancholy gravity. After he became rich,
those who constituted "society" bowed to him as they met, and, in the city, he
began to be called Monsieur Madeleine;--but his workmen and the children
contin-
ued to call him Father Madeleine, and at that name his face always wore a smile.
As his wealth increased, invitations rained in on him. "Society" claimed him. The
little exclusive parlours of M-- sur M--, which were carefully guarded, and in
earlier days, of course, had been closed to the artisan, opened wide their doors
to the millionaire. A thousand advances were made to him, but he refused
them all.
And again the gossips were at no loss. "He is an ignorant man, and of poor edu-
cation. No one knows where he came from. He does not know how to conduct himself
in good society, and it is by no means certain that he knows how to read."
When they saw him making money, they said, "He is a merchant,"
When they saw
the way in which he scattered his money they said. "He is ambitious." When they
saw him refuse to accept honours, they said, "He is an adventurer." When they saw
him repel the advances of the fashionable, they said, "He is a brute."
In 1820, five years after his arrival at M-- stir M--, the ser-vices that he had
rendered to the region where so brilliant, and the wish of the whole population
was so unanimous, that the king. again appointed him mayor of the city. He refused
again; but the prefect resisted his detennination, the principal citizens
came
and urged him to accept, and the people in the streets begged him to do so; all
insisted so strongly that at last he yielded. It was remarked that what appeared
most of all to bring him to this determination, was the almost angry exclamation
of an old woman belonging to the poorer class, who cried out to hint from
her
door-stone. with some temper:
"A good mayor is a good thing. Are you afraid of the good you can do?"
This was the third step in his ascent. Father Madeleine had become Monsieur
Mad-
eleine, and Monsieur Madeleine now became Monsieur the Mayor.
III. MONEYS DEPOSITED WITH LAFITTE
NEVERTHELESS he remained as simple as at first. He had grey hair, a serious eye,
the brown complexion of a labourer, and the thoughtful countenance of a
philosopher.
He usually wore a hat with a wide brim, and a long coat of coarse cloth
buttoned to
the chin. He fulfilled his duties as mayor. but beyond that his life was
isolated.
He talked with very few persons. He shrank from compliments, and with a touch of
the hat walked on rapidly; he smiled to avoid talking, and gave to avoid
smiling.
The women said of him: "What a good bear!" His pleasure was to walk in the fields.
He always took his meals alone with a book open before him in which he read. His
library was small but well selected. He loved books; books are cold but sure friends.
As his growing fortune gave him more leisure, it seemed that he profited
by it to
cultivate his mind. Since he had been at M-- sur M--. it was remarked from year
to year that his language became more polished, choicer, and more gentle.
In his walks he liked to carry a gun, though he seldom used it. When he did so,
however, his aim was frightfully certain. He never killed an inoffensive animal,
and never fired at any of the small birds.
Although he was no longer young, it was reported that he was of prodigious strength.
He would offer a helping hand to any one who needed it, help up a fallen horse, push
at a stalled wheel, or seize the horns a bull that had broken loose. He
always had his
pockets full of money when he went out, and empty when he returned. When he passed
through a village the ragged little youngsters would run after him with
joy, and surround
him like a swarm of flies.
It was surmised that he must have lived formerly in the country, for he
had all sorts
of useful secrets which he taught the peasants. He showed them how to destroy
the
grain-moth by sprinkling the granary and washing the cracks of the floor
with a solution
of common salt, and how to drive away the weevil by hanging up all about
the ceiling
and walls, in the pastures, and in the houses, the flowers of the orviot.
He had recipes
for clearing a field of rust, of vetches, of moles, of doggrass, and all the parasitic
herbs which live upon the grain. He defended a rabbit warren against rats, with no-
thing but the odour of a little Barbary pig that he placed there.
One day he saw some country people very busy pulling up nettles; he looked at the
heap of plants, uprooted, and already wilted, and said: "This is dead; but it would
be well if we knew how to put it to some use. When the nettle is young, the leaves
make excellent greens; when it grows old it has filaments and fibres like
hemp and
flax. Cloth made from the nettle is worth as much as that made from hemp.
Chopped
up, the nettle is good for poultry; pounded, it is good for horned cattle.
The seed of
the nettle mixed with the fodder of animals gives a lustre to their skin;the root,
mixed with salt, produces a beautiful yellow dye. It makes, however, excellent hay,
as it can be cut twice in a season. And what does the nettle need? very little soil,
no care, no culture; except that the seeds fall as fast as they ripen, and it is
difficult to gather them; that is all. If we would take a little pains, the nettle
would be useful; we neglect it, and it becomes harmful. Then we kill it. How much
men are like the nettle!" After a short silence, he added: "My friends, remember
this, that there are no bad herbs, and no bad men; there are only bad cultivators."
The children loved him yet more, because he knew how to make charming little
play-
things out of straw and cocoanuts.
When he saw the door of a church shrouded with black, he entered: he sought out
a funeral as others seek out a christening. The bereavement and the misfortune of
others attracted him, because of his great gentleness; he mingled with friends who
were in mourning, with families dressing in black, with the priests who
were
sighing around a corpse. He seemed glad to take as a text for his thoughts these
funeral psalms, full of the vision of another world. With his eyes raised
to heaven,
he listened with a sort of aspiration towards all the mysteries of the infinite, to
these sad voices, which sing upon the brink of the dark abyss of death.
He did a multitude of good deeds as secretly as bad ones are usually done. He would
steal into houses in the evening, and furtively mount the stairs. A poor
devil, on re-
turning to his garret, would find that his door had been opened, sometimes
even forced,
during his absence. The poor man would cry out: "Some thief has been
here!" When
he got in, the first thing that he would see would be a piece of gold lying on the table.
"The thief" who had been there was Father Madeleine.
He was affable and sad. Thep people used to say: "There is a rich
man who does not
show pride. There is a fortunate man who does not appear contented."
Some pretended that he was a mysterious personage, and declared that no
one ever
went into his room, which was a true anchorite's cell furnished with hour-glasses,
and enlivened with death's heads and cross-bones. So much was said of this kind
that some of the more mischievous of the elegant young ladies of M-- sur
M--
called on him one day and said: "Monsieur Mayor, will you show us your room? We
have heard that it is a grotto." He smiled, and introduced them on the spot to this
"grotto." They were well punished for their curiosity. It was
a room very well fitted
up with mahogany furniture, ugly as all furniture of that kind is, and
the walls cov-
ered with shilling paper. They could see nothing but two candlesticks of
antique form
that stood on the mantel, and appeared to be silver, "for they were marked," a
remark full of the spirit of these little towns.
But none the less did it continue to be said that nobody ever went into that cham-
ber, and that it was a hermit's cave, a place of dreams, a hole, a tomb.
It was also whispered that he had "immense" sums deposited with Laffitte, with the
special condition that they were always at his immediate command, in such a way,
it was added, that Monsieur Madeleine might arrive in the morning at Laffitte's,
sign a receipt and carry away his two or three millions in ten minutes. In reality
these "two or three millions" dwindled down, as we have said, to six hundred and
thirty or for thousand francs.
IV. MONSIEUR MADELEINE IN MOURNING
NEAR the beginning of the year 1821, the journals announced the decease of Monsieur
Myriel, Bishop of D---, "surnamed Monseigneur Bienvenu" who died in the odour of
sanctity at the age of eighty-two years.
The Bishop of D---, to add an incident which the journals omitted had been blind for
several years before he died, and was content therewith his sister being with him.
Let us say by the way, to be blind and to be loved, is in fact, in this earth where
nothing is complete, one of the most strangely exquisite forms of happiness. To have
continually at your side a woman, a girl, a sister, a charming being, who is there
because you have need of her, and because she cannot do without you, to know you are
indispensable to her who is necessary to you, to be able at all times to measure her
affection by the amount of her company that she gives you, and to say to
yourself:
she consecrates to me all her time, because I possess her whole heart;
to see the
thought instead of the face; to be sure of the fidelity of one being in the eclipse
of the world; to imagine the rustling of her dress the rustling of wings; to hear
her moving to and fro, going out, coming in, talking, singing, and to think that
you are the centre of those steps, of those words, of that song; to manifest at
every minute your personal attraction; to feel yourself powerful by so much the
more as you are the more infirm; to become in darkness, and by reason of
darkness,
the star around which this angel gravitates; few happy lots can equal that. The
supreme happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved; loved for ourselves--
say rather, loved in spite of ourselves; this conviction the blind have. In their
calamity, to be served, is to be caressed. Are they deprived of anything? No.
Light is, not lost where love enters. And what a loved a love wholly founded in
purity. There is no blindness where there is certainty. The soul gropes in search
of a soul, and finds it. And that soul, so found and proven, is a woman. A band
sustains you, it is hers; lips lightly touch your forehead, they are her lips;
you hear one breathing near you, it is she. To have her wholly, from her devotion
to her pity, never to he left, to have that sweet weakness which is your aid, to
lean upon that unbending reed, to touch Providence with your hands and he able to
grasp it in your arms; God made palpable, what transport! The heart, that dark but
celestial flower, bursts into a mysterious bloom. You would not give that shade
for all light I The angel-soul is there, for ever there; if she goes away, it is
only to return; she fades away in dream and reappears in reality. You feel an
approaching warmth, she is there. You overflow with serenity, gaiety, and ecstasy;
you are radiant in your darkness. And the thousand little cares! The nothings
which are enormous in this void. The most unspeakable accents of the womanly voice
employed to soothe you, and making up to you the vanished universe! You are ca-
ressed through the soul. You see nothing, but you feel yourself adored. It is a
paradise of darkness.
From this paradise Monseigneur Bienvenu passed to the other.
The announcement of his death was reproduced in the local paper of M-- sur M--.
Monsieur Madeleine appeared next morning dressed in black with crape on his bat.
This mourning was noticed and talked about all over the town. It appeared to
throw some light upon the origin of Monsieur Madeleine. The conclusion was that
he was in some way related to the venerable bishop. "He wears black for the
Bishop of D-----," was the talk of the drawing-rooms; it elevated Monsieur
Madeleine very much, and gave him suddenly, and in a trice, marked considera-
tion in the noble world of M-- sur M--. The microscopic Faubourg Saint
Ger-
main of the little place thought of raising the quarantine for Monsieur Made-
leine, the probable relative of a bishop. Monsieur Madeleine perceived the ad-
vancement that he had obtained, by the greater reverence of the old ladies,
and the more frequent smiles of the young ladies. One evening, one of the dow-
agers of that little great world, curious by right of age, ventured to ask him;
"The mayor is doubtless a relative of the late Bishop of D--?"
He said: "No, madame."
"But," the dowager persisted, "you wear mourning for him?"
He answered: "In my youth I was a servant in his family."
It was also remarked that whenever there passed through the city a young Sav-
oyard who was tramping about the country in search of chimneys to sweep, the
mayor would send for him, ask his name and give him motley. The little Savo-
yards told each other, and many of them passed that way.
V. VAGUE FLASHES IN THE HORIZON
Little by little in the lapse of time all opposition had ceased. At first there
had been, as always happens with those who rise by their own efforts, slanders
and calumnies against Monsieur Madeleine, soon this was reduced to satire, then
it was only wit, then it vanished entirely; respect became complete, unanimous,
cordial. and there came a moment, about 1821, when the words Monsieur the Mayor
were pronounced at M-- sur M-- with almost the same accent as the words
Mon-
seigneur the Bishop at D-- in 1815. People came from thirty miles around
to con-
sult Monsieur Madeleine. He settled differences, he prevented lawsuits, he recon-
ciled enemies. Everybody, of his own will, chose him for judge. He seemed to have
the book of the natural law by heart. A contagion of veneration had, in the course
of six or seven years, step by step, spread over the whole country.
One man alone, in the city and its neighbourhood, held himself entirely
clear
from this contagion, and, whatever Father Madeleine did, he remained indifferent,
as if a sort of instinct, unchangeable and imperturbable, kept him awake and on
the watch. It would seem, indeed, that there is in certain men the veritable in-
stinct of a beast, pure and complete like all instinct, which creates antipathies and
sympathies, which separates one nature from another for ever, which never hes-
itates, never is perturbed, never keeps silent, and never admits itself to be in
the wrong; clear in its obscurity, infallible, imperious, refractory under
all the
counsels of intelligence, and all the. solvents of reason, and which, whatever
may be their destinies, secretly warns the dog-man of the presence of the
cat-
man and the fox-man of the presence of the lion-man.
Often, when Monsieur Madeleine passed along the street, calm, affectionate,
followed by the benedictions of all, it happened that a tall man, wearing a
flat hat and an iron-grey coat, and armed with a stout cane, would turn around
bruptly behind him, and follow him with his eyes until he disappeared,
crossing
his arms, slowly shaking his head, and pushing his upper with his under
lip up
to his nose, a sort of significant grimace which might be rendered by: "But
what is that man? I am sure I have seen him somewhere: At all events, I
at
least am not his dupe."
This personage, grave with an almost threatening gravity; was one of those who,
even in a hurried interview, command the attention of the observer.
His name was Javert, and he was one of the police.
He exercised at M-- stir M-- the unpleasant, but useful, function of inspector.
He was not there at the date of Madeleine's arrival. Javert owed his position
to the protection of Monsieur Chabouillet, the secretary of the Minister
of
State, Count Angles, then prefect of police at Paris. When Javert arrived at
M-- sur M-- the fortune of the great manufacturer had been made already,
and
Father Madeleine had become Monsieur Madeleine.
Certain police officers have a peculiar physiognomy in which can be traced
an
air of meanness mingled with an air of authority. Javert had this physiognomy,
without meanness.
It is our conviction that if souls were visible to the eye we should distinctly
see this strange fact that each individual of the human species corresponds to
some one of the species of the animal creation; and we should clearly recog-
nise the truth, hardly perceived by thinkers, that, from the oyster to
the eagle,
from the swine to the tiger, all animals are in man, and that each of them is in
a man; sometimes even, several of them at a time.
Animals are nothing but the forms of our virtues and vices wandering before our
eyes, the visible phantoms of our souls. God shows them to us to make us reflect.
Only, as animals are but shadows, God has not made them capable of education
in
the complete sense of the word. Why should he? On the contrary, our souls
being
realities and having their peculiar end, God has given them intelligence, that
is to say, the possibility of education. Social education, well attended to, can
always draw out of a soul, whatever it may be, the usefulness that it contains.
Be this said, nevertheless, from the restricted point of view of the apparent ear-
thly life, and without prejudice to the deep question of the anterior or ulterior
personality of the beings that are not man. The visible me in no way authorises
the thinker to deny the latent me. With this reservation, let us pass on.
Now, if we admit for a moment that there is in every man some one of the
species
of the animal creation, it will be easy for us to describe the guardian of the
peace, Javert.
The peasants of the Asturias believe that in every litter of wolves there is one
dog, which is killed by the mother, lest on growing up it should devour the other
little ones.
Give a human face to this dog son of a wolf, and you will have Javert.
Javert was born in a prison. His mother was a fortune-teller whose husband was in
the galleys. He grew up to think himself without the pale of society, and despaired
of ever entering it. He noticed that society doors, without pity, on two classes
of men, those who attack it sveesi who guard it; he could choose between these two
classes only; at the same time he felt that he had an indescribable basis of rec-
titude, order, and honesty, associated with an irrepressible hatred for that gypsy
belonged. He entered the police. He succeeded. At forty he was an inspector.
In his youth he had been stationed in the galleys at the South.
Before going further, let us understand what we mean by the words human face,
which we have just now applied to Javert.
The human face of Javert consisted of a snub nose, with two deep nostrils,
which
were bordered by large bushy whiskers that covered both his cheeks. One felt ill
at ease the first time he saw those two forests and those two caverns. When Javert
laughed, which was rarely and terribly, his thin lips parted, and showed, not only
his teeth, but his gums; and around his nose there was a wrinkle as broad and wild
as the muzzle of a fallow deer. Javert, when serious, was a bull-dog; when he
laughed, he was a tiger. For the rest, a small head, large jaws, hair hiding
the fore-
head and falling over the eyebrows, between the eyes a permanent central
frown,
a gloomy look, a mouth pinched and frightful, and an air of fierce command.
This man was a compound of two sentiments very simple and very good in them-
selves, but he almost made them evil by his exaggeration of them; respect for au-
thority and hatred of rebellion; and in his eyes, theft, murder, all crimes,
were only
forms of rebellion. In his strong and implicit faith he included all who held any
function in the state, from the prime minister to the constable. He had nothing but
disdain, aversion, and disgust for all who had once overstepped the bounds of the
law. He was absolute, and admitted no exceptions. On the one hand he said: "A
public officer cannot be deceived; a magistrate never does wrong!" And on the
other he said: "They are irremediably lost; no good can come out of. them. He
shared fully the opinion of those extremists who attribute oto. human laws an
indescribable power of making, or, if you will, of determining, demons,
and who
place a Styx at the bottom of society. He was stoical, serious, austere: a dreamer
of stern dreams; humble and haughty, like all fanatics. His stare was cold
and
as piercing a a gimblet. His whole life was contained in these two words: waking
and watching. He marked out a straight path through most tortuous thing in the
world; his conscience was bound up in his utility, his religion in his
duties,
and he was a spy as others are priests. Woe to him who should fall into his hands
He would have arrested his father if escaping from the galleys, and denounced his
mother for violating her ticket of leave. And he would have done it with
that sort
of interior satisfaction that springs from virtue. His life was a life
of privations,
isolation, self-denial, and chastity: never any amusement. It was implacable
duty, absorbed in the police as the Spartans were absorbed in Sparta, a pitiless
detective, a fierce honesty, a marble-hearted informer, Brutus united with Vidocq.
The whole person of Javert expressed the spy and the informer. The mystic school
of Joseph de Maistre, which at that time enlivened what were called the ultra
journals with high-sounding cosmogonies, would have said that Javert was a symbol.
You could not see his forehead which disappeared under his hat, you could not see
his eyes which were lost under his brows, you could not see his chin which was buried
in his cravat, you could not see his bands which were drawn up into his sleeves,
you could not see his cane which he carried under his coat. But when the time came,
you would see spring all at once out of this shadow, as from an ambush, a steep and
narrow forehead, an ominous look, a threatening chin, enormous hands, and a mon-
strous club.
In his leisure moments, which were rare, although he hated books, he read;
where-
fore he was not entirely illiterate. This was perceived also from a certain emphasis
in his speech.
He was free from vice, we have said. When he was satisfied with himself,
he allowed
himself a pinch of snuff. That proved that be was human.
It will be easily understood that Javert was the terror of all that class
which the
annual statistics of the Minister of Justice include under the heading:
People with-
out a fixed abode. To speak the name of Javert would put all such to flight; the face
of Javert petrified them.
Such was this formidable man.
Javert was like an eye always fixed on Monsieur Madeleine; an eye full
of suspicion
and conjecture. Monsieur Madeleine finally noticed it, but seemed to consider it of
no consequence. He asked no question of Javert, he neither sought him nor shunned him,
he endured this unpleasant and annoying stare without appearing to pay any attention
to it. He treated Javert as he did everybody else, at ease and with kindness.
From some words that Javert had dropped, it was guessed that he had secretly
hunt-
ed up, with that curiosity which belongs to his race, and which is more
a matter of
instinct than of will, all the traces of his previous life which Father
Madeleine had
left elsewhere. He appeared to know, and he said sometimes in a town covert.
way,
that somebody had gathered certain information in a certain region about
a certain
missing family. Once he happened to say speaking to himself: "I think
l have got him!"
Then for three days he remained moody without speaking a word. It appeared that
the clue which he thought he had was broken.
But, and this is the necessary corrective to what the meaning. of certain
words may
have presented in too absolute a sense, there can be nothing really infallible in
a human creature, and the very peculiarity of instinct is that it can be
disturbed,
followed up, and routed. Were this not so it would be superior to intelligence,
and
the beast would be in possession of a purer light than man.
Javert was evidently somewhat disconcerted by the completely natural air and
the tranquillity of Monsieur Madeleine,
One day, however, his strange manner appeared to make an impression upon
Monsieur Madeleine. The occasion was this:
VI. FATHER FAUCHELEVENT
MONSIEUR Madeleine was walking one morning along one of the unpaved alleys of M----
sur M---; he heard a shouting and saw a crowd at a little distance. He went to
the spot. An old man, named Father Fauchelevent, had fallen under his cart, his
horse being thrown down.
This Fauchelevent was one of the few is who were still enemies of Monsieur Made-
leine at this time. When Madeleine arrived in the place, the business of Fauche-
levent, who was a notary of longstanding, and very well-read for a rustic. was
beginning to decline. Fauchelevent had seen this mere artisan grow rich while
he himself, a professional man, had been going to ruin. This had filled him with
jealousy, and he had done what he could on all occasions to injure Madeleine.
Then came bankruptcy, and the old man, having nothing but a horse and cart, as he
was without family, and without children, was compelled to earn his living as a
carman.
The horse had his thighs broken, and could not stir. The old man was caught be-
tween the wheels. Unluckily he had fallen so that the whole weight rested upon
his breast. The cart was heavily loaded. Father Fauchelevent was uttering doleful
groans. They had tried to pull him out, but in vain. An unlucky effort, inexpert
help, a false push, might crush him. It was impossible to extricate him other-
wise than by raising the waggon from beneath. Javert, who came up at the moment
of the accident, had sent for a jack.
Monsieur Madeleine came. The crowd fell back with respect.
"Help," cried old Fauchelevent. "Who is a good fellow to save an old man?"
Monsieur Madeleine turned towards the bystanders:
"Has anybody a jack?"
"They have gone for one," replied a peasant.
"How soon will it be here?"
"We sent to the nearest place, to Flachot Place, where there is a blacksmith; but
it will take a good quarter of an hour at least."
"A quarter of an hour!" exclaimed Madeleine.
It had rained the night before, the road was soft, the cart was sinking
deeper
every moment, and pressing more and more on the breast of the old carman.
It was evident that in less than five minutes his ribs would be crushed.
"We cannot wait a quarter of an hour," said Madeleine to the peasants who were
looking on.
"We must!"
"But it will be too late! Don't you see that the waggon is sinking all the while?"
"It can't be helped."
"Listen," resumed Madeleine, "there is room enough still under the waggon for a
man to crawl in, and lift it with his back. In half a minute we will have the poor
man out. Is there nobody here who has strength and courage? Five louis
d'ors for
him!"
Nobody stirred in the crowd.
"Ten louis," said Madeleine.
The bystanders dropped their eyes. One of them muttered: "He'd have to be
devilish stout. And then he would risk getting crushed."
"Come," said Madeleine, "twenty louis."
The same silence.
"It is not willingness which they lack," said a voice.
Monsieur Madeleine turned and saw Javert. He had not noticed him when he came.
Javert continued:
"It is strength. He must be a terrible man who can raise a waggon like that on
his back."
Then, looking fixedly at Monsieur Madeleine, he went on emphasising every word
that he uttered:
"Monsieur Madeleine, I have known but one man capable of doing what you call
for."
Madeleine shuddered.
Javert added, with an air of indifference, but without taking his eyes from
Madeleine:
"He was a convict."
"Ah!" said Madeleine.
"In the galleys at Toulon."
Madeleine became pale.
Meanwhile the cart was slowly settling down. Father Fauchelevent roared and
screamed:
"I am dying! my ribs are breaking! a jack! anything! oh!"
Madeleine looked around him:
"Is there nobody, then, who wants to earn twenty Louis and save this poor
old man's life?"
None of the bystanders moved. Javert resumed:
"I have known but one man who could take the place of a jack; that was that
convict."
"Oh! how it crushes me!" cried the old man.
Madeleine raised his head, met the falcon eye of Javert still fixed upon him,
looked at the immovable peasants, and smiled sadly. Then, without saying a word,
he fell on his knees, and even before the crowd had time to utter a cry, he was
under the cart.
There was an awful moment of suspense and of silence.
Madeleine, lying almost flat under the fearful weight, was twice seen to try
in vain to bring his elbows and knees nearer together. They cried out to
him: "Father Madeleine! come out from there!" Old Fauchelevent himself
said: "Monsieur Madeleine! go away! I must die, you see that; leave me! you
will be crushed too." Madeleine made no answer.
The bystanders held their breath. The wheels were still sinking and it
had now become almost impossible for Madeleine to extricate himself.
All at once the enormous mass started, the cart rose slowly, the wheels
came half out of the ruts. A smothered voice was heard crying: "Quick!
help!" It was Madeleine, who had just made a final effort.
They all rushed to the work. The devotion of one man had given
strength and courage to all. The cart was lifted by twenty arms. Old
Fauchelevent was safe.
Madeleine arose. He was very pale, though dripping with sweat. His
clothes were torn and covered with mud. All wept. The old man kissed his
knees and called him the good God. He himself wore on his face an inde-
scribable expression of joyous and celestial suffering, and he looked with
tranquil eye upon Javert, who was still watching him.
VII. FAUCHELEVENT BECOMES A GARDENER AT PARIS
FAUCHELEVENT had broken his knee-pan in his fall. Father Madeleine had
him carried to an infirmary that he had established for his workmen in the
same building with his factory, which was attended by two sisters of charity.
The next morning the old man found a thousand franc bill upon the stand
by the side of the bed, with this note in the handwriting of Father
Madeleine: I have purchased your horse and cart. The cart was broken and
the horse was dead. Fauchelevent got well, but he had a stiff knee. Mon-
sieur Madeleine, through the recommendations of the sisters and the cure,
got the old man a place as gardener at a convent in the Quartier Saint
Antoine at Paris.
Some time afterwards Monsieur Madeleine was appointed mayor. The first time
that Javert saw Monsieur Madeleine clothed with the scarf which gave him
full authority over the city, he felt the same sort of shudder which a
bull-dog would feel who should scent a wolf in his master's clothes. From
that time he avoided him as much as he could. When the necessities of the
service imperiously demanded it and he could not do otherwise than come
in contact with the mayor, he spoke to him with profound respect.
The prosperity which Father Madeleine had created at M--sur M--, in add-
ition to the visible signs that we have pointed out had another symptom
which, although not visible, was not the less significant. This never fails.
When the population is suffering, when there is lack of work, when trade
falls off, the tax-payer, constrained by poverty, resists taxation, exhausts
and overruns the delays allowed by law, and the government is forced to incur
large expenditures in the costs of levy and collection. Whens work is abundant,
when the country is rich and happy, the tax is easily paid and costs the state
but little to collect. It may be said that poverty and public wealth have an
infallible thermometer in the cost of the collection of the taxes. In seven
years, the cost of the collection of the taxes had been reduced three-quarters
in the district of M--sur M--, so that that district was frequently referred
to especially by Monsieur de Villele, then Minister of Finance.
Such was the situation of the country when Fantine returned. No one remembered
her. Luckily the door of M. Madeleine's factory was like the face of a friend.
She presented herself there, and was admitted into the workshop for women. The
business was entirely new to Fantine; she could not be very expert in it, and
consequently did not receive much for her day's work; but that little was enough,
the problem was solved; she was earning her living.
VIII. MADAME VICTURNIEN SPENDS THIRTY FRANCS ON MORALITY
WHEN Fantine realised how she was living, she had a moment of joy. To live
honest-
ly by her own labour: what a heavenly boon The taste for labour returned to her,
in High. She bought a mirror, delighted herself with the sight of her youth, her
fine hair and her fine teeth, forgot many things, thought of nothing save
Cosette
and the possibilities of the future, and was almost happy. She hired a small room
and furnished it on the credit of her future labour; a remnant of her habits of
disorder.
Not being able to say that she was married, she took good care, as we have already
intimated, not to speak of her little girl.
At first, as we have seen, she paid the Thenardiers punctually. As she only knew
how to sign her name she was obliged to write through a public letter-writer.
She wrote often; that was noticed. They began to whisper in the women's workshop
that Pontine "wrote letters," and that "she had airs." For prying into any human
affairs, none are equal to those whom it does not concern. "Why does this gentle-
man never come till dusk?" "Why does Mr. So-and-so never hang his key on the nail
on Thursday?" "Why does he always take the by-streets?" "Why does madame always
leave her carriage before getting to the house?" "Wlw does she send to buy a quire
of writing-paper when she has her portfolio full of it?" etc. etc. There are persons
who, to solve these enigmas, which are moreover perfectly immaterial to them, spend
more money, waste more time, and give themselves more trouble than would suffice
for ten good deeds; and that gratuitously, and for the pleasure of it, without be-
ing paid for their curiosity in any other way than by curiosity. They will follow
this man or that woman whole days, stand guard for hours at the corners
of the
street, under the entrance of a passage-way, at night, in the cold and in the rain,
bribe messengers, get hack-drivers and lackeys drunk, fee a chambermaid, or buy a
porter. For what? for nothing. Pure craving to see, to know, and to find out. Pure
itching for scandal. And often these secrets made known, these mysteries published,
these enigmas brought into the light of day, lead to catastrophes, to duels, to
failures, to the ruin of families, and make lives wretched, to the great
joy of
those who have "discovered all" without any interest, and from
pure instinct. A
sad thing.
Some people are malicious from the mere necessity of talking. Their conversation,
tattling in the drawing-room, gossip in the ante chamber, is like those
fireplaces
that use up wood rapidly; they need a great deal of fuel; the fuel is their neighbour.
So Fantine was watched.
Beyond this, more than one was jealous of her fair hair and of her white teeth.
It was reported that in the shop, with all the rest about her, she often turned
aside to wipe away a tear. Those were moments when she thought of her child; per-
haps also of the man whom she had loved.
It is a mournful task to break the sombre attachments of the past.
It was ascertained that she wrote, at least twice a month, and always to
the same
address, and that she prepaid the postage. They succeeded in learning the address:
Monsieur, Monsieur Thenardier, inn-keeper Montfermeil. The public letter-writer, a
simple old fellow, who could not fill his stomach with red-wine without emptying
his pocket of his secrets, was made to reveal this at a drinking-house. In. short,
it became known that Fantine had a child. "She must be that sort of a woman." And
there was one old gossip who went to Montfermeil, talked with the Thenardiers, and
said on her return: "For my thirty-five francs, I have found out all about it. I have
seen the child!"
The busybody who did this was a beldame, called Madame Victurnien, keeper
and
guardian of everybody's virtue. Madame Victurnien was fifty-six years old,
and
wore a mask of old age over her mask of ugliness. Her voice trembled, and she was
capricious. It seemed strange, but this woman had been young. In her youth, in '93,
she married a monk who had escaped from the clotster in a red cap, and passed from
the Bernardines to the Jacobins. She was dry, rough, sour, sharp, crabbed, almost
venomous; never forgetting her monk, whose widow she was, and who had ruled and
curbed her harshly. She was a nettle bruised by a frock. At the restoration she be-
came a bigot, and so energetically, that the priests had pardoned her monk episode.
She had a little property, which she had bequeathed to a religious community with
great flourish. She was in very good standing at the bishop's palace in Arras. This
Madame Victurnien then went to Montfermeil, and returned saying: "I have seen the
child."
All this took time; Fantine had been more than a year at the factory, when one morn-
ing the overseer of the workshop handed her, on behalf of the mayor, fifty francs,
saying that she was no longer wanted in the shop, and enjoining her, on behalf of
the mayor, to leave the city.
This was the very same month in which the Thenardiers. alter having asked twelve
francs instead of six, had demanded fifteen francs instead of twelve.
Fantine was thunderstruck. She could not leave the city; she was in debt for her
lodging and her furniture. Fifty francs were not enough to clear off that debt. She
faltered out some suppliant words. The overseer gave her to understand that she must
leave the shop instantly. Fantine was moreover only a moderate worker. Overwhelmed
with shame even more than with despair, she left the shop, and returned to her rooms
her fault then was now known to all!
She felt no strength to say a word. She was advised to see the mayor; she dared not.
The mayor gave her fifty francs, because he was kind. and sent her away, because he
was just. She bowed to that decree.
SUCCESS OF MADAME VICTURNIEN
THE MONK'S WIDOW was then good for something.
Monsieur Madeleine had known nothing of all this. These are combinations of e-
vents of which life is full. It was Monsieur Madeleine's habit scarcely ever
to enter the women's workshop.
He had placed at the head of this shop an old spinster whom the cure had rec-
ommended to him, and he had entire confidence in this overseer, a very respect-
able person, firm, just, upright, full of that charity which consists in giving,
but not having to the same extent that charity which consists in understanding
and pardoning. Monsieur Madeleine left everything to her. The best men are
often compelled to delegate their authority. It was in the exercise of this
full power, and with the conviction that she was doing right, that the over-
seer had framed the indictment, tried, condemned, and executed Fantine.
As to the fifty francs, she had given them from a fund that Monsieur Madeleine
had entrusted her with for alms-giving and aid to work-women, and of which she
rendered no account.
Fantine offered herself as a servant in the neighbourhood; she went from one
house to another. Nobody wanted her. She could not leave the city. The second-
hand dealer to whom she was in debt for her furniture, and such furniture! had
said to her: "If you go away, I will have you arrested as a thief." The land-
lord, whom she owed for rent, had said to her: "You are young and pretty, you
can pay." She divided the fifty francs between the landlord and the dealer,
returned to the latter three-quarters of his goods, kept only what was neces-
sary, and found herself without work, without position, having nothing
but
her bed, and owing still about a hundred francs.
She began to make coarse shirts for the soldiers of the garrison, and earned
twelve sous a day. Her daughter cost her ten. It was at this time that she began
to get behindhand with the Thenardiers.
However, an old woman, who lit her candle for her when she came home at night,
taught her the art of living in misery. Behind living on a little, lies
the art
of living on nothing. They are two rooms; the first is obscure, the second is
utterly dark.
Fantine learned how to do entirely without fire in winter, how to give up a
bird that eats a farthing's worth of millet every other day, how to make a cov-
erlid of her petticoat, and a petticoat of her coverlid, how to save her candle
in taking her meals by the light of an opposite window. Few know how much certain
feeble beings who have grown old in privation and honesty, can extract
from a
sou. This finally becomes a talent. Fantine acquired this sublime talent and took
heart a little.
During these times, she said to a neighbour: "Bah! I say to myself:
by sleeping
but five hours and working all the rest at my sewing, I shall always succeed in
nearly earning bread. And then, when one is sad, one eats less. Well! what with
sufferings, troubles, a little bread on the one hand, anxiety on the other,
all that will keep me alive."
In this distress, to have had her little daughter would have been a strange hap-
piness. She thought of having her come. But what? to make her share her privation?
and then, she owed the Thenardiers? How could she pay them? and the journey; how
pay for that?
The old woman, who had given her what might be called lessons in indigent life,
was a pious woman, Marguerite by name, a devotee of genuine devotion, poor,
and
charitable to the poor, and also to the rich, knowing how to write just enough
to sign Margeritte, and believing in God, which is science.
There are many of these virtues in low places; some day they will be on high.
This life has a morrow.
At first, Fantine was so much ashamed that she did not dare to go out.
When she was in the street, she imagined that people turned behind her and pointed
at her; everybody looked at her and no one greeted her; the sharp and cold disdain
of the passers-by penetrated her, body and soul, like north wind.
In small cities an unfortunate woman seems to be laid bare to the sarcasm and
the curiosity of all. In Paris, at least, nobody knows you, and that obscurity is
a covering. Oh! how she long to go to Paris! impossible.
She must indeed become accustomed to disrespect as she had to poverty. Little by
little she learned her part. After two or three months she shook off her
shame and
went went out as if there were nothing in the way. "It is all one
to me," said she.
She went and came, holding her head up and wearing a bitter smile, and felt that
she was becoming shameless.
Madame Victurnien sometimes saw her pass her window, noticed the distress of
"that creature," thanks to her "put back to her place," and congratulated herself.
The malicious have a dark happiness.
Excessive work fatigued Fantine, and the slight dry cough that she had increased.
She sometimes said to her neighbour, Marguerite, "just feel how hot
my hands are."
In the morning, however, when with an old broken comb she combed her fine hair
which flowed down in silky waves, she enjoyed a moment of happiness.
X. RESULTS OF THE SUCCESS
SHE HAD BEEN discharged towards the end of winter; summer passed away, but win-
ter returned. Short days, less work. In winter there is no heat, no light, no noon,
evening touches morning, there is fog, and mist, the window is frosted, and you
cannot see clearly. The sky is but the mouth of a cave. The whole day is the cave.
The sun has the appearance of a pauper. Frightful season! Winter changes into stone
the water of heaven and the heart of man. Her creditors harassed her.
Fantine earned too little. Her debts had increased. The Thenardiers being poorly
paid, were constantly writing letters to her the contents of which disheartened
her, while the postage was ruining her. One day they wrote to her that her little
Cosette was entirely destitute of clothing for the cold weather, that she
needed
a woollen skirt, and that her mother must send at least ten francs for that. She
received the letter and crushed it in her hand for a whole day. In the evening
she went into a barber's shop at the corner of the street, andpulled out her comb.
Her beautiful fair hair fell below her waist.
"What beautiful hair!" exclaimed the barber.
"How much will you give me for it?" said she.
"Ten francs."
"Cut it off."
She bought a knit skirt and sent it to the Thenardiers.
This skirt made the Thenardiers furious. It was the money that they wanted. They
gave the skirt to Eponine. The poor lark still shivered.
Fantine thought: "My child is no longer cold I have clothed her with my hair."
She put on a little round cap which concealed her shorn head, and with that she
was still pretty.
A gloomy work was going on in Fantine's heart.
When she saw that she could no longer dress her hair, she began to look with
hatred on all around her. She had long shared in the universal veneration for
Father Madeleine; nevertheless by dint of repeating to her-self that it was he
who had turned her away, and that he was the cause of her misfortunes, she came
to hate him also, and especially. When she passed the factory at the hours in
which the labourers were at the door, she forced herself to laugh and sing.
An old working-woman who saw her once singing and laughing in this way, said:
"There is a girl who will come to a bad end."
She took a lover, the first comer, a man whom she did not love, through bravado,
and with rage in her heart. He was a wretch, a kind of mendicant musician, a
lazy ragamuffin, who beat her, and who left her, as she had taken him, with dis-
gust.
She worshipped her child.
The lower she sank, the more all became gloomy around her, the more the sweet
little angel shone out in the bottom of her heart. She would say: "When I am
rich, I shall have my Cosette with me ," and she laughed. The cough did not
leave her, and she had night sweats.
One day she received from the Thenardiers a letter in these words: "Cosette is
sick of an epidemic disease. A miliary fever they call it. The drugs necessary
are dear. It is ruining us, and we can no longer pay for them. Unless you
send
us forty francs within a week the little one will die."
She burst out laughing, and said to her old neighbour:
"Oh! they are nice! forty francs! think of that! that is two Napoleons!
Where do they think I can get them? Are they fools, these boors?"
She went, however, to the staircase near a dormer window, and read
the letter again.
Then she went down stairs and out of doors, running and jumping, still laughing.
Somebody who met her said to her: "What is the matter with you, that You are so
gay?"
She answered: "A stupid joke that some country people have just written me.
They ask for forty francs; the boors!"
AS she passed through the square, she saw many people gathered about an odd-looking
carriage on the top of which stood a in veil clothes, declaiming. He was a juggler
and a traveling dentist and was offering to the public complete sets of
teeth, opiates,
powders and elixirs.
Fantine joined the crowd and began tolaugh with the rest at harangue, in
which were
mingled slang for the rabble and jargan for the better sort. The puller of teeth saw
this beautiful girl laughing, and suddenly called out: "You have pretty teeth, you girl
who are laughing there. If you will sell me your two incisors, I will give
you a gold
Napoleon for each of them."
"What is that? What are incisors?" asked Fantine.
"The incisors," resumed the professor of dentistry, "are
the front teeth, the two up-
per ones."
"How horrible!" cried Fantine.
"Two Napoleons!" grumbled a toothless old hag who stood by. "How lucky she is!"
Fantine fled away and stopped her cars not to hear the shrill voice of the man who
called after her: "Consider, my beauty! two Napoleons how much good they will do
you! If you have the courage for it, come this evening to the inn of the Tillac d'Argent;
you will find me there."
Fantine returned home; she was raving, and told the story to her good neighbour
Marguerite: "Do you understand that? isn't he an abominable man? Why do they let
such people go about the country? Pull out my two front teeth! why, I should be hor-
rible! The hair is bad enough, but the teeth! Oh! what a monster of a man! would
rather throw myself from the fifth story, head first, to the pavement! He told me
that he would be this evening at the Tillac d'Argent."
"And what was it he offered you?" asked Marguerite. "Two Napoleons."
"That is forty francs."
"Yes," said Fantine, "that makes forty francs."
She became thoughtful and went about her work. In a gunnel. of an hour she left
her sewing and went to the stairs to read again the Tlulnardiers' letter.
On her return she said to Marguerite, who was at work near her: "What does this
mean, a miliary fever? Do you know?"
"Yes," answered the old woman, "it is a disease."
"Then it needs a good many drugs?"
"Yes; terrible drugs."
"How does it come upon you?"
"It is a disease that comes in a moment."
"Does it attack children?"
"Children especially."
"Do people die of it?"
"Very often," said Marguerite.
Fantine withdrew and went once more in read over the letter on the stairs.
In the evening she went out, and too); the diirection of tin' Rite Jr Paris where
the inns are.
The next morning, when Marguerite went into Fantine's chamber before daybreak,
for they always worked together, and made one candle do for the two, she found
Fantine seated upon her couch, pale and icy. She had not been in bed. Her cap
had fallen upon her knees. The candle had burned all night, and was almost con-
sumed.
Marguerite stopped upon the threshold, petrified by this wild disorder, and
exclaimed: "Good Lord! the candle is all burned out. Something has happened.'
Then she looked at Fantine, who sadly turned her shorn head.
Fantine had grown ten years older since evening.
"Bless us!" said Marguerite, "what is the matter with you,
Fantine?"
"Nothing," said Fantine. "Quite the contrary. My child will not die with that
frightful sickness for lack of aid. I am satisfied."
So saying, she showed the old woman two Napoleons that glistened on the table.
"Ohl good God!" said Marguerite. "Why there is a fortune! where did you get these
louis d'or?"
"I got them," answered Fantine.
At the same time she smiled. The candle lit up her face. It was a sickening smile,
for the corners of her mouth were stained with blood, and a dark cavity revealed
itself there.
The two teeth were gone.
She sent the forty francs to Montfermeil.
And this was a ruse of the Thenardiers to get money. Cosette was not sick.
Fantine threw her looking-glass out of the window. Long before she had left her
little room on the second story for an attic room with no other fastening
than
a latch; one of those garret rooms the ceiling of which makes an angle
with the
floor and hits your head a every moment. The poor cannot go to the end of their
chamber or to the end of their destiny, but by bending continually more
and more.
She no longer had a bed, she retained a rag that she called he coverlid, a mat-
tress on the floor, and a worn-out straw chair. He little rosebush was dried up
in the corner, forgotten. In the othe corner was a butter-pot for water, which
froze in the winter, and the different levels at which the water had stood
re-
mained marked a long time by circles of ice. She had lost her modesty,
she was
losing her coquetry. The last sign. She would go out with a dirty cap.
Either
from want of time or from indifference she no longer washed her linen.
As
fast as the heels of her stockings wore out she drew them down into her
shoes.
This was shown by certain perpendicular wrinkles. She mended her old, wornout
corsets with bits of calico which were torn by the slightest motion. Her
creditors
quarrelled with her and gave her no rest. She met them in the street; she
met them;
again on her stairs. She passed whole nights in weeping and thinking. She
had a
strange brilliancy in her eyes, and a constant pain in her shoulder near the top
of her left shoulder-blade. She coughed a great deal. She hated Father Madeleine
thoroughly, and never complained. She sewed seventeen hours a day; but a prison
contractor, who was working prisoners at a loss, suddenly cut down the price,
and this reduced the day's wages of free labourers to nine sous. Seventeen hours
of work, and nine sous a day! Her creditors were more pitiless than ever. The
second-hand dealer, who had taken back nearly all his furniture, was constantly
saying to her: "When will you pay me, wench?"
Good God I what did they want her to do? She felt herself hunted down, and some-
thing of the wild beast began to develop within her. About the same time. Thenar-
dier wrote to her that really he had waited with too much generosity, and that
he must have a hundred francs immediately, or else little Cosette, just conval-
escing after her severe sickness, would be turned out of doors into the cold
and upon the highway, and that she would become what she could, and would per-
ish if she must. "A hundred francs," thought Pauline. "But where is there a
place where one can earn a hundred sous a day?"
"Come!" said she, "I will sell what is left."
The unfortunate creature became a woman of the town.
XI. CHRISTUS NOS LIBERAVIT
WHAT is this history of Fanzine? It is society buying a slave.
From whom? From misery.
From hunger, from cold, from loneliness, from abandonment, from privation.
Melancholy barter. A soul for a bit of bread. Misery makes the offer, society
accepts.
The holy law of Jesus Christ governs our civilisation, but it does not
yet per-
meate it; it is said that slavery has disappeared from European civilisation.
This is a mistake. It still exists: but it weighs now only upon woman, and it
is called prostitution.
It weighs upon woman, that is to say, upon grace, upon feebleness, upon beauty,
upon maternity. This is not one of the least of man's shames.
At the stage of this mournful drama at which we have now arrived,
Fantine has nothing left of what she had formerly been. She has become
marble in becoming corrupted. Whoever touches her feels a chill. She goes
her ways, she endures you and she knows you not, she wears a dishonoured
and severe face. Life and social order have spoken their last word to her. All
that can happen to her has happened. She has endured all, borne all, experienced
all, suffered all, lost all, wept for all. She is resigned, with that
resignation that resembles indifference as death resembles sleep. She shuns
nothing now. She fears nothing now. Every cloud falls upon her, and all
the ocean sweeps over her! What matters it to her! the sponge is already
drenched.
She believed so at least, but it is a mistake to imagine that man can
exhaust his destiny, or can reach the bottom of anything whatever.
Alas! what are all these destinies thus driven pell-mell? whither go
they? why are they so?
He who knows that, sees all the shadow.
He is alone. His name is God.
XII. THE IDLENESS OF MONSIEUR BAMATABOIS
THERE is in all small cities, and there was at M--sur M-- in particular, a set of
young men who nibble their fifteen hundred livres of income in the country
with
the same air with which their fellows devour two hundred thousand francs
a
year at Paris. They are beings of the great neuter species; geldings, parasites,
nobodies, who have a little land, a little folly, and a little wit, who
would be
clowns in a drawing-room, and think themselves gentlemen in a barroom, who talk
about "my fields, my woods, my peasants," hiss the actresses
at the theatre to
prove that they are persons of taste, quarrel with the officers of the
garrison to
show that they are gallant, hunt, smoke, gape, drink, take snuff, play billiards,
stare at passengers getting out of the coach, live at the cafe, dine at the inn,
have a dog who eats the bones under the table, and a mistress who sets the dishes
upon it, hold fast to a sou, overdo the fashions, admire tragedy, despise women,
wear out their old boots, copy London as reflected from Paris, and Paris as re-
flected from Pont-a-Mousson, grow stupid as they grow old, do no work, do no
good, and not much harm.
Monsieur Felix Thotomyes, had he remained in his province and never seen
Paris.
would have been such a man.
If they were richer, we should say: they are dandies; if they were poorer, we
should say: they are vagabonds. They are simply idlers Among these idlers
there
are some that are bores, some that ar bored, some dreamers, and some jokers.
In those days, a dandy was made up of a large collar, a large cravat, a
watch loaded
with chains, three waistcoats worn one over the other, of different colours,
the red
and blue within, a short olive coloured coat with a fish-tail skirt, a
double row
of silver buttons alternating with one another and running up to the shoulder,
a
pantaloons of a lighter olive, ornamented at the two seams with an indefinite,
but
always odd, number of ribs, varying from one to eleven, a limit which was never ex-
ceeded. Add to this, Blucher boots with little iron caps on the heel, a high-crowned
and narrow-brimmed hat, hair bushed out, an enormous cane, and conversation spiced
with the puns of Potion. Above all, spurs and moustaches. In those days, moustaches
meant civilians, and spurs meant pedestrians.
The provincial dandy wore longer spurs and fiercer moustaches.
It was the time of the war of the South American Republics against the King of Spain,
of Bolivar against Morillo. Hats with narrow brims were Royalist, and were called Mor-
illos; the liberals wore hats with wide brims which were called Bolivars.
Eight or ten months after what has been related in the preceding pages, in the early
part of January, 1823, one evening when it had been snowing, one of these dandies, one
of these idlers, a "well-intentioned" man, for he wore a morillo, very warmly wrapped
in one of those large cloaks which completed the fashionable costume in cold weather,
was amusing himself with tormenting a creature who was walking back and forth before
the window of the officers' cafe, in a ball-dress, with her neck and shoulders bare,
and flowers upon her head. The dandy was smoking, for that was decidedly the fashion.
Every time that the woman passed before him, he threw out at her, with a puff of smoke
from his cigar, some remark which he thought was witty and pleasant as: "How ugly you
are!" "Are you trying to hide?" "You have lost your
teeth!" etc., etc. This gentleman's
name was Monsieur Bamatabois. The woman, a rueful, bedizened spectre, who was walking
backwards and forwards upon the snow, did not answer him, did not even look at him, but
continued her walk in silence and with a dismal regularity that brought her under his
sarcasm every five minutes, like the condemned soldier who at stated periods returns
under the rods. This failure to secure attention doubtless piqued the loafer, who, tak-
ing advantage of the moment when she turned, came up behind her with a stealthy step and
stifling his laughter stooped down, seized a handful of snow from the side walk, and threw
it hastily into her back between her naked shoulders. The girl roared with rage, turned,
bounded like a panther, and rushed upon the man, burying her nails in his face, and using
the most frightful words that ever fell from the off-scouring of a guard-house. These in-
sults were thrown out in a voice roughened by brandy, from a hideous mouth
which lacked
the two front teeth. it was Fantine.
At the noise which this made, the officers came out of the cafe, a crowd gathered, and
a large circle was formed, laughing, jeering and applauding, around this centre of attract-
ion composed of two beings who could hardly be recognized as a man and a woman, the
man defending himself, his hat knocked off, the woman kicking and striking,
her head bare,
shrieking, toothless, and without hair, livid with wrath, and horrible.
Suddenly a tall man advanced quickly from the crowd, seized the woman by her muddy satin
waist, and said: "Follow me!"
The woman raised her head; her furious voice died out at once. Her eyes were glassy,
from livid she had become pale, and she shuddered with a shudder of terror. She recog-
nised Javert.
The dandy profited by this to steal away.
XIII. SOLUTION OF SOME QUESTIONS OF MUNICIPAL POLICE
JAVERT dismissed the bystanders, broke up the circle, and walked . off rapidly towards
the Bureau of Police, which is at the end of the square, dragging the poor creature after
him. She made no resistance, but followed mechanically. Neither spoke a word. The flock
of spectators, in a paroxysm of joy, followed with their jokes. The deepest misery,
an opportunity for obscenity.
When they reached the Bureau of Police, which was a low hall warmed by a stove, and
guarded by a sentinel, with a grated window looking on the street, Javert opened the
door, entered with. Pontine, and closed the door behind him, to the great disappointment
of the curious crowd who stood upon tiptoe and stretched their necks before the dirty
window of the guard-house, in their endeavours to see. Curiosity is a kind of glutton.
To see is to devour.
On entering Fantine crouched down in a corner motionless and silent, like
a frightened
dog.
The sergeant of the guard placed a lighted candle on the table. Javert
sat down, drew
from his pocket a sheet of stamped paper, and began to write.
These women are placed by our laws completely under the discretion of the
police. They
do what they will with them, punish them as they please, and confiscate at will those
two sad things which they call their industry and their liberty. Javert was impassible;
his grave face betrayed no emotion. He was, however, engaged in serious
and earnest con-
sideration. It was one of those moments in which he exercised without restraint, but
with all the scruples of a strict conscience, his formidable discretionary power. At
this moment he felt that his policeman's stool was a bench of justice. He was conduct-
ing a trial. He was trying and condemning. He called all the ideas of which
his mind
was capable around the grand thing that he was doing. The more he examined the conduct
of this girl, the more he revolted at it. It was clear that he had seen a crime
commit-
ted. He had seen, there in the street, society represented by a property holder and an
elector, insulted and attacked by a creature who was an outlaw and an outcast. A pros-
titute had assaulted a citizen. He, Javert, had seen that himself. He wrote in silence.
When he had finished, he signed his name, folded the paper, and handed it to the sergeant
of the guard, saying: "Take three men. and carry this girl to jai!"
Then turning to Fan-
tine; "You are in for six months."
The hapless woman shuddered.
"Six months! six months in prison!" cried she. "Six months to earn seven sous a day! but
what will become of Cosette! my daughter! my daughter! Why, I still owe more than a hun-
dred francs to the Thenardiers, Monsieur Inspector. do you ktpw that?"
She dragged herself along on the floor. dirtied by the muddy boots of all these men,
without rising, clasping her hands, and moving rapidly on her knees.
"Monsieur Javert," said she, "I beg your pity. I assure you that I was not in the wrong.
If you had seen the beginning, you would have seen. I swear to you by the good God that
I was not in the wrong. That gentleman, whom I do not know, threw snow in my back. Have
they the right to throw snow into our backs when we are going along quietly like that
without doing any harm to anybody? That made me wild. I am not very well, you see! and
then he had already been saying things to me for some time. 'You are homelv:"You have
no teeth!' I know too well that I have lost my teeth. I did not do anything; I thought:
'He is a gentleman who is amusing himself.' I was not immodest with him, I did not
speak to him. It was then that he threw the snow at me. Monsieur Javert, my good Mon-
sieur Inspector! was there no one there who saw it and can tell you that this is true!
I perhaps did wrong to get angry. You know, at the first moment, we cannot master our-
selves. We are excitable. And then, to have something so cold thrown into your back
when you are not expecting it. I did wrong to spoil the gentleman's hat.
Why has he
gone away? I would ask his pardon. Oh! I would beg his pardon. Have pity on me now
this once, Monsieur Javert. Stop, you don't know how it is, in the prisons they only
earn seven sous; that is not the fault of the government, but they earn seven sous,
andjust think that I have a hundred francs to pay, or else they will turn away my
little one. 0 my God! I cannot have her with me. What I do is so vile! O my Cosette,
O my little angel of the good blessed Virgin, what will she become, poor famished
child! I tell you the Thenardiers are inn-keepers, boors, they have no consideration.
They must have money. Do not put me in prison! Do you see, she is a little one that
they will put out on the highway, to do what she can, in the very heart of winter;
you must feel pity for such a thing, good Monsieur Javert. „If she were older, she
could earn her living, but she cannot at such an age.' I am not a bad woman at heart.
It is not laziness and appetite that have brought me to this; I have drunk brandy,
but it was from misery. I do not like it, but it stupefies. When I was happier,
one would only have had to look into my wardrobe to see that I was not a disorderly
woman. I had linen, much linen. Have pity on me, Monsieur Javert."
She talked thus, bent double, shaken with sobs, blinded by tears, her neck bare,
clenching her hands, coughing with a dry and short cough, stammering very feebly
with an agonised voice. Great grief is a divine and terrible radiance which trans-
figures the wretched. At that moment Fantine had again become beautiful. At cer-
tain instants she stopped and tenderly kissed the policeman's coat. She would
have softened a heart of granite; but you cannot soften a heart of wood.
"Come," said Javert, "I have heard you. Haven't you got through? March off at
once! you have your six months! the Eternal Father in person could do nothing
for you."
At those solemn words, The Eternal Father in person could do nothing for
you, she understood that her sentence was fixed. She sank down murmuring:
"Mercy!"
Javert turned his back.
The soldiers seized her by the arms.
A few minutes before a man had entered without being noticed. He had closed
the door, and stood with his back against it, and heard the despairing sup-
plication of Fantine. When the soldiers put their hands upon the wretched
being, who would not rise, he stepped forward out of the shadow and said:
One moment, if you please!"
Javert raised his eyes and recognised Monsieur Madeleine. He took off his hat,
and bowing with a sort of angry awkwardness: "Pardon, Monsieur Mayor--."
This word, Monsieur Mayor, had a strange effect upon Fantine. She sprang to her
feet at once like a spectre rising from the ground, pushed back the soldiers
with
her arms, walked straight to Monsieur Madeleine before they could stop
her, and
gazing at him fixedly, with a wild look, she exclaimed:
"Ah! it is you then who are Monsieur Mayor!"
Then she burst out laughing and spit in his face.
Monsieur Madeleine wiped his face and said:
"Inspector Javert, set this woman at liberty."
Javert felt as though he were on the point of losing his senses. He experienced,
at that moment, blow on blow, and almost simultaneously, the most violent
emotions
that he had known in his life. To see a woman of the town spit in the face of a
mayor was a thing so monstrous that in his most daring suppositions he would have
thought it sacrilege to believe it possible. On the other hand, deep down
in his
thought, he dimly brought into hideous association what this woman was and what
this mayor might be, and then he perceived with horror something indescribably
simple in this prodigious assault. But when he saw this mayor, this magistrate,
wipe his face quietly and say: set this woman at liberty, he was stupefied with
amazement; thought and speech alike failed him; the sum of possible astonishment
had been overpassed. He remained speechless.
The mayor's words were not less strange a blow to Fantine. She raised her bare
arm and clung to the damper of the stove as if she were staggered. Meanwhile
she
looked all around and began to talk in a low voice, as if speaking to herself:
"At liberty! they let me go! I am not to go to prison for six months! Who was it
said that? It is not possible that anyone said that. I misunderstood. That cannot
be this monster of a mayor! Was it you, my good Monsieur Javert, who told them to
set me at liberty? Oh! look now! I will tell you and you will let me go?
This
monster of a mayor, this old whelp of a mayor, he is the cause of all this. Think
of it, Monsieur Javert, he turned me away on account of a parcel of beggars who
told stories in the workshop. Was not that horrible! To turn away a poor girl who
does her work honestly? Since that I could not earn enough, and all the wretched-
ness has come. To begin with, there is a change that you gentlemen of the police
ought to make--that is. to stop prison contracters from wronging poor people. I
will tell you him it is: listen. You earn twelve sous at shirt making, that falls
to nine sous, not enough to live. Then we must do what we can. For me, I had my little
Cosette and I had to be a bad woman. You see now that it is this beggar of a mayor
who has done all this, and then, I did stamp on the hat of this gentleman in from of
the officers cafe. But he, he had spoiled my whole dress with the snow. We women,
we have only one silk dress, for evening. See you, I have never meant to do wrong,
in truth, Monsieur Javert, and I see everywhere much worse women than I am who are
much more fortunate. Oh, Monsieur Javert. it is you who said that they must let me
go, is it not? Go and inquire. speak to my landlord; I pay my rent, and he will
surely tell you that I am honest. Oh dear, I beg your pardon. I have touched--I did
not know it--the damper of the stove, and it smokes.
Monsieur Madeleine listened with profound attention. While she was talking, he had
fumbled in his waistcoat, had taken out his purse and opened it. It was empty. He
had put it hack into his pocket. He said to Fantine:
"How much did you say that you owed?"
Fantine, who had only looked at Javert, turned towards him:
"Who said anything to you?"
Then addressing herself to the soldiers:
"Say now, did you see how I spit in his face? Oh! you old scoundrel of a mayor, you
come here to frighten me, but I am not afraid of you. I am afraid of Monsieur Javert.
I am afraid of my good Monsieur Javert!"
As she said this she turned again towards the inspector:
"Now, you see, Monsieur Inspector, you must be just. I know That you are just, Monsieur
Inspector; in fact, it is verysimple, a man who jocosely throws a little snow into a
woman's back, that makes them laugh, the officers, they must divert themselves with
something, and we poor things are only for their amusement. And then, you, you come,
you are obliged to keep order, you arrest the woman who has done wrong, but on reflect-
ion, as you are good, you tell them to set me at liberty, that is for my little one,
because six months in prison, that would prevent my supporting my child. Only never
come back again, wretch! Oh! I will never come back again, Monsieur Javert! They may
do anything they like with me now, I will not stir. Only, today, you see, I cried out because
that hurt me. I did not in the least expect that snow from that gentleman, and then, I
have told you, I am not very well, I cough, I have something in my chest
like a ball which
burns me, and the doctor tells me: 'be careful.' Stop, feel, give my your hand, don't be
afraid, here it is."
She wept no more; her voice was caressing; she placed Javert's great coarse
hand upon
her white and delicate chest, and looked at him smiling.
Suddenly she hastily adjusted the disorder of her garments, smoothed down the folds of
her dress, which, in dragging herself about, had been raised almost as
high as her knees,
and walked towards the door, saying in an undertone to the soldiers, with a friendly nod
of the head:
"Boys. Monsieur the Inspector said that you must release me; I am going."
She put her hand upon the latch. One more step and she would be in the street.
Javert until that moment had remained standing, motionless, his eyes fixed on the ground,
looking, in the midst of the scene; like a statue which was waiting to be placed in posi-
tion.
The sound of the latch roused him. He raised his head with an expression of sovereign au-
thority, an expression always the more frightful in proportion as power
is vested in be-
ings of lower grade; ferocious in the wild beast, atrocious in the undeveloped man.
"Sergeant." exclaimed he, "don't you see that this vagabond is going off? Who told you to
let her go?"
"I," said Madeleine.
At the words of Javert, Fantine had trembled and dropped the latch, as a thief who is caught,
drops what he has stolen. When Madeleine spoke, she turned, and from that moment, without
saying a word, without even daring to breathe freely, she looked by turns from Madeleine to
Javert and from Javert to Madeleine, as the one or the other was speaking.
It was clear that Javert must have been, as they say, "thrown off his balance," or he would
not have allowed himself to address the sergeant at he did, after the direction of the mayor
to set Fantine at liberty. Had he forgotten the presence of the mayor? Had he finally decided
within himself that it was impossible for "an authority" to give such an order, and that very
certainly the mayor must have said one thing when he meant another? Or, in view of the enor-
mities which he had witnessed for the last two hours, did he say to himself that it was nec-
essary to revert to extreme measures, that it was necessary for the little to make itself
great, for the detective to transform himself into a magistrate, for the policeman to become
a judge, and that in this fearful extremity, order, law, morality, government, society as a
whole, were personified in him, Javert?
However this might be, when Monsieur Madeleine pronounced that I which we have just heard,
the inspector of police, Javert, turned towards the mayor, pale, cold, with blue lips, a
desperate look, his whole body agitated with an imperceptible tremor, and, an unheard-of
thing, said to him, with a downcast look, but a firm voice:
"Monsieur Mayor, that cannot be done."
"Why?" said Monsieur Madeleine.
"This wretched woman has insulted a citizen."
"Inspector Javert," replied Monsieur 'Madeleine, in a conciliating and calm tone, "listen. You
are an honest man, and I have no objection to explain myself to you. The truth is this. I was
passing through the square when you arrested this woman; there was a crowd
still there; I
learned the circumstances; I know all about it; it is the citizen who was in the wrong, and
who, by a faithful police, would have been arrested."
Javert went on:
"This wretch has just insulted Monsieur the Mayor."
"That concerns me," said Monsieur Madeleine. "The insult to me rests with myself, perhaps.
I can do what I please about it."
"I beg Monsieur the Mayor's pardon. The insult rests not with him, it rests with justice."
"Inspector Javert," replied Monsieur Madeleine, "the highest
justice is conscience. I have
heard this woman. I know what I am doing."
"And for my part, Monsieur Mayor, I do not know what I am seeing."
"Then content yourself with obeying."
"I obey my duty. My duty requires that this woman spend six months in prison."
Monsieur Madeleine answered mildly:
"Listen to this. She shall not a day."
At these decisive words, Javert had the boldness to look the mayor in the eye, and
said, but still in a tone of profound respect:
"I am very sorry to resist Monsieur the Mayor; it is the first time in my life, but
he will deign to permit me to observe that I am within the limits of my
own authority.
I will speak, since the mayor desires it, on the matter of the citizen. I was there.
This girl fell upon Monsieur Bamatabois, who is an elector and the owner of that fine
house with a balcony, that stands at the corner of the esplanade, three stories high,
and all of hewn stone. Indeed, there are some things in this world which must be con-
sidered. However that may be, Monsiuer Mayor, this Matter belongs to the police
of
the street; that concerns me, and I detain the woman Fantine."
At this Monsieur Madeleine folded his arms and said in a severe tone which nobody in
the city had ever yet heard:
"The matter of which you speak belongs to the municipal police. By the terms of art-
icles nine, eleven, fifteen, and sixty-six of the code of criminal law, I am the judge
of it. I order that this woman be set at liberty."
Javert endeavoured to make a last attempt.
"But, Monsieur Mayor--"
"I refer you to article eighty-one of the law of December 13th, 1799, upon illegal
imprisonment."
"Monsieur Mayor, permit--"
"Not another word."
"However--"
"Retire," said Monsieur Madeleine.
Javert received the blow, standing in front, and with open breast like a Russian
soldier. He bowed to the ground before the mayor, and went out.
Fantine stood by the door and looked at him with stupor as he passed before her.
Meanwhile she also was the subject of a strange revolution. She had seen
herself
somehow disputed about by two opposing powers. She had seen struggling
before her
very eyes two men who held in their hands her liberty, her life, her soul, her
child; one of these men was drawing her to the side of darkness, the other was
leading her towards the light. In this contest, seen with distortion through
the magnifying power of fright, these two men had appeared to her like two giants;
one spoke as her demon, the other as her good angel. The angel had vanquished the
demon, and the thought of it made her shudder from head to foot; this angel, this
deliverer, was precisely the man whom she abhorred, this mayor whom she had so long
considered as the author of all her woes, this Madeleine! and at the very moment
when she had insulted him in a hideous fashion, he had saved her! Had she
then
been deceived? Ought she then to change her whole heart? She did not know, she
trembled. She listened with dismay, she looked around with alarm, and at each word
that Monsieur Madeleine uttered, she felt the fearful darkness of her hatred melt
within and flow away, while there was born in her heart an indescribable and un-
speakable warmth of joy, of confidence, and of love.
When Javert was gone, Monsieur Madeleine turned towards her, and said to her,
speaking slowly and with difficulty, like a man who is struggling that he may not
weep:
"I have heard you. I knew nothing of what you have said. I believe that it is true.
I did not even know that you had left my workshop. Why did you not apply to me?
But now: I will pay your debts, I will have your child come to you, or you shall
go to her. You shall live here, at Paris, or where you will. I take charge of your
child and you. You shall do no more work, if you do not wish to. I will give you
all the money that you need. You shall again become honest in again becoming happy.
More than that, listen. I declare to you from this moment, if all is as you say,
and I do not doubt it, that you have never ceased to be virtuous and holy before
God. Oh, poor woman!"'
This was more than poor Fantine could bear. To have Cosette! to leave this
infamous life! to live free, rich, happy, honest, with Cosette! to see
suddenly
spring up in the midst of her misery all these realities of paradise! She
looked
as if she were stupefied at the man who was speaking to her, and could only pour
out two or three sobs: "Oh! oh! oh!" Her limbs gave way, she
threw herself on
her knees before Monsieur Madeleine, and, before he could prevent it, he
felt
that she had seized his hand and carried it to her lips.
Then she fainted.
BOOK SIXTH
JAVERT
I. THE BEGINNING OF THE REST
MONSIEUR MADELEINE had Fantine taken to the infirmary, which
was in his own house. He confided her to the sisters, who put her to bed. A. vi-
olent fever came on, and she passed a part of the night in delirious ravings.
Finally, she fell asleep.
Towards noon the following day, Fantine awoke. She heard a breathing near her
bed, drew aside the curtain, and saw Monsieur Madeleine standing gazing at some-
thing above his head. His look was full of compassionate and supplicating agony.
She followed its direction, and saw that it was fixed upon a crucifix nailed
against the wall.
From that moment Monsieur Madeleine was transfigured in the eyes of Fantine; he
seemed to her clothed upon with light. He was absorbed in a kind of prayer. She
gazed at him for a long while without daring to interrupt him; at last she said
timidly:
"What are you doing?"
Monsieur Madeleine had been in that place for an hour waiting for Fantine to awake.
He took her hand, felt her pulse, and said:
"How do you feel?"
"Very well. I have slept," she said. "I think I am getting better--this will be
nothing."
Then he said, answering the question she had first asked him, as if she had just
asked it:
"I was praying to the martyr who is on 'high."
And in his thought he added: "For the martyr who is here below."
Monsieur Madeleine had passed the night and morning in informing himself about Fan-
tine. He knew all now, he had learned, even in all its poignant details, the history
of Fantine.
He went on:
"You have suffered greatly, poor mother, Oh! do not lament, you have now the portion
of the elect. It is in this way that mortals become angels. It is not their fault;
they do not know how to set about it otherwise. This hell from which you have come
out is the first step towards Heaven. We must begin by that."
He sighed deeply; but she smiled with this sublime smile from which two teeth were
gone.
That same night, Javert wrote a letter. Next morning he carried this letter himself
to the post-office ofM--sur M--. It was directed to Paris and bore this address:
"To Monsieur Chabouillet, Secretary of Monsieur the Prefect of Police."
As the affair of the Bureau of Police had been noised about, the postmistress and
some others who saw the letter before it was sent, and who recognized Javert's hand-
writing in the address, thought he was sending in his resignation. Monsieur Madeleine
wrote immediately to the Thenardiers. Fantine owed them a hundred and twenty francs.
He sent them three hundred francs, telling them to pay themselves out of it, and bring
the child at once to M--sur M--, where her mother, who was sick, wanted
her.
This astonished Thenardier.
"The Devil!" he said to his wife, "we won't let go of the child. It may be that this
lark will become a milch cow. I guess some silly fellow had been smitten by the mother."
He replied by a bill of five hundred and some odd francs carefully drawn up. In this
bill figured two incontestable items for upwards of three hundred francs, one of a phys-
ician and the other of an apothecary who had attended and supplied Eponine and Azelma
during two long illnesses. Cosette, as we have said, had not been ill. This was only a
slight substitution of names. Thenardier wrote at the bottom of the bill: "Received on
account three hundred francs."
Monsieur Madeleine immediately sent three hundred francs more, and wrote: "Make haste
to bring Cosette."
"Christy!" said Thenardier, "we won't let go of the girl."
Meanwhile Fantine had not recovered. She still remained in the infirmary.
It was not without some repugnance, at first, that the sisters received and cared for
"this girl." He who has seen the bas-reliefs at Rheims will recall the distension of
the lower lip of the wise virgins beholding the foolish virgins. This ancient contempt
of vestals for less fortunate women is one of the deepest instincts of womanly dignity;
the sisters had experienced it with the intensification of Religion. But in a few days
Fantine had disarmed them. The motherly tenderness within her, with her soft and touch-
ing words, moved them. One day the sisters heard her say in her delirium: "I have been
a sinner, but when I shall have my child with me, that will mean that God has pardoned
me. While I was bad I would not have had my Cosette with me; I could not have
borne her
sad and surprised looks. It was for her I sinned, and that is why God forgives
me. I
shall feel this benediction when Cosette comes. I shall gaze upon her; the sight of her
innocence will do me good. She knows nothing of it all. She is an angel,
you see, my sis-
ters. At her age the wings have not yet fallen.'
Monsieur Madeleine came to see her twice a day, and at each visit she asked
him:
"Shall I see my Cosette soon?"
He answered:
"Perhaps to-morrow. I expect her every moment."
And the mother's pale face would brighten.
"And she would say, "how happy I shall be."
We have just said she did not recover: on the contrary, her condition seemed to become
worse from week to week. That handful of snow applied to the naked skin between her shou-
lder-blades, had caused a sudden check of perspiration, in consequence of which the dis-
ease, which had been forming for some years, at last attacked her violently. They were
just at that time beginning in the diagnosis and treatment of lung diseases to follow
the fine theory of Laennec. The doctor sounded her lungs and shook his head.
Monsieur Madeleine said to him:
"Well?"
"Has she not a child she is anxious to see?" said the doctor.
"Yes."
"Well then, make haste to bring her."
Monsieur Madeleine gave a shudder.
Fantine asked him; "What did the doctor say?" Monsieur Madeleine tried to smile.
"He told us to bring your child at once. That will restore your health."
"Oh!" she cried, "he is right. But what is the matter with these Thenardiers that they
keep my Cosette from me? Oh! She is coming! Here at last I see happiness near me."
The Thenardiers, however, did not "let go of the child;" they gave a hundred bad rea-
sons. Cosette was too delicate to travel in the winter time, and then there were a
number of little petty debts, of which they were collecting the bills, etc., etc.
"I will send somebody for Cosette," said Monsieur Madeleine, "if necessary, I will go
myself."
He wrote at Fantine's dictation this letter, which she signed. "Monsieur Thenardier:
"You will deliver Cosette to the bearer. "He will settle all small debts.
"I have the honour to salute you with consideration.
"FANTINE."
In the meanwhile a serious matter intervened. In vain we chisel, as best we can, the
mysterious block of which our life is made, the black vein of destiny reappears con-
tinually.
II. NOW JEAN CAN BECOME CHAMP
ONE morning Monsieur Madeleine was in his office arranging for some pressing business
of the mayoralty, in case he should decide to go to Montfermeil himself,
when he was
informed that Javert, the inspector of police, wished to speak with him. On hearing
this name spoken, Monsieur Madeleine could not repress a disagreeable impression.
Since the affair of the Bureau of Police, Javert had more than ever avoided him, and
Monsieur Madeleine had not seen him at all.
"Let him come in," said he.
Javert entered.
Monsieur Madeleine remained seated near the fire, looking over a bundle of papers
upon which he was making notes, and which contained the returns of the police patrol.
He did not disturb himself at all for Javert: He could not but think of poor Fantine,
and it was fitting that he should receive him very coldly.
Javert respectfully saluted the mayor, who had his back towards him. The mayor did
not look up, but continued to make notes on the papers.
Javert advanced a few steps, and paused without breaking silence.
A physiognomist, had he been familiar with Javert's face, had he made a study for
years of this savage in the service of civilisation, this odd mixture of the Roman,
Spartan, monk and corporal, this spy, incapable of a lie, this virgin detective--a
physiognomist, had he known his secret and inveterate aversion for Monsieur Madeleine,
his contest with the mayor on the subject of Fantine, and had he seen Javert at that
moment, would have said: "What has happened to him?"
It was evident to any one who had known this conscientious, straight-forward, clear,
sincere, upright, austere, fierce man, that Javert had suffered some great interior
commotion. There was nothing in his mind that was not depicted on his face. He was,
like all violent people, subject to sudden changes. Never had his face been stranger
or more startling. On entering, he had bowed before Monsieur Madeleine with a look
in which was neither rancour, anger, nor defiance; he paused some steps behind the
mayor's chair, and was now standing in a soldierly attitude with the natural, cold
rudeness of a man who was never kind, but has always been patient; he waited with-
out speaking a word or making a motion, in genuine humility and tranquil resignation,
until it should please Monsieur the Mayor to turn towards him, calm, serious, hat
in hand, and eyes cast down with an expression between that of a soldier before his
officer and a prisoner before his judge. All the feeling as well as all the remem-
brances which we should have expected him to have, disappeared. Nothing was left upon
this face, simple and impenetrable as granite, except a gloomy sadness. His whole
person expressed abasement and firmness, an indescribably courageous dejection.
At last the mayor laid down his pen and turned partly round:
"Well, what is it? What is the matter, Javert?"
Javert remained silent a moment as if collecting himself; then raised his voice with
a sad solemnity which did not, however, exclude simplicity: "There has been a crimi-
nal act committed, Monsieur Mayor."
"What act?"
"An inferior agent of the government has been wanting in respect to a magistrate,
in the gravest manner. I come, as is my duty, to bring the fact to your knowledge."
"Who is this agent?" asked Monsieur Madeleine.
"I," said Javert.
"You?"
"And who is the magistrate who has to complain of this agent?"
"You, Monsieur Mayor."
Monsieur Madeleine straightened himself in his chair. Javert continued, with serious
looks and eyes still cast down.
"Monsieur Mayor, I come to ask you to be so kind as to make charges and procure my
dismissal.'
Monsieur Madeleine, amazed, opened his mouth. Javert interupted him.
"You will say that I might tender my resignation, but that is not enough. To resign
is honourable; I have done wrong. I ought to be punished. I must be dismissed."
And after a pause he added:
"Monsieur Mayor, you were severe to me the other day, unjustly. Be justly so today."
"Ah, indeed! why? What is all this nonsense? What does it all mean?
What is the crim-
inal act committed by you against me? What have you done to me? How have you wronged
me? You accuse yourself do you wish to be relieved?"
"Dismissed," said Javert.
"Dismissed it is then. It is very strange. I do not understand you."
"You will understand, Monsieur Mayor," Javert sighed deeply, and continued sadly
and coldly:
"Monsieur Mayor, six weeks ago, after that scene about that girl,
I was enraged and
I denounced you."
"Denounced me?"
"To the Prefecture of Police at Paris."
Monsieur Madeleine, who did not laugh much oftener than Javert, began to laugh:
"As a mayor having encroached upon the police?"
"As a former convict."
The mayor became livid.
Javert, who had not raised his eyes, continued:
"I believed it. For a long while I had had suspicions. A resemblance, information you
obtained at Faverolles, your immense strength; the affair of old Fauchelevent; your
skill as a marksman; your leg which drags a little--and in fact I don't know what other
stupidities; but at last I took you for a man named Jean Valjean."
"Named what? How did you call that name?"
"Jean Valjean. He was a convict I saw twenty years ago, when I was adjutant of the
galley guard at Toulon. After leaving the galleys this Valjean, it appears, robbed a
bishop's palace, then he committed another robbery with weapons in his hands, in a
highway, on a little Savoyard. For eight years his whereabouts have been unknown, and
search has been made for him. I fancied--in short, I have done this thing. Anger de-
termined me, and I denounced you to the prefect"
M. Madeleine, who had taken up the file of papers again, a few moments before, said
with a tone of perfect indifference: "And what answer did you get?"
"That I was crazy."
"Well!"
"Well; they were right."
"It is fortunate that you think so!"
"It must be so, for the real Jean Valjean has been found."
The paper that M. Madeleine held fell from his band; he raked his head, looked stead-
ily at Javert, and said in an inexpressible tone:
"Ah!"
Javert continued:
"I will tell you how it is, Monsieur Mayor. There was, it appears,
in the country, near
Ailly-le-Haut Clocher, a simple sort of fellow who was called Father Champmathieu. He was
very poor. Nobody paid any attention to him. Such folks live, one hardly knows how. Fin-
ally, this last fall, Father Champmathieu was arrested for stealing cider apples from --,
but that is of no consequence. There was a theft, a wall scaled, branches of trees broken.
Our Champmathieu was arrested; he had even then a branch of an apple-tree in his hand. The
rogue was caged. So far, it was nothing more than a penitentiary matter. But here comes
in the hand of Providence. The jail being in a bad condition, the police justice thought
it best to take him to Arras, where the prison of the department is. In this prison at
Arras there was a former convict named Brevet, where for some trifle, and who, for his
good conduct, his been made. turnkey!. No sooner was Champmathieu set down, than Brevet
cried out: 'Ha, ha! I know that man. He is a fagot.'
" 'Look up here, my good man. You are Jean Valjean.' 'Jean Valjean, who is Jean Valjean?'
Champmathieu plays off the astonished. 'Don't play ignorance,' said Brevet. 'You are Jean
Valjean; you were in the galleys at Toulon. It is twenty years ago. We were there together:
Champmathieu denied it all. Faith! you understand; they fathomed it. The
case was worked
up and this was what they found. This Champmathieu thirty years ago was a -pruner in divers
places, particularly in Faverolles. There we lose trace of him. A long time afterwards we
find him at Auvergne; then at Paris, where he is said to have been a wheelwright and to
have had a daughter--a washerwoman, but that is not proven, and finally in this part of
the country. Now before going to the galleys for burglary, what was Jean Valjean? A pruner.
Where? At Fa-verolles. Another fact. This Valjean's baptismal name was jean; his mother's
family name, Mathieu. Nothing could be more natural, on leaving the galleys, than to take
his mother's name to disguise himself; then he would be called Jean Mathieu.
He goes to Au-
vergne, the pronunciation of that region would make Chan of Ma--they would call him Chan
Mathieu. Our man adopts it, and nowyou have him transformed into Champmathieu. You follow
me, doyou not? Search has been made at Faverolles; the family of Jean Valjean are no long-
er there. Nobody knows where they are. You know in such classes these disappearances of
families often occur. You search, but can find nothing. Such people, when they are not
mud, are dust. And then as the commencement of this story dates back thirty years, there
is nobody now at Paverolles who knew Jean Valjean. But search has been made at Toulon.
Besides Brevet there are only two convicts who have seen jean Valjean. They are convicts
for life; their names are Cochepaille and Chenildieu. These men were brought from the
galleys and confronted with the pretended Champmathieu. They did not hesitate. To them
as well as to Brevet it was Jean Valjean. Same age; fifty-four years old; same height;
same appearance, in fact the same man; it is he. At this time it was that I sent my de-
nunciation to the Prefecture at Paris. They replied that I was out of my mind, and that
Jean Valjean was at Arras in the hands of justice. You may imagine how that astonished
me; I who believed that I had here the same Jean Valjean. I wrote to the justice; he
sent for me and brought Champmathieu before me."
"Well," interrupted Monsieur Madeleine.
Javert replied, with an incorruptible and sad face:
"Monsieur Mayor, truth, is truth. I am sorry for it, but that man is Jean Valjean. I
recognised him also."
Monsieur Madeleine said in a very low voice:
"Are you sure?"
Javert began to laugh with the suppressed laugh which indicates profound conviction.
"H'm, sure!"
He remained a moment in thought, mechanically taking up pinches of the powdered wood
used to dry ink, from the box on the table, and then added:
"And now that I see the real Jean Valjean, I do not understand how I ever could have
believed anything else. I beg your pardon, Monsieur Mayor."
In uttering these serious and supplicating words to him, who six weeks before had
humiliated him before the entire guard, and had said "Retire!" Javert, this haughty
man, was unconsciously full of simplicity and dignity. Monsieur Madeleine answered
his request, by this abrupt question:
"And what did the man say?"
"Oh, bless me! Monsieur Mayor, the affair is a bad one. If it is Jean Valjean, it is
a second offence. To climb a wall, break a branch, and take apples, for a child is only
a trespass; for a man it is a misdemeanor; for a convict it is a crime. Scaling a wall
and theft includes everything. It is not a case for a police court, but for the assizes.
It is not a few days' imprisonment, but the galleys for life. And then there is the af-
fair of the little Savoyard, who I hope will be found. The devil! There is something to
struggle against, is there not? There would be for anybody but Jean Valjean. But Jean
Valjean is a sly fellow. And that is just where I recognise him. Anybody else would
know that he was in a hot place, and would rave and cry out, as the tea-kettle sings
on the fire; he would say that he was not Jean Valjean, et cetera. But this man pretends
not to understand, he says: 'I am Champmathieu: I have no more to say.' He puts on an
appearance of astonishment; he plays the brute. Oh, the rascal is cunning! But it is
all the same, there is the evidence. Four persons have recognised him, and the old vil-
lain will be condemned. It has been taken to the assizes at Arms. I am going to testify.
I have been summoned."
Monsieur Madeleine had turned again to his desk, and was quietly looking over his papers,
reading and writing alternately, like a man pressed with business. He turned again towards
Javert:
"That will do, Javert. Indeed all these details interest me very little. We are wasting
time, and we have urgent business, Javert; go at once to the house of the good woman Bus-
eaupicd, who sells herbs at the corner of Rue Saint Saulve; tell her to make her complaint
against the carman Pierre Chesnelong. He is a brutal fellow. He almost crushed this woman
and her child. He must be punished. You will go to Monsieur Chattellay, Rue Montre-de-
Chamy. He complains that the gutter of the next house when it rains throws
water upon
his house, and is undermining the foundation. Then you will inquire into
the offences that
have been reported to me at the widow Doris's, Rue Guibourg, and Madame Renee le Bosse's,
Rue du Garraud Blanc, and make out reports. But I am riving you too much to do. Did you
not tell me you were going to Arras in eight or ten days on this matter?"
"Sooner than that, Monsieur Mayor."
"What day then?"
"I think I told monsieur that the case would be tried to-morrow, and that I should leave
by the diligence to-night"
Monsieur Madeleine made an imperceptible motion.
"And how long will the matter last?"
"One day at longest. Sentence will be pronounced at latest tomorrow evening. But I shall
not wait for the sentence, which is certain; as soon as my testimony is given I shall
return here."
"Very well," said Monsieur Madeleine.
And he dismissed him with a wave of his hand.
Javert did not go.
"Your pardon, monsieur," said he.
"What more is there?" asked Monsieur Madeleine.
"Monsieur Mayor, there is one thing more to which I desire to call your attention."
"What is it?"
"It is that I ought to be dismissed."
Monsieur Madeleine arose.
"Javert, you are a man of honour and I esteem you. You exaggerate your fault. Besides,
this is an offence which concerns me. You are worthy of promotion rather than disgrace.
I desire you to keep your place."
Javert looked at Monsieur Madeleine with his calm eyes, in whose depths
it seemed that
one beheld his conscience, unenlightened, but stern and pure, and said
in a tranquil
voice:
"Monsieur Mayor, I cannot agree to that."
"I repeat," said Monsieur Madeleine, "that this matter concerns me."
But Javert, with his one idea, continued:
"As to exaggerating, I do not exaggerate. This is the reason. I have unjustly
suspected
you. That is nothing. It is our province to suspect, although it may he
an abuse of our
right to suspect our superiors. But without proofs and in a fit of anger,
with revenge as
my aim, I denounced you as a convict--you, a respectable man, a mayor,
and a magistrate.
This is a serious matter; very serious. I have committed an offence against authority in
your person, I, who am the agent of authority. If one of my subordinates
had done what
I have, I would have pronounced him unworthy of the service, and sent him
away. Well,
listen a moment Monsieur Mayor; I have often been severe in my life toward others. It
was just. I did right. Now if I were not severe toward myself, all I have justly done
would become injustice. Should I spare myself more than others? No. What! if I should
be prompt only to punish others and not myself, I should be a wretch indeed! They who
say: 'That blackguard, Javert,' would be right. Monsieur Mayor, I do not wish you to
treat me with kindness. Your kindness, when it was for others, enraged me; I do not
wish it for myself. That kindness which consists in defending a woman of the town a-
gainst a citizen, a police agent against the mayor, the inferior against the superior,
that is what I call ill-judged kindness. Such kindness disorganizes society. Good God,
it is easy to be kind, the difficulty is to be just. Had you been what I thought, I
should not have been kind to you; not I. You would have seen, Monsieur Mayor. I ought
to treat myself as I would treat anybody else. When I put down malefactors, when I
rigorously brought up offenders, I often said to myself: 'You, if you ever trip; if
ever I catch you doing wrong, look out!' I have tripped, I have caught myself doing
wrong. So much the worse! I must be sent away, broken, dismissed, that
is right. I
have hands: I can till the ground. It is all the same to me. Monsieur Mayor, the good
of the service demands an example. I simply ask the dismissal of Inspector Javert."
All this was said in a tone of proud humility, a desperate and resolute tone, which
gave an indescribably whimsical grandeur to this oddly honest man.
"We will see," said Monsieur Madeleine.
And he held out his hand to him.
Javert started back, and said fiercely:
"Pardon, Monsieur Mayor, that should not be. A mayor does not give
his hand to a spy."
He added between his teeth:
'Spy, yes; from the moment I abused the power of my position, I have been
nothing
better than a spy!"
Then he bowed profoundly, and went towards the door.
There he turned around: his eyes yet downcast.
Monsieur Mayor, I will continue in the service until I am relieved."
He went out. Monsieur Madeleine sat musing, listening to his firm and resolute step as it
died away along the corridor.
BOOK SEVENTH
THE CHAMPMATHIEU AFFAIR
I. SISTER SIMPLICE
The events which follow were never all known at M--sur M--. But the few which did leak
out have left such memories in that city, that it would be a serious omission in this
book if we did not relate them in their minutest details.
Among these details, the reader will meet with two or thredill-probable circumstances,
which we preserve from respect for the truth.
In the afternoon following the visit of javert, M.:Madeleine went to see
Fantine as
usual.
Before going to Fantine's room, he sent for Sister Simplice.
The two nuns who attended the infirmary, Lazarists as all these Sisters of Charity are,
were called Sister Perpetue and Sister Simplice.
Sister Perpetue was an ordinary village-girl, summarily become a Sister of Charity, who
entered the service of God as she would have entered service anywhere. She was a nun as
others are cooks. This type is not very rare. The monastic orders gladly accept this hea-
vy peasant clay, easily shaped into a Capuchins or an Ursuline. Such rustics
are useful
for the coarser duties of devotion. There is no shock in the transition
from a cowboy to
a Carmelite; the one becomes the other without much labour; the common
basis of ignor-
ance of a village and a cloister is a ready-made preparation, and puts
the rustic at once
upon an even footing with the monk. Enlarge the smock a little and you have a frock. Sis-
ter Perpetue was a stout nun, from Marines, near Pontoise, given to patois,
psalm-sing-
ing and muttering, sugaring a nostrum according to the bigotry or hypocrisy of the pati-
ent, treating invalids harshly, rough with the dying, almost throwing them into the face
of God, belabouring the death agony with angry prayers, bold, honest, and florid.
Sister Simplice was white with a waxen clearness. In comparison with Sister Perpetue she
was a sacramental taper by the side of a tallow candle. St. Vincent de Paul has divinely
drawn the figure of a Sister of Charity in these admirable words in which he unites so
much liberty with so much servitude. "Her only convent shall be the house of sickness;
her only cell, a hired lodging; her chapel the parish church; her cloister the streets
of the city, or the wards of the hospital; her only wall obedience; her
grate the fear
of God; her veil modesty." This ideal was made alive in Sister Simplice.
No one could
have told Sister Simplice's age; she had never been young, and seemed as if she never
should be old. She was a person--we dare not say a woman--gentle, austere, companionable,
cold, and who had never told a lie. She was so gentle that she appeared
fragile; but on
the contrary she was more enduring than granite. She touched the unfortunate with charming
fingers, delicate and pure. There was, so to say, silence in her speech;
she said just
what was necessary, and she had a tone of voice which would at the same time have edified
a confessional, and enchanted a drawing-room. This delicacy accommodated itself to the
serge dress, finding in its harsh touch a continual reminder of Heaven and of God. Let
us dwell upon one circumstance. Never to have lied, never to have spoken, for any purpose
whatever, even carelessly, a single word which was not the truth, the sacred truth, was
the distinctive trait of Sister Simplice; it was the mark of her virtue.
She was almost
celebrated in the congregation for this imperturbable veracity. The Abbe Sicard speaks of
Sister Simplice in a letter to the deaf mute. Massieu. Sincere and pure as we may be, we
all have the mark of some little lie upon our truthfulness. She had none. A little lie,
an innocent lie, can such a thing exist? To lie is the absolute of evil.
To lie a lit-
tle is not possible; he who lies, lies a whole lie: lying is the very face
of the demon.
Satan has two name; he is called Satan, and he is called the Liar. Such
were her thoughts.
And as she thought, she practised. From this resulted that whiteness of which we have spoken,
a whiteness that covered with its radiance even her lips and her eyes. Her smile was white,
her look was white. There was not a spider's web, not a speck of dust upon the glass of that
conscience. When she took the vows of St. Vincent de Paul. she had taken
the name of Simp-
lice by especial choice. Simplice of Sicily, it is well known, is that saint who preferred
to have both her breasts torn out rather than answer, having been born at Syracuse, that
she was born at Segesta, a lie which would have saved her. This patron saint was fitting
for this soul.
Sister Simplice, on entering the order, had two faults of which she corrected herself grad-
ually; she had had a taste for delicacies, and loved to receive letters. Now she read nothing
but a prayer-book in large type and in Latin. She did not understand Latin, but she under-
stood the book.
The pious woman had conceived an affection for Fantine, perceiving in her probably some
latent virtue, and had devoted herself almost exclusively to her care.
Monsieur Madeleine took Sister Simplice aside and recommended Fantine to her with a
singular emphasis, which the sister
remembered at a later day.
On leaving the Sister, he approached Fantine.
Fantine awaited each day the appearance of Monsieur Made-leine as one awaits a ray
of warmth and of joy. She would say to the sisters: "I. live only when the Mayor is
here."
That day she had more fever. As soon as she saw Monsieur Madeleine, she asked him:
"Cosette?"
He answered with a smile:
"Very soon."
Monsieur Madeleine, while with Fantine, seemed the same as usual. Only he stayed an
hour instead of half an hour, to the great satisfaction of Fantine. He made a thousand
charges to everybody that the sick woman might want for nothing. It was noticed that
at one moment his countenance became very sombre. But this was explained when it was
known that the doctor had, bending dose to his car, said to him: "She is sinking fast."
Then he returned to the mayor's office, and the office boy saw him examine attentively
a road-map of France which hung in his room. He made a few figures in pencil upon a
piece of paper.
II. SHREWDNESS OF MASTER SCAUFFLA1RE
FROM the mayor's office he went to the outskirts of the city, to a Fleming's, Master
Scauffiaer, Frenchified into Seauffiaire, who kept horses to let and "chaises if de-
sired."
In order to go to Scaufflaire's, the nearest way was by a rarely frequented street, on
which was the parsonage of the parish in which Monsieur Madeleine lived. The cure was,
it was said, a worthy and respectable man, and a good counsellor. At the moment when
Monsieur Madeleine arrived in front of the parsonage, there was but one person passing
in the street, and he remarked this: the mayor, after passing by the cure's house,
stopped, stood still a moment, then turned back and retraced his steps as far as the
door of the parsonage, which was a large door with an iron knocker. He seized the
knocker quickly and raised it; then he stopped anew, stood a short time as if in
thought, and after a few seconds, instead of letting the knocker fall smartly, he
replaced it gently, and resumed his walk with a sort of haste that he had not shown
before.
Monsieur Madeleine found Master Scaufilaire at home busy repairing a harness.
"Master' Scaufliaire," he asked, "have you a good horse?"
"Monsieur Mayor," said the Fleming, "all my horses are good. What do you understand
by a good horse?"
"I understand a horse that can go twenty leagues in a day."
"The devil!" said the Fleming, "twenty leagues!"
"Yes."
"Before a chaise?"
"Yes."
"And how long will he rest after the journey?"
"He must be able to start again the next day in case of need." "To do the same thing
again?"
"Yes."
"The devil I and it is twenty leagues?"
Monsieur Madeleine drew from his pocket the paper on which he had pencilled the
figures. He showed them to the Fleming. They were the figures, 5, 6, 8%.
"You see," said he. "Total, nineteen and a half, that is to say, twenty leagues."
"Monsieur Mayor," resumed the Fleming, "I have just what you want. My little white
horse, you must have seen him sometimes passing; he is a little beast from Bas-Bou-
lonnais. He is full of fire. They tried at first to make a saddle horse of hint.
Bah! he kicked, he threw everybody off. They thought he was vicious, they didn't
know what to do. I bought him. I put him before a chaise; Monsieur, that is what
he wanted; he is as gentle as a girl, he goes like the wind. But, for example, it
won't do to get on his back. It's not his idea to be a saddle horse. Everybody has
his peculiar ambition. To draw, but not to carry; we must believe that he has said
that to himself."
"And he will make the trip?"
"Your twenty leagues, all the way at a full trot, and in less than eight hours. But
there are some conditions."
"Name them."
"First, you must let him breathe an hour when you are half way; he will eat, and
somebody must be by while he eats to prevent the tavern boy from stealing his oats;
for I have noticed that at taverns, oats are oftener drunk by the stable boys
than
eaten by the horses."
"Somebody shall be there."
"Secondly--is the chaise for Monsieur the Mayor?"
"Yes."
"Monsieur the Mayor knows how to drive?"
"Yes."
"Well, Monsieur the Mayor will travel alone and without baggage, so
as not to over-
load the horse."
"Agreed."
"But Monsieur the Mayor, having no one with him, will be obliged to take the trouble
of seeing to the oats himself."
"So said."
"I must have thirty francs a day, the days he rests included. Not
a penny less, and
the fodder of the beast at the expense of Monsieur the Mayor."
Monsieur Madeleine took three Napoleons from his purse and laid them on the table.
"There is two days, in advance."
"Fourthly, for such a trip, a chaise would be too heavy; that would tire the horse.
Monsieur the Mayor must consent to travel in a little tilbury that I have
"
"I consent to that
"It is light, but it is open."
"It is all the same to me."
"Has Monsieur the Mayor reflected that it is winter?"
Monsieur Madeleine did not answer; the Fleming went on:
"That it is very cold?"
Monsieur Madeleine kept silence.
Master Scauffiaire continued:
"That it may rain?"
Monsieur Madeleine raised his head and said:
"The horse and the tilbury will be before my door tomorrow at half-past
four in the
morning?'
"That is understood, Monsieur Mayor," answered Scauaire; then scratching a stain on
the top of the table with his thumb nail, he resumed with that careless air that Flem-
ings so welt know how to associate with their shrewdness:
"Why, I have just thought of it I Monsieur the Mayor has not told me where he is going.
Where is Monsieur the Mayor going?"
He had thought of nothing else since the beginning of the conversation,
but without
knowing why, he bad not dared to ask the question.
"Has your horse good forelegs?" said Monsieur Madeleine.
"Yes, 'Monsieur Mayor. You will hold him up a little going downhill.
Is there much
downhill between here and where you are gen ing?"
"Don't forget to he at my door precisely at half-past four in the morning," answered
Monsieur Madeleine, and he went out.
The Fleming was left "dumb-founded," as he said himself some time afterwards.
The mayor bad been gone two or three minutes, when the door again opened; it was the
mayor.
He had the same impassive and absent-minded air as ever.
"Monsieur Scauffiaire." said he, "at what sum do you value the horse and the tilbury
that you furnish nit, the one carrying the other?"
"The one drawing the other, Monsieur Mayor," said the Fleming with a loud laugh.
"As you like. How much?"
"Does Monsieur the Mayor wish to buy them?"
"No, but at all events I wish to guarantee them to you. On my return you can give me
back the amount. At how much do you value horse and chaise?"
"Five hundred francs, Monsieur Mayor!"
"Here it is."
Monsieur Madeleine placed a banknote on the table, then went out, and this time did
not return.
Master Scaufflaire regretted terribly that he had not said a thousand francs.
In fact,
the horse and tilbury, in the lump, were worth a hundred crowns.
The Fleming called his wife, and related the affair to her. Where the deuce could the
mayor be going? They talked it en. er. "fie is going to Paris," said the wife. "I don't
believe it.- said the hug.)anii: Monsieur Madeleine had forgotten the paper on which
he had marked the figures, and left it on the mantel. The Fle-,;ng seized it and studied
it. Five, six, eight and a half? this must mean the relays of the post. He turned to his
wife: have limn' it out." "How?" "It is five leagues from here to Hesdin. six from Hesdin
to Saint Pol, eight and a half from Saint Pol to Arras. He is going to Arras."
Meanwhile Monsieur Madeleine had reached home. To return from Master Scaufflaires he had
taken a longer road, as if the door of the parsonage were a temptation to him, and he
wished to a vnid it. He went up to his room, and shut himself in. which was nothing re-
markable, for he usually went to bed early. However. the janitress of the factory, who
was at the same time Monsieur Madeleine's only servant, observed that his light was out
at half-past eight, and she mentioned it to the cashier who came in. adding:
"Is Monsieur the Mayor sick? I thought that his manner was a little singular."
The cashier occupied a room situated exactly beneath Monsieur Madeleine's. He paid no
attention to the portess's words. went to bed, and went to sleep. Towards midnight he
suddenly awoke; he had heard, in his sleep, a noise overhead. He listened. It was a step
that went and came, as if some one were walking in the room above. He listened more at-
tentively, and recognized Monsieur Madeleine's step. That appeared strange to him; ord-
inarily no noise was made in Monsieur Madeleine's room before his hour
of rising. A moment
afterwards, the cashier heard something that sounded like the opening and shutting of a
wardrobe, then a piece of furniture was moved, there was another silence, and the step
began again. The cashier rose up in bed, threw off his drowsiness, looked out, and through
his window-panes, saw upon an opposite wall the ruddy reflection of a lighted
window. From
the direction of the rays, it could only be the window of Monsieur Madeleine's chamber.
The reflection trembled as if it came rather from a bright fire than from a light. The sha-
dow of the sash could not be seen which indicated that the window was wide
open. Cold
as it was, this open window was surprising. The cashier fell asleep again. An hour or two
afterwards he awoke again. The same step, slow and regular, was corning
and going con-
stantly over his head.
The reflection continued visible upon the wall, but it was now pale and steady like
the light of a lamp or candle. The window was still open. Let us see what was passing
in Monsieur Madeleine's room.
III. A TEMPEST IN A BRAIN
THE READER has doubtless divined that Monsieur Madeleine is none other than Jean
Valjean.
We have already looked into the depths of that conscience; the time has come to
look into them again. We do so not without emotion, nor without trembling. There
exists nothing more terrific than this kind of contemplation. The mind's eye
can nowhere find anything more dazzling nor more dark than in man; it can
fix
itself upon nothing which is more awful, more complex, more mysterious or more
infinite. There is one spectacle grander than the sea, that is the sky; there
is one spectacle grander than the sky, that is the interior of the soul.
To write the poem of the human conscience, were it only of a single man, were
it only of the most infamous of men, would be to swallow up all epics in a su-
perior and final epic. The conscience is the chaos of chimeras, of lusts
and of
temptations, the furnace of dreams, the cave of the ideas which are our
shame,
it is the pandemonium of sophisms, the battlefield of the passions. At certain
hours, penetrate within the livid face of a human being who reflects, and
look
at what lies behind; look into that soul, look into that obscurity. There,
beneath
the external silence, there are combats of giants as in Homer, melees of
dragons
and hydras, and clouds of phantoms as in Milton, ghostly labyrinths as in Dante.
What a gloom enwraps that infinite which each man bears within himself,
and by
which he measures in despair the desires of his will, and the actions of his life!
Alighieri arrived one day at an ill-omened door before which he hesitated. Here
is one also before us, on the threshold of which we hesitate. Let us enter not-
withstanding.
We have but little to add to what the reader already knows, concerning what had
happened to Jean Valjean, since his adventure with Petit Gervais From that moment,
we have seen, he was another man. What desired to do with him, that he had ex-
ecuted. It was more than a transformation--it was a transfiguration.
He succeeded in escaping from sight, sold the bishop's silver, keeping only the
candlesticks as souvenirs, glided quietly from city to city across France, came
to M-- sur M-- conceived the idea that we have described, accomplished
what we
have related, gained the point of making himself unassailable and inaccessible,
and thence forward, established at M-- sur M--, happy to feel his conscience
saddened by his past, and the last half of his existence giving the lie
to the
first, he lived peaceable, reassured, and hopeful, having but two thoughts: to
conceal his name, and to sanctify his life; to escape from men and to return to
God.
These two thoughts were associated so closely in his mind, that they formed but
a single one; they were both equally absorbing and imperious, and ruled his
slightest actions. Ordinarily they were in harmony in the regulation of the con-
duct of his life, they turned him towards the dark side of life; they made him
benevolent and simple-hearted; they counselled him to the same things. Sometimes
however, there was a conflict between them. In such cases, it will be remembered,
the man, whom all the country around M-- sur M-- called Monsieur Madeleine,
did not waver in sacrificing the first to the second, his security to his
virtue. Thus,
in despite of all reserve and of all prudence, he had kept the bishop's candle-
sticks, worn mourning for him, called and questioned all the little Savoyards
who passed by, gathered information concerning the families at Faverolles, and
saved the life of old Fauchelevent, in spite of the disquieting insinuations of
Javert. It would seem, we have already remarked, that he thought, following the
example of all who have been wise, holy, and just, that his highest duty was not
towards himself .
But of all these occasions, it must be said, none had ever been anything like
that which was now presented.
Never had the two ideas that governed the unfortunate man whose sufferings we
are relating, engaged in so serious a struggle. He comprehended this confusedly,
but thoroughly, from the first words that Javert pronounced on entering his of-
fice. At the moment when that name which he had so deeply buried was so
strange-
ly uttered, he was seized with stupor, and as if intoxicated by the sinister
gro-
tesqueness of his destiny, and through that stupor he felt the shudder
which pre-
cedes great shocks; he bent like an oak at the approach of a storm, like a soldier
at the approach of an assault. He felt clouds full of thunderings and lightning
gathering upon his head. Even while listening to Javert, his first thought
was to
run, to denounce himself, to drag this Champmathdieu out of prison and
to put
himself in his place; it was painful and sharp as an incision into the
living
flesh, but passed away, and he said to himself: "Let us see! Let us
see!" He re-
pressed this first generous impulse and recoiled before such heroism.
Doubtless it would have been fine if, after the holy words of the bishop, after
so many years of repentance and self-denial, in the midst of a penitence admirably
commenced, even in the presence of so terrible a conjecture, he had not faltered
an instant, and had con-tinned to march on with even pace towards that yawning
pit at the bottom of which was heaven; this would have been fine, but this was
not the case. We must render an account of what took place in that soul, and we
can relate only what was there. What first gained control was the instinct of
self-preservation; he collected his ideas hastily, stifled his emotions, took
into consideration the presence of Javert, The great danger, postponed any dec-
ision with the firmness of terror, banished from his mind all consideration of
the course he should pursue, and resumed his calmness as a gladiator retakes his
buckler.
For the rest of the day he was in this state, a tempest within, a perfect calm
without; he took only what might be called precautionary measures. All was still
confused and jostling in his brain; the agitation there was such that he did not
see distinctly the form of any idea; and he could have told nothing of himself,
unless it were that he bad just received a terrible blow. He went according to
his habit to the sick bed of Fantine, and prolonged his visit, by an instinct
of kindness, saying to himself that he ought to do so, and recommend her earn-
estly to the sisters, in case it should happen that be would have to be absent.
He felt vaguely that it would perhaps be necessary for him to go to Arras; and
without having in the least decided up, this journey, he said to himself that,
entirely free from suspicion as he was, there would be no difficulty in being a
witness of what might pass, and he engaged Scaufflaire's tilbury, in order to
be prepared for any emergency.
He dined with a good appetite.
Returning to his room he collected his thoughts.
He examined the situation and found it an unheard-of one; so unheard-of that
in the midst of his reverie, by some strange impulse of almost inexplicable
anxiety, he rose from his chair, and bolted his door. He feared lest some-
thing might yet enter. He barricaded himself against all possibilities.
A moment afterwards he blew out his light. It annoyed him. It seemed to
him
that somebody could see him.
Who? Somebody?
Alas! what he wanted to keep out of doors had entered; what he wanted to
render blind was looking upon him. His conscience.
His conscience, that is to say, God.
At the first moment, however, he deluded himself; he had a feeling of safety and
solitude; the bolt drawn, he believed himsel invisible. Then he took possession of
himself; he placed his elbows on head on his hand, and set himself to meditating
in the darkness.
"Where am I? Am I not in a dream? What have I heard? Is it really true that I saw
this Javert, and that he talked to me so? Who can this Champmathieu be? He resem-
bles me then? Is it possible? When I think that yesterday I was so calm, and so far
from suspecting anything! What was I doing yesterday at this time? What is there in
this matter? How will it turn out? What is to be done?"
Such was the torment he was in. His brain had lost the power of retaining its ideas;
they passed away like waves, and he grasped his forehead with both hands to stop them.
Out of this tumult, which overwhelmed his will and his reason, and from which he
sought to draw a certainty and a resolution, nothing came clearly forth but anguish.
His brain was burning. He went to the window and threw it wide open. Not a star was
in the sky. He returned and sat down by the table.
The first hour thus rolled away.
Little by little, however, vague outlines began to take form and to fix themselves in
his meditation; he could perceive, with the precision of reality, not the whole of the
situation, but a few details.
He began by recognising that, however extraordinary and critical the situation was, he
was completely master of it.
His stupor only became the deeper.
Independently of the severe and religious aim that his actions had in view, all
that he
had done up to this day was only a hole that he was digging in which to bury his name.
What he had always most dreaded, in his hours of self-communion, in his
sleepless nights,
was the thought of ever hearing that name pronounced; he felt for him that
would be the
end of all; that the day on which that name should reappear would see vanish from around
him his new life, and, who knows, even perhaps his new soul from within him. He shuddered
at the bare thought that it was possible. Surely, if anyone had told him
at such moments
that an hour would come when that name would resound in his ear, when that
hideous
word, Jean Valjean would start forth suddenly from the night and stand before him; when
this fearful glare, destined to dissipate the mystery in which he had wrapped
himself, would
flash suddenly upon his head, and that this name would not menace him,
and that this glare
would only make his obscurity the deeper, that this rending of the veil would increase the
mystery, that this earthquake would consolidate his edifice, that this
prodigious event would
have no other result, if it seemed good to him, to himself alone, than
to render his existence
at once more brilliant and more impenetrable, and that, from his encounter with the phantom
of Jean Valjean, the good and worthy citizen, Monsieur Madeleine, would come forth more
honoured, more peaceful, and more respected than ever--if any one had said
said this to
him, he would have shaken his head and looked upon the words as nonsense.
Well! precisely
that had happened; all this grouping of the impossible was now a fact, and God had permit-
ted these absurdities to become real things!
His musings continued to grow clearer. He was getting a wider and wider
view of his position.
It seemed to him that he had just awaked from some wondrous slumber, and
that he found
himself gliding over a precipice in the. middle of the night, standing,
shivering, recoiling in
vain, upon the very edge of an abyss. He perceived distinctly in the gloom
an unknown
man, a stranger, whom fate had mistaken for him, and was pushing into the gulf in his place.
It was necessary, in order that the gulf should be closed, that some one
should fall in, he
or the other.
He had only to let it alone.
The light became complete, and he recognized this: That his place at the
galleys was em-
pty, that do what he could it was always awaiting him, that the robbing
of Petit Gervais
sent him back there, that this empty place would await him and attract him until he should
be there, that this was inevitable and fatal. And then he said to himself:
That at this very
moment he had a substitute, that it appeared that a man named Champmathieu had that
unhappy lot, and that as for himself, present in future at the galleys in the person of this
Champmathieu, present in society under the name of Monsieur 'Madeleine, he had nothing
more to fear, provided he did not prevent men from sealing upon the head
of this Chantpma-
thieu that stone of infamy which, like the stone of the sepulchre, falls once never to rise
again.
All this was so violent and so strange that he suddenly felt that kind of indescribable move-
ment that no man experiences more than two or three times in his life, a sort of convulsion of
the conscience that stirs up all that is dubious in the heart, which is composed of irony. of
joy, and of despair, and which might be called a burst of interior laughter.
He hastily relighted his candle.
"Well, what!" said he, "what am I afraid of? why do I ponder over these things? I am now safe?
all is finished. There was but a single half-open door through which my past could make
an irrup-
tion into my life; that door is now walled up! for ever! This Javert who has troubled me so
long, that fearful instinct which seemed to have divined the truth, that had divined it, in
fact! and which followed me everywhere, that terrible bloodhound always
in pursuit of me, he
is thrown off the track, engrossed elsewhere, absolutely baffled. He is satisfied henceforth,
he will leave me in quiet, he holds his Jean Valjean fast! Who knows! it is even probable that
he will want to leave the city! And all this is accomplished without my aid! And I have nothing
to do with it! Ah, yes, but, what is there unfortunate in all this! People who should
see me,
upon my honour, would think that a catastrophe had befallen me! After all, if there is any harm
done to anybody. it is in nowise my fault. Providence has done it all. This is what He wishes
apparently. Have I the right to disarrange what He arranges? What is it
that. I ask for now?
Why do I interfere? It does not concern me. How! I am not satisfied! But
what would I have
then? The aim to which I have aspired for so many years, my nightly dream. the object of my
prayers to heaven, security, I have gained it. It is God's will. I must do nothing contrary to
the will of God. And why is it God's will? That I may carry on what I have begun, that I may
do good, that I may he one day a grand and encouraging example, that it may be said that there
was finally some little happiness resulting from this suffering which I have undergone and this
virtue to which I have returned! Really I do not understand why I was so much afraid to go to
this honest curd and tell him the whole story as a confessor, and ask his advice; this is evi-
dently what he would have said to me. It is decided, let the matter alone! let us not interfere
with God."
Thus he spoke in the depths of his conscience, hanging over what might be called his own
abyss. He rose from his chair, and began to walk the room. "Come."
said he, "let us think of
it no more. The resolution is formed!" But he felt no joy.
Quite the contrary.
One can no more prevent the mind from returning to an idea than the sea
from returning to
a shore. In the case of the sailor, this is called the tide; in the case
of the guilty, it is
called remorse. God upheaves the soul as well as the ocean.
After the lapse of a few moments, he could do no otherwise, he resumed this sombre dialogue.
in which it was himself who spoke and himself who listened, saying what he wished to keep si-
lent, listening to what he did not wish to hear, yielding to that mysterious power which said
to him: "think!" as it said two thousand years ago to another condemned; "march!"
Before going further, and in order to be fully understood, it is necessary that we should
make with some emphasis a single observation.
It is certain that we talk with ourselves; there is not a thinking being who has not exper-
ienced that. We may say even that the word is never a more magnificent
mystery than when
it goes, in the interior of a man, from his thought to his conscience, and returns from his
conscience to his thought. It is in this sense only that the words must
be understood, so
often employed in this chapter, he said, he exclaimed; we say to ourselves, we speak to
ourselves, we exclaim within ourselves, the external silence not being
broken. There is a
great tumult within; everything within us speaks, except the tongue. The
realities of the
soul, because they are not visible and palpable, are not the less realities.
He asked himself then where he was. He questioned himself upon this "resolution
formed." He confessed to himself that all that he had been arranging in his mind
was monstrous, that "to let the matter alone, not to interfere with God," was sim-
ply horrible, to let this Mistake of destiny and of men be accomplished, not to pre-
vent it, to lend himself to it by his silence, to do nothing, finally, was to do all!
it was the last degree of hypocritical meanness! it was a base, cowardly,
lying,
abject, hideous crime!
For the first time within eight years, the unhappy man had just tasted the bitter
flavour of a wicked thought and a wicked action.
He spit it out with disgust.
He continued to question himself. He sternly asked himself what he had understood by
this: "My object is attained." He declaredthat his life, in truth, did have an object.
But what object? to con- teal his name? to deceive the police? was it for so petty a
thing thathe bad done all that he had done? had he no other object, which was the
great one, which was the true one? To save, not his body, but his soul. To become
honest and good again. To be an upright man! was it not that above all, that alone,
which he had always wished, and which the bishop had enjoined upon him! To close the
door on his past? But he was not closing it, great God he was re-opening it by commit-
ting an infamous act for he became a robber again, and the most odious of robbers! he
robbed another of his existence, his life, his peace, his place in the world, be be-
came an assassin! he murdered, he murdered in a moral sense a wretched man, he in-
flicted upon him that frightful life in death, that living burial, which is called the
galleys! on the contrary, to deliver himself up, to save this man stricken by so
ghastly a mistake, to reassume his name, to become again from duty the convict Jean
Valjean; that was really to achieve his resurrection, and to close for ever the hell
from whence he had emerged to fall back into it in appearance, was to emerge
in reality!
he must do that! all he had done was nothing, if he did not do that! all his life was
useless, all his suffering was lost. He had only to ask the question: "What
is the use?"
He felt that the bishop was there, that the bishop was present all the more that he
was dead, that the bishop was looking fixedly at him, that henceforth Mayor
Madeleine
with all his virtues would be abominable to him, and the galley slave, Jean Valjean,
would badmirable and pure in his sight. That men saw his mask, but the bishop saw
his face. That men saw his life, but the bishop saw his conscience. He
must then go
to Arras, deliver the wrong Jean Valjean, denounce the right one. Alas! that was the
greatest of sacrifices, the most poignant of victories, the final step to be taken, but
he must do it. Mournful destiny! he could only enter into sancity in the
eyes of God,
by returning into infamy in the eyes of men!
"Well," said he, "let us take this course! let us do our duty! Let us save this man!"
He pronounced these words in a loud voice, without preceiving that he was speaking aloud.
He took his books, verified them, and put them in order. He threw into the fire a pack-
age of notes which he held against needy small traders. He wrote a letter, which he sealed,
and upon the envelope of which might have been read, if there had been any one in the room
at the time: Monsieur Lafitte, banker, Rue d'Artois, Paris.
He drew from a secretary a pocket-book containing some bank-notes and the
passport that he
had used that same year in going to the elections.
Had any one seen him while he was doing these various acts with such serious meditation, he
would not have suspected what was passing within him. Still at intervals his lips quivered;
at other times he raised his head and fixed his eye on some point of the wall, as if he saw
just there something that he wished to clear up or to interrogate.
The letter to Monsieur Laffitte finished. he put it in his pocket as well as the pocket-book,
and began to walk again.
The current of his thought had not changed. He still saw his duty clearly written in luminous
letters which flared out before his eyes, and moved with his gaze: "Go! avow thy name! denounce
thyself!
He saw also, and as if they were laid bare before him with sensible forms, the two ideas which
had been hitherto the double rule of his life, to conceal his name, and to sanctify his soul.
For the first time, they appeared to him absolutely distinct, and he saw
the difference which
separated them. He recognised that one of these ideas was necessarily good, while the other
might become evil; that the former was devotion, and that the latter was selfishness; that the
one said: "the neighbour," and that the other said: "me;" that the one came from the light, and
the other from the night.
They were fighting with each other. He saw them fighting. While he was looking, they had ex-
panded before his mind's eye; they were now colossal; and it seemed to him that he saw strug-
gling within him, in that infinite of which we spoke just now, in the midst of darkness and
gloom, a goddess and a giantess.
He was full of dismay, but it seemed to him that the good thought was gaining the victory.
He felt that he had reached the second decisive movement of his conscience, and his destiny;
that the bishop had marked the first phase of his new life, and that this Champmathieu marked
the second. After a great crisis, a great trial.
Meanwhile the fever, quieted for an instant, returned upon him: little by little. A thousand
thoughts flashed across him, but they fortified him in his resolution.
One moment he had said: that perhaps he took the affair too much to heart, that after all this
Champmathieu was not worthy of interest, that in fact he had committed theft.
He answered: If this man has in fact stolen a few apples, that is a month in prison. There is
a wide distance between that and the galleys. And who knows even? has he committed theft? is
it proven? the name of Jean Valjean overwhelms him, and seems to dispense with proofs. Are
not prosecuting officers in the habit of acting thus? They think him a robber, because they
know him to be. a convict.
At another moment the idea occurred to him that, if he should denounce himself, perhaps the
heroism of his action, and his honest life for the past seven years, and what he had done for
the country, would be considered, and he would be pardoned.
But this supposition quickly vanished, and he smiled bitterly at the thought, that the robbery
of the forty sous from Petit Gervais made him a second offender, that that matter would
certainly reappear, and by the precise terms of the law he would be condemned to hard labour
for life.
He turned away from all illusion, disengaged himself more and more from the earth, and sought
consolation and strength elsewhere. He said to himself that he must do his duty; that perhaps
even he should not be more unhappy after having done his duty than after having evaded it; that
if he let matters alone, if he remained at M-- sur M--, his reputation, his good name, his good
works, the deference, the veneration he commanded, his charity, his riches, his popularity, his
virtue, would be tainted with a crime, and what pleasure would there be in alt these holy
things tied to that hideous thing? while, if he carried out the sacrifice, in the galleys,
with his chain, with his iron collar, with his green cap, with his perpetual labour, with his
pitiless shame, there would be associated a celestial idea.
Finally, he said to himself that it was a necessity, that his destiny was so fixed, that it
was not for him to derange the arrangements of God. that at all events he must choose, either
virtue without, and abomination within, or sanctity within, and infamy without.
In revolving so many gloomy ideas, his courage did not fail, but his brain
was fatigued. He
began in spite of himself to think of other things, of indifferent things.
His blood rushed violently to his temples. He walked back and forth constantly. Midnight was
struck first from the parish church, then from the city hall. He counted the twelve strokes of
the two clocks, and he compared the sound of the two bells. It reminded him that, a few. days
before, he had seen at a junkshop an old bell for sale, upon which was this name: Antoine Albin
de Romainville.
He was cold. He.kindled a fire. He did not think to close the window.
Meanwhile he had fallen into his stupor again. It required not a little effort to recall his
mind to what he was thinking of before the clock struck. He succeeded at last.
"Ah! yes," said he, "I had formed the resolution to denounce my, self."
And then alat once he thought of Fantine.
"Stop!" said he, "this poor woman!"
Here was a new crisis.
Fantine, abruptly appearing in his reverie, was like a ray of unexpected light. It seemed to
him that everything around him was changing its aspect; he exclaimed:
"Ah! yes, indeed! so far I have only thought of myself! I have only looked to my own conveni-
ence! It is whether I shall keep silent or denounce myself, conceal my body or save my soul,
be a despicable and respected magistrate, or an infamous and venerable
galley slave: it is my-
self, always myself, only myself. But, good God I all this is egotism. Different forms of ego-
tism, but still egotism! Suppose I should think a little of others? The highest duty is to
think of others. Let us see, let us examine!I gone, I taken away, I forgotten; what will be-
come of all this? I denounce myself? I am arrested, this Chimpmathieu is released, I am sent
back to the galleys; very well, and what then? what takes place here? Ah! here, there is a
country, a city, factories, a business, labourers, men, women, old grandfathers, children,
poor people! I have created all this, I keep it all alive; wherever a chimney is smoking, I
have put the brands in the fire and the meat in the pot; I have produced ease, circulation,
credit; before me there was nothing; I have aroused, vivified, animated, quickened, stimulated,
enriched, all the country; without me, the soul is gone. I take myself
away; it all dies. And
this woman who has suffered so much, who is so worthy in her fall, all whose misfortunes I
have unconsciously caused! And that child which I was going for, which
I have promised to the
mother! Do I not also owe something to this woman, in reparation for the
wrong that I have
done her? If I should disappear, what happens? The mother dies. The child
becomes what she may.
This is what comes to pass if I denounce myself; and if I do not denounce myself? Let us see,
if I do not denounce myself?"
After putting this question, he stopped; for a moment he hesitated and trembled; but that
moment was brief, and he answered with calmness:
"Well, this man goes to the galleys, it is true, but, what of that? He has stolen! It is
useless for me to say he has not stolen, he has stolen I As for me, T remain here, I go on.
In ten years I shall have made ten millions; I scatter it over the country, I keep nothing
for myself:what is it to me? What I am doing is not for myself. The prosperity of all goes
on increasing, industry is quickened and excited, manufactories and workshops are multipled,
families, a hundred families, a thousand families, are happy; the country
becomes populous;
villages spring up where there were only farms, farms spring up where there was nothing; pov-
erty disappears, and with poverty disappear debauchery, prostitution, theft, murder, all
vices, all crimes! And this poor mother brings up her child and the whole
country is rich
and honest! Ah, yes! How foolish, how absurd I was! What was I speaking of in denouncing
myself? This demands reflection, surely, and nothing must be precipitate. What! because it
would have pleased me to do the grand and the generous! That is melodramatic after all! Be-
cause I only thought of myself, of myself alone, what I to save from a punishment perhaps a
little too severe, but in reality just, nobody knows who, a thief, a scoundrel at any rate.
Must an entire country be let go to ruin! must a poor hapless woman perish
in the hospital!
must a poor little girl perish on the street! like dogs! Ah! that would
be adominable!
And the mother not even see her child again! and the child hardly have
known her mother!
And all for this old whelp of an apple-thief, who, beyond all doubt, deserves
the galleys for
something else, if not for this. Fine scruples these, which save an old
vagabond who has,
after all, only a few years to live, and who will hardly be more unhappy in the galleys than
in his hovel, and which sacrifice a whole population, mothers, wives, children! This poor
little Cosette who has no one but me in the world, and who is doubtless at this moment all
blue with cold in the hut of these Thenardiers! They too are miserable rascals! And I should
fail in my duty towards all these poor beings) And I should go away and denounce myself! And
I should conumt this silly blunder! Take it at the very worst. Suppose there were a misdeed
for me in this, and that my conscience should some clay reproach me; the acceptance for the
good of others of these reproaches which weigh only upon me, of this misdeed which affects
only my own soul, why, that is devotion, that is virtue."
He arose and resumed his walk. This time it seemed to him that he was satisfied.
Diamonds are found only in the dark places of the earth; truths are found only in the depths
of thought. It seemed to him that after having descended into these depths, after having grop-
ed long in the blackest of this darkness, he had at last found one of these diamonds, one of
these truths, and that he held it in his hand; and it blinded him to look at it.
"Yes," thought he, "that is it! I am in the true road. I have the solution. I must end by
holding fast to something. My choice is made. Let the matter alone! No more vacillation, no
more shrinking. This is in the interest of all, not in my own. I am Madeleine, I remain Made-
leine. Woe to him who is Jean Valjean! He and I are no longer the same. I do not recognise
that man, I no longer know what he is; if it is found that anybody is Jean Valjean at this
hour, let him take care of himself. That does not concern me. That is a fatal name which is
floating about in the darkness; if it stops and settles upon any man, so much the worse for
that man."
He looked at himself in the little mirror that hung over his mantel-piece and said:
"Yes! To come to a resolution has solaced me! I am quite another man now!"
He took a few steps more, then he stopped short.
"Come!" said he, "I must not hesitate before any of the consequences of the resolution I have
formed. There are yet some threads which knit me to this Jean Valjean. They must be broken!
There are, in this very room, objects which would accuse me. mute things which would be wit-
nesses; it is done, all these must disappear."
He felt in his pocket, drew out his purse, opened it, and took out a little key.
He put this key into a lock the hole of which was hardly visible. lost as it was in the dark-
est shading of the figures on the paper which covered the wall. A secret
door opened: a kind
of false press built between the corner of the Avail and the caging of the chimney. There was
nothing in this closet but a few refuse trifles; a blue smock-frock, an old pair of trousers,
an old haversack, and a great thorn stick, iron-bound at both ends. Those who had seen Jean Val-
jean at the time he passed through D--, in October, 1815, would have recognized easily all the
fragments of this miserable outfit.
He had kept them, as he had kept the silver candlesticks, to remind him at all times of what
he had been. But he concealed what came from the galleys, and left the candlesticks that came
from the bishop in sight.
He cast a furtive look towards the door, as if he were afraid it would open in spite of the bolt
that held it; then with a quick and hasty movement, and at a single armful, without even a glance
at these things which he had kept so religiously and with so much danger during so many years.
he took the whole, rags, stick, haversack, and threw them all into the fire.
He shut up the false press, and, increasing his precautions, henceforth useless, since it was
empty, concealed the door behind a heavy piece of furniture which he pushed against it.
In a few seconds, the room and the wall opposite were lit up a great, red
flickering glare. It was
all burning; the thorn stick cracked and threw out sparks into the middle
of the room.
The haversack, as it was consumed with the horrid rags which it contained, left something uncov-
ered which glistened in the ashes. By bending towards it, one could have easily recognised a
piece of silver. It was doubtless the forty sous piece stolen from the little Savoyard.
But he did not look at the fire; he continued his walk to and fro, always at the same pace.
Suddenly his eyes fell upon the two silver candlesticks on the mantel, which were glistening dimly
in the reflection.
"Stop!" thought he, "alt Jean Valjean is contained in them too. They also must be destroyed."
He took the two candlesticks.
There was fire enough to melt them quickly into an unrecognisable ingot.
He bent over the fire and warmed himself a moment. It felt really comfortable to him. "The plea-
sant warmth!" said he.
He stirred the embers with one of the candlesticks.
A minute more, and they would have been in the fire.
At that moment, it seemed to him that be heard a voice crying within him: "Jean Valjean!"
"Jean Valjean!"
His hair stood on end; he was like a man who hears some terrible thing.
"Yes! that is it, finish!" said the voice, "complete what
you are doing! destroy these candle-
sticks! annihilate this memorial! forget the bishop! forget all! ruin this
Champmathieu, yes!
very well. Applaud yourself! So it is arranged, it is determined, it is done. Behold a man, a
greybeard who knows not what he is accused of, who has done nothing, it
may be, an innocent man,
whose misfortune is caused by your name, upon whom your name weighs like
a crime, who will be
taken instead of you; will be condemned, will end his days in abjection and in horror! very well.
Be an honoured man yourself. Remain, Monsieur Mayor, remain honourable and honoured, enrich
the city, feed the poor, bring up the orphans, live happy, virtuous, and
admired, and all this time
while you are here in joy and in the light, there shall be a man wearing your red blouse, bear-
ing your name in ignominy, and dragging your chain in the galleys! Yes! this is a fine arrange-
ment! Oh, wretch!"
The sweat rolled off his forehead, lie looked upon the candlesticks with haggard eyes. Meanwhile
the voice which spoke within him had not ended. It continued:
"Jean Valjean! there shall be about you many voices which will make great noise, which will
speak very loud, and which will bless you; and one only which nobody shall hear, and which will
curse you in the darkness. Well, listen, wretch! all these blessings shall fall before they reach
Heaven; only the curse shall mount into the presence of God!"
This voice, at first quite feeble, and which was raised from the most obscure depths of his con-
science, had become by degrees loud and formidable, and he heard it now at his ear. It seemed to
him that it had emerged from himself, and that it was speaking now from without. He thought he
heard the last words so distinctly that he looked about the room with a kind of terror.
"Is there anybody here?" asked he, aloud and in a startled voice. Then he continued with a laugh,
which was like the laugh of an idiot:
"What a fool I am! there cannot be anybody here."
There was One; but He who was there was not of such as the human eye can see.
He put the candlesticks on the mantel.
Then he rsumed this monotonous and dismal walk, which disturbed the man asleep beneath him in
his dreams, and wakened him out of his sleep.
This walk soothed him and excited him at the same time. It some-times seems that on the greatest
occasions we put ourselves in motion in order to ask advice from whatever we may meet by change
of place. After a few moments he no longer knew where he was.
He now recoiled with equal terror from each of the resolutions which he had formed in turn. Each
of the two ideas which counselled him, appeared to him as fatal as the other. What a fatality!
What a chance that this Champmathieu should be mistaken for him! To be hurled down headlong by
the very means which Providence seemed at first to have employed to give him full security.
There was a moment during which he contemplated the future. Denounce himself, great God! Give
himself up! He saw with infinite despair all that he must leave, all that
he must resume. He must
then bid farewell to this existence, so good. so pure, so radiant; to this respect of all, to hon-
our, to liberty! No more would he go out to walk in the fields, never again would he hear the birds
singing in the month of May, never more give alms to the little children! No longer would he feel
the sweetness of looks of gratitude and of love! He would leave this house that he had built, this
little room! Everything appeared charming to him now. He would read no more in these books, he
would write no more on this little white wood table! His old portress, the only servant he had,
would no longer bring him his coffee in the morning. Great God! instead of that, the galley-crew,
the iron collar, the red blouse, the chain at hisfoot, fatigue, the dungeon, the plank-bed, all
these horrors, which he knew so well I At his age, after having been what he was! If be were still
young I But so old, to be insulted by the firstcomer; to be tumbled about by the prison guard, to
be struck by the jailor's stick I To have his bare feet in iron-bound shoes! To submit morn-
ing anevening his leg to the hammer of the roundsman who tests theThis fetters 1 To endure the cur-
iosity of strangers who would be told: one is the famous least Mean, who was mayor of, fit-- sir
if--I At night, dripping with sweat, overwhelmed with weariness, the green cap over Ins eyes, to
mount two by two, under the sergeant's whip, the step-ladder of the floating prison. Oh, what
wretchedness! Can destiny then be malignant like an intelligent being, and become monstrous like
the human heart?
And do what he might, he always fell back upon this sharp dilemma which
was at the bottom of his
thought. To remain in paradise and there become a demon! To re-enter into
hell and there become
an angel
What shall be done, great God I what shall be done?
The torment from which he had emerged with so much difficulty, broke loose anew within him. His
ideas again began to become confused. They took that indescribable, stupefied, and mechanical shape,
which is peculiar to despair. The name of Romainville returned constantly to his mind, with two
lines of a song he had formerly heard. He thought that Romainville is a little wood near Paris,
where young lovers go to gather lilacs in the month of April.
He staggered without as well as within. He walked like a little child that is just allowed to go
alone.
Now and then, struggling against his fatigue, he made an effort again to arouse his intellect. He
endeavoured to state, finally and conclusively, the problem over which
he had in some sort fallen
exhausted. Must he denounce himself? Must he be silent? He could see nothing
distinctly. The
vague forms of all the reasonings thrown out by his mind trembled, and were dissipated one after
another in smoke. But this much he felt, that by whichever resolve he might abide, necessarily,
and without possibility of escape, something of himself would surely die;
that he was entering
into a sepulchre on the right hand, as well as on the left; that he was suffering a death-agony,
the death-agony of his happiness, or the death-agony of his virtue.
Alas! all his irresolutions were again upon him. He was no further advanced than when he began.
So struggled beneath its anguish this unhappy soul. Eighteen hundred years before this unfortunate
man, the mysterious Being, in whom are aggregated all the sanctities and
all the sufferings of hu-
manity, He also, while the olive trees were shivering in the fierce breath
of the Infinite, had
long put away from his hand the fearful chalice that appeared before him,
dripping with shadow
and running over with darkness in the star-filled depths.
IV. FORMS ASSUMED BY SUFFERING DURING SLEEP
THE CLOCK struck three. For five hours he had been walking thus, almost
without in-
terruption, when he dropped into his chair.
He fell asleep and dreamed.
This dream, like most dreams, had no further relation to the condition of affairs
than its mournful and poignant character, but it made an impression upon him. This
nightmare struck him so forcibly that he afterwards wrote it down. It is one of the
papers in his own handwriting, which he has left behind him. We think it our duty
to copy it here literally.
Whatever this dream may be, the story of that night would be incomplete if we should
omit it. It is the gloomy adventure of a sick soul.
It is as follows: upon the envelope we find this line written: "The dream that I had
that night."
"I was in a field. A great sad field where there was no grass. It did not seem that
it was day, nor that it was night.
"I was walking with my brother, the brother of my childhood; this brother of whom I
must say that I never think, and whom I scarcely remember.
"We were talking, and we met others walking. We were speaking' s neighbour we had
formerly, who, since she had lived in the street, ailr70 worked with her window open.
Even while we talked, we felt cow account of that open window.
"There were no trees in the field.
"We saw a man passing near us. He was entirely naked, ashen-coloured, mounted
upon a horse which was of the colour of earth. The man had no hair; we saw his
skull and the veins in his skull. In his hand he held a stick which was limber
like a twig of grape vine, and heavy as iron. This horseman passed by and said
nothing.
"My brother said to me: 'Let us take the deserted road.'
"There was a deserted road where we saw not a bush, nor even a sprig of moss. All
was of the colour of earth, even the sky. A few steps further, and no one answered
me when I spoke. I perceived that my brother was no longer with me.
"I entered a village which I saw. I thought that it must be Romainville (why Romai-
nville?).
"The first street by which I entered was deserted. I.passed into a
second street. At
the corner of the two streets was a man standing against the wall, I said to this man:
'What place is this? Where am I?' The man made no answer. I saw the door of a house
open, I went in.
"The first room was deserted. I entered the second. Behind the door of this room was
a man standing against the wall. I asked this man: 'Whose house is this? Where am I?'
The man made no answer. The house had a garden.
"I went out of the house and into the garden. The garden was deserted. Behind the
first tree I found a man standing. I said to this man: 'What is this garden? Where
am I?' The man made no answer.
"I wandered about the village, and I perceived that it was a city.
Al the streets were
deserted, all the doors were open. No living being was passing along the streets, or
stirring in the rooms, or. walking in the gardens. But behind every angle of a wall, be-
hind every door, behind everything, there was a man standing who kept silence.
But one could ever be seen at a time. These men looked at me as I passed by.
"I went out of the city and began to walk in the fields.
"After a little while, I turned and I saw a great multitude coming after me. I recog-
nised all the men that I had seen in the city. Their heads were strange. They did not
seem to hasten, and still they walked faster than I. They made no sound in walking. In
an instant this multitude came up and surrounded me. The faces of these men were the
colour of earth.
"Then the first one whom I had seen and questioned on entering the city, said to me:
'Where are you going? Do you not know that you have been dead for a long time?'
"I opened my mouth to answer, and I perceived that no one was near me."
He awoke. He was chilly. A wind as cold as the morning wind made the sashes of the
still open window swing on their hinges. The fire had gone out. The candle was low
in the socket. The night was yet dark.
He arose and went to the window. There were still no stars in the sky.
'From his window he could look into the court-yard and into the street. A harsh, rat-
tling noise that suddenly resounded from the ground made him look down.
He saw below him two red stars, whose rays danced back and forth grotesquely in the
shadow.
His mind was still half buried in the mist of his reverie: "Yes ., thought he, "there
are none in the sig. They are on the earth now.
This confusion, however, faded away; a second noise like the first awakened him com-
pletely; lie looked, and he saw that these two stars were the lamps of a carriage. By
the light which they emitted, he could distinguish the form of a carriage. It was a
tilbury drawn by a small white horse. The noise which he had heard was the sound of
the horse's hoofs upon the pavement.
"What carriage is that?" said he to himself. "Who is it that comes so early?"
At that moment there was a low rap at the door of his room. He shuddered from head
to foot and cried in a terrible voice: "Who is there?"
Some one answered:
"I, Monsieur Mayor."
He recognised the voice of the old woman, his portress. "Well," said he, "what is it?"
"Monsieut Mayor, it is just five o'clock."
"What is that to me?"
"Monsieur Mayor, it is the chaise."
"What chaise?"
"The tilbury."
"What tilbury?"
"Did not Monsieur the Mayor order a tilbury?"
"No," said he:
"The driver says that he has come for Monsieur the Mayor."
"What driver?"
"Monsieur Scaufflaire's driver."
"Monsieur Scaufflaire?"
That name startled him as if a flash had passed before his face. "Oh, yes!" he said,
"Monsieur Scaufflaire!"
Could the old woman have seen him at that moment she would have been frightened.
There was a long silence. He examined the flame of the candle with a stupid air, and
took some of the melted wax from around the wick and rolled it in his fingers. The
old woman was waiting. She ventured, however, to speak again:
"Monsieur Mayor, what shall I say?"
"Say that it is right, and I am coming down."
V. CLOGS IN THE WHEELS
THE postal service from Arras to M-- sur was still performed at this time by the lit-
tle mail waggons of the date of the empire. These mail waggons were two-wheeled cab-
riolets, lined with buckskin, hung upon jointed springs, and having but two seats, one
for the driver, the other for the traveller. The wheels were armed with those long
threatening hubs which keep other vehicles at a distance, and which are still seen
upon the roads of Germany. The letters were carried in a blip oblong box placed behind
the cabriolet and making a part of it. This box was painted black and the cabriolet
yellow.
These vehicles, which nothing now resembles, were indescribably misshapen and clumsy,
and when they were seen from a distance crawling along some road in the horizon, they
were like those in-sects called, I think, termites, which with a slender body draw a
great train behind. They went, however, very fast. The mail that left Arras every night
at one o'clock, after the passing of the courier from Paris, arrived at
M-- sur M--
a little before five in the morning.
That night the mail that came down to M-- sur M-- by the road from Hesdin, at the turn
of a street just as it was entering the city, ran against a little tilbury drawn by a
white horse, which was going in the opposite direction, and in which there was only
one person, a man wrapped in a cloak. The wheel of the tilbury received a very severe
blow. The courier cried out to the man to stop, but the traveller did not listen and
kept on his way at a rapid trot.
"There is a man in a devilish hurry!" said the courier.
The man who was in such a hurry was he whom we have seen struggling in such pitiable
convulsions.
Where was he going? He could not have told. Why was he in haste? He did not know.
He went forward at haphazard. Whither? To Arm, doubtless; but perhaps he was going
elsewhere also. At moments he felt this, and he shuddered. He plunged into that
darkness as into a yawning gulf. Something pushed him, something drew him on. that
was passing within him, no one could describe,:di will understand. What man has not
entered, at least once in his life, into This dark cavern of the unknown?
But he had resolved upon nothing, decided nothing, determined nothing, done nothing.
None of the acts of his conscience had been final. Ile was more than
ever as at the first moment.
Why was he going to Arras?
He repeated what he had already said to himself when he engaged the cabriolet of
Scaulaire, that, whatever might be the result, there could be no objection to seeing
with his own eyes, and judging ofthe circumstances for himself; that it
was even
prudent, that he ought to know what took place; that he could decide nothing without
having observed and scrutinised; that in the distance every little thing
seems a
mountain; that alter all, when he should have seen this Cliampinathieu, some wretch
probably, his conscience would be very much reconciled to letting him go
to the
galleys in his place; that it was true that Javert would be there, and
Brevet, Chenildieu,
Cochepaille, old. convicts who had known him; but surely they would not recognise
him; bah! what an idea! that Javert was a hundred miles off the track; that
all con-
jectures and all suppositions were fixed upon this Champmathieu, and that nothing
is so stubborn as suppositions and conjectures; that there was, therefore, no danger.
That it was no doubt a dark hour, but that he should get through it; that after all
he held his destiny, evil as it might be, in his own hand; that he was master of it.
He clung to that thought.
In reality, to tell the truth, he would have preferred not to go to Arras.
Still he was on the way.
Although absorbed in thought, he whipped up his horse, which trotted away at that reg-
ular and sure full trot that gets over two leagues and a half an hour.In proportion
as the tilbury went forward, he felt something within him which shrank back.
At daybreak he was in the open country, the city of M-- sur M-- was a long way behind.
He saw the horizon growing lighter; he beheld, without seeing them, all the frozen
fig-
ures of a winter dawn pass before his eyes. Morning has its spectres as well as evening.
He did not see them, but, without his consciousness, and by a kind of penetration which
was almost physical, those black outlines of trees and hills added to the tumultuous
state of his soul an indescribable gloom and apprehension.
Every time he passed one of the isolated houses that stood here and there by the side of
the road, he said to himself: "But yet, there are people there who are sleeping!"
The trotting of the horse, the rattling of the harness, the wheels upon the pavement,
made a gentle, monotonous sound. These things are charm-ing when one is joyful, and
mournful when one is sad.
It was broad day when he arrived at Hesdin. He stopped before an inn to let his horse
breathe and to have some oats given him.
This horse was, as Scaufflaire had said, of that small breed of the Boulonnais
which has
too much head, too much belly, and not enough neck, but which has an open chest, a large
rump, fine and slender legs, and a firm foot, a homely race, but strong
and sound. The
excellent animal had made five leagues in two hours, and had not turned a hair.
He did not get out of the tilbury. The stable-boy who brought the oats stooped down sud-
denly and examined the left wheel.
"Have you gone far so?" said the man.
He answered, almost without breaking up his train of thought:
"Why?"
"Have you come far?" said the boy.
"Five leagues from here."
"Ah!"
"Why do you say ah?"
The boy stooped down again, was silent a momentoVith his eye ' fixed on the wheel,
then he rose up saying:
"To think that this wheel has just come five leagues, that is possible, but it is
very sure that it won't go a quarter of a league now. He sprang down from
the tilbury.
"What do you say, my friend?"
"I say that it is a miracle that you have come five leagues without tumbling, you
and your horse, into some ditch on the 'way. Look for yourself."
The wheel in fact was badly damaged. The collision with the nail wagon had broken
two spokes and loosened the hub so that the nut no longer held.
"My friend," said he to the stable-boy, "is there a wheelwright here?"
"Certainly, monsieur."
"Do me the favour to go for him?'
"There he is, close by. Hallo, Master Bourgaillard!"
Master Bourgaillard the wheelwright was on his own door step. He came and examined
the wheel, and made such a grimace as a surgeon makes at the sight of a broken leg.
"Can you mend that wheel on the spot?"
"Yes, monsieur."
"When can I start again?"
"To-morrow."
"To-morrow!"
"It is a good day's work. Is monsieur in a great hurry?"
"A very great hurry. I must leave in an hour at the latest."
"Impossible, monsieur."
"I will pay whatever you like."
"Impossible."
"Well! in two hours."
"Impossible today. There are two spokes and a hub to be repaired. Monsieur cannot
start again before tomorrow."
"My business cannot wait till to-morrow. Instead of mending this wheel, cannot it
be replaced?"
"How so?"
"You are a wheelwright?"
"Certainly, monsieur."
"Have not you a wheel to sell me? I could start away at once. "A wheel to exchange?"
"Yes."
"I have not a wheel made for your cabriolet. Two wheels make a pair. Two wheels
don't go together haphazard."
"In that case, sell me a pair of wheels."
"Monsieur, every wheel doesn't go on to every axle." But try."
"It's of no use, monsieur. I have nothing but cart wheels to sell. We are a small
place here."
"Have you a cabriolet to let?"
The-wheelwright, at the first glance, had seen that the tilbury was a hired vehicle.
He shrugged his shoulders.
"You take good care of the cabriolets that you hire!I should have one a good while
before I would let it to you."
"Well, sell it to me."
"I have not one."
"What! not even a carriole? I am not hard to suit, as you see."
"We are a little place. True, I have under the old shed there," added the wheelwright,
"an old chaise that belongs to a citizen of the place, who has given it to me to keep,
and who usese it every 29th of February. I would let it to you, of course it is nothing
to me. The citizen must not see it go by, and then, it is clumsy; it would take two
horses."
"I will take two post-horses."
"Where is monsieur going?"
"To Arras."
"And monsieur would like to get there today?"
"I would."
"By taking post-horses?"
"Why not?"
"Will monsieur be satisfied to arrive by four o'clock to-morrow morning?"
"No, indeed."
"I mean, you see, that there is something to be said, in taking post-horses. Monsieur has
his passport?" 'ryes?,
"Well, by taking post-horses, monsieur will not reach Arras 'before to-morrow. We are a
cross-road. The relays are poorly served, the horses are in the fields. The ploughing sea-
son has just commenced; heavy teams are needed, and the horses are taken from everywhere,
from the post as well as elsewhere. Monsieur will have to wait at least three or four hours
at each relay, and then they go at a walk: There are a good many hills to climb."
"Well, I will go on horseback. Unhitch the cabriolet. Somebody in the place can surely
sell me a saddle."
"Certainly, but will this horse go under the saddle?"
"It is true, I had forgotten it, he will not."
"Then--"
"But I can surely find in the village a horse to let?"
"A horse td go to Arras at one trip?"
"Yes."
"It would take a better horse than there is in our parts. You would have to buy him too,
for nobody knows you. But neither to sell nor to let, neither for five hundred francs nor
for a thousand, will you find such a one."
"What shall I do?"
"The best thing to do, like a sensible man, is that I -mend the wheel and you continue your
journey tomorrow."
"To-morrow will be too late."
"Confound it!"
"Is there no mail that goes to Arras? When does it pass?"
"Tonight. Both mails make the trip in the night, the up mail as well as the down."
"How I must you take a whole day to mend this wheel?"
"A whole day, and a long one!"
"If you set two workmen at it?"
"If I should set ten."
"If you should tie the spokes with cords?"
"The spokes I could, but not the hub. And then,the tire is also in bad condition, too."
"Is there no livery stable in the city?"
"No."
"Is there another wheelwright?"
The stable boy and the wheelwright answered at the same time, with a shake of the head--
"No."
He felt an immense joy.
It was evident that Providence was in the matter. It was Providence that
had broken the
wheel of the tilbury and stopped him on his way. He had not yielded to this sort of first
summons; be had made all possible efforts to continue his journey; he had faithfully and
scrupulously exhausted every means; he had shrunk neither before the season, nor from
fatigue, nor from expense; he had nothing for which to reproach himself, If he went no
further, it no longer concerned him. It was now not his fault; it was, not the act of his
conscience, but the act of Providence.
He breathed. He breathed freely and with a full chest for the first time since Javert's
visit. It seemed to him that the iron hand which had gripped his heart for twenty hours
was relaxed.
It appeared to him that now God was for him, was manifestly for him.
He said to himself that he had done all that he could, and that now he
had only to re-
trace his steps, tranquilly.
If his conversation with the wheelwright had taken place in a room of the inn, it would
have had no witnesses, nobody would have heard it, the matter would have rested there,
and it is probable that we should not have had to relate any of the events which follow,
but that conversation occurred in the street. Every colloquy in the street inevitably
gathers a circle. There are always people who ask nothing better than to be spectators.
While he was questioning the wheelwright, some of the passers-by had stopped around them.
After listening for a few minutes, a young boy whom no one had noticed, had separated
from the group and ran away.
At the instant the traveller, after the internal deliberation which we have just indi-
cated, was making up his mind to go back, this boy returned. He was accompanied by an
old woman.
"Monsieur," said the woman, "my boy tells me that you are anxious to hire a cabriolet."
This simple speech, uttered by an old woman who was brought there by a boy, made the
sweat pour down his back. 1 le thought he saw the hand he was but now freed from reap-
pear in the shadow behind him, all ready to seize him again.
He answered:
"Yes, good woman, I am looking for a cabriolet to hire." And he hastened to add:
"But there is none in the place."
"Yes, there is." said the dame.
"Where is it then?" broke in the wheelwright.
"At my house," replied the dame.
He shuddered. The fatal hand had closed upon him again.
The old woman had, in fact, under a shed, a sort of willow carriole. The blacksmith
and the boy at the hm, angry that the traveller should escape them,
intervened.
"It was a frightful go-cart, it had no springs. it was true the seat was hung inside
with leather straps it would not keep out the rain, the wheels were rusty and rotten,
it couldn't gn much further than the tilbury, a real jumper! This gentleman would do
very wrong to set out in it." etc., etc.
This was all true, but this go-cart, this jumper. this thing, whatever it might be,
went upon two wheels and could go to Arms.
He paid what was asked, left the tilbury to be mended at the blacksmith's against his
return. had the white horse harnessed to the carriole, got in, and
resumed the route he had followed since morning.
The moment the carriole started, he acknowledged that he had felt an instant before a
certain joy at the thought that he should not go where he was going. He examined that
joy with a sort of anger, and thought it absurd. Why should he feel joy at going back?
After all, he was making a journey of his own accord, nobody forced him to it.
And certainly, nothing could happen which he did not choose to have happen.
As he was leaving Hesdin, he heard a voice crying out: "Stop! stop!" He stopped the
carriole with a hasty movement, in which there was still something strangely feverish
and convulsive which resembled hope.
It was the dame's little boy.
"Monsieur," said he, "it was I who got the carriole for you."
"Well!"
"You have not given me anything."
He, who gave to all, and so freely, felt this claim was exorbitant and almost odious.
"Oh! is it you, you beggar?" said he, "you shall have nothing!"
He whipped up the horse and started away at a quick trot.
He had lost a good deal of time at Hesdin, he wished to snake it up. The little horse
was plucky, and pulled enough for two; but it was *February, it had rained, the roads
were bad. And then, it was no longer the tilbury. The carriole ran hard, and was very
heavy. And besides there were many steep hills.He was almost four hours going from
Hesdin to Saint Pol. Pour hours for five leagues.
At Saint Pol he drove to the nearest inn, and had the horse taken to the stable. As he
had promised Scaufflaire, he stood near the manger while the horse was eating. He was
thinking of things sad and confused.
The innkeeper's wife came into the stable.
"Does not monsieur wish breakfast?"
"Why, it is true," said he, "I have a good appetite."
He followed the woman, who had a fresh and pleasant face. She led him into a low ball,
where there were some tables covered with oilcloth.
"De quick," said he, "I must start again. I am in a hurry."
A big *Flemish Servant girl waited on him in all haste. He looked
at the girl with a feeling of comfort. "This is what ailed me," thought he. "I bad not
breakfasted." Ilis breakfast was served. He seized the bread, bit a
piece, then
slowly put it back on the table, and did not touch anything more. A teamster was eating
at another table. He said to this man: "Why is their bread so
bitter?"
The teamster was a German, and did not understand him. He returned to the stable to his
horse.
An hour later he had left Saint Pol, and was driving towards Tinque.s, which is but five
leagues from Arras.
What was he doing during the trip? What was he thinking about? As in the morning, he saw
the trees pass by, the thatched roofs. the cultivated fields, and the dissolving
views
of the country which change at every turn of the road. Such scenes are
sometimes suffic-
ient for the soul, and almost do away with thought. To see thousand objects for the first
and for the last time, what can be deeper and more melancholy? To travel is to be born
and to die at every instant. It may be that in the most shadowy portion of his mind, he
was drawing a comparison between these changing horizons and human existence. All the
facts of life are perpetually in flight before us. Darkness and light alternate with each
other. After a flash, an eclipse; we look, we hasten, we stretch out our hands to seize
what is passing; every event is a turn of the road; and all at once we are old. We feel
a slight shock, all is black, we distinguish a dark door, this gloomy horse of life which
was carrying us stops, and we see a veiled and unknown form that turns him out into the
darkness.
Twilight was falling just as the children coming out of school beheld our traveller enter-
ing Tinques. It is true that the (lays were still short. He did not stop at Tinques. As he
was driving out of the village, a countryman who was repairing the road, raised his head
and said:
"Your horse is very tired."
The poor beast, in fact, was not going faster than a walk.
"Are you going to Arras?" added the countryman.
"Yes."
"If you go at this rate, you won't get there very earl," He stopped his horse and asked
the countryman:
"How far is it from here to Arra?"
"Near seven long leagues."
"How is that? the post route only counts five and a quarter."
"Ah!" replied the workman. "then you don't know that the road is being repaired. You will
find it cut off a quarter of an hour from here. There's no means of
going further."
"Indeed!"
"you will take the left, the road that leads to Careney, and cross the river; when you are
at Camblin, you n ill turn to the right; that is the road from Mont Saint-Eloy to Arras."
"But it is night, I shall lose my way."
"You are not of these parts?"
"Besides, they are all cross-roads."
"Stop, monsieur," the countryman continued, "do you want I should give you some advice?
Your horse is tired; go back to Tinques. There is a good house there. Sleep there. You
can go on to Arras to-morrow."
"I must be there to-night--this evening!"
"That is another thing. Then go back all the same to that inn, and take an extra horse.
The boy that will go with the horse will guide you through the
cross-roads."
He followed the countryman's advice, retraced his steps, and a half hour afterwards he
again passed the same place, but at a full trot, with a good extra horse. A stable-boy,
who called himself a postillion, was sitting upon the shaft of the carriole.
He felt, however, that he was losing time. It was now quite dark.
They were driving through a cross-path. The road became frightful; The carriole tumbled
from one rut to the other. He said to the postillion:
"Keep up a trot ,and double drink-money."
In one of the jolts the whiffle-tree broke.
"Monsieur," said the postillion, "the whiffle-tree is broken; I do not know how to har-
ness my horse now, this road is very bad at night, if you will come back and stop at
Tinques, we can be at Arras early to-morrow morning."
He answered: "Have you a piece of string and a knife?"
"Yes, monsieur."
He cut off the limb of a tree and made a whiffle-tree of it. This was another loss of
twenty minutes; but they started off' at a gallop.
The plain was dark. A low fog, thick and black, was creeping over the hill-tops and
floating away like smoke. There were glimmering flashes from the clouds. A strong wind,
Which came from the sea, made a sound all around the horizon like the moving of furni-
ture. Everything that he caught a glimpse of had an attitude of terror. How all things
shudder under the terrible breath of night.
The cold penetrated him. He had not eaten since the evening before. He recalled vaguely
to mind his other night adventure in the great plain near D--, eight years before; and
it seemed yesterday to him.
Some distant bell struck the hour. He asked the boy:
"What o'clock is that?"
"Seven o'clock, monsieur; we shall be in Arras at eight. We have only three leagues."
At this moment he thought for the first time, and it seemed strange that it had not oc-
curred to him sooner; that perhaps all the trouble he was taking might be useless; that
he did not even latow the hour of the trial; that he should at least have informed him-
self of that; that it was foolish to be going on at this rate, without knowing whether
it would be of any use. Then he figured out some calculations in his mind; that ordina-
rily the sessions of the courts of assize began at nine o'clock in the morning; that
this case would not occupy much time; this apple-stealing would be very short:- that
there would be nothing but a question of identity; four or five witnesses and some lit-
tle to be said by the lawyers; that he would get there after it was all over!
The postillion whipped up the horses. They had crossed the river, and left Mont Saint-
I:toy behind them.
The night grew darker and darker.
VI. SISTER PUT TO THE PROOF
MEANWHILE, at that very moment, Fantine was in ecstasies.
She had passed a very bad night. Cough frightful, fever re-doubled; she had bad
dreams. In the morning, when the doctor came, she was delirious. He appeared to
be alarmed, and asked to be informed as soon as Monsieur Madeleine came.
All the morning she was low-spirited, spoke little and was mak-ing folds in the
sheets, murmuring in a low voice over some calculations which appeared to be cal-
culations of distances Her eyes were hollow and fixed. The light seemed almost
gone out. but then. at moments, they would be lighted up and sparkle like stars.
It seems as though at the approach of a certain dark hour, the light of heaven
infills those who are leaving the light of earth.
Whenever Sister Simplice asked her how she u as, she answered invariably:
"Well,
I would like to see Monsieur Madeleine."
A few months earlier, when Fantine had lost the last of her modesty, her
last shame
and her last happiness, she to as the shadow of herself; now she was the
spectre
of herself. Physical suffering had completed the work of moral suffering.
This
creature of twenty-five years had a wrinkled forehead. flabby cheeks. pinched nos-
trils, shrivelled arms, a leaden complexion. a bony neck, protruding collar-bones,
skinny limbs, an earthy skin. and her fair hair was mixed with grey. Alas!
how
sickness extemporises old age.
At noon the doctor came again, left a feu prescriptions, inquired if the
mayor
had been at the infirmary. and shook his heal.
Monsieur Madeleine usually came at three o'clock to see the sick woman.
As exact-
itude was kindness, he was exact.
About half-past two, Fantine began to be agitated. In the space of twenty
minutes.
she asked the nun more than ten times: "My sister, what time is it?"
The clock struck three. At the third stroke. Fantine rise up in bed--ordinarily
she could hardly turn herself--she joined her two shrunken and yellow hands in a
sort of convulsive clasp, and the nun heard from her one of those deep sighs which
seem to uplift a great weight. Then Fantine turned and looked towards the door.
Nobody came in; the door did not open.
She sat so for a quarter of an hour, her eyes fixed upon the door, motionless, and
as if holding her breath. The sister dared not speak. The church clock struck the
quarter. Fantine fell back upon her pillow.
She said nothing, and again began to make folds in the sheet. A half-hour passed,
then an hour, but no one came; every time the clock struck, Fantine rose and looked
towards the door, then she fell back.
Her thought could be clearly seen, but she pronounced no name, she did not complain,
she found no fault. She only coughed mournfully. One would have said that something
dark was settling down upon her. She was livid, and her lips were blue.
She smiled at times.
The clock struck five. Then the sister heard her speak very low and gently:
"But
since I am going away to-morrow, he does wrong not to come today!"
Sister Simplice herself was surprised at Monsieur Madeleine's delay.
Meanwhile, Fantine was looking at the canopy of her bed. She seemed to be seeking to
recall something to her mind. All at once she began to sing in a voice
as feeble as a
whisper. The nun listened. This is what Fantine sang:
Nous acheterons de bien belles choses
En nous promenant It long des faubourgs.
[We will buy very pretty things
A walking through the faubourgs.]
Les blends sent bleus, Its roses sent roses,
Les bleucts sent blcus, j'aime mes amours.
[Violets are blue, roses are red.
Violets are blue, I love my loves.]
La vierge Marie aupres de mon poele
Est venue bier en mantcau brode;
Et m'a dit:--Voici, cache sous mon voile,
Le petit qu'un jour tu m'as demand&
Courez a la vile, ayes de la toile,
Achetez do fib, achetez un de.
Nous atheterons de bien belles chores
En nous promenant It long des faubourgs.
[The Virgin Mary to my bed
Came yesterday in broidered cloak
And told me: "Here hidden in my veil
Is the babe that once you asked of me.'
"Run to the town, get linen,
Buy thread, buy a thimble."
We will buy very pretty things,
A walking through the faubourgs.]
Bonne sainte Vierge, aupres de mon poele
Jai mis un berceau de rubans erne;
Dieu me donnerait sa plus belle etoile,
Jaime mieux l'enfant quo tu m'as donne.
Madame. que faire avec tette toile?
Faites en trousseau pour mon nouveau-ne.
Les bleucts sent bleus, les roses sont roses,
Les blends sent bleu; j'aime mes amours.
[Good holy Virgin, by my bed
I have put a cradle draped with ribbons;
Were God to give me his fairest star
I should love the babe thou hast given me more.
"Madame, what shall be done with this linen?"
Make a trousseau for my new-born."
Violets are blue, roses are red,
Violets are blue, I love my loves.]
Lavez cette toile.--Ou?--Dans la riviere.
Faites-en, sans nen grater ni
Unc belle jupe avec sa brassiere
Quo je veux broder et do flours emplir,
L'enfant nest plus ift, madame, qu'en faire?
Faites-en un drap pour m'ensevelir.
[Wash this linen. "Where?" In the river.
Make of it, without spoiling or soiling,
A pretty skirt, a very long skirt,
Which I will broider and fill with flowers.
"The child is gone, madame, what more?"
"Make of it a shroud to bury me."]
Nous acheterous de Bien belles chimes
En nous promenant It long des faubourgs.
Les blends sont bleus, Its roses sont roses,
Les bleucts sont bleus, j'aime mes amours}
[I we will buy very pretty things,
A walking through the faubourgs.
Violets are blue, roses are red.
Violets are blue, I love my loves.]
This was an old nursery song with which she once used to sing her little Cosette to
sleep, and which had not occurred to her mind for the five years since she had had
her child with her. She sang it in a voice so sad, and to an air so sweet, that it
could not but draw tears even from a nun. The sister, accustomed to austerity as
she was, felt a drop upon her cheek.
The clock struck six. Fantine did not appear to hear. She seemed no longer to pay
attention to anything around her.
Sister Simplice sent a girl to inquire of the portress of the factory if the mayor had
come in, and if he would not very soon come to the infirmary. The girl returned
in a few minutes.
Fantine was still motionless, and appeared to be absorbed in her own thoughts.
The servant related in a whisper to Sister Simplice that the mayor had gone away
that morning before six o'clock in a little tilbury drawn by a white horse, cold
as the weather was; that he went alone, without even a driver, that no one knew
the road he had taken, that some said he had been seen to turn off by the road to
Arras, that others were sure they had met him on the road to Paris. That when he
went away he seemed, as usual, very kind, and that he simply said to the portress
that he need not be expected that night.
While the two women were whispering, with their backs turned towards Fantine's bed,
the sister questioning, the servant conjecturing, Fantine, with that feverish viva-
city of certain organic diseases, which unites the free movement of health
with the
frightful exhaustion of death, had risen to her knees on the bed, her shrivelled hands
resting on the bolster and with her head passing through the opening of
the curtains,
she listened. All at once she exclaimed:
"You are talking there of Monsieur Madeleine! why do you talk so low? what has he
done? why does he not come?"
Her voice was so harsh and rough that the two women thought they heard the voice of a
man; they turned towards her affrighted.
"Why don't you answer?" cried Fantine.
The servant stammered out:
"The portress told me that he could not come today."
"My child," said the sister, "be calm, lie down again."
Fantine, without changing. her attitude, resumed with a loud voice, and in a tone at
once piercing and imperious:
"He cannot come. Why not? You know the reason. 'You were. whispering it there between
you. I want to know."
The servant whispered quickly in the nun's ear: "Answer that he is busy with the City
Council:
Sister Simplice reddened slightly; it was a lie that the servant had proposed to her.
On the other hand, it did seem to her that to tell the truth to the sick woman would
doubtless be a terrible blow, and that it was dangerous in the state in which Fantine
was. This blush did not last long. The sister turned her calm, sad eye upon Fantine,
and said:
"The mayor has gone away."
Fantine sprang up and sat upon her feet. Her eyes sparkled. A marvellous joy spread over
that mournful face.
"Gone away she exclaimed. "He has gone for Cosette?'
Then she stretched her hands towards heaven, and her whole countenance became ineffable.
Her lips moved; she was praying in a whisper.
When her prayer was ended: "My sister," said she, "I am quite willing to lie down again,
I will do whatever you wish; I was naughty just now, pardon me for having talked so loud;
it is vet,' bad to talk loud; I know it, my good sister, but see how happy
I aim God is
kind, Monsieur Madeleine is good; just think of-it, that he has gone to
Montfermeil for
my little Cosette."
She lay down again, helped the nun to arrange the pillow, and kissed a little silver cross
which she wore at her neck, and which Sister Simplice had given her.
"My child," said the sister, "try to rest now, and do not talk any more.'
Fantine took the sister's hand between hers; they were moist; the sister was pained to feel
it.
"He started this morning for Paris. Indeed he need not even go through Paris. Montfermeil is
a little to the left in coming. You remember what he said yesterday, when I spoke to him about
Cosette: Very soon very soon! This is a surprise he has for me. You know he had me sign a let-
ter to take her away from the Thenardiers They will have nothing to say, will they? They will
give up Cosette. Because they have their pay. The authorities would not let them keep a child
when they are paid. My sister, do not make signs to me that I must not talk. I am very happy,
I am doing very well. I have no pain at all, I am going to see Cosette
again, I am hungry
even. For almost five years I have not seen her. You do not, you cannot imagine what a hold
children have upon you! And then she will be so handsome, you will see! If you knew, she has
such pretty little rosy fingers! First, she will have very beautiful hands.
At a year old she
had ridiculous hands, so? She must be large now. She is seven years old. She is a little lady.
I call her Cosette, but her name is Euphrasie. Now, this morning I was looking at the dust on
the mantel, and I had an idea that Should see Cosette again very soon! Oh, dear! how wrong it
is to be years Without seeing one's children! We ought to remember that life is not eternal!
Oh! how good it is in the mayor to go--true, it is very cold! He had his cloak at least! He
will be here to-morrow, will he not? That will make to-morrow a fete. To-morrow morning, my
sister, you will remind me to put on my little lace cap. Montfermeil is a country place. I
made the trip on foot once. It was a long way for me. But the diligences go very fast. He
will be here to-morrow with Cosette! How far is it from here to Montfermeil?"
The sister, who had no idea of the distance, answered: "Oh! I feel sure that he
will be here to-morrow."
"To-morrow! to-morrow!" said Fantine, "I shall see Cosette tomorrow! See, good
Sister of God, I am well now. I am wild; I would dance, if anybody wanted me to."
One who had seen her a quarter of an hour before could not have understood this.
Now she was all rosy; she talked in a lively, natural tone. her whole face was
only a smile. At times she laughed while whispering to herself. A mother's joy
is almost like a child's.
"Well," resumed the nun, "now you are happy, obey me--do not talk any more."
Fantine laid her head upon the pillow, and said in a low voice: "Yes, lie down
again; be prudent now that you are going to have your child. Sister Simplice is
right. All here are right."
And then, without moving, or turning her head, she began to look all about with
her eyes wide open and a joyous air, and she said nothing more.
The sister closed the curtains, hoping that she would sleep.
Between seven and eight o'clock the doctor came. Hearing no sound, he supposed
that Fantine was asleep, went in softly, and approached the bed on tiptoe. He
drew the curtains aside, and by the glimmer of the twilight he saw Fantine's
large calm eyes looking at him.
She said to him: "Monsieur, you will let her lie by my side in a little bed,
won't you?"
.
The doctor thought she was delirious. She added:
"Look, there is just room."
The doctor took Sister Simplice aside, who explained the matter to him, that
Monsieur Madeleine was absent for, a day of two, and that, not being certain,
they had not thought it best to undeceive the sick woman, who believed
the
mayor had gone to Montfermeil; that it was possible, after all, that she had
guessed aright. The doctor approved of this.
He returned to Fantine's bed again, and she continued:
"Then you see, in the morning, when she wakes, I can say good morning to
the
poor kitten; and at night, when I am awake, I can hear her sleep. Her little
breathing is so sweet it will do me good."
"Give me your hand," said the doctor.
She reached out her hand, and exclaimed with a laugh:
"Oh, stop! Indeed, it is true you don't know! but I am cured. Cosette is coming
to-morrow."
The doctor was surprised. She was better. Her languor was less. Her pulse
was
stronger. A sort of new life was all at once reanimating this poor exhausted
being.
"Doctor," she continued, "has the sister told you that Monsieur the Mayor has
gone for the little thing?"
The doctor recommended silence, and that she should avoid all painful emotion.
He prescribed an infusion of pure quinine, and, in Can the fever should return
in the night, a soothing potion. As he was going away he said to the sister:
"She is better. If by good fortune the mayor should really come back to-morrow
with the child, who knows? there are such astonishing crises; we have seen great
joy instantly cure diseases; I am well aware that this is an organic disease,
and far advanced, but this is all such a mystery! We shall save her perhaps!"
VII. THE TRAVELLER ARRIVES AND PROVIDES FOR HIS RETURN
It was nearly eight o'clock in the evening when the carriole which we left on the
road drove into the yard of the Hotel de la Poste at Arras. The man whom
we have
followed thus far, got out, answered the hospitalities of the inn's people
with an
absent-minded air, sent back the extra horse, and took the little white one to the
stable himself; then he opened the door of a billiard-room on the first
floor, took
a seat, and leaned his elbows on the table. He had spent fourteen hours in this trip,
which he expected to make in six. He did himself the justice to feel that it was not
his fault; but at bottom he was not sorry for it.
The landlady entered.
"Will monsieur have a bed? will monsieur have supper?" He shook his head.
"The stable-boy says that monsieur's horse is very tired!" Here
he broke silence.
"Is not the horse able to start again tomorrow morning?"
"Oh; monsieur! be needs at least two day's rest."
He asked:
"Is not the Bureau of the Post here?"
"Yes, sir."
The hostess led him to the Bureau he showed his passport and inquired if there were
an opportunity to return that very night to M-- sur M-- by the mail coach; only one
seat was vacant, that by the side of the driver: he retained it and paidfor
it. "Monsieur,"
said the booking clerk, "don't fail to be here ready to start at precisely one o'clock in
the morning."
This done, he left the hotel and began to walk in the city.
He was not acquainted in Arras, the streets were dark, and he went haphazard. Never-
theless he seemed to refrain obstinately from asking his way. He crossed
the little
river Crinchon. and found himself in a labyrinth of narrow streets, where
he was soon lost.
A citizen came along with a lantern. After some hesitation, he determined
to speak to
this man, but not until he had looked before and behind, as if he were
afraid that
somebody might overhear the question he was about to ask.
"Monsieur," said he, "the court house. if you please?"
"You are not a resident of the city, monsieur," answered the
citizen, who was an old
man, "well, follow me, I am going right by the court house, that is to say. the city
hall. For they are repairing the court house just now, and the courts are holding
their sessions at the city hall, temporarily."
"Is it there," asked he, "that the assizes are held?"
"Certainly, monsieur; you see, what is the city hall today was the
bishop's palace
before the revolution. Monsieur de Comic, who was bishop in 'eighty-two, had a large
hall built. The court is held in that hall."
As they walked along, the citizen said to him:
"If monsieur 'wishes to see a trial, he is rather.late. Ordinarily
the sessions close
at six o'clock."
However, when they reached the great square, the citizen showed him four long lighted
windows on the front of a vast dark building.
"Faith, monsieur, you are in time, you are fortunate. Do you see those four windows?
that is the court of assizes. There is a light there. Then they have not finished. The
case must have been pro-longed and they are having an evening session. Are you inter-
ested in this case? Is it a criminal trial? Are you a witness?"
He answered
"I have no business; I only wish to speak to a lawyer."
"That's another thing," said the citizen. "Stop, monsieur, here is the door. The door-
keeper is up there. You have only to go up the grand stairway."
He followed the citizen's instructions, and in a few minutes found himself
in a hall
where there were many people, and scattered groups of lawyers in their robes whispering
here and there.
It is always a chilling sight to see these gatherings of men clothed in black, talking
among themselves in a low voice on the threshold of the chamber of justice.
It is rare that charity and pity can be found in their words. What are oftenest heard
are sentences pronounced in advance. All these groups seem to the observer, who passes
musingly by, like so many gloomy hives where buzzing spirits are building in common all
sorts of dark structures.
This hall, which, though spacious, was lighted by a single lamp, was an
ancient hall of
the Episcopal palace, and served as a waiting-room. A double folding door, which was now
closed, separated it from the large room in which the court of assizes was in session.
The obscurity was such that he felt no fear in addressing the first lawyer whom he met.
"Monsieur," said he, "how are they getting along?" "It is finished," said the lawyer.
"Finished!"
The word was repeated in such a tone that the lawyer turned around.
"Pardon me, monsieur, you are a relative, perhaps?"
"No. I know no one here. And was there a sentence?"
"Of course. It was hardly possible for it to be otherwise."
"To hard labour?"
"For life."
He continued in a voice so weak that it could hardly be heard: "The identity was establish-
ed. then?"
"What identity?" responded the lawyer. "There was no identity to be established. It was a
simple.affair. This woman.had killed her child, the infanticide was proven,
the jury were
not satisfied that there was any pre-meditation; she was sentenced for life."
"It is a woman, then?" said he.
"Certainly. The Limousin girl. What else are you speaking of?"
"Nothing, but if it is finished, why is the hail still lighted up?"
"That is for the other case, which commenced nearly two hours ago."
"What other case?"
"Oh! that is a clear one also. It is a sort of a thief, a second offender, a galley slave;
a case of robbery. I forget his name. He looks like a bandit. Were it for nothing but having
such a face, I would send him to the galleys."
"Monsieur," asked he, "is there any means of getting into the hall?"
"I think not really. There is a great crowd. However, they are taking a recess. Some people
have come out, and when the session is resumed, you can try."
"How do you get in?"
"Through that large door."
The lawyer left him. In a few moments he had undergone, almost at the same time, almost to-
gether, all possible emotions. The words of this indifferent man had alternately pierced his
heart like icicles and like of fire. When he learned that it was not concluded, he drew breath;
but he could not have told whether what he felt was satisfaction or pain.
He approached several groups and listened to their talk. The calendar of the term being very
heavy, the judge had set down two short, simple cases for that day. They
had begun with the in-
fanticide, and now were on the convict, the second offender, the "old stager." This man had
some apples, but that did not appear to be very well proven; what was proven, was that he had
been in the galleys at Toulon. This was what ruined his case. The examination
of the man had
been finished, and the testimony of the witnesses had been taken; but there yet remained the
argument of the counsel, and the summing up of his prosecuting attorney; it would hardly be
finished before midnight. The man would probably becondemned; the prosecuting attorney was
very good, and never failed with his prisoners; he was a fellow of talent, who wrote poetry.
An officer stood near the door which opened into the courtroom. He asked this officer:
"Monsieur, will the door be opened soon?"
"It will not be opened," said the officer.
"How! it will not be opened when the session is resumed? is there not a recess?"
"The session has just been resumed," answered the officer, "but he door will not be opened
again."
"Why not?"
"Because the hall is ful!"
"What there are no more seats?"
"Not a single one. The door is closed. No one can enter."
The officer added, after a silence: "There are indeed two or three places still behind Mon-
sieur the Judge, but Monsieur the Judge admits none but public functionaries to them."
So saying, the officer turned his back.
He retired with his head bowed down, crossed the ante-chamber, and walked slowly down the
staircase, seeming to hesitate at every step. It is probable that he was holding counsel with
himself. The violent combat that had been going on within him since the previotis evening was
not finished; and, every moment, he fell upon some new turn. When he reached the turn of the
stairway, he leaned against the railing and folded his arms. Suddenly he opened his coat, drew
out his pocket-book, took out a pencil, tore out a sheet, and wrote rapidly
upon that sheet,
by the glimmering light, this line: Monsieur Madeleine, Mayor of Al- stir M--; then he went
up the stairs again rapidly, passed through the crowd, walked straight to the officer, handed
him the paper, and said to him with authority: "Carry that to Monsieur
the Judge."
The officer took the paper, cast his eye upon it, and obeyed.
VIII. ADMISSION BY FAVOUR
Without himself suspecting it, the Mayor of M--sur M-- had a certain celebrity. For
seven years the reputation of his virtu had been extending throughout Bas-Boulonnais;
it had final' crossed the boundaries of the little county, and had spread into tb two
or three neighbouring departments. Besides the considerable service that
he had rend-
ered to the chief town by reviving the manufacture of jet-work, there was not one of
the hundred and forty-or communes of the district of d sur M-- which was
not indebted
to him for some benefit. He had even in case of need aided and quickened
the business of
the other districts. Thus he had, time of need, sustained with his credit and with his
own funds f tulle factory at Boulogne, the flax-spinning factory at Prevent, at the lin-
en factory at Roubers-sur-Canche. Everywhere the name Monsieur Madeleine was spoken
with veneration. Arras and Dot envied the lucky little city of NI-- sur
M-- its mayor.
The Judge of the Royal Court of Douai, who was holding this term of the assizes at Arras,
was familiar, as well as evenody else, with this name so profoundly and so universally hon-
oured. When the officer, quietly opening the door which led from the counsel chamber to the
court room, bent behind the judge's chair and handed him the paper, on which was written
the line we have just read, adding: "This gentleman desires to witness
the trial," the
judge made a hasty movement of deference, seized a pen, wrote a few words at the bottom
of the paper and handed it back to the officer, saying to him: "Let him enter."
The unhappy man, whose history we are relating, had remained near the door of the hall,
in the same place and the same attitude 'as when the officer left him. He heard, through
his thoughts, some one saying.to him: "Will monsieur do me the honour to follow me?" It
was the same officer who had turned his back upon him the minute before, and who now
bowed to the earth before him. The officer at the same time handed him the paper. He
unfolded it, and, as he happened to be near the lamp, he could read;
"The Judge of the Court of Assizes presents his respects to Monsieur Madeleine."
.He crushed the paper in his hands, as if those few words had left some strange and bit-
ter taste behind.
He followed the officer.
In a few minutes he found himself alone in a kind of panelled cabinet, of a severe ap-
pearance, lighted by two wax candles placed upon a table covered with green cloth. The
last words of the officer who had left him still rang in his car: "Monsieur, you are now
in the counsel chamber; you have but to turn the brass knob of that door and you will
find yourself in the court room, behind the judge's chair." These words were associated
in his thoughts with a vague remembrance of the narrow corridors and dark stairways
through which he had just passed.
The officer had left him alone. The decisive moment had arrived. He endeavoured to col-
lect his thoughts, but did not succeed. At those hours especially when we have sorest
need of grasping the sharp realities of life do the threads of thought snap off in the
brain. He was in the very place where the judges deliberate and decide. He beheld with
a stupid tranquillity that silent and formidable room where so many existences had been
terminated, where his own name would be heard so soon, and which his destiny was cross-
ing at this moment. He looked at the walls, then he looked at himself, astonished that
this could be this chamber, and that this could be he.
He had eaten nothing for more than twenty-four hours; he was bruised by the jolting of
the carriole, but he did not feel it. It seemed to him that he felt nothing.
He examined a black frame which hung on the wall, and which contained under glass an old
autograph letter of Jean Nicolas Pache, Mayor of Paris, and Minister, dated,
doubtless by
mistake, Julie 9th, year II., in which Pache sent to the Commune the list
of the ministers
and deputies held in arrest within their limits. A spectator, had he seen and watched him
then, would have imagined,. doubtless, that this letter appeared very remarkable
to him,
for he did not take his eyes off from it, and he read it two or three times.
He was reading
without paying any attention, and without knowing what he was doing. He was thinking of
Fantine and Cosette.
Even while musing, he turned unconsciously, and his eyes en-countered the brass knob of
the door which separated him from the hall of the assizes. He had almost forgotten that
door. His countenance, at first calm, now fell. His eyes were fixed on that brass knob,
then became set and wild and little by little filled with dismay. Drops of sweat started
out from his head, and rolled down over his temples.
At one moment he made, with a kind of authority united to rebellion, that
indescribable
gesture which means and which so well says: Well who is there to compel
me? Then he turn-
ed quickly, saw before him the door by which he had entered, went to it,
opened it, and
went out. He was no longer in that room; he was outside, in a corridor, a long, narrow
corridor, cut up with steps and side-doors, making all sorts of angles, lighted here and
there by lamps hung on the wall similar to nurse-lamps for the sick; it was the corridor
by which he had come. He drew breath and listened; no sound behind him, no sound before
him; he ran as if be were pursued.
When he had doubled several of the turns of this passage, he listened again. There was
still the same silence and the same shadow about him. He was out of breath, he tottered,
he leaned against the wall. The stone was cold; the sweat was icy upon his forehead; he
roused himself with a shudder.
Then and there, alone, standing in that obscurity, trembling with cold and, perhaps, with
something else, he reflected.
He had reflected all night, he had reflected all day; he now heard but one voice within
him, which said: "Alas!"
A quarter of an hour thus rolled away. Finally, he bowed his head, sighed with anguish,
let his arms fall, and retraced his steps. He walked slowly and as if overwhelmed. It
seemed as if he had been caught in his flight and brought back.
He entered The counsel chamber again. The first thing that he saw was the
handle of the
door. That handle, round and of polished brass. shone out before him like an ominous
star. He looked at it as a lamb might look at the eye of a tiger.
His eyes could not move from it. From time to time, he took another step
towards the
door. Had he listened, he would have heard, as a kind of confused murmur,
the noise
of the neighbouring hall; but he did not listen and he did not hear. Suddenly, without
himself knowing how, he found himself near .the door, he seized the knob
convulsively;
the door opened.He was in the court room.
IX. A PLACE FOR ARRIVING AT CONVICTIONS
HE took a step, closed the door behind him, mechanically, and re-mained stand-
ing, noting what he saw.
It was a large hall, dimly lighted, and noisy and silent by turns, where all the
machinery of a criminal trial w as exhibited, with its petty, yet solemn gravity,
before the multitude.
At one end of the hall, that at which he found himself, heedless judges, in thread-
bare robes, were biting their finger-nails, or closing their eyelids; at the other
end was a ragged rabble; there were lawyers in all sorts of attitudes; soldiers
with honest and hard faces; old, stained wainscoting, a dirty ceiling, tables cov-
ered with serge, which was more nearly yellow than green; doors blackened
by
finger-marks; tavern lamps, giving more smoke than light, on nails in the panelling;
candles, in brass candlesticks, on the table; everywhere obscurity, unsightliness,
and gloom; and from all this there arose an austere and august impression;
for men
felt therein the presence of that great human thing which is called law,
and that great
divine thing which is called justice.
No man in this multitude paid any attention to him. All eyes converged on a single
point, a wooden bench placed against a little door, along the wall at the left
hand
of the judge. Upon this bench, which was lighted by several candles, was a man
between two gendarmes.
This was the man.
He did not look for him, he saw him. His eyes went towards him naturally, as if
they had known in advance where he was.
He thought he saw himself, older, doubtless, not precisely the same in features, but
alike in attitude and appearance, with that bristling hair, with those wild and rest-
less eyeballs, with that blouse --just as he was on the day he entered
D--- full of hatred,
and concealing in his soul that hideous hoard of frightful thoughts which he had spent
nineteen years in gathering upon the floor of the galleys.
He said to himself, with a shudder: "Great God! shall I again come
to this?"
This being appeared at least sixty years old. There was something indescribably rough,
stupid, and terrified in his appearance.
At the sound of the door, people had stood aside to make room. .The judge had turned
his head, and supposing the person who eny. tered to be the mayor of M--
sur M--,
greeted him with a boos. The prosecuting attorney, who had seen Madeleine at M-- sur
M-- whither he had been called more than once by the duties his office, recognised him
and bowed likewise. He scarcely perceived than. He gazed about him, a prey to a sort of
hallucination.
Judges, clerk, gendarmes, a throng of heads, cruelly curious--he had seen all these once
before, twenty-seven years ago. He had fallen again upon these fearful things; they were
before him, they moved, they had being; it was no longer an effort of his
memory, a mir-
age of his fancy, but real gendarmes and real judges, a real throng, and real men of
flesh and bone. It was done; he saw reappearing and living again around him, with all
the frightfulness of reality, the monstrous visions of the past.
All this was yawning before him.
Stricken with horror, he closed his eyes, and exclaimed from the depths
of his soul:
"Never!"
And by a tragic sport of destiny, which was agitating all his ideas and rendering him
almost insane, it was another self before him. This man on trial was called by all a-
round him, Jean Valjean!
He had before his eyes an unheard-of vision, a sort of representation of the most
horrible moment of his life, played by his shadow.
All, everything was there--the same paraphernalia, the same hour of the night--almost
the same faces, judge and assistant judges, soldiers and spectators. But above the head
of the judge was a crucifix, a thing which did not appear in court rooms at the time of
his sentence. When he was tried, God was not there.
A chair was behind him; he sank into it, terrified at the idea that he might be ob-
served. When seated, he took advantage of a pile of papers on the judges' desk to hide
his face from the whole room. He could now see without being seen. He entered fully
into the spirit of the reality; by degrees he recovered his composure, and arrived at
that degree of calmness at which it is possible to listen.
Monsieur Bamatabois was one of the jurors.
He looked for Javert, but did not see him. The witnesses' seat was hidden from him by
the clerk's table. And then, as we have just said, the hall was very dimly lighted.
At the moment of his entrance, the counsel for the prisoner was finishing his plea. The
attention of all was excited to the.highest degree; the trial had been in progress for
three hours. During these three hours, the spectators had seen a man, an unknown, wretch-
ed being, thoroughly stupid or thoroughly artful, gradually bending beneath the weight
of a terrible probability. This man, as is already known, was a vagrant who had been found
in a field, carrying off a branch, laden with ripe apples, which had been broken from a
tree in a neighbouring close called the Pierron inclosure. Who was this man? An examina-
tion had been held, witnesses had been heard, they had been unanimous, light had been
elicited from every portion of the trial. The prosecution said: "We have here not merely
a fruit thief, a marauder; we have here, in our hands, a bandit, an outlaw who has broken
his ban, an old convict, a most dangerous wretch. a malefactor, called Jean Valjean, of
whom justice has been long in pursuit, and who, eight years ago, on leaving the galleys
at Toulon, committed a highway robbery, with force and arms, upon the person of a youth
of Savoy, Petit Gervais by name, a crime which is specified in Article 383 of the Penal
Code, and for which we reserve the right of further prosecution when his identity shall
be judicially established. He has now committed a new theft. It is a case of second of-
fence. Convict him for the new crime; he will be tried hereafter for the previous one."
Before this accusation, before the unanimity of the witnesses, the principal emotion
evinced be the accused was astonishment. He made gestures and signs which signified
denial, or he gazed at the ceiling. He spoke with difficulty, and answered
with embar-
rassment, but from head to foot his whole person denied the charge. He seemed like an
idiot in the presence of all these intellects ranged in battle around him, and like a
stranger in the midst of this society by whom he had been seized. Nevertheless,
a most
threatening future awaited him; probabilities increased every moment; and every spectator
was looking with more anxiety than himself for the calamitous sentence
which seemed to
be hanging over his bead with ever increasing surety, One contingency even gave a glimpse
of the possibiliity, beyond the galleys, of a capital penalty should his
identity be estab-
lished, and the Petit Gervais affair result in his conviction. Who was
this man? What
was the nature of his apathy? Was it imbecility or artifice? Did he know too much or no-
thing at all? These were questions upon which the spectators took sides, and which seemed
to affect the jury. There was something fearful and something mysterious in the trial;
the drama was not merely gloomy, but it was obscure.
The counsel for the defence had made a very good plea in that provincial language which
long constituted the eloquence of the bar, and which was formerly employed by all lawyers.
at Paris as well as at Romorantin or NIontbrison, but which, having now become classic,
is used by few except the official orators of the bar, to whom it is suited by its solemn
rotundity and majestic periods; a language in which husband and wife are
called spouses,
Paris, the centre of arts and civilisation, the king, the monarch, a bishop, a holy pontiff,
the prosecuting attorney, the eloquent interpreter of the vengeance of the law, arguments,
the accents which we have just heard, the time of Louis XIV., the illustrious age, a theater
the temple of Melpomene, the reigning family, the august blood of our kings, a concert, a
musical solemnity, the general in command, the illustrious warrior who, etc., students of
theology, those tender Levites, mistakes imputed to newspapers, the imposture which
distils its venom into the columns of these organs, etc., etc. The counsel for the de-
fence had begun by expatiating on the theft of the apples,---a thing ill-suited
to a
lofy style; but Benign Bossuet himself was once compelled to make allusion
to a
hen in the midst of a funeral oration, and acquitted himself with dignity. The counsel
established that the theft of the apples was not in fact proved. This client, whom in
his character of counsel he persisted in calling Champmathieu, had not been seen to
scale the wall or break off the branch. He had been arrested in possession of this
branch (which the counsel preferred to call bough); but he said that he had found
it on the ground. Where was the proof to the contrary? Undoubtedly this branch had
been broken and carried off after the scaling of the wall, then thrown away by the a-
larmed marauder; undoubtedly, there had been a tiler--But what evidence was there
that this thief was Champmathieu? One single thing. That he was formerly a convict.
The counsel would not deny that this fact unfortunately appeared to be fully proved;
the defendant had resided at Faverolles; the defendant had been a pruner,
the name of
Champmathieu might well have had its origin in that of Jean Mathieu; all
this was true,
and finally, four witnesses hatpositively and. without hesitation identified Champma-
thieu as the galley slave, Jean Valjean; to these circumstances and this testimony the
counsel could oppose nothing but the denial of his client, an interested denial; but
even supposing him to be the convict Jean Valjean, did this prove that he had stolen
the apples? that was a presumption at most, not a proof. The accused, it was true, and
the counsel in good faith" must admit it. had adopted "a mistaken system of defence."
He had persisted in denying everything, both the theft and the fact that he had been a
convict. An avowal on the latter point would have been better certainly, and would have
secured to him the indulgence of the judges; the counsel had advised him to this course,
but the defendant had obstinately refused, expecting probably to escape punishment en-
tirely, by admitting nothing. It was a mistake, but must not the poverty of his intellect
be taken into con-sideration? The man was evidently imbecile. Long suffering in the gal-
leys, long suffering out of the galleys, had brutaliseim, etc., etc.; if he made a bad
defence, was this a reason for convicting him? As to the Petit Gervais affair, the counsel
had nothitig to.say. it was not in the case. He concluded by entreating the jury and court.
if the identity of Jean Valjean appeared evident to them; to apply to him the police penal-
ties prescribed foe the breaking, of ban, and not the fearful punishment decreed to the
convict, found guilty of a second offence.
The prosecuting attorney replied to the counsel for the defence. He was violent and flowery,
like most prosecuting attorneys.
He complimented the counsel for his "frankness," of which he shrewdly took advantage. He
attacked the accused through all the concessions which his counsel had made. The counsel
seemed to admit that the accused was Jean Valjean. Ile accepted the admission. This man
then was Jean Valjean. This fact was conceded to the prosecution, and could be no longer
contested. Here, by an adroit autonomasia, going back to the sources and causes of crime,
the prosecuting attorney thundered against the immorality of the romantic school--then in
its dawn, under the name of the Satanic school, conferred upon it by the critics of the Quo-
tidienne and the Oriflamme; and he attributed, not without plausibility, to the influence of this
perverse literature, the crime of Champmathieu, or rather of Jean Valjean. These consid-
erations exhausted, he passed to Jean Valjean himself. Who was Jean Valjean? Description
of Jean Valjean: a monster vomited, etc. The model of all such descriptions may be found
in the story of Theramene. which as tragedy is useless, but which does
great service in
judicial eloquence every day. The auditory and the jury "shuddered." This description fin-
ished, the prosecuting attorney resumed with an oratorical burst, designed
to excite the
enthusiasm of the Journal de la Prefecture to the highest pitch next morning. "And it
is such a man," etc. etc. A vagabond, a mendicant. without means of existence, etc.,
etc. Accustomed through his existence to criminal acts, and profiting little by his past
life in the galleys, as: is proved by the crime committed upon Petit Gervais,
etc.. et, .
It is such a man who, found on the highway in the very act of theft. a
few paces from
a wall that had been scaled, still holding in his hand the subject of his
crime, denies
the act in which he is caught, denies the theft, denies the escalade, denies
everything,
denies even his name, denies even his identity! Besides a hundred other proofs to
whichh we will not return, he is identified by four witnesses-- Javert--
the; incorruptible
inspector of police. Javert--and three of his former companions in disgrace,
the con-
victs Brevet, Cheuildien, and Cochepaille. What has he to oppose to this
overwhelming u-
nanimity? His denial. What depravity! You will do justice, gentlemen of the jury. etc..
etc. While the prosecuting attorney was speaking the accused listened opened-mouthed, with
a sort of astonishment, not unmingled with admiration. He was evidently
surprised that a
man could speak so well. From time to time, at the most "forcible" parts of the argument,
at those moments when eloquence, unable to contain itself, overflows in a stream of with-
ering epithets, and surrounds the prisoner like a tempest, he slowly moved his head from
right to left, and from left to right--a sort of sad, mute protest, with which.
he contented
himself from the beginning of the argument. Two or three times the spectators nearest him
heard him say in a low tone: 'This all comes from not asking for Monsieur Baloup!" The
prosecuting attorney pointed out to the jury this air of stupidity, which
was evidently
put on, and which denoted, not imbecility, but address, artifice, and the habit of de-
ceiving justice; and which showed in its full light the "deep-rooted perversity" of the
man. He concluded by reserving entirely the Petit Gervais affair, and demanding
a sen-
tence to the full extent of the law.
This was, for this offence, as will be remembered, hard labour for life.
The counsel for the prisoner rose, commenced by complimenting "Monsieur, the prosecuting
attorney, on his admirable argument; then replied as best he could, but in a weaker tone;
the ground was-evidently giving way under him.
X. THE SYSTEM OF DENEGATIONS
THE time had come for closing the case. The judge commanded the accused to rise, and put
the usual question: "Have you anything to add to your defence?"
The man, standing, and twirling in his hands a hideous cap which he had, seemed not to
hear.
The judge repeated the question.
This time the man heard, and appeared to comprehend. He started like one awaking from
sleep, cast his eyes around him, looked at the spectators, the gendarmes,
his counsel,
the jurors, and the court, placed his huge fists on the bar before him, looked around
again, and suddenly fixing his eyes upon the prosecuting attorney, began to speak. It
was like an eruption. It seemed from the manner in which the words escaped
his lips,
incoherent, impetuous, jostling each other pell-mell, as if they were all eager to find
vent at the same time. He said:
"I have this to say: That I have been a wheelwright at Paris; that it was at M. Baloup's
too. It is a hard life to be a wheelwright, you always work out-doors, in yards,
under
sheds when you have good bosses, never in shops, because you must have
room, you see.
In the winter, it is so cold that you thresh your arms to warm them; but the bosses
won't allow that; they say it is a waste of time. It is tough work to handle iron when
there is ice on the pavement. It wears a man out quick. You get old when
you are young
at this trade. A man is used up by forty. I was fifty-three; I was sick
a good deal. And
then the workmen are so bad when a poor fellow isn't young, they always call you old bird,
and old beast! I earned only thirty sous a day, they paid me as little as they could--
the bosses took advantage of my age. Then I had my daughter, who was a washerwoman at
the river. She earned a little for herself; between us two, we got on; she had hard
work
too. All day long up to the waist in a tub, in rain, in snow, with wind that
cuts your
face when it freezes, it is all the same, the washing must be done; there are folks who
hav'n't much linen and are waiting for it; if you don't wash you lose your customers. The
planks are not well matched, and the water falls on you everywhere. You get your clothes
wet through and through; that strikes in. She washed too in the laundry
of the Enfants-
Rouges, where, the water comes in through pipes. There you are not in the
tub. You wash
before you under the pipe. and rinse behind you in the trough. This is under cover, and
you are not so cold. But there is a hot lye that is terrible and ruins your eyes. She
would come home at seven o'clock at night, and go to bed right away, she was so tired.
Her husband used to beat her. She is dead. We wasn't very happy. She was a good girl she
never went to balls, and was very quiet. I remember one Shrove Tuesday
she went to bed
at eight o'clock. Look here. I am telling the truth. You have only to ask
if 'tisn't so.
Ask! how stupid I am! Paris is a gulf. Who is there that knows Father Champmathieu?
But
there is M. Baloup. Go and see M. Manor. I don't know what more you want of me."
The man ceased speaking, but did not sit down. He had uttered these sentences in a
loud, rapid, hoarse. harsh. and guttural tone, with a sort of angry and
savage simplicity.
Once, he stopped to bow to somebody in the crowd. The sort of affirmations which he seem-
ed to fling out haphazard came from him like hiccoughs and he added to
each the gesture
of a man chopping wood.. When he had finished, the auditory burst into laughter. He looked
at them. and seeing them laughing and not knowing why, began to laugh himself.
That was an ill omen.
The judge, considerate and kindly man, raised his voice:
He reminded "gentlemen of the jury" that M. Baloup, the former
master wheelwright by whom
the prisoner said he hail been employed, had been stimulioiled, but had not appeared. He
had become bankrupt, and could not be found. Then. turning to the accused, he adjured him
to listen to what he was about to say, and added: "You are in a position
which demands
reflection. The grayest presumptions are weighing against you, and may lead to fatal re-
sults. Prisoner, on your own behalf, I qeustion you a second time, explain yourself clear-
ly on these two points. First, did you or did you not climb the wall of the Pierron close,
break off the branch and steal the apples, that is to say, commit the crime of theft, with
the addition of breaking into an inclosure? Secondly, are you or are you not the discharged
convict, Jean Valjean?"
The prisoner shook his head with a knowing look, like a man 'who understands perfectly, and
knows what he is going to say. He opened his mouth, turned towards the presiding judge, and
said:
"In the first place--"
Then he looked at his cap, looked up at the ceiling, and was silent.
"Prisoner," resumed the prosecuting attorney, in an austere tone, "give attention. You have
replied to nothing that has been asked you. Your agitation condemns you. It is evident that
your name is not Champmathieu, but that you are the convict, Jean Valjean, disguised under
the name at first, of Jean Mathieu, which was that of his mother; that you have lived in
Auvergne; that you were born at Faverolles, where you were a pruner. It is evident that you
have stolen ripe apples from the Pierron close, with the addition of breaking into the in-
closure. The gentlemen of the jury will consider this."
The accused had at last resumed his seat; he rose abruptly when the prosecuting attorney had
ended, and exclaimed:
"You are a very bad man, you, I mean. This is what I wanted to say. I couldn't think of it
first off. I never stole anything. I am a man who don't get something to eat every day. I
was coming from Ailly, walking alone after a shower, which had made the ground all yellow
with mud, so that the ponds were running over, and you only saw little sprigs of grass
sticking out of the sand along the road, and I found a broken branch on
the ground with
apples on it; and I picked it up not knowing what trouble it would give me. It is three
months that I have been in prison, being knocked about. More'n that, I
can't tell. You talk
against me and tell me 'answer!' The gendarme, who is a good fellow, nudges
my elbow, and
whispers, 'answer now.' I can't explain myself; I never studied; I am a poor man. You are
all wrong not to see that I didn't steal. I picked up off the ground things that was there.
You talk about jean Valjean, Jean Mathieu--I don't know any such people. They must be vil-
lagers. I have worked for Monsieur Baloup, Boulevard de Mt' ital. My name is Champmathieu.
You must be very sharp to tell me where I was born. I don't know myself. Everybody can't
have houses to be born in; that would be too handy. I think my father.
and mother were strol-
lers, but I don't know. When I was a child they called me Little One; now, they call me Old
Man. They're my Christian names. Take them as you like. I have been in Auvergne, I have been
at Faverolles. Bless mei can't a man have been in Auvergne and Faverolles without having been
at the galleys? I tell you I never stole, and that I am Father Champmathieu. I have been at
Monsieur Baloup's; I lived in his house. I am tired of your everlasting nonsense. What is
everybody after me for like a mad dog?"
The prosecuting attorney was still standing; he addressed the judge:
"Sir, in the presence of the confused but very adroit denegations of the accused, who endea-
vours to pass for an idiot, but who will not succeed in it--we will prevent
him--we request
that it may please you and the court to call again within the bar the convicts, Brevet, Coch-
epaille, and Chenildicu, and the police-inspector Javert, and to submit them to a final in-
terrogation, concerning the identity of the accused with the convict Jean Valjean."
"I must remind the prosecuting attorney," said the presiding judge, "that police-inspector
Javert, recalled by his duties to the chief town of a neighbouring district, left the hall,
and the city also as soon as his testimony was taken. We granted him this permission, with
the consent of the prosecuting attorney and the counsel of the accused."
"True," replied the prosecuting attorney; "in the absence of Monsieur Javert. I think it a
duty to recall to the gentlemen of the jury what he said here a few hours ago. Javert is an
estimable man, who does honour to inferior but important functions, by his rigorous and strict
probity. These are the terms in which he testified: 'I do not need even moral presumptions
and material proofs to contradict the denials of the accused. I recognise him perfectly. This
man's name is not Champmathieu; lie is a convict, Jean Valjean, very hard, and much feared.
He was liberated at the expiration of his term, but with extreme regret. He served out nine-
teen years at hard labour for burglary; five or six times he attempted to escape. Besides the
Petit Gen'ais and Pierron robberies. I suspect hint also of a robbery committed on his high-
ness. the late Bishop of D--. I often saw him when I was adjutant of the galley guard at
Toulon. I repeat it; I recognise him perfectly.'"
This declaration, in terms so precise, appeared to produce a strong impression upon the pub-
lic and jury. The prosecuting attorney concluded by insisting that, in the absence of Javert,
the three witnesses, Brevet, Chenildicu, and Cochepaille, should be heard anew and solemnly
interrogated.
The judge gave an order to an officer, and a moment afterwards the door of the witness-room
opened, and the officer, accompanied by a gendarme ready to lend assistance, led in the con-
vict Brevet. The audience was in breathless suspense, and all hearts palpitated as if
they
contained but a single soul.
The old convict Brevet was clad in the black and grey jacket of the central prisons. Brevet
was about sixty years old; he had the face of a man of business, and the air of a rogue. They
sometimes go together. He bad become something like a turn-key in the priseon
--to which he
had been brought by new misdeeds. He was one of those men of whom their superiors are wont
to say, "He tries to make himself useful." The chaplain bore good testimony to his religious
habits. It must not be forgotten that this happened under the Restoration.
"Brevet," said the judge, "you have suffered infamous punishment, and cannot take an oath."
Brevet cast down his eyes.
"Nevertheless," continued the judge, "even in the man whom the law has degraded there may
remain, if divine justice permit, a sentiment of honour and equity. To
that sentiment I appeal
in this decisive hour. If it still exist in you, as I hope, reflect before you answer me; consider
on the one hand this man, whom a word from you may destroy; on the other
hand, justice,
which a word from you may enlighten. The moment is a solemn one, and there is still time to
retract if you think yourself mistaken. Prisoner, rise. Brevet, look well upon the prisoner;
collect your remembrances, and say, on your soul and conscience, whether you still recognise
this man as your former comrade in the galleys, Jean Valjean."
Brevet looked at the prisoner, then turned again to the court.
"Yes, your honour, 1 was the first to recognise him, and still do so. This man is Jean Val-
jean, who came to Toulon in 1796, and left in 1815. I left a year after. He looks like a
brute now, but he must have grown stupid with age; at the galleys he was sullen. I recognise
him now, positively."
"Sit down," said the judge. "Prisoner, remain standing."
Chenildieu was brought in, a convict for life, as was shown by his red cloak and green cap.
He was undergoing his punishment in the galleys of Toulon, whence he had been brought for
this occasion.. He was a little man, about fifty years old, active, wrinkled, lean, yellow,
brazen, restless, with a sort of sickly feebleness in his limbs and whole person, and im-
mense force in his eye. His companions in the galleys had nicknamed him Je-nie-Dieu.
The judge addressed nearly the same words to him as to Brevet. When he reminded him that
his infamy had deprived him of the right to take an oath, Chenildieu raised his head and
looked the spectators in the face. The judge requested him to collect his thoughts, and
asked him as he had Brevet, whether he still recognised the prisoner.
Chenildieu burst out laughing.
"Gad! do I recognise him! we were five years on the same chain. You're sulky with me, are
you, old boy?"
"Sit down," said the judge.
The officer brought in Cochepaille; this other convict for life, brought from the galleys
and dressed in red like Chenildieu, was a peasant from Lourdes, and a semi-bear of the Pyr-
enees. He had tended flocks in the mountains, and from shepherd had glided into brigandage.
Cochepaille was not less uncouth than the accused, and appeared still more stupid. He was
one of those unfortunate men whom nature turns out as wild beasts, and society finishes up
into galley slaves.
The judge attempted to move him by a few serious and pathetic words, and asked him, as he
had the others, whether he still recognised without hesitation or difficulty the man stand-
ing before him.
"It is Jean Valjean," said Cochepaille. "The same they called Jean-the-Jack, he was so
strong."
Each of the affirmations of these three men, evidently sincere and in good faith, had ex-
cited in the audience a murmur of evil augury for the accused--a murmur which increased in
force and continuance, every time a new declaration was added to the preceding one. The pri-
soner himself listened to them with that astonished countenance which,
according to the
prosecution, was his principal means of defence. At the first, the gendarmes by his side
heard him mutter between his teeth: "Alt, well! there is one of them!"
After the second,
he said in a louder tone, with an air almost of satisfaction, "Good!" At the third, he
exclaimed, "Famous!"
The judge addressed him:
"Prisoner, you have listened. What have you to say?" He replied:
"I say--famous!"
A buzz ran through the crowd and almost invaded the jury. It was evident that the man was
lost.
"Officers," said the judge, "enforce order. I am about to sum up the case."
At this moment there was a movement near the judge. A voice was heard exclaiming:
"Brevet, Chenildieu, Cochepaille. look this way!"
So lamentable and terrible was this voice that those who heard it felt their blood run
cold. All eyes turned towards the spot whence it came. A man, who had been sitting among
the privileged spectators behind the court, had risen, pushed open the low door which sep-
arated the tribunal from the bar, and was standing in the centre of the hall. The judge,
the prosecuting attorney, Monsieur Bamatabois, twenty persons recognised him, and ex-
claimed at once:
"Monsieur Madeleine!"
XI. CHAMPMATHIEU MORE AND MORE ASTONISHED
IT was he, indeed. The clerk's lamp lighted up his face. He Itch! his hat in band; there
was no disorder its his dress his overcoat was carefully buttoned. He was very pale, and
trembled slightly. Ills hair, already grey when he came to Arms, was now perfectly white.
t had become so during the tour that he had been there. All eyes were 'strained towards
him.
The sensation was indescribable. There was a moment of hesitation in the auditory. The
voice had been so thrilling, the man standing there appealed so calm, that at first nobody
could comprehend it. They asked who had cried out. They could not believe that this tranquil
man had uttered that fearful cry.
This indecision lasted but few seconds. Before even the judge and prosecuting attorney
could say a word, before the gendarmes and officers could make a sign, the man, whom all
up to this moment had called Monsieur Madeleine, had advanced towards the witnesses Coch-
epaille, Brevet, and Chenildieu.
"Do you not recognise me?" said he.
All three stood confounded, and indicated by a shake of the heal that they did know him.
Cochepaille, intimidated, gave the military salute. Monsieur Madeleine
turned towards the
jurors and cour and said in a mild voice:
"Gentlemen of the jury, release the accused. Your honour, ordt my arrest. He is not the
man whom you seek; it is I. I am Jean Valjean."
Not a breath stirred. To the first commotion of astonishment in succeeded a sepulchral
silence. That species of religious awe was ft in the hall which thrills the multitude at
the accomplishment of grand action.
Nevertheless, the face of the judge was marked with sympathy and sadness; he
exchanged glances with the prosecuting attorney, and a few whispered words
with the assistant judges. He turned to the spectators and asked in a tone
which was understood by all:
"Is there a physician here?"
The prosecuting attorney continued:
"Gentlemen of the jury, the strange and unexpected incident which disturbs
the audience, inspires us, as well as yourselves, with a feeling we have no
need to express. You all know, at least by reputation, the honourable Monsieur
Madeleine, Mayor of M-- sur M--. If there be a physician in the audience, we
unite with his . honour the judge in entreating him to be kind enough to lend
his assistance to Monsieur Madeleine and conduct him' to his residence."
Monsieur Madeleine did not permit the prosecuting attorney to finish, but in-
terrupted him with a tone full of gentleness and authority. These are the words
he uttered; we give them literally, as they were written down immediately after
the trial, by one of the witnesses of the scene--as they still ring in the ears
of those-who heard them, now nearly forty years ago.
"I thank you, Monsieur Prosecuting Attorney. but I am not mad. You shall see.
You were on the point of committing a great mistake; release that man. I am
accomplishing a duty; I am the unhappy convict. I am the only one who sees
clearly here, and I tell you the truth. What I do at this moment, God beholds
from on high, and that is sufficient. You can take me, since I am here. Never-
theless, I have done my best. I have disguised myself under another name, I have
become rich, I have become a mayor, I have desired to enter again among honest
men. It seems that this cannot be. In short, there are many things which I
cannot tell. I shall not relate to you the story of my life: some day you will
know it. I did rob Monseigneur the Bishop--that is true; I did rob Petit Gervais--
that is true. They were right in telling you that Jean Valjean was a wicked
wretch. But all the blame may not belong to him. Listen, your honours; a
man so abased as I, has no remonstrance to make with Providence, nor advice
to give to society; but, mark you, the infamy from which I have sought
to rise
is pernicious to men. The galleys make the galley-slave. Receive this in kindness,
if you will. Before the galleys, I was a poor peasant, unintelligent, a species of
idiot; the galley changed me. I was stupid, I became wicked; I was a log,
I became
a firebrand. Later, I was saved by indulgence and kindness, as I had been
lost by
severity. But, pardon, you cannot comprehend what I say. You will find in my house,
among the ashes of the fireplace, the forty-sous piece of which, seven
years ago, I
robbed Petit Gervais. I have nothing more to add, Take me. Great God the
prose-
cuting attorney shakes his head. You say 'Monsieur Madeleine has gone mad;
you do
not believe me. This is hard to be borne. Do not condemn that man, at least. What!
these men do not know me! 'Would that Javert were here, He would recognise
me!"
Nothing could express the kindly yet terrible melancholy of the tone which accom-
panied these words.
He turned to the three convicts:
"Well! I recognise you, Brevet, do you remember--"
He paused, hesitated a moment, and said:
"Do you remember those checkered, knit suspenders that you had in the galleys?"
Brevet started as if struck with surprise, and gazed wildly at him from head to
foot. He continued:
"Chenildieu, surnamed by yourself Je-nie-Dieu, the whole of your left shoulder has
been burned deeply, from laving it one day on a chafing dish full of embers to
efface the three fetters T. F. P., which yet are still to be seen there. Answer
me, is this true?"
"It is true!" said Chenildieu.
He turned to Cochepaille:
"Cochepaille, you have on your left arm, near where you have been bled, a date put
in blue letters with burnt powder. It is the date of the landing of the emperor at
Cannes, March 1st, ISIS. Lift up your sleeve:.
Cochepaille lifted up his sleeve;.all eyes around him were turned to his naked ann.
A gendarme brought a lamp; the date was there.
The unhappy man turned towards the audience and the court with a smile, the thought
of which still rends the hearts of those who witnessed it. It was the smile of tri-
umph; it was also the smile of despair.
"You see clearly," said he, "that I am Jean Valjean."
'
There were no longer either judges, or accusers, or gendarmes in the hall;
there were
only fixed eyes and beating hearts. Nobody remembered longer the part which
he
had to play; the prosecuting attorney forgot that he was there to prosecute, the judge
that he was there to preside, the counsel for the defence that he was there
to defend.
Strange to say no question was put, no authority intervened. It is the
peculiarity of
sublime spectacles that they take possession of every soul, and make of every witness
a spectator. Nobody, perhaps, was positively conscious of what he experienced;
and,
undoubtedly, nobody said to himself that he there beheld the effulgence
of a great light,
yet all felt dazzled at heart.
It was evident that jean Valjean was before their eyes. That fact shone forth. The
appearance of this man had been enough fully to clear up the case, so obscure a mo-
ment before. Without need of any further explanation, the multitude, as by a sort of
electric revelation, comprehended instantly, and at a single glance, this
simple
and magnificent story of a man giving himself up that another might not be condemned
in his place. The details, the hesitation, the slight reluctance possible were lost
in this immense, luminous fact.
It was an impression which quickly passed over, but for the moment it was irresist-
ible.
"I will not disturb the proceeding further," continued Jean Valjean. "1 am going,
since I am not arrested. I have many things to do. Monsieur the prosecuting
attorney knows where I am going, and will have me arrested when he chooses."
He walked towards the outer door. Not a voice was raised; not an arm stretched out
to prevent him. All stood aside. There was at this moment an indescribable divinity
within him which makes the multitudes fall back and make way before a man.
He passed
through the throng with slow steps. It was never known who opened the door, but it
is certain that the door was open when he came to it. On reaching it he turned and
said:
"Monsieur the Prosecuting Attorney, I remain at your disposal." He then addressed
himself to the auditory.
"You all, all who are here, think me worthy of pity, do you not? Great
God! when I
think of what I have been on the point of doing, I think myself worthy of envy.
Still, would that all this had not happened!"
He went out, and the door closed as it had opened, for those who do deeds
sovereignly
great are always sure of being served by somebody in the multitude.
Less than an hour afterwards, the verdict of the jury discharged from all accusation
the said Champmathieu; and Champmathieu, set at liberty forthwith, went his way stup-
efied, thinking all men mad, and understanding nothing of this vision.
BOOK EIGHTH
COUNTER-STROKE
I. IN WHAT MIRROR M. MADELEINE LOOKS AT HIS HAIR
DAY began to dawn. Fantine had had a feverish and sleepless night, yet full
of happy visions; she fell asleep at daybreak. Sister Simplice, who had watch-
ed with her, took advantage of this slumber to go and prepare a new potion
of
quinine. The good sister had been for a few moments in the laboratory of the
infirmary, bending over her vials and drugs, looking at them very closely
on
account of the mist which the dawn casts over all objects, when suddenly she
turned her head, and uttered a faint cry. M. Madeleine stood before her. He
had just come in silently.
"You, Monsieur the Mayor!" she exclaimed.
"How is the poor woman?" he answered in a low voice. "Better just now. But we
have been very anxious indeed."
She explained what had happened, that Fantine had been very ill the night be-
fore, but was now better, because she believed that the mayor had gone to
Montfermeil for her child. The sister dared not question the mayor, but
she saw
clearly from his manner that he had not come from that place.
"That is well," said he. "You did right not to deceive her."
"Yes," returned the sister, "but now, Monsieur the Mayor, when she sees you
without her child, what shall we tell her?"
He reflected for a moment, then said.
"God will inspire us."
"But, we cannot tell her a lie," murmured the sister, in a smothered tone.
The broad daylight streamed into the room, and lighted up the face of Madeleine.
The sister happened to raise her eyes.
"O God, monsieur," she exclaimed. "What has befallen you? Your hair is all white!"
"White!" said he.
Sister Simplice had no mirror; she rummaged in a case of instruments, and found
a little glass which the physician of the infirmary used to discover whether the
breath had left the body of a patient. M. Madeleine took the glass, looked at
his hair in it, and said, "Indeed!"
He spoke the word with indifference, as if thinking of something else.
The sister felt chilled by an unknown something, of which she caught a glimpse
in all this.
He asked: "Can I see her?"
"Will not Monsieur the Mayor bring back her child?" asked the sister, scarcely
daring to venture a question.
"Certainly, but two or three days are necessary."
"If she does not see Monsieur the Mayor here," continued the sister timidly,
"she will not know that he has returned; it will be easy for her to have pa-
tience, and when the child comes, she will think naturally that Monsieur the
Mayor has just arrived with her. Then we will not have to tell her a falsehood."
Monsieur Madeleine seemed to reflect for a few moments, then said with his calm
gravity:
"No, my sister, I must see her. Perhaps I have not much time."
The nun did not seem to notice this "perhaps," which gave an obscure and sing-
ular significance to the words of Monsieur the Mayor. She answered, lowering her
eyes and voice respectfully:
"In that case, she is asleep, but monsieur can go in."
He made a few remarks about a door that shut with difficulty the noise of which
might awaken the sick woman; then entered the chamber of Fantine, approached her
bed, and opened the curtains. She was sleeping. Her breath came from her chest
with that tragic sound which is peculiar to these diseases, and which rends the
heart of unhappy mothers, watching the slumbers of their fated children. But this
laboured respiration scarcely disturbed an ineffable serenity, which overshadowed
her countenance, and transfigured her in her sleep. Her pallor had become white-
ness, and her cheeks were glowing. Her long, fair eyelashes, the only beauty left
to her of her maidenhood and youth, quivered as they lay closed upon her check.
Her whole person trembled as if with the fluttering of wings which were felt, but
could not be seen, and which seemed about to unfold and bear her away. To see her
thus, no one could have believed that her life was despaired of. She looked more
as if about to soar away than to die.
The stem, when the hand is stretched out to pluck the flower, quivers, and seems
at once to shrink back, and present itself. The human body has something of this
trepidation at the moment when the mysterious fingers of death are about to gather
the soul.
Monsieur Madeleine remained for some time montionless near the bed, looking by
turns at the patient and the crucifix, as he had done two months before, on the
day when he came for the first time to see her in this asylum. They were still
there, both in the came attitude, she sleeping. he praying; only now, after these
two months had rolled away, her hair was grey and his was white.
The sister had not entered with him. He stood by the bed, ivith his finger on his
lips, as if there were some one in the room to silence. She opened her eyes, saw
him, and said tranquilly, with a smile:
"And Cossette?"
II. FANTINE HAPPY
SHE did not start with surprise or joy; she was joy itself. The simple ques-
tion: "And Cosette?" was asked with such deep faith, with so much certainty,
with so complete an absence of disquiet or doubt, that he could find no word
in reply. She continued:
"I knew that you were there; I was asleep, but I saw you. I have seen you for
a long time; I have followed you with my eyes the whole night. You were in a
halo of glory, and all manner of celestial forms were hovering around you!"
He raised his eyes towards the crucifix.
"But tell me, where is Cosette?" she resumed. "Why not put
her on my bed that
I might see her the instant I woke?"
He answered something mechanically, which he 'could never afterwards recall.
Happily, the physician had come and had been apprised of this. He came to the
aid of M. Madeleine.
"My child," said he, "be calm, your daughter is here."
The eyes of Fantine beamed with joy, and lighted up her whole countenance.
She
clasped her hands with an expression full of the most violent and most gentle
entreaty:
"Oh!" she exclaimed, "bring her to me!"
Touching illusion of the mother; Cosette was still to her a little child to be
carried in the arms.
"Not yet," continued the physician, "not at this moment. You have some fever
still. The sight of your child will agitate you, and make you worse. We must
cure you first."
She interrupted him impetuously.
"But I am cured! I tell you I am cured Is this physician a fool? I will see my
child!"
"You see how you are carried away!" said the physician. "So long as you are in
this state, I cannot let vou have your child. It is not enough to see her, you
must live for her. When you are reasonable. I will bring her to you myself."
The poor mother bowed her head.
"Sir, I ask your pardon. I sincerely ask your pardon. Once I would not have spo-
ken as I have now, but so many misfortunes have befallen me that sometimes I do
not know what-I am saying. I understand, you fear excitement; I will wait as
long as you wish, but I am sure that it will not harm me to see my daughter. I
see her now, I have not taken my eyes from her since last night. Let them bring
her to me now, and I will just speak to her very gently. That is all. Is it not
very natural that I should wish to see my child, when they have been to
Mont-
fermeil on purpose to bring her to me? I am not angry. I know that I am going to
be very happy. All night, I saw figures in white, smiling on me. As soon as the
doctor pleases, he can bring Cosette. My fever is gone, for I am cured;
I feel
that there is scarcely anything the matter with me; but I will act as if I were
ill, and do not stir so as to please the ladies here. When they see that I am
calm, they will say: 'You must give her the child.'
M. Madeleine was sitting in a chair by the side of the bed. She turned towards
him, and made visible efforts to appear calm and "very good," as she said, in
that weakness of disease which resembles childhood, so that, seeing her so peace-
ful, there should be no objection to bringing her Cosette. Nevertheless, although
restraining herself, she could not help addressing a thousand questions to M.
Madeleine.
"Did you have a pleasant journey, Monsieur the Mayor? Oh! how good
you have
been to go for her! Tell me only how she is. Did she bear the journey well? Ah!
she will not know me. In all this time, she has forgotten me, poor kitten!
Children
have no memory. They are like birds. Today they see one thing, and tomorrow
a-
nother, and remember nothing. Tell me only, were her clothes clean? Did those
Thenardiers keep her neat? How did they feed her? if you knew how I have
suf-
fered in asking myself all these things in the time of my wretchedness!
Now,
it is past. I am happy. Oh! how I want to see her! Monsieur the Mayor, did you
think her pretty? Is not my daughter beautiful? You must have been very cold
in the diligence? Could they not bring her here for one little moment?
they
might take her away immediately. Say! you are master here, are you willing?"
He took her hand. "Cosette is beautiful." said he. "Cosette is well; you shall
see her soon. but he quiet. You talk too fast; and then you throw your arms
out of bed, which makes you cough."
In fact, coughing fits interrupted Fantine at almost every word.
She did not murmur; she feared that by too eager entreaties she had weakened
the confidence which she wished to inspire, and began to talk about indifferent
subjects.
"Montfermeil is a pretty place, is it not? In summer people go there on pleasure
parties. Do the Thenardiers do a good business? Not many great people pass through
that country. Their inn is a kind of chop-house.'
Monsieur Madeleine still held her hand and looked at her with anxiety. It was ev-
ident that he had come to tell her things before which his mind now hesitated.
The physician had made his visit and retired. Sister Simplice alone remained with
them.
But in the midst of the silence, Fantine cried out:--
"I hear her! Oh, darling! I hear her!"
There was a child playing in the court--the child of the portress or some work-
woman. It was one of those chances which are always met with, and which seem
to make part of the mysterious representation of tragic events. The child,
which
was a little girl, was running up and down to keep herself warm, singing
and
laughing in a loud voice. Alas! with what are not the plays of children mingled!
Fantine had heard this little girl singing.
"Oh!" said she, "it is my Cosettell know her voice!"
The child departed as she had come, and the voice died away. Fantine listened
for some time. A shadow came over her:face, and Monsieur Madeleine heard her
whisper, "How wicked it is of that doctor not to let me see my child! That man
has a bad face!"
But yet her happy train of thought returned. With her head on the pillow she
continued to talk to herself. "How happy we shall be! We will have
a little
garden in the first place; Monsieur Madeleine has promised it to me. My child
will play in the garden. She must know her letters now. I will teach her to
spell. She will chase the butterflies in the grass, and I will watch her. Then
there will be her first communion. Ah! when will her first communion be?"
She began to count on her fingers.
"One, two, three, four. She is seven years old. In five years. She will have a
white veil and open-worked stockings, and will look like a little lady. Oh, my
good sister. you do not know how foolish I am here I am thinking of my child's
first communion!"
And she began to laugh.
He had let go the hand of Fantine. He listened to the words as one listens to
the wind that blows, his eyes on the ground, and his mind plunged into unfath-
omable reflections. Suddenly she ceased speaking, and raised her head mechani-
cally. Fantine had become appalling.
She did not speak; she did not breathe; she half-raised herself in the bed, the
covering fell from her emaciated shoulders; her tour tenance, radiant a moment
before, became livid, and her eyes, dilated whit terror, seemed to fasten on
something before her at the other end of the room.
"Good God!" exclaimed he. "What is the matter, Fantine?"
She did not answer; she did not take her eyes from the object which she
seemed
to see, but touched his arm witlt one hand, and with the other made a sign to
him to look behind him.
He turned, and saw Javert.
III. JAVERT SATISFIED
LET us see what had happened.
The half hour after midnight was striking when M. Madeleine left the hall of the
Arras Assizes. lie had returned to his inn just in time to take the mailcoach,
in which it will be remembered he had retained his seat. A little before
six in
the morning be had reached M-- sur M--, where his first care had been
to post his letter to M. Laffitte, then go to the infirmary and visit Fantine.
Meanwhile he had scarcely left the hall of the Court of Assizes when the prosecu-
ting attorney, recovering from his this shock, addressed the court, deploring the
insanity of the honourable Mayor of M-- sur M--, declaring that his convictions
were in no wise modified by this singular incident, which would be explained
hereafter, and demanding the conviction of this Champmathieu, who was evidently
the real Jean Valjean. The persistence of the prosecuting attorney was visibly
in contradiction to the sentiment of all--the public, the court, and the
jury.
The counsel for the defence had little difficulty in answering this harangue,
and establishing that, in consequence of the revelations of M. Madeleine--that is
of the real Jean Valjean--the aspect of the case was changed, entirely changed,
from top to bottom, and that the jury now had before them an innocent man. The
counsel drew from this a few passionate appeals. unfortunately not very
new, in
regard to judicial errors. etc.: the judge, in his summing up. sided with the defence:
and the jury, after a few moments' consultation. acquitted Chamignatinen.
But yet the prosecuting attorney must have a Jean Valjean, and having lost Champ-
mathieu he took Madeleine.
Immediately upon the discharge of Champmathieu the prosecuting attorney
closeted himself with the judge. The subject of their conference was, "Of
the
necessity of the arrest of the person of Monsieur the Mayor of M-- sur
M--."
This sentence. in which there is a great deal of of, is the prosecuting attorney's,
written by his own hand, on the minutes of his report to the Attorney-general.
The first sensation being over, the judge made few objection. Justice must
take
its course. Then to confess the truth. although the judge was a kind man, and
really intelligent. he was at the same time a strong, almost zealous royalist,
and had been shocked when the mayor of M-- sur M--, in speaking of the debark-
ation at Cannes, said the Emperor instead of Buonaparte.
The order of arrest was therefore granted. The prosecuting attorney sent it to
M-- sur M--, a courier, at full speed, to police Inspector Javert.
It will be remembered that Javert had returned to M-- sur M-- immediately
after giving his testimony.
Javert was just rising when the courier brought him the warrant and order
of arrest.
The courier was himself a policeman, and an intelligent man; who, in three
words, acquainted Javert with what had happened at Arras.
The order of arrest, signed by the prosecuting attorney, was couched in
these
terms:
"Inspector Javert will seize the body of Sieur Madeleine, Mayor
of M-- sur M--, who has this day been identified in court as the dis-
charged convict Jean Valjean.'
One who did not know Javert, on seeing him as he entered the hall of the
infirmary, could have divined nothing of what was going on, and would
have thought his manner the most natural imaginable. He was cool, calm,
grave; his grey hair lay perfectly smooth over his temples, and he had
ascended the stairway with his customary deliberation. But one who knew
him thoroughly and examined him with attention, would have shuddered.
The buckle of his leather cravat, instead of being on the back of his
neck, was under his left ear. This denoted an unheard-of agitation.
Javert was a complete character, without a wrinkle in his duty
or his uniform, methodical with villains, rigid with the buttons of his
coat.
For him to misplace the buckle of his cravat, he must have received one
of those shocks which may well be the earthquakes of the soul.
He came unostentatiously, had taken a corporal and four soldiers from a
station-house near-by had left the soldiers in the court, had been shown
to Fantine's chamber by theportress, without suspicion, accustomed as
she was to see armed men asking for the mayor.
On reaching the room of Fantine, Javert turned the key, pushed open the
door with the gentleness of a sick-nurse, or a police spy, and entered.
Properly speaking, he did not enter. He remained standing in the half-
opened door, his hat on his head, and his left hand in his overcoat,
which was buttoned to the chin. In the bend of his elbow might be seen
the leaden head of his enormous cane, which disappeared behind him.
He remained thus for nearly a minute, unperceived. Suddenly, Fantine
raised her eyes, saw Mm, and caused Monsieur;Madeleine to turn round.
At the moment when the glance of Madeleine encountered that of Javert,
Javert, without stirring, without moving, without approaching, became
terrible. No human feeling can ever be so appalling as joy.
It was the face of a demon who had again found his victim.
The certainty that he had caught Jean Valjean at last brought forth
upon his countenance all that was in his soul. The disturbed depths
rose to the surface. The humiliation of having lost the scent for a
little while, of having been mistaken for a few moments concerning
Champmathieu, was lost in the pride of having divined. so well at
first, and having so long retained a true instinct. The satisfaction
of Javert shone forth in his commanding attitude. The deformity of
triumph spread over his narrow forehead. It was the fullest devel-
opment of horror that a gratified face can show.
Javert was at this moment in heaven. Without clearly defining his
own feelings, yet notwithstanding with a confused intuition of his
necessity and his success, he, Javert, personified justice, light,
and truth, in their celestial function as destroyers of evil. He
was surrounded and supported by infinite depths of authority, rea-
son, precedent, legal conscience, the vengeance of the law, all the
stars in the firmament; he protected order, he hurled forth the
thunder of the law, he avenged society, he lent aid to the abso-
lute; he stood erect in a halo of glory; there was in his victory
a reminder of defiance and of combat; standing haughty, resplendent,
he displayed in full glory the superhuman beastliness of a ferocious
archangel; the fearful shadow of the deed which he was accomplish-
ing, made visible in his clenched fist, the uncertain flashes of
the social sword; happy and indignant, he had set his heel on crime,
vice, rebellion. perdition, and hell, he was radiant, exterminating,
smiling; there was an incontestable grandeur in this monstrous St.
Michael.
Javert, though hideous, was not ignoble.
Probity, sincerity, candour, conviction, the idea of duty, are things
which, mistaken, may become hideous, but which, even though hideous,
remain great; their majesty, peculiar to the human conscience, contin-
ues in all their horror; they are virtues with a single vice--error.
The pitiless, sincere joy of a fanatic in an act of atrocity preserves
an indescribably mournful radiance which inspires us with veneration.
Without suspecting it, Javert, in his fear-inspiring happiness, was
pitiable, like every ignorant man who wins a triumph. Nothing could be
more painful and terrible than this face, which revealed what we may
call all the evil of good.
IV. AUTHORITY RESUMES ITS SWAY
FANTINE had not seen Javert since the day the mayor had wrested
her from him. Her sick brain accounted for nothing. only she was
sure that he had come for her. She could not endure this hideous
face, she felt as if she were dying; she hid her face with both
hands, and shrieked in anguish:
"Monsieur Madeleine; save me!"
Jean Valjean, we shall call him by no other name henceforth,
had risen. He said to Fantine in his gentlest and calmest tone: "
Be composed; it is not for you that he comes."
He then turned to Javert and said:
"I know what you want."
Javert answered:
"Hurry along."
There was in the manner in which these two words were uttered,
an inexpressible something which reminded you of a wild beast
and of a madman. Javert did not say "Hurry along!" he said:
"Hurr-'long!" No orthography can express the tone in which this
was pronounced; it ceased to be human speech; it was a howl.
He did not go through the usual ceremony; he made no words;
he showed no warrant. To him Jean Valjean was a sort of myster-
ious and intangible antagonist, a shadowy wrestler with whom he
had been struggling for five years, without being able to throw
him. This arrest was not a beginning, but an end. He only said:
"Hurry along!"
While speaking thus, he did not stir a step, but cast upon Jean
Valjean a look like a noose, with which he was accustomed to draw
the wretched to him by force.
It was the same look which Fantine had felt penetrate to the
very marrow of her bones, two months before.
At the exclamation of Javert, Fantine had opened her eyes again.
But the mayor was there, what could she fear?
Javert advanced to the middle of the chamber, exclaiming:
"Hey, there; are you coming?"
The unhappy woman looked around her. There was no one but the nun
and the mayor. To whom could this contemptuous familiarity be ad-
dressed? To herself alone. She shuddered.
Then she saw a mysterious thing, so mysterious that its like had never
appeared to her in the darkest delirium of fever.
She saw the spy Javert seize Monsieur the Mayor by the collar; she saw
Monsieur the Mayor bow his head. The world seemed vanishing before her
sight.
Javert, in fact, had taken Jean Valjean by the collar. Javert burst into
a horrid laugh, displaying all his teeth.
"There is no Monsieur the Mayor here any longer!" said he.
Jean Valjean did not attempt to disturb the hand which grasped the
collar of his coat. He said:
"Javert--"
Javert interrupted him: "Call me Monsieur the Inspector!"
"Monsieur," continued Jean Valjean, "I would like to speak a word with
you in private."
"Aloud, speak aloud," said Javert, "people speak aloud to me." Jean
Valjean went on, lowering his voice.
"It is a request that I have to make of you--"
"I tell you to speak aloud."
"But this should not be heard by any one but yourself."
"What is that to me? I will not listen."
Jean Valjean turned to him and said rapidly and in a very low tone:
"Give me three days! Three days to go for the child of this unhappy wo-
man! I will pay whatever is necessary. You shall accompany me if you like."
"Are you laughing at me!" cried Javert. "I did not think you so stupid!
You ask for three days to get away, and tell me that you are going for
this girl's child! Ha, that's good! That is good!"
Fantine shivered.
"My child!" she exclaimed, "going for my child! Then she
is not here!
Sister, tell me, where is Cosette? I want my child! Monsieur Madeleine,
Monsieur the Mayor!"
Javert stamped his foot.
"There is the other law! Hold your tongue, hussy! Miserable country,
where galley slaves are magistrates and women of the town are nursed
like countesses! Ha, but all this will be changed; it was time!"
He gazed steadily at Fantine and added, grasping anew the cravat, shirt,
and coat collar of Jean Valjean:
"I tell you that there is no Monsieur Madeleine and that there is no
Monsieur the Mayor. There is a robber, there is a brigand, there is a
convict called Jean Valjean, and I have got him! That is what there is!"
Fantine started upright, supporting herself by her rigid arms and hands;
she looked at Jean Valjean, then at Javert, and then at the nun; she o-
pened her mouth as if to speak: a rattle came from her throat, her teeth
struck together, she stretched out her arms in anguish, convulsively open-
ing her hands, and groping about her like one who is drowning; then sank
suddenly back upon the pillow.
Her head struck the head of the bed and fell forward on her breast, the
mouth gaping, the eyes open and glazed.
She was dead.
Jean Valjean put his hand on that of Javert which held him, and opened it
as he would have opened the hand of a child; then he said:
"You have killed this woman."
"Have done with this!" cried Javert, furious, "I am not here to listen to
sermons; save all that; the guard is below; come right along, or the hand-
cuffs!"
There stood in a corner of the room an old iron bedstead in a dilapi-
dated condition, which the sisters used as a camp-bed when they watched.
Jean Valjean went to the bed, wrenched out the rickety head bar--a thing
easy for muscles like his--in the twinkling of an eye, and with the bar in
his clenched fist, looked at Javert. Javert recoiled towards the door.
Jean Valjean, his iron bar in hand, walked slowly towards the bed of
Fantine. On reaching it, he turned and said to Javert in a voice that could
scarcely be heard:
"I advise you not to disturb me now."
Nothing is more certain than that Javert trembled.
He had an idea of calling the guard, but Jean Valjean might profit by
his absence to escape. He remained, therefore, grasped the bottom of his
cane, and leaned against the framework of the door without taking his eyes
from Jean Valjean.
Jean Valjean rested his elbow upon the post, and his head upon his
hand, and gazed at Fantine, stretched motionless before him. He remained
thus, mute and absorbed, evidently lost to everything of this life. His coun-
tenance and attitude bespoke nothing but inexpressible pity.
After a few moments' reverie, he bent down to Fantine, and addressed
her in a whisper.
What did he say? What could this condemned man say to this dead,
woman? What were these words? They were heard by none on earth. Did the
dead woman hear them? There are touching illusions which perhaps are sublime
realities. One thing is beyond doubt; Sister Simplice, the only witness of
what passed, has often related that, at the moment when Jean Valjean whispered
in the ear of Fantine, she distinctly saw an ineffable smile beam on those pale
lips and in those dim eyes, full of the wonder of the tomb.
Jean Valjean took Fantine's head in his hands and arranged it pillow, a mother
would have done for her child, then fastened the string of her night-dress,
and replaced her hair beneath her cap. This done, he closed her eyes.
The face of Fantine, at this instant, seemed strangely illumined.
Death is the entrance into the great light.
Fantine's hand hung over the side of the bed. Jean Valjean knelt before this
hand, raised it gently, and kissed it.
Then he rose, and, turning to Javert, said:
"Now, I am at your disposal."
A FITTING TOMB
JAVERT put Jean Valjean in the city prison.
The arrest of Monsieur Madeleine produced a sensation, or rather an extraor-
dinary commotion, at M sur M . We are sorry not to be able to disguise the
fact that, on this single sentence, he was a galley slave, almost everybody
abandoned him. In less than two hours, all the good he had done was forgotten,
and he was "nothing but a galley slave." It is just to say that the details of
the scene at Arras were not yet known. All day long, conversations like this
were heard in every part of the town: "Don't you know, he was a discharged con-
vict!" "He! Who?" "The mayor." "Bah! Monsieur Madeleine." "Yes." "Indeed!" "His
name was not Madeleine; he has a horrid name, Bejean, Bojean, Bonjean!" "Oh!
bless me!" "He has been arrested." "Arrested!" "In prison, in the city prison
to await his removal." "His removal! where will he be taken?" "To the Court of
Assizes for a high¬way robbery that he once committed." "Well! I always did
suspect him. The man was too good, too perfect, too sweet. He refused fees,
and gave sous to every little blackguard he met. I always thought that there
must be something bad at the bottom of all this."
"The drawing-rooms," above all, were entirely of this opinion.
An old lady, a subscriber to the Drapeau Blanc, made this remark, the depth of
which it almost impossible to fathom:
"I am not sorry for it. That will teach the Bonapartists!"
In this manner the phantom which had been called Monsieur Madeleine was dissi-
pated at M-- sur M--. Three or four persons alone in the whole city remained faith-
ful to his memory. The old portress who had been his servant was among the number.
On the evening of this same day, the worthy old woman was sitting in her lodge,
still quite bewildered and sunk in sad reflections. The factory had been closed
all day, the carriage doors were bolted, the street was deserted. There was no
one in the house but the two nuns, Sister Perpetue and Sister Simplice, who were
watching the corpse of Fantine.
Towards the time then Monsieur Madeleine had been accustomed to return, the honest
portress rose mechanically, took the key of his room from a drawer, with
the taper-
stand that he used at night to light himself up the stairs, then hung the
key on
a nail from which lie had been m the habit of taking it, and placed the taper-stand
by its side, as if she were expecting him, She then seated herself again in her chair,
and resumed her reflections. The poor old woman had done all this without
being con-
scious of it.
More than two hours had elapsed when she started from her reverie and exclaimed, "Why,
bless me! I have hung his, key on the nail!"
Just then, the window of her box opened, a hand passed through the opening,
took the
key and stand, and lighted the taper at the candle which was burning.
The portress raised her eyes; she was transfixed with astonishment; a cry rose to
her lips, but she could not give it utterance.
She knew the hand, the arm, the coat-sleeve.
It was M. Madeleine:
She was speechless for some seconds, thunderstruck, as she said herself, af-
terwards, in giving her account of the affair.
"My God! Monsieur Mayor!" she exclaimed, "I thought you were--"
She stopped; the end of her sentence would not have been, respectful to the
beginning. To her, Jean Valjean was still Monsieur the Mayor. He completed her
thought.
"In prison," said he. "I was there; I broke a bar from a window, let myself fall
from the top of a roof, and here I am. I am going to my room; go for Sister Sim-
plice. She is doubtless beside this poor woman.'
The old servant hastily obeyed.
He gave her no caution, very sure she would guard him better than he would guard
himself.
It has never been known how he had succeeded in gaining entrance into the court-
yard without opening the carriage-door. He had, and always carried about him, a
pass-key which opened a little side door, but he must have been searched, and
this taken from him. This point is not yet cleared up.
He ascended the staircase which led to his room. On reaching the top, he left
his taper stand on the upper stair, opened his door with little noise, felt his
way to the window and closed the shutter, then came back, took his taper, and
went into the chamber.
The precaution was not useless; it will be remembered that his window could be
seen from the street.
He cast a glance about him, over his table, his chair, his bed, which had not
been slept in for three days. There remained no trace of the disorder of the
night before the last. The portress had "put the room to rights."
Only, she had
picked up from the ashes, and laid in order on the table, the ends of the loaded
club, and the fort-sous piece, blackened by the fire.
He took a sheet of paper and wrote: These are the ends of my loaded club and the
forty-sous piece stolen from Petit Gervais, of which I spoke at the Court of As-
sizes; then placed the two bits of iron and the piece of silver on the sheet in
such a way that it would be the first thing perceived on entering the room. He
took from a wardrobe an old shirt which he tore into several pieces and
in which he
packed the two silver candlesticks. In all this there was neither haste nor agitation.
And even while packing the bishop's candlesticks, he was eating a piece of black
bread. It was probably prison-bread, which he had brought away in escaping.
This has been established by crumbs of bread found on the floor of the room, when
the court afterwards ordered a search.
Two gentle taps were heard at the door.
"Come in," said he.
It was Sister Simplice.
She was pale, her eyes were red, and the candle which she he tremble in her hand.
The shocks of destiny have this peculiarity; however subdued or disciplined our
feelings may be, they draw out the human nature from the depths of our souls, and
compel us to exhibit it to others. In the agitation of this day the nun had again
become a woman. She had wept, and she was trembling.
Jean Valjean had written a few lines on a piece of paper, which he handed to the
nun, saying: "Sister, you will give this to the cure."
The paper was not folded. She cast her eyes on it.
"You may read it," said he.
She read: "I beg Monsieur the Cure to take charge of all that I leave here. He
will please defray therefrom the expenses of my trial, and of the burial of the
woman who died this morning. The remainder is for the poor."
The sister attempted to speak, but could scarcely stammer out a few inarticulate
sounds. She succeeded, however, in saying:
"Does not Monsieur the Mayor wish to see this poor unfortunate again for the last
time?"
"No," said he, "I am pursued; I should only be arrested in her chamber; it would
disturb her."
He had scarcely finished when there was a loud noise on the staircase. They heard
a tumult of steps ascending, and the old portress exclaiming in her loudest and
most piercing tones:
"My good sir, I swear to you in the name of God, that nobody has come in here the
whole day, and the whole evening; that I have not even once left my door!"
A man replied: "But yet, there is a light in this room."
They recognised the voice of Javert.
The chamber was so arranged that the door in opening covered the corner of the wall
to the right. Jean Valjean blew out the taper, and placed himself in this corner.
Sister Simplice fell on her knees near the table.
The door opened.
Javert entered.
The whispering of several men, and the protestations of the portress were heard in
the hall.
The nun did not raise her eyes. She was praying.
The candle was on the mantel, and gave but a dim light.
Javert perceived the sister, and stopped abashed.
It will be remembered that the very foundation of Javert, his element, the medium in
which he breathed, was veneration for all authority. He was perfectly homogeneous,
and admitted of no objection, or abridgment. To him, be it understood, ecclesiastical
authority was the highest of all; he was devout, superficial, and correct, upon this
point as upon all others. In his eyes, a priest was a spirit who was never mistaken,
a nun was a being who never sinned. They were souls walled in from this world, with
a single door which never opened but for the exit of truth.
On perceiving the sister, his first impulse was to retire.
But there was also another duty which held him, and which urged him imperiously in
the opposite direction. His second impulse was to remain, and to venture at least
one question.
This was the Sister Simplice, who had never lied in her life. Javert knew this, and
venerated her especially on account of it.
"Sister," said he, "are you alone in this room?"
There was a fearful instant during which the poor portress felt her limbs falter
beneath her. The sister raised her eyes, and replied:
"Yes."
Then continued Javert--"Excuse me if I persist, it is my duty: you have not seen this
evening a person, a man--he has escaped and we are in search of him--Jean Valjean--
you have not seen him?"
The sister answered--"No."
She lied. Two lies in succession, one upon another, without hesitation, quickly, as
if she were an adept in it.
"Your pardon!" said Javert, and he withdrew, bowing reverently.
Oh, holy maiden! for many years thou hast been no more in this world; thou hast joined
the sisters, the virgins, and thy brethren, the angels, in glory; may this falsehood
be remembered to thee in Paradise.
The affirmation of the sister was to Javert something so decisive that he did not even
notice the singularity of this taper, just blown out, and smoking on the table.
An hour afterwards, a man was walking rapidly in the darkness beneath the trees from
M-- sur M--in the direction of Paris. This man was Jean Valjean. It has been estab-
lished, by the testimony of two or three waggoners who met him, that he carried a
bundle, and was dressed in a blouse. Where did he get this blouse? It was never
known. Nevertheless, an old artisan had died in the infirmary of the factory a few
days before, leaving nothing but his blouse. This might have been the one.
A last word in regard to Fantine.
We have all one mother--the earth. Fantine was restored to this mother.
The cure thought best, and did well perhaps, to reserve out of what Jean Valjean
had left, the largest amount possible for the poor. After all, who were in question?
--a convict and a woman of the town. This was why he simplified the burial of
Fantine, and reduced it to that bare necessity called the Potter's field.
And so Fantine was buried in the common grave of the cemetery, which is for
everybody and for all and in which the poor are lost. Happily, God knows where
to find the soul. Fantine was laid away in the darkness with bodies which had
no name; she suffered the promiscuity of dust. She was thrown into the public
pit. Her tomb was like her bed.
COSETTE
BOOK FIRST
WATERLOO
I. WHAT YOU MEET IN COMING FROM LAVILLE
ON a beautiful morning in May, last year (1861), a traveller, hr who tells this story,
was journeying from Nivelles towarrds La Hulpe. He travelled a-foot. He was following,
between two rows of trees, a broad road, undulating over hills, which, one after another,
upheave it and let it fall again, like enormous waves. He has passed Lillois vand Bois-
Seigneur-lsaac. He saw to the west the slated steeple of Braine-l'Alleud,
which has the
form of an inverted vase. He had just passed a wood upon a hill, and at the corner of a
crossroad, beside a sort of worm-eaten sign-post, bearing the inscription --Old Toll-Gate,
No. 4--a tavern with this sign: The Four Winds. Echlaleau, Private Cafe.
Half a mile from this tavern, he reached the bottom of a little valley, where a stream flowed
beneath an arch in the embankment of the road. The cluster of trees, thin-sown but very
green, which fills the vale on one side of the road, on the other spreads into meadows,
and sweeps away in graceful disorder towards Braine l'Alleud.
At this point there was at the right. and immediately on the road, an inn, with a four-
wheeled cart before the door, a great bundle of hop-poles, a plough, a pile of dry brush
near a quickset hedge, some lime which was smoking in a square hole in the ground, and a
ladder lying along an old shed with mangers for straw. A young girl was pulling weeds in
a field. where a large green poster, probably of a travelling show at some annual fair,
fluttered in the wind. At the corner of the inn, beside a pond, in which a flotilla of
ducks was navigating, a difficult foot-path lost itself in the shrubbery.
The traveller
took this path.
At the end of a hundred paces, passing a wall of the fifteenth century, surmounted by a
sharp gable of crossed bricks, he found himself opposite a great arched stone doorway,
with rectilinear impost, in the solemn style of Louis XIV., and plain medallions on the
sides. Over the entrance wag a severe facade. and a wall perpendicular to the facade almost
touched the doorway. flanking it at an abrupt right angle. On the meadow before the door
by three harrows, through which were blooming, as best they could, all the
flowers of May.
The doorway was closed. It was shut by two decrepit folding-doors, decorated
with an old
rusty knocker.
The sunshine was enchanting; the branches of the trees had that gentle tremulousness of
the month of May which seems to come from the birds' nests rather than the wind. A spruce
little bird, ' probably in love, was singing desperately in a tall tree.
The traveller paused and examined in the stone at the left of the door, near the ground,
a large circular excavation like the hollow of a sphere. Just then the folding-doors open-
ed, and a peasant woman came out.
She saw the traveller, and perceived what he was examining. "It was a French ball which
did that," said she.
And she added--
"What you see there, higher up, in the door, near a nail, is the hole made by a Biscay
musket. The musket has not gone through the wood."
"What is the name of this place?" asked the traveller
"Hougomont," the woman answered.
The traveller raised his head. He took a few steps and looked over the
hedges. He saw in
the horizon, through the trees, a sort of hillock, and on this hillock something which,
in the distance, resembled a lion.
He was on the battle-field of Waterloo.
II. HOUGOMONT
Hougomoont--this was the fatal spot, the beginning of the resis-tance,
the first check
encountered at Waterloo by this great butcher of Europe, called Napoleon; the first knot
under the axe.
It was a chateau; it is now nothing more than a farm. Hougomont, to the antiquary, is
Hugomons. This manor was built by Hugo, sire de Somerel, the same who endowed the
sixth
chaplainship of the abbey of Villiers.
The traveller pushed open the door, elbowed an old carriage under the porch, and entered
the court.
The first thing that he noticed in this yard was a door of the sixteenth century, which
seemed like an arch, everything having fallen down around it. The monumental aspect is
often produced by ruin. Near the arch opens another door in the wall, with keystones of
the time of 'Henry IV., which discloses the trees of an orchard. Beside this door were a
dung-hill, mattocks and shovels, some carts, an old well with its flag-stone and iron
pulley, a skipping colt, a strutting turkey, a chapel surmounted by a little steeple, a
pear-tree in bloom, trained in espalier on the wall of the chapel; this
was the court,
the conquest of which was the aspiration of Napoleon. This bit of earth,
could he have
taken it, would perhaps have given him the world. The hens are scattering the dust with
their beaks. You hear a growling: it is a great dog, who shows his teeth,
and takes the
place of the English.
The English fought admirably there. The four companies of guards under Cooke held their
ground for seven hours, against the fury of an assaulting army.
Hougomont, seen on the map, on a geometrical plan, comprising buildings and inclosure,
presents a sort of irregular rectangle. one corner of which is cut off. At this corner
is the southern entrance, guarded by this wall, which commands it at the shortest musket
range. Hougomont has two entrances: the southern, that of the chateau, and the northern,
that of the farm. Napoleon sent against Hougomont his brother Jerome. The divisions of
Gunleminot. Foy, and Bachelu were hurled against it; nearly the whole corps of Reille
was there employed and there defeated, and the bullets of Kellermann were exhausted a-
gainst this heroic wall-front. It was too much for the brigade of Bauduin to force Hou-
gomont on the north, and the brigade of Soyc could only batter it on the south--it could
not take it.
The buildings of the farm are on the southern side of the court. A small portion of the
northern door, broken by the French, hangs dangling from the wall. It is composed of four
planks, nailed to two cross-pieces, and in it may be seen the scars of the attack.
The northern door, forced by the French, and to which a piece has been added to replace
the panel suspended from the wall, stands half open at the foot of the court-yard; it is
cut squarely in a wall of stone below, and brick above, and closes the court on the north.
It is a simple cart-door, such as are found on all small farms, composed of two large fold-
ing-doors, made of rustic planks; bevond this are the meadows. This entrance was furiously
contested. For a long time there could be seen upon the door all sorts
of prints of bloody
hands. It was there that Bauduin was killed.
The storm of the combat is still in this court: the horror is visible there; the overturn
of the conflict is there petrified; it lives, it dies; it was but yesterday. The walls are
still in death agonies; the stones fall, the breaches cry out; the holes are wounds; the
trees bend and shudder, as if making an effort to escape.
This court, in 1815, was in better condition than i: is today. Structures
which have since
been pulled down formed redans. angles, and squares.
The English were barricaded there; the French effected an entrance. but could not maintain
their position. At the side of the chapel, one wing of the chateau. the only remnant which
estate of the manor of I lotsgomont, stands crumbling, one might almost say disembowelled.
The chateau served as donjon; the chapel served as block-house. There was work of extermi-
nation. The French, shot down from all sides, from behind the walls, from the roofs of the
barns, from the bottom of the cellars, through every window, through every air-hole, through
every chink in the stones, brought fagots and fired the walls and the men: the storm of
balls was answered by a tempest of flame.
A glimpse may be had in the ruined wing, through the iron-barred windows,
of the dismantled
chambers of a main building; the English guards lay in ambush in these chambers; the spiral
staircase, broken from foundation to roof, appears like the interior of a broken shell. The
staircase has two landings; the English, besieged in the staircase, and crowded upon The up-
per steps, had cut away the lower ones. These are large slabs of blue stone, now heaped to-
gether among the nettles. A dozen steps still cling to the wall: on the first is cut the
image of a trident. These inaccessible steps are firm in their sockets;
all the rest re-
sembles a toothless jawbone. Two old trees are there; one is dead, the other is wounded at
the root, and does not leaf out until April. Since 1850 it has begun to grow across the
staircase.
There was a massacre in the chapel. The interior, again restored to quiet, is strange. No
mass has been said there since the carnage. The altar remains, however--a clumsy wooden al-
tar, backed by a wall of rough stone. Four whitewashed walls, a door opposite the altar,
two little arched windows, over the door a large wooden cmcifix, above the crucifix a square
opening in which is stuffed a bundle of straw; in a corner on the ground, an old glazed sash
all broken, such is this chapel. Near the altar hangs a wooden statue of St. Anne of the fif-
teenth century; the head of the infant Jesus has been carried away by a musket-shot. The
French, masters for a moment of the chapel, then dislodged, fired it. The flames filled this
ruin; it was a furnace; the door was burned, the floor was burned, but the wooden Christ
was not burned. The fire ate its way to his feet, the blackened stumps of which only are
visible; then it stopped. A miracle, say the country people. The infant Jesus, decapitated,
was not so fortunate as the Christ.
The walls are covered with inscriptions. Near the feet of the Christ we read this
name: Henquincz. Then these others: Conde de Rio Major Marques y Marquess de
Amagn (Habana). There are French names with exclamation points, signs of anger.
The wall was whitewashed in 1819. The nations were insulting each other
un it.
At the door of this chapel a body was picked up holding an axe in its hand. This
body was that of second-lieutenant Legros.
On coming out of the chapel, a well is seen at the left. There are two in this
yard. You ask: why is there no bucket and no pulley to this one.? Because no
water is drawn from it now. Why is no more water drawn from it? Because it is full
of skeletons.
The last man who drew water from that well was Guillaume Van Kylsom. He was a
peasant, who lived in Hougomont, and was gardener there. On the 18th of June,
1815, his family fled and hid in the woods.
The forest about the Abbey of Villiers concealed for several days and several
nights all that scattered and distressed population. Even now certain vestiges
may be distinguished, such as old trunks of scorched trees, which mark
the place
of these poor trembling bivouacs in the depths of the thickets.
Fuillaume Van Kylsom remained at Hougomont, "to take care of the chateau,"
and
hid in the cellar. The English discovered him there. He was torn from his hiding
place, and, with blows of the flat of their swords, the soldiers compelled this
frightened man to wait upon them. They were thirsty; this Guillaume brought
them
drink. It was from this well that he drew the water. Many drank their last
quaff.
This well, where drank so many of the dead, must die itself also.
After the action, there was haste to bury the corpses. Death has its own
way of
embittering victory, and it causes glory to be followed by pestilence.
Typhus is
the successor ol triumph. This well was deep, it was made a sepulchre.
Three
hundred desd were thrown into it. Perhaps with too much haste. Were they
all
dead? Tradition says no. It appears that on the night after the burial,
feeble
voices were heard calling out from the well.
This well is isolated in the middle of the courtyard. Three walls, half
brick and
half stone, folded back like the leaves of a screen, and imitating a square
turret, surround it on three sides. The fourth side is open. On that side the wa-
ter is drawn. The back wall has a sort of shapeless bull's-eye, perhaps
a hole
made by a shell. This turret had a roof. of which only the beams remain. The iron
that sustains the wall on the right is in the shape of a cross. You bend over
the well, the eye is lost in a deep brick cylinder, which is filled with an accum-
ulation of shadows. All around it, the bottom of the walls is covered by
nettles.
This well has not in front the large blue flagging stone which serves as a curb
for all the wells of Belgium. The blue stone is re-placed by a cross-bar
on
which rest five or six misshapen wooden stumps, knotty and hardened, that
resem-
ble huge bones. There is no longer either bucket, or chain, or pulley;
but the stone
basin is still there which served for the waste water. The rain water gathers there,
and fron time to time a bird from the neighbouring forest comes to drink and flies
away.
One house among these ruins, the farm-home. is still inhabited. The door
of this
house opens upon the court-yard. By the side of pretty Gothic key-hole
plate
there is upon the door a handful of iron in trefoil, slanting forward.
At the
moment that the Hanover ian lieutenant Wilda was seizing this to take refuge in
the farm house, a French sapper struck off his hand with the blow of an axe.
The family which occupies the house calls the former gardener, Van Kylsom,
long
since dead, its grandfather. A grey-haired woman said to us: "I was there. I
was three years old. My sister, larger, was afraid, and cried. They carried
us
away into the woods; I was in my mother's arms. They laid their ears to
the
ground to listen. For my part, I mimicked the cannon, and I went boom,
boom."
One of the yard doors, on the left, we have said, opens into the orchard.
The orchard is terrible.
It is in the three parts, one might almost say in three acts. The first part
is a garden, the second is the orchard, the third is a wood. These three parts
have a common indosure; on the sick of the entrance the buildings of the chateau
and the farm, on the left a hedge, on the right a wall, at the back a wall. The
wall on theright is of brick, the wall on the back is of stone. The garden is
entered first. It is sloping, planted with currant bushes, covered with wild
vegetation, and terminated by a terrace of cut stone, with balusters with a
double swell. It is a seignorial garden, in this first French style, which pre-
ceded the modern; now ruins and .briers. The pilasters are surmounted by globes
which look like stone cannon-balls. We count forty-three balusters still in their
places; the others are lying in the grass, nearly all show some scratches of
musketry. A broken baluster remains upright like a broken leg.
It is in this garden, which is lower than the orchard, that six of the first
Light Voltigeurs, having penetrated thither, and being unable to escape,
caught
and trapped like bears in a pit, engaged in a battle with two Hanoverian compan-
ies, one of which was armed with carbines. The Hanoverians were ranged
along
these balusters, and fired from above. These voltigeurs, answering from
below,
six against two hundred, intrepid, with the currant bushes only for a shelter,
took a quarter of an hour to die.
You rise a few steps, and from the garden pass into the orchard proper. There,
in these few square yards, fifteen hundred men fell in less than a hour.
The wall
seems ready to recommence the combat. The thirty-eight loopholes, pierced
by
the English at irregular heights, are there yet. In front of the sixteenth, lie two
English tombs of granite. There are no loopholes except in the south-wall, the
principal attack came from that side. This wall is concealed on the outside by
a large quickset hedge; the French came up, thinking there was nothing in their
way but the hedge, crossed it, and found the wall, an obstacle and an ambush,
the English Guards behind, the thirty-eight loopholes pouring forth their fire
at once, a storm of grape and of balls; and Soye's brigade broke there. Waterloo
commenced thus.
The orchard, however, was taken. They had no scaling ladders, but the French
climbed the wall with their hands. They fought hand to hand under the trees.
All this grass was soaked with blood. A battalion from Nassau, seven hundred
men, was annihilated there. On the outside, the wall against which the two bat-
teries of Kellermann were directed, is gnawed by grape.
This orchard is as responsive as any other to the month of May. It has its
golden blossoms and its daisies; the grass is high; farm horses are grazing;
lines on which clothes are drying cross the intervals between the trees, making
travellers bend their heads; you walk over that sward, and your foot sinks in
the path of the mole. In the midst of the grass you notice an uprooted trunk,
lying on the ground, but still growing green. Major Blackmann leaned back against
it to die. Under a large tree near by fell the German general, Duplat, of a
French family which fled on the revocation of the edict of Nantes. Close beside
it leans a diseased old apple tree swathed in a bandage of straw and loam.
Nearly
all the apple trees are falling from old age. There is not one which does not
show its cannon ball or its musket shot. Skeletons of dead trees abound in this
orchard. Crows fly in the branches; beyond it is a wood full of violets.
Bauduin killed, Foy wounded, fire, slaughter, carnage, a brook made of English
blood, of German blood, and of French blood, mingled in fury; a well filled with
corpses, the regiment of Nassau and the regiment of Brunswick destroyed, Duplat
killed, Blackmann killed, the English Guards crippled, twenty French battalions,
out of the forty of Reille's corps, decimated, three thousand men, in this
one
ruin of Hougomont, sabred, slashed, slaughtered, shot, burned; and all this in
order that today a peasant may say to a traveller: Monsieur, give me three
francs; if you like, I will explain to you the affair of Waterloo.
III. THE 18TH OF JUNE, 1815
LET us go back, for such is the stow-teller's privilege, and place ourselves
in the year 1815, a little before the date of the commencement of the action
narrated in the first part of this book.
Had it not rained on the night of the 17th of June, 1815, the future of Europe
would have been changed. A few drops of water more or less prostrated Napoleon.
That Waterloo should be the end of Austerlitz, Providence needed only a little
rain, and an unseasonable cloud crossing thee sky sufficed for the overthrow of
a world:
The battle of Waterloo--and this gave Blucher time to come up--could not be com-
menced before half-past eleven. Why? Because the ground was soft. It was neces-
sary to wait for it to acquire some little firmness that the artillery
could manoeuvre.
Napoleon was an artillery officer, and he never forgot it. The foundation of
this prodigious captain was the man who, in his report to the Directory upon
Aboukir, said: Such of our balls killed six men. All his plans of battle were
made for projectiles. To converge. the artillery upon a given point was
his key
of victory. tk f 'cto He treated the strategy of the hostile general as a cit-
adel, and battered it to a breach. He overwhelmed the weak point with grape;
he joined and resolved battles with cannon. There was marksmanship in his gen-
ius. To destroy squares, to pulverise regiments, to break lines, to crush and
disperse masses, all this was for him, to strike, strike, strike incessantly,
and he entrusted this duty to the cannon ball. A formidable method, which,
joined to genius, made this sombre athlete of the pugilism of war invincible
for fifteen years.
On the 18th of June, 1815, he counted on his artillery the more because he had
the advantage in numbers. Wellington had only a hundred and fifty-nine guns;
Napoleon had two hundred and forty.
Had the ground been dry, and the artillery able to move, the ac-tion would have
been commenced at six o'clock in the morning. The battle would have been won
and finished at two o'clock, three hours before the Prussians turned the scale
of fortune.
How much fault is there on the part of Napoleon in the loss of this battle? Is
the shipwreck to be imputed to the pilot?
Was the evident physical decline of Napoleon accompanied at this time by a cor-
responding mental decline? had his twenty years of war worn out the sword as
well as the sheath, the soul as well as the body? was the veteran injuriously
felt in the captain? in a word, was that genius, as many considerable historians
have thought, under an eclipse? had he put on a frenzy to disguise his enfeeble-
ment from himself? did he begin to waver, and be bewildered by a random
blast?
was he becoming, a grave fault in a general, careless of danger? in that class
of material great men who may be called the giants of action, is there an age
when their genius becomes short-sighted? Old age has no hold on the geniuses of
the ideal; for the Dantes and the Michael Angelos, to grow old is to grow
great;
for the Hannibals and the Bonapartes is it to grow less? had Napoleon lost his
clear sense of victory? could he no longer recognise the shoal, no longer div-
ine the snare, no longer discern the crumbling edge of the abyss? had he
lost
the instinct of disaster? was he, who formerly knew all the paths of triumph,
and who, from the height of his flashing car, pointed them out with sovereign
finger, now under such dark hallucination as to drive his tumultuous train of
legions over the precipices? was he seized, at forty-six years, with a
sup-
reme madness? was this titanic driver of Destiny now only a monstrous break?
neck?
We think not.
His plan of battle was, all confess, a masterpiece. To march straight to
the
centre of the allied line, pierce the enemy, cut them in two, push the British
half upon Hal and the Prussian half upon Tongres, make of Wellington and Blucher
two fragments, carry Mont Saint Jean, seize Brussels, throw the German into the
Rhine, and the Englishman into the sea. All this, for Napoleon, was in this bat-
tle. What would follow, anybody can see.
We do not, of course, profess to give here the history of Waterloo; one of the
scenes that gave rise to the drama which we are describing hangs upon that battle;
but the history of the battle is not our subject; that history moreover is told,
and told in a masterly way, from one point of view by Napoleon, from the other
point of view by Charras. As for us, we leave the two historians to their
contest;
we are only a witness at a distance, a passer in the plain, a seeker bending over
this ground kneaded with human flesh, taking perhaps appearances for realities;
we have no right to cope in the name of science with a mass of facts in which
there is doubtless some mirage; we have neither the military experience nor the
strategic ability which authorises a system; in our opinion, a chain of accidents
overruled both captains at Waterloo; and when destiny is called in this mysterious
accused, we judge like the people, that artless judge.
IV A
THOSE who would get a clear idea of the battle of Waterloo have only to lay
down upon the ground in their mind a capital A. The left stroke of the t'-s
the road from Nivelles, the right stroke is the road from. Genappe, the cross
of the A is the sunken road from Ohain to Braine l'Alleud. The top of the A
is Mont Saint Jean, Wellington is there; the left-hand lower point is Hougomont
Reille is there with Jerome Bonaparte; the right-hand lower t:iutint is La Belle
Alliance, Napoleon is there. A little below the point where Zaciross of the A
meets and cuts the right stroke, is La Haie Sainte. At the ule of this cross is
the precise point where the final battle-word was hero. Spoken. There the lion
is placed, the involuntary symbol of the supreme heroism: of the Imperial
Guard.
The triangle contained at the top of the A, between the two strokes between the
two strokes and the cross. is the plateau Uf Mn: Saint ir.tn I he -mil:- gle
for this plateau was the whole of the battle.
The wings of the two tanks extended to the right and kit of the two roads from
Genappe and from Nivelks D'Erlon opposite Picton. Reille opposite Hill.
Behind the point of the A, behind the plateau of Mont SaintJean, is the forest
of Soignes.
As to the plain itself, we must imagine a vast undulating country each wave com-
manding the next, and these undulations rising towards Mont Saint Jean, are
there bounded by the forest.
Two hostile armies upon a field of battle are two wrestlers. Their arms are locked;
each seeks to throw the other. They grasp at every aid; a thicket is a point of
support; a corner of a wall is a brace for the shoulder; for lack of a few sheds
to lean upon a regiment loses its footing; a depression in the plain, movement of
the soil, a convenient cross path, a wood, a ravine, may catch the heel of this col-
ossus which is called an army, and prevent him from falling. He who leaves the field
is beaten. Hence, for the responsible chief, the necessity of examining the smallest
tuft of trees and appreciating the slightest details of contour.
Both generals had carefully studied the plain of Mont Saint Jean, now called the
plain of Waterloo. Already in the preceding year, Wellington, with the sagacity of
prescience, had examined it as a possible site for a great battle. On thisground
and for this contest Wellington had the favourable side, Napoleon the unfavourable.
The English army was above, the French army below.
To sketch here the appearance of Napoleon, on horseback, glass in hand, upon the
heights of Rossomtne, at dawn on the 18th of June, 1815, would be almost superfluous.
Before we point him out, everybody has seen him. This calm profile under the little
chapeau of the school of Brienne, this green uniform, the white facings concealing
the stars on his breast, the overcoat concealing the epaulets, the bit of red sash
under the waistcoat, the leather breeches, the white horse with his housings of pur-
ple velvet with crowned N.'s and eagles on the corners, the Hessian boots over silk
stockings, the silver spurs, the Marengo sword, this whole form of the last Caesar
lives in all imaginations, applauded by half the world, reprobated by the rest.
That form has long been fully illuminated; it did have a certain traditional obscur-
ity through which most heroes pass, and which always veils the truth for a longer
or shorter time; but now the history is luminous and complete.
This light of history is pitiless; it has this strange and divine quality that, all
luminous as it is, and precisely because it is luminous, it often casts a shadow
just where we saw a radiance; of the same man it makes two different phantoms, and
the one attacks and punishes the other, and the darkness of the despot struggles
with the splendour of the captain. Hence results a truer measure in the final judg-
ment of the nations. Babylon violated lessens Alexander; Rome enslaved lessens Cae-
sar; massacred Jerusalem lessens Titus. Tyranny lessens Titus. Tyranny
follows the
tyrant. It is woe to a man to leave behind him a shadow which has his form.
V. THE QUID OBSCURUM OF BATTLES
EVERBODY KNOWS the first phase of this battle; the difficult opening, uncertain,
hesitating, threatening for both armies, but for the English still more than for
the French.
It had rained all night; the ground was softened by the shower; water lay here
and there in the hollows of the plains as in basins; at some points the wheels
sank into the axles; the horses' girths dripped with liquid mud; had not the wheat
and rye spread down by that multitude of advancing carts filled the ruts and made
a bed under the wheels, all movement, particularly in the valleys on the side of
Papelotte, would have been impossible.
The affair opened late; Napoleon, as we have explained, had a habit of holding
all his artillery in hand like a pistol, aiming now at one point, anon at another
point of the battle, and he desired to wait until the field-batteries could wheel
and gallop freely; for this the sun must come out and dry the ground. But the sun
did not come out. He had not now the field of Austerlitz. When the first gun was
fired, the English General Colville looked at his watch and noted that it was
thirty-five minutes past eleven.
The battle commenced with fury, more fury perhaps than the emperor would have
wished, by the left wing of the French at Hougomont. At the same time Napoleon
attacked the centre by hurling the brigade of Quiot upon La Haie Sainte, and Ney
pushed the right wing of the French against the left wing of the English
which rested upon Papelotte.
The attack upon Hougomont was partly a feint; to draw Wellington that way, to make
him incline to the left; this was the plan. This plan would have succeeded had not
the four companies of the English Guards, and the brave Belgian; of Perponcher's
division, resolutely held the position, enabling Wellington, instead of massing
his forces upon that point, to limit himself to reinforcing them only by four add-
itional companies of guards, and a Brunswick battalion.
The attack of the French right wing upon Papelotte was intended to overwhelm the
English left, cut the Brussels road, bar passage of the Prussians, should
they come,
to carry Mont Saint Jean drive back Wellinton upon Hougomont, from thence upon Braine
l'Alleud, from thence upon Hal; nothing is clearer. With the exception of a few inci-
dents, this attack succeeded. Papelotte was taken; La Haie Sainte was carried.
Note a circumstance. There were in the English infantry, particularly in Kempt's bri-
gade, many new recruits. These young soldiers, before our formidable infantry, were
heroic; their inexperience bore itself boldly in the affair; they did especially good
service as skirmishers; the soldier as a skirmisher, to some extent left to himself,
becomes, so to speak, his own general; these recruits exhibited something of French
invention invention and French fury. This raw infantry showed enthusiasm. That dis-
pleased Wellington.
After the capture of La Haie Sainte, the battle wavered.
There is in this day from noon to four o'clock, an obscure interval; the middle of
this battle is almost indistinct, and partakes of the thickness of the conflict.
Twilight was gathering. You could perceive vast fluctuations in this mist, a giddy
mirage, implements of war now almost unknown, the flaming colbacks, the waving sabre-
taches, the crossed shoulder-belts, the grenade cartridge boxes, the dolmans of the
hussars, the red boots with a thousand creases, the heavy shakos festooned with
fringe, the almost black infantry of Brunswick united with the scarlet infantry of
England, the English soldiers with great white circular pads on their sleeves
for
epaulets, the Hanoverian light horse, with their oblong leather cap with copper
bands and flowing plumes of red horse-hair, the Scotch with bare knees and plaids,
the large white gaiters of our grenadiers; tableaux, not strategic lines, the need
of Salvator Rosa, not of Gribeauval.
A certain amount of tempest always mingles with a battle, Quid obscurum, quid
divinum. Each historian traces the particular lineament which pleases him in this
hurly-burly. Whatever may be the combinations of the generals, the shock of armed
masses has incalculable recoils in action, the two plans of the two leaders enter
into each other, and are disarranged by each other. Such a point of the battle-
field swallows up more combatants than such another, as the more or less spongy
soil drinks up water thrown upon it faster or slower. You are obliged to pour out
more soldiers there than you thought. An unforeseen expenditure. The line of battle
waves and twists like a thread; streams of blood flow regardless of logic; the
fronts of the armies undulate; regiments entering or retiring make capes and gulfs;
all these shoals are continually swaying back and forth before each other; where
infantry was, artillery comes; where artillery was, cavalry rushes up, battalions
are smoke. There was something there; look for it; it is gone; the vistas are dis-
placed; the sombre folds advance and recoil; a kind of sepulchral wind pushes for-
wards, crowds back, swells and disperses these tragic multitudes. What
is a hand
to hand fight? an oscillation. A rigid mathematical plan tells the story of a min-
ute, and not a day. To paint a battle needs those mighty painters who have chaos
in their touch. Rembrandt is better than Vandermeulen. Vandemeulen, exact
at noon,
lies at three o'clock. Geometry deceives; the hurricane alone is true. This is
what gives Folard the right to contradict Polybius. We must add that there is always
a certain moment when the battle degenerates into a combat, particularises itself,
scatters into innumerable details, which, to borrow the expression of Napoleon him-
self. "belong rather to the biography of the regiments than to the history of the
army." The historian, in this case, evidently has the right of abridgment. He can
only seize upon the principal outlines of the struggle, and it is given to no nar-
rator, however conscientious he may be, to fix absolutely the form of this
hor-
rible cloud which is called a battle.
This, which is true of all great armed encounters, is particularly applicable to
Waterloo.
However, in the afternoon, at a certain moment, the battle assumed precision.
VI. FOUR O'CLOCK IN THE AFTERNOON
TOWARDS four o'clock the situation of the English army was serious. The Prince of
Orange commanded the centre, I ItII the right wing, Pieton the left wing. The
Prince of Orange. desperate and intrepid, cried to the!Janosto-Belgian%:
Nassau!
Brunswick never retreat! Hill, exhausted, had fallen back upon Wellington. Picion
was dead. At the very moment that the English had taken from the French the colours
of the 105th of the line, the French had killed General Picton by a ball through
the head. For Wellington the battle had two points of support, I Iougonit
nit and
la!hale Sainte; Hougomont still held out, but was burning; La I laic Sainte had
been taken. Of the German battalion which defended it, forty-two men only survived;
all the officers, except five, were dead or prisoners. Three thousand combatants
were massacred in that grange. A sergeant of the English Guards, the best boxer
in England. reputed invulnerable by his comrades, had been killed by a
little
French drummer. Baring had been dislodged. Allen put to the sword. Several col-
ours had been lost, one belonging to Allen's division, and one to the Luneburg
battalion, borne by a prince of the family of DeuxPouts. The Scotch Grays were no
more: Ponsonby's heavy dragoons had been cut to pieces. That valiant cavalry had
given way before the lancers of Bro and the cuirassiers of Travers; of
their
twelve hundred horses there remained six hundred; of three lieutnant-colonels,
two lay on the ground, Hamilton wounded, Mather killed. Ponsonby had tallest.
pierced with seven thructc of a lance. Gordon was dead, Marsh was dead. Two slivi,
innc, the fifth aral the sixth. were destroyed.
Hougomont yielding. La Haie Sainte takcti, there was but one knot left, the
centre. That still held. Wellington reinforced it called thither Hill who was
at Merbe Braine, and Chasse who was at Braine l'Alleud
The centre of the English army, slightly concave, very dense and very compact,
held a strong position. It occupied the plateau of Mont Saint Jean, with the vil-
lage behind it and in front the declivity, which at that time was steep. At the
rear it rested on this strong stone-house, then an outlying property of Nivelles,
which marks the intersection of the roads, a sixteenth century pile so solid that
the balls ricocheted against it without injuring it. All about the plateau,
the English
had cut away the hedges here and there, made embrasures in the hawthorns,
thrust the mouth of a cannon between two branches, made loopholes in the thickets.
Their artillery was in ambush under the shrubbery. This punic labour, undoubtedly
fair in war, which allows snares, was so well done that Haxo, sent by the emperor
at nine o'clock in the morning to reconnoitre the enemy's batteries, saw nothing
of it, and returned to tell Napoleon that there was no obstacle, except the two
barricades across the Nivelles and Genappe roads. It was the season when grain is
at its height; upon the verge of the plateau, a battalion of Keropes brigade, the
95th, armed with carbines, was lying in the tall wheat.
Thus supported and protected, the centre of the Anglo-Dutch army was well situated.
The danger of this position was the forest of Soignes, then contiguous
to the bat-
tle-field and separated by the ponds of Groenendael and Boitsfort. An army could not
retreat there without being routed; regiments would have been dissolved immediately,
and the artillery would have been lost in the swamps. A retreat, according to the
opinion of many military men--contested by others, it is true--would have been an
utter rout.
'Wellington reinforced this centre by one of Chasse's brigades, taken from the right
wing, and one of Wincke's from the left in addition to Clinton's division. To his
English, to Halkett's regiments, to Mitchell's brigade, to Maitland's guards,
he
gave as supports the infantry of Brunswick, the Nassau contingent, Kleimansegge's
Hanovenans, and Ompteda's Germans. The right wing, as Charras says, was bent back
behind the centre. An enormous battery was faced with sand-bags at the place where
now stands what is called "the Waterloo Museum." Wellington had besides, in a lit-
tle depression of the ground, Somerset's Horse Guards, fourteen hundred. This was
the other half of that English cavalry, so justly celebrated. Ponsonby destroyed,
Somerset was left.
The battery, which, finished, would have been almost a redoubt, was disposed behind
a very low garden wall, hastily covered with sand-bags and a broad, sloping bank of
earth. This work was not finished; they bad not time to stockade it.
Wellington, anxious, but impassible, was on horseback, and remained there the whole
day in the same attitude, a little in from of the old mill of Mont Saint Jean, which
is still standing. under an elm which an Englishman, an enthusiastic vandal, has
since bought for two hundred francs, cut down and carried away. Wellington
was
frigidly heroic. The balls rained down. His aide-de-camp, Gordon, had just
fallen
at his side. Lord Hill, showing him a bursting shell, said: My Lord, what are your
instructions. and what orders do you leave us, if you allow yourself to
be killed?--
To follow my example, answered Wellington. To Clinton, he said laconically: Hold this
spot to the last man. The day was clearly going badly. Wellington cried to his old
companions of Talavera, Vittoria, and Salamanca: Boys! We must not be beat: what
would they say of us in England!
About four o'clock, the English line staggered backwards. All at once only the art-
illery and the sharp-shooters were seen on the crest of the plateau, the
rest disap-
peared; the regiments, driven by the shells and bullets of the French, fell back
into the valley now crossed by the cow-path of the farm of Mont Saint Jean;
a retro-
grade moyement took place, the battle front of the English way slipping.
away, Well-
ington gave ground. Beginning retreat! cried Napoleon.
VII. NAPOLEON IN GOOD HUMOR
THE emperor, although sick and hurt in his saddle by a local affliction,
had never
been in so good humour as on that day, Since morning, his impenetrable countenance
had worn a smile. On the 18th of June. 1815, that profound soul masked
in marble, shone
obscurely forth. The dark-browned man of Austerlitz was gay at Waterloo.
The greatest,
when foredoomed, present these contradictions. Our joys are shaded. The
perfect smile
belongs to God alone.
Ridet Caesar, Pompeiuts flebit, said the legionaries of the Fulminatrix Legion. Pom-
pey at this time was not to weep. but it is certain that Caesar laughed.
From the previous evening, and in the night, at one o'cle,eh. exploring on horseback,
in the tempest and the rain, with Itertrant the hills near Rossomtne, and gratified
to see the long line of the English fires illuminating all the horizon from Frischemont
to Braine-l'Alleud, it had seemed to him that destiny, for which he had
made an
appointment. for a certain day upon the field of Watertrloo, was punctual: he stopped
his horse. and remained some time motionless, watching the lightning and listening
to the thunder; this fatalist was heard to utter in the darkness these myserious
words: "We are in accord." Napoleon was deceived. They were no longer in accord.
He had not taken a moment's sleep; every instant of that night had brought him a new
joy. He passed along the whole line of the advanced guards, stopping here and
there
to speak to the pickets. At half-past two, near the wood of Hougomont, he heard the
tread of a column in march; he thought for a moment that Wellington was falling back.
He said: It is the English rear guard startineo get away. I shall take the six thou-
sand Englishmen who have just arrived at Ostend prisoners. He chatted freely; he had
recovered that animation of the disembarkation of the first of March; when he showed
to the Grand Marshal the enthusiastic peasant of Gulf Juan crying: Well, Bertrand,
there is a reinforcement already! On the night of the 17th of June, he made fun of
Wellington: This little Englishman must have his lesson, said Napoleon. The rain re-
doubled; it thundered while the emperor was speaking.
At half-past three in the morning one illusion was gone; officers sent out on a recon-
naissance announced to him that the enemy was making no movement. Nothing was stir-
ring, not a bivouac fire was extinguished. The English army was asleep. Deep silence
was upon the earth; there was no noise save in the sky. At four o'clock, a peasant
was brought to him by the scouts; this peasant had acted as guide to a brigade of
English cavalry, probably Vivian's brigade on its way to take position at the vil-
lage of Ohain, at the extreme left. At five o'clock, two Belgian deserters reported
to him that they had just left their regiment, and that the English army was expect-
ing a battle. So much the better! exclaimed Napoleon, I would much rather cut them
to pieces than repulse them.
In the morning, he alighted in the mud, upon the high bank at the corner of the road
from Planchenoit, had a kitchen table and a peasant's chair brought from the farm of
Rossomme, sat down, with a bunch of straw for a carpet, and spread out upon the table
the plan of the battle-field, saying to Soult: "Pretty chequer-board!"
In consequence of the night's rain, the convoys of provisions, mired in the softened
roads, had not arrived at dawn; the soldiers had not slept, and were wet and fasting;
but for all this Napoleon cried out joyfully to Ney: We have ninety chances
in a hundred.
At eight o'clock the emperor's breakfast was brought. He had invited several generals.
While breakfasting, it was related, that on the night but one before, Wellington was at
a ball in Brussels, given by the Duchess of Somerset; and Soult, rude soldier that he
was, with his archbishop's face, said: The ball is today. The emperor jested with Ney,
who said: Wellington will not be so simple as to wait for your majesty. This was his
manner usually. He was fond of joking, says Fleury de Chaboulon. His character
at bottom
was a playful humour, says Gourgaud. He abounded in pleasantries, oftener
grotesque
than witty, says Benjamin Constant. These gaieties of a giant are worthy
of remembrance.
He called his grenadier, "tbr growlers;" he would pinch their ears and would pull their
mustaches. The emperor did nothing but play tricks on us: so one of them said. During
the mysterious voyage from the Wand of Etta to France, on the 27th of February, in the
open sea. the French brig-of-war Zephyr having met the brig Inconstant, on which Napol-
eon was concealed, and having asked the Inconstant for news of Napoleon,
the emperor,
who still had on his hat the white and amaranth cockade, sprinkled with bees, adopted
by him in the island of Elba, took the speaking trumpet, with a laugh,
and answered
himself: the emperor is getting on finely. He who laughs in this way is on familiar
terms with events; Napoleon had several of these bursts of laughter during his Water-
loo breakfast. After breakfast. for a quarter of an hour, he collected his thoughts:
then two generals were seated on the bundle of straw, pen in hand, and
paper on knee,
and the emperor dictated the order of battle.
At nine o'clock, at the instant when the French army. drawn up and set in motion in five
columns, was deployed, the divisions urn two lines. the artillery between the brigades.
music at the head. playing marches, with the rolling of drums and the sounding
of trum-
pets--mighty, vast, joyous,---a sea of casques. sabres, and bayonets in
the horizon, the
emperor. excited, cried out, and repeated: "Magnificent! magnificent!"
Between nine o'clock and half-past ten, the whole army, which seems incredible, had tak-
en position, and Iva, ranged in six lines, forming, to repeat the expression of the em-
peror, "the figure of six V's." A few moments after the formation
of the line of battle,
in the midst of this profound silence, like that at the commencement of
a storm, which
precedes the fight, seeing as they filed by the three batteries of twelve
pounders, de-
tached by his orders from the three corps of D'Esion, Relic, and Lobau, to commence the
action In attacking Mont Saint Jean at the intersection of the roads from NI: elks and
Genappe, the emperor struck I inso on the shoulder, There are twenty- four pretty girls,
General.
Sure of the event, he encouraged with a smile, as they passed before him,
the
company of sappers of the first corps, which he had designated to erect
barr-
icades in Mont Saint Jean. as soon as the village was carried. All this serenity
was disturbed by but a word of haughty pity; on seeing, massed at his left,
at
a place where there is today a great tomb, those wonderful Scotch Grays,
with
their superb horses, he said: "It is a pity."
Then he mounted his horse, rode forward from Rossome, and chose for his point of
view a narrow grassy ridge, at the right ofthe road from Grenappe to Brussels,
which was his second station during the battle. The third station, that of seven
o'clock betweenLa Belle Alliance and La Wale Sainte is terrible; it is a consid-
erable hill which can still be seen, and behind which the guard was massed in a
depression of the plain. About this hill the balls ricocheted over the paved road
up to Napoleon. As at Brienne, he had over his headthe whistling of balls and bul-
lets. There have been gathered, old upon the spot pressed by his horse's feet,
crushed bullets, old sabreblades, and shapeless projectiles, eaten with
rust. Scara
rubigine. Some years ago, a sixty-pound shell was dug up there, still loaded, the
fuse having broken off even with the bomb. It was at this last station that the
emperor said to his guide Lacoste, a hostile peasant, frightened, tied to a hussar's
saddle, turning around at every volley of grape, and trying to hide behind Napoleon:
Dolt, this is shameful. You will get yourself shot in the back. He who writes these
lines has himself found in the loose slope of that hill, by turning up
the earth,
the remains of a bomb, disintegrated by the rust of forty-six years, and some old
bits of iron which broke like alder twigs in his finger.
The undulations of the diversely inclined plains, which were the theatre of the en-
counter of Napoleon and Wellington, are, as everybody knows, no longer what they
were on the 18th of June, 1815. In taking from that fatal field wherewith to make
its monument, its real form was destroyed: history, disconcerted, no longer recognises
herself upon it. To glorify it, it has been disfigured. Wellington, two years after-
wards, on seeing Waterloo, exclaimed: They have changed my battle-field Where to-
day is the great pyramid of earth surmounted by the lion, there was a ridge
which
sank away towards the Nivelles road in a practicable slope, but which, above the
Genappe road, was almost an escarpment. The elevation of this escarpment, silent
may be measured today by the height of the two great burial mounds which
embank
the road from Genappe to Brussels; the English tomb at the left, the German tomb
at the right. There is no French tomb. For France that whole plain is a sepulchre.
Thanks to thousands and thousands of loads of earth used in the mound of a hundred
and fifty feet high and a half a mile in circuit, the plateau of Mont St. Jean is
accessible by a gentle slope; on the day of the battle, especially on the side of
La Hale Sainte, the declivity was steep and abrupt. The descent was there so prec-
ipitous that the English artillery did not see the farm below them at the bottom
of the valley, the centre of the combat. On the 18th of June, 1815, the rain had
gullied out this steep descent still more; the mud made the ascent still more dif-
ficult; it was not merely laborious, but men actually stuck in the mire. Along the
crest of the plateau ran a sort of ditch, which could not possibly have been sus-
pected by a distant observer.
What was this ditch? we will tell. Braine l'Alleud is a village of Belgium. Ohain
is another. These villages, both hidden by the curving of the ground, are
con-
nected by a road about four miles long which crosses an undulating plain, often
burying itself in the hills like a furrow, so that at certain points it is a rav-
ine. In 1815, as now, this road cut the crest of the plateau of Mont Saint
Jean
between the two roads from Genappe and Nivelles; only, today it is on a level
with the plain; whereas then it was sunk between high bank,. It's two slopes were
taken away for the monumental mound. That road was and is still a trench for the
greater part of its length: a trench in some parts a dozen feet deep, the slopes
of which are so steep as to slide down here and there, especially in winter,
after showers. Accidents happen there. The road was so narrow at the entrance of
Braine l'Allend that a traveller was once crushed by a waggon as is attested by
a stone cross standing near the cemetery, which gives the name of the dead.
Mon-
sieur Bernard Petty, snerchant of Brussels, and the date of the accident, February,
1637,' It was so deep at the plateau of Mont Saint Jean, that a peasant, Matthew
Nicaise, had been crushed there in 1783 by thy falling of the bank, as another
stone cross attested; the top of this has disappeared in the changes, but its o-
verturned pedestal is still visible upon the sloping bank at the left of the road
between Li I laic Sainte and the farm of Mont Saint Jean.
On the day of the battle, this sunken road, of which nothing gave warning, along
the crest of Mont Saint Jean, a ditch at the summit of the escarpment, a trench
concealed by the ground, was invisible, that is to say terrible.
VIII. THE EMPEROR PUTS A QUESTION TO THE GUIDE LACOSTE
On the morning of Waterloo then, Napoleon was satisfied.
He was right; the plan of battle which he had conceived, as we have shown, was indeed
admirable.
After the battle was once commenced, its very diverse fortune, the resistance
of Hou-
gomont, the tenacity of I.a link Sainte, Banduin killed, For put hors de
ronthat, the unex-
pected wall against which Snye's brigade was broken, the fatal blunder of Gunk:it:not in
having neither grenades nor powder, the miring of the batteries, the fifteen pieces without
escort cut off by Uxbridge in a deep cut of a road, the slight effect of
the bombs that
fell within the English lines, burying themselves in the soil softened
by the rain and
only succeeding in making volcanoes of mud, so that the explosion was changed into a
splash, the uselessness of Pire's demonstration upon Braine I'Alleud, all
this cavalry,
fifteen squadrons, almost destroyed, the English right wing hardly disturbed, the left
wing hardly moved, the strange mistake of Ney in massing, instead of drawing
out, the
four divisions of the first corps, the depth of twenty-seven ranks and the front of two
hundred men offered up in this manner to grape, the frightful gaps made
by the balls
in these masses, the lack of connection between the attacking columns, the slanting bat-
tery suddenly unmasked upon their flank, Bourgeois, Donzelot, and Durutte entangled,
Quiot repulsed, Lieutenant Vieux, that Hercules sprung from the Polytechnic School,
wounded at the moment when he was beating down with the blows of an axe the door of La
Haic Sainte under the plunging fire of the English barricade barring the turn of the
road from Genappe to Brussels, Marcognet's caught between infantry and cavalry, shot
down at arm's length in the wheat field by Best and Pack, sabred by Ponsonby, his bat-
tery of seven pieces spiked, the Prince of Saxe Weimar holding and keeping Frischemont
and Smohain in spite of Count D'Erlon, the colours of the 105th taken, the colours of
the 43rd taken, this Prussian Black Hussar, brought in by the scouts of the flying col-
umn of three hundred chasseurs scouring the country between Wavre and Planchenoit,
the disquieting things that this prisoner had said, Grouchy's delay, the
fifteen hundred
men killed in less than an hour in the orchard of Hougomont, the eighteen hundred men
fallen its still less time around La Hale Sainte--all these stormy events, passing like
battle clouds before Napoleon, had hardly disturbed his countenance, and had not dark-
ened its imperial expression of certainty. Napoleon was accustomed to look
upon war
fixedly; he never made figure by figure the tedious addition of details; the figures
mattered little to him, provided they gave this total: Victory; though beginnings went
wrong he was not alarmed at it, he who believed himself master and possessor of the
end; he knew how to wait, believing himself beyond contingency, and he treated destiny
as an equal treats an equal. He appeared to say to Fate: thou would'st not dare.
Half light and half shadow, Napoleon felt himself protected in the right, and tolerated
in the wrong. He had, or believed that he had, a connivance, one might almost say com-
plicity, with events, equivalent to the ancient invulnerability. However, when one has
Beresina, Leipsic, and Fontainebleau behind him, it seems as if he might
distrust Wat-
erloo. A mysterious frown is becoming visible in the depths of the sky.
At the moment when Wellington drew back, Napoleon started up. He saw the
plateau of
Mont Saint Jean suddenly laid bare, and the front of the English army disappear.
It
rallied, but kept concealed. The emperor half rose in his stirrups. The flash of vic-
tory passed into his eyes.
Wellington hurled back on the forest of Soignes and destroyed; that was
the final over-
throw of England by France; it was Cressy Poitiers, Malplaquet, and Ramillies
aveng-
ed. The man of Marengo was wiping out Agincourt.
The emperor then, contemplating this terrible turn of fortune, swept his
glass for the
last time over every point of the battle-field. His guard standing behind
with grounded
arms, looked up to him with a sort of religion. He was reflecting; he was
examining
the slopes, noting the ascents, scrutinising the tuft of trees, the square
rye field, the
footpath; he seemed to count every bush. He looked for some time at the English barri-
cades on the two roads, two large abattis of trees, that on the Genappe
road above La
Haie Sainte, armed with two cannon, which alone, of all the English artillery,
bore
upon the bottom of the field of battle, and that of the Nivellei road where glistened
the Dutch bayonets of Chasse's brigade. He noticed near that barricade
the old chapel
of Saint Nicholas, painted white, which is at the corner of the cross-road
toward
Braine l'Alleud. He bent over and spoke in an under tone to the guide Lacoste. The guide
made a negative sign of the head, probably treacherous.
The emperor rose up and reflected. Wellington had fallen back. It remained only to com-
plete this repulse by a crushing charge.
Napoleon, turning abruptly, sent off a courier at full speed to Paris to announce that
the battle was won. Napoleon was one of those geniuses who rule the thunder. He had
found his thunderbolt. He ordered Milhaud's cuirassiers to carry the plateau of Mont
Saint Jean.
IX. THE UNLOOKED FOR
There were three thousand five hundred. They formed a line of half a mile. They
were gigantic men on colossal horses. There were twenty-six squadrons and
they
had behind them, as a suppot, the. division of Lefebvre Desnouettes, the
hundred
and six gendarmes d'elite, the Chasseurs of the Guard, seven hundred and
ninety-
seven men. and the Lancers of the Guard, eight hundred eighty lances They wore
casques with plumes, and cuirasses of wrought iron, with horse pistols in their
holsters and long sabre-swords. In the morning, they had been the admiration of
the whole army, when at nine o'clock, with trumpets sounding, and all the bands
playing, Veillons au salut de l'empire, they came, in heavy column, one of their bat-
teries on their flank, the other at their centre, and deployed in two ranks be-
tween the. Genappe road and Frischemont, and took their position of battle
in
this powerful second line, so wisely made up by Napoleon, which, having
at its ex-
treme left the cuirassiers of Kellerman, and at its extreme right the cuirassiers
of Milhaud, had, so to speak, two wings of iron.
Aide-de-camp Bernard brought them the emperor's order. Ney drew his sword and
placed himself at their head. The .enormous squadrons began to move.
Then was seen a fearful sight.
All this cavalry, with sabres drawn, banners waving and trumpets sounding, formed
in column by division, descended with an even movement and as one man--with the
precision of a bronze battering-ram opening a breach--the hill of La Belle Alli-
ance, sank into that formidable depth where so many men had already fallen, disa-
ppeared in the smoke, then, rising from this valley of shadow reappeared on the
other side, still compact and serried, mounting at full trot, through a cloud of
grape emptying itself upon them, the frightful acclivity of mud of the
plateau of
Mont Saint Jean. They rose, serious, menacing, imperturable; in the intervals of
the musketry and artillery could be heard the sound of this colossal tramp. Being
in two divisions, they formed two columns; Wathier's division had the right, De-
lord's the left. From a distance they would be taken for two immense serpents of
steel stretching themselves towards the crest of the plateau. That ran through
the battle like a prodigy.
Nothing like it had been seen since the taking of the grand redoubt at La Moscowa
by the heavy cavalry; Murat was not there, but Ney was there. It seemed as if this
mass had become a monster, and had but a single mind. Each squadron undulated
and swelled like the ring of a polyp. They could be seen through the thick
smoke, as
it was broken here and there. It was one pell-mell of casques, cries, sabres; a
furious bounding of horses among the cannon, and the flourish of trumpets, a ter-
rible and disciplined tumult; over all, the cuirasses, like the scales of a hydra.
These recitals appear to belong to another age. Something like this vision appeared,
doubtless, in the old Orphic epics which tell of centaurs, antique hippanthropes,
those titans with human faces, and chests like horses, whose gallop scaled Olympus,
horrible, invulnerable, sublime; at once gods and beasts.
An odd numerical coincidence, twenty-six battalions were to receive these twenty-
six squadrons. Behind the crest of the plateau. under cover of the masked battery,
the English infantry, formed in thirteen squares, two battalions to the square,
and upon two lines--seven on the first, and six oil the second--with musket to the
shoulder, and eye upon their sights, waiting calm, silent. and immovable. They
could not see the cuirassiers, and the cuirassiers could not see them.
They listened
to the rising of this tide of men They heard the increasing sound of three thousand
horses. the alternate and measured striking of their hoofs at full trot, the rattling
of the cuirasses, the clicking of the sabres, and a sort of fierce roar of the coming
host. There was a moment of fearful silence, then. suddenly, a long line of raised
arms brandishing sabres appeared above the crest, with casques, trumpets, and
standards, and three thousand faces with grey moustaches, crying. Vive l'emper-
eur! this cavalry debouched on the plateau, and it was like tin: beginning of an
earthquake.
All at once, tragic to relate, at the left of the English. and on our right, the
head of the column of cuirassiers reared with a frightful clamour. Arrived at the
culminating point of the crest, unmanageable, full of fury, and bent upon
the ex-
termination of the square, and cannons, the cuirassiers saw between themselves
and the English a ditch, a grave. It was the sunken road of Ohain.
It was a frightful moment. There was the ravine, unlooked for, yawning at the very
feet of the horses, two fathoms deep between its double slope. The second
rank
pushed in the first, the third pushed in the second; the horses reared,
threw them-
selves over, fell upon their backs, and struggled with their feet in the air, pil-
ing up and overturning their riders; no power to retreat: the whole column
was no-
thing but a projectile. The force acquired to crush the English crushed
the French.
The inexorable ravine could not yield until it was filled; riders and horses
roll-
ed in together pell-mell, grinding each other, making common flesh in this dreadful
gulf, and when this grave was full of living men, the rest marched over them and
passed on. Almost a third of Dubois' brigade sank into this abyss.
Here the loss of the battle began.
A local tradition. which evidently exaggerates, says that two thousand horses and
fifteen hundred men were hurled in the sunken road of Chain. This undoubtedly com-
prises all the other 'bodies thrown into this ravine on the morrow after the battle.
Napoleon, before ordering this charge of Milhaucrs cuirass.ier, had examined the
ground, but could not see tisk hollow road, which did not make even a wrinkle on the
surface of the plateau. Warurel. however, and put on his guard IT the little white
chapel which marks its junction with the Niceties road, he had, probably en the con-
tingency of an obstacle, put a quection to the guile Lan:str. The guide bad atom:
ern! no. It ma) al... be s:.61;ha: th, t.hal:c of a peasant's head came the entac-
trethe m Nap,Trnn.
Still other fatalities must arise.
Was it possible that Narleon riltoulil %, in Oa, battle: Wt no. Why? Because of
Wellington? Because of Blucher? No. Because of God.
For Bonaparte to be conqueror at Waterloo was not in the lay of the nineteenth cen-
tury. Another series of facts were preparing in which Napoleon had no place. The
ill-will of events had long been announced.
It was time that this vast man should fall.
The excessive weight of this man in human destiny disturbed the equilibrium. This
individual counted, of himself alone, more than the universe besides. These pleth-
oras of all human vitality concentrated in a single head, the world mounting to
the brain of one man, would be fatal to civilisation if they should endure. The
moment had come for incorruptible supreme equity to look to it. Probably
the prin-
ciples and elements upon which regular gravitations in the moral order as well as
in the material depend, began to murmur. Reeking blood, overcrowded cemeteries,
weeping mothers--these are formidable pleaders. When the earth is suffering
from a
surcharge, there are mysterious moanings from the deeps which the heavens hear.
Napoleon bad been impeached before the Infinite, and his fall was decreed.
He vexed God.
Waterloo is not a battle; it is the change of front of the universe.
X. THE PLATEAU OF MONT SAINT JEAN
AT the same time with the ravine, the artillery was unmasked.
Sixty cannon and the thirteen squares thundered and flashed into the cuirassiers.
The brave General Delord gave the military salute to the English battery. All the
English flying artillery took position in the squares at a gallop. The cuirassiers
had not even time to breathe. The disaster of the sunken road had decimated, but
not discouraged them. They were men who, diminished in number, grew greater in
heart.
Wathier's column alone had suffered from the disaster; Dc-lord's, which Ney bad
sent obliquely to the left, as if he had a presentiment of the snare, arrival en-
tire.
The cuirassiers hurled themselves upon the English squares.
At full gallop, with free rein, their sabres in their teeth, and their
pistols
in their hands, the attack began.
There are moments in battle when the soul hardens a man even to changing the
soldier into a statue, and all this; flesh becomes granite. The English
battalions,
desperately assailed, did not yield an inch.
Then it was frightful.
All sides of the English squares were attached at once, A whirlwind of
frenzy
enveloped them. This frigid infantry remained impassible. The first rank, with
knee on the ground, received the cuirassiers on their bayonets, the second
shot
them down; behind the second rank, the cannoneers loaded their guns, the
front
of the square opened, made way for an eruption of grape, and closed again.
The
cuirassiers answered by rushing upon them with crushing force,. Their great
horses
reared, trampled upon the ranks. leaped over the bayonets and fell, gigantic,
in the
midst of these four living walls. The balls made gaps in the ranks of the
cuirassiers,
the cuirassiers made breaches in the squares. Files of men disappeared,
ground
down beneath the horses' feet. Bayonets were buried in the bellies of these centaurs.
Hence a monstrosity of wounds never perhaps seen elsewhere. The squares. con-
sumed by this furious cavalry, closed up without wavering. Inexhaustible in grape,
they kept up an explosion in the midst of their assailant:. It was a monstrous sight.
These squares were battalions no longer, they were crates; these cuirassiers were
cavalry no longer, they were a tempest. Each square was a volcano attacked by a
thunder-cloud; the lava fought with the lightning.
The square on she extreme right, the most exposed of all, being in the
open field,
was almost annihilated at the first shock. It was formed of the 75th regiment of
highlanders. The piper in the centre, while the work of extermination wag going on,
profoundly oblivious of all about him, casting down his melancholy eye
full of the
shadows of forests and lakes, seated upon a drum, his bagpipe under his arm,
was playing his mountain airs. These Scotchmen died thinking of Ben Lothian, as
the Greeks died remembering Argos. The sabre of a cuirassier, striking
down the pi-
broch and the arm which bore it, caused the strain to cease by killing the player.
The cuirassiers, relatively few in number, lessened by the catastrophe
of the
ravine, had to contend with almost the whole the English army, but they
multiplied them-
selves, each man becoming equal to ten. Nevertheless some Hanoverian battalions
fell
back. Wellington saw it and remembered his cavalry. Had Napoleon, at that
very mo-
ment, remembered his infantry, he would have woin the battle. This forgetfulness was
his great fatal blunder.
Suddenly the assailiing cuirassers perceived that they were assailed, The English cavalry
was upon their back. Beroe them squares, behind them Somerset; Somerset, with the
fourteen hundred dragoon guards. Somerset had on his right Dornberg with his German
light-horse and on his left Trip, with the Belgian carbineers. The cuirassiers, attacked
front, flank, and rear, by infantry and cavalry,. were compelled to face in all directions.
What was that to them? They were a whirlwind. Their valour became unspeakable.
Besides, they had behind them the ever thundering artillery. All that was necessary in
order to wound such men in the back. One of their cuirasses, with a hole
in the left
shoulder-plate made by a musket ball, is in the collection of the Waterloo Museum.
With such Frenchmen only such Englishmen could cope.
It was no longer a conflict, it was a darkness, a fury, a giddy vortex
of souls and cou-
rage, a hurricane of sword-flashes. In an instant the fourteen hundred horse guards
were but eight hundred; their lieutenant, fell dead. Ney rushed up with the lancers and
chasseurs of Lefebvre-Desnouettes. The plateau of Mont Saint Jean was taken, retaken,
taken again. The cuirassiers left the ecavalry to return to the infantry, or more cor-
rectly, all this terrible multitude wrestled with each other without letting go their
hold. The squares still held. There were twelve assaults. Ney had four horses killed
under him. Half of the cuirassiers lay on the plateau. This struggle lasted two hours.
The English army was terribly shaken. There is no doubt, if they had not been crippled
in their first shock by the disaster of the sunken road, the cuirassiers would have
overwhelmed the centre, and decided the victory. This wonderful cavalry astounded Clin-
ton, who had seen Talavera and Badajos. Wellington, though three-fourths conquered,
was struck with heroic admiration. He said in a low voice: "splendid!"
The cuirassiers annihilated seven squares out of thirteen, took or spiked sixty pieces
of cannon, and took from the English regiments six colours, which three cuirassiers and
three chasseurs of the guard carried to the emperor before the farm of La Belle Alliance.
The situation of Wellington was growing worse. This strange battle was like a duel be-
tween two wounded infuriates who, while yet fighting and resisting, lose all their
blood. Which of the two shall fall first?
The struggle of the plateau continued.
How far did the cuirassiers penetrate? None can tell. One thing is certain:
the day
after the battle, a cuirassier and his horse were found dead under the frame of the hay-
scales at Mont Saint jean, at the point where the four roads from Nivelles, Genappe, La
Itulpe, and Brussels meet. This horseman had pierced the E.nglish lines. One of the men
who took away the body still lives at Mont Saint Jean. His name is Dehaze; he was then
eighteen years old.
Wellington felt that he was giving way. The crisis was upon him.
The cuirassiers had not succeeded, in this sense, that the centre was not. broken. All
holding the plateau, nobody held it, and in fact it remained for the most part with
the English. Wellington held the village and the crowning plain; Ney held only the crest
and the slope. On both sides they seemed rooted in this funebral soil.
But the enfeeblement of the English appeared irremediable. The haemorrhage
of this army was horrible. Kempt, on the left wing, called for reinforcements.
"Impossible," answered Wellington; "we must die on the spot we now occupy."
Almost at the same moment--singular coincidence which depicts the exhaustion
of both armies--Ney sent to Napoleon for infantry, and Napoleon exclaimed:
"Infantry! where does he expect me to take them! Does he expect me to make
them?"
However, the English army was farthest gone. The furious onslaughts of these
great squadrons with iron cuirasses and steel breastplates had ground up the
infantry. A few men about a flag marked the place of a regiment; battalions
were now commanded by captains or lieutenants. Alten's division, already so
cut up at La Haie Sainte, was almost destroyed; the intrepid Belgians of Van
Kluze's brigade strewed the rye field along the Nivelles road; there were
hardly any left of those Dutch grenadiers who, in 1811, joined to our ranks
in Spain, fought against Wellington, and who, Li 1815, rallied on the English
side, fought against Napoleon. The loss in officers was heavy. Lord Uxbridge,
who buried his leg next day, had a knee fractured. If, on the side of the
French, in this struggle of the cuirassiers, Delord, l'Heritier, Colbert, Dm:).
Travers, and Blancard were hors de combat, on the side of the English, Alten
was wounded, Barrie was wounded. Delancey was killed, Van Meeren was killed.
Ompteda was killed, the entire staff of Wellington was decimated, and England
had the worst share in this balance of blood. The second regiment of foot
guards had lost five lieutenant-colonels, four captains, and three ensigns;
the first battalion of the thirtieth infantry had lost twenty-four officers
and one hundred and twelve soldiers; the seventy-ninth Highlanders had twenty-
four officers wounded, eighteen officers killed, and four hundred and fifty
soldiers slain. Cumberland's Hanoverian hussars, an entire regiment, having
at its head Colonel Hacke, who was afterwards court-martialed and broken,
had drawn rein before the fight, and were in flight in the Forest of Soignes,
spreading the panic as far as Brussels. Carts, ammunition-wagons, baggage-
waggons, ambulances full of wounded, seeing the French gain ground, and ap-
proach the forest, lied precipitately; the Dutch, sabred by the French cav-
alry, cried murder! From Vert-Coucou to Groenendael, for a distance of near-
ly six miles in the direction towards Brussels, the roads, according to the
testimony of witnesses still alive, were choked with fugitives. This panic
was such that it reached the Prince of Conde at Malines, and Louis XVIII.
at Ghent. With the exception of the small reserve drawn up in echelon behind
the hospital established at the farm of Mont Saint Jean, and the brigades
of Vivian and Vandeleur on the flank of, the left wing, Wellington's caval-
ry was exhausted. A number of batteries lay dismounted. These facts are con-
fessed by Siborne; and Pringle, exaggerating the disaster, says even that
the Anglo-Dutch army.was reduced to thirty-four thousand men. The Iron Duke
remained calm, but his lips were pale. The Austrian Commissary, Vincent,
the Spanish Commissary,!Nava, present at the battle inthe English staff,
thought the duke was beyond hope. At five o'clock Wellington drew out his
watch, and was heard to murmur these sombre words: Blucher, or nigh!!
It was about this time that a distant line of bayonets glistened on the
heights beyond Frischemont.
Here is the turning-point in this colossal drama.
XI. SAD GUIDE FOR NAPOLEON; GOOD GUIDE FOR BULOW
WE understand the bitter mistake of Napoleon; Grouchy hoped for, Blucher
arriving; death instead of life.
Destiny has such turnings. Awaiting the world's throne, Saint Helena became
visible.
If the little cowboy, who acted as guide to Bulow, Blucher's lieutenant,
had advised him to debauch from the forest above Prischernont rather than
below Planchenoit, the shaping of the nineteenth century would perhaps
have been different. Napoleon would have won the battle of Waterloo. By
any other road than below Planchenoit, the Prussian army would have
brought up at a ravine impassable for artillery, and Bulow would not have
arrived.
Now. an hour of delay, as the Prussian general Muffling declares, and Black-
er would not have found Wellington in position; "the battle was lost."
It was time, we have seen, that Bulow should arrive. He had bivouacked at
Dion le Mont, and started on at dawn. But the roads were impracticable,
and
his division stuck in the mire. The cannon sank to the hubs in the ruts.
Furthermore, he had to cross the Dyle an the narrow bridge of Wavre; the
street leading to the bridge had been fired by the French; the caissons
and artillery waggons, being unable to pass between two rows of burning
houses, had to wait till the fire was extinguished. It was noon before
Bulow could reach Chapelle Saint Lambert.
Had the action commenced two hours earlier, it would have been finished at
four o'clock, and Blucher would have fallen upon a field already won by
Napoleon. Such are these immense chances, proportioned to an infinity,
which we cannot grasp.
As early as mid-day, the emperior, first of all, with his field gkiss, per-
ceived in the extreme horizon something which fixed his attention. He said:
"I see yonder a cloud which appears to me to be troops." Then he asked the
Duke of Dalmatia: "Soult, what do you see towards Chapelle Saint Lambert?"
The marshal, turning his glass that way, answered: "Four or five thousand
men, sire. Grouchy, of course." Meanwhile it remained motionless in the
haze. The 'glasses of the whole staff studied "the cloud" pointed out by
the emperor. Some said: "They are columns halting." The most said: "It is
trees." The fact is, that the cloud did not stir. The emperor detached
Damon's division of light cavalry to reconnoitre this obscure point.
Bulow, in fact, had not moved. His vanguard was very weak, and could do
nothing. He had to wait for the bulk of his corps d'armee, and he was
ordered to concentrate his force before enter' ing into' line; but at
five o'clock, seeing Wellington's peril, Blucher ordered Bulow to attack,
and uttered these remarkable words: "We must give the English army a
breathing spell."
Soon after the divisions of Losthin, Hiller, Hacke, and Ryssel deployed
in front of Lobau's corps, the cavalry of Prince William of Prussia de-
bouched from the wood of Paris, Planchenoit was in flames, and the
Prussian balls began to rain down even in the ranks of the guard in re-
serve behind Napoleon.
XII. THE GUARD
THE rest is known; the irruption of a third army, the battle thrown
out of joint, eighty-six pieces of artillery suddenly thundering
forth, Pirch the First coming up with Bulow, Ziethen's cavalry led by
Blucher in person, the French crowded back, Marcognet swept from the
plateau of Ohain, Durutte dislodged from Papelotte, Donzelot and Quiot
recoiling, Lobau taken en echarpe, a new battle falling at night-fall
upon our dismantled regiments, the whole English line assuming the of-
fensive and pushed forward, the gigantic gap made in the French army,
the-English grape and the Prussian grape lending mutual aid, extermi-
nation, disaster in front, disaster in flank, the guard entering into
line amid this terrible crumbling.
Feeling that they were going to their death, they cried out: Vive
l'Empereur! There is nothing more touching in history than this'death-
agony bursting forth in acclamations.
The sky had been overcast all day. All at once, at this very mament:--
it was eight o'clock at night--the clouds in the horizon broke, and
through the elms on the Nivelles road streamed the sinister red light
of the setting sun. The rising sun shone upon Austerlitz.
Each battalion of the guard, for this final effort, was commanded,
by a general. Friant, Michel, Roguet, Harlet, Mallet, Pond de
Morvan, were there. When the tall caps of the grenadiers of the
guard with their large eagle plates appeared, symmetrical, drawn up
in line, calm, in the smoke of that conflict, the enemy felt respect
for France; they thought they saw twenty victories entering upon the
field of battle, with wings extended, and those who were conquerors,
thinking themselves conquered, recoiled; but Wellington cried: "Up,
guards, and at them!" The red regiment of English guards, lying be-
hind the hedges, rose up, a shower of grape riddled the tricoloured
flag fluttering about our eagles, all hurled themselves forward, and
the final carnage began. The Imperial Guard felt the army slipping
away around them in the gloom, and the vast overthrow of the rout;
they heard the sauve qui pent!* which had replaced the vive l'Empereur!
and, with flight behind them, they held on their course, battered
more and more and dying faster and faster at every step. There were
no weak souls or cowards there. The privates of that band were as
heroic as their generals. Not a man flinched from the suicide.
Ney, desperate, great in all the grandeur of accepted death, bared
himself to every blow in this tempest. He had his horse killed under
him. Reeking with sweat, fire in his eyes, froth upon his lips, his
uniform unbuttoned, one of his epaulets half cut away by the sabre
stroke of a horse-guard, his badge of the grand eagle pierced by a
ball, bloody, covered with mud, magnificent, a broken sword in his
hand, he said: "Come and see how a marshal, of France dies upon the
field of battle!" But in vain, he did not die. He was haggard and
exasperated. He flung this question at Drouet D'Erlon. "What! are
you not going to die?" He cried out in the midst of all this artil-
lery which was mowing down a handful of men: "Is there nothing,
then, for me? Oh! I would that all these English balls were buried
in my body!" Unhappy man! thou wast reserved for French bullets!
XIII. THE CATASTROPHE
THE route behind the guard was dismal.
The army fell back rapidly from all sides at once, from Hougomont,
from La Haie Sainte, from Papelotte, from Planchenoit. The cry: Trea-
chery! was followed by the cry: Sauve qui pent! A disbanding army is
a thaw. The whole bends, cracks, snaps, floats, rolls, falls, crashes,
hurries, plunges. Mysterious disintegration. Ney borrows a horse,
leaps upon him, and without hat, cravat, or sword. plants himself
in the Brussels road, arresting at once the English and the French.
He endeavours to hold the army, he calls them hack, he reproaches
them, be grapples with the rout. He is swept away. The soldiers flee
from him, crying: Vive Marshal Ney! Durutte's two regiments come and
go, frightened, and tossed between the sabres of the Uhlans and the
fire of the brigades of Kempt, Best, Pack, and Rylandt; rout is the
worst of all conflicts; friends slay each other in their flight;
squadrons and battalions are crushed and dispersed against each other,
enormous foam of the battle. Lobau at. one extremity, like Reille, at
the other, is rolled away in the flood. In vain does Napoleon make
walls with the remains of the guard; in vain does he expend his re-
serve squadron in a last effort. Quiot gives way before Vivian, Kell-
ermann before Vandeleur, Lobau before Bulow, Moraud before Pirch,
Domon and Lubervic before Prince William of Prussia. Guyot, who had
led the emperor's squadrons to the charge, falls under the feet of
the English horse. Napoleon gallops along the fugitives, harangues
them, urges, threatens, entreats. The mouths, which in the morning
were crying vive l'Empereur, are now agape; he is hardly. recog-
nised. The Prussian cavalry, just come up, spring forward, fling
themselves upon the enemy, sabre, cut, hack, kill, exterminate. Teams
rush off, the guns are left to the care of themselves; the soldiers
of the train unhitch the caissons and take the horses to escape; wag-
gons upset, with their four wheels in the air, block up. the road,
and are accessories of massacre. They crush and they crowd; they
trample upon the living and the dead. Arms are broken. A multitude
fills roads, paths, bridges, plains, hills, valleys, woods, choked
up by this flight of forty thousand men. Cries, despair, knapsacks
and muskets cast into the rye, passage forced at the point of the
sword; no more comrades, no more officers, no more generals; inex-
pressible dismay. Ziethen sabring France at his ease. Lions become
kids. Such was this flight.
At Genappe there was an effort to turn back, to form a line, to make
a stand. Lobau rallied three hundred men. The entrance to the village
was barricaded, but at the first volley of Prussian grape, all took
to flight again, and Lobau was captured. The marks of that volley of
grape are still to be seen upon the old gable of a brick ruin at the
right of the road, a short distance before entering Genappe. The
Prussians rushed into Genappe, furious, doubtless, at having conquer-
ed so little. The pursuit was monstrous. Blucher gave orders to kill
all. Roguet had set this sad example by threatening with death every
French grenadier who should bring him a Prussian prisoner. Bliicher
surpassed Roguet. The general of the Young Guard, Duhesme, caught at
the door of a tavern in Genappe, gave up his sword to a Hussar of
Death, who took the sword and killed the prisoner. The victory was
completed by the assassination of the vanquished. Let us punish,
since we are history: old Blucher disgraced himself. This ferocity
filled the disaster to the brim. The desperate rout passed through
Genappe, passed through Quatre Bras, passed through Somhreffe, passed
through Frasnes,fpassed through 'Min, passed through Charleroi, and
stopped only at the frontier. Alas! who now was flying in such wise?
The Grand Army.
This madness, this terror,' this falling to ruins of the highest brave-
ry which ever astonished history, can that be without cause? No. The
shadow of an enormous right hand rests on Waterloo. It is the day of
Destiny. A power above man controlled the day. Hence, the loss of mind
in dismay; hence, all these great souls yielding up their swords. Those
who had conquered Europe fell to the ground, having nothing more to say
or to do, feeling a terrible presence in the darkness. Hoc erat in fatis.
That day, the perspective of the human race changed. Waterloo is the
hinge of the nineteenth century. This disappearance of the great man
was necessary for the advent of the great century. One, to whom there
is no reply, took it in charge. The panic of heroes is explained. In
the battle of Waterloo, there is more than a cloud, there is a meteor.
God passed over it.
In the gathering night, on a field near Genappe, Bernard and Bertrand
seized by a flap of his coat and stopped. a haggard, thoughtful, gloomy
man, who, dragged thus far by the current of the rout, had dismounted,
passed the bridle of his horse under his arm, and, with bewildered eye,
was returning alone towards Waterloo. It was Napoleon endeavouring to
advance again, mighty somnambulist of a vanished dream.
XIV. THE LAST SQUARE
A few squares of the guard, immovable in the flow of the rout as rocks in
running water, held out until night. Night approaching; and death also,
they waited this double shadow, and yielded unfaltering, to its embrace.
Each regiment, isolated from the others, and having no further communica-
tion with the army, which was broken in all directions, was dying alone.
They had taken position, for this last struggle, some upon the heights of
Rossomme, others in the plain of Mont Saint Jean. There, abandoned, con-
quered, terrible, these sombre squares suffered formidable martyrdom. Ulm,
Wagram, Jena, Friedland, were dying in them.
At dusk, towards nine o'clock in the evening, at. the foot of the plateau
of Mont Saint Jean, there remained but one. In this fatal valley, at the
bottom of that slope which had been climbed by the cuirassiers. inundated
now by the English masses, under the converging fire of the victorious ar-
tillery of the enemy, under a frightful storm of projectiles, this square
fought on. It was commanded by an obscure officer whose name was Cambronne.
At every discharge, the square grew less, but returned the fire. It replied
to grape by bullets, narrowing in its four walls continually. Afar off the
fugitives, stopping for a moment out of breath, heard in the darkness this
dismal thunder decreasing.
When this legion was reduced to a handful, when their flag was reduced to
a shred, when their muskets, exhausted of ammunition, were reduced to no-
thing but clubs, when the pile of corpses was larger than the group of the
living, there spread among the conquerors a sort of sacred terror about
these sublime martyrs, and the English artillery, stopping to take breath,
was silent. It was a kind of respite. These combatants had about them, as
it were, a swarm of spectres, the outlines of men on horseback, the black
profile of the cannons, the white sky seen through the wheels and the gun-
carriages; the colossal death's head which heroes always see in the smoke
of the battle was advancing upon them, and glaring at them. They could hear
in the gloom of the twilight the loading of the pieces, the lighted matches
like tigers' eyes in the night made a circle about their heads; all the
linstocks of the English batteries approached the guns, when, touched by
their heroism, holding the death-moment suspended over these men, an Eng-
lish general, Colville, according to some, Maitland, according to others,
cried to them: "Brave Frenchman. surrender!" Cambronne answered:
"Merde!"*
XV. CAMERONNE
OUT of respect to the French reader, the finest word, perhaps, that a French-
man ever uttered cannot be repeated to him. We are prohibited from embalming
a sublimity in history.
At our own risk and peril, we violate that prohibition.
Among these giants, then, there was one Titan--Cambronne.
To speak that word, and then to die, what could be more grand! for to accept
death is to die, and it is not the fault of this man, if, in the storm of
grape, he survived.
The man who won the battle of Waterloo is not Napoleon put to rout; nor Well-
ington giving way at four o'clock, desperate at five; not Bliicher, who did
not fight; the man who won the battle of Waterloo was Cambronne.
To fulminate such a word at the thunderbolt which kills you is victory.
To make this answer to disaster, to say this to destiny, to give this base
for the future-lion, to fling down this reply at the rain of the previous night,
at the treacherous wall of Hougomont, at the sunken road of Ohain, at the delay
of Grouchy, at the arrival of Blocher, to be ironical in the sepulchre, to act
so as to remain upright after one shall have fallen, to drown in two syllables
the European coalition, to offer to kings these privities already known to the
Caesars, to make the last of words the first, by associating it with the glory
of France, to close Waterloo insolently by a Mardi Gras, to complete Leonidas
by Rabelais, to sum up this victory in a supreme word which cannot be pronounced,
to lose the field, and to preserve history, after this carnage to have the laugh
on his side, is immense.
It is an insult to the thunderbolt. That attains the grandeur of Aeschylus.
This word of Cambronne's gives the effect of a fracture. It is
the breaking of a heart by scorn; it is an overplus of agony in ex-
plosion. Who conquered? Wellington? No. Without Blucher he
would have been lost. Blucher? No. If Wellington had not com-
menced, Bliicher could not have finished. This Cambronne, this passer at the
last hour, this unknown soldier, this infinitesimal of war, feels that there
is there a lie in a catastrophe, doubly bitter; and at the moment when he is
bursting with rage, he is offered this mockery--life? How can he restrain him-
self? They are there, all the kings of Europe, the fortunate generals, the thun-
dering Joves, they have a hundred thousand victorious soldiers, and behind the
hundred thousand, a million; their guns, with matches lighted, are agape; they
have the Imperial Guard and the Grand Army under their feet; they have crushed
Napoleon, and Cambronne only remains; there is none but this worm of the earth
to protest. He will protest. Then he seeks for a word as one seeks for a sword.
He froths at the mouth, and this froth is the word. Before this mean and mon-
strous victory, before this victory without victors, this desperate man straigh-
tens himself up, he suffers its enormity, but he establishes its nothingness;
and he does more than spit upon it; and overwhelmed in numbers and material
strength he finds in the soul an expression--ordure. We repeat it, to say that,
to do that, to find that, is to be the conqueror.
The soul of great days entered into this unknown man at that moment of death.
Cambronne finds the word of Waterloo, as Rouget de l'Isle finds the Itlarseil-
laise, through a superior inspiration. An effluence from the divine afflatus
detaches itself,. and passes over these men, and they tremble, and the one
sings the supreme song, and the other utters the terrible cry. This word of
titanic scorn Cambronne throws down not merely to Europe, in the name of the
Empire, that would be but little; he throws it down to the past, in the
name
of the Revolution. It is heard, and men recognize in Cambronne the old soul
of the giants. It seems as if it were a speech of Damon, or a roar of Kleber.
To this word of Cambronne, the English voice replied: "Fire!" the batteries
flamed, the hill trembled, from all those brazen throats went forth a final
vomiting of grape, terrific; a vast smoke, dusky white in the light of the
rising moon, rolled out, and when the smoke was dissipated, there was nothing
left. That formidable remnant was annihilated; the guard was dead. The four
walls of the living redoubt had fallen, hardly could a quivering be distin-
guished here and there among the corpses; and thus the French legions, grander
than the Roman legions, expired at Mont Saint Jean on ground soaked in rain
and blood, in the sombre wheat-fields, at the spot where now, at four o'clock
in the morning, whistling, and gaily whipping up his horse, Joseph passes,
who drives the mail from Nivelles.
XVI. QUOT LIBRAS IN DUCE?
THE battle of Waterloo is an enigma. It is as obscure to those who won it as
to him who lost it. To Napoleon it is a panic; Blucher sees in it only fire;
Wellington comprehends nothing of it. Look at the reports. The bulletins
are confused, the commentaries are foggy. The former stammer, the latter
fal-
ter. Jomini separates the battle of Waterloo into four periods; Muffling div-
ides it into three tides of fortune; Charras alone, though upon some points
our appreciation differs from his, has seized with his keen glance the charac-
teristic lineaments of that catastrophe of human genius struggling with divine
destiny. All the other historians are blinded by the glare, and are groping
a-
bout in that blindness. A day of lightnings, indeed, the downfall of the mili-
tary monarchy, which, to the great amazement of kings, has dragged with it all
kingdoms, the fall of force, the overthrow of war.
In this event, bearing the impress of superhuman necessity, man's part is no-
thing.
Does taking away Waterloo from Wellington and from Blucher, detract anything
from England and Germany? No. Neither illustrious England nor august Germany
is in question in the problem of Waterloo. Thank heaven, nations are great a-
side from the dismal chances of the sword. Neither Germany, nor England,
nor
France, is held in a scabbard. At this day when Waterloo is only a clicking of
sabres, above Blucher, Germany has Goethe, and above Wellington, England
has
Byron. A vast uprising of ideas is peculiar to our century, and in this aurora
England and Germany have a magnificent share. They are majestic because
they
think. The higher plane which they bring to civilisation is intrinsic to them;
it comes from themselves, and not from an accident. The advancement which
they have made in the nineteenth century does not spring from Waterloo. It is
duly barbarous nations who have a sudden growth after a victory. It is the
fleeting vanity of the streamlet swelled by the storm. Civilised nations, es-
pecially in our times, are not exalted nor abased by the good or bad fortune
'of a captain. Their specific gravity in the human race results from something
more than:a combat. Their honour, thank God, their dignity, their light, their
genius, are not numbers that heroes and conquerors, those gamblers, can
cast into the lottery of battles. Oftentimes a battle lost is progress
attained.
Less glory, more liberty. The drum is silent, reason speaks. It is the game at
which he who loses, gains. Let us speak, then, coolly of Waterloo on both
sides.
Let us render unto Fortune the things that are Fortune's, and mad God the
things that are God's What is Waterloo? A victory? No. A prize.
A prize won by Europe, paid by France.
It was not much to put a lion there.
Waterloo moreover is the strangest encodnter in history. Napoleon and Well-
ington: they are not enemies, they are opposites. Never has God, who takes
pleasure in antitheses, made a more striking contrast and a more extraord-
inary meeting. On one side, precision, foresight, geometry, prudence, re-
treat assured, reserves economised, obstinate composure, imperturbable
method, strategy to profit by the ground, tactics to balance battalions,
carnage drawn to the line, war directed watch in hand, nothing left volun-
tarily to intuition, inspiration, a military marvel, a superhuman instinct;
a chance, ancient classic courage, absolute correctness; on the other,
Clashing glance, a mysterious something which gazes like the eagle and
strikes like the thunderbolt, prodigious art in disdainful. impetuosity,
all the mysteries of a deep soul, intimacy with Destiny; river, plain, for-
est, hill, commanded, and in some sort forced to obey, the despot going
even so far as to tyrannise over the battlefield; faith in a star joined
to strategic science, increasing it, but disturbing it. Wellington was the
Barreme of war,.Napoleow was its Michael Angelo, and this time genius was
vanquished by calculation.
On both sides they were expecting somebody. It was the exact calculator who
succeeded. Napoleon expected Grouchy; he did not come. Wellington expected
Blucher; he came.
Wellington is classic war taking her revenge. Bonaparte, in his dawn. had
met her in Italy, and defeated her superbly. The old owl fled before the
young vulture. Ancient tactics had been not only thunderstruck, but bad
received mortal offence? What was this Corsican of twenty-six? What meant
this brilliant novice who, having ever3 7fliing against him, nothing for
him, with no provisions, no munitions, no cannon, no shoes,.almost without
an army, with a handful Of men against..multitrides, rushed upon allied
Europe, andabSinjdly gained victories that were impossible? Whence came
this thiindering madman who, almost without taking breath, and with the
same set of the combatants in hand, pulverised one after the other the
five armies of the Emperor of Germany. overthrowing Beaulieu upon Alvinzi,
Wurmser upon Beaulieu, Melas upon Wurmser, Mack upon Melas? Who was this
new-comer in war with the confidence of destiny? The academic military
school excom-municated him as it ran away. Thence an implacable hatred
of the old system of war against the new, of the correct sabre against
the flashing sword, and of the chequer-board against genius. On the 18th
of June, 1815, this hatred had the last word, and under Lodi, Montebello,
Montenotte, Mantua, Marengo, Arcola, it wrote: Waterloo. Triumph of the
commonplace, grateful to majorities. Destiny consented to this irony. In
his decline, Napoleon again found Wurmser Wore him, but young. Indeed,
to produce Wunnser, it would have been enough to whiten Wellington's hair.
Waterloo is a battle of the first rank won by a captain of the second.
What is truly admirable in the battle of Waterloo is England, English
firmness, English resolution, English blood; the superb thing which Eng-
land had there--may it not displease her--is herself. It is not her cap-
tain, it is her army.
Wellington, strangely ungrateful, declared in a letter to Lord Bathurst
that his army, the army that fought on the 18th of June, 1815, was a
"detestable army." What does this dark assemblage of bones, buried be-
neath the furrows of Waterloo, think of that?
England has been too modest in regard to Wellington. To make Wellington
so
great is to belittle England. Wellington is but a hero like the rest. These
Scotch Grays, these Horse Guards, these regiments of Maitland and of Mitchell,
this infantry of Pack and Remit this cavalry of Ponsonby and of Somerset,
these Highlanders playing the bagpipe under the storm of grape, these batta-
lions of Rylandt, these raw recruits who hardly knew how to handle a musket,
holding out against the veteran bands of Essling and Rivoli--all that is
grand.
Wellington was tenacious, that was his merit, and we do not underyalue it, but
the least of his foot-soldiers or his horsemen was quite as firm as he.
The iron
soldier is as good as the Iron Duke. For our part, all our glorification
goes to
the English 'soldier, the English army; the English people. If trophy there be;
to England the trophy is due. The Waterloo column would be more just'if,
instead
of the figure of a man, it lifted to the clouds the statue of a nation:
But this great England will be offended at what we say here. She has still,
after
her 1688 and our 1789, the feudal illusion. She believes in hereditary right, and in
the hierarchy. This people, surpassed by none in might and glory, esteems
itself as
a nation, not as a people. So much so that as a people they subordinate
themselves
willingly, and take a Lord for a head. Workmen, they submit to be despised
soldiers,
they submit to be whipped. We remember that at the battle of Inkerman a sergeant
who, as it appeared, had saved the army, could not be mentioned by Lord
Raglan, the
English military hierarchy not permitting any hero below the rank of officer
to be
spoken of in a report.
What we admire above all, in an encounter like that of Waterloo, is the prodigious
skill of fortune. The night's rain, the wall of Hougomont, the sunken road of Ohain,
Grouchy deaf to cannon, Napoleon's guide who deceives him, Bulow's guide who leads
him right; all this cataclysm is wonderfully carried out.
Taken as a whole, let us say, Waterloo was more of a massacre than a battle.
Of all great battles, Waterloo is that which has the shortest line in proportion to
the number engaged. Napoleon, two miles, Wellington, a mile and a half; seventy-two
thousand men on each side. From this density came the carnage.
The calculation has been made and this proportion established: Loss of men: at Aust-
erlitz, French, fourteen per cent.; Russians, thirty per cent.; Austrians,
forty-
four per cent. At Wagram, French, thirteen per cent.; Austrians, fourteen.
At La
Moscowa, French, thirty-seven per cent.; Russians, forty-four. At Bautzen, French,
thirteen per cent.; Russians and Prussians, fourteen. At Waterloo, French, fifty-six
per cent.; Allies, thirty-one. Average for Waterloo, forty-one per cent. A hundred
and forty-four thousand men; sixty thousand dead.
The field of Waterloo today has that calm which belongs to the earth, impassive
sup-
port of man; it resembles any other plain.
At night, however, a sort of visionary mist arises from it, and if some traveller be
walking there, if he looks, if he listens, if he dreams like Virgil in the fatal plain
of Philippi, he becomes possessed by the hallucination of the disaster.
The terrible
18th of June is again before him; the artificial hill of the monument fades away, this
lion, whatever it be, is dispelled; the field of battle resumes its reality; the lines
of infantry undulate in the plain, furious gallops traverse the horizon; the bewildered
dreamer sees the flash of sabres, the glistening of bayonets, the bursting of shells,
the awful intermingling of the thunders; he hears, like a death-rattle from the depths
of a tomb, the vague clamour of the phantom battle; these shadows are grenadiers; these
gleams are cuirassiers; this skeleton is Napoleon; that skeleton is Wellington; all this
is unreal, and yet it clashes and combats; and the ravines run red, and the trees shiver,
and there is fury even in the clouds, and, in the darkness, all those savage heights,
Mont Sain Jean, Hougomont, Frischemont, Papelotte, Planchenoit, appear
confusedly
crowned with whirlwinds of spectres exterminating each other.
XVII. MUST WE APPROVE WATERLOO?
THERE exists a very respectable liberal school, which does not hate Waterloo. We are
not of them. To us Waterloo is but the unconscious date of liberty. That such an eagle
should come from such an egg, is certainly an unlooked-for thing.
Waterloo, if we place ourselves at the culminating point of view of the question, is
intentionally a counter-revolutionary victory. It is Europe against France; it is Pet-
ersburg, Berlin, and Vienna against Paris; it is the status quo against the initiative;
it is the 14th of June, 1789, attacked by the 20th March, 1815; it is the monarchies
clearing the decks for action against indomitable French uprising. The final extinction
of this vast people, for twenty-six years in eruption, such was the dream,
It was the
solidarity of the Brunswicks, the Nassaus, the Romanoffs, the I f ohenzollern s, and
the Hapsburgs, with the Bourbons. Divine right rides behind wir h kVater loo. It is
true that the empire having been despotic, royalty, by the natural reaction of things,
was forced to become liberal, and also that a constitutional order has indirectly
sprung from Waterloo, to the great regret of the conquerors. The fact is, that revo-
lution cannot be conquered, and that being providential and absolutely decreed, it
reappears continually, before Waterloo in Bonaparte, throwing the old thrones, after
Waterloo in Louis: VI l I., granting and submitting to the charter. Bonaparte places
a postillion on the throne of Naples and a sergeant on the throne of Sweden, employing
inequality to demonstrate equality; Louis X VI I I. at Saint Ouen countersigns the dec-
laration of the rights of man. Would you realise what Revolution is, call it Progress
and would you realise what Progress is, call it To-morrow. To-morrow performs
its work
irresistibly, and it performs it from today, It always reaches its aim
through unexpect-
ed means. It employ Wellington to make Foy, who was only a soldier, an
orator. Foy
falls at ' Hougomont and rises again at the rostrum. Thus progress goes on. No tool
comes amiss to this workman It adjusts to its divine work, without being
disconcerted,
the man who strode over the Alps, and the good old tottering invalid of the Pere Elysee.
It makes use of the cripple as well as the conqueror, the conqueror without,
the, cripple
within. Waterloo, by cutting short the demolition of European thrones by
the sword,
has had no other effect than to continue the revolutionary work in another way. The
saberers have gone out, the time of the thinkers has come. The age which Waterloo
would have checked, has marched on and pursued its course. This inauspicious victory
has been conquered by liberty.
In fine and incontestably, that which triumphed at Waterloo; that which
smiled be-
hind Wellington; that which brought him all the marshals' batons of Europe,
among
them, it is said, the baton of marshal of France, that which joyfully rolled
barrows of earth full of bones to rear the mound of the lion; that which has
written triumphantly on that pedestal this date: June 18th, 1815; that which
encouraged Blucher sabering the fugitives; that which, from the height of the
plateau of Mont Saint jean, hung over France as over a prey, was Counter-revo-
lution. It was Counter-revolution which murmured this infamous word--dismember-
ment. Arriving at Paris, it had a near view of the crater; it felt that these
ashes were burning its feet, and took a second thought. It came back lisping of
a charter.
Let us see in Waterloo only what there is in Waterloo. Of intentional liberty,
nothing. The Counter-revolution was involuntarily liberal, as, by a correspond-
ing phenomenon, Napoleon was involuntarily revolutionary. On the 18th June, 1815,
Robespierre on horseback was thrown from the saddle.
XVIII. RECRUDESCENCE OF DIVINE RIGHT
END OF the dictatorship. The whole European system fell.
The empire sank into a darkness which resembled that of the expiring Roman world.
It rose again from the depths, as in the time of the Barbarians. Only, the barbar-
ism of 1815, which should be called by its special name, the counter-revolution,
was short-winded, soon out of breath, and soon stopped. The empire, we must acknow-
ledge, was wept over, and wept over by heroic eyes. If there be glory in the sceptre-
sword, the empire had been glory itself. It had spread over the earth all the light
which tyranny can give--a sombre light. Let us say further--an obscure
light. Com-
pared to the real day, it is night. This disappearance of night had the effect of an
eclipse.
Louis XVIII. returned to Paris. The dancing in a ring of the 8th of July effaced the
enthusiasm of the 20th of March. The Corsican became the antithesis of the Bearnois.
The flag of the dome of the Tuileries was white. The exile mounted the throne. The
fir table of Hartwell took its place before the chair decorated with fleur-de-lis of
Louis XIV. Men talked of Bouvines and Fontenoy as of yesterday, Austerlitz being out
of date. The altar and the throne fraternised majestically. One of the most unquest-
ionably safe forms of society in the nineteenth century was established in France
and on the Continent. Europe put on the white cockade. Trestail became
famous.
The device non pluribus impar reappeared in the radiations on the facade of the bar-
racks of the quay of Orsay. Where there had been an imperial guard, there was a red
house. The are du Carrousel--covered with awkwardly gained victories,--disowned
by
these new times and a little ashamed, perhaps, of Marengo and Arcola, extricated it-
self from the affair by the statue of the Duke of Angouleme. The cemetery de la
Madeleine, the terrible Potter's field of '93, was covered with marble and jasper,
the bones of Louis XVI. and Marie-Antoinette being in this dust. In the ditch of
Vincennes, a sepulchral column rose from the ground, recalling the fact that the
Duke of Enghien died in the same month in which Napoleon was crowned. Pope Pius
VII., who had performed this consecration very near the time of this death, tran-
quilly blessed the fall as he had blessed the elevation. At Schoenbrunn there was
a little shadow four years old which it was seditious to call the King of Rome.
And these things were done, and these kings resumed their thrones, and the master
of Europe was put in a cage, and the old regime became the new, and all the light
and shade of the earth changed place, because, in the afternoon of a summer's day,
a cowboy said to a Prussian in a wood: "Pass this way and not that!"
This 1815 was a sort of gloomy April. The old unhealthy and poisonous realities
took on new shapes. Falsehood espousd 1789, divine right masked itself under a
charter, fictions became constitutional, prejudices, superstitions and mental
reservations, with article 14 hugged to the heart, put on a varnish of
liberalism.
Serpents changing their skins.
Man had been at once made greater and made less by Napoleon. The ideal, under
this splendid material reign, had received the strange name of ideology. Serious
recklessness of a great man, to turn the future into derision. The people, however,
that food for cannon so fond of the cannoneer, looked for him. Where is he? What
is he doing? "Napoleon is dead," said a visitor to an invalid of Marengo and Water-
loo. "He dead!" cried the soldier; "are you sure of that?" Imagination defied this
prostrate man. The heart of Europe, after Waterloo, was gloomy. An enormous void
remained long after the disappearance of Napoleon.
Kings threw themselves into this void. Old Europe profited by it to assume a new
form. There was a Holy Alliance. Belle Alliance the fatal field of Waterloo had
already said in advance.
In presence of and confronting this ancient_Europe made over, the lineaments of a
new France began to appear. The future, the jest of the emperor, made its appearance.
It had on its brow this star, Liberty. The ardent eyes of rising generations
turned
towards it. Strange to tell, men became enamoured at the same time of this future,
Liberty, and of this past, Napoleon. Defeat had magnified the vanquished. Bonaparte
fallen seemed higher than Bonaparte in power. Those who had triumphed, were struck
with fear. England guarded him through Hudson Lowe, and France watched
him through
Montchenu. His folded arms became the anxiety of thrones. Alexander called him, My
Wakefulness. This terror arose from the amount of revolution he had in
him. This
is the explanation and excuse of Bonapartist liberalism. This phantom made the old
world quake. Kings reigned ill at ease with the rock of Saint Helena in the horizon.
While Napoleon was dying at Longwood, the sixty thousand men fallen on the field of
Waterloo tranquilly mouldered away, and something of their peace spread
over the world.
The congress of Vienna made, from it the treaties of 1815, and Europe called that the
Restoration.
Such is Waterloo.
But what is that to the Infinite? All this tempest, all this cloud, this war, then
this peace, all this darkness, disturb not for a moment the light of that infinite
Eye, before which the least of insects leaping from one blade of grass to another
equals the eagle flying from spire to spire among the towers of Notre-Dame.
XIX. THE FIELD OF BATTLE AT NIGHT
WE return, for it is a requirement of this book, to the fatal field of battle.
On the 18th of June, 1815, the moon was full. Its light favoured the ferocious pursuit
of Blucher, disclosed the traces of the fugitives, delivered this helpless
mass to
the bloodthirsty Prussian cavalry, and aided in the massacre. Night sometimes lends such
tragic assistance to catastrophe.
When the last gun had been fired the plain of Mont Saint Jean remained deserted.
The English occupied the camp of the French; it is the usual verification of victory to
sleep in the bed of the vanquished. They established their bivouac around Rossomme. The
Prussians, let loose upon the fugitives, pushed forward. Wellington went to the
vil-
lag of Waterloo to make up his report to Lord Bathurst.
If ever the sic vou non vobis were applicable, it is surely to this village of Waterloo.
Waterloo did nothing, and was two miles distant from the action. Mont Saint Jean was
cannonaded, Hougomont was burned, Papelotte was burned, Planchenoit was
burned, La Haie
Sainte was taken by assault, La Belle Alliance witnessed the meeting of the two conquerors;
these names are scarcely known, and Waterloo, which had nothing to do with the battle, has
all the honour of it.
We are not of those who glorify war; when the opportunity presents itself we describe its
realities. War has frightful beauties which we have not concealed; it has also, we
must admit,
some deformities. One of the most surprising is the eager spoliation of the dead after a vic-
tory. The day after a battle dawns upon naked corpses.
Who does this? Who thus sullies the triumph? Whose is this hideous furtive hand which glides
into the pocket of victory? Who are these pickpockets following their trade in the wake of
glory? Some philosophers, Voltaire among others, affirm that they are precisely those who have
achieved the glory. They are the same, say they, there is no exchange; those who survive pill-
age those who succumb. The hero of the day is the vampire of the night. A man has a right,
after all, to despoil in part a corpse which he has made.
For our part we do not believe this. To gather laurels and to steal the shoes from a dead man,
seems to us impossible to the same hand.
One thing is certain, that, after the conquerors, come the robbers. But let us place the sol-
dier, especially the soldier of today, beyond this charge.
Every army has a train, and there the accusation should lie. Bats, half brigand and half valet,
all species of night bird engendered by this twilight which is called war, bearers of uniforms
who never fight, sham invalids, formidable cripples, interloping sutlers, travelling, sometimes
with their wives, on little carts and stealing what they sell, beggars offering themselves as
guides to officers, army-servants, marauders; armies on the march formerly--we do not speak
of the present time--were followed by all these, to such an extent that,
in technical language,
they are called "camp-followers." No army and no nation was responsible for these beings;
they spoke Italian and followed the Germans; they spoke French and followed the English. It
was by one of these wretches, a Spanish camp-follower who spoke French, that the Marquis of
Fervacques, deceived by his Picardy gibberish, and taking him for one of us, was treacherously
killed and robbed on the very battle-field during the night which followed the victory of
Cerisoles. From marauding came the marauder. The detestable maxim, Live on your enemy, pro-
duced this leper, which rigid discipline alone can cure. There are reputations which are illu-
sory; it is not always known why certain generals, though they have been great, have been so
popular. Turenne was adored by his soldiers because he tolerated pillage; the permission to do
wrong forms part of kindness; Turenne was so kind that he allowed the Palatinate to be burned
and put to the sword. There were seen in the wake of armies more or less of marauders according
as the commander was more or less severe. Roche and .Marceau had no camp-followers; Wellington--
we gladly do him this justice--had few. . .
However, during the night of the 18th of June, the dead were despoiled. Wellington was rigid;
he ordered whoever should be taken in-the act to he put to death; but rapine is persevering.
The marauders were robbing in one corner of the battle-field while they were shooting them in
another.
The moon was an evil genius on this plain.
Towards midnight a man was prowling or rather crawling along the sunken road of Ohain. He was,
to all appearance, one of those whom we have just described, neither English nor French, peasant
nor soldier, less a man than a ghoul, attracted by the scent of the corpses, counting
theft
for victory, coming to rifle Waterloo. He was dressed in a blouse which was in part a capote,
was restless and daring, looking behind and before as he went. Who was this man? Night, proba-
bly, knew more of his doings than day! He had no knapsack, but evidenly large pockets under
his capote. From time to time he stopped, examined the plain around him as if to see if he
were observed, stooped down suddenly, stirred on the ground something silent and motionless,
then rose up and skulked away. His gliding movement, his attitudes, his rapid and mysterious
gestures, made him seem like those twilight spectres which haunt ruins
and which the old
Norman legends call the Goers.
Certain nocturnal water-birds make such motions in marshes.
An eye which had carefully penetrated all this haze, might have noticed
at some distance,
standing as it were concealed behind the ruin which is on the Nivelle road at the corner of
the route from Mont Saint Jean to Brain l'Alleud, a sort of little sutler's waggon, covered
with tarred osiers, harnessed to a famished jade browsing nettles through
her bit, and in the
waggon a sort of woman seated tin some trunks and packages. Perhaps there
was some con-
nection between this waggon and the prowler.
The night was serene. Not a cloud was in the zenith. What mattered it that
the earth was red;
the moon retained her whiteness. Such is the indifference of heaven. In the meadows, branches
of trees broken by grape, but not fallen and held by the bark, swung gently
in the night wind.
A breath, almost a respiration, moved the brushwood. There was a quivering in the grass which
seemed like the departure of souls.
The tread of the patrols and groundsmen of the English camp could be hemd dimly in the dis-
tance.
Hougomont and ta La Haie continued to burn making, one in the east and the other in
the west, two great flames, to which was attached, like a necklace of rubies
with two car-
buncles at its extremities, the cordon of bivouac fires of the English,
extending in an im-
mense semicircle over the hills of the horizon.
We have spoken of the catastrophe of the road to Ohain. The heart almost
sinks
with terror at the thought of such a death for so many brave men.
If anything is frightful, if there be a reality which surpasses dreams, it is
this: to live, to see the sun, to be in full possession of manly vigour, to
have health and joy, to laugh sturdily, to rush towards a glory which dazzling-
ly invites you on, to feel a very pleasure in respiration, to feel your heart
beat, to feel yourself a reasoning being, to speak, to think, to hope, to love;
to have mother, to have wife, to have children, to have sunlight, and suddenly,
in a moment, in less than a minute, to feel yourself buried in an abyss, to fall,
to roll, to crush, to be crushed, to see the grain, the flowers, the leaves, the
branches, to be able to seize upon nothing, to feel your sword useless, men under
you, horses over you, to strike about you in vain, your bones broken by some kick
in the darkness, to feel a heel which makes your eyes leap from their sockets,
to grind the horseshoes with rage in your teeth, to stifle, to howl, to twist,
to be under all this, and to say: just now I was a living man!
There, where this terrible death-rattle had been, all was now silent. The cut of
the sunken road was filled with horses and riders inextricably heaped together.
Terrible entanglement. There were no longer slopes to the road; dead bodies filled
it even with the plain, and came to the edge of the banks like a well-measured
bushel of barley. A mass of dead above, a river of blood below--such was this
road on the evening of the 18th of June, 1815. The blood ran even to the Nivelles
road, and oozed through in a large pool in front of the abattis of trees, whibh
barred that road, at a spot which is still sIown. It was, it will be remembered,
at the opposite point towards the road from Genappe, that the burying of the cui-
rassiers took place. The thickness of the mass of bodies was proportioned to the
depth of the hollow road. Towards the middle, at a spot where it became shallower,
over which Delord's division had passed, this bed of death became thinner.
The night prowler which we have just introduced to the reader went in this direct-
ion. He ferreted through this immense grave. He looked about. He passed an inde-
scribably hideous review of the dead. He walked with his feet in blood.
Suddenly he stopped.
A few steps before him, in the sunken road, at a point where the mound of corpses
ended, from under this mass of men and noises appeared an open hand, lighted by
the moon.
This hand had something upon a finger which sparkled a gold ring.
The man stooped down, remained a moment, and when he rose again there was
no
ring upon that hand.
He did not rise up precisely; he remained in a sinister and startled attitude,
turning his back to the pile of dead, scrutinising the horizon, on his knees, all
the front of his body being supported on his two fore-fingers, his head raised
just enough to peep above the edge of the hollow road. The four paws of
the
jackal are adapted to certain actions.
Then, deciding upon his course, he arose.
At this moment lie experienced a shock. He felt that be was held from behind.
He turned; it was the open hand, which had closed, seizing the lappel of his ca-
pote.
An honest man would have been frightened. This man began to laugh.
"Oh," said he, "it's only the dead man. I like a ghost better than a gendarme."
However, the band relaxed and let go its hold. Strength is soon exhausted in the
tomb.
"Ah ha!" returned the prowler, "is this dead man alive? Let us see."
He bent over again, rummaged among the heap, removed whatever impeded him, seized
the hand, laid hold of the arm, disengaged the head, drew out the body, and some
moments after dragged into the shadow of the hollow road an inanimate man, at
least one who was senseless. It was a cuirassier, an officer; an officer, also,
of some rank; a great gold epaulet protruded from beneath his cuirass, but he had
no casque. A furious sabre cut had disfigured his face, where nothing but blood was
to be seen. It did not seem, however, that he had any limbs broken; and by some hap-
py chance, if the word is possible here, the bodies were arched above him in such a
way as to prevent his being crushed. His eyes were closed.
He had on his cuirass the silver cross of the Legion of Honour.
The prowler tore off this cross, which disappeared in one of the gulfs which he had
under his capote.
After which he felt the officer's fob, found a watch there, and took it. Then he
rummaged in his vest and found a purse, which he pocketed.
When he had reached this phase of the succour he was lending the dying man, the of-
ficer opened his eyes.
"Thanks," said he feebly.
The rough movements of the man handling him, the coolness of the night, and breath-
ing the fresh air freely, had roused him from his lethargy.
The prowler answered not. He raised his head. The sound of a footstep could be heard
on the plain; probably it was some patrol who was approaching.
The officer murmured, for there were still signs of suffering in his voice:
"Who has gained the battle?"
"The English," answered the prowler.
The officer replied:
"Search my pockets. You will there find a purse and a watch. Take them."
This had already been done.
The prowler made a pretence of executing the command, and said:
"There is nothing there."
"I have been robbed," replied the officer; "I am sorry. They would have been yours."
The step of the patrol became more and more distinct. "Somebody is coming," said the
prowler, making a movement as if he would go.
The officer, raising himself up painfully upon one arm, held him back.
"You have saved my life. Who are you?"
The prowler answered quick and low:
"I belong, like yourself, to the French army. I must go. If I are. taken I shall be
shot. I have saved your life. Help yourself now."
"What is your grade?"
"Sergeant.
"What is your name?"
"Thenardier."
"I shall not forget that name," said the officer. "And you, remem-ber mine. My name
is Pontmercy."
BOOK SECOND
THE SHIP ORION
NUMBER 24601 BECOMES NUMBER 9430
JEAN Valjean has been retaken.
We shall be pardoned for passing rapidly over the painful details. We shall merely re-
produce a couple of items published in the newspapers of that day, some few months after
the remarkable events that occurred at M-- sur M--,
The articles referred to are somewhat laconic. It will be remembered that
the Gazelle
des Tribunaux had not yet been established.
We copy the first from the Drapeau Blanc. It is dated the .25th of July, 1823:
"A district of the Pas-de-Calais has just been the scene of an extraordinary occurrence.
A stranger in that department, known as Monsieur Madeleine, had, within a few years past,
restored, by means of certain new processes, the manufacture of jet and black glass ware--
a former local branch of industry. He had made his own fortune by it, and, in fact, that
of the entire district. In acknowledgment of his services he had been appointed
mayor.
The police has discovered that Monsieur Madeleine was none other than an escaped convict,
condemned in 1796 for robbery, and named Jean Valjean. This Jean Valjean has been sent
back to the galleys. It appears that previous to his arrest, he succeeded in withdrawing
from I-antes a sum amounting to more than half a million which he had deposited there,
and which it is said, by the way, he had very legitimately realised in his business.
Since his return to the galleys at Toulon, it has been impossible to discover where Jean
Valjean concealed this money."
The second article, which enters a little more into detail, is taken from
the Journal de
Paris of the same date:
"An old convict, named Jean Valjean, has recently been brought beforethe Var Assizes,
under circumstances calculated to attract attention. This villain had succeeded in elud-
ing the vigilance of the police; he had changed his name, and had even been adroit enough
to procure the appointment of mayor in one of our small towns in the North. He had estab-
lished in this town a very considerable business, but was, at length unmasked
and arrested,
thanks to the indefatigable zeal of the public authorities. He kept, as
his mistress, a
prostitute, who died of the shock at the moment of his arrest. This wretch, who is endowed
with herculean strength, managed to escape, but, three or four days afteywards, the police
retook him, in Paris, just as he was getting into one of the small vehicles
that ply between
the capital and the village of Montfermeil ( Seine-etOise). It is said
that he had availed him-
self of the interval of these three or four days of freedom, to withdraw
a considerable sum
deposited by him with one of our principal bankers. The amount is estimated at six or seven
hundred thousand francs. According to the minutes of the case, he has concealed
it in some
place known to himself alone, and it has been impossible to seize it; however
that may 'be,
the said Jean Valjean has been brought before the assizes of the Department of the Var
under indictment for an assault and robbery on the high road committed
vi et armis some
eight years ago on the person of one of those honest lads who, as the patriarch
of Ferney
has written in immortal verse,
. . . De Savoie arrivent tous les ans,
Et dont la main legerement essuie
Ces longs canaux engorges par la stile".
( Who come from Savoy every year,
And whose hand deftly wipes out
Those long channels choked up with soot.)
This bandit attempted no defence. It was proven by the able and eloquent
representative of
the crown that the robbery was shared in by others, and that Jean Valjean formed one of a
band of robbers in the South. Consequently, Jean Valjean, being found guilty, was condemned
'to death. The criminal refused to appeal to the higher courts, and the king, in his inex-
haustible clemency, deigned to commute his sentence to that of hard labour
in prison for
life. Jean Valjean was immediately forwarded to the galleys at Toulon."
It will not be forgotten that Jean Valjean had at M-- sur M--.certain religious habits.
Some of the newspapers and, among them, the Constitutionnel, held up this commutation as
a triumph of the clerical party.
Jean Valjean changed his number at the galleys. He became 9430.
While we are about it, let us remark, in dismissing the subject, that with M.' Madeleine,
the prosperity of M-- sur M-- disappeared; all that he had foreseen, in that night of fever
and irresolution, was realised; he gone, the sou/ was gone. After his downfall; there was
at sur M-- that egotistic distribution of what is left when great men have fallen--that
fatal carving up of prosperous enterprises which is daily going on, out of sight, in hu-
man society, and whichhistory has noted but once,. and then, because it
took place after
the death of Alexander. Generals crown themselves kings; the foremen, in this case,
assumed the position of manufacturers. Jealous rivalries arose. The spacious
workshops of M. Madeleine were closed; the building fell into ruin, the
workmen
dispersed. Some left the country, others abandoned the business. From that time
forth, everything was done on a small, instead of on the large scale, and for
gain rather than for good. No longer any centre; competition on all sides, and
on all sides venom. M. Madeleine had ruled and directed everything. He
fallen,
every man strove for himself; the spirit of strife succeeded to the spirit
of
organisation, bitterness to cordiality, hatred of each against each instead of
the good will of the founder towards all; the threads knitted by M. Madeleine
became entangled and were broken; the workmanship was debased, the manufactur-
ers were degraded, confidence was killed; customers diminished, there were
fewer
orders, wages decreased, the shops became idle, bankruptcy followed. And, then,
there was nothing left for the poor. All that was there disappeared.
Even the state noticed that some one had been crushed, in some direction. Less
than four years after the decree of the court of assizes establishing the iden-
tity of M. Madeleine and Jean Valjean, for the benefit of the galleys, the expense
of collecting the taxes was doubled an the district of M--sur and M. de Villele
remarked the fact, on the floor of the Assembly, in the month of February, 1827.
II. IN WHICH A COUPLE OF LINES WILL BE READ WHICH CAME, PERHAPS, FROM THE EVIL ONE
Before proceeding further, it will not be amiss to relate, in some detail,
a singular
incident which took place, about the same time, at Montfenneil, and which, perhaps,
does not fall in badly with certain conjectures of the public authorities.
There exists, in the neighbourhood of Montfermeil, a vet"' ancient superstition, all
the more rare and precious from the fact that a popular superstition in the vicinity
of Paris is like an aloe tree in Siberia. Now, we are of those who respect
anything
in the way of a rarity. Here, then, is the superstition of Mont lemma they believe,
there, that the Evil One has, from time immemorial, chosen the forest as the hiding-
place for his treasure. The good wives of the vicinity affirm that it is no unusual
thing to meet. at sundown, in the secluded portions of the woods, a black-looking
man. resembling a waggoner or wood-cutter, shod in wooden shoes, clad in breeches
and sack of coarse linen, and recognisable front the circumstance that;
instead of a
cap or hat, he has two immense horns upon his head. That certainly ought to render
him recognisable. This man is Constantly occupied in digging holes. There are three
ways of dealing when you meet him.
The first mode is to approach the man and speak to him. Then you perceive that
the man is nothing but a peasant, that he looks black because it is twilight,
that he is digging no hole whatever, but is merely cutting grass for his cows;
and that what had been taken for horns are nothing but his pitchfork which he
carries on his back, and the prongs of which, thanks to the night perspective,
seemed to rise from his head. You go home and die within a week. The second meth-
od is to watch him, to wait until he has dug the hole, dosed it up, and gone away;
then, to run quickly to the spot, to open it and.set the "treasure" which the
black-looking man has, of course, buried there. In this case, you die within a
month. The third manner is not to speak to the dark man nor even to look at him,
and to run away as fast as you can. You die within the year.
As all three of these methods have their drawbacks, the second, which, at least,
offers some advantages, among others that of possessing a treasure, though it be
but for a month, is the one generally adopted.Daring fellows, who never neglect a
good chance, have, therefore, many times, it is asseverated, reopened the holes
thus dug by the black-looking man, and tried to rob the Devil. It would appear,
however, that it is not a very good business--at least, if we are to believe trad-
ition, and, more especially, two enigmatic lines in barbarous Latin left us, on
this subject, by a roguish Norman monk, named Tryphon, who dabbled in the black
art. This Tryphon was buried in the abbey of St. Georges de Bochervile, near
Rouen,
and toads are produced from his grave.
Well then, the treasure-seeker makes tremendous efforts, for the holes referred to
are dug, generally, very deep; he sweats, he digs, he works away all night, for
this is done in the night-time; he gets his clothes wet, he consumes his candle,
he hacks and breaks his pickaxe, and when, at length, he has reached the bottom of
the hole, when he has put his hand upon the "treasure," what does he find? What is
this treasure of the Evil One? A penny--sometimes a crown; a stone, a skeleton, a
bleeding corpse, sometimes a spectre twice folded like a sheet of paper in a port-
folio, sometimes nothing. This is what seems to be held forth to the indiscreet
and prying by the lines of Tryphon:
Podit, et in fossa thesauros coridit opaca,
As, nummos, Lapides, cadaver, simulacra, nihilque.
(He digs, and in the dark grave hides,
nothing but coins, gems, a corpse and pictures.)
It appears that, in our time, they find in addition sometimes a powder-horn with
bullets, sometimes an old pack of brown and greasy cards which have evidently been
used by the Devil. Tryphon makes no mention of these articles, as Tryphon
lived in the
twelfth century, and it does not appear that the Evil One had wit enough to invent
powder in advance of Roger Bacon or cards before Charles VI.
Moreover, whoever plays with these cards is sure to lose all he has, and as to the
powder in the flask, it has the peculiarity of bursting your gun in your face.
Now, very shortly after the time when the authorities wok it into their heads that
the liberated convict Jean Valjean had, during his escape of a few days' duration,
been prowling. about Montfermeil, it was remarked, in that village, that a certain
old road-labourer named Boulatruelle had "a fancy" for the woods. People in the
neighbourhood claimed to know that Boulatruelle had been in the galleys; be was
under police surveillance, and, as he could find no work anywhere, the government
employed him at half wages as a mender on the cross-road from Gagny to Lagny.
This Boulatruelle was a man in bad odour with the people of the neighbourhood; he
was too respectful, too humble, prompt to doff his cap to everybody; he always trem-
bled and smiled in the presence of the gendarmes, was probably in secret connection
with robber-bands, said the gossips, and suspected of lying in wait in the hedge
corners, at night-fall, He had nothing in his favour except that he was a drunkard.
What had been observed was this:
For some time past, Boulatruelle had left off his work at stone-breaking and keeping
the road in order, very early, and had gone into the woods with his pick. He would
be met towards evening in the remotest glades and the wildest thickets, having the
appearance of a person looking for something and, sometimes, digging holes. The good
wives who passed that way took hint at first for-Beelzebub, then they recognised
Boulatruelle, and were by no means reassured. These chance meetings seemed greatly
to disconcert Boulamelte. It was clear that he was trying to conceal himself, and that
there was something mysterious in his operations.
The village gossips said:--"It's plain that the Devil has been about,
Boulatruelle
has seen him and is looking for his treasure. The truth is. he is just the fellow to
rob the Evil One."--The Voltairians added: "Will Boulatruelle
catch the Devil or the
Devil catch Boulatruelle?"--The old women crossed themselves very often.
However, the visits of Boulatruelle to the woods ceased and he recommenced his regular
labour on the road. People began to talk about something else.
A few, however, retained their curiosity, thinking that there might he involved in the
affair, not the fabulous treasures of the legend, but some goodly matter more substan-
tial than the Devil's bank-bills,' and that Boulatruelle had half spied out the secret.
The worst puzzled of all were the schoolmaster and the taven-keeper, Thenardier, who
was everybody's .friend, and who had not disdained to strike up an intimacy with even
Boulatruelle.
"He has been in the galleys," said .Thenardier.:"Good Lord!
nobody knows who is there
or who may be there!"
One evening, the schoolmaster remarked that, in old times, the authorities would have
inquired into what Boulatruelle was about in the woods, and that he would have been com-
pelled to speak--even put to torture, if need were--and that Boulatruelle would not have
held out, had he been put to the question by water, for example.
"Let us put him to the wine question," said Thenardier.
So they made up a party and plied the old roadsman with drink. Boulatruelle drank enor-
mously, but said little. He combined with admirable art and in masterly proportions the
thirst of a guzzler with the discretion of a judge. However, by dint of returning to the
charge and by putting together and twisting the obscure expressions that he did let fall,
Thenardier and the schoolmaster made out, as they thought, the following:
One morning about daybreak as he was going to his work, Boulatruelle had been surprised
at seeing under a bush in a corner of the wood, apickaxe and spade, as one would say, hi-
dden there. However, he supposed that they were the pick and spade of old Six-Fours, the
water-carrier, and thought no more about it. But, on the evening of the same day, he had
seen, without being seen himself, for he was hidden behind a large tree, "a person who
did not belong at all to that region, and whom he, Boulatruelle, knew very
wel!"--or, as
Thenardier translated it, "an old comrade at the galleys"--turn off from the high road
towards the thickest part of the wood. Boulatruelle obstinately refused to tell the stran-
ger's name. This person carried a package, something square, like a large box or a small
trunk. Boulatruelle was surprised. Seven or eight minutes, however, elapsed before it oc-
curred to him to follow the "person."' But he was too late. The person was already in the
thick woods, night had come on, and Boulatruelle did not succeed in overtaking him. There-
upon he made up his mind to watch the outskirts of the wood. "There was a moon." Two or
three hours later, Boulatruelle saw this person come forth again from the wood, this time
carrying now not the little trunk but a pick and a spade. Boulatruelle let the person pass
unmolested, because, as he thought to himself, the other was three times as strong as he,
was armed with a pickaxe, and would probably murder him, on recognising
his countenance
and seeing that he, in turn, was recognised. Touching display of feeling in two old com-
panions unexpectedly meeting! But the pick and the spade were a ray of light to Boulatru-
elle he hastened to the bushes, in the morning, and found neither one nor the other. He
thence concluded that this person, on entering the wood, had dug a hole with his pick, had
buried the chest, and had; then, filled up the hole with his spade. Now, as the chest was
too small to contain a corpse, it must contain money; hence his continued searches. Boula-
truelle had explored, sounded, and ransacked the whole forest, and had rummaged every spot
where the earth seemed to have been freshly disturbed. But all in vain.
He had turned up nothing. Nobody thought any more about it, at Montfermeil, excepting a
few good gossips, who said: "Be sure the road-labourer of Carty didn't make all that fuss
for nothing: the devil was certainly there."
III. SHOWING THAT THE CHAIN OP THE IRON RING MUST NEEDS HAVE
UNDERGONE A CERTAIN PREPARATION TO DE THUS 'BROKEN
BY ONE BLOW OF THE HAMMER
TOWARDS the end of October, in that same year, 1823, the inhabitants of Toulon saw coming
back into their port, in consequence of heavy weather, and in order to repair some damages,
the ship Orion, which was at a later period employed at Brest as a vessel of instruction,
and which then formed a part of the Mediterranean squadron. This ship, crippled as she was,
for the sea had used her roughly, produced some sensation on entering the roadstead. She
flew I forget what pennant, but it entitled her to a regular salute of eleven guns, which
she returned shot for shot: in all twenty-two. It has been estimated that in salutes, royal
and military compliments, exchanges of courteous hubbub, signals of etiquette, roadstead
and citadel formalities, risings and settings of the sun saluted daily by all fortresses
and all vessels of war, the opening and closing of gates, etc., etc., the civilised world,
in every part of the globe, fires off, daily, one hundred and fifty thousand useless =non
shots. At six francs per shot, that would amount to nine hundred thousand francs per day,
or three hundred millions per year, blown off in smoke. This is only an item. In the mean-
while, the poor are dying with hunger.
The year 1623 was what the Restoration has called the "time of the Spanish War."
That war comprised many events in one, and no small number of singular things. It was a great
family affair of the Bourbons; the French branch aiding and protecting the branch at Madrid,
that is to say, performing the duties of seniority; an apparent return to our national trad-
itions, mixed up with subserviency, and cringing to the cabinets of the North; the Due d'Ang-
ouleme, dubbed by the liberal journals the hero of Andujar, repressing, with a triumphal at-
titude--rather contradicted by his peaceful mien--the old and very real terrorism of the Holy
Office, in conflict with the chimerical terrorism of the Liberals; sans-culottes revived, to
the great alarm of all the old dowagers, under the name of descamisados; monarchists striving
to impede progress, which they styled anarchy; the theories of '89 rudely interrupted in
their undermining advances; a halt from all Europe, intimated to the French idea of revolu-
tion,- making its tour of the globe; side by side with the son of France, general-in-chief,
the Prince de Carignan, afterwards Charles Albert, enlisting in this crusade of the kings a-
gainst the peoples, as a volunteer, with a grenadier's epaulets of red
wool; the soldiers of
the empire again betaking themselves to the field, but after eight years of rest, grown old,
gloomy, and under the white cockade; the tricolour displayed abroad by
a heroic handful of
Frenchmen, as the white flag had been at Coblentz, thirty years before; monks mingling with
our troopers; the spirit of liberty and of innovation reduced by bayonets;
principles struck
dumb by cannon-shot; France undoing by her arms what she had done with her mind; to cap the
climax, the leaders on the other side sold, their troops irresolute; cities besieged by mil-
lions of money; no military dangers, and yet some explosions possible, as is the case in every
mine entered and taken by surprise; but little blood shed, but little honour
gained; shame
for a few, glory for none. Such was this war, brought about by princes who descended from
Louis XIV., and carried on by generals who sprang from Napoleon. It had this wretched fate,
that it recalled neither the image of a great war nor of a great policy.
A few feats of arms were serious affairs; the taking of Trocadero, among
others, was a hand-
some military exploit; but, taken all in all, we repeat, the trumpets of this war emit a crack-
ed and feeble sound, the general appearance of it was suspicious, and history approves the un-
willingness of France to father so false a triumph. It seemed clear that certain Spanish offi-
cers intrusted with the duty of resistance, yielded too easily, the idea of bribery was suggest-
ed by a contemplation of the victory; it appeared as if the generals rather than the battles
had been won, and the victorious soldier returned humiliated. It was war grown petty indeed,
where you could read Bank of France on the folds of the flag.
Soldiers of the war of 1808, under whose feet Saragossa had so terribly crumbled, knit their
brows at this ready surrender of fastness and citadels, and regretted Palafox. It is the mood
of France to prefer to have before her a Rostopchine rather than a Ballesteros.
In a still graver point of view, which it is well to urge, too, this war, which broke the mil-
itary spirit of France, fired the democratic spirit with indignation. It was a scheme of sub-
jugation. In this campaign, the object held out to the French soldier,
son of democracy, was the
conquest of a yoke for the neck of another. Hideous contradiction. France
exists to arouse the
soul of the peoples, not to the stifle it. Since 1792, all the revolutions of Europe have been
but the French Revolution: liberty radiates on every side from France. That is a fact as dear
as noonday. Blind is he who does not see it! Bonaparte has said it.
The war of 1823, an outrage on the generous Spanish nation, was, at the same time, an outrage
on the French Revolution. This monstrous deed of violence France committed, but by compulsion;
for, aside from wars of liberation, all that armies do they do by compulsion.
The words passive
obedience tell the tale. An army is a wondrous masterpiece of combination, in which might is
the result of an enormous sum-total of utter weakness. Thus only can we explain a war waged by
humanity against humanity, in despite of humanity.
As to the Bourbons, the war of 1823 was fatal to them. They took it for a success. They did not
see what danger there is in attempting to kill an idea by.a military watchword.
In their simp-
licity, they blundered to the extent of introducing into their establishment,
as an element of
strength, the immense enfeeblement of a crime. The spirit of ambuscade and lying in wait entered
into their policy. The germ of 1830 was in 1823. The Spanish campaign became in their councils
an argument on behalf of violent measures and intrigues in favour of divine right. France having
restored el rcy ncto ut Spain, could certainly restore the absolute monarchy
at home. They
fell into the tremendous error of mistaking the obedience of the soldier for the acquiescence of
the nation. That fond delusion ruins thrones. It will not do to fall asleep either in the shade
of a upas tree or in the shadow of an army.
But let us return to the ship Orion.
During the operations of the army of the Prince, commanding-in-chief, a squadron cruised in the
Mediterranean. We have said that the Orion belonged to that squadron, and that she had been dri-
ven back by stress of weather to the port of Toulon.
The presence of a vessel of war in port has about it a certain influence which attracts and en-
gages the multitude. It is because it is something grand, and the multitude like what is imposing.
A ship-of-the-line is one of the most magnificent struggles of human genius with the
forces of
nature.
A vessel of the line is composed of the heaviest, and at the same time the lightest materials,
because she has to contend, at one and the same time. with the three forms
of matter, the solid,
the liquid. and the fluid. She has eleven claws of iron to grasp the rock at the bottom of the
sea. and more wings and feelers than the butterfly to catch the breezes in the clouds. Her breath
goes forth through her hundred and twenty guns as through enormous trumpets,
and haughtily an-
swers the thunderbolt. Ocean strives to lead her astray in the frightful
sameness of his billows, but
the ship has her compass, which is her soul, always counselling her and always pointing towards
the north. In dark nights, her lanterns take the place of the stars. Thus, then, to oppose the
wind, she has her ropes and canvas; against the water her timber; against the rock her iron, her
copper, and her lead; against the darkness, light; against immensity, needle.
Whoever would form an idea of all these gigantic proportions, the aggregate of which constitutes
a ship-of-the-line, has but to pass under one of the covered ship-houses, six stories high, at
Brest or Toulon. The vessels in process of construction are seen there under glass cases, so to
speak. That colossal beam is a yard; that huge column of timber lying on
the ground and reach-
ing out of sight is the mainmast. Taking it from its root in the hold to its summit in the clouds,
it is sixty fathoms long, and is three feet in diameter at its base. The English mainmast rises
two hundred and seventeen feet above the water-line. The navy of our fathers used cables, ours
uses chains. Now the mere coil of chains of a hundred-gun ship is four feet high, twenty feet
broad, and eight feet thick. And for the construction of this vessel, how much timber is required?
It is a floating forest.
And yet, be it remembered, that we are here speaking only of the war vessel of some forty years
ago, the mere sailing craft; steam, then in its infancy, has, since that
time, added new wonders
to this prodigy called a man-of-war. At the present day, for example, the mixed vessel, the screw-
propeller, is a surprising piece of mechanism moved by a spread of canvas measuring four thousand
square yards of surface, and by a steam-engine of twenty-five hundred horse power.
Without referring to these fresher marvels, the old-fashioned ship of Christopher Columbus and of
De Ruyter is one of the noblest works of man. It is exhaustless in force as the breadth of infini-
tude; it gathers up the wind in its canvas, it is firmly fixed in the immense
chaos of the waves,
it floats and it reigns.
But a moment comes, when the white squall breaks that sixty-foot yard like a straw; and when the
wind flaw bends that four hundred foot mast like a reed; when that anchor, weighing its tons upon
tons, is twisted in the maw of the wave like the angler's hook in the jaws of a pike; when those
monster guns utter plaintive and futile roarings which the tempest whirls away into space and
night, when all this might and all this majesty are engulfed in a superior might and majesty.
Whenever immense strength is put forth only to end in immense weakness,
it makes men meditate.
Hence it is that, in seaports, the curious, without themselves knowing exactly why, throng about
these wonderful instruments of war and navigation.
Every day, then, from morning till night, the quays, the wharves, and the piers of the port of
Toulon were covered with a throng of saunterers and idlers, whose occupation consisted in gazing
at the Orion.
The Orion was a ship that had long been in bad condition. During her previous voyages,
thick lay-
ers of shellfish had gathered on her bottom to such an extent as to seriously impede her progress;
she bad been put on the dry-dock the year before,. to be scraped, and then she had gone to sea a-
gain. But this scraping had injured her fastening.
In the latitude of the Balearic Isles, her planking had loosened and opened, and as there was in
those days no copper sheathing, the ship had leaked. A fierce equinoctial came on, which had stove
in the larboard bows and a porthole, and damaged the fore-chainwales. In consequence of these inju-
ries, the Orion had put back to Toulon.
She was moored near the arsenal. She was in commission, and they were repairing her. The hull had
not been injured on the starboard side, but a few planks had been taken off here and there, accord-
ing to custom, to admit the air to the framework.
One morning, the throng which was gazing at her witnessed an accident.
The crew was engaged in furling sail. The topinan, whose duty it was to take in the starboard tip-
per corner of the main top-sail, lost his balance. He was seen tottering; the dense throng assem-
bled on the wharf of the arsenal uttered a cry, the man's head overbalanced
his body. and he whirl-
ed over the yard, his arms outstretched towards the deep; as he went over, he grasped the man-ropes,
first with one hand, and then with the other, and hung suspended in that manner. The sea lay far be-
low him at a giddy depth. The shock of his fall had given to the man-ropes a violent swinging motion,
and the poor fellow hung dangling to and fro at the end of this line, like a stone in a sling.
To go to his aid was to run a frightful risk. None of the crew, who were
all fishermen of the coast re-
cently taken into service, dared attempt it. In the meantime, the poor topman was becoming exhausted;
his agony could not be seen us his countenance, but his increasing weakness could be detected in the
movements of all his limbs. His arms twisted about in horrible contortions. Every attempt he made to
reascend only increased the oscillations of the man-ropes. He did not cry
out, for fear of losing his
strength. All were now looking forward to the moment when he should let
go of the rope, and, at instants,
all turned their heads away that they might not see him fall. There are
moments when a rope's end, a
pole, the branch of a tree, is life itself, and it is a frightful thing
to see a living being lose his hold u-
pon it, and fall like a ripe fruit.
Suddenly, a man was discovered clambering up the rigging with the agility
of a wildcat. This man
was clad in red--it was a convict; he wore a green cap--it was a convict for life. As he reached
the round top, a gust of wind blew off his cap and revealed a head entirely
white: it was not a
young man.
In fact, one of the convicts employed on board in some prison task, had,
at the first alarm, run
to the officer of the watch, and, amid the confusion and hesitation of the crew, while all the
sailors trembled and shrank back, had asked permission to save the topman's life at the risk
of his own. A sign of assent being given, with one blow of a hammer he
broke the chain riveted
to the iron ring at his ankle, then took a rope in his hand, and flung
himself into the shrouds.
Nobody, at the moment, noticed with what ease the chain was broken. It was only some time
afterwards that anybody remembered it.
In a twinkling he was upon the yard. He paused a few seconds, and seemed
to measure it with
his glance. Those seconds, during which the wind swayed the sailor to and
fro at the end of the
rope, seemed ages to the lookers-on. At length. the convict raised his eyes to heaven, and took
a step forward. The crowd drew a long breath. He was seen to run along
the yard. On reaching
its extreme tip, he fastened one end of the rope he had with him, and let
the other hang at full
length. Thereupon, he began to let himself down by his hands along this
rope, and then there was
an inexpressible sensation of terror; instead of one man, two were seen
dangling at that giddy
height.
You would have said it was a spider seizing a fly; only, in this case, the spider was bringing life,
and not death. Ten thousand eyes were fixed upon the group. Not a cry;
not a word was uttered;
the same emotion contracted every brow. Every man held his breath, as if
afraid to add the
least whisper to the wind which was swaying the two unfortunate men.
However, the convict had, at length, managed to make his way down to the
seaman. It was time;
one minute more, and the man, exhausted and despairing, would have fallen into the deep. The
convict firmly secured him to the rope to which he clung with one hand
whale he worked with
the other. Finally, lie was seen reascending to the yard, and hauling the
sailor after him; he
supported hind there, for an instant, to let him recover his strength,
and then, lifting him in his
arms, carried him, as he walked along the yard, to the crosstrees, and
from there to the round-
top, where he left him in the hands of his mess-mates.
Then the throng applauded; old galley sergeants wept, women hugged each other on the wharves,
and, on all sides, voices were heard exclaiming, with a sort of tenderly
Subdued enthusiasm:
"This man must be pardoned!"
He, however, had made it a point of duty to 'descend again immediately, and go back to his work.
In order to arrive more quickly, he slid down the rigging, and started
to run along a lower yard.
All eves were following him. There was a certain moment when every one
felt alarmed; whether
it was that he felt fatigued, or because his head swam, people thought they saw him hesitate
and stagger. Suddenly, the throng uttered a thrilling outcry: the convict
had fallen into the sea.
The fall was perilous. The frigate Allgesiras was moored close to the Orion,
and the poor convict
had plunged between the two ships. It was feared that he would be drawn under one or the other.
Fourmen sprang, at once, into a boat. The people cheered them on, and anxiety again took pos-
session of all minds. The man had not again risen to the surface. He had disappeared in the sea,
without making even a ripple, as though he had fallen into a cask of oil.
They sounded and dragged
the place. It was in vain. The search was continued until night, but not even the body was found.
The next morning, the Toulon Journal published the following lines:--"November 17, 1823. Yes-
terday, a convict at work on board of the Orion, on his return from rescuing
a sailor, fell into
the sea, and was drowned. His body was not recovered. It is presumed that
it has been caught
under the piles at the pier-head of the arsenal. This man was registered by the number 9430,
and his name was Jean Valjean."
BOOK THIRD
FULFILMENT OF THE PROMISE TO THE DEPARTED
I. THE WATER QUESTION AT MONTFERMEIL
MONTFERMEIL is situated between Livry and Chelles, upon the southern slope of
the high plateau which separates the Ourcq from the Marne. At present, it is a
considerable town, adorned all the year round with stuccoed villas, and, on Sun-
days, with citizens in full blossom. In 1823, there were at Montfermeil neither
so many white houses nor so many comfortable citizens; it was nothing but a vil-
lage in the woods. You would find, indeed, here and there a few country seats of
the last century, recognisable by their grand appearance, their balconies of
twisted iron, and those long windows the little panes of which show all sorts of
different greens upon the white of the closed shutters. But Montfermeil was none
the less a village. Retired dry-goods merchants and amateur villagers had not yet
discovered it. It was a peaceful and charming spot, and not upon the road to any
place; the inhabitants cheaply enjoyed that rural life which is so luxuriant and
so easy of enjoyment. But water was scarce there on account of the height of the
plateau.
They had to go a considerable distance for it. The end of the village towards
Gagny drew its water from the magnificent ponds in the forest on that side; the
other end, which surrounds the church and which is towards Chelles, found drinking-
water only at a little spring on the side of the hill, near the road to Chelles,
about fifteen minutes' walk from Montfermeil.
It was therefore a serious matter for each household to obtain its supply of water.
The great houses, the aristocracy, the Thenardier tavern included, paid a penny a
bucket-full to an old man who made it his business, and whose income from the Mont-
fermeil waterworks was about eight sous per day; but this man worked only till sev-
en o'clock in summer and five in the winter, and when night had come on, and the
first-floor shutters were closed, whoever had no drinking-water went after it, or
went without it.
This was the terror of the poor being whom the reader has not perhaps forgotten--
little Cosette. It will be remembered that Cosette was useful to the Thenardiers
in two ways. they got pay from the mother and work from the child. Thus when the
mother ceased entirely to pay, we have seen why,,in the preceding chapters, the
Thenardiers kept Cosette. She saved them a servant. In that capacity she
ran for
water when it was wanted. So the child, always horrified at the idea of going to
the spring at night took good care that water should never be wanting at
the house.
Christmas in the year 1823 was particularly brilliant at Montfermei!. The early
part of the winter had been mild; so far there had been neither frost nor snow.
Some jugglers from Paps had obtained permission from the mayor to set up their
stalls in the main street of the village, and a company of pedlars had, under the
same licence, put up their booths in the square before the church and even in the
lane du Boulanger, upon which, as the reader perhaps remembers, the Thenardier
chophouse was situated. This filled up the taverns and pot-houses, and gave to
this little quiet place a noisy and joyous appearance. We ought also to say, to be
a faithful historian, that, among the curiosities displayed in the square, there
was a menagerie in which frightful clowns, clad in rags and come nobody knows whence,
were exhibiting in 1823 to the peasants of Montfermelt one of those horrid Brazilian
vultures, a specimen of which our Museum Royal did not obtain until 1845, and the
eye of which is a tri-coloured cockade. Naturalists call this bird, I believe, Car-
acara Polyborus; it belongs to the order of the Apicidm and the family of the vul-
tures. Some good old retired Bonapartist soldiers in the village went to see the
bird as a matter of faith. The jugglers pronounced the tri-coloured cockade a unique
phenomenon, made expressly by God for their menagerie.
On that Christmas evening, several men, waggoners and pedlars, were seated at table
and drinking around four or five candles in the low hall of the Thenardier tavern.
This room resembled all barrooms; tables, pewter-mugs, bottles, drinkers, smokers;
little light, and much noise. The date, 1823, was, however, indicated by the two
things then in vogue with the middle classes, which were on the table, a kaleido-
scope and a fluted tin lamp. Thenardier, the wife, was looking to the supper, which
was cooking before a bright blazing fire; the husband, 'Thenardier, was drinking
with his guests and talking politics.
Aside from the political discussions, the principal subjects of which were the Span-
ish war and the Duc d'Angouleme, local interludes were heard amid the hubbub,
like
these, for instance:--
"Down around Nanterre and Suresnes wine is turning out well. Where they expected ten
casks they are getting twelve. That is getting 2.good yield of juice out of the
press." "But the grapes can't be ripe r "Oh, in these parts there is no need of har-
vesting ripe; the wine is fat enough by.spring." "It is all light wine then?" "There
is a good deal lighter wines than they make hereabouts. You have to harvest green."
Etc.
Or, indeed, a miller might be bawling:--
"Are we responsible for what there is in the bags? We find a heap of little
seeds there, but we can't amuse ourselves by picking out, and of course we
have got to let 'em go through the stones; there's darnel, there's fennel,
there's cockles, there's vetch, there's hemp, there's fox-tail, and a lot of
other weeds, not counting the stones that there is in some wheat, especially
Breton wheat. I don't like to grind Breton wheat, no more than carpenters like
to saw boards with nails in 'em. Just think of the dirt that all that makes
in the till. And then they complain of the flour. It's their own fault. We
ain't to blame for the flour."
Between two windows, a mower seated at a table with a farmer, who was making
a bargain for a piece of work to be done the next season, was saying:-
"There is no harm in the grass having the dew on. It cuts better. The dew is
a good thing. It is all the same, that are grass o' yours is young, and pretty
hard to cut. You see it is so green; you see it bends under the scythe."
Etc.
Cosette was at her usual place, seated on the cross-piece of the kitchen table,
near the fire-place; she was clad in rags; her bare feet were in wooden
shoes,
and by the light of the fire she was knitting wollen stockings for the little
Thenarcliers. A young kitten was play-under the chairs. In a neighbouring room
the fresh voices of two children were heard laughing and prattling; it was Epo-
nine and Azelma.
In the chimney-corner, a cow-hide hung upon a nail.
At intervals, the cry of a very young child, which was somewhere in the
house,
was heard above the noise of the bar-room. This was a little boy which the woman
had had some winters before--"She didn't know why," she said:
"it was the cold
weather,"--and which was a little more than three years old. The mother had nursed
him, but did not love him. When the hungry clamour of the brat became too much to
hear:--"Your boy is squalling," said Thenardier, "why don't
you go and see what
he wants?" "Bah!" answered the mother; "I am sick of him." And the poor little
fellow continued to cry in the darkness.
II. TWO PORTRAITS COMPLETED
THE Thenardiers have hitherto been seen in this book in profile only; the
time
has come to turn this couple about and look at them on all sides.
Thenardier has just passed his fiftieth year; Madame Thenardier had reached her
fortieth, which is the fiftieth for woman;so that there was an equilibrium
of
age between the husband and Wife.
The reader has perhaps, since her first appearance, preserved some remembrance
of this huge Thenardiess;--for such we shall call the female of this species,--
large, blond, red, fat, brawny, square, enormous, and agile; she belonged, as
we have said, to the race of those colossal wild women who posturise at fairs with
paving-stones hung in their hair. She did everything about the house, the
cham-
ber-work, the washing, the cooking, anything she pleased, and played the deuce
generally. Cosette was her only servant; a mouse in the service of an elephant.
Everything trembled at the sound of her voice; windows and furniture as
well as
people. Her broad face, covered with freckles, had the appearance of a skimmer.
She had a beard. She was the ideal of a butcher's boy dressed in petticoats. She
swore splendidly; she prided herself on being able to crack a nut with
her fist.
Apart from the novels she had read, which at times gave you an odd glimpse of the
affected lady under the ogress, the idea of calling her a woman never would have
occurred to anybody. This Thenardiess seemed like a cross between a wench and a
fishwoman. If you heard her speak, you would say it is a gendarme; if you
saw
her drink, you would say it is a cartman; if you saw her handle Cosette,
you
would say it is the hangman. When at rest, a tooth protruded from her mouth.
The other Thenardier was a little man, meagre, pale, angular, bony, and lean,
who appeared to be sick, and whose health was excellent; here his knavery began.
He smiled habitually as a matter of business, and tried to be polite to
everybody,
even to the beggar to whom he refused a penny. He had the look of a weazel,
and
the mien of a man of letters. He had a strong resemblance to the portraits of
the Abbe Define. He affected drinking with waggoners. Nobody ever saw him drunk.
He smoked a large pipe. He wore a House, and under it an old black coat. He made
pretensions to literature and materialism. There were names which he often pro-
nounced in support of anything whatever that he might say. Voltaire, Ravnal,
Parny, and, oddly enough, St. Augustine. He professed to have "a system." For the
rest, a great swindler. A fellow-sopher. There is such a variety. It will
be remem-
bered, that he pretended to have been in the service; he related with some pomp
that at Waterloo, being sergeant in a Sixth or Ninth Light something. he alone,
against a squadron of Hussars of Death, had covered with his body, and saved amid
a shower of grape, "a general, dangerously wounded." Hence the flaming picture on
his sign, and the name of his inn, which was spoken of in the region as the "tavent
of the sergeant of Waterloo." He was liberal; classical, and a Bonapartist. He had
subscribed for the Champ d'Asile. It was said in the village that he had studied
for the priesthood.
We believe that he had only studied in Holland to be an inn-keeper. This whelp of
the composite order was, according to all probability, some Fleming of Lille in
Flanders, a Frenchman in Paris, a Belgian in Brussels, conveniently on the fence
between the two frontiers. We understand his prowess at Waterloo. As we have seen,
he exaggerated it a little. Ebb and flow, wandering, adventure, was his element; a
violated conscience is followed by a loose life; and without doubt, at the stormy
epoch of the 18th of June, 1815, Thenardier belonged to that species of marauding
sutlers of whom we have spoken, scouring the country, robbing here and selling
there, and travelling in family style, man, woman, and children, in some rickety
carry-all, in the wake of marching troops, with the instinct to attach himself al-
ways to the victorious army. This campaign over, having, as he said, some "quibus,"
he had opened a "chop-house" at Montfermeil.
This "quibus," composed of purses and watches, gold rings and silver crosses, gath-
ered at the harvest time in the furrows sown with corpses," did not form a great to-
tal, and had not lasted this sutler, now become a tavern-keeper, very long.
Thenardier had that indescribable stiffness of gesture which, with an oath, reminds
you of the barracks, and, with a sign of the cross, of the seminary. He was a fine
talker. He was fond of being thought learned. Nevertheless, the schoolmaster remark-
ed that he made mistakes in pronunciation. He made out travellers' bills in a super-
ior style, but practised eyes sometimes found them faulty in orthography. Thenardier
was sly, greedy, lounging, and clever. He did not disdain servant girls, consequently
his wife had no more of them. This giantess was jealous. It seemed to her that this
little, lean, and yellow man must be the object of universal desire.
Thenardier, above all a man of astuteness and poise, was a rascal of the subdued or-
der. This is the worst species; there is hypocrisy in it.
Not that Thenardier was not on occasion capable of anger, quite as much as his wife;
but that was very rare, and at such times, as if he were at war with the whole human
race, as if he had in him a deep furnace of hatred, as if he were of those who are
perpetually avenging themselves, who accuse everybody about them of the evils that
befall them, and are always ready to throw on the first comer, as legitimate
grie-
vance, the sum-total of the deceptions, failures, and calamities of their life--as
all this leaven worked in him, and boiled up into his mouth and eyes, he was fright-
ful. Woe to him who came within reach of his fury, then!
Besides all his other qualities, Thenardier was attentive and penetrating, silent or
talkative as occasion required, and always with great intelligence. He had somewhat
the look of sailors accustomed to squinting the eye in looking through
spy-glasses.
Thenardier was a statesman.
Every new-comer who entered the chop-house said, on seeing the Thenaidiers:
There is the master of the house. It was an error. She was not even the mis-
tress. The husband was both master and mistress. She performed, he created.
He directed everything by a sort of invisible and continuous magnetic action.
A word sufficed, sometimes a sign; the mastodon obeyed. Thenardier was to her,
without her being really aware of it, a sort of being apart and sovereign.
She had the virtues of her order of creation; never would she have differed
in any detail with "Monsieur Thenardier"--nor--impossible supposition--would
she have publicly quarrelled with her husband, on any matter whatever. Never
had she committed "before company' that fault of which women are so often guil-
ty, and which is called in parliamentary language: discovering the crown. Al-
though their accord had no other result than evil, there was food for con-
templation in the submission of the Thenardiess to her husband. This bustling
mountain of flesh moved under the little finger of this frail despot. It was,
viewed from its dwarfed and grotesque side, this great universal fact: the
homage of matter to spirit; for certain deformities have their origin in the
depths even of eternal beauty. There was somewhat of the unknown in Thenar-
dier; hence the absolute empire of this man over this woman. At times, she
looked upon him as upon a lighted candle; at others, she felt him like
a
claw.
This woman was a formidable creation, who loved nothing but her children, and
feared nothing but her husband. She was a mother because she was a mammal.
Her maternal feelings stopped with her girls, and, as we shall see, did
not extend
to boys. The man had but one thought--to get rich.
He did not succeed. His great talents had no adequate opportunity. Thenardier
at Montfenneil was ruining himself, if ruin is possible at zero. In Switzerland,
or in the Pyrenees, this penniless rogue would have become a millionaire. But
where fate places the innkeeper he must browse.
It is understood that the word innkeeper is employed here in a restricted sense,
and does not extend to an entire class.
In this same year, 1823, Thenardier owed about fifteen hundred francs, of press-
ing debts, which rendered him moody.
However obstinately unjust destiny was to him, Thenardier was one of those men
who best understood, to the greatest depth and in the most modern style, that
which is a virtue among the barbarous, and a subject of merchandise among the
civilised--hospitality. He was, besides, an admirable poacher, and was counted
an excellent shot. He had a certain cool and quiet laugh, which was particu-
larly dangerous.
His theories of innkeeping sometimes sprang from him by flashes. He had
certain professional aphorism's which he inculcated in the mind of his
wife. "The duty of the innkeeper," said he to her one day, emphatically, and
in a low voice, "is to sell to the first comer, food, rest, light, fire, dirty
linen, servants, fleas, and smiles; to stop travellers, empty small purses, and
honestly lighten large ones; to receive families who are travelling, with respect:
scrape the man, pluck the woman, and pick the child; to charge for the open win-
dow, the closed window, the chimney corner, the sofa, the chair, the stool, the
bench, the feather bed, the mattress, and the straw bed; to know how much the
mirror is worn, and to tax that; and, by the five hundred thousand devils, to
make the traveller pay for everything, even to the flies that his dog eats!"
This man and this woman were cunning and rage married--a hideous and terrible
pair.
While the husband calculated and schemed, the Thenardiess thought not of absent
creditors, took no care either for yesterday or the morrow, and lived passion-
ately in the present moment.
Such were these two beings. Cosette was between them, undergoing their double
pressure, like a creature who is at the same time being bruised by a millstone,
and lacerated with pincers. The man and the woman had each a different way. Cos-
ette was beaten unmercifully; that came from the woman. She went barefoot in
winter; that came from the man.
Cosette ran up stairs and down stairs; washed, brushed, scrubbed, swept, ran,
tired herself, got out of breath, lifted heavy things, and, puny as she was,
did the rough work. No pity; a ferocious mistress, a malignant master. The Then-
ardier chop-house was like a snare, in which Cosette had been caught, and was
trembling. The ideal of oppression was realised by this dismal servitude. It was
something like a fly serving spiders.
The poor child was passive and silent.
When they find themselves in such condition at the dawn of existence, so young,
so feeble, among men, what passes in these souls fresh from God!
III. MEN MUST HAVE WINE AND HORSES WATER
FOUR new guests had just come in.
Cosette was musing sadly; for, though she was only eight years old, she had al-
ready suffered so much that she mused with the mournful air of an old woman.
She had a black eye from a blow of the Thenardiess's fist, which made the Then-
ardiess. say from time to time, "How ugly she is with her patch on her eye."
Cosette was then thinking that it was evening, late in the evening, that
the bowls
and pitchers in the rooms of the travellers. who had arrived must be filled
immediately, and that there was no more water in the cistern.
One thing comforted her a little; they did not drink much water in the Thenardier
tavern. There were plenty of people there who were thirsty; but it was that kind
of thirst which reaches rather towards the jug than the pitcher. Had anybody asked
for a glass of water among these glasses of wine, he would have seemed a savage
to all those men. However, there was an instant when the child trembled; the Then-
ardiess raised the cover of a kettle which was boiling on the range, then took a
glass and hastily approached the cistern. She turned the faucet; the child had
raised her head and followed all her movements. A thin stream of water ran from
the faucet, and filled the glass half full.
"Here," said she, "there is no more water!" Then she was silent for a moment. The
child held her breath.
"Pshaw!" continued the Thenardiess, examining the half-filled glass, "there is
enough of it, such as it is."
Cosette resumed her work, but for more than a quarter of an hour she felt her heart
leaping into her throat like a great ball.
She counted the minutes as they thus rolled away, and eagerly wished it were morning.
From time to time, one of the drinkers would look out into the street and
exclaim:--
"It is as black as an oven!" or, "It would take a cat to
go along the street
without a lantern to-night!" And Cosette shuddered.
All at once, one of the pedlars who lodged in the tavern came in, and said
in a
harsh voice:
"You have not watered my horse."
"Yes, we have, sure," said the Thenardiess.
"I tell you no, ma'am," replied the pedlar.
Cosette came out from under the table.
"Oh, yes, monsieur!" said she, "the horse did drink; he drank in the bucket, the
bucket full, and 'twas me that carried it to him, and l talked to him."
This was not true. Cosette lied.
"Here is a girl as big as my fist, who can tell a lie as big as a
house," ex-
claimed the pedlar. "I tell you that he has not had any water, little wench! He
has a way of blowing when he has not had any water, that I know well enough."
Cosette persisted, and added in a voice stifled with anguish, and which could
hardly be heard:
"Rut he did drink a good deal."
"Come," continued the pedlar, in a passion, "that is enough; give my horse some
water, and say no more about it."
Cosette went back under the table.
"Well, of course that is right," said the Thenardiess; "if the beast has
not had any water, she must have some."
Then looking about her:
"Well, what has become of that girl?"
She stooped down and discovered Cosette crouched of the other end of the
table, almost under the feet of the drinkers.
"Aren't you coming?" cried the Thenardiess.
Cosette came out of the kind of hole where she had hidden. The Thenardiess
continued:
"Mademoiselle Dog-without-a-name, go and carry some drink to this horse."
"But, ma'am," said Cosette feebly, "there is no water."
The Thenardiess
threw the street door wide open.
"Well, go after some!"
Cosette hung her head, and went for an empty bucket that was by the chimney
corner.
The bucket was larger than she, and the child could have sat down in it
comfortably.
The Thenardiess went back to her range, and tasted what was in the kettle
with a wooden spoon, grumbling the while.
"There is some at the spring. She is the worst girl that ever was. I think
Would have been better if I'd left out the onions."
Then she fumbled in a drawer where there were some pennies, pepper, and
garlic.
"Here, Mamselle Toad," added she, "get a big loaf at the baker's, as you come
back. Here is fifteen sous."
Cosette had a little pocket in the side of her apron; she took the piece with-
out saying a word, and put it in that pocket.
Then she remained motionless, bucket in hand, the open door before her. She
seemed to be waiting for somebody to come to her aid. "Get along!" cried the
Thenardiess.
Cosette went out. The door closed.
IV. A DOLL ENTERS UPON THE SCENE
THE row of booths extended along the street from the church, the reader will
remember, as far as the Thenardier tavern. These booths, on account of the
approaching passage of the citizens on their way to the midnight mass, were
all illuminated with candles, burning in paper lanterns, which, as the
schoolmaster of Montfermeil, who was at that moment seated at one of Thenar-
dier's tables, said, produced a magical effect. In retaliation, not a star was
to be seen in the sky.
The last of these stalls, set up exactly opposite Thenardier's door, was a
toy-shop, all glittering with trinkets, glass beads, and things magnificent
in
tin. In the first rank, and in front, the merchant had placed, upon a bed of
white napkins, a great doll nearly two feet high dressed in a robe of pink-
crape with golden wheat-ears on its head, and which had real hair and enamel
eyes. The whole, day, this marvel had been displayed to the bewilderment of
the passers under ten years of age, but there had not been found in Montfermeil
a mother rich enough, or prodigal enough to give it to her child. Epbnine and
Azelma had passed hours in contemplating it, and Co-sate herself, furtively,
it is true, had dared to look at it.
At the moment when Cosette went out, bucket in hand, all gloomy and overwhelmed
as she was, she could not help raising her eyes towards this wonderful doll,
towards the lady, as she called it. The poor child stopped petrified. She
had
not seen this doll so near before.
This whole booth seemed a palace to her; this doll was not a doll, it was a
vision. It was joy, splendour, riches, happiness, and it appeared in a
sort
of chimerical radiance to this unfortunate little being, buried so deeply in
a cold and dismal misery. Cosette was measuring with the sad and simple saga-
city of childhood the abyss which separated her from that doll. She was saying
to herself that one must he a queen, or at least a princess, to have a "thing"
like that. She gazed upon this beautiful pink dress, this beautiful smooth hair,
and she was thinking, "How happy must be that doll!" Her eye could not turn
away from this fantastic booth. The longer she looked, the more she was
dazzled.
She thought she saw paradise. There were other dolls behind the large one that
appeared to her to be fairies and genii. The merchant walking to and fro in the
back part of his stall, suggested the Eternal Father.
In this adoration, she forgot everything, even the errand on which she had been
sent. Suddenly, the harsh voice of the Thenardiess called her back to the
reality: "How, jade, haven't you gone yet? Hold on; I am canting for
you! I'd
like to know what she's doing there? Little monster, be off!"
The Thenardiess had glanced into the street, and perceived Cosette in ecstasy.
Cosette fled with her bucket, running as fast as she could.
V. LITTLE GIRL ALL ALONE
As the Thenardier tavern was in that part of the village which is near the church.
Cosette bad to go to the spring in the woods towards Chelles to draw water.
She looked no more at the displays in the booths, so long as she was in the lane
Boulanger; and in the vicinity of the church, the illuminated stalls lighted the
way, but soon the last gleam from the last stall disappeared. The poor child found
herself in darkness. She became buried in it. Only, as she became the prey of a
certain sensation, she shook the handle of the bucket as much as she could on her
way. That made a noise, which kept her company.
The further she went, the thicker became the darkness. There was no longer anybody
in the street. However,. she met a woman who turned around on seeing her pass, and
remained motionless, muttering between her teeth; "Where in the world can that
child be going? Is it a phantom child?" Then the woman recognised Cosette. "Oh,"
said she, "it is the lark!"
Cosette thus passed through the labyrinth of crooked and de-serted streets, which
terminates the village of Montfermeil towards Chelles. As long as she had houses,
or even walls, on the sides of the road; she went on boldly enough. From time to
time, she saw the light of a candle through the cracks of a shutter; it was light
and life to her; there were people there; that kept up her courage. However, as she
advanced, her speed slackened as if mechanically. When she had passed the corner of
the last house, Cosette stopped. To go beyond the last booth had been difficult; to
go further than the last house became impossible. She put the bucket on the ground,
buried her hands in her hair, and began to scratch her head slowly, a motion pecul-
iar to terrified and hesitating children. It was Montfermeil no longer, it was the
open country; dark and deserted space was before her. She looked with despair into
this darkness where nobody was, where there were beasts, where there were perhaps
ghosts. She looked intensely, and she heard the animals walking in the grass, and
she distinctly saw the ghosts moving in the trees. Then she seized her bucket again;
fear gave her boldness: "Pshaw," said she, "I will tell her there isn't any more
water!" And she resolutely went back into Montfermeil.
She had scarcely gone a hundred steps when she stopped again, and began to scratch
her head. Now, it was the Thenardiess that appeared to her; the hideous Thenardiess,
with her hyena mouth, and wrath flashing from her eyes. The child cast a pitiful
glance before her and behind her. What could she do? Nlihat would become of her?
Where should she go? Before her, the spectre of the Thenardiess; behind her, all the
phantoms of night and of the forest. It was at the Thenardiess that she recoiled. She
took the road to the spring again, and began to run. She ran out of the village; she
ran into the woods, seeing nothing, hearing nothing. She did not stop running until out
of breath, and even then she staggered on. She went right on, desperate.
Even while running, she wanted to cry.
The nocturnal tremulousness of the forest wrapped her about completely.
She thought no more; she saw nothing more. The immensity of 'night con-
fronted this little creature. On one side, the infinite shadow; on the other,
an atom.
It was only seven or eight minutes' walk from the edge of the woods to the
spring. Cosette knew the road, from travelling it several times a day.
Strange thing, she did not lose her way. A remnant of instinct guided
her blindly. But she neither turned her eyes to the right nor to the left,
for fear of seeing things in the trees and in the bushes. Titus she ar-
rived at the spring.
It was a small natural basin, made by the water in the loamy soil, about
two feet deep, surrounded with moss, and with that long figured grass
called HenryFourth's collars, and paved with a few large stones. A brook
escaped from it with a gentle, tranquil murmur.
Cosette did not take time to breathe. It was very dark, but she was accus-
tomed to come to this fountain. She felt with her left hand in the darkness
for a young oak which bent over the spring and usually served her as a sup-
port, found a branch, swung herself from it, bent down and plunged the bucket
in the water. She was for a moment so excited that her strength was tripled.
When she was thus bent over, she did not notice that the pocket of her apron
emptied itself into the spring. The fifteen-sous piece fell into the water.
Cosette neither saw it nor heard it fall. She drew out the bucket almost full
and set it on the grass.
This done, she perceived that her strength was exhausted. She was anxious to
start at once; but the effort of filling the bucket had been so great that it
was impossible for her to take a step. She was compelled to sit down. She fell
upon the grass and remained in a crouching posture.
She closed her eyes, then she opened them, without knowing why, without the
power of doing otherwise. At her side, the water shaken in the bucket made
circles that resembled serpents of white fire.
Above her head, the sky was covered with vast black clouds which were like
sheets of smoke. The tragic mask of night seemed to bend vaguely over this
child. Jupiter was setting in the depths of the horizon.
The child looked with a startled eye upon that great star which she did not
know and which made her afraid. The planet, in fact, was at that moment very
near the horizon and was crossing a dense bed of mist which gave it a horrid
redness. The mist, gloomily empurpled, magnified the star. One would have
called it a luminous wound.
A cold wind blew from the plain. The woods were dark, without any rustling of
leaves, without any of those vague and fresh coruscations of summer. Great
branches drew themselves up fearfully. Mean and shapeless bushes whistled in
the glades. The tall grass wriggled under the north wind like eels. The bram-
bles twisted about like long arms seeking to seize their prey in their claws.
Some dry weeds driven by the wind, passed rapidly by, and appeared to flee
with dismay before something that was following. The prospect was dismal.
Darkness makes the brain giddy. Man needs light, whoever plunges into the op-
posite of day feels his heart chilled. 'When the eye sees blackness, the mind
sees trouble. In an eclipse, in night, in the sooty darkness, there is anxiety
even to the strongest. Nobody walks alone at night in the forest without trem-
bling. Darkness and trees, two formidable depths--a reality of chimeras appears
in the indistinct distance. The Inconceivable outlines itself a few steps from
you with a spectral clearness. You see floating in space or in your brain some-
thing strangely vague and unseizable as the dreams of sleeping flowers. There
are fierce phantoms in the horizon. You breathe in the odours of the great
black void. You are afraid, and are tempted to look behind you. The hollowness
of night, the haggardness of all things, the silent profiles that fade away as
you advance, the obscure dishevelments, angry clumps, livid pools, the gloomy
reflected in the funereal, the sepulchral immensity of silence, the possible
unknown beings, the swaying of mysterious branches, the frightful twistings of
the trees, long spires of shivering grass against all this you have no defence.
There is no bravery which does not shudder and feel the nearness of anguish.
You feel something hideous, as if the soul were amalgamating with the shadow.
This penetration of the darkness is inexpressibly dismal for a child.
Forests are apocalypses; and the beating of the wings of a little soul makes
an agonising sound under their monstrous vault.
Without being conscious of what she was experiencing, Cosette felt that she
was seized by this black enormity of nature. It was not merely terror that held
her, but something more terrible even than terror. She shuddered. Words fail
to express the peculiar strangeness of that shudder which chilled her through
and through. Her eye had become wild. She felt that perhaps she would be com-
pelled to return there at the same hour the next night.
Then, by a sort of instinct, to get out of this singular state, which she did
not understand, but which terrified her, she began to count aloud, one, two,
three, four, up to ten, and when she had finished, she began again. This re-
stored her to a real perception of things about her. Her hands, which she had
wet in drawing the water, felt cold. She arose. Her fear had returned, a natural
and insurmountable fear. She had only one thought, to fly; to fly with all her
might, across woods, across fields, to houses, to windows, to lighted candles.
Her eyes fell upon the bucket that was before her. Such dread with which the
Thenardiess inspired her, that she did not dare to go without the bucket of
water. She grasped the handle with both hands. She could hardly lift the bucket.
She went a dozen steps in this manner, but the bucket was full, it was heavy,
she was compelled to rest it on the ground. She breathed an instant, then grasp-
ed the handle again, and walked on, this time a little longer. But she had to
stop again. After resting a fete seconds, she started on. She walked bending
forward, her head down, like an old woman: the weight of the bucket strained
and stiffened her thin arms. The iron handle was numbing and freezing her little
wet hands; from time to time she bad to stop, and every time she stopped, the
cold water that splashed from the bucket fell upon her naked knees. This took
place in the depth of a wood, at night, in the winter, far from all human sight;
it was a child of eight years; there was none but God at that moment who saw
this sad thing.
And undoubtedly her mother, alas!
For there are things which open the eyes of the dead in their grave.
She breathed with a kind of mournful rattle; sobs choked but she did not
dare to weep; so fearful was she of the Thenardiess, even at a distance.
She always imagined that the Thenardiess was near.
However, she could not make much headway in this manner, and was getting
along very slowly. She tried hard to shorten her resting spells, and to
walk as far as possible between them. She remembered with anguish that it
would take her more than an hour to return to Montfenneil thus, and that
the Thenardiess would beat her. This anguish added to her dismay at being
alone in the woods at night. She was worn out with fatigue, and was not
yet out of the forest. Arriving near an old chestnut tree which she knew,
she made a last halt, longer than the others, to get well rested; then she
gathered all her strength, took up the bucket again, and began to walk on
courageously. meanwhile the poor little despairing thing could not help
cry-
ing: "Oh! my God! my God!"
At that moment she felt all at once that the weight of the bucket was gone.
A hand, which seemed enormous to her, had just caught the handle, and was
carrying it easily. She raised her head. A large dark form, straight and erect,
was walking beside her in the gloom. It was a man who had come up behind
her, and whom she had not heard. This man, without saying a word, had
grasped the handle of the bucket she was carrying.
There are instincts for all the crises of life.
The child was not afraid.
VI. WHICH PERHAPS PROVES THE INTELLIGENCE OF BOULATRUELLE
IN the afternoon of that same Christmas-day, 1823, a man walked a king time
in the most deserted portion of the Boulevard de l'Hapi tal at Paris. This man
had the appearance of some one who was looking for lodgings, and seemed to
stop by preference before the most modest houses of this dilapidated part of
the Faubourg Saint Marceau.
We shall see further on that this man did hi fact hire a room in this isolated
quarter.
This man, in his dress as in his whole person, realised the type of what might
be called the mendicant of good society--extreme misery being combined
with
extreme neatness. It is a rare coincidence which inspires intelligent hearts
with this double respect that we feel for him who is very poor and for him who
is very worthy. He wore a round hat, very old and carefully brushed, a long coat,
completely threadbare, of coarse yellow cloth, a colour which was in nowise ex-
traordinary at that epoch, a large waistcoat with pockets of antique style, black
trousers worn grey at the knees, black woollen stockings, and thick shoes with
copper buckles. One would have called him an old preceptor of a good family,
returned from the emigration. From his hair, which was entirely white, from
his wrinkled brow, from his livid lips, from his face in which everything
breathed exhaustion and weariness of life, one would have supposed him
con-
siderably over sixty. From his firm though slow step, and the singular vigour
impressed upon all his motions, one would hardly have thought him fifty. The
wrinkles on his forehead were well disposed, and would have prepossessed in his
favour any one who observed him with attention. His lip contracted with a strange
expression, which seemed severe and yet which was humble. There was in
the
depths of his eye an indescribably mournful serenity. He carried in his left hand
a small package tied in a handkerchief, with his right he leaned upon a
sort of
staff cut from a hedge. This staff had been finished with some care, and did not
look very badly; the knots were smoothed down, and a coral head had been formed
with red wax; it was a cudgel, and it seemed a cane.
There are few people on that boulevard, especially in winter. This man appeared
to avoid them rather than seek them, but without affectation.
At that epoch the king, Louis XVIII., went almost every day td Choisy Le Roy. It
was one of his favourite rides. About two o'clock, almost invariably, the
carriage and the royal cavalcade were seen to pass at full speed through
the
Boulevard de l'Hospital.
This supplied the place of watch and clock to the poor women of the quarter,
who would say: It is two o'clock, there he is going back to the Tuileries."
And some ran, and others fell into line; for when a king passes by, there is
always a tumult. Moreover, the appearance and disappearance of Louis XVIII.
produced a certain sensation in the streets of Paris. It was rapid, but maj-
estic. This impotent king had a taste for fast driving; not being able to walk,
he wished to run; this cripple would have gladly been drawn by the lightning.
He passed by, peaceful and severe, in the midst of naked sabres. His massive
coach, all gilded, with great lily branches painted on the panels, rolled noi-
sily along. One hardly had time to catch a glance of it. In the back corner on
the right could be seen, upon cushions covered with white satin, a broad face,
firm and red, a forehead freshly powdered a la bird of paradise, a proud eye,
stern and keen, a well-read smile, two large epaulets of bullion waving over a
citizen's dress, the Golden Fleece, the cross of Saint Louis, the cross of the
Legion of Honour, the silver badge of the Holy Spirit, a big belly, and a large
blue ribbon; that was the king. Outside of Paris, lie held his hat with white
feathers upon Ins knees, which were inclosed in high English gaiters; when he
re-entered the city, he placed his hat upon his head, bowing but little.
He
looked coldly upon the people, who returned his look. When he appeared for the
first time in the Quartier' Saint Marceau. all he succeeded in eliciting was
this saying of a resident to his comrade: "It's that big fellow who is the gov-
ernment."
This unfailing passage of the king at the same hour was then the daily event of
the Boulevard de l'Hospital.
The promenader in the yellow coat evidently did not belong to the quarter, and
probably not to Paris, for lie was ignorant of this circumstance. When at two
o'clock the royal carriage, surrounded by a squadron of silver-laced body-guard,
turned into the boulevard, after passing La Salpetriere, he appeared surprised,
and almost frightened. There was no one else in the cross alley, and he retired
hastily behind a corner of the side wall, but this did not prevent the Duke
d'Havre seeing hint. The Duke d'Havre, as captain of the guards in waiting that
day, was seated in the carriage opposite the king. He said to his majesty:
"There
is a man who has a had look." Some policemen, who were clearing the passage for
the king, also noticed him; one of them was ordered to follow him. But the man
plunged into the little solitary streets of the Faubourg. and as night was coming
on the officer lost his track, as is established by a report addressed on the
same evening to the Comte Angles,:Nlinister of State, Prefect of Police.
When the man in the yellow coat had thrown the officer off his track, he turned
about, not without looking back many 'times to make sure that he was not fol-
lowed. At a quarter past four, that is to say, after dark, he passed in front
of the theatre of the Porte' Saint Martin where the play that day was The Two
Convicts. The poster, lit up by the reflection from the theatre, seemed to
strike him, for, although he was walking rapidly, he stopped to read it A mo-
ment after, he was in the cul-de-sac de la Planchette, and entered the Pewter
platter, which was then the office of the Lagny stage. This stage started at
half past four. The horses were harnessed, and the travellers, who had been
called by the driver hastily, were climbing the high iron steps of the vehicle.
The man asked:
"Have you a seat?"
"Only one, beside me, on the box," said the driver.
"I will take it."
"Get up then."
Before starting, however, the driver cast a glance at the poor apparel of the
traveller, and at the smallness of his bundle, and took his pay.
"Are you going through to Lagny?" asked the driver. "Yes," said the man.
The traveller paid through to Lagny.
They started off. When they had passed the barriere, the driver tried to start
a conversation, but the traveller answered only in monosyllables. The driver
concluded to whistle, and swear at his horses.
The driver wrapped himself up in his cloak. It was cold. The man did not appear
to notice it. In this way they passed through Gournay and Neuilly sur Marne.
About six o'clock in the evening they were at Chelles. The driver stopped to let
his horses breathe, in front of the waggoners' tavern established in the old
buildings of the royal abbey.
"I will get down here," said the man.
He took his bundle and stick, and jumped down from the stage.
A moment afterwards he had disappeared.
He did not go into the tavern.
When, a few minutes afterwards, the stage started off for Lagny, it did not
overtake him in the main street of Chelles.
The driver turned to the inside passengers:
"There," said he, "is a man who does not belong here, for I don't know him. He
has an appearance of not having a sou; however, he don't stick about money; he
pays to Lagny, and he only goes to Chelles. It is night, all the houses are shut,
he don't go to the tavern, and we don't overtake him. He must, then, have
sunk into the ground."
The man had not sunk into the ground, but he had hurried rapidly in the
dark-
ness along the main street of Chelles; then he had turned to the left, before
reaching the church, into the cross road leading to Montfermeil, like one who
knew the country and had been that way before.
He followed this road rapidly. At the spot where it intersects the old road bor-
dered with trees that goes from Gagny to Lam, he heard footsteps approaching.
He
concealed himself hastily in a ditch, and waited there till the people who were
passing were a good distance off. The precaution was indeed almost superfluous,
for, as we have already said, it was a very dark December night. There were scarce-
ly two or three stars to be seen in the sky.
It is at this point that the ascent of the hill begins. The man did not
return to
the Montfermeil road; he turned to the right across the fields, and gained
the
woods with rapid strides.
When he reached the wood, he slackened his pace, and began to look carefully at
all the trees, pausing at every step, as if he were seeking and following a mys-
terious route known only to himself. There was a moment when he appeared to lose
himself, and when he stopped, undecided. Finally he arrived, by continual groping,
at a glade where there was a heap of large whitish stones. He made his way quickly
towards these stones, and examined them with attention in the dusk of the night,
as if he were paiiing them in review. A large tree, covered with these excrescences
which are the warts of vegetation, was a few steps from the heap of stones.
He went
to tins tree, and passed his hand over the bark of the trunk, as if he were seeking
to recognise and to count all the warts.
Opposite this tree, which was an ash, there was a chestnut tree wounded in the bark,
which had been staunched with a bandage of zinc nailed on. He rose on tip-toe and
touched that band of zinc.
Then he stamped for some time upon the ground in the space between the tree and the
stones, like one who would be sure that the earth had not been freshly stirred.
This done, he took his course and resumed his walk through the woods.
This was the man who had fallen in with Cosette.
As he made his way through the copse in the direction of Montfermeil, he had per-
ceived that little shadow, struggling along with a groan, setting her burden on the
ground, then taking it up and going on again. He had approached her and seen that
it was a very young child carrying an enormous bucket of water. Then he had gone to
the child, and silently taken hold of the handle of the bucket.
VII. COSETTE SIDE BY SIDE WITH THE UNKNOWN, IN THE DARKNESS.
COSETTE, we have said, was not afraid.
The man spoke to her. His voice was serious, and was almost a whisper.
"My child, that is very heavy for you which you are carrying there."
Cosette raised her head and answered:
"Yes, monsieur."
"Give it to me," the man continued, "I will carry it for you." Cosette let go of the
bucket. The man walked along with her. "It is very heavy, indeed," said he to himself.
Then he added: "Little girl, how old are you?"
"Eight years, monsieur."
"And have you come far in this way?"
"From the spring in the woods."
"And are you going far?"
"A good quarter of an hour from here."
The man remained a moment without speaking, then he said abruptly:
"You have no mother then?"
"I don't know," answered the child.
Before the man had had time to say a word, she added:
"I don't believe I have. All the rest have one. For my part, I have none."
And after a silence, she added:
"I believe I never had any."
The man stopped, put the bucket on the ground, stooped down and placed his hands upon
the child's shoulders, making an effort to look at her and see her face in the darkness.
The thin and puny face of Cosette was vaguely outlined in the livid light
of the sky.
"What is your name?" said the man.
"Cosette."
It seemed as if the man had an electric shock. He looked at her again, then letting go
of her shoulders, took up the bucket, and walked on.
A moment after, he asked:
"Little girl, where do you live?"
"At Montfermeil, if you know it."
"It is there that we are going?"
"Yes, monsieur.'?
He made another pause, then he began:
"Who is it that has sent you out into the woods after water at this time of night?"
"Madame Thenardier."
The man resumed with a tone of voice which he tried to render indifferent, but in which
there was nevertheless a singular tremor: "What does she do, your Madame Thenardier?"
"She is my mistress," said the child. "She keeps the tavern." "The tavern," said the man.
"Well, I am going there to lodge to-night. Show me the way."
"We are going there," said the child.
The man walked very fast. Cosette followed him without difficulty. She felt fatigue no
more. From time to time, she raised her eyes towards this man with a sort of tranquillity
and inexpressible confidence. She had never been taught to turn towards Providence and to
pray. However, she felt in her bosom something that resembled hope and joy, and which rose
towards heaven.
A few minutes passed. The man spoke:
"Is there no servant at Madame Thenardier's?"
"No, monsieur."
"Are you alone?"
"Yes, monsieur."
There was another interval of silence. Cosette raised her voice: "That is, there are two
little girls."
"What little girls?"
"Ponine and Zelma."
The child simplified in this way the -romantic names dear to the mother.
"What are Ponine and Zelma?"
"They are Madame Thenardier's young ladies, you might say her daughters."
"And what do they do?"
"Oh!" said the child, "they have beautiful dolls, things which there's gold in; they are
full of business. They play, they amuse themselves."
"All day long?"
"Yes, monsieur."
"And you?"
"Me! I work."
"All day long?"
The child raised her large eyes in which there was a tear, which could not be seen in the
darkness, and answered softly:
"Yes, monsieur."
She continued after an interval of silence:
"Sometimes, when I have finished my work and they are willing, I amuse
myself also."
"How do you amuse yourself?"
"The best I can. They let me alone. But I have not many play-things. Ponine
and Zelma are not willing, for me to play with their dolls. I have only a
little lead sword, not longer. than that."
The child showed her little finger.
"And which does not cut?"
"Yes, monsieur," said the child, "it cuts lettuce and flies' heads."
They reached the village; Cosette guided the stranger through the streets. They
passed by the bakery, but Cosette did not think of the bread she was to have
brought back. The man questioned her no more, and now maintained a mournful
silence. When they had'passed the church, the man, seeing all these booths in
the street, asked Cosette:
"Is it fair-time here!"
"No, monsieur, it is Christmas."
As they drew near the tavern, Cosette timidly touched his arm: "Monsieur?"
"What, my child?"
"Here we are close by the house."
"Well?"
"Will you let me take the bucket now?"
"What for?"
"Because, if madame sees that anybody brought it for me, she will beat me."
The man gave her the bucket. A moment after they were at the door of the chop-
house.
VIII. INCONVENIENCE OP ENTERTAINING A POOR MAN WHO IS PERHAPS RICH
Cosette could not help casting one look towards the grand doll still displayed in
the toy-shop, then she rapped. The door opened. The Thenardiess appeared with a
candle in her hand.
"Oh! it is you, you little beggar! Lud-aLmassy! you have taken your time! she has
been playing, the wench!"
"Madame," said Cosette, trembling, "there is a gentleman who is coming to lodge."
The Thenardiess very quickly' replaced her fierce air by her amiable grimace, a
change at sight peculiar to innkeepers, and looked for the new-comer with eager
eyes.
"Is it monsieur?" said she.
"Yes, madame," answered the man, touching his hat.
Rich travellers are not so polite. This gesture and the sight of the stranger's
costume and baggage which the Thenardiess passed in review at a glance made the
amiable grimace disappear and the fierce air reappear. She added drily:
"Enter, goodman. '
The "goodman" entered. The Thenardiess cast a second glance at him, examined par-
ticularly his long coat which was absolutely threadbare, and his hat which was some-
what broken, and with a nod, a wink, and a turn of her nose, consulted
her husband,
who was still drinking with the waggoners. The husband answered by that impercept-
ible shake of the forefinger which, supported by a protrusion of the lips, signifies
in such a case: "complete destitution." Upon this the Thenardiess exclaimed:
"Ah! my brave man, I am very sorry, but I have no room.
"Put me where you will," said the man, "in the garret, in the stable. I will pay as
if I had a room."
"Forty sous."
"Forty sous. Well."
"In advance."
"Forty sous," whispered a waggoner to the Thenardiess, "but it is only twenty sous."
"It is forty sous for him," replied the Thenardiess in the same tone. "I don't lodge
poor people for less."
"That is true," added her husband softly, "it ruins a house to have this sort of people."
Meanwhile the man, after leaving his stick and bundle on a bench, had seated himself
at a table on which Cosette had been quick to place a bottle of wine and a glass. The
pedlar, who had asked for the bucket of water, had gone himself to carry it to his
horse. Cosette had resumed her place under the kitchen table and her knitting.
The man, who hardly touched his lips to the wine he had turned out, was contemplating
the child with a strange attention.
Cosette was ugly. Happy, she might, perhaps, have been pretty. We have already sketch-
ed this little pitiful face. Cosette was thin and pale; she was nearly
eight years old, but
one would hardly have thought her six. Her large eyes, sunk in a sort of shadow, were
almost put out by continual weeping. The corners of her mouth had that curve of habitual
anguish, which is seen in the condemned and in the hopelessly sick. Her hands were, as
her mother had guessed, "covered with chilblains."
The light of the fire which was shining upon her, made her bones stand out and rendered
her thinness fearfully visible. As she was always shivering, she had acquired the habit
of drawing her knees together. Her whole dress was nothing but a rag, which would have
excited pity in the summer. and which excited horror in the winter. She had on nothing
but cotton, and that full of holes; not a rag of woollen. Her skin showed here and there,
and black and blue spots could be distinguished, which indicated the places where the
Thenardiess had touched her. Her naked legs were red and rough. The hollows under her
collar bones would make one weep. The whole person of this child, her gait, her attitude,
the sound of her voice, the intervals between one word and another, her looks, her silence,
her least motion, expressed and uttered a single idea: fear.
Fear was spread all over her; she was, so to say, covered with it; fear drew back her
elbows against her sides, drew her heels under her skirt, made her take the least possible
room, prevented her from breathing more than was absolutely necessary, and had become
what might be called her bodily habit, without possible variation, except of increase.
There was in the depth of her eye an expression of astonishment mingled with terror.
This fear was such that on coming in, all wet as she was, Cosette had not dared go and
dry herself by the fire, but had gone silently to her work.
The expression of the countenance of this child of eight years was habitually
so sad and
sometimes so tragical that it seemed, at certain moments, as if she were in the way of
becoming an idiot or a demon.
Never, as we have said, had she known what it is to pray, never had she
set foot within
a church. "How can I spare the time?" said the Thenardiess.
The man in the yellow coat did not take his eyes from Cosette.
Suddenly, the Thenardiess exclaimed out:
"Oh! I forgot! that bread!"
Cosette, according to her custom whenever the Thenardiess raised her voice,
sprang out quickly from under the table.
She had entirely forgotten the bread. She had recourse to the expedient of
children who are always terrified. She lied.
"Madame, the baker was shut."
"You ought to have knocked."
"I did knock, madame."
"Well?"
"He didn't open."
"I'll find out to-morrow if that is true," said the Thenardiess, "and if you are
lying you will lead a pretty dance. Meantime give me back the fifteen-sous piece."
Cosette plunged her hand into her apron pocket, and turned white. The fifteen-sous
piece was not there.
"Come," said the Thenardiess, "didn't you hear me?"
Cosette turned her pocket inside out; there was nothing there. What could have be-
come of that money? The little unfortunate could not utter a word. She was petrified.
"Have you lost it, the fifteen-sous piece?" screamed the Thenardiess, "or do you
want to steal it from me?"
At the same time she reached her arm towards the cowhide hanging in the chimney
corner.
This menacing movement gave Cosette the strength to cry out:
"Forgive me! Madame! Madame! I won't do so any more!"
The Thenardiess took down the whip.
Meanwhile the man in the yellow coat had been fumbling in his waistcoat pocket,
without being noticed. The other travellers were drinking or playing cards, and paid
no attention to anything.
Cosette was writhing with anguish in the chimney-corner, trying to gather up and hide
her poor half-naked limbs. The Thenardiess raised her arm.
"I beg your pardon, madame," said the man, "but I just now saw something fall out of
the pocket of that little girl's apron and roll away. That may be it."
At the same time he stooped down and ap eared to search on p the for an instant.
"Just so, here it is," said he, rising.
And he handed a silver piece to the Thenardiess.
"Yes, that is it," said she.
That was not it, for it was a twenty-sous piece, but the Thenardiess found
her profit in it. She put the piece in her pocket, and contented he's self
with casting a ferocious look at the child and saying:
"Don't let that happen again, ever."
Cosette went back to what the Thenardiess called "her hole," and her large
eye, fixed upon the unknown traveller, began to assume an expression that
it had never known before. It was still only an artless astonishment, but a
sort of blind confidence was associated with it.
"O! you want supper?" asked the Thenardiess of the traveller.
He did not answer. He seemed to be thinking deeply.
"What is that man?" said she between her teeth. "It is some frightful pauper.
He hasn't a penny for his supper. Is he going to pay me for his lodging only?
It is very lucky, anyway, that he didn't think to steal the money that was on
the floor."
A door now opened, and Eponine and Azelma came in.
They were really two pretty little girls, rather city girls than peasants, very
charming, one with her well-polished auburn tresses, the other with her long black
braids falling down her back and both so lively, neat, plump, fresh, and
healthy,
that it was a pleasure to see them. They were warmly clad, but with such
ma-
ternal art, that the thickness of the stuff detracted nothing from the
coquetry
of the fit. Winter was provided against without effacing spring. These two little
girls shed light around them. Moreover, they were regnant. In their toilet, in
their gaiety, in the noise they made, there was sovereignty. When they entered,
the Thenardiess said to them in a scolding tone, which was full of adoration:
"Ah! you are here then, you children!"
Then, taking them upon her knees one after the other, smoothing their hair, tying
over their ribbons, and finally letting them go with that gentle sort of shake
which is peculiar to mothers, she exclaimed:
"Are they dowdies!"
They went and sat down by the fire. They had a doll which they turned backwards
and forwards upon their knees with many pretty panel Clings. From time to time,
Cosette raised her eyes from her knitting, and looked sadly at them as they were
playing.
Eponine and Azelma did not notice Cosette. To them she was like the dog. These
three little girls could not count twenty-four years among them all, and they
already represented all human society; on one side envy, on the other disdain.
The doll of the Thenardier sisters was very much faded, and old and broken; and
it appeared none the less wonderful to Cosette, who had never in her life had a
doll, a real doll, to use an expression that all children will understand.
All at once, the Thenardiess, who was ot ntinually going and coming about the room,
noticed that Cosette's attention wasdistracted, and that instead of working she was
busied with the little girls who were playing.
“Ah! I've caught you!" cried she. "That is the way you work! I'll make you work
with a cowhide, I will."
The stranger, without leaving his chair, turned towards the Thenardiess.
"Madame," said he, smiling diffidently. "Pshaw! let her play!"
On the part of any traveller who had eaten a slice of mutton, and drunk
two bottles
of wine at his supper, and who had not had the appearance of a horrid pauper,
such a
wish would have been a command. But that a man who wore that hat should
allow
himself to have a desire, and that a man who wore that coat should permit himself to
have a wish, was what the Thenardiess thought ought not to be tolerated. She replied
sharply:
"She must work, for she eats. I don't support her to do nothing."
"What is it she is making?" said the stranger, in that gentle voice which contrasted
so strangely with his beggar's clothes and his porter's shoulders.
The Thenardiess deigned to answer.
"Stockings, if you please. Stockings for my little girls who have none, worth speaking
of, and will soon be going barefooted."
The man looked at Cosette's poor red feet, and continued: "When will she finish that
pair of stockings?"
"It will take her at least three or four good days, the lazy thing."
"And how much might this pair of stockings be worth, when it is fin-
ished?"
The Thenardiess cast a disdained glance at him.
"At least thirty sous."
"Would you take five francs for them?" said the man.
"Goodness!" exclaimed a waggoner who was listening, with a horse-laugh, "five francs?
It's a humbug! five bullets!"
Thenardier now thought it time to speak.
"Yes, monsieur, if it is your fancy, you can have that pair of stockings for five francs.
We can't refuse anything to travellers."
"You must pay for them now," said the Thenardiess, in her short
and peremptory way.
"I will buy that pair of stockings," answered the man, "and,"
added, he, drawing a five
franc piece from his pocket and laying it on the table, "I will pay
for them."
Then he turned towards Cosette.
"Now your work belongs to me. Play, my child."
The waggoner was so affected by the five franc piece, that at he left his glass and went
to look at it.
"It's so, that's a fact!" cried he, as he looked at it. "A regular and no counterfeit!"
Thenardier approached, and silently put the piece in his pocket.
The Thenardiess had nothing to reply. She bit her lips, and her face assumed
an expression
of hatred.
Meanwhile Cosette trembled. She ventured to ask:
"Madame, is it true? can I play?"
"Play!" said the Thenardiess in a terrible voice.
"Thank you, madame," said Cosette. And, while her mouth thanked the Thenardiess, all her
little soul was thanking the traveller.
Thenardier returned to his drink. His wife whispered in his ear:
"What can that yellow man
be?"
"I have seen," answered Thenardier, in a commanding tone, "millionaires with coats like
that."
Cosette had left her knitting, but she had not moved from her place. Cosette always stirred
as little as was possible. She had taken from a little box behind her a few old rags, and
her little lead sword.
Eponine and Azelma paid no attention to what was going on. They had just performed a very
important operation; they had caught the kitten. They had thrown the doll on the floor, and
Eponine, the elder, was dressing the kitten, in spite of her miaulings and contortions, with
a lot of clothes and red and blue rags. While she was engaged in this serious and difficult
labour, she was talking to her sister in that sweet and charming language of children, the
grace of which, like the splendour of the butterfly's wings, escapes when we try to preserve
it.
"Look! look, sister, this doll is more amusing than the other. She moves, she cries, she is
warm. Come, sister, let us play with her. She shall be my little girl; I will be a lady. I'll
come to see you, and you must l) And her. By and by you must see her whiskers, and you must
be surprisa then you must see her ears, and then you must see her tail, and that will astonish
you. And you must say to me: 'Oh! my stars!' and I will say to you `Yes, madame, it is a lit-
tle girl that I have like that.' Little girls are, now."
Azelma listened to Eponine with wonder.
Meanwhile, the drinkers were singing an obscene song, at which they laughed
enough to
shake the room. Thenardier encouraged and accompanied them.
As birds make a nest of anything, children make a doll of no matter what. While
Eponine and Azelma were dressing up the cat, Cosette, for her part, had dressed
up the sword. That done, she had laid it upon her arm, and was singing it softly
to sleep.
The doll is one of the most imperious necessities, and at the same tim one of the
most charming instincts of female childhood. To care for, to e clothe, to adorn,
to dress, to undress, to dress over. again, to teach, to scold a little, to rock,
to cuddle, to put to sleep, to imagine somebody--all the future of woman is there.
Even while musing and prattling, while making little wardrobes and little baby-
clothes, while sewing little dresses, little bodices, and little jackets, the child
becomes es a little girl, the little girl becomes a great girl, the great girl be-
comes a woman. The first baby takes the place of the last doll.
A little girl without a doll is almost as unfortunate and quite as impossible as a
woman without children.
Cosette had therefore made a doll of her sword.
The Thenardiess, on her part, approached the yellow man. "My husband is right,"
thought she; "it may be Monsieur Laffitte. Some rich men are so odd."
She came and rested her elbow on the table at which he was sitting.
"Monsieur," said she---
At this word monsieur, the man turned. The Thenardiess had called him before only
brave man or good man.
"You see, monsieur," she pursued, putting on her sweetest look, which was still more
unendurable than her ferocious manner, "I am very willing the child should play, I am
not opposed to it; it is well for once, because you are generous. But, you see, she
is poor; she must work."
"The child is not yours, then?" asked the man.
"Oh dear! no, monsieur! It is a little pauper that we have taken in through charity.
A sort of imbecile child. She must have water on her brain. Her head is big, as you
see. We do all we can for her, but we are not rich. We write in vain to her country;
for six months we have had no answer. We think that her mother must be dead."
"Ah!" said the man, and he fell back into his reverie.
"This mother was no great things," added the Thenardiess. "She abandoned her child."
During all this conversation, Cosette, as if an instinct had warned her that they were
talking about her, had not taken her eyes from the Thenardiess. She listened.
She heard
a few words here and there.
Meanwhile the drinkers, all three-quarters drunk, were repeating their foul chorus with
redoubled gaiety. It was highly spiced with jests, in which the names of the Virgin and
the child Jesus were often heard. The Thenardiess had gone to take her part in the hil-
arity. Cosette, under the table, was looking. into the fire, which was reflected
from her
fixed eye; she was again rocking the sort of rag baby that she had made, and as she rocked
it, she sang in a low voice; "My mother is dead! my mother is dead! my mother is dead!"
At the repeated entreaties of the hostess, the yellow man, "the millionaire," finally con-
sented to sup.
"What will monsieur have?"
"Some bread and cheese," said the man.
"Decidedly, it is a beggar," thought the Thimardiess.
The revellers continued to sing their songs, and the child, under the table, also sang
hers.
All at once, Cosette stopped. She had just turned and seen the little Thenardiers' doll,
which they had forsaken for the cat and left on the floor, a few steps from the kitchen
table.
Then she let the bundled-up sword, that only half satisfied her, fall, and ran her eyes
slowly around the room. The Thenarcliess was whispering to her husband and counting some
money, Eponiac and Azelma were playing with the cat, the travellers were eating or drink-
ing or sing-ing, nobody was looking at her. She had not a moment to lose. She crept out
from under the table on her hands and knees, made sure once more that nobody was watching
her, then darted quickly to the doll, and seized it. An instant afterwards she was at
her place, seated, motionless, only turned in such a way as to keep the doll that she
held in her arms in the shadow. The happiness of playing with a doll was so rare to her
that it had all the violence of rapture.
Nobody had seen her, except the traveller, who was slowly eating his meagre supper.
This joy lasted for nearly a quarter of an hour.
But in spite of Cosette's precautions, she did not perceive that one of the doll's feet
stuck out, and that the fire of the fireplace lighted it up very vividly. This rosy and
luminous foot which protruded from the shadow suddenly caught Azelma's
eye, and she
said to Eponine: "Oh! sister!"
The two little girls stopped, stupefied; Cosette had dared to take the
doll.
Eponine got up, and without letting go of the cat, went to her mother and began
to pull at her skirt.
"Let me alone," said the mother; "what do you want?" "Mother," said the child,
"look there."
And she pointed at Cosette.
Cosette, wholly absorbed in the ecstasy of her possession, saw and heard nothing
else.
The face of the Thenardiess assumed the peculiar expression which is composed of
the terrible mingled with the commonplace and which has given this class of
women the name of furies.
This time wounded pride exasperated her anger still more. Cosette had leaped over
all barriers. Cosette had laid her hands upon the doll of "those young
ladies." A
czarina who had seen a moujik trying on the grand cordon of her imperial son would
have had the same expression.
She cried with a voice harsh with indignation:
"Cosette
Cosette shuddered as if the earth had quaked beneath her. She turned around.
"Cosette!" repeated the Thenardiess.
Cosette took the doll and placed it gently on the floor with a kind of veneration
mingled with despair. Then, without taking away her eyes, she joined her hands, and,
what is frightful to tell in a child of that age, she wrung them; then, what none of
the emotions of the day had drawn from her, neither the run in the wood, nor the
weight of the bucket of water, nor the loss of the money, nor the sight of the cow-
hide, nor even the stern words she had heard from The Thenardiess, she burst into
tears. She sobbed.
Meanwhile the traveller arose.
"What is the matter?" said he to the Thenardiess.
"Don't you see?" said the Thenardiess, pointing with her finger
to the corpus delicti
lying at Cosette's feet.
"Well, what is that?" said the man.
"That beggar," answered the Thenardiess. "has dared to touch the children's doll."
"All this noise about that?" said the man. "Well, what if she did play with that doll?"
"She has touched it with her dirty hands!" continued the Thenardiess,
"with her horrid
hands!"
Here Cosette redoubled her sobs.
"Be still!" cried the Thenardiess.
The man walked straight to the street door, opened it, and went out.
As soon as he had gone, the Thenardiess profited by his absence to give Cosette under
the table a severe kick, which made the child shriek.
The door opened again, and the man reappeared, holding in his hands the fabulous doll
of which we have spoken, and which had been the admiration of all the youngsters of
the village since morning; he stood it up before Cosette, saying:
"Here, this is for you."
It is probable that during the time he had been there--moret than an hour-- in the
midst of his reverie, he had caught confused glimpses of this toy-shop, lighted up with
lamps and candles so splendidly that it shone through the bar-room window like an illu-
mination.
Cosette raised her eyes; she saw the man approach her with that doll as she would have
seen the sun approach, she heard those astounding words: This is for you. She looked at
him, she looked at the doll, then she drew back slowly, and went and hid as far as she
could under the table in the corner of the room.
She wept no more, she cried no more, she had the appearance of no longer
daring to
breathe.
The Thenardiess, Eponine, and Azelma were so many statues. Even the drinkers stopped.
There was a solemn silence in the whole bar-room.
The Thenardiess, petrified and mute, recommenced her conjectures anew: "What is this old
fellow? is he a pauper? is he a millionaire? Perhaps he's both, that is
a robber."
The face of the husband Thenardier presented that expressive wrinkle which
marks the human
countenance whenever the dominant instinct appears in it with all its brutal
power. The
innkeeper contemplated by turns the doll and the traveller; he seemed to be scenting this
man as he would have scented a bag of money. This only lasted for a moment. He approached
his wife and whispered to her:
"That machine cost at least thirty francs. No nonsense. Down on your knees before the man!"
Coarse natures have this in common with artless natures, that they have no transitions.
"Well, Cosette," said the Thenardiess in a voice which was meant to be sweet, and which was
entirely composed of the sour honey of vicious women, "a'n't you going to take your doll?"
Cosette ventured to come out of her hole.
"My little Cosette," said Thenardier with a caressing air, “Monsieur gives you a doll.
Take it. It is yours."
Cosette looked upon the wonderful doll with a sort of terror. Her face was still flooded
with tears, but her eyes began to fill, like the sky in the breaking of the dawn, with
strange radiations of joy What she experienced at that moment was almost like what she
would have felt if some one had said to her suddenly: Little girl, you are queen of France.
It seemed to her that if she touched that doll, thunder would spring forth
from it.
Which was true to some extent, for she thought that the Thenardiess would scold and beat
her.
However, the attraction overcame her. She finally approached and timidly murmured, turning
towards the Thenardiess:
"Can I, madame?"
No expression can describe her look, at once full of despair, dismay, and
transport.
"Good Lord!" said the Thenardiess, "it is yours. Since monsieur gives it to you.
"Is it true, is it true, monsieur?" said Cosette; "is the lady for me?"
The stranger appeared to have his eyes full of tears. He seemed to be at that stage of emo-
tion in which one does not speak for fear of weeping. He nodded assent to Cosette, and put
the hand of "the lady" in her little hand.
Cosette withdrew her hand hastily, as if that of the lady burned her, and looked down at the
floor. We are compelled to add, that at that instant she thrust out her tongue enormously.
All at once she turned, and seized the doll eagerly.
"I will call her Catharine," said she.
It was a strange moment when Cosette's rags met and pressed against the ribbons and the fresh
pink muslins of the doll.
"Madame," said she, "may I put her in a chair?"
"Yes, my child," answered the Thenardiess.
It was Eponine and Azelma now who looked upon Cosette with envy.
Cosette placed Catharine on a chair, then sat down on the floor before her, and remained mo-
tionless, without saying a word, in the attitude of contemplation.
"Why don't you play, Cosette?" said the stranger.
"Oh! I am playing," answered the child.
This stranger, this unknown man, who seemed like a visit from Providence to Cosette, was at
that moment the being which the Thenardiess hated more than aught else in the world. However,
she was compelled to restrain herself. Her emotions were more than she could endure, accust-
omed as she was to dissimulation, by endeavouring to copy her husband in all her actions.
She sent her daughters to bed immediately, then asked the yellow man's permission to send
Cosette to bed--who is very tired today, added she, with a motherly air. Cosette went to
bed, holding Catharine in arms.
The Thenardiess went from time to time to the other end of the room, where her husband was,
to soothe her soul, she said. She exchanged a few words with him, which were the more furious
that she did not dare to speak
The old fool! what has he got into his head, to come here to disturb us! to want that little
monster to play! to give her dolls! to give forty-franc dolls to a slut that I wouldn't give
forty sous for. A little more, and he would say your majesty to her, as they do to the Duchess
of Berry Is he in his senses? he must be crazy, the strange old fellow!"
"Why? It is very simple," replied Thenardier. "If it amuses
him! It amuses you for the
girl to work; it amuses him for her to play. He has the right to do it.
A traveller can do
as he likes, if he pays for it. If this old fellow is a philanthropist,
what is that to you? if
he is crazy it don't concern you. What do you interfere for, as long as
he has money?"
Language of a Master and reasoning of an innkeeper, which neither in one case
nor the other admits of reply.
The man had leaned his elbows on the table, and resumed his attitude of
rev-
erie. All the other travellers, pedlars, and waggoners, had drawn back a little,
and sung no more. They looked upon him from a distance with a sort of respectful
fear.
This solitary man, so poorly clad, who took five-franc pieces from his
pocket
with so much indifference, and who lavished gigantic dolls on little brats in
wooden shoes, was certainly a magnificent and formidable goodman.
Several hours passed away. The midnight mass was said, the revel was finished,
the drinkers bad gone, the house was closed, the room was deserted, the fire had
gone out, the stranger still remained in the same place and in the same posture.
From time to time he changed the elbow on which he rested. 'That was all. But he
had not spoken a word since Cosette was gone.
The Thenardiers alone out of propriety and curiosity, had re-mained in the room.
"Is he going to spend the night like this?" grumbled the Thenardiess. When the
clock struck two in the morning, she acknowledged herself beaten, and said to her
husband: "I am going to bed, you may do as you like." The husband sat clown at a
table in a corner, lighted a candle. and began to read the Courrier Francais,
A good hour passed thus. The worthy innkeeper had read the Courrier Francais at
least three times, from the date of the number to the name of the printer. The
stranger did not stir.
Thenardier moved, coughed, spit, blew his nose, and creaked his chair. The man
did not stir. "Is he asleep?" thought Thenardier. The man was not asleep, but
nothing could arouse him.
Finally, Thenardier took off his cap, approached softly, and ventured to say:
"Is monsieur not going to repose?"
Not going to bed would have seemed to him too much and too familiar. To repose
implied luxury, and there was respect in it. Such words have the mysterious
and wonderful property of swelling the bill in the morning. A room in which
you go to bed costs twenty sous; a room in which you repose costs twenty
francs.
"Yes," said the stranger, "you are right. Where is your stable?" "Monsieur,"
said Thenardier, with a smile, "I will conduct monsieur."
He took the candle, the man took his bundle and his staff, and Thenardier led
him into a room on the first floor, which was very showy, furnished all in
mahogany, with a high-post bedstead and red calico curtains.
"What is this?" said the traveller.
"It is properly our bridal chamber." said the innkeeper. "We occupy another
like this, my spouse and I; this is not open more than three or four times
in a year."
"I should have liked the stable as well," said the man, bluntly. Thenardier
did not appear to hear this not very civil answer.
He lighted two entirely new wax candles, which were displayed upon the
mantel:
a good fire was blazing in the fireplace. There was on the mantel, under a
glass case, a woman's head-dress of silver thread and orange-flowers.
"What is this?" said the stranger.
"Monsieur." said Thenardier, "it is my wife's bridal cap."
The traveller looked at the object with a look which seemed to say: "there
was
a moment, then when this monster was a virgin."
Thenardier lied, however. When he hired this shanty to turn it into a chop-
house, he found the room thus furnished, and bought this furniture, and
pur-
chased at second-hand these orange-flowers, thinking that this would cast a
gracious light over "his spouse," and that the house would derive from them
what the English call respectability.
When the traveller turned again the host had disappeared. Thenardier had
dis-
creetly taken himself out of the way without daring to say good-night,
not des-
iring to treat with a disrespectful cordiality a man whom he proposed to skin
royally in the morning. The innkeeper retired to his room; his wife was in bed,
but not asleep. When she heard her husband's step, she turned towards him and
said:
"You know that I am going to kick Cosette out doors to-mor-row!"
Thehardier coolly answered:
"You are, indeed!"
They exchanged no further words, and in a few moments their candle was blown out.
For his part, the traveller had put his staff and bundle in a corner. The host
gone, he sat down in an arm-chair, and remained some time thinking. Then he drew
off his shoes, took one of the two candles, blew out the other, pushed open the
door, and went out of the room, looking about him as if he were searching for
something. He passed through a hull, and came to the stairway. There he heard a
very soft little sound, which resembled the breathing of a child. Guided by this
sound he came to a sort of triangular nook built under the stairs, or,
rather,
formed by the staircase itself. This hole was nothing but the space beneath
the
stairs. There, among all sorts of old baskets and old rubbish, in the dust and a-
mong the cobwebs, there was a bed; if a mattress so full of holes as to show the
straw, and a covering so full of holes as to show the mattress, can be
called a bed.
There were no sheets. This was placed on the floor immediately on the tiles. In
this bed Cosette was sleeping.
The man approached and looked at her.
Cosette was sleeping soundly; she was dressed. In the winter she did not undress on
account of the cold. She held the doll clasped in her arms; its large open eyes shone
in the obscurity. From time to time she heaved a deep sigh, as if she were about to
wake, and she hugged the doll almost convulsively. There was only one of her wooden
shoes at the side of her bed. An open door near Cosette's nook disclosed a large dark
room. The stranger entered. At the further end, through a glass window, he perceived
two little beds with very white spreads. They were those of Azelma and Eponinc. Half
hid behind these beds was a willow cradle without curtains, in which the little boy
who had cried all the evening was sleeping.
The stranger conjectured that this room communicated with that of the Thenardiers. He
was about to withdraw when his eye fell upon the fireplace, one of those huge tavern
fireplaces where there is always so little fire, when there is a fire, and which are
so cold to look upon. In this one there was no fire, there were not even any ashes.
What there was, however, attracted the traveller's attention. It was two little chil-
dren's shoes, of coquettish shape and of different sizes. The traveller remembered the
graceful and immemorial custom of children putting their shoes in the fireplace on
Christmas night, to wait there in the darkness in expectation of some shining gift
from their good fairy. Eponine and Azelma had taken good care not to forget this,
and each had put one of her shoes in the fire-place.
The traveller bent over them.
The fairy--that is to say, the mother--had already made her visit, and shining in
each shoe was a beautiful new ten-sous piece.
The man rose up and was on the point of going away, when he perceived further
along, by itself, in the darkest corner of the fireplace, another object. He
looked, and recognised a shoe, a horrid wooden shoe of the clumsiest sort,
half broken
and covered with ashes and dried mud. It was Cosette's shoe. Cosette, with that
touching confidence of childhood which can always be deceived without ever being
discouraged, had also placed her shoe in the fireplace.
What a sublime and sweet thing is hope in a child who has never known anything
but despair!
There was nothing in this wooden shoe.
The stranger fumbled in his waistcoat, bent over, and dropped into Cosette's
shoe a gold Louis.
Then he went back to his room with stealthy tread.
IX. THENARDIER MANUFACTURING
ON THE following morning, at least two hours before day, Thenardier, seated at
a table in the bar-room, a candle by his side with pen in hand, was making out
the bill of the traveller in the yellow coat.
His wife was standing, half bent over him, following him with her eyes. Not a
word passed between them. It was, on one side, a profound meditation, on the
other that religious admiration with which we observe a marvel of the human
mind spring up and expand. A noise was heard in the house; it was the lark,
sweeping the stairs.
After a good quarter of an hour and some erasures, Thenardier produced this
masterpiece.
Service was written servisse.
Twenty-three francs!" exclaimed the woman, with an enthusiasm Which was mingled
with some hesitation.
Like all great artists Thenardier was not satisfied.
Pooh!" said he.
It was the accent of Castlereagh drawing up for the Congress of Vienna the bill
which France was to pay.
"MonsiuerThenardier, you are right; he deserves it," murmured the woman, thinking of
the doll given to Cosette in the presence, of her daughters; "it is right! but it's
too much. He won't pay it."
Thenardier put on his cold laugh, and said: "He, will pay it"
This laugh was the highest sign of certainty and authority. What was thus said, must
be. The woman did not insist. She began to arrange the tables; the husband walked back
and forth in the room. A moment after he added:
"I owe, at least, fifteen hundred francs!"
He seated himself thoughtfully in the chimney corner, his feet in the warm ashes.
"Ah ha!" replied the woman, "you don't forget that I kick Cosette out of the house
today? The monster! it tears my vitals to see her with her doll! I would rather marry
Louis XVIII, than keep her in the house another day!"
Thenardier lighted his pipe, and answered between two puffs:
"You'll give the bill to the man."
Then he went out.
He was scarcely out of the room when the traveller came in. Thenardier reappeared
immediately behind him, and remained motionless in the half-open door, visible only
to his wife.
The yellow man carried his staff and bundle in his hand.
"Up so soon!" said the Thenardiess; "is monsieur going to
leave us already?"
While speaking, she turned the bill in her hands with an embarrased look, and made
creases in it with her nails. Her hard face exhibited a shade of timidity and doubt
that was not habitual.
To present such a bill to a man who had so perfectly the appearance of "a pauper"
seemed too awkward to her.
The traveller appeared pre-occupied and absent-minded.
He answered:
"Yes, madame, I am going away."
"Monsieur, then, had no business at Montfermeil?" replied she.
"No, I am passing through; that is all. Madame," added he, "what do I owe?"
The Thenardiess, without answering, banded him the folded bill.
The man unfolded the paper and looked at it; but his thoughts were evidently else-
where.
"Madame," replied he, "do you do a good business in Montfer-men?"
"So-so, monsieur," answered the Thenardiess, stupefied at seeing no other explosion.
She continued in a mournful and lamenting strain:
"Oh! monsieur, the times are very hard, and then we have so few rich people around
here! It is avert' little place, you see. If we only had rich travellers
now and then, like
monsieur! We have so many expenses! Why, that little girl eats us out of
house and
home."
"What little girl?"
"Why, the little girl you know! Cosette the lark, as they call her
about here!"
"Ah!" said the man.
She continued:
"How stupid these peasants are with their nicknames! She looks more like a bat
than a lark. You see, monsieur, we don't ask charity, but we are not able to
give it. We make nothing, and have a great deal to pay. The licence, the excise,
the doors and windows, the tax .on everything! Monsieur knows that the government
demands a deal of money. And then I have my own girls. I have nothing to spend
on other people's children."
The man replied in a voice which he endeavoured to render indifferent, and in
which there was a slight tremulousness.
"Suppose you were relieved of her?"
"Who? Cosette?"
"Yes."
The red and violent face of the woman became illumined with a hideous expression.
"Ah, monsieur! my good monsieur! take her, keep her, take her away, carry her off,
sugar her, stuff her, drink her, eat her, and be blessed by the holy Virgin and
all the saints in Paradise!"
"Agreed."
"Really! you will take her away?"
"I will."
"Immediately?"
"Immediately. Call the child."
"Cosette!" cried the Thenardiess.
"In the meantime." continued the man. "I will pay my bill.
How much is it?"
He cast a glance at the bill, and could not repress a movement of surprise.
"Twenty-three francs?"
He looked at the hostess and repeated:
"Twenty-three francs?"
There was, in the pronunciation of these two sentences, thus repeated,
the accent
which lies between the point of exclamation and the point of interrogation.
The Thenardiess had had time to prepare herself for the shock. She replied with as-
surance:
"Yes, of course, monsieur! it is twenty-three francs."
The stranger placed five five-franc pieces upon the table. " Go for the little girl,"
said he,
At this moment Thonardier advanced into the middle of the room and said:
"Monsieur owes twenty-six sous."
"Twenty-six sous!" exclaimed the woman.
"Twenty sous for the room," continued Thenardier coldly, "and
six for supper. As to
the little girl, I must have some talk with monsieur about that. Leave us, wife."
The Thenardiess was dazzled by one of those unexpected flashes which emanate from
talent. She felt that the great actor had entered upon the scene, answered not a word,
and went out
As soon as they were alone, Thenardier offered the traveller a chair. The traveller
sat down, but Thenardier remained standing, and his face assumed a singular expression
of good-nature and simplicity.
"Monsieur," said he, "listen, I must say that I adore this
child." The stranger looked
at him steadily.
"What child?"
Thenardier continued:
"How strangely we become attached! What is all this silver? Take back your money. This
child I adore."
"Who is that?" asked the stranger.
"Oh, our little Cosette! And you wish to take her away from us? Indeed, I speak frankly,
as true as you are an honourable man, I cannot consent to it. I should miss her. I have
had her since she was very small. It is true, she costs us money; it is true she has her
faults, it is true we are not rich, it is true I paid four hundred francs for medicines
at one time when she was sick. But we must do something for God. She has neither father
nor mother; I have brought her up. I have bread enough for her and for myself. In fact,
I must keep this child. You understand, we have affections; I am a good
beast; myself;
I do not reason; I love this little girl; my wife is hasty, but she loves her also. You
see, she is like our own child. I feel the need of her prattle in the house."
The stranger was looking steadily at him all the while. He continued:
"Pardon me, excuse me, monsieur, but one does not give his child like that to a traveller.
Isn't it true that I am right? After that, I don't say--you are rich and have the appear-
ance of a very fine man --if it is for her advantage,--but I must know about it. You under-
stand? On the supposition that I should let her go and sacrifice my own feelings, I should
want to know where she is going. I would not want to lose sight of her, I should want to
know who she was with, that I might come and see her now and then, and that she might know
that her good foster-father was still watching over her. Finally, there
are things which
are not possible. I do not know even ' your name. If you should take her away, I should
say, alas for the little Lark, where has she gone? I must, at least, see some poor rag of
paper, a bit of a passport, something."
The stranger, without removing from him this gaze which went, so to speak, to the bottom
of his conscience, answered in a severe and firm tone.
"Monsieur Thenardier, people do not take a passport to come five leagues
from Paris. If I
take Cosette, I take her, that is all. You will not know my name, you will not know my abode,
you will not know where she goes, and my intention is that she shall never see you again in
her life. Do you agree to that? Yes or no?"
As demons and genii recognise by certain signs the presence of a superior God, Thenardier
comprehended that he was to deal with one who was very powerful. It came like an intuition;
he understood it with his clear and quick sagacity; although during the evening he had been
drinking with the waggoners, smoking and singing bawdy songs, still he
was observing the
stranger all the while, watching him like a cat, and studying him like a mathematician. He
had been observing him on his own account, for pleasure and by instinct,
and at the same
time lying in wait as if he had been paid for it. Not a gesture, not a movement of the man
in the yellow coat had escaped him. Before even the stranger had so clearly
shown his in-
terest in Cosette, Thenardier had divined it. He had surprised the searching
glances of
the old man constantly returning to the child. Why this interest? What was this man? Why,
with so much money in his purse, this miserable dress? These were questions which he put
to himself without being able to answer them, and they irritated him. He had been thinking
it over all night. This could not be Cosette's father. NVas it a grandfather?
Then why did
he not make himself known at once? When a man has a right, he shows it. This man evidently
had no right to Cosette. Then who was he? Thenardier was lost in conjectures. He caught
glimpses of everything, but saw nothing. However it might be, when he commenced the conver-
sation with this man, sure that there was a secret in all this, sure that the man had an
interest in remaining unknown, he felt himself strong; at the stranger's clear and firm
answer, when he saw that this mysterious personage was mysterious and nothing more, he felt
weak. He was expecting nothing of the kind. His conjectures were put to flight. He rallied
his ideas. He weighed all in a second. Thenardier was one of those men who comprehend a
situation at a glance. He decided that this was the moment to advance straight forward and
swiftly. He did what great captains do at that decisive instant which they alone can recog-
nise; he unmasked his battery at once.
"Monsieur," said he, "I must have fifteen hundred francs."
The stranger took from his side-pocket an old black leather pocket-book, opened it, and drew
forth three bank bills which he placed upon the table. He then rested his large thimb on
these bills, and said to the tavern-keeper.
"Bring Cosette."
While this was going on what was Cosette doing?
Cosette, as soon as she awoke, had run to her wooden shoe. She had found the gold piece in
it. It was not a Napoleon, but one of those new twenty-franc pieces of
the Restoration, on
the face of which the little Prussian queue had replaced the laurel crown. Cosette was daz-
zled. Her destiny began to intoxicate her. She did not know that it was a piece of gold;
she had never seen one before; she hastily concealed it in her pocket as if she had stolen
it. Nevertheless she felt it boded good to her. She divined whence the gift came, but she
experienced a joy that was filled with awe. She was gratified; she was moreover stupefied.
Such magnificent and beautiful things seemed unreal to her. The doll made her afraid, the
gold piece made her afraid. She trembled with wonder before these magnificences. The stran-
ger himself did not make her afraid. On the contrary, he reassured her. Since the previous
evening, amid all her astonishment, and in her sleep, she was thinking in her little child's
mind of this man who had such an old, and poor, and sad appearance, and who was so rich
and so kind. Since she had met this goodman in the wood, it seemed as though
all things
were changed about her. Cosette, less happy than the smallest swallow of
the sky, had never
known what it is to take refuge under a mother's wing. For five years, that is to say, as
far back as she could remember, the poor child had shivered and shuddered. She had always
been naked under the biting north wind of misfortune, and now it seemed to her that she was
clothed. Before her soul was cold, now it was warm. Cosette was no longer afraid of the
Thenardier; she was no longer alone; she had somebody to look to.
She hurriedly set herself to her morning task. This Louis, which she had placed in the same
pocket of her apron from which the fifteen-sous piece had fallen the night before, distract-
ed her attention front her work. She did not dare to touch it, but she spent five minutes
at a time contemplating it, and we must confess, with her tongue thrust
out. While sweeping
the stairs, she stopped and stood there, motionless, forgetting her broom, and the whole
world besides, occupied in looking at this shining star at the bottoin
of her pocket.
It was in one of these reveries that the Thenardiess found her.
At the command of her husband, she had gone to look for het. Wonderful to tell, she did not
give her a slap nor even call her a bard name.
"Cosette," said she, almost gently, "come quick."
An instant after, Cosette entered the bar-room.
The stranger took the bundle he had brought and untied it. This bundle
contained a little
woollen frock, an apron, a coarse cotton under-garment, a petticoat, a scarf, woollen
stockings, and shoes--a complete dress for a girl of seven years. It was all in black.
"My child," said the man, "take this and go and dress yourself quick."
The day was breaking when those of the inhabitants of Montfermeil who were beginning to
open their doors, saw pass on the road to Paris a poorly clad goodman leading a little
girl dressed in mourning who had a pink doll in her arms. They were going towards Livry.
It was the stranger and Cosette.
No one recognised the man; as Cosette was not now in tatters, few recognised her.
Cosette was going away. With whom? She was ignorant. Where? She knew not. All she un-
derstood was, that she was leaving behind the Thenardier chop-house. Nobody had thought
of bidding her good-by, nor had she of bidding good-by to anybody. She went out from
that house, hated and hating.
Poor gentle being, whose heart had only been crushed hitherto.
Cosette walked seriously along, opening her large eyes, and looking at the sky. She
had put her louis in the pocket of her new apron. From time to time she bent over and
cast a glance at it, and then looked at the goodman. She felt somewhat as if she were
near God.
X. WHO SEEKS THE BEST MAY FIND THE WORST
THE THENARDIESS, according to her custom, had left her husband alone.
She was expecting great events. When the man and Cosette were gone,
Thenardier after a good quarter of an hour, took her aside, and showed
her the fifteen hundred francs.
"What's that?" said she.
It was the first time, since the beginning of their housekeeping, that she had dared
to criticise the act of her master.
He felt the blow.
"True you are right," said he; "I am a fool. Give me my hat."
He folded the three bank bills, thrust them into his pocket, and started in all haste,
but he missed the direction and took the road to the right. Some neighbours of whom
he inquired put him on the track; the Lark and the man had been seen to go in the
direction of Livry. He followed this indication, walking rapidly and talking to him-
self.
"This man is evidently a millionaire dressed in yellow, and as for me, I am a brute.
He first gave twenty sous, then five francs, then fifty francs, then fifteen hundred
francs, all so readily.. He would have given fifteen thousand francs. But
I shall catch
him.'
And then this bundle of clothes, made ready beforehand for the little girl; all that was
strange, there was a good deal of mystery under it. When one gets hold of a mystery, he does
not let go of it. The secrets of the rich are sponges full of gold; a man ought to know how
to squeeze them. All these thoughts were whirling in his brain. "I am a brute," said he.
On leaving Montfermeil and reaching the turn made by .the road to Livry, the route may be
seen for a long distance on the plateau. On reaching this point he counted on being able to
see the man and the little girl. He looked as far as his eye could reach, but saw nothing.
He inquired again. In the meanwhile he was losing time. The passers-by told him that the man
and child whom he sought had travelled towards the wood in the direction of Gagny. He hast-
ened in this direction.
They had the start of him, but a child walks slowly, and he went rapidly. And Then the coun-
try was well known to him.
Suddenly he stopped and struck his forehead like a man who 'has forgotten the main thing,
and who thinks of retracing his steps.
"I ought to have taken my gun!" said he.
Thenardier was one of those double natures who sometimes ap-pear among us without our know-
ledge, and disappear without ever being known, because destiny has shown us but one side of
them. It is the fate of many men to live thus half submerged. In a quiet ordinary situation,
Thenardier had all that is necessary to make--we do not say to be--what passes for an honest
tradesman, a good citizen. At the same time, under certain circumstances, under the opera-
tion of certain occurrences exciting his baser nature, he had in him all that was necessary
to be a villain. He was a shopkeeper, in which lay hidden a monster. Satan ought for a moment
to have squatted in some corner of the hole in which Thenardier lived and studied this hide-
ous masterpiece.
After hesitating an instant:
"Bah!" thought he, "they would have time to escape!"
And he continued on his way, going rapidly forward, and almost as if he were certain, with
the sagacity of the fox scenting a flock of partridges.
In fact, when he had passed the ponds, and crossed obliquely the large meadow at the right
of the avenue de Bellevue, as he reached the grassy path which nearly encircles the hill,
and which covers the arch of the old aqueduct of the abbey of Chelles, he perceived above a
bush. the hat on which he had already built so many conjectures. It was the man's hat. The
bushes were low. Thenardier. perceived that the man and Cosette were seated there. The
child could not be seen, she was so short, but lie could'see the head of the doll:
Thenardier was not deceived. The man had sat down there to give Cosette a little rest. The
chop-house keeper turned aside the bushes, and suddenly appeared before the eyes of those
whom he sought.
"Pardon me, excuse me, monsieur," said he, all out of breath; "but here are your fifteen
hundred francs."
So saying, he held out the three bank bills to the stranger. The man raised his eyes:
"What does that mean?"
Thenardier answered respectfully:
"Monsieur, that means that I take back Cosette."
Cosette shuddered, and hugged close to the goodman.
He answered, looking Thenardier straight in the eye, and spac-ing his syllables.
"You--take---back--Cosette?"
"Yes, monsieur, I take her back. I tell you I have reflected. In-deed, I haven't the right
to give her to you. I am an honest man, you see. This little girl is not mine. She belongs
to her mother. Her mother has confided her to me; I can only give her up toiler mother.
You will tell me: But her mother is dead. Well. In that case, I can only give up the child
to a person who shall bring me a written order, signed by the mother, stating I should de-
liver the child to him. That is clear."
The man, without answering, felt in his pocket, and Thenardier saw the pocket-book contain-
ing the bank bills reappear.
The tavern-keeper felt a thrill of joy.
"Good!" thought he; "hold on. He is going to corrupt me!"
Before opening the pocket-book, the traveller cast a look about him. The place was entirely
deserted. There was not a soul either in the wood, or in the valley. The man opened the
pocket-book, and drew from it, not the handful of bankbills which Thenardier
expected, but
a little piece of paper, which he unfolded and presented open to the innkeeper, saying:
"You are right. Read that!"
Thenardier took the paper and read.
"M-- stir M--, March 25, 1823.
"Monsieur Thenardier
"You will deliver Cosette to the bearer. He will settle all small
debts.
"I have the honour to salute you with consideration.
'FANTINE."
"You know that signature?" replied the man.
It was indeed the signature of Fantine. Thenardier recognised it.
There was nothing to say. He felt doubly enraged, enraged at being compelled to give up the
bribe which he hoped for, and enraged at being beaten. The man added:
"You can keep this paper as your receipt."
Thenardier retreated in good order.
"This signature is very well imitated," he grumbled between his teeth. "Well, so be it!"
Then he made a desperate effort.
"Monsieur," said he, "it is all right. Then you are the person. But you must settle 'all
small debts.' There is a large amount due to me.'
The man rose to his feet, and said at the same time, snapping with his thumb and finger
some dust from his threadbare sleeve:
"Monsieur Thenardier, in January the mother reckoned that she owed you a hundred and twenty
francs; you sent her in February a memorandum of five hundred 'francs; you received three
hundred francs at the end of February, and three hundred at the beginning of March. There
has since elapsed nine months which; at fifteen francs per month, the price agreed upon,
amounts to a hundred and thirty-five francs. You had received a hundred francs in advance.
There remain thirty-five francs due you. I have just given you fifteen hundred francs."
Thenardier felt what the wolf feels the moment when he finds himself seized and crushed by
the steel jaws of the trap.
"What is this devil of a man?" thought he.
He did what the wolf does, he gave a spring. Audacity had succeeded with him once already.
"Monsieur-l-don't-know-your-name," said he resolutely, and putting aside this time all show
of respect. "I shall take back Cosette or you must give me a thousand crowns."
The stranger said quietly:
"Come, Cosette."
He took Cosette with his left hand, and with the right picked up his staff, which was on
the ground.
Thenardier noted the enormous size of the cudgel, and the solitude of the
place.
The man disappeared in the wood with the child, leaving the chop-house keeper motionless
and non-plussed.
As they walked away, Thenardier observed his broad shoulders, a little rounded, and his
big fists.
Then his eyes fell back upon his own puny arms and thin hands. "I must have been a fool
indeed," thought he, "not to have brought my gun, as I was going on a hunt."
However, the innkeeper did not abandon the pursuit.
"I must know where he goes," said he; And he began to follow
them at a distance. There
remained two things in his possession, one a bitter mockery, the piece
of paper signed
Fantine, and the other a consolation, the fifteen hundred francs.
The man was leading Cosette in the direction of Livry and Bondy. He was walking slowly,
his head bent down, in an attitude of reflection and sadness. The winter had bereft the
wood of foliage, so that Thenardier did not lose sight of them, though remaining at a
considerable distance behind. From time to time the man turned, and looked to see if
he were followed. Suddenly he perceived Thenardier. He at once entered a coppice with
Cosette, and both disappeared from sight. "The devil!" said Thenardier. And he redou-
bled his pace.
The density of the thicket compelled him to approach them. When the man
reached the
thickest part of the wood, he turned again. Thenardier had endeavoured to conceal him-
self in the branches in vain, he could not prevent the man from seeing him. The man
cast an uneasy glance at him, then shook his head, and resumed his journey. The inn-
keeper again took up the pursuit. They walked thus two or three hundred paces. Suddenly
the man turned again. He perceived the innkeeper. This time he looked at him so for-
biddingly that Thenardier judged it "unprofitable" to go further. Thenardier went home.
XI. NUMBER 9430 COMES UP AGAIN, AND COSETTE DRAWS IT
JEAN Valjean was not dead.
When he fell into the sea, or rather when he threw himself into it, he was as we have seen,
free from his irons. He swam under water to a ship at anchor to which a boat was fastened.
He found means to conceal himself in this boat until evening. At night he betook himself
again to the water, and reached the land a short distance from Cape Brun.
There, as he did not lack for money, he could procure clothes. A little public-house in
the environs of Balaguier was then the place which supplied clothing for
escaped convicts,
a lucrative business. Then Jean Valjean, like all those joyless fugitives who are endeav-
ouring to throw off the track the spy of the law and social fatality, followed an obscure
and wandering path. He found an asylum first in Pradeaux, near Beausset. Then he went to-
wards Grand Villard near Briancon, in the Hautes Alpes. Groping and restless flight,
threading the mazes of the mole whose windings are unknown. There were afterwards found
some trace of his passage in Ain, on the territory of Civrieux, in the Pyrenees at Accons,
at a place called the Grange-de-Domecq, near the hamlet of Chavailles, and in the environs
of Perigneux, at Brunies, a canton of Chapelle Gonaguet. He finally reached Paris. We have
seen him at Montfermeil.
His first care, on reaching Paris, had been to purchase a mourning dress for a little girl
of seven years, then to procure lodgings. That done, he had gone to Afontfermeil.
It will be remembered that, at the time of his former escape, or near that
time, he had made
a mysterious journey of which justice had had some glimpse.
Moreover, he was believed to be dead, and that thickened the obscurity which surrounded him.
At Paris there fell into his hands a paper which chronicled the fact. He felt reassured, and
almost as much at peace as if he really had been dead.
On the evening of the same day that Jean Valjean had rescued Cosette from the clutches of
the Thenardiess, he entered Paris again. He entered the city at night-fall,
with the child,
by the barriere de Monceaux. There he took a cabriolet, which carried him as far as the
esplanade of the Observatory. There he got out, paid the driver, took Cosette
by the hand,
and both in the darkness of the night, through the deserted streets in the vicinity of
l'Ourcine and la Glaciere, walked towards the boulevard de l'Hopital.
The day had been strange and full of emotion for Cosette; they had eaten behind hedges
bread and cheese bought at isolated chop-houses; they had often changed carriages, and had
travelled short distances on foot. She did not complain; but she was tired, and Jean Valjean
perceived it by her pulling more heavily at his hand while walking. He took her in his arms;
Cosette, without letting go of Catharine, laid her head on Jean Valjean's shoulder, and went
to sleep.
BOOK FOURTH
THE OLD GORBEAU HOUSE
I. MASTER GORBEAU
FORTY years ago, the solitary pedestrian who ventured into the unknown
reg-
ions of La Salpetriere and went up along the Boulevard as far as the Barriere
d'Italie, reached certain points where it might be said that Paris disappeared.
It was no longer a solitude, for there were people passing; it was not the
country, for there were houses and streets; it was not a city, the streets had
ruts in them, like the highways, and grass grew along their borders; it was not
a village, the houses were too lofty. What was it then? It was an inhabited
place where there was nobody, it was a desert place where there was somebody;
it was a boulevard of the great city, a street of Paris, wilder, at night, than
a forest, and gloomier, by day, than a graveyard.
It was the old quarter of the Horse Market.
Our pedestrian, if he trusted himself beyond the four tumbling walls of this Horse
Market, if willing to go even further than the Rue du Petit Banquier, leaving on
his right a courtyard shut in by lofty walls, then a meadow studded with stacks
of tanbark that looked like the gigantic beaver dams, then an inclosure half fill-
ed with lumber and piles of logs, sawdust and shavings, from the top of which a
huge dog was baying, then a long, low, ruined wall with a small dark-coloured and
decrepit gate in it, covered with moss, which was full of flowers in spring-time,
then, in the loneliest spot, a frightful broken-down structure on which could be
read in large letters: POST NO BILLS; this bold promenader, we say, would reach
the corner of the Rue des Vignes-Saint-Marcel, a latitude not much explored. There,
near a manufactory and between two garden walls, could be seen at the time of which
we speak an old ruined dwelling that, at first sight, seemed as small as a cottage,
yet was, in reality, as vast as a cathedral. It stood with its gable end towards
the highway, and hence its apparent diminutiveness. Nearly the whole house was hid-
den. Only the door and one window could be seen.
This old dwelling had but one story.
On examining it, the peculiarity that first struck the beholder was that the door
could never have been anything but the door of a hovel, while the window, had it
been cut in freestone and not in rough material, might have been the casement of a
lordly resident.
The door was merely a collection of worm-eaten boards rudely tacked together with
cross-pieces that looked like pieces of firewood clumsily split out. It opened dir-
ectly on a steep staircase with high steps covered with mud, plaster, and dust, and
of the same breadth as the door,and which seemed from the street to rise perpendic-
ularly like a ladder, and disappear in the shadow between two walls. The top of the
shapeless opening which this door dosed upon, was disguised by a narrow topscreen,
in the middle of which had been sawed a three-cornered orifice that served both for
skylight and ventilator when the door was shut. On the inside of the door. a brush
dipped in ink had, in a couple of strokes of the hand, traced the number 52, and
above the screen, the same brush had daubed the number 50, so that a new-comer
would hesitate, asking: Where am I?
The top of the entrance says, at number 50; the inside, however, replies,
No! at
number 52! The dust-coloured rags that hung in guise of curtains about the three-
cornered ventilator, we will not attempt to describe.
The window was broad and of considerable height, With large panes in the sashes
and provided with Venetian shutters; only the panes had received a variety of wounds
which were at once concealed and made manifest by ingenious strips and bandages of
paper, and the shutters were so broken and disjointed that they menaced the passers-
by more than they shielded the occupants of the dwelling. The horizontal slats were
lacking, here and there, and bad been very simply replaced with boards nailed across,
so that what had been a Venetian, in the first instance, ended as a regular close
shutter. This door with its dirty look and this window with its decent though dilap-
idated appearance, seen thus in one and the same building, produced the effect of two
ragged beggars bound in the same direction and walking side by side, with different
mein under the same rags, one having always been a pauper while the other had been a
gentleman.
The staircase led up to a very spacious interior, which looked like a barn
convened
into a house. This structure had for its main channel of communication
a long hall,
on which there opened, on either side, apartments of different dimensions scarcely hab-
itable, rather resembling booths than rooms. These chambers looked out upon the shape-
less grounds of the neighbourhood. Altogether, it was dark and dull and dreary, even
melancholy and sepulchral, and it was penetrated, either by the dim, cold
rays of the
sun or by icy draughts, according to the situation of the cracks, in the
roof, or in
the door. One interesting and picturesque peculiarity of this kind of tenement is the
monstrous size of the spiders.
To the left of the main door, on the boulevard, a small window that had been walled
up formed a square niche some six feet from the ground, which was filled with stones
that passing urchins had thrown into it.
A portion of this building has recently been pulled down, but what remains, at the
present day, still conveys an idea of what it was. The structure, taken as a whole,
is not more than a hundred years old. A hundred years is youth to a church, but old
age to a private mansion. It would seem that the dwelling of Man partakes of his brief
existence, and the dwelling of God, of His eternity.
The letter-carriers called the house No. 50-52; but it was known, in the quarter, as
Gorbeau House.
Let us see how it came by that title.
The "gatherers-up of unconsidered trifles" who collect anecdotes
as the herbalist his
simples, and prick the fleeting dates upon their memories with a pin, know that there
lived in Paris, in the last century, about 1770, two attorneys of the Chatelet, one
named Corbeau and the other Renard--two names, anticipated by La Fontaine.
The chance
for a joke was altogether too fine a one to be let slip by the goodly company of law-
yers' clerks. So, very soon, the galleries of the court-rooms rang with the following
parody, in rather gouty verse:
Maitre Corbeau. sur un dossier perch&
Tenait dans son bee une saisie executoire;
Maitre Renard, par l'odeur alleche,
Lui fit a peu pros cette histoirc:
He! bonjour! etc.'
'Master Crow, on a document perched.
In his beak held a fat execution,
Master Fox, with his jaws well besmirched.
Thus spoke up, to his neighbour's confusion.
"Good dayl my fine fellow," quoth he, etc.
The two honest practitioners, annoyed by these shafts of wit, and rather disconcerted
in their dignity by the roars of laughter that followed them, resolved to change their
names, and, with that view, applied to the king. The petition was presented to
Louis XV.
on .the very day on which the Pope's Nuncio and the Cardinal de La Roche-Aymon in the
presence of his Majesty. devoutly kneeling. one on each side of Madame Du Barry. put her
slippers on her naked feet, as she was getting out of bed. The king, who was laughing,
continued his laugh; he passed gaily from the two bishops to the two advocates, and ab-
solved these limbs of the law from their names almost. It was granted to Master Corbeau,
by the king's good pleasure, to add a flourish to the first letter of his name, thus
making it Gorbeau; Master Renard was less fortunate, as he only got permission to put a
P. before the It which made the word Prenard, a name no less appropriate
than the first
one.
Now, according to tradition, this Master Gorbeau was the pro-prietor of the structure
numbered 50-52, Boulevard del Hopital. He was, likewise, the originator of the monumental
window.
Hence, this building got its name of Gorbeau House.
Opposite No. 50-52 stands, among the shade-trees that line the Boulevard, a tall elm,
three-quarters dead, and almost directly in front, opens the Rue de la Barriere des
Gobelins--a street, at that time, without houses, unpaved, bordered with scrubby trees,
grass-grown or muddy, according to the season, and running squarely up to the wall en-
circling Paris. An odour of vitriol ascended in puffs from the roofs of a neighbouring
factory.
The Barriere was quite near. In 1832, the encircling wall yet existed.
This Barriere itself filled the mind with gloomy images. It was on the way to the Bicetre.
It was there that, under the Empire and the Restoration, condemned criminals re-entered
Paris on the day of their execution. It was there, that, about the year 1829, was com-
mitted the mysterious assassination, called "the murder of the Barriere de Fontainebleau,"
the perpetrators of which the authorities have never discovered--a sombre problem which
has not yet been solved, a terrible enigma not yet unravelled. Go a few steps further,
and you find that fatal Rue Croulebarbe where Ulbach stabbed the goatherd girl of Ivry,
in a thunderstorm, in the style of a melodrama. Still a few steps, and you come to those
detestable clipped elm-trees of the Barriere Saint Jacques, that expedient of philanthro-
pists to hide the scaffold, that pitiful and shameful Place de Breve of a cockney, shop-
keeping society which recoils from capital punishment, yet dares neither to abolish it
with lofty dignity, nor to maintain it with firm authority.
Thirty-seven years ago, excepting this place, Saint-Jacques, which seemed fore-doomed, and
always was horrible, the gloomiest of all this gloomy Boulevard was the spot, stilt so un-
attractive, where stood the old building 50-52.
The city dwelling-houses did not begin to start up there until some twenty-five
years later.
The place was repulsive. In addition to the melancholy thought that seized you there, you
felt conscious of being between a La Salpetriere, the cupola of which was in sight, and
Bicetre, the barrier of which was dose by--that is to say, between the
wicked folly of
woman and that of man. Far as the eye could reach, there was nothing to be seen but the
public shambles, the city wall, and here and there the side of a factory, resembling a bar-
rack or a monastery; on all sides, miserable hovels and heaps of rubbish, old walls as black
as widows' weeds, and new walls as white as winding-sheets; on all sides, parallel rows of
trees, buildings in straight lines, low, flat structures, long, cold perspectives,
and the
gloomy sameness of right angles. Not a variation of the surface of the ground, not a caprice
of architecture, not a curve. Altogether, it was chilly, regular, and hideous. Nothing sti-
fles one like this perpetual symmetry. Symmetry is ennui, and ennui is the very essence of
grief and melancholy. Despair yawns. Something more terrible than a hell of suffering may be
conceived; to wit, a hell of ennui. Were there such a hell in existence, this section of the
Boulevard de l'Hopital might well serve as the approach to it.
Then, at nightfall, at the moment when the day is dying out, especially in winter, at that
hour when the evening breeze tears from the elms their faded and withered leaves, when the
gloom is deep, without a single star, or when the moon and the wind make openings in the
clouds, this boulevard became positively terrifying. The dark outlines shrank together, and
even lost themselves in the obscurity like fragments of the infinite. The passer-by could not
keep from thinking of the innumerable bloody traditions of the spot. The solitude of this
neighbourhood in which so many crimes had been committed, had something fearful about it. One
felt presentiments of snares in this obscurity; all the confused outlines visible through the
gloom were eyed suspiciously. and the oblong cavities between the trees seemed like graves.
In the day-time it was ugly; in the evening, it was dismal; at night, it was ominous of evil.
In summer, in the twilight, some old woman might be seen seated, here and there, under the
elms, on benches made mouldy by the rain. These good old dames were addicted to begging.
In conclusion. this quarter, which was rather superannuated than ancient, from that time began
to undergo a transformation. Thenceforth, whoever would see it. must hasten. Each day, some of
its details wholly passed away. Now, as has been the case for twenty years past, the terminus
of the Orleans railroad lies just outside of the old suburb, and keeps it in movement. Wherever
von may locate, in the outskirts of a capital, a railroad depot, it is the death of a suburb
and the birth of a city. It would seem as though around these great centres of the activity of
nations, at the rumbling of these mighty engines, at the snorting of these giant draught-horses
of civilisation, which devour coal and spout forth fire, the earth, teeming with germs of life,
trembles and opens to swallow old dwellings of men and to bring forth new; old houses crumble,
new houses spring up.
Since the depot of the Orleans railway invaded the grounds of La Salpetriere,
the old narrow
streets that adjoin the Fosses Saint Victor and the jardin des Plantes are giving way, violently
traversed, as they are, three or four times a clay, by those streams of
diligences, hacks, and
omnibuses, which, in course of time, push back the houses right and left; for there are things
that sound strangely, and yet which are precisely correct; and, just as
the remark is true that,
in large cities, the sun causes the fronts of houses looking south to vegetate and grow, so is
it undeniable that the frequent passage of vehicles widens the streets. The symptoms of a
new life are evident. In that old provincial quarter, and in its wildest
corners, pavement is be-
ginning to appear, sidewalks are springing up and stretching to longer
and longer distances,
even in those parts where there are as yet no passers-by. One morning, a memorable morning
in July, 1845, black kettles filled with bitumen were seen smoking there: on that day, one could
exclaim that civilisation had reached the Rue de l'Ourcine, and that Paris
had stepped across
into the Faubourg Saint Marceau.
II. A NEST FOR OWL AND WREN
BEFORE this Gorbeau tenement Jean Valjean stopped. Like the birds of prey, be had chosen this
lonely place to make his nest.
He fumbled in his waistcoat and took from it a sort of night-key, opened the door, entered, then
carefully closed it again and ascended the stairway, still carrying Cosette.
At the top of the stairway he drew his from pocket another key, with which he opened another door.
The chamber which he entered and closed again immediately was a sort of garret, rather spacious,
furnished only with a mattress spread on the floor, a table, and a few chairs. A stove containing
a fire, the coals of which were visible, stood in one corner. The street lamp of the boulevards
shed a dim light through this poor interior. At the further extremity there was a little room con-
taining a cot bed. On this Jean Valjean laid the child without waking her.
He struck a light with a flint and steel and lit a candle, which, with his tinder-box, stood ready,
beforehand, on the table; and, as he had done on the preceding evening,
he began to gaze upon Cos-
ette with a look of ecstasy, in which the expression of goodness and tenderness went almost to the
verge of insanity, The little girl. with that tranquil confidence which belongs only to extreme
strength or extreme weakness, had fallen asleep without knowing with whom she was, and continued
to slumber without knowing where she was.
Jean Valjean bent down and kissed the child's hand.
Nine months before, he had kissed the hand of the mother, who also had just fallen asleep.
The same mournful, pious. agonising feeling now filled his heart.
He knelt down by the bedside of Cosette.
It was broad daylight, and yet the child slept on. A pale ray from the December sun struggled
through the garret window and traced upon the ceiling long streaks of light
and shade. Suddenly a
carrier's waggon, heavily laden, trundled over the cobble-stones of the boulevard, and shook the
old building like the rumbling of a tempest, jarring it from cellar to roof-tree.
"Yes, madame!" cried Cosette, starting up out of sleep, "here I am! here I am!"
And she threw herself from the bed, her eyelids still half closed with the weight of slumber,
stretching out her hand towards the corner of the wall.
"Oh! what shall I do? Where is my broom?" said she.
By this time her eyes were fully open, and she saw the smiling face of Jean Valjean.
"Oh! yes--so it is!" said the child. "Good morning, monsieur."
Children at once accept joy and happiness with quick familiarity, being
themselves naturally all
happiness and joy.
Cosette noticed Catharine at the foot of the bed, laid hold of her at once,
and, playing the
while, asked Jean Valjean a thousand questions.--Where was she? Was Paris a big place? Was Ma-
dame Thenardier really very far away? Wouldn't she come back again, etc.,
etc. All at once she
exclaimed, "How pretty it is here!"
It was a frightful hovel, but she felt free.
"Must I sweep?" she continued at length.
"Play!" replied Jean Valjean.
And thus the day passed by. Cosette, without troubling herself with trying to understand anything
about it, was inexpressibly happy with her doll and her good friend.
III. TWO MISFORTUNES MINGLED MAKE HAPPINESS
THE dawn of the next day found Jean Valican again near the bed of Cosette.
He waited there, motion-
less, to see her wake. Something new was entering his soul.
Jean Valjean had never loved anything. For twenty-five years he had been
alone in the world. He
had never been a father, lover, husband, or friend. At the galleys, he was cross, sullen, abstinent,
ignorant, and intractable. The heart of the old convict was full of freshness. His sister and her
children had left in his memory only a vague and distant impression, which had finally almost en-
tirely vanished. He had made every exertion to find them again, and, not succeeding, had forgotten
them. Human nature is thus constituted. The other tender emotions of his youth. if any such he had,
were lost in an abyss.
When he saw Cosette, when he had taken her, carried her away, and rescued her, he felt his heart
moved. All that he had of feeling and affection was aroused and vehemently attracted towards this
child. He would approach the bed where she slept, and would tremble there
with delight; he felt
inward yearnings, like a mother, and knew not what they were; for it is something very incompre-
hensible and very sweet, this grand and strange emotion of a heart in its first love.
Poor old heart, so young!
But, as he was fifty-five and Cosette was but eight years old, all that he might have felt of
love in his entire life melted into a sort of ineffable radiance.
This was the second white vision he had seen. The bishop had caused the dawn of virtue on his
horizon; Cosette evoked the dawn of love.
The first few days rolled by amid this bewilderment.
On her part, Cosette, too, unconsciously underwent a change, poor little creature! She was so
small when her mother left her, that she could not recollect her now. As
all children do, like
the young shoots of the vine that cling to everything, she had tried to love. She had not been
able to succeed. Everybody had repelled her--the Thenardiers, their children, other children.
She had loved the dog; it died, and after that no person and no thing would have aught to do
with her. Mournful thing to tell, and one which we have already hinted, at the age of eight her
heart was cold. This was not her fault; it was not the faculty of love that she lacked; alas it
was the possibility. And so, from the very first day, all that thought and felt in her began to
love this kind old friend. She now felt sensations utterly unknown to her before--a sensation
of budding and of growth.
Her kind friend no longer impressed as old and poor. In her eyes Jean Valjean was handsome,
just as the garret had seemed pretty.
Such are the effects of the aurora-glow of childhood, youth, and joy. The newness of earth and
of life has something to do with it. Nothing is so charming as the ruddy tints that happiness
can shed around a garret room. We all, in the course of our lives. have had our rose-coloured
sky-parlour.
Nature had placed a wide chasm--fifty years' interval gap--between Jean Valjean and Cosette.
This chasm fate filled up. Fate abruptly brought together, and wedded with its resistless power,
these two shattered lives, dissimilar in years, but similar in sorrow. The one, indeed, was the
complement of the other. The instinct of Cosette sought for a father, as the instinct of Jean
Valjean sought for a child. To meet, was to find one another. In that mysterious moment, when
their hands touched, they were welded together. When their two souls saw each other, they recog-
nised that they were mutually needed, and they closely embraced.
Taking the words in their most comprehensive and most absolute sense, it might be said that,
separated from everything by the walls of the tomb, Jean Valjean was the husband bereaved, as
Cosette was the orphan. This position made Jean Valjean become, in a celestial sense, the father
of Cosette.
And, in truth, the mysterious impression produced upon Cosette, in the depths of the woods at
Chelles, by the hand of Jean Valjean grasping her own in the darkness, was not an illusion but
a reality. The coming of this man and his participation in the destiny of this child had been
the advent of God.
In the meanwhile, Jean Valjean had well chosen his hiding-place. He was there in a state of
security that seemed to be complete.
The apartment with the side chamber which he occupied with Cosette, was the one whose window
looked out upon the boulevard. This window being the only one in the house, there was no neigh-
bour's prying eye to fear either from that side or opposite.
The lower floor of No. 50-52 was a sort of dilapidated shed; it served as a sort of stable for
market gardeners, and had no communication with the upper floor. It was separated from it by
the flooring, which had neither stairway nor trap-door, and was, as it were, the diaphragm of
the old building. The upper floor contained, as we have said, several rooms and a few lofts,
only one of which was occupied--by an old woman, who was maid of all work to Jean Valjean.
All the rest was uninhabited.
It was this old woman, honoured with the title of landlady, but, in reality, intrusted with
the functions of portress, who had rented him these lodgings on Christmas
Day. He had passed
himself off to her as a gentle-man of means, ruined by the Spanish Bonds, who was going to
live there with his grand-daughter. He had paid her for six months in advance, and engaged
the old dame to furnish the chamber and the little bedroom, as we have
described them. This
old woman it was who had kindled the fire in the stove and made everything ready for them,
on the evening of their arrival.
Weeks rolled by. These two beings led in that wretched shelter a happy life.
From the earliest dawn, Cosette laughed, prattled, and sang. Children have their morning song,
like birds.
Sometimes it happened that Jean Valjean would take her little red hand, all chapped and frost-
bitten as it was and kiss it. The poor child, accustomed only to blows,
had no idea what this
meant, and would draw back ashamed.
At times, she grew serious and looked musingly at her little black dress.
Cosette was no longer
in rags; she was as in mourning. She was issuing from utter poverty and was entering upon life.
Jean Valjean had begun to teach her to read. Sometimes, while teaching the child to spell, he
would remember that it was with the intention of accomplishing evil that he had learned to read,
in the galleys. This intention had now been changed into teaching a child
to ready. Then the old
convict would smile with the pensive smile of angels.
He felt in this a pre-ordination from on high, a volition of some one more than man, and he
would lose himself in reverie. Good thoughts as well as bad have their abysses.
To teach Cosette to read, and to watch her playing, was nearly all Jean Valjean's life. And
then, he would talk to her about her mother, and teach her to pray.
She called him Father, and knew him by no other name.
He spent hours seeing her dress and undress her doll, and listening to
her song and prattle.
From that time on, life seemed full of interest to him, men seemed good and just; he no longer,
in his thoughts, reproached any one with any wrong; he saw no reason, now, why he should not
live to grow very old, since his child loved him, lie looked forward to a long future illum-
inated by Cosette with charming light. The very best of us are not altogether exempt from
some tinge of egotism. At times, he thought with a sort of quiet satisfaction, that she
would be by no means handsome.
This is but personal opinion; but in order to express our idea thoroughly, at the point Jean
Valjean had reached, when he began to love Cosette, it is not clear to us that he did not
require this fresh supply of goodness to enable him to persevere in the
right path. He had
seen the wickedness of men and the misery of society under new aspects--aspects incomplete
and, unfortunately, showing forth only one side of the truth--the lot of woman summed up in
Fantine, public authority personified in Javert; he had been sent back to the galleys this
time for doing good; new waves of bitterness had overwhelmed him; disgust and weariness had
once more resumed their sway; the recollection of the bishop, even, was perhaps eclipsed,
sure to reappear afterwards, luminous and triumphant; yet, in fact, this blessed remembrance
was growing feebler. Who knows that Jean Valjean was not on the point of becoming discou-
raged and falling back to evil ways? Love came, and he again grew strong. Alas! he was no less
feeble than Cosette. He protected her, and she gave strength to him, Thanks
to him, she
could walk upright in life; thanks to her, he could persist in virtuous deeds. He was the
support of this child, and this child was his prop and staff. Oh, divine and unfathomable
mystery of the compensations of Destiny
IV. WHAT THE LANDLADY DISCOVERED
JEAN Valjean was prudent enough never to go out in the daytime. Every evening, however,
about twilight, he would walk for an hour or two, sometimes alone, often
with Cosette, selecting
the most unfrequented side alleys of the boulevards and going into the
churches at nightfall.
He was fond of going to St. Medard, which is the nearest church. When he did not take Cosette,
she remained with the old woman; but it was the child's delight to go out with her kind old
friend. She preferred an hour with him even to her delicious the a-tetes with Catharine. He
would walk along holding her by the hand, and telling her pleasant things,
It turned out that Cosette was very playful.
The old woman was housekeeper and cook, and did the marketing.
They lived frugally, always with a little fire in the stove, but like people in embarrassed
circumstances Jean Valjean made no change in the furniture described on the first day, except-
ing that be caused a solid door to be put up in place of the glass door of Cosette's little
bed-chamber.
He still wore his yellow coat, his black pantaloons, and his old hat. On
the street he was
taken for a beggar. It sometimes happened that kind-hearted dame, in passing. would turn
and bawl him a penny. Jean Valjean accepted the penny and bowed humbly. It chanced, some-
times, also, that he would meet some wretched creature begging alms, and then, glancing
about him to be sure no one was looking, he would stealthily approach the beggar, slip a
piece of money, often silver, into his hand, and walk rapidly away. This had its inconven-
iences. He began to be known in the quarter as the beggar who gives alms.
The old landlady, a crabbed creature, fully possessed with that keen observation as to all
that concerned her neighbours, which is peculiar to the suburbs. watched Jean Valjean closely
without exciting his suspicion. She was a little deaf, which made her talkative. She had but
two teeth left, one in the upper and one in the lower jaw, and these she was continually
rattling together. She had questioned Cosette, who, knowing nothing, could tell nothing,
further than that she came from Montfermeil. One morning this old female spy saw Jean Val-
jean go, with an appearance which seemed peculiar to the old busybody, into one of the un-
inhabited apartments of the building. She followed him with the steps of an old cat, and
could see him without herself being seen, through the chink of the door directly opposite.
an Valjean had, doubtless for greater caution, turned his back towards the door in question.
The old woman saw him fumble in his pocket, and take from it a needle case, scissors, and
thread, and then proceed to rip open the lining of one lapel of his coat and take from under it
a piece of yellowish paper, which he unfolded. The beldame remarked with dismay, that it
was a bank bill for a thousand francs. It was the second or third one only
that she had ever
seen. She ran away very much frightened.
A moment afterwards, Jean Valjean accosted her, and asked her to get this thousand-franc
bill changed for him, adding that it was the half-yearly interest on his property which he
had received on the previous day. "Where?' thought the old woman. He did not go out until
six o'clock, and the government treasury is certainly not open at that hour. The old woman
got the note changed, all the while forming her conjectures. This bill of a thousand francs,
commented upon and multiplied, gave rise to a host of breathless conferences among the gos-
sips of the Rue des Vignes Saint Marcel.
Some days afterwards, it chanced that Jean Valjean, in his shirtsleeves, was sawing wood in
the entry. The old woman wasin his room doing the chamberwork. She was alone. Cosette was
intent upon the wood he was sawing. The woman saw the coat hanging on a nail, and examined
it. The lining had been sewed over. She felt it carefully and thought she could detect in
the lappets and in the padding, thicknesses of paper. Other thousand-franc bills beyond a
doubt!
She noticed, besides, that there were all sorts of things in the pockets. Not only were
there the needles, scissors, and thread, which she had already seen, but a large pocket-
book, a very big knife, and, worst symptom of all, several wigs of different colours. Every
pocket of this coat had the appearence of containing something to be provided with against
sudden emergencies.
Thus, the occupants of the old building reached the closing days of winter.
V. A FIVE FRANC PIECE FALLING ON THE FLOOR MAKES A NOISE
THERE was, in the neighbourhood of Saint Medard, a mendicant who sat crouching over the
edge of a condemned public well near by, and to whom Jean Valjean often gave alms. He never
passed this man without giving hint a few pennies. Sometimes he spoke to him. Those who were
envious of this poor creature said be was in the pay of the police. He was an old church
beadle of seventy-five, who was always mumbling prayers.
One evening. as Jean Valjean was passing that way, unaccompanied by Cosette. he noticed
the beggar sitting in his usual place, under the street lamp which had just been lighted.
The man, according to custom seemed to be praying and was bent over. Jean, Valjean walked
up to him him and put a piece of money in his hand, as usual. The beggar suddenly raised
his eyes, gazed intently at Jean Valjean, and then quickly dropped his head. This movement
was like a flash; Jean Valjean shuddered; it seemed to he had just seen, by the light of
the street-lamp, not the calm, sanctimonious face of the aged beadle, but a terrible and
well-known countenance. He experienced the sensation one would feel on finding himself
suddenly face to face, in the gloom, with a tiger. He recoiled, horror-stricken and
petrified, daring neither to breathe nor to speak, to stay nor to fly, but gazing upon
the beggar who had once more bent down his head, with its tattered covering, and seemed
to be no longer conscious of his presence. At this singular moment, an instinct, perhaps
the mysterious instinct of self preservation, prevented Jean Valjean from uttering a word.
The beggar had the same form, the same rags, the same general appearance as on every
other day. "Pshaw!" said Jean Valjean to himself, "I am mad! I am dreaming! It cannot
be!" And he went home, anxious and ill at ease.
He scarcely dared to admit, even to himself, that the countenance he thought he had seen
was the face of Javert.
That night, upon reflection, he regretted that he had not questioned the man so as to
compel him to raise his head a second time. On the morrow, at nightfall, he went thither,
again. The beggar was in his place. "Good day! Good day!" said Jean Valjean, with firm-
ness, as he gave him the accustomed alms. The beggar raised his head and answered in a
whining voice: "Thanks, kind sir, thanks!" It was indeed, only the old beadle.
Jean Valjean now felt fully reassured. He even began to laugh. "What, the deuce was I
about to fancy that I saw Javert," thought he; "is my sight growing
poor already?" And
he thought no more about it.
Some days after, it might be eight o'clock in the evening, he was in his room, giving
Cosette her spelling lesson, which the child was repeating in a loud voice, when he
heard the door of the building open and close again. that seemed odd to
him. The old
woman the only occupant of the house besides himself and Cosette, always
went to bed
at dark to save candles. Jean Valjean made a sign to Cosette to be silent. He heard
some one coming up the stairs. Possibly, it might be the old woman who had felt unwell
and had been to the druggist. Jean Valjean listened. The footstep was heavy, and
sounded like a man's; but the old woman wore heavy shoes, and there is nothing so
much like the step of a man as the step of an old woman. However, Jean Valjean
blew out his candle.
He sent Cosette to bed, telling her in a suppressed voice to lie down very quietly--
and, as he kissed her forehead, the footsteps stopped. Jean Valjean remained silent
and motionless, his back turned towards the door, still seated on his chair from which
he had not moved, and holding his breath in the darkness. After a considerable interval,
not hearing anything more, he turned round without making any noise, and as he raised
his eyes towards the door of his room, he saw a light through the keyhole. This ray of
light was an evil star in the black background of the door and the wall. There was,
evidently, somebody outside with a candle who was listening.
A few minutes elapsed, and the light disappeared. But he heard no sound of footsteps,
which seemed to indicate that whoever was listening at the door had taken off his shoes.
Jean Valjean threw himself on his bed without undressing, but could not shut his eyes
that night.
At daybreak, as he was sinking into slumber from fatigue, he was aroused, again, by
the creaking of the door of some room at the end of the hall, and then he heard the same
footstep which had ascended the stairs, on the preceding night. The step approached. He
started from his bed and placed his eye to the keyhole, which was quite a large one,
hoping to get a glimpse of the person, whoever it might be, who had made his way into
the building in the night-time and had listened at his door. It was a man, indeed, who
passed by Jean Val jean's room, this time without stopping. The hall was still too dark
for him to make out his features; but, when the man reached the stairs, a ray of light
from without made his figure stand out like a profile, and jean Valjean had a full view
of his back. The man was tall, wore a long frock-coat, and had a cudgel
under his arm.
It was the redoubtable form of Javert.
Jean Valjean might have tried to get another look at him through his window that opened
on the boulevard, but he would have had to raise the sash, and that be
dared not do.
It was evident that the man had entered by means of a key, as if at home. "Who, then,
had given him the key?--and what was the meaning of this?"
At seven in the morning, when the old lady came to clear up the rooms, Jean Valjean
eyed her sharply, but asked her no questions. The good dame appeared as
usual.
While she was doing her sweeping, she said:--
"Perhaps monsieur heard some one come in, last night?"
At her age and on that boulevard, eight in the evening is the very darkest of the night.
"Ah! ves, by the way, I did," he answered in the most natural tone. "Who was it?"
"It's a new lodger," said the old woman, "who has come into the house."
"And his name--?"
"Well, I hardly recollect now. Dumont or Daumont.-- Some such name as that."
"And what is he--this M. Daumont?"
The old woman studied him, a moment, through her little foxy eyes, and answered:
"He's a gentleman living on his income like you."
She may have intended nothing by this, but Jean Valjean thought he could make out that
she did.
When the old woman was gone, he made a roll of a hundred francs he had in a drawer and
put it into his pocket. Do what he would to manage this so that the clinking of the
silver should not be heard, a five-franc piece escaped his grasp and rolled jingling
away over the floor.
At dusk, he went to the street-door and looked carefully up and down the boulevard. No
one was to be seen. The boulevard seemed to be utterly deserted. It is true that there
might have been someone hidden behind a tree.
He went upstairs again.
"Come," said he to Cosette.
He took her by the hand and they both went out.
BOOK FIFTH
A DARK CHASE NEEDS A SILENT HOUND
I. THE ZIGZAGS OF STRATEGY
IN order to understand the pages immediately following, and others also which will
be found further on, an observation is here necessary.
Many years have already passed away since the .author of this book, who is compelled,
reluctantly, to speak of himself, was in Paris. Since then, Paris has been transformed.
A new city has arisen, which to him is in some sense unknown. He need not
say that
he loves Paris; Paris is the native city of his heart. Through demolition
and recon-
struction, the Paris of his youth, that Paris which he religiously treasures in his
memory, has become a Paris of former times. Let him be permitted to speak of that
Paris as if it still existed. It is possible that where the author is about to con-
duct his readers, saying: "In such a street there is such a house," there is now no
longer either house or street. The reader will verify it, if he chooses to take the
trouble. As to himself, the author knows not the new Paris, and writes with the old
Paris before his eyes in an illusion which is precious to him. It is a sweet. thing
for him to imagine that there still remains something of what he saw when he was in
his own country, and that all is not vanished. While we are living in our native
land, we fancy that these streets are indifferent to us, that these windows, these
roofs, and these doors are nothing to us, that these walls are strangers to us, that
these trees are no more than other trees, that these houses which we never enter are
useless to us, that this pavement on which we walk is nothing but stone. In after
times, when we are there no longer, we find that those streets are very dear, that
we miss those roofs, those windows, and those doors, that those walls are necessary
to us, that those trees are our well-beloved, that those houses which we never en-
tered we entered every day, and that we have left something of our affections, our
life, and our heart in those streets. All those places which we see no more. which
perhaps we shall never see again, but the image of which we have preserved, assume
a mournful chann, return to us with the sadness of a spectre, make the holy land
visible to us, and are, so to speak, the very form of France; and we love them and
call them up such as they are, such as they were, and hold to them, unwilling to
change anything, for one clings to the form of his fatherland as to the face of his
mother.
Permit us, then, to speak of the past in the present. Saying which, we beg the
reader to take note of it, and we proceed.
Jean Valjean had immediately left the boulevard and began to thread the streets,
making as many turns as he could, returning sometimes upon his track to make sure
that he was not followed.
This manoeuvre is peculiar to the hunted stag. On ground where the foot leaves a
mark, it has, among other advantages, that of deceiving the hunters and the dogs
by the counter-step. It is what is called in venery false reimbushment.
The moon was full. Jean Valjean was not sorry for that. The moon, still near the
horizon, cut large prisms of light and shade in the streets. Jean Valjean could
glide along the houses and the walls on the dark side and observe the light
side.
He did not, perhaps, sufficiently realise that the obscure side escaped him. How-
ever, in all the deserted little streets in the neighbourhood of the Rue de Poli-
veau, he felt sure that no one was behind him.
Cosette walked without asking any questions. The sufferings of the first six years
of her life had introduced something of the passive into her nature. Besides--and
this is a remark to which we shall have more than one occasion to return--she had
become familiar, without being fully conscious of them, with the peculiarities of
her good friend and the eccentricities of destiny. And then, she felt safe, being
with him.
Jean Valjean knew, no more than Cosette, where he was going. He trusted in God, as
she trusted in him. It seemed to him that he also held some one greater than himself
by the hand; he believed he felt a being leading him, invisible. Finally, he had no
definite idea, no plan, no project. He was not even absolutely sure that this was
Javert, and then it might be Javertt and Javert not know that he was jean Valjean.
Was he not disguised? was he not supposed to be dead? Nevertheless, singular things
had happened within the last few days. He wanted no more of them. He was determined
not to enter Getheau House again. Like the animal hunted from his den, he was look-
ing for a hole to hide in until he could find one to remain in.
Jean Valjean 'described many and varied labyrinths in the Quartier lIouffetard,
which was asleep already as if it were still theunder the discipline of middle age
and the yoke of the curfew he produced different combinations, in wise strategy,
with the Rue Cennsier and the Re Copeath, the Rue du Battoir Saint Victor and
the Rue du Puits l'Ermite. There are lodgings in that region, but he did not even
enter them, not finding what suited him. He had no doubt whatever that if, perchance,
they had sought his track, they had lost it.
As eleven o'clock struck in the tower of Saint Etienne du Mont, he crossed the Rue
de Pontoise in front of the bureau of the Commissary of Police, which is at No. 14.
Some moments afterwards; the instinct of which we have already spoken made him turn
his head. At this moment he saw distinctly--thanks to the commissary's lamp which
revealed them--three men following him quite near, pass one after another under this
lamp on the dark side of the street. One of these men entered the passage leading.
to the commissary's house. The one in advance appeared to him decidedly suspicious.
"Come, child!" said he to Cosette, and he made haste to get out of the Rue de Pon-
toise.
He made a circuit, went round the arcade des Patriarches, which was closed on account
of the lateness of the hour, walked rapidly through the Rue de 1'46e-de-3ois and the
Rue de l'Arbalete, and plunged into the Rue des Pastes.
There was a square there, where the College Rollin now is, and from which branches
off the Ruc Neuve-Sainte-Genevieve.
(We need not say that the Rue Neuve-Sainte-Genevieve is an old street, and that there
a postchaise did not pass once in ten years through the Rue des Postes. This Rue des
Posies was in the thirteenth century inhabited by potters, and its true name is Rue
des Pots.)
The moon lighted up this square brightly. Jean Valjcan concealed himself in a doorway,
calculating that if these men were still following him, he could not fail to get a
good view of them when they crossed this lighted space.
In fact, three minutes had not elapsed when the men appeared. There were now four
of them; all were tall, dressed in long brown coats, with round hats, and
great clubs
in their bands. They were not less fearfully forbidding by their size and their large
fists than by their stealthy tread in the darkness. One would have taken them air
four spectres in citizen's dress.
They stopped in the centre of the square and formed a group like people consulting.
They appeared undecided. The man who seemed to be the leader turned and energetically
pointed in the direction in which Jean Valjean was; one of the others seemed to insist
with some obstinacy on the contrary direction. At the instant when the leader turned,
the moon shone full in his face. Jean Valjean recognised Javert perfectly.
II. IT IS FORTUNATE THAT VEHICLES CAN CROSS THE BRIDGE OF AUSTERLITZ
UNCERTAINTY was at an end for Jean Voljean; happily, it still continued with these
men. He took advantage of their hesitation; it was time lost for them, gained for him.
He came out from the doorway in which he was concealed, and made his way into the Rue
des Postes towards the region of the Jardin des Plantes. Cosette began
to be tired;
he took her in his arms, and carried her. There was nobody in,the streets, and the
lamps had not been lighted on account of the moon.
He doubled his pace.
In a few steps, he reached the Goblet pottery, on the facade of which the old in-
scription stood out distinctly legible in the light of the moon:
De Goblet Ms c'est icf la fabrique;
Vote choisir des cruchcs ct des brocs,
Des pots a flours, des tugaux, de la briquc.
A tout venant It Cur vend des Carreaux.
He passed through the Rue de la Clef, then by the Fontaine de Saint Victor along the
Jardin des Plantes by the lower streets, and reached the quay. There be looked around.
The quay was deserted. The streets were deserted. Nobody behind him. He took breath.
He arrived at the bridge of Austerlitz.
It was still a toll-bridge at this period.
He presented himself at the toll-house and gave a sous.
"It is two sous," said the toll-keeper. "You are carrying a child who can walk. Pay
for two."
He paid, annoyed that his passage should have attracted observation. All flight
should be gliding.
A large cart was passing the Seine at the same time, and like him was going towards
the right bank. This could be made of use. He could go the whole length of the bridge
in the shade of this cart.
Towards the middle of the bridge, Cosette, her feet becoming numb, desired to walk.
He put her down and took her by the hand.
The bridge passed, he perceived some wood-yards a little to the right and walked in
that direction. To get there, he must venture into a large clear open space. He did
not hesitate. Those who followed him were evidently thrown off his track, and Jean
Valean believed himself out of clanger. Sought for, he might be, but followed he was
not.
A little street, the Rue de Chemin Vet Saint Antoine, opened between two wood-yards
inclosed by walls. This street was narrow, obscure, and seemed made expressly for him.
Before enter he looked back.
From the point where he was, he could see the whole length of the bridge
of Austerlitz.
Four shadows, at that moment, entered upon the bridge. These shadows were coming from
the Jardin des Plantes wards the right bank.
These four shadows were the four men.
Jean Valjean felt a shudder like that of the deer when he s the hounds again upon his
track.
One hope was left him; it was that these men had not enter upon the bridge, and had not
perceived him when he crossed the large square clear space leading Cosette
by the hand.
In that case, by plunging into the little street before him, if he could succeed in
reaching the wood-yards, the marshes, the fields, the open grounds, he could escape.
It seemed to him that he might trust himself to this silent'little street. He entered
it.
III. SEE THE PLAN OF PARIS OF 1727
SOME three hundred paces on, he reached a point where the street. forked.
It divided into
two streets, the one turning off obliquely to the left, the other to the right. Jean Val-
jean had before him the two branches of a Y. Which should he choose?
He did not hesitate, but took the right.
Why?
Because the left branch led towards the faubourg--that is to st towards the inhabited re-
gion, and the right branch towards tl country--that is, towards the uninhabited region.
But now, they no longer walked very fast. Cosette's step slackened Jean Valjean's pace.
He took her up and carried her again. Cosette rested her head tpon the goodman's shoulder,
and did not say a word.
He turned, from time to time, and looked back. He took care keep always on the dark side of
the street. The street was straight hind him. The two or three first times he turned, he saw
nothing; the silence was complete, and he kept on his way somewhat reassured. Suddenly, on
turning again, he thought he saw in the portion of the street through which he had just
passed, far in the obscurity, something which stirred.
He plunged forward rather than walked, hoping to find some street by which to escape, and
once more to elude his pursuers. He came to a wall.
This wall, however, did not prevent him from going further; it was a wall forming the side of
a cross alley, in which the street Jean Valjean was then in came to an end.
Here again he must decide; should he take the right or the left?
He looked to the right. The alley ran out to a space between some buildings that were mere
sheds or barns, then terminated abruptly. The end of this blind alley was plain to be seen--
a great white wall.
He looked to the left. The alley on this side was open, and, about two hundred paces further
on, ran into a street of which it was an affluent. In this direction lay safety.
The instant Jean Valjean decided to turn to the left, to try to reach the street which he saw
at the end of the alley, he perceived, at the corner of the alley and the street towards which
he was just about going, a sort of black, motionless statue.
It was a man, who had just been posted there, evidently, and who was waiting for him, guarding
the passage.
Jean Valjean was startled.
This part of Paris where Jean Valjean was, situated between the Faubourg Saint Antoine and the
La Rapee, is one of those which have been entirely transformed by the recent works--a change
for the worse, in the opinion of some, a transfiguration, according to others. The vegetable
gardens, the wood-yards, and the old buildings are gone. There are now broad new streets, am-
phitheatres, circuses, hippodromes, railroad depots, a prison, Mazas; progress, as we see, with
its corrective.
Half a century ago, in the common popular language, full of tradition, which obstinately calls
l'Institut Les Quartre Nations, and l'Opera Comique Thyleau, the precise spot which Jean Val-
jean bad reached was called the Petit Pie pus. The Porte Saint Jacques, the Porte Paris, the
Barriere des Sergents, the Porcher-ons, the Galiote, the Celestins, the Capuchins, the Mail,
the Bourke, the Arbre de Carcovie, the Petite Pologne, the Petit Picpus,
these are names of
the old Paris floating over into the new. The memory of the people buoys over these waifs of
the past.
The Petit Picpus, which in fact hardly had a real existence, and was never more than a mere
outline of a quarter, had almost the monkish aspect of a Spanish city. The roads were poorly
paved, the streets were thinly built up. Beyond the two or three streets of which we are about
to speak, there was nothing there but wall and solitude. Not a shop, not a vehicle, hardly a
light here and there in the windows; all the lights put out after ten o'clock. Gardens, con-
vents, wood-yards, market gardens, a few scattered low houses, and great walls as high as the
houses.
Such was the quarter in the last century. The Revolution had already very much altered it.
The republican authorities had pulled down buildings and run streets into and through it. Dep-
ositories of rubbish had been established there. Thirty years ago, this quarter was being grad-
ually erased by the construction of new buildings. it is now completely blotted out. The Petit
Picpus, of which no present plan retains a trace, is clearly enough indicated in the plan of
1727, published at Paris by Denis Thierry, Rue Saint Jacques, opposite the Rue du Platte, and
at Lyons by Jean Ginn, Rue MerciCre, a la Prudence. The Petit Picpus had what we have just
called a Y of streets, formed by the Rue du Chemin Vert Saint Antoine dividing into two branch-
es and taking on the left the name Petite Rue Picpus and on the right the name of the Rue Pol-
onceau. The two branches of the Y were joined at the top as by a bar. This bar was called the
Rue Droit Mur. The Rue Polonceau ended there; the Petite Rue Picpus passed beyond, rising to-
wards the Marche Lenoir. He who, coming from the Seine, readied the extremity of the Rue Polo-
nceau, had on his left the Rue Droit Mur turning sharply at a right angle, before him the side
wall of that street, and on his right a truncated prolongation of the Rue Droit Mur, without
thoroughfare, called the Cul-de-sac Genrot.
Jean Valjean was in this place.
As we have said, on perceiving the black form standing sentry at the corner of the Rue Droit
Mur and the Petite Rue Picpus, he was startled. There was no doubt. He was watched by this
shadow.
What should he do?
There was now no time to turn back. What he had seen moving in the obscurity some distance be-
hind him, the moment before, was undoubtedly Javert and his squad. Javert probably had already
reached the commencement of the street of which Jean Valjean was at the end. Javert, to all ap-
pearance, was acquainted with this little trap, and had taken his precautions by sending one of
his men to guard the exit. These conjectures, so like certainties, whirled about wildly in Jean
Valjean's troubled brain, as a handful of dust flies before a sudden blast. He scrutinised the
Cul-de-sac Genrot; there were high walls. He scrutinised the Petite Rue Picpus; them was a sen-
tinel. He saw the dark form repeated in black upon the white pavement flooded with the moonlight.
To advance, was to fall upon that man. To go back, was to throw himself into Jared's hands. Jean
Valjean felt as if caught by a chain that was slowly winding up. He looked up into the sky in
despair.
IV. GROPING FOR ESCAPE
IN order to understand what follows, it is necessary to form an exact idea of the little Rue
Droit Mur, and particularly the corner which it makes at the left as you leave the Rue Polonceau
to enter this alley. The little Rue Molt Mur was almost' entirely lined on the right, as far
as
the Petite Rue Picpus, by houses of poor appearance; on the left by a single
building of severe
outline, com-posed of several structures which rose gradually a story or two, one above another,
as they approached the Petite Rue Picpus, so that the building, very high on the side of the Pe-
tite Rue Ricpus, was quite low on the side of the Rue Polonceau. There, at the corner of which
he have spoken, it became so low as to be nothing more than a wall. This wall did not abut square-
ly on the corner, which was cut off diagonally, leaving' a Considerable space that was shielded
by the two angles thus formed from observers at a distance in either the Rne Polonceau, or the
Rue Droit Mur.
From these two angles of the truncated corner, the wall extended along the Rue Polonceau as far
as a house numbered 49, and along the Rue Droit Mur, where its height was
much less, to the som-
bre-looking building of which we have spoken, cutting its gable, and thus making a new re-entering
angle in the street. This gable had a gloomy aspect; there was but one window to be seen, or ra-
ther twb shutters covered with a sheet of zinc, and always closed.
The situation of the places which we describe here is rigorously exact, and we certainly awaken
a very precise remembrance in the minds of the old inhabitants of the locality.
This truncated corner was entirely filled by a thing which seemed like a colossal and miserable
door. It was a vast shapeless assemblage of perpendicular planks, broader above than below, bound
together by long transverse iron bands. At the side there was a porte-cochere of the ordinary
dimensions, which had evidently been cut in within the last fifty years.
A lime-tree lifted its branches above this corner, and the wall was covered with ivy towards the
Rue Polonceau.
In the imminent peril of Jean Valjean, this sombre building had a solitary and uninhabited appear-
ance which attracted him. He glanced over it rapidly. He thought if he could only succeed in get-
ting into it, he would perhaps be safe. Hope came to him with the idea.
Midway of the front of this building on the Rue Droit Mur, there were at all the windows of the
different stories old leaden waste-pipes. The varied branchings of the tubing which was continued
from a central conduit to each of these waste-pipes, outlined on the facade a sort of tree. These
ramifications of the pipes with their hundred elbows seemed like those old closely-pruned grape-
vines which twist about over the front of ancient farm-houses.
This grotesque espalier, with its sheet-iron branches, was the first object which Jean Valjean
saw. He seated Cosette with her back against a post. and, telling her to be quiet, ran to the
spot where the conduit came to the pavement. Perhaps there was some means of scaling
the wall
by that and entering the house. But the conduit was dilapidated and out of use, and scarcely
held by its fastening. Besides, all the windows of this silent house were protected by thick bars
of iron, even the dormer windows. And then the moon shone full upon this
facade, and the man who
was watching from the end of the street would have seen Jean Valjean making the escalade.
And then what should he do with Cosette? How could he raise her to the
top of a three-story
house?
He gave up climbing by the conduit, and crept along the wall to the Rue Polonceau.
When he reached this flattened corner where he had left Cosette, he noticed
that there no one could
see him. He escaped, as we have just explained, all observation from every side. Besides, he was in
the shade. Then there were two doors. Perhaps they might be forced. The wall, above which he saw the
lime and the ivy, evidently surrounded a garden, where he could at least conceal himself, although
there were no leaves on the trees yet, and pass the rest of the night.
Time was passing. He must act quickly.
He tried the carriage door, and found at once that it was fastened within and without.
He approached the other large door with more hope. It was frightfully decrepit, its immense size
even rendering it less 'solid; the planks were rotten, the iron fastenings, of which there were
three, were rusted. It seemed possible to pierce this worm-eaten structure.
On examining it, he saw that this door was not a door. It bad neither hinges, braces. lock, nor
crack in the middle. The iron bands crossed from one side to the other without a break. Through
the crevices of the planks he saw the rubble-work and stones, roughly cemented, which passers-by
could have seen within the last ten years. He was compelled to admit with consternation that this
appearance of a door was simply an ornamentation in wood of a wall, upon which it was placed. It
was easy to tear off a board, but then he would find himself face to face with a wall.
V. WHICH WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE WERE THE STREETS LIGHTED WITH GAS
Ar this moment a muffled and regular sound began to make" itself heard at some distance. Jean Val-
jean ventured to thrust his head a little way around the corner of the street. Seven or eight.
soldiers. formed in platoon. had just turned into the Rue Polon: ceau. He.saw the gleam of their
bayonets. They were coming towords him.
The soldiers, a whose head he distinguished the tall form of Javert, advanced
slowly and with
precaution. They stopped fre-quently. It was plain they were exploring all the recesses of the
walls and all the entrances of doors and alleys.
It was--and here conjecture could not be deceived--some patrol which Javert
had met and
which he had put in requisition. Javert's two assistants marched in the
ranks.
At the rate at which they were marching, and the stops they were making,
it would take them
about a quarter of an hour to arrive at the spot where Jean Valjean was. It was a frightful mo-
ment. A few minutes separated Jean Valjean from that awful precipice which was opening before
him for the third time. And the galleys now were no longer simply the galleys,
they were Cosette
lost for ever; that is to say, a life in death.
There was now only one thing possible.
Jean Valjean had this peculiarity, that he might be said to carry two knapsacks; in one he had
the thoughts of a saint, in the other the formidable talents of a convict. He helped himself from
one or the other as occasion required.
Among other resources, thanks to his numerous escapes from the galleys
at Toulon, he had, it
will be remembered, become master of that incredible art of raising himself, in the right angle
of a wall, if need to be to the height of a sixth story; an art without
ladders or props, by mere
musclar strength, supporting himself by the back of his neck, his shoulders,
his hips, and his
knees, hardly making use of the few projections of the stone, which rendered
so terrible and
so celebrated the corner of the yard of the Conciergerie of Paris by which, some twenty
years ago, the convict Battemolle made his escape.
Jean Valjean measured with his eyes the wall above which he saw the lime tree. It was
about eighteen feet high. The angle that it made with the gable of the great building
was filled in its lower part with a pile of masonry of triangular shape, probably in-
tended to preserve this too convenient recess from a too public use. This preventive
filling-up of the corners of a wall is very common in Paris.
This pile was about five feet high. From its top the space to climb to get upon the
wall was hardly more than fourteen feet.
The wall was capped by a flat stone without any projection.
The difficulty was Cosette. Cosette did not know how to scale a wall. Abandon her? Jean
Valjean did not think of it. To carry her was impossible. The whole strength of a man
is necessary to accomplish these strange ascents. The least burden would make him lose
his centre of gravity and he would fall.
He needed a cord. Jean Valjean had none. Where could he find a cord, at midnight, in
the Rue Po1onceau? Truly at that instant, if Jean Valjean had had a kingdom, he would
have given it for a rope. All extreme situations have their flashes which sometimes make
us blind, sometimes illuminate us.
The despairing gaze of Jean Valjean encountered the lamp-post in the Cul-de-sac Genrot.
At this epoch there were no gas-lights in the streets of Paris. At nightfall they lighted the
streets lamps, which were placed at intervals, and were raised and lowered by means of a rope
traversing the street from end to end, running through the grooves of posts. The reel on which
this rope was wound was inclosed below the lantern in a little iron box, the key of which was
kept by the lamp-lighter, and the rope itself was protected by a casing of metal.
Jean Valjean, with the energy of a final struggle, crossed the street at a bound, entered the
cul-de-sac, sprang the bolt of the little box with the point of his knife, and an instant after
was back at the side of Cosette. He had a rope. These desperate inventors of expedients, in their
struggles with fatality, move electrically in case of need.
We have explained that the street lamps had not been lighted that night. The lamp in the Cul-
de-sac Genrot was then, as a matter of course, extinguished like the rest, and one might pass
by without even noticing that it was not in its place.
Meanwhile the hour, the place, the darkness, the preoccupation of Jean Valjean, his singular
actions, his going to and fro, all this began to disturb Cosette. Any other child would have
uttered loud cries long before. She contented herself with pulling Jean Valjeati by the skirt
of his coat. The sound of the approaching patrol was constantly becoming more and more distinct.
"Father," said she, in a whisper, "I am afraid. Who is it
that is coming?"
"Hush!" answered the unhappy man, "it is the Thenardiess."
Cosette shuddered. He added:
"Don't say a word: I'll take care of her. If you cry, if you make
any noise, the Thenardiess
will hear you. She is coming to catch you."
Then, without any haste, but without doing anything a second time, with a firm and rapid decision,
so much the more remarkable at such a moment when the patrol and Javert
might come upon him
at any instant, he took off his cravat, passed it around Cosette's body
under the arms, taking care
that it should not hurt the child, attached this cravat to an end of the
rope by means of the knot
which seamen call a swallow-knot, took the other end of the rope in his teeth, took off his shoes
and stockings and threw them over the wall, climbed upon the pile of masonry and began to raise
himself in the angle of the wall and the gable with as much solidity and certainty as if he had
the rounds of a ladder under his heels and his elbows. Half a minute had not passed before he was
on his knees on the wall.
Cosette watched him, stupefied, without saying a word. Jean Valjean's charge and the name of the
Thenardiess had made her dumb.
All at once, she heard Jean Valjean's voice calling to her in a low whisper;
"Put your back against the wall."
She obeyed.
"Don't speak, and don't be afraid," added Jean Valjean. And she felt herself lifted from the ground.
Before she had time to think where she was she was at the top of the wall.
Jean Valjean seized her, put her on his back, took her two little hands in his left hand, lay down
fiat and crawled along the top of wall as far as the cut-off corner. As he had supposed, there was
a building there, the roof of which sloped from the top of the wooden casing we have mentioned very
nearly to the ground, with a gentle inclination, and just reaching to the lime-tree.
A fortunate circumstance, for the wall was much higher on this side than on the street. Jean Valjean
saw the ground beneath him at a great depth.
He had just reached the inclined plane of the roof, and had not yet left the crest of the wall, when
a violent uproar proclaimed the arrival of the patrol. He heard the thundering voice of Javert:
"Search the cul-de-sac! The Rue Droit Mur is guarded, the Petite Rue Picpus also. I'll answer for
it if he is in the cul-de-sac." The soldiers rushed into the Cul-de-sac Genrot.
Jean Valjean slid down the roof, keeping hold of Cosette, reached the lime-tree, and jumped to the
ground. Whether from terror, or from courage. Cosette had not uttered a whisper. Her hands were a
little scraped.
VI. COMMENCEMENT OF AN ENIGMA
JEAN Valjean found himself in a sort of garden, very large and of a singular appearance; one of those
gloomy gardens which scent made to be seen in the winter and at night. This garden was oblong, with
a row of large poplars at the further end, some tall forest trees in the corners, and a clear space
in the centre, where stood a very 'large isolated tree, then a few fruit trees, contorted and shaggy,
like big bushes, some vegetable beds, a melon patch the glass covers of which shone in the moonlight.
and an old well. There were here and there stone benches which seemed black
with moss. The walks
were bordered with sorry little shrubs perfectly straight. The grass covered
half of them, and a green
moss covered the rest.
Jean Valjean had on one side the building, down the roof of which he had come, a wood-pile, and be-
hind the wood, against the wall, a stone statue, the mutilated face of which was now nothing but a
shapeless mask which was seen dimly through the obscurity.
The building was in ruins, but some dismantled rooms could be dis-tinguished in it, one of which was
well filled, and appeared to serve as a shed.
The large building of the Rue Droit Mur which ran back on the Petite Rue Picpus, presented upon this
garden two square facades. These inside facades were still more gloomy than those on the outside.
All
the windows were grated. No light was to be seen. On the upper stories there were shut-ters as in
prisons. The shadow of one of these facades was projected upon the other, and fell on the garden like
an immense black pall.
No other house could be seen. The further end of the garden was lost in mist and in darkness. Still,
he could make out walls intersecting, as if there were other cultivated grounds beyond, as well as
the low roofs of the Rue Polonceau.
Nothing can be imagined more wild and more solitary than this garden. There was no one there, which
was very natural on account of the hour; but it did not seem as if the place were made for anybody to
walk in, even in broad noon.
Jean Valjean's first care had been to find his shoes, and put them on; then he entered the shed with
Cosette. A man trying to escape never thinks himself sufficiently concealed. The child, thinking con-
stantly of the Thenardiess, shared his instinct, and cowered down as closely as she could.
Cosette trembled, and pressed closely to his side. They heard the tumultuous clamour of the patrol
ransacking the cul-de-sac and the street, the clatter of their muskets against the stones, the calls
of Javerts to the watchmen he had stationed, and his imprecations mingled with words which they could
not distinguish.
At the end of a quarter of an hour it seemed as though this stormy rumbling began to recede. Jean Val-
jean did not breathe.
He had placed his hand gently upon Cosette's mouth.
But the solitude about him was so strangely calm that that frightful din, so furious and so near, did
not even cast over it a shadow of disturbance. It seemed as if these walls were built of the deaf
stones spoken of in Scripture.
Suddenly, in the midst of this deep calm, a new sound arose; a celestial, divine, ineffable sound, as
ravishing as the other was horrible. It was a hymn which came forth from the darkness, a bewildering
mingling of prayer and harmony in the obscure and fearful silence of the night; voices of women, but
voices with the pure accents of virgins, and artless accents of children; those voices which are not
of earth, and which resemble those that the new-born still hear, and the dying hear already. This song
came from the gloomy building which overlooked the garden. At the moment
when the uproar of the
demons receded, one would have said, it was a choir of angels approaching
in the darkness.
Cosette and Jean Valjean fell on their knees.
They knew not what it was; they knew not where they were; but they both felt, the man and the child,
the penitent and the innocent, that they ought to be on their knees.
These voices had this strange effect; they did not prevent the building from appearing deserted. It
was like a supernatural song in an uninhabited dwelling.
While these voices were singing Jean Valjean was entirely absorbed in them. He no longer saw the night,
he saw a blue sky. He seemed to feel the spreading of these wings which we all have within us.
The chant ceased. Perhaps it had lasted a long time. Jean Valjean could not have told. Hours of ecstasy
are never more than a moment.
All had again relapsed into silence. There was nothing more in the street, nothing more in the garden.
That which threatened, that which reassured, all had vanished. The wind rattled the dry grass on the
top of the wall, which made a low, soft, and mournful noise.
VII. THE ENIGMA CONTINUED
THE night wind had risen, which indicated that it must be between one and
two o'clock in the morning.
Poor Cosette did not speak. As she had sat down at his side and leaned her head on him, Jean Valjean
thought that she was asleep. He bent over and looked at her. Her eyes were wide open, and she had a
look that gave Jean Valjean pain.
She was still trembling.
"Are you sleepy?" said Jean Valjean.
"I am very cold," she answered.
A moment after she added:
"Is she there yet?"
"Who?" said Jean Valjean.
"Madame Thenardier."
Jean Valjean had already forgotten the means he had employed to secure Cosette's silence.
"Oh!" said he. "She has gone. Don't he afraid any longer."
The child sighed as if a weight were lifted from her breast.
The ground was damp, the shed open on all sides, the wind freshened every
moment. The goodman
took off his coat and wrapped Cosette in it.
"Are you warmer, so?"
"Oh! yes, father!"
"Well, wait here a moment for me. I shall soon be back."
He went out of the ruin, and along by the large building, in search of some better shelter. He
found doors, but they were all closed. An the windows of the ground-floor
were barred.
As he passed the interior angle of the building, he noticed several arched windows before him,
where he perceived some light. He rose on tiptoe and looked in at one of these windows. They all
opened into a large ball, paved with broad slabs, and intersected by arches and pillars, be could
distinguish nothing but. a slight glimmer in the deep obscurity. This glimmer came from a night-
lamp burning in a corner. The hall was deserted; everything was motionless. However, by dint of
looking, he thought he saw something, stretched out on the pavement, which appeared to be covered
with a shroud, and which resembled a human form. It was lying with the face downwards, the arms
crossed, in the immobility of death. One would have said, from a sort of serpent which trailed
along the pavement, that this ill-omened figure had a rope about its neck.
The whole hall was enveloped in that mist peculiar to dimly-lighted places, which always increases
horror.
Jean Vaijean has often said since that, although in the course of his life he had seen many fune-
real sights, never had he seen anything more freezing and more terrible
than this enigmatical
figure fulfilling some strange mystery, he knew not what, in that gloomy place, and thus dimly
seen in the night. It was terrifying to suppose that it was perhaps dead, and still more terri-
fying to think that it might be alive.
He had the courage to press his forehead against the glass, and watch to see if the thing would
move. He remained what seemed to him a long time in vain: the prostrate form made no movement.
Suddenly be was seized with an inexpressible dismay, and he fled. Me ran towards the shed without
daring to look behind him. It seemed to him that if he should turn his head he would seethe fig-
ure walking behind him with rapid strides and shaking its arms.
He reached the ruin breathless. His knees gave way; a cold sweat oozed out from every pore.
Where was he? who would ever have imagined anything equal to this species of sepulchre in the
midst of Paris? what was this strange house?A budding full of
nocturnal mystery, calling to souls in the shade with the voice of angels, and, when they came,
abruptly presenting to them this frightful vision--promising to open the radiant gate of 'leaven
and opening the horrible door of the tomb. And that was in fact a building, a house which had
its number in a street? It was not a dream? He had to touch the walls to believe it.
The cold, the anxiety, the agitation, the anguish of the night, were giving him a veritable
fever, and all his ideas were jostling in his brain.
He went to Cosette. She was sleeping.
VIII. THE ENIGMA REDOUBLES
THE child had laid her head upon a stone and gone to sleep.
He sat down near her and looked at her. Little by little, as he beheld her, he grew calm, and
regained possession of his clearness of mind.
He plainly perceived this truth, the basis of his life henceforth, that so long as she should
be alive, so long as he should have her with him, he should need nothing except for her, and
fear nothing save on her account. He did not even realise that he was very cold, having taken
off his coat to cover her.
Meanwhile, through the reverie into which he bad fallen, he had heard for some time a singular
noise. It sounded like a little bell that some one was shaking. This noise was in the garden.
It was heard distinctly, though feebly. It resembled the dimly heard tinkling of cow-bells in
the pastures at night.
This noise made Jean Valjean turn.
He looked, and saw that there was some one in the garden.
Something which resembled a man was walking among the glass cases of the melon patch, rising up,
stooping down, stopping, with a regular motion, as if he were drawing or stretching something
upon the ground. This being appeared to limp.
Jean Valjean shuddered with the continual tremor of the outcast. To them everything is hostile
and suspicious. They distrust the day because it helps to discover them, and the night because
it helps to surprise them. Just now be was shuddering because the garden was empty, now he shud-
dered because there was some one in it.
He fell again from chimerical terrors into real terrors. He said to himself that perhaps Javert
and his spies had not gone away, that they had doubtless left somebody on the watch in the street;
that, if this man should discover him in the garden, he would cry thief, and would deliver him up.
He took the sleeping Cosette gently in his arms and carried her into the furthest corner of the
shed behind a heap of old furniture that was out of use. Cosette did not stir.
From there he watched the strange motions of the man in the melon patch.
It seemed very singular,
but the sound of the bell followed every movement of the man. When the man approached, the sound
approached; when he moved away, the sound moved away; if he made some sudden motion. a trill ac-
companied the motion; when he stopped, the noise ceased. It seemed evident
it was fastened to This
man; but then what could that mean? what was this man to whom a bell was
hung as to a ram or a
cow?
While he was revolving these questions, he touched Cosette's bands. They were icy.
"Oh! God!" said he.
He called to her in a low voice:
"Cosette!"
She did not open her eyes.
He shook her smartly.
She did not wake.
"Could she be dead?" said he, and he sprang up, shuddering from head to foot.
The most frightful thoughts rushed through his mind in 'confusion. There are moments when hideous
suppositions besiege us like a throng of furies and violently force the portals of our brain. When
those whom we love are in danger, our solicitude invents all sorts of follies. He remembered that
sleep may be fatal in the open air in a cold night.
Cosette was pallid; she had fallen prostrate on the ground at his feet, making no sign.
He listened for her breathing; she was breathing; but with a respiration
that appeared feeble and
about to stop.
How should he get her warm again? how rouse her? All else was banished
from his thoughts. He rush-
ed desperately out of the ruin. It was absolutely necessary that in less than a quarter of an hour
Cosette should be in bed and before a fire.
IX. THE MAN WITH THE BELL
HE walked straight to the man whom he saw in the garden. He had taken in
his hand the roll of mo-
ney which was in his vest-pocket.
This man had his head down, and did not see him coming. A few strides, jean Valjean was at his side.
Jean Valjean approached him, exclaiming:
"A hundred francs!"
The man started and raised his eyes.
"A hundred francs for you," continued Jean Valjean, "if you will give me refuge to-night."
The moon shone full in Jean Valjean's bewildered face.
"What, it is you, Father Madeleine!" said the man.
This name, thus pronounced, at this dark hour, in this unknown place. by this unknown man, made
Jean
Valjean start back.
He was ready for anything but that. The speaker was an old man, bent and lame, dressed much like a
peasant, who had on his left knee a leather knee-cap from which hung a
bell. His face was in the shade,
and could not be distinguished.
Meanwhile the goodman had taken off his cap, and was exclaiming tremulously:
"Ah! my God! how did you come here, Father Madeleine? How did you
get in, O Lord? Did you fall
from the sky? There is no doubt, if you ever do fall, you will fall from
there. And what has hap-
pened to you? You have no cravat, you have no hat, you have no coat? Do you know that you would
have frightened anybody who did not know you? No coat? Merciful heavens! are the saints all crazy
now? But how did you get in?"
One word did not wait for another. The old man spoke with a rustic volubility in which there was
nothing disquieting. All this was said with a mixture of astonishment, and frank good nature.
"Who are you? and what is this house!" asked Jean Valjean.
"Oh! indeed, that is good now," exclaimed the old man. "I am the one you got the place for here,
and this house is the one you got me the place in. What! you don't remember
me?"
"No,' said Jean Valjean. "And how does it happen that you know me?"
"You saved my life," said the man.
He turned, a ray of the moon lighted up his side face, and Jean Valjean recognised old Fauchele-
vent.
"Ah!" said Jean Valjean, "it is you? yes, I remember you."
"That is very fortunate!" said the old man, in a reproachful
tone.
"And what are you doing here?" added Jean Valjean.
"Oh! I am covering my melons."
Old Fauchelevent had in his hand, indeed, at the moment when Jean Valjean accosted him, the end
of a piece of awning which he was stretching out over the melon patch. He had already spread out
several in this way during the hour he had been in the garden. It was this work which made him go
through the peculiar motions observed by Jean Valjean from the shed.
He continued:
"I said to myself: the moon is bright, there is going to be a frost. Suppose I put their jackets
on my melons? And," added he, looking at Jean Valjean, with a loud laugh, "you would have done
well to do as much for yourself? but how did you come here?"
Jean Valjean, finding that he was known by this man, at least under his name of Madeleine: went
no further with his precautions. He multiplied questions. Oddly enough
their parts seemed rev-
ersed. It was he, the intruder, who put questions.
"And what is this bell you have on your knee?"
"That!" answered. Fauthelevent, "that is so that they may keep away from me."
"How! keep away from you?"
Old Fauchelevent winked in an indescribable manner.
"Ah! Bless me! there's nothing but women in this house; plenty of young girls. It seems that I
am dangerous to meet. The bell warns them. When I come they go away."
"What is this house?"
"Why, you know very well."
"No. I don't."
"Why, you got me this place here as gardener."
"Answer me as if I didn't know."
"It is the Convent of the Petit Picpus, then."
Jean Valjean remembered. Chance, that is to say, Providence, had thrown him precisely into this
convent of the Quartier Saint Antoine, to which old Fauchelevent, crippled
by his fall from his cart,
had been admitted, upon his recommendation, two years before. He repeated as if he were talking
to himself:
"The Convent of the Petit Picpus!"
"But now, really," resumed Fauchelevent, "how the deuce did you manage to get in, you, Father
Madeleine? It is.no use for you to be a saint, you are a man; and no men come in here."
"But you are here."
"There is none but me."
"But," resumed Jean Valjean, "I must stay here."
"Oh! my God," exclaimed Fauchelevent.
Jean Valjean approached the old man, and said to him in a grave voice:
"Father Fauchelevent, I saved your lift."
"I was first to remember it," answered Fauchelevent.
"Well, you can now do for me what I once did for you."
Fauchelevent grasped in his old wrinkled and trembling hands the robust hands of Jean Valjean,
and it was some seconds before be could speak; at last he exclaimed:
"Ohl that would be a blessing of God if I could do something for you, in return for that! I
save your life! Monsieur Mayor, the old man is at your disposal."
A wonderful joy had, as it were, transfigured the old gardener. A radiance seemed to shine
forth from his face.
"What do you want me to do?" he added.
"I will explain. You have a room?"
"I have a solitary shanty, over there, behind the ruins of the old convent. in a corner that no-
body ever sees. There are three rooms."
The shanty was in fact so well concealed behind the ruins, and so well arranged, that no one
should see it--that Jean Valjean had not seen it.
"Good," said Jean Valjean. "Now I ask of you two things." "What are they, Monsieur Madeleine?"
"First, that you will not tell anybody what you know about me. Second, that you will not attempt
to learn anything more."
"As you please. I know that you can do nothing dishonourable, and that you have always been a man
of God. And then, besides, it was you that put me here. It is your place, I am yours."
"Very well. But now come with me. We will go for the child."
"Ah!" said Fauchelevent, "there is a child!"
He said not a word more, but followed Jean Valjean as a dog follows his master.
In half an hour Cosette, again become rosy before a good fire, was asleep
in the old gardener's
bed. Jean VaUm had put on his cravat and coat; his hat, which he had thrown over the wall, had
been found and brought in. While Jean Vaijean was putting on his coat, Fauchelevent had taken
off his knee-cap with the bell attached, which now, hanging on a nail near a shutter, decorated
the wall. The two men were warming themselves, with their elbows on a table, on which Fauchelevent
had set a piece of cheese, some brown bread, a bottle of wine, and two glasses, and the old man
said to Jean Val jean, putting his hand on his knee:
"Ah! Father Madeleine! you didn't know me at first? You save people's lives and then you forget
them? Ohl that's bad; they remember you. You are ungrateful!"
X. IN WHICH IS EXPLAINED HOW JAVERT LOST THE GAME
THE events, the reverse of which, so to speak, we have just seen, had been brought about under
the simplest conditions.
When Jean Valjettn, on the night of the very day that Javert arrested him at the death-bed of
Fantine. escaped from the municipal prison of M-- sur M--, the police supposed
that the escaped
convict would start for Paris. Paris is a maelstrom in which everything is lost; and everything
disappears in this whirlpool of the world as in the whirlpool of the sea. No forest conceals a
man like this multitude. Fugitives of all kinds know this. They go to Paris to be swallowed up;
there are swallowings-up which save. The police know it also, and it is in Paris that they search
for what they have lost elsewhere. They searched there for the ex-mayor of M-- sur M--. Javert
was summoned to Paris to aid in the investigation. Javert, in fact, was
of great aid in the recapture
of Jean Valjean. The zeal and intelligence of _Invert on this occasion were remarked by M. Chabo-
uillet, Secretary of the Prefecture, under Count Angles. M. Chabouillet, who
had already inter-
ested himself in Javert. secured the transfer of the inspector of to the police of Paris. There
Javert rendered Idzwel riots ways, and, let us say, although the word seems
untistil!"for such
service, honourably, useful.
He thought no more of Jean Valjean--with these hounds always upon the scent, the wolf of today
banishes the memory of the wolf of yesterday--when, in December, 1823, he read a newspaper, he
who never react the newspapers; but Javert, as a monarchist, made a point of knowing the details
of the triumphal entry of the "Prince generalissimo" into Bayonne. Just as he finished the art-
icle which interested him, a name--the name of Jean Valjean--at the bottom of the page attracted
his attention. The newspaper announced that the convict Jean Valjean was dead, and published the
fact in terms so explicit, that Javert had no doubt of it. He merely said:
"That settles it."
Then he threw aside the paper, and thought no more of it.
Some time afterwards it happened that a police notice was trans-mined by
the Prefecture of Seine-
et-Oise to the Prefecture of Police of Paris in relation to the kidnapping of a child, which had
taken place, it was said, under peculiar circumstances, in the commune
of Montfermeil. A little
girl, seven or eight years old, the notice said, who had been confided by her mother to an inn-
keeper of the country, had been stolen by an unknown man; this little girl answered to the name
of Cosette, and was the child of a young woman named Fantine, who had died at the Hospital, no-
body knew when or where. This notice came under the eyes of Javert, and set him to thinking.
The name of Fantine was well known to him. He remembered that Jean Valjean had actually made
him--Javert--laugh aloud by asking of him a respite of three days, in order
to go for the child of
this creature. He recalled the fact that Jean Valjean had been arrested at Paris, at the moment
he was getting into the Montfermeil diligence. Some indications had even led him to think then
that it was the second time that he was entering this diligence, and that he had already, the
night previous, made another excursion to the environs of this village, for he had not been seen
in the village itself. What was he doing in this region of Montfermeil? Nobody could divine. Jav-
ert understood it. The daughter of Fantine was there. Jean Valjean was going after her. Now this
child had been stolen by an unknown man! Who could this man be? Could it be Jean Valjean? But
Jean Valjean was dead. Javert, without saying .a word to any one, took the diligence at the Plat
d'Etain, cul-de-sac de Planchette, and took a trip to Monfermeil..
He expected to find great developments there; he found great obscurity.
For the first few days, the Thenardiers, in their spite, had blabbed the
story about. 'The disa-
ppearance of the Lark bad made sonic noise in the village. There were soon several versions of
the story, which ended by becoming a case of kidnapping. Hence the police
notice. However,
when the first ebullition was over, Thenardier, with admirable instinct,
very soon arrived at the
conclusion that it is never useful to set in motion the Procureur du Roi; that the first result
of his complaints in regard to the kidnapping of Cos-cue would be to fix upon himself, and on
many business troubles which he had, the keen eye of justice. The last thing that owls wish is
a candle. And first of all, how should he explain the fifteen hundred, francs he had received?
He stopped short, and enjoined secrecy upon his wife, and professed to be astonished when any-
body spoke to him of the stolen child. He knew nothing about it; undoubtedly he had made some
complaint at the time that the dear little girl should be "taken away" so suddenly; he would
have liked, for affection's sake, to keep her two or three days; but it was her "grandfather"
who had come for her, the most natural thing in the world. He had added the grandfather, which
sounded well. It was upon this story that Javert fell on reaching Montfermeil. The grandfather
put Jean Valjean out of the question.
Javert. however, dropped a few questions like plummets into Thenardier's
story. Who was this
grandfather, and what was his name? Thu nardier answered with simplicity: "He is a rich farmer,
I saw his passport. I believe his name is M. Guillaume Lambert."
Lambert is a very respectable reassuring name. Javert returned to Paris.
"Jean Valjean is really dead," said he, "and I am a fool."
He had begun to forget all this story, when, in the month of March, 1824,
he heard an odd person
spoken of who lived in the parish of Saint Millard, and who was called "the beggar who gives
alms." This person was, it was said, a man living on his income, whose name nobody knew exactly,
and who lived alone with a little girl eight years old, who knew nothing of herself except that
she came from Mont fermeil. Mont fermeil! This name constantly recurring., excited Javert's at-
tention anew. An old begging police spy,. formerly a beadle, to whom this person had extended
his charity. added some other details. "This man was very unsociable, never going out except at
night, speaking to nobody, except to the poor sometimes, and allowing nob* to get acquainted with
him. He wore a horrible old yellow coat which was worth millions, being lined n11 over with bank
hills." This decidedly piqued Javeres curiosity. That he might get a near view of this fantastic
rich man without frightening him away, he borrowed one day of the beadle his old frock, and the
place where the old spy squatted every night droning out his orisons aml playing the spy as he
prayed.
"The suspicious individua!" (lid indeed come to Javert thus disi:thed,
and gave him alms: at
that mullein invert raised his head, and the shoe{ which Jean Valjean received, thinking that
he recognised Javert, Javert received, thinking that be recognised Jean Valjean.
However, the obscurity might have deceived him, the death of Jean Va!jean was officially cert-
ified; Javert had still serious doubts; and in case of doubt, Javert, scrupulous as he was,
never seized any man by the collar.
He followed the old man to Gorbeatt House, and set "the old woman" talking, which was not at
all difficult. The old woman con-firmed the story of the coat lined with millions, and related
to him the episode of the thousand-franc note. She had seen it! site bad touched it! Javert
hired a room. That very night he installed himself in it. He listened at the door of the mys-
terious lodger, hoping to bear the sound of his voice, but Jean Valjean perceived his candle
through the key-hole and baulked the spy by keeping silence.
The next day Jean Valjean decamped. But the noise of the five-franc piece which he dropped was
noticed by the old woman, who hearing money moving, suspected that he was going to move, and
hastened to forewarn Javert. At night, when Jean Valjean went out, Javert was waiting for him
behind the trees of the
boulevard with two men.
Javert had called for assistance from the Prefecture, but he had not given the name of the per-
son he hoped to seize. That was his secret; and he kept it for three reasons; first, because
the least indiscretion might give the alarm to Jean Valjean next, because the arrest of an
old escaped convict who was reputed dead, a criminal whom the records of justice had already
classed for ever among malefactors of the most dangerous kind, would be a magnificent success
which the old members of the Parisian police certainly would never leave to a new-comer like
Javert, and he feared they would take his galley-slave away from him; finally, because Javert,
being an artist, had a liking for surprises. He hated these boasted successes which are de-
flowered by talking of them long in advance. He liked to elaborate his
masterpieces in the
shade, and then to unveil them suddenly afterwards.
Javert had followed Jean Valjean from tree to tree, then front street corner to street corner,
and had not lost sight of him a single instant; even in the moments when Jean Valjean felt him-
self most secure, the eye of Javert was upon him. Why did not invert arrest Jean Valjean? Be-
cause he was still in doubt. It must he remembered that at that time the police was not exactly
at its ease; it was cramped by a free press. Some arbitrary arrests, denounced
by the news-
papers, had been re-echoed even in the Chambers, and rendered the Prefecture timid. To attack
individual liberty was a serious thing. The officers were afraid of making mistakes: the Pre-
fect held them responsible; an error was the loss of their place. Imagine the effect which
this brief paragraph repeated in twenty papers, would have produced in Paris. "fester day,
an old white-haired grandsire, a respectable person living on his income, who was taking a
walk with his granddaughter, eight years old, was arrested and taken to the Station of the
Prefecture as an escaped convict!"
Let us say, in addition, that Javert bad his own personal scruples; the injunctions of his
conscience were added to the injunctions of the Prefect. He was really
in doubt.
Jean Valjean turned his back, and walked away in the darkness.
Sadness, trouble, anxiety, weight of cares, this new sorrow of be. ing obliged to fly by
night, and to seek a chance asylum in Paris for Cosette and himself, the necessity of ad-
apting his pace to the pace of a child, all this, without his knowing it even, had changed
Jean Valjean's gait, and impressed upon his carriage such an appearance of old age that the
police itself, incarnated in Javert, could be deceived. The impossibility of approaching
too near, his dress of an old preceptor of the emigration, the declaration of Thetiardier,
who made him a grandfather; finally, the belief in his death at the galleys, added yet more
to the uncertainty which was increasing in Javert's mind.
For a moment be had an idea of asking him abruptly for his papers. But if the man were not
Jean Valjean, and if the man were not a good old honest man of means, he was probably some
sharper profoundly and skilfully adept in the obscure web of Parisian crime, some.dangerous
chief of bandits, giving alms to conceal his other talents, an old trick. He had comrades,
accomplices, retreats on all hands, in which lie would take refuge without doubt. All these
windings which he was making in the streets seemed to indicate that he was not a simple hon-
est man. To arrest him too soon would be "to kill the goose that laid the golden eggs." What
inconvenience was there in waiting? Javert was very sure that he would not escape.
lie walked on, therefore, in some perplexity, questioning himself continually in regard to
this mysterious personage.
It was not until quite late, in the Rue de Pontoise, that, thanks to the bright light which
streamed from a bar-room, he decidedly recognised Jean Valjean.There are in this world two
beings who can be deeply thrilled: the mother, who finds her child, and the tiger, who finds
his prey. Jayert felt this profound
thrill.
As soon as be bad positively recognised Jean Valjean, the formidable convict, he perceived
that there were only three of them, and sent to the commissary of police, of the Rue de Pon-
toise, for additional abl. Before grasping a thorny stick, men put on gloves.
This delay and stopping at the Rollin square to arrange with his men made
him lose the scent,
However, he had very soon imessed that jean Va.ljean's first wish would be to put the river
between his pursuers and himself. He bowed his head and reflected, like a hound who put his
nose to the ground to be sure of the way. Javert, with his straightforward power of instinct,
went directly to the bridge of Austerlitz. A word to the toll-keeper set him right "Have you
seen a man with a little girl:" "I made him pay two sous," answered the tollman. Javert reach-
ed the bridge in time to see Jean Val-jean on the other side of the river leading Cosette a-
cross the space lighted by the moon. He saw him enter the Rue de Chemin Vert Saint Antoine,
he thought of the Cul-de-sac Genrot placed there like a trap, and of the only outlet from
the Rue Droit Mur into the Petite Rue Picpus. He put out beaters, as hunters say; he sent
one of his men hastily by a detour to guard that outlet. A patrol passing, on its return to
the station at the arsenal, he put it in requisition and took it along with him. In such
games soldiers are trumps. Moreover, it is a maxim that, to take the boar requires the
science of the hunter, and the strength of the dogs. These combinations being effected,
feeling that Jean Valjean was caught between the Cul-de-sac Genrot on the right, his offi-
cer on the left, and himself, Javert, in the rear, he took a pinch of snuff.
Then he began to play. He enjoyed a ravishing and infernal moment; he let
his man go be-
fore him, knowing that he had him, but desiring to put off as long as possible the moment
of arresting him, delighting to feel that he was caught, and to see him free, fondly gazing
upon him with the rapture of the spider which lets the fly buzz, or the cat which lets the
mouse run. The paw and the talon find a monstrous pleasure in the quivering of the animal
imprisoned in their grasp. What delight there is in this suffocation!
Javert was rejoicing. The links of his chain were solidly welded. He was
sure of success;
he had now only to close his hand.
Accompanied as he was, the very idea of resistance was impossible, however energetic, how-
ever vigorous, and however desperate Jean Valjean might be.
Javert advanced slowly, sounding and ransacking on his way all the recesses, of the streets
as he would the pockets of a thief.
When he reached the centre of the web, the fly was no longer there.
Imagine his exasperation.
He questioned his sentinel at the corner of the Rue Droit liar and Rue
Piepus; this officer,
who had remained motionless at his po;:, had not seen the man
pass.
It happens sometimes that a stag breaks with the head covered, that is
to say escapes, al-
though the hound is upon him; then the oldest of hunters know not what
to say. Davivier, Lig-
niville. and Desprez are at fault. On the occasion of a mishap of this
sort, Artorige exclaimed:
It is not a stag, is a sorcerer
Javert would fain have uttered the same cry.
His disappointment had a moment of despair and fury.
It is certain that Napoleon blundered in the campaign in Russia, that Alexander blundered
in the war in India, that Caesar blundered in the African war, that Cyrus blundered in the
war in Scythia, and that Javert blundered in this campaign against Jean Valjean. He did wrong
perhaps in hesitating to recognise the old galley slave. The first glance should have been e-
nough for him. He did wrong in not seizing him without ceremony in the old building. He did
wrong in not arresting him when he positively recognised him in the Rue de Pontoise. He did
wrong to hold a council with his aides, in full moonlight, in the Rollin square. Certainly
advice is useful, and it is well to know and to question those of the dogs which are worthy
of credit; but the hunter cannot take too many precautions when he is chasing restless ani-
mals, like the wolf and the convict. Javert, by too much forethought in setting his blood-
hounds on the track, alarmed his prey by giving him wind of the pursuit, and allowed him the
start. He did wrong, above all, when he had regained the scent at the bridge of Austerlitz,
to play the formidable and puerile game of holding such a man at the end
of a thread. He
thought himself stronger than he was, and believed he could play mouse with a lion. At the
same time, be esteemed himself too weak when he deemed it necessary to obtain a reinforce-
ment. Fatal precaution, loss of precious time. Javert made all these blunders, and yet he
was none the less one of the wisest and most correct detectives that ever existed. He was,
in the full force of the term, what in venery is called a gentle dog. But who is perfect?
Great strategists have their eclipses.
Great blunders are often made, like large ropes, of a multitude of fibres. Take the cable
thread by thread, take separately all the little determining motives. you break them out af-
ter another, and you say: that is all. Wind them and twist them together they become an en-
ormity; Attila hesitating between Marcian in the East and Valentinian in the West; Hannibal
delaying at Capua; Damon falling to sleep at Arcis stir Aube.
However this may be, even at the moment when he perceived that Jean Valjean bad escaped him,
Javert did not lose his presence of mind. Sure that the convict who had broken his ban could
not be far away, he set watches, arranged traps and ambushes, and beat
the quarter the night
through. The first thing that he saw was the displacement of the lamp, the rope
of which was
cut. Precious indication, which led him astray, however, by directing all his researches towards
The Cul-de-sac Genrot. There are in that cul-de-sac some rather low walls which face upon
gardens the limits of which extend to some very large uncultivated grounds. Jean Valjeau evi-
dently must have fled that way, The fact is that, if he had penetrated
into the Cul-de-sac
Genrot a little further, he would have done so, and would have been lost. Javert explored
these gardens and these grounds, as if he were searching for a needle.
At daybreak, he left two intelligent men on the watch, and returned to the Prefecture of
Police, crestfallen as a spy who has been caught by a thief.
BOOK SIXTH
PETIT PICPUS
I. PETITE RUE PICPUS, NO. 62.
Nothing resembled more closely. half a century ago, the commonest port-cochere of the time than
the porte-cochere of No. 62 Petite Rue Picpus. This door was usually half open in the most attract-
ive manner, disclosing two things which have nothing very funreal about them--a court surrounded
with walls bedecked with vines, and the face of a lounging porter. Above the rear wall large trees
could be seen. When a beam of sunshine enlivened the court, when a glass of wine enlivened the
porter, it was difficult to pass by No. 62 Petite Rue Picpus, without. carrying away a pleasant
idea. It was, however, a gloomy place of which you had had a glimpse.
The door smiled; the house prayed and wept.
If you succeeded, which was not easy, in passing the porter--which for almost everybody was even
impossible, for there was anopen Strom. which you must know;--if, having passed the porter, you
entered on the right a little vestibule which led to a stairway shut in between two walls, and so
narrow that but one person could pass at a time; if you did not allow yourself to be frightened
by the yellow wall paper with the chocolate surbase that extended along the stairs, if you ven-
tured to go up, you passed by a first broad stair, then a second, and reached the second story in
a hall where the yellow hue and the chocolate plinth followed you with a peaceful persistency.
Staircase and hall were lighted by two handsome windows. The hall made a sudden turn and became
dark. If you doubled that cape, you came, in a few steps, to a door, all the more mysterious that
it was not quite closed. You pushed it open. and found yourself in a little room about six feet
square, the floor tiled, scoured, neat and cold, and the walls hung with fifteen-cent paper. nan-
keen-coloured paper with green flowers. A dull white light came from a large window with small
panes which was at the left, and which took up the whole width of the room. You looked, you saw
no one: you listened, you heard no step and no human sound. The wall was bare; the room had no
furniture, not even a chair.
You looked again, and you saw in the wall opposite the door a quadrangular
opening akin a foot
square, covered with a grate of iron bars crossing one another, black, knotted, solid, which formed
squares, I had almost said meshes, less than an inch across. The little green flowers on the nankeen
paper cane calmly and in order to these iron bars, without being frightened or scattered by the dis-
mal contact. In case any living being had been so marvellously slender as to attempt to get in or
out by the square hole, this grate would have prevented it. It did not let the body pass, but it
did let the eyes pass, that is to say, the mind. This seemed to have been cared for, for it had
been doubled by a sheet of tin inserted in the wall a little behind it, and pierced with a thou-
sand holes more microscopic than those of a skimmer. At the bottom of this plate there was an
opening cut exactly like the mouth of a letter-box. A piece of broad tape
attached to a bell
hung at the right of the grated opening.
If you pulled this tape, a bell tinkled and a voice was heard, very near you, which startled you.
"Who is there?" asked the voice.
It was a woman's voice, a gentle voice, so gentle that it was mournful.
Here again there was a magic word which you must know. If you did not know it, the voice was heard
no more, and the wall again became silent as if the wild obscurity of the sepulchre had been on the
other side.
If you knew the word, the voice added:
"Enter at the right."
You then noticed at your right, opposite the window, a glazed door surmounted by a glazed sash and
painted grey. You lifted the latch, you passed through the door, and you felt exactly the same im-
pression as when you enter a grated box at the theatre before the grate is lowered and the lights
are lit. You were in fact irra sort of theatre box, hardly made visible by the dim light of the
glass door, narrow, furnished with two old chairs and a piece of tattered straw matting--a genuine
box with its front to lean upon, upon which was a tablet of black wood. This box was grated, but
it was not a grate of gilded wood as at the Opera; it was a monstrous trellis
of iron bars fright-
fully tangled together, and bolted to the wall by enormous bolts which resembled clenched fists.
After a few minutes, when your eyes began to get accustomed to this cavernous light, you tried to
look through the grate, but could not see more than six inches beyond. There you saw a barrier of
black shutters, secured and strengthened by wooden cross-bars painted gingerbread colour. These
shutters were jointed, divided into long slender strips, and covered the whole length of the grate'
They were always closed.
In a few moments, you heard a voice calling to you from behind these shutters and saying:
"I am here. What do you want of me?"
It was a loved voice, perhaps sometimes an adored one. You saw nobody. You hardly heard a breath.
It seemed as if it were a ghostly voice speaking to you across the portal of the tomb.
If you appeared under certain necessary conditions, very rare, the narrow
strip of one of these
shutters opened in front of you, and the ghostly voice became an apparition. Behind the grate, be-
hind the shutter, you perceived, as well as the grate permitted, a head, of which you saw only the
mouth and chin; the rest was covered with a black veil. You caught a glimpse
of a black guimp and
an ill-defined form covered with a black shroud. This head spoke to you, but did not look at you
and never smiled at you.
The light which came from behind you was disposed in such wise that you saw her in the light, and
she saw you in the shade. This light was symbolic.
Meantime your eyes gazed eagerly, through this aperture thus opened, into this place closed against
all observation.
A deep obscurity enveloped this form thus clad in mourning. Your eyes strained into this obscurity
and sought to distinguish what was about the apparition. In a little while you perceived that you
saw nothing. What you saw was night, void, darkness. a wintry mist mingled with a sepulchral vapour,
a sort of terrifying quiet, a silence from which you distinguished nothing, not even sighs--a shade
in which you discerned nothing, not even phantoms.
What you saw was the interior of a cloister.
It was the interior of that stern and gloomy house that was called the convent of the Bernardines
of the Perpetual Adoration. This box where you were was the parlour. This voice, the first that
spoke to you, was the voice of the portress, who was always seated, motionless and silent, on the
other side of the wall, near the square aperture, defended by the iron grate and the plate with the
thousand holes, as by a double visor.
The obscurity in which the grated box was sunk arose from this, that the
Memory, which had a window
on the side towards the outside world, had none on the convent side. Profane eyes must see nothing
of this sacred place.
There was something, however, beyond this shade, there was a light; there was a life within this
death. Although this convent was more inaccessible than any other, we shall endeavour to penetrate
it, and to take the reader with us, and to relate, as fully as we may. something which storytellers
have never seen, and consequently have never related.
II. THE OBEDIENCE OF MARTIN VERGA
THIS convent, which in 1824 had existed for long years in the Petite Rue Picpus, was a community
of Bernardines of the Obedience of Martin Verge.
These Bernardino, consequently, were attached, not to Clawvaux, like other Bernardines, but to
Citeaux, like the Benedictines. In other words, they were subjects, not of Saint Bernard, but of
Saint Benedict.
Whoever is at all familiar with old folios, knows that Martin Verga founded in 1425 a congregation
of Bernardino-Benedictines, having their chief convent at Salamanca and an affiliation at Alcala.
This congregation had put out branches in all the Catholic court-tries of Europe.
These grafts of one order upon another are not unusual in the Latin church. To speak only of a
single order of St. Benedict, which is here in question--to this order are attached, without count-
ing the Obedience of Martin Verga, four congregations; two in Italy, Monte Cassino and Santa Gius-
tina of Padua, two in France, Cluny and Saint Maur; and nine orders, Vallombrosa, Grammont, the
todestines, the Comaldules. the Carthusian, the Ilumiliati, the Olivetans, the Sylvestrines, and
finally Citeaux; for Citeaux itself, the trunk of other orders, is only
an off-shoot from Saint
Benedict. Citeaux dates from St. Robert, Abbe of Molesme, in the diocese
of Langres in 1098. Now
it was in 529 that the devil, who had retired to the desert of Salida (he
was old; had he become
a hermit?), was driven fmm the ancient temple of Apollo where he was living
with St. Benedict,
then seventeen years old.
Next to the rules of the Carmelites, who go barefoot, wear a withie about
their throat, and never
sit down, the most severe rules are those of the Bernardine-Benedictines of Martin Verga. They are
clothed with a black guimp which, according to the express command of Saint
Benedict, comes up to
the chin. A serge dress with wide sleeves, a large woollen veil, the guimp which rises to the chin,
cut square across the breast, and the fillet which comes down to the eyes,
constitute their dress.
It is all black, except the fillet, which is white. The novices wear the
sante dress, all in white.
The professed nuns have in addition a rosary by their side.
The Bernardine-Benedictines of Martin Verga perform the devotion of the
Perpetual Adoration, as
do the Benedictines called Ladies of the Holy Sacrament, who, at the commencement
of this century,
had at Paris two houses, one at the Temple, the other in the Rue Neuve Sainte Gentalive. In other
respects the Bernardine-Benedictines of the Petit Pirpus, of whom we are speaking, were an entirely
separate order from the Ladies of the Holy Sacrament. whose cloisters were in the Rue Xeuve Sainte
Genevieve and at the Temple. There were many differences in their rules, there were some in their
costume. The Bernardino-Benedictines of the Petit Picpus wore a black guimp,
and the Benedictines
of the Holy Sacrament and of the Rue Neuve Sainte Genevieve were a white one. and had moreover
upon their breast a crucifix about three inches long in silver or copper gilt. The nuns of the
Petit Picpus did not wear this crucifix. The devotion of the Perpetual Adoration, common to the
house of the Petit Piepus and in the house of the Temple, left the two orders perfectly distinct.
There is a similarity only in this respect between the Ladies of the Holy Sacrament and the Bern-
ardines of Martin Verge, even as there is a similitude, in the study and the glorification of all
the mysteries relative in the infancy, the life and the death of Jesus Christ, and to the Virgin,
between two orders widely separated and ottasionally inimical; the Oratory of Italy. established
at Florence by Philip di Neri, and the Oratory of France, established at Paris by Pierre de Beadle.
The Oratory of Paris claims the precedence, Philip di Xeri being only a saint, and Birulle being
a cardinal.
Let us return to the severe Spanish rules of Manin Verge.
The Bernardino-Benedictines of this Obedlience abstain from meat all the year round, fast
during
Lent and many other days peculiar to them, rise out of their first sleep
at one o'clock in the morn-
ing to read their breviary and chant matins until three, sleep in coarse
woollen sheets at all
seasons and upon straw, use no baths, never light any fire, scourge themselves
every Friday, ob-
serve the rule of silence, speak to one another only at recreations, which
are very short, and
wear haircloth chemises for six months, from the fourteenth of September, the Exaltation of the
Holy Cross, until Easter. These six months are a moderation--the rules
say all the year; but this
haircloth chemise, insupportable in the heat of summer, produced fevers and nervous spasms. It be-
came necessary to limit its use. Even with this mitigation after the fourteenth
of September, when
the nuns put on this chemise, they have three or four days of fever. Obedience. poverty. chastity,
continuance in cloister; such are their vows, rendered much more difficult of fulfilment by the
rules.
The prioress is elected for three years by the mothers, who are called
vocal mothers, because they
have a voice in the chapter. A prioress can be re-elected but twice, which fixes the longest pos-
sible reign of a prioress at nine vears.
They never see the officiating priest, who is always coneed from them by
a woollen curtain time
feet high. During when the preacher is in the chapel, they drop their veil
over face; they must
always speak low, walk with their eye on the ground and their head bowed
down. But one man can
enter the convent, the archbishop of the diocese.
There is indeed one other, the gardener; but he is always an old man, and ht order that he may be
perpetually alone in the prden and that the nuns may be warned to avoid him, a bell is attached
to his knee.
They are subject to the prioress with an absolute and passive submission.
It is canonical sub-
jection in all its abnegation. As at the voice of Christ, ut voci Christi, at a nod, at the first
signal, ad nutum, ad primum signum, promptly, with pleasure, with perserverence, with a certain
blind obedience, prompte, hilariter, perserveranter, et coeca quadam obedientia, like the file in
the workman's hands, quasi limam in manibus, fabri, forbidden to read or write without express per-
mission, legere vel scribere non addiscerit sine expressa superioris licentia.
Each one of them in turn performed what they call the reparation. The Reparation is prayer for
all sins, for all faults, for all disorders, for all violations, for all
iniquities, for all the crime which
are committed upon the earth. During twelve consecutive hours, from for
o'clock in the afternoon
till four o'clock in the morning, or from four o'clock in the morning till four o'clock in the afternoon,
the sister who performs the reparation remains on her knees upon the stone before the holy
sacrament, her hands clasped and a rope around her neck. When fatigue becomes insupportable.
she prostrates herself, her face against the marble and her hands crossed; this is all her relief.
In this attitude, she prays for all the guilty in the universe. This is
grand even to sublimity.
As this act is performed before a post on the top of which a taper is burning,
they say indiscrim-
inately, to perform the reparation or to be at the post. The even prefer, from humility, this
latter exprestion. which involves an idea of punishment and of abasement.
The performance of the reparation is a process in which the whole soul
is absorbed. The sister at
the post would not turn were a thunderbolt to fall behind her.
Moreover, there is always a nun on her knees before the holy sacrament.
They remain for an hour.
They are relieved like soldiers standing sentry. That is the Perpetual Adoration.
The prioresses and the mothers almost always have names of peculiar solemnity,
recalling not the
saints and the martyrs, but momenta in the life of Christ, like Mother
Nativity, Mother Conception,
Mother Presentation, Mother Passion. The names of saints. however, are not prohibited.
When you see them, you see only their mouth.
They all have yellow teeth. Never did a tooth-brush enter the convent.
To brush the teeth is the
top round of a ladder, the bottom round of which is--to lose the soul.
They never say my or mine. They have nothing of their own, and must cherish nothing. They say
our of everything; thus: our veil, our chaplet; if they speak of their chemise,
they say our chemise.
Sometimes they become attached to some little object, to a prayer-book,
a relic, or a sacred medal.
As soon as they perceive that they are beginning to cherish this object, they must give it up.
They remember the reply of Saint Theresa, to whom a great lady, at the moment of entering her or-
der, said: permit me, mother, to send for a holy Bible which I cherish
very much. "Ah! you cherish
something! In that ease, do not enter our house."
None are allowed to shut themselves up, and to have a home, a room. They live in open cells. When
they meet one another, one says: Praise and adoration to the most holy sacrament of the altar! The
other responds: Forever. The same ceremony when one knocks at another's door. Hardly is the door
touched when a gentle voice is heard from the other side hastily saying,
Forever. Like all rituals, this
becomes mechanical from habit; and one sometimes says forever before the other has had time to
say, what is indeed rather lengthy, Praise and adoration to the most holy sacrament of the altar!
Among the Visitandines, the one who comes in says: Ave Maria, and the one to whose cell she comes
says: Gratia plena. This is their good day, which is, in fact, "graceful."
At each hour of the day, three supplementary strokes sound from the bell of the convent church.
At this signal, prioress, mothers. professed nuns, sister servants, novices,
postulants, all break off
from what they are saying, doing, or thinking, and say at once, if it is five o'clock, for example:
At five o'clock and at all times, praise and adoration to the most holy sacrament of the altar! If
it is eight o'clock: At eight and at all times, etc., and so on, according to whatever hour it may be.
This custom, which is intended to interrupt the thoughts, and to lead them back constantly to God,
exists in many communities: the formula only, varies. Thus. at the Infant
Jesus, they say: At the
present hour and at all hours may the love of Jesus enkindle my heart!
The Bernardine-Benedictines of Martin Verga, cloistered fifty years ago in the Petit Mims, chant
the offices in a grave loalmody, pre plain-amt, and always in a loud voice for the whole duration
of the office. Wherever there is an asterisk in the missal, they make a pause and say in a law tone:
Iesas--Mary--lorrth. For the office for the dead, they mite so low a pitch, that it is difficult for
female toices to melt it. The effect is thrilling and tragical.
Those of the Petit Picups had had a vault made under their high altar fur
the burial of their commun-
ity. The government, at they call it, does not permit corpses to be deposited in the vault.
They
therefore were taken from the convent when they died. This was an affliction
to them, and horrified
them as if it were a violation.
They had obtained--small consolation--the privilege of being buried at a special hour and in a spec-
ial place in the old V. onward Cemetery, which was located in ground formerly belonging to the com-
munity.
On Thursday these nuns heard high mass, vespers, and all the offices the same as on Sunday. They
moreover scrupulously observed all the little feast days, unknown to the
people of the world, of which
the church was formerly lavish in France, and is still lavish in Spain and Italy. Their attendance
at chapel is interminable. As to the number and duration of their prayers,
we cannot give a better
idea than by quoting the frank words of one of themselves: The prayers of the postulants are fright-
ful, the prayers of the novices worse, and the prayers of the professed mans still worse.
Once a week the chapter assembles; the prioress presides, the mothers attend. Each sister tomes in
her turn, kneels upon the stone, and confesses aloud, before all, the faults and sins which she has
committed during the week. The mothers consult together after each confession,
and announce the
penalty aloud.
In addition to open confession, for which they reserve all serious faults, they have for venial
faults what they call the coulpe. To perform the coulpe is to prostrate yourself on your face dur-
ing the office, before the prioress until she, who is never spoken of except
as our mother, indi-
cates to the sufferer, by a gentle rap upon the ante of her stall, that she may rise. The coulpe
is performed for very petty things; a glass broken, a veil torn, an involuntary delay of a few sec-
onds at an office, a false note in church, etc..--these are enough for
the coulpe. The coulpe is
entirely spontaneous; it is the culpaple herself (this word is here etymologically in its place) who
Judges herself and who inflicts it upon herself. On feast-days and Sundays there are four chorister
mothers who sing the offices before a large desk with four music stands. One day a mother chorister
intoned a psalm which commenced by Etre, and, instead of Erre, she pronounced in a loud voice these
three notes: sot, si, rot; for this absence of mind she underwent a coulpe which lasted through the
whole office. What rendered the fault peculiarly enor-mous was, that the chapter laughed.
When a nun is called to the locutory, be it even the prioress, she drops
her veil, it will be rem-
embered, in such a way as to show nothing but her mouth.
The prioress alone can communicate with strangers. The others can see only their immediate family,
and that very rarelyothersfebrys chance persons from without present themselves to ice a nun whom
they have known or loved in the world, a formal negotiation is necessary. if it he a woman, perm-
ission may be sometimes accordal; the nun comes and k spoken to through
the shutters, which are
never opened except for a mother or sister. It is unnecessary to say that permission is always refused
to men.
Such are the rules of St. Benedict, rendered more severe by Martin Verge.
These nuns are not joyous, rosy, and cheerful, as are often the daughters of other orders. They are
pale and serious. Between 1825 and 1830 three became insane.
III. SEVERITIES
A POSTULANCY of at least two years is required, often four; a novitiate of four years. It is rare
that the final vows can be pronounced under twenty-three or twenty-four
year.. The Bernanfine. Ben-
edictines of Martin Verga admit no widows into their order.
They subject themselves in their cells to many unknown self-morlifications of which they must
never speak.
The day on which a lattice makes her profession she is dressed in her finest attire, with her head
decked with white roses, and her hair glossy and curled; then she prostrates
herself; a great
black veil is spread over her, and the office for the dead is chanted.
The nuns then divide into two
files, one file passes near her, saying in plaintive accents: Our sister is dead, and the other file
reponds in ringing tones: living in Jesus Christ!
At the period to which this history relates, a boarding-school was attached
to the convent. A school
of noble young girls, for the most part rich, among whom were noticeable
Mademoiselles De Sainte
Aulaire and De Bili.cen, and an Eneliat girl bearing the illustrious Catholic name of Talbot. These
young girls, reared by these nuns between four walls, grew up in horror
of the world and of the age.
One of them said to us one day: to see the pavement of the street made me shiver from head to foot
They were dressed in blue with a white cap, and a Holy Spirit, in silver
or copper gilt, upon their
breast. On certain grand feast-days, particularly on St Martha's day, they
were allowed. as a high
favour and a supreme pleasure, to dress as nuns and perform tho offices
and the ritual of St. Benedict
for a whole day. At first the professed nuns lent them their black garments.
That appeared profane,
and the prioress forbade it. This loan was permitted only to novice. It is remarkable that these
representations, undoubtedly tolerated and encouraged in the convent by
a secret spirit of proselytism,
and to give these children some foretaste of the holy dress, were a real
pleasure and a genuine rec-
reation for the scholars. They simply amused themselves. It was new; it was a change. Candid rea-
sons of childhood, which do not succeed, however in making us, mundane
people, the felicity of hold-
ing a holy sprinkler in the hand, and remaining standing entire hours singing in quartette before a
desk.
The pupils, austerities excepted, conformed to all the ritual of the convent. There are young
women who, returned to the world, and after several years of marriage, have not yet succeeded in
breaking off the habit of saying hastily, whenever there is a knock at
the door: Forever! Like the
nuns, the boarders saw their relatives only In the locutory. Even their mothers were not permitted
to embrace them. Strictness upon this point was carried to the following extent: One day a young
girl was visited by her mother accompanied by a little sister three years old. The young girl wept,
for she wished very much to kiss her sister. Impossible. She begged that
the child should at least
be permitted to pass her little hand through the bars that she might kiss it. This was refused al-
most with indignation.
IV. GAIETIES
These young girls have none the less filled this solemn house with charming reminiscences.
At certain hours, childhood sparkled in this cloister. The hour of recreation struck. A
door turned
upon its hinges. The birds said good! here are the children! An irruption of youth inundated this
garden, which was cut by walks in the form of a cross, like a shroud. Radiant
faces, white foreheads,
frank eyes full of cheerful light, auroras of all sorts scattered through this darkness. After the
chants, the bellringing, the knells, and the offices, all at once this hum of little girls burst forth
sweeter than the hum of bees. The hive of joy opened, and each one brought
her honey. They played,
they called to one another, they formed groups, they ran; pretty little white teeth chatted in the cor-
ners; veils from a distance watched over the laughter, shadows spying the
sunshine; but what matter!
They sparkled and they laughed. These four dismal walls had their moments
of bewilderment. They too
shared, dimly lighted up by the reflection of so much joy, in this sweet
and swarming whirl. It was like
a shower of roses upon this mourning. The young girls frolicked under the eyes of the nuns; the gaze
of sinlessness does not disturb innocence. Thanks to these children, among so many hours of austerity,
there was one hour of artlessness. The little girls skipped, the larger ones danced. In this cloister,
play was mingled with haven. Nothing was so transporting and superb, as
all these fresh, blooming
souls. Homer might have laughed there with Perrault and there were, in
this dark garden, enough of
youth, health, murmurs, cries, uproar, pleasure and happiness, to smooth the wrinkles from off all
grandames, those of the epic as well as the tale, those of the throne as well as the hut, from Hecuba
to Mother Goose.
In this house, more than anywhere else, perhaps, have been heard these children's sayings, which have
so much grace, and which make one laugh with a laugh full of Thought. It was within these four forbid-
ding walls that a child of five years exclaimed one day: "Mother, a great girl has just told me that
I have only nine years and ten months more to stay here. How glad I am!"
Here, also, that this memorable dialogue occurred:
A MOTHER.--"What are you crying for, my child?"
THE CHILD--(six years old), sobbing.--"I told Alice I knew my French history.
She says I don't
know it, and I do know it."
ALICE, larger (nine years)--"No, she. doesn't know it."
A MOTHER.--.--"How is that, my child?"
ALICE--"She told me to open the book anywhere and ask her any question
there was in the book,
and she could answer it."
"Well?"
"She didn't answer it."
"Let us me. What did you ask her?"
"I opened the book anywhere, just as she said, and I asked her the first question I found."
"And what was the question?"
"It was What happened next?"
Here this profound observation was made about a rather dainty parrot, which belonged to a lady
boarder:
"Isn't she genteel., she picks off the top of her tart, like a lady."
From one of the tiles of the cloister, the following confession was picked
up, written beforehand,
so as not to be forgotten, by a little sinner seven years old.
"Father, I accuse myself of having been avaricious.
"Father, I accuse myself of letting been adulterous.
"Father. I accuse myself of having raised my eyes towards the gentlemen."
Upon one of the grassy banks of this garden, the following story was improvised
by a rosy mouth
six years old, and listened to by blue eyes four and five years old:
"There were three little chickens who lived in a country where there were a good many flowers.
They picked the flowers and they put them in their pockets After that, they picked the leans,
and they put them in their playthings. There was a wolf in the country, and there was a goal
many. wools; and the wolf was in the woods; and he ate up the little chickens."
And again. this other poem:
"There was a blow with a stick.
"It was Punchinello who struck the cat.
"That didn't do him any good; it did her harm.
"Then a lady put Punchinello in prison."
There, also, these sweet and heartrending words were said by a little foundling
that the convent
was rearing through charity. She heard the others talking about their mothers,
and she murmured
in her little place:
"For my part, my mother was not there when I was born."
There was a fat prioress, who was always to be seen hurrying about the
corridors with her bunch of
keys, and whose name was Sister Agatha. The great big girls,--over ten,
called her Agathocles.
The refectory, a large oblong room, which received light only from a cloister window with a fluted
arch opening on a level with the garden, was dark and damp, and, as the children said--full of
beasts. All the surrounding places furnished it their contingent of insects. Each of its four corners
had received in the language of the pupils, a peculiar and expressive name. There was the
Spiders' corner, the Caterpillars' corner, the Woodlice's corner, and the
Crickets' corner. The
crickets' corner was near the kitchen, and was highly esteemed. It was not so cold as the others.
From the'refectory the names had passed to the school-room, and served to dis tinguish there, as
at the old Mazarin College, four nations. Each pupil belonged to one of these four nations accord-
ing to the corner of the refectory in which she sat at meals. One day, the archbishop, making his
pastoral visit, saw enter the class which he was passing, a pretty little blushing girl with beau-
tiful fair hair; and he asked another scholar, a charming fresh-checked brunette, who was near him:
"What is this little girl?"
"She is a spider, monseigneur."
"Pshaw!--and this other one?"
"She is a cricket."
"And that one?"
"She is a caterpillar."
"Indeed I And what are you?"
"I am a wood-louse, monseigneur."
Every house of this kind has its peculiarities. At the commencement of
this century, Ecouen was one
of those serene and graceful places where, in a shade which was almost
august, the childhood of young
girls was passed. At Ecouen, by way of rank in the procession of the Holy Sacrament, they made a dis-
tinction between the virgins and the florists, There were also "the canopies," and the "censers," the
former earning the cords of the canopy, the latter swinging censers before the Holy Sacrament. The
flowers returned of right to the florists. Four "virgins" walked at the head of the procession. On
the morning of the great day, it was not uncommon to hear the question
in the dormitory.
"Who is a virgin?"
Madame Cowman relates this saying of a "little gir!" seven years
old to a "great gir!" of sixteen
who took the head of the pro. cession, while she, the little one, remained in the rear. "You're a
virgin, you are; but I am not."
V. DISTRACTIONS
Above the door of the refectory was written in large black letters this prayer, which was called
the white Paternoster, and which possessed the virtue of leading people straight in to Paradise
"Little white paternoster, which God made, which God said, which God
laid in Paradise. At night,
on going to bed, I finded (sic) three angels lying on my bed, one at the
foot, two at the head,
the good Virgin Mary in the middle, who to me said that I should went to bed, and nothing sus-
pected. The good God is my father, the Holy Virgin is my mother, the three apostles
are my bro-
thers, the three virgins are my sisters. The chemise in which God was born, my body is enveloped
in; the cross of Saint Marguerite on my breast is writ; Madame the Virgin goes away through the
fields, weeping for God, meeted Monsieur Saint John. Monsieur Saint John, where do you come
from? I come from Ave Salus. You have not seen the good God, have you? He is on the tree of the
cross, his feet hanging, his hands nailing, a little hat of white thorns
upon his head. Whoever
shall say this three times at night, three times in the morning, will win Paradise in the end."
In 1827, this characteristic orison had disappeared from the wall under a triple layer of paper.
It is fading away to this hour in the memory of some young girls of that
day, old ladies now.
A large crucifix hanging upon the wall completed the decoration of this refectory, the only door
of which, as we believe we have said, opened upon the garden. Two narrow tables, at the sides
of each of which were two Wooden benches, extended along the refectory in parallel lines from one
end to the other. The walls were white, and the tables black: these two mourning odours are the
only variety in convents, The meals were coarse, and the diet of even the
children strict. A
single plate, meat and vegetables together, or salt fish, constituted the
fare. This brief bill of
fare was, however, an exception, reserved for the scholars alone. The children
ate in silence,
under the watchful eyes of the mother for the week, who, from time to time,
if a fly ventured
to hum or to buzz contrary to rule, noisily opened and shut a wooden book.
This silence was
seasoned with the Lives of the Saints, read in a loud voice from a little
reading desk placed at
the foot of a crucifix. The reader was a large pupil, selected for the week. There were placed at
intervals along the bare table, glazed earthen bowls, in which each pupil washed her cup and dish
herself, and sometimes threw refuse bits, tough meat or tainted fish; this
was punished. These
bowls were called water basins.
A child who broke the silence made a "cross with her tongue."
Where? On the floor. She licked the
tiles. Dust, that end of all joys, was made to chastise these poor little rosebuds, when guilty of
prattling.
There was a book in the convent, which is the only copy ever printed, and which it is forbidden
to read. It is the Rules of St. Benedict; arcana into which no profane eye must penetrate. Nemo
regulas, sine constitutiones nostros, externis communicabit.
The scholars succeeded one day in purloining this book, and began to read
it eagerly, a reading
often interrupted by fears of being caught, which made them close the volume very suddenly. But
from this great risk they derived small pleasure. A few unintelligible pages about the sins of
young boys, were what they thought "most interesting."
They played in one walk of the garden, along which were a few puny fruit trees. In spite of the
close watch and the severity of the punishments, when the wind had shaken the trees, they some-
times succeeded in furtively picking up a green apple, a half-rotten apricot, or a worm-eaten
pear. But I will let a letter speak, which I have at hand; a letter written twenty-five years
ago by a former pupil, now Madame the Duchess of --, one of the most elegant women of Paris. I
quote verbatim: --"We hide our pear or our apple as we can. When we go up to spread
the covers on
our beds before supper, we put them under our pillows, and at night eat
them in bed, and when we
cannot do that, we eat them in the closets." This was one of their most vivid pleasures.
At another time, also an the occasion of a visit of the archbishop to the convent, one of the
young girls, Mademoiselle Bouchard, a descendant of the Montmorencies,
wagered that she would
ask leave of absence for a day, a dreadful thing in a community so austere. The wager was accepted.
but no one of those who took it believed she would dare do it. When the opportunity came as the
archbishop was passing before the scholars, Mademoiselle Bouchard, to the indescribable dismay
of her companions, left the rank, and said: "Monseigneur. leave of
absence for a day.":Mademoi-
selle Bouchard was tall and fresh-looking, with the prettiest little rosy face in the world.
M. De Quelen smiled and said: "How now, my dear child, leave of absence for a day! Three days.
if you like: I grant you three days." The prioress could do nothing; the archbishop had spoken. A
scandal to the convent, yet a joyful thing for the school. Imagine the effect.
This rigid cloister was not, however, so well walled in, that the life of the passions of the
outside world, that drama. that romance even, did not penetrate it. To prove this, we will mere-
ly state briefly an actual, incontestable fact, which, however, has in itself no relation to our
story. not being attached to it even by a thread. We mention this merely
to complete the picture
of the convent in the mind of the reader.
This woman, hardly thirty years old, a beautiful brunette, stared wildly with her large
black
eyes. Was she looking at anything? It was doubtful. She glided along rather than walked; she
never spoke; it was not quite certain that she breathed. Her nostrils were as thin and livid
as if she had heaved her last sigh. To touch her hand was like touching snow. She had a strange
spectral grace. Wherever she came, all were cold. One day, a sister seeing
her pass, said to
another, "She passes for dead." "Perhaps she is," answered the other.
Many stories were told about Madame Albertine. She was the eternal subject
of curiosity of the
boarders. There was in the chapel a gallery, which ich was called l'Oeil-de-Boeuf.
In this gal-
lery, which had only a circular openiing, an oeil-de-boeuf, Madame Albertine attended the of-
fices. She was usually alone there, because from this gallery, which was elevated, the preacher
or the officiating priest could be seen, which was forbidden to the nuns One day, the pulpit was
occupied by a young priest of high rank, the Duke de Rohan, peer of France, who was an officer
of the Mousquetaires Rouges in 1815 when he was Prince de Leon, and who died afterwards in 1830,
a cardinal and Archbishop of Besancon. This was the first time that M. de Rohan had preached
in the convent of the Petit Picpus. Madame Albertine ordinarily attended the sermons and the
offices with perfect calmness and complete silence. On that day, as soon as she saw M. de Rohan,
she half rose, and in all the stillness of the chapel, exclaimed: "What? Auguste?" The whole
community were astounded, and turned their heads; the preacher raised his
eyes, but Madame
Albertine had fallen back into her motionless silence. A breath from the
world without, a glimmer
of life, vanished, had passed for a moment over that dead and icy form,
then all had vanished,
and the lunatic had again become a corpse.
These two words, however, set everybody in the convent who could speak
to chattering. How
many things there were in that What? Auguste? How many revelations! M. de Rohan's name was,
in fact, Auguste. It was clear that Madame Albertine came from the highest
society, since she
knew M. de Rohan; that she had occupied a high position herself, since
she spoke of so great a
noble so familiarly; and that she had some connection with him, of relationship perhaps, but beyond
all doubt very intimate, since she knew his "pet name."
Two very severe duchesses, Mesdames de Choiseul and de Serent, often visited the community, to
which they doubtless were admitted by virtue of the privilege of Magnates mulieres, greatly to the terror
of the school. When the two old ladies passed, all the poor young girls trembled and lowered their
eyes.
M. de Rohan was, moreover, without knowing it, the object of the attention of the school-girls. He
had just at that time been made, while waiting for the episcopacy, grand-vicar of the Archbishop of
Paris. He was in the habit of coming rather. frequentlyto chant the offices in the chapel of the nuns
of the Petit Picpus. None of the young recluses could see him, on account of the serge curtain, but
he had a gentle, penetrating voice, which they came to recognise and distinguish. He had been a
mousquetaire, and then he was said to be very agreeable, with beautiful chestnut hair, which he wore
in curls, and a large girdle of magnificent moire, while his black cassock was of the most elegant
cut in the world. All these girlish imaginations were very much occupied with him.
No sound from without penetrated the convent. There was, however, one year when the sound of a flute
was heard. This was an event, and the pupils of the time remember it yet.
It was a flute on which somebody in the neighbourhood was playing. This
flute always played the same
air, an air long since forgotten: My Zetulba, come reign o'er any soul, and they heard it two or three
times a day. The young girls passed hours in listening, the mothers were distracted, heads grew giddy,
punishments were exhausted. This lasted for several months. The pupils were all more or less in love
with the unknown musician. Each one imagined herself Zetulba. The sound of the flute came from the
direction of the Rue Droit Mur; they would have given everything, sacrificed everything, dared ever-
ything to see, were it only for a second, to catch a glimpse of the "young man" who played so delici-
ously on that flute, and who, without suspecting it, was playing at the same time upon all their hearts.
There were some who escaped by a back door, and climbed up to the third story on the Rue Droit
Mur, incurring days of suffering in the endeavour to see him. Impossible. One went so far as to
reach her arm above her head through the grate and wave her white handkerchief. Two were bolder
still. They found means to climb to the top of a roof, and risking themselves there, they finally suc-
ceeded in seeing the "young man." He was an old gentlemah of the emigration, ruined and blind,
who was playing upon the flute in his garret to while away the time.
VI. THE LITTLE CONVENT
THERE WERE in this inclosure of the Petit Picpus three perfectly distinct buildings, the Great Convent,
in which the nuns lived, the school building, in which the pupils lodged, and finally what was called
the Little Convent. This was a detached building with a garden, in which dwelt in common many old nuns
of various orders, remnants of cloisters destroyed by the revolution; a gathering of all shades black,
grey, and white, from all the communities and of all the varieties possible; what might be called, if
such a coupling of names were not disrespectful, a sort of motley convent.
From the time of the empire, all these poor scattered and desolate maidens had been permitted to take
shelter under the wings of the Benedictine-Bernardines. The government
made them a small allowance;
the ladies of the Petit Picpus had received them with eagerness. It was
a grotesque mixture. Each fol-
lowed her own rules. The school-girls were sometimes permitted, as a great recreation, to make them a
visit; so that these young memories have retained among others a reminiscence of holy Mother Bazile, of
holy Mother Scholastique, and of Mother Jacob.
One of these refugees found herself again almost in her own home. She was a nun of Sainte Aure, the only
one of her order who survived. The ancient convent of the Ladies of Sainte Aure occupied at the beginning
of the eighteenth century this same house of the Petit Picpus which after-wards belonged to the Benedict-
ines of Martin Verga. This holy maiden, too poor to wear the magnificent dress of her order, which was a
white robe with a scarlet scapular, had piously clothed a little image
with it, which she showed compla-
cently, and which at her death she bequeathed to the house. In 1824, there remained of this order only
one nun; today there remains only a doll.
In addition to these worthy mothers, a few old women of fashion had obtained permission of the prioress,
as had Madame Albertine, to retire into the Little Convent. Among the number were Madame de Beaufort,
d'Hautpoul, and Madame la Marquise Dufresne. Another was known in the convent only by the horrible noise
she made in blowing her nose. The pupils called her Racketini.
About 1820 or 1821, Madame de Geniis, who at that time was editing a little
magazine called the Intrepide,
asked permission to occupy a room at the convent of the Petit Picpus. Monsieur the Duke of Orleans recom-
mended her. A buzzing in the hive; the mothers were all in a tremor; Madame de Genlis had written romances;
but she declared that she was the first to detest them, and then she had arrived at her phase of fierce
devotion. God aiding, and the prince also, she entered.
She went away at the end of six or eight months, giving as a reason that the garden had no shade. The
nuns were in raptures. Although very old, she still played on the harp, and that very well.
On going away, she left her mark on her cell. Madame de Geniis was superstitious and fond of Latin. These
two terms give a very good outline of her. There could still be seen a few years ago, pasted up in a little
closet in her cell, in which she locked up her money and jewellery, these five Latin lines written in her
hand with red ink upon yellow paper, and which, in her opinion, possessed the virtue of frightening away
thieves:
Imparibus meritis pendent trig corpora ramis:
Dismas et Gesmas, media est diving potestas;
Alta petit Dismas, infelix, infima, Gesmas;
Nos et res nostras conservet summa potestas,
Hos versus dicas, ne to furto tug perdas.
These lines in Latin of the Sixth Century, raise the question as to whether the mimes of the two thieves of
Calvary were, as is commonly believed. Dimas and Gestas, or Dismas and
Gesmas. The latter orthography would
make against the pretensions which the Vicomte de Gestas put forth, in the last century, to be a descendant
of the unrepentant thief. The convenient virtue attributed to these lines was, moreover, an article of faith
in the order of the Hosphallers.
The church of the convent, which was built in such a manner as to separate as much as possible the Great
Convent from the school, was, of course, common to the school, the Great Convent and the Little Convent. The
public even were admitted there by a beggarly entrance opening from the street. But everything was arranged
in such a way that none of the inmates of the cloister could see a face from without. Imagine a church, the
choir of which should be seized by a gigantic hand, and bent round in such a way as to form, not, as in or-
dinary churches, a prolongation behind the altar, but a sort of room or obscure cavern at the right of the
priest: imagine this room closed by the curtain seven feet high of which we have already spoken; heap toge-
ther in the shade of this curtain. on wooded stalls, the nuns of the choir at the left, the pupils at the
right. the shier servants and the novices in the ran:, and you will have some idea of the nuns of the Petit
Piq,us, attending elkint service. This cavern, which was called the choir, communicated with the cloister by
a narrow passage. The church received light from the garden. When the nuns were attending offices in which
their rules commanded silence, the public was advised of their presence only by the sound of the rising and
falling stall-seats.
VII. A FEW OUTLINES IN THIS SHADE
DURING the six years which separate 1819 from 1825, the prioress of the Petit Picpus was Mademoiselle De
Blemeur, whose religious name was Mother Innocent. She was of the family of Marguerite De Blemeur, author
of the Lives of the Saints of the Order of St. Benedict. She had been re-elected. A woman of about sixty,
short, fat, "chanting like a cracked kettle," says the letter from which we have already quoted; but an
excellent woman, the only one who was cheerful in the whole convent, and
on that account adored.
Mother Innocent resembled her ancestor Marguerite, the Dacier of the Order. She was well-read, erudite,
learned, skilful, curious in history, stuffed with Latin, crammed with Greek, full of Hebrew, and rather
a monk than a nun.
The sub-prioress was an old Spanish nun almost blind Mother Cineres.
The most esteemed among the mothers were Mother Sainte Honorine, the treasurer,
Mother Sainte Gertrude,
first mistress of the novices, Mother Sainte Ange, second mistress, Mother Annunciation, sacristan, Mother
Sainte Augustin, nurse, the only nun in the convent who was ill-natured; then Mother Sainte Mechthilde
(Mlle. Gauvain), quite young and having a wonderful voice; Mother Des Anges (Mlle. Drouet), who had been
in the Convent of the Filles-Dieu and in the convent of the Tresor, between Sainte Magny; Mother Sainte
Joseph (Mlle. de Cogolludo), Mother Saint Adelaide (Mlle. D'Auverney), Mother Mercy (Mile. de Cifuentes),
who could not endure the austerities, Mother Compassion (Mlle. De la Militiere, received at sixty in spite
of
the rules, very rich); Mother Providence Mile. de Laudiniere) Mother Presentation
(Mile. de Siguenza),
was prioress in 1847; finally, Mother Sainte Celigne (sister of the sculptor
Ceracchi), since insane, Mother
Sainte Chantal (Mile. de Suzon), since insane.
There was still among the prettiest a charming girl of twenty-three from the Isle of Bourbon, a descendant
of the Chevalier Roze, who was called in the world Mademoiselle Roze, and who called herself Mother Assump-
tion.
Mother Sainte Mechthilde, who had charge of the singing and si hvee, choir, gladly availed herself of the
pupils. She usually took a complete gamut of them, that is to say, seven, from ten years old to sixteen
inclusive, of graduated voice and stature, and had them sing, standing in a row, ranged according to their
age from the smallest to the largest. This presented to the sight something like a harp of young girls,
a sort of living pipe of Pan made of angels.
Those of the servant sisters whom the pupils liked best were Sister Sainte Euphrasie, Sister Sainte Mar-
guerite, Sister Sainte Marthe, who was in her dotage, and Sister Sainte Michael, whose long nose made them
laugh.
All these women were gentle to all these children. The nuns were severe only to themselves. The only fires
were in the school building, and the fare, compared with that of the convent, was choice. Besides that, they
received a thousand little attentions. Only when a child passed near a nun and spoke to her, the nun never
answered.
This rule of silence had had this effect that, in the whole convent, speech was withdrawn from human crea-
tures and given to inanimate objects. Sometimes it was the church-bell that spoke, sometimes the gar-dener's.
A very sonorous bell, placed beside the portress and which was heard all over the house, indicated by its
variations, which were a kind of acoustic telegraph, all the acts of material
life to be performed, and
called to the locutory, if need were, this or that inhabitant of the house. Each person and each thing had
its special ring. The prioress had one and one; the sub-prioress one and two. Six-five announced the reci-
tation, so that the pupils never said going to recitation, but going to six-five. Four-four was Madame de
Geniis' signal. It was heard very often. It is the four deuce, said the uncharitable. Nineteen strokes an-
nounced a great event. It was the opening of the close door, a fearful iron plate bristling with bolts which
turned upon its hinges only before the archbishop.
He and the gardener excepted, as we have said, no man entered the convent.
The pupils saw two others, one
the almoner, the Abbe Banes old and ugly, whom they had the privilege of
contemplating through a grate
in the choir; the other, the drawing-master, M. Ansiaux, whom the letter
from which we have already quoted a
few lines, calls M. Anciot, and describes as a horrid old hunchback.
We see that all the men were select.
Such was this rare house.
VIII. POST CORDA LAPIDES
After sketching its moral features, it may not he useless to point out
in a few words its material configura-
tion. The reader his already some idea of it.
The convent of the Petit Picpus Saint Antoine almost entirely filled the large trapezium which was formed by
the intersection of the Rue Polonceau, the Rue Droit Mur, the Petite Rue Picpus, and the built-up alley called
in the old plans Rue Aumarais. These four streets surrounded this trapezium like a ditch. The convent was com-
posed of several buildings and agarden. The principal building, taken as a whole, was an aggregation of hybrid
constructions which, in a bird's-eye view, presented with considerable
accuracy the form of a gibbet laid down
on the ground.
The long arm of the gibbet extended along the whole portion of the Rue Droit Mur comprised between the Petite
Rue Picpus and the Rue Polonceau; the short arm was a high, grey, severe, grated facade which overlooked the
Petite Rue Picpus; the porte-cochere, No. 62, marked the end of it. Towards the middle of this facade, the dust
and ashes had whitened an old low-arched door where the spiders made their webs, and which was opened only
for an hour or two on Sunday and on the rare occasions when the corpse of a nun was taken out of the con-
vent. It was the public entrance of the church. The elbow of the gibbet was a
square hall which served as gantry,
and which the nuns called the expense. In the long arm were the cells with
mothers, sisters and novices. In the
short arm were the kitchens, the refectory lined with cells, and the church. Between the door, No. 62, and
the corner of the closed alley Aumarais, was the school, which could not
be seen fwhich was outside. The rest
of the trapezium formed the garden, which was much lower than the level of the Rue Polonceau, so that the
walls were onsiderably higher on the inside than on the outside. The garden, which was slightly convex, had
in the centre, on the top of a a knoll, a beautiful fir, pointed and conical, from which parted, as from the cen-
tre of a buckler, four broad walks and, arranged two by two between the broad walks eight narrow ones, so
that, if the inclosure had been circular, the metrical plan of the walks would have resembled a cross placed
over a wheel. The walks, all extending to the very irregular walls of the
garden, were of unequal length. They
were bordered with gooseberry bushes. At the further end ot the garden a row of large poplars extended
from the ruins of the old convent, which was at the corner of the Rue Droit Mur, to the house of the Little
Convent, which was at the corner of the alley Aumarais. Before the Little
Convent, was what was called
the Littele Garden. Add to this outline a courtyard, all manner of angles made by detached
buildings, prison
walls, no prospect and no neighbourhood, but the long black line of roofs
which ran along the other side of
the Rue Polonceau, and you can form a complete image of what was, forty-five years ago, the house of the
Bernardines of the Petit Picpus. This holy house had been built on the exact site of a famous tennis-court,
which existed from the fourteenth to the sixteenth Century, and which was called the court of the eleven
thousand devils.
All these streets, moreover, were among the most ancient in Paris. These names, Droit Mur and Aumarais,
are very old; the streets which bear them are much older still. The alley Aumarais was called the alley
Maugout; the Rue Droit Mur was called the Rue des Eglantiers, for God opened the flowers before man cut
stone.
IX. A CENTURY UNDER A GUIMP
SINCE we are dealing with the details of what was formerly the convent
of the Petit Picpus, and have dared
to open a window upon that secluded asylum, the reader wilt pardon us another little digression, foreign
to the object of this book, but characteristic and usful, as it latches us that the cloister itself has its
original characters.
There was in the Little Convent a centenarian who came from the Abbey of Fontevrault. Before the revolution
she had even been in society. She talked much of M. de Miromesnil, keeper of the seals under Louis XVI.,
and of the lady of a President Dupiat whom she had known very well. It was her pleasure and her vanity to
bring forward these names on all occasions. She told wonders of the Abbey of Fentevrault, that it was like
a city, and that there were streets within the convent.
She spoke with a Picardy accent which delighted the pupils. Every year she solemnly renewed her vows, and,
at the moment of taking. the oath, she would say to the priest: Monseigneur
St. Francis gave it to Monsei-
gneur St. Julian, Monseigneur St. Julian gave it to Monseigneur St. Eusebius, Monseigneur St. Eusebius gave
it to Monseigneur St. Procopius, etc., etc.; so I give it to you, my father. And the pupils would laugh,
not in their sleeves, but in their veils, joyous little stifled laughs
which made the mothers frown.
At one time, the centenarian was telling stories, she said that in her youth the Bernardins did not yield
the precedence to the Moutquetaires. It was a century which was speaking, but it was the eighteenth century.
She told of the custom in Champagne and Burgundy before the revolution, of the four wines. When a great
personage, a marshal of France, a prince, a duke or peer, pawn through a city of Burgundy or Champagne,
the corporation of the city waited on him, delivered an address, and presented him with four silver gob-
lets in which were four different wines. Upon the first goblet he read this inscription: Monkey wine,
upon the second: lion wine, upon the third: sheep wine, upon the fourth: swine wine. These four inscrip-
tions expressed the four descending degrees of drunkenness: the first,
that which enlivens; the second,
that which irritates; the third, that which stupefies; finally the last, that which brutalises.
She had in a closet, under key, a mysterious object, which she cherished
very highly. The rules of Font-
evrault did not prohibit it. She would not show this object to anybody. She shut herself up, which her
rules permitted, and hid herself whenever she wished to look at it. If she heard a step in the hall,
she shut the closet as quick as she could with her old hands. As soon as anybody spoke to her about this,
she was silent, although she was so fond of talking. The most curious were foiled by her silence, and
the most perservering by her obstinacy. This also was a subject of comment for all who were idle or list-
less in the convent. What then could this thing be, so secret and so precious, which was the treasure of
the centenarian? Doubtless, some sacred book, or some unique chaplet? or some proven relic? They lost
themselves in conjecture. On the death of the poor old woman they ran to the closet sooner, perhaps, than
was seemly, and opened it. The object of their curiosity was found under triple cloths, like a blessed
patine. It was a Faenza plate, representing Loves in flight, pursued by apothecaries' boys, armed with
enormous syringes. The pursuit is full of grimaces and comic postures. One of the charming little Loves
is already spitted. He struggles, shakes his little wings, and still tries to fly away, but the lad
capering about, laughs with a Satanic laughter. Moral:--love conquered
by cholic. This plate, very cur-
ious, moreover, and which had the honour, perhaps, of giving an idea to
Moliere, was still in existence
in September, 1845; it was for sale in a second-hand store in the Boulevard Beaumarchais.
This good old woman would receive no visit from the outside world, because, said she, the locutory is
too gloomy.
X. ORIGIN OF THE PERPETUAL ADORATION
THAT ALMOST SEPULCHRAL locutory, of which we have endeavoured to give an idea, is an entirely local
feature, which is not reproduced with the same severity in other convents.
At the convent of the Rue du
Temple in particular, which, indeed, was of another order, the black shutters were replaced by brown
curtains, and the locutory itself was a nicely-floored parlour, the windows of which were draped with
white muslin, while the walls admitted a variety of pictures, a portrait of a Benedictine nun, with
uncovered face, flower-pieces, and even a Turk's head.
It was in the garden of the convent of the Rue du Temple, that that horse-chestnut tree stood, which
passed for the most beautiful and the largest in France, and which, among the good people of the eight-
eenth century, had the name of being the father of all the horse-chestnuts in the kingdom.
As we have said, this convent of the Temple was occupied fry the Benedictines of the Perpetual Adoration,
Benedictines quite distinct from those who spring from Citcaux. This order of the Perpetual Adoration is
not very ancient, and does not date back more than two hundred years. In 1649, the Holy Sacrament
was profaned twice, within a few days, in two churches in Paris, at Saint
Sulpice, and at Saint Jean en
Greve--a rare and terrible sacrilege, which shocked the whole city. The Prior Grand-vicar of Saint Ger-
main des Pri's ordained a solemn procession of all his clergy, in which the Papal Nuncio officiated.
But this expiation was not sufficient for two noble women, Madame Courtin, Marquise de Bouts, and the
Countess of Chittouvieux. This outrage, committed before the "most august sacrament of the altar," al-
though transient, did not pass away from these two holy souls, and it seemed to them that it could be
atoned for only by a "Perpetual Adoration" in some convent. They both, one in 1652, the other in 1653,
made donations of considerable sums to Mother Catharine de Bar, surnamed of the Holy Sacrament, a Bene-
dictine nun, to enable her to found, with that pious object, a monastery of the order of Saint Benedict;
the first permission for this foundation was given to Mother Catharine de Bar,by M. de Metz, Abbe of
Saint Germainrwith the stipulation that no maiden shall be received unless she brings three hundred
livres of income, which is six thousand livres of principal." After the Abbe of Saint Germain, the
king granted letters patent, and the whole, abbatial charter and letters royal, was confirmed in 1654,
by the Chamber of Accounts and by the Parlement.
Such is the origin and the legal consecration of the establishment of Benedictines of the Perpetual
Adoration of the Holy Sacrament at Paris. Their first convent was "built new," Rue Cassette, with the
money of Mesdames de Bouts and de Chatouvieux.
This order, as we see, is not to be confounded with the Berm ditto called Cistercians. It sprang from
the Abbe of Saint Germain des Frig, in the same manlier as the Ladies of the Sacred Heart spring from
the General of the Jesuits and the Sisters of Charity from the General of the Lanrists.
It is also entirely different from the Bernardines of the Petit Picpus, whose interior life we have
been exhibiting. In 1657, Pope Alexander VII., by special bull, authorised the Bernardines of the
Petit Picpus to practise the Perpetual Adoration like the Benedictines of the Holy Sacrament. But
the two orders, none the less, remained distinct.
XI. END OF THE PETIT PICPUS
FROM THE TIME of the restoration, the convent of the Petit Picpus had been
dwindling away; this was
a portion of the general death of the order, which, since the eighteenth century, has been going the
way of all religious orders. Meditation is, as well as prayer, a necessity of humanity; but, like
everything which the revolution has touched, it will transform itself, and, from being hostile to
social progress, will become favourable to it.
The house of the petit Picpus dwindled rapidly. In 1840, the little convent had disappeared; the
school had disappeared. There were no longer either the old women, or the young girls; the former
were dead, the latter had gone away. Volaverunt.
The rules of the Perpetual Adoration are so rigid that they inspire dismay;
inclinations recoil,
the order gets no recruits. In 1845, it still gathered here and there a few sister servants; but
no nuns of the choir. Forty years ago there were nearly a hundred nuns, fifteen years ago there
were only twenty-eight. How many are there today? In 1847 the prioress was young, a sign that the
opportunity for choice was limited. She was not forty. As the number diminishes the fatigue in-
creases; the service of each becomes more difficult, thenceforth they saw the moment approaching
when there should be only a dozen sorrowful and bowed shoulders to bear the hard rules of Saint
Benedict. The burden is inflexible, and remains the same for the few as for the many. It weighs
down, it crushes. Thus they died. Since the author of this book lived in Paris, two have died.
One was twenty-five, the other twenty-three. The latter might say with Julia Alpinula: Hic jaceo,
Vixi annos viginti et tres. It was on account of this decay that the convent abandoned the edu-
cation of girls.
We could not pass by this extraordinary, unknown, obscure house without entering and leading in
those who accompany us, and who listen as we relate, for the benefit of some, perhaps, the mel-
ancholy history of Jean Valjean. We have penetrated into that community full of its old practices
which seem so novel today. It is the closed garden. Hortus conclusus. We have spoken of this
singular place with minuteness, but with respect, as much at least as respect and minuteness
are reconcilable. We do not comprehend everything, but we insult nothing.
We are equally dis-
tant from the hosannahs of Joseph De Maistre, who goes so far as to sanctify the executioner,
and the mockery of Voltaire, who goes so far as to rail at the crucifix.
Illogicalness of Voltaire, be it said by the way; for Voltaire would have defended Jesus as he
defended Calas; and, for those even who deny the superhuman incarnation, what does the crucifix
represent? The assassinated sage.
In the nineteenth century the religious idea is undergoing a crisis. We
are unlearning certain
things, and we do well, provided that while unlearning one thing we are learning another. No
vacuum in the human heart! Certain forms are torn down, and it is well
that they should he,
but on condition that they are followed by reconstructions.
In the meantime let us study the things which are no more. It is necessary to understand them,
were it only to avoid than.. The counterfeits of the past take assumed names, and are fond of
calling themselves the future. That spectre, the past, not infrequently
falsifies its pass-
port. Let us be ready for the snare. Let us beware. The past has a fare, superstition, and a
mask, hypocrisy. Let us denounce the face and tear off the mask.
As to convents, they present a complex question. A question of civilisation, which condemns
them; a question of liberty, which protects them.
BOOK SEVEN
A PARENTHESIS
I. THE CONVENT AS AN ABSTRACT IDEA
THIS BOOK is a drama the first character of which is the Infinite.
Man is the second.
This being the case, when a convent was found on our path, we were compelled to penetrate it.
Why so? Because the convent, which is common to the East as well to the West, to ancient, as
well as to modern times, to Paganism as well as to Buddhims, to Mahometanism as well as to
Christianity, is one of the optical appliances turned by man upon the Infinite.
This is not the place for the development at length of certain ideas; however, while rigidly
maintaining our reservations, our limits of expression, and even our impulses of indignation;
whenever we meet with the Infinite in man, whether well or ill understood, we are seized with
an involuntary feeling of respect. There in the synagogue, in the mosque, a hideous side that
we detest, and in the pagoda and in the wigwam, a sublime aspect that we adore. What a subject
of meditation for the mind and what a limitless source of reverie is this reflection of God
upon he human wall!
II. THE CONVENT AS A HISTORICAL FACT
In the light of history, reason, and truth, monastic life stands condemned.
Monasteries, when they are numerous in a country, are knots in the circulation; encumbrances, cen-
tres of indolence where there should be centres of industry. Monastic communities
are to the great
community what the ivy is to the oak, what the wart is to the human body.
There propsperity and fat-
ness are impoverishment of the country. The monastic system, useful as it is in the dawn of civili-
sation, in effecting the abatement of brutality by the development of the
spiritual, is injurious in
the manhood of nations. Especially when it relaxes and enters upon its period of disorganization,
the period in which we now see it, does it become harmful, for every reason that made it salutary
in its period of purity.
These withdrawals into convents and morasteries have had the day. Cloisters, although beneficial in
the first training of modem civilisation, cramped its growth, and are injurious to its develop-ment.
Regarded as an institution, and as a method of culture for man, monasteries, good in the tenth century,
were open to discussion in the fifteenth, and are detestable in the nineteenth. The leprosy of mona-
sticism has gnawed, almost to a skeleton, two admirable nations, Italy and Spain, one the light, and
the other the glory of Europe, for centuries; and, in our time, the cure of these two illustrious peo-
ples is beginning, thanks only to the sound and vigorous hygiene of 1789.
The convent, the old style convent especially, such as it appeared on the threshold of this century,
in Italy, Austria, and Spain, is one of the gloomiest concretions of the Middle Ages. The cloister,
the cloister as there beheld, was the intersecting point of multiplied horrors. The Catholic cloister,
properly so-called, is filled with the black effulgence of death.
The Spanish convent is dismal above all the rest. There, rise in the obscurity. beneath vaults fill-
ed with mist, beneath domes dim with thick shadow, massive Babel-like altars, lofty as cathedrals; there,
hang by chains in the deep gloom, immense white emblems of the crucifixion; there, are extended, naked
on the ebon wood, huge ivory images of Christ--more than bloody, bleeding--hideous and magnificent, their
bones protruding from the elbows, their knee-pads disclosing the strained
integuments, their wounds re-
vealing the raw flesh--crowned with thorns of silver, nailed with nails of gold, with drops of blood in
rubies on their brows, and tears of diamonds in their eyes. The diamonds and the rubies seem real moist-
ure; and down below there, in the shadow, make veiled ones weep, whose loins are scratched and torn with
haircloth, and scourges set thick with iron points, whose breasts are bruised with wicker pads, and whose
knees are lacerated by the continual attitude of prayer; women who deem themselves wives; spectres that
fancy thernselms seraphim. Do these women think? No. Have they a will? No. Do they love? No. Do they
live? No. Their nerves have become bone; their bones have become rock.
Their veil is the enwoven night.
Their breath, beneath that veil, is like some indescribable, tragic respiration of death itself. The
abbess, a phantom. sanctifies and terrifies them, The immaculate is there, austere to behold. Such are
the old convents of Spain--dens of terrible devotion, lairs inhabited by virgins, will and savage places.
Catholic Spain was more Roman than Rome herself. The Spanish was the model
of the Catholic convent.
The air was redolent of the East. The archbishop as officiating kislaraga of heaven,
locked in, and zeal-
ously watch'ed this seraglio of souls set apart for God. The nun was the
odalisque, the priest was the
eunuch. The fervently devout were, in their dreams, the chosen ones, and were possessed of Christ. At
night, the lovely naked youth descended from the cross, and became the rapture of the cell. Lofty walls
guarded from all the distractions of real life the mystic Sultana, who had the Crucified for Sultan. A
single glance without was an act of perfidy. The in pace took the place of the leather sack. What they
threw into the sea in the East, they threw into the earth in the West. On either side. poor women wrung
their hands; the waves to those--to these the pit; there the drowned and
here the buried alive. Monstrous
parallelism!
In our day, the champions of the Past, unable to deny these things, have adopted the alternative of smil-
ing at them. It has become the fashion, a convenient and a strange one, to suppress the revelations of
history, to invalidate the comments of philosophy, and to draw the pen across all unpleasant facts
and all gloomy inquiries. "Topics for declamation," throw in the skillful, "Declamation," echo the silly.
Jean Jacques, a declaimer: Diderot, a declaimer; Voltaire on Calas, Labarre. and Sirven, a declaimer! I
forget who it is who has lately made out Tacitus, too, a declaimer, Nero a victim, and "that poor Holo-
phernes," a man really to he pitied.
Facts, however, are stubborn, and hard to baffle. The author of this boo has seen, with his own eyes,
about twenty miles from Brussels, a specimen of the Middle Ages, within everybody's reach, at the Abbey
of Villars--the orifices of the secret dungeons in the middle of the meadow which was once the courtyard
of the cloister and, on the banks of the Dyle, four stone cells, half underground and half under water.
These were in pace. Each of these dungeons has a remnant of an iron wicket,
a closet, and a barred
skylight, which, on the outside, is two feet above the surface of the river,
and from the inside is six
feet above the ground. Four feet in depth of the river flows along the outer face of the wall; the
ground near by is constantly wet. This saturated soil was the only bed of the in pace occupant. In
one of these dungeons there remains the stump of an iron collar fixed in the wall; in another may be
seen a kind of square box, formed of four slabs of granite, too short for a human being to lie down
in, too low to stand in erect. Now, in this was placed a creature like ourselves, and then a lid of
stone was closed above her head. There it is. You can see it; you can touch it. These in pace; these
dungeons; these iron hinges; these metal collars; this lofty skylight, on a level with which the river
runs; this box of stone, covered by its lid of granite, like a sepulchre, with this difference, that
it shut in the living and not the dead; this soil of mud, this cess-pool; these oozing walls. Oh!
what declaimers!
III. UPON WHAT CONDITIONS WE CAN RESPECT THE PAST
MONASTICISM. such as it was in Spain, and such as it is in Thibet, is for civilisation
a
kind of consumption. It stops life short. It, in one word, deimpulates. Monastic incarcera-
tion is castration. In Europe, it has been a scourge. Add to that, the violence so often done
to conscience; the ecclesiastical calling so frequently compulsory; the
feudal system lean-
ing on the cloister; primogeniture emptying into the monastery the surplus of the family; the
ferocious cruelties which we have just described; the in pace; mouths closed, brains walled-up,
so many hapless intellects incarcerated in the dungeons of eternal vows; the assumption of the
gown, the burial of souls alive. Add these individual torments to the national degradation,
and, whoever you may be, you will find yourself shuddering at the sight
of the frock and the
veil, those two winding sheets of human invention.
However, on certain points and in certain places, in spite of philosophy, and in spite of pro-
gress, the monastic spirit perseveres in the full blare of the nineteenth century, and a sing-
ular revival of asceticism, at this very moment, amazes the civilised world. The persistence of
superannuated institutions in striving to perpetuate themselves is like
the obstinacy of a
rancid odour clinging to the hair; the pretension of spoiled fish that insists on being eaten,
the tenacious folly of a child's garment trying to clothe a man, or the tenderness of a corpse
returning to embrace the living.
"Ingrates!" exclaims the garment. "I shielded you in weakness.
Why do you reject me now?"
"I come front the depths of the sois, says the fish; "I was once
a rose," cries the odour; "I
loved you," murmurs the corpse; "I civilized you," says the convent.
To this there is but one reply, "In the past."
To dream of the indefinite prolongation of things dead and the government
of mankind by em-
balming; to restore dilapidated dogmas, regild the shrines, replaster the
cloisters, reconse-
crate the reliquaries, revamp old superstitions, replenish fading fanaticism, put new handles
in worn-out sprinkling brushes, reconstitute monasticism; to believe in
the salvation of
society by the multiplication of parasites; to foist the past upon the
present, all this seems
strange. There are, however, advocates for such theories as theseThey.e thesnists,
men
of mind too, in other things, have a vol. simple process; they apply to the past a coating
of what. they term divine right, respect for our forefathers, time-honoured
autbority, sacred
tradition, legitimacy; and they go about. shouting, "Here! take this,
good people!" This
hind of logic was familiar to the ancients. Their soothsayers practiced
it. Rubbing over a
black heifer with chalk, they would exclaim, "She is White." Bos cretatus.
As for ourselves, we distribute our respect, here and there, and spare the past entirely,
provided it will but consent to be dead. But, if it insist upon being alive, we attack it
and endeavour to kill it.
Superstitions, bigotries, hypocrisies, prejudices, these phantoms, phantoms though they be,
are tenacious of life; they have teeth and nails in their Shadowy substance, and we must
grapple with them, body to body, and make war upon them and that, too, without cessation;
for it is one of the fatalities of humanity to be condemned to eternal struggle with phan-
toms. A shadow is hard to seize by the throat and dash upon the ground.
A convent in France, in the high noon of the nineteenth century, is a college
of owls
confronting the day. A cloister in the open act of asceticism in the full face of the city,
of '89, of 1830 and of 1848, Rome blooming forth in Paris, is an anachronism. In ordinary
times, to disperse an anachronism and cause it to vanish, one has only to make it spell
the year of our Lord. But, we do not live in ordinary times.
Let us attack, then.
Let us attack, but let us distinguish. The characteristic of truth is never to run into
excess. What need has she of exaggeration? Some things must be destroyed, and some things
must be merely cleared up and investigated. What power there is in a courteous and seri-
ous examination! Let us not therefore carry flame where light alone will suffice.
Well, then, assuming that we are in the nineteenth century, we are opposed, as a general
proposition, and in every nation, in Asia as well as in ,Europe, in Judea as well as in
Turkey, to ascetic seclusion in monasteries. He who says "convent" says "marsh." Their
putrescence is apparent, their stagnation is baleful, their fermentation fevers and in-
fects the nations, and their increase becomes an Egyptian plague. We cannot, without a
shudder, think of those countries where Fakirs, Bonzes, Santpns, Caloyers, Marabouts,
and Talapoins multiply in swarms, like vermin.
Having said this much, the religious question still remains. This question has some
mysterious aspects, and we must ask leave to look it steadily in the face.
IV. THE CONVENT VIEWED IN THE LIGHT OF PRINCIPLE
MEN COME TOGETHER and live in common. By what right? By virtue of the right of as-
sociation.
They shut themselves up. By what right? every man has to open or to shut his door.
They do not go out. By what right? By virtue of the right to go and come which implies
the right to stay at home. And what are they doing there, at home?
They speak in low tones; they keep their eyes fixed on the ground; they
work. They give
up the world, cities, sensual enjoyments, pleasures, vanities, pride, interest.
They
go clad in coarse woollen or coarse linen. Not one of them possesses any property what-
ever. Upon entering, he who was rich becomes poor, What he had, he gives to all. He
who was what is called a nobleman, a man of rank, a lord, is the equal
of him who was
a peasant. The cell is the same for all, All undergo the same tonsure, wear the same
frock, eat the same black bread, sleep on the same straw, and die on the
same ashes.
The same sack-cloth is on every back, the same rope about every waist.
If it be the
rule to go bare-footed, all go with naked feet. There may be a prince among
them; the
prince is a shadow like all the rest. Titles there are none. Family names even have
disappeared. They answer only to Christian names. All are bowed beneath
the equality
of their baptismal names. They have dissolved the family of the flesh, and have formed,
in their community, the family of the spirit. They have no other relatives
than all
mankind. They succour the poor, they tend the sick. They choose out those whom they
are to obey, and they address one another by the title: "Brother!"
You stop me, exclaiming: "But, that is the ideal monastery!"
It enough that it is a possible monastery, for me to take it into consideration.
Hence it is that, in the preceding book, I spoke of a convent with respect. The Mid-
dle Ages aside, Asia aside, and the historical and political question reserved, in
the purely philosophical point of view, beyond the necessities of militant polemics,
on condition that the monastery be absolutely voluntary and contain none but willing
devotees, I should always look upon the monastic community with a certain serious,
and, in some respects, deferential attention. Where community exists, there likewise
exists the true body politic, and where the latter is, there too is justice. The mon-
astery is the product of the formula: "Equality, Fraternity." Ohl how great is lib-
erty! And how glorious the transfiguration! Liberty suffices to transform
the mon-
astery into a republic!
Let us proceed.
These men or women who live within those four walls, and dress in haircloth,
are
equal in condition and call each other brother and sister. It is well, but do they
do aught else?
Yes.
What?
They gaze into the gloom, they kneel, and they join their hands.
What does that mean?
V. PRAYER
THEY PRAY.
To whom?
To God.
Pray to God, what is meant by that?
Is there an infinite outside of us? Is this infinite, one, inherent, permanent;
necessarily substantial, because it is infinite, and because, if matter were
wanting to it, it would in that respect be limited; necessarily intelligent,
because it is infinite, and because if it lacked intelligence, it would be
to that extent, finite? Does this infinite awaken in us the idea of essence,
while we are able to attribute to ourselves the idea of existence only? In
other words, is it not the absolute of which we are the relative?
At the same time, while there is an infinite outside of us, is there not an
infinite within us? These two infinites (fearful plural!) do they not rest
super-posed on one another? Does not the second infinite underlie the first,
so to speak? Is it not the mirror, the reflection, the echo of the first, an
abyss concentric with another abyss? Is this second infinite, intelligent also?
Does it think? Does it love? Does it will? If the two infinites be intelligent,
each one of them has a will principle, and there is a "me" in the infinite
above, as there is a "me" in the infinite below. The "me" below is the soul;
the "me" above is God.
To place, by process of thought, the infinite below in contact with the in-
finite above, is called "prayer."
Let us not take anything away from the human mind; suppression is evil. We
must reform and transform. Certain faculties of man are directed towards the
Unknown; thought, meditation, prayer. The Unknown is an Ocean. What is con-
science? It is the compass of the Unknown. Thought, meditation, prayer, these
are the great, mysterious pointings of the needle. Let us respect them.
Whither tend these majestic irradiations of the soul? into the shadow, that
is, towards the light.
The grandeur of democracy is that it denies nothing and renounces
nothing of humanity. Close by the rights of Man, side by side with them,
at
least are the rights of the Soul.
To crush out fanaticisms and revere the Infinite, such is the law. Let us
not confine ourselves to falling prostrate beneath the tree of Creation and
contemplating its vast ramifications full of stars. We have a duty to per-
form, to cultivate the human soul, to defend mystery against miracle, to
adore the incomprehensible and reject the absurd; to admit nothing that is
inexplicable excepting what is necessary, to purify faith and obliterate
superstition from the face of religion, to remove the vermin from the gar-
den of God.
VI. ABSOLUTE EXCELLENCE OF PRAYER
As to methods of prayer, all are good, if they be but sincere. Turn your book
over and be in the infinite.
There is we are aware, a philosophy that denies the infinite: There is also
a philosophy, classed pathologically, which denies the sun; this philosophy
is called blindness.
To set up a sense we lack as a source of truth, is a fine piece of blind
man's assurance.
And the rarity of it consists in the haughty air of superiority and compas-
sion which is assumed towards the philosophy that sees God, by this philos-
ophy that has to grope its way. Jrmakes' one think of a mole exclaiming:
"How they excite my pity With their prate about a sun!"
There are, we know, illustrious and mighty atheists. These men, in fact,
led round again towards truth by their very power, are not absolutely
sure of being atheists; with them, the matter is nothing but a question
of definitions, and, at all events, if they do not believe in God, being
great minds, they prove God.
We hail, in them, philosophers, while, at the same time, inexorably dis-
puting their philosophy.
But, let us proceed.
An admirable thing, too, is the facility of settling everything to one's
satisfaction with words. A metaphysical school at the North, slightly
impregnated with the fogs, has imagined that it effected revolution in
the human understanding by substituting for the word "Force" the word
"Will."
To say, "the plant wills," instead of "the plant grows," would be indeed
pregnant with meaning if you were to add, "the universe wills." Why? Be-
cause this would flow from it: the plant wills, then it has a "me;"
the universe wills, then it has a God.
To us, however, who, in direct opposition to this school, reject nothing
a priori, a will in the plant, which is accepted by this school, appears
more difficult to admit, than a will in the universe,
which it denies.
To deny the will of the infinite, that is to say God, can be done only
on condition of denying the infinite itself. We have demonstrated that.
Denial of the infinite leads directly to nihilism. Everything becomes
"a conception of the mind,"
With nihilism no discussion is possible. For the logical nihilist doubts
the existence of his interlocuter, and is not quite sure he exists him-
self.
From his point of view it is possible that he may be to himself only a
"conception of his mind."
However, he does not perceive that all he has denied he admits in a
mass by merely pronouncing the word "mind."
To sum up, no path is left open for thought by a philosophy that makes
everything come to but one conclusion, the monosyllable "No."
To "No," there is but one reply: "Yes."
Nihilism has no scope. There is no nothing. Zero does not exist. Everything
is something. Nothing is nothing.
Man lives by affirmation even more than he does by bread.
To behold and to show forth, even these will not suffice. Philosophy
should be an energy; it should find its aim and its effect in the ameliora-
tion of mankind. Socrates should enter into Adam and produce Marcus
Aurelius--in other words, bring forth from the man of enjoyment, the man
of wisdom--and change Eden into the Lyceum. Science should be a cor-
dial, Enjoyment! What wretched aim, and what pitiful ambition! The brute
enjoys. Thought, this is the true triumph of the soul. To proffer thought to
the thirst of men, to give to all, as an elixir, the idea of God, to cause con-
science and science to fraternise in them, and to make them good men by
this mysterious confrontation--such is the province of true philosophy.
Morality is truth in full bloom. Contemplation leads to action. The abso-
lute should be practical. The ideal must be made air and food and drink to
the human mind. It is the ideal which has the right to say: Take of it, this is
my flesh, this is any blood. Wisdom is a sacred communion. It is upon that
condition that it ceases to be a sterile love of science, and becomes the one
and supreme method by which to rally humanity; from philosophy it is pro-
moted to religion.
Philosophy should not be a mere watch-tower, built upon mystery, from
which to gaze at ease upon it with no other result than to be a conveni-
ence for the curious.
For ourselves, postponing the development of our thought to some other
oc-
casion, we will only say that we do not comprehend either man as a starting-
point, or progress as the goal, without those two forces which are the
two
great motors, faith and love.
Progress is the aim, the ideal is the model.
What is the ideal? It is God.
Ideal, absolute, perfection, the infinite--these are identical words.
VII. PRECAUTIONS TO BE TAKEN IN CENSURE
HISTORY and philosophy have eternal duties, which are, at thg same time, sim-
ple duties--to oppose Caiaphas as bishop, Draco as judge, Trimalcion as legi-
slator, and Tiberius as emperor. This is clear, direct, and limpid, and pres-
ents no obscurity. But the right to live apart, even with its inconveniences
and abuses, must be verified and dealt with carefully. The life of the cenobite
is a human problem.
When we speak of convents, those scats of error but of inno-cence, of mistaken
views but of good intentions, of ignorance but of devotion, of torment but of
martyrdom, we must nearly always have "Yes" and "No" upon our lips.
A convent is a contradiction,--its object salvation, its means self-sacrifice.
The convent is supreme egotism resulting in supreme self-denial.
"Abdicate that you may reign" seems to be the device of monasticism.
In the cloister they suffer that they may enjoy--they draw a bill of exchange
on death--they discount the celestial splendour in terrestrial night. In the
cloister, hell is accepted as the charge made in advance on the future inheri-
tance of heaven.
The assumption of the veil or the frock is a suicide reimbursed by an eternity.
It seems to us that, in treating such a subject, raillery would be quite out
of place. Everything relating to it is serious, the good as well as the evil.
The good man knits his brows, but never smiles with the had man s smile. We
can understand anger but not malignity.
VIII. FAITH--LAW
A FEW words more.
We blame the Church when it is saturated with intrigues; We despise the spiri-
tual when it is harshly austere to the temporal; hat we honour everywhere, the
thoughtful man.
We bow to the man who kneels.
A faith is a necessity to man. Woe to him who believes nothing. A man is not
idle, because he is absorbed in thought. There is a visible labour and there
is an invisible labour.
To meditate is to labour; to think is to act.
Folded hands work, closed hands perform, a gaze fixed on heaven is a toil.
To meditate is to labour; to think is to act.
Folded arms work, closed hands perform, a gaze fixed on heaven is a toil.
Thales remained motionless for four years. He founded philosophy. In our eyes,
cenobites are not idlers, nor is the recluse a sluggard.
To think of the Gloom is a serious thing.
Without at all invalidating what we have just said, we believe that a perpetual
remembrance of the tomb is proper for the living. On this point, the priest and
the philosopher agree: We must die. The Abbe of La Trappe answers Horace.
To mingle with one's life a certain presence of the sepulchre is the law of the
wise man, and it is the law of the ascetic. In this relation, the ascetic and
the sage tend towards a common centre
There is a material advancement; we desire it. There is, also, a moral grandeur;
we hold fast to it.
Unreflecting, headlong minds say:
"of what use are those motionless figures by the side of mystery? What purpose
do they serve? What do they effect?"
Alas! in the presence of that obscurity which surrounds us and awaits us, not
knowing what the vast dispersion of all things will do with us, we answer:
There is, perhaps, no work more sublime than that which is accomplished by
these souls; and we add, There is no labour, perhaps, more useful.
Those who pray always are necessary to those who never pray.
In our view, the whole question is in the amount of thought that is mingled with
prayer.
Leibnitz, praying, is something grand; Voltaire, worshipping, is some-thing beau-
tiful. Deo erexit Voltaire.
We are for religion against the religions.
We are of those who believe in the pitifulness of orisons, and in the sublimity
of prayer.
Besides, in this moment through which we are passing, a moment which happily will
not leave its stamp upon the nineteenth century; in this hour which finds so many
with their brows abased so low and their souls so little uplifted, among so many of
the living whose motto is happiness, and who are occupied with the brief, mis-
shapen things of matter, whoever is self-exiled seems venerable to us. The mona-
stery is a renunciation. Self-sacrifice, even when misdirected, is still self-sac-
rifice. To assume as duty error has itspeculiar grandeur.
Considered in itself, ideally, and holding it up to truth, until it is impartially
and exhaustively examined in all its aspects, the monastery, and particularly
the convent--for woman suffers most under our system of society, and in this
exile of the cloister there is an element of protest--the convent, we repeat, has,
unquestionably, a certain majesty.
This monastic existence, austere and gloomy as it is, of which we have deline-
ated a few characteristics, is not life, is not liberty, for it is not the grave, for it
is not completion: it is that singular place, front which, as from the
summit of a
lofty mountain, we perceive, on one side, the abyss in which we are, and,
on the
other, the abyss wherein we are to be: it is a narrow and misty boundary; that
separates two worlds, at once illuminated and obscured by both, where .the en-
feebled ray of life commingles with the uncertain ray of death; it is the
twilight
of the tomb.
For ourselves, we, who do not believe what these women believe, but live, like
them, by faith, never could look without a species of tender and religious awe, a
kind of pity still of envy, upon those devoted beings, trembling yet confident--
those humble yet august souls, who dare to live upon the very confines of the great
mystery, waiting between the world closed to them and heaven not yet opened; turned
towards the daylight not yet seen, with only the happiness of thinking that they
know where it is; their aspirations directed towards the abyss and the unknown,
their gaze fixed on the motionless gloom, kneeling, dismayed, stupefied, shudder-
ing, and half borne away at certain times by the deep pulsations of Eternity.