home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1994-06-14 | 318.0 KB | 6,736 lines |
-
-
- VOLUME II.
-
- COSETTE
-
-
- BOOK FIRST.--WATERLOO
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- WHAT IS MET WITH ON THE WAY FROM NIVELLES
-
-
- Last year (1861), on a beautiful May morning, a traveller, the person
- who is telling this story, was coming from Nivelles, and directing
- his course towards La Hulpe. He was on foot. He was pursuing
- a broad paved road, which undulated between two rows of trees,
- over the hills which succeed each other, raise the road and let it
- fall again, and produce something in the nature of enormous waves.
-
- He had passed Lillois and Bois-Seigneur-Isaac. In the west he
- perceived the slate-roofed tower of Braine-l'Alleud, which has
- the form of a reversed vase. He had just left behind a wood upon
- an eminence; and at the angle of the cross-road, by the side
- of a sort of mouldy gibbet bearing the inscription Ancient
- Barrier No. 4, a public house, bearing on its front this sign:
- At the Four Winds (Aux Quatre Vents). Echabeau, Private Cafe.
-
- A quarter of a league further on, he arrived at the bottom of a
- little valley, where there is water which passes beneath an arch
- made through the embankment of the road. The clump of sparsely
- planted but very green trees, which fills the valley on one side of
- the road, is dispersed over the meadows on the other, and disappears
- gracefully and as in order in the direction of Braine-l'Alleud.
-
- On the right, close to the road, was an inn, with a four-wheeled cart
- at the door, a large bundle of hop-poles, a plough, a heap of dried
- brushwood near a flourishing hedge, lime smoking in a square hole,
- and a ladder suspended along an old penthouse with straw partitions.
- A young girl was weeding in a field, where a huge yellow poster,
- probably of some outside spectacle, such as a parish festival,
- was fluttering in the wind. At one corner of the inn, beside a pool
- in which a flotilla of ducks was navigating, a badly paved path plunged
- into the bushes. The wayfarer struck into this.
-
- After traversing a hundred paces, skirting a wall of the
- fifteenth century, surmounted by a pointed gable, with bricks set
- in contrast, he found himself before a large door of arched stone,
- with a rectilinear impost, in the sombre style of Louis XIV., flanked
- by two flat medallions. A severe facade rose above this door;
- a wall, perpendicular to the facade, almost touched the door,
- and flanked it with an abrupt right angle. In the meadow
- before the door lay three harrows, through which, in disorder,
- grew all the flowers of May. The door was closed. The two decrepit
- leaves which barred it were ornamented with an old rusty knocker.
-
- The sun was charming; the branches had that soft shivering of May,
- which seems to proceed rather from the nests than from the wind.
- A brave little bird, probably a lover, was carolling in a distracted
- manner in a large tree.
-
- The wayfarer bent over and examined a rather large circular excavation,
- resembling the hollow of a sphere, in the stone on the left,
- at the foot of the pier of the door.
-
- At this moment the leaves of the door parted, and a peasant
- woman emerged.
-
- She saw the wayfarer, and perceived what he was looking at.
-
- "It was a French cannon-ball which made that," she said to him.
- And she added:--
-
- "That which you see there, higher up in the door, near a nail,
- is the hole of a big iron bullet as large as an egg. The bullet did
- not pierce the wood."
-
- "What is the name of this place?" inquired the wayfarer.
-
- "Hougomont," said the peasant woman.
-
- The traveller straightened himself up. He walked on a few paces,
- and went off to look over the tops of the hedges. On the horizon
- through the trees, he perceived a sort of little elevation,
- and on this elevation something which at that distance resembled
- a lion.
-
- He was on the battle-field of Waterloo.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- HOUGOMONT
-
-
- Hougomont,--this was a funereal spot, the beginning of the obstacle,
- the first resistance, which that great wood-cutter of Europe,
- called Napoleon, encountered at Waterloo, the first knot under the
- blows of his axe.
-
- It was a chateau; it is no longer anything but a farm. For the antiquary,
- Hougomont is Hugomons. This manor was built by Hugo, Sire of Somerel,
- the same who endowed the sixth chaplaincy of the Abbey of Villiers.
-
- The traveller pushed open the door, elbowed an ancient calash
- under the porch, and entered the courtyard.
-
- The first thing which struck him in this paddock was a door of the
- sixteenth century, which here simulates an arcade, everything else
- having fallen prostrate around it. A monumental aspect often has its
- birth in ruin. In a wall near the arcade opens another arched door,
- of the time of Henry IV., permitting a glimpse of the trees
- of an orchard; beside this door, a manure-hole, some pickaxes,
- some shovels, some carts, an old well, with its flagstone and its
- iron reel, a chicken jumping, and a turkey spreading its tail,
- a chapel surmounted by a small bell-tower, a blossoming pear-tree
- trained in espalier against the wall of the chapel--behold the court,
- the conquest of which was one of Napoleon's dreams. This corner
- of earth, could he but have seized it, would, perhaps, have given
- him the world likewise. Chickens are scattering its dust abroad
- with their beaks. A growl is audible; it is a huge dog, who shows
- his teeth and replaces the English.
-
- The English behaved admirably there. Cooke's four companies
- of guards there held out for seven hours against the fury of an army.
-
- Hougomont viewed on the map, as a geometrical plan, comprising
- buildings and enclosures, presents a sort of irregular rectangle,
- one angle of which is nicked out. It is this angle which contains
- the southern door, guarded by this wall, which commands it only
- a gun's length away. Hougomont has two doors,--the southern door,
- that of the chateau; and the northern door, belonging to the farm.
- Napoleon sent his brother Jerome against Hougomont; the divisions
- of Foy, Guilleminot, and Bachelu hurled themselves against it;
- nearly the entire corps of Reille was employed against it, and miscarried;
- Kellermann's balls were exhausted on this heroic section of wall.
- Bauduin's brigade was not strong enough to force Hougomont on the north,
- and the brigade of Soye could not do more than effect the beginning
- of a breach on the south, but without taking it.
-
- The farm buildings border the courtyard on the south. A bit of the
- north door, broken by the French, hangs suspended to the wall.
- It consists of four planks nailed to two cross-beams, on which the
- scars of the attack are visible.
-
- The northern door, which was beaten in by the French, and which has
- had a piece applied to it to replace the panel suspended on the wall,
- stands half-open at the bottom of the paddock; it is cut squarely
- in the wall, built of stone below, of brick above which closes in the
- courtyard on the north. It is a simple door for carts, such as exist
- in all farms, with the two large leaves made of rustic planks:
- beyond lie the meadows. The dispute over this entrance was furious.
- For a long time, all sorts of imprints of bloody hands were visible
- on the door-posts. It was there that Bauduin was killed.
-
- The storm of the combat still lingers in this courtyard; its horror
- is visible there; the confusion of the fray was petrified there;
- it lives and it dies there; it was only yesterday. The walls
- are in the death agony, the stones fall; the breaches cry aloud;
- the holes are wounds; the drooping, quivering trees seem to be making
- an effort to flee.
-
- This courtyard was more built up in 1815 than it is to-day. Buildings
- which have since been pulled down then formed redans and angles.
-
- The English barricaded themselves there; the French made their way in,
- but could not stand their ground. Beside the chapel, one wing of
- the chateau, the only ruin now remaining of the manor of Hougomont,
- rises in a crumbling state,--disembowelled, one might say.
- The chateau served for a dungeon, the chapel for a block-house.
- There men exterminated each other. The French, fired on from
- every point,--from behind the walls, from the summits of the garrets,
- from the depths of the cellars, through all the casements,
- through all the air-holes, through every crack in the stones,--
- fetched fagots and set fire to walls and men; the reply to the
- grape-shot was a conflagration.
-
- In the ruined wing, through windows garnished with bars of iron,
- the dismantled chambers of the main building of brick are visible;
- the English guards were in ambush in these rooms; the spiral
- of the staircase, cracked from the ground floor to the very roof,
- appears like the inside of a broken shell. The staircase has two stories;
- the English, besieged on the staircase, and massed on its upper steps,
- had cut off the lower steps. These consisted of large slabs
- of blue stone, which form a heap among the nettles. Half a score
- of steps still cling to the wall; on the first is cut the figure
- of a trident. These inaccessible steps are solid in their niches.
- All the rest resembles a jaw which has been denuded of its teeth.
- There are two old trees there: one is dead; the other is wounded
- at its base, and is clothed with verdure in April. Since 1815 it has
- taken to growing through the staircase.
-
- A massacre took place in the chapel. The interior, which has
- recovered its calm, is singular. The mass has not been said there
- since the carnage. Nevertheless, the altar has been left there--
- an altar of unpolished wood, placed against a background of
- roughhewn stone. Four whitewashed walls, a door opposite the altar,
- two small arched windows; over the door a large wooden crucifix,
- below the crucifix a square air-hole stopped up with a bundle of hay;
- on the ground, in one corner, an old window-frame with the glass
- all broken to pieces--such is the chapel. Near the altar there is
- nailed up a wooden statue of Saint Anne, of the fifteenth century;
- the head of the infant Jesus has been carried off by a large ball.
- The French, who were masters of the chapel for a moment, and were
- then dislodged, set fire to it. The flames filled this building;
- it was a perfect furnace; the door was burned, the floor was burned,
- the wooden Christ was not burned. The fire preyed upon his feet,
- of which only the blackened stumps are now to be seen; then it stopped,--
- a miracle, according to the assertion of the people of the neighborhood.
- The infant Jesus, decapitated, was less fortunate than the Christ.
-
- The walls are covered with inscriptions. Near the feet of Christ
- this name is to be read: Henquinez. Then these others:
- Conde de Rio Maior Marques y Marquesa de Almagro (Habana). There
- are French names with exclamation points,--a sign of wrath.
- The wall was freshly whitewashed in 1849. The nations insulted
- each other there.
-
- It was at the door of this chapel that the corpse was picked up
- which held an axe in its hand; this corpse was Sub-Lieutenant Legros.
-
- On emerging from the chapel, a well is visible on the left.
- There are two in this courtyard. One inquires, Why is there no bucket
- and pulley to this? It is because water is no longer drawn there.
- Why is water not drawn there? Because it is full of skeletons.
-
- The last person who drew water from the well was named
- Guillaume van Kylsom. He was a peasant who lived at Hougomont,
- and was gardener there. On the 18th of June, 1815, his family
- fled and concealed themselves in the woods.
-
- The forest surrounding the Abbey of Villiers sheltered these unfortunate
- people who had been scattered abroad, for many days and nights.
- There are at this day certain traces recognizable, such as old
- boles of burned trees, which mark the site of these poor bivouacs
- trembling in the depths of the thickets.
-
- Guillaume van Kylsom remained at Hougomont, "to guard the chateau,"
- and concealed himself in the cellar. The English discovered
- him there. They tore him from his hiding-place, and the combatants
- forced this frightened man to serve them, by administering blows
- with the flats of their swords. They were thirsty; this Guillaume
- brought them water. It was from this well that he drew it.
- Many drank there their last draught. This well where drank so many
- of the dead was destined to die itself.
-
- After the engagement, they were in haste to bury the dead bodies.
- Death has a fashion of harassing victory, and she causes the pest
- to follow glory. The typhus is a concomitant of triumph.
- This well was deep, and it was turned into a sepulchre. Three hundred
- dead bodies were cast into it. With too much haste perhaps.
- Were they all dead? Legend says they were not. It seems that on
- the night succeeding the interment, feeble voices were heard calling
- from the well.
-
- This well is isolated in the middle of the courtyard. Three walls,
- part stone, part brick, and simulating a small, square tower,
- and folded like the leaves of a screen, surround it on all sides.
- The fourth side is open. It is there that the water was drawn.
- The wall at the bottom has a sort of shapeless loophole,
- possibly the hole made by a shell. This little tower had a platform,
- of which only the beams remain. The iron supports of the well on
- the right form a cross. On leaning over, the eye is lost in a deep
- cylinder of brick which is filled with a heaped-up mass of shadows.
- The base of the walls all about the well is concealed in a growth
- of nettles.
-
- This well has not in front of it that large blue slab which forms
- the table for all wells in Belgium. The slab has here been
- replaced by a cross-beam, against which lean five or six shapeless
- fragments of knotty and petrified wood which resemble huge bones.
- There is no longer either pail, chain, or pulley; but there is
- still the stone basin which served the overflow. The rain-water
- collects there, and from time to time a bird of the neighboring
- forests comes thither to drink, and then flies away. One house
- in this ruin, the farmhouse, is still inhabited. The door of this
- house opens on the courtyard. Upon this door, beside a pretty Gothic
- lock-plate, there is an iron handle with trefoils placed slanting.
- At the moment when the Hanoverian lieutenant, Wilda, grasped this
- handle in order to take refuge in the farm, a French sapper hewed
- off his hand with an axe.
-
- The family who occupy the house had for their grandfather Guillaume
- van Kylsom, the old gardener, dead long since. A woman with gray
- hair said to us: "I was there. I was three years old. My sister,
- who was older, was terrified and wept. They carried us off to
- the woods. I went there in my mother's arms. We glued our ears
- to the earth to hear. I imitated the cannon, and went boum! boum!"
-
- A door opening from the courtyard on the left led into the orchard,
- so we were told. The orchard is terrible.
-
- It is in three parts; one might almost say, in three acts.
- The first part is a garden, the second is an orchard, the third
- is a wood. These three parts have a common enclosure: on the
- side of the entrance, the buildings of the chateau and the farm;
- on the left, a hedge; on the right, a wall; and at the end, a wall.
- The wall on the right is of brick, the wall at the bottom is of stone.
- One enters the garden first. It slopes downwards, is planted
- with gooseberry bushes, choked with a wild growth of vegetation,
- and terminated by a monumental terrace of cut stone, with balustrade
- with a double curve.
-
- It was a seignorial garden in the first French style which
- preceded Le Notre; to-day it is ruins and briars. The pilasters
- are surmounted by globes which resemble cannon-balls of stone.
- Forty-three balusters can still be counted on their sockets; the rest
- lie prostrate in the grass. Almost all bear scratches of bullets.
- One broken baluster is placed on the pediment like a fractured leg.
-
- It was in this garden, further down than the orchard, that six
- light-infantry men of the 1st, having made their way thither,
- and being unable to escape, hunted down and caught like bears
- in their dens, accepted the combat with two Hanoverian companies,
- one of which was armed with carbines. The Hanoverians lined
- this balustrade and fired from above. The infantry men,
- replying from below, six against two hundred, intrepid and with
- no shelter save the currant-bushes, took a quarter of an hour to die.
-
- One mounts a few steps and passes from the garden into the orchard,
- properly speaking. There, within the limits of those few
- square fathoms, fifteen hundred men fell in less than an hour.
- The wall seems ready to renew the combat. Thirty-eight loopholes,
- pierced by the English at irregular heights, are there still.
- In front of the sixth are placed two English tombs of granite.
- There are loopholes only in the south wall, as the principal attack came
- from that quarter. The wall is hidden on the outside by a tall hedge;
- the French came up, thinking that they had to deal only with a hedge,
- crossed it, and found the wall both an obstacle and an ambuscade,
- with the English guards behind it, the thirty-eight loopholes firing
- at once a shower of grape-shot and balls, and Soye's brigade was broken
- against it. Thus Waterloo began.
-
- Nevertheless, the orchard was taken. As they had no ladders,
- the French scaled it with their nails. They fought hand to hand
- amid the trees. All this grass has been soaked in blood.
- A battalion of Nassau, seven hundred strong, was overwhelmed there.
- The outside of the wall, against which Kellermann's two batteries
- were trained, is gnawed by grape-shot.
-
- This orchard is sentient, like others, in the month of May.
- It has its buttercups and its daisies; the grass is tall there;
- the cart-horses browse there; cords of hair, on which linen
- is drying, traverse the spaces between the trees and force the
- passer-by to bend his head; one walks over this uncultivated land,
- and one's foot dives into mole-holes. In the middle of the grass
- one observes an uprooted tree-bole which lies there all verdant.
- Major Blackmann leaned against it to die. Beneath a great tree
- in the neighborhood fell the German general, Duplat, descended from
- a French family which fled on the revocation of the Edict of Nantes.
- An aged and falling apple-tree leans far over to one side,
- its wound dressed with a bandage of straw and of clayey loam.
- Nearly all the apple-trees are falling with age. There is not one
- which has not had its bullet or its biscayan.[6] The skeletons of dead
- trees abound in this orchard. Crows fly through their branches,
- and at the end of it is a wood full of violets.
-
-
- [6] A bullet as large as an egg.
-
-
- Bauduin, killed, Foy wounded, conflagration, massacre, carnage,
- a rivulet formed of English blood, French blood, German blood
- mingled in fury, a well crammed with corpses, the regiment of
- Nassau and the regiment of Brunswick destroyed, Duplat killed,
- Blackmann killed, the English Guards mutilated, twenty French battalions,
- besides the forty from Reille's corps, decimated, three thousand
- men in that hovel of Hougomont alone cut down, slashed to pieces,
- shot, burned, with their throats cut,--and all this so that a peasant
- can say to-day to the traveller: Monsieur, give me three francs,
- and if you like, I will explain to you the affair of Waterloo!
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- THE EIGHTEENTH OF JUNE, 1815
-
-
- Let us turn back,--that is one of the story-teller's rights,--
- and put ourselves once more in the year 1815, and even a little
- earlier than the epoch when the action narrated in the first part
- of this book took place.
-
- If it had not rained in the night between the 17th and the 18th
- of June, 1815, the fate of Europe would have been different.
- A few drops of water, more or less, decided the downfall of Napoleon.
- All that Providence required in order to make Waterloo the end
- of Austerlitz was a little more rain, and a cloud traversing the sky
- out of season sufficed to make a world crumble.
-
- The battle of Waterloo could not be begun until half-past eleven
- o'clock, and that gave Blucher time to come up. Why? Because the
- ground was wet. The artillery had to wait until it became a little
- firmer before they could manoeuvre.
-
- Napoleon was an artillery officer, and felt the effects of this.
- The foundation of this wonderful captain was the man who, in the report
- to the Directory on Aboukir, said: Such a one of our balls killed
- six men. All his plans of battle were arranged for projectiles.
- The key to his victory was to make the artillery converge on one point.
- He treated the strategy of the hostile general like a citadel,
- and made a breach in it. He overwhelmed the weak point with grape-shot;
- he joined and dissolved battles with cannon. There was something
- of the sharpshooter in his genius. To beat in squares, to pulverize
- regiments, to break lines, to crush and disperse masses,--for him
- everything lay in this, to strike, strike, strike incessantly,--
- and he intrusted this task to the cannon-ball. A redoubtable method,
- and one which, united with genius, rendered this gloomy athlete
- of the pugilism of war invincible for the space of fifteen years.
-
- On the 18th of June, 1815, he relied all the more on his artillery,
- because he had numbers on his side. Wellington had only one hundred
- and fifty-nine mouths of fire; Napoleon had two hundred and forty.
-
- Suppose the soil dry, and the artillery capable of moving,
- the action would have begun at six o'clock in the morning.
- The battle would have been won and ended at two o'clock, three
- hours before the change of fortune in favor of the Prussians.
- What amount of blame attaches to Napoleon for the loss of this battle?
- Is the shipwreck due to the pilot?
-
- Was it the evident physical decline of Napoleon that complicated
- this epoch by an inward diminution of force? Had the twenty years
- of war worn out the blade as it had worn the scabbard, the soul
- as well as the body? Did the veteran make himself disastrously
- felt in the leader? In a word, was this genius, as many historians
- of note have thought, suffering from an eclipse? Did he go into
- a frenzy in order to disguise his weakened powers from himself?
- Did he begin to waver under the delusion of a breath of adventure?
- Had he become--a grave matter in a general--unconscious of peril?
- Is there an age, in this class of material great men, who may be
- called the giants of action, when genius grows short-sighted? Old
- age has no hold on the geniuses of the ideal; for the Dantes and
- Michael Angelos to grow old is to grow in greatness; is it to grow
- less for the Hannibals and the Bonapartes? Had Napoleon lost the
- direct sense of victory? Had he reached the point where he could
- no longer recognize the reef, could no longer divine the snare,
- no longer discern the crumbling brink of abysses? Had he lost
- his power of scenting out catastrophes? He who had in former days
- known all the roads to triumph, and who, from the summit of his
- chariot of lightning, pointed them out with a sovereign finger,
- had he now reached that state of sinister amazement when he could
- lead his tumultuous legions harnessed to it, to the precipice?
- Was he seized at the age of forty-six with a supreme madness?
- Was that titanic charioteer of destiny no longer anything more than
- an immense dare-devil?
-
- We do not think so.
-
- His plan of battle was, by the confession of all, a masterpiece.
- To go straight to the centre of the Allies' line, to make a breach
- in the enemy, to cut them in two, to drive the British half back on Hal,
- and the Prussian half on Tongres, to make two shattered fragments
- of Wellington and Blucher, to carry Mont-Saint-Jean, to seize Brussels,
- to hurl the German into the Rhine, and the Englishman into the sea.
- All this was contained in that battle, according to Napoleon.
- Afterwards people would see.
-
- Of course, we do not here pretend to furnish a history of the battle
- of Waterloo; one of the scenes of the foundation of the story which
- we are relating is connected with this battle, but this history
- is not our subject; this history, moreover, has been finished,
- and finished in a masterly manner, from one point of view by Napoleon,
- and from another point of view by a whole pleiad of historians.[7]
-
-
- [7] Walter Scott, Lamartine, Vaulabelle, Charras, Quinet, Thiers.
-
-
- As for us, we leave the historians at loggerheads; we are but a
- distant witness, a passer-by on the plain, a seeker bending over
- that soil all made of human flesh, taking appearances for realities,
- perchance; we have no right to oppose, in the name of science,
- a collection of facts which contain illusions, no doubt; we possess
- neither military practice nor strategic ability which authorize
- a system; in our opinion, a chain of accidents dominated the two
- leaders at Waterloo; and when it becomes a question of destiny,
- that mysterious culprit, we judge like that ingenious judge,
- the populace.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- A
-
-
- Those persons who wish to gain a clear idea of the battle of Waterloo
- have only to place, mentally, on the ground, a capital A. The left limb
- of the A is the road to Nivelles, the right limb is the road to Genappe,
- the tie of the A is the hollow road to Ohain from Braine-l'Alleud. The
- top of the A is Mont-Saint-Jean, where Wellington is; the lower left
- tip is Hougomont, where Reille is stationed with Jerome Bonaparte;
- the right tip is the Belle-Alliance, where Napoleon was. At the
- centre of this chord is the precise point where the final word of the
- battle was pronounced. It was there that the lion has been placed,
- the involuntary symbol of the supreme heroism of the Imperial Guard.
-
- The triangle included in the top of the A, between the two limbs
- and the tie, is the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean. The dispute over
- this plateau constituted the whole battle. The wings of the two
- armies extended to the right and left of the two roads to Genappe
- and Nivelles; d'Erlon facing Picton, Reille facing Hill.
-
- Behind the tip of the A, behind the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean,
- is the forest of Soignes.
-
- As for the plain itself, let the reader picture to himself a vast
- undulating sweep of ground; each rise commands the next rise,
- and all the undulations mount towards Mont-Saint-Jean, and there
- end in the forest.
-
- Two hostile troops on a field of battle are two wrestlers. It is
- a question of seizing the opponent round the waist. The one seeks
- to trip up the other. They clutch at everything: a bush is a point
- of support; an angle of the wall offers them a rest to the shoulder;
- for the lack of a hovel under whose cover they can draw up,
- a regiment yields its ground; an unevenness in the ground, a chance
- turn in the landscape, a cross-path encountered at the right moment,
- a grove, a ravine, can stay the heel of that colossus which is
- called an army, and prevent its retreat. He who quits the field
- is beaten; hence the necessity devolving on the responsible leader,
- of examining the most insignificant clump of trees, and of studying
- deeply the slightest relief in the ground.
-
- The two generals had attentively studied the plain of Mont-Saint-Jean,
- now called the plain of Waterloo. In the preceding year, Wellington,
- with the sagacity of foresight, had examined it as the possible seat
- of a great battle. Upon this spot, and for this duel, on the 18th
- of June, Wellington had the good post, Napoleon the bad post.
- The English army was stationed above, the French army below.
-
- It is almost superfluous here to sketch the appearance of Napoleon
- on horseback, glass in hand, upon the heights of Rossomme,
- at daybreak, on June 18, 1815. All the world has seen him before we
- can show him. That calm profile under the little three-cornered
- hat of the school of Brienne, that green uniform, the white revers
- concealing the star of the Legion of Honor, his great coat hiding
- his epaulets, the corner of red ribbon peeping from beneath his vest,
- his leather trousers, the white horse with the saddle-cloth of purple
- velvet bearing on the corners crowned N's and eagles, Hessian boots
- over silk stockings, silver spurs, the sword of Marengo,--that whole
- figure of the last of the Caesars is present to all imaginations,
- saluted with acclamations by some, severely regarded by others.
-
- That figure stood for a long time wholly in the light; this arose
- from a certain legendary dimness evolved by the majority of heroes,
- and which always veils the truth for a longer or shorter time;
- but to-day history and daylight have arrived.
-
- That light called history is pitiless; it possesses this peculiar and
- divine quality, that, pure light as it is, and precisely because it is
- wholly light, it often casts a shadow in places where people had hitherto
- beheld rays; from the same man it constructs two different phantoms,
- and the one attacks the other and executes justice on it, and the
- shadows of the despot contend with the brilliancy of the leader.
- Hence arises a truer measure in the definitive judgments of nations.
- Babylon violated lessens Alexander, Rome enchained lessens Caesar,
- Jerusalem murdered lessens Titus, tyranny follows the tyrant.
- It is a misfortune for a man to leave behind him the night which
- bears his form.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- THE QUID OBSCURUM OF BATTLES
-
-
- Every one is acquainted with the first phase of this battle;
- a beginning which was troubled, uncertain, hesitating, menacing to
- both armies, but still more so for the English than for the French.
-
- It had rained all night, the earth had been cut up by the downpour,
- the water had accumulated here and there in the hollows of the plain
- as if in casks; at some points the gear of the artillery carriages
- was buried up to the axles, the circingles of the horses were dripping
- with liquid mud. If the wheat and rye trampled down by this cohort
- of transports on the march had not filled in the ruts and strewn a
- litter beneath the wheels, all movement, particularly in the valleys,
- in the direction of Papelotte would have been impossible.
-
- The affair began late. Napoleon, as we have already explained,
- was in the habit of keeping all his artillery well in hand,
- like a pistol, aiming it now at one point, now at another,
- of the battle; and it had been his wish to wait until the horse
- batteries could move and gallop freely. In order to do that it
- was necessary that the sun should come out and dry the soil.
- But the sun did not make its appearance. It was no longer
- the rendezvous of Austerlitz. When the first cannon was fired,
- the English general, Colville, looked at his watch, and noted
- that it was thirty-five minutes past eleven.
-
- The action was begun furiously, with more fury, perhaps, than the
- Emperor would have wished, by the left wing of the French resting
- on Hougomont. At the same time Napoleon attacked the centre by
- hurling Quiot's brigade on La Haie-Sainte, and Ney pushed forward
- the right wing of the French against the left wing of the English,
- which rested on Papelotte.
-
- The attack on Hougomont was something of a feint; the plan was
- to draw Wellington thither, and to make him swerve to the left.
- This plan would have succeeded if the four companies of the English
- guards and the brave Belgians of Perponcher's division had not held the
- position solidly, and Wellington, instead of massing his troops there,
- could confine himself to despatching thither, as reinforcements,
- only four more companies of guards and one battalion from Brunswick.
-
- The attack of the right wing of the French on Papelotte was calculated,
- in fact, to overthrow the English left, to cut off the road
- to Brussels, to bar the passage against possible Prussians,
- to force Mont-Saint-Jean, to turn Wellington back on Hougomont,
- thence on Braine-l'Alleud, thence on Hal; nothing easier.
- With the exception of a few incidents this attack succeeded
- Papelotte was taken; La Haie-Sainte was carried.
-
- A detail to be noted. There was in the English infantry,
- particularly in Kempt's brigade, a great many raw recruits. These young
- soldiers were valiant in the presence of our redoubtable infantry;
- their inexperience extricated them intrepidly from the dilemma;
- they performed particularly excellent service as skirmishers:
- the soldier skirmisher, left somewhat to himself, becomes, so to speak,
- his own general. These recruits displayed some of the French
- ingenuity and fury. This novice of an infantry had dash.
- This displeased Wellington.
-
- After the taking of La Haie-Sainte the battle wavered.
-
- There is in this day an obscure interval, from mid-day to four o'clock;
- the middle portion of this battle is almost indistinct, and participates
- in the sombreness of the hand-to-hand conflict. Twilight reigns
- over it. We perceive vast fluctuations in that fog, a dizzy mirage,
- paraphernalia of war almost unknown to-day, pendant colbacks,
- floating sabre-taches, cross-belts, cartridge-boxes for grenades,
- hussar dolmans, red boots with a thousand wrinkles, heavy shakos
- garlanded with torsades, the almost black infantry of Brunswick mingled
- with the scarlet infantry of England, the English soldiers with great,
- white circular pads on the slopes of their shoulders for epaulets,
- the Hanoverian light-horse with their oblong casques of leather,
- with brass hands and red horse-tails, the Scotch with their bare
- knees and plaids, the great white gaiters of our grenadiers;
- pictures, not strategic lines--what Salvator Rosa requires,
- not what is suited to the needs of Gribeauval.
-
- A certain amount of tempest is always mingled with a battle.
- Quid obscurum, quid divinum. Each historian traces, to some extent,
- the particular feature which pleases him amid this pellmell.
- Whatever may be the combinations of the generals, the shock of armed
- masses has an incalculable ebb. During the action the plans of
- the two leaders enter into each other and become mutually thrown
- out of shape. Such a point of the field of battle devours more
- combatants than such another, just as more or less spongy soils
- soak up more or less quickly the water which is poured on them.
- It becomes necessary to pour out more soldiers than one would like;
- a series of expenditures which are the unforeseen. The line of battle
- waves and undulates like a thread, the trails of blood gush illogically,
- the fronts of the armies waver, the regiments form capes and gulfs
- as they enter and withdraw; all these reefs are continually moving
- in front of each other. Where the infantry stood the artillery arrives,
- the cavalry rushes in where the artillery was, the battalions are
- like smoke. There was something there; seek it. It has disappeared;
- the open spots change place, the sombre folds advance and retreat,
- a sort of wind from the sepulchre pushes forward, hurls back,
- distends, and disperses these tragic multitudes. What is a fray?
- an oscillation? The immobility of a mathematical plan expresses
- a minute, not a day. In order to depict a battle, there is required
- one of those powerful painters who have chaos in their brushes.
- Rembrandt is better than Vandermeulen; Vandermeulen, exact at noon,
- lies at three o'clock. Geometry is deceptive; the hurricane alone
- is trustworthy. That is what confers on Folard the right to
- contradict Polybius. Let us add, that there is a certain instant
- when the battle degenerates into a combat, becomes specialized,
- and disperses into innumerable detailed feats, which, to borrow
- the expression of Napoleon himself, "belong rather to the biography
- of the regiments than to the history of the army." The historian has,
- in this case, the evident right to sum up the whole. He cannot
- do more than seize the principal outlines of the struggle, and it
- is not given to any one narrator, however conscientious he may be,
- to fix, absolutely, the form of that horrible cloud which is called
- a battle.
-
- This, which is true of all great armed encounters, is particularly
- applicable to Waterloo.
-
- Nevertheless, at a certain moment in the afternoon the battle came
- to a point.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- FOUR O'CLOCK IN THE AFTERNOON
-
-
- Towards four o'clock the condition of the English army was serious.
- The Prince of Orange was in command of the centre, Hill of the
- right wing, Picton of the left wing. The Prince of Orange,
- desperate and intrepid, shouted to the Hollando-Belgians: "Nassau!
- Brunswick! Never retreat!" Hill, having been weakened, had come up
- to the support of Wellington; Picton was dead. At the very moment
- when the English had captured from the French the flag of the 105th
- of the line, the French had killed the English general, Picton, with a
- bullet through the head. The battle had, for Wellington, two bases
- of action, Hougomont and La Haie-Sainte; Hougomont still held out,
- but was on fire; La Haie-Sainte was taken. Of the German battalion
- which defended it, only forty-two men survived; all the officers,
- except five, were either dead or captured. Three thousand combatants
- had been massacred in that barn. A sergeant of the English Guards,
- the foremost boxer in England, reputed invulnerable by his companions,
- had been killed there by a little French drummer-boy. Baring had
- been dislodged, Alten put to the sword. Many flags had been lost,
- one from Alten's division, and one from the battalion of Lunenburg,
- carried by a prince of the house of Deux-Ponts. The Scotch Grays no
- longer existed; Ponsonby's great dragoons had been hacked to pieces.
- That valiant cavalry had bent beneath the lancers of Bro and
- beneath the cuirassiers of Travers; out of twelve hundred horses,
- six hundred remained; out of three lieutenant-colonels, two lay
- on the earth,--Hamilton wounded, Mater slain. Ponsonby had fallen,
- riddled by seven lance-thrusts. Gordon was dead. Marsh was dead.
- Two divisions, the fifth and the sixth, had been annihilated.
-
- Hougomont injured, La Haie-Sainte taken, there now existed but
- one rallying-point, the centre. That point still held firm.
- Wellington reinforced it. He summoned thither Hill, who was
- at Merle-Braine; he summoned Chasse, who was at Braine-l'Alleud.
-
- The centre of the English army, rather concave, very dense,
- and very compact, was strongly posted. It occupied the plateau
- of Mont-Saint-Jean, having behind it the village, and in front of it
- the slope, which was tolerably steep then. It rested on that stout
- stone dwelling which at that time belonged to the domain of Nivelles,
- and which marks the intersection of the roads--a pile of the
- sixteenth century, and so robust that the cannon-balls rebounded from
- it without injuring it. All about the plateau the English had cut
- the hedges here and there, made embrasures in the hawthorn-trees, thrust
- the throat of a cannon between two branches, embattled the shrubs.
- There artillery was ambushed in the brushwood. This punic labor,
- incontestably authorized by war, which permits traps, was so well done,
- that Haxo, who had been despatched by the Emperor at nine o'clock
- in the morning to reconnoitre the enemy's batteries, had discovered
- nothing of it, and had returned and reported to Napoleon that there
- were no obstacles except the two barricades which barred the road
- to Nivelles and to Genappe. It was at the season when the grain
- is tall; on the edge of the plateau a battalion of Kempt's brigade,
- the 95th, armed with carabines, was concealed in the tall wheat.
-
- Thus assured and buttressed, the centre of the Anglo-Dutch army was
- well posted. The peril of this position lay in the forest of Soignes,
- then adjoining the field of battle, and intersected by the ponds
- of Groenendael and Boitsfort. An army could not retreat thither
- without dissolving; the regiments would have broken up immediately there.
- The artillery would have been lost among the morasses. The retreat,
- according to many a man versed in the art,--though it is disputed
- by others,--would have been a disorganized flight.
-
- To this centre, Wellington added one of Chasse's brigades taken
- from the right wing, and one of Wincke's brigades taken from the
- left wing, plus Clinton's division. To his English, to the regiments
- of Halkett, to the brigades of Mitchell, to the guards of Maitland,
- he gave as reinforcements and aids, the infantry of Brunswick,
- Nassau's contingent, Kielmansegg's Hanoverians, and Ompteda's
- Germans. This placed twenty-six battalions under his hand.
- The right wing, as Charras says, was thrown back on the centre.
- An enormous battery was masked by sacks of earth at the spot
- where there now stands what is called the "Museum of Waterloo."
- Besides this, Wellington had, behind a rise in the ground,
- Somerset's Dragoon Guards, fourteen hundred horse strong.
- It was the remaining half of the justly celebrated English cavalry.
- Ponsonby destroyed, Somerset remained.
-
- The battery, which, if completed, would have been almost a redoubt,
- was ranged behind a very low garden wall, backed up with a coating
- of bags of sand and a large slope of earth. This work was not finished;
- there had been no time to make a palisade for it.
-
- Wellington, uneasy but impassive, was on horseback, and there
- remained the whole day in the same attitude, a little in advance
- of the old mill of Mont-Saint-Jean, which is still in existence,
- beneath an elm, which an Englishman, an enthusiastic vandal,
- purchased later on for two hundred francs, cut down, and carried off.
- Wellington was coldly heroic. The bullets rained about him.
- His aide-de-camp, Gordon, fell at his side. Lord Hill, pointing to a
- shell which had burst, said to him: "My lord, what are your orders
- in case you are killed?" "To do like me," replied Wellington.
- To Clinton he said laconically, "To hold this spot to the last man."
- The day was evidently turning out ill. Wellington shouted to his
- old companions of Talavera, of Vittoria, of Salamanca: "Boys, can
- retreat be thought of? Think of old England!"
-
- Towards four o'clock, the English line drew back. Suddenly nothing
- was visible on the crest of the plateau except the artillery
- and the sharpshooters; the rest had disappeared: the regiments,
- dislodged by the shells and the French bullets, retreated into the bottom,
- now intersected by the back road of the farm of Mont-Saint-Jean;
- a retrograde movement took place, the English front hid itself,
- Wellington drew back. "The beginning of retreat!" cried Napoleon.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- NAPOLEON IN A GOOD HUMOR
-
-
- The Emperor, though ill and discommoded on horseback by a
- local trouble, had never been in a better humor than on that day.
- His impenetrability had been smiling ever since the morning. On the
- 18th of June, that profound soul masked by marble beamed blindly.
- The man who had been gloomy at Austerlitz was gay at Waterloo.
- The greatest favorites of destiny make mistakes. Our joys are
- composed of shadow. The supreme smile is God's alone.
-
- Ridet Caesar, Pompeius flebit, said the legionaries of the
- Fulminatrix Legion. Pompey was not destined to weep on that occasion,
- but it is certain that Caesar laughed. While exploring on horseback
- at one o'clock on the preceding night, in storm and rain, in company
- with Bertrand, the communes in the neighborhood of Rossomme,
- satisfied at the sight of the long line of the English camp-fires
- illuminating the whole horizon from Frischemont to Braine-l'Alleud,
- it had seemed to him that fate, to whom he had assigned a day on the
- field of Waterloo, was exact to the appointment; he stopped his horse,
- and remained for some time motionless, gazing at the lightning
- and listening to the thunder; and this fatalist was heard to cast
- into the darkness this mysterious saying, "We are in accord."
- Napoleon was mistaken. They were no longer in accord.
-
- He took not a moment for sleep; every instant of that night was marked
- by a joy for him. He traversed the line of the principal outposts,
- halting here and there to talk to the sentinels. At half-past two,
- near the wood of Hougomont, he heard the tread of a column on
- the march; he thought at the moment that it was a retreat on the part
- of Wellington. He said: "It is the rear-guard of the English
- getting under way for the purpose of decamping. I will take
- prisoners the six thousand English who have just arrived at Ostend."
- He conversed expansively; he regained the animation which he had
- shown at his landing on the first of March, when he pointed out
- to the Grand-Marshal the enthusiastic peasant of the Gulf Juan,
- and cried, "Well, Bertrand, here is a reinforcement already!"
- On the night of the 17th to the 18th of June he rallied Wellington.
- "That little Englishman needs a lesson," said Napoleon. The rain
- redoubled in violence; the thunder rolled while the Emperor
- was speaking.
-
- At half-past three o'clock in the morning, he lost one illusion;
- officers who had been despatched to reconnoitre announced to him
- that the enemy was not making any movement. Nothing was stirring;
- not a bivouac-fire had been extinguished; the English army was asleep.
- The silence on earth was profound; the only noise was in the heavens.
- At four o'clock, a peasant was brought in to him by the scouts;
- this peasant had served as guide to a brigade of English cavalry,
- probably Vivian's brigade, which was on its way to take up a position
- in the village of Ohain, at the extreme left. At five o'clock,
- two Belgian deserters reported to him that they had just quitted
- their regiment, and that the English army was ready for battle.
- "So much the better!" exclaimed Napoleon. "I prefer to overthrow them
- rather than to drive them back."
-
- In the morning he dismounted in the mud on the slope which forms
- an angle with the Plancenoit road, had a kitchen table and a peasant's
- chair brought to him from the farm of Rossomme, seated himself,
- with a truss of straw for a carpet, and spread out on the table
- the chart of the battle-field, saying to Soult as he did so,
- "A pretty checker-board."
-
- In consequence of the rains during the night, the transports
- of provisions, embedded in the soft roads, had not been able
- to arrive by morning; the soldiers had had no sleep; they were
- wet and fasting. This did not prevent Napoleon from exclaiming
- cheerfully to Ney, "We have ninety chances out of a hundred."
- At eight o'clock the Emperor's breakfast was brought to him.
- He invited many generals to it. During breakfast, it was said
- that Wellington had been to a ball two nights before, in Brussels,
- at the Duchess of Richmond's; and Soult, a rough man of war,
- with a face of an archbishop, said, "The ball takes place to-day."
- The Emperor jested with Ney, who said, "Wellington will not be so
- simple as to wait for Your Majesty." That was his way, however.
- "He was fond of jesting," says Fleury de Chaboulon. "A merry
- humor was at the foundation of his character," says Gourgaud.
- "He abounded in pleasantries, which were more peculiar than witty,"
- says Benjamin Constant. These gayeties of a giant are worthy
- of insistence. It was he who called his grenadiers "his grumblers";
- he pinched their ears; he pulled their mustaches. "The Emperor
- did nothing but play pranks on us," is the remark of one of them.
- During the mysterious trip from the island of Elba to France,
- on the 27th of February, on the open sea, the French brig of war,
- Le Zephyr, having encountered the brig L'Inconstant, on which Napoleon
- was concealed, and having asked the news of Napoleon from L'Inconstant,
- the Emperor, who still wore in his hat the white and amaranthine
- cockade sown with bees, which he had adopted at the isle of Elba,
- laughingly seized the speaking-trumpet, and answered for himself,
- "The Emperor is well." A man who laughs like that is on familiar
- terms with events. Napoleon indulged in many fits of this laughter
- during the breakfast at Waterloo. After breakfast he meditated
- for a quarter of an hour; then two generals seated themselves on
- the truss of straw, pen in hand and their paper on their knees,
- and the Emperor dictated to them the order of battle.
-
- At nine o'clock, at the instant when the French army, ranged in
- echelons and set in motion in five columns, had deployed--
- the divisions in two lines, the artillery between the brigades,
- the music at their head; as they beat the march, with rolls on the drums
- and the blasts of trumpets, mighty, vast, joyous, a sea of casques,
- of sabres, and of bayonets on the horizon, the Emperor was touched,
- and twice exclaimed, "Magnificent! Magnificent!"
-
- Between nine o'clock and half-past ten the whole army, incredible as it
- may appear, had taken up its position and ranged itself in six lines,
- forming, to repeat the Emperor's expression, "the figure of six V's."
- A few moments after the formation of the battle-array, in the midst
- of that profound silence, like that which heralds the beginning
- of a storm, which precedes engagements, the Emperor tapped Haxo on
- the shoulder, as he beheld the three batteries of twelve-pounders,
- detached by his orders from the corps of Erlon, Reille, and Lobau,
- and destined to begin the action by taking Mont-Saint-Jean, which was
- situated at the intersection of the Nivelles and the Genappe roads,
- and said to him, "There are four and twenty handsome maids, General."
-
- Sure of the issue, he encouraged with a smile, as they passed
- before him, the company of sappers of the first corps, which he
- had appointed to barricade Mont-Saint-Jean as soon as the village
- should be carried. All this serenity had been traversed by but
- a single word of haughty pity; perceiving on his left, at a spot
- where there now stands a large tomb, those admirable Scotch Grays,
- with their superb horses, massing themselves, he said, "It is a pity."
-
- Then he mounted his horse, advanced beyond Rossomme, and selected
- for his post of observation a contracted elevation of turf to the right
- of the road from Genappe to Brussels, which was his second station
- during the battle. The third station, the one adopted at seven
- o'clock in the evening, between La Belle-Alliance and La Haie-Sainte,
- is formidable; it is a rather elevated knoll, which still exists,
- and behind which the guard was massed on a slope of the plain.
- Around this knoll the balls rebounded from the pavements of
- the road, up to Napoleon himself. As at Brienne, he had over
- his head the shriek of the bullets and of the heavy artillery.
- Mouldy cannon-balls, old sword-blades, and shapeless projectiles,
- eaten up with rust, were picked up at the spot where his horse'
- feet stood. Scabra rubigine. A few years ago, a shell of sixty pounds,
- still charged, and with its fuse broken off level with the bomb,
- was unearthed. It was at this last post that the Emperor said
- to his guide, Lacoste, a hostile and terrified peasant, who was
- attached to the saddle of a hussar, and who turned round at every
- discharge of canister and tried to hide behind Napoleon: "Fool, it
- is shameful! You'll get yourself killed with a ball in the back."
- He who writes these lines has himself found, in the friable soil
- of this knoll, on turning over the sand, the remains of the neck
- of a bomb, disintegrated, by the oxidization of six and forty years,
- and old fragments of iron which parted like elder-twigs between
- the fingers.
-
- Every one is aware that the variously inclined undulations of the plains,
- where the engagement between Napoleon and Wellington took place,
- are no longer what they were on June 18, 1815. By taking from this
- mournful field the wherewithal to make a monument to it, its real
- relief has been taken away, and history, disconcerted, no longer
- finds her bearings there. It has been disfigured for the sake
- of glorifying it. Wellington, when he beheld Waterloo once more,
- two years later, exclaimed, "They have altered my field of battle!"
- Where the great pyramid of earth, surmounted by the lion,
- rises to-day, there was a hillock which descended in an easy slope
- towards the Nivelles road, but which was almost an escarpment
- on the side of the highway to Genappe. The elevation of this
- escarpment can still be measured by the height of the two knolls
- of the two great sepulchres which enclose the road from Genappe
- to Brussels: one, the English tomb, is on the left; the other,
- the German tomb, is on the right. There is no French tomb. The whole
- of that plain is a sepulchre for France. Thanks to the thousands
- upon thousands of cartloads of earth employed in the hillock one
- hundred and fifty feet in height and half a mile in circumference,
- the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean is now accessible by an easy slope.
- On the day of battle, particularly on the side of La Haie-Sainte,
- it was abrupt and difficult of approach. The slope there is so
- steep that the English cannon could not see the farm, situated in
- the bottom of the valley, which was the centre of the combat.
- On the 18th of June, 1815, the rains had still farther increased
- this acclivity, the mud complicated the problem of the ascent,
- and the men not only slipped back, but stuck fast in the mire.
- Along the crest of the plateau ran a sort of trench whose presence it
- was impossible for the distant observer to divine.
-
- What was this trench? Let us explain. Braine-l'Alleud is a
- Belgian village; Ohain is another. These villages, both of them
- concealed in curves of the landscape, are connected by a road about
- a league and a half in length, which traverses the plain along its
- undulating level, and often enters and buries itself in the hills
- like a furrow, which makes a ravine of this road in some places.
- In 1815, as at the present day, this road cut the crest of the plateau
- of Mont-Saint-Jean between the two highways from Genappe and Nivelles;
- only, it is now on a level with the plain; it was then a hollow way.
- Its two slopes have been appropriated for the monumental hillock.
- This road was, and still is, a trench throughout the greater portion
- of its course; a hollow trench, sometimes a dozen feet in depth,
- and whose banks, being too steep, crumbled away here and there,
- particularly in winter, under driving rains. Accidents happened here.
- The road was so narrow at the Braine-l'Alleud entrance that a
- passer-by was crushed by a cart, as is proved by a stone cross
- which stands near the cemetery, and which gives the name of the dead,
- Monsieur Bernard Debrye, Merchant of Brussels, and the date of
- the accident, February, 1637.[8] It was so deep on the table-land
- of Mont-Saint-Jean that a peasant, Mathieu Nicaise, was crushed there,
- in 1783, by a slide from the slope, as is stated on another stone cross,
- the top of which has disappeared in the process of clearing the ground,
- but whose overturned pedestal is still visible on the grassy slope
- to the left of the highway between La Haie-Sainte and the farm
- of Mont-Saint-Jean.
-
- [8] This is the inscription:--
- D. O. M.
- CY A ETE ECRASE
- PAR MALHEUR
- SOUS UN CHARIOT,
- MONSIEUR BERNARD
- DE BRYE MARCHAND
- A BRUXELLE LE [Illegible]
- FEVRIER 1637.
-
-
- On the day of battle, this hollow road whose existence was in no
- way indicated, bordering the crest of Mont-Saint-Jean, a trench
- at the summit of the escarpment, a rut concealed in the soil,
- was invisible; that is to say, terrible.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- THE EMPEROR PUTS A QUESTION TO THE GUIDE LACOSTE
-
- So, on the morning of Waterloo, Napoleon was content.
-
- He was right; the plan of battle conceived by him was, as we have seen,
- really admirable.
-
- The battle once begun, its very various changes,--the resistance
- of Hougomont; the tenacity of La Haie-Sainte; the killing of Bauduin;
- the disabling of Foy; the unexpected wall against which Soye's
- brigade was shattered; Guilleminot's fatal heedlessness when he
- had neither petard nor powder sacks; the miring of the batteries;
- the fifteen unescorted pieces overwhelmed in a hollow way by Uxbridge;
- the small effect of the bombs falling in the English lines, and there
- embedding themselves in the rain-soaked soil, and only succeeding
- in producing volcanoes of mud, so that the canister was turned into
- a splash; the uselessness of Pire's demonstration on Braine-l'Alleud;
- all that cavalry, fifteen squadrons, almost exterminated; the right
- wing of the English badly alarmed, the left wing badly cut into;
- Ney's strange mistake in massing, instead of echelonning the four
- divisions of the first corps; men delivered over to grape-shot,
- arranged in ranks twenty-seven deep and with a frontage of two hundred;
- the frightful holes made in these masses by the cannon-balls;
- attacking columns disorganized; the side-battery suddenly unmasked on
- their flank; Bourgeois, Donzelot, and Durutte compromised; Quiot repulsed;
- Lieutenant Vieux, that Hercules graduated at the Polytechnic School,
- wounded at the moment when he was beating in with an axe the door
- of La Haie-Sainte under the downright fire of the English barricade
- which barred the angle of the road from Genappe to Brussels;
- Marcognet's division caught between the infantry and the cavalry,
- shot down at the very muzzle of the guns amid the grain by Best
- and Pack, put to the sword by Ponsonby; his battery of seven
- pieces spiked; the Prince of Saxe-Weimar holding and guarding,
- in spite of the Comte d'Erlon, both Frischemont and Smohain;
- the flag of the 105th taken, the flag of the 45th captured; that black
- Prussian hussar stopped by runners of the flying column of three
- hundred light cavalry on the scout between Wavre and Plancenoit;
- the alarming things that had been said by prisoners; Grouchy's delay;
- fifteen hundred men killed in the orchard of Hougomont in less
- than an hour; eighteen hundred men overthrown in a still shorter
- time about La Haie-Sainte,--all these stormy incidents passing
- like the clouds of battle before Napoleon, had hardly troubled
- his gaze and had not overshadowed that face of imperial certainty.
- Napoleon was accustomed to gaze steadily at war; he never added
- up the heart-rending details, cipher by cipher; ciphers mattered
- little to him, provided that they furnished the total, victory;
- he was not alarmed if the beginnings did go astray, since he
- thought himself the master and the possessor at the end; he knew
- how to wait, supposing himself to be out of the question, and he
- treated destiny as his equal: he seemed to say to fate, Thou wilt
- not dare.
-
- Composed half of light and half of shadow, Napoleon thought himself
- protected in good and tolerated in evil. He had, or thought
- that he had, a connivance, one might almost say a complicity,
- of events in his favor, which was equivalent to the invulnerability
- of antiquity.
-
- Nevertheless, when one has Beresina, Leipzig, and Fontainebleau
- behind one, it seems as though one might distrust Waterloo.
- A mysterious frown becomes perceptible in the depths of the heavens.
-
- At the moment when Wellington retreated, Napoleon shuddered.
- He suddenly beheld the table-land of Mont-Saint-Jean cleared,
- and the van of the English army disappear. It was rallying,
- but hiding itself. The Emperor half rose in his stirrups.
- The lightning of victory flashed from his eyes.
-
- Wellington, driven into a corner at the forest of Soignes
- and destroyed--that was the definitive conquest of England by France;
- it was Crecy, Poitiers, Malplaquet, and Ramillies avenged.
- The man of Marengo was wiping out Agincourt.
-
- So the Emperor, meditating on this terrible turn of fortune,
- swept his glass for the last time over all the points of the field
- of battle. His guard, standing behind him with grounded arms,
- watched him from below with a sort of religion. He pondered;
- he examined the slopes, noted the declivities, scrutinized the
- clumps of trees, the square of rye, the path; he seemed to be
- counting each bush. He gazed with some intentness at the English
- barricades of the two highways,--two large abatis of trees, that on
- the road to Genappe above La Haie-Sainte, armed with two cannon,
- the only ones out of all the English artillery which commanded the
- extremity of the field of battle, and that on the road to Nivelles
- where gleamed the Dutch bayonets of Chasse's brigade. Near this
- barricade he observed the old chapel of Saint Nicholas, painted white,
- which stands at the angle of the cross-road near Braine-l'Alleud;
- he bent down and spoke in a low voice to the guide Lacoste. The guide
- made a negative sign with his head, which was probably perfidious.
-
- The Emperor straightened himself up and fell to thinking.
-
- Wellington had drawn back.
-
- All that remained to do was to complete this retreat by crushing him.
-
- Napoleon turning round abruptly, despatched an express at full
- speed to Paris to announce that the battle was won.
-
- Napoleon was one of those geniuses from whom thunder darts.
-
- He had just found his clap of thunder.
-
- He gave orders to Milhaud's cuirassiers to carry the table-land
- of Mont-Saint-Jean.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- THE UNEXPECTED
-
-
- There were three thousand five hundred of them. They formed
- a front a quarter of a league in extent. They were giant men,
- on colossal horses. There were six and twenty squadrons of them;
- and they had behind them to support them Lefebvre-Desnouettes's
- division,--the one hundred and six picked gendarmes, the light
- cavalry of the Guard, eleven hundred and ninety-seven men,
- and the lancers of the guard of eight hundred and eighty lances.
- They wore casques without horse-tails, and cuirasses of beaten iron,
- with horse-pistols in their holsters, and long sabre-swords. That
- morning the whole army had admired them, when, at nine o'clock,
- with braying of trumpets and all the music playing "Let us watch
- o'er the Safety of the Empire," they had come in a solid column,
- with one of their batteries on their flank, another in their centre,
- and deployed in two ranks between the roads to Genappe and Frischemont,
- and taken up their position for battle in that powerful second line,
- so cleverly arranged by Napoleon, which, having on its extreme
- left Kellermann's cuirassiers and on its extreme right Milhaud's
- cuirassiers, had, so to speak, two wings of iron.
-
- Aide-de-camp Bernard carried them the Emperor's orders. Ney drew
- his sword and placed himself at their head. The enormous squadrons
- were set in motion.
-
- Then a formidable spectacle was seen.
-
- All their cavalry, with upraised swords, standards and trumpets
- flung to the breeze, formed in columns by divisions, descended,
- by a simultaneous movement and like one man, with the precision
- of a brazen battering-ram which is effecting a breach, the hill
- of La Belle Alliance, plunged into the terrible depths in which
- so many men had already fallen, disappeared there in the smoke,
- then emerging from that shadow, reappeared on the other side of
- the valley, still compact and in close ranks, mounting at a full trot,
- through a storm of grape-shot which burst upon them, the terrible
- muddy slope of the table-land of Mont-Saint-Jean. They ascended,
- grave, threatening, imperturbable; in the intervals between the
- musketry and the artillery, their colossal trampling was audible.
- Being two divisions, there were two columns of them; Wathier's division
- held the right, Delort's division was on the left. It seemed as
- though two immense adders of steel were to be seen crawling towards
- the crest of the table-land. It traversed the battle like a prodigy.
-
- Nothing like it had been seen since the taking of the great redoubt
- of the Muskowa by the heavy cavalry; Murat was lacking here, but Ney
- was again present. It seemed as though that mass had become a monster
- and had but one soul. Each column undulated and swelled like the
- ring of a polyp. They could be seen through a vast cloud of smoke
- which was rent here and there. A confusion of helmets, of cries,
- of sabres, a stormy heaving of the cruppers of horses amid the cannons
- and the flourish of trumpets, a terrible and disciplined tumult;
- over all, the cuirasses like the scales on the hydra.
-
- These narrations seemed to belong to another age. Something parallel
- to this vision appeared, no doubt, in the ancient Orphic epics,
- which told of the centaurs, the old hippanthropes, those Titans
- with human heads and equestrian chests who scaled Olympus at
- a gallop, horrible, invulnerable, sublime--gods and beasts.
-
- Odd numerical coincidence,--twenty-six battalions rode to meet
- twenty-six battalions. Behind the crest of the plateau, in the
- shadow of the masked battery, the English infantry, formed into
- thirteen squares, two battalions to the square, in two lines,
- with seven in the first line, six in the second, the stocks
- of their guns to their shoulders, taking aim at that which was on
- the point of appearing, waited, calm, mute, motionless. They did
- not see the cuirassiers, and the cuirassiers did not see them.
- They listened to the rise of this flood of men. They heard the
- swelling noise of three thousand horse, the alternate and symmetrical
- tramp of their hoofs at full trot, the jingling of the cuirasses,
- the clang of the sabres and a sort of grand and savage breathing.
- There ensued a most terrible silence; then, all at once, a long file
- of uplifted arms, brandishing sabres, appeared above the crest,
- and casques, trumpets, and standards, and three thousand heads with
- gray mustaches, shouting, "Vive l'Empereur!" All this cavalry debouched
- on the plateau, and it was like the appearance of an earthquake.
-
- All at once, a tragic incident; on the English left, on our right,
- the head of the column of cuirassiers reared up with a frightful clamor.
- On arriving at the culminating point of the crest, ungovernable,
- utterly given over to fury and their course of extermination of the
- squares and cannon, the cuirassiers had just caught sight of a trench,--
- a trench between them and the English. It was the hollow road of Ohain.
-
- It was a terrible moment. The ravine was there, unexpected, yawning,
- directly under the horses' feet, two fathoms deep between its
- double slopes; the second file pushed the first into it, and the third
- pushed on the second; the horses reared and fell backward, landed on
- their haunches, slid down, all four feet in the air, crushing and
- overwhelming the riders; and there being no means of retreat,--
- the whole column being no longer anything more than a projectile,--
- the force which had been acquired to crush the English crushed
- the French; the inexorable ravine could only yield when filled;
- horses and riders rolled there pell-mell, grinding each other,
- forming but one mass of flesh in this gulf: when this trench
- was full of living men, the rest marched over them and passed on.
- Almost a third of Dubois's brigade fell into that abyss.
-
- This began the loss of the battle.
-
- A local tradition, which evidently exaggerates matters, says that two
- thousand horses and fifteen hundred men were buried in the hollow
- road of Ohain. This figure probably comprises all the other corpses
- which were flung into this ravine the day after the combat.
-
- Let us note in passing that it was Dubois's sorely tried brigade which,
- an hour previously, making a charge to one side, had captured
- the flag of the Lunenburg battalion.
-
- Napoleon, before giving the order for this charge of Milhaud's
- cuirassiers, had scrutinized the ground, but had not been able to see
- that hollow road, which did not even form a wrinkle on the surface of
- the plateau. Warned, nevertheless, and put on the alert by the little
- white chapel which marks its angle of junction with the Nivelles highway,
- he had probably put a question as to the possibility of an obstacle,
- to the guide Lacoste. The guide had answered No. We might almost affirm
- that Napoleon's catastrophe originated in that sign of a peasant's head.
-
- Other fatalities were destined to arise.
-
- Was it possible that Napoleon should have won that battle?
- We answer No. Why? Because of Wellington? Because of Blucher?
- No. Because of God.
-
- Bonaparte victor at Waterloo; that does not come within the law of
- the nineteenth century. Another series of facts was in preparation,
- in which there was no longer any room for Napoleon. The ill will
- of events had declared itself long before.
-
- It was time that this vast man should fall.
-
- The excessive weight of this man in human destiny disturbed the balance.
- This individual alone counted for more than a universal group.
- These plethoras of all human vitality concentrated in a single head;
- the world mounting to the brain of one man,--this would be mortal
- to civilization were it to last. The moment had arrived for the
- incorruptible and supreme equity to alter its plan. Probably the
- principles and the elements, on which the regular gravitations
- of the moral, as of the material, world depend, had complained.
- Smoking blood, over-filled cemeteries, mothers in tears,--
- these are formidable pleaders. When the earth is suffering from
- too heavy a burden, there are mysterious groanings of the shades,
- to which the abyss lends an ear.
-
- Napoleon had been denounced in the infinite and his fall had been
- decided on.
-
- He embarrassed God.
-
- Waterloo is not a battle; it is a change of front on the part
- of the Universe.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- THE PLATEAU OF MONT-SAINT-JEAN
-
-
- The battery was unmasked at the same moment with the ravine.
-
- Sixty cannons and the thirteen squares darted lightning point-blank
- on the cuirassiers. The intrepid General Delort made the military
- salute to the English battery.
-
- The whole of the flying artillery of the English had re-entered
- the squares at a gallop. The cuirassiers had not had even the
- time for a halt. The disaster of the hollow road had decimated,
- but not discouraged them. They belonged to that class of men who,
- when diminished in number, increase in courage.
-
- Wathier's column alone had suffered in the disaster; Delort's column,
- which Ney had deflected to the left, as though he had a presentiment
- of an ambush, had arrived whole.
-
- The cuirassiers hurled themselves on the English squares.
-
- At full speed, with bridles loose, swords in their teeth pistols
- in fist,--such was the attack.
-
- There are moments in battles in which the soul hardens the man
- until the soldier is changed into a statue, and when all this flesh
- turns into granite. The English battalions, desperately assaulted,
- did not stir.
-
- Then it was terrible.
-
- All the faces of the English squares were attacked at once.
- A frenzied whirl enveloped them. That cold infantry remained impassive.
- The first rank knelt and received the cuirassiers on their bayonets,
- the second ranks shot them down; behind the second rank the cannoneers
- charged their guns, the front of the square parted, permitted the passage
- of an eruption of grape-shot, and closed again. The cuirassiers
- replied by crushing them. Their great horses reared, strode across
- the ranks, leaped over the bayonets and fell, gigantic, in the midst
- of these four living wells. The cannon-balls ploughed furrows
- in these cuirassiers; the cuirassiers made breaches in the squares.
- Files of men disappeared, ground to dust under the horses. The bayonets
- plunged into the bellies of these centaurs; hence a hideousness of
- wounds which has probably never been seen anywhere else. The squares,
- wasted by this mad cavalry, closed up their ranks without flinching.
- Inexhaustible in the matter of grape-shot, they created explosions
- in their assailants' midst. The form of this combat was monstrous.
- These squares were no longer battalions, they were craters;
- those cuirassiers were no longer cavalry, they were a tempest.
- Each square was a volcano attacked by a cloud; lava contended
- with lightning.
-
- The square on the extreme right, the most exposed of all,
- being in the air, was almost annihilated at the very first shock.
- lt was formed of the 75th regiment of Highlanders. The bagpipe-player
- in the centre dropped his melancholy eyes, filled with the reflections
- of the forests and the lakes, in profound inattention, while men
- were being exterminated around him, and seated on a drum, with his
- pibroch under his arm, played the Highland airs. These Scotchmen
- died thinking of Ben Lothian, as did the Greeks recalling Argos.
- The sword of a cuirassier, which hewed down the bagpipes and the arm
- which bore it, put an end to the song by killing the singer.
-
- The cuirassiers, relatively few in number, and still further diminished
- by the catastrophe of the ravine, had almost the whole English army
- against them, but they multiplied themselves so that each man of them
- was equal to ten. Nevertheless, some Hanoverian battalions yielded.
- Wellington perceived it, and thought of his cavalry. Had Napoleon
- at that same moment thought of his infantry, he would have won
- the battle. This forgetfulness was his great and fatal mistake.
-
- All at once, the cuirassiers, who had been the assailants,
- found themselves assailed. The English cavalry was at their back.
- Before them two squares, behind them Somerset; Somerset meant
- fourteen hundred dragoons of the guard. On the right, Somerset had
- Dornberg with the German light-horse, and on his left, Trip with
- the Belgian carabineers; the cuirassiers attacked on the flank and
- in front, before and in the rear, by infantry and cavalry, had to
- face all sides. What mattered it to them? They were a whirlwind.
- Their valor was something indescribable.
-
- In addition to this, they had behind them the battery, which was
- still thundering. It was necessary that it should be so, or they
- could never have been wounded in the back. One of their cuirasses,
- pierced on the shoulder by a ball from a biscayan,[9] is in the
- collection of the Waterloo Museum.
-
-
- [9] A heavy rifled gun.
-
-
- For such Frenchmen nothing less than such Englishmen was needed.
- It was no longer a hand-to-hand conflict; it was a shadow, a fury,
- a dizzy transport of souls and courage, a hurricane of lightning swords.
- In an instant the fourteen hundred dragoon guards numbered only
- eight hundred. Fuller, their lieutenant-colonel, fell dead.
- Ney rushed up with the lancers and Lefebvre-Desnouettes's light-horse.
- The plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean was captured, recaptured, captured again.
- The cuirassiers quitted the cavalry to return to the infantry;
- or, to put it more exactly, the whole of that formidable rout
- collared each other without releasing the other. The squares still
- held firm.
-
- There were a dozen assaults. Ney had four horses killed under him.
- Half the cuirassiers remained on the plateau. This conflict lasted
- two hours.
-
- The English army was profoundly shaken. There is no doubt that,
- had they not been enfeebled in their first shock by the disaster
- of the hollow road the cuirassiers would have overwhelmed the centre
- and decided the victory. This extraordinary cavalry petrified Clinton,
- who had seen Talavera and Badajoz. Wellington, three-quarters vanquished,
- admired heroically. He said in an undertone, "Sublime!"
-
- The cuirassiers annihilated seven squares out of thirteen, took or
- spiked sixty pieces of ordnance, and captured from the English
- regiments six flags, which three cuirassiers and three chasseurs of
- the Guard bore to the Emperor, in front of the farm of La Belle Alliance.
-
- Wellington's situation had grown worse. This strange battle
- was like a duel between two raging, wounded men, each of whom,
- still fighting and still resisting, is expending all his blood.
-
- Which of the two will be the first to fall?
-
- The conflict on the plateau continued.
-
- What had become of the cuirassiers? No one could have told.
- One thing is certain, that on the day after the battle, a cuirassier
- and his horse were found dead among the woodwork of the scales
- for vehicles at Mont-Saint-Jean, at the very point where the four
- roads from Nivelles, Genappe, La Hulpe, and Brussels meet and
- intersect each other. This horseman had pierced the English lines.
- One of the men who picked up the body still lives at Mont-Saint-Jean.
- His name is Dehaze. He was eighteen years old at that time.
-
- Wellington felt that he was yielding. The crisis was at hand.
-
- The cuirassiers had not succeeded, since the centre was not
- broken through. As every one was in possession of the plateau, no one
- held it, and in fact it remained, to a great extent, with the English.
- Wellington held the village and the culminating plain; Ney had only the
- crest and the slope. They seemed rooted in that fatal soil on both sides.
-
- But the weakening of the English seemed irremediable.
- The bleeding of that army was horrible. Kempt, on the left wing,
- demanded reinforcements. "There are none," replied Wellington;
- "he must let himself be killed!" Almost at that same moment,
- a singular coincidence which paints the exhaustion of the two armies,
- Ney demanded infantry from Napoleon, and Napoleon exclaimed, "Infantry!
- Where does he expect me to get it? Does he think I can make it?"
-
- Nevertheless, the English army was in the worse case of the two.
- The furious onsets of those great squadrons with cuirasses of iron
- and breasts of steel had ground the infantry to nothing. A few
- men clustered round a flag marked the post of a regiment; such and
- such a battalion was commanded only by a captain or a lieutenant;
- Alten's division, already so roughly handled at La Haie-Sainte,
- was almost destroyed; the intrepid Belgians of Van Kluze's brigade
- strewed the rye-fields all along the Nivelles road; hardly anything
- was left of those Dutch grenadiers, who, intermingled with Spaniards
- in our ranks in 1811, fought against Wellington; and who, in 1815,
- rallied to the English standard, fought against Napoleon.
- The loss in officers was considerable. Lord Uxbridge, who had
- his leg buried on the following day, had his knee shattered.
- If, on the French side, in that tussle of the cuirassiers, Delort,
- l'Heritier, Colbert, Dnop, Travers, and Blancard were disabled,
- on the side of the English there was Alten wounded, Barne wounded,
- Delancey killed, Van Meeren killed, Ompteda killed, the whole
- of Wellington's staff decimated, and England had the worse of it
- in that bloody scale. The second regiment of foot-guards had
- lost five lieutenant-colonels, four captains, and three ensigns;
- the first battalion of the 30th infantry had lost 24 officers and
- 1,200 soldiers; the 79th Highlanders had lost 24 officers wounded,
- 18 officers killed, 450 soldiers killed. The Hanoverian hussars
- of Cumberland, a whole regiment, with Colonel Hacke at its head,
- who was destined to be tried later on and cashiered, had turned
- bridle in the presence of the fray, and had fled to the forest
- of Soignes, sowing defeat all the way to Brussels. The transports,
- ammunition-wagons, the baggage-wagons, the wagons filled with wounded,
- on perceiving that the French were gaining ground and approaching
- the forest, rushed headlong thither. The Dutch, mowed down by the
- French cavalry, cried, "Alarm!" From Vert-Coucou to Groentendael,
- for a distance of nearly two leagues in the direction of Brussels,
- according to the testimony of eye-witnesses who are still alive,
- the roads were encumbered with fugitives. This panic was such
- that it attacked the Prince de Conde at Mechlin, and Louis XVIII.
- at Ghent. With the exception of the feeble reserve echelonned
- behind the ambulance established at the farm of Mont-Saint-Jean,
- and of Vivian's and Vandeleur's brigades, which flanked the left wing,
- Wellington had no cavalry left. A number of batteries lay unhorsed.
- These facts are attested by Siborne; and Pringle, exaggerating
- the disaster, goes so far as to say that the Anglo-Dutch army was
- reduced to thirty-four thousand men. The Iron Duke remained calm,
- but his lips blanched. Vincent, the Austrian commissioner, Alava,
- the Spanish commissioner, who were present at the battle in the
- English staff, thought the Duke lost. At five o'clock Wellington
- drew out his watch, and he was heard to murmur these sinister words,
- "Blucher, or night!"
-
- It was at about that moment that a distant line of bayonets gleamed
- on the heights in the direction of Frischemont.
-
- Here comes the change of face in this giant drama.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- A BAD GUIDE TO NAPOLEON; A GOOD GUIDE TO BULOW
-
-
- The painful surprise of Napoleon is well known. Grouchy hoped for,
- Blucher arriving. Death instead of life.
-
- Fate has these turns; the throne of the world was expected;
- it was Saint Helena that was seen.
-
- If the little shepherd who served as guide to Bulow, Blucher's lieutenant,
- had advised him to debouch from the forest above Frischemont,
- instead of below Plancenoit, the form of the nineteenth century might,
- perhaps, have been different. Napoleon would have won the battle
- of Waterloo. By any other route than that below Plancenoit,
- the Prussian army would have come out upon a ravine impassable
- for artillery, and Bulow would not have arrived.
-
- Now the Prussian general, Muffling, declares that one hour's delay,
- and Blucher would not have found Wellington on his feet. "The battle
- was lost."
-
- It was time that Bulow should arrive, as will be seen. He had,
- moreover, been very much delayed. He had bivouacked at Dion-le-Mont,
- and had set out at daybreak; but the roads were impassable, and his
- divisions stuck fast in the mire. The ruts were up to the hubs
- of the cannons. Moreover, he had been obliged to pass the Dyle on
- the narrow bridge of Wavre; the street leading to the bridge had been
- fired by the French, so the caissons and ammunition-wagons could
- not pass between two rows of burning houses, and had been obliged
- to wait until the conflagration was extinguished. It was mid-day
- before Bulow's vanguard had been able to reach Chapelle-Saint-Lambert.
-
- Had the action been begun two hours earlier, it would have been
- over at four o'clock, and Blucher would have fallen on the battle
- won by Napoleon. Such are these immense risks proportioned
- to an infinite which we cannot comprehend.
-
- The Emperor had been the first, as early as mid-day, to descry
- with his field-glass, on the extreme horizon, something which had
- attracted his attention. He had said, "I see yonder a cloud,
- which seems to me to be troops." Then he asked the Duc de Dalmatie,
- "Soult, what do you see in the direction of Chapelle-Saint-Lambert?"
- The marshal, levelling his glass, answered, "Four or five
- thousand men, Sire; evidently Grouchy." But it remained motionless
- in the mist. All the glasses of the staff had studied "the cloud"
- pointed out by the Emperor. Some said: "It is trees." The truth is,
- that the cloud did not move. The Emperor detached Domon's division
- of light cavalry to reconnoitre in that quarter.
-
- Bulow had not moved, in fact. His vanguard was very feeble,
- and could accomplish nothing. He was obliged to wait for the body
- of the army corps, and he had received orders to concentrate his
- forces before entering into line; but at five o'clock, perceiving
- Wellington's peril, Blucher ordered Bulow to attack, and uttered
- these remarkable words: "We must give air to the English army."
-
- A little later, the divisions of Losthin, Hiller, Hacke, and Ryssel
- deployed before Lobau's corps, the cavalry of Prince William of
- Prussia debouched from the forest of Paris, Plancenoit was in flames,
- and the Prussian cannon-balls began to rain even upon the ranks
- of the guard in reserve behind Napoleon.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- THE GUARD
-
-
- Every one knows the rest,--the irruption of a third army; the battle
- broken to pieces; eighty-six months of fire thundering simultaneously;
- Pirch the first coming up with Bulow; Zieten's cavalry led
- by Blucher in person, the French driven back; Marcognet swept
- from the plateau of Ohain; Durutte dislodged from Papelotte;
- Donzelot and Quiot retreating; Lobau caught on the flank; a fresh
- battle precipitating itself on our dismantled regiments at nightfall;
- the whole English line resuming the offensive and thrust forward;
- the gigantic breach made in the French army; the English grape-shot
- and the Prussian grape-shot aiding each other; the extermination;
- disaster in front; disaster on the flank; the Guard entering the line
- in the midst of this terrible crumbling of all things.
-
- Conscious that they were about to die, they shouted, "Vive l'Empereur!"
- History records nothing more touching than that agony bursting
- forth in acclamations.
-
- The sky had been overcast all day long. All of a sudden, at that
- very moment,--it was eight o'clock in the evening--the clouds on
- the horizon parted, and allowed the grand and sinister glow of the
- setting sun to pass through, athwart the elms on the Nivelles road.
- They had seen it rise at Austerlitz.
-
- Each battalion of the Guard was commanded by a general for this
- final catastrophe. Friant, Michel, Roguet, Harlet, Mallet,
- Poret de Morvan, were there. When the tall caps of the grenadiers
- of the Guard, with their large plaques bearing the eagle appeared,
- symmetrical, in line, tranquil, in the midst of that combat,
- the enemy felt a respect for France; they thought they beheld twenty
- victories entering the field of battle, with wings outspread,
- and those who were the conquerors, believing themselves to be vanquished,
- retreated; but Wellington shouted, "Up, Guards, and aim straight!"
- The red regiment of English guards, lying flat behind the hedges,
- sprang up, a cloud of grape-shot riddled the tricolored flag
- and whistled round our eagles; all hurled themselves forwards,
- and the final carnage began. In the darkness, the Imperial Guard
- felt the army losing ground around it, and in the vast shock of
- the rout it heard the desperate flight which had taken the place
- of the "Vive l'Empereur!" and, with flight behind it, it continued
- to advance, more crushed, losing more men at every step that it took.
- There were none who hesitated, no timid men in its ranks.
- The soldier in that troop was as much of a hero as the general.
- Not a man was missing in that suicide.
-
- Ney, bewildered, great with all the grandeur of accepted death,
- offered himself to all blows in that tempest. He had his fifth horse
- killed under him there. Perspiring, his eyes aflame, foaming at
- the mouth, with uniform unbuttoned, one of his epaulets half cut
- off by a sword-stroke from a horseguard, his plaque with the great
- eagle dented by a bullet; bleeding, bemired, magnificent, a broken
- sword in his hand, he said, "Come and see how a Marshal of France
- dies on the field of battle!" But in vain; he did not die.
- He was haggard and angry. At Drouet d'Erlon he hurled this question,
- "Are you not going to get yourself killed?" In the midst of all
- that artillery engaged in crushing a handful of men, he shouted:
- "So there is nothing for me! Oh! I should like to have all these
- English bullets enter my bowels!" Unhappy man, thou wert reserved
- for French bullets!
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- THE CATASTROPHE
-
- The rout behind the Guard was melancholy.
-
- The army yielded suddenly on all sides at once,--Hougomont, La
- Haie-Sainte, Papelotte, Plancenoit. The cry "Treachery!" was
- followed by a cry of "Save yourselves who can!" An army which is
- disbanding is like a thaw. All yields, splits, cracks, floats,
- rolls, falls, jostles, hastens, is precipitated. The disintegration
- is unprecedented. Ney borrows a horse, leaps upon it, and without
- hat, cravat, or sword, places himself across the Brussels road,
- stopping both English and French. He strives to detain the army,
- he recalls it to its duty, he insults it, he clings to the rout.
- He is overwhelmed. The soldiers fly from him, shouting, "Long live
- Marshal Ney!" Two of Durutte's regiments go and come in affright
- as though tossed back and forth between the swords of the Uhlans
- and the fusillade of the brigades of Kempt, Best, Pack, and Rylandt;
- the worst of hand-to-hand conflicts is the defeat; friends kill each
- other in order to escape; squadrons and battalions break and disperse
- against each other, like the tremendous foam of battle. Lobau at
- one extremity, and Reille at the other, are drawn into the tide.
- In vain does Napoleon erect walls from what is left to him of his Guard;
- in vain does he expend in a last effort his last serviceable squadrons.
- Quiot retreats before Vivian, Kellermann before Vandeleur,
- Lobau before Bulow, Morand before Pirch, Domon and Subervic before
- Prince William of Prussia; Guyot, who led the Emperor's squadrons
- to the charge, falls beneath the feet of the English dragoons.
- Napoleon gallops past the line of fugitives, harangues, urges, threatens,
- entreats them. All the mouths which in the morning had shouted,
- "Long live the Emperor!" remain gaping; they hardly recognize him.
- The Prussian cavalry, newly arrived, dashes forwards, flies, hews,
- slashes, kills, exterminates. Horses lash out, the cannons flee;
- the soldiers of the artillery-train unharness the caissons and use
- the horses to make their escape; transports overturned, with all
- four wheels in the air, clog the road and occasion massacres.
- Men are crushed, trampled down, others walk over the dead and
- the living. Arms are lost. A dizzy multitude fills the roads,
- the paths, the bridges, the plains, the hills, the valleys,
- the woods, encumbered by this invasion of forty thousand men.
- Shouts despair, knapsacks and guns flung among the rye, passages forced
- at the point of the sword, no more comrades, no more officers,
- no more generals, an inexpressible terror. Zieten putting France to the
- sword at its leisure. Lions converted into goats. Such was the flight.
-
- At Genappe, an effort was made to wheel about, to present a
- battle front, to draw up in line. Lobau rallied three hundred men.
- The entrance to the village was barricaded, but at the first volley
- of Prussian canister, all took to flight again, and Lobau was taken.
- That volley of grape-shot can be seen to-day imprinted on the
- ancient gable of a brick building on the right of the road at
- a few minutes' distance before you enter Genappe. The Prussians
- threw themselves into Genappe, furious, no doubt, that they were
- not more entirely the conquerors. The pursuit was stupendous.
- Blucher ordered extermination. Roguet had set the lugubrious example
- of threatening with death any French grenadier who should bring him
- a Prussian prisoner. Blucher outdid Roguet. Duhesme, the general
- of the Young Guard, hemmed in at the doorway of an inn at Genappe,
- surrendered his sword to a huzzar of death, who took the sword and
- slew the prisoner. The victory was completed by the assassination
- of the vanquished. Let us inflict punishment, since we are history:
- old Blucher disgraced himself. This ferocity put the finishing
- touch to the disaster. The desperate route traversed Genappe,
- traversed Quatre-Bras, traversed Gosselies, traversed Frasnes,
- traversed Charleroi, traversed Thuin, and only halted at the frontier.
- Alas! and who, then, was fleeing in that manner? The Grand Army.
-
- This vertigo, this terror, this downfall into ruin of the loftiest
- bravery which ever astounded history,--is that causeless?
- No. The shadow of an enormous right is projected athwart Waterloo.
- It is the day of destiny. The force which is mightier than man
- produced that day. Hence the terrified wrinkle of those brows;
- hence all those great souls surrendering their swords. Those who had
- conquered Europe have fallen prone on the earth, with nothing left
- to say nor to do, feeling the present shadow of a terrible presence.
- Hoc erat in fatis. That day the perspective of the human race
- underwent a change. Waterloo is the hinge of the nineteenth century.
- The disappearance of the great man was necessary to the advent of the
- great century. Some one, a person to whom one replies not, took the
- responsibility on himself. The panic of heroes can be explained.
- In the battle of Waterloo there is something more than a cloud,
- there is something of the meteor. God has passed by.
-
- At nightfall, in a meadow near Genappe, Bernard and Bertrand
- seized by the skirt of his coat and detained a man, haggard,
- pensive, sinister, gloomy, who, dragged to that point by the
- current of the rout, had just dismounted, had passed the bridle
- of his horse over his arm, and with wild eye was returning
- alone to Waterloo. It was Napoleon, the immense somnambulist
- of this dream which had crumbled, essaying once more to advance.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- THE LAST SQUARE
-
-
- Several squares of the Guard, motionless amid this stream of
- the defeat, as rocks in running water, held their own until night.
- Night came, death also; they awaited that double shadow,
- and, invincible, allowed themselves to be enveloped therein.
- Each regiment, isolated from the rest, and having no bond with
- the army, now shattered in every part, died alone. They had taken
- up position for this final action, some on the heights of Rossomme,
- others on the plain of Mont-Saint-Jean. There, abandoned, vanquished,
- terrible, those gloomy squares endured their death-throes
- in formidable fashion. Ulm, Wagram, Jena, Friedland, died with them.
-
- At twilight, towards nine o'clock in the evening, one of them was left
- at the foot of the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean. In that fatal valley,
- at the foot of that declivity which the cuirassiers had ascended,
- now inundated by the masses of the English, under the converging
- fires of the victorious hostile cavalry, under a frightful density
- of projectiles, this square fought on. It was commanded by an obscure
- officer named Cambronne. At each discharge, the square diminished
- and replied. It replied to the grape-shot with a fusillade,
- continually contracting its four walls. The fugitives pausing
- breathless for a moment in the distance, listened in the darkness
- to that gloomy and ever-decreasing thunder.
-
- When this legion had been reduced to a handful, when nothing was left
- of their flag but a rag, when their guns, the bullets all gone,
- were no longer anything but clubs, when the heap of corpses was larger
- than the group of survivors, there reigned among the conquerors,
- around those men dying so sublimely, a sort of sacred terror,
- and the English artillery, taking breath, became silent. This furnished
- a sort of respite. These combatants had around them something in
- the nature of a swarm of spectres, silhouettes of men on horseback,
- the black profiles of cannon, the white sky viewed through wheels
- and gun-carriages, the colossal death's-head, which the heroes
- saw constantly through the smoke, in the depths of the battle,
- advanced upon them and gazed at them. Through the shades of twilight
- they could hear the pieces being loaded; the matches all lighted,
- like the eyes of tigers at night, formed a circle round their heads;
- all the lintstocks of the English batteries approached the cannons,
- and then, with emotion, holding the supreme moment suspended above
- these men, an English general, Colville according to some, Maitland
- according to others, shouted to them, "Surrender, brave Frenchmen!"
- Cambronne replied, "-----."
-
- {EDITOR'S COMMENTARY: Another edition of this book has the word
- "Merde!" in lieu of the ----- above.}
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- CAMBRONNE
-
-
- If any French reader object to having his susceptibilities offended,
- one would have to refrain from repeating in his presence what is
- perhaps the finest reply that a Frenchman ever made. This would
- enjoin us from consigning something sublime to History.
-
- At our own risk and peril, let us violate this injunction.
-
- Now, then, among those giants there was one Titan,--Cambronne.
-
- To make that reply and then perish, what could be grander?
- For being willing to die is the same as to die; and it was not this
- man's fault if he survived after he was shot.
-
- The winner of the battle of Waterloo was not Napoleon, who was put
- to flight; nor Wellington, giving way at four o'clock, in despair
- at five; nor Blucher, who took no part in the engagement.
- The winner of Waterloo was Cambronne.
-
- To thunder forth such a reply at the lightning-flash that kills
- you is to conquer!
-
- Thus to answer the Catastrophe, thus to speak to Fate, to give
- this pedestal to the future lion, to hurl such a challenge to the
- midnight rainstorm, to the treacherous wall of Hougomont, to the
- sunken road of Ohain, to Grouchy's delay, to Blucher's arrival,
- to be Irony itself in the tomb, to act so as to stand upright
- though fallen, to drown in two syllables the European coalition,
- to offer kings privies which the Caesars once knew, to make the lowest
- of words the most lofty by entwining with it the glory of France,
- insolently to end Waterloo with Mardigras, to finish Leonidas
- with Rabellais, to set the crown on this victory by a word impossible
- to speak, to lose the field and preserve history, to have the laugh
- on your side after such a carnage,--this is immense!
-
- It was an insult such as a thunder-cloud might hurl! It reaches
- the grandeur of AEschylus!
-
- Cambronne's reply produces the effect of a violent break.
- 'Tis like the breaking of a heart under a weight of scorn.
- 'Tis the overflow of agony bursting forth. Who conquered?
- Wellington? No! Had it not been for Blucher, he was lost.
- Was it Blucher? No! If Wellington had not begun, Blucher could
- not have finished. This Cambronne, this man spending his last hour,
- this unknown soldier, this infinitesimal of war, realizes that here is
- a falsehood, a falsehood in a catastrophe, and so doubly agonizing;
- and at the moment when his rage is bursting forth because of it,
- he is offered this mockery,--life! How could he restrain himself?
- Yonder are all the kings of Europe, the general's flushed with victory,
- the Jupiter's darting thunderbolts; they have a hundred thousand
- victorious soldiers, and back of the hundred thousand a million;
- their cannon stand with yawning mouths, the match is lighted; they grind
- down under their heels the Imperial guards, and the grand army;
- they have just crushed Napoleon, and only Cambronne remains,--
- only this earthworm is left to protest. He will protest. Then he seeks
- for the appropriate word as one seeks for a sword. His mouth froths,
- and the froth is the word. In face of this mean and mighty victory,
- in face of this victory which counts none victorious, this desperate
- soldier stands erect. He grants its overwhelming immensity, but he
- establishes its triviality; and he does more than spit upon it.
- Borne down by numbers, by superior force, by brute matter,
- he finds in his soul an expression: "Excrement!" We repeat it,--
- to use that word, to do thus, to invent such an expression, is to be
- the conqueror!
-
- The spirit of mighty days at that portentous moment made its descent
- on that unknown man. Cambronne invents the word for Waterloo as
- Rouget invents the "Marseillaise," under the visitation of a breath
- from on high. An emanation from the divine whirlwind leaps forth
- and comes sweeping over these men, and they shake, and one of them
- sings the song supreme, and the other utters the frightful cry.
-
- This challenge of titanic scorn Cambronne hurls not only at Europe
- in the name of the Empire,--that would be a trifle: he hurls it at
- the past in the name of the Revolution. It is heard, and Cambronne
- is recognized as possessed by the ancient spirit of the Titans.
- Danton seems to be speaking! Kleber seems to be bellowing!
-
- At that word from Cambronne, the English voice responded, "Fire!"
- The batteries flamed, the hill trembled, from all those brazen
- mouths belched a last terrible gush of grape-shot; a vast volume
- of smoke, vaguely white in the light of the rising moon, rolled out,
- and when the smoke dispersed, there was no longer anything there.
- That formidable remnant had been annihilated; the Guard was dead.
- The four walls of the living redoubt lay prone, and hardly was
- there discernible, here and there, even a quiver in the bodies;
- it was thus that the French legions, greater than the Roman legions,
- expired on Mont-Saint-Jean, on the soil watered with rain and blood,
- amid the gloomy grain, on the spot where nowadays Joseph, who drives
- the post-wagon from Nivelles, passes whistling, and cheerfully
- whipping up his horse at four o'clock in the morning.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- QUOT LIBRAS IN DUCE?
-
-
- The battle of Waterloo is an enigma. It is as obscure to those who
- won it as to those who lost it. For Napoleon it was a panic;[10]
- Blucher sees nothing in it but fire; Wellington understands
- nothing in regard to it. Look at the reports. The bulletins
- are confused, the commentaries involved. Some stammer, others lisp.
- Jomini divides the battle of Waterloo into four moments; Muffling cuts
- it up into three changes; Charras alone, though we hold another
- judgment than his on some points, seized with his haughty glance
- the characteristic outlines of that catastrophe of human genius
- in conflict with divine chance. All the other historians suffer from
- being somewhat dazzled, and in this dazzled state they fumble about.
- It was a day of lightning brilliancy; in fact, a crumbling of
- the military monarchy which, to the vast stupefaction of kings,
- drew all the kingdoms after it--the fall of force, the defeat of war.
-
-
- [10] "A battle terminated, a day finished, false measures repaired,
- greater successes assured for the morrow,--all was lost by a moment
- of panic, terror."--Napoleon, Dictees de Sainte Helene.
-
-
- In this event, stamped with superhuman necessity, the part played
- by men amounts to nothing.
-
- If we take Waterloo from Wellington and Blucher, do we thereby deprive
- England and Germany of anything? No. Neither that illustrious
- England nor that august Germany enter into the problem of Waterloo.
- Thank Heaven, nations are great, independently of the lugubrious
- feats of the sword. Neither England, nor Germany, nor France
- is contained in a scabbard. At this epoch when Waterloo is
- only a clashing of swords, above Blucher, Germany has Schiller;
- above Wellington, England has Byron. A vast dawn of ideas is the
- peculiarity of our century, and in that aurora England and Germany
- have a magnificent radiance. They are majestic because they think.
- The elevation of level which they contribute to civilization is intrinsic
- with them; it proceeds from themselves and not from an accident.
- The aggrandizement which they have brought to the nineteenth
- century has not Waterloo as its source. It is only barbarous
- peoples who undergo rapid growth after a victory. That is the
- temporary vanity of torrents swelled by a storm. Civilized people,
- especially in our day, are neither elevated nor abased by the good
- or bad fortune of a captain. Their specific gravity in the human
- species results from something more than a combat. Their honor,
- thank God! their dignity, their intelligence, their genius, are not
- numbers which those gamblers, heroes and conquerors, can put in the
- lottery of battles. Often a battle is lost and progress is conquered.
- There is less glory and more liberty. The drum holds its peace;
- reason takes the word. It is a game in which he who loses wins.
- Let us, therefore, speak of Waterloo coldly from both sides.
- Let us render to chance that which is due to chance, and to God
- that which is due to God. What is Waterloo? A victory? No. The
- winning number in the lottery.
-
- The quine[11] won by Europe, paid by France.
-
-
- [11] Five winning numbers in a lottery.
-
-
- It was not worth while to place a lion there.
-
- Waterloo, moreover, is the strangest encounter in history.
- Napoleon and Wellington. They are not enemies; they are opposites.
- Never did God, who is fond of antitheses, make a more striking
- contrast, a more extraordinary comparison. On one side, precision,
- foresight, geometry, prudence, an assured retreat, reserves spared,
- with an obstinate coolness, an imperturbable method, strategy,
- which takes advantage of the ground, tactics, which preserve the
- equilibrium of battalions, carnage, executed according to rule,
- war regulated, watch in hand, nothing voluntarily left to chance,
- the ancient classic courage, absolute regularity; on the other,
- intuition, divination, military oddity, superhuman instinct,
- a flaming glance, an indescribable something which gazes like
- an eagle, and which strikes like the lightning, a prodigious art
- in disdainful impetuosity, all the mysteries of a profound soul,
- associated with destiny; the stream, the plain, the forest,
- the hill, summoned, and in a manner, forced to obey, the despot going
- even so far as to tyrannize over the field of battle; faith in a
- star mingled with strategic science, elevating but perturbing it.
- Wellington was the Bareme of war; Napoleon was its Michael Angelo;
- and on this occasion, genius was vanquished by calculation.
- On both sides some one was awaited. It was the exact calculator
- who succeeded. Napoleon was waiting for Grouchy; he did not come.
- Wellington expected Blucher; he came.
-
- Wellington is classic war taking its revenge. Bonaparte, at his
- dawning, had encountered him in Italy, and beaten him superbly.
- The old owl had fled before the young vulture. The old tactics
- had been not only struck as by lightning, but disgraced. Who was
- that Corsican of six and twenty? What signified that splendid
- ignoramus, who, with everything against him, nothing in his favor,
- without provisions, without ammunition, without cannon, without shoes,
- almost without an army, with a mere handful of men against masses,
- hurled himself on Europe combined, and absurdly won victories
- in the impossible? Whence had issued that fulminating convict,
- who almost without taking breath, and with the same set of combatants
- in hand, pulverized, one after the other, the five armies of the emperor
- of Germany, upsetting Beaulieu on Alvinzi, Wurmser on Beaulieu,
- Melas on Wurmser, Mack on Melas? Who was this novice in war
- with the effrontery of a luminary? The academical military school
- excommunicated him, and as it lost its footing; hence, the implacable
- rancor of the old Caesarism against the new; of the regular sword
- against the flaming sword; and of the exchequer against genius.
- On the 18th of June, 1815, that rancor had the last word.
- and beneath Lodi, Montebello, Montenotte, Mantua, Arcola,
- it wrote: Waterloo. A triumph of the mediocres which is sweet
- to the majority. Destiny consented to this irony. In his decline,
- Napoleon found Wurmser, the younger, again in front of him.
-
- In fact, to get Wurmser, it sufficed to blanch the hair of Wellington.
-
- Waterloo is a battle of the first order, won by a captain of the second.
-
- That which must be admired in the battle of Waterloo, is England;
- the English firmness, the English resolution, the English blood;
- the superb thing about England there, no offence to her, was herself.
- It was not her captain; it was her army.
-
- Wellington, oddly ungrateful, declares in a letter to Lord Bathurst,
- that his army, the army which fought on the 18th of June, 1815,
- was a "detestable army." What does that sombre intermingling
- of bones buried beneath the furrows of Waterloo think of that?
-
- England has been too modest in the matter of Wellington. To make
- Wellington so great is to belittle England. Wellington is nothing
- but a hero like many another. Those Scotch Grays, those Horse Guards,
- those regiments of Maitland and of Mitchell, that infantry of Pack
- and Kempt, that cavalry of Ponsonby and Somerset, those Highlanders
- playing the pibroch under the shower of grape-shot, those battalions
- of Rylandt, those utterly raw recruits, who hardly knew how to
- handle a musket holding their own against Essling's and Rivoli's
- old troops,--that is what was grand. Wellington was tenacious;
- in that lay his merit, and we are not seeking to lessen it:
- but the least of his foot-soldiers and of his cavalry would have been
- as solid as he. The iron soldier is worth as much as the Iron Duke.
- As for us, all our glorification goes to the English soldier,
- to the English army, to the English people. If trophy there be,
- it is to England that the trophy is due. The column of Waterloo would
- be more just, if, instead of the figure of a man, it bore on high
- the statue of a people.
-
- But this great England will be angry at what we are saying here.
- She still cherishes, after her own 1688 and our 1789,
- the feudal illusion. She believes in heredity and hierarchy.
- This people, surpassed by none in power and glory, regards itself
- as a nation, and not as a people. And as a people, it willingly
- subordinates itself and takes a lord for its head. As a workman,
- it allows itself to be disdained; as a soldier, it allows itself
- to be flogged.
-
- It will be remembered, that at the battle of Inkermann a sergeant
- who had, it appears, saved the army, could not be mentioned
- by Lord Paglan, as the English military hierarchy does not permit
- any hero below the grade of an officer to be mentioned in the reports.
-
- That which we admire above all, in an encounter of the nature of Waterloo,
- is the marvellous cleverness of chance. A nocturnal rain, the wall
- of Hougomont, the hollow road of Ohain, Grouchy deaf to the cannon,
- Napoleon's guide deceiving him, Bulow's guide enlightening him,--
- the whole of this cataclysm is wonderfully conducted.
-
- On the whole, let us say it plainly, it was more of a massacre
- than of a battle at Waterloo.
-
- Of all pitched battles, Waterloo is the one which has the smallest
- front for such a number of combatants. Napoleon three-quarters
- of a league; Wellington, half a league; seventy-two thousand
- combatants on each side. From this denseness the carnage arose.
-
- The following calculation has been made, and the following
- proportion established: Loss of men: at Austerlitz, French,
- fourteen per cent; Russians, thirty per cent; Austrians,
- forty-four per cent. At Wagram, French, thirteen per cent;
- Austrians, fourteen. At the Moskowa, 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; the Allies, thirty-one. Total for Waterloo, forty-one per
- cent; one hundred and forty-four thousand combatants; sixty thousand dead.
-
- To-day the field of Waterloo has the calm which belongs to the earth,
- the impassive support of man, and it resembles all plains.
-
- At night, moreover, a sort of visionary mist arises from it;
- and if a traveller strolls there, if he listens, if he watches, if he
- dreams like Virgil in the fatal plains of Philippi, the hallucination
- of the catastrophe takes possession of him. The frightful 18th
- of June lives again; the false monumental hillock disappears,
- the lion vanishes in air, the battle-field resumes its reality,
- lines of infantry undulate over the plain, furious gallops traverse
- the horizon; the frightened dreamer beholds the flash of sabres,
- the gleam of bayonets, the flare of bombs, the tremendous interchange
- of thunders; he hears, as it were, the death rattle in the depths
- of a tomb, the vague clamor of the battle phantom; those shadows
- are grenadiers, those lights are cuirassiers; that skeleton Napoleon,
- that other skeleton is Wellington; all this no longer exists,
- and yet it clashes together and combats still; and the ravines
- are empurpled, and the trees quiver, and there is fury even in the
- clouds and in the shadows; all those terrible heights, Hougomont,
- Mont-Saint-Jean, Frischemont, Papelotte, Plancenoit, appear confusedly
- crowned with whirlwinds of spectres engaged in exterminating each other.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- IS WATERLOO TO BE CONSIDERED GOOD?
-
-
- There exists a very respectable liberal school which
- does not hate Waterloo. We do not belong to it.
- To us, Waterloo is but the stupefied date of liberty.
- That such an eagle should emerge from such an egg is certainly unexpected.
-
- If one places one's self at the culminating point of view of the question,
- Waterloo is intentionally a counter-revolutionary victory. It is Europe
- against France; it is Petersburg, Berlin, and Vienna against Paris;
- it is the statu quo against the initiative; it is the 14th of July,
- 1789, attacked through the 20th of March, 1815; it is the monarchies
- clearing the decks in opposition to the indomitable French rioting.
- The final extinction of that vast people which had been in eruption
- for twenty-six years--such was the dream. The solidarity of
- the Brunswicks, the Nassaus, the Romanoffs, the Hohenzollerns,
- the Hapsburgs with the Bourbons. Waterloo bears divine right on
- its crupper. It is true, that the Empire having been despotic,
- the kingdom by the natural reaction of things, was forced to be liberal,
- and that a constitutional order was the unwilling result of Waterloo,
- to the great regret of the conquerors. It is because revolution cannot
- be really conquered, and that being providential and absolutely fatal,
- it is always cropping up afresh: before Waterloo, in Bonaparte
- overthrowing the old thrones; after Waterloo, in Louis XVIII.
- granting and conforming to the charter. Bonaparte places a postilion
- on the throne of Naples, and a sergeant on the throne of Sweden,
- employing inequality to demonstrate equality; Louis XVIII.
- at Saint-Ouen countersigns the declaration of the rights of man.
- If you wish to gain an idea of what revolution is, call it Progress;
- and if you wish to acquire an idea of the nature of progress,
- call it To-morrow. To-morrow fulfils its work irresistibly, and it is
- already fulfilling it to-day. It always reaches its goal strangely.
- It employs Wellington to make of Foy, who was only a soldier,
- an orator. Foy falls at Hougomont and rises again in the tribune.
- Thus does progress proceed. There is no such thing as a bad tool
- for that workman. It does not become disconcerted, but adjusts
- to its divine work the man who has bestridden the Alps, and the
- good old tottering invalid of Father Elysee. It makes use of the
- gouty man as well as of the conqueror; of the conqueror without,
- of the gouty man within. Waterloo, by cutting short the demolition
- of European thrones by the sword, had no other effect than to cause
- the revolutionary work to be continued in another direction.
- The slashers have finished; it was the turn of the thinkers.
- The century that Waterloo was intended to arrest has pursued its march.
- That sinister victory was vanquished by liberty.
-
- In short, and incontestably, that which triumphed at Waterloo;
- that which smiled in Wellington's rear; that which brought him all
- the marshals' staffs of Europe, including, it is said, the staff
- of a marshal of France; that which joyously trundled the barrows full
- of bones to erect the knoll of the lion; that which triumphantly
- inscribed on that pedestal the date "June 18, 1815"; that which
- encouraged Blucher, as he put the flying army to the sword; that which,
- from the heights of the plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean, hovered over
- France as over its prey, was the counter-revolution. It was the
- counter-revolution which murmured that infamous word "dismemberment."
- On arriving in Paris, it beheld the crater close at hand; it felt
- those ashes which scorched its feet, and it changed its mind;
- it returned to the stammer of a charter.
-
- Let us behold in Waterloo only that which is in Waterloo.
- Of intentional liberty there is none. The counter-revolution was
- involuntarily liberal, in the same manner as, by a corresponding
- phenomenon, Napoleon was involuntarily revolutionary. On the 18th
- of June, 1815, the mounted Robespierre was hurled from his saddle.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- A RECRUDESCENCE OF DIVINE RIGHT
-
-
- End of the dictatorship. A whole European system crumbled away.
-
- The Empire sank into a gloom which resembled that of the Roman
- world as it expired. Again we behold the abyss, as in the days
- of the barbarians; only the barbarism of 1815, which must be called
- by its pet name of the counter-revolution, was not long breathed,
- soon fell to panting, and halted short. The Empire was bewept,--
- let us acknowledge the fact,--and bewept by heroic eyes.
- If glory lies in the sword converted into a sceptre, the Empire
- had been glory in person. It had diffused over the earth all the
- light which tyranny can give a sombre light. We will say more;
- an obscure light. Compared to the true daylight, it is night.
- This disappearance of night produces the effect of an eclipse.
-
- Louis XVIII. re-entered Paris. The circling dances of the 8th
- of July effaced the enthusiasms of the 20th of March. The Corsican
- became the antithesis of the Bearnese. The flag on the dome of the
- Tuileries was white. The exile reigned. Hartwell's pine table took
- its place in front of the fleur-de-lys-strewn throne of Louis XIV.
- Bouvines and Fontenoy were mentioned as though they had taken
- place on the preceding day, Austerlitz having become antiquated.
- The altar and the throne fraternized majestically. One of the
- most undisputed forms of the health of society in the nineteenth
- century was established over France, and over the continent.
- Europe adopted the white cockade. Trestaillon was celebrated.
- The device non pluribus impar re-appeared on the stone rays
- representing a sun upon the front of the barracks on the Quai d'Orsay.
- Where there had been an Imperial Guard, there was now a red house.
- The Arc du Carrousel, all laden with badly borne victories,
- thrown out of its element among these novelties, a little ashamed,
- it may be, of Marengo and Arcola, extricated itself from its
- predicament with the statue of the Duc d'Angouleme. The cemetery
- of the Madeleine, a terrible pauper's grave in 1793, was covered
- with jasper and marble, since the bones of Louis XVI. and Marie
- Antoinette lay in that dust.
-
- In the moat of Vincennes a sepulchral shaft sprang from the earth,
- recalling the fact that the Duc d'Enghien had perished in the
- very month when Napoleon was crowned. Pope Pius VII., who had
- performed the coronation very near this death, tranquilly bestowed
- his blessing on the fall as he had bestowed it on the elevation.
- At Schoenbrunn there was a little shadow, aged four, whom it was
- seditious to call the King of Rome. And these things took place,
- and the kings resumed their thrones, and the master of Europe
- was put in a cage, and the old regime became the new regime,
- and all the shadows and all the light of the earth changed place,
- because, on the afternoon of a certain summer's day, a shepherd
- said to a Prussian in the forest, "Go this way, and not that!"
-
- This 1815 was a sort of lugubrious April. Ancient unhealthy
- and poisonous realities were covered with new appearances.
- A lie wedded 1789; the right divine was masked under a charter;
- fictions became constitutional; prejudices, superstitions and
- mental reservations, with Article 14 in the heart, were varnished
- over with liberalism. It was the serpent's change of skin.
-
- Man had been rendered both greater and smaller by Napoleon.
- Under this reign of splendid matter, the ideal had received the
- strange name of ideology! It is a grave imprudence in a great man
- to turn the future into derision. The populace, however, that food
- for cannon which is so fond of the cannoneer, sought him with
- its glance. Where is he? What is he doing? "Napoleon is dead,"
- said a passer-by to a veteran of Marengo and Waterloo. "He dead!"
- cried the soldier; "you don't know him." Imagination distrusted
- this man, even when overthrown. The depths of Europe were full
- of darkness after Waterloo. Something enormous remained long empty
- through Napoleon's disappearance.
-
- The kings placed themselves in this void. Ancient Europe
- profited by it to undertake reforms. There was a Holy Alliance;
- Belle-Alliance, Beautiful Alliance, the fatal field of Waterloo
- had said in advance.
-
- In presence and in face of that antique Europe reconstructed,
- the features of a new France were sketched out. The future,
- which the Emperor had rallied, made its entry. On its brow it bore
- the star, Liberty. The glowing eyes of all young generations were
- turned on it. Singular fact! people were, at one and the same time,
- in love with the future, Liberty, and the past, Napoleon. Defeat had
- rendered the vanquished greater. Bonaparte fallen seemed more
- lofty than Napoleon erect. Those who had triumphed were alarmed.
- England had him guarded by Hudson Lowe, and France had him watched
- by Montchenu. His folded arms became a source of uneasiness
- to thrones. Alexander called him "my sleeplessness." This terror
- was the result of the quantity of revolution which was contained
- in him. That is what explains and excuses Bonapartist liberalism.
- This phantom caused the old world to tremble. The kings reigned,
- but ill at their ease, with the rock of Saint Helena on the horizon.
-
- While Napoleon was passing through the death struggle at Longwood,
- the sixty thousand men who had fallen on the field of Waterloo
- were quietly rotting, and something of their peace was shed abroad
- over the world. The Congress of Vienna made the treaties in 1815,
- and Europe called this the Restoration.
-
- This is what Waterloo was.
-
- But what matters it to the Infinite? all that tempest, all that cloud,
- that war, then that peace? All that darkness did not trouble
- for a moment the light of that immense Eye before which a grub
- skipping from one blade of grass to another equals the eagle
- soaring from belfry to belfry on the towers of Notre Dame.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- THE BATTLE-FIELD AT NIGHT
-
-
- Let us return--it is a necessity in this book--to that fatal
- battle-field.
-
- On the 18th of June the moon was full. Its light favored
- Blucher's ferocious pursuit, betrayed the traces of the fugitives,
- delivered up that disastrous mass to the eager Prussian cavalry,
- and aided the massacre. Such tragic favors of the night do occur
- sometimes during catastrophes.
-
- After the last cannon-shot had been fired, the plain of Mont-Saint-Jean
- remained deserted.
-
- The English occupied the encampment of the French; it is the
- usual sign of victory to sleep in the bed of the vanquished.
- They established their bivouac beyond Rossomme. The Prussians,
- let loose on the retreating rout, pushed forward. Wellington went
- to the village of Waterloo to draw up his report to Lord Bathurst.
-
- If ever the sic vos non vobis was applicable, it certainly is
- to that village of Waterloo. Waterloo took no part, and lay half
- a league from the scene of action. Mont-Saint-Jean was cannonaded,
- Hougomont was burned, La Haie-Sainte was taken by assault,
- Papelotte was burned, Plancenoit was burned, La Belle-Alliance beheld
- the embrace of the two conquerors; these names are hardly known,
- and Waterloo, which worked not in the battle, bears off all the honor.
-
- We are not of the number of those who flatter war; when the occasion
- presents itself, we tell the truth about it. War has frightful
- beauties which we have not concealed; it has also, we acknowledge,
- some hideous features. One of the most surprising is the prompt
- stripping of the bodies of the dead after the victory. The dawn
- which follows a battle always rises on naked corpses.
-
- Who does this? Who thus soils the triumph? What hideous,
- furtive hand is that which is slipped into the pocket of victory?
- What pickpockets are they who ply their trade in the rear of glory?
- Some philosophers--Voltaire among the number--affirm that it is
- precisely those persons have made the glory. It is the same men,
- they say; there is no relief corps; those who are erect pillage
- those who are prone on the earth. The hero of the day is the
- vampire of the night. One has assuredly the right, after all,
- to strip a corpse a bit when one is the author of that corpse.
- For our own part, we do not think so; it seems to us impossible
- that the same hand should pluck laurels and purloin the shoes from a
- dead man.
-
- One thing is certain, which is, that generally after conquerors
- follow thieves. But let us leave the soldier, especially the
- contemporary soldier, out of the question.
-
- Every army has a rear-guard, and it is that which must be blamed.
- Bat-like creatures, half brigands and lackeys; all the sorts
- of vespertillos that that twilight called war engenders; wearers
- of uniforms, who take no part in the fighting; pretended invalids;
- formidable limpers; interloping sutlers, trotting along in little carts,
- sometimes accompanied by their wives, and stealing things which they
- sell again; beggars offering themselves as guides to officers;
- soldiers' servants; marauders; armies on the march in days gone by,--
- we are not speaking of the present,--dragged all this behind them,
- so that in the special language they are called "stragglers." No army,
- no nation, was responsible for those beings; they spoke Italian and
- followed the Germans, then spoke French and followed the English.
- It was by one of these wretches, a Spanish straggler who spoke French,
- that the Marquis of Fervacques, deceived by his Picard jargon,
- and taking him for one of our own men, was traitorously slain
- and robbed on the battle-field itself, in the course of the night
- which followed the victory of Cerisoles. The rascal sprang
- from this marauding. The detestable maxim, Live on the enemy!
- produced this leprosy, which a strict discipline alone could heal.
- There are reputations which are deceptive; one does not always know why
- certain generals, great in other directions, have been so popular.
- Turenne was adored by his soldiers because he tolerated pillage;
- evil permitted constitutes part of goodness. Turenne was so good that
- he allowed the Palatinate to be delivered over to fire and blood.
- The marauders in the train of an army were more or less in number,
- according as the chief was more or less severe. Hoche and Marceau
- had no stragglers; Wellington had few, and we do him the justice to
- mention it.
-
- Nevertheless, on the night from the 18th to the 19th of June,
- the dead were robbed. Wellington was rigid; he gave orders that any
- one caught in the act should be shot; but rapine is tenacious.
- The marauders stole in one corner of the battlefield while others
- were being shot in another.
-
- The moon was sinister over this plain.
-
- Towards midnight, a man was prowling about, or rather, climbing in
- the direction of the hollow road of Ohain. To all appearance he
- was one of those whom we have just described,--neither English
- nor French, neither peasant nor soldier, less a man than a ghoul
- attracted by the scent of the dead bodies having theft for
- his victory, and come to rifle Waterloo. He was clad in a blouse
- that was something like a great coat; he was uneasy and audacious;
- he walked forwards and gazed behind him. Who was this man?
- The night probably knew more of him than the day. He had no sack,
- but evidently he had large pockets under his coat. From time to
- time he halted, scrutinized the plain around him as though to see
- whether he were observed, bent over abruptly, disturbed something
- silent and motionless on the ground, then rose and fled.
- His sliding motion, his attitudes, his mysterious and rapid gestures,
- caused him to resemble those twilight larvae which haunt ruins,
- and which ancient Norman legends call the Alleurs.
-
- Certain nocturnal wading birds produce these silhouettes among
- the marshes.
-
- A glance capable of piercing all that mist deeply would have
- perceived at some distance a sort of little sutler's wagon
- with a fluted wicker hood, harnessed to a famished nag which was
- cropping the grass across its bit as it halted, hidden, as it were,
- behind the hovel which adjoins the highway to Nivelles,
- at the angle of the road from Mont-Saint-Jean to Braine l'Alleud;
- and in the wagon, a sort of woman seated on coffers and packages.
- Perhaps there was some connection between that wagon and that prowler.
-
- The darkness was serene. Not a cloud in the zenith. What matters it
- if the earth be red! the moon remains white; these are the indifferences
- of the sky. In the fields, branches of trees broken by grape-shot,
- but not fallen, upheld by their bark, swayed gently in the breeze
- of night. A breath, almost a respiration, moved the shrubbery.
- Quivers which resembled the departure of souls ran through the grass.
-
- In the distance the coming and going of patrols and the general
- rounds of the English camp were audible.
-
- Hougomont and La Haie-Sainte continued to burn, forming, one in
- the west, the other in the east, two great flames which were joined
- by the cordon of bivouac fires of the English, like a necklace
- of rubies with two carbuncles at the extremities, as they extended
- in an immense semicircle over the hills along the horizon.
-
- We have described the catastrophe of the road of Ohain. The heart
- is terrified at the thought of what that death must have been
- to so many brave men.
-
- If there is anything terrible, if there exists a reality which
- surpasses dreams, it is this: to live, to see the sun; to be in full
- possession of virile force; to possess health and joy; to laugh valiantly;
- to rush towards a glory which one sees dazzling in front of one;
- to feel in one's breast lungs which breathe, a heart which beats,
- a will which reasons; to speak, think, hope, love; to have a mother,
- to have a wife, to have children; to have the light--and all at once,
- in the space of a shout, in less than a minute, to sink into an abyss;
- to fall, to roll, to crush, to be crushed; to see ears of wheat,
- flowers, leaves, branches; not to be able to catch hold of anything;
- to feel one's sword useless, men beneath one, horses on top of one;
- to struggle in vain, since one's bones have been broken by some
- kick in the darkness; to feel a heel which makes one's eyes start
- from their sockets; to bite horses' shoes in one's rage; to stifle,
- to yell, to writhe; to be beneath, and to say to one's self,
- "But just a little while ago I was a living man!"
-
- There, where that lamentable disaster had uttered its death-rattle,
- all was silence now. The edges of the hollow road were encumbered
- with horses and riders, inextricably heaped up. Terrible entanglement!
- There was no longer any slope, for the corpses had levelled the road
- with the plain, and reached the brim like a well-filled bushel
- of barley. A heap of dead bodies in the upper part, a river of
- blood in the lower part--such was that road on the evening of the
- 18th of June, 1815. The blood ran even to the Nivelles highway,
- and there overflowed in a large pool in front of the abatis
- of trees which barred the way, at a spot which is still pointed out.
-
- It will be remembered that it was at the opposite point,
- in the direction of the Genappe road, that the destruction
- of the cuirassiers had taken place. The thickness of the layer
- of bodies was proportioned to the depth of the hollow road.
- Towards the middle, at the point where it became level,
- where Delort's division had passed, the layer of corpses was thinner.
-
- The nocturnal prowler whom we have just shown to the reader
- was going in that direction. He was searching that vast tomb.
- He gazed about. He passed the dead in some sort of hideous review.
- He walked with his feet in the blood.
-
- All at once he paused.
-
- A few paces in front of him, in the hollow road, at the point
- where the pile of dead came to an end, an open hand, illumined by
- the moon, projected from beneath that heap of men. That hand
- had on its finger something sparkling, which was a ring of gold.
-
- The man bent over, remained in a crouching attitude for a moment,
- and when he rose there was no longer a ring on the hand.
-
- He did not precisely rise; he remained in a stooping and
- frightened attitude, with his back turned to the heap of dead,
- scanning the horizon on his knees, with the whole upper portion
- of his body supported on his two forefingers, which rested on
- the earth, and his head peering above the edge of the hollow road.
- The jackal's four paws suit some actions.
-
- Then coming to a decision, he rose to his feet.
-
- At that moment, he gave a terrible start. He felt some one clutch
- him from behind.
-
- He wheeled round; it was the open hand, which had closed, and had
- seized the skirt of his coat.
-
- An honest man would have been terrified; this man burst into a laugh.
-
- "Come," said he, "it's only a dead body. I prefer a spook
- to a gendarme."
-
- But the hand weakened and released him. Effort is quickly exhausted
- in the grave.
-
- "Well now," said the prowler, "is that dead fellow alive?
- Let's see."
-
- He bent down again, fumbled among the heap, pushed aside everything
- that was in his way, seized the hand, grasped the arm, freed the head,
- pulled out the body, and a few moments later he was dragging
- the lifeless, or at least the unconscious, man, through the shadows
- of hollow road. He was a cuirassier, an officer, and even an officer
- of considerable rank; a large gold epaulette peeped from beneath
- the cuirass; this officer no longer possessed a helmet. A furious
- sword-cut had scarred his face, where nothing was discernible but blood.
-
- However, he did not appear to have any broken limbs, and, by some
- happy chance, if that word is permissible here, the dead had been vaulted
- above him in such a manner as to preserve him from being crushed.
- His eyes were still closed.
-
- On his cuirass he wore the silver cross of the Legion of Honor.
-
- The prowler tore off this cross, which disappeared into one
- of the gulfs which he had beneath his great coat.
-
- Then he felt of the officer's fob, discovered a watch there,
- and took possession of it. Next he searched his waistcoat,
- found a purse and pocketed it.
-
- When he had arrived at this stage of succor which he was administering
- to this dying man, the officer opened his eyes.
-
- "Thanks," he said feebly.
-
- The abruptness of the movements of the man who was manipulating him,
- the freshness of the night, the air which he could inhale freely,
- had roused him from his lethargy.
-
- The prowler made no reply. He raised his head. A sound of footsteps
- was audible in the plain; some patrol was probably approaching.
-
- The officer murmured, for the death agony was still in his voice:--
-
- "Who won the battle?"
-
- "The English," answered the prowler.
-
- The officer went on:--
-
- "Look in my pockets; you will find a watch and a purse. Take them."
-
- It was already done.
-
- The prowler executed the required feint, and said:--
-
- "There is nothing there."
-
- "I have been robbed," said the officer; "I am sorry for that.
- You should have had them."
-
- The steps of the patrol became more and more distinct.
-
- "Some one is coming," said the prowler, with the movement of a man
- who is taking his departure.
-
- The officer raised his arm feebly, and detained him.
-
- "You have saved my life. Who are you?"
-
- The prowler answered rapidly, and in a low voice:--
-
- "Like yourself, I belonged to the French army. I must leave you.
- If they were to catch me, they would shoot me. I have saved your life.
- Now get out of the scrape yourself."
-
- "What is your rank?"
-
- "Sergeant."
-
- "What is your name?"
-
- "Thenardier."
-
- "I shall not forget that name," said the officer; "and do you
- remember mine. My name is Pontmercy."
-
-
-
- BOOK SECOND.--THE SHIP ORION
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- NUMBER 24,601 BECOMES NUMBER 9,430
-
-
- Jean Valjean had been recaptured.
-
- The reader will be grateful to us if we pass rapidly over
- the sad details. We will confine ourselves to transcribing
- two paragraphs published by the journals of that day, a few
- months after the surprising events which had taken place at M. sur M.
-
- These articles are rather summary. It must be remembered, that at
- that epoch the Gazette des Tribunaux was not yet in existence.
-
- We borrow the first from the Drapeau Blanc. It bears the date
- of July 25, 1823.
-
-
- An arrondissement of the Pas de Calais has just been the
- theatre of an event quite out of the ordinary course. A man,
- who was a stranger in the Department, and who bore the name of
- M. Madeleine, had, thanks to the new methods, resuscitated some
- years ago an ancient local industry, the manufacture of jet and of
- black glass trinkets. He had made his fortune in the business,
- and that of the arrondissement as well, we will admit. He had been
- appointed mayor, in recognition of his services. The police discovered
- that M. Madeleine was no other than an ex-convict who had broken
- his ban, condemned in 1796 for theft, and named Jean Valjean.
- Jean Valjean has been recommitted to prison. It appears that previous
- to his arrest he had succeeded in withdrawing from the hands of
- M. Laffitte, a sum of over half a million which he had lodged there,
- and which he had, moreover, and by perfectly legitimate means,
- acquired in his business. No one has been able to discover where Jean
- Valjean has concealed this money since his return to prison at Toulon.
-
-
- The second article, which enters a little more into detail,
- is an extract from the Journal de Paris, of the same date.
- A former convict, who had been liberated, named Jean Valjean,
- has just appeared before the Court of Assizes of the Var,
- under circumstances calculated to attract attention. This wretch
- had succeeded in escaping the vigilance of the police, he had changed
- his name, and had succeeded in getting himself appointed mayor
- of one of our small northern towns; in this town he had established
- a considerable commerce. He has at last been unmasked and arrested,
- thanks to the indefatigable zeal of the public prosecutor.
- He had for his concubine a woman of the town, who died of a shock
- at the moment of his arrest. This scoundrel, who is endowed with
- Herculean strength, found means to escape; but three or four days
- after his flight the police laid their hands on him once more,
- in Paris itself, at the very moment when he was entering one of
- those little vehicles which run between the capital and the village
- of Montfermeil (Seine-et-Oise). He is said to have profited
- by this interval of three or four days of liberty, to withdraw a
- considerable sum deposited by him with one of our leading bankers.
- This sum has been estimated at six or seven hundred thousand francs.
- If the indictment is to be trusted, he has hidden it in some place
- known to himself alone, and it has not been possible to lay hands
- on it. However that may be, the said Jean Valjean has just been
- brought before the Assizes of the Department of the Var as accused
- of highway robbery accompanied with violence, about eight years ago,
- on the person of one of those honest children who, as the patriarch
- of Ferney has said, in immortal verse,
-
-
- ". . . Arrive from Savoy every year,
- And who, with gentle hands, do clear
- Those long canals choked up with soot."
-
-
- This bandit refused to defend himself. It was proved by the
- skilful and eloquent representative of the public prosecutor,
- that the theft was committed in complicity with others, and that
- Jean Valjean was a member of a band of robbers in the south.
- Jean Valjean was pronounced guilty and was condemned to the death
- penalty in consequence. This criminal refused to lodge an appeal.
- The king, in his inexhaustible clemency, has deigned to commute
- his penalty to that of penal servitude for life. Jean Valjean was
- immediately taken to the prison at Toulon.
-
-
- The reader has not forgotten that Jean Valjean had religious
- habits at M. sur M. Some papers, among others the Constitutional,
- presented this commutation as a triumph of the priestly party.
-
- Jean Valjean changed his number in the galleys. He was called 9,430.
-
- However, and we will mention it at once in order that we may not be
- obliged to recur to the subject, the prosperity of M. sur M. vanished
- with M. Madeleine; all that he had foreseen during his night
- of fever and hesitation was realized; lacking him, there actually
- was a soul lacking. After this fall, there took place at M. sur
- M. that egotistical division of great existences which have fallen,
- that fatal dismemberment of flourishing things which is accomplished
- every day, obscurely, in the human community, and which history has
- noted only once, because it occurred after the death of Alexander.
- Lieutenants are crowned kings; superintendents improvise manufacturers
- out of themselves. Envious rivalries arose. M. Madeleine's vast
- workshops were shut; his buildings fell to ruin, his workmen
- were scattered. Some of them quitted the country, others abandoned
- the trade. Thenceforth, everything was done on a small scale,
- instead of on a grand scale; for lucre instead of the general good.
- There was no longer a centre; everywhere there was competition
- and animosity. M. Madeleine had reigned over all and directed all.
- No sooner had he fallen, than each pulled things to himself;
- the spirit of combat succeeded to the spirit of organization,
- bitterness to cordiality, hatred of one another to the benevolence
- of the founder towards all; the threads which M. Madeleine had set
- were tangled and broken, the methods were adulterated, the products
- were debased, confidence was killed; the market diminished,
- for lack of orders; salaries were reduced, the workshops stood still,
- bankruptcy arrived. And then there was nothing more for the poor.
- All had vanished.
-
- The state itself perceived that some one had been crushed somewhere.
- Less than four years after the judgment of the Court of Assizes
- establishing the identity of Jean Valjean and M. Madeleine,
- for the benefit of the galleys, the cost of collecting taxes had
- doubled in the arrondissement of M. sur M.; and M. de Villele called
- attention to the fact in the rostrum, in the month of February, 1827.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-
- IN WHICH THE READER WILL PERUSE TWO VERSES, WHICH ARE OF THE
- DEVIL'S COMPOSITION, POSSIBLY
-
-
- Before proceeding further, it will be to the purpose to narrate
- in some detail, a singular occurrence which took place at about the
- same epoch, in Montfermeil, and which is not lacking in coincidence
- with certain conjectures of the indictment.
-
- There exists in the region of Montfermeil a very ancient superstition,
- which is all the more curious and all the more precious, because a popular
- superstition in the vicinity of Paris is like an aloe in Siberia.
- We are among those who respect everything which is in the nature
- of a rare plant. Here, then, is the superstition of Montfermeil:
- it is thought that the devil, from time immemorial, has selected
- the forest as a hiding-place for his treasures. Goodwives affirm
- that it is no rarity to encounter at nightfall, in secluded nooks
- of the forest, a black man with the air of a carter or a wood-chopper,
- wearing wooden shoes, clad in trousers and a blouse of linen,
- and recognizable by the fact, that, instead of a cap or hat,
- he has two immense horns on his head. This ought, in fact, to render
- him recognizable. This man is habitually engaged in digging a hole.
- There are three ways of profiting by such an encounter. The first is
- to approach the man and speak to him. Then it is seen that the man
- is simply a peasant, that he appears black because it is nightfall;
- that he is not digging any hole whatever, but is cutting grass
- for his cows, and that what had been taken for horns is nothing
- but a dung-fork which he is carrying on his back, and whose teeth,
- thanks to the perspective of evening, seemed to spring from his head.
- The man returns home and dies within the week. The second way is
- to watch him, to wait until he has dug his hole, until he has filled
- it and has gone away; then to run with great speed to the trench,
- to open it once more and to seize the "treasure" which the black
- man has necessarily placed there. In this case one dies within
- the month. Finally, the last method is not to speak to the black man,
- not to look at him, and to flee at the best speed of one's legs.
- One then dies within the year.
-
- As all three methods are attended with their special inconveniences,
- the second, which at all events, presents some advantages,
- among others that of possessing a treasure, if only for a month,
- is the one most generally adopted. So bold men, who are tempted
- by every chance, have quite frequently, as we are assured, opened the
- holes excavated by the black man, and tried to rob the devil.
- The success of the operation appears to be but moderate. At least,
- if the tradition is to be believed, and in particular the two
- enigmatical lines in barbarous Latin, which an evil Norman monk,
- a bit of a sorcerer, named Tryphon has left on this subject.
- This Tryphon is buried at the Abbey of Saint-Georges de Bocherville,
- near Rouen, and toads spawn on his grave.
-
- Accordingly, enormous efforts are made. Such trenches are
- ordinarily extremely deep; a man sweats, digs, toils all night--
- for it must be done at night; he wets his shirt, burns out his candle,
- breaks his mattock, and when he arrives at the bottom of the hole,
- when he lays his hand on the "treasure," what does he find?
- What is the devil's treasure? A sou, sometimes a crown-piece,
- a stone, a skeleton, a bleeding body, sometimes a spectre folded
- in four like a sheet of paper in a portfolio, sometimes nothing.
- This is what Tryphon's verses seem to announce to the indiscreet
- and curious:--
-
- "Fodit, et in fossa thesauros condit opaca,
- As, nummas, lapides, cadaver, simulacra, nihilque."
-
-
- It seems that in our day there is sometimes found a powder-horn
- with bullets, sometimes an old pack of cards greasy and worn,
- which has evidently served the devil. Tryphon does not record
- these two finds, since Tryphon lived in the twelfth century,
- and since the devil does not appear to have had the wit to invent
- powder before Roger Bacon's time, and cards before the time of Charles VI.
-
- Moreover, if one plays at cards, one is sure to lose all that
- one possesses! and as for the powder in the horn, it possesses
- the property of making your gun burst in your face.
-
- Now, a very short time after the epoch when it seemed to the prosecuting
- attorney that the liberated convict Jean Valjean during his flight
- of several days had been prowling around Montfermeil, it was remarked
- in that village that a certain old road-laborer, named Boulatruelle,
- had "peculiar ways" in the forest. People thereabouts thought
- they knew that this Boulatruelle had been in the galleys.
- He was subjected to certain police supervision, and, as he could
- find work nowhere, the administration employed him at reduced
- rates as a road-mender on the cross-road from Gagny to Lagny.
-
- This Boulatruelle was a man who was viewed with disfavor by the
- inhabitants of the district as too respectful, too humble, too prompt
- in removing his cap to every one, and trembling and smiling in the
- presence of the gendarmes,--probably affiliated to robber bands,
- they said; suspected of lying in ambush at verge of copses at nightfall.
- The only thing in his favor was that he was a drunkard.
-
- This is what people thought they had noticed:--
-
- Of late, Boulatruelle had taken to quitting his task of stone-breaking
- and care of the road at a very early hour, and to betaking himself
- to the forest with his pickaxe. He was encountered towards
- evening in the most deserted clearings, in the wildest thickets;
- and he had the appearance of being in search of something,
- and sometimes he was digging holes. The goodwives who passed took
- him at first for Beelzebub; then they recognized Boulatruelle,
- and were not in the least reassured thereby. These encounters seemed
- to cause Boulatruelle a lively displeasure. It was evident that he
- sought to hide, and that there was some mystery in what he was doing.
-
- It was said in the village: "It is clear that the devil has appeared.
- Boulatruelle has seen him, and is on the search. In sooth, he is
- cunning enough to pocket Lucifer's hoard."
-
- The Voltairians added, "Will Boulatruelle catch the devil,
- or will the devil catch Boulatruelle?" The old women made a great
- many signs of the cross.
-
- In the meantime, Boulatruelle's manoeuvres in the forest ceased;
- and he resumed his regular occupation of roadmending; and people
- gossiped of something else.
-
- Some persons, however, were still curious, surmising that in all
- this there was probably no fabulous treasure of the legends,
- but some fine windfall of a more serious and palpable sort than
- the devil's bank-bills, and that the road-mender had half discovered
- the secret. The most "puzzled" were the school-master and Thenardier,
- the proprietor of the tavern, who was everybody's friend,
- and had not disdained to ally himself with Boulatruelle.
-
- "He has been in the galleys," said Thenardier. "Eh! Good God!
- no one knows who has been there or will be there."
-
- One evening the schoolmaster affirmed that in former times the law
- would have instituted an inquiry as to what Boulatruelle did in
- the forest, and that the latter would have been forced to speak,
- and that he would have been put to the torture in case of need,
- and that Boulatruelle would not have resisted the water test,
- for example. "Let us put him to the wine test," said Thenardier.
-
- They made an effort, and got the old road-mender to drinking.
- Boulatruelle drank an enormous amount, but said very little.
- He combined with admirable art, and in masterly proportions,
- the thirst of a gormandizer with the discretion of a judge.
- Nevertheless, by dint of returning to the charge and of comparing
- and putting together the few obscure words which he did allow to
- escape him, this is what Thenardier and the schoolmaster imagined
- that they had made out:--
-
- One morning, when Boulatruelle was on his way to his work, at daybreak,
- he had been surprised to see, at a nook of the forest in the underbrush,
- a shovel and a pickaxe, concealed, as one might say.
-
- However, he might have supposed that they were probably the shovel
- and pick of Father Six-Fours, the water-carrier, and would have
- thought no more about it. But, on the evening of that day, he saw,
- without being seen himself, as he was hidden by a large tree,
- "a person who did not belong in those parts, and whom he, Boulatruelle,
- knew well," directing his steps towards the densest part of
- the wood. Translation by Thenardier: A comrade of the galleys.
- Boulatruelle obstinately refused to reveal his name. This person
- carried a package--something square, like a large box or a small trunk.
- Surprise on the part of Boulatruelle. However, it was only
- after the expiration of seven or eight minutes that the idea of
- following that "person" had occurred to him. But it was too late;
- the person was already in the thicket, night had descended,
- and Boulatruelle had not been able to catch up with him. Then he
- had adopted the course of watching for him at the edge of the woods.
- "It was moonlight." Two or three hours later, Boulatruelle had seen
- this person emerge from the brushwood, carrying no longer the coffer,
- but a shovel and pick. Boulatruelle had allowed the person to pass,
- and had not dreamed of accosting him, because he said to himself
- that the other man was three times as strong as he was, and armed
- with a pickaxe, and that he would probably knock him over the head
- on recognizing him, and on perceiving that he was recognized.
- Touching effusion of two old comrades on meeting again. But the
- shovel and pick had served as a ray of light to Boulatruelle; he had
- hastened to the thicket in the morning, and had found neither shovel
- nor pick. From this he had drawn the inference that this person,
- once in the forest, had dug a hole with his pick, buried the coffer,
- and reclosed the hole with his shovel. Now, the coffer was too small
- to contain a body; therefore it contained money. Hence his researches.
- Boulatruelle had explored, sounded, searched the entire forest
- and the thicket, and had dug wherever the earth appeared to him
- to have been recently turned up. In vain.
-
- He had "ferreted out" nothing. No one in Montfermeil thought
- any more about it. There were only a few brave gossips, who said,
- "You may be certain that the mender on the Gagny road did not take
- all that trouble for nothing; he was sure that the devil had come."
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- THE ANKLE-CHAIN MUST HAVE UNDERGONE A CERTAIN PREPARATORY MANIPULATION
- TO BE THUS BROKEN WITH A BLOW FROM A HAMMER
-
-
- Towards the end of October, in that same year, 1823, the inhabitants
- of Toulon beheld the entry into their port, after heavy weather,
- and for the purpose of repairing some damages, of the ship Orion,
- which was employed later at Brest as a school-ship, and which then
- formed a part of the Mediterranean squadron.
-
- This vessel, battered as it was,--for the sea had handled it roughly,--
- produced a fine effect as it entered the roads. It flew some
- colors which procured for it the regulation salute of eleven guns,
- which it returned, shot for shot; total, twenty-two. It has been
- calculated that what with salvos, royal and military politenesses,
- courteous exchanges of uproar, signals of etiquette, formalities of
- roadsteads and citadels, sunrises and sunsets, saluted every day
- by all fortresses and all ships of war, openings and closings
- of ports, etc., the civilized world, discharged all over the earth,
- in the course of four and twenty hours, one hundred and fifty
- thousand useless shots. At six francs the shot, that comes to nine
- hundred thousand francs a day, three hundred millions a year,
- which vanish in smoke. This is a mere detail. All this time the
- poor were dying of hunger.
-
- The year 1823 was what the Restoration called "the epoch of the
- Spanish war."
-
- This war contained many events in one, and a quantity of peculiarities.
- A grand family affair for the house of Bourbon; the branch of France
- succoring and protecting the branch of Madrid, that is to say,
- performing an act devolving on the elder; an apparent return to our
- national traditions, complicated by servitude and by subjection to the
- cabinets of the North; M. le Duc d'Angouleme, surnamed by the liberal
- sheets the hero of Andujar, compressing in a triumphal attitude
- that was somewhat contradicted by his peaceable air, the ancient
- and very powerful terrorism of the Holy Office at variance with the
- chimerical terrorism of the liberals; the sansculottes resuscitated,
- to the great terror of dowagers, under the name of descamisados;
- monarchy opposing an obstacle to progress described as anarchy;
- the theories of '89 roughly interrupted in the sap; a European halt,
- called to the French idea, which was making the tour of the world;
- beside the son of France as generalissimo, the Prince de Carignan,
- afterwards Charles Albert, enrolling himself in that crusade of kings
- against people as a volunteer, with grenadier epaulets of red worsted;
- the soldiers of the Empire setting out on a fresh campaign, but aged,
- saddened, after eight years of repose, and under the white cockade;
- the tricolored standard waved abroad by a heroic handful of Frenchmen,
- as the white standard had been thirty years earlier at Coblentz;
- monks mingled with our troops; the spirit of liberty and of novelty
- brought to its senses by bayonets; principles slaughtered by cannonades;
- France undoing by her arms that which she had done by her mind;
- in addition to this, hostile leaders sold, soldiers hesitating,
- cities besieged by millions; no military perils, and yet possible
- explosions, as in every mine which is surprised and invaded;
- but little bloodshed, little honor won, shame for some, glory for no one.
- Such was this war, made by the princes descended from Louis XIV.,
- and conducted by generals who had been under Napoleon. Its sad fate
- was to recall neither the grand war nor grand politics.
-
- Some feats of arms were serious; the taking of the Trocadero,
- among others, was a fine military action; but after all, we repeat,
- the trumpets of this war give back a cracked sound, the whole
- effect was suspicious; history approves of France for making a
- difficulty about accepting this false triumph. It seemed evident
- that certain Spanish officers charged with resistance yielded
- too easily; the idea of corruption was connected with the victory;
- it appears as though generals and not battles had been won,
- and the conquering soldier returned humiliated. A debasing war,
- in short, in which the Bank of France could be read in the folds
- of the flag.
-
- Soldiers of the war of 1808, on whom Saragossa had fallen in
- formidable ruin, frowned in 1823 at the easy surrender of citadels,
- and began to regret Palafox. It is the nature of France to prefer
- to have Rostopchine rather than Ballesteros in front of her.
-
- From a still more serious point of view, and one which it is also
- proper to insist upon here, this war, which wounded the military
- spirit of France, enraged the democratic spirit. It was an enterprise
- of inthralment. In that campaign, the object of the French soldier,
- the son of democracy, was the conquest of a yoke for others.
- A hideous contradiction. France is made to arouse the soul of nations,
- not to stifle it. All the revolutions of Europe since 1792 are
- the French Revolution: liberty darts rays from France. That is a
- solar fact. Blind is he who will not see! It was Bonaparte who said it.
-
- The war of 1823, an outrage on the generous Spanish nation,
- was then, at the same time, an outrage on the French Revolution.
- It was France who committed this monstrous violence; by foul means,
- for, with the exception of wars of liberation, everything that armies
- do is by foul means. The words passive obedience indicate this.
- An army is a strange masterpiece of combination where force results
- from an enormous sum of impotence. Thus is war, made by humanity
- against humanity, despite humanity, explained.
-
- As for the Bourbons, the war of 1823 was fatal to them. They took it
- for a success. They did not perceive the danger that lies in having
- an idea slain to order. They went astray, in their innocence,
- to such a degree that they introduced the immense enfeeblement of a
- crime into their establishment as an element of strength. The spirit
- of the ambush entered into their politics. 1830 had its germ in 1823.
- The Spanish campaign became in their counsels an argument for force
- and for adventures by right Divine. France, having re-established
- elrey netto in Spain, might well have re-established the absolute king
- at home. They fell into the alarming error of taking the obedience
- of the soldier for the consent of the nation. Such confidence
- is the ruin of thrones. It is not permitted to fall asleep,
- either in the shadow of a machineel tree, nor in the shadow of an army.
-
- Let us return to the ship Orion.
-
- During the operations of the army commanded by the prince generalissimo,
- a squadron had been cruising in the Mediterranean. We have just
- stated that the Orion belonged to this fleet, and that accidents
- of the sea had brought it into port at Toulon.
-
- The presence of a vessel of war in a port has something about it
- which attracts and engages a crowd. It is because it is great,
- and the crowd loves what is great.
-
- A ship of the line is one of the most magnificent combinations
- of the genius of man with the powers of nature.
-
- A ship of the line is composed, at the same time, of the heaviest
- and the lightest of possible matter, for it deals at one and the same
- time with three forms of substance,--solid, liquid, and fluid,--
- and it must do battle with all three. It has eleven claws of
- iron with which to seize the granite on the bottom of the sea,
- and more wings and more antennae than winged insects, to catch
- the wind in the clouds. Its breath pours out through its hundred
- and twenty cannons as through enormous trumpets, and replies
- proudly to the thunder. The ocean seeks to lead it astray in the
- alarming sameness of its billows, but the vessel has its soul,
- its compass, which counsels it and always shows it the north.
- In the blackest nights, its lanterns supply the place of the stars.
- Thus, against the wind, it has its cordage and its canvas;
- against the water, wood; against the rocks, its iron, brass, and lead;
- against the shadows, its light; against immensity, a needle.
-
- If one wishes to form an idea of all those gigantic proportions which,
- taken as a whole, constitute the ship of the line, one has only to
- enter one of the six-story covered construction stocks, in the ports
- of Brest or Toulon. The vessels in process of construction are
- under a bell-glass there, as it were. This colossal beam is a yard;
- that great column of wood which stretches out on the earth as far
- as the eye can reach is the main-mast. Taking it from its root
- in the stocks to its tip in the clouds, it is sixty fathoms long,
- and its diameter at its base is three feet. The English main-mast rises
- to a height of two hundred and seventeen feet above the water-line.
- The navy of our fathers employed cables, ours employs chains.
- The simple pile of chains on a ship of a hundred guns is four feet high,
- twenty feet in breadth, and eight feet in depth. And how much
- wood is required to make this ship? Three thousand cubic metres.
- It is a floating forest.
-
- And moreover, let this be borne in mind, it is only a question
- here of the military vessel of forty years ago, of the simple
- sailing-vessel; steam, then in its infancy, has since added
- new miracles to that prodigy which is called a war vessel.
- At the present time, for example, the mixed vessel with a screw
- is a surprising machine, propelled by three thousand square
- metres of canvas and by an engine of two thousand five hundred horse-power.
-
- Not to mention these new marvels, the ancient vessel of Christopher
- Columbus and of De Ruyter is one of the masterpieces of man.
- It is as inexhaustible in force as is the Infinite in gales;
- it stores up the wind in its sails, it is precise in the immense
- vagueness of the billows, it floats, and it reigns.
-
- There comes an hour, nevertheless, when the gale breaks that sixty-foot
- yard like a straw, when the wind bends that mast four hundred feet tall,
- when that anchor, which weighs tens of thousands, is twisted in the
- jaws of the waves like a fisherman's hook in the jaws of a pike,
- when those monstrous cannons utter plaintive and futile roars,
- which the hurricane bears forth into the void and into night,
- when all that power and all that majesty are engulfed in a power
- and majesty which are superior.
-
- Every time that immense force is displayed to culminate
- in an immense feebleness it affords men food for thought,
- Hence in the ports curious people abound around these marvellous
- machines of war and of navigation, without being able to explain
- perfectly to themselves why. Every day, accordingly, from morning
- until night, the quays, sluices, and the jetties of the port
- of Toulon were covered with a multitude of idlers and loungers,
- as they say in Paris, whose business consisted in staring at the Orion.
-
- The Orion was a ship that had been ailing for a long time;
- in the course of its previous cruises thick layers of barnacles
- had collected on its keel to such a degree as to deprive it of half
- its speed; it had gone into the dry dock the year before this,
- in order to have the barnacles scraped off, then it had put to
- sea again; but this cleaning had affected the bolts of the keel:
- in the neighborhood of the Balearic Isles the sides had been
- strained and had opened; and, as the plating in those days was not
- of sheet iron, the vessel had sprung a leak. A violent equinoctial
- gale had come up, which had first staved in a grating and a porthole
- on the larboard side, and damaged the foretop-gallant-shrouds;
- in consequence of these injuries, the Orion had run back to Toulon.
-
- It anchored near the Arsenal; it was fully equipped, and repairs
- were begun. The hull had received no damage on the starboard,
- but some of the planks had been unnailed here and there,
- according to custom, to permit of air entering the hold.
-
- One morning the crowd which was gazing at it witnessed an accident.
-
- The crew was busy bending the sails; the topman, who had to
- take the upper corner of the main-top-sail on the starboard,
- lost his balance; he was seen to waver; the multitude thronging
- the Arsenal quay uttered a cry; the man's head overbalanced his body;
- the man fell around the yard, with his hands outstretched towards
- the abyss; on his way he seized the footrope, first with one hand,
- then with the other, and remained hanging from it: the sea lay
- below him at a dizzy depth; the shock of his fall had imparted
- to the foot-rope a violent swinging motion; the man swayed back
- and forth at the end of that rope, like a stone in a sling.
-
- It was incurring a frightful risk to go to his assistance; not one of
- the sailors, all fishermen of the coast, recently levied for the service,
- dared to attempt it. In the meantime, the unfortunate topman was
- losing his strength; his anguish could not be discerned on his face,
- but his exhaustion was visible in every limb; his arms were contracted
- in horrible twitchings; every effort which he made to re-ascend served
- but to augment the oscillations of the foot-rope; he did not shout,
- for fear of exhausting his strength. All were awaiting the minute
- when he should release his hold on the rope, and, from instant
- to instant, heads were turned aside that his fall might not be seen.
- There are moments when a bit of rope, a pole, the branch of a tree,
- is life itself, and it is a terrible thing to see a living being
- detach himself from it and fall like a ripe fruit.
-
- All at once a man was seen climbing into the rigging with the agility
- of a tiger-cat; this man was dressed in red; he was a convict;
- he wore a green cap; he was a life convict. On arriving on a level
- with the top, a gust of wind carried away his cap, and allowed
- a perfectly white head to be seen: he was not a young man.
-
- A convict employed on board with a detachment from the galleys had,
- in fact, at the very first instant, hastened to the officer of
- the watch, and, in the midst of the consternation and the hesitation
- of the crew, while all the sailors were trembling and drawing back,
- he had asked the officer's permission to risk his life to save
- the topman; at an affirmative sign from the officer he had
- broken the chain riveted to his ankle with one blow of a hammer,
- then he had caught up a rope, and had dashed into the rigging:
- no one noticed, at the instant, with what ease that chain had
- been broken; it was only later on that the incident was recalled.
-
- In a twinkling he was on the yard; he paused for a few seconds
- and appeared to be measuring it with his eye; these seconds,
- during which the breeze swayed the topman at the extremity
- of a thread, seemed centuries to those who were looking on.
- At last, the convict raised his eyes to heaven and advanced a step:
- the crowd drew a long breath. He was seen to run out along the yard:
- on arriving at the point, he fastened the rope which he had brought
- to it, and allowed the other end to hang down, then he began
- to descend the rope, hand over hand, and then,--and the anguish
- was indescribable,--instead of one man suspended over the gulf,
- there were two.
-
- One would have said it was a spider coming to seize a fly,
- only here the spider brought life, not death. Ten thousand glances
- were fastened on this group; not a cry, not a word; the same tremor
- contracted every brow; all mouths held their breath as though they
- feared to add the slightest puff to the wind which was swaying
- the two unfortunate men.
-
- In the meantime, the convict had succeeded in lowering himself
- to a position near the sailor. It was high time; one minute more,
- and the exhausted and despairing man would have allowed himself
- to fall into the abyss. The convict had moored him securely with
- the cord to which he clung with one hand, while he was working
- with the other. At last, he was seen to climb back on the yard,
- and to drag the sailor up after him; he held him there a moment
- to allow him to recover his strength, then he grasped him in his
- arms and carried him, walking on the yard himself to the cap,
- and from there to the main-top, where he left him in the hands
- of his comrades.
-
- At that moment the crowd broke into applause: old convict-sergeants
- among them wept, and women embraced each other on the quay,
- and all voices were heard to cry with a sort of tender rage,
- "Pardon for that man!"
-
- He, in the meantime, had immediately begun to make his descent
- to rejoin his detachment. In order to reach them the more speedily,
- he dropped into the rigging, and ran along one of the lower yards;
- all eyes were following him. At a certain moment fear assailed them;
- whether it was that he was fatigued, or that his head turned,
- they thought they saw him hesitate and stagger. All at once the crowd
- uttered a loud shout: the convict had fallen into the sea.
-
- The fall was perilous. The frigate Algesiras was anchored alongside
- the Orion, and the poor convict had fallen between the two vessels:
- it was to be feared that he would slip under one or the other of them.
- Four men flung themselves hastily into a boat; the crowd cheered
- them on; anxiety again took possession of all souls; the man had not
- risen to the surface; he had disappeared in the sea without leaving
- a ripple, as though he had fallen into a cask of oil: they sounded,
- they dived. In vain. The search was continued until the evening:
- they did not even find the body.
-
- On the following day the Toulon newspaper printed these lines:--
-
- "Nov. 17, 1823. Yesterday, a convict belonging to the detachment on
- board of the Orion, on his return from rendering assistance to a sailor,
- fell into the sea and was drowned. The body has not yet been found; it is
- supposed that it is entangled among the piles of the Arsenal point: this
- man was committed under the number 9,430, and his name was Jean Valjean."
-
-
-
- BOOK THIRD.--ACCOMPLISHMENT OF THE PROMISE MADE TO THE DEAD WOMAN
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- THE WATER QUESTION AT MONTFERMEIL
-
-
- Montfermeil is situated between Livry and Chelles, on the southern edge
- of that lofty table-land which separates the Ourcq from the Marne.
- At the present day it is a tolerably large town, ornamented all the year
- through with plaster villas, and on Sundays with beaming bourgeois.
- In 1823 there were at Montfermeil neither so many white houses nor
- so many well-satisfied citizens: it was only a village in the forest.
- Some pleasure-houses of the last century were to be met with there,
- to be sure, which were recognizable by their grand air, their balconies
- in twisted iron, and their long windows, whose tiny panes cast all
- sorts of varying shades of green on the white of the closed shutters;
- but Montfermeil was none the less a village. Retired cloth-merchants
- and rusticating attorneys had not discovered it as yet; it was a
- peaceful and charming place, which was not on the road to anywhere:
- there people lived, and cheaply, that peasant rustic life which is
- so bounteous and so easy; only, water was rare there, on account
- of the elevation of the plateau.
-
- It was necessary to fetch it from a considerable distance;
- the end of the village towards Gagny drew its water from the
- magnificent ponds which exist in the woods there. The other end,
- which surrounds the church and which lies in the direction of Chelles,
- found drinking-water only at a little spring half-way down the slope,
- near the road to Chelles, about a quarter of an hour from Montfermeil.
-
- Thus each household found it hard work to keep supplied with water.
- The large houses, the aristocracy, of which the Thenardier tavern
- formed a part, paid half a farthing a bucketful to a man who made a
- business of it, and who earned about eight sous a day in his enterprise
- of supplying Montfermeil with water; but this good man only worked
- until seven o'clock in the evening in summer, and five in winter;
- and night once come and the shutters on the ground floor once closed,
- he who had no water to drink went to fetch it for himself or did
- without it.
-
- This constituted the terror of the poor creature whom the reader
- has probably not forgotten,--little Cosette. It will be remembered
- that Cosette was useful to the Thenardiers in two ways:
- they made the mother pay them, and they made the child serve them.
- So when the mother ceased to pay altogether, the reason for which we
- have read in preceding chapters, the Thenardiers kept Cosette.
- She took the place of a servant in their house. In this capacity she
- it was who ran to fetch water when it was required. So the child,
- who was greatly terrified at the idea of going to the spring at night,
- took great care that water should never be lacking in the house.
-
- Christmas of the year 1823 was particularly brilliant at Montfermeil.
- The beginning of the winter had been mild; there had been neither snow
- nor frost up to that time. Some mountebanks from Paris had obtained
- permission of the mayor to erect their booths in the principal street
- of the village, and a band of itinerant merchants, under protection
- of the same tolerance, had constructed their stalls on the Church Square,
- and even extended them into Boulanger Alley, where, as the reader
- will perhaps remember, the Thenardiers' hostelry was situated.
- These people filled the inns and drinking-shops, and communicated
- to that tranquil little district a noisy and joyous life. In order
- to play the part of a faithful historian, we ought even to add that,
- among the curiosities displayed in the square, there was a menagerie,
- in which frightful clowns, clad in rags and coming no one knew whence,
- exhibited to the peasants of Montfermeil in 1823 one of those
- horrible Brazilian vultures, such as our Royal Museum did not
- possess until 1845, and which have a tricolored cockade for an eye.
- I believe that naturalists call this bird Caracara Polyborus;
- it belongs to the order of the Apicides, and to the family of
- the vultures. Some good old Bonapartist soldiers, who had retired
- to the village, went to see this creature with great devotion.
- The mountebanks gave out that the tricolored cockade was a unique
- phenomenon made by God expressly for their menagerie.
-
- On Christmas eve itself, a number of men, carters, and peddlers,
- were seated at table, drinking and smoking around four or five
- candles in the public room of Thenardier's hostelry. This room
- resembled all drinking-shop rooms,--tables, pewter jugs, bottles,
- drinkers, smokers; but little light and a great deal of noise.
- The date of the year 1823 was indicated, nevertheless, by two
- objects which were then fashionable in the bourgeois class: to wit,
- a kaleidoscope and a lamp of ribbed tin. The female Thenardier was
- attending to the supper, which was roasting in front of a clear fire;
- her husband was drinking with his customers and talking politics.
-
- Besides political conversations which had for their principal subjects
- the Spanish war and M. le Duc d'Angouleme, strictly local parentheses,
- like the following, were audible amid the uproar:--
-
- "About Nanterre and Suresnes the vines have flourished greatly.
- When ten pieces were reckoned on there have been twelve.
- They have yielded a great deal of juice under the press."
- "But the grapes cannot be ripe?" "In those parts the grapes
- should not be ripe; the wine turns oily as soon as spring comes."
- "Then it is very thin wine?" "There are wines poorer even than these.
- The grapes must be gathered while green." Etc.
-
- Or a miller would call out:--
-
- "Are we responsible for what is in the sacks? We find in them
- a quantity of small seed which we cannot sift out, and which we
- are obliged to send through the mill-stones; there are tares,
- fennel, vetches, hempseed, fox-tail, and a host of other weeds,
- not to mention pebbles, which abound in certain wheat, especially in
- Breton wheat. I am not fond of grinding Breton wheat, any more than
- long-sawyers like to saw beams with nails in them. You can judge
- of the bad dust that makes in grinding. And then people complain
- of the flour. They are in the wrong. The flour is no fault of ours."
-
- In a space between two windows a mower, who was seated at table
- with a landed proprietor who was fixing on a price for some meadow
- work to be performed in the spring, was saying:--
-
- "It does no harm to have the grass wet. It cuts better.
- Dew is a good thing, sir. It makes no difference with that grass.
- Your grass is young and very hard to cut still. It's terribly tender.
- It yields before the iron." Etc.
-
- Cosette was in her usual place, seated on the cross-bar of the kitchen
- table near the chimney. She was in rags; her bare feet were thrust
- into wooden shoes, and by the firelight she was engaged in knitting
- woollen stockings destined for the young Thenardiers. A very young
- kitten was playing about among the chairs. Laughter and chatter were
- audible in the adjoining room, from two fresh children's voices:
- it was Eponine and Azelma.
-
- In the chimney-corner a cat-o'-nine-tails was hanging on a nail.
-
- At intervals the cry of a very young child, which was somewhere
- in the house, rang through the noise of the dram-shop. It was
- a little boy who had been born to the Thenardiers during one
- of the preceding winters,--"she did not know why," she said,
- "the result of the cold,"--and who was a little more than three
- years old. The mother had nursed him, but she did not love him.
- When the persistent clamor of the brat became too annoying,
- "Your son is squalling," Thenardier would say; "do go and see
- what he wants." "Bah!" the mother would reply, "he bothers me."
- And the neglected child continued to shriek in the dark.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- TWO COMPLETE PORTRAITS
-
-
- So far in this book the Thenardiers have been viewed only in profile;
- the moment has arrived for making the circuit of this couple,
- and considering it under all its aspects.
-
- Thenardier had just passed his fiftieth birthday; Madame Thenardier
- was approaching her forties, which is equivalent to fifty in a woman;
- so that there existed a balance of age between husband and wife.
-
- Our readers have possibly preserved some recollection of this
- Thenardier woman, ever since her first appearance,--tall, blond,
- red, fat, angular, square, enormous, and agile; she belonged, as we
- have said, to the race of those colossal wild women, who contort
- themselves at fairs with paving-stones hanging from their hair.
- She did everything about the house,--made the beds, did the washing,
- the cooking, and everything else. Cosette was her only servant;
- a mouse in the service of an elephant. Everything trembled at
- the sound of her voice,--window panes, furniture, and people.
- Her big face, dotted with red blotches, presented the appearance
- of a skimmer. She had a beard. She was an ideal market-porter
- dressed in woman's clothes. She swore splendidly; she boasted
- of being able to crack a nut with one blow of her fist. Except for
- the romances which she had read, and which made the affected lady
- peep through the ogress at times, in a very queer way, the idea would
- never have occurred to any one to say of her, "That is a woman."
- This Thenardier female was like the product of a wench engrafted
- on a fishwife. When one heard her speak, one said, "That is
- a gendarme"; when one saw her drink, one said, "That is a carter";
- when one saw her handle Cosette, one said, "That is the hangman."
- One of her teeth projected when her face was in repose.
-
- Thenardier was a small, thin, pale, angular, bony, feeble man, who had
- a sickly air and who was wonderfully healthy. His cunning began here;
- he smiled habitually, by way of precaution, and was almost polite
- to everybody, even to the beggar to whom he refused half a farthing.
- He had the glance of a pole-cat and the bearing of a man of letters.
- He greatly resembled the portraits of the Abbe Delille.
- His coquetry consisted in drinking with the carters. No one had
- ever succeeded in rendering him drunk. He smoked a big pipe.
- He wore a blouse, and under his blouse an old black coat. He made
- pretensions to literature and to materialism. There were certain
- names which he often pronounced to support whatever things he
- might be saying,--Voltaire, Raynal, Parny, and, singularly enough,
- Saint Augustine. He declared that he had "a system." In addition,
- he was a great swindler. A filousophe [philosophe], a scientific thief.
- The species does exist. It will be remembered that he pretended
- to have served in the army; he was in the habit of relating
- with exuberance, how, being a sergeant in the 6th or the 9th light
- something or other, at Waterloo, he had alone, and in the presence
- of a squadron of death-dealing hussars, covered with his body and saved
- from death, in the midst of the grape-shot, "a general, who had been
- dangerously wounded." Thence arose for his wall the flaring sign,
- and for his inn the name which it bore in the neighborhood, of "the
- cabaret of the Sergeant of Waterloo." He was a liberal, a classic,
- 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 simply studied in Holland for an inn-keeper.
- This rascal of composite order was, in all probability,
- some Fleming from Lille, in Flanders, a Frenchman in Paris,
- a Belgian at Brussels, being comfortably astride of both frontiers.
- As for his prowess at Waterloo, the reader is already acquainted
- with that. It will be perceived that he exaggerated it a trifle.
- Ebb and flow, wandering, adventure, was the leven of his existence;
- a tattered conscience entails a fragmentary life, and, apparently at
- the stormy epoch of June 18, 1815, Thenardier belonged to that
- variety of marauding sutlers of which we have spoken, beating about
- the country, selling to some, stealing from others, and travelling
- like a family man, with wife and children, in a rickety cart,
- in the rear of troops on the march, with an instinct for always
- attaching himself to the victorious army. This campaign ended,
- and having, as he said, "some quibus," he had come to Montfermeil
- and set up an inn there.
-
- This quibus, composed of purses and watches, of gold rings and
- silver crosses, gathered in harvest-time in furrows sown with corpses,
- did not amount to a large total, and did not carry this sutler
- turned eating-house-keeper very far.
-
- Thenardier had that peculiar rectilinear something about his
- gestures which, accompanied by an oath, recalls the barracks,
- and by a sign of the cross, the seminary. He was a fine talker.
- He allowed it to be thought that he was an educated man. Nevertheless,
- the schoolmaster had noticed that he pronounced improperly.[12]
-
-
- [12] Literally "made cuirs"; i. e., pronounced a t or an s at
- the end of words where the opposite letter should occur, or used
- either one of them where neither exists.
-
-
- He composed the travellers' tariff card in a superior manner,
- but practised eyes sometimes spied out orthographical errors in it.
- Thenardier was cunning, greedy, slothful, and clever. He did not
- disdain his servants, which caused his wife to dispense with them.
- This giantess was jealous. It seemed to her that that thin and yellow
- little man must be an object coveted by all.
-
- Thenardier, who was, above all, an astute and well-balanced man,
- was a scamp of a temperate sort. This is the worst species;
- hypocrisy enters into it.
-
- It is not that Thenardier was not, on occasion, capable of wrath
- to quite the same degree as his wife; but this was very rare, and at
- such times, since he was enraged with the human race in general,
- as he bore within him a deep furnace of hatred. And since he
- was one of those people who are continually avenging their wrongs,
- who accuse everything that passes before them of everything
- which has befallen them, and who are always ready to cast upon
- the first person who comes to hand, as a legitimate grievance,
- the sum total of the deceptions, the bankruptcies, and the
- calamities of their lives,--when all this leaven was stirred up
- in him and boiled forth from his mouth and eyes, he was terrible.
- Woe to the person who came under his wrath at such a time!
-
- In addition to his other qualities, Thenardier was attentive
- and penetrating, silent or talkative, according to circumstances,
- and always highly intelligent. He had something of the look
- of sailors, who are accustomed to screw up their eyes to gaze
- through marine glasses. Thenardier was a statesman.
-
- Every new-comer who entered the tavern said, on catching sight
- of Madame Thenardier, "There is the master of the house."
- A mistake. She was not even the mistress. The husband was
- both master and mistress. She worked; he created. He directed
- everything by a sort of invisible and constant magnetic action.
- A word was sufficient for him, sometimes a sign; the mastodon obeyed.
- Thenardier was a sort of special and sovereign being in Madame
- Thenardier's eyes, though she did not thoroughly realize it.
- She was possessed of virtues after her own kind; if she had ever had
- a disagreement as to any detail with "Monsieur Thenardier,"--which was
- an inadmissible hypothesis, by the way,--she would not have blamed
- her husband in public on any subject whatever. She would never have
- committed "before strangers" that mistake so often committed by women,
- and which is called in parliamentary language, "exposing the crown."
- Although their concord had only evil as its result, there was
- contemplation in Madame Thenardier's submission to her husband.
- That mountain of noise and of flesh moved under the little finger
- of that frail despot. Viewed on its dwarfed and grotesque side,
- this was that grand and universal thing, the adoration of mind
- by matter; for certain ugly features have a cause in the very depths
- of eternal beauty. There was an unknown quantity about Thenardier;
- hence the absolute empire of the man over that woman. At certain
- moments she beheld him like a lighted candle; at others she felt him
- like a claw.
-
- This woman was a formidable creature who loved no one except
- her children, and who did not fear any one except her husband.
- She was a mother because she was mammiferous. But her maternity
- stopped short with her daughters, and, as we shall see, did not extend
- to boys. The man had but one thought,--how to enrich himself.
-
- He did not succeed in this. A theatre worthy of this great talent
- was lacking. Thenardier was ruining himself at Montfermeil,
- if ruin is possible to zero; in Switzerland or in the Pyrenees this
- penniless scamp would have become a millionaire; but an inn-keeper
- must browse where fate has hitched him.
-
- It will be understood that the word inn-keeper is here employed
- in a restricted sense, and does not extend to an entire class.
-
- In this same year, 1823, Thenardier was burdened with about fifteen
- hundred francs' worth of petty debts, and this rendered him anxious.
-
- Whatever may have been the obstinate injustice of destiny in
- this case, Thenardier was one of those men who understand best,
- with the most profundity and in the most modern fashion, that thing
- which is a virtue among barbarous peoples and an object of
- merchandise among civilized peoples,--hospitality. Besides, he was
- an admirable poacher, and quoted for his skill in shooting. He had
- a certain cold and tranquil laugh, which was particularly dangerous.
-
- His theories as a landlord sometimes burst forth in lightning flashes.
- He had professional aphorisms, which he inserted into his wife's mind.
- "The duty of the inn-keeper," he said to her one day, violently,
- and in a low voice, "is to sell to the first comer, stews, repose,
- light, fire, dirty sheets, a servant, lice, and a smile; to stop
- passers-by, to empty small purses, and to honestly lighten heavy ones;
- to shelter travelling families respectfully: to shave the man,
- to pluck the woman, to pick the child clean; to quote the window open,
- the window shut, the chimney-corner, the arm-chair, the chair,
- the ottoman, the stool, the feather-bed, the mattress and the
- truss of straw; to know how much the shadow uses up the mirror,
- and to put a price on it; and, by five hundred thousand devils,
- to make the traveller pay for everything, even for the flies
- which his dog eats!"
-
- This man and this woman were ruse and rage wedded--a hideous
- and terrible team.
-
- While the husband pondered and combined, Madame Thenardier thought
- not of absent creditors, took no heed of yesterday nor of to-morrow,
- and lived in a fit of anger, all in a minute.
-
- Such were these two beings. Cosette was between them, subjected to
- their double pressure, like a creature who is at the same time being
- ground up in a mill and pulled to pieces with pincers. The man
- and the woman each had a different method: Cosette was overwhelmed
- with blows--this was the woman's; she went barefooted in winter--
- that was the man's doing.
-
- Cosette ran up stairs and down, washed, swept, rubbed, dusted, ran,
- fluttered about, panted, moved heavy articles, and weak as she was,
- did the coarse work. There was no mercy for her; a fierce mistress
- and venomous master. The Thenardier hostelry was like a spider's web,
- in which Cosette had been caught, and where she lay trembling.
- The ideal of oppression was realized by this sinister household.
- It was something like the fly serving the spiders.
-
- The poor child passively held her peace.
-
- What takes place within these souls when they have but just
- quitted God, find themselves thus, at the very dawn of life,
- very small and in the midst of men all naked!
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- MEN MUST HAVE WINE, AND HORSES MUST HAVE WATER
-
-
- Four new travellers had arrived.
-
- Cosette was meditating sadly; for, although she was only eight years old,
- she had already suffered so much that she reflected with the lugubrious
- air of an old woman. Her eye was black in consequence of a blow
- from Madame Thenardier's fist, which caused the latter to remark
- from time to time, "How ugly she is with her fist-blow on her eye!"
-
- Cosette was thinking that it was dark, very dark, that the pitchers
- and caraffes in the chambers of the travellers who had arrived must
- have been filled and that there was no more water in the cistern.
-
- She was somewhat reassured because no one in the Thenardier establishment
- drank much water. Thirsty people were never lacking there;
- but their thirst was of the sort which applies to the jug rather
- than to the pitcher. Any one who had asked for a glass of water
- among all those glasses of wine would have appeared a savage to
- all these men. But there came a moment when the child trembled;
- Madame Thenardier raised the cover of a stew-pan which was boiling
- on the stove, then seized a glass and briskly approached the cistern.
- She turned the faucet; the child had raised her head and was following
- all the woman's movements. A thin stream of water trickled from
- the faucet, and half filled the glass. "Well," said she, "there is
- no more water!" A momentary silence ensued. The child did not breathe.
-
- "Bah!" resumed Madame Thenardier, examining the half-filled glass,
- "this will be enough."
-
- Cosette applied herself to her work once more, but for a quarter
- of an hour she felt her heart leaping in her bosom like a big
- snow-flake.
-
- She counted the minutes that passed in this manner, and wished it
- were the next morning.
-
- From time to time one of the drinkers looked into the street,
- and exclaimed, "It's as black as an oven!" or, "One must needs
- be a cat to go about the streets without a lantern at this hour!"
- And Cosette trembled.
-
- All at once one of the pedlers who lodged in the hostelry entered,
- and said in a harsh voice:--
-
- "My horse has not been watered."
-
- "Yes, it has," said Madame Thenardier.
-
- "I tell you that it has not," retorted the pedler.
-
- Cosette had emerged from under the table.
-
- "Oh, yes, sir!" said she, "the horse has had a drink; he drank
- out of a bucket, a whole bucketful, and it was I who took the water
- to him, and I spoke to him."
-
- It was not true; Cosette lied.
-
- "There's a brat as big as my fist who tells lies as big as the house,"
- exclaimed the pedler. "I tell you that he has not been watered,
- you little jade! He has a way of blowing when he has had no water,
- which I know well."
-
- Cosette persisted, and added in a voice rendered hoarse with anguish,
- and which was hardly audible:--
-
- "And he drank heartily."
-
- "Come," said the pedler, in a rage, "this won't do at all,
- let my horse be watered, and let that be the end of it!"
-
- Cosette crept under the table again.
-
- "In truth, that is fair!" said Madame Thenardier, "if the beast
- has not been watered, it must be."
-
- Then glancing about her:--
-
- "Well, now! Where's that other beast?"
-
- She bent down and discovered Cosette cowering at the other end
- of the table, almost under the drinkers' feet.
-
- "Are you coming?" shrieked Madame Thenardier.
-
- Cosette crawled out of the sort of hole in which she had hidden herself.
- The Thenardier resumed:--
-
- "Mademoiselle Dog-lack-name, go and water that horse."
-
- "But, Madame," said Cosette, feebly, "there is no water."
-
- The Thenardier threw the street door wide open:--
-
- "Well, go and get some, then!"
-
- Cosette dropped her head, and went for an empty bucket which stood
- near the chimney-corner.
-
- This bucket was bigger than she was, and the child could have set
- down in it at her ease.
-
- The Thenardier returned to her stove, and tasted what was
- in the stewpan, with a wooden spoon, grumbling the while:--
-
- "There's plenty in the spring. There never was such a malicious
- creature as that. I think I should have done better to strain
- my onions."
-
- Then she rummaged in a drawer which contained sous, pepper, and shallots.
-
- "See here, Mam'selle Toad," she added, "on your way back, you will
- get a big loaf from the baker. Here's a fifteen-sou piece."
-
- Cosette had a little pocket on one side of her apron; she took
- the coin without saying a word, and put it in that pocket.
-
- Then she stood motionless, bucket in hand, the open door before her.
- She seemed to be waiting for some one to come to her rescue.
-
- "Get along with you!" screamed the Thenardier.
-
- Cosette went out. The door closed behind her.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- ENTRANCE ON THE SCENE OF A DOLL
-
-
- The line of open-air booths starting at the church, extended, as the
- reader will remember, as far as the hostelry of the Thenardiers.
- These booths were all illuminated, because the citizens would
- soon pass on their way to the midnight mass, with candles burning
- in paper funnels, which, as the schoolmaster, then seated at the
- table at the Thenardiers' observed, produced "a magical effect."
- In compensation, not a star was visible in the sky.
-
- The last of these stalls, established precisely opposite the Thenardiers'
- door, was a toy-shop all glittering with tinsel, glass, and magnificent
- objects of tin. In the first row, and far forwards, the merchant had
- placed on a background of white napkins, an immense doll, nearly two
- feet high, who was dressed in a robe of pink crepe, with gold wheat-ears
- on her head, which had real hair and enamel eyes. All that day,
- this marvel had been displayed to the wonderment of all passers-by
- under ten years of age, without a mother being found in Montfermeil
- sufficiently rich or sufficiently extravagant to give it to her child.
- Eponine and Azelma had passed hours in contemplating it, and Cosette
- herself had ventured to cast a glance at it, on the sly, it is true.
-
- At the moment when Cosette emerged, bucket in hand, melancholy and
- overcome as she was, she could not refrain from lifting her eyes
- to that wonderful doll, towards the lady, as she called it.
- The poor child paused in amazement. She had not yet beheld
- that doll close to. The whole shop seemed a palace to her:
- the doll was not a doll; it was a vision. It was joy, splendor,
- riches, happiness, which appeared in a sort of chimerical halo
- to that unhappy little being so profoundly engulfed in gloomy and
- chilly misery. With the sad and innocent sagacity of childhood,
- Cosette measured the abyss which separated her from that doll.
- She said to herself that one must be a queen, or at least a princess,
- to have a "thing" like that. She gazed at that beautiful pink dress,
- that beautiful smooth hair, and she thought, "How happy that doll
- must be!" She could not take her eyes from that fantastic stall.
- The more she looked, the more dazzled she grew. She thought she
- was gazing at paradise. There were other dolls behind the large one,
- which seemed to her to be fairies and genii. The merchant, who was
- pacing back and forth in front of his shop, produced on her somewhat
- the effect of being the Eternal Father.
-
- In this adoration she forgot everything, even the errand with
- which she was charged.
-
- All at once the Thenardier's coarse voice recalled her to reality:
- "What, you silly jade! you have not gone? Wait! I'll give it
- to you! I want to know what you are doing there! Get along,
- you little monster!"
-
- The Thenardier had cast a glance into the street, and had caught
- sight of Cosette in her ecstasy.
-
- Cosette fled, dragging her pail, and taking the longest strides
- of which she was capable.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- THE LITTLE ONE ALL ALONE
-
-
- As the Thenardier hostelry was in that part of the village which is
- near the church, it was to the spring in the forest in the direction
- of Chelles that Cosette was obliged to go for her water.
-
- She did not glance at the display of a single other merchant. So long
- as she was in Boulanger Lane and in the neighborhood of the church,
- the lighted stalls illuminated the road; but soon the last light from
- the last stall vanished. The poor child found herself in the dark.
- She plunged into it. Only, as a certain emotion overcame her,
- she made as much motion as possible with the handle of the bucket
- as she walked along. This made a noise which afforded her company.
-
- The further she went, the denser the darkness became. There was no
- one in the streets. However, she did encounter a woman, who turned
- around on seeing her, and stood still, muttering between her teeth:
- "Where can that child be going? Is it a werewolf child?" Then the
- woman recognized Cosette. "Well," said she, "it's the Lark!"
-
- In this manner Cosette traversed the labyrinth of tortuous and
- deserted streets which terminate in the village of Montfermeil
- on the side of Chelles. So long as she had the houses or even
- the walls only on both sides of her path, she proceeded with
- tolerable boldness. From time to time she caught the flicker of
- a candle through the crack of a shutter--this was light and life;
- there were people there, and it reassured her. But in proportion
- as she advanced, her pace slackened mechanically, as it were.
- When she had passed the corner of the last house, Cosette paused.
- It had been hard to advance further than the last stall;
- it became impossible to proceed further than the last house.
- She set her bucket on the ground, thrust her hand into her hair,
- and began slowly to scratch her head,--a gesture peculiar to children
- when terrified and undecided what to do. It was no longer Montfermeil;
- it was the open fields. Black and desert space was before her.
- She gazed in despair at that darkness, where there was no longer
- any one, where there were beasts, where there were spectres, possibly.
- She took a good look, and heard the beasts walking on the grass,
- and she distinctly saw spectres moving in the trees. Then she seized
- her bucket again; fear had lent her audacity. "Bah!" said she;
- "I will tell him that there was no more water!" And she resolutely
- re-entered Montfermeil.
-
- Hardly had she gone a hundred paces when she paused and began to scratch
- her head again. Now it was the Thenardier who appeared to her,
- with her hideous, hyena mouth, and wrath flashing in her eyes.
- The child cast a melancholy glance before her and behind her.
- What was she to do? What was to become of her? Where was she to go?
- In front of her was the spectre of the Thenardier; behind her all
- the phantoms of the night and of the forest. It was before the
- Thenardier that she recoiled. She resumed her path to the spring,
- and began to run. She emerged from the village, she entered the
- forest at a run, no longer looking at or listening to anything.
- She only paused in her course when her breath failed her;
- but she did not halt in her advance. She went straight before her
- in desperation.
-
- As she ran she felt like crying.
-
- The nocturnal quivering of the forest surrounded her completely.
-
- She no longer thought, she no longer saw. The immensity of night
- was facing this tiny creature. On the one hand, all 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 way, through having gone over it
- many times in daylight. Strange to say, she did not get lost.
- A remnant of instinct guided her vaguely. But she did not turn
- her eyes either to right or to left, for fear of seeing things
- in the branches and in the brushwood. In this manner she reached
- the spring.
-
- It was a narrow, natural basin, hollowed out by the water in a
- clayey soil, about two feet deep, surrounded with moss and with
- those tall, crimped grasses which are called Henry IV.'s frills,
- and paved with several large stones. A brook ran out of it,
- with a tranquil little noise.
-
- Cosette did not take time to breathe. It was very dark, but she
- was in the habit of coming to this spring. She felt with her left
- hand in the dark for a young oak which leaned over the spring,
- and which usually served to support her, found one of its branches,
- clung to it, bent down, and plunged the bucket in the water.
- She was in a state of such violent excitement that her strength
- was trebled. While thus bent over, she did not notice that the pocket
- of her apron had emptied itself into the spring. The fifteen-sou
- piece fell into the water. Cosette neither saw nor heard it fall.
- She drew out the bucket nearly full, and set it on the grass.
-
- That done, she perceived that she was worn out with fatigue.
- She would have liked to set out again at once, but the effort required
- to fill the bucket had been such that she found it impossible to take
- a step. She was forced to sit down. She dropped on the grass,
- and remained crouching there.
-
- She shut her eyes; then she opened them again, without knowing why,
- but because she could not do otherwise. The agitated water
- in the bucket beside her was describing circles which resembled
- tin serpents.
-
- Overhead the sky was covered with vast black clouds, which were
- like masses of smoke. The tragic mask of shadow seemed to bend
- vaguely over the child.
-
- Jupiter was setting in the depths.
-
- The child stared with bewildered eyes at this great star, with which
- she was unfamiliar, and which terrified her. The planet was,
- in fact, very near the horizon and was traversing a dense layer
- of mist which imparted to it a horrible ruddy hue. The mist,
- gloomily empurpled, magnified the star. One would have called it
- a luminous wound.
-
- A cold wind was blowing from the plain. The forest was dark,
- not a leaf was moving; there were none of the vague, fresh gleams
- of summertide. Great boughs uplifted themselves in frightful wise.
- Slender and misshapen bushes whistled in the clearings. The tall
- grasses undulated like eels under the north wind. The nettles
- seemed to twist long arms furnished with claws in search of prey.
- Some bits of dry heather, tossed by the breeze, flew rapidly by, and had
- the air of fleeing in terror before something which was coming after.
- On all sides there were lugubrious stretches.
-
- The darkness was bewildering. Man requires light. Whoever buries
- himself in the opposite of day feels his heart contract. When the eye
- sees black, the heart sees trouble. In an eclipse in the night,
- in the sooty opacity, there is anxiety even for the stoutest of hearts.
- No one walks alone in the forest at night without trembling.
- Shadows and trees--two formidable densities. A chimerical
- reality appears in the indistinct depths. The inconceivable is
- outlined a few paces distant from you with a spectral clearness.
- One beholds floating, either in space or in one's own brain,
- one knows not what vague and intangible thing, like the dreams
- of sleeping flowers. There are fierce attitudes on the horizon.
- One inhales the effluvia of the great black void. One is afraid to
- glance behind him, yet desirous of doing so. The cavities of night,
- things grown haggard, taciturn profiles which vanish when one advances,
- obscure dishevelments, irritated tufts, livid pools, the lugubrious
- reflected in the funereal, the sepulchral immensity of silence,
- unknown but possible beings, bendings of mysterious branches,
- alarming torsos of trees, long handfuls of quivering plants,--
- against all this one has no protection. There is no hardihood which
- does not shudder and which does not feel the vicinity of anguish.
- One is conscious of something hideous, as though one's soul were
- becoming amalgamated with the darkness. This penetration of the
- shadows is indescribably sinister in the case of a child.
-
- Forests are apocalypses, and the beating of the wings of a tiny
- soul produces a sound of agony beneath their monstrous vault.
-
- Without understanding her sensations, Cosette was conscious
- that she was seized upon by that black enormity of nature;
- it was no longer terror alone which was gaining possession of her;
- it was something more terrible even than terror; she shivered.
- There are no words to express the strangeness of that shiver which
- chilled her to the very bottom of her heart; her eye grew wild;
- she thought she felt that she should not be able to refrain from
- returning there at the same hour on the morrow.
-
- Then, by a sort of instinct, she began to count aloud,
- one, two, three, four, and so on up to ten, in order to escape
- from that singular state which she did not understand, but which
- terrified her, and, when she had finished, she began again;
- this restored her to a true perception of the things about her.
- Her hands, which she had wet in drawing the water, felt cold;
- she rose; her terror, a natural and unconquerable terror,
- had returned: she had but one thought now,--to flee at full speed
- through the forest, across the fields to the houses, to the windows,
- to the lighted candles. Her glance fell upon the water which stood
- before her; such was the fright which the Thenardier inspired
- in her, that she dared not flee without that bucket of water:
- she seized the handle with both hands; she could hardly lift the pail.
-
- In this manner she advanced a dozen paces, but the bucket was full;
- it was heavy; she was forced to set it on the ground once more.
- She took breath for an instant, then lifted the handle of the bucket
- again, and resumed her march, proceeding a little further this time,
- but again she was obliged to pause. After some seconds of repose
- she set out again. She walked bent forward, with drooping head,
- like an old woman; the weight of the bucket strained and stiffened
- her thin arms. The iron handle completed the benumbing and freezing
- of her wet and tiny hands; she was forced to halt from time to time,
- and each time that she did so, the cold water which splashed from
- the pail fell on her bare legs. This took place in the depths
- of a forest, at night, in winter, far from all human sight;
- she was a child of eight: no one but God saw that sad thing at
- the moment.
-
- And her mother, no doubt, alas!
-
- For there are things that make the dead open their eyes in their graves.
-
- She panted with a sort of painful rattle; sobs contracted her throat,
- but she dared not weep, so afraid was she of the Thenardier,
- even at a distance: it was her custom to imagine the Thenardier
- always present.
-
- However, she could not make much headway in that manner, and she went
- on very slowly. In spite of diminishing the length of her stops,
- and of walking as long as possible between them, she reflected
- with anguish that it would take her more than an hour to return to
- Montfermeil in this manner, and that the Thenardier would beat her.
- This anguish was mingled with her terror at being alone in the woods
- at night; she was worn out with fatigue, and had not yet emerged from
- the forest. On arriving near an old chestnut-tree with which she
- was acquainted, made a last halt, longer than the rest, in order
- that she might get well rested; then she summoned up all her strength,
- picked up her bucket again, and courageously resumed her march,
- but the poor little desperate creature could not refrain from crying,
- "O my God! my God!"
-
- At that moment she suddenly became conscious that her bucket no longer
- weighed anything at all: a hand, which seemed to her enormous,
- had just seized the handle, and lifted it vigorously. She raised
- her head. A large black form, straight and erect, was walking beside
- her through the darkness; it was a man who had come up behind her,
- and whose approach she had not heard. This man, without uttering
- a word, had seized the handle of the bucket which she was carrying.
-
- There are instincts for all the encounters of life.
-
- The child was not afraid.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- WHICH POSSIBLY PROVES BOULATRUELLE'S INTELLIGENCE
-
-
- On the afternoon of that same Christmas Day, 1823, a man had walked
- for rather a long time in the most deserted part of the Boulevard
- de l'Hopital in Paris. This man had the air of a person who is
- seeking lodgings, and he seemed to halt, by preference, at the most
- modest houses on that dilapidated border of the faubourg Saint-Marceau.
-
- We shall see further on that this man had, in fact, hired a chamber
- in that isolated quarter.
-
- This man, in his attire, as in all his person, realized the type
- of what may be called the well-bred mendicant,--extreme wretchedness
- combined with extreme cleanliness. This is a very rare mixture which
- inspires intelligent hearts with that double respect which one feels
- for the man who is very poor, and for the man who is very worthy.
- He wore a very old and very well brushed round hat; a coarse coat,
- worn perfectly threadbare, of an ochre yellow, a color that was
- not in the least eccentric at that epoch; a large waistcoat with
- pockets of a venerable cut; black breeches, worn gray at the knee,
- stockings of black worsted; and thick shoes with copper buckles.
- He would have been pronounced a preceptor in some good family,
- returned from the emigration. He would have been taken for more than
- sixty years of age, from his perfectly white hair, his wrinkled brow,
- his livid lips, and his countenance, where everything breathed
- depression and weariness of life. Judging from his firm tread,
- from the singular vigor which stamped all his movements,
- he would have hardly been thought fifty. The wrinkles on his brow
- were well placed, and would have disposed in his favor any one
- who observed him attentively. His lip contracted with a strange
- fold which seemed severe, and which was humble. There was in
- the depth of his glance an indescribable melancholy serenity.
- In his left hand he carried a little bundle tied up in a handkerchief;
- in his right he leaned on a sort of a cudgel, cut from some hedge.
- This stick had been carefully trimmed, and had an air that was not
- too threatening; the most had been made of its knots, and it had
- received a coral-like head, made from red wax: it was a cudgel,
- and it seemed to be a cane.
-
- There are but few passers-by on that boulevard, particularly in
- the winter. The man seemed to avoid them rather than to seek them,
- but this without any affectation.
-
- At that epoch, King Louis XVIII. went nearly every day to
- Choisy-le-Roi: it was one of his favorite excursions. Towards two
- o'clock, almost invariably, the royal carriage and cavalcade
- was seen to pass at full speed along the Boulevard de l'Hopital.
-
- This served in lieu of a watch or clock to the poor women of the quarter
- who said, "It is two o'clock; there he is returning to the Tuileries."
-
- And some rushed forward, and others drew up in line, for a passing king
- always creates a tumult; besides, the appearance and disappearance
- of Louis XVIII. produced a certain effect in the streets of Paris.
- It was rapid but majestic. This impotent king had a taste for a
- fast gallop; as he was not able to walk, he wished to run: that cripple
- would gladly have had himself drawn by the lightning. He passed,
- pacific and severe, in the midst of naked swords. His massive couch,
- all covered with gilding, with great branches of lilies painted on
- the panels, thundered noisily along. There was hardly time to cast
- a glance upon it. In the rear angle on the right there was visible
- on tufted cushions of white satin a large, firm, and ruddy face,
- a brow freshly powdered a l'oiseau royal, a proud, hard, crafty eye,
- the smile of an educated man, two great epaulets with bullion
- fringe floating over a bourgeois coat, the Golden Fleece, the cross
- of Saint Louis, the cross of the Legion of Honor, the silver
- plaque of the Saint-Esprit, a huge belly, and a wide blue ribbon:
- it was the king. Outside of Paris, he held his hat decked with white
- ostrich plumes on his knees enwrapped in high English gaiters;
- when he re-entered the city, he put on his hat and saluted rarely;
- he stared coldly at the people, and they returned it in kind.
- When he appeared for the first time in the Saint-Marceau quarter,
- the whole success which he produced is contained in this remark of an
- inhabitant of the faubourg to his comrade, "That big fellow yonder is
- the government."
-
- This infallible passage of the king at the same hour was, therefore,
- the daily event of the Boulevard de l'Hopital.
-
- The promenader in the yellow coat evidently did not belong in
- the quarter, and probably did not belong in Paris, for he was ignorant
- as to this detail. When, at two o'clock, the royal carriage,
- surrounded by a squadron of the body-guard all covered with
- silver lace, debouched on the boulevard, after having made the turn
- of the Salpetriere, he appeared surprised and almost alarmed.
- There was no one but himself in this cross-lane. He drew
- up hastily behind the corner of the wall of an enclosure,
- though this did not prevent M. le Duc de Havre from spying him out.
-
- M. le Duc de Havre, as captain of the guard on duty that day,
- was seated in the carriage, opposite the king. He said to his
- Majesty, "Yonder is an evil-looking man." Members of the police,
- who were clearing the king's route, took equal note of him:
- one of them received an order to follow him. But the man plunged
- into the deserted little streets of the faubourg, and as twilight
- was beginning to fall, the agent lost trace of him, as is stated
- in a report addressed that same evening to M. le Comte d'Angles,
- Minister of State, Prefect of Police.
-
- When the man in the yellow coat had thrown the agent off his track,
- he redoubled his pace, not without turning round many a time to assure
- himself that he was not being followed. At a quarter-past four,
- that is to say, when night was fully come, he passed in front of the
- theatre of the Porte Saint-Martin, where The Two Convicts was being
- played that day. This poster, illuminated by the theatre lanterns,
- struck him; for, although he was walking rapidly, he halted to read it.
- An instant later he was in the blind alley of La Planchette, and he
- entered the Plat d'Etain [the Pewter Platter], where the office
- of the coach for Lagny was then situated. This coach set out at
- half-past four. The horses were harnessed, and the travellers,
- summoned by the coachman, were hastily climbing the lofty iron ladder
- of the vehicle.
-
- The man inquired:--
-
- "Have you a place?"
-
- "Only one--beside me on the box," said the coachman.
-
- "I will take it."
-
- "Climb up."
-
- Nevertheless, before setting out, the coachman cast a glance at
- the traveller's shabby dress, at the diminutive size of his bundle,
- and made him pay his fare.
-
- "Are you going as far as Lagny?" demanded the coachman.
-
- "Yes," said the man.
-
- The traveller paid to Lagny.
-
- They started. When they had passed the barrier, the coachman
- tried to enter into conversation, but the traveller only replied
- in monosyllables. The coachman took to whistling and swearing
- at his horses.
-
- The coachman wrapped himself up in his cloak. It was cold.
- The man did not appear to be thinking of that. Thus they passed
- Gournay and Neuilly-sur-Marne.
-
- Towards six o'clock in the evening they reached Chelles. The coachman
- drew up in front of the carters' inn installed in the ancient
- buildings of the Royal Abbey, to give his horses a breathing spell.
-
- "I get down here," said the man.
-
- He took his bundle and his cudgel and jumped down from the vehicle.
-
- An instant later he had disappeared.
-
- He did not enter the inn.
-
- When the coach set out for Lagny a few minutes later, it did not
- encounter him in the principal street of Chelles.
-
- The coachman turned to the inside travellers.
-
- "There," said he, "is a man who does not belong here, for I do not
- know him. He had not the air of owning a sou, but he does not
- consider money; he pays to Lagny, and he goes only as far as Chelles.
- It is night; all the houses are shut; he does not enter the inn,
- and he is not to be found. So he has dived through the earth."
-
- The man had not plunged into the earth, but he had gone with great
- strides through the dark, down the principal street of Chelles,
- then he had turned to the right before reaching the church,
- into the cross-road leading to Montfermeil, like a person who was
- acquainted with the country and had been there before.
-
- He followed this road rapidly. At the spot where it is intersected
- by the ancient tree-bordered road which runs from Gagny to Lagny,
- he heard people coming. He concealed himself precipitately in
- a ditch, and there waited until the passers-by were at a distance.
- The precaution was nearly superfluous, however; for, as we have
- already said, it was a very dark December night. Not more than two
- or three stars were visible in the sky.
-
- It is at this point that the ascent of the hill begins. The man did
- not return to the road to Montfermeil; he struck across the fields
- to the right, and entered the forest with long strides.
-
- Once in the forest he slackened his pace, and began a careful
- examination of all the trees, advancing, step by step, as though
- seeking and following a mysterious road known to himself alone.
- There came a moment when he appeared to lose himself, and he paused
- in indecision. At last he arrived, by dint of feeling his way inch
- by inch, at a clearing where there was a great heap of whitish stones.
- He stepped up briskly to these stones, and examined them attentively
- through the mists of night, as though he were passing them in review.
- A large tree, covered with those excrescences which are the warts
- of vegetation, stood a few paces distant from the pile of stones.
- He went up to this tree and passed his hand over the bark of the trunk,
- as though seeking to recognize and count all the warts.
-
- Opposite this tree, which was an ash, there was a chestnut-tree,
- suffering from a peeling of the bark, to which a band of zinc
- had been nailed by way of dressing. He raised himself on tiptoe
- and touched this band of zinc.
-
- Then he trod about for awhile on the ground comprised in the space
- between the tree and the heap of stones, like a person who is trying
- to assure himself that the soil has not recently been disturbed.
-
- That done, he took his bearings, and resumed his march through
- the forest.
-
- It was the man who had just met Cosette.
-
- As he walked through the thicket in the direction of Montfermeil,
- he had espied that tiny shadow moving with a groan, depositing a
- burden on the ground, then taking it up and setting out again.
- He drew near, and perceived that it was a very young child,
- laden with an enormous bucket of water. Then he approached the child,
- and silently grasped the handle of the bucket.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- COSETTE SIDE BY SIDE WITH THE STRANGER IN THE DARK
-
-
- Cosette, as we have said, was not frightened.
-
- The man accosted her. He spoke in a voice that was grave and almost bass.
-
- "My child, what you are carrying is very heavy for you."
-
- Cosette raised her head and replied:--
-
- "Yes, sir."
-
- "Give it to me," said the man; "I will carry it for you."
-
- Cosette let go of the bucket-handle. The man walked along beside her.
-
- "It really is very heavy," he muttered between his teeth.
- Then he added:--
-
- "How old are you, little one?"
-
- "Eight, sir."
-
- "And have you come from far like this?"
-
- "From the spring in the forest."
-
- "Are you going far?"
-
- "A good quarter of an hour's walk from here."
-
- The man said nothing for a moment; then he remarked abruptly:--
-
- "So you have no mother."
-
- "I don't know," answered the child.
-
- Before the man had time to speak again, she added:--
-
- "I don't think so. Other people have mothers. I have none."
-
- And after a silence she went on:--
-
- "I think that I never had any."
-
- The man halted; he set the bucket on the ground, bent down and
- placed both hands on the child's shoulders, making an effort
- to look at her and to see her face in the dark.
-
- Cosette's thin and sickly face was vaguely outlined by the livid
- light in the sky.
-
- "What is your name?" said the man.
-
- "Cosette."
-
- The man seemed to have received an electric shock. He looked at
- her once more; then he removed his hands from Cosette's shoulders,
- seized the bucket, and set out again.
-
- After a moment he inquired:--
-
- "Where do you live, little one?"
-
- "At Montfermeil, if you know where that is."
-
- "That is where we are going?"
-
- "Yes, sir."
-
- He paused; then began again:--
-
- "Who sent you at such an hour to get water in the forest?"
-
- "It was Madame Thenardier."
-
- The man resumed, in a voice which he strove to render indifferent,
- but in which there was, nevertheless, a singular tremor:--
-
- "What does your Madame Thenardier do?"
-
- "She is my mistress," said the child. "She keeps the inn."
-
- "The inn?" said the man. "Well, I am going to lodge there to-night.
- Show me the way."
-
- "We are on the way there," said the child.
-
- The man walked tolerably fast. Cosette followed him without difficulty.
- She no longer felt any fatigue. From time to time she raised
- her eyes towards the man, with a sort of tranquillity and an
- indescribable confidence. She had never been taught to turn to
- Providence and to pray; nevertheless, she felt within her something
- which resembled hope and joy, and which mounted towards heaven.
-
- Several minutes elapsed. The man resumed:--
-
- "Is there no servant in Madame Thenardier's house?"
-
- "No, sir."
-
- "Are you alone there?"
-
- "Yes, sir."
-
- Another pause ensued. Cosette lifted up her voice:--
-
- "That is to say, there are two little girls."
-
- "What little girls?"
-
- "Ponine and Zelma."
-
- This was the way the child simplified the romantic names so dear
- to the female Thenardier.
-
- "Who are Ponine and Zelma?"
-
- "They are Madame Thenardier's young ladies; her daughters, as you
- would say."
-
- "And what do those girls do?"
-
- "Oh!" said the child, "they have beautiful dolls; things with gold
- in them, all full of affairs. They play; they amuse themselves."
-
- "All day long?"
-
- "Yes, sir."
-
- "And you?"
-
- "I? I work."
-
- "All day long?"
-
- The child raised her great eyes, in which hung a tear, which was
- not visible because of the darkness, and replied gently:--
-
- "Yes, sir."
-
- After an interval of silence she went on:--
-
- "Sometimes, when I have finished my work and they let me,
- I amuse myself, too."
-
- "How do you amuse yourself?"
-
- "In the best way I can. They let me alone; but I have not
- many playthings. Ponine and Zelma will not let me play with
- their dolls. I have only a little lead sword, no longer than that."
-
- The child held up her tiny finger.
-
- "And it will not cut?"
-
- "Yes, sir," said the child; "it cuts salad and the heads of flies."
-
- They reached the village. Cosette guided the stranger through
- the streets. They passed the bakeshop, but Cosette did not think
- of the bread which she had been ordered to fetch. The man had
- ceased to ply her with questions, and now preserved a gloomy silence.
-
- When they had left the church behind them, the man, on perceiving
- all the open-air booths, asked Cosette:--
-
- "So there is a fair going on here?"
-
- "No, sir; it is Christmas."
-
- As they approached the tavern, Cosette timidly touched his arm:--
-
- "Monsieur?"
-
- "What, my child?"
-
- "We are quite near the house."
-
- "Well?"
-
- "Will you let me take my bucket now?"
-
- "Why?"
-
- "If Madame sees that some one has carried it for me, she will beat me."
-
- The man handed her the bucket. An instant later they were at
- the tavern door.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- THE UNPLEASANTNESS OF RECEIVING INTO ONE'S HOUSE A POOR MAN WHO
- MAY BE A RICH MAN
-
-
- Cosette could not refrain from casting a sidelong glance at the big doll,
- which was still displayed at the toy-merchant's; then she knocked.
- The door opened. The Thenardier appeared with a candle in her hand.
-
-
- "Ah! so it's you, you little wretch! good mercy, but you've taken
- your time! The hussy has been amusing herself!"
-
- "Madame," said Cosette, trembling all over, "here's a gentleman
- who wants a lodging."
-
- The Thenardier speedily replaced her gruff air by her amiable grimace,
- a change of aspect common to tavern-keepers, and eagerly sought
- the new-comer with her eyes.
-
- "This is the gentleman?" said she.
-
- "Yes, Madame," replied the man, raising his hand to his hat.
-
- Wealthy travellers are not so polite. This gesture, and an inspection
- of the stranger's costume and baggage, which the Thenardier passed
- in review with one glance, caused the amiable grimace to vanish,
- and the gruff mien to reappear. She resumed dryly:--
-
- "Enter, my good man."
-
- The "good man" entered. The Thenardier cast a second glance
- at him, paid particular attention to his frock-coat, which was
- absolutely threadbare, and to his hat, which was a little battered,
- and, tossing her head, wrinkling her nose, and screwing up her eyes,
- she consulted her husband, who was still drinking with the carters.
- The husband replied by that imperceptible movement of the forefinger,
- which, backed up by an inflation of the lips, signifies in such cases:
- A regular beggar. Thereupon, the Thenardier exclaimed:--
-
- "Ah! see here, my good man; I am very sorry, but I have no room left."
-
- "Put me where you like," said the man; "in the attic, in the stable.
- I will pay as though I occupied a room."
-
- "Forty sous."
-
- "Forty sous; agreed."
-
- "Very well, then!"
-
- "Forty sous!" said a carter, in a low tone, to the Thenardier woman;
- "why, the charge is only twenty sous!"
-
- "It is forty in his case," retorted the Thenardier, in the same tone.
- "I don't lodge poor folks for less."
-
- "That's true," added her husband, gently; "it ruins a house to have
- such people in it."
-
- In the meantime, the man, laying his bundle and his cudgel on
- a bench, had seated himself at a table, on which Cosette made
- haste to place a bottle of wine and a glass. The merchant who
- had demanded the bucket of water took it to his horse himself.
- Cosette resumed her place under the kitchen table, and her knitting.
-
- The man, who had barely moistened his lips in the wine which he had
- poured out for himself, observed the child with peculiar attention.
-
- Cosette was ugly. If she had been happy, she might have been pretty.
- We have already given a sketch of that sombre little figure.
- Cosette was thin and pale; she was nearly eight years old, but she
- seemed to be hardly six. Her large eyes, sunken in a sort of shadow,
- were almost put out with weeping. The corners of her mouth had that
- curve of habitual anguish which is seen in condemned persons and
- desperately sick people. Her hands were, as her mother had divined,
- "ruined with chilblains." The fire which illuminated her at that
- moment brought into relief all the angles of her bones, and rendered
- her thinness frightfully apparent. As she was always shivering,
- she had acquired the habit of pressing her knees one against the other.
- Her entire clothing was but a rag which would have inspired pity
- in summer, and which inspired horror in winter. All she had on was
- hole-ridden linen, not a scrap of woollen. Her skin was visible
- here and there and everywhere black and blue spots could be descried,
- which marked the places where the Thenardier woman had touched her.
- Her naked legs were thin and red. The hollows in her neck were
- enough to make one weep. This child's whole person, her mien,
- her attitude, the sound of her voice, the intervals which she
- allowed to elapse between one word and the next, her glance,
- her silence, her slightest gesture, expressed and betrayed one
- sole idea,--fear.
-
- Fear was diffused all over her; she was covered with it, so to speak;
- fear drew her elbows close to her hips, withdrew her heels under
- her petticoat, made her occupy as little space as possible,
- allowed her only the breath that was absolutely necessary, and had
- become what might be called the habit of her body, admitting of no
- possible variation except an increase. In the depths of her eyes
- there was an astonished nook where terror lurked.
-
- Her fear was such, that on her arrival, wet as she was, Cosette did
- not dare to approach the fire and dry herself, but sat silently
- down to her work again.
-
- The expression in the glance of that child of eight years was habitually
- so gloomy, and at times so tragic, that it seemed at certain moments
- as though she were on the verge of becoming an idiot or a demon.
-
- As we have stated, she had never known what it is to pray; she had
- never set foot in a church. "Have I the time?" said the Thenardier.
-
- The man in the yellow coat never took his eyes from Cosette.
-
- All at once, the Thenardier exclaimed:--
-
- "By the way, where's that bread?"
-
- Cosette, according to her custom whenever the Thenardier uplifted
- her voice, emerged with great haste from beneath the table.
-
- She had completely forgotten the bread. She had recourse to the
- expedient of children who live in a constant state of fear.
- She lied.
-
- "Madame, the baker's shop was shut."
-
- "You should have knocked."
-
- "I did knock, Madame."
-
- "Well?"
-
- "He did not open the door."
-
- "I'll find out to-morrow whether that is true," said the Thenardier;
- "and if you are telling me a lie, I'll lead you a pretty dance.
- In the meantime, give me back my fifteen-sou piece."
-
- Cosette plunged her hand into the pocket of her apron, and turned green.
- The fifteen-sou piece was not there.
-
- "Ah, come now," said Madame Thenardier, "did you hear me?"
-
- Cosette turned her pocket inside out; there was nothing in it.
- What could have become of that money? The unhappy little creature
- could not find a word to say. She was petrified.
-
- "Have you lost that fifteen-sou piece?" screamed the Thenardier,
- hoarsely, "or do you want to rob me of it?"
-
- At the same time, she stretched out her arm towards
- the cat-o'-nine-tails which hung on a nail in the chimney-corner.
-
- This formidable gesture restored to Cosette sufficient strength
- to shriek:--
-
- "Mercy, Madame, Madame! I will not do so any more!"
-
- The Thenardier took down the whip.
-
- In the meantime, the man in the yellow coat had been fumbling in the
- fob of his waistcoat, without any one having noticed his movements.
- Besides, the other travellers were drinking or playing cards,
- and were not paying attention to anything.
-
- Cosette contracted herself into a ball, with anguish, within the
- angle of the chimney, endeavoring to gather up and conceal
- her poor half-nude limbs. The Thenardier raised her arm.
-
- "Pardon me, Madame," said the man, "but just now I caught sight
- of something which had fallen from this little one's apron pocket,
- and rolled aside. Perhaps this is it."
-
- At the same time he bent down and seemed to be searching
- on the floor for a moment.
-
- "Exactly; here it is," he went on, straightening himself up.
-
- And he held out a silver coin to the Thenardier.
-
- "Yes, that's it," said she.
-
- It was not it, for it was a twenty-sou piece; but the Thenardier
- found it to her advantage. She put the coin in her pocket,
- and confined herself to casting a fierce glance at the child,
- accompanied with the remark, "Don't let this ever happen again!"
-
- Cosette returned to what the Thenardier called "her kennel,"
- and her large eyes, which were riveted on the traveller,
- began to take on an expression such as they had never worn before.
- Thus far it was only an innocent amazement, but a sort of stupefied
- confidence was mingled with it.
-
- "By the way, would you like some supper?" the Thenardier inquired
- of the traveller.
-
- He made no reply. He appeared to be absorbed in thought.
-
- "What sort of a man is that?" she muttered between her teeth.
- "He's some frightfully poor wretch. He hasn't a sou to pay for
- a supper. Will he even pay me for his lodging? It's very lucky,
- all the same, that it did not occur to him to steal the money that
- was on the floor."
-
- In the meantime, a door had opened, and Eponine and Azelma entered.
-
- They were two really pretty little girls, more bourgeois than
- peasant in looks, and very charming; the one with shining chestnut
- tresses, the other with long black braids hanging down her back,
- both vivacious, neat, plump, rosy, and healthy, and a delight
- to the eye. They were warmly clad, but with so much maternal art
- that the thickness of the stuffs did not detract from the coquetry
- of arrangement. There was a hint of winter, though the springtime
- was not wholly effaced. Light emanated from these two little beings.
- Besides this, they were on the throne. In their toilettes,
- in their gayety, in the noise which they made, there was sovereignty.
- When they entered, the Thenardier said to them in a grumbling
- tone which was full of adoration, "Ah! there you are, you children!"
-
- Then drawing them, one after the other to her knees, smoothing
- their hair, tying their ribbons afresh, and then releasing them
- with that gentle manner of shaking off which is peculiar to mothers,
- she exclaimed, "What frights they are!"
-
- They went and seated themselves in the chimney-corner. They had
- a doll, which they turned over and over on their knees with all
- sorts of joyous chatter. From time to time Cosette raised her eyes
- from her knitting, and watched their play with a melancholy air.
-
- Eponine and Azelma did not look at Cosette. She was the same
- as a dog to them. These three little girls did not yet reckon up
- four and twenty years between them, but they already represented
- the whole society of man; envy on the one side, disdain on the other.
-
- The doll of the Thenardier sisters was very much faded, very old,
- and much broken; but it seemed none the less admirable to Cosette,
- who had never had a doll in her life, a real doll, to make use
- of the expression which all children will understand.
-
- All at once, the Thenardier, who had been going back and forth
- in the room, perceived that Cosette's mind was distracted, and that,
- instead of working, she was paying attention to the little ones
- at their play.
-
- "Ah! I've caught you at it!" she cried. "So that's the way you work!
- I'll make you work to the tune of the whip; that I will."
-
- The stranger turned to the Thenardier, without quitting his chair.
-
- "Bah, Madame," he said, with an almost timid air, "let her play!"
-
- Such a wish expressed by a traveller who had eaten a slice of
- mutton and had drunk a couple of bottles of wine with his supper,
- and who had not the air of being frightfully poor, would have been
- equivalent to an order. But that a man with such a hat should
- permit himself such a desire, and that a man with such a coat
- should permit himself to have a will, was something which Madame
- Thenardier did not intend to tolerate. She retorted with acrimony:--
-
- "She must work, since she eats. I don't feed her to do nothing."
-
- "What is she making?" went on the stranger, in a gentle voice
- which contrasted strangely with his beggarly garments and his
- porter's shoulders.
-
- The Thenardier deigned to reply:--
-
- "Stockings, if you please. Stockings for my little girls,
- who have none, so to speak, and who are absolutely barefoot just now."
-
- The man looked at Cosette's poor little red feet, and continued:--
-
- "When will she have finished this pair of stockings?"
-
- "She has at least three or four good days' work on them still,
- the lazy creature!"
-
- "And how much will that pair of stockings be worth when she has
- finished them?"
-
- The Thenardier cast a glance of disdain on him.
-
- "Thirty sous at least."
-
- "Will you sell them for five francs?" went on the man.
-
- "Good heavens!" exclaimed a carter who was listening, with a loud laugh;
- "five francs! the deuce, I should think so! five balls!"
-
- Thenardier thought it time to strike in.
-
- "Yes, sir; if such is your fancy, you will be allowed to have that pair
- of stockings for five francs. We can refuse nothing to travellers."
-
- "You must pay on the spot," said the Thenardier, in her curt
- and peremptory fashion.
-
- "I will buy that pair of stockings," replied the man, "and," he added,
- drawing a five-franc piece from his pocket, and laying it on the table,
- "I will pay for them."
-
- Then he turned to Cosette.
-
- "Now I own your work; play, my child."
-
- The carter was so much touched by the five-franc piece, that he
- abandoned his glass and hastened up.
-
- "But it's true!" he cried, examining it. "A real hind wheel!
- and not counterfeit!"
-
- Thenardier approached and silently put the coin in his pocket.
-
- The Thenardier had no reply to make. She bit her lips, and her
- face assumed an expression of hatred.
-
- In the meantime, Cosette was trembling. She ventured to ask:--
-
- "Is it true, Madame? May I play?"
-
- "Play!" said the Thenardier, in a terrible voice.
-
- "Thanks, Madame," said Cosette.
-
- And while her mouth thanked the Thenardier, her whole little soul
- thanked the traveller.
-
- Thenardier had resumed his drinking; his wife whispered in his ear:--
-
- "Who can this yellow man be?"
-
- "I have seen millionaires with coats like that," replied Thenardier,
- in a sovereign manner.
-
- Cosette had dropped her knitting, but had not left her seat.
- Cosette always moved as little as possible. She picked up some old
- rags and her little lead sword from a box behind her.
-
- Eponine and Azelma paid no attention to what was going on.
- They had just executed a very important operation; they had just
- got hold of the cat. They had thrown their doll on the ground,
- and Eponine, who was the elder, was swathing the little cat, in spite
- of its mewing and its contortions, in a quantity of clothes and red
- and blue scraps. While performing this serious and difficult work
- she was saying to her sister in that sweet and adorable language
- of children, whose grace, like the splendor of the butterfly's wing,
- vanishes when one essays to fix it fast.
-
- "You see, sister, this doll is more amusing than the other.
- She twists, she cries, she is warm. See, sister, let us play with her.
- She shall be my little girl. I will be a lady. I will come to
- see you, and you shall look at her. Gradually, you will perceive
- her whiskers, and that will surprise you. And then you will see
- her ears, and then you will see her tail and it will amaze you.
- And you will say to me, `Ah! Mon Dieu!' and I will say to you:
- `Yes, Madame, it is my little girl. Little girls are made like that
- just at present.'"
-
- Azelma listened admiringly to Eponine.
-
- In the meantime, the drinkers had begun to sing an obscene song,
- and to laugh at it until the ceiling shook. Thenardier accompanied
- and encouraged them.
-
- As birds make nests out of everything, so children make a doll
- out of anything which comes to hand. While Eponine and Azelma were
- bundling up the cat, Cosette, on her side, had dressed up her sword.
- That done, she laid it in her arms, and sang to it softly, to lull
- it to sleep.
-
- The doll is one of the most imperious needs and, at the same time,
- one of the most charming instincts of feminine childhood.
- To care for, to clothe, to deck, to dress, to undress, to redress,
- to teach, scold a little, to rock, to dandle, to lull to sleep,
- to imagine that something is some one,--therein lies the whole
- woman's future. While dreaming and chattering, making tiny outfits,
- and baby clothes, while sewing little gowns, and corsages and bodices,
- the child grows into a young girl, the young girl into a big girl,
- the big girl into a woman. The first child is the continuation of the
- last doll.
-
- A little girl without a doll is almost as unhappy, and quite
- as impossible, as a woman without children.
-
- So Cosette had made herself a doll out of the sword.
-
- Madame Thenardier approached the yellow man; "My husband is right,"
- she thought; "perhaps it is M. Laffitte; there are such queer
- rich men!"
-
- She came and set her elbows on the table.
-
- "Monsieur," said she. At this word, Monsieur, the man turned;
- up to that time, the Thenardier had addressed him only as brave homme
- or bonhomme.
-
- "You see, sir," she pursued, assuming a sweetish air that was
- even more repulsive to behold than her fierce mien, "I am willing
- that the child should play; I do not oppose it, but it is good
- for once, because you are generous. You see, she has nothing;
- she must needs work."
-
- "Then this child is not yours?" demanded the man.
-
- "Oh! mon Dieu! no, sir! she is a little beggar whom we have taken
- in through charity; a sort of imbecile child. She must have water
- on the brain; she has a large head, as you see. We do what we
- can for her, for we are not rich; we have written in vain to her
- native place, and have received no reply these six months.
- It must be that her mother is dead."
-
- "Ah!" said the man, and fell into his revery once more.
-
- "Her mother didn't amount to much," added the Thenardier;
- "she abandoned her child."
-
- During the whole of this conversation Cosette, as though warned
- by some instinct that she was under discussion, had not taken her
- eyes from the Thenardier's face; she listened vaguely; she caught
- a few words here and there.
-
- Meanwhile, the drinkers, all three-quarters intoxicated, were repeating
- their unclean refrain with redoubled gayety; it was a highly
- spiced and wanton song, in which the Virgin and the infant Jesus
- were introduced. The Thenardier went off to take part in the shouts
- of laughter. Cosette, from her post under the table, gazed at the fire,
- which was reflected from her fixed eyes. She had begun to rock
- the sort of baby which 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!"
-
- On being urged afresh by the hostess, the yellow man, "the millionaire,"
- consented at last to take supper.
-
- "What does Monsieur wish?"
-
- "Bread and cheese," said the man.
-
- "Decidedly, he is a beggar" thought Madame Thenardier.
-
- The drunken men were still singing their song, and the child under
- the table was singing hers.
-
- All at once, Cosette paused; she had just turned round and caught
- sight of the little Thenardiers' doll, which they had abandoned for
- the cat and had left on the floor a few paces from the kitchen table.
-
- Then she dropped the swaddled sword, which only half met her needs,
- and cast her eyes slowly round the room. Madame Thenardier
- was whispering to her husband and counting over some money;
- Ponine and Zelma were playing with the cat; the travellers were
- eating or drinking or singing; not a glance was fixed on 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 no one was watching her;
- then she slipped quickly up to the doll and seized it. An instant
- later she was in her place again, seated motionless, and only turned
- so as to cast a shadow on the doll which she held in her arms.
- The happiness of playing with a doll was so rare for her that it
- contained all the violence of voluptuousness.
-
- No one had seen her, except the traveller, who was slowly devouring
- his meagre supper.
-
- This joy lasted about a quarter of an hour.
-
- But with all the precautions that Cosette had taken she did not
- perceive that one of the doll's legs stuck out and that the fire on
- the hearth lighted it up very vividly. That pink and shining foot,
- projecting from the shadow, suddenly struck the eye of Azelma,
- who said to Eponine, "Look! sister."
-
- The two little girls paused in stupefaction; Cosette had dared
- to take their doll!
-
- Eponine rose, and, without releasing the cat, she ran to her mother,
- and began to tug at her skirt.
-
- "Let me alone!" said her mother; "what do you want?"
-
- "Mother," said the child, "look there!"
-
- And she pointed to Cosette.
-
- Cosette, absorbed in the ecstasies of possession, no longer saw
- or heard anything.
-
- Madame Thenardier's countenance assumed that peculiar expression
- which is composed of the terrible mingled with the trifles of life,
- and which has caused this style of woman to be named megaeras.
-
- On this occasion, wounded pride exasperated her wrath still further.
- Cosette had overstepped all bounds; Cosette had laid violent hands
- on the doll belonging to "these young ladies." A czarina who should
- see a muzhik trying on her imperial son's blue ribbon would wear
- no other face.
-
- She shrieked in a voice rendered hoarse with indignation:--
-
- "Cosette!"
-
- Cosette started as though the earth had trembled beneath her;
- she turned round.
-
- "Cosette!" repeated the Thenardier.
-
- Cosette took the doll and laid it gently on the floor with a
- sort of veneration, mingled with despair; then, without taking
- her eyes from it, she clasped her hands, and, what is terrible
- to relate of a child of that age, she wrung them; then--not one
- of the emotions of the day, neither the trip to the forest,
- nor the weight of the bucket of water, nor the loss of the money,
- nor the sight of the whip, nor even the sad words which she had
- heard Madame Thenardier utter had been able to wring this from her--
- she wept; she burst out sobbing.
-
- Meanwhile, the traveller had risen to his feet.
-
- "What is the matter?" he said to the Thenardier.
-
- "Don't you see?" said the Thenardier, pointing to the corpus delicti
- which lay at Cosette's feet.
-
- "Well, what of it?" resumed the man.
-
- "That beggar," replied the Thenardier, "has permitted herself
- to touch the children's doll!"
-
- "All this noise for that!" said the man; "well, what if she did
- play with that doll?"
-
- "She touched it with her dirty hands!" pursued the Thenardier,
- "with her frightful hands!"
-
- Here Cosette redoubled her sobs.
-
- "Will you stop your noise?" screamed the Thenardier.
-
- The man went straight to the street door, opened it, and stepped out.
-
- As soon as he had gone, the Thenardier profited by his absence
- to give Cosette a hearty kick under the table, which made the child
- utter loud cries.
-
- The door opened again, the man re-appeared; he carried in both
- hands the fabulous doll which we have mentioned, and which all
- the village brats had been staring at ever since the morning,
- and he set it upright in front of Cosette, saying:--
-
- "Here; this is for you."
-
- It must be supposed that in the course of the hour and more which he
- had spent there he had taken confused notice through his revery of that
- toy shop, lighted up by fire-pots and candles so splendidly that it
- was visible like an illumination through the window of the drinking-shop.
-
- Cosette raised her eyes; she gazed at the man approaching her
- with that doll as she might have gazed at the sun; she heard
- the unprecedented words, "It is for you"; she stared at him;
- she stared at the doll; then she slowly retreated, and hid herself
- at the extreme end, under the table in a corner of the wall.
-
- She no longer cried; she no longer wept; she had the appearance
- of no longer daring to breathe.
-
- The Thenardier, Eponine, and Azelma were like statues also;
- the very drinkers had paused; a solemn silence reigned through
- the whole room.
-
- Madame Thenardier, petrified and mute, recommenced her conjectures:
- "Who is that old fellow? Is he a poor man? Is he a millionaire?
- Perhaps he is both; that is to say, a thief."
-
- The face of the male Thenardier presented that expressive fold
- which accentuates the human countenance whenever the dominant
- instinct appears there in all its bestial force. The tavern-keeper
- stared alternately at the doll and at the traveller; he seemed to be
- scenting out the man, as he would have scented out a bag of money.
- This did not last longer than the space of a flash of lightning.
- He stepped up to his wife and said to her in a low voice:--
-
- "That machine costs at least thirty francs. No nonsense.
- Down on your belly before that man!"
-
- Gross natures have this in common with naive natures, that they
- possess no transition state.
-
- "Well, Cosette," said the Thenardier, in a voice that strove to be sweet,
- and which was composed of the bitter honey of malicious women,
- "aren't you going to take your doll?"
-
- Cosette ventured to emerge from her hole.
-
- "The gentleman has given you a doll, my little Cosette,"
- said Thenardier, with a caressing air. "Take it; it is yours."
-
- Cosette gazed at the marvellous doll in a sort of terror.
- Her face was still flooded with tears, but her eyes began to fill,
- like the sky at daybreak, with strange beams of joy. What she felt
- at that moment was a little like what she would have felt if she
- had been abruptly told, "Little one, you are the Queen of France."
-
- It seemed to her that if she touched that doll, lightning would
- dart from it.
-
- This was true, up to a certain point, for she said to herself
- that the Thenardier would scold and beat her.
-
- Nevertheless, the attraction carried the day. She ended by drawing
- near and murmuring timidly as she turned towards Madame Thenardier:--
-
- "May I, Madame?"
-
- No words can render that air, at once despairing, terrified, and ecstatic.
-
- "Pardi!" cried the Thenardier, "it is yours. The gentleman has
- given it to you."
-
- "Truly, sir?" said Cosette. "Is it true? Is the `lady' mine?"
-
- The stranger's eyes seemed to be full of tears. He appeared
- to have reached that point of emotion where a man does not speak
- for fear lest he should weep. He nodded to Cosette, and placed
- the "lady's" hand in her tiny hand.
-
- Cosette hastily withdrew her hand, as though that of the "lady"
- scorched her, and began to stare at the floor. We are forced
- to add that at that moment she stuck out her tongue immoderately.
- All at once she wheeled round and seized the doll in a transport.
-
- "I shall call her Catherine," she said.
-
- It was an odd moment when Cosette's rags met and clasped the ribbons
- and fresh pink muslins of the doll.
-
- "Madame," she resumed, "may I put her on a chair?"
-
- "Yes, my child," replied the Thenardier.
-
- It was now the turn of Eponine and Azelma to gaze at Cosette with envy.
-
- Cosette placed Catherine on a chair, then seated herself on the floor
- in front of her, and remained motionless, without uttering a word,
- in an attitude of contemplation.
-
- "Play, Cosette," said the stranger.
-
- "Oh! I am playing," returned the child.
-
- This stranger, this unknown individual, who had the air of a
- visit which Providence was making on Cosette, was the person
- whom the Thenardier hated worse than any one in the world at
- that moment. However, it was necessary to control herself.
- Habituated as she was to dissimulation through endeavoring to copy
- her husband in all his actions, these emotions were more than
- she could endure. She made haste to send her daughters to bed,
- then she asked the man's permission to send Cosette off also;
- "for she has worked hard all day," she added with a maternal air.
- Cosette went off to bed, carrying Catherine in her arms.
-
- From time to time the Thenardier went to the other end of the
- room where her husband was, to relieve her soul, as she said.
- She exchanged with her husband words which were all the more furious
- because she dared not utter them aloud.
-
- "Old beast! What has he got in his belly, to come and upset us
- in this manner! To want that little monster to play! to give away
- forty-franc dolls to a jade that I would sell for forty sous,
- so I would! A little more and he will be saying Your Majesty to her,
- as though to the Duchess de Berry! Is there any sense in it?
- Is he mad, then, that mysterious old fellow?"
-
- "Why! it is perfectly simple," replied Thenardier, "if that amuses him!
- It amuses you to have the little one work; it amuses him to have
- her play. He's all right. A traveller can do what he pleases
- when he pays for it. If the old fellow is a philanthropist,
- what is that to you? If he is an imbecile, it does not concern you.
- What are you worrying for, so long as he has money?"
-
- The language of a master, and the reasoning of an innkeeper,
- neither of which admitted of any reply.
-
- The man had placed his elbows on the table, and resumed his
- thoughtful attitude. All the other travellers, both pedlers
- and carters, had withdrawn a little, and had ceased singing.
- They were staring at him from a distance, with a sort of respectful awe.
- This poorly dressed man, who drew "hind-wheels" from his pocket with
- so much ease, and who lavished gigantic dolls on dirty little brats
- in wooden shoes, was certainly a magnificent fellow, and one to be feared.
-
- Many hours passed. The midnight mass was over, the chimes had ceased,
- the drinkers had taken their departure, the drinking-shop was closed,
- the public room was deserted, the fire extinct, the stranger still
- remained in the same place and the same attitude. From time
- to time he changed the elbow on which he leaned. That was all;
- but he had not said a word since Cosette had left the room.
-
- The Thenardiers alone, out of politeness and curiosity, had remained
- in the room.
-
- "Is he going to pass the night in that fashion?" grumbled the Thenardier.
- When two o'clock in the morning struck, she declared herself vanquished,
- and said to her husband, "I'm going to bed. Do as you like."
- Her husband seated himself at a table in the corner, lighted a candle,
- and began to read the Courrier Francais.
-
- A good hour passed thus. The worthy inn-keeper had perused the
- Courrier Francais at least three times, from the date of the number
- to the printer's name. The stranger did not stir.
-
- Thenardier fidgeted, coughed, spit, blew his nose, and creaked
- his chair. Not a movement on the man's part. "Is he asleep?"
- thought Thenardier. The man was not asleep, but nothing could
- arouse him.
-
- At last Thenardier took off his cap, stepped gently up to him,
- and ventured to say:--
-
- "Is not Monsieur going to his repose?"
-
- Not going to bed would have seemed to him excessive and familiar.
- To repose smacked of luxury and respect. These words possess
- the mysterious and admirable property of swelling the bill on
- the following day. A chamber where one sleeps costs twenty sous;
- a chamber in which one reposes costs twenty francs.
-
- "Well!" said the stranger, "you are right. Where is your stable?"
-
- "Sir!" exclaimed Thenardier, with a smile, "I will conduct you, sir."
-
- He took the candle; the man picked up his bundle and cudgel,
- and Thenardier conducted him to a chamber on the first floor,
- which was of rare splendor, all furnished in mahogany, with a
- low bedstead, curtained with red calico.
-
- "What is this?" said the traveller.
-
- "It is really our bridal chamber," said the tavern-keeper. "My wife
- and I occupy another. This is only entered three or four times
- a year."
-
- "I should have liked the stable quite as well," said the man, abruptly.
-
- Thenardier pretended not to hear this unamiable remark.
-
- He lighted two perfectly fresh wax candles which figured on
- the chimney-piece. A very good fire was flickering on the hearth.
-
- On the chimney-piece, under a glass globe, stood a woman's head-dress
- in silver wire and orange flowers.
-
- "And what is this?" resumed the stranger.
-
- "That, sir," said Thenardier, "is my wife's wedding bonnet."
-
- The traveller surveyed the object with a glance which seemed to say,
- "There really was a time, then, when that monster was a maiden?"
-
- Thenardier lied, however. When he had leased this paltry building
- for the purpose of converting it into a tavern, he had found
- this chamber decorated in just this manner, and had purchased
- the furniture and obtained the orange flowers at second hand,
- with the idea that this would cast a graceful shadow on "his spouse,"
- and would result in what the English call respectability for his house.
-
- When the traveller turned round, the host had disappeared.
- Thenardier had withdrawn discreetly, without venturing to wish him
- a good night, as he did not wish to treat with disrespectful cordiality
- a man whom he proposed to fleece royally the following morning.
-
- The inn-keeper retired to his room. His wife was in bed, but she
- was not asleep. When she heard her husband's step she turned
- over and said to him:--
-
- "Do you know, I'm going to turn Cosette out of doors to-morrow."
-
- Thenardier replied coldly:--
-
- "How you do go on!"
-
- They exchanged no further words, and a few moments later their
- candle was extinguished.
-
- As for the traveller, he had deposited his cudgel and his bundle
- in a corner. The landlord once gone, he threw himself into
- an arm-chair and remained for some time buried in thought.
- Then he removed his shoes, took one of the two candles,
- blew out the other, opened the door, and quitted the room,
- gazing about him like a person who is in search of something.
- He traversed a corridor and came upon a staircase. There he heard
- a very faint and gentle sound like the breathing of a child.
- He followed this sound, and came to a sort of triangular recess built
- under the staircase, or rather formed by the staircase itself.
- This recess was nothing else than the space under the steps.
- There, in the midst of all sorts of old papers and potsherds,
- among dust and spiders' webs, was a bed--if one can call by the name
- of bed a straw pallet so full of holes as to display the straw,
- and a coverlet so tattered as to show the pallet. No sheets.
- This was placed on the floor.
-
- In this bed Cosette was sleeping.
-
- The man approached and gazed down upon her.
-
- Cosette was in a profound sleep; she was fully dressed. In the
- winter she did not undress, in order that she might not be so cold.
-
- Against her breast was pressed the doll, whose large eyes, wide open,
- glittered in the dark. From time to time she gave vent to a deep
- sigh as though she were on the point of waking, and she strained
- the doll almost convulsively in her arms. Beside her bed there
- was only one of her wooden shoes.
-
- A door which stood open near Cosette's pallet permitted a view
- of a rather large, dark room. The stranger stepped into it.
- At the further extremity, through a glass door, he saw two small,
- very white beds. They belonged to Eponine and Azelma.
- Behind these beds, and half hidden, stood an uncurtained wicker cradle,
- in which the little boy who had cried all the evening lay asleep.
-
- The stranger conjectured that this chamber connected with that of
- the Thenardier pair. He was on the point of retreating when his
- eye fell upon the fireplace--one of those vast tavern chimneys
- where there is always so little fire when there is any fire at all,
- and which are so cold to look at. There was no fire in this one,
- there was not even ashes; but there was something which attracted
- the stranger's gaze, nevertheless. It was two tiny children's shoes,
- coquettish in shape and unequal in size. The traveller recalled
- the graceful and immemorial custom in accordance with which children
- place their shoes in the chimney on Christmas eve, there to await
- in the darkness some sparkling gift from their good fairy.
- Eponine and Azelma had taken care not to omit this, and each of them
- had set one of her shoes on the hearth.
-
- The traveller bent over them.
-
- The fairy, that is to say, their mother, had already paid her visit,
- and in each he saw a brand-new and shining ten-sou piece.
-
- The man straightened himself up, and was on the point of withdrawing,
- when far in, in the darkest corner of the hearth, he caught sight
- of another object. He looked at it, and recognized a wooden shoe,
- a frightful shoe of the coarsest description, half dilapidated
- and all covered with ashes and dried mud. It was Cosette's sabot.
- Cosette, with that touching trust of childhood, which can always
- be deceived yet never discouraged, had placed her shoe on the
- hearth-stone also.
-
- Hope in a child who has never known anything but despair is a sweet
- and touching thing.
-
- There was nothing in this wooden shoe.
-
- The stranger fumbled in his waistcoat, bent over and placed a louis
- d'or in Cosette's shoe.
-
- Then he regained his own chamber with the stealthy tread of a wolf.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- THENARDIER AND HIS MANOEUVRES
-
-
- On the following morning, two hours at least before day-break, Thenardier,
- seated beside a candle in the public room of the tavern, pen in hand,
- was making out the bill for the traveller with the yellow coat.
-
- His wife, standing beside him, and half bent over him, was following
- him with her eyes. They exchanged not a word. On the one hand,
- there was profound meditation, on the other, the religious
- admiration with which one watches the birth and development
- of a marvel of the human mind. A noise was audible in the house;
- it was the Lark sweeping the stairs.
-
- After the lapse of a good quarter of an hour, and some erasures,
- Thenardier produced the following masterpiece:--
-
- BILL OF THE GENTLEMAN IN No. 1.
-
- Supper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 francs.
- Chamber . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 "
- Candle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 "
- Fire . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 "
- Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 "
- ----------
- Total . . . . . . 23 francs.
-
-
- Service was written servisse.
-
- "Twenty-three francs!" cried the woman, with an enthusiasm which
- was mingled with some hesitation.
-
- Like all great artists, Thenardier was dissatisfied.
-
- "Peuh!" he exclaimed.
-
- It was the accent of Castlereagh auditing France's bill at the
- Congress of Vienna.
-
- "Monsieur Thenardier, you are right; he certainly owes that,"
- murmured the wife, who was thinking of the doll bestowed on Cosette
- in the presence of her daughters. "It is just, but it is too much.
- He will not pay it."
-
- Thenardier laughed coldly, as usual, and said:--
-
- "He will pay."
-
- This laugh was the supreme assertion of certainty and authority.
- That which was asserted in this manner must needs be so. His wife did
- not insist.
-
- She set about arranging the table; her husband paced the room.
- A moment later he added:--
-
- "I owe full fifteen hundred francs!"
-
- He went and seated himself in the chimney-corner, meditating,
- with his feet among the warm ashes.
-
- "Ah! by the way," resumed his wife, "you don't forget that I'm
- going to turn Cosette out of doors to-day? The monster! She breaks
- my heart with that doll of hers! I'd rather marry Louis XVIII.
- than keep her another day in the house!"
-
- Thenardier lighted his pipe, and replied between two puffs:--
-
- "You will hand that bill to the man."
-
- Then he went out.
-
- Hardly had he left the room when the traveller entered.
-
- Thenardier instantly reappeared behind him and remained motionless
- in the half-open door, visible only to his wife.
-
- The yellow man carried his bundle and his cudgel in his hand.
-
- "Up so early?" said Madame Thenardier; "is Monsieur leaving us already?"
-
- As she spoke thus, she was twisting the bill about in her hands
- with an embarrassed air, and making creases in it with her nails.
- Her hard face presented a shade which was not habitual with it,--
- timidity and scruples.
-
- To present such a bill to a man who had so completely the air "of
- a poor wretch" seemed difficult to her.
-
- The traveller appeared to be preoccupied and absent-minded. He replied:--
-
- "Yes, Madame, I am going."
-
- "So Monsieur has no business in Montfermeil?"
-
- "No, I was passing through. That is all. What do I owe you,
- Madame," he added.
-
- The Thenardier silently handed him the folded bill.
-
- The man unfolded the paper and glanced at it; but his thoughts
- were evidently elsewhere.
-
- "Madame," he resumed, "is business good here in Montfermeil?"
-
- "So so, Monsieur," replied the Thenardier, stupefied at not
- witnessing another sort of explosion.
-
- She continued, in a dreary and lamentable tone:--
-
- "Oh! Monsieur, times are so hard! and then, we have so few bourgeois
- in the neighborhood! All the people are poor, you see. If we had not,
- now and then, some rich and generous travellers like Monsieur,
- we should not get along at all. We have so many expenses. Just see,
- that child is costing us our very eyes."
-
- "What child?"
-
- "Why, the little one, you know! Cosette--the Lark, as she
- is called hereabouts!"
-
- "Ah!" said the man.
-
- She went on:--
-
- "How stupid these peasants are with their nicknames! She has more
- the air of a bat than of a lark. You see, sir, we do not ask charity,
- and we cannot bestow it. We earn nothing and we have to pay out
- a great deal. The license, the imposts, the door and window tax,
- the hundredths! Monsieur is aware that the government demands
- a terrible deal of money. And then, I have my daughters.
- I have no need to bring up other people's children."
-
- The man resumed, in that voice which he strove to render indifferent,
- and in which there lingered a tremor:--
-
- "What if one were to rid you of her?"
-
- "Who? Cosette?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- The landlady's red and violent face brightened up hideously.
-
- "Ah! sir, my dear sir, take her, keep her, lead her off,
- carry her away, sugar her, stuff her with truffles, drink her,
- eat her, and the blessings of the good holy Virgin and of all
- the saints of paradise be upon you!"
-
- "Agreed."
-
- "Really! You will take her away?"
-
- "I will take her away."
-
- "Immediately?"
-
- "Immediately. Call the child."
-
- "Cosette!" screamed the Thenardier.
-
- "In the meantime," pursued the man, "I will pay you what I owe you.
- How much is it?"
-
- He cast a glance on the bill, and could not restrain a start
- of surprise:--
-
- "Twenty-three francs!"
-
- He looked at the landlady, and repeated:--
-
- "Twenty-three francs?"
-
- There was in the enunciation of these words, thus repeated,
- an accent between an exclamation and an interrogation point.
-
- The Thenardier had had time to prepare herself for the shock.
- She replied, with assurance:--
-
- "Good gracious, yes, sir, it is twenty-three francs."
-
- The stranger laid five five-franc pieces on the table.
-
- "Go and get the child," said he.
-
- At that moment Thenardier advanced to the middle of the room,
- and said:--
-
- "Monsieur owes twenty-six sous."
-
- "Twenty-six sous!" exclaimed his wife.
-
- "Twenty sous for the chamber," resumed Thenardier, coldly, "and six
- sous for his supper. As for the child, I must discuss that matter
- a little with the gentleman. Leave us, wife."
-
- Madame Thenardier was dazzled as with the shock caused by unexpected
- lightning flashes of talent. She was conscious that a great actor
- was making his entrance on the stage, uttered not a word in reply,
- and left the room.
-
- As soon as they were alone, Thenardier offered the traveller a chair.
- The traveller seated himself; Thenardier remained standing,
- and his face assumed a singular expression of good-fellowship
- and simplicity.
-
- "Sir," said he, "what I have to say to you is this, that I adore
- that child."
-
- The stranger gazed intently at him.
-
- "What child?"
-
- Thenardier continued:--
-
- "How strange it is, one grows attached. What money is that?
- Take back your hundred-sou piece. I adore the child."
-
- "Whom do you mean?" demanded the stranger.
-
- "Eh! our little Cosette! Are you not intending to take her away
- from us? Well, I speak frankly; as true as you are an honest man,
- I will not consent to it. I shall miss that child. I saw her first
- when she was a tiny thing. It is true that she costs us money;
- it is true that she has her faults; it is true that we are not rich;
- it is true that I have paid out over four hundred francs for
- drugs for just one of her illnesses! But one must do something
- for the good God's sake. She has neither father nor mother.
- I have brought her up. I have bread enough for her and for myself.
- In truth, I think a great deal of that child. You understand,
- one conceives an affection for a person; I am a good sort of
- a beast, I am; I do not reason; I love that little girl; my wife
- is quick-tempered, but she loves her also. You see, she is just
- the same as our own child. I want to keep her to babble about
- the house."
-
- The stranger kept his eye intently fixed on Thenardier.
- The latter continued:--
-
- "Excuse me, sir, but one does not give away one's child to a
- passer-by, like that. I am right, am I not? Still, I don't say--
- you are rich; you have the air of a very good man,--if it were
- for her happiness. But one must find out that. You understand:
- suppose that I were to let her go and to sacrifice myself,
- I should like to know what becomes of her; I should not wish to
- lose sight of her; I should like to know with whom she is living,
- so that I could go to see her from time to time; so that she may know
- that her good foster-father is alive, that he is watching over her.
- In short, there are things which are not possible. I do not even
- know your name. If you were to take her away, I should say:
- `Well, and the Lark, what has become of her?' One must, at least,
- see some petty scrap of paper, some trifle in the way of a passport,
- you know!"
-
- The stranger, still surveying him with that gaze which penetrates,
- as the saying goes, to the very depths of the conscience, replied in
- a grave, firm voice:--
-
- "Monsieur Thenardier, one does not require a passport to travel five
- leagues from Paris. If I take Cosette away, I shall take her away,
- and that is the end of the matter. You will not know my name,
- you will not know my residence, you will not know where she is;
- and my intention is that she shall never set eyes on you again
- so long as she lives. I break the thread which binds her foot,
- and she departs. Does that suit you? Yes or no?"
-
- Since geniuses, like demons, recognize the presence of a superior
- God by certain signs, Thenardier comprehended that he had to deal
- with a very strong person. It was like an intuition; he comprehended
- it with his clear and sagacious promptitude. While drinking with
- the carters, smoking, and singing coarse songs on the preceding evening,
- he had devoted the whole of the time to observing the stranger,
- watching him like a cat, and studying him like a mathematician.
- He had watched him, both on his own account, for the pleasure of
- the thing, and through instinct, and had spied upon him as though
- he had been paid for so doing. Not a movement, not a gesture,
- on the part of the man in the yellow great-coat had escaped him.
- Even before the stranger had so clearly manifested his interest
- in Cosette, Thenardier had divined his purpose. He had caught
- the old man's deep glances returning constantly to the child.
- Who was this man? Why this interest? Why this hideous costume,
- when he had so much money in his purse? Questions which he put to
- himself without being able to solve them, and which irritated him.
- He had pondered it all night long. He could not be Cosette's father.
- Was he her grandfather? Then why not make himself known at once?
- When one has a right, one asserts it. This man evidently had no
- right over Cosette. What was it, then? Thenardier lost himself
- in conjectures. He caught glimpses of everything, but he saw nothing.
- Be that as it may, on entering into conversation with the man,
- sure that there was some secret in the case, that the latter had
- some interest in remaining in the shadow, he felt himself strong;
- when he perceived from the stranger's clear and firm retort,
- that this mysterious personage was mysterious in so simple a way,
- he became conscious that he was weak. He had expected nothing
- of the sort. His conjectures were put to the rout. He rallied
- his ideas. He weighed everything in the space of a second.
- Thenardier was one of those men who take in a situation at a glance.
- He decided that the moment had arrived for proceeding straightforward,
- and quickly at that. He did as great leaders do at the decisive moment,
- which they know that they alone recognize; he abruptly unmasked his
- batteries.
-
- "Sir," said he, "I am in need of fifteen hundred francs."
-
- The stranger took from his side pocket an old pocketbook of black leather,
- opened it, drew out three bank-bills, which he laid on the table.
- Then he placed his large thumb on the notes and said to the inn-keeper:--
-
- "Go and fetch Cosette."
-
- While this was taking place, what had Cosette been doing?
-
- On waking up, Cosette had run to get her shoe. In it she had
- found the gold piece. It was not a Napoleon; it was one of those
- perfectly new twenty-franc pieces of the Restoration, on whose
- effigy the little Prussian queue had replaced the laurel wreath.
- Cosette was dazzled. Her destiny began to intoxicate her.
- She did not know what a gold piece was; she had never seen one;
- she hid it quickly in her pocket, as though she had stolen it.
- Still, she felt that it really was hers; she guessed whence her gift
- had come, but the joy which she experienced was full of fear.
- She was happy; above all she was stupefied. Such magnificent
- and beautiful things did not appear real. The doll frightened her,
- the gold piece frightened her. She trembled vaguely in the presence
- of this magnificence. The stranger alone did not frighten her.
- On the contrary, he reassured her. Ever since the preceding evening,
- amid all her amazement, even in her sleep, she had been thinking
- in her little childish mind of that man who seemed to be so poor
- and so sad, and who was so rich and so kind. Everything had
- changed for her since she had met that good man in the forest.
- Cosette, less happy than the most insignificant swallow of heaven,
- had never known what it was to take refuge under a mother's shadow
- and under a wing. For the last five years, that is to say, as far
- back as her memory ran, the poor child had shivered and trembled.
- She had always been exposed completely naked to the sharp wind
- of adversity; now it seemed to her she was clothed. Formerly her
- soul had seemed cold, now it was warm. Cosette was no longer
- afraid of the Thenardier. She was no longer alone; there was some
- one there.
-
- She hastily set about her regular morning duties. That louis,
- which she had about her, in the very apron pocket whence the fifteen-sou
- piece had fallen on the night before, distracted her thoughts.
- She dared not touch it, but she spent five minutes in gazing at it,
- with her tongue hanging out, if the truth must be told. As she
- swept the staircase, she paused, remained standing there motionless,
- forgetful of her broom and of the entire universe, occupied in gazing
- at that star which was blazing at the bottom of her pocket.
-
- It was during one of these periods of contemplation that the
- Thenardier joined her. She had gone in search of Cosette at her
- husband's orders. What was quite unprecedented, she neither
- struck her nor said an insulting word to her.
-
- "Cosette," she said, almost gently, "come immediately."
-
- An instant later Cosette entered the public room.
-
- The stranger took up the bundle which he had brought and untied it.
- This bundle contained a little woollen gown, an apron, a fustian bodice,
- a kerchief, a petticoat, woollen stockings, shoes--a complete outfit
- for a girl of seven years. All was black.
-
- "My child," said the man, "take these, and go and dress yourself quickly."
-
- Daylight was appearing when those of the inhabitants of Montfermeil
- who had begun to open their doors beheld a poorly clad old man
- leading a little girl dressed in mourning, and carrying a pink
- doll in her arms, pass along the road to Paris. They were going
- in the direction of Livry.
-
- It was our man and Cosette.
-
- No one knew the man; as Cosette was no longer in rags, many did
- not recognize her. Cosette was going away. With whom? She did
- not know. Whither? She knew not. All that she understood was
- that she was leaving the Thenardier tavern behind her. No one had
- thought of bidding her farewell, nor had she thought of taking
- leave of any one. She was leaving that hated and hating house.
-
- Poor, gentle creature, whose heart had been repressed up to that hour!
-
- Cosette walked along gravely, with her large eyes wide open,
- and gazing at the sky. She had put her louis in the pocket of her
- new apron. From time to time, she bent down and glanced at it;
- then she looked at the good man. She felt something as though she
- were beside the good God.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- HE WHO SEEKS TO BETTER HIMSELF MAY RENDER HIS SITUATION WORSE
-
-
- Madame Thenardier had allowed her husband to have his own way,
- as was her wont. She had expected great results. When the man
- and Cosette had taken their departure, Thenardier allowed a full
- quarter of an hour to elapse; then he took her aside and showed
- her the fifteen hundred francs.
-
- "Is that all?" said she.
-
- It was the first time since they had set up housekeeping that she
- had dared to criticise one of the master's acts.
-
- The blow told.
-
- "You are right, in sooth," said he; "I am a fool. Give me my hat."
-
- He folded up the three bank-bills, thrust them into his pocket, and ran
- out in all haste; but he made a mistake and turned to the right first.
- Some neighbors, of whom he made inquiries, put him on the track again;
- the Lark and the man had been seen going in the direction of Livry.
- He followed these hints, walking with great strides, and talking
- to himself the while:--
-
- "That man is evidently a million dressed in yellow, and I am an animal.
- First he gave twenty sous, then five francs, then fifty francs,
- then fifteen hundred francs, all with equal readiness. He would
- have given fifteen thousand francs. But I shall overtake him."
-
- And then, that bundle of clothes prepared beforehand for the child;
- all that was singular; many mysteries lay concealed under it.
- One does not let mysteries out of one's hand when one has once
- grasped them. The secrets of the wealthy are sponges of gold;
- one must know how to subject them to pressure. All these thoughts
- whirled through his brain. "I am an animal," said he.
-
- When one leaves Montfermeil and reaches the turn which the road
- takes that runs to Livry, it can be seen stretching out before
- one to a great distance across the plateau. On arriving there,
- he calculated that he ought to be able to see the old man and
- the child. He looked as far as his vision reached, and saw nothing.
- He made fresh inquiries, but he had wasted time. Some passers-by
- informed him that the man and child of whom he was in search had
- gone towards the forest in the direction of Gagny. He hastened
- in that direction.
-
- They were far in advance of him; but a child walks slowly, and he
- walked fast; and then, he was well acquainted with the country.
-
- All at once he paused and dealt himself a blow on his forehead
- like a man who has forgotten some essential point and who is ready
- to retrace his steps.
-
- "I ought to have taken my gun," said he to himself.
-
- Thenardier was one of those double natures which sometimes pass
- through our midst without our being aware of the fact, and who
- disappear without our finding them out, because destiny has only
- exhibited one side of them. It is the fate of many men to live
- thus half submerged. In a calm and even situation, Thenardier
- possessed all that is required to make--we will not say to be--
- what people have agreed to call an honest trader, a good bourgeois.
- At the same time certain circumstances being given, certain shocks
- arriving to bring his under-nature to the surface, he had all
- the requisites for a blackguard. He was a shopkeeper in whom
- there was some taint of the monster. Satan must have occasionally
- crouched down in some corner of the hovel in which Thenardier dwelt,
- and have fallen a-dreaming in the presence of this hideous masterpiece.
-
- After a momentary hesitation:--
-
- "Bah!" he thought; "they will have time to make their escape."
-
- And he pursued his road, walking rapidly straight ahead, and with
- almost an air of certainty, with the sagacity of a fox scenting
- a covey of partridges.
-
- In truth, when he had passed the ponds and had traversed in an oblique
- direction the large clearing which lies on the right of the Avenue
- de Bellevue, and reached that turf alley which nearly makes the circuit
- of the hill, and covers the arch of the ancient aqueduct of the Abbey
- of Chelles, he caught sight, over the top of the brushwood, of the hat
- on which he had already erected so many conjectures; it was that
- man's hat. The brushwood was not high. Thenardier recognized the fact
- that the man and Cosette were sitting there. The child could not be
- seen on account of her small size, but the head of her doll was visible.
-
- Thenardier was not mistaken. The man was sitting there,
- and letting Cosette get somewhat rested. The inn-keeper walked
- round the brushwood and presented himself abruptly to the eyes
- of those whom he was in search of.
-
- "Pardon, excuse me, sir," he said, quite breathless, "but here
- are your fifteen hundred francs."
-
- So saying, he handed the stranger the three bank-bills.
-
- The man raised his eyes.
-
- "What is the meaning of this?"
-
- Thenardier replied respectfully:--
-
- "It means, sir, that I shall take back Cosette."
-
- Cosette shuddered, and pressed close to the old man.
-
- He replied, gazing to the very bottom of Thenardier's eyes the while,
- and enunciating every syllable distinctly:--
-
- "You are go-ing to take back Co-sette?"
-
- "Yes, sir, I am. I will tell you; I have considered the matter.
- In fact, I have not the right to give her to you. I am an honest man,
- you see; this child does not belong to me; she belongs to her mother.
- It was her mother who confided her to me; I can only resign her
- to her mother. You will say to me, `But her mother is dead.'
- Good; in that case I can only give the child up to the person
- who shall bring me a writing, signed by her mother, to the effect
- that I am to hand the child over to the person therein mentioned;
- that is clear."
-
- The man, without making any reply, fumbled in his pocket, and Thenardier
- beheld the pocket-book of bank-bills make its appearance once more.
-
- The tavern-keeper shivered with joy.
-
- "Good!" thought he; "let us hold firm; he is going to bribe me!"
-
- Before opening the pocket-book, the traveller cast a glance about him:
- the spot was absolutely deserted; there was not a soul either in the
- woods or in the valley. The man opened his pocket-book once more
- and drew from it, not the handful of bills which Thenardier expected,
- but a simple little paper, which he unfolded and presented fully
- open to the inn-keeper, saying:--
-
- "You are right; read!"
-
- Thenardier took the paper and read:--
-
- "M. SUR M., March 25, 1823.
-
- "MONSIEUR THENARDIER:--
- You will deliver Cosette to this person.
- You will be paid for all the little things.
- I have the honor to salute you with respect,
- FANTINE."
-
- "You know that signature?" resumed the man.
-
- It certainly was Fantine's signature; Thenardier recognized it.
-
- There was no reply to make; he experienced two violent vexations,
- the vexation of renouncing the bribery which he had hoped for,
- and the vexation of being beaten; the man added:--
-
- "You may keep this paper as your receipt."
-
- Thenardier retreated in tolerably good order.
-
- "This signature is fairly well imitated," he growled between his teeth;
- "however, let it go!"
-
- Then he essayed a desperate effort.
-
- "It is well, sir," he said, "since you are the person, but I must
- be paid for all those little things. A great deal is owing to me."
-
- The man rose to his feet, filliping the dust from his thread-bare sleeve:--
-
- "Monsieur Thenardier, in January last, the mother reckoned that she owed
- you one hundred and twenty francs. In February, you sent her a bill
- of five hundred francs; you received three hundred francs at the end
- of February, and three hundred francs at the beginning of March.
- Since then nine months have elapsed, at fifteen francs a month,
- the price agreed upon, which makes one hundred and thirty-five francs.
- You had received one hundred francs too much; that makes thirty-five
- still owing you. I have just given you fifteen hundred francs."
-
- Thenardier's sensations were those of the wolf at the moment when he
- feels himself nipped and seized by the steel jaw of the trap.
-
- "Who is this devil of a man?" he thought.
-
- He did what the wolf does: he shook himself. Audacity had succeeded
- with him once.
-
- "Monsieur-I-don't-know-your-name," he said resolutely, and this
- time casting aside all respectful ceremony, "I shall take back
- Cosette if you do not give me a thousand crowns."
-
- The stranger said tranquilly:--
-
- "Come, Cosette."
-
- He took Cosette by his left hand, and with his right he picked up
- his cudgel, which was lying on the ground.
-
- Thenardier noted the enormous size of the cudgel and the solitude
- of the spot.
-
- The man plunged into the forest with the child, leaving the inn-keeper
- motionless and speechless.
-
- While they were walking away, Thenardier scrutinized his huge shoulders,
- which were a little rounded, and his great fists.
-
- Then, bringing his eyes back to his own person, they fell upon his
- feeble arms and his thin hands. "I really must have been exceedingly
- stupid not to have thought to bring my gun," he said to himself,
- "since I was going hunting!"
-
- However, the inn-keeper did not give up.
-
- "I want to know where he is going," said he, and he set out to
- follow them at a distance. Two things were left on his hands,
- an irony in the shape of the paper signed Fantine, and a consolation,
- the fifteen hundred francs.
-
- The man led Cosette off in the direction of Livry and Bondy.
- He walked slowly, with drooping head, in an attitude of reflection
- and sadness. The winter had thinned out the forest, so that Thenardier
- did not lose them from sight, although he kept at a good distance.
- The man turned round from time to time, and looked to see if he
- was being followed. All at once he caught sight of Thenardier.
- He plunged suddenly into the brushwood with Cosette, where they could
- both hide themselves. "The deuce!" said Thenardier, and he redoubled
- his pace.
-
- The thickness of the undergrowth forced him to draw nearer to them.
- When the man had reached the densest part of the thicket,
- he wheeled round. It was in vain that Thenardier sought to conceal
- himself in the branches; he could not prevent the man seeing him.
- The man cast upon him an uneasy glance, then elevated his head
- and continued his course. The inn-keeper set out again in pursuit.
- Thus they continued for two or three hundred paces. All at once
- the man turned round once more; he saw the inn-keeper. This time
- he gazed at him with so sombre an air that Thenardier decided
- that it was "useless" to proceed further. Thenardier retraced
- his steps.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- NUMBER 9,430 REAPPEARS, AND COSETTE WINS IT IN THE LOTTERY
-
-
- Jean Valjean was not dead.
-
- When he fell into the sea, or rather, when he threw himself into it,
- he was not ironed, as we have seen. He swam under water until
- he reached a vessel at anchor, to which a boat was moored.
- He found means of hiding himself in this boat until night.
- At night he swam off again, and reached the shore a little way from
- Cape Brun. There, as he did not lack money, he procured clothing.
- A small country-house in the neighborhood of Balaguier was at that
- time the dressing-room of escaped convicts,--a lucrative specialty.
- Then Jean Valjean, like all the sorry fugitives who are seeking to
- evade the vigilance of the law and social fatality, pursued an obscure
- and undulating itinerary. He found his first refuge at Pradeaux,
- near Beausset. Then he directed his course towards Grand-Villard,
- near Briancon, in the Hautes-Alpes. It was a fumbling and uneasy flight,--
- a mole's track, whose branchings are untraceable. Later on, some trace
- of his passage into Ain, in the territory of Civrieux, was discovered;
- in the Pyrenees, at Accons; at the spot called Grange-de-Doumec,
- near the market of Chavailles, and in the environs of Perigueux
- at Brunies, canton of La Chapelle-Gonaguet. He reached Paris.
- We have just seen him at Montfermeil.
-
- His first care on arriving in Paris had been to buy mourning clothes
- for a little girl of from seven to eight years of age; then to procure
- a lodging. That done, he had betaken himself to Montfermeil.
- It will be remembered that already, during his preceding escape,
- he had made a mysterious trip thither, or somewhere in that neighborhood,
- of which the law had gathered an inkling.
-
- However, he was thought to be dead, and this still further
- increased the obscurity which had gathered about him. At Paris,
- one of the journals which chronicled the fact fell into his hands.
- He felt reassured and almost at peace, as though he had really
- been dead.
-
- On the evening of the day when Jean Valjean rescued Cosette from
- the claws of the Thenardiers, he returned to Paris. He re-entered
- it at nightfall, with the child, by way of the Barrier Monceaux.
- There he entered a cabriolet, which took him to the esplanade
- of the Observatoire. There he got out, paid the coachman,
- took Cosette by the hand, and together they directed their steps
- through the darkness,--through the deserted streets which adjoin
- the Ourcine and the Glaciere, towards the Boulevard de l'Hopital.
-
- The day had been strange and filled with emotions for Cosette.
- They had eaten some bread and cheese purchased in isolated taverns,
- behind hedges; they had changed carriages frequently; they had
- travelled short distances on foot. She made no complaint, but she
- was weary, and Jean Valjean perceived it by the way she dragged
- more and more on his hand as she walked. He took her on his back.
- Cosette, without letting go of Catherine, laid her head on Jean
- Valjean's shoulder, and there fell asleep.
-
-
-
- BOOK FOURTH.--THE GORBEAU HOVEL
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- MASTER GORBEAU
-
-
- Forty years ago, a rambler who had ventured into that unknown
- country of the Salpetriere, and who had mounted to the Barriere
- d'Italie by way of the boulevard, reached a point where it might
- be said that Paris disappeared. It was no longer solitude,
- for there were passers-by; it was not the country, for there were
- houses and streets; it was not the city, for the streets had ruts
- like highways, and the grass grew in them; it was not a village,
- the houses were too lofty. What was it, then? It was an inhabited
- spot where there was no one; it was a desert place where there was
- some one; it was a boulevard of the great city, a street of Paris;
- more wild at night than the forest, more gloomy by day than a cemetery.
-
- It was the old quarter of the Marche-aux-Chevaux.
-
- The rambler, if he risked himself outside the four decrepit walls
- of this Marche-aux-Chevaux; if he consented even to pass beyond
- the Rue du Petit-Banquier, after leaving on his right a garden
- protected by high walls; then a field in which tan-bark mills rose
- like gigantic beaver huts; then an enclosure encumbered with timber,
- with a heap of stumps, sawdust, and shavings, on which stood
- a large dog, barking; then a long, low, utterly dilapidated wall,
- with a little black door in mourning, laden with mosses,
- which were covered with flowers in the spring; then, in the most
- deserted spot, a frightful and decrepit building, on which ran
- the inscription in large letters: POST NO BILLS,--this daring
- rambler would have reached little known latitudes at the corner
- of the Rue des Vignes-Saint-Marcel. There, near a factory,
- and between two garden walls, there could be seen, at that epoch,
- a mean building, which, at the first glance, seemed as small as a
- thatched hovel, and which was, in reality, as large as a cathedral.
- It presented its side and gable to the public road; hence its
- apparent diminutiveness. Nearly the whole of the house was hidden.
- Only the door and one window could be seen.
-
- This hovel was only one story high.
-
- The first detail that struck the observer was, that the door could
- never have been anything but the door of a hovel, while the window,
- if it had been carved out of dressed stone instead of being in
- rough masonry, might have been the lattice of a lordly mansion.
-
- The door was nothing but a collection of worm-eaten planks roughly
- bound together by cross-beams which resembled roughly hewn logs.
- It opened directly on a steep staircase of lofty steps, muddy,
- chalky, plaster-stained, dusty steps, of the same width as itself,
- which could be seen from the street, running straight up like a
- ladder and disappearing in the darkness between two walls. The top
- of the shapeless bay into which this door shut was masked by a narrow
- scantling in the centre of which a triangular hole had been sawed,
- which served both as wicket and air-hole when the door was closed.
- On the inside of the door the figures 52 had been traced with a
- couple of strokes of a brush dipped in ink, and above the scantling
- the same hand had daubed the number 50, so that one hesitated.
- Where was one? Above the door it said, "Number 50"; the inside replied,
- "no, Number 52." No one knows what dust-colored figures were
- suspended like draperies from the triangular opening.
-
- The window was large, sufficiently elevated, garnished with
- Venetian blinds, and with a frame in large square panes;
- only these large panes were suffering from various wounds,
- which were both concealed and betrayed by an ingenious paper bandage.
- And the blinds, dislocated and unpasted, threatened passers-by
- rather than screened the occupants. The horizontal slats were
- missing here and there and had been naively replaced with boards
- nailed on perpendicularly; so that what began as a blind ended
- as a shutter. This door with an unclean, and this window with
- an honest though dilapidated air, thus beheld on the same house,
- produced the effect of two incomplete beggars walking side by side,
- with different miens beneath the same rags, the one having
- always been a mendicant, and the other having once been a gentleman.
-
- The staircase led to a very vast edifice which resembled a shed
- which had been converted into a house. This edifice had, for its
- intestinal tube, a long corridor, on which opened to right and left
- sorts of compartments of varied dimensions which were inhabitable
- under stress of circumstances, and rather more like stalls than cells.
- These chambers received their light from the vague waste grounds
- in the neighborhood.
-
- All this was dark, disagreeable, wan, melancholy, sepulchral;
- traversed according as the crevices lay in the roof or in the door,
- by cold rays or by icy winds. An interesting and picturesque
- peculiarity of this sort of dwelling is the enormous size of the spiders.
-
- To the left of the entrance door, on the boulevard side, at about
- the height of a man from the ground, a small window which had been
- walled up formed a square niche full of stones which the children
- had thrown there as they passed by.
-
- A portion of this building has recently been demolished.
- From what still remains of it one can form a judgment as to what it
- was in former days. As a whole, it was not over a hundred years old.
- A hundred years is youth in a church and age in a house.
- It seems as though man's lodging partook of his ephemeral character,
- and God's house of his eternity.
-
- The postmen called the house Number 50-52; but it was known
- in the neighborhood as the Gorbeau house.
-
- Let us explain whence this appellation was derived.
-
- Collectors of petty details, who become herbalists of anecdotes,
- and prick slippery dates into their memories with a pin,
- know that there was in Paris, during the last century, about 1770,
- two attorneys at the Chatelet named, one Corbeau (Raven), the other
- Renard (Fox). The two names had been forestalled by La Fontaine.
- The opportunity was too fine for the lawyers; they made the most of it.
- A parody was immediately put in circulation in the galleries of the
- court-house, in verses that limped a little:--
-
-
- Maitre Corbeau, sur un dossier perche,[13]
- Tenait dans son bee une saisie executoire;
- Maitre Renard, par l'odeur alleche,
- Lui fit a peu pres cette histoire:
- He! bonjour. Etc.
-
- [13] Lawyer Corbeau, perched on a docket, held in his beak a writ
- of execution; Lawyer Renard, attracted by the smell, addressed him
- nearly as follows, etc.
-
-
- The two honest practitioners, embarrassed by the jests, and finding
- the bearing of their heads interfered with by the shouts of laughter
- which followed them, resolved to get rid of their names, and hit
- upon the expedient of applying to the king.
-
- Their petition was presented to Louis XV. on the same day when the
- Papal Nuncio, on the one hand, and the Cardinal de la Roche-Aymon on
- the other, both devoutly kneeling, were each engaged in putting on,
- in his Majesty's presence, a slipper on the bare feet of Madame
- du Barry, who had just got out of bed. The king, who was laughing,
- continued to laugh, passed gayly from the two bishops to the two
- lawyers, and bestowed on these limbs of the law their former names,
- or nearly so. By the kings command, Maitre Corbeau was permitted
- to add a tail to his initial letter and to call himself Gorbeau.
- Maitre Renard was less lucky; all he obtained was leave to place a P
- in front of his R, and to call himself Prenard; so that the second
- name bore almost as much resemblance as the first.
-
- Now, according to local tradition, this Maitre Gorbeau had been
- the proprietor of the building numbered 50-52 on the Boulevard de
- l'Hopital. He was even the author of the monumental window.
-
- Hence the edifice bore the name of the Gorbeau house.
-
- Opposite this house, among the trees of the boulevard, rose a great elm
- which was three-quarters dead; almost directly facing it opens the Rue de
- la Barriere des Gobelins, a street then without houses, unpaved, planted
- with unhealthy trees, which was green or muddy according to the season,
- and which ended squarely in the exterior wall of Paris. An odor
- of copperas issued in puffs from the roofs of the neighboring factory.
-
- The barrier was close at hand. In 1823 the city wall was still
- in existence.
-
- This barrier itself evoked gloomy fancies in the mind. It was
- the road to Bicetre. It was through it that, under the Empire
- and the Restoration, prisoners condemned to death re-entered Paris
- on the day of their execution. It was there, that, about 1829,
- was committed that mysterious assassination, called "The assassination
- of the Fontainebleau barrier," whose authors justice was never able
- to discover; a melancholy problem which has never been elucidated,
- a frightful enigma which has never been unriddled. Take a few steps,
- and you come upon that fatal Rue Croulebarbe, where Ulbach stabbed
- the goat-girl of Ivry to the sound of thunder, as in the melodramas.
- A few paces more, and you arrive at the abominable pollarded elms
- of the Barriere Saint-Jacques, that expedient of the philanthropist
- to conceal the scaffold, that miserable and shameful Place de Grove
- of a shop-keeping and bourgeois society, which recoiled before
- the death penalty, neither daring to abolish it with grandeur,
- nor to uphold it with authority.
-
- Leaving aside this Place Saint-Jacques, which was, as it were,
- predestined, and which has always been horrible, probably the
- most mournful spot on that mournful boulevard, seven and thirty
- years ago, was the spot which even to-day is so unattractive,
- where stood the building Number 50-52.
-
- Bourgeois houses only began to spring up there twenty-five years later.
- The place was unpleasant. In addition to the gloomy thoughts which
- assailed one there, one was conscious of being between the Salpetriere,
- a glimpse of whose dome could be seen, and Bicetre, whose outskirts
- one was fairly touching; that is to say, between the madness of women
- and the madness of men. As far as the eye could see, one could
- perceive nothing but the abattoirs, the city wall, and the fronts of
- a few factories, resembling barracks or monasteries; everywhere about
- stood hovels, rubbish, ancient walls blackened like cerecloths,
- new white walls like winding-sheets; everywhere parallel rows of trees,
- buildings erected on a line, flat constructions, long, cold rows,
- and the melancholy sadness of right angles. Not an unevenness
- of the ground, not a caprice in the architecture, not a fold.
- The ensemble was glacial, regular, hideous. Nothing oppresses
- the heart like symmetry. It is because symmetry is ennui,
- and ennui is at the very foundation of grief. Despair yawns.
- Something more terrible than a hell where one suffers may be imagined,
- and that is a hell where one is bored. If such a hell existed,
- that bit of the Boulevard de l'Hopital might have formed the entrance
- to it.
-
- Nevertheless, at nightfall, at the moment when the daylight
- is vanishing, especially in winter, at the hour when the twilight
- breeze tears from the elms their last russet leaves, when the
- darkness is deep and starless, or when the moon and the wind are
- making openings in the clouds and losing themselves in the shadows,
- this boulevard suddenly becomes frightful. The black lines sink
- inwards and are lost in the shades, like morsels of the infinite.
- The passer-by cannot refrain from recalling the innumerable
- traditions of the place which are connected with the gibbet.
- The solitude of this spot, where so many crimes have been committed,
- had something terrible about it. One almost had a presentiment
- of meeting with traps in that darkness; all the confused forms
- of the darkness seemed suspicious, and the long, hollow square,
- of which one caught a glimpse between each tree, seemed graves:
- by day it was ugly; in the evening melancholy; by night it
- was sinister.
-
- In summer, at twilight, one saw, here and there, a few old women
- seated at the foot of the elm, on benches mouldy with rain.
- These good old women were fond of begging.
-
- However, this quarter, which had a superannuated rather than an
- antique air, was tending even then to transformation. Even at
- that time any one who was desirous of seeing it had to make haste.
- Each day some detail of the whole effect was disappearing.
- For the last twenty years the station of the Orleans railway
- has stood beside the old faubourg and distracted it, as it does
- to-day. Wherever it is placed on the borders of a capital,
- a railway station is the death of a suburb and the birth of a city.
- It seems as though, around these great centres of the movements
- of a people, the earth, full of germs, trembled and yawned, to engulf
- the ancient dwellings of men and to allow new ones to spring forth,
- at the rattle of these powerful machines, at the breath of these
- monstrous horses of civilization which devour coal and vomit fire.
- The old houses crumble and new ones rise.
-
- Since the Orleans railway has invaded the region of the Salpetriere,
- the ancient, narrow streets which adjoin the moats Saint-Victor
- and the Jardin des Plantes tremble, as they are violently traversed
- three or four times each day by those currents of coach fiacres
- and omnibuses which, in a given time, crowd back the houses
- to the right and the left; for there are things which are odd
- when said that are rigorously exact; and just as it is true to say
- that in large cities the sun makes the southern fronts of houses
- to vegetate and grow, it is certain that the frequent passage of
- vehicles enlarges streets. The symptoms of a new life are evident.
- In this old provincial quarter, in the wildest nooks, the pavement
- shows itself, the sidewalks begin to crawl and to grow longer,
- even where there are as yet no pedestrians. One morning,--a memorable
- morning in July, 1845,--black pots of bitumen were seen smoking there;
- on that day it might be said that civilization had arrived in the Rue
- de l'Ourcine, and that Paris had entered the suburb of Saint-Marceau.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- A NEST FOR OWL AND A WARBLER
-
-
- It was in front of this Gorbeau house that Jean Valjean halted.
- Like wild birds, he had chosen this desert place to construct
- his nest.
-
- He fumbled in his waistcoat pocket, drew out a sort of a pass-key,
- opened the door, entered, closed it again carefully, and ascended
- the staircase, still carrying Cosette.
-
- At the top of the stairs he drew from his pocket another key,
- with which he opened another door. The chamber which he entered,
- and which he closed again instantly, was a kind of moderately
- spacious attic, furnished with a mattress laid on the floor,
- a table, and several chairs; a stove in which a fire was burning,
- and whose embers were visible, stood in one corner. A lantern
- on the boulevard cast a vague light into this poor room.
- At the extreme end there was a dressing-room with a folding bed;
- Jean Valjean carried the child to this bed and laid her down there
- without waking her.
-
- He struck a match and lighted a candle. All this was prepared
- beforehand on the table, and, as he had done on the previous evening,
- he began to scrutinize Cosette's face with a gaze full of ecstasy,
- in which the expression of kindness and tenderness almost amounted
- to aberration. The little girl, with that tranquil confidence
- which belongs only to extreme strength and extreme weakness,
- had fallen asleep without knowing with whom she was, and continued
- to sleep without knowing where she was.
-
- Jean Valjean bent down and kissed that child's hand.
-
- Nine months before he had kissed the hand of the mother, who had
- also just fallen asleep.
-
- The same sad, piercing, religious sentiment filled his heart.
-
- He knelt beside Cosette's bed.
-
- lt was broad daylight, and the child still slept. A wan ray
- of the December sun penetrated the window of the attic and lay
- upon the ceiling in long threads of light and shade. All at once
- a heavily laden carrier's cart, which was passing along the boulevard,
- shook the frail bed, like a clap of thunder, and made it quiver
- from top to bottom.
-
- "Yes, madame!" cried Cosette, waking with a start, "here I am!
- here I am!"
-
- And she sprang out of bed, her eyes still half shut with the heaviness
- of sleep, extending her arms towards the corner of the wall.
-
- "Ah! mon Dieu, my broom!" said she.
-
- She opened her eyes wide now, and beheld the smiling countenance
- of Jean Valjean.
-
- "Ah! so it is true!" said the child. "Good morning, Monsieur."
-
- Children accept joy and happiness instantly and familiarly,
- being themselves by nature joy and happiness.
-
- Cosette caught sight of Catherine at the foot of her bed,
- and took possession of her, and, as she played, she put a hundred
- questions to Jean Valjean. Where was she? Was Paris very large?
- Was Madame Thenardier very far away? Was she to go back? etc., etc.
- All at once she exclaimed, "How pretty it is here!"
-
- It was a frightful hole, but she felt free.
-
- "Must I sweep?" she resumed at last.
-
- "Play!" said Jean Valjean.
-
- The day passed thus. Cosette, without troubling herself to understand
- anything, was inexpressibly happy with that doll and that kind man.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- TWO MISFORTUNES MAKE ONE PIECE OF GOOD FORTUNE
-
-
- On the following morning, at daybreak, Jean Valjean was still by
- Cosette's bedside; he watched there motionless, waiting for her to wake.
-
- Some new thing had come into his soul.
-
- Jean Valjean had never loved anything; for twenty-five years he had been
- alone in the world. He had never been father, lover, husband, friend.
- In the prison he had been vicious, gloomy, chaste, ignorant,
- and shy. The heart of that ex-convict was full of virginity.
- His sister and his sister's children had left him only a vague
- and far-off memory which had finally almost completely vanished;
- he had made every effort to find them, and not having been able
- to find them, he had forgotten them. Human nature is made thus;
- the other tender emotions of his youth, if he had ever had any,
- had fallen into an abyss.
-
- When he saw Cosette, when he had taken possession of her,
- carried her off, and delivered her, he felt his heart moved within him.
-
- All the passion and affection within him awoke, and rushed towards
- that child. He approached the bed, where she lay sleeping,
- and trembled with joy. He suffered all the pangs of a mother,
- and he knew not what it meant; for that great and singular movement
- of a heart which begins to love is a very obscure and a very sweet thing.
-
- Poor old man, with a perfectly new heart!
-
- Only, as he was five and fifty, and Cosette eight years of age,
- all that might have been love in the whole course of his life flowed
- together into a sort of ineffable light.
-
- It was the second white apparition which he had encountered.
- The Bishop had caused the dawn of virtue to rise on his horizon;
- Cosette caused the dawn of love to rise.
-
- The early days passed in this dazzled state.
-
- Cosette, on her side, had also, unknown to herself, become another
- being, poor little thing! She was so little when her mother
- left her, that she no longer remembered her. Like all children,
- who resemble young shoots of the vine, which cling to everything,
- she had tried to love; she had not succeeded. All had repulsed her,--
- the Thenardiers, their children, other children. She had loved the dog,
- and he had died, after which nothing and nobody would have anything
- to do with her. It is a sad thing to say, and we have already
- intimated it, that, at eight years of age, her heart was cold.
- It was not her fault; it was not the faculty of loving that she lacked;
- alas! it was the possibility. Thus, from the very first day,
- all her sentient and thinking powers loved this kind man. She felt
- that which she had never felt before--a sensation of expansion.
-
- The man no longer produced on her the effect of being old or poor;
- she thought Jean Valjean handsome, just as she thought the hovel pretty.
-
- These are the effects of the dawn, of childhood, of joy. The novelty
- of the earth and of life counts for something here. Nothing is
- so charming as the coloring reflection of happiness on a garret.
- We all have in our past a delightful garret.
-
- Nature, a difference of fifty years, had set a profound gulf
- between Jean Valjean and Cosette; destiny filled in this gulf.
- Destiny suddenly united and wedded with its irresistible power
- these two uprooted existences, differing in age, alike in sorrow.
- One, in fact, completed the other. Cosette's instinct sought a father,
- as Jean Valjean's instinct sought a child. To meet was to find
- each other. At the mysterious moment when their hands touched,
- they were welded together. When these two souls perceived each other,
- they recognized each other as necessary to each other, and embraced
- each other closely.
-
- Taking the words in their most comprehensive and absolute sense,
- we may say that, separated from every one by the walls of the tomb,
- Jean Valjean was the widower, and Cosette was the orphan:
- this situation caused Jean Valjean to become Cosette's father after
- a celestial fashion.
-
- And in truth, the mysterious impression produced on Cosette in
- the depths of the forest of Chelles by the hand of Jean Valjean
- grasping hers in the dark was not an illusion, but a reality.
- The entrance of that man into the destiny of that child had been
- the advent of God.
-
- Moreover, Jean Valjean had chosen his refuge well. There he seemed
- perfectly secure.
-
- The chamber with a dressing-room, which he occupied with Cosette,
- was the one whose window opened on the boulevard. This being the
- only window in the house, no neighbors' glances were to be feared
- from across the way or at the side.
-
- The ground-floor of Number 50-52, a sort of dilapidated penthouse,
- served as a wagon-house for market-gardeners, and no communication
- existed between it and the first story. It was separated by
- the flooring, which had neither traps nor stairs, and which formed
- the diaphragm of the building, as it were. The first story contained,
- as we have said, numerous chambers and several attics, only one
- of which was occupied by the old woman who took charge of Jean
- Valjean's housekeeping; all the rest was uninhabited.
-
- It was this old woman, ornamented with the name of the principal
- lodger, and in reality intrusted with the functions of portress,
- who had let him the lodging on Christmas eve. He had represented
- himself to her as a gentleman of means who had been ruined by
- Spanish bonds, who was coming there to live with his little daughter.
- He had paid her six months in advance, and had commissioned the old
- woman to furnish the chamber and dressing-room, as we have seen.
- It was this good woman who had lighted the fire in the stove,
- and prepared everything on the evening of their arrival.
-
- Week followed week; these two beings led a happy life in that hovel.
-
- Cosette laughed, chattered, and sang from daybreak. Children have
- their morning song as well as birds.
-
- It sometimes happened that Jean Valjean clasped her tiny red hand,
- all cracked with chilblains, and kissed it. The poor child,
- who was used to being beaten, did not know the meaning of this,
- and ran away in confusion.
-
- At times she became serious and stared at her little black gown.
- Cosette was no longer in rags; she was in mourning. She had emerged
- from misery, and she was entering into life.
-
- Jean Valjean had undertaken to teach her to read. Sometimes, as he
- made the child spell, he remembered that it was with the idea
- of doing evil that he had learned to read in prison. This idea
- had ended in teaching a child to read. Then the ex-convict smiled
- with the pensive smile of the angels.
-
- He felt in it a premeditation from on high, the will of some one
- who was not man, and he became absorbed in revery. Good thoughts
- have their abysses as well as evil ones.
-
- To teach Cosette to read, and to let her play, this constituted
- nearly the whole of Jean Valjean's existence. And then he talked
- of her mother, and he made her pray.
-
- She called him father, and knew no other name for him.
-
- He passed hours in watching her dressing and undressing her doll,
- and in listening to her prattle. Life, henceforth, appeared to
- him to be full of interest; men seemed to him good and just;
- he no longer reproached any one in thought; he saw no reason why he
- should not live to be a very old man, now that this child loved him.
- He saw a whole future stretching out before him, illuminated by
- Cosette as by a charming light. The best of us are not exempt from
- egotistical thoughts. At times, he reflected with a sort of joy
- that she would be ugly.
-
- This is only a personal opinion; but, to utter our whole thought,
- at the point where Jean Valjean had arrived when he began to love Cosette,
- it is by no means clear to us that he did not need this encouragement
- in order that he might persevere in well-doing. He had just viewed
- the malice of men and the misery of society under a new aspect--
- incomplete aspects, which unfortunately only exhibited one side
- of the truth, the fate of woman as summed up in Fantine, and public
- authority as personified in Javert. He had returned to prison,
- this time for having done right; he had quaffed fresh bitterness;
- disgust and lassitude were overpowering him; even the memory of the
- Bishop probably suffered a temporary eclipse, though sure to reappear
- later on luminous and triumphant; but, after all, that sacred
- memory was growing dim. Who knows whether Jean Valjean had not
- been on the eve of growing discouraged and of falling once more?
- He loved and grew strong again. Alas! he walked with no less
- indecision than Cosette. He protected her, and she strengthened him.
- Thanks to him, she could walk through life; thanks to her,
- he could continue in virtue. He was that child's stay, and she
- was his prop. Oh, unfathomable and divine mystery of the balances
- of destiny!
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- THE REMARKS OF THE PRINCIPAL TENANT
-
-
- Jean Valjean was prudent enough never to go out by day.
- Every evening, at twilight, he walked for an hour or two,
- sometimes alone, often with Cosette, seeking the most deserted
- side alleys of the boulevard, and entering churches at nightfall.
- He liked to go to Saint-Medard, which is the nearest church.
- When he did not take Cosette with him, she remained with the old woman;
- but the child's delight was to go out with the good man. She preferred
- an hour with him to all her rapturous tete-a-tetes with Catherine.
- He held her hand as they walked, and said sweet things to her.
-
- It turned out that Cosette was a very gay little person.
-
- The old woman attended to the housekeeping and cooking and went
- to market.
-
- They lived soberly, always having a little fire, but like people
- in very moderate circumstances. Jean Valjean had made no alterations
- in the furniture as it was the first day; he had merely had the glass
- door leading to Cosette's dressing-room replaced by a solid door.
-
- He still wore his yellow coat, his black breeches, and his old hat.
- In the street, he was taken for a poor man. It sometimes happened
- that kind-hearted women turned back to bestow a sou on him.
- Jean Valjean accepted the sou with a deep bow. It also happened
- occasionally that he encountered some poor wretch asking alms;
- then he looked behind him to make sure that no one was observing him,
- stealthily approached the unfortunate man, put a piece of money
- into his hand, often a silver coin, and walked rapidly away.
- This had its disadvantages. He began to be known in the neighborhood
- under the name of the beggar who gives alms.
-
- The old principal lodger, a cross-looking creature, who was
- thoroughly permeated, so far as her neighbors were concerned, with the
- inquisitiveness peculiar to envious persons, scrutinized Jean Valjean
- a great deal, without his suspecting the fact. She was a little deaf,
- which rendered her talkative. There remained to her from her past,
- two teeth,--one above, the other below,--which she was continually
- knocking against each other. She had questioned Cosette, who had
- not been able to tell her anything, since she knew nothing herself
- except that she had come from Montfermeil. One morning, this spy saw
- Jean Valjean, with an air which struck the old gossip as peculiar,
- entering one of the uninhabited compartments of the hovel.
- She followed him with the step of an old cat, and was able to observe
- him without being seen, through a crack in the door, which was directly
- opposite him. Jean Valjean had his back turned towards this door,
- by way of greater security, no doubt. The old woman saw him fumble
- in his pocket and draw thence a case, scissors, and thread; then he
- began to rip the lining of one of the skirts of his coat, and from
- the opening he took a bit of yellowish paper, which he unfolded.
- The old woman recognized, with terror, the fact that it was
- a bank-bill for a thousand francs. It was the second or third
- only that she had seen in the course of her existence. She fled in alarm.
-
- A moment later, Jean Valjean accosted her, and asked her to go
- and get this thousand-franc bill changed for him, adding that it
- was his quarterly income, which he had received the day before.
- "Where?" thought the old woman. "He did not go out until six
- o'clock in the evening, and the government bank certainly is not
- open at that hour." The old woman went to get the bill changed,
- and mentioned her surmises. That thousand-franc note, commented on
- and multiplied, produced a vast amount of terrified discussion among
- the gossips of the Rue des Vignes Saint-Marcel.
-
- A few days later, it chanced that Jean Valjean was sawing some wood,
- in his shirt-sleeves, in the corridor. The old woman was in the chamber,
- putting things in order. She was alone. Cosette was occupied
- in admiring the wood as it was sawed. The old woman caught sight
- of the coat hanging on a nail, and examined it. The lining had been
- sewed up again. The good woman felt of it carefully, and thought
- she observed in the skirts and revers thicknesses of paper.
- More thousand-franc bank-bills, no doubt!
-
- She also noticed that there were all sorts of things in the pockets.
- Not only the needles, thread, and scissors which she had seen, but a
- big pocket-book, a very large knife, and--a suspicious circumstance--
- several wigs of various colors. Each pocket of this coat had the air
- of being in a manner provided against unexpected accidents.
-
- Thus the inhabitants of the house reached the last days of winter.
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
-
- A FIVE-FRANC PIECE FALLS ON THE GROUND AND PRODUCES A TUMULT
-
-
- Near Saint-Medard's church there was a poor man who was in the habit
- of crouching on the brink of a public well which had been condemned,
- and on whom Jean Valjean was fond of bestowing charity. He never passed
- this man without giving him a few sous. Sometimes he spoke to him.
- Those who envied this mendicant said that he belonged to the police.
- He was an ex-beadle of seventy-five, who was constantly mumbling
- his prayers.
-
- One evening, as Jean Valjean was passing by, when he had not Cosette
- with him, he saw the beggar in his usual place, beneath the lantern
- which had just been lighted. The man seemed engaged in prayer,
- according to his custom, and was much bent over. Jean Valjean
- stepped up to him and placed his customary alms in his hand.
- The mendicant raised his eyes suddenly, stared intently at
- Jean Valjean, then dropped his head quickly. This movement was
- like a flash of lightning. Jean Valjean was seized with a shudder.
- It seemed to him that he had just caught sight, by the light
- of the street lantern, not of the placid and beaming visage
- of the old beadle, but of a well-known and startling face.
- He experienced the same impression that one would have on finding
- one's self, all of a sudden, face to face, in the dark, with a tiger.
- He recoiled, terrified, petrified, daring neither to breathe,
- to speak, to remain, nor to flee, staring at the beggar who had
- dropped his head, which was enveloped in a rag, and no longer appeared
- to know that he was there. At this strange moment, an instinct--
- possibly the mysterious instinct of self-preservation,--restrained
- Jean Valjean from uttering a word. The beggar had the same figure,
- the same rags, the same appearance as he had every day. "Bah!" said
- Jean Valjean, "I am mad! I am dreaming! Impossible!" And he
- returned profoundly troubled.
-
- He hardly dared to confess, even to himself, that the face which he
- thought he had seen was the face of Javert.
-
- That night, on thinking the matter over, he regretted not having
- questioned the man, in order to force him to raise his head
- a second time.
-
- On the following day, at nightfall, he went back. The beggar was at
- his post. "Good day, my good man," said Jean Valjean, resolutely,
- handing him a sou. The beggar raised his head, and replied in
- a whining voice, "Thanks, my good sir." It was unmistakably the ex-beadle.
-
- Jean Valjean felt completely reassured. He began to laugh.
- "How the deuce could I have thought that I saw Javert there?"
- he thought. "Am I going to lose my eyesight now?" And he thought
- no more about it.
-
- A few days afterwards,--it might have been at eight o'clock in
- the evening,--he was in his room, and engaged in making Cosette
- spell aloud, when he heard the house door open and then shut again.
- This struck him as singular. The old woman, who was the only inhabitant
- of the house except himself, always went to bed at nightfall,
- so that she might not burn out her candles. Jean Valjean made a sign
- to Cosette to be quiet. He heard some one ascending the stairs.
- It might possibly be the old woman, who might have fallen ill
- and have been out to the apothecary's. Jean Valjean listened.
-
- The step was heavy, and sounded like that of a man; but the old woman
- wore stout shoes, and there is nothing which so strongly resembles
- the step of a man as that of an old woman. Nevertheless, Jean Valjean
- blew out his candle.
-
- He had sent Cosette to bed, saying to her in a low voice, "Get into
- bed very softly"; and as he kissed her brow, the steps paused.
-
- Jean Valjean remained silent, motionless, with his back towards
- the door, seated on the chair from which he had not stirred,
- and holding his breath in the dark.
-
- After the expiration of a rather long interval, he turned round,
- as he heard nothing more, and, as he raised his eyes towards the door
- of his chamber, he saw a light through the keyhole. This light formed
- a sort of sinister star in the blackness of the door and the wall.
- There was evidently some one there, who was holding a candle in his
- hand and listening.
-
- Several minutes elapsed thus, and the light retreated. But he heard
- no sound of footsteps, which seemed to indicate that the person
- who had been listening at the door had removed his shoes.
-
- Jean Valjean threw himself, all dressed as he was, on his bed,
- and could not close his eyes all night.
-
- At daybreak, just as he was falling into a doze through fatigue,
- he was awakened by the creaking of a door which opened on some
- attic at the end of the corridor, then he heard the same masculine
- footstep which had ascended the stairs on the preceding evening.
- The step was approaching. He sprang off the bed and applied his eye
- to the keyhole, which was tolerably large, hoping to see the person
- who had made his way by night into the house and had listened at
- his door, as he passed. It was a man, in fact, who passed, this time
- without pausing, in front of Jean Valjean's chamber. The corridor
- was too dark to allow of the person's face being distinguished;
- but when the man reached the staircase, a ray of light from without
- made it stand out like a silhouette, and Jean Valjean had a complete
- view of his back. The man was of lofty stature, clad in a long
- frock-coat, with a cudgel under his arm. The formidable neck and
- shoulders belonged to Javert.
-
- Jean Valjean might have attempted to catch another glimpse of him
- through his window opening on the boulevard, but he would have been
- obliged to open the window: he dared not.
-
- It was evident that this man had entered with a key, and like himself.
- Who had given him that key? What was the meaning of this?
-
- When the old woman came to do the work, at seven o'clock
- in the morning, Jean Valjean cast a penetrating glance on her,
- but he did not question her. The good woman appeared as usual.
-
- As she swept up she remarked to him:--
-
- "Possibly Monsieur may have heard some one come in last night?"
-
- At that age, and on that boulevard, eight o'clock in the evening
- was the dead of the night.
-
- "That is true, by the way," he replied, in the most natural
- tone possible. "Who was it?"
-
- "It was a new lodger who has come into the house," said the old woman.
-
- "And what is his name?"
-
- "I don't know exactly; Dumont, or Daumont, or some name of that sort."
-
- "And who is this Monsieur Dumont?"
-
- The old woman gazed at him with her little polecat eyes, and answered:--
-
- "A gentleman of property, like yourself."
-
- Perhaps she had no ulterior meaning. Jean Valjean thought he
- perceived one.
-
- When the old woman had taken her departure, he did up a hundred francs
- which he had in a cupboard, into a roll, and put it in his pocket.
- In spite of all the precautions which he took in this operation
- so that he might not be heard rattling silver, a hundred-sou piece
- escaped from his hands and rolled noisily on the floor.
-
- When darkness came on, he descended and carefully scrutinized both
- sides of the boulevard. He saw no one. The boulevard appeared
- to be absolutely deserted. It is true that a person can conceal
- himself behind trees.
-
- He went up stairs again.
-
- "Come." he said to Cosette.
-
- He took her by the hand, and they both went out.
-
-
-