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<h2> BOOK SIXTH.—THE CONJUNCTION OF TWO STARS </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I—THE SOBRIQUET: MODE OF FORMATION OF FAMILY NAMES </h2>
<p>Marius was, at this epoch, a handsome young man, of medium stature, with
thick and intensely black hair, a lofty and intelligent brow, well-opened
and passionate nostrils, an air of calmness and sincerity, and with
something indescribably proud, thoughtful, and innocent over his whole
countenance. His profile, all of whose lines were rounded, without thereby
losing their firmness, had a certain Germanic sweetness, which has made
its way into the French physiognomy by way of Alsace and Lorraine, and
that complete absence of angles which rendered the Sicambres so easily
recognizable among the Romans, and which distinguishes the leonine from
the aquiline race. He was at that period of life when the mind of men who
think is composed, in nearly equal parts, of depth and ingenuousness. A
grave situation being given, he had all that is required to be stupid: one
more turn of the key, and he might be sublime. His manners were reserved,
cold, polished, not very genial. As his mouth was charming, his lips the
reddest, and his teeth the whitest in the world, his smile corrected the
severity of his face, as a whole. At certain moments, that pure brow and
that voluptuous smile presented a singular contrast. His eyes were small,
but his glance was large.</p>
<p>At the period of his most abject misery, he had observed that young girls
turned round when he passed by, and he fled or hid, with death in his
soul. He thought that they were staring at him because of his old clothes,
and that they were laughing at them; the fact is, that they stared at him
because of his grace, and that they dreamed of him.</p>
<p>This mute misunderstanding between him and the pretty passers-by had made
him shy. He chose none of them for the excellent reason that he fled from
all of them. He lived thus indefinitely,—stupidly, as Courfeyrac
said.</p>
<p>Courfeyrac also said to him: "Do not aspire to be venerable" [they called
each other thou; it is the tendency of youthful friendships to slip into
this mode of address]. "Let me give you a piece of advice, my dear fellow.
Don't read so many books, and look a little more at the lasses. The jades
have some good points about them, O Marius! By dint of fleeing and
blushing, you will become brutalized."</p>
<p>On other occasions, Courfeyrac encountered him and said:—"Good
morning, Monsieur l' Abb�!"</p>
<p>When Courfeyrac had addressed to him some remark of this nature, Marius
avoided women, both young and old, more than ever for a week to come, and
he avoided Courfeyrac to boot.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, there existed in all the immensity of creation, two women
whom Marius did not flee, and to whom he paid no attention whatever. In
truth, he would have been very much amazed if he had been informed that
they were women. One was the bearded old woman who swept out his chamber,
and caused Courfeyrac to say: "Seeing that his servant woman wears his
beard, Marius does not wear his own beard." The other was a sort of little
girl whom he saw very often, and whom he never looked at.</p>
<p>For more than a year, Marius had noticed in one of the walks of the
Luxembourg, the one which skirts the parapet of the Pepiniere, a man and a
very young girl, who were almost always seated side by side on the same
bench, at the most solitary end of the alley, on the Rue de l'Ouest side.
Every time that that chance which meddles with the strolls of persons
whose gaze is turned inwards, led Marius to that walk,—and it was
nearly every day,—he found this couple there. The man appeared to be
about sixty years of age; he seemed sad and serious; his whole person
presented the robust and weary aspect peculiar to military men who have
retired from the service. If he had worn a decoration, Marius would have
said: "He is an ex-officer." He had a kindly but unapproachable air, and
he never let his glance linger on the eyes of any one. He wore blue
trousers, a blue frock coat and a broad-brimmed hat, which always appeared
to be new, a black cravat, a quaker shirt, that is to say, it was
dazzlingly white, but of coarse linen. A grisette who passed near him one
day, said: "Here's a very tidy widower." His hair was very white.</p>
<p>The first time that the young girl who accompanied him came and seated
herself on the bench which they seemed to have adopted, she was a sort of
child thirteen or fourteen years of age, so thin as to be almost homely,
awkward, insignificant, and with a possible promise of handsome eyes.
Only, they were always raised with a sort of displeasing assurance. Her
dress was both aged and childish, like the dress of the scholars in a
convent; it consisted of a badly cut gown of black merino. They had the
air of being father and daughter.</p>
<p>Marius scanned this old man, who was not yet aged, and this little girl,
who was not yet a person, for a few days, and thereafter paid no attention
to them. They, on their side, did not appear even to see him. They
conversed together with a peaceful and indifferent air. The girl chattered
incessantly and merrily. The old man talked but little, and, at times, he
fixed on her eyes overflowing with an ineffable paternity.</p>
<p>Marius had acquired the mechanical habit of strolling in that walk. He
invariably found them there.</p>
<p>This is the way things went:—</p>
<p>Marius liked to arrive by the end of the alley which was furthest from
their bench; he walked the whole length of the alley, passed in front of
them, then returned to the extremity whence he had come, and began again.
This he did five or six times in the course of his promenade, and the
promenade was taken five or six times a week, without its having occurred
to him or to these people to exchange a greeting. That personage, and that
young girl, although they appeared,—and perhaps because they
appeared,—to shun all glances, had, naturally, caused some attention
on the part of the five or six students who strolled along the Pepiniere
from time to time; the studious after their lectures, the others after
their game of billiards. Courfeyrac, who was among the last, had observed
them several times, but, finding the girl homely, he had speedily and
carefully kept out of the way. He had fled, discharging at them a
sobriquet, like a Parthian dart. Impressed solely with the child's gown
and the old man's hair, he had dubbed the daughter Mademoiselle Lanoire,
and the father, Monsieur Leblanc, so that as no one knew them under any
other title, this nickname became a law in the default of any other name.
The students said: "Ah! Monsieur Leblanc is on his bench." And Marius,
like the rest, had found it convenient to call this unknown gentleman
Monsieur Leblanc.</p>
<p>We shall follow their example, and we shall say M. Leblanc, in order to
facilitate this tale.</p>
<p>So Marius saw them nearly every day, at the same hour, during the first
year. He found the man to his taste, but the girl insipid.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER II—LUX FACTA EST </h2>
<p>During the second year, precisely at the point in this history which the
reader has now reached, it chanced that this habit of the Luxembourg was
interrupted, without Marius himself being quite aware why, and nearly six
months elapsed, during which he did not set foot in the alley. One day, at
last, he returned thither once more; it was a serene summer morning, and
Marius was in joyous mood, as one is when the weather is fine. It seemed
to him that he had in his heart all the songs of the birds that he was
listening to, and all the bits of blue sky of which he caught glimpses
through the leaves of the trees.</p>
<p>He went straight to "his alley," and when he reached the end of it he
perceived, still on the same bench, that well-known couple. Only, when he
approached, it certainly was the same man; but it seemed to him that it
was no longer the same girl. The person whom he now beheld was a tall and
beautiful creature, possessed of all the most charming lines of a woman at
the precise moment when they are still combined with all the most
ingenuous graces of the child; a pure and fugitive moment, which can be
expressed only by these two words,—"fifteen years." She had
wonderful brown hair, shaded with threads of gold, a brow that seemed made
of marble, cheeks that seemed made of rose-leaf, a pale flush, an agitated
whiteness, an exquisite mouth, whence smiles darted like sunbeams, and
words like music, a head such as Raphael would have given to Mary, set
upon a neck that Jean Goujon would have attributed to a Venus. And, in
order that nothing might be lacking to this bewitching face, her nose was
not handsome—it was pretty; neither straight nor curved, neither
Italian nor Greek; it was the Parisian nose, that is to say, spiritual,
delicate, irregular, pure,—which drives painters to despair, and
charms poets.</p>
<p>When Marius passed near her, he could not see her eyes, which were
constantly lowered. He saw only her long chestnut lashes, permeated with
shadow and modesty.</p>
<p>This did not prevent the beautiful child from smiling as she listened to
what the white-haired old man was saying to her, and nothing could be more
fascinating than that fresh smile, combined with those drooping eyes.</p>
<p>For a moment, Marius thought that she was another daughter of the same
man, a sister of the former, no doubt. But when the invariable habit of
his stroll brought him, for the second time, near the bench, and he had
examined her attentively, he recognized her as the same. In six months the
little girl had become a young maiden; that was all. Nothing is more
frequent than this phenomenon. There is a moment when girls blossom out in
the twinkling of an eye, and become roses all at once. One left them
children but yesterday; today, one finds them disquieting to the feelings.</p>
<p>This child had not only grown, she had become idealized. As three days in
April suffice to cover certain trees with flowers, six months had sufficed
to clothe her with beauty. Her April had arrived.</p>
<p>One sometimes sees people, who, poor and mean, seem to wake up, pass
suddenly from indigence to luxury, indulge in expenditures of all sorts,
and become dazzling, prodigal, magnificent, all of a sudden. That is the
result of having pocketed an income; a note fell due yesterday. The young
girl had received her quarterly income.</p>
<p>And then, she was no longer the school-girl with her felt hat, her merino
gown, her scholar's shoes, and red hands; taste had come to her with
beauty; she was a well-dressed person, clad with a sort of rich and simple
elegance, and without affectation. She wore a dress of black damask, a
cape of the same material, and a bonnet of white crape. Her white gloves
displayed the delicacy of the hand which toyed with the carved, Chinese
ivory handle of a parasol, and her silken shoe outlined the smallness of
her foot. When one passed near her, her whole toilette exhaled a youthful
and penetrating perfume.</p>
<p>As for the man, he was the same as usual.</p>
<p>The second time that Marius approached her, the young girl raised her
eyelids; her eyes were of a deep, celestial blue, but in that veiled
azure, there was, as yet, nothing but the glance of a child. She looked at
Marius indifferently, as she would have stared at the brat running beneath
the sycamores, or the marble vase which cast a shadow on the bench, and
Marius, on his side, continued his promenade, and thought about something
else.</p>
<p>He passed near the bench where the young girl sat, five or six times, but
without even turning his eyes in her direction.</p>
<p>On the following days, he returned, as was his wont, to the Luxembourg; as
usual, he found there "the father and daughter;" but he paid no further
attention to them. He thought no more about the girl now that she was
beautiful than he had when she was homely. He passed very near the bench
where she sat, because such was his habit.</p>
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