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<h2> CHAPTER V—COSETTE AFTER THE LETTER </h2>
<p>As Cosette read, she gradually fell into thought. At the very moment when
she raised her eyes from the last line of the note-book, the handsome
officer passed triumphantly in front of the gate,—it was his hour;
Cosette thought him hideous.</p>
<p>She resumed her contemplation of the book. It was written in the most
charming of chirography, thought Cosette; in the same hand, but with
divers inks, sometimes very black, again whitish, as when ink has been
added to the inkstand, and consequently on different days. It was, then, a
mind which had unfolded itself there, sigh by sigh, irregularly, without
order, without choice, without object, hap-hazard. Cosette had never read
anything like it. This manuscript, in which she already perceived more
light than obscurity, produced upon her the effect of a half-open
sanctuary. Each one of these mysterious lines shone before her eyes and
inundated her heart with a strange radiance. The education which she had
received had always talked to her of the soul, and never of love, very
much as one might talk of the firebrand and not of the flame. This
manuscript of fifteen pages suddenly and sweetly revealed to her all of
love, sorrow, destiny, life, eternity, the beginning, the end. It was as
if a hand had opened and suddenly flung upon her a handful of rays of
light. In these few lines she felt a passionate, ardent, generous, honest
nature, a sacred will, an immense sorrow, and an immense despair, a
suffering heart, an ecstasy fully expanded. What was this manuscript? A
letter. A letter without name, without address, without date, without
signature, pressing and disinterested, an enigma composed of truths, a
message of love made to be brought by an angel and read by a virgin, an
appointment made beyond the bounds of earth, the love-letter of a phantom
to a shade. It was an absent one, tranquil and dejected, who seemed ready
to take refuge in death and who sent to the absent love, his lady, the
secret of fate, the key of life, love. This had been written with one foot
in the grave and one finger in heaven. These lines, which had fallen one
by one on the paper, were what might be called drops of soul.</p>
<p>Now, from whom could these pages come? Who could have penned them?</p>
<p>Cosette did not hesitate a moment. One man only.</p>
<p>He!</p>
<p>Day had dawned once more in her spirit; all had reappeared. She felt an
unheard-of joy, and a profound anguish. It was he! he who had written! he
was there! it was he whose arm had been thrust through that railing! While
she was forgetful of him, he had found her again! But had she forgotten
him? No, never! She was foolish to have thought so for a single moment.
She had always loved him, always adored him. The fire had been smothered,
and had smouldered for a time, but she saw all plainly now; it had but
made headway, and now it had burst forth afresh, and had inflamed her
whole being. This note-book was like a spark which had fallen from that
other soul into hers. She felt the conflagration starting up once more.</p>
<p>She imbued herself thoroughly with every word of the manuscript: "Oh yes!"
said she, "how perfectly I recognize all that! That is what I had already
read in his eyes." As she was finishing it for the third time, Lieutenant
Theodule passed the gate once more, and rattled his spurs upon the
pavement. Cosette was forced to raise her eyes. She thought him insipid,
silly, stupid, useless, foppish, displeasing, impertinent, and extremely
ugly. The officer thought it his duty to smile at her.</p>
<p>She turned away as in shame and indignation. She would gladly have thrown
something at his head.</p>
<p>She fled, re-entered the house, and shut herself up in her chamber to
peruse the manuscript once more, to learn it by heart, and to dream. When
she had thoroughly mastered it she kissed it and put it in her bosom.</p>
<p>All was over, Cosette had fallen back into deep, seraphic love. The abyss
of Eden had yawned once more.</p>
<p>All day long, Cosette remained in a sort of bewilderment. She scarcely
thought, her ideas were in the state of a tangled skein in her brain, she
could not manage to conjecture anything, she hoped through a tremor, what?
vague things. She dared make herself no promises, and she did not wish to
refuse herself anything. Flashes of pallor passed over her countenance,
and shivers ran through her frame. It seemed to her, at intervals, that
she was entering the land of chimaeras; she said to herself: "Is this
reality?" Then she felt of the dear paper within her bosom under her gown,
she pressed it to her heart, she felt its angles against her flesh; and if
Jean Valjean had seen her at the moment, he would have shuddered in the
presence of that luminous and unknown joy, which overflowed from beneath
her eyelids.—"Oh yes!" she thought, "it is certainly he! This comes
from him, and is for me!"</p>
<p>And she told herself that an intervention of the angels, a celestial
chance, had given him back to her.</p>
<p>Oh transfiguration of love! Oh dreams! That celestial chance, that
intervention of the angels, was a pellet of bread tossed by one thief to
another thief, from the Charlemagne Courtyard to the Lion's Ditch, over
the roofs of La Force.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER VI—OLD PEOPLE ARE MADE TO GO OUT OPPORTUNELY </h2>
<p>When evening came, Jean Valjean went out; Cosette dressed herself. She
arranged her hair in the most becoming manner, and she put on a dress
whose bodice had received one snip of the scissors too much, and which,
through this slope, permitted a view of the beginning of her throat, and
was, as young girls say, "a trifle indecent." It was not in the least
indecent, but it was prettier than usual. She made her toilet thus without
knowing why she did so.</p>
<p>Did she mean to go out? No.</p>
<p>Was she expecting a visitor? No.</p>
<p>At dusk, she went down to the garden. Toussaint was busy in her kitchen,
which opened on the back yard.</p>
<p>She began to stroll about under the trees, thrusting aside the branches
from time to time with her hand, because there were some which hung very
low.</p>
<p>In this manner she reached the bench.</p>
<p>The stone was still there.</p>
<p>She sat down, and gently laid her white hand on this stone as though she
wished to caress and thank it.</p>
<p>All at once, she experienced that indefinable impression which one
undergoes when there is some one standing behind one, even when she does
not see the person.</p>
<p>She turned her head and rose to her feet.</p>
<p>It was he.</p>
<p>His head was bare. He appeared to have grown thin and pale. His black
clothes were hardly discernible. The twilight threw a wan light on his
fine brow, and covered his eyes in shadows. Beneath a veil of incomparable
sweetness, he had something about him that suggested death and night. His
face was illuminated by the light of the dying day, and by the thought of
a soul that is taking flight.</p>
<p>He seemed to be not yet a ghost, and he was no longer a man.</p>
<p>He had flung away his hat in the thicket, a few paces distant.</p>
<p>Cosette, though ready to swoon, uttered no cry. She retreated slowly, for
she felt herself attracted. He did not stir. By virtue of something
ineffable and melancholy which enveloped him, she felt the look in his
eyes which she could not see.</p>
<p>Cosette, in her retreat, encountered a tree and leaned against it. Had it
not been for this tree, she would have fallen.</p>
<p>Then she heard his voice, that voice which she had really never heard,
barely rising above the rustle of the leaves, and murmuring:—</p>
<p>"Pardon me, here I am. My heart is full. I could not live on as I was
living, and I have come. Have you read what I placed there on the bench?
Do you recognize me at all? Have no fear of me. It is a long time, you
remember the day, since you looked at me at the Luxembourg, near the
Gladiator. And the day when you passed before me? It was on the 16th of
June and the 2d of July. It is nearly a year ago. I have not seen you for
a long time. I inquired of the woman who let the chairs, and she told me
that she no longer saw you. You lived in the Rue de l'Ouest, on the third
floor, in the front apartments of a new house,—you see that I know!
I followed you. What else was there for me to do? And then you
disappeared. I thought I saw you pass once, while I was reading the
newspapers under the arcade of the Odeon. I ran after you. But no. It was
a person who had a bonnet like yours. At night I came hither. Do not be
afraid, no one sees me. I come to gaze upon your windows near at hand. I
walk very softly, so that you may not hear, for you might be alarmed. The
other evening I was behind you, you turned round, I fled. Once, I heard
you singing. I was happy. Did it affect you because I heard you singing
through the shutters? That could not hurt you. No, it is not so? You see,
you are my angel! Let me come sometimes; I think that I am going to die.
If you only knew! I adore you. Forgive me, I speak to you, but I do not
know what I am saying; I may have displeased you; have I displeased you?"</p>
<p>"Oh! my mother!" said she.</p>
<p>And she sank down as though on the point of death.</p>
<p>He grasped her, she fell, he took her in his arms, he pressed her close,
without knowing what he was doing. He supported her, though he was
tottering himself. It was as though his brain were full of smoke;
lightnings darted between his lips; his ideas vanished; it seemed to him
that he was accomplishing some religious act, and that he was committing a
profanation. Moreover, he had not the least passion for this lovely woman
whose force he felt against his breast. He was beside himself with love.</p>
<p>She took his hand and laid it on her heart. He felt the paper there, he
stammered:—</p>
<p>"You love me, then?"</p>
<p>She replied in a voice so low that it was no longer anything more than a
barely audible breath:—</p>
<p>"Hush! Thou knowest it!"</p>
<p>And she hid her blushing face on the breast of the superb and intoxicated
young man.</p>
<p>He fell upon the bench, and she beside him. They had no words more. The
stars were beginning to gleam. How did it come to pass that their lips
met? How comes it to pass that the birds sing, that snow melts, that the
rose unfolds, that May expands, that the dawn grows white behind the black
trees on the shivering crest of the hills?</p>
<p>A kiss, and that was all.</p>
<p>Both started, and gazed into the darkness with sparkling eyes.</p>
<p>They felt neither the cool night, nor the cold stone, nor the damp earth,
nor the wet grass; they looked at each other, and their hearts were full
of thoughts. They had clasped hands unconsciously.</p>
<p>She did not ask him, she did not even wonder, how he had entered there,
and how he had made his way into the garden. It seemed so simple to her
that he should be there!</p>
<p>From time to time, Marius' knee touched Cosette's knee, and both shivered.</p>
<p>At intervals, Cosette stammered a word. Her soul fluttered on her lips
like a drop of dew on a flower.</p>
<p>Little by little they began to talk to each other. Effusion followed
silence, which is fulness. The night was serene and splendid overhead.
These two beings, pure as spirits, told each other everything, their
dreams, their intoxications, their ecstasies, their chimaeras, their
weaknesses, how they had adored each other from afar, how they had longed
for each other, their despair when they had ceased to see each other. They
confided to each other in an ideal intimacy, which nothing could augment,
their most secret and most mysterious thoughts. They related to each
other, with candid faith in their illusions, all that love, youth, and the
remains of childhood which still lingered about them, suggested to their
minds. Their two hearts poured themselves out into each other in such
wise, that at the expiration of a quarter of an hour, it was the young man
who had the young girl's soul, and the young girl who had the young man's
soul. Each became permeated with the other, they were enchanted with each
other, they dazzled each other.</p>
<p>When they had finished, when they had told each other everything, she laid
her head on his shoulder and asked him:—</p>
<p>"What is your name?"</p>
<p>"My name is Marius," said he. "And yours?"</p>
<p>"My name is Cosette."</p>
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