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<h2> BOOK EIGHTH.—ENCHANTMENTS AND DESOLATIONS </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I—FULL LIGHT </h2>
<p>The reader has probably understood that Eponine, having recognized through
the gate, the inhabitant of that Rue Plumet whither Magnon had sent her,
had begun by keeping the ruffians away from the Rue Plumet, and had then
conducted Marius thither, and that, after many days spent in ecstasy
before that gate, Marius, drawn on by that force which draws the iron to
the magnet and a lover towards the stones of which is built the house of
her whom he loves, had finally entered Cosette's garden as Romeo entered
the garden of Juliet. This had even proved easier for him than for Romeo;
Romeo was obliged to scale a wall, Marius had only to use a little force
on one of the bars of the decrepit gate which vacillated in its rusty
recess, after the fashion of old people's teeth. Marius was slender and
readily passed through.</p>
<p>As there was never any one in the street, and as Marius never entered the
garden except at night, he ran no risk of being seen.</p>
<p>Beginning with that blessed and holy hour when a kiss betrothed these two
souls, Marius was there every evening. If, at that period of her
existence, Cosette had fallen in love with a man in the least unscrupulous
or debauched, she would have been lost; for there are generous natures
which yield themselves, and Cosette was one of them. One of woman's
magnanimities is to yield. Love, at the height where it is absolute, is
complicated with some indescribably celestial blindness of modesty. But
what dangers you run, O noble souls! Often you give the heart, and we take
the body. Your heart remains with you, you gaze upon it in the gloom with
a shudder. Love has no middle course; it either ruins or it saves. All
human destiny lies in this dilemma. This dilemma, ruin, or safety, is set
forth no more inexorably by any fatality than by love. Love is life, if it
is not death. Cradle; also coffin. The same sentiment says "yes" and "no"
in the human heart. Of all the things that God has made, the human heart
is the one which sheds the most light, alas! and the most darkness.</p>
<p>God willed that Cosette's love should encounter one of the loves which
save.</p>
<p>Throughout the whole of the month of May of that year 1832, there were
there, in every night, in that poor, neglected garden, beneath that
thicket which grew thicker and more fragrant day by day, two beings
composed of all chastity, all innocence, overflowing with all the felicity
of heaven, nearer to the archangels than to mankind, pure, honest,
intoxicated, radiant, who shone for each other amid the shadows. It seemed
to Cosette that Marius had a crown, and to Marius that Cosette had a
nimbus. They touched each other, they gazed at each other, they clasped
each other's hands, they pressed close to each other; but there was a
distance which they did not pass. Not that they respected it; they did not
know of its existence. Marius was conscious of a barrier, Cosette's
innocence; and Cosette of a support, Marius' loyalty. The first kiss had
also been the last. Marius, since that time, had not gone further than to
touch Cosette's hand, or her kerchief, or a lock of her hair, with his
lips. For him, Cosette was a perfume and not a woman. He inhaled her. She
refused nothing, and he asked nothing. Cosette was happy, and Marius was
satisfied. They lived in this ecstatic state which can be described as the
dazzling of one soul by another soul. It was the ineffable first embrace
of two maiden souls in the ideal. Two swans meeting on the Jungfrau.</p>
<p>At that hour of love, an hour when voluptuousness is absolutely mute,
beneath the omnipotence of ecstasy, Marius, the pure and seraphic Marius,
would rather have gone to a woman of the town than have raised Cosette's
robe to the height of her ankle. Once, in the moonlight, Cosette stooped
to pick up something on the ground, her bodice fell apart and permitted a
glimpse of the beginning of her throat. Marius turned away his eyes.</p>
<p>What took place between these two beings? Nothing. They adored each other.</p>
<p>At night, when they were there, that garden seemed a living and a sacred
spot. All flowers unfolded around them and sent them incense; and they
opened their souls and scattered them over the flowers. The wanton and
vigorous vegetation quivered, full of strength and intoxication, around
these two innocents, and they uttered words of love which set the trees to
trembling.</p>
<p>What words were these? Breaths. Nothing more. These breaths sufficed to
trouble and to touch all nature round about. Magic power which we should
find it difficult to understand were we to read in a book these
conversations which are made to be borne away and dispersed like smoke
wreaths by the breeze beneath the leaves. Take from those murmurs of two
lovers that melody which proceeds from the soul and which accompanies them
like a lyre, and what remains is nothing more than a shade; you say:
"What! is that all!" eh! yes, childish prattle, repetitions, laughter at
nothing, nonsense, everything that is deepest and most sublime in the
world! The only things which are worth the trouble of saying and hearing!</p>
<p>The man who has never heard, the man who has never uttered these
absurdities, these paltry remarks, is an imbecile and a malicious fellow.
Cosette said to Marius:—</p>
<p>"Dost thou know?—"</p>
<p>[In all this and athwart this celestial maidenliness, and without either
of them being able to say how it had come about, they had begun to call
each other thou.]</p>
<p>"Dost thou know? My name is Euphrasie."</p>
<p>"Euphrasie? Why, no, thy name is Cosette."</p>
<p>"Oh! Cosette is a very ugly name that was given to me when I was a little
thing. But my real name is Euphrasie. Dost thou like that name—Euphrasie?"</p>
<p>"Yes. But Cosette is not ugly."</p>
<p>"Do you like it better than Euphrasie?"</p>
<p>"Why, yes."</p>
<p>"Then I like it better too. Truly, it is pretty, Cosette. Call me
Cosette."</p>
<p>And the smile that she added made of this dialogue an idyl worthy of a
grove situated in heaven. On another occasion she gazed intently at him
and exclaimed:—</p>
<p>"Monsieur, you are handsome, you are good-looking, you are witty, you are
not at all stupid, you are much more learned than I am, but I bid you
defiance with this word: I love you!"</p>
<p>And Marius, in the very heavens, thought he heard a strain sung by a star.</p>
<p>Or she bestowed on him a gentle tap because he coughed, and she said to
him:—</p>
<p>"Don't cough, sir; I will not have people cough on my domain without my
permission. It's very naughty to cough and to disturb me. I want you to be
well, because, in the first place, if you were not well, I should be very
unhappy. What should I do then?"</p>
<p>And this was simply divine.</p>
<p>Once Marius said to Cosette:—</p>
<p>"Just imagine, I thought at one time that your name was Ursule."</p>
<p>This made both of them laugh the whole evening.</p>
<p>In the middle of another conversation, he chanced to exclaim:—</p>
<p>"Oh! One day, at the Luxembourg, I had a good mind to finish breaking up a
veteran!" But he stopped short, and went no further. He would have been
obliged to speak to Cosette of her garter, and that was impossible. This
bordered on a strange theme, the flesh, before which that immense and
innocent love recoiled with a sort of sacred fright.</p>
<p>Marius pictured life with Cosette to himself like this, without anything
else; to come every evening to the Rue Plumet, to displace the old and
accommodating bar of the chief-justice's gate, to sit elbow to elbow on
that bench, to gaze through the trees at the scintillation of the
on-coming night, to fit a fold of the knee of his trousers into the ample
fall of Cosette's gown, to caress her thumb-nail, to call her thou, to
smell of the same flower, one after the other, forever, indefinitely.
During this time, clouds passed above their heads. Every time that the
wind blows it bears with it more of the dreams of men than of the clouds
of heaven.</p>
<p>This chaste, almost shy love was not devoid of gallantry, by any means. To
pay compliments to the woman whom a man loves is the first method of
bestowing caresses, and he is half audacious who tries it. A compliment is
something like a kiss through a veil. Voluptuousness mingles there with
its sweet tiny point, while it hides itself. The heart draws back before
voluptuousness only to love the more. Marius' blandishments, all saturated
with fancy, were, so to speak, of azure hue. The birds when they fly up
yonder, in the direction of the angels, must hear such words. There were
mingled with them, nevertheless, life, humanity, all the positiveness of
which Marius was capable. It was what is said in the bower, a prelude to
what will be said in the chamber; a lyrical effusion, strophe and sonnet
intermingled, pleasing hyperboles of cooing, all the refinements of
adoration arranged in a bouquet and exhaling a celestial perfume, an
ineffable twitter of heart to heart.</p>
<p>"Oh!" murmured Marius, "how beautiful you are! I dare not look at you. It
is all over with me when I contemplate you. You are a grace. I know not
what is the matter with me. The hem of your gown, when the tip of your
shoe peeps from beneath, upsets me. And then, what an enchanted gleam when
you open your thought even but a little! You talk astonishingly good
sense. It seems to me at times that you are a dream. Speak, I listen, I
admire. Oh Cosette! how strange it is and how charming! I am really beside
myself. You are adorable, Mademoiselle. I study your feet with the
microscope and your soul with the telescope."</p>
<p>And Cosette answered:—</p>
<p>"I have been loving a little more all the time that has passed since this
morning."</p>
<p>Questions and replies took care of themselves in this dialogue, which
always turned with mutual consent upon love, as the little pith figures
always turn on their peg.</p>
<p>Cosette's whole person was ingenuousness, ingenuity, transparency,
whiteness, candor, radiance. It might have been said of Cosette that she
was clear. She produced on those who saw her the sensation of April and
dawn. There was dew in her eyes. Cosette was a condensation of the auroral
light in the form of a woman.</p>
<p>It was quite simple that Marius should admire her, since he adored her.
But the truth is, that this little school-girl, fresh from the convent,
talked with exquisite penetration and uttered, at times, all sorts of true
and delicate sayings. Her prattle was conversation. She never made a
mistake about anything, and she saw things justly. The woman feels and
speaks with the tender instinct of the heart, which is infallible.</p>
<p>No one understands so well as a woman, how to say things that are, at
once, both sweet and deep. Sweetness and depth, they are the whole of
woman; in them lies the whole of heaven.</p>
<p>In this full felicity, tears welled up to their eyes every instant. A
crushed lady-bug, a feather fallen from a nest, a branch of hawthorn
broken, aroused their pity, and their ecstasy, sweetly mingled with
melancholy, seemed to ask nothing better than to weep. The most sovereign
symptom of love is a tenderness that is, at times, almost unbearable.</p>
<p>And, in addition to this,—all these contradictions are the lightning
play of love,—they were fond of laughing, they laughed readily and
with a delicious freedom, and so familiarly that they sometimes presented
the air of two boys.</p>
<p>Still, though unknown to hearts intoxicated with purity, nature is always
present and will not be forgotten. She is there with her brutal and
sublime object; and however great may be the innocence of souls, one feels
in the most modest private interview, the adorable and mysterious shade
which separates a couple of lovers from a pair of friends.</p>
<p>They idolized each other.</p>
<p>The permanent and the immutable are persistent. People live, they smile,
they laugh, they make little grimaces with the tips of their lips, they
interlace their fingers, they call each other thou, and that does not
prevent eternity.</p>
<p>Two lovers hide themselves in the evening, in the twilight, in the
invisible, with the birds, with the roses; they fascinate each other in
the darkness with their hearts which they throw into their eyes, they
murmur, they whisper, and in the meantime, immense librations of the
planets fill the infinite universe.</p>
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