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<h2> CHAPTER IX—EMPLOYMENT OF THE OLD TALENTS OF A POACHER AND THAT INFALLIBLE MARKSMANSHIP WHICH INFLUENCED THE CONDEMNATION OF 1796 </h2>
<p>Opinions were exchanged in the barricade. The firing from the gun was
about to begin again. Against that grape-shot, they could not hold out a
quarter of an hour longer. It was absolutely necessary to deaden the
blows.</p>
<p>Enjolras issued this command:</p>
<p>"We must place a mattress there."</p>
<p>"We have none," said Combeferre, "the wounded are lying on them."</p>
<p>Jean Valjean, who was seated apart on a stone post, at the corner of the
tavern, with his gun between his knees, had, up to that moment, taken no
part in anything that was going on. He did not appear to hear the
combatants saying around him: "Here is a gun that is doing nothing."</p>
<p>At the order issued by Enjolras, he rose.</p>
<p>It will be remembered that, on the arrival of the rabble in the Rue de la
Chanvrerie, an old woman, foreseeing the bullets, had placed her mattress
in front of her window. This window, an attic window, was on the roof of a
six-story house situated a little beyond the barricade. The mattress,
placed cross-wise, supported at the bottom on two poles for drying linen,
was upheld at the top by two ropes, which, at that distance, looked like
two threads, and which were attached to two nails planted in the window
frames. These ropes were distinctly visible, like hairs, against the sky.</p>
<p>"Can some one lend me a double-barrelled rifle?" said Jean Valjean.</p>
<p>Enjolras, who had just re-loaded his, handed it to him.</p>
<p>Jean Valjean took aim at the attic window and fired.</p>
<p>One of the mattress ropes was cut.</p>
<p>The mattress now hung by one thread only.</p>
<p>Jean Valjean fired the second charge. The second rope lashed the panes of
the attic window. The mattress slipped between the two poles and fell into
the street.</p>
<p>The barricade applauded.</p>
<p>All voices cried:</p>
<p>"Here is a mattress!"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Combeferre, "but who will go and fetch it?"</p>
<p>The mattress had, in fact, fallen outside the barricade, between besiegers
and besieged. Now, the death of the sergeant of artillery having
exasperated the troop, the soldiers had, for several minutes, been lying
flat on their stomachs behind the line of paving-stones which they had
erected, and, in order to supply the forced silence of the piece, which
was quiet while its service was in course of reorganization, they had
opened fire on the barricade. The insurgents did not reply to this
musketry, in order to spare their ammunition The fusillade broke against
the barricade; but the street, which it filled, was terrible.</p>
<p>Jean Valjean stepped out of the cut, entered the street, traversed the
storm of bullets, walked up to the mattress, hoisted it upon his back, and
returned to the barricade.</p>
<p>He placed the mattress in the cut with his own hands. He fixed it there
against the wall in such a manner that the artillery-men should not see
it.</p>
<p>That done, they awaited the next discharge of grape-shot.</p>
<p>It was not long in coming.</p>
<p>The cannon vomited forth its package of buck-shot with a roar. But there
was no rebound. The effect which they had foreseen had been attained. The
barricade was saved.</p>
<p>"Citizen," said Enjolras to Jean Valjean, "the Republic thanks you."</p>
<p>Bossuet admired and laughed. He exclaimed:</p>
<p>"It is immoral that a mattress should have so much power. Triumph of that
which yields over that which strikes with lightning. But never mind, glory
to the mattress which annuls a cannon!"</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER X—DAWN </h2>
<h3> At that moment, Cosette awoke. </h3>
<p>Her chamber was narrow, neat, unobtrusive, with a long sash-window, facing
the East on the back court-yard of the house.</p>
<p>Cosette knew nothing of what was going on in Paris. She had not been there
on the preceding evening, and she had already retired to her chamber when
Toussaint had said:</p>
<p>"It appears that there is a row."</p>
<p>Cosette had slept only a few hours, but soundly. She had had sweet dreams,
which possibly arose from the fact that her little bed was very white.
Some one, who was Marius, had appeared to her in the light. She awoke with
the sun in her eyes, which, at first, produced on her the effect of being
a continuation of her dream. Her first thought on emerging from this dream
was a smiling one. Cosette felt herself thoroughly reassured. Like Jean
Valjean, she had, a few hours previously, passed through that reaction of
the soul which absolutely will not hear of unhappiness. She began to
cherish hope, with all her might, without knowing why. Then she felt a
pang at her heart. It was three days since she had seen Marius. But she
said to herself that he must have received her letter, that he knew where
she was, and that he was so clever that he would find means of reaching
her.—And that certainly to-day, and perhaps that very morning.—It
was broad daylight, but the rays of light were very horizontal; she
thought that it was very early, but that she must rise, nevertheless, in
order to receive Marius.</p>
<p>She felt that she could not live without Marius, and that, consequently,
that was sufficient and that Marius would come. No objection was valid.
All this was certain. It was monstrous enough already to have suffered for
three days. Marius absent three days, this was horrible on the part of the
good God. Now, this cruel teasing from on high had been gone through with.
Marius was about to arrive, and he would bring good news. Youth is made
thus; it quickly dries its eyes; it finds sorrow useless and does not
accept it. Youth is the smile of the future in the presence of an unknown
quantity, which is itself. It is natural to it to be happy. It seems as
though its respiration were made of hope.</p>
<p>Moreover, Cosette could not remember what Marius had said to her on the
subject of this absence which was to last only one day, and what
explanation of it he had given her. Every one has noticed with what
nimbleness a coin which one has dropped on the ground rolls away and
hides, and with what art it renders itself undiscoverable. There are
thoughts which play us the same trick; they nestle away in a corner of our
brain; that is the end of them; they are lost; it is impossible to lay the
memory on them. Cosette was somewhat vexed at the useless little effort
made by her memory. She told herself, that it was very naughty and very
wicked of her, to have forgotten the words uttered by Marius.</p>
<p>She sprang out of bed and accomplished the two ablutions of soul and body,
her prayers and her toilet.</p>
<p>One may, in a case of exigency, introduce the reader into a nuptial
chamber, not into a virginal chamber. Verse would hardly venture it, prose
must not.</p>
<p>It is the interior of a flower that is not yet unfolded, it is whiteness
in the dark, it is the private cell of a closed lily, which must not be
gazed upon by man so long as the sun has not gazed upon it. Woman in the
bud is sacred. That innocent bud which opens, that adorable half-nudity
which is afraid of itself, that white foot which takes refuge in a
slipper, that throat which veils itself before a mirror as though a mirror
were an eye, that chemise which makes haste to rise up and conceal the
shoulder for a creaking bit of furniture or a passing vehicle, those cords
tied, those clasps fastened, those laces drawn, those tremors, those
shivers of cold and modesty, that exquisite affright in every movement,
that almost winged uneasiness where there is no cause for alarm, the
successive phases of dressing, as charming as the clouds of dawn,—it
is not fitting that all this should be narrated, and it is too much to
have even called attention to it.</p>
<p>The eye of man must be more religious in the presence of the rising of a
young girl than in the presence of the rising of a star. The possibility
of hurting should inspire an augmentation of respect. The down on the
peach, the bloom on the plum, the radiated crystal of the snow, the wing
of the butterfly powdered with feathers, are coarse compared to that
chastity which does not even know that it is chaste. The young girl is
only the flash of a dream, and is not yet a statue. Her bed-chamber is
hidden in the sombre part of the ideal. The indiscreet touch of a glance
brutalizes this vague penumbra. Here, contemplation is profanation.</p>
<p>We shall, therefore, show nothing of that sweet little flutter of
Cosette's rising.</p>
<p>An oriental tale relates how the rose was made white by God, but that Adam
looked upon her when she was unfolding, and she was ashamed and turned
crimson. We are of the number who fall speechless in the presence of young
girls and flowers, since we think them worthy of veneration.</p>
<p>Cosette dressed herself very hastily, combed and dressed her hair, which
was a very simple matter in those days, when women did not swell out their
curls and bands with cushions and puffs, and did not put crinoline in
their locks. Then she opened the window and cast her eyes around her in
every direction, hoping to descry some bit of the street, an angle of the
house, an edge of pavement, so that she might be able to watch for Marius
there. But no view of the outside was to be had. The back court was
surrounded by tolerably high walls, and the outlook was only on several
gardens. Cosette pronounced these gardens hideous: for the first time in
her life, she found flowers ugly. The smallest scrap of the gutter of the
street would have met her wishes better. She decided to gaze at the sky,
as though she thought that Marius might come from that quarter.</p>
<p>All at once, she burst into tears. Not that this was fickleness of soul;
but hopes cut in twain by dejection—that was her case. She had a
confused consciousness of something horrible. Thoughts were rife in the
air, in fact. She told herself that she was not sure of anything, that to
withdraw herself from sight was to be lost; and the idea that Marius could
return to her from heaven appeared to her no longer charming but mournful.</p>
<p>Then, as is the nature of these clouds, calm returned to her, and hope and
a sort of unconscious smile, which yet indicated trust in God.</p>
<p>Every one in the house was still asleep. A country-like silence reigned.
Not a shutter had been opened. The porter's lodge was closed. Toussaint
had not risen, and Cosette, naturally, thought that her father was asleep.
She must have suffered much, and she must have still been suffering
greatly, for she said to herself, that her father had been unkind; but she
counted on Marius. The eclipse of such a light was decidedly impossible.
Now and then, she heard sharp shocks in the distance, and she said: "It is
odd that people should be opening and shutting their carriage gates so
early." They were the reports of the cannon battering the barricade.</p>
<p>A few feet below Cosette's window, in the ancient and perfectly black
cornice of the wall, there was a martin's nest; the curve of this nest
formed a little projection beyond the cornice, so that from above it was
possible to look into this little paradise. The mother was there,
spreading her wings like a fan over her brood; the father fluttered about,
flew away, then came back, bearing in his beak food and kisses. The
dawning day gilded this happy thing, the great law, "Multiply," lay there
smiling and august, and that sweet mystery unfolded in the glory of the
morning. Cosette, with her hair in the sunlight, her soul absorbed in
chimeras, illuminated by love within and by the dawn without, bent over
mechanically, and almost without daring to avow to herself that she was
thinking at the same time of Marius, began to gaze at these birds, at this
family, at that male and female, that mother and her little ones, with the
profound trouble which a nest produces on a virgin.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER XI—THE SHOT WHICH MISSES NOTHING AND KILLS NO ONE </h2>
<p>The assailants' fire continued. Musketry and grape-shot alternated, but
without committing great ravages, to tell the truth. The top alone of the
Corinthe facade suffered; the window on the first floor, and the attic
window in the roof, riddled with buck-shot and biscaiens, were slowly
losing their shape. The combatants who had been posted there had been
obliged to withdraw. However, this is according to the tactics of
barricades; to fire for a long while, in order to exhaust the insurgents'
ammunition, if they commit the mistake of replying. When it is perceived,
from the slackening of their fire, that they have no more powder and ball,
the assault is made. Enjolras had not fallen into this trap; the barricade
did not reply.</p>
<p>At every discharge by platoons, Gavroche puffed out his cheek with his
tongue, a sign of supreme disdain.</p>
<p>"Good for you," said he, "rip up the cloth. We want some lint."</p>
<p>Courfeyrac called the grape-shot to order for the little effect which it
produced, and said to the cannon:</p>
<p>"You are growing diffuse, my good fellow."</p>
<p>One gets puzzled in battle, as at a ball. It is probable that this silence
on the part of the redoubt began to render the besiegers uneasy, and to
make them fear some unexpected incident, and that they felt the necessity
of getting a clear view behind that heap of paving-stones, and of knowing
what was going on behind that impassable wall which received blows without
retorting. The insurgents suddenly perceived a helmet glittering in the
sun on a neighboring roof. A fireman had placed his back against a tall
chimney, and seemed to be acting as sentinel. His glance fell directly
down into the barricade.</p>
<p>"There's an embarrassing watcher," said Enjolras.</p>
<p>Jean Valjean had returned Enjolras' rifle, but he had his own gun.</p>
<p>Without saying a word, he took aim at the fireman, and, a second later,
the helmet, smashed by a bullet, rattled noisily into the street. The
terrified soldier made haste to disappear. A second observer took his
place. This one was an officer. Jean Valjean, who had re-loaded his gun,
took aim at the newcomer and sent the officer's casque to join the
soldier's. The officer did not persist, and retired speedily. This time
the warning was understood. No one made his appearance thereafter on that
roof; and the idea of spying on the barricade was abandoned.</p>
<p>"Why did you not kill the man?" Bossuet asked Jean Valjean.</p>
<p>Jean Valjean made no reply.</p>
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