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<h2> BOOK THIRD.—MUD BUT THE SOUL </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I—THE SEWER AND ITS SURPRISES </h2>
<h3> It was in the sewers of Paris that Jean Valjean found himself. </h3>
<p>Still another resemblance between Paris and the sea. As in the ocean, the
diver may disappear there.</p>
<p>The transition was an unheard-of one. In the very heart of the city, Jean
Valjean had escaped from the city, and, in the twinkling of an eye, in the
time required to lift the cover and to replace it, he had passed from
broad daylight to complete obscurity, from midday to midnight, from tumult
to silence, from the whirlwind of thunders to the stagnation of the tomb,
and, by a vicissitude far more tremendous even than that of the Rue
Polonceau, from the most extreme peril to the most absolute obscurity.</p>
<p>An abrupt fall into a cavern; a disappearance into the secret trap-door of
Paris; to quit that street where death was on every side, for that sort of
sepulchre where there was life, was a strange instant. He remained for
several seconds as though bewildered; listening, stupefied. The waste-trap
of safety had suddenly yawned beneath him. Celestial goodness had, in a
manner, captured him by treachery. Adorable ambuscades of providence!</p>
<p>Only, the wounded man did not stir, and Jean Valjean did not know whether
that which he was carrying in that grave was a living being or a dead
corpse.</p>
<p>His first sensation was one of blindness. All of a sudden, he could see
nothing. It seemed to him too, that, in one instant, he had become deaf.
He no longer heard anything. The frantic storm of murder which had been
let loose a few feet above his head did not reach him, thanks to the
thickness of the earth which separated him from it, as we have said,
otherwise than faintly and indistinctly, and like a rumbling, in the
depths. He felt that the ground was solid under his feet; that was all;
but that was enough. He extended one arm and then the other, touched the
walls on both sides, and perceived that the passage was narrow; he
slipped, and thus perceived that the pavement was wet. He cautiously put
forward one foot, fearing a hole, a sink, some gulf; he discovered that
the paving continued. A gust of fetidness informed him of the place in
which he stood.</p>
<p>After the lapse of a few minutes, he was no longer blind. A little light
fell through the man-hole through which he had descended, and his eyes
became accustomed to this cavern. He began to distinguish something. The
passage in which he had burrowed—no other word can better express
the situation—was walled in behind him. It was one of those blind
alleys, which the special jargon terms branches. In front of him there was
another wall, a wall like night. The light of the air-hole died out ten or
twelve paces from the point where Jean Valjean stood, and barely cast a
wan pallor on a few metres of the damp walls of the sewer. Beyond, the
opaqueness was massive; to penetrate thither seemed horrible, an entrance
into it appeared like an engulfment. A man could, however, plunge into
that wall of fog and it was necessary so to do. Haste was even requisite.
It occurred to Jean Valjean that the grating which he had caught sight of
under the flag-stones might also catch the eye of the soldiery, and that
everything hung upon this chance. They also might descend into that well
and search it. There was not a minute to be lost. He had deposited Marius
on the ground, he picked him up again,—that is the real word for it,—placed
him on his shoulders once more, and set out. He plunged resolutely into
the gloom.</p>
<p>The truth is, that they were less safe than Jean Valjean fancied. Perils
of another sort and no less serious were awaiting them, perchance. After
the lightning-charged whirlwind of the combat, the cavern of miasmas and
traps; after chaos, the sewer. Jean Valjean had fallen from one circle of
hell into another.</p>
<p>When he had advanced fifty paces, he was obliged to halt. A problem
presented itself. The passage terminated in another gut which he
encountered across his path. There two ways presented themselves. Which
should he take? Ought he to turn to the left or to the right? How was he
to find his bearings in that black labyrinth? This labyrinth, to which we
have already called the reader's attention, has a clue, which is its
slope. To follow to the slope is to arrive at the river.</p>
<p>This Jean Valjean instantly comprehended.</p>
<p>He said to himself that he was probably in the sewer des Halles; that if
he were to choose the path to the left and follow the slope, he would
arrive, in less than a quarter of an hour, at some mouth on the Seine
between the Pont au Change and the Pont-Neuf, that is to say, he would
make his appearance in broad daylight on the most densely peopled spot in
Paris. Perhaps he would come out on some man-hole at the intersection of
streets. Amazement of the passers-by at beholding two bleeding men emerge
from the earth at their feet. Arrival of the police, a call to arms of the
neighboring post of guards. Thus they would be seized before they had even
got out. It would be better to plunge into that labyrinth, to confide
themselves to that black gloom, and to trust to Providence for the
outcome.</p>
<p>He ascended the incline, and turned to the right.</p>
<p>When he had turned the angle of the gallery, the distant glimmer of an
air-hole disappeared, the curtain of obscurity fell upon him once more,
and he became blind again. Nevertheless, he advanced as rapidly as
possible. Marius' two arms were passed round his neck, and the former's
feet dragged behind him. He held both these arms with one hand, and groped
along the wall with the other. Marius' cheek touched his, and clung there,
bleeding. He felt a warm stream which came from Marius trickling down upon
him and making its way under his clothes. But a humid warmth near his ear,
which the mouth of the wounded man touched, indicated respiration, and
consequently, life. The passage along which Jean Valjean was now
proceeding was not so narrow as the first. Jean Valjean walked through it
with considerable difficulty. The rain of the preceding day had not, as
yet, entirely run off, and it created a little torrent in the centre of
the bottom, and he was forced to hug the wall in order not to have his
feet in the water.</p>
<p>Thus he proceeded in the gloom. He resembled the beings of the night
groping in the invisible and lost beneath the earth in veins of shadow.</p>
<p>Still, little by little, whether it was that the distant air-holes emitted
a little wavering light in this opaque gloom, or whether his eyes had
become accustomed to the obscurity, some vague vision returned to him, and
he began once more to gain a confused idea, now of the wall which he
touched, now of the vault beneath which he was passing. The pupil dilates
in the dark, and the soul dilates in misfortune and ends by finding God
there.</p>
<p>It was not easy to direct his course.</p>
<p>The line of the sewer re-echoes, so to speak, the line of the streets
which lie above it. There were then in Paris two thousand two hundred
streets. Let the reader imagine himself beneath that forest of gloomy
branches which is called the sewer. The system of sewers existing at that
epoch, placed end to end, would have given a length of eleven leagues. We
have said above, that the actual net-work, thanks to the special activity
of the last thirty years, was no less than sixty leagues in extent.</p>
<p>Jean Valjean began by committing a blunder. He thought that he was beneath
the Rue Saint-Denis, and it was a pity that it was not so. Under the Rue
Saint-Denis there is an old stone sewer which dates from Louis XIII. and
which runs straight to the collecting sewer, called the Grand Sewer, with
but a single elbow, on the right, on the elevation of the ancient Cour des
Miracles, and a single branch, the Saint-Martin sewer, whose four arms
describe a cross. But the gut of the Petite-Truanderie the entrance to
which was in the vicinity of the Corinthe wine-shop has never communicated
with the sewer of the Rue Saint-Denis; it ended at the Montmartre sewer,
and it was in this that Jean Valjean was entangled. There opportunities of
losing oneself abound. The Montmartre sewer is one of the most
labyrinthine of the ancient network. Fortunately, Jean Valjean had left
behind him the sewer of the markets whose geometrical plan presents the
appearance of a multitude of parrots' roosts piled on top of each other;
but he had before him more than one embarrassing encounter and more than
one street corner—for they are streets—presenting itself in
the gloom like an interrogation point; first, on his left, the vast sewer
of the Platriere, a sort of Chinese puzzle, thrusting out and entangling
its chaos of Ts and Zs under the Post-Office and under the rotunda of the
Wheat Market, as far as the Seine, where it terminates in a Y; secondly,
on his right, the curving corridor of the Rue du Cadran with its three
teeth, which are also blind courts; thirdly, on his left, the branch of
the Mail, complicated, almost at its inception, with a sort of fork, and
proceeding from zig-zag to zig-zag until it ends in the grand crypt of the
outlet of the Louvre, truncated and ramified in every direction; and
lastly, the blind alley of a passage of the Rue des Jeuneurs, without
counting little ducts here and there, before reaching the belt sewer,
which alone could conduct him to some issue sufficiently distant to be
safe.</p>
<p>Had Jean Valjean had any idea of all that we have here pointed out, he
would speedily have perceived, merely by feeling the wall, that he was not
in the subterranean gallery of the Rue Saint-Denis. Instead of the ancient
stone, instead of the antique architecture, haughty and royal even in the
sewer, with pavement and string courses of granite and mortar costing
eight hundred livres the fathom, he would have felt under his hand
contemporary cheapness, economical expedients, porous stone filled with
mortar on a concrete foundation, which costs two hundred francs the metre,
and the bourgeoise masonry known as a petits materiaux—small stuff;
but of all this he knew nothing.</p>
<p>He advanced with anxiety, but with calmness, seeing nothing, knowing
nothing, buried in chance, that is to say, engulfed in providence.</p>
<p>By degrees, we will admit, a certain horror seized upon him. The gloom
which enveloped him penetrated his spirit. He walked in an enigma. This
aqueduct of the sewer is formidable; it interlaces in a dizzy fashion. It
is a melancholy thing to be caught in this Paris of shadows. Jean Valjean
was obliged to find and even to invent his route without seeing it. In
this unknown, every step that he risked might be his last. How was he to
get out? should he find an issue? should he find it in time? would that
colossal subterranean sponge with its stone cavities, allow itself to be
penetrated and pierced? should he there encounter some unexpected knot in
the darkness? should he arrive at the inextricable and the impassable?
would Marius die there of hemorrhage and he of hunger? should they end by
both getting lost, and by furnishing two skeletons in a nook of that
night? He did not know. He put all these questions to himself without
replying to them. The intestines of Paris form a precipice. Like the
prophet, he was in the belly of the monster.</p>
<p>All at once, he had a surprise. At the most unforeseen moment, and without
having ceased to walk in a straight line, he perceived that he was no
longer ascending; the water of the rivulet was beating against his heels,
instead of meeting him at his toes. The sewer was now descending. Why? Was
he about to arrive suddenly at the Seine? This danger was a great one, but
the peril of retreating was still greater. He continued to advance.</p>
<p>It was not towards the Seine that he was proceeding. The ridge which the
soil of Paris forms on its right bank empties one of its water-sheds into
the Seine and the other into the Grand Sewer. The crest of this ridge
which determines the division of the waters describes a very capricious
line. The culminating point, which is the point of separation of the
currents, is in the Sainte-Avoye sewer, beyond the Rue Michelle-Comte, in
the sewer of the Louvre, near the boulevards, and in the Montmartre sewer,
near the Halles. It was this culminating point that Jean Valjean had
reached. He was directing his course towards the belt sewer; he was on the
right path. But he did not know it.</p>
<p>Every time that he encountered a branch, he felt of its angles, and if he
found that the opening which presented itself was smaller than the passage
in which he was, he did not enter but continued his route, rightly judging
that every narrower way must needs terminate in a blind alley, and could
only lead him further from his goal, that is to say, the outlet. Thus he
avoided the quadruple trap which was set for him in the darkness by the
four labyrinths which we have just enumerated.</p>
<p>At a certain moment, he perceived that he was emerging from beneath the
Paris which was petrified by the uprising, where the barricades had
suppressed circulation, and that he was entering beneath the living and
normal Paris. Overhead he suddenly heard a noise as of thunder, distant
but continuous. It was the rumbling of vehicles.</p>
<p>He had been walking for about half an hour, at least according to the
calculation which he made in his own mind, and he had not yet thought of
rest; he had merely changed the hand with which he was holding Marius. The
darkness was more profound than ever, but its very depth reassured him.</p>
<p>All at once, he saw his shadow in front of him. It was outlined on a
faint, almost indistinct reddish glow, which vaguely empurpled the
flooring vault underfoot, and the vault overhead, and gilded to his right
and to his left the two viscous walls of the passage. Stupefied, he turned
round.</p>
<p>Behind him, in the portion of the passage which he had just passed
through, at a distance which appeared to him immense, piercing the dense
obscurity, flamed a sort of horrible star which had the air of surveying
him.</p>
<p>It was the gloomy star of the police which was rising in the sewer.</p>
<p>In the rear of that star eight or ten forms were moving about in a
confused way, black, upright, indistinct, horrible.</p>
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