Les MisĂ©rables by Victor Hugo (top novels .txt) đ
- Author: Victor Hugo
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All dropped their heads with a gloomy air.
Strange contradictions of the human heart at its most sublime moments. Combeferre, who spoke thus, was not an orphan. He recalled the mothers of other men, and forgot his own. He was about to get himself killed. He was âan egoist.â
Marius, fasting, fevered, having emerged in succession from all hope, and having been stranded in grief, the most sombre of shipwrecks, and saturated with violent emotions and conscious that the end was near, had plunged deeper and deeper into that visionary stupor which always precedes the fatal hour voluntarily accepted.
A physiologist might have studied in him the growing symptoms of that febrile absorption known to, and classified by, science, and which is to suffering what voluptuousness is to pleasure. Despair, also, has its ecstasy. Marius had reached this point. He looked on at everything as from without; as we have said, things which passed before him seemed far away; he made out the whole, but did not perceive the details. He beheld men going and coming as through a flame. He heard voices speaking as at the bottom of an abyss.
But this moved him. There was in this scene a point which pierced and roused even him. He had but one idea now, to die; and he did not wish to be turned aside from it, but he reflected, in his gloomy somnambulism, that while destroying himself, he was not prohibited from saving some one else.
He raised his voice.
âEnjolras and Combeferre are right,â said he; âno unnecessary sacrifice. I join them, and you must make haste. Combeferre has said convincing things to you. There are some among you who have families, mothers, sisters, wives, children. Let such leave the ranks.â
No one stirred.
âMarried men and the supporters of families, step out of the ranks!â repeated Marius.
His authority was great. Enjolras was certainly the head of the barricade, but Marius was its savior.
âI order it,â cried Enjolras.
âI entreat you,â said Marius.
Then, touched by Combeferreâs words, shaken by Enjolrasâ order, touched by Mariusâ entreaty, these heroic men began to denounce each other.ââIt is true,â said one young man to a full grown man, âyou are the father of a family. Go.âââIt is your duty rather,â retorted the man, âyou have two sisters whom you maintain.ââAnd an unprecedented controversy broke forth. Each struggled to determine which should not allow himself to be placed at the door of the tomb.
âMake haste,â said Courfeyrac, âin another quarter of an hour it will be too late.â
âCitizens,â pursued Enjolras, âthis is the Republic, and universal suffrage reigns. Do you yourselves designate those who are to go.â
They obeyed. After the expiration of a few minutes, five were unanimously selected and stepped out of the ranks.
âThere are five of them!â exclaimed Marius.
There were only four uniforms.
âWell,â began the five, âone must stay behind.â
And then a struggle arose as to who should remain, and who should find reasons for the others not remaining. The generous quarrel began afresh.
âYou have a wife who loves you.âââYou have your aged mother.âââ You have neither father nor mother, and what is to become of your three little brothers?âââYou are the father of five children.âââYou have a right to live, you are only seventeen, it is too early for you to die.â
These great revolutionary barricades were assembling points for heroism. The improbable was simple there. These men did not astonish each other.
âBe quick,â repeated Courfeyrac.
Men shouted to Marius from the groups:
âDo you designate who is to remain.â
âYes,â said the five, âchoose. We will obey you.â
Marius did not believe that he was capable of another emotion. Still, at this idea, that of choosing a man for death, his blood rushed back to his heart. He would have turned pale, had it been possible for him to become any paler.
He advanced towards the five, who smiled upon him, and each, with his eyes full of that grand flame which one beholds in the depths of history hovering over ThermopylĂŠ, cried to him:
âMe! me! me!â
And Marius stupidly counted them; there were still five of them! Then his glance dropped to the four uniforms.
At that moment, a fifth uniform fell, as if from heaven, upon the other four.
The fifth man was saved.
Marius raised his eyes and recognized M. Fauchelevent.
Jean Valjean had just entered the barricade.
He had arrived by way of Mondétour lane, whither by dint of inquiries made, or by instinct, or chance. Thanks to his dress of a National Guardsman, he had made his way without difficulty.
The sentinel stationed by the insurgents in the Rue MondĂ©tour had no occasion to give the alarm for a single National Guardsman, and he had allowed the latter to entangle himself in the street, saying to himself: âProbably it is a reinforcement, in any case it is a prisoner.â The moment was too grave to admit of the sentinel abandoning his duty and his post of observation.
At the moment when Jean Valjean entered the redoubt, no one had noticed him, all eyes being fixed on the five chosen men and the four uniforms. Jean Valjean also had seen and heard, and he had silently removed his coat and flung it on the pile with the rest.
The emotion aroused was indescribable.
âWho is this man?â demanded Bossuet.
âHe is a man who saves others,â replied Combeferre.
Marius added in a grave voice:
âI know him.â
This guarantee satisfied every one.
Enjolras turned to Jean Valjean.
âWelcome, citizen.â
And he added:
âYou know that we are about to die.â
Jean Valjean, without replying, helped the insurgent whom he was saving to don his uniform.
The situation of all in that fatal hour and that pitiless place, had as result and culminating point Enjolrasâ supreme melancholy.
Enjolras bore within him the plenitude of the revolution; he was incomplete, however, so far as the absolute can be so; he had too much of Saint-Just about him, and not enough of Anacharsis Cloots; still, his mind, in the society of the Friends of the A B C, had ended by undergoing a certain polarization from Combeferreâs ideas; for some time past, he had been gradually emerging from the narrow form of dogma, and had allowed himself to incline to the broadening influence of progress, and he had come to accept, as a definitive and magnificent evolution, the transformation of the great French Republic, into the immense human republic. As far as the immediate means were concerned, a violent situation being given, he wished to be violent; on that point, he never varied; and he remained of that epic and redoubtable school which is summed up in the words: âEighty-three.â Enjolras was standing erect on the staircase of paving-stones, one elbow resting on the stock of his gun. He was engaged in thought; he quivered, as at the passage of prophetic breaths; places where death is have these effects of tripods. A sort of stifled fire darted from his eyes, which were filled with an inward look. All at once he threw back his head, his blond locks fell back like those of an angel on the sombre quadriga made of stars, they were like the mane of a startled lion in the flaming of an halo, and Enjolras cried:
âCitizens, do you picture the future to yourselves? The streets of cities inundated with light, green branches on the thresholds, nations sisters, men just, old men blessing children, the past loving the present, thinkers entirely at liberty, believers on terms of full equality, for religion heaven, God the direct priest, human conscience become an altar, no more hatreds, the fraternity of the workshop and the school, for sole penalty and recompense fame, work for all, right for all, peace over all, no more bloodshed, no more wars, happy mothers! To conquer matter is the first step; to realize the ideal is the second. Reflect on what progress has already accomplished. Formerly, the first human races beheld with terror the hydra pass before their eyes, breathing on the waters, the dragon which vomited flame, the griffin who was the monster of the air, and who flew with the wings of an eagle and the talons of a tiger; fearful beasts which were above man. Man, nevertheless, spread his snares, consecrated by intelligence, and finally conquered these monsters. We have vanquished the hydra, and it is called the locomotive; we are on the point of vanquishing the griffin, we already grasp it, and it is called the balloon. On the day when this Promethean task shall be accomplished, and when man shall have definitely harnessed to his will the triple ChimĂŠra of antiquity, the hydra, the dragon and the griffin, he will be the master of water, fire, and of air, and he will be for the rest of animated creation that which the ancient gods formerly were to him. Courage, and onward! Citizens, whither are we going? To science made government, to the force of things become the sole public force, to the natural law, having in itself its sanction and its penalty and promulgating itself by evidence, to a dawn of truth corresponding to a dawn of day. We are advancing to the union of peoples; we are advancing to the unity of man. No more fictions; no more parasites. The real governed by the true, that is the goal. Civilization will hold its assizes at the summit of Europe, and, later on, at the centre of continents, in a grand parliament of the intelligence. Something similar has already been seen. The amphictyons had two sittings a year, one at Delphos the seat of the gods, the other at ThermopylĂŠ, the place of heroes. Europe will have her amphictyons;
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