Page 1352 - les-miserables
P. 1352

Leblanc would be sacrificed, and, who knows? Thenardier
         would escape. Should he dash down the one or allow the
         other to fall? Remorse awaited him in either case.
            What was he to do? What should he choose? Be false to
         the most imperious souvenirs, to all those solemn vows to
         himself, to the most sacred duty, to the most venerated text!
         Should he ignore his father’s testament, or allow the perpe-
         tration of a crime! On the one hand, it seemed to him that
         he heard ‘his Ursule’ supplicating for her father and on the
         other, the colonel commending Thenardier to his care. He
         felt that he was going mad. His knees gave way beneath him.
         And he had not even the time for deliberation, so great was
         the fury with which the scene before his eyes was hastening
         to its catastrophe. It was like a whirlwind of which he had
         thought himself the master, and which was now sweeping
         him away. He was on the verge of swooning.
            In the meantime, Thenardier, whom we shall henceforth
         call by no other name, was pacing up and down in front of
         the table in a sort of frenzy and wild triumph.
            He seized the candle in his fist, and set it on the chim-
         ney-piece with so violent a bang that the wick came near
         being extinguished, and the tallow bespattered the wall.
            Then he turned to M. Leblanc with a horrible look, and
         spit out these words:—
            ‘Done for! Smoked brown! Cooked! Spitchcocked!’
            And  again  he  began  to  march  back  and  forth,  in  full
         eruption.
            ‘Ah!’ he cried, ‘so I’ve found you again at last, Mister phi-
         lanthropist! Mister threadbare millionnaire! Mister giver of

         1352                                  Les Miserables
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