Page 1472 - les-miserables
P. 1472

smile, he had grown morose and no longer received visitors.
         Marius did well not to dream of going thither. Sometimes,
         at the hour when M. Mabeuf was on his way to the Jardin
         des Plantes, the old man and the young man passed each
         other on the Boulevard de l’Hopital. They did not speak,
         and only exchanged a melancholy sign of the head. A heart-
         breaking thing it is that there comes a moment when misery
         looses bonds! Two men who have been friends become two
         chance passers-by.
            Royal  the  bookseller  was  dead.  M.  Mabeuf  no  longer
         knew his books, his garden, or his indigo: these were the
         three forms which happiness, pleasure, and hope had as-
         sumed  for  him.  This  sufficed  him  for  his  living.  He  said
         to himself: ‘When I shall have made my balls of blueing,
         I shall be rich, I will withdraw my copperplates from the
         pawn-shop, I will put my Flora in vogue again with trick-
         ery, plenty of money and advertisements in the newspapers
         and I will buy, I know well where, a copy of Pierre de Me-
         dine’s Art de Naviguer, with wood-cuts, edition of 1655.’ In
         the meantime, he toiled all day over his plot of indigo, and
         at night he returned home to water his garden, and to read
         his books. At that epoch, M. Mabeuf was nearly eighty years
         of age.
            One evening he had a singular apparition.
            He had returned home while it was still broad daylight.
         Mother Plutarque, whose health was declining, was ill and
         in bed. He had dined on a bone, on which a little meat lin-
         gered, and a bit of bread that he had found on the kitchen
         table, and had seated himself on an overturned stone post,

         1472                                  Les Miserables
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