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P. 1698

CHAPTER II



         THE BEWILDERMENT OF

         PERFECT HAPPINESS






         They existed vaguely, frightened at their happiness. They
         did not notice the cholera which decimated Paris precisely
         during that very month. They had confided in each other
         as far as possible, but this had not extended much further
         than their names. Marius had told Cosette that he was an
         orphan, that his name was Marius Pontmercy, that he was
         a lawyer, that he lived by writing things for publishers, that
         his father had been a colonel, that the latter had been a hero,
         and that he, Marius, was on bad terms with his grandfa-
         ther who was rich. He had also hinted at being a baron, but
         this had produced no effect on Cosette. She did not know
         the meaning of the word. Marius was Marius. On her side,
         she had confided to him that she had been brought up at
         the Petit-Picpus convent, that her mother, like his own, was
         dead, that her father’s name was M. Fauchelevent, that he
         was very good, that he gave a great deal to the poor, but that
         he was poor himself, and that he denied himself everything
         though he denied her nothing.

         1698                                  Les Miserables
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