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CHAPTER III



         THE BEGINNING

         OF SHADOW






         Jean Valjean suspected nothing.
            Cosette, who was rather less dreamy than Marius, was gay,
         and that sufficed for Jean Valjean’s happiness. The thoughts
         which Cosette cherished, her tender preoccupations, Mar-
         ius’ image which filled her heart, took away nothing from
         the incomparable purity of her beautiful, chaste, and smil-
         ing brow. She was at the age when the virgin bears her love
         as the angel his lily. So Jean Valjean was at ease. And then,
         when two lovers have come to an understanding, things al-
         ways go well; the third party who might disturb their love
         is kept in a state of perfect blindness by a restricted number
         of precautions which are always the same in the case of all
         lovers. Thus, Cosette never objected to any of Jean Valjean’s
         proposals. Did she want to take a walk? ‘Yes, dear little fa-
         ther.’ Did she want to stay at home? Very good. Did he wish
         to pass the evening with Cosette? She was delighted. As he
         always went to bed at ten o’clock, Marius did not come to the
         garden on such occasions until after that hour, when, from

         1702                                  Les Miserables
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