Page 1714 - les-miserables
P. 1714

‘As  you  like,  but  you  shall  not  enter  here.  I’m  not  the
         daughter of a dog, since I’m the daughter of a wolf. There are
         six of you, what matters that to me? You are men. Well, I’m
         a woman. You don’t frighten me. I tell you that you shan’t
         enter this house, because it doesn’t suit me. If you approach,
         I’ll bark. I told you, I’m the dog, and I don’t care a straw for
         you. Go your way, you bore me! Go where you please, but
         don’t come here, I forbid it! You can use your knives. I’ll use
         kicks; it’s all the same to me, come on!’
            She advanced a pace nearer the ruffians, she was terrible,
         she burst out laughing:—
            ‘Pardine! I’m not afraid. I shall be hungry this summer,
         and I shall be cold this winter. Aren’t they ridiculous, these
         ninnies of men, to think they can scare a girl! What! Scare?
         Oh, yes, much! Because you have finical poppets of mis-
         tresses who hide under the bed when you put on a big voice,
         forsooth! I ain’t afraid of anything, that I ain’t!’
            She  fastened  her  intent  gaze  upon  Thenardier  and
         said:—
            ‘Not even of you, father!’
            Then  she  continued,  as  she  cast  her  blood-shot,
         spectre-like eyes upon the ruffians in turn:—
            ‘What do I care if I’m picked up to-morrow morning on
         the pavement of the Rue Plumet, killed by the blows of my
         father’s club, or whether I’m found a year from now in the
         nets at Saint-Cloud or the Isle of Swans in the midst of rot-
         ten old corks and drowned dogs?’
            She was forced to pause; she was seized by a dry cough,
         her breath came from her weak and narrow chest like the

         1714                                  Les Miserables
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