Page 1726 - les-miserables
P. 1726

He went on:—
            ‘Do you love me?’
            She replied, sobbing, by that word from paradise which
         is never more charming than amid tears:—
            ‘I adore you!’
            He  continued  in  a  tone  which  was  an  indescribable
         caress:—
            ‘Do not weep. Tell me, will you do this for me, and cease
         to weep?’
            ‘Do you love me?’ said she.
            He took her hand.
            ‘Cosette, I have never given my word of honor to any one,
         because my word of honor terrifies me. I feel that my father
         is by my side. Well, I give you my most sacred word of hon-
         or, that if you go away I shall die.’
            In  the  tone  with  which  he  uttered  these  words  there
         lay a melancholy so solemn and so tranquil, that Cosette
         trembled.  She  felt  that  chill  which  is  produced  by  a  true
         and gloomy thing as it passes by. The shock made her cease
         weeping.
            ‘Now, listen,’ said he, ‘do not expect me to-morrow.’
            ‘Why?’
            ‘Do not expect me until the day after to-morrow.’
            ‘Oh! Why?’
            ‘You will see.’
            ‘A day without seeing you! But that is impossible!’
            ‘Let us sacrifice one day in order to gain our whole lives,
         perhaps.’
            And Marius added in a low tone and in an aside:—

         1726                                  Les Miserables
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