Page 1728 - les-miserables
P. 1728

‘Then I will pray to God and I will think of you here, so
         that you may be successful. I will question you no further,
         since you do not wish it. You are my master. I shall pass the
         evening to-morrow in singing that music from Euryanthe
         that you love, and that you came one evening to listen to,
         outside my shutters. But day after to-morrow you will come
         early. I shall expect you at dusk, at nine o’clock precisely, I
         warn you. Mon Dieu! how sad it is that the days are so long!
         On the stroke of nine, do you understand, I shall be in the
         garden.’
            ‘And I also.’
            And  without  having  uttered  it,  moved  by  the  same
         thought,  impelled  by  those  electric  currents  which  place
         lovers in continual communication, both being intoxicated
         with delight even in their sorrow, they fell into each other’s
         arms, without perceiving that their lips met while their up-
         lifted eyes, overflowing with rapture and full of tears, gazed
         upon the stars.
            When Marius went forth, the street was deserted. This
         was the moment when Eponine was following the ruffians
         to the boulevard.
            While Marius had been dreaming with his head pressed
         to the tree, an idea had crossed his mind; an idea, alas! that
         he himself judged to be senseless and impossible. He had
         come to a desperate decision.







         1728                                  Les Miserables
   1723   1724   1725   1726   1727   1728   1729   1730   1731   1732   1733