Page 1848 - les-miserables
P. 1848

that the mob had rushed into it.—‘Ah my God! Ah my God!’
         sighed Mame Hucheloup.
            Bossuet had gone down to meet Courfeyrac.
            Joly,  who  had  placed  himself  at  the  window,
         exclaimed:—
            ‘Courfeyrac, you ought to have brought an umbrella. You
         will gatch gold.’
            In the meantime, in the space of a few minutes, twenty
         iron bars had been wrenched from the grated front of the
         wine-shop, ten fathoms of street had been unpaved; Gavro-
         che and Bahorel had seized in its passage, and overturned,
         the dray of a lime-dealer named Anceau; this dray contained
         three barrels of lime, which they placed beneath the piles
         of paving-stones: Enjolras raised the cellar trap, and all the
         widow Hucheloup’s empty casks were used to flank the bar-
         rels of lime; Feuilly, with his fingers skilled in painting the
         delicate sticks of fans, had backed up the barrels and the
         dray with two massive heaps of blocks of rough stone. Blocks
         which were improvised like the rest and procured no one
         knows where. The beams which served as props were torn
         from the neighboring house-fronts and laid on the casks.
         When Bossuet and Courfeyrac turned round, half the street
         was already barred with a rampart higher than a man. There
         is nothing like the hand of the populace for building every-
         thing that is built by demolishing.
            Matelote and Gibelotte had mingled with the workers.
         Gibelotte went and came loaded with rubbish. Her lassitude
         helped  on  the  barricade.  She  served  the  barricade  as  she
         would have served wine, with a sleepy air.

         1848                                  Les Miserables
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