Page 2158 - les-miserables
P. 2158

each other. The one who was in advance was trying to get
         away, the one in the rear was trying to overtake the other.
            It was like a game of checkers played at a distance and in
         silence. Neither seemed to be in any hurry, and both walked
         slowly, as though each of them feared by too much haste to
         make his partner redouble his pace.
            One would have said that it was an appetite following
         its prey, and purposely without wearing the air of doing so.
         The prey was crafty and on its guard.
            The  proper  relations  between  the  hunted  pole-cat  and
         the hunting dog were observed. The one who was seeking to
         escape had an insignificant mien and not an impressive ap-
         pearance; the one who was seeking to seize him was rude of
         aspect, and must have been rude to encounter.
            The first, conscious that he was the more feeble, avoid-
         ed the second; but he avoided him in a manner which was
         deeply furious; any one who could have observed him would
         have discerned in his eyes the sombre hostility of flight, and
         all the menace that fear contains.
            The shore was deserted; there were no passers-by; not
         even a boatman nor a lighter-man was in the skiffs which
         were moored here and there.
            It was not easy to see these two men, except from the
         quay opposite, and to any person who had scrutinized them
         at that distance, the man who was in advance would have
         appeared like a bristling, tattered, and equivocal being, who
         was uneasy and trembling beneath a ragged blouse, and the
         other like a classic and official personage, wearing the frock-
         coat of authority buttoned to the chin.

         2158                                  Les Miserables
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