Page 2162 - les-miserables
P. 2162

The man in the buttoned-up coat walked to the extremity
         of the shore, and remained there in thought for a moment,
         his fists clenched, his eyes searching. All at once he smote
         his brow. He had just perceived, at the point where the land
         came to an end and the water began, a large iron grating,
         low,  arched,  garnished  with  a  heavy  lock  and  with  three
         massive hinges. This grating, a sort of door pierced at the
         base of the quay, opened on the river as well as on the shore.
         A blackish stream passed under it. This stream discharged
         into the Seine.
            Beyond  the  heavy,  rusty  iron  bars,  a  sort  of  dark  and
         vaulted corridor could be descried. The man folded his arms
         and stared at the grating with an air of reproach.
            As this gaze did not suffice, he tried to thrust it aside; he
         shook it, it resisted solidly. It is probable that it had just been
         opened, although no sound had been heard, a singular cir-
         cumstance in so rusty a grating; but it is certain that it had
         been closed again. This indicated that the man before whom
         that door had just opened had not a hook but a key.
            This evidence suddenly burst upon the mind of the man
         who was trying to move the grating, and evoked from him
         this indignant ejaculation:
            ‘That is too much! A government key!’
            Then,  immediately  regaining  his  composure,  he  ex-
         pressed a whole world of interior ideas by this outburst of
         monosyllables  accented  almost  ironically:  ‘Come!  Come!
         Come! Come!’
            That said, and in the hope of something or other, either
         that he should see the man emerge or other men enter, he

         2162                                  Les Miserables
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