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CHAPTER II



         MARIUS, EMERGING FROM

         CIVIL WAR, MAKES READY

         FOR DOMESTIC WAR






         For a long time, Marius was neither dead nor alive. For
         many  weeks  he  lay  in  a  fever  accompanied  by  delirium,
         and by tolerably grave cerebral symptoms, caused more by
         the shocks of the wounds on the head than by the wounds
         themselves.
            He repeated Cosette’s name for whole nights in the mel-
         ancholy loquacity of fever, and with the sombre obstinacy
         of agony. The extent of some of the lesions presented a seri-
         ous danger, the suppuration of large wounds being always
         liable to become re-absorbed, and consequently, to kill the
         sick man, under certain atmospheric conditions; at every
         change of weather, at the slightest storm, the physician was
         uneasy.
            ‘Above all things,’ he repeated, ‘let the wounded man be
         subjected to no emotion.’ The dressing of the wounds was
         complicated  and  difficult,  the  fixation  of  apparatus  and

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