Page 2300 - les-miserables
P. 2300

quire buffoons. The King has Roquelaure, the populace has
         the Merry-Andrew. Paris is a great, mad city on every occa-
         sion that it is a great sublime city. There the Carnival forms
         part of politics. Paris,—let us confess it—willingly allows
         infamy to furnish it with comedy. She only demands of her
         masters—when she has masters—one thing: ‘Paint me the
         mud.’ Rome was of the same mind. She loved Nero. Nero
         was a titanic lighterman.
            Chance ordained, as we have just said, that one of these
         shapeless  clusters  of  masked  men  and  women,  dragged
         about on a vast calash, should halt on the left of the bou-
         levard,  while  the  wedding  train  halted  on  the  right.  The
         carriage-load of masks caught sight of the wedding carriage
         containing the bridal party opposite them on the other side
         of the boulevard.
            ‘Hullo!’ said a masker, ‘here’s a wedding.’
            ‘A sham wedding,’ retorted another. ‘We are the genuine
         article.’
            And, being too far off to accost the wedding party, and
         fearing  also,  the  rebuke  of  the  police,  the  two  maskers
         turned their eyes elsewhere.
            At the end of another minute, the carriage-load of mask-
         ers had their hands full, the multitude set to yelling, which
         is the crowd’s caress to masquerades; and the two maskers
         who had just spoken had to face the throng with their com-
         rades, and did not find the entire repertory of projectiles
         of the fishmarkets too extensive to retort to the enormous
         verbal attacks of the populace. A frightful exchange of met-
         aphors took place between the maskers and the crowd.

         2300                                  Les Miserables
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