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P. 2392

CHAPTER I



         PITY FOR THE UNHAPPY,

         BUT INDULGENCE

         FOR THE HAPPY






         It is a terrible thing to be happy! How content one is! How
         all-sufficient one finds it! How, being in possession of the
         false object of life, happiness, one forgets the true object,
         duty!
            Let us say, however, that the reader would do wrong were
         he to blame Marius.
            Marius, as we have explained, before his marriage, had
         put no questions to M. Fauchelevent, and, since that time,
         he had feared to put any to Jean Valjean. He had regretted
         the promise into which he had allowed himself to be drawn.
         He  had  often  said  to  himself  that  he  had  done  wrong  in
         making that concession to despair. He had confined himself
         to gradually estranging Jean Valjean from his house and to
         effacing him, as much as possible, from Cosette’s mind. He
         had, in a manner, always placed himself between Cosette
         and Jean Valjean, sure that, in this way, she would not per-

         2392                                  Les Miserables
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