Page 30 - les-miserables
P. 30

the least understood, there were people in the town who
         said, when commenting on this conduct of the Bishop, ‘It
         is affectation.’
            This, however, was a remark which was confined to the
         drawing-rooms. The populace, which perceives no jest in
         holy deeds, was touched, and admired him.
            As for the Bishop, it was a shock to him to have beheld
         the guillotine, and it was a long time before he recovered
         from it.
            In  fact,  when  the  scaffold  is  there,  all  erected  and
         prepared, it has something about it which produces hallu-
         cination. One may feel a certain indifference to the death
         penalty, one may refrain from pronouncing upon it, from
         saying yes or no, so long as one has not seen a guillotine
         with one’s own eyes: but if one encounters one of them, the
         shock is violent; one is forced to decide, and to take part for
         or against. Some admire it, like de Maistre; others execrate
         it, like Beccaria. The guillotine is the concretion of the law;
         it is called vindicte; it is not neutral, and it does not permit
         you to remain neutral. He who sees it shivers with the most
         mysterious of shivers. All social problems erect their inter-
         rogation point around this chopping-knife. The scaffold is a
         vision. The scaffold is not a piece of carpentry; the scaffold is
         not a machine; the scaffold is not an inert bit of mechanism
         constructed of wood, iron and cords.
            It seems as though it were a being, possessed of I know
         not what sombre initiative; one would say that this piece
         of carpenter’s work saw, that this machine heard, that this
         mechanism understood, that this wood, this iron, and these

         30                                    Les Miserables
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