Page 1244 - les-miserables
P. 1244

Marius had just emerged from his: night was falling. It
         was the hour for his dinner; for he had been obliged to take
         to dining again, alas! oh, infirmities of ideal passions!
            He had just crossed his threshold, where Ma’am Bougon
         was sweeping at the moment, as she uttered this memorable
         monologue:—
            ‘What  is  there  that  is  cheap  now?  Everything  is  dear.
         There is nothing in the world that is cheap except trouble;
         you can get that for nothing, the trouble of the world!’
            Marius slowly ascended the boulevard towards the barri-
         er, in order to reach the Rue Saint-Jacques. He was walking
         along with drooping head.
            All at once, he felt some one elbow him in the dusk; he
         wheeled round, and saw two young girls clad in rags, the
         one tall and slim, the other a little shorter, who were passing
         rapidly, all out of breath, in terror, and with the appearance
         of fleeing; they had been coming to meet him, had not seen
         him, and had jostled him as they passed. Through the twi-
         light, Marius could distinguish their livid faces, their wild
         heads, their dishevelled hair, their hideous bonnets, their
         ragged petticoats, and their bare feet. They were talking as
         they ran. The taller said in a very low voice:—
            ‘The bobbies have come. They came near nabbing me at
         the half-circle.’ The other answered: ‘I saw them. I bolted,
         bolted, bolted!’
            Through  this  repulsive  slang,  Marius  understood  that
         gendarmes or the police had come near apprehending these
         two children, and that the latter had escaped.
            They plunged among the trees of the boulevard behind

         1244                                  Les Miserables
   1239   1240   1241   1242   1243   1244   1245   1246   1247   1248   1249