Page 1487 - les-miserables
P. 1487

solemn about it, as befits a caprice of love and magistracy.
            This house and corridor, which have now disappeared,
         were in existence fifteen years ago. In ‘93 a coppersmith had
         purchased the house with the idea of demolishing it, but
         had not been able to pay the price; the nation made him
         bankrupt. So that it was the house which demolished the
         coppersmith. After that, the house remained uninhabited,
         and fell slowly to ruin, as does every dwelling to which the
         presence of man does not communicate life. It had remained
         fitted with its old furniture, was always for sale or to let, and
         the ten or a dozen people who passed through the Rue Plu-
         met were warned of the fact by a yellow and illegible bit of
         writing which had hung on the garden wall since 1819.
            Towards the end of the Restoration, these same passers-
         by might have noticed that the bill had disappeared, and
         even that the shutters on the first floor were open. The house
         was occupied, in fact. The windows had short curtains, a
         sign that there was a woman about.
            In the month of October, 1829, a man of a certain age had
         presented himself and had hired the house just as it stood,
         including, of course, the back building and the lane which
         ended in the Rue de Babylone. He had had the secret open-
         ings of the two doors to this passage repaired. The house, as
         we have just mentioned, was still very nearly furnished with
         the justice’s old fitting; the new tenant had ordered some
         repairs, had added what was lacking here and there, had re-
         placed the paving-stones in the yard, bricks in the floors,
         steps in the stairs, missing bits in the inlaid floors and the
         glass in the lattice windows, and had finally installed him-

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