Page 1488 - les-miserables
P. 1488

self there with a young girl and an elderly maid-servant,
         without commotion, rather like a person who is slipping in
         than like a man who is entering his own house. The neigh-
         bors did not gossip about him, for the reason that there were
         no neighbors.
            This  unobtrusive  tenant  was  Jean  Valjean,  the  young
         girl was Cosette. The servant was a woman named Tous-
         saint, whom Jean Valjean had saved from the hospital and
         from wretchedness, and who was elderly, a stammerer, and
         from the provinces, three qualities which had decided Jean
         Valjean to take her with him. He had hired the house under
         the name of M. Fauchelevent, independent gentleman. In
         all that has been related heretofore, the reader has, doubt-
         less, been no less prompt than Thenardier to recognize Jean
         Valjean.
            Why had Jean Valjean quitted the convent of the Petit-
         Picpus? What had happened?
            Nothing had happened.
            It will be remembered that Jean Valjean was happy in
         the convent, so happy that his conscience finally took the
         alarm. He saw Cosette every day, he felt paternity spring up
         and develop within him more and more, he brooded over
         the soul of that child, he said to himself that she was his,
         that nothing could take her from him, that this would last
         indefinitely, that she would certainly become a nun, being
         thereto gently incited every day, that thus the convent was
         henceforth the universe for her as it was for him, that he
         should grow old there, and that she would grow up there,
         that she would grow old there, and that he should die there;

         1488                                  Les Miserables
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