Page 1506 - les-miserables
P. 1506

with tapestry, against which stood tufted easy-chairs. Jean
         Valjean sometimes said to her, smiling at his happiness in
         being importuned: ‘Do go to your own quarters! Leave me
         alone a little!’
            She  gave  him  those  charming  and  tender  scoldings
         which are so graceful when they come from a daughter to
         her father.
            ‘Father, I am very cold in your rooms; why don’t you have
         a carpet here and a stove?’
            ‘Dear child, there are so many people who are better than
         I and who have not even a roof over their heads.’
            ‘Then why is there a fire in my rooms, and everything
         that is needed?’
            ‘Because you are a woman and a child.’
            ‘Bah! must men be cold and feel uncomfortable?’
            ‘Certain men.’
            ‘That is good, I shall come here so often that you will be
         obliged to have a fire.’
            And again she said to him:—
            ‘Father, why do you eat horrible bread like that?’
            ‘Because, my daughter.’
            ‘Well, if you eat it, I will eat it too.’
            Then,  in  order  to  prevent  Cosette  eating  black  bread,
         Jean Valjean ate white bread.
            Cosette had but a confused recollection of her childhood.
         She prayed morning and evening for her mother whom she
         had never known. The Thenardiers had remained with her
         as two hideous figures in a dream. She remembered that she
         had gone ‘one day, at night,’ to fetch water in a forest. She

         1506                                  Les Miserables
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