Page 1546 - les-miserables
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him, ‘Call the dog-doctor,’ said he.
            Cosette dressed the wound morning and evening with
         so divine an air and such angelic happiness at being of use
         to him, that Jean Valjean felt all his former joy returning,
         his fears and anxieties dissipating, and he gazed at Cosette,
         saying: ‘Oh! what a kindly wound! Oh! what a good mis-
         fortune!’
            Cosette on perceiving that her father was ill, had deserted
         the pavilion and again taken a fancy to the little lodging and
         the back courtyard. She passed nearly all her days beside
         Jean Valjean and read to him the books which he desired.
         Generally they were books of travel. Jean Valjean was un-
         dergoing a new birth; his happiness was reviving in these
         ineffable rays; the Luxembourg, the prowling young strang-
         er, Cosette’s coldness,—all these clouds upon his soul were
         growing dim. He had reached the point where he said to
         himself: ‘I imagined all that. I am an old fool.’
            His happiness was so great that the horrible discovery of
         the Thenardiers made in the Jondrette hovel, unexpected as
         it was, had, after a fashion, glided over him unnoticed. He
         had succeeded in making his escape; all trace of him was
         lost—what more did he care for! he only thought of those
         wretched beings to pity them. ‘Here they are in prison, and
         henceforth they will be incapacitated for doing any harm,’
         he thought, ‘but what a lamentable family in distress!’
            As for the hideous vision of the Barriere du Maine, Co-
         sette had not referred to it again.
            Sister Sainte-Mechtilde had taught Cosette music in the
         convent; Cosette had the voice of a linnet with a soul, and

         1546                                  Les Miserables
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