Page 1614 - les-miserables
P. 1614

This stove-pipe, which has been baptized by a sonorous
         name, and called the column of July, this monument of a
         revolution that miscarried, was still enveloped in 1832, in
         an immense shirt of woodwork, which we regret, for our
         part, and by a vast plank enclosure, which completed the
         task of isolating the elephant.
            It was towards this corner of the place, dimly lighted by
         the reflection of a distant street lamp, that the gamin guided
         his two ‘brats.’
            The reader must permit us to interrupt ourselves here
         and to remind him that we are dealing with simple reality,
         and that twenty years ago, the tribunals were called upon to
         judge, under the charge of vagabondage, and mutilation of
         a public monument, a child who had been caught asleep in
         this very elephant of the Bastille. This fact noted, we pro-
         ceed.
            On  arriving  in  the  vicinity  of  the  colossus,  Gavroche
         comprehended the effect which the infinitely great might
         produce on the infinitely small, and said:—
            ‘Don’t be scared, infants.’
            Then he entered through a gap in the fence into the el-
         ephant’s enclosure and helped the young ones to clamber
         through the breach. The two children, somewhat frightened,
         followed Gavroche without uttering a word, and confided
         themselves to this little Providence in rags which had given
         them bread and had promised them a shelter.
            There, extended along the fence, lay a ladder which by
         day  served  the  laborers  in  the  neighboring  timber-yard.
         Gavroche  raised  it  with  remarkable  vigor,  and  placed  it

         1614                                  Les Miserables
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