Page 1621 - les-miserables
P. 1621

over each other fell apart.
            ‘Down on all fours, brats!’ said Gavroche.
            He made his guests enter the cage with great precaution,
         then he crawled in after them, pulled the stones together,
         and closed the opening hermetically again.
            All three had stretched out on the mat. Gavroche still
         had the cellar rat in his hand.
            ‘Now,’ said he, ‘go to sleep! I’m going to suppress the can-
         delabra.’
            ‘Monsieur,’  the  elder  of  the  brothers  asked  Gavroche,
         pointing to the netting, ‘what’s that for?’
            ‘That,’ answered Gavroche gravely, ‘is for the rats. Go to
         sleep!’
            Nevertheless, he felt obliged to add a few words of in-
         struction for the benefit of these young creatures, and he
         continued:—
            ‘It’s  a  thing  from  the  Jardin  des  Plantes.  It’s  used  for
         fierce animals. There’s a whole shopful of them there. All
         you’ve got to do is to climb over a wall, crawl through a win-
         dow, and pass through a door. You can get as much as you
         want.’
            As he spoke, he wrapped the younger one up bodily in a
         fold of the blanket, and the little one murmured:—
            ‘Oh! how good that is! It’s warm!’
            Gavroche cast a pleased eye on the blanket.
            ‘That’s from the Jardin des Plantes, too,’ said he. ‘I took
         that from the monkeys.’
            And, pointing out to the eldest the mat on which he was
         lying, a very thick and admirably made mat, he added:—

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