Page 772 - les-miserables
P. 772

fragment was much shorter, as far as the gloomy building
         which we have mentioned and whose gable it intersected,
         thus forming another retreating angle in the street. This ga-
         ble was sombre of aspect; only one window was visible, or,
         to speak more correctly, two shutters covered with a sheet of
         zinc and kept constantly closed.
            The state of the places of which we are here giving a de-
         scription is rigorously exact, and will certainly awaken a
         very precise memory in the mind of old inhabitants of the
         quarter.
            The  niche  was  entirely  filled  by  a  thing  which  resem-
         bled a colossal and wretched door; it was a vast, formless
         assemblage of perpendicular planks, the upper ones being
         broader than the lower, bound together by long transverse
         strips of iron. At one side there was a carriage gate of the
         ordinary dimensions, and which had evidently not been cut
         more than fifty years previously.
            A linden-tree showed its crest above the niche, and the
         wall was covered with ivy on the side of the Rue Polonceau.
            In  the  imminent  peril  in  which  Jean  Valjean  found
         himself, this sombre building had about it a solitary and
         uninhabited look which tempted him. He ran his eyes rap-
         idly over it; he said to himself, that if he could contrive to
         get inside it, he might save himself. First he conceived an
         idea, then a hope.
            In the central portion of the front of this building, on
         the Rue Droit-Mur side, there were at all the windows of the
         different stories ancient cistern pipes of lead. The various
         branches of the pipes which led from one central pipe to all

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