Les Misérables, v. 4

Les Misérables, v. 4
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Оглавление

Victor Hugo. Les Misérables, v. 4

BOOK I. SOME PAGES OF HISTORY

CHAPTER I. WELL CUT OUT

CHAPTER II. BADLY STITCHED

CHAPTER III. LOUIS PHILIPPE

CHAPTER IV. CRACKS IN THE FOUNDATION

CHAPTER V. FACTS FROM WHICH HISTORY IS DERIVED BUT WHICH HISTORY IGNORES

CHAPTER VI. ENJOLRAS AND HIS LIEUTENANTS

BOOK II. ÉPONINE

CHAPTER I. THE LARK'S FIELD

CHAPTER II. CRIMES IN EMBRYO INCUBATED IN PRISONS

CHAPTER III. FATHER MABŒUF HAS AN APPARITION

CHAPTER IV. MARIUS HAS AN APPARITION

BOOK III. THE HOUSE OF THE RUE PLUMET

CHAPTER I. THE MYSTERIOUS HOUSE

CHAPTER II. JEAN VALJEAN A NATIONAL GUARD

CHAPTER III. FOLIIS AC FRONDIBUS

CHAPTER IV. CHANGE OF GRATING

CHAPTER V. THE ROSE PERCEIVES THAT SHE IS AN IMPLEMENT OF WAR

CHAPTER VI. THE BATTLE BEGINS

CHAPTER VII. JEAN VALJEAN IS VERY SAD

CHAPTER VIII. THE CHAIN-GANG

BOOK IV. SUCCOR FROM BELOW MAY BE SUCCOR FROM ON HIGH

CHAPTER I. AN EXTERNAL WOUND AND AN INTERNAL CURE

CHAPTER II. MOTHER PLUTARCH ACCOUNTS FOR A PHENOMENON

BOOK V. IN WHICH THE END DOES NOT RESEMBLE THE BEGINNING

CHAPTER I. SOLITUDE AND THE BARRACKS COMBINED

CHAPTER II. COSETTE'S FEARS

CHAPTER III. ENRICHED WITH THE COMMENTS OF TOUSSAINT

CHAPTER IV. A HEART UNDER A STONE

CHAPTER V. COSETTE AFTER THE LETTER

CHAPTER VI. THE OLD PEOPLE ARE OPPORTUNELY OBLIGED TO GO OUT

BOOK VI. LITTLE GAVROCHE

CHAPTER I. A MALICIOUS TRICK OF THE WIND

CHAPTER II. GAVROCHE REAPS ADVANTAGE FROM NAPOLEON THE GREAT

CHAPTER III. INCIDENTS OF AN ESCAPE

BOOK VII. SLANG

CHAPTER I. THE ORIGIN OF SLANG

CHAPTER II. ROOTS

CHAPTER III. SLANG THAT CRIES AND SLANG THAT LAUGHS

CHAPTER IV. TWO DUTIES: TO WATCH AND TO HOPE

BOOK VIII. ENCHANTMENTS AND DESOLATIONS

CHAPTER I. BRIGHT LIGHT

CHAPTER II. THE GIDDINESS OF PERFECT BLISS

CHAPTER III. THE BEGINNING OF THE SHADOW

CHAPTER IV. CAB RUNS IN ENGLISH AND BARKS IN SLANG

CHAPTER V. THINGS OF THE NIGHT

CHAPTER VI. MARIUS ACTUALLY GIVES COSETTE HIS ADDRESS

CHAPTER VII. AN OLD HEART AND A YOUNG HEART FACE TO FACE

BOOK IX. WHERE ARE THEY GOING?

CHAPTER I. JEAN VALJEAN

CHAPTER II. MARIUS

CHAPTER III. M. MABŒUF

BOOK X. THE FIFTH OF JUNE, 1832

CHAPTER I. THE SURFACE OF THE QUESTION

CHAPTER II. THE BOTTOM OF THE QUESTION

CHAPTER III. A BURIAL GIVES OPPORTUNITY FOR A REVIVAL

CHAPTER IV. THE EBULLITIONS OF OTHER DAYS

CHAPTER V. ORIGINALITY OF PARIS

BOOK XI. THE ATOM FRATERNIZES WITH HURRICANE

CHAPTER I. THE ORIGIN OF THE POETRY OF GAVROCHEAND THE INFLUENCE OF AN ACADEMICIAN UPON IT

CHAPTER II. GAVROCHE ON THE MARCH

CHAPTER III. JUST INDIGNATION OF A BARBER

CHAPTER IV. THE CHILD ASTONISHES THE OLD MAN

CHAPTER V. THE OLD MAN

CHAPTER VI. RECRUITS

BOOK XII. CORINTH

CHAPTER I. HISTORY OF CORINTH FROM ITS FOUNDATION

CHAPTER II. PRELIMINARY GAYETIES

CHAPTER III. THE NIGHT BEGINS TO FALL ON GRANTAIRE

CHAPTER IV. AN ENDEAVOR TO CONSOLE THE WIDOW HUCHELOUP

CHAPTER V. PREPARATIONS

CHAPTER VI. WAITING

CHAPTER VII. THE RECRUIT OF THE RUE DES BILLETTES

CHAPTER VIII. WAS HIS NAME LE CABUC?

BOOK XIII. MARIUS ENTERS THE SHADOW

CHAPTER I. FROM THE RUE PLUMET TO THE QUARTIER ST. DENIS

CHAPTER II. AN OWL'S-EYE VIEW OF PARIS

CHAPTER III. THE EXTREME BRINK

BOOK XIV. THE GRANDEUR OF DESPAIR

CHAPTER I. THE FLAG: ACT FIRST

CHAPTER II. THE FLAG: ACT SECOND

CHAPTER III. GAVROCHE HAD BETTER HAVE ACCEPTED THE CARBINE OF ENJOLRAS

CHAPTER IV. THE BARREL OF GUNPOWDER

CHAPTER V. END OF THE VERSES OF JEAN PROUVAIRE

CHAPTER VI. DEATH'S AGONY AFTER LIFE'S AGONY

CHAPTER VII. GAVROCHE CALCULATES DISTANCES

BOOK XV. THE RUE DE L'HOMME ARMÉ

CHAPTER I. BLOTTING, BLABBING

CHAPTER II. THE GAMIN THE ENEMY OF LAMPS

CHAPTER III. WHILE COSETTE AND TOUSSAINT SLEEP

CHAPTER IV. GAVROCHE'S EXCESS OF ZEAL

Отрывок из книги

1831 and 1832, the two years immediately attached to the revolution of July, contain the most peculiar and striking moments of history; and these two years, amid those that precede and follow them, stand out like mountains. They possess the true revolutionary grandeur, and precipices may be traced in them. The social masses, the foundations of civilization, the solid group of superimposed and adherent interests, and the secular profiles of the ancient Gallic formations, appear and disappear every moment through the stormy clouds of systems, passions, and theories. These apparitions and disappearances were called resistance and movement, but at intervals truth, the daylight of the human soul, flashes through all.

This remarkable epoch is so circumscribed, and is beginning to become so remote from us, that we are able to seize its principal outlines. We will make the attempt. The Restoration was one of those intermediate phases which are so difficult to define, in which are fatigue, buzzing, murmurs, sleep, and tumult, and which, after all, are nought but the arrival of a great nation at a halting-place. These epochs are peculiar, and deceive the politician who tries to take advantage of them. At the outset the nation only demands repose; there is but one thirst, for peace, and only one ambition, to be small, – which is the translation of keeping quiet. "Great events, great accidents, great adventures, great men, – O Lord! we have had enough of these, and more than enough." Cæsar would be given for Prusias, and Napoleon for the Roi d'Yvetôt, who was "such a merry little king." Folk have been marching since daybreak and arrive at the evening of a long and rough journey; they made their first halt with Mirabeau, the second with Robespierre, and the third with Napoleon, and they are exhausted. Everybody insists on a bed.

.....

"You did not expect the double six. Had I played it at first it would have changed the whole game."

"Double two."

.....

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