Les Misérables, v. 3

Les Misérables, v. 3
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Оглавление

Victor Hugo. Les Misérables, v. 3

BOOK I. PARIS STUDIED IN ITS GAMIN

CHAPTER I. PARVULUS

CHAPTER II. THE GAMIN'S CHARACTERISTICS

CHAPTER III. HE IS AGREEABLE

CHAPTER IV. HE MAY BE USEFUL

CHAPTER V. HIS CONFINES

CHAPTER VI. A BIT OF HISTORY

CHAPTER VII. THE GAMIN WOULD HAVE HIS PLACE IN INDIAN CASTES

CHAPTER VIII. A CHARMING ANECDOTE OF THE LAST KING

CHAPTER IX. THE OLD SOUL OF GAUL

CHAPTER X. ECCE PARIS, ECCE HOMO

CHAPTER XI. THE REIGN OF RIDICULE

CHAPTER XII. THE FUTURE LATENT IN THE PEOPLE

CHAPTER XIII. LITTLE GAVROCHE

BOOK II. LE GRAND BOURGEOIS

CHAPTER I. NINETY YEARS AND TWO-AND-THIRTY TEETH

CHAPTER II. LIKE MASTER, LIKE HOME

CHAPTER III. LUC ESPRIT

CHAPTER IV. AN ASPIRING CENTENARIAN

CHAPTER V. BASQUE AND NICOLETTE

CHAPTER VI. MAGNON AND HER TWO LITTLE ONES

CHAPTER VII. RULE: NO ONE RECEIVED UNTIL EVENING

CHAPTER VIII. TWO DO NOT MAKE A PAIR

Book III. GRANDFATHER AND GRANDSON

CHAPTER I. AN OLD DRAWING-ROOM

CHAPTER II. A RED SPECTRE OF THAT DAY

CHAPTER III. REQUIESCANT!

CHAPTER IV. THE END OF THE BRIGAND

CHAPTER V. MARIUS MEETS A CHURCHWARDEN

CHAPTER VI. WHAT RESULTED FROM MEETING A CHURCHWARDEN

CHAPTER VII. SOME PETTICOAT

CHAPTER VIII. MARBLE AGAINST GRANITE

BOOK IV. THE FRIENDS OF THE A. B. C

CHAPTER I. A GROUP THAT NEARLY BECAME HISTORICAL

CHAPTER II. BOSSUET'S FUNERAL ORATION ON BLONDEAU

CHAPTER III. MARIUS IS ASTONISHED

CHAPTER IV. THE BACK ROOM OF THE CAFÉ MUSAIN

CHAPTER V. ENLARGEMENT OF THE HORIZON

CHAPTER VI. RES ANGUSTA

BOOK V. THE GOOD OF MISFORTUNE

CHAPTER I. MARIUS IS INDIGENT

CHAPTER II. MARIUS POOR

CHAPTER III. MARIUS GROWS

CHAPTER IV. M. MABŒUF

CHAPTER V. POVERTY A GOOD NEIGHBOR TO MISERY

CHAPTER VI. THE SUBSTITUTE

BOOK VI. THE CONJUNCTION OF TWO STARS

CHAPTER I. NICKNAMES AND SURNAMES

CHAPTER II. LUX FACTA EST

CHAPTER III. THE EFFECT OF SPRING

CHAPTER IV. BEGINNING OF A GREAT MALADY

CHAPTER V. MAME BOUGON IS THUNDER-STRUCK

CHAPTER VI. TAKEN PRISONER

CHAPTER VII. ADVENTURES OF THE LETTER "U" LEFT TO CONJECTURES

CHAPTER VIII. EVEN INVALIDS MAY BE LUCKY

CHAPTER IX. ECLIPSE

BOOK VII. PATRON MINETTE

CHAPTER I. MINES AND MINERS

CHAPTER II. THE BOTTOM

CHAPTER III. BABET, GUEULEMER, CLAQUESOUS, AND MONTPARNASSE

CHAPTER IV. COMPOSITION OF THE TROOP

BOOK VIII. THE EVIL POOR

CHAPTER I. MARIUS LOOKING FOR A GIRL'S BONNET MEETS A MAN'S CAP

CHAPTER II. MARIUS FINDS SOMETHING

CHAPTER III. FOUR LETTERS

CHAPTER IV. A ROSE IN WRETCHEDNESS

CHAPTER V. A PROVIDENTIAL PEEP-HOLE

CHAPTER VI. THE WILD-BEAST MAN IN HIS LAIR

CHAPTER VII. STRATEGY AND TACTICS

CHAPTER VIII. A SUNBEAM IN THE GARRET

CHAPTER IX. JONDRETTE ALMOST CRIES

CHAPTER X. THE TARIFF OF CAB-FARES

CHAPTER XI. WRETCHEDNESS OFFERS HELP TO SORROW

CHAPTER XII. THE USE OF M. LEBLANC'S FIVE-FRANC PIECE

CHAPTER XIII. PLOT AND COUNTERPLOT

CHAPTER XIV. A POLICE-AGENT GIVES A LAWYER TWO "KNOCK-ME-DOWNS."

CHAPTER XV. JONDRETTE MAKES HIS PURCHASE

CHAPTER XVI. A SONG TO AN ENGLISH AIR POPULAR IN 1832

CHAPTER XVII. THE USE OF MARIUS'S FIVE-FRANC PIECE

CHAPTER XVIII. THE TWO CHAIRS FACE TO FACE

CHAPTER XIX. TREATING OF DARK DEPTHS

CHAPTER XX. THE TRAP

CHAPTER XXI. ALWAYS BEGIN BY ARRESTING THE VICTIMS

CHAPTER XXII. THE LITTLE CHILD WHO CRIED IN VOLUME SECOND

Отрывок из книги

Paris has a child and the forest has a bird; the bird is called a sparrow, the child is called a gamin. Couple these two ideas, the one which is all furnace, the other all dawn; bring the two sparks, Paris and childhood, into collision, and a little being is produced, – a homuncio, as Plautus would say.

This little being is joyous; he does not eat every day, and he goes to the theatre every night if he thinks proper. He has no shirt on his body, no shoes on his feet, and no covering on his head; he is like the flies, which have none of those things. He is from seven to thirteen years of age, lives in gangs, rambles about the streets, lodges in the open air, wears an old pair of his father's trousers, which descend lower than his heels, an old hat belonging to some other father, which comes below his ears, and one yellow list brace. He runs, watches, begs, kills time, colors pipes, swears like a fiend, haunts the wine-shop, knows thieves, is familiar with women of the town, talks slang, sings filthy songs, and has nothing bad in his heart; for he has in his soul a pearl, Innocence; and pearls are not dissolved by mud. So long as the man is a child, God desires that he should be innocent. If we were to ask the enormous city, "What is this creature?" it would reply, "It is my little one."

.....

And after a silence he added, —

"Start to-morrow morning. I believe there is a coach which leaves at six o'clock and gets to Vernon at nightfall. Go by it, for he says that the matter presses."

.....

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