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Les Misérables

Chapter 294

All flocked around Marius. Courfeyrac flung himself on his neck. 'Here you are! ' 'What luck! ' said Combeferre. 'You came in opportunely! ' ejaculated Bossuet. 'If it had not been for you, I should have been dead! ' began Courfeyrac again.

'If it had not been for you, I should have been gobbled up! ' added Gavroche. Marius asked:— 'Where is the chief? ' 'You are he! ' said Enjolras. Marius had had a furnace in his brain all day long; now it was a whirlwind.

This whirlwind which was within him, produced on him the effect of being outside of him and of bearing him away. It seemed to him that he was already at an immense distance from life.

His two luminous months of joy and love, ending abruptly at that frightful precipice, Cosette lost to him, that barricade, M. Mabeuf getting himself killed for the Republic, himself the leader of the insurgents,—all these things appeared to him like a tremendous nightmare.

He was obliged to make a mental effort to recall the fact that all that surrounded him was real. Marius had already seen too much of life not to know that nothing is more imminent than the impossible, and that what it is always necessary to foresee is the unforeseen.

He had looked on at his own drama as a piece which one does not understand.

In the mists which enveloped his thoughts, he did not recognize Javert, who, bound to his post, had not so much as moved his head during the whole of the attack on the barricade, and who had gazed on the revolt seething around him with the resignation of a martyr and the majesty of a judge.

Marius had not even seen him. In the meanwhile, the assailants did not stir, they could be heard marching and

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