Volume 4/Book 14/Chapter 5

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Les Misérables, Volume 4: The Idyll of the Rue Plumet & The Epic of the Rue Saint-Denis, Book Fourteenth: The Grandeurs of Despair, Chapter 5: End of the Verses of Jean Prouvaire
(Tome 4: L'idylle rue Plumet et l'épopée rue Saint-Denis, Livre quatorzième: Les grandeurs du désespoir, Chapitre 5: Fin des vers de Jean Prouvaire)

General notes on this chapter

French text

Tous entourèrent Marius. Courfeyrac lui sauta au cou.

—Te voilà!

—Quel bonheur! dit Combeferre.

—Tu es venu à propos! fit Bossuet.

—Sans toi j'étais mort! reprit Courfeyrac.

—Sans vous j'étais gobé! ajouta Gavroche.

Marius demanda:

—Où est le chef?

—C'est toi, dit Enjolras.

Marius avait eu toute la journée une fournaise dans le cerveau, maintenant c'était un tourbillon. Ce tourbillon qui était en lui lui faisait l'effet d'être hors de lui et de l'emporter. Il lui semblait qu'il était déjà à une distance immense de la vie. Ses deux lumineux mois de joie et d'amour aboutissant brusquement à cet effroyable précipice, Cosette perdue pour lui, cette barricade, M. Mabeuf se faisant tuer pour la République, lui-même chef d'insurgés, toutes ces choses lui paraissaient un cauchemar monstrueux. Il était obligé de faire un effort d'esprit pour se rappeler que tout ce qui l'entourait était réel. Marius avait trop peu vécu encore pour savoir que rien n'est plus imminent que l'impossible, et que ce qu'il faut toujours prévoir, c'est l'imprévu. Il assistait à son propre drame comme à une pièce qu'on ne comprend pas.

Dans cette brume où était sa pensée, il ne reconnut pas Javert qui, lié à son poteau, n'avait pas fait un mouvement de la tête pendant l'attaque de la barricade et qui regardait s'agiter autour de lui la révolte avec la résignation d'un martyr et la majesté d'un juge. Marius ne l'aperçut même pas.

Cependant les assaillants ne bougeaient plus, on les entendait marcher et fourmiller au bout de la rue, mais ils ne s'y aventuraient pas, soit qu'ils attendissent des ordres, soit qu'avant de se ruer de nouveau sur cette imprenable redoute, ils attendissent des renforts. Les insurgés avaient posé des sentinelles, et quelques-uns qui étaient étudiants en médecine s'étaient mis à panser les blessés.

On avait jeté les tables hors du cabaret à l'exception de deux tables réservées à la charpie et aux cartouches, et de la table où gisait le père Mabeuf; on les avait ajoutées à la barricade, et on les avait remplacées dans la salle basse par les matelas des lits de la veuve Hucheloup et des servantes. Sur ces matelas on avait étendu les blessés. Quant aux trois pauvres créatures qui habitaient Corinthe, on ne savait ce qu'elles étaient devenues. On finit pourtant par les retrouver cachées dans la cave.

Une émotion poignante vint assombrir la joie de la barricade dégagée.

On fit l'appel. Un des insurgés manquait. Et qui? Un des plus chers, un des plus vaillants. Jean Prouvaire. On le chercha parmi les blessés, il n'y était pas. On le chercha parmi les morts, il n'y était pas. Il était évidemment prisonnier.

Combeferre dit à Enjolras:

—Ils ont notre ami; mais nous avons leur agent. Tiens-tu à la mort de ce mouchard?

—Oui, répondit Enjolras, mais moins qu'à la vie de Jean Prouvaire.

Ceci se passait dans la salle basse près du poteau de Javert.

—Eh bien, reprit Combeferre, je vais attacher mon mouchoir à ma canne, et aller en parlementaire leur offrir de leur donner leur homme pour le nôtre.

—Écoute, dit Enjolras en posant sa main sur le bras de Combeferre.

Il y avait au bout de la rue un cliquetis d'armes significatif.

On entendit une voix mâle crier:

—Vive la France! vive l'avenir!

On reconnut la voix de Prouvaire.

Un éclair passa et une détonation éclata.

Le silence se refit.

—Ils l'ont tué, s'écria Combeferre.

Enjolras regarda Javert et lui dit:

—Tes amis viennent de te fusiller.

English text

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 swarming through at the end of the street but they did not venture into it, either because they were awaiting orders or because they were awaiting reinforcements before hurling themselves afresh on this impregnable redoubt. The insurgents had posted sentinels, and some of them, who were medical students, set about caring for the wounded.

They had thrown the tables out of the wine-shop, with the exception of the two tables reserved for lint and cartridges, and of the one on which lay Father Mabeuf; they had added them to the barricade, and had replaced them in the tap-room with mattresses from the bed of the widow Hucheloup and her servants. On these mattresses they had laid the wounded. As for the three poor creatures who inhabited Corinthe, no one knew what had become of them. They were finally found, however, hidden in the cellar.

A poignant emotion clouded the joy of the disencumbered barricade.

The roll was called. One of the insurgents was missing. And who was it? One of the dearest. One of the most valiant. Jean Prouvaire. He was sought among the wounded, he was not there. He was sought among the dead, he was not there. He was evidently a prisoner. Combeferre said to Enjolras:—

"They have our friend; we have their agent. Are you set on the death of that spy?"

"Yes," replied Enjolras; "but less so than on the life of Jean Prouvaire."

This took place in the tap-room near Javert's post.

"Well," resumed Combeferre, "I am going to fasten my handkerchief to my cane, and go as a flag of truce, to offer to exchange our man for theirs."

"Listen," said Enjolras, laying his hand on Combeferre's arm.

At the end of the street there was a significant clash of arms.

They heard a manly voice shout:—

"Vive la France! Long live France! Long live the future!"

They recognized the voice of Prouvaire.

A flash passed, a report rang out.

Silence fell again.

"They have killed him," exclaimed Combeferre.

Enjolras glanced at Javert, and said to him:—

"Your friends have just shot you."

Translation notes

Textual notes

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