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<h2> CHAPTER IX—CLOISTERED </h2>
<h3> Cosette continued to hold her tongue in the convent. </h3>
<p>It was quite natural that Cosette should think herself Jean Valjean's
daughter. Moreover, as she knew nothing, she could say nothing, and then,
she would not have said anything in any case. As we have just observed,
nothing trains children to silence like unhappiness. Cosette had suffered
so much, that she feared everything, even to speak or to breathe. A single
word had so often brought down an avalanche upon her. She had hardly begun
to regain her confidence since she had been with Jean Valjean. She
speedily became accustomed to the convent. Only she regretted Catherine,
but she dared not say so. Once, however, she did say to Jean Valjean:
"Father, if I had known, I would have brought her away with me."</p>
<p>Cosette had been obliged, on becoming a scholar in the convent, to don the
garb of the pupils of the house. Jean Valjean succeeded in getting them to
restore to him the garments which she laid aside. This was the same
mourning suit which he had made her put on when she had quitted the
Thenardiers' inn. It was not very threadbare even now. Jean Valjean locked
up these garments, plus the stockings and the shoes, with a quantity of
camphor and all the aromatics in which convents abound, in a little valise
which he found means of procuring. He set this valise on a chair near his
bed, and he always carried the key about his person. "Father," Cosette
asked him one day, "what is there in that box which smells so good?"</p>
<p>Father Fauchelevent received other recompense for his good action, in
addition to the glory which we just mentioned, and of which he knew
nothing; in the first place it made him happy; next, he had much less
work, since it was shared. Lastly, as he was very fond of snuff, he found
the presence of M. Madeleine an advantage, in that he used three times as
much as he had done previously, and that in an infinitely more luxurious
manner, seeing that M. Madeleine paid for it.</p>
<p>The nuns did not adopt the name of Ultime; they called Jean Valjean the
other Fauvent.</p>
<p>If these holy women had possessed anything of Javert's glance, they would
eventually have noticed that when there was any errand to be done outside
in the behalf of the garden, it was always the elder Fauchelevent, the
old, the infirm, the lame man, who went, and never the other; but whether
it is that eyes constantly fixed on God know not how to spy, or whether
they were, by preference, occupied in keeping watch on each other, they
paid no heed to this.</p>
<p>Moreover, it was well for Jean Valjean that he kept close and did not stir
out. Javert watched the quarter for more than a month.</p>
<p>This convent was for Jean Valjean like an island surrounded by gulfs.
Henceforth, those four walls constituted his world. He saw enough of the
sky there to enable him to preserve his serenity, and Cosette enough to
remain happy.</p>
<p>A very sweet life began for him.</p>
<p>He inhabited the old hut at the end of the garden, in company with
Fauchelevent. This hovel, built of old rubbish, which was still in
existence in 1845, was composed, as the reader already knows, of three
chambers, all of which were utterly bare and had nothing beyond the walls.
The principal one had been given up, by force, for Jean Valjean had
opposed it in vain, to M. Madeleine, by Father Fauchelevent. The walls of
this chamber had for ornament, in addition to the two nails whereon to
hang the knee-cap and the basket, a Royalist bank-note of '93, applied to
the wall over the chimney-piece, and of which the following is an exact
facsimile:—</p>
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<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/2b8-9-baknote.jpg" alt="Royalist Bank-note 2b8-9-banknote " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<p>This specimen of Vendean paper money had been nailed to the wall by the
preceding gardener, an old Chouan, who had died in the convent, and whose
place Fauchelevent had taken.</p>
<p>Jean Valjean worked in the garden every day and made himself very useful.
He had formerly been a pruner of trees, and he gladly found himself a
gardener once more. It will be remembered that he knew all sorts of
secrets and receipts for agriculture. He turned these to advantage. Almost
all the trees in the orchard were ungrafted, and wild. He budded them and
made them produce excellent fruit.</p>
<p>Cosette had permission to pass an hour with him every day. As the sisters
were melancholy and he was kind, the child made comparisons and adored
him. At the appointed hour she flew to the hut. When she entered the lowly
cabin, she filled it with paradise. Jean Valjean blossomed out and felt
his happiness increase with the happiness which he afforded Cosette. The
joy which we inspire has this charming property, that, far from growing
meagre, like all reflections, it returns to us more radiant than ever. At
recreation hours, Jean Valjean watched her running and playing in the
distance, and he distinguished her laugh from that of the rest.</p>
<p>For Cosette laughed now.</p>
<p>Cosette's face had even undergone a change, to a certain extent. The gloom
had disappeared from it. A smile is the same as sunshine; it banishes
winter from the human countenance.</p>
<p>Recreation over, when Cosette went into the house again, Jean Valjean
gazed at the windows of her class-room, and at night he rose to look at
the windows of her dormitory.</p>
<p>God has his own ways, moreover; the convent contributed, like Cosette, to
uphold and complete the Bishop's work in Jean Valjean. It is certain that
virtue adjoins pride on one side. A bridge built by the devil exists
there. Jean Valjean had been, unconsciously, perhaps, tolerably near that
side and that bridge, when Providence cast his lot in the convent of the
Petit-Picpus; so long as he had compared himself only to the Bishop, he
had regarded himself as unworthy and had remained humble; but for some
time past he had been comparing himself to men in general, and pride was
beginning to spring up. Who knows? He might have ended by returning very
gradually to hatred.</p>
<p>The convent stopped him on that downward path.</p>
<p>This was the second place of captivity which he had seen. In his youth, in
what had been for him the beginning of his life, and later on, quite
recently again, he had beheld another,—a frightful place, a terrible
place, whose severities had always appeared to him the iniquity of
justice, and the crime of the law. Now, after the galleys, he saw the
cloister; and when he meditated how he had formed a part of the galleys,
and that he now, so to speak, was a spectator of the cloister, he
confronted the two in his own mind with anxiety.</p>
<p>Sometimes he crossed his arms and leaned on his hoe, and slowly descended
the endless spirals of revery.</p>
<p>He recalled his former companions: how wretched they were; they rose at
dawn, and toiled until night; hardly were they permitted to sleep; they
lay on camp beds, where nothing was tolerated but mattresses two inches
thick, in rooms which were heated only in the very harshest months of the
year; they were clothed in frightful red blouses; they were allowed, as a
great favor, linen trousers in the hottest weather, and a woollen carter's
blouse on their backs when it was very cold; they drank no wine, and ate
no meat, except when they went on "fatigue duty." They lived nameless,
designated only by numbers, and converted, after a manner, into ciphers
themselves, with downcast eyes, with lowered voices, with shorn heads,
beneath the cudgel and in disgrace.</p>
<p>Then his mind reverted to the beings whom he had under his eyes.</p>
<p>These beings also lived with shorn heads, with downcast eyes, with lowered
voices, not in disgrace, but amid the scoffs of the world, not with their
backs bruised with the cudgel, but with their shoulders lacerated with
their discipline. Their names, also, had vanished from among men; they no
longer existed except under austere appellations. They never ate meat and
they never drank wine; they often remained until evening without food;
they were attired, not in a red blouse, but in a black shroud, of woollen,
which was heavy in summer and thin in winter, without the power to add or
subtract anything from it; without having even, according to the season,
the resource of the linen garment or the woollen cloak; and for six months
in the year they wore serge chemises which gave them fever. They dwelt,
not in rooms warmed only during rigorous cold, but in cells where no fire
was ever lighted; they slept, not on mattresses two inches thick, but on
straw. And finally, they were not even allowed their sleep; every night,
after a day of toil, they were obliged, in the weariness of their first
slumber, at the moment when they were falling sound asleep and beginning
to get warm, to rouse themselves, to rise and to go and pray in an
ice-cold and gloomy chapel, with their knees on the stones.</p>
<p>On certain days each of these beings in turn had to remain for twelve
successive hours in a kneeling posture, or prostrate, with face upon the
pavement, and arms outstretched in the form of a cross.</p>
<p>The others were men; these were women.</p>
<p>What had those men done? They had stolen, violated, pillaged, murdered,
assassinated. They were bandits, counterfeiters, poisoners, incendiaries,
murderers, parricides. What had these women done? They had done nothing
whatever.</p>
<p>On the one hand, highway robbery, fraud, deceit, violence, sensuality,
homicide, all sorts of sacrilege, every variety of crime; on the other,
one thing only, innocence.</p>
<p>Perfect innocence, almost caught up into heaven in a mysterious
assumption, attached to the earth by virtue, already possessing something
of heaven through holiness.</p>
<p>On the one hand, confidences over crimes, which are exchanged in whispers;
on the other, the confession of faults made aloud. And what crimes! And
what faults!</p>
<p>On the one hand, miasms; on the other, an ineffable perfume. On the one
hand, a moral pest, guarded from sight, penned up under the range of
cannon, and literally devouring its plague-stricken victims; on the other,
the chaste flame of all souls on the same hearth. There, darkness; here,
the shadow; but a shadow filled with gleams of light, and of gleams full
of radiance.</p>
<p>Two strongholds of slavery; but in the first, deliverance possible, a
legal limit always in sight, and then, escape. In the second, perpetuity;
the sole hope, at the distant extremity of the future, that faint light of
liberty which men call death.</p>
<p>In the first, men are bound only with chains; in the other, chained by
faith.</p>
<p>What flowed from the first? An immense curse, the gnashing of teeth,
hatred, desperate viciousness, a cry of rage against human society, a
sarcasm against heaven.</p>
<p>What results flowed from the second? Blessings and love.</p>
<p>And in these two places, so similar yet so unlike, these two species of
beings who were so very unlike, were undergoing the same work, expiation.</p>
<p>Jean Valjean understood thoroughly the expiation of the former; that
personal expiation, the expiation for one's self. But he did not
understand that of these last, that of creatures without reproach and
without stain, and he trembled as he asked himself: The expiation of what?
What expiation?</p>
<p>A voice within his conscience replied: "The most divine of human
generosities, the expiation for others."</p>
<p>Here all personal theory is withheld; we are only the narrator; we place
ourselves at Jean Valjean's point of view, and we translate his
impressions.</p>
<p>Before his eyes he had the sublime summit of abnegation, the highest
possible pitch of virtue; the innocence which pardons men their faults,
and which expiates in their stead; servitude submitted to, torture
accepted, punishment claimed by souls which have not sinned, for the sake
of sparing it to souls which have fallen; the love of humanity swallowed
up in the love of God, but even there preserving its distinct and
mediatorial character; sweet and feeble beings possessing the misery of
those who are punished and the smile of those who are recompensed.</p>
<p>And he remembered that he had dared to murmur!</p>
<p>Often, in the middle of the night, he rose to listen to the grateful song
of those innocent creatures weighed down with severities, and the blood
ran cold in his veins at the thought that those who were justly chastised
raised their voices heavenward only in blasphemy, and that he, wretch that
he was, had shaken his fist at God.</p>
<p>There was one striking thing which caused him to meditate deeply, like a
warning whisper from Providence itself: the scaling of that wall, the
passing of those barriers, the adventure accepted even at the risk of
death, the painful and difficult ascent, all those efforts even, which he
had made to escape from that other place of expiation, he had made in
order to gain entrance into this one. Was this a symbol of his destiny?
This house was a prison likewise and bore a melancholy resemblance to that
other one whence he had fled, and yet he had never conceived an idea of
anything similar.</p>
<p>Again he beheld gratings, bolts, iron bars—to guard whom? Angels.</p>
<p>These lofty walls which he had seen around tigers, he now beheld once more
around lambs.</p>
<p>This was a place of expiation, and not of punishment; and yet, it was
still more austere, more gloomy, and more pitiless than the other.</p>
<p>These virgins were even more heavily burdened than the convicts. A cold,
harsh wind, that wind which had chilled his youth, traversed the barred
and padlocked grating of the vultures; a still harsher and more biting
breeze blew in the cage of these doves.</p>
<p>Why?</p>
<p>When he thought on these things, all that was within him was lost in
amazement before this mystery of sublimity.</p>
<p>In these meditations, his pride vanished. He scrutinized his own heart in
all manner of ways; he felt his pettiness, and many a time he wept. All
that had entered into his life for the last six months had led him back
towards the Bishop's holy injunctions; Cosette through love, the convent
through humility.</p>
<p>Sometimes at eventide, in the twilight, at an hour when the garden was
deserted, he could be seen on his knees in the middle of the walk which
skirted the chapel, in front of the window through which he had gazed on
the night of his arrival, and turned towards the spot where, as he knew,
the sister was making reparation, prostrated in prayer. Thus he prayed as
he knelt before the sister.</p>
<p>It seemed as though he dared not kneel directly before God.</p>
<p>Everything that surrounded him, that peaceful garden, those fragrant
flowers, those children who uttered joyous cries, those grave and simple
women, that silent cloister, slowly permeated him, and little by little,
his soul became compounded of silence like the cloister, of perfume like
the flowers, of simplicity like the women, of joy like the children. And
then he reflected that these had been two houses of God which had received
him in succession at two critical moments in his life: the first, when all
doors were closed and when human society rejected him; the second, at a
moment when human society had again set out in pursuit of him, and when
the galleys were again yawning; and that, had it not been for the first,
he should have relapsed into crime, and had it not been for the second,
into torment.</p>
<p>His whole heart melted in gratitude, and he loved more and more.</p>
<p>Many years passed in this manner; Cosette was growing up.</p>
<p>[THE END OF VOLUME II. "COSETTE"]
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