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<h2> CHAPTER II. A PRIEST AND A PHILOSOPHER ARE TWO DIFFERENT THINGS. </h2>
<p>The priest whom the young girls had observed at the top of the North
tower, leaning over the Place and so attentive to the dance of the gypsy,
was, in fact, Archdeacon Claude Frollo.</p>
<p>Our readers have not forgotten the mysterious cell which the archdeacon
had reserved for himself in that tower. (I do not know, by the way be it
said, whether it be not the same, the interior of which can be seen to-day
through a little square window, opening to the east at the height of a man
above the platform from which the towers spring; a bare and dilapidated
den, whose badly plastered walls are ornamented here and there, at the
present day, with some wretched yellow engravings representing the fa�ades
of cathedrals. I presume that this hole is jointly inhabited by bats and
spiders, and that, consequently, it wages a double war of extermination on
the flies).</p>
<p>Every day, an hour before sunset, the archdeacon ascended the staircase to
the tower, and shut himself up in this cell, where he sometimes passed
whole nights. That day, at the moment when, standing before the low door
of his retreat, he was fitting into the lock the complicated little key
which he always carried about him in the purse suspended to his side, a
sound of tambourine and castanets had reached his ear. These sounds came
from the Place du Parvis. The cell, as we have already said, had only one
window opening upon the rear of the church. Claude Frollo had hastily
withdrawn the key, and an instant later, he was on the top of the tower,
in the gloomy and pensive attitude in which the maidens had seen him.</p>
<p>There he stood, grave, motionless, absorbed in one look and one thought.
All Paris lay at his feet, with the thousand spires of its edifices and
its circular horizon of gentle hills—with its river winding under
its bridges, and its people moving to and fro through its streets,—with
the clouds of its smoke,—with the mountainous chain of its roofs
which presses Notre-Dame in its doubled folds; but out of all the city,
the archdeacon gazed at one corner only of the pavement, the Place du
Parvis; in all that throng at but one figure,—the gypsy.</p>
<p>It would have been difficult to say what was the nature of this look, and
whence proceeded the flame that flashed from it. It was a fixed gaze,
which was, nevertheless, full of trouble and tumult. And, from the
profound immobility of his whole body, barely agitated at intervals by an
involuntary shiver, as a tree is moved by the wind; from the stiffness of
his elbows, more marble than the balustrade on which they leaned; or the
sight of the petrified smile which contracted his face,—one would
have said that nothing living was left about Claude Frollo except his
eyes.</p>
<p>The gypsy was dancing; she was twirling her tambourine on the tip of her
finger, and tossing it into the air as she danced Proven�al sarabands;
agile, light, joyous, and unconscious of the formidable gaze which
descended perpendicularly upon her head.</p>
<p>The crowd was swarming around her; from time to time, a man accoutred in
red and yellow made them form into a circle, and then returned, seated
himself on a chair a few paces from the dancer, and took the goat's head
on his knees. This man seemed to be the gypsy's companion. Claude Frollo
could not distinguish his features from his elevated post.</p>
<p>From the moment when the archdeacon caught sight of this stranger, his
attention seemed divided between him and the dancer, and his face became
more and more gloomy. All at once he rose upright, and a quiver ran
through his whole body: "Who is that man?" he muttered between his teeth:
"I have always seen her alone before!"</p>
<p>Then he plunged down beneath the tortuous vault of the spiral staircase,
and once more descended. As he passed the door of the bell chamber, which
was ajar, he saw something which struck him; he beheld Quasimodo, who,
leaning through an opening of one of those slate penthouses which resemble
enormous blinds, appeared also to be gazing at the Place. He was engaged
in so profound a contemplation, that he did not notice the passage of his
adopted father. His savage eye had a singular expression; it was a
charmed, tender look. "This is strange!" murmured Claude. "Is it the gypsy
at whom he is thus gazing?" He continued his descent. At the end of a few
minutes, the anxious archdeacon entered upon the Place from the door at
the base of the tower.</p>
<p>"What has become of the gypsy girl?" he said, mingling with the group of
spectators which the sound of the tambourine had collected.</p>
<p>"I know not," replied one of his neighbors, "I think that she has gone to
make some of her fandangoes in the house opposite, whither they have
called her."</p>
<p>In the place of the gypsy, on the carpet, whose arabesques had seemed to
vanish but a moment previously by the capricious figures of her dance, the
archdeacon no longer beheld any one but the red and yellow man, who, in
order to earn a few testers in his turn, was walking round the circle,
with his elbows on his hips, his head thrown back, his face red, his neck
outstretched, with a chair between his teeth. To the chair he had fastened
a cat, which a neighbor had lent, and which was spitting in great
affright.</p>
<p>"Notre-Dame!" exclaimed the archdeacon, at the moment when the juggler,
perspiring heavily, passed in front of him with his pyramid of chair and
his cat, "What is Master Pierre Gringoire doing here?"</p>
<p>The harsh voice of the archdeacon threw the poor fellow into such a
commotion that he lost his equilibrium, together with his whole edifice,
and the chair and the cat tumbled pell-mell upon the heads of the
spectators, in the midst of inextinguishable hootings.</p>
<p>It is probable that Master Pierre Gringoire (for it was indeed he) would
have had a sorry account to settle with the neighbor who owned the cat,
and all the bruised and scratched faces which surrounded him, if he had
not hastened to profit by the tumult to take refuge in the church, whither
Claude Frollo had made him a sign to follow him.</p>
<p>The cathedral was already dark and deserted; the side-aisles were full of
shadows, and the lamps of the chapels began to shine out like stars, so
black had the vaulted ceiling become. Only the great rose window of the
fa�ade, whose thousand colors were steeped in a ray of horizontal
sunlight, glittered in the gloom like a mass of diamonds, and threw its
dazzling reflection to the other end of the nave.</p>
<p>When they had advanced a few paces, Dom Claude placed his back against a
pillar, and gazed intently at Gringoire. The gaze was not the one which
Gringoire feared, ashamed as he was of having been caught by a grave and
learned person in the costume of a buffoon. There was nothing mocking or
ironical in the priest's glance, it was serious, tranquil, piercing. The
archdeacon was the first to break the silence.</p>
<p>"Come now, Master Pierre. You are to explain many things to me. And first
of all, how comes it that you have not been seen for two months, and that
now one finds you in the public squares, in a fine equipment in truth!
Motley red and yellow, like a Caudebec apple?"</p>
<p>"Messire," said Gringoire, piteously, "it is, in fact, an amazing
accoutrement. You see me no more comfortable in it than a cat coiffed with
a calabash. 'Tis very ill done, I am conscious, to expose messieurs the
sergeants of the watch to the liability of cudgelling beneath this cassock
the humerus of a Pythagorean philosopher. But what would you have, my
reverend master? 'tis the fault of my ancient jerkin, which abandoned me
in cowardly wise, at the beginning of the winter, under the pretext that
it was falling into tatters, and that it required repose in the basket of
a rag-picker. What is one to do? Civilization has not yet arrived at the
point where one can go stark naked, as ancient Diogenes wished. Add that a
very cold wind was blowing, and 'tis not in the month of January that one
can successfully attempt to make humanity take this new step. This garment
presented itself, I took it, and I left my ancient black smock, which, for
a hermetic like myself, was far from being hermetically closed. Behold me
then, in the garments of a stage-player, like Saint Genest. What would you
have? 'tis an eclipse. Apollo himself tended the flocks of Admetus."</p>
<p>"'Tis a fine profession that you are engaged in!" replied the archdeacon.</p>
<p>"I agree, my master, that 'tis better to philosophize and poetize, to blow
the flame in the furnace, or to receive it from carry cats on a shield.
So, when you addressed me, I was as foolish as an ass before a turnspit.
But what would you have, messire? One must eat every day, and the finest
Alexandrine verses are not worth a bit of Brie cheese. Now, I made for
Madame Marguerite of Flanders, that famous epithalamium, as you know, and
the city will not pay me, under the pretext that it was not excellent; as
though one could give a tragedy of Sophocles for four crowns! Hence, I was
on the point of dying with hunger. Happily, I found that I was rather
strong in the jaw; so I said to this jaw,—perform some feats of
strength and of equilibrium: nourish thyself. <i>Ale te ipsam</i>. A pack
of beggars who have become my good friends, have taught me twenty sorts of
herculean feats, and now I give to my teeth every evening the bread which
they have earned during the day by the sweat of my brow. After all,
concede, I grant that it is a sad employment for my intellectual
faculties, and that man is not made to pass his life in beating the
tambourine and biting chairs. But, reverend master, it is not sufficient
to pass one's life, one must earn the means for life."</p>
<p>Dom Claude listened in silence. All at once his deep-set eye assumed so
sagacious and penetrating an expression, that Gringoire felt himself, so
to speak, searched to the bottom of the soul by that glance.</p>
<p>"Very good, Master Pierre; but how comes it that you are now in company
with that gypsy dancer?"</p>
<p>"In faith!" said Gringoire, "'tis because she is my wife and I am her
husband."</p>
<p>The priest's gloomy eyes flashed into flame.</p>
<p>"Have you done that, you wretch!" he cried, seizing Gringoire's arm with
fury; "have you been so abandoned by God as to raise your hand against
that girl?"</p>
<p>"On my chance of paradise, monseigneur," replied Gringoire, trembling in
every limb, "I swear to you that I have never touched her, if that is what
disturbs you."</p>
<p>"Then why do you talk of husband and wife?" said the priest. Gringoire
made haste to relate to him as succinctly as possible, all that the reader
already knows, his adventure in the Court of Miracles and the broken-crock
marriage. It appeared, moreover, that this marriage had led to no results
whatever, and that each evening the gypsy girl cheated him of his nuptial
right as on the first day. "'Tis a mortification," he said in conclusion,
"but that is because I have had the misfortune to wed a virgin."</p>
<p>"What do you mean?" demanded the archdeacon, who had been gradually
appeased by this recital.</p>
<p>"'Tis very difficult to explain," replied the poet. "It is a superstition.
My wife is, according to what an old thief, who is called among us the
Duke of Egypt, has told me, a foundling or a lost child, which is the same
thing. She wears on her neck an amulet which, it is affirmed, will cause
her to meet her parents some day, but which will lose its virtue if the
young girl loses hers. Hence it follows that both of us remain very
virtuous."</p>
<p>"So," resumed Claude, whose brow cleared more and more, "you believe,
Master Pierre, that this creature has not been approached by any man?"</p>
<p>"What would you have a man do, Dom Claude, as against a superstition? She
has got that in her head. I assuredly esteem as a rarity this nunlike
prudery which is preserved untamed amid those Bohemian girls who are so
easily brought into subjection. But she has three things to protect her:
the Duke of Egypt, who has taken her under his safeguard, reckoning,
perchance, on selling her to some gay abb�; all his tribe, who hold her in
singular veneration, like a Notre-Dame; and a certain tiny poignard, which
the buxom dame always wears about her, in some nook, in spite of the
ordinances of the provost, and which one causes to fly out into her hands
by squeezing her waist. 'Tis a proud wasp, I can tell you!"</p>
<p>The archdeacon pressed Gringoire with questions.</p>
<p>La Esmeralda, in the judgment of Gringoire, was an inoffensive and
charming creature, pretty, with the exception of a pout which was peculiar
to her; a na�ve and passionate damsel, ignorant of everything and
enthusiastic about everything; not yet aware of the difference between a
man and a woman, even in her dreams; made like that; wild especially over
dancing, noise, the open air; a sort of woman bee, with invisible wings on
her feet, and living in a whirlwind. She owed this nature to the wandering
life which she had always led. Gringoire had succeeded in learning that,
while a mere child, she had traversed Spain and Catalonia, even to Sicily;
he believed that she had even been taken by the caravan of Zingari, of
which she formed a part, to the kingdom of Algiers, a country situated in
Achaia, which country adjoins, on one side Albania and Greece; on the
other, the Sicilian Sea, which is the road to Constantinople. The
Bohemians, said Gringoire, were vassals of the King of Algiers, in his
quality of chief of the White Moors. One thing is certain, that la
Esmeralda had come to France while still very young, by way of Hungary.
From all these countries the young girl had brought back fragments of
queer jargons, songs, and strange ideas, which made her language as motley
as her costume, half Parisian, half African. However, the people of the
quarters which she frequented loved her for her gayety, her daintiness,
her lively manners, her dances, and her songs. She believed herself to be
hated, in all the city, by but two persons, of whom she often spoke in
terror: the sacked nun of the Tour-Roland, a villanous recluse who
cherished some secret grudge against these gypsies, and who cursed the
poor dancer every time that the latter passed before her window; and a
priest, who never met her without casting at her looks and words which
frightened her.</p>
<p>The mention of this last circumstance disturbed the archdeacon greatly,
though Gringoire paid no attention to his perturbation; to such an extent
had two months sufficed to cause the heedless poet to forget the singular
details of the evening on which he had met the gypsy, and the presence of
the archdeacon in it all. Otherwise, the little dancer feared nothing; she
did not tell fortunes, which protected her against those trials for magic
which were so frequently instituted against gypsy women. And then,
Gringoire held the position of her brother, if not of her husband. After
all, the philosopher endured this sort of platonic marriage very
patiently. It meant a shelter and bread at least. Every morning, he set
out from the lair of the thieves, generally with the gypsy; he helped her
make her collections of targes* and little blanks** in the squares; each
evening he returned to the same roof with her, allowed her to bolt herself
into her little chamber, and slept the sleep of the just. A very sweet
existence, taking it all in all, he said, and well adapted to revery. And
then, on his soul and conscience, the philosopher was not very sure that
he was madly in love with the gypsy. He loved her goat almost as dearly.
It was a charming animal, gentle, intelligent, clever; a learned goat.
Nothing was more common in the Middle Ages than these learned animals,
which amazed people greatly, and often led their instructors to the stake.
But the witchcraft of the goat with the golden hoofs was a very innocent
species of magic. Gringoire explained them to the archdeacon, whom these
details seemed to interest deeply. In the majority of cases, it was
sufficient to present the tambourine to the goat in such or such a manner,
in order to obtain from him the trick desired. He had been trained to this
by the gypsy, who possessed, in these delicate arts, so rare a talent that
two months had sufficed to teach the goat to write, with movable letters,
the word "Phoebus."</p>
<p>* An ancient Burgundian coin.<br/>
<br/>
** An ancient French coin.<br/></p>
<p>"'Phoebus!'" said the priest; "why 'Phoebus'?"</p>
<p>"I know not," replied Gringoire. "Perhaps it is a word which she believes
to be endowed with some magic and secret virtue. She often repeats it in a
low tone when she thinks that she is alone."</p>
<p>"Are you sure," persisted Claude, with his penetrating glance, "that it is
only a word and not a name?"</p>
<p>"The name of whom?" said the poet.</p>
<p>"How should I know?" said the priest.</p>
<p>"This is what I imagine, messire. These Bohemians are something like
Guebrs, and adore the sun. Hence, Phoebus."</p>
<p>"That does not seem so clear to me as to you, Master Pierre."</p>
<p>"After all, that does not concern me. Let her mumble her Phoebus at her
pleasure. One thing is certain, that Djali loves me almost as much as he
does her."</p>
<p>"Who is Djali?"</p>
<p>"The goat."</p>
<p>The archdeacon dropped his chin into his hand, and appeared to reflect for
a moment. All at once he turned abruptly to Gringoire once more.</p>
<p>"And do you swear to me that you have not touched her?"</p>
<p>"Whom?" said Gringoire; "the goat?"</p>
<p>"No, that woman."</p>
<p>"My wife? I swear to you that I have not."</p>
<p>"You are often alone with her?"</p>
<p>"A good hour every evening."</p>
<p>Porn Claude frowned.</p>
<p>"Oh! oh! <i>Solus cum sola non cogitabuntur orare Pater Noster</i>."</p>
<p>"Upon my soul, I could say the <i>Pater</i>, and the <i>Ave Maria</i>, and
the <i>Credo in Deum patrem omnipotentem</i> without her paying any more
attention to me than a chicken to a church."</p>
<p>"Swear to me, by the body of your mother," repeated the archdeacon
violently, "that you have not touched that creature with even the tip of
your finger."</p>
<p>"I will also swear it by the head of my father, for the two things have
more affinity between them. But, my reverend master, permit me a question
in my turn."</p>
<p>"Speak, sir."</p>
<p>"What concern is it of yours?"</p>
<p>The archdeacon's pale face became as crimson as the cheek of a young girl.
He remained for a moment without answering; then, with visible
embarrassment,—</p>
<p>"Listen, Master Pierre Gringoire. You are not yet damned, so far as I
know. I take an interest in you, and wish you well. Now the least contact
with that Egyptian of the demon would make you the vassal of Satan. You
know that 'tis always the body which ruins the soul. Woe to you if you
approach that woman! That is all."</p>
<p>"I tried once," said Gringoire, scratching his ear; "it was the first day:
but I got stung."</p>
<p>"You were so audacious, Master Pierre?" and the priest's brow clouded over
again.</p>
<p>"On another occasion," continued the poet, with a smile, "I peeped through
the keyhole, before going to bed, and I beheld the most delicious dame in
her shift that ever made a bed creak under her bare foot."</p>
<p>"Go to the devil!" cried the priest, with a terrible look; and, giving the
amazed Gringoire a push on the shoulders, he plunged, with long strides,
under the gloomiest arcades of the cathedral.</p>
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