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<h2> CHAPTER V. THE KEY TO THE RED DOOR. </h2>
<p>In the meantime, public minor had informed the archdeacon of the
miraculous manner in which the gypsy had been saved. When he learned it,
he knew not what his sensations were. He had reconciled himself to la
Esmeralda's death. In that matter he was tranquil; he had reached the
bottom of personal suffering. The human heart (Dora Claude had meditated
upon these matters) can contain only a certain quantity of despair. When
the sponge is saturated, the sea may pass over it without causing a single
drop more to enter it.</p>
<p>Now, with la Esmeralda dead, the sponge was soaked, all was at an end on
this earth for Dom Claude. But to feel that she was alive, and Phoebus
also, meant that tortures, shocks, alternatives, life, were beginning
again. And Claude was weary of all this.</p>
<p>When he heard this news, he shut himself in his cell in the cloister. He
appeared neither at the meetings of the chapter nor at the services. He
closed his door against all, even against the bishop. He remained thus
immured for several weeks. He was believed to be ill. And so he was, in
fact.</p>
<p>What did he do while thus shut up? With what thoughts was the unfortunate
man contending? Was he giving final battle to his formidable passion? Was
he concocting a final plan of death for her and of perdition for himself?</p>
<p>His Jehan, his cherished brother, his spoiled child, came once to his
door, knocked, swore, entreated, gave his name half a score of times.
Claude did not open.</p>
<p>He passed whole days with his face close to the panes of his window. From
that window, situated in the cloister, he could see la Esmeralda's
chamber. He often saw herself with her goat, sometimes with Quasimodo. He
remarked the little attentions of the ugly deaf man, his obedience, his
delicate and submissive ways with the gypsy. He recalled, for he had a
good memory, and memory is the tormentor of the jealous, he recalled the
singular look of the bellringer, bent on the dancer upon a certain
evening. He asked himself what motive could have impelled Quasimodo to
save her. He was the witness of a thousand little scenes between the gypsy
and the deaf man, the pantomime of which, viewed from afar and commented
on by his passion, appeared very tender to him. He distrusted the
capriciousness of women. Then he felt a jealousy which he could never have
believed possible awakening within him, a jealousy which made him redden
with shame and indignation: "One might condone the captain, but this one!"
This thought upset him.</p>
<p>His nights were frightful. As soon as he learned that the gypsy was alive,
the cold ideas of spectre and tomb which had persecuted him for a whole
day vanished, and the flesh returned to goad him. He turned and twisted on
his couch at the thought that the dark-skinned maiden was so near him.</p>
<p>Every night his delirious imagination represented la Esmeralda to him in
all the attitudes which had caused his blood to boil most. He beheld her
outstretched upon the poniarded captain, her eyes closed, her beautiful
bare throat covered with Phoebus's blood, at that moment of bliss when the
archdeacon had imprinted on her pale lips that kiss whose burn the unhappy
girl, though half dead, had felt. He beheld her, again, stripped by the
savage hands of the torturers, allowing them to bare and to enclose in the
boot with its iron screw, her tiny foot, her delicate rounded leg, her
white and supple knee. Again he beheld that ivory knee which alone
remained outside of Torterue's horrible apparatus. Lastly, he pictured the
young girl in her shift, with the rope about her neck, shoulders bare,
feet bare, almost nude, as he had seen her on that last day. These images
of voluptuousness made him clench his fists, and a shiver run along his
spine.</p>
<p>One night, among others, they heated so cruelly his virgin and priestly
blood, that he bit his pillow, leaped from his bed, flung on a surplice
over his shirt, and left his cell, lamp in hand, half naked, wild, his
eyes aflame.</p>
<p>He knew where to find the key to the red door, which connected the
cloister with the church, and he always had about him, as the reader
knows, the key of the staircase leading to the towers.</p>
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