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<h2> CHAPTER II. THE BEAUTIFUL CREATURE CLAD IN WHITE. (Dante.) </h2>
<p>When Quasimodo saw that the cell was empty, that the gypsy was no longer
there, that while he had been defending her she had been abducted, he
grasped his hair with both hands and stamped with surprise and pain; then
he set out to run through the entire church seeking his Bohemian, howling
strange cries to all the corners of the walls, strewing his red hair on
the pavement. It was just at the moment when the king's archers were
making their victorious entrance into Notre-Dame, also in search of the
gypsy. Quasimodo, poor, deaf fellow, aided them in their fatal intentions,
without suspecting it; he thought that the outcasts were the gypsy's
enemies. He himself conducted Tristan l'Hermite to all possible
hiding-places, opened to him the secret doors, the double bottoms of the
altars, the rear sacristries. If the unfortunate girl had still been
there, it would have been he himself who would have delivered her up.</p>
<p>When the fatigue of finding nothing had disheartened Tristan, who was not
easily discouraged, Quasimodo continued the search alone. He made the tour
of the church twenty times, length and breadth, up and down, ascending and
descending, running, calling, shouting, peeping, rummaging, ransacking,
thrusting his head into every hole, pushing a torch under every vault,
despairing, mad. A male who has lost his female is no more roaring nor
more haggard.</p>
<p>At last when he was sure, perfectly sure that she was no longer there,
that all was at an end, that she had been snatched from him, he slowly
mounted the staircase to the towers, that staircase which he had ascended
with so much eagerness and triumph on the day when he had saved her. He
passed those same places once more with drooping head, voiceless,
tearless, almost breathless. The church was again deserted, and had fallen
back into its silence. The archers had quitted it to track the sorceress
in the city. Quasimodo, left alone in that vast Notre-Dame, so besieged
and tumultuous but a short time before, once more betook himself to the
cell where the gypsy had slept for so many weeks under his guardianship.</p>
<p>As he approached it, he fancied that he might, perhaps, find her there.
When, at the turn of the gallery which opens on the roof of the side
aisles, he perceived the tiny cell with its little window and its little
door crouching beneath a great flying buttress like a bird's nest under a
branch, the poor man's heart failed him, and he leaned against a pillar to
keep from falling. He imagined that she might have returned thither, that
some good genius had, no doubt, brought her back, that this chamber was
too tranquil, too safe, too charming for her not to be there, and he dared
not take another step for fear of destroying his illusion. "Yes," he said
to himself, "perchance she is sleeping, or praying. I must not disturb
her."</p>
<p>At length he summoned up courage, advanced on tiptoe, looked, entered.
Empty. The cell was still empty. The unhappy deaf man walked slowly round
it, lifted the bed and looked beneath it, as though she might be concealed
between the pavement and the mattress, then he shook his head and remained
stupefied. All at once, he crushed his torch under his foot, and, without
uttering a word, without giving vent to a sigh, he flung himself at full
speed, head foremost against the wall, and fell fainting on the floor.</p>
<p>When he recovered his senses, he threw himself on the bed and rolling
about, he kissed frantically the place where the young girl had slept and
which was still warm; he remained there for several moments as motionless
as though he were about to expire; then he rose, dripping with
perspiration, panting, mad, and began to beat his head against the wall
with the frightful regularity of the clapper of his bells, and the
resolution of a man determined to kill himself. At length he fell a second
time, exhausted; he dragged himself on his knees outside the cell, and
crouched down facing the door, in an attitude of astonishment.</p>
<p>He remained thus for more than an hour without making a movement, with his
eye fixed on the deserted cell, more gloomy, and more pensive than a
mother seated between an empty cradle and a full coffin. He uttered not a
word; only at long intervals, a sob heaved his body violently, but it was
a tearless sob, like summer lightning which makes no noise.</p>
<p>It appears to have been then, that, seeking at the bottom of his lonely
thoughts for the unexpected abductor of the gypsy, he thought of the
archdeacon. He remembered that Dom Claude alone possessed a key to the
staircase leading to the cell; he recalled his nocturnal attempts on the
young girl, in the first of which he, Quasimodo, had assisted, the second
of which he had prevented. He recalled a thousand details, and soon he no
longer doubted that the archdeacon had taken the gypsy. Nevertheless, such
was his respect for the priest, such his gratitude, his devotion, his love
for this man had taken such deep root in his heart, that they resisted,
even at this moment, the talons of jealousy and despair.</p>
<p>He reflected that the archdeacon had done this thing, and the wrath of
blood and death which it would have evoked in him against any other
person, turned in the poor deaf man, from the moment when Claude Frollo
was in question, into an increase of grief and sorrow.</p>
<p>At the moment when his thought was thus fixed upon the priest, while the
daybreak was whitening the flying buttresses, he perceived on the highest
story of Notre-Dame, at the angle formed by the external balustrade as it
makes the turn of the chancel, a figure walking. This figure was coming
towards him. He recognized it. It was the archdeacon.</p>
<p>Claude was walking with a slow, grave step. He did not look before him as
he walked, he was directing his course towards the northern tower, but his
face was turned aside towards the right bank of the Seine, and he held his
head high, as though trying to see something over the roofs. The owl often
assumes this oblique attitude. It flies towards one point and looks
towards another. In this manner the priest passed above Quasimodo without
seeing him.</p>
<p>The deaf man, who had been petrified by this sudden apparition, beheld him
disappear through the door of the staircase to the north tower. The reader
is aware that this is the tower from which the H�tel-de-Ville is visible.
Quasimodo rose and followed the archdeacon.</p>
<p>Quasimodo ascended the tower staircase for the sake of ascending it, for
the sake of seeing why the priest was ascending it. Moreover, the poor
bellringer did not know what he (Quasimodo) should do, what he should say,
what he wished. He was full of fury and full of fear. The archdeacon and
the gypsy had come into conflict in his heart.</p>
<p>When he reached the summit of the tower, before emerging from the shadow
of the staircase and stepping upon the platform, he cautiously examined
the position of the priest. The priest's back was turned to him. There is
an openwork balustrade which surrounds the platform of the bell tower. The
priest, whose eyes looked down upon the town, was resting his breast on
that one of the four sides of the balustrades which looks upon the Pont
Notre-Dame.</p>
<p>Quasimodo, advancing with the tread of a wolf behind him, went to see what
he was gazing at thus.</p>
<p>The priest's attention was so absorbed elsewhere that he did not hear the
deaf man walking behind him.</p>
<p>Paris is a magnificent and charming spectacle, and especially at that day,
viewed from the top of the towers of Notre-Dame, in the fresh light of a
summer dawn. The day might have been in July. The sky was perfectly
serene. Some tardy stars were fading away at various points, and there was
a very brilliant one in the east, in the brightest part of the heavens.
The sun was about to appear; Paris was beginning to move. A very white and
very pure light brought out vividly to the eye all the outlines that its
thousands of houses present to the east. The giant shadow of the towers
leaped from roof to roof, from one end of the great city to the other.
There were several quarters from which were already heard voices and noisy
sounds. Here the stroke of a bell, there the stroke of a hammer, beyond,
the complicated clatter of a cart in motion.</p>
<p>Already several columns of smoke were being belched forth from the
chimneys scattered over the whole surface of roofs, as through the
fissures of an immense sulphurous crater. The river, which ruffles its
waters against the arches of so many bridges, against the points of so
many islands, was wavering with silvery folds. Around the city, outside
the ramparts, sight was lost in a great circle of fleecy vapors through
which one confusedly distinguished the indefinite line of the plains, and
the graceful swell of the heights. All sorts of floating sounds were
dispersed over this half-awakened city. Towards the east, the morning
breeze chased a few soft white bits of wool torn from the misty fleece of
the hills.</p>
<p>In the Parvis, some good women, who had their milk jugs in their hands,
were pointing out to each other, with astonishment, the singular
dilapidation of the great door of Notre-Dame, and the two solidified
streams of lead in the crevices of the stone. This was all that remained
of the tempest of the night. The bonfire lighted between the towers by
Quasimodo had died out. Tristan had already cleared up the Place, and had
the dead thrown into the Seine. Kings like Louis XI. are careful to clean
the pavement quickly after a massacre.</p>
<p>Outside the balustrade of the tower, directly under the point where the
priest had paused, there was one of those fantastically carved stone
gutters with which Gothic edifices bristle, and, in a crevice of that
gutter, two pretty wallflowers in blossom, shaken out and vivified, as it
were, by the breath of air, made frolicsome salutations to each other.
Above the towers, on high, far away in the depths of the sky, the cries of
little birds were heard.</p>
<p>But the priest was not listening to, was not looking at, anything of all
this. He was one of the men for whom there are no mornings, no birds, no
flowers. In that immense horizon, which assumed so many aspects about him,
his contemplation was concentrated on a single point.</p>
<p>Quasimodo was burning to ask him what he had done with the gypsy; but the
archdeacon seemed to be out of the world at that moment. He was evidently
in one of those violent moments of life when one would not feel the earth
crumble. He remained motionless and silent, with his eyes steadily fixed
on a certain point; and there was something so terrible about this silence
and immobility that the savage bellringer shuddered before it and dared
not come in contact with it. Only, and this was also one way of
interrogating the archdeacon, he followed the direction of his vision, and
in this way the glance of the unhappy deaf man fell upon the Place de
Gr�ve.</p>
<p>Thus he saw what the priest was looking at. The ladder was erected near
the permanent gallows. There were some people and many soldiers in the
Place. A man was dragging a white thing, from which hung something black,
along the pavement. This man halted at the foot of the gallows.</p>
<p>Here something took place which Quasimodo could not see very clearly. It
was not because his only eye had not preserved its long range, but there
was a group of soldiers which prevented his seeing everything. Moreover,
at that moment the sun appeared, and such a flood of light overflowed the
horizon that one would have said that all the points in Paris, spires,
chimneys, gables, had simultaneously taken fire.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the man began to mount the ladder. Then Quasimodo saw him again
distinctly. He was carrying a woman on his shoulder, a young girl dressed
in white; that young girl had a noose about her neck. Quasimodo recognized
her.</p>
<p>It was she.</p>
<p>The man reached the top of the ladder. There he arranged the noose. Here
the priest, in order to see the better, knelt upon the balustrade.</p>
<p>All at once the man kicked away the ladder abruptly, and Quasimodo, who
had not breathed for several moments, beheld the unhappy child dangling at
the end of the rope two fathoms above the pavement, with the man squatting
on her shoulders. The rope made several gyrations on itself, and Quasimodo
beheld horrible convulsions run along the gypsy's body. The priest, on his
side, with outstretched neck and eyes starting from his head, contemplated
this horrible group of the man and the young girl,—the spider and
the fly.</p>
<p>At the moment when it was most horrible, the laugh of a demon, a laugh
which one can only give vent to when one is no longer human, burst forth
on the priest's livid face.</p>
<p>Quasimodo did not hear that laugh, but he saw it.</p>
<p>The bellringer retreated several paces behind the archdeacon, and suddenly
hurling himself upon him with fury, with his huge hands he pushed him by
the back over into the abyss over which Dom Claude was leaning.</p>
<p>The priest shrieked: "Damnation!" and fell.</p>
<p>The spout, above which he had stood, arrested him in his fall. He clung to
it with desperate hands, and, at the moment when he opened his mouth to
utter a second cry, he beheld the formidable and avenging face of
Quasimodo thrust over the edge of the balustrade above his head.</p>
<p>Then he was silent.</p>
<p>The abyss was there below him. A fall of more than two hundred feet and
the pavement.</p>
<p>In this terrible situation, the archdeacon said not a word, uttered not a
groan. He merely writhed upon the spout, with incredible efforts to climb
up again; but his hands had no hold on the granite, his feet slid along
the blackened wall without catching fast. People who have ascended the
towers of Notre-Dame know that there is a swell of the stone immediately
beneath the balustrade. It was on this retreating angle that miserable
archdeacon exhausted himself. He had not to deal with a perpendicular
wall, but with one which sloped away beneath him.</p>
<p>Quasimodo had but to stretch out his hand in order to draw him from the
gulf; but he did not even look at him. He was looking at the Gr�ve. He was
looking at the gallows. He was looking at the gypsy.</p>
<p>The deaf man was leaning, with his elbows on the balustrade, at the spot
where the archdeacon had been a moment before, and there, never detaching
his gaze from the only object which existed for him in the world at that
moment, he remained motionless and mute, like a man struck by lightning,
and a long stream of tears flowed in silence from that eye which, up to
that time, had never shed but one tear.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the archdeacon was panting. His bald brow was dripping with
perspiration, his nails were bleeding against the stones, his knees were
flayed by the wall.</p>
<p>He heard his cassock, which was caught on the spout, crack and rip at
every jerk that he gave it. To complete his misfortune, this spout ended
in a leaden pipe which bent under the weight of his body. The archdeacon
felt this pipe slowly giving way. The miserable man said to himself that,
when his hands should be worn out with fatigue, when his cassock should
tear asunder, when the lead should give way, he would be obliged to fall,
and terror seized upon his very vitals. Now and then he glanced wildly at
a sort of narrow shelf formed, ten feet lower down, by projections of the
sculpture, and he prayed heaven, from the depths of his distressed soul,
that he might be allowed to finish his life, were it to last two
centuries, on that space two feet square. Once, he glanced below him into
the Place, into the abyss; the head which he raised again had its eyes
closed and its hair standing erect.</p>
<p>There was something frightful in the silence of these two men. While the
archdeacon agonized in this terrible fashion a few feet below him,
Quasimodo wept and gazed at the Gr�ve.</p>
<p>The archdeacon, seeing that all his exertions served only to weaken the
fragile support which remained to him, decided to remain quiet. There he
hung, embracing the gutter, hardly breathing, no longer stirring, making
no longer any other movements than that mechanical convulsion of the
stomach, which one experiences in dreams when one fancies himself falling.
His fixed eyes were wide open with a stare. He lost ground little by
little, nevertheless, his fingers slipped along the spout; he became more
and more conscious of the feebleness of his arms and the weight of his
body. The curve of the lead which sustained him inclined more and more
each instant towards the abyss.</p>
<p>He beheld below him, a frightful thing, the roof of Saint-Jean le Rond, as
small as a card folded in two. He gazed at the impressive carvings, one by
one, of the tower, suspended like himself over the precipice, but without
terror for themselves or pity for him. All was stone around him; before
his eyes, gaping monsters; below, quite at the bottom, in the Place, the
pavement; above his head, Quasimodo weeping.</p>
<p>In the Parvis there were several groups of curious good people, who were
tranquilly seeking to divine who the madman could be who was amusing
himself in so strange a manner. The priest heard them saying, for their
voices reached him, clear and shrill: "Why, he will break his neck!"</p>
<p>Quasimodo wept.</p>
<p>At last the archdeacon, foaming with rage and despair, understood that all
was in vain. Nevertheless, he collected all the strength which remained to
him for a final effort. He stiffened himself upon the spout, pushed
against the wall with both his knees, clung to a crevice in the stones
with his hands, and succeeded in climbing back with one foot, perhaps; but
this effort made the leaden beak on which he rested bend abruptly. His
cassock burst open at the same time. Then, feeling everything give way
beneath him, with nothing but his stiffened and failing hands to support
him, the unfortunate man closed his eyes and let go of the spout. He fell.</p>
<p>Quasimodo watched him fall.</p>
<p>A fall from such a height is seldom perpendicular. The archdeacon,
launched into space, fell at first head foremost, with outspread hands;
then he whirled over and over many times; the wind blew him upon the roof
of a house, where the unfortunate man began to break up. Nevertheless, he
was not dead when he reached there. The bellringer saw him still endeavor
to cling to a gable with his nails; but the surface sloped too much, and
he had no more strength. He slid rapidly along the roof like a loosened
tile, and dashed upon the pavement. There he no longer moved.</p>
<p>Then Quasimodo raised his eyes to the gypsy, whose body he beheld hanging
from the gibbet, quivering far away beneath her white robe with the last
shudderings of anguish, then he dropped them on the archdeacon, stretched
out at the base of the tower, and no longer retaining the human form, and
he said, with a sob which heaved his deep chest,—"Oh! all that I
have ever loved!"</p>
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