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Hunchback of Notre Dame (Notre-Dame de Paris), The
VOLUME II - BOOK EIGHTH - Chapter 4 - ~Lasciate Ogni Speranza~--Leave all hope behind, ye who Enter here
Victor Hugo
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       _ In the Middle Ages, when an edifice was complete, there
       was almost as much of it in the earth as above it. Unless
       built upon piles, like Notre-Dame, a palace, a fortress, a
       church, had always a double bottom. In cathedrals, it was,
       in some sort, another subterranean cathedral, low, dark,
       mysterious, blind, and mute, under the upper nave which was
       overflowing with light and reverberating with organs and bells
       day and night. Sometimes it was a sepulchre. In palaces,
       in fortresses, it was a prison, sometimes a sepulchre also,
       sometimes both together. These mighty buildings, whose
       mode of formation and vegetation we have elsewhere explained,
       had not simply foundations, but, so to speak, roots
       which ran branching through the soil in chambers, galleries,
       and staircases, like the construction above. Thus churches,
       palaces, fortresses, had the earth half way up their bodies.
       The cellars of an edifice formed another edifice, into which
       one descended instead of ascending, and which extended
       its subterranean grounds under the external piles of the
       monument, like those forests and mountains which are reversed
       in the mirror-like waters of a lake, beneath the forests and
       mountains of the banks.
       At the fortress of Saint-Antoine, at the Palais de Justice of
       Paris, at the Louvre, these subterranean edifices were prisons.
       The stories of these prisons, as they sank into the soil, grew
       constantly narrower and more gloomy. They were so many
       zones, where the shades of horror were graduated. Dante
       could never imagine anything better for his hell. These
       tunnels of cells usually terminated in a sack of a lowest
       dungeon, with a vat-like bottom, where Dante placed Satan,
       where society placed those condemned to death. A miserable
       human existence, once interred there; farewell light, air, life,
       ~ogni speranza~--every hope; it only came forth to the scaffold
       or the stake. Sometimes it rotted there; human justice
       called this "forgetting." Between men and himself, the
       condemned man felt a pile of stones and jailers weighing down
       upon his head; and the entire prison, the massive bastille
       was nothing more than an enormous, complicated lock, which
       barred him off from the rest of the world.
       It was in a sloping cavity of this description, in the
       ~oubliettes~ excavated by Saint-Louis, in the ~inpace~ of the
       Tournelle, that la Esmeralda had been placed on being condemned
       to death, through fear of her escape, no doubt, with the colossal
       court-house over her head. Poor fly, who could not have
       lifted even one of its blocks of stone!
       Assuredly, Providence and society had been equally unjust;
       such an excess of unhappiness and of torture was not necessary
       to break so frail a creature.
       There she lay, lost in the shadows, buried, hidden, immured.
       Any one who could have beheld her in this state, after having
       seen her laugh and dance in the sun, would have shuddered.
       Cold as night, cold as death, not a breath of air in her tresses,
       not a human sound in her ear, no longer a ray of light in her
       eyes; snapped in twain, crushed with chains, crouching beside
       a jug and a loaf, on a little straw, in a pool of water, which
       was formed under her by the sweating of the prison walls;
       without motion, almost without breath, she had no longer the
       power to suffer; Phoebus, the sun, midday, the open air, the
       streets of Paris, the dances with applause, the sweet babblings
       of love with the officer; then the priest, the old crone,
       the poignard, the blood, the torture, the gibbet; all this did,
       indeed, pass before her mind, sometimes as a charming and
       golden vision, sometimes as a hideous nightmare; but it was
       no longer anything but a vague and horrible struggle, lost in
       the gloom, or distant music played up above ground, and
       which was no longer audible at the depth where the unhappy
       girl had fallen.
       Since she had been there, she had neither waked nor slept.
       In that misfortune, in that cell, she could no longer
       distinguish her waking hours from slumber, dreams from reality,
       any more than day from night. All this was mixed, broken,
       floating, disseminated confusedly in her thought. She no
       longer felt, she no longer knew, she no longer thought; at
       the most, she only dreamed. Never had a living creature
       been thrust more deeply into nothingness.
       Thus benumbed, frozen, petrified, she had barely noticed
       on two or three occasions, the sound of a trap door opening
       somewhere above her, without even permitting the passage of
       a little light, and through which a hand had tossed her a bit
       of black bread. Nevertheless, this periodical visit of the
       jailer was the sole communication which was left her with
       mankind.
       A single thing still mechanically occupied her ear; above
       her head, the dampness was filtering through the mouldy
       stones of the vault, and a drop of water dropped from them
       at regular intervals. She listened stupidly to the noise made
       by this drop of water as it fell into the pool beside her.
       This drop of water falling from time to time into that pool,
       was the only movement which still went on around her, the
       only clock which marked the time, the only noise which
       reached her of all the noise made on the surface of the earth.
       To tell the whole, however, she also felt, from time to time,
       in that cesspool of mire and darkness, something cold passing
       over her foot or her arm, and she shuddered.
       How long had she been there? She did not know. She
       had a recollection of a sentence of death pronounced somewhere,
       against some one, then of having been herself carried
       away, and of waking up in darkness and silence, chilled to
       the heart. She had dragged herself along on her hands.
       Then iron rings that cut her ankles, and chains had rattled.
       She had recognized the fact that all around her was wall, that
       below her there was a pavement covered with moisture and a
       truss of straw; but neither lamp nor air-hole. Then she had
       seated herself on that straw and, sometimes, for the sake of
       changing her attitude, on the last stone step in her dungeon.
       For a while she had tried to count the black minutes measured
       off for her by the drop of water; but that melancholy
       labor of an ailing brain had broken off of itself in her
       head, and had left her in stupor.
       At length, one day, or one night, (for midnight and midday
       were of the same color in that sepulchre), she heard above her
       a louder noise than was usually made by the turnkey when he
       brought her bread and jug of water. She raised her head,
       and beheld a ray of reddish light passing through the crevices
       in the sort of trapdoor contrived in the roof of the ~inpace~.
       At the same time, the heavy lock creaked, the trap grated
       on its rusty hinges, turned, and she beheld a lantern, a hand,
       and the lower portions of the bodies of two men, the door
       being too low to admit of her seeing their heads. The light
       pained her so acutely that she shut her eyes.
       When she opened them again the door was closed, the lantern
       was deposited on one of the steps of the staircase; a
       man alone stood before her. A monk's black cloak fell to his
       feet, a cowl of the same color concealed his face. Nothing
       was visible of his person, neither face nor hands. It was a
       long, black shroud standing erect, and beneath which
       something could be felt moving. She gazed fixedly for
       several minutes at this sort of spectre. But neither he
       nor she spoke. One would have pronounced them two statues
       confronting each other. Two things only seemed alive in that
       cavern; the wick of the lantern, which sputtered on account
       of the dampness of the atmosphere, and the drop of water
       from the roof, which cut this irregular sputtering with its
       monotonous splash, and made the light of the lantern quiver
       in concentric waves on the oily water of the pool.
       At last the prisoner broke the silence.
       "Who are you?"
       "A priest."
       The words, the accent, the sound of his voice made her tremble.
       The priest continued, in a hollow voice,--
       "Are you prepared?"
       "For what?"
       "To die."
       "Oh!" said she, "will it be soon?"
       "To-morrow."
       Her head, which had been raised with joy, fell back upon
       her breast.
       "'Tis very far away yet!" she murmured; "why could they not
       have done it to-day?"
       "Then you are very unhappy?" asked the priest, after a silence.
       "I am very cold," she replied.
       She took her feet in her hands, a gesture habitual with
       unhappy wretches who are cold, as we have already seen in the
       case of the recluse of the Tour-Roland, and her teeth chattered.
       The priest appeared to cast his eyes around the dungeon from beneath
       his cowl.
       "Without light! without fire! in the water! it is horrible!"
       "Yes," she replied, with the bewildered air which unhappiness
       had given her. "The day belongs to every one, why do
       they give me only night?"
       "Do you know," resumed the priest, after a fresh silence,
       "why you are here?"
       "I thought I knew once," she said, passing her thin fingers
       over her eyelids, as though to aid her memory, "but I know
       no longer."
       All at once she began to weep like a child.
       "I should like to get away from here, sir. I am cold, I am
       afraid, and there are creatures which crawl over my body."
       "Well, follow me."
       So saying, the priest took her arm. The unhappy girl was
       frozen to her very soul. Yet that hand produced an impression
       of cold upon her.
       "Oh!" she murmured, "'tis the icy hand of death. Who are you?"
       The priest threw back his cowl; she looked. It was the
       sinister visage which had so long pursued her; that demon's
       head which had appeared at la Falourdel's, above the head of
       her adored Phoebus; that eye which she last had seen glittering
       beside a dagger.
       This apparition, always so fatal for her, and which had thus
       driven her on from misfortune to misfortune, even to torture,
       roused her from her stupor. It seemed to her that the sort of
       veil which had lain thick upon her memory was rent away.
       All the details of her melancholy adventure, from the nocturnal
       scene at la Falourdel's to her condemnation to the Tournelle,
       recurred to her memory, no longer vague and confused
       as heretofore, but distinct, harsh, clear, palpitating, terrible.
       These souvenirs, half effaced and almost obliterated by
       excess of suffering, were revived by the sombre figure which
       stood before her, as the approach of fire causes letters traced
       upon white paper with invisible ink, to start out perfectly
       fresh. It seemed to her that all the wounds of her heart
       opened and bled simultaneously.
       "Hah!" she cried, with her hands on her eyes, and a convulsive
       trembling, "'tis the priest!"
       Then she dropped her arms in discouragement, and remained
       seated, with lowered head, eyes fixed on the ground, mute and
       still trembling.
       The priest gazed at her with the eye of a hawk which has
       long been soaring in a circle from the heights of heaven over a
       poor lark cowering in the wheat, and has long been silently
       contracting the formidable circles of his flight, and has
       suddenly swooped down upon his prey like a flash of lightning,
       and holds it panting in his talons.
       She began to murmur in a low voice,--
       "Finish! finish! the last blow!" and she drew her head
       down in terror between her shoulders, like the lamb awaiting
       the blow of the butcher's axe.
       "So I inspire you with horror?" he said at length.
       She made no reply.
       "Do I inspire you with horror?" he repeated.
       Her lips contracted, as though with a smile.
       "Yes," said she, "the headsman scoffs at the condemned.
       Here he has been pursuing me, threatening me, terrifying me
       for months! Had it not been for him, my God, how happy it
       should have been! It was he who cast me into this abyss!
       Oh heavens! it was he who killed him! my Phoebus!"
       Here, bursting into sobs, and raising her eyes to the priest,--
       "Oh! wretch, who are you? What have I done to you?
       Do you then, hate me so? Alas! what have you against me?"
       "I love thee!" cried the priest.
       Her tears suddenly ceased, she gazed at him with the look
       of an idiot. He had fallen on his knees and was devouring
       her with eyes of flame.
       "Dost thou understand? I love thee!" he cried again.
       "What love!" said the unhappy girl with a shudder.
       He resumed,--
       "The love of a damned soul."
       Both remained silent for several minutes, crushed beneath
       the weight of their emotions; he maddened, she stupefied.
       "Listen," said the priest at last, and a singular calm had
       come over him; "you shall know all I am about to tell you
       that which I have hitherto hardly dared to say to myself,
       when furtively interrogating my conscience at those deep
       hours of the night when it is so dark that it seems as though
       God no longer saw us. Listen. Before I knew you, young
       girl, I was happy."
       "So was I!" she sighed feebly.
       "Do not interrupt me. Yes, I was happy, at least I believed
       myself to be so. I was pure, my soul was filled with
       limpid light. No head was raised more proudly and more
       radiantly than mine. Priests consulted me on chastity; doctors,
       on doctrines. Yes, science was all in all to me; it was a
       sister to me, and a sister sufficed. Not but that with age
       other ideas came to me. More than once my flesh had been
       moved as a woman's form passed by. That force of sex and
       blood which, in the madness of youth, I had imagined that I
       had stifled forever had, more than once, convulsively raised
       the chain of iron vows which bind me, a miserable wretch, to
       the cold stones of the altar. But fasting, prayer, study, the
       mortifications of the cloister, rendered my soul mistress of
       my body once more, and then I avoided women. Moreover, I
       had but to open a book, and all the impure mists of my brain
       vanished before the splendors of science. In a few moments,
       I felt the gross things of earth flee far away, and I found
       myself once more calm, quieted, and serene, in the presence of
       the tranquil radiance of eternal truth. As long as the demon
       sent to attack me only vague shadows of women who passed
       occasionally before my eyes in church, in the streets, in
       the fields, and who hardly recurred to my dreams, I easily
       vanquished him. Alas! if the victory has not remained with
       me, it is the fault of God, who has not created man and the
       demon of equal force. Listen. One day--
       Here the priest paused, and the prisoner heard sighs of
       anguish break from his breast with a sound of the death rattle.
       He resumed,--
       "One day I was leaning on the window of my cell. What
       book was I reading then? Oh! all that is a whirlwind in my
       head. I was reading. The window opened upon a Square. I
       heard a sound of tambourine and music. Annoyed at being
       thus disturbed in my revery, I glanced into the Square. What
       I beheld, others saw beside myself, and yet it was not a
       spectacle made for human eyes. There, in the middle of the
       pavement,--it was midday, the sun was shining brightly,--a
       creature was dancing. A creature so beautiful that God
       would have preferred her to the Virgin and have chosen her
       for his mother and have wished to be born of her if she had
       been in existence when he was made man! Her eyes were
       black and splendid; in the midst of her black locks, some
       hairs through which the sun shone glistened like threads
       of gold. Her feet disappeared in their movements like the
       spokes of a rapidly turning wheel. Around her head, in her
       black tresses, there were disks of metal, which glittered in
       the sun, and formed a coronet of stars on her brow. Her
       dress thick set with spangles, blue, and dotted with a
       thousand sparks, gleamed like a summer night. Her brown,
       supple arms twined and untwined around her waist, like two
       scarfs. The form of her body was surprisingly beautiful.
       Oh! what a resplendent figure stood out, like something
       luminous even in the sunlight! Alas, young girl, it was thou!
       Surprised, intoxicated, charmed, I allowed myself to gaze
       upon thee. I looked so long that I suddenly shuddered with
       terror; I felt that fate was seizing hold of me."
       The priest paused for a moment, overcome with emotion.
       Then he continued,--
       "Already half fascinated, I tried to cling fast to something
       and hold myself back from falling. I recalled the snares which
       Satan had already set for me. The creature before my eyes
       possessed that superhuman beauty which can come only from
       heaven or hell. It was no simple girl made with a little of
       our earth, and dimly lighted within by the vacillating ray of
       a woman's soul. It was an angel! but of shadows and flame,
       and not of light. At the moment when I was meditating
       thus, I beheld beside you a goat, a beast of witches, which
       smiled as it gazed at me. The midday sun gave him golden
       horns. Then I perceived the snare of the demon, and I no
       longer doubted that you had come from hell and that you had
       come thence for my perdition. I believed it."
       Here the priest looked the prisoner full in the face, and
       added, coldly,--
       "I believe it still. Nevertheless, the charm operated little
       by little; your dancing whirled through my brain; I felt the
       mysterious spell working within me. All that should have
       awakened was lulled to sleep; and like those who die in the
       snow, I felt pleasure in allowing this sleep to draw on. All
       at once, you began to sing. What could I do, unhappy
       wretch? Your song was still more charming than your dancing.
       I tried to flee. Impossible. I was nailed, rooted to the
       spot. It seemed to me that the marble of the pavement had
       risen to my knees. I was forced to remain until the end.
       My feet were like ice, my head was on fire. At last you took
       pity on me, you ceased to sing, you disappeared. The reflection
       of the dazzling vision, the reverberation of the enchanting
       music disappeared by degrees from my eyes and my ears.
       Then I fell back into the embrasure of the window, more
       rigid, more feeble than a statue torn from its base. The
       vesper bell roused me. I drew myself up; I fled; but alas!
       something within me had fallen never to rise again, something
       had come upon me from which I could not flee."
       He made another pause and went on,--
       "Yes, dating from that day, there was within me a man
       whom I did not know. I tried to make use of all my remedies.
       The cloister, the altar, work, books,--follies! Oh, how
       hollow does science sound when one in despair dashes against
       it a head full of passions! Do you know, young girl, what I
       saw thenceforth between my book and me? You, your shade,
       the image of the luminous apparition which had one day
       crossed the space before me. But this image had no longer
       the same color; it was sombre, funereal, gloomy as the black
       circle which long pursues the vision of the imprudent man
       who has gazed intently at the sun.
       "Unable to rid myself of it, since I heard your song
       humming ever in my head, beheld your feet dancing always
       on my breviary, felt even at night, in my dreams, your form
       in contact with my own, I desired to see you again, to touch
       you, to know who you were, to see whether I should really
       find you like the ideal image which I had retained of you, to
       shatter my dream, perchance, with reality. At all events, I
       hoped that a new impression would efface the first, and the
       first had become insupportable. I sought you. I saw you
       once more. Calamity! When I had seen you twice, I wanted
       to see you a thousand times, I wanted to see you always.
       Then--how stop myself on that slope of hell?--then I no
       longer belonged to myself. The other end of the thread
       which the demon had attached to my wings he had fastened
       to his foot. I became vagrant and wandering like yourself.
       I waited for you under porches, I stood on the lookout for
       you at the street corners, I watched for you from the summit
       of my tower. Every evening I returned to myself more
       charmed, more despairing, more bewitched, more lost!
       "I had learned who you were; an Egyptian, Bohemian,
       gypsy, zingara. How could I doubt the magic? Listen. I
       hoped that a trial would free me from the charm. A witch
       enchanted Bruno d'Ast; he had her burned, and was cured. I
       knew it. I wanted to try the remedy. First I tried to have
       you forbidden the square in front of Notre-Dame, hoping to
       forget you if you returned no more. You paid no heed to it.
       You returned. Then the idea of abducting you occurred to
       me. One night I made the attempt. There were two of us.
       We already had you in our power, when that miserable officer
       came up. He delivered you. Thus did he begin your unhappiness,
       mine, and his own. Finally, no longer knowing what to
       do, and what was to become of me, I denounced you to the official.
       "I thought that I should be cured like Bruno d'Ast. I also
       had a confused idea that a trial would deliver you into my
       hands; that, as a prisoner I should hold you, I should have
       you; that there you could not escape from me; that you had
       already possessed me a sufficiently long time to give me the
       right to possess you in my turn. When one does wrong, one
       must do it thoroughly. 'Tis madness to halt midway in the
       monstrous! The extreme of crime has its deliriums of joy.
       A priest and a witch can mingle in delight upon the truss of
       straw in a dungeon!
       "Accordingly, I denounced you. It was then that I terrified
       you when we met. The plot which I was weaving against
       you, the storm which I was heaping up above your head, burst
       from me in threats and lightning glances. Still, I hesitated.
       My project had its terrible sides which made me shrink back.
       "Perhaps I might have renounced it; perhaps my hideous
       thought would have withered in my brain, without bearing
       fruit. I thought that it would always depend upon me to
       follow up or discontinue this prosecution. But every evil
       thought is inexorable, and insists on becoming a deed; but
       where I believed myself to be all powerful, fate was more
       powerful than I. Alas! 'tis fate which has seized you and
       delivered you to the terrible wheels of the machine which I
       had constructed doubly. Listen. I am nearing the end.
       "One day,--again the sun was shining brilliantly--I behold
       man pass me uttering your name and laughing, who carries
       sensuality in his eyes. Damnation! I followed him; you
       know the rest."
       He ceased.
       The young girl could find but one word:
       "Oh, my Phoebus!"
       "Not that name!" said the priest, grasping her arm
       violently. "Utter not that name! Oh! miserable wretches
       that we are, 'tis that name which has ruined us! or, rather
       we have ruined each other by the inexplicable play of fate!
       you are suffering, are you not? you are cold; the night makes
       you blind, the dungeon envelops you; but perhaps you still
       have some light in the bottom of your soul, were it only your
       childish love for that empty man who played with your heart,
       while I bear the dungeon within me; within me there is
       winter, ice, despair; I have night in my soul.
       "Do you know what I have suffered? I was present at your
       trial. I was seated on the official's bench. Yes, under one of
       the priests' cowls, there were the contortions of the
       damned. When you were brought in, I was there; when you were
       questioned, I was there.--Den of wolves!--It was my crime, it
       was my gallows that I beheld being slowly reared over your
       head. I was there for every witness, every proof, every plea;
       I could count each of your steps in the painful path; I was
       still there when that ferocious beast--oh! I had not foreseen
       torture! Listen. I followed you to that chamber of anguish.
       I beheld you stripped and handled, half naked, by the infamous
       hands of the tormentor. I beheld your foot, that foot
       which I would have given an empire to kiss and die, that
       foot, beneath which to have had my head crushed I should have
       felt such rapture,--I beheld it encased in that horrible boot,
       which converts the limbs of a living being into one bloody
       clod. Oh, wretch! while I looked on at that, I held beneath
       my shroud a dagger, with which I lacerated my breast. When
       you uttered that cry, I plunged it into my flesh; at a second
       cry, it would have entered my heart. Look! I believe that it
       still bleeds."
       He opened his cassock. His breast was in fact, mangled as
       by the claw of a tiger, and on his side he had a large and
       badly healed wound.
       The prisoner recoiled with horror.
       "Oh!" said the priest, "young girl, have pity upon me!
       You think yourself unhappy; alas! alas! you know not what
       unhappiness is. Oh! to love a woman! to be a priest! to be
       hated! to love with all the fury of one's soul; to feel that one
       would give for the least of her smiles, one's blood, one's vitals,
       one's fame, one's salvation, one's immortality and eternity, this
       life and the other; to regret that one is not a king, emperor,
       archangel, God, in order that one might place a greater slave
       beneath her feet; to clasp her night and day in one's dreams
       and one's thoughts, and to behold her in love with the
       trappings of a soldier and to have nothing to offer her but a
       priest's dirty cassock, which will inspire her with fear and
       disgust! To be present with one's jealousy and one's rage,
       while she lavishes on a miserable, blustering imbecile,
       treasures of love and beauty! To behold that body whose form
       burns you, that bosom which possesses so much sweetness,
       that flesh palpitate and blush beneath the kisses of another!
       Oh heaven! to love her foot, her arm, her shoulder, to think
       of her blue veins, of her brown skin, until one writhes for
       whole nights together on the pavement of one's cell, and to
       behold all those caresses which one has dreamed of, end in
       torture! To have succeeded only in stretching her upon the
       leather bed! Oh! these are the veritable pincers, reddened
       in the fires of hell. Oh! blessed is he who is sawn between
       two planks, or torn in pieces by four horses! Do you know
       what that torture is, which is imposed upon you for long
       nights by your burning arteries, your bursting heart, your
       breaking head, your teeth-knawed hands; mad tormentors
       which turn you incessantly, as upon a red-hot gridiron, to a
       thought of love, of jealousy, and of despair! Young girl,
       mercy! a truce for a moment! a few ashes on these live
       coals! Wipe away, I beseech you, the perspiration which
       trickles in great drops from my brow! Child! torture me
       with one hand, but caress me with the other! Have pity,
       young girl! Have pity upon me!"
       The priest writhed on the wet pavement, beating his head
       against the corners of the stone steps. The young girl gazed
       at him, and listened to him.
       When he ceased, exhausted and panting, she repeated in a
       low voice,--
       "Oh my Phoebus!"
       The priest dragged himself towards her on his knees.
       "I beseech you," he cried, "if you have any heart, do not
       repulse me! Oh! I love you! I am a wretch! When you
       utter that name, unhappy girl, it is as though you crushed all
       the fibres of my heart between your teeth. Mercy! If you
       come from hell I will go thither with you. I have done
       everything to that end. The hell where you are, shall he
       paradise; the sight of you is more charming than that of God!
       Oh! speak! you will have none of me? I should have thought
       the mountains would be shaken in their foundations on the
       day when a woman would repulse such a love. Oh! if you
       only would! Oh! how happy we might be. We would flee--I
       would help you to flee,--we would go somewhere, we would
       seek that spot on earth, where the sun is brightest, the sky
       the bluest, where the trees are most luxuriant. We would
       love each other, we would pour our two souls into each other,
       and we would have a thirst for ourselves which we would
       quench in common and incessantly at that fountain of
       inexhaustible love."
       She interrupted with a terrible and thrilling laugh.
       "Look, father, you have blood on your fingers!"
       The priest remained for several moments as though petrified,
       with his eyes fixed upon his hand.
       "Well, yes!" he resumed at last, with strange gentleness,
       "insult me, scoff at me, overwhelm me with scorn! but come,
       come. Let us make haste. It is to be to-morrow, I tell you.
       The gibbet on the Grève, you know it? it stands always
       ready. It is horrible! to see you ride in that tumbrel! Oh
       mercy! Until now I have never felt the power of my love
       for you.--Oh! follow me. You shall take your time to love
       me after I have saved you. You shall hate me as long as you
       will. But come. To-morrow! to-morrow! the gallows! your
       execution! Oh! save yourself! spare me!"
       He seized her arm, he was beside himself, he tried to drag
       her away.
       She fixed her eye intently on him.
       "What has become of my Phoebus?"
       "Ah!" said the priest, releasing her arm, "you are pitiless."
       "What has become of Phoebus?" she repeated coldly.
       "He is dead!" cried the priest.
       "Dead!" said she, still icy and motionless "then why do
       you talk to me of living?"
       He was not listening to her.
       "Oh! yes," said he, as though speaking to himself, "he
       certainly must be dead. The blade pierced deeply. I believe
       I touched his heart with the point. Oh! my very soul was at
       the end of the dagger!"
       The young girl flung herself upon him like a raging tigress,
       and pushed him upon the steps of the staircase with
       supernatural force.
       "Begone, monster! Begone, assassin! Leave me to die!
       May the blood of both of us make an eternal stain upon your
       brow! Be thine, priest! Never! never! Nothing shall unite
       us! not hell itself! Go, accursed man! Never!"
       The priest had stumbled on the stairs. He silently disentangled
       his feet from the folds of his robe, picked up his lantern
       again, and slowly began the ascent of the steps which led
       to the door; he opened the door and passed through it.
       All at once, the young girl beheld his head reappear; it
       wore a frightful expression, and he cried, hoarse with rage
       and despair,--
       "I tell you he is dead!"
       She fell face downwards upon the floor, and there was no
       longer any sound audible in the cell than the sob of the drop
       of water which made the pool palpitate amid the darkness. _
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Preface
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 1. The Grand Hall
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 2. Pierre Gringoire
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 3. Monsieur The Cardinal
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 4. Master Jacques Coppenole
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 5. Quasimodo
Volume 1 - Book 1 - Chapter 6. Esmeralda
Volume 1 - Book 2 - Chapter 1. From Charybdis To Scylla
Volume 1 - Book 2 - Chapter 2. The Place De Gr& - 232;ve
Volume 1 - Book 2 - Chapter 3. Kisses For Blows
Volume 1 - Book 2 - Chapter 4. The Inconveniences Of Following A Pretty Woman
Volume 1 - Book 2 - Chapter 5. Result Of The Dangers
Volume 1 - Book 2 - Chapter 6. The Broken Jug
Volume 1 - Book 2 - Chapter 7. A Bridal Night
VOLUME I - BOOK THIRD - Chapter 1 - Notre-Dame
VOLUME I - BOOK THIRD - Chapter 2 - A Bird's-eye View of Paris
VOLUME I - BOOK FOURTH - Chapter 1 - Good Souls
VOLUME I - BOOK FOURTH - Chapter 2 - Claude Frollo
VOLUME I - BOOK FOURTH - Chapter 3 - Immanis Pecoris Custos, Immanior Ipse
VOLUME I - BOOR FOURTH - Chapter 4 - The Dog and his Master
VOLUME I - BOOK FOURTH - Chapter 5 - More about Claude Frollo
VOLUME I - BOOK FOURTH - Chapter 6 - Unpopularity
VOLUME I - BOOK FIFTH - Chapter 1 - Abbas Beati Martini
VOLUME I - BOOK FIFTH - Chapter 2 - This will Kill That
VOLUME I - BOOK SIXTH - Chapter 1 - An Impartial Glance at the Ancient Magistracy
VOLUME I - BOOK SIXTH - Chapter 2 - The Rat-hole
VOLUME I - BOOK SIXTH - Chapter 3 - History of a Leavened Cake of Maize
VOLUME I - BOOK SIXTH - Chapter 4 - A Tear for a Drop of Water
VOLUME I - BOOK SIXTH - Chapter 5 - End of the Story of the Cake
VOLUME II - BOOK SEVENTH - Chapter 1 - The Danger of Confiding One's Secret to a Goat
VOLUME II - BOOK SEVENTH - Chapter 2 - A Priest and a Philosopher are two Different Things
VOLUME II - BOOK SEVENTH - Chapter 3 - The Bells
VOLUME II - BOOK SEVENTH - Chapter 4 - ~ANArKH~
VOLUME II - BOOK SEVENTH - Chapter 5 - The Two Men Clothed in Black
VOLUME II - BOOK SEVENTH - Chapter 6 - The Effect which Seven Oaths in the Open Air can Produce
VOLUME II - BOOK SEVENTH - Chapter 7 - The Mysterious Monk
VOLUME II - BOOK SEVENTH - Chapter 8 - The Utility of Windows which Open on the River
VOLUME II - BOOK EIGHTH - Chapter 1 - The Crown Changed into a Dry Leaf
VOLUME II - BOOK EIGHTH - Chapter 2 - Continuation of the Crown which was Changed into a Dry Leaf
VOLUME II - BOOK EIGHTH - Chapter 3 - End of the Crown which was Changed into a Dry Leaf
VOLUME II - BOOK EIGHTH - Chapter 4 - ~Lasciate Ogni Speranza~--Leave all hope behind, ye who Enter here
VOLUME II - BOOK EIGHTH - Chapter 5 - The Mother
VOLUME II - BOOK EIGHTH - Chapter 6 - Three Human Hearts differently Constructed
VOLUME II - BOOK NINTH - Chapter 1 - Delirium
VOLUME II - BOOK NINTH - Chapter 2 - Hunchbacked, One Eyed, Lame
VOLUME II - BOOK NINTH - Chapter 3 - Deaf
VOLUME II - BOOK NINTH - Chapter 4 - Earthenware and Crystal
VOLUME II - BOOK NINTH - Chapter 5 - The Key to the Red Door
VOLUME II - BOOK NINTH - Chapter 6 - Continuation of the Key to the Red Door
VOLUME II - BOOK TENTH - Chapter 1 - Gringoire has Many Good Ideas in Succession.--Rue des Bernardins
VOLUME II - BOOK TENTH - Chapter 2 - Turn Vagabond
VOLUME II - BOOK TENTH - Chapter 3 - Long Live Mirth
VOLUME II - BOOK TENTH - Chapter 4 - An Awkward Friend
VOLUME II - BOOK TENTH - Chapter 5 - The Retreat in which Monsieur Louis of France says his Prayers
VOLUME II - BOOK TENTH - Chapter 6 - Little Sword in Pocket
VOLUME II - BOOK TENTH - Chapter 7 - Chateaupers to the Rescue
VOLUME II - BOOK ELEVENTH - Chapter 1 - The Little Shoe
VOLUME II - BOOK ELEVENTH - Chapter 2 - The Beautiful Creature Clad in White
VOLUME II - BOOK ELEVENTH - Chapter 3 - The Marriage of Pinnbus
VOLUME II - BOOK ELEVENTH - Chapter 4 - The Marriage of Quasimodo