CHAPTER I
NUMBER 24,601 BECOMES NUMBER 9,430-
Jean Valjean had been recaptured.
The reader will be grateful to us
if we pass rapidly over the sad details. We will
confine ourselves to transcribing two paragraphs published
by the journals of that day, a few months after the
surprising events which had taken place at M. sur
M.
These articles are rather summary.
It must be remembered, that at that epoch the Gazette
des Tribunaux was not yet in existence.
We borrow the first from the Drapeau
Blanc. It bears the date of July 25, 1823.
An arrondissement of the Pas de Calais
has just been the theatre of an event quite out of
the ordinary course. A man, who was a stranger
in the Department, and who bore the name of M. Madeleine,
had, thanks to the new methods, resuscitated some
years ago an ancient local industry, the manufacture
of jet and of black glass trinkets. He had made
his fortune in the business, and that of the arrondissement
as well, we will admit. He had been appointed
mayor, in recognition of his services. The police
discovered that M. Madeleine was no other than an ex-convict
who had broken his ban, condemned in 1796 for theft,
and named Jean Valjean. Jean Valjean has been
recommitted to prison. It appears that previous
to his arrest he had succeeded in withdrawing from
the hands of M. Laffitte, a sum of over half a million
which he had lodged there, and which he had, moreover,
and by perfectly legitimate means, acquired in his
business. No one has been able to discover where
Jean Valjean has concealed this money since his return
to prison at Toulon.
The second article, which enters a
little more into detail, is an extract from the Journal
de Paris, of the same date.
A former convict, who had been liberated,
named Jean Valjean, has just appeared before the Court
of Assizes of the Var, under circumstances calculated
to attract attention. This wretch had succeeded
in escaping the vigilance of the police, he had changed
his name, and had succeeded in getting himself appointed
mayor of one of our small northern towns; in this
town he had established a considerable commerce.
He has at last been unmasked and arrested, thanks
to the indefatigable zeal of the public prosecutor.
He had for his concubine a woman of the town, who
died of a shock at the moment of his arrest. This
scoundrel, who is endowed with Herculean strength,
found means to escape; but three or four days after
his flight the police laid their hands on him once
more, in Paris itself, at the very moment when he
was entering one of those little vehicles which run
between the capital and the village of Montfermeil
(Seine-et-Oise). He is said to have profited by
this interval of three or four days of liberty, to
withdraw a considerable sum deposited by him with
one of our leading bankers. This sum has been
estimated at six or seven hundred thousand francs.
If the indictment is to be trusted, he has hidden
it in some place known to himself alone, and it has
not been possible to lay hands on it. However
that may be, the said Jean Valjean has just been brought
before the Assizes of the Department of the Var as
accused of highway robbery accompanied with violence,
about eight years ago, on the person of one of those
honest children who, as the patriarch of Ferney has
said, in immortal verse,
“. . . Arrive
from Savoy every year,
And who, with gentle hands, do clear
Those long canals choked up with soot.”
This bandit refused to defend himself.
It was proved by the skilful and eloquent representative
of the public prosecutor, that the theft was committed
in complicity with others, and that Jean Valjean was
a member of a band of robbers in the south. Jean
Valjean was pronounced guilty and was condemned to
the death penalty in consequence. This criminal
refused to lodge an appeal. The king, in his inexhaustible
clemency, has deigned to commute his penalty to that
of penal servitude for life. Jean Valjean was
immediately taken to the prison at Toulon.
The reader has not forgotten that
Jean Valjean had religious habits at M. sur M. Some
papers, among others the Constitutional, presented
this commutation as a triumph of the priestly party.
Jean Valjean changed his number in
the galleys. He was called 9,430.
However, and we will mention it at
once in order that we may not be obliged to recur
to the subject, the prosperity of M. sur M. vanished
with M. Madeleine; all that he had foreseen during
his night of fever and hesitation was realized; lacking
him, there actually was a soul lacking. After
this fall, there took place at M. sur M. that egotistical
division of great existences which have fallen, that
fatal dismemberment of flourishing things which is
accomplished every day, obscurely, in the human community,
and which history has noted only once, because it
occurred after the death of Alexander. Lieutenants
are crowned kings; superintendents improvise manufacturers
out of themselves. Envious rivalries arose.
M. Madeleine’s vast workshops were shut; his
buildings fell to ruin, his workmen were scattered.
Some of them quitted the country, others abandoned
the trade. Thenceforth, everything was done on
a small scale, instead of on a grand scale; for lucre
instead of the general good. There was no longer
a centre; everywhere there was competition and animosity.
M. Madeleine had reigned over all and directed all.
No sooner had he fallen, than each pulled things to
himself; the spirit of combat succeeded to the spirit
of organization, bitterness to cordiality, hatred
of one another to the benevolence of the founder towards
all; the threads which M. Madeleine had set were tangled
and broken, the methods were adulterated, the products
were debased, confidence was killed; the market diminished,
for lack of orders; salaries were reduced, the workshops
stood still, bankruptcy arrived. And then there
was nothing more for the poor. All had vanished.
The state itself perceived that some
one had been crushed somewhere. Less than four
years after the judgment of the Court of Assizes establishing
the identity of Jean Valjean and M. Madeleine, for
the benefit of the galleys, the cost of collecting
taxes had doubled in the arrondissement of M. sur
M.; and M. de Villele called attention to the fact
in the rostrum, in the month of February, 1827.
Chapter II
in which the reader will
peruse two verses, which are
of the
devil’s composition, possibly
Before proceeding further, it will
be to the purpose to narrate in some detail, a singular
occurrence which took place at about the same epoch,
in Montfermeil, and which is not lacking in coincidence
with certain conjectures of the indictment.
There exists in the region of Montfermeil
a very ancient superstition, which is all the more
curious and all the more precious, because a popular
superstition in the vicinity of Paris is like an aloe
in Siberia. We are among those who respect everything
which is in the nature of a rare plant. Here,
then, is the superstition of Montfermeil: it
is thought that the devil, from time immemorial, has
selected the forest as a hiding-place for his treasures.
Goodwives affirm that it is no rarity to encounter
at nightfall, in secluded nooks of the forest, a black
man with the air of a carter or a wood-chopper, wearing
wooden shoes, clad in trousers and a blouse of linen,
and recognizable by the fact, that, instead of a cap
or hat, he has two immense horns on his head.
This ought, in fact, to render him recognizable.
This man is habitually engaged in digging a hole.
There are three ways of profiting by such an encounter.
The first is to approach the man and speak to him.
Then it is seen that the man is simply a peasant, that
he appears black because it is nightfall; that he
is not digging any hole whatever, but is cutting grass
for his cows, and that what had been taken for horns
is nothing but a dung-fork which he is carrying on
his back, and whose teeth, thanks to the perspective
of evening, seemed to spring from his head. The
man returns home and dies within the week. The
second way is to watch him, to wait until he has dug
his hole, until he has filled it and has gone away;
then to run with great speed to the trench, to open
it once more and to seize the “treasure”
which the black man has necessarily placed there.
In this case one dies within the month. Finally,
the last method is not to speak to the black man, not
to look at him, and to flee at the best speed of one’s
legs. One then dies within the year.
As all three methods are attended
with their special inconveniences, the second, which
at all events, presents some advantages, among others
that of possessing a treasure, if only for a month,
is the one most generally adopted. So bold men,
who are tempted by every chance, have quite frequently,
as we are assured, opened the holes excavated by the
black man, and tried to rob the devil. The success
of the operation appears to be but moderate.
At least, if the tradition is to be believed, and in
particular the two enigmatical lines in barbarous Latin,
which an evil Norman monk, a bit of a sorcerer, named
Tryphon has left on this subject. This Tryphon
is buried at the Abbey of Saint-Georges de Bocherville,
near Rouen, and toads spawn on his grave.
Accordingly, enormous efforts are
made. Such trenches are ordinarily extremely
deep; a man sweats, digs, toils all night for
it must be done at night; he wets his shirt, burns
out his candle, breaks his mattock, and when he arrives
at the bottom of the hole, when he lays his hand on
the “treasure,” what does he find?
What is the devil’s treasure? A sou, sometimes
a crown-piece, a stone, a skeleton, a bleeding body,
sometimes a spectre folded in four like a sheet of
paper in a portfolio, sometimes nothing. This
is what Tryphon’s verses seem to announce to
the indiscreet and curious:
“Fodit, et in fossa
thesauros condit opaca,
As, nummas, lapides, cadaver, simulacra,
nihilque.”
It seems that in our day there is
sometimes found a powder-horn with bullets, sometimes
an old pack of cards greasy and worn, which has evidently
served the devil. Tryphon does not record these
two finds, since Tryphon lived in the twelfth century,
and since the devil does not appear to have had the
wit to invent powder before Roger Bacon’s time,
and cards before the time of Charles vi.
Moreover, if one plays at cards, one
is sure to lose all that one possesses! and as for
the powder in the horn, it possesses the property
of making your gun burst in your face.
Now, a very short time after the epoch
when it seemed to the prosecuting attorney that the
liberated convict Jean Valjean during his flight of
several days had been prowling around Montfermeil,
it was remarked in that village that a certain old
road-laborer, named Boulatruelle, had “peculiar
ways” in the forest. People thereabouts
thought they knew that this Boulatruelle had been
in the galleys. He was subjected to certain police
supervision, and, as he could find work nowhere, the
administration employed him at reduced rates as a road-mender
on the cross-road from Gagny to Lagny.
This Boulatruelle was a man who was
viewed with disfavor by the inhabitants of the district
as too respectful, too humble, too prompt in removing
his cap to every one, and trembling and smiling in
the presence of the gendarmes, probably
affiliated to robber bands, they said; suspected of
lying in ambush at verge of copses at nightfall.
The only thing in his favor was that he was a drunkard.
This is what people thought they had noticed:
Of late, Boulatruelle had taken to
quitting his task of stone-breaking and care of the
road at a very early hour, and to betaking himself
to the forest with his pickaxe. He was encountered
towards evening in the most deserted clearings, in
the wildest thickets; and he had the appearance of
being in search of something, and sometimes he was
digging holes. The goodwives who passed took
him at first for Beelzebub; then they recognized Boulatruelle,
and were not in the least reassured thereby.
These encounters seemed to cause Boulatruelle a lively
displeasure. It was evident that he sought to
hide, and that there was some mystery in what he was
doing.
It was said in the village: “It
is clear that the devil has appeared. Boulatruelle
has seen him, and is on the search. In sooth,
he is cunning enough to pocket Lucifer’s hoard.”
The Voltairians added, “Will
Boulatruelle catch the devil, or will the devil catch
Boulatruelle?” The old women made a great many
signs of the cross.
In the meantime, Boulatruelle’s
manoeuvres in the forest ceased; and he resumed his
regular occupation of roadmending; and people gossiped
of something else.
Some persons, however, were still
curious, surmising that in all this there was probably
no fabulous treasure of the legends, but some fine
windfall of a more serious and palpable sort than the
devil’s bank-bills, and that the road-mender
had half discovered the secret. The most “puzzled”
were the school-master and Thenardier, the proprietor
of the tavern, who was everybody’s friend, and
had not disdained to ally himself with Boulatruelle.
“He has been in the galleys,”
said Thenardier. “Eh! Good God! no
one knows who has been there or will be there.”
One evening the schoolmaster affirmed
that in former times the law would have instituted
an inquiry as to what Boulatruelle did in the forest,
and that the latter would have been forced to speak,
and that he would have been put to the torture in
case of need, and that Boulatruelle would not have
resisted the water test, for example. “Let
us put him to the wine test,” said Thenardier.
They made an effort, and got the old
road-mender to drinking. Boulatruelle drank an
enormous amount, but said very little. He combined
with admirable art, and in masterly proportions, the
thirst of a gormandizer with the discretion of a judge.
Nevertheless, by dint of returning to the charge and
of comparing and putting together the few obscure
words which he did allow to escape him, this is what
Thenardier and the schoolmaster imagined that they
had made out:
One morning, when Boulatruelle was
on his way to his work, at daybreak, he had been surprised
to see, at a nook of the forest in the underbrush,
a shovel and a pickaxe, concealed, as one might say.
However, he might have supposed that
they were probably the shovel and pick of Father Six-Fours,
the water-carrier, and would have thought no more
about it. But, on the evening of that day, he
saw, without being seen himself, as he was hidden
by a large tree, “a person who did not belong
in those parts, and whom he, Boulatruelle, knew well,”
directing his steps towards the densest part of the
wood. Translation by Thenardier: A comrade
of the galleys. Boulatruelle obstinately refused
to reveal his name. This person carried a package something
square, like a large box or a small trunk. Surprise
on the part of Boulatruelle. However, it was
only after the expiration of seven or eight minutes
that the idea of following that “person”
had occurred to him. But it was too late; the
person was already in the thicket, night had descended,
and Boulatruelle had not been able to catch up with
him. Then he had adopted the course of watching
for him at the edge of the woods. “It was
moonlight.” Two or three hours later, Boulatruelle
had seen this person emerge from the brushwood, carrying
no longer the coffer, but a shovel and pick.
Boulatruelle had allowed the person to pass, and had
not dreamed of accosting him, because he said to himself
that the other man was three times as strong as he
was, and armed with a pickaxe, and that he would probably
knock him over the head on recognizing him, and on
perceiving that he was recognized. Touching effusion
of two old comrades on meeting again. But the
shovel and pick had served as a ray of light to Boulatruelle;
he had hastened to the thicket in the morning, and
had found neither shovel nor pick. From this
he had drawn the inference that this person, once
in the forest, had dug a hole with his pick, buried
the coffer, and reclosed the hole with his shovel.
Now, the coffer was too small to contain a body; therefore
it contained money. Hence his researches.
Boulatruelle had explored, sounded, searched the entire
forest and the thicket, and had dug wherever the earth
appeared to him to have been recently turned up.
In vain.
He had “ferreted out”
nothing. No one in Montfermeil thought any more
about it. There were only a few brave gossips,
who said, “You may be certain that the mender
on the Gagny road did not take all that trouble for
nothing; he was sure that the devil had come.”
Chapter III
the ankle-chain must have
undergone A certain preparatory
manipulation to be thus broken
with A blow from A hammer
Towards the end of October, in that
same year, 1823, the inhabitants of Toulon beheld
the entry into their port, after heavy weather, and
for the purpose of repairing some damages, of the
ship Orion, which was employed later at Brest as a
school-ship, and which then formed a part of the Mediterranean
squadron.
This vessel, battered as it was, for
the sea had handled it roughly, produced
a fine effect as it entered the roads. It flew
some colors which procured for it the regulation salute
of eleven guns, which it returned, shot for shot;
total, twenty-two. It has been calculated that
what with salvos, royal and military politenesses,
courteous exchanges of uproar, signals of etiquette,
formalities of roadsteads and citadels, sunrises and
sunsets, saluted every day by all fortresses and all
ships of war, openings and closings of ports, etc.,
the civilized world, discharged all over the earth,
in the course of four and twenty hours, one hundred
and fifty thousand useless shots. At six francs
the shot, that comes to nine hundred thousand francs
a day, three hundred millions a year, which vanish
in smoke. This is a mere detail. All this
time the poor were dying of hunger.
The year 1823 was what the Restoration
called “the epoch of the Spanish war.”
This war contained many events in
one, and a quantity of peculiarities. A grand
family affair for the house of Bourbon; the branch
of France succoring and protecting the branch of Madrid,
that is to say, performing an act devolving on the
elder; an apparent return to our national traditions,
complicated by servitude and by subjection to the
cabinets of the North; M. lé Duc d’Angoulême,
surnamed by the liberal sheets the hero of Andujar,
compressing in a triumphal attitude that was somewhat
contradicted by his peaceable air, the ancient and
very powerful terrorism of the Holy Office at variance
with the chimerical terrorism of the liberals; the
sansculottes resuscitated, to the great terror of
dowagers, under the name of descamisados; monarchy
opposing an obstacle to progress described as anarchy;
the theories of ’89 roughly interrupted in the
sap; a European halt, called to the French idea, which
was making the tour of the world; beside the son of
France as generalissimo, the Prince de Carignan, afterwards
Charles Albert, enrolling himself in that crusade
of kings against people as a volunteer, with grenadier
epaulets of red worsted; the soldiers of the Empire
setting out on a fresh campaign, but aged, saddened,
after eight years of repose, and under the white cockade;
the tricolored standard waved abroad by a heroic handful
of Frenchmen, as the white standard had been thirty
years earlier at Coblentz; monks mingled with our troops;
the spirit of liberty and of novelty brought to its
senses by bayonets; principles slaughtered by cannonades;
France undoing by her arms that which she had done
by her mind; in addition to this, hostile leaders
sold, soldiers hesitating, cities besieged by millions;
no military perils, and yet possible explosions, as
in every mine which is surprised and invaded; but
little bloodshed, little honor won, shame for some,
glory for no one. Such was this war, made by the
princes descended from Louis XIV., and conducted by
generals who had been under Napoleon. Its sad
fate was to recall neither the grand war nor grand
politics.
Some feats of arms were serious; the
taking of the Trocadero, among others, was a fine
military action; but after all, we repeat, the trumpets
of this war give back a cracked sound, the whole effect
was suspicious; history approves of France for making
a difficulty about accepting this false triumph.
It seemed evident that certain Spanish officers charged
with resistance yielded too easily; the idea of corruption
was connected with the victory; it appears as though
generals and not battles had been won, and the conquering
soldier returned humiliated. A debasing war,
in short, in which the Bank of France could be read
in the folds of the flag.
Soldiers of the war of 1808, on whom
Saragossa had fallen in formidable ruin, frowned in
1823 at the easy surrender of citadels, and began to
regret Palafox. It is the nature of France to
prefer to have Rostopchine rather than Ballesteros
in front of her.
From a still more serious point of
view, and one which it is also proper to insist upon
here, this war, which wounded the military spirit
of France, enraged the democratic spirit. It was
an enterprise of inthralment. In that campaign,
the object of the French soldier, the son of democracy,
was the conquest of a yoke for others. A hideous
contradiction. France is made to arouse the soul
of nations, not to stifle it. All the revolutions
of Europe since 1792 are the French Revolution:
liberty darts rays from France. That is a solar
fact. Blind is he who will not see! It was
Bonaparte who said it.
The war of 1823, an outrage on the
generous Spanish nation, was then, at the same time,
an outrage on the French Revolution. It was France
who committed this monstrous violence; by foul means,
for, with the exception of wars of liberation, everything
that armies do is by foul means. The words passive
obedience indicate this. An army is a strange
masterpiece of combination where force results from
an enormous sum of impotence. Thus is war, made
by humanity against humanity, despite humanity, explained.
As for the Bourbons, the war of 1823
was fatal to them. They took it for a success.
They did not perceive the danger that lies in having
an idea slain to order. They went astray, in
their innocence, to such a degree that they introduced
the immense enfeeblement of a crime into their establishment
as an element of strength. The spirit of the ambush
entered into their politic had its germ in 1823.
The Spanish campaign became in their counsels an argument
for force and for adventures by right Divine.
France, having re-established elrey netto in
Spain, might well have re-established the absolute
king at home. They fell into the alarming error
of taking the obedience of the soldier for the consent
of the nation. Such confidence is the ruin of
thrones. It is not permitted to fall asleep,
either in the shadow of a machineel tree, nor in the
shadow of an army.
Let us return to the ship Orion.
During the operations of the army
commanded by the prince generalissimo, a squadron
had been cruising in the Mediterranean. We have
just stated that the Orion belonged to this fleet,
and that accidents of the sea had brought it into
port at Toulon.
The presence of a vessel of war in
a port has something about it which attracts and engages
a crowd. It is because it is great, and the crowd
loves what is great.
A ship of the line is one of the most
magnificent combinations of the genius of man with
the powers of nature.
A ship of the line is composed, at
the same time, of the heaviest and the lightest of
possible matter, for it deals at one and the same time
with three forms of substance, solid, liquid,
and fluid, and it must do battle with all
three. It has eleven claws of iron with which
to seize the granite on the bottom of the sea, and
more wings and more antennæ than winged insects,
to catch the wind in the clouds. Its breath pours
out through its hundred and twenty cannons as through
enormous trumpets, and replies proudly to the thunder.
The ocean seeks to lead it astray in the alarming
sameness of its billows, but the vessel has its soul,
its compass, which counsels it and always shows it
the north. In the blackest nights, its lanterns
supply the place of the stars. Thus, against
the wind, it has its cordage and its canvas; against
the water, wood; against the rocks, its iron, brass,
and lead; against the shadows, its light; against
immensity, a needle.
If one wishes to form an idea of all
those gigantic proportions which, taken as a whole,
constitute the ship of the line, one has only to enter
one of the six-story covered construction stocks, in
the ports of Brest or Toulon. The vessels in
process of construction are under a bell-glass there,
as it were. This colossal beam is a yard; that
great column of wood which stretches out on the earth
as far as the eye can reach is the main-mast.
Taking it from its root in the stocks to its tip in
the clouds, it is sixty fathoms long, and its diameter
at its base is three feet. The English main-mast
rises to a height of two hundred and seventeen feet
above the water-line. The navy of our fathers
employed cables, ours employs chains. The simple
pile of chains on a ship of a hundred guns is four
feet high, twenty feet in breadth, and eight feet
in depth. And how much wood is required to make
this ship? Three thousand cubic metres.
It is a floating forest.
And moreover, let this be borne in
mind, it is only a question here of the military vessel
of forty years ago, of the simple sailing-vessel;
steam, then in its infancy, has since added new miracles
to that prodigy which is called a war vessel.
At the present time, for example, the mixed vessel
with a screw is a surprising machine, propelled by
three thousand square metres of canvas and by an engine
of two thousand five hundred horse-power.
Not to mention these new marvels,
the ancient vessel of Christopher Columbus and of
De Ruyter is one of the masterpieces of man. It
is as inexhaustible in force as is the Infinite in
gales; it stores up the wind in its sails, it is precise
in the immense vagueness of the billows, it floats,
and it reigns.
There comes an hour, nevertheless,
when the gale breaks that sixty-foot yard like a straw,
when the wind bends that mast four hundred feet tall,
when that anchor, which weighs tens of thousands, is
twisted in the jaws of the waves like a fisherman’s
hook in the jaws of a pike, when those monstrous cannons
utter plaintive and futile roars, which the hurricane
bears forth into the void and into night, when all
that power and all that majesty are engulfed in a
power and majesty which are superior.
Every time that immense force is displayed
to culminate in an immense feebleness it affords men
food for thought, Hence in the ports curious people
abound around these marvellous machines of war and
of navigation, without being able to explain perfectly
to themselves why. Every day, accordingly, from
morning until night, the quays, sluices, and the jetties
of the port of Toulon were covered with a multitude
of idlers and loungers, as they say in Paris, whose
business consisted in staring at the Orion.
The Orion was a ship that had been
ailing for a long time; in the course of its previous
cruises thick layers of barnacles had collected on
its keel to such a degree as to deprive it of half
its speed; it had gone into the dry dock the year
before this, in order to have the barnacles scraped
off, then it had put to sea again; but this cleaning
had affected the bolts of the keel: in the neighborhood
of the Balearic Isles the sides had been strained
and had opened; and, as the plating in those days
was not of sheet iron, the vessel had sprung a leak.
A violent equinoctial gale had come up, which had first
staved in a grating and a porthole on the larboard
side, and damaged the foretop-gallant-shrouds; in
consequence of these injuries, the Orion had run back
to Toulon.
It anchored near the Arsenal; it was
fully equipped, and repairs were begun. The hull
had received no damage on the starboard, but some of
the planks had been unnailed here and there, according
to custom, to permit of air entering the hold.
One morning the crowd which was gazing
at it witnessed an accident.
The crew was busy bending the sails;
the topman, who had to take the upper corner of the
main-top-sail on the starboard, lost his balance;
he was seen to waver; the multitude thronging the Arsenal
quay uttered a cry; the man’s head overbalanced
his body; the man fell around the yard, with his hands
outstretched towards the abyss; on his way he seized
the footrope, first with one hand, then with the other,
and remained hanging from it: the sea lay below
him at a dizzy depth; the shock of his fall had imparted
to the foot-rope a violent swinging motion; the man
swayed back and forth at the end of that rope, like
a stone in a sling.
It was incurring a frightful risk
to go to his assistance; not one of the sailors, all
fishermen of the coast, recently levied for the service,
dared to attempt it. In the meantime, the unfortunate
topman was losing his strength; his anguish could
not be discerned on his face, but his exhaustion was
visible in every limb; his arms were contracted in
horrible twitchings; every effort which he made to
re-ascend served but to augment the oscillations of
the foot-rope; he did not shout, for fear of exhausting
his strength. All were awaiting the minute when
he should release his hold on the rope, and, from
instant to instant, heads were turned aside that his
fall might not be seen. There are moments when
a bit of rope, a pole, the branch of a tree, is life
itself, and it is a terrible thing to see a living
being detach himself from it and fall like a ripe
fruit.
All at once a man was seen climbing
into the rigging with the agility of a tiger-cat;
this man was dressed in red; he was a convict; he wore
a green cap; he was a life convict. On arriving
on a level with the top, a gust of wind carried away
his cap, and allowed a perfectly white head to be
seen: he was not a young man.
A convict employed on board with a
detachment from the galleys had, in fact, at the very
first instant, hastened to the officer of the watch,
and, in the midst of the consternation and the hesitation
of the crew, while all the sailors were trembling
and drawing back, he had asked the officer’s
permission to risk his life to save the topman; at
an affirmative sign from the officer he had broken
the chain riveted to his ankle with one blow of a
hammer, then he had caught up a rope, and had dashed
into the rigging: no one noticed, at the instant,
with what ease that chain had been broken; it was
only later on that the incident was recalled.
In a twinkling he was on the yard;
he paused for a few seconds and appeared to be measuring
it with his eye; these seconds, during which the breeze
swayed the topman at the extremity of a thread, seemed
centuries to those who were looking on. At last,
the convict raised his eyes to heaven and advanced
a step: the crowd drew a long breath. He
was seen to run out along the yard: on arriving
at the point, he fastened the rope which he had brought
to it, and allowed the other end to hang down, then
he began to descend the rope, hand over hand, and then, and
the anguish was indescribable, instead of
one man suspended over the gulf, there were two.
One would have said it was a spider
coming to seize a fly, only here the spider brought
life, not death. Ten thousand glances were fastened
on this group; not a cry, not a word; the same tremor
contracted every brow; all mouths held their breath
as though they feared to add the slightest puff to
the wind which was swaying the two unfortunate men.
In the meantime, the convict had succeeded
in lowering himself to a position near the sailor.
It was high time; one minute more, and the exhausted
and despairing man would have allowed himself to fall
into the abyss. The convict had moored him securely
with the cord to which he clung with one hand, while
he was working with the other. At last, he was
seen to climb back on the yard, and to drag the sailor
up after him; he held him there a moment to allow
him to recover his strength, then he grasped him in
his arms and carried him, walking on the yard himself
to the cap, and from there to the main-top, where
he left him in the hands of his comrades.
At that moment the crowd broke into
applause: old convict-sergeants among them wept,
and women embraced each other on the quay, and all
voices were heard to cry with a sort of tender rage,
“Pardon for that man!”
He, in the meantime, had immediately
begun to make his descent to rejoin his detachment.
In order to reach them the more speedily, he dropped
into the rigging, and ran along one of the lower yards;
all eyes were following him. At a certain moment
fear assailed them; whether it was that he was fatigued,
or that his head turned, they thought they saw him
hesitate and stagger. All at once the crowd uttered
a loud shout: the convict had fallen into the
sea.
The fall was perilous. The frigate
Algesiras was anchored alongside the Orion, and the
poor convict had fallen between the two vessels:
it was to be feared that he would slip under one or
the other of them. Four men flung themselves
hastily into a boat; the crowd cheered them on; anxiety
again took possession of all souls; the man had not
risen to the surface; he had disappeared in the sea
without leaving a ripple, as though he had fallen
into a cask of oil: they sounded, they dived.
In vain. The search was continued until the evening:
they did not even find the body.
On the following day the Toulon newspaper
printed these lines:
“No, 1823. Yesterday,
a convict belonging to the detachment on board of
the Orion, on his return from rendering assistance
to a sailor, fell into the sea and was drowned.
The body has not yet been found; it is supposed that
it is entangled among the piles of the Arsenal point:
this man was committed under the number 9,430, and
his name was Jean Valjean.”