<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0054" id="link2H_4_0054"></SPAN></p>
<h2> BOOK NINTH. </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0043" id="link2HCH0043"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER I. DELIRIUM. </h2>
<p>Claude Frollo was no longer in Notre-Dame when his adopted son so abruptly
cut the fatal web in which the archdeacon and the gypsy were entangled. On
returning to the sacristy he had torn off his alb, cope, and stole, had
flung all into the hands of the stupefied beadle, had made his escape
through the private door of the cloister, had ordered a boatman of the
Terrain to transport him to the left bank of the Seine, and had plunged
into the hilly streets of the University, not knowing whither he was
going, encountering at every step groups of men and women who were
hurrying joyously towards the Pont Saint-Michel, in the hope of still
arriving in time to see the witch hung there,—pale, wild, more
troubled, more blind and more fierce than a night bird let loose and
pursued by a troop of children in broad daylight. He no longer knew where
he was, what he thought, or whether he were dreaming. He went forward,
walking, running, taking any street at haphazard, making no choice, only
urged ever onward away from the Gr�ve, the horrible Gr�ve, which he felt
confusedly, to be behind him.</p>
<p>In this manner he skirted Mount Sainte-Genevi�ve, and finally emerged from
the town by the Porte Saint-Victor. He continued his flight as long as he
could see, when he turned round, the turreted enclosure of the University,
and the rare houses of the suburb; but, when, at length, a rise of ground
had completely concealed from him that odious Paris, when he could believe
himself to be a hundred leagues distant from it, in the fields, in the
desert, he halted, and it seemed to him that he breathed more freely.</p>
<p>Then frightful ideas thronged his mind. Once more he could see clearly
into his soul, and he shuddered. He thought of that unhappy girl who had
destroyed him, and whom he had destroyed. He cast a haggard eye over the
double, tortuous way which fate had caused their two destinies to pursue
up to their point of intersection, where it had dashed them against each
other without mercy. He meditated on the folly of eternal vows, on the
vanity of chastity, of science, of religion, of virtue, on the uselessness
of God. He plunged to his heart's content in evil thoughts, and in
proportion as he sank deeper, he felt a Satanic laugh burst forth within
him.</p>
<p>And as he thus sifted his soul to the bottom, when he perceived how large
a space nature had prepared there for the passions, he sneered still more
bitterly. He stirred up in the depths of his heart all his hatred, all his
malevolence; and, with the cold glance of a physician who examines a
patient, he recognized the fact that this malevolence was nothing but
vitiated love; that love, that source of every virtue in man, turned to
horrible things in the heart of a priest, and that a man constituted like
himself, in making himself a priest, made himself a demon. Then he laughed
frightfully, and suddenly became pale again, when he considered the most
sinister side of his fatal passion, of that corrosive, venomous malignant,
implacable love, which had ended only in the gibbet for one of them and in
hell for the other; condemnation for her, damnation for him.</p>
<p>And then his laughter came again, when he reflected that Phoebus was
alive; that after all, the captain lived, was gay and happy, had handsomer
doublets than ever, and a new mistress whom he was conducting to see the
old one hanged. His sneer redoubled its bitterness when he reflected that
out of the living beings whose death he had desired, the gypsy, the only
creature whom he did not hate, was the only one who had not escaped him.</p>
<p>Then from the captain, his thought passed to the people, and there came to
him a jealousy of an unprecedented sort. He reflected that the people
also, the entire populace, had had before their eyes the woman whom he
loved exposed almost naked. He writhed his arms with agony as he thought
that the woman whose form, caught by him alone in the darkness would have
been supreme happiness, had been delivered up in broad daylight at full
noonday, to a whole people, clad as for a night of voluptuousness. He wept
with rage over all these mysteries of love, profaned, soiled, laid bare,
withered forever. He wept with rage as he pictured to himself how many
impure looks had been gratified at the sight of that badly fastened shift,
and that this beautiful girl, this virgin lily, this cup of modesty and
delight, to which he would have dared to place his lips only trembling,
had just been transformed into a sort of public bowl, whereat the vilest
populace of Paris, thieves, beggars, lackeys, had come to quaff in common
an audacious, impure, and depraved pleasure.</p>
<p>And when he sought to picture to himself the happiness which he might have
found upon earth, if she had not been a gypsy, and if he had not been a
priest, if Phoebus had not existed and if she had loved him; when he
pictured to himself that a life of serenity and love would have been
possible to him also, even to him; that there were at that very moment,
here and there upon the earth, happy couples spending the hours in sweet
converse beneath orange trees, on the banks of brooks, in the presence of
a setting sun, of a starry night; and that if God had so willed, he might
have formed with her one of those blessed couples,—his heart melted
in tenderness and despair.</p>
<p>Oh! she! still she! It was this fixed idea which returned incessantly,
which tortured him, which ate into his brain, and rent his vitals. He did
not regret, he did not repent; all that he had done he was ready to do
again; he preferred to behold her in the hands of the executioner rather
than in the arms of the captain. But he suffered; he suffered so that at
intervals he tore out handfuls of his hair to see whether it were not
turning white.</p>
<p>Among other moments there came one, when it occurred to him that it was
perhaps the very minute when the hideous chain which he had seen that
morning, was pressing its iron noose closer about that frail and graceful
neck. This thought caused the perspiration to start from every pore.</p>
<p>There was another moment when, while laughing diabolically at himself, he
represented to himself la Esmeralda as he had seen her on that first day,
lively, careless, joyous, gayly attired, dancing, winged, harmonious, and
la Esmeralda of the last day, in her scanty shift, with a rope about her
neck, mounting slowly with her bare feet, the angular ladder of the
gallows; he figured to himself this double picture in such a manner that
he gave vent to a terrible cry.</p>
<p>While this hurricane of despair overturned, broke, tore up, bent, uprooted
everything in his soul, he gazed at nature around him. At his feet, some
chickens were searching the thickets and pecking, enamelled beetles ran
about in the sun; overhead, some groups of dappled gray clouds were
floating across the blue sky; on the horizon, the spire of the Abbey
Saint-Victor pierced the ridge of the hill with its slate obelisk; and the
miller of the Copeaue hillock was whistling as he watched the laborious
wings of his mill turning. All this active, organized, tranquil life,
recurring around him under a thousand forms, hurt him. He resumed his
flight.</p>
<p>He sped thus across the fields until evening. This flight from nature,
life, himself, man, God, everything, lasted all day long. Sometimes he
flung himself face downward on the earth, and tore up the young blades of
wheat with his nails. Sometimes he halted in the deserted street of a
village, and his thoughts were so intolerable that he grasped his head in
both hands and tried to tear it from his shoulders in order to dash it
upon the pavement.</p>
<p>Towards the hour of sunset, he examined himself again, and found himself
nearly mad. The tempest which had raged within him ever since the instant
when he had lost the hope and the will to save the gypsy,—that
tempest had not left in his conscience a single healthy idea, a single
thought which maintained its upright position. His reason lay there almost
entirely destroyed. There remained but two distinct images in his mind, la
Esmeralda and the gallows; all the rest was blank. Those two images
united, presented to him a frightful group; and the more he concentrated
what attention and thought was left to him, the more he beheld them grow,
in accordance with a fantastic progression, the one in grace, in charm, in
beauty, in light, the other in deformity and horror; so that at last la
Esmeralda appeared to him like a star, the gibbet like an enormous,
fleshless arm.</p>
<p>One remarkable fact is, that during the whole of this torture, the idea of
dying did not seriously occur to him. The wretch was made so. He clung to
life. Perhaps he really saw hell beyond it.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the day continued to decline. The living being which still
existed in him reflected vaguely on retracing its steps. He believed
himself to be far away from Paris; on taking his bearings, he perceived
that he had only circled the enclosure of the University. The spire of
Saint-Sulpice, and the three lofty needles of Saint Germain-des-Pr�s, rose
above the horizon on his right. He turned his steps in that direction.
When he heard the brisk challenge of the men-at-arms of the abbey, around
the crenelated, circumscribing wall of Saint-Germain, he turned aside,
took a path which presented itself between the abbey and the lazar-house
of the bourg, and at the expiration of a few minutes found himself on the
verge of the Pr�-aux-Clercs. This meadow was celebrated by reason of the
brawls which went on there night and day; it was the hydra of the poor
monks of Saint-Germain: <i>quod mouachis Sancti-Germaini pratensis hydra
fuit, clericis nova semper dissidiorum capita suscitantibus</i>. The
archdeacon was afraid of meeting some one there; he feared every human
countenance; he had just avoided the University and the Bourg
Saint-Germain; he wished to re-enter the streets as late as possible. He
skirted the Pr�-aux-Clercs, took the deserted path which separated it from
the Dieu-Neuf, and at last reached the water's edge. There Dom Claude
found a boatman, who, for a few farthings in Parisian coinage, rowed him
up the Seine as far as the point of the city, and landed him on that
tongue of abandoned land where the reader has already beheld Gringoire
dreaming, and which was prolonged beyond the king's gardens, parallel to
the Ile du Passeur-aux-Vaches.</p>
<p>The monotonous rocking of the boat and the ripple of the water had, in
some sort, quieted the unhappy Claude. When the boatman had taken his
departure, he remained standing stupidly on the strand, staring straight
before him and perceiving objects only through magnifying oscillations
which rendered everything a sort of phantasmagoria to him. The fatigue of
a great grief not infrequently produces this effect on the mind.</p>
<p>The sun had set behind the lofty Tour-de-Nesle. It was the twilight hour.
The sky was white, the water of the river was white. Between these two
white expanses, the left bank of the Seine, on which his eyes were fixed,
projected its gloomy mass and, rendered ever thinner and thinner by
perspective, it plunged into the gloom of the horizon like a black spire.
It was loaded with houses, of which only the obscure outline could be
distinguished, sharply brought out in shadows against the light background
of the sky and the water. Here and there windows began to gleam, like the
holes in a brazier. That immense black obelisk thus isolated between the
two white expanses of the sky and the river, which was very broad at this
point, produced upon Dom Claude a singular effect, comparable to that
which would be experienced by a man who, reclining on his back at the foot
of the tower of Strasburg, should gaze at the enormous spire plunging into
the shadows of the twilight above his head. Only, in this case, it was
Claude who was erect and the obelisk which was lying down; but, as the
river, reflecting the sky, prolonged the abyss below him, the immense
promontory seemed to be as boldly launched into space as any cathedral
spire; and the impression was the same. This impression had even one
stronger and more profound point about it, that it was indeed the tower of
Strasbourg, but the tower of Strasbourg two leagues in height; something
unheard of, gigantic, immeasurable; an edifice such as no human eye has
ever seen; a tower of Babel. The chimneys of the houses, the battlements
of the walls, the faceted gables of the roofs, the spire of the
Augustines, the tower of Nesle, all these projections which broke the
profile of the colossal obelisk added to the illusion by displaying in
eccentric fashion to the eye the indentations of a luxuriant and fantastic
sculpture.</p>
<p>Claude, in the state of hallucination in which he found himself, believed
that he saw, that he saw with his actual eyes, the bell tower of hell; the
thousand lights scattered over the whole height of the terrible tower
seemed to him so many porches of the immense interior furnace; the voices
and noises which escaped from it seemed so many shrieks, so many death
groans. Then he became alarmed, he put his hands on his ears that he might
no longer hear, turned his back that he might no longer see, and fled from
the frightful vision with hasty strides.</p>
<p>But the vision was in himself.</p>
<p>When he re-entered the streets, the passers-by elbowing each other by the
light of the shop-fronts, produced upon him the effect of a constant going
and coming of spectres about him. There were strange noises in his ears;
extraordinary fancies disturbed his brain. He saw neither houses, nor
pavements, nor chariots, nor men and women, but a chaos of indeterminate
objects whose edges melted into each other. At the corner of the Rue de la
Barillerie, there was a grocer's shop whose porch was garnished all about,
according to immemorial custom, with hoops of tin from which hung a circle
of wooden candles, which came in contact with each other in the wind, and
rattled like castanets. He thought he heard a cluster of skeletons at
Montfau�on clashing together in the gloom.</p>
<p>"Oh!" he muttered, "the night breeze dashes them against each other, and
mingles the noise of their chains with the rattle of their bones! Perhaps
she is there among them!"</p>
<p>In his state of frenzy, he knew not whither he was going. After a few
strides he found himself on the Pont Saint-Michel. There was a light in
the window of a ground-floor room; he approached. Through a cracked window
he beheld a mean chamber which recalled some confused memory to his mind.
In that room, badly lighted by a meagre lamp, there was a fresh,
light-haired young man, with a merry face, who amid loud bursts of
laughter was embracing a very audaciously attired young girl; and near the
lamp sat an old crone spinning and singing in a quavering voice. As the
young man did not laugh constantly, fragments of the old woman's ditty
reached the priest; it was something unintelligible yet frightful,—</p>
<p>"<i>Gr�ve, aboie, Gr�ve, grouille!<br/>
File, file, ma quenouille,<br/>
File sa corde au bourreau,<br/>
Qui siffle dans le pre au,<br/>
Gr�ve, aboie, Gr�ve, grouille</i>!<br/>
<br/>
"<i>La belle corde de chanvre!<br/>
Semez d'Issy jusqu'� Vanvre<br/>
Du chanvre et non pas du bleu.<br/>
Le voleur n'a pas vole<br/>
La belle corde de chanvre</i>.<br/>
<br/>
"<i>Gr�ve, grouille, Gr�ve, aboie!<br/>
Pour voir la fille de joie,<br/>
Prendre au gibet chassieux,<br/>
Les fen�tres sont des yeux.<br/>
Gr�ve, grouille, Gr�ve, aboie!</i>"*<br/></p>
<p>* Bark, Gr�ve, grumble, Gr�ve! Spin, spin, my distaff, spin<br/>
her rope for the hangman, who is whistling in the meadow. What a<br/>
beautiful hempen rope! Sow hemp, not wheat, from Issy to Vanvre. The<br/>
thief hath not stolen the beautiful hempen rope. Grumble, Gr�ve, bark,<br/>
Gr�ve! To see the dissolute wench hang on the blear-eyed gibbet, windows<br/>
are eyes.<br/></p>
<p>Thereupon the young man laughed and caressed the wench. The crone was la
Falourdel; the girl was a courtesan; the young man was his brother Jehan.</p>
<p>He continued to gaze. That spectacle was as good as any other.</p>
<p>He saw Jehan go to a window at the end of the room, open it, cast a glance
on the quay, where in the distance blazed a thousand lighted casements,
and he heard him say as he closed the sash,—</p>
<p>"'Pon my soul! How dark it is; the people are lighting their candles, and
the good God his stars."</p>
<p>Then Jehan came back to the hag, smashed a bottle standing on the table,
exclaiming,—</p>
<p>"Already empty, <i>cor-boeuf</i>! and I have no more money! Isabeau, my
dear, I shall not be satisfied with Jupiter until he has changed your two
white nipples into two black bottles, where I may suck wine of Beaune day
and night."</p>
<p>This fine pleasantry made the courtesan laugh, and Jehan left the room.</p>
<p>Dom Claude had barely time to fling himself on the ground in order that he
might not be met, stared in the face and recognized by his brother.
Luckily, the street was dark, and the scholar was tipsy. Nevertheless, he
caught sight of the archdeacon prone upon the earth in the mud.</p>
<p>"Oh! oh!" said he; "here's a fellow who has been leading a jolly life,
to-day."</p>
<p>He stirred up Dom Claude with his foot, and the latter held his breath.</p>
<p>"Dead drunk," resumed Jehan. "Come, he's full. A regular leech detached
from a hogshead. He's bald," he added, bending down, "'tis an old man! <i>Fortunate
senex</i>!"</p>
<p>Then Dom Claude heard him retreat, saying,—</p>
<p>"'Tis all the same, reason is a fine thing, and my brother the archdeacon
is very happy in that he is wise and has money."</p>
<p>Then the archdeacon rose to his feet, and ran without halting, towards
Notre-Dame, whose enormous towers he beheld rising above the houses
through the gloom.</p>
<p>At the instant when he arrived, panting, on the Place du Parvis, he shrank
back and dared not raise his eyes to the fatal edifice.</p>
<p>"Oh!" he said, in a low voice, "is it really true that such a thing took
place here, to-day, this very morning?"</p>
<p>Still, he ventured to glance at the church. The front was sombre; the sky
behind was glittering with stars. The crescent of the moon, in her flight
upward from the horizon, had paused at the moment, on the summit of the
light hand tower, and seemed to have perched itself, like a luminous bird,
on the edge of the balustrade, cut out in black trefoils.</p>
<p>The cloister door was shut; but the archdeacon always carried with him the
key of the tower in which his laboratory was situated. He made use of it
to enter the church.</p>
<p>In the church he found the gloom and silence of a cavern. By the deep
shadows which fell in broad sheets from all directions, he recognized the
fact that the hangings for the ceremony of the morning had not yet been
removed. The great silver cross shone from the depths of the gloom,
powdered with some sparkling points, like the milky way of that sepulchral
night. The long windows of the choir showed the upper extremities of their
arches above the black draperies, and their painted panes, traversed by a
ray of moonlight had no longer any hues but the doubtful colors of night,
a sort of violet, white and blue, whose tint is found only on the faces of
the dead. The archdeacon, on perceiving these wan spots all around the
choir, thought he beheld the mitres of damned bishops. He shut his eyes,
and when he opened them again, he thought they were a circle of pale
visages gazing at him.</p>
<p>He started to flee across the church. Then it seemed to him that the
church also was shaking, moving, becoming endued with animation, that it
was alive; that each of the great columns was turning into an enormous
paw, which was beating the earth with its big stone spatula, and that the
gigantic cathedral was no longer anything but a sort of prodigious
elephant, which was breathing and marching with its pillars for feet, its
two towers for trunks and the immense black cloth for its housings.</p>
<p>This fever or madness had reached such a degree of intensity that the
external world was no longer anything more for the unhappy man than a sort
of Apocalypse,—visible, palpable, terrible.</p>
<p>For one moment, he was relieved. As he plunged into the side aisles, he
perceived a reddish light behind a cluster of pillars. He ran towards it
as to a star. It was the poor lamp which lighted the public breviary of
Notre-Dame night and day, beneath its iron grating. He flung himself
eagerly upon the holy book in the hope of finding some consolation, or
some encouragement there. The hook lay open at this passage of Job, over
which his staring eye glanced,—</p>
<p>"And a spirit passed before my face, and I heard a small voice, and the
hair of my flesh stood up."</p>
<p>On reading these gloomy words, he felt that which a blind man feels when
he feels himself pricked by the staff which he has picked up. His knees
gave way beneath him, and he sank upon the pavement, thinking of her who
had died that day. He felt so many monstrous vapors pass and discharge
themselves in his brain, that it seemed to him that his head had become
one of the chimneys of hell.</p>
<p>It would appear that he remained a long time in this attitude, no longer
thinking, overwhelmed and passive beneath the hand of the demon. At length
some strength returned to him; it occurred to him to take refuge in his
tower beside his faithful Quasimodo. He rose; and, as he was afraid, he
took the lamp from the breviary to light his way. It was a sacrilege; but
he had got beyond heeding such a trifle now.</p>
<p>He slowly climbed the stairs of the towers, filled with a secret fright
which must have been communicated to the rare passers-by in the Place du
Parvis by the mysterious light of his lamp, mounting so late from loophole
to loophole of the bell tower.</p>
<p>All at once, he felt a freshness on his face, and found himself at the
door of the highest gallery. The air was cold; the sky was filled with
hurrying clouds, whose large, white flakes drifted one upon another like
the breaking up of river ice after the winter. The crescent of the moon,
stranded in the midst of the clouds, seemed a celestial vessel caught in
the ice-cakes of the air.</p>
<p>He lowered his gaze, and contemplated for a moment, through the railing of
slender columns which unites the two towers, far away, through a gauze of
mists and smoke, the silent throng of the roofs of Paris, pointed,
innumerable, crowded and small like the waves of a tranquil sea on a
sum-mer night.</p>
<p>The moon cast a feeble ray, which imparted to earth and heaven an ashy
hue.</p>
<p>At that moment the clock raised its shrill, cracked voice. Midnight rang
out. The priest thought of midday; twelve o'clock had come back again.</p>
<p>"Oh!" he said in a very low tone, "she must be cold now."</p>
<p>All at once, a gust of wind extinguished his lamp, and almost at the same
instant, he beheld a shade, a whiteness, a form, a woman, appear from the
opposite angle of the tower. He started. Beside this woman was a little
goat, which mingled its bleat with the last bleat of the clock.</p>
<p>He had strength enough to look. It was she.</p>
<p>She was pale, she was gloomy. Her hair fell over her shoulders as in the
morning; but there was no longer a rope on her neck, her hands were no
longer bound; she was free, she was dead.</p>
<p>She was dressed in white and had a white veil on her head.</p>
<p>She came towards him, slowly, with her gaze fixed on the sky. The
supernatural goat followed her. He felt as though made of stone and too
heavy to flee. At every step which she took in advance, he took one
backwards, and that was all. In this way he retreated once more beneath
the gloomy arch of the stairway. He was chilled by the thought that she
might enter there also; had she done so, he would have died of terror.</p>
<p>She did arrive, in fact, in front of the door to the stairway, and paused
there for several minutes, stared intently into the darkness, but without
appearing to see the priest, and passed on. She seemed taller to him than
when she had been alive; he saw the moon through her white robe; he heard
her breath.</p>
<p>When she had passed on, he began to descend the staircase again, with the
slowness which he had observed in the spectre, believing himself to be a
spectre too, haggard, with hair on end, his extinguished lamp still in his
hand; and as he descended the spiral steps, he distinctly heard in his ear
a voice laughing and repeating,—</p>
<p>"A spirit passed before my face, and I heard a small voice, and the hair
of my flesh stood up."</p>
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