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<h2> CHAPTER III—THE EXTREME EDGE </h2>
<h3> Marius had reached the Halles. </h3>
<p>There everything was still calmer, more obscure and more motionless than
in the neighboring streets. One would have said that the glacial peace of
the sepulchre had sprung forth from the earth and had spread over the
heavens.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, a red glow brought out against this black background the
lofty roofs of the houses which barred the Rue de la Chanvrerie on the
Saint-Eustache side. It was the reflection of the torch which was burning
in the Corinthe barricade. Marius directed his steps towards that red
light. It had drawn him to the Marche-aux-Poirees, and he caught a glimpse
of the dark mouth of the Rue des Pr�cheurs. He entered it. The insurgents'
sentinel, who was guarding the other end, did not see him. He felt that he
was very close to that which he had come in search of, and he walked on
tiptoe. In this manner he reached the elbow of that short section of the
Rue Mondetour which was, as the reader will remember, the only
communication which Enjolras had preserved with the outside world. At the
corner of the last house, on his left, he thrust his head forward, and
looked into the fragment of the Rue Mondetour.</p>
<p>A little beyond the angle of the lane and the Rue de la Chanvrerie which
cast a broad curtain of shadow, in which he was himself engulfed, he
perceived some light on the pavement, a bit of the wine-shop, and beyond,
a flickering lamp within a sort of shapeless wall, and men crouching down
with guns on their knees. All this was ten fathoms distant from him. It
was the interior of the barricade.</p>
<p>The houses which bordered the lane on the right concealed the rest of the
wine-shop, the large barricade, and the flag from him.</p>
<p>Marius had but a step more to take.</p>
<p>Then the unhappy young man seated himself on a post, folded his arms, and
fell to thinking about his father.</p>
<p>He thought of that heroic Colonel Pontmercy, who had been so proud a
soldier, who had guarded the frontier of France under the Republic, and
had touched the frontier of Asia under Napoleon, who had beheld Genoa,
Alexandria, Milan, Turin, Madrid, Vienna, Dresden, Berlin, Moscow, who had
left on all the victorious battle-fields of Europe drops of that same
blood, which he, Marius, had in his veins, who had grown gray before his
time in discipline and command, who had lived with his sword-belt buckled,
his epaulets falling on his breast, his cockade blackened with powder, his
brow furrowed with his helmet, in barracks, in camp, in the bivouac, in
ambulances, and who, at the expiration of twenty years, had returned from
the great wars with a scarred cheek, a smiling countenance, tranquil,
admirable, pure as a child, having done everything for France and nothing
against her.</p>
<p>He said to himself that his day had also come now, that his hour had
struck, that following his father, he too was about to show himself brave,
intrepid, bold, to run to meet the bullets, to offer his breast to
bayonets, to shed his blood, to seek the enemy, to seek death, that he was
about to wage war in his turn and descend to the field of battle, and that
the field of battle upon which he was to descend was the street, and that
the war in which he was about to engage was civil war!</p>
<p>He beheld civil war laid open like a gulf before him, and into this he was
about to fall. Then he shuddered.</p>
<p>He thought of his father's sword, which his grandfather had sold to a
second-hand dealer, and which he had so mournfully regretted. He said to
himself that that chaste and valiant sword had done well to escape from
him, and to depart in wrath into the gloom; that if it had thus fled, it
was because it was intelligent and because it had foreseen the future;
that it had had a presentiment of this rebellion, the war of the gutters,
the war of the pavements, fusillades through cellar-windows, blows given
and received in the rear; it was because, coming from Marengo and
Friedland, it did not wish to go to the Rue de la Chanvrerie; it was
because, after what it had done with the father, it did not wish to do
this for the son! He told himself that if that sword were there, if after
taking possession of it at his father's pillow, he had dared to take it
and carry it off for this combat of darkness between Frenchmen in the
streets, it would assuredly have scorched his hands and burst out aflame
before his eyes, like the sword of the angel! He told himself that it was
fortunate that it was not there and that it had disappeared, that that was
well, that that was just, that his grandfather had been the true guardian
of his father's glory, and that it was far better that the colonel's sword
should be sold at auction, sold to the old-clothes man, thrown among the
old junk, than that it should, to-day, wound the side of his country.</p>
<p>And then he fell to weeping bitterly.</p>
<p>This was horrible. But what was he to do? Live without Cosette he could
not. Since she was gone, he must needs die. Had he not given her his word
of honor that he would die? She had gone knowing that; this meant that it
pleased her that Marius should die. And then, it was clear that she no
longer loved him, since she had departed thus without warning, without a
word, without a letter, although she knew his address! What was the good
of living, and why should he live now? And then, what! should he retreat
after going so far? should he flee from danger after having approached it?
should he slip away after having come and peeped into the barricade? slip
away, all in a tremble, saying: "After all, I have had enough of it as it
is. I have seen it, that suffices, this is civil war, and I shall take my
leave!" Should he abandon his friends who were expecting him? Who were in
need of him possibly! who were a mere handful against an army! Should he
be untrue at once to his love, to country, to his word? Should he give to
his cowardice the pretext of patriotism? But this was impossible, and if
the phantom of his father was there in the gloom, and beheld him
retreating, he would beat him on the loins with the flat of his sword, and
shout to him: "March on, you poltroon!"</p>
<p>Thus a prey to the conflicting movements of his thoughts, he dropped his
head.</p>
<p>All at once he raised it. A sort of splendid rectification had just been
effected in his mind. There is a widening of the sphere of thought which
is peculiar to the vicinity of the grave; it makes one see clearly to be
near death. The vision of the action into which he felt that he was,
perhaps, on the point of entering, appeared to him no more as lamentable,
but as superb. The war of the street was suddenly transfigured by some
unfathomable inward working of his soul, before the eye of his thought.
All the tumultuous interrogation points of revery recurred to him in
throngs, but without troubling him. He left none of them unanswered.</p>
<p>Let us see, why should his father be indignant? Are there not cases where
insurrection rises to the dignity of duty? What was there that was
degrading for the son of Colonel Pontmercy in the combat which was about
to begin? It is no longer Montmirail nor Champaubert; it is something
quite different. The question is no longer one of sacred territory,—but
of a holy idea. The country wails, that may be, but humanity applauds. But
is it true that the country does wail? France bleeds, but liberty smiles;
and in the presence of liberty's smile, France forgets her wound. And then
if we look at things from a still more lofty point of view, why do we
speak of civil war?</p>
<p>Civil war—what does that mean? Is there a foreign war? Is not all
war between men, war between brothers? War is qualified only by its
object. There is no such thing as foreign or civil war; there is only just
and unjust war. Until that day when the grand human agreement is
concluded, war, that at least which is the effort of the future, which is
hastening on against the past, which is lagging in the rear, may be
necessary. What have we to reproach that war with? War does not become a
disgrace, the sword does not become a disgrace, except when it is used for
assassinating the right, progress, reason, civilization, truth. Then war,
whether foreign or civil, is iniquitous; it is called crime. Outside the
pale of that holy thing, justice, by what right does one form of man
despise another? By what right should the sword of Washington disown the
pike of Camille Desmoulins? Leonidas against the stranger, Timoleon
against the tyrant, which is the greater? the one is the defender, the
other the liberator. Shall we brand every appeal to arms within a city's
limits without taking the object into a consideration? Then note the
infamy of Brutus, Marcel, Arnould von Blankenheim, Coligny, Hedgerow war?
War of the streets? Why not? That was the war of Ambiorix, of Artevelde,
of Marnix, of Pelagius. But Ambiorix fought against Rome, Artevelde
against France, Marnix against Spain, Pelagius against the Moors; all
against the foreigner. Well, the monarchy is a foreigner; oppression is a
stranger; the right divine is a stranger. Despotism violates the moral
frontier, an invasion violates the geographical frontier. Driving out the
tyrant or driving out the English, in both cases, regaining possession of
one's own territory. There comes an hour when protestation no longer
suffices; after philosophy, action is required; live force finishes what
the idea has sketched out; Prometheus chained begins, Arostogeiton ends;
the encyclopedia enlightens souls, the 10th of August electrifies them.
After AEschylus, Thrasybulus; after Diderot, Danton. Multitudes have a
tendency to accept the master. Their mass bears witness to apathy. A crowd
is easily led as a whole to obedience. Men must be stirred up, pushed on,
treated roughly by the very benefit of their deliverance, their eyes must
be wounded by the true, light must be hurled at them in terrible handfuls.
They must be a little thunderstruck themselves at their own well-being;
this dazzling awakens them. Hence the necessity of tocsins and wars. Great
combatants must rise, must enlighten nations with audacity, and shake up
that sad humanity which is covered with gloom by the right divine,
Caesarian glory, force, fanaticism, irresponsible power, and absolute
majesty; a rabble stupidly occupied in the contemplation, in their
twilight splendor, of these sombre triumphs of the night. Down with the
tyrant! Of whom are you speaking? Do you call Louis Philippe the tyrant?
No; no more than Louis XVI. Both of them are what history is in the habit
of calling good kings; but principles are not to be parcelled out, the
logic of the true is rectilinear, the peculiarity of truth is that it
lacks complaisance; no concessions, then; all encroachments on man should
be repressed. There is a divine right in Louis XVI., there is because a
Bourbon in Louis Philippe; both represent in a certain measure the
confiscation of right, and, in order to clear away universal insurrection,
they must be combated; it must be done, France being always the one to
begin. When the master falls in France, he falls everywhere. In short,
what cause is more just, and consequently, what war is greater, than that
which re-establishes social truth, restores her throne to liberty,
restores the people to the people, restores sovereignty to man, replaces
the purple on the head of France, restores equity and reason in their
plenitude, suppresses every germ of antagonism by restoring each one to
himself, annihilates the obstacle which royalty presents to the whole
immense universal concord, and places the human race once more on a level
with the right? These wars build up peace. An enormous fortress of
prejudices, privileges, superstitions, lies, exactions, abuses, violences,
iniquities, and darkness still stands erect in this world, with its towers
of hatred. It must be cast down. This monstrous mass must be made to
crumble. To conquer at Austerlitz is grand; to take the Bastille is
immense.</p>
<p>There is no one who has not noticed it in his own case—the soul,—and
therein lies the marvel of its unity complicated with ubiquity, has a
strange aptitude for reasoning almost coldly in the most violent
extremities, and it often happens that heartbroken passion and profound
despair in the very agony of their blackest monologues, treat subjects and
discuss theses. Logic is mingled with convulsion, and the thread of the
syllogism floats, without breaking, in the mournful storm of thought. This
was the situation of Marius' mind.</p>
<p>As he meditated thus, dejected but resolute, hesitating in every
direction, and, in short, shuddering at what he was about to do, his
glance strayed to the interior of the barricade. The insurgents were here
conversing in a low voice, without moving, and there was perceptible that
quasi-silence which marks the last stage of expectation. Overhead, at the
small window in the third story Marius descried a sort of spectator who
appeared to him to be singularly attentive. This was the porter who had
been killed by Le Cabuc. Below, by the lights of the torch, which was
thrust between the paving-stones, this head could be vaguely
distinguished. Nothing could be stranger, in that sombre and uncertain
gleam, than that livid, motionless, astonished face, with its bristling
hair, its eyes fixed and staring, and its yawning mouth, bent over the
street in an attitude of curiosity. One would have said that the man who
was dead was surveying those who were about to die. A long trail of blood
which had flowed from that head, descended in reddish threads from the
window to the height of the first floor, where it stopped.</p>
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