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<h2> CHAPTER IX—A PLACE WHERE CONVICTIONS ARE IN PROCESS OF FORMATION </h2>
<p>He advanced a pace, closed the door mechanically behind him, and remained
standing, contemplating what he saw.</p>
<p>It was a vast and badly lighted apartment, now full of uproar, now full of
silence, where all the apparatus of a criminal case, with its petty and
mournful gravity in the midst of the throng, was in process of
development.</p>
<p>At the one end of the hall, the one where he was, were judges, with
abstracted air, in threadbare robes, who were gnawing their nails or
closing their eyelids; at the other end, a ragged crowd; lawyers in all
sorts of attitudes; soldiers with hard but honest faces; ancient, spotted
woodwork, a dirty ceiling, tables covered with serge that was yellow
rather than green; doors blackened by handmarks; tap-room lamps which
emitted more smoke than light, suspended from nails in the wainscot; on
the tables candles in brass candlesticks; darkness, ugliness, sadness; and
from all this there was disengaged an austere and august impression, for
one there felt that grand human thing which is called the law, and that
grand divine thing which is called justice.</p>
<p>No one in all that throng paid any attention to him; all glances were
directed towards a single point, a wooden bench placed against a small
door, in the stretch of wall on the Pr�sident's left; on this bench,
illuminated by several candles, sat a man between two gendarmes.</p>
<p>This man was the man.</p>
<p>He did not seek him; he saw him; his eyes went thither naturally, as
though they had known beforehand where that figure was.</p>
<p>He thought he was looking at himself, grown old; not absolutely the same
in face, of course, but exactly similar in attitude and aspect, with his
bristling hair, with that wild and uneasy eye, with that blouse, just as
it was on the day when he entered D——, full of hatred,
concealing his soul in that hideous mass of frightful thoughts which he
had spent nineteen years in collecting on the floor of the prison.</p>
<p>He said to himself with a shudder, "Good God! shall I become like that
again?"</p>
<p>This creature seemed to be at least sixty; there was something
indescribably coarse, stupid, and frightened about him.</p>
<p>At the sound made by the opening door, people had drawn aside to make way
for him; the Pr�sident had turned his head, and, understanding that the
personage who had just entered was the mayor of M. sur M., he had bowed to
him; the attorney-general, who had seen M. Madeleine at M. sur M., whither
the duties of his office had called him more than once, recognized him and
saluted him also: he had hardly perceived it; he was the victim of a sort
of hallucination; he was watching.</p>
<p>Judges, clerks, gendarmes, a throng of cruelly curious heads, all these he
had already beheld once, in days gone by, twenty-seven years before; he
had encountered those fatal things once more; there they were; they moved;
they existed; it was no longer an effort of his memory, a mirage of his
thought; they were real gendarmes and real judges, a real crowd, and real
men of flesh and blood: it was all over; he beheld the monstrous aspects
of his past reappear and live once more around him, with all that there is
formidable in reality.</p>
<p>All this was yawning before him.</p>
<p>He was horrified by it; he shut his eyes, and exclaimed in the deepest
recesses of his soul, "Never!"</p>
<p>And by a tragic play of destiny which made all his ideas tremble, and
rendered him nearly mad, it was another self of his that was there! all
called that man who was being tried Jean Valjean.</p>
<p>Under his very eyes, unheard-of vision, he had a sort of representation of
the most horrible moment of his life, enacted by his spectre.</p>
<p>Everything was there; the apparatus was the same, the hour of the night,
the faces of the judges, of soldiers, and of spectators; all were the
same, only above the Pr�sident's head there hung a crucifix, something
which the courts had lacked at the time of his condemnation: God had been
absent when he had been judged.</p>
<p>There was a chair behind him; he dropped into it, terrified at the thought
that he might be seen; when he was seated, he took advantage of a pile of
cardboard boxes, which stood on the judge's desk, to conceal his face from
the whole room; he could now see without being seen; he had fully regained
consciousness of the reality of things; gradually he recovered; he
attained that phase of composure where it is possible to listen.</p>
<p>M. Bamatabois was one of the jurors.</p>
<p>He looked for Javert, but did not see him; the seat of the witnesses was
hidden from him by the clerk's table, and then, as we have just said, the
hall was sparely lighted.</p>
<p>At the moment of this entrance, the defendant's lawyer had just finished
his plea.</p>
<p>The attention of all was excited to the highest pitch; the affair had
lasted for three hours: for three hours that crowd had been watching a
strange man, a miserable specimen of humanity, either profoundly stupid or
profoundly subtle, gradually bending beneath the weight of a terrible
likeness. This man, as the reader already knows, was a vagabond who had
been found in a field carrying a branch laden with ripe apples, broken in
the orchard of a neighbor, called the Pierron orchard. Who was this man?
an examination had been made; witnesses had been heard, and they were
unanimous; light had abounded throughout the entire debate; the accusation
said: "We have in our grasp not only a marauder, a stealer of fruit; we
have here, in our hands, a bandit, an old offender who has broken his ban,
an ex-convict, a miscreant of the most dangerous description, a malefactor
named Jean Valjean, whom justice has long been in search of, and who,
eight years ago, on emerging from the galleys at Toulon, committed a
highway robbery, accompanied by violence, on the person of a child, a
Savoyard named Little Gervais; a crime provided for by article 383 of the
Penal Code, the right to try him for which we reserve hereafter, when his
identity shall have been judicially established. He has just committed a
fresh theft; it is a case of a second offence; condemn him for the fresh
deed; later on he will be judged for the old crime." In the face of this
accusation, in the face of the unanimity of the witnesses, the accused
appeared to be astonished more than anything else; he made signs and
gestures which were meant to convey No, or else he stared at the ceiling:
he spoke with difficulty, replied with embarrassment, but his whole
person, from head to foot, was a denial; he was an idiot in the presence
of all these minds ranged in order of battle around him, and like a
stranger in the midst of this society which was seizing fast upon him;
nevertheless, it was a question of the most menacing future for him; the
likeness increased every moment, and the entire crowd surveyed, with more
anxiety than he did himself, that sentence freighted with calamity, which
descended ever closer over his head; there was even a glimpse of a
possibility afforded; besides the galleys, a possible death penalty, in
case his identity were established, and the affair of Little Gervais were
to end thereafter in condemnation. Who was this man? what was the nature
of his apathy? was it imbecility or craft? Did he understand too well, or
did he not understand at all? these were questions which divided the
crowd, and seemed to divide the jury; there was something both terrible
and puzzling in this case: the drama was not only melancholy; it was also
obscure.</p>
<p>The counsel for the defence had spoken tolerably well, in that provincial
tongue which has long constituted the eloquence of the bar, and which was
formerly employed by all advocates, at Paris as well as at Romorantin or
at Montbrison, and which to-day, having become classic, is no longer
spoken except by the official orators of magistracy, to whom it is suited
on account of its grave sonorousness and its majestic stride; a tongue in
which a husband is called a consort, and a woman a spouse; Paris, the
centre of art and civilization; the king, the monarch; Monseigneur the
Bishop, a sainted pontiff; the district-attorney, the eloquent interpreter
of public prosecution; the arguments, the accents which we have just
listened to; the age of Louis XIV., the grand age; a theatre, the temple
of Melpomene; the reigning family, the august blood of our kings; a
concert, a musical solemnity; the General Commandant of the province, the
illustrious warrior, who, etc.; the pupils in the seminary, these tender
levities; errors imputed to newspapers, the imposture which distills its
venom through the columns of those organs; etc. The lawyer had,
accordingly, begun with an explanation as to the theft of the apples,—an
awkward matter couched in fine style; but Benigne Bossuet himself was
obliged to allude to a chicken in the midst of a funeral oration, and he
extricated himself from the situation in stately fashion. The lawyer
established the fact that the theft of the apples had not been
circumstantially proved. His client, whom he, in his character of counsel,
persisted in calling Champmathieu, had not been seen scaling that wall nor
breaking that branch by any one. He had been taken with that branch (which
the lawyer preferred to call a bough) in his possession; but he said that
he had found it broken off and lying on the ground, and had picked it up.
Where was there any proof to the contrary? No doubt that branch had been
broken off and concealed after the scaling of the wall, then thrown away
by the alarmed marauder; there was no doubt that there had been a thief in
the case. But what proof was there that that thief had been Champmathieu?
One thing only. His character as an ex-convict. The lawyer did not deny
that that character appeared to be, unhappily, well attested; the accused
had resided at Faverolles; the accused had exercised the calling of a
tree-pruner there; the name of Champmathieu might well have had its origin
in Jean Mathieu; all that was true,—in short, four witnesses
recognize Champmathieu, positively and without hesitation, as that
convict, Jean Valjean; to these signs, to this testimony, the counsel
could oppose nothing but the denial of his client, the denial of an
interested party; but supposing that he was the convict Jean Valjean, did
that prove that he was the thief of the apples? that was a presumption at
the most, not a proof. The prisoner, it was true, and his counsel, "in
good faith," was obliged to admit it, had adopted "a bad system of
defence." He obstinately denied everything, the theft and his character of
convict. An admission upon this last point would certainly have been
better, and would have won for him the indulgence of his judges; the
counsel had advised him to do this; but the accused had obstinately
refused, thinking, no doubt, that he would save everything by admitting
nothing. It was an error; but ought not the paucity of this intelligence
to be taken into consideration? This man was visibly stupid.
Long-continued wretchedness in the galleys, long misery outside the
galleys, had brutalized him, etc. He defended himself badly; was that a
reason for condemning him? As for the affair with Little Gervais, the
counsel need not discuss it; it did not enter into the case. The lawyer
wound up by beseeching the jury and the court, if the identity of Jean
Valjean appeared to them to be evident, to apply to him the police
penalties which are provided for a criminal who has broken his ban, and
not the frightful chastisement which descends upon the convict guilty of a
second offence.</p>
<p>The district-attorney answered the counsel for the defence. He was violent
and florid, as district-attorneys usually are.</p>
<p>He congratulated the counsel for the defence on his "loyalty," and
skilfully took advantage of this loyalty. He reached the accused through
all the concessions made by his lawyer. The advocate had seemed to admit
that the prisoner was Jean Valjean. He took note of this. So this man was
Jean Valjean. This point had been conceded to the accusation and could no
longer be disputed. Here, by means of a clever autonomasia which went back
to the sources and causes of crime, the district-attorney thundered
against the immorality of the romantic school, then dawning under the name
of the Satanic school, which had been bestowed upon it by the critics of
the Quotidienne and the Oriflamme; he attributed, not without some
probability, to the influence of this perverse literature the crime of
Champmathieu, or rather, to speak more correctly, of Jean Valjean. Having
exhausted these considerations, he passed on to Jean Valjean himself. Who
was this Jean Valjean? Description of Jean Valjean: a monster spewed
forth, etc. The model for this sort of description is contained in the
tale of Theramene, which is not useful to tragedy, but which every day
renders great services to judicial eloquence. The audience and the jury
"shuddered." The description finished, the district-attorney resumed with
an oratorical turn calculated to raise the enthusiasm of the journal of
the prefecture to the highest pitch on the following day: And it is such a
man, etc., etc., etc., vagabond, beggar, without means of existence, etc.,
etc., inured by his past life to culpable deeds, and but little reformed
by his sojourn in the galleys, as was proved by the crime committed
against Little Gervais, etc., etc.; it is such a man, caught upon the
highway in the very act of theft, a few paces from a wall that had been
scaled, still holding in his hand the object stolen, who denies the crime,
the theft, the climbing the wall; denies everything; denies even his own
identity! In addition to a hundred other proofs, to which we will not
recur, four witnesses recognize him—Javert, the upright inspector of
police; Javert, and three of his former companions in infamy, the convicts
Brevet, Chenildieu, and Cochepaille. What does he offer in opposition to
this overwhelming unanimity? His denial. What obduracy! You will do
justice, gentlemen of the jury, etc., etc. While the district-attorney was
speaking, the accused listened to him open-mouthed, with a sort of
amazement in which some admiration was assuredly blended. He was evidently
surprised that a man could talk like that. From time to time, at those
"energetic" moments of the prosecutor's speech, when eloquence which
cannot contain itself overflows in a flood of withering epithets and
envelops the accused like a storm, he moved his head slowly from right to
left and from left to right in the sort of mute and melancholy protest
with which he had contented himself since the beginning of the argument.
Two or three times the spectators who were nearest to him heard him say in
a low voice, "That is what comes of not having asked M. Baloup." The
district-attorney directed the attention of the jury to this stupid
attitude, evidently deliberate, which denoted not imbecility, but craft,
skill, a habit of deceiving justice, and which set forth in all its
nakedness the "profound perversity" of this man. He ended by making his
reserves on the affair of Little Gervais and demanding a severe sentence.</p>
<p>At that time, as the reader will remember, it was penal servitude for
life.</p>
<p>The counsel for the defence rose, began by complimenting Monsieur
l'Avocat-General on his "admirable speech," then replied as best he could;
but he weakened; the ground was evidently slipping away from under his
feet.</p>
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