Book the First - Recalled to Life
5. V. The Wine-shop
 (continued)
The wine was red wine, and had stained the ground of the narrow
 street in the suburb of Saint Antoine, in Paris, where it was
 spilled.  It had stained many hands, too, and many faces, and many
 naked feet, and many wooden shoes.  The hands of the man who sawed
 the wood, left red marks on the billets; and the forehead of the
 woman who nursed her baby, was stained with the stain of the old rag
 she wound about her head again.  Those who had been greedy with the
 staves of the cask, had acquired a tigerish smear about the mouth;
 and one tall joker so besmirched, his head more out of a long squalid
 bag of a nightcap than in it, scrawled upon a wall with his finger
 dipped in muddy wine-lees--BLOOD. 
The time was to come, when that wine too would be spilled on the
 street-stones, and when the stain of it would be red upon many there. 
And now that the cloud settled on Saint Antoine, which a momentary
 gleam had driven from his sacred countenance, the darkness of it was
 heavy-cold, dirt, sickness, ignorance, and want, were the lords in
 waiting on the saintly presence-nobles of great power all of them;
 but, most especially the last.  Samples of a people that had
 undergone a terrible grinding and regrinding in the mill, and
 certainly not in the fabulous mill which ground old people young,
 shivered at every corner, passed in and out at every doorway, looked
 from every window, fluttered in every vestige of a garment that the
 wind shook.  The mill which had worked them down, was the mill that
 grinds young people old; the children had ancient faces and grave
 voices; and upon them, and upon the grown faces, and ploughed into
 every furrow of age and coming up afresh, was the sigh, Hunger.  It
 was prevalent everywhere.  Hunger was pushed out of the tall houses,
 in the wretched clothing that hung upon poles and lines; Hunger was
 patched into them with straw and rag and wood and paper; Hunger was
 repeated in every fragment of the small modicum of firewood that the
 man sawed off; Hunger stared down from the smokeless chimneys, and
 started up from the filthy street that had no offal, among its refuse,
 of anything to eat.  Hunger was the inscription on the baker's
 shelves, written in every small loaf of his scanty stock of bad
 bread; at the sausage-shop, in every dead-dog preparation that was
 offered for sale.  Hunger rattled its dry bones among the roasting
 chestnuts in the turned cylinder; Hunger was shred into atomics in
 every farthing porringer of husky chips of potato, fried with some
 reluctant drops of oil. 
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