BOOK ELEVENTH.
CHAPTER 1. THE LITTLE SHOE.
 (continued)
The man in black let the garrulous poet chatter on.  He
 continued to struggle against the violent and narrow current,
 which separates the prow of the City and the stem of the
 island of Notre-Dame, which we call to-day the Isle St. Louis. 
"By the way, master!" continued Gringoire suddenly.
 "At the moment when we arrived on the Parvis, through the
 enraged outcasts, did your reverence observe that poor little
 devil whose skull your deaf man was just cracking on the
 railing of the gallery of the kings?  I am near sighted and I
 could not recognize him.  Do you know who he could be?" 
The stranger answered not a word.  But he suddenly ceased
 rowing, his arms fell as though broken, his head sank on his
 breast, and la Esmeralda heard him sigh convulsively.  She
 shuddered.  She had heard such sighs before. 
The boat, abandoned to itself, floated for several minutes
 with the stream.  But the man in black finally recovered
 himself, seized the oars once more and began to row against
 the current.  He doubled the point of the Isle of Notre
 Dame, and made for the landing-place of the Port an Foin. 
"Ah!" said Gringoire, "yonder is the Barbeau mansion.--Stay,
 master, look: that group of black roofs which make such
 singular angles yonder, above that heap of black, fibrous
 grimy, dirty clouds, where the moon is completely crushed
 and spread out like the yolk of an egg whose shell is
 broken.--'Tis a fine mansion.  There is a chapel crowned with
 a small vault full of very well carved enrichments.  Above, you
 can see the bell tower, very delicately pierced.  There is also
 a pleasant garden, which consists of a pond, an aviary, an echo,
 a mall, a labyrinth, a house for wild beasts, and a quantity of
 leafy alleys very agreeable to Venus.  There is also a rascal
 of a tree which is called 'the lewd,' because it favored the
 pleasures of a famous princess and a constable of France, who
 was a gallant and a wit.--Alas! we poor philosophers are to
 a constable as a plot of cabbages or a radish bed to the garden
 of the Louvre.  What matters it, after all? human life, for
 the great as well as for us, is a mixture of good and evil.  Pain
 is always by the side of joy, the spondee by the dactyl.--Master,
 I must relate to you the history of the Barbeau mansion.  It
 ends in tragic fashion.  It was in 1319, in the reign
 of Philippe V., the longest reign of the kings of France.  The
 moral of the story is that the temptations of the flesh are
 pernicious and malignant.  Let us not rest our glance too long
 on our neighbor's wife, however gratified our senses may be
 by her beauty.  Fornication is a very libertine thought.
 Adultery is a prying into the pleasures of others--Ohé!  the
 noise yonder is redoubling!" 
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