| BOOK FOURTH.
CHAPTER 5. MORE ABOUT CLAUDE FROLLO.
 (continued)There were no great proofs of sorcery in that, after all, but
 there was still enough smoke to warrant a surmise of fire, and
 the archdeacon bore a tolerably formidable reputation.  We
 ought to mention however, that the sciences of Egypt, that
 necromancy and magic, even the whitest, even the most innocent,
 had no more envenomed enemy, no more pitiless denunciator
 before the gentlemen of the officialty of Notre-Dame.
 Whether this was sincere horror, or the game played by the
 thief who shouts, "stop thief!" at all events, it did not prevent
 the archdeacon from being considered by the learned heads of
 the chapter, as a soul who had ventured into the vestibule of
 hell, who was lost in the caves of the cabal, groping amid the
 shadows of the occult sciences.  Neither were the people
 deceived thereby; with any one who possessed any sagacity,
 Quasimodo passed for the demon; Claude Frollo, for the
 sorcerer.  It was evident that the bellringer was to serve the
 archdeacon for a given time, at the end of which he would
 carry away the latter's soul, by way of payment.  Thus the
 archdeacon, in spite of the excessive austerity of his life, was
 in bad odor among all pious souls; and there was no devout
 nose so inexperienced that it could not smell him out to
 be a magician. And if, as he grew older, abysses had formed in his science,
 they had also formed in his heart.  That at least, is what one
 had grounds for believing on scrutinizing that face upon
 which the soul was only seen to shine through a sombre cloud.
 Whence that large, bald brow? that head forever bent? that
 breast always heaving with sighs?  What secret thought
 caused his mouth to smile with so much bitterness, at the
 same moment that his scowling brows approached each other
 like two bulls on the point of fighting?  Why was what hair
 he had left already gray?  What was that internal fire which
 sometimes broke forth in his glance, to such a degree that his
 eye resembled a hole pierced in the wall of a furnace? These symptoms of a violent moral preoccupation, had
 acquired an especially high degree of intensity at the epoch
 when this story takes place.  More than once a choir-boy had
 fled in terror at finding him alone in the church, so strange
 and dazzling was his look.  More than once, in the choir, at
 the hour of the offices, his neighbor in the stalls had heard
 him mingle with the plain song, ad omnem tonum, unintelligible
 parentheses.  More than once the laundress of the Terrain
 charged "with washing the chapter" had observed, not
 without affright, the marks of nails and clenched fingers
 on the surplice of monsieur the archdeacon of Josas. |