| BOOK FIRST.
CHAPTER 2. PIERRE GRINGOIRE.
 (continued)Much ill-will would also have been required, not to
 comprehend, through the medium of the poetry of the prologue, that
 Labor was wedded to Merchandise, and Clergy to Nobility,
 and that the two happy couples possessed in common a magnificent
 golden dolphin, which they desired to adjudge to the
 fairest only.  So they were roaming about the world seeking
 and searching for this beauty, and, after having successively
 rejected the Queen of Golconda, the Princess of Trebizonde,
 the daughter of the Grand Khan of Tartary, etc., Labor and
 Clergy, Nobility and Merchandise, had come to rest upon the
 marble table of the Palais de Justice, and to utter, in the
 presence of the honest audience, as many sentences and
 maxims as could then be dispensed at the Faculty of Arts,
 at examinations, sophisms, determinances, figures, and acts,
 where the masters took their degrees. All this was, in fact, very fine. Nevertheless, in that throng, upon which the four allegories
 vied with each other in pouring out floods of metaphors,
 there was no ear more attentive, no heart that palpitated
 more, not an eye was more haggard, no neck more outstretched,
 than the eye, the ear, the neck, and the heart of
 the author, of the poet, of that brave Pierre Gringoire, who
 had not been able to resist, a moment before, the joy of telling
 his name to two pretty girls.  He had retreated a few
 paces from them, behind his pillar, and there he listened,
 looked, enjoyed.  The amiable applause which had greeted the
 beginning of his prologue was still echoing in his bosom,
 and he was completely absorbed in that species of ecstatic
 contemplation with which an author beholds his ideas fall,
 one by one, from the mouth of the actor into the vast silence
 of the audience.  Worthy Pierre Gringoire! It pains us to say it, but this first ecstasy was speedily
 disturbed.  Hardly had Gringoire raised this intoxicating cup of
 joy and triumph to his lips, when a drop of bitterness was
 mingled with it. A tattered mendicant, who could not collect any coins, lost
 as he was in the midst of the crowd, and who had not probably
 found sufficient indemnity in the pockets of his neighbors,
 had hit upon the idea of perching himself upon some conspicuous
 point, in order to attract looks and alms.  He had,
 accordingly, hoisted himself, during the first verses of the
 prologue, with the aid of the pillars of the reserve gallery, to
 the cornice which ran round the balustrade at its lower edge;
 and there he had seated himself, soliciting the attention and
 the pity of the multitude, with his rags and a hideous sore
 which covered his right arm.  However, he uttered not a word. |