BOOK FIRST.
CHAPTER 1. THE GRAND HALL.
 (continued)
Among the rest there was a group of those merry imps, who,
 after smashing the glass in a window, had seated themselves
 hardily on the entablature, and from that point despatched
 their gaze and their railleries both within and without,
 upon the throng in the hall, and the throng upon the Place.
 It was easy to see, from their parodied gestures, their
 ringing laughter, the bantering appeals which they exchanged
 with their comrades, from one end of the hall to the other,
 that these young clerks did not share the weariness and
 fatigue of the rest of the spectators, and that they understood
 very well the art of extracting, for their own private diversion
 from that which they had under their eyes, a spectacle
 which made them await the other with patience. 
"Upon my soul, so it's you, 'Joannes Frollo de Molendino!'"
 cried one of them, to a sort of little, light-haired
 imp, with a well-favored and malign countenance, clinging to
 the acanthus leaves of a capital; "you are well named John
 of the Mill, for your two arms and your two legs have the air
 of four wings fluttering on the breeze.  How long have you
 been here?" 
"By the mercy of the devil," retorted Joannes Frollo,
 "these four hours and more; and I hope that they will be
 reckoned to my credit in purgatory.  I heard the eight singers
 of the King of Sicily intone the first verse of seven o'clock
 mass in the Sainte-Chapelle." 
"Fine singers!" replied the other, "with voices even more
 pointed than their caps!  Before founding a mass for Monsieur
 Saint John, the king should have inquired whether
 Monsieur Saint John likes Latin droned out in a Provençal
 accent." 
"He did it for the sake of employing those accursed singers
 of the King of Sicily!" cried an old woman sharply from
 among the crowd beneath the window.  "I just put it to
 you!  A thousand livres parisi for a mass! and out of the tax
 on sea fish in the markets of Paris, to boot!" 
"Peace, old crone," said a tall, grave person, stopping up
 his nose on the side towards the fishwife; "a mass had to be
 founded.  Would you wish the king to fall ill again?" 
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