The Three Cities Trilogy: Paris, Volume 5 by Émile Zola
page 104 of 142 (73%)
page 104 of 142 (73%)
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breath mingling in that kind of subterranean dungeon, where their big
dancing shadows looked like ghosts. They seemed to be vanishing into the night, the candle now showed merely like a little yellow tear in the midst of the darkness; and at that moment, in those far depths, a quiver sped through the silence of the earth which weighed so heavily upon them. Distant but sonorous peals rang out, as if death itself were somewhere ringing its invisible bell. "You hear," stammered Guillaume, "it's their bell up there. The time has come. I have vowed to act, and you want to prevent me!" "Yes, I'll prevent you as long as I'm here alive." "As long as you are alive, you'll prevent me!" Guillaume could hear "La Savoyarde" pealing joyfully up yonder; he could see the triumphant basilica, overflowing with its ten thousand pilgrims, and blazing with the splendour of the Host amidst the smoke of incense; and blind frenzy came over him at finding himself unable to act, at finding an obstacle suddenly barring the road to his fixed idea. "As long as you are alive, as long as you are alive!" he repeated, beside himself. "Well, then, die, you wretched brother!" A fratricidal gleam had darted from his blurred eyes. He hastily stooped, picked up a large brick forgotten there, and raised it with both hands as if it were a club. "Ah! I'm willing," cried Pierre. "Kill me, then; kill your own brother before you kill the others!" |
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