CONTENTS 1
BOOK FIRST A FEW PAGES OF HISTORY
CHAPTER 1 3
CHAPTER 2 10
CHAPTER 3 15
CHAPTER 4 24
CHAPTER 5 33
CHAPTER 6 47
BOOK SECONDPONINE
CHAPTER 1 55
CHAPTER 2 62
CHAPTER 3 68
CHAPTER 4 73
CONTENTS
2 LES MISRABLES - VOLUME 4
BOOK THIRDTHE HOUSE IN
THE RUE PLUMET
CHAPTER 1 81
CHAPTER 2 87
CHAPTER 3 91
CHAPTER 4 96
CHAPTER 5 102
CHAPTER 6 108
CHAPTER 7 113
CHAPTER 8 120
BOOK FOURTHSUCCOR FROM
BELOW MAY TURN OUT TO
BE SUCCOR FROM ON HIGH
CHAPTER 1 135
CHAPTER 2 138
CONTENTS 3
BOOK FIFTHTHE END OF WHICH DOES
NOT RESEMBLE THE BEGINNING
CHAPTER 1 151
CHAPTER 2 154
CHAPTER 3 159
CHAPTER 4 163
CHAPTER 5 168
CHAPTER 6 172
BOOK SIXTHLITTLE GAVROCHE
CHAPTER 1 179
CHAPTER 2 184
CHAPTER 3 212
BOOK SEVENTHSLANG
CHAPTER 1 231
4 LES MISRABLES - VOLUME 4
CHAPTER 2 240
CHAPTER 3 251
CHAPTER 4 257
BOOK EIGHTHENCHANTMENTS
AND DESOLATIONS
CHAPTER 1 265
CHAPTER 2 272
CHAPTER 3 275
CHAPTER 4 280
CHAPTER 5 289
CHAPTER 6 291
CHAPTER 7 299
BOOK NINTHWHITHER ARE THEY GOING?
CHAPTER 1 317
CHAPTER 2 320
CHAPTER 3 324
CONTENTS 5
BOOK TENTHTHE 5TH OF JUNE, 1832
CHAPTER 1 331
CHAPTER 2 336
CHAPTER 3 344
CHAPTER 4 351
CHAPTER 5 358
BOOK ELEVENTHTHE ATOM
FRATERNIZES WITH THE HURRICANE
CHAPTER 1 365
CHAPTER 2 369
CHAPTER 3 374
CHAPTER 4 377
CHAPTER 5 380
CHAPTER 6 383
6 LES MISRABLES - VOLUME 4
BOOK TWELFTHCORINTHE
CHAPTER 1 389
CHAPTER 2 396
CHAPTER 3 408
CHAPTER 4 413
CHAPTER 5 418
CHAPTER 6 421
CHAPTER 7 425
CHAPTER 8 430
BOOK THIRTEENTHMARIUS ENTERS
THE SHADOW
CHAPTER 1 439
CHAPTER 2 443
CHAPTER 3 447
CONTENTS 7
BOOK FOURTEENTH
THE GRANDEURS OF DESPAIR
CHAPTER 1 457
CHAPTER 2 461
CHAPTER 3 465
CHAPTER 4 467
CHAPTER 5 471
CHAPTER 6 474
CHAPTER 7 480
BOOK FIFTEENTH
THE RUE DE L''HOMME ARM
CHAPTER 1 487
CHAPTER 2 498
CHAPTER 3 504
CHAPTER 4 506
內容試閱:
CHAPTER 1
WELL CUT
1
831 and 1832, the two years which are
immediately connected with the Revolution
of July, form one of the most peculiar and striking
moments of history. These two years rise like two
mountains midway between those which precede and
those which follow them. They have a revolutionary
grandeur. Precipices are to be distinguished there.
The social masses, the very assizes of civilization, the
solid group of superposed and adhering interests, the
century-old profiles of the ancient French formation,
appear and disappear in them every instant, athwart
the storm clouds of systems, of passions, and of
theories. These appearances and disappearances have
been designated as movement and resistance. At
intervals, truth, that daylight of the human soul, can be
descried shining there.
This remarkable epoch is decidedly circumscribed
and is beginning to be sufficiently distant from us to
allow of our grasping the principal lines even at the
present day.
We shall make the attempt.
The Restoration had been one of those intermediate
phases, hard to define, in which there is fatigue,
buzzing, murmurs, sleep, tumult, and which are
nothing else than the arrival of a great nation at a
halting-place.