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Notre Dame de Paris - Bartleby.com

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lifted the brim of his hat—“which mansions are thirteen in number; further the Court of Miracles,<br />

further the Lazaretto called the Banlieue, further the whole of the high-road beginning at the Lazaretto<br />

and ending at the Porte Saint-Jacques. Of these several places he is reeve of the ways, chief, mean, and<br />

inferior justiciary, full and absolute lord.”<br />

“So, ho!” said the King, scratching his left ear with his right hand, “that <strong>com</strong>prises a good slice of my<br />

town! Ah, Monsieur the Provost was king of all this!”<br />

This time he did not correct himself. He continued cogitating and as if talking to himself: “Softly,<br />

Monsieur the Provost, you had a very pretty piece of our <strong>Paris</strong>!”<br />

Sud<strong>de</strong>nly he burst out: “Pasque-Dieu! what are all these people that claim to be highway-reeves,<br />

justiciaries, lords and masters along with us! that have their toll-gates at the corner of every field, their<br />

gibbet and their executioner at every crossway among our people, so that, as the Greek thought he had<br />

as many gods as he had springs of water, the Persian as many as the stars he saw, the Frenchman<br />

reckons as many kings as he sees gibbets. Pardieu! this thing is evil, and the confusion of it incenses me!<br />

I would know if it be God’s pleasure that there should be in <strong>Paris</strong> any keepers of the highways but the<br />

King, any justiciary but our Parliament, any emperor but ourself in this empire? By my soul, but the day<br />

must <strong>com</strong>e when there shall be in France but one king, one lord, one judge, one headsman, just as in<br />

paradise there is but one God!”<br />

He lifted his cap again and went on, still <strong>de</strong>ep in his own thoughts, with the look and tone of a huntsman<br />

uncoupling and cheering on his pack:<br />

“Good, my people! Well done! Pull down these false lords! Do your work! At them! At them! Pillage,<br />

hang, sack them! Ah, you would be kings, my lords! At them! my people, at them!”<br />

He stopped himself abruptly, bit his lips as if to regain possession of his escaping thoughts, bent his<br />

piercing eye in turn on each of the five persons around him, and sud<strong>de</strong>nly taking his hat in both hands<br />

and regarding it steadfastly, he exclaimed: “Oh, I would burn thee, didst thou know what I have in my<br />

head!”<br />

Then casting around him the alert and suspicious glance of a fox stealing back to his hole—“No<br />

matter,” he said, “we will send help to Monsieur the Provost. Most unfortunately we have very few<br />

troops here at this moment to send against such a mob. We must wait till to-morrow. Or<strong>de</strong>r shall then be<br />

restored in the city, and all who are taken shall be promptly hanged.”<br />

“That reminds me, Sire,” said Coictier, “I forgot in my first perturbation, the watch have seized two<br />

stragglers of the band. If your Majesty pleases to see these men, they are here.”<br />

“If it be my pleasure!” cried the King. “What Pasque-Dieu! canst thou forget such a thing? Run quick.<br />

Olivier, do thou go and bring them here.”<br />

Maître Olivier went out and returned immediately with the two prisoners, surroun<strong>de</strong>d by archers of the<br />

body-guard. The first of the two had a wild, imbecile face, drunken and won<strong>de</strong>r-struck. He was clad in<br />

rags and walked with one knee bent and dragging his foot. The other presented a pale and smiling<br />

countenance, with which the rea<strong>de</strong>r is already acquainted.<br />

The King scrutinized them a moment without speaking, then abruptly addressed the first prisoner:

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