第560段(2 / 3)

Everything could be seen as plainly as by day.

There was no one there.

She opened the window.

The garden was absolutely calm, and all that was visible was that the street was deserted as usual.

Cosette thought that she had been mistaken.

She thought that she had heard a noise.

It was a hallucination produced by the melancholy and magnificent chorus of Weber, which lays open before the mind terrified depths, which trembles before the gaze like a dizzy forest, and in which one hears the crackling of dead branches beneath the uneasy tread of the huntsmen of whom one catches a glimpse through the twilight.

She thought no more about it.

Moreover, Cosette was not very timid by nature.

There flowed in her veins some of the blood of the bohemian and the adventuress who runs barefoot.

It will be remembered that she was more of a lark than a dove.

There was a foundation of wildness and bravery in her.

On the following day, at an earlier hour, towards nightfall, she was strolling in the garden.

In the midst of the confused thoughts which occupied her, she fancied that she caught for an instant a sound similar to that of the preceding evening, as though some one were walking beneath the trees in the dusk, and not very far from her; but she told herself that nothing so closely resembles a step on the grass as the friction of two branches which have moved from side to side, and she paid no heed to it.