'Yet you are a lover to soften the heart with gauntness.'
'Alas!'
'In your place,I would let her alone.'
'That is easy enough to say.'
'And to do.
Is not her name Musichetta?'
'Yes.
Ah!my poor Bahorel,she is a superb girl,very literary,with tiny feet,little hands,she dresses well,and is white and dimpled,with the eyes of a fortune-teller.I am wild over her.'
'My dear fellow,then in order to please her,you must be elegant,and produce effects with your knees.
Buy a good pair of trousers of double-milled cloth at Staub's.That will assist.'
'At what price?'shouted Grantaire.
The third corner was delivered up to a poetical discussion.Pagan mythology was giving battle to Christian mythology.The question was about Olympus,whose part was taken by Jean Prouvaire,out of pure romanticism.
Jean Prouvaire was timid only in repose.
Once excited,he burst forth,a sort of mirth accentuated his enthusiasm,and he was at once both laughing and lyric.
'Let us not insult the gods,'said he.
'The gods may not have taken their departure.
Jupiter does not impress me as dead.The gods are dreams,you say.
Well,even in nature,such as it is to-day,after the flight of these dreams,we still find all the grand old pagan myths.
Such and such a mountain with the profile of a citadel,like the Vignemale,for example,is still to me the headdress of Cybele;it has not been proved to me that Pan does not come at night to breathe into the hollow trunks of the willows,stopping up the holes in turn with his fingers,and I have always believed that Io had something to do with the cascade of Pissevache.'
In the last corner,they were talking politics.
The Charter which had been granted was getting roughly handled.
Combeferre was upholding it weakly.
Courfeyrac was energetically making a breach in it.On the table lay an unfortunate copy of the famous Touquet Charter.Courfeyrac had seized it,and was brandishing it,mingling with his arguments the rattling of this sheet of paper.