1212 Les Miserables
CHAPTER VII
ADVENTURES OF THE
LETTER U DELIVERED
OVER TO CONJECTURES
Isolation, detachment, from everything, pride, indepen-
dence, the taste of nature, the absence of daily and material
activity, the life within himself, the secret conflicts of chas-
tity, a benevolent ecstasy towards all creation, had prepared
Marius for this possession which is called passion. His wor-
ship of his father had gradually become a religion, and, like
all religions, it had retreated to the depths of his soul. Some-
thing was required in the foreground. Love came.
A full month elapsed, during which Marius went every
day to the Luxembourg. When the hour arrived, nothing
could hold him back.—‘He is on duty,’ said Courfeyrac.
Marius lived in a state of delight. It is certain that the young
girl did look at him.
He had finally grown bold, and approached the bench.
Still, he did not pass in front of it any more, in obedience
to the instinct of timidity and to the instinct of prudence