1170 Les Miserables
CHAPTER IV
M. MABEUF
On the day when M. Mabeuf said to Marius: ‘Certainly
I approve of political opinions,’ he expressed the real state
of his mind. All political opinions were matters of indiffer-
ence to him, and he approved them all, without distinction,
provided they left him in peace, as the Greeks called the Fu-
ries ‘the beautiful, the good, the charming,’ the Eumenides.
M. Mabeuf ’s political opinion consisted in a passionate love
for plants, and, above all, for books. Like all the rest of the
world, he possessed the termination in ist, without which no
one could exist at that time, but he was neither a Royalist, a
Bonapartist, a Chartist, an Orleanist, nor an Anarchist; he
was a bouquinist, a collector of old books. He did not un-
derstand how men could busy themselves with hating each
other because of silly stuff like the charter, democracy, le-
gitimacy, monarchy, the republic, etc., when there were in
the world all sorts of mosses, grasses, and shrubs which
they might be looking at, and heaps of folios, and even of
32mos, which they might turn over. He took good care not
to become useless; having books did not prevent his read-
ing, being a botanist did not prevent his being a gardener.