GERMINAL
PART III
CHAPTER II
IT was Montsou feast-day, the last Sunday in July.
Since Saturday evening the good housekeepers of
the settlement had deluged their parlours with
water, throwing bucketfuls over the flags and
against the walls; and the floor was not yet dry,
in spite of the white sand which had been strewn
over it, an expensive luxury for the purses of the
poor. But the day promised to be very warm; it
was one of those heavy skies threatening storm,
which in summer stifle this flat bare country of
the Nord.
Sunday upset the hours for rising, even among the
Maheus. While the father, after five o'clock,
grew weary of his bed and dressed himself, the
children lay in bed until nine. On this day Maheu
went to smoke a pipe in the garden, and then came
back to eat his bread and butter alone, while
waiting. He thus passed the morning in a random
manner; he mended the tub, which leaked; stuck up
beneath the clock a portrait of the prince
imperial which had been given to the little ones.
However, the others came down one by one. Father
Bonnemort had taken a chair outside, to sit in the
sun, while the mother and Alzire had at once set
about cooking. Catherine appeared, pushing before
her Lénore and Henri, whom she had just
dressed. Eleven o'clock struck, and the odour of
the rabbit, which was boiling with potatoes, was
already filling the house when Zacharie and
Jeanlin. came down last, still yawning and with
their eyes swollen.
The settlement was now in a flutter, excited by
the feast-day, and in expectation of dinner, which
was being hastened for the departure in bands to
Montsou. Troops of children were rushing about.
Men in their shirt-sleeves were trailing their old
shoes with the lazy gait of days of rest. Windows
and doors, opened wide in the fine weather, gave
glimpses of rows of parlours which were filled
with movement and shouts and the chatter of
families. And from one end to the other of the
frontages, there was a smell of rabbit, a rich
kitchen smell which on this day struggled with the
inveterate odour of fried onion.
The Maheus dined at midday. They made little
noise in the midst of the chatter from door to
door, in the coming and going of women in a
constant uproar of calls and replies, of objects
borrowed, of youngsters hunted away or brought
back with a slap. Besides, they had not been on
good terms during the last three weeks with their
neighbours, the Levaques, on the subject of the
marriage of Zacharie and Philoméne. The
men passed the time of day, but the women
pretended not to know each other. This quarrel
had strengthened the relations with Pierronne,
only Pierronne had left Pierron and Lydie with her
mother, and set out early in the morning to spend
the day with a cousin at Marchiennes; and they
joked, for they knew this cousin; she had a
moustache, and was head captain at the Voreux.
Maheude declared that it was not proper to leave
one's family on a feast-day Sunday.
Beside the rabbit with potatoes, a rabbit which
had been fattening in the shed for a month, the
Maheus had meat soup and beef. The fortnight's
wages had just fallen due the day before. They
could not recollect such a spread. Even at the
last St. Barbara's Day, the fete of the miners
when they do nothing for three days, the rabbit
had not been so fat nor so tender. So the ten
pairs of jaws, from little Estelle, whose teeth
were beginning to appear, to old Bonnemort, who
was losing his, worked so heartily that the bones
themselves disappeared. The meat was good, but
they could not digest it well; they saw it too
seldom. Everything disappeared; there only
remained a piece of boiled beef for the evening.
They could add bread and butter if they were
hungry.
Jeanlin went out first. Bébert was waiting
for him behind the school, and they prowled about
for a long time before they were able to entice
away Lydie, whom Brulé, who had decided not
to go out, was trying to keep with her. When she
perceived that the child had fled, she shouted and
brandished her lean arms, while Pierron, annoyed
at the disturbance, strolled quietly away with the
air of a husband who can amuse himself with a good
conscience, knowing that his wife also has her
little amusements.
Old Bonnemort set out at last, and Maheu decided
to have a little fresh air after asking Maheude if
she would come and join him down below. No, she
couldn't at all, it was nothing but drudgery with
the little ones; but perhaps she would, all the
same; she would think about it: they could easily
find each other. When he got outside he
hesitated, then he went into the neighbours' to
see if Levaque was ready. There he found
Zacharie, who was waiting for Philoméne.
and the Levaque woman started again on that
everlasting subject of marriage, saying that she
was being made fun of and that she would have an
explanation with Maheude once and for all. Was
life worth living when one had to keep one's
daughter's fatherless children while she went off
with her lover? Philoméne quietly finished
putting on her bonnet, and Zacharie took her off,
saying that he was quite willing if his mother was
willing. As Levaque had already gone, Maheu
referred his angry neighbour to his wife and
hastened to depart. Bouteloup, who was finishing
a fragment of cheese with both elbows on the
table, obstinately refused the friendly offer of a
glass. He would stay in the house like a good
husband.
Gradually the settlement was emptied; all the men
went off one behind the other, while the girls,
watching at the doors, set out in the opposite
direction on the arms of their lovers. As her
father turned the corner of the church, Catherine
perceived Chaval, and, hastening to join him, they
took together the Montsou road. And the mother
remained alone, in the midst of her scattered
children, without strength to leave her chair,
where she was pouring out a second glass of
boiling coffee, which she drank in little sips.
In the settlement there were only the women left,
inviting each other to finish the dregs of the
coffee-pots, around tables that were still warm
and greasy with the dinner.
Maheu had guessed that Levaque was at the
Avantage, and he slowly went down to Rasseneur's.
In fact, behind the bar, in the little garden shut
in by a hedge, Levaque was having a game of
skittles with some mates. Standing by, and not
playing, Father Bonnemort and old Mouque were
following the ball, so absorbed that they even
forgot to nudge each other with their elbows. A
burning sun struck down on them perpendicularly;
there was only one streak of shade by the side of
the inn; and Étienne was there drinking his
glass before a table, annoyed because Souvarine
had just left him to go up to his room. Nearly
every Sunday the engine-man shut himself up to
write or to read.
"Will you have a game?" asked Levaque of
Maheu.
But he refused: it was too hot, he was already
dying of thirst.
"Rasseneur," called Étienne,
"bring a glass, will you?"
And turning towards Maheu:
"I'll stand it, you know."
They now all treated each other familiarly.
Rasseneur did not hurry himself, he had to be
called three times; and Madame Rasseneur at last
brought some lukewarm beer. The young man had
lowered his voice to complain about the house:
they were worthy people, certainly, people with
good ideas, but the beer was worthless and the
soup abominable! He would have changed his
lodgings ten times over, only the thought of the
walk from Montsou held him back. One day or
another he would go and live with some family at
the settlement.
"Sure enough!" said Maheu in his slow
voice, "sure enough, you would be better in a
family."
But shouts now broke out. Levaque had overthrown
all the skittles at one stroke. Mouque and
Bonnemort, with their faces towards the ground, in
the midst of the tumult preserved a silence of
profound approbation. And the joy at this stroke
found vent in jokes, especially when the players
perceived Mouquette's radiant face behind the
hedge. She had been prowling about there for an
hour, and at last ventured to come near on hearing
the laughter.
"What! are you alone?" shouted Levaque.
"Where are your sweethearts?"
"My sweethearts! I've stabled them,"
she replied, with a fine impudent gaiety.
"I'm looking for one."
They all offered themselves, throwing coarse chaff
at her. She refused with a gesture and laughed
louder, playing the fine lady. Besides, her
father was watching the game without even taking
his eyes from the fallen skittles.
"Ah!" Levaque went on, throwing a look
towards Étienne: "one can tell where
you're casting sheep's eyes, my girl! You'll have
to take him by force."
Then Étienne brightened up. It was in fact
around him that the putter was revolving. And he
refused, amused indeed, but without having the
least desire for her. She remained planted behind
the hedge for some minutes longer, looking at him
with large fixed eyes; then she slowly went away,
and her face suddenly became serious as if she
were overcome by the powerful sun.
In a low voice Étienne was again giving
long explanations to Maheu regarding the necessity
for the Montsou miners to establish a provident
fund. "Since the Company professes to leave
us free," he repeated, "what is there to
fear? We only have their pensions and they
distribute them according to their own idea, since
they don't hold back any of our pay. Well, it
will be prudent to form, outside their good
pleasure, an association of mutual help on which
we can count at least in cases of immediate
need."
And he gave details, and discussed the
organization, promising to undertake the labour of
it.
"I am willing enough," said Maheu, at
last convinced. "But there are the others;
get them to make up their minds."
Levaque had won, and they left the skittles to
empty their glasses. But Maheu refused to drink a
second glass; he would see later on, the day was
not yet done. He was thinking about Pierron.
Where could he be? No doubt at the Estimainet
Lenfant. And, having persuaded Étienne and
Levaque, the three set out for Montsou, at the
same moment that a new band took possession of the
skittles at the Avantage.
On the road they had to pause at the Casimir Bar,
and then at the Estaminet du Progrés.
Comrades called them through the open doors, and
there was no way of refusing. Each time it was a
glass, two if they were polite enough to return
the invitation. They remained there ten minutes,
exchanging a few words, and then began again, a
little farther on, knowing the beer, with which
they could fill themselves without any other
discomfort than having to piss it out again in the
same measure, as clear as rock water. At the
Estaminet Lenfant they came right upon Pierron,
who was finishing his second glass, and who, in
order not to refuse to touch glasses, swallowed a
third. They naturally drank theirs also. Now
there were four of them, and they set out to see
if Zacharie was not at the Estaminet Tison. It
was empty, and they called for a glass, in order
to wait for him a moment. Then they thought of
the Estaminet Saint-Éloi and accepted there
a round from Captain Richomme. Then they rambled
from bar to bar, without any pretext, simply
saying that they were having a stroll.
"We must go to the Volcan!" suddenly
said Levaque, who was getting excited.
The others began to laugh, and hesitated. Then
they accompanied their comrade in the midst of the
growing crowd. In the long narrow room of the
Volcan, on a platform raised at the end, five
singers, the scum of the Lille prostitutes, were
walking about, low-necked and with monstrous
gestures, and the customers gave ten sous when
they desired to have one behind the stage. There
was especially a number of putters and landers,
even trammers of fourteen, all the youth of the
pit, drinking more gin than beer. A few old
miners also ventured there, and the worst husbands
of the settlements, those whose households were
falling into ruin.
As soon as the band was seated round a little
table, Étienne took possession of Levaque
to explain to him his idea of the Provident Fund.
Like all new converts who have found a mission, he
had become an obstinate propagandist.
"Every member," he repeated, "could
easily pay in twenty sous a month. As these
twenty sous accumulated they would form a nice
little sum in four or five years, and when one has
money one is ready, eh, for anything that turns
up? Eh, what do you say to it?"
"I've nothing to say against it,"
replied Levaque, with an abstracted air. "We
will talk about it."
He was excited by an enormous blonde, and
determined to remain behind when Maheu and
Pierron, after drinking their glasses, set out
without waiting for a second song.
Outside, Étienne who had gone with them
found Mouquette, who seemed to be following them.
She was always there, looking at him with her
large fixed eyes, laughing her good-natured laugh,
as if to say: "Are you willing?" The
young man joked and shrugged his shoulders. Then,
with a gesture of anger, she was lost in the
crowd.
"Where, then, is Chaval?" asked Pieron.
"True!" said Maheu. "He must
surely be at Piquette's. Let us go to
Piquette's."
But as they all three arrived at the Estaminet
Piquette, sounds of a quarrel arrested them at the
door; Zacharie with his fist was threatening a
thick-set phlegmatic Walloon nail-maker, while
Chaval, with his hands in his pockets, was looking
on.
"Hallo! there's Chaval," said Maheu
quietly; "he is with Catherine."
For five long hours the putter and her lover had
been walking about the fair. All along the
Montsou road, that wide road with low bedaubed
houses winding downhill, a crowd of people
wandered up and down in the sun, like a trail of
ants, lost in the flat, bare plain. The eternal
black mud had dried, a black dust was rising and
floating about like a storm-cloud.
On both sides the public-houses were crowded;
there were rows of tables to the street, where
stood a double rank of hucksters at stalls in the
open air, selling neck-handkerchiefs and
looking-glasses for the girls, knives and caps for
the lads; to say nothing of sweetmeats,
sugar-plums, and biscuits. In front of the church
archery was going on. Opposite the Yards they
were playing at bowls. At the corner of the
Joiselle road, beside the Administration
buildings, in a spot enclosed by fences, crowds
were watching a cock-fight, two large red cocks,
armed with steel spurs, their breasts torn and
bleeding. Farther on, at Maigrat's, aprons and
trousers were being won at billiards. And there
were long silences; the crowd drank and stuffed
itself without a sound; a mute indigestion of beer
and fried potatoes was expanding in the great
heat, still further increased by the frying-pans
bubbling in the open air.
Chaval bought a looking-glass for nineteen sous
and a handkerchief for three francs, to give to
Catherine. At every turn they met Mouque and
Bonnemort, who had come to the fair and, in
meditative mood, were plodding heavily through it
side by side. Another meeting made them angry;
they caught sight of Jeanlin inciting
Bébert and Lydie to steal bottles of gin
from an extemporized bar installed at the edge of
an open piece of ground. Catherine succeeded in
boxing her brother's ears; the little girl had
already run away with a bottle. These imps of
Satan would certainly end in a prison. Then, as
they arrived before another bar, the
Tete-Coupée, it occurred to Chaval to take
his sweetheart in to a competition of chaffinches
which had been announced on the door for the past
week. Fifteen nail-makers from the Marchiennes
nail works had responded to the appeal, each with
a dozen cages; and the gloomy little cages in
which the blinded finches sat motionless were
already hung upon a paling in the inn yard. It
was a question as to which, in the course of an
hour, should repeat the phrase of its song the
greatest number of times. Each nail-maker with a
slate stood near his cages to mark, watching his
neighbours and watched by them. And the
chaffinches had begun, the
chichouïeux with the deeper note,
the batisecouics with their shriller
note, all at first timid, and only risking a rare
phrase, then, excited by each other's songs,
increasing the pace; then at last carried away by
such a rage of rivalry that they would even fall
dead. The nail-makers violently whipped them on
with their voices, shouting out to them in Walloon
to sing more, still more, yet a little more, while
the spectators, about a hundred people, stood by
in mute fascination in the midst of this infernal
music of a hundred and eighty chaffinches all
repeating the same cadence out of time. It was a
batisecouic which gained the first prize,
a metal coffee-pot.
Catherine and Chaval were there when Zacharie and
Philoméne entered. They shook hands, and
all stayed together. But suddenly Zacharie became
angry, for he discovered that a nail-maker, who
had come in with his mates out of curiosity, was
pinching his sister's thigh. She blushed and
tried to make him be silent, trembling at the idea
that all these nail-makers would throw themselves
on Chaval and kill him if he objected to her being
pinched. She had felt the pinch, but said nothing
out of prudence. Her lover, however, merely made
a grimace, and as they all four now went out the
affair seemed to be finished. But hardly had they
entered Piquette's to drink a glass, when the
nail-maker reappeared, making fun of them and
coming close up to them with an air of
provocation. Zacharie, insulted in his good
family feelings, threw himself on the insolent
intruder.
"That's my sister, you swine! Just wait a
bit, and I'm damned if I don't make you respect
her."
The two men were separated, while Chaval, who was
quite calm, only repeated:
"Let be! it's my concern. I tell you I
don't care a damn for him."
Maheu now arrived with his party, and quieted
Catherine and Philoméne who were in tears.
The nail-maker had disappeared, and there was
laughter in the crowd. To bring the episode to an
end, Chaval, who was at home at the Estaminet
Piquette, called for drinks. Étienne had
touched glasses with Catherine, and all drank
together--the father, the daughter and her lover,
the son and his mistress--saying politely:
"To your good health!" Pierron
afterwards persisted in paying for more drinks.
And they were all in good humour, when Zacharie
grew wild again at the sight of his comrade
Mouquet, and called him, as he said, to go and
finish his affair with the nail-maker.
"I shall have to go and do for him! Here,
Chaval, keep Philoméne with Catherine. I'm
coming back."
Maheu offered drinks in his turn. After all, if
the lad wished to avenge his sister it was not a
bad example. But as soon as she had seen Mouquet,
Philoméne felt at rest, and nodded her
head. Sure enough the two chaps would be off to
the Volcan!
On the evenings of feast-days the fair was
terminated in the ball-room of the Bon-Joyeux. It
was a widow, Madame Désir, who kept this
ball-room, a fat matron of fifty, as round as a
tub, but so fresh that she still had six lovers,
one for every day of the week, she said, and the
six together for Sunday. She called all the
miners her children; and grew tender at the
thought of the flood of beer which she had poured
out for them during the last thirty years; and she
boasted also that a putter never became pregnant
without having first stretched her legs at her
establishment. There were two rooms in the
BonJoyeux: the bar which contained the counter and
tables; then, communicating with it on the same
floor by a large arch, was the ball-room, a large
hall only planked in the middle, being paved with
bricks round the sides. It was decorated with two
garlands of paper flowers which crossed one
another, and were united in the middle by a crown
of the same flowers; while along the walls were
rows of gilt shields bearing the names of
saints--St. Éloi, patron of the
iron-workers; St. Crispin, patron of the
shoemakers; St. Barbara, patron of the miners;
the whole calendar of corporations. The ceiling
was so low that the three musicians on their
platform, which was about the size of a pulpit,
knocked their heads against it. When it became
dark four petroleum lamps were fastened to the
four corners of the room.
On this Sunday there was dancing from five o'clock
with the full daylight through the windows, but it
was not until towards seven that the rooms began
to fill. Outside, a gale was rising, blowing
great black showers of dust which blinded people
and sleeted into the fryingpans. Maheu,
Étienne, and Pierron, having come in to sit
down, had found Chaval at the Bon-Joyeux dancing
with Catherine, while Philoméne by herself
was looking on. Neither Levaque nor Zacharie had
reappeared. As there were no benches around the
ball-room, Catherine came after each dance to rest
at her father's table. They called
Philoméne, but she preferred to stand up.
The twilight was coming on; the three musicians
played furiously; one could only see in the hall
the movement of hips and breasts in the midst of a
confusion of arms. The appearance of the four
lamps was greeted noisily, and suddenly everything
was lit up--the red faces, the dishevelled hair
sticking to the skin, the flying skirts spreading
abroad the strong odour of perspiring couples.
Maheu pointed out Mouquette to Étienne: she
was as round and greasy as a bladder of lard,
revolving violently in the arms of a tall, lean
lander. She had been obliged to console herself
and take a man.
At last, at eight o'clock, Maheude appeared with
Estelle at her breast, followed by Alzire, Henri,
and Lénore. She had come there straight to
her husband without fear of missing him. They
could sup later on; as yet nobody was hungry, with
their stomachs soaked in coffee and thickened with
beer. Other women came in, and they whispered
together when they saw, behind Maheude, the
Levaque woman enter with Bouteloup, who led in by
the hand Achille and Désirée,
Philoméne's little ones. The two
neighbours seemed to be getting on well together,
one turning round to chat with the other. On the
way there had been a great explanation, and
Maheude had resigned herself to Zacharie's
marriage, in despair at the loss of her eldest
son's wages, but overcome by the thought that she
could not hold it back any longer without
injustice. She was trying, therefore, to put a
good face on it, though with an anxious heart, as
a housekeeper who was asking herself how she could
make both ends meet now that the best part of her
purse was going.
"Place yourself there, neighbour," she
said, pointing to a table near that where Maheu
was drinking with Étienne and Pierron.
"Is not my husband with you?" asked the
Levaque woman.
The others told her that he would soon come. They
were all seated together in a heap, Bouteloup and
the youngsters so tightly squeezed among the
drinkers that the two tables only formed one.
There was a call for drinks. Seeing her mother
and her children Philoméne had decided to
come near. She accepted a chair, and seemed
pleased to hear that she was at last to be
married; then, as they were looking for Zacharie,
she replied in her soft voice:
"I am waiting for him; he is over
there."
Maheu had exchanged a look with his wife. She had
then consented? He became serious and smoked in
silence. He also felt anxiety for the morrow in
face of the ingratitude of these children, who got
married one by one leaving their parents in
wretchedness.
The dancing still went on, and the end of a
quadrille drowned the ball-room in red dust; the
walls cracked, a cornet produced shrill whistling
sounds like a locomotive in distress; and when the
dancers stopped they were smoking like horses.
"Do you remember?" said the Levaque
woman, bending towards Maheude's ear; "you
talked of strangling Catherine if she did anything
foolish!"
Chaval brought Catherine back to the family table,
and both of them standing behind the father
finished their glasses.
"Bah!" murmured Maheude, with an air of
resignation, "one says things like that--But
what quiets me is that she will not have a child;
I feel sure of that. You see if she is confined,
and obliged to marry, what shall we do for a
living then?"
Now the cornet was whistling a polka, and as the
deafening noise began again, Maheu, in a low
voice, communicated an idea to his wife. Why
should they not take a lodger? Étienne,
for example, who was looking out for quarters?
They would have room since Zacharie was going to
leave them, and the money that they would lose in
that direction would be in part regained in the
other. Maheude's face brightened; certainly it
was a good idea, it must be arranged. She seemed
to be saved from starvation once more, and her
good humour returned so quickly that she ordered a
new round of drinks.
Étienne, meanwhile, was seeking to
indoctrinate Pierron, to whom he was explaining
his plan of a provident fund. He had made him
promise to subscribe, when he was imprudent enough
to reveal his real aim.
"And if we go out on strike you can see how
useful that fund will be. We can snap our fingers
at the Company, we shall have there a fund to
fight against them. Eh? don't you think
so?"
Pierron lowered his eyes and grew pale; he
stammered:
"I'll think over it. Good conduct, that's
the best provident fund."
Then Maheu took possession of Étienne, and
squarely, like a good man, proposed to take him as
a lodger. The young man accepted at once, anxious
to live in the settlement with the idea of being
nearer to his mates. The matter was settled in
three words, Maheude declaring that they would
wait for the marriage of the children.
Just then, Zacharie at last came back, with
Mouquet and Levaque. The three brought in the
odours of the Volcan, a breath of gin, a musky
acidity of ill-kept girls. They were very tipsy
and seemed well pleased with themselves, digging
their elbows into each other and grinning. When
he knew that he was at last to be married Zacharie
began to laugh so loudly that he choked.
Philoméne peacefully declared that she
would rather see him laugh than cry. As there
were no more chairs, Bouteloup had moved so as to
give up half of his to Levaque. And the latter,
suddenly much affected by realizing that the whole
family party was there, once more had beer served
out.
"By the Lord! we don't amuse ourselves so
often!" he roared.
They remained there till ten o'clock. Women
continued to arrive, either to join or to take
away their men; bands of children followed in
rows, and the mothers no longer troubled
themselves, pulling out their long pale breasts,
like sacks of oats, and smearing their chubby
babies with milk; while the little ones who were
already able to walk, gorged with beer and on all
fours beneath the table, relieved themselves
without shame. It was a rising sea of beer, from
Madame Désir's disembowelled barrels, the
beer enlarged every belly, flowing from noses,
eyes, and everywhere. So puffed out was the crowd
that every one had a shoulder or knee poking into
his neighbour; all were cheerful and merry in thus
feeling each other's elbows. A continuous laugh
kept their mouths open from ear to ear. The heat
was like an oven; they were roasting and felt
themselves at ease with glistening skin, gilded in
a thick smoke from the pipes; the only discomfort
was when one had to move away; from time to time a
girl rose, went to the other end, near the pump,
lifted her clothes, and then came back. Beneath
the garlands of painted paper the dancers could no
longer see each other, they perspired so much;
this encouraged the trammers to tumble the putters
over, catching them at random by the hips. But
where a girl tumbled with a man over her, the
cornet covered their fall with its furious music;
the swirl of feet wrapped them round as if the
ball had collapsed upon them.
Someone who was passing warned Pierron that his
daughter Lydie was sleeping at the door, across
the pavement. She had drunk her share of the
stolen bottle and was tipsy. He had to carry her
away in his arms while Jeanlin and Bébert,
who were more sober, followed him behind, thinking
it a great joke. This was the signal for
departure, and several families came out of the
Bon-Joyeux, the Maheus and the Levaques deciding
to return to the settlement. At the same moment
Father Bonnemort and old Mouque also left Montsou,
walking in the same somnambulistic manner,
preserving the obstinate silence of their
recollections. And they all went back together,
passing for the last time through the fair, where
the frying-pans were coagulating, and by the
estaminets, from which the last glasses were
flowing in a stream towards the middle of the
road. The storm was still threatening, and sounds
of laughter arose as they left the lighted houses
to lose themselves in the dark country around.
Panting breaths arose from the ripe wheat; many
children must have been made on that night. They
arrived in confusion at the settlement. Neither
the Levaques nor the Maheus supped with appetite,
and the latter kept on dropping off to sleep while
finishing their morning's boiled beef.
Étienne had led away Chaval for one more
drink at Rasseneur's.
"I am with you!" said Chaval, when his
mate had explained the matter of the provident
fund. "Put it there! you're a fine
fellow!"
The beginning of drunkenness was flaming in
Étienne's eyes. He exclaimed:
"Yes, let's join hands. As for me, you know
I would give up everything for the sake of
justice, both drink and girls. There's only one
thing that warms my heart, and that is the thought
that we are going to sweep away these
bourgeois."