Information for "Les Misérables (novel)/Source/Volume 4/Book 2/Chapter 4"

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Display titleLes Misérables (novel)/Source/Volume 4/Book 2/Chapter 4
Default sort keyLes Misérables (novel)/Source/Volume 4/Book 2/Chapter 4
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Page creatorDerivative (talk | contribs)
Date of page creation15:28, 19 October 2019
Latest editorSelfCloak (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit23:25, 16 June 2020
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Some days after this visit of a “spirit” to Farmer Mabeuf, one morning,—it was on a Monday, the day when Marius borrowed the hundred-sou piece from Courfeyrac for Thénardier—Marius had put this coin in his pocket, and before carrying it to the clerk’s office, he had gone “to take a little stroll,” in the hope that this would make him work on his return. It was always thus, however. As soon as he rose, he seated himself before a book and a sheet of paper in order to scribble some translation; his task at that epoch consisted in turning into French a celebrated quarrel between Germans, the Gans and Savigny controversy; he took Savigny, he took Gans, read four lines, tried to write one, could not, saw a star between him and his paper, and rose from his chair, saying: “I shall go out. That will put me in spirits.”
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