[The Fortune of the Rougons by Emile Zola]@TWC D-Link book
The Fortune of the Rougons

CHAPTER V
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He, who could never see any forsaken creature, a poor man, or a child, walking barefooted along the dusty roads, without a throb of pity, loved Miette because nobody else loved her, because she virtually led an outcast's hard life.
When he saw her smile he was deeply moved by the joy he brought her.
Moreover, the child was a wildling, like himself, and they were of the same mind in hating all the gossips of the Faubourg.

The dreams in which Silvere indulged in the daytime, while he plied his heavy hammer round the cartwheels in his master's shop, were full of generous enthusiasm.
He fancied himself Miette's redeemer.

All his reading rushed to his head; he meant to marry his sweetheart some day, in order to raise her in the eyes of the world.

It was like a holy mission that he imposed upon himself, that of redeeming and saving the convict's daughter.

And his head was so full of certain theories and arguments, that he did not tell himself these things in simple fashion, but became lost in perfect social mysticism; imagining rehabilitation in the form of an apotheosis in which he pictured Miette seated on a throne, at the end of the Cours Sauvaire, while the whole town prostrated itself before her, entreating her pardon and singing her praises.


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