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Chapter 15 Number 34 and Number 27.

Chapter 15  Number 34 and Number 27.

 

Dantes passed through all the stages of torture natural to

prisoners in suspense. He was sustained at first by that

pride of conscious innocence which is the sequence to hope;

then he began to doubt his own innocence, which justified in

some measure the governor's belief in his mental alienation;

and then, relaxing his sentiment of pride, he addressed his

supplications, not to God, but to man. God is always the

last resource. Unfortunates, who ought to begin with God, do

not have any hope in him till they have exhausted all other

means of deliverance.

 

Dantes asked to be removed from his present dungeon into

another; for a change, however disadvantageous, was still a

change, and would afford him some amusement. He entreated to

be allowed to walk about, to have fresh air, books, and

writing materials. His requests were not granted, but he

went on asking all the same. He accustomed himself to

speaking to the new jailer, although the latter was, if

possible, more taciturn than the old one; but still, to

speak to a man, even though mute, was something. Dantes

spoke for the sake of hearing his own voice; he had tried to

speak when alone, but the sound of his voice terrified him.

Often, before his captivity, Dantes, mind had revolted at

the idea of assemblages of prisoners, made up of thieves,

vagabonds, and murderers. He now wished to be amongst them,

in order to see some other face besides that of his jailer;

he sighed for the galleys, with the infamous costume, the

chain, and the brand on the shoulder. The galley-slaves

breathed the fresh air of heaven, and saw each other. They

were very happy. He besought the jailer one day to let him

have a companion, were it even the mad abbe.

 

The jailer, though rough and hardened by the constant sight

of so much suffering, was yet a man. At the bottom of his

heart he had often had a feeling of pity for this unhappy

young man who suffered so; and he laid the request of number

34 before the governor; but the latter sapiently imagined

that Dantes wished to conspire or attempt an escape, and

refused his request. Dantes had exhausted all human

resources, and he then turned to God.

 

All the pious ideas that had been so long forgotten,

returned; he recollected the prayers his mother had taught

him, and discovered a new meaning in every word; for in

prosperity prayers seem but a mere medley of words, until

misfortune comes and the unhappy sufferer first understands

the meaning of the sublime language in which he invokes the

pity of heaven! He prayed, and prayed aloud, no longer

terrified at the sound of his own voice, for he fell into a

sort of ecstasy. He laid every action of his life before the

Almighty, proposed tasks to accomplish, and at the end of

every prayer introduced the entreaty oftener addressed to

man than to God: "Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive

them that trespass against us." Yet in spite of his earnest

prayers, Dantes remained a prisoner.

 

Then gloom settled heavily upon him. Dantes was a man of

great simplicity of thought, and without education; he could

not, therefore, in the solitude of his dungeon, traverse in

mental vision the history of the ages, bring to life the

nations that had perished, and rebuild the ancient cities so

vast and stupendous in the light of the imagination, and

that pass before the eye glowing with celestial colors in

Martin's Babylonian pictures. He could not do this, he whose

past life was so short, whose present so melancholy, and his

future so doubtful. Nineteen years of light to reflect upon

in eternal darkness! No distraction could come to his aid;

his energetic spirit, that would have exalted in thus

revisiting the past, was imprisoned like an eagle in a cage.

He clung to one idea -- that of his happiness, destroyed,

without apparent cause, by an unheard-of fatality; he

considered and reconsidered this idea, devoured it (so to

speak), as the implacable Ugolino devours the skull of

Archbishop Roger in the Inferno of Dante.

 

Rage supplanted religious fervor. Dantes uttered blasphemies

that made his jailer recoil with horror, dashed himself

furiously against the walls of his prison, wreaked his anger

upon everything, and chiefly upon himself, so that the least

thing, -- a grain of sand, a straw, or a breath of air that

annoyed him, led to paroxysms of fury. Then the letter that

Villefort had showed to him recurred to his mind, and every

line gleamed forth in fiery letters on the wall like the

mene tekel upharsin of Belshazzar. He told himself that it

was the enmity of man, and not the vengeance of heaven, that

had thus plunged him into the deepest misery. He consigned

his unknown persecutors to the most horrible tortures he

could imagine, and found them all insufficient, because

after torture came death, and after death, if not repose, at

least the boon of unconsciousness.

 

By dint of constantly dwelling on the idea that tranquillity

was death, and if punishment were the end in view other

tortures than death must be invented, he began to reflect on

suicide. Unhappy he, who, on the brink of misfortune, broods

over ideas like these!

 

Before him is a dead sea that stretches in azure calm before

the eye; but he who unwarily ventures within its embrace

finds himself struggling with a monster that would drag him

down to perdition. Once thus ensnared, unless the protecting

hand of God snatch him thence, all is over, and his

struggles but tend to hasten his destruction. This state of

mental anguish is, however, less terrible than the

sufferings that precede or the punishment that possibly will

follow. There is a sort of consolation at the contemplation

of the yawning abyss, at the bottom of which lie darkness

and obscurity.

 

Edmond found some solace in these ideas. All his sorrows,

all his sufferings, with their train of gloomy spectres,

fled from his cell when the angel of death seemed about to

enter. Dantes reviewed his past life with composure, and,

looking forward with terror to his future existence, chose

that middle line that seemed to afford him a refuge.

 

"Sometimes," said he, "in my voyages, when I was a man and

commanded other men, I have seen the heavens overcast, the

sea rage and foam, the storm arise, and, like a monstrous

bird, beating the two horizons with its wings. Then I felt

that my vessel was a vain refuge, that trembled and shook

before the tempest. Soon the fury of the waves and the sight

of the sharp rocks announced the approach of death, and

death then terrified me, and I used all my skill and

intelligence as a man and a sailor to struggle against the

wrath of God. But I did so because I was happy, because I

had not courted death, because to be cast upon a bed of

rocks and seaweed seemed terrible, because I was unwilling

that I, a creature made for the service of God, should serve

for food to the gulls and ravens. But now it is different; I

have lost all that bound me to life, death smiles and

invites me to repose; I die after my own manner, I die

exhausted and broken-spirited, as I fall asleep when I have

paced three thousand times round my cell."

 

No sooner had this idea taken possession of him than he

became more composed, arranged his couch to the best of his

power, ate little and slept less, and found existence almost

supportable, because he felt that he could throw it off at

pleasure, like a worn-out garment. Two methods of

self-destruction were at his disposal. He could hang himself

with his handkerchief to the window bars, or refuse food and

die of starvation. But the first was repugnant to him.

Dantes had always entertained the greatest horror of

pirates, who are hung up to the yard-arm; he would not die

by what seemed an infamous death. He resolved to adopt the

second, and began that day to carry out his resolve. Nearly

four years had passed away; at the end of the second he had

ceased to mark the lapse of time.

 

Dantes said, "I wish to die," and had chosen the manner of

his death, and fearful of changing his mind, he had taken an

oath to die. "When my morning and evening meals are

brought," thought he, "I will cast them out of the window,

and they will think that I have eaten them."

 

He kept his word; twice a day he cast out, through the

barred aperture, the provisions his jailer brought him -- at

first gayly, then with deliberation, and at last with

regret. Nothing but the recollection of his oath gave him

strength to proceed. Hunger made viands once repugnant, now

acceptable; he held the plate in his hand for an hour at a

time, and gazed thoughtfully at the morsel of bad meat, of

tainted fish, of black and mouldy bread. It was the last

yearning for life contending with the resolution of despair;

then his dungeon seemed less sombre, his prospects less

desperate. He was still young -- he was only four or five

and twenty -- he had nearly fifty years to live. What

unforseen events might not open his prison door, and restore

him to liberty? Then he raised to his lips the repast that,

like a voluntary Tantalus, he refused himself; but he

thought of his oath, and he would not break it. He persisted

until, at last, he had not sufficient strength to rise and

cast his supper out of the loophole. The next morning he

could not see or hear; the jailer feared he was dangerously

ill. Edmond hoped he was dying.

 

Thus the day passed away. Edmond felt a sort of stupor

creeping over him which brought with it a feeling almost of

content; the gnawing pain at his stomach had ceased; his

thirst had abated; when he closed his eyes he saw myriads of

lights dancing before them like the will-o'-the-wisps that

play about the marshes. It was the twilight of that

mysterious country called Death!

 

Suddenly, about nine o'clock in the evening, Edmond heard a

hollow sound in the wall against which he was lying.

 

So many loathsome animals inhabited the prison, that their

noise did not, in general, awake him; but whether abstinence

had quickened his faculties, or whether the noise was really

louder than usual, Edmond raised his head and listened. It

was a continual scratching, as if made by a huge claw, a

powerful tooth, or some iron instrument attacking the

stones.

 

Although weakened, the young man's brain instantly responded

to the idea that haunts all prisoners -- liberty! It seemed

to him that heaven had at length taken pity on him, and had

sent this noise to warn him on the very brink of the abyss.

Perhaps one of those beloved ones he had so often thought of

was thinking of him, and striving to diminish the distance

that separated them.

 

No, no, doubtless he was deceived, and it was but one of

those dreams that forerun death!

 

Edmond still heard the sound. It lasted nearly three hours;

he then heard a noise of something falling, and all was

silent.

 

Some hours afterwards it began again, nearer and more

distinct. Edmond was intensely interested. Suddenly the

jailer entered.

 

For a week since he had resolved to die, and during the four

days that he had been carrying out his purpose, Edmond had

not spoken to the attendant, had not answered him when he

inquired what was the matter with him, and turned his face

to the wall when he looked too curiously at him; but now the

jailer might hear the noise and put an end to it, and so

destroy a ray of something like hope that soothed his last

moments.

 

The jailer brought him his breakfast. Dantes raised himself

up and began to talk about everything; about the bad quality

of the food, about the coldness of his dungeon, grumbling

and complaining, in order to have an excuse for speaking

louder, and wearying the patience of his jailer, who out of

kindness of heart had brought broth and white bread for his

prisoner.

 

Fortunately, he fancied that Dantes was delirious; and

placing the food on the rickety table, he withdrew. Edmond

listened, and the sound became more and more distinct.

 

"There can be no doubt about it," thought he; "it is some

prisoner who is striving to obtain his freedom. Oh, if I

were only there to help him!" Suddenly another idea took

possession of his mind, so used to misfortune, that it was

scarcely capable of hope -- the idea that the noise was made

by workmen the governor had ordered to repair the

neighboring dungeon.

 

It was easy to ascertain this; but how could he risk the

question? It was easy to call his jailer's attention to the

noise, and watch his countenance as he listened; but might

he not by this means destroy hopes far more important than

the short-lived satisfaction of his own curiosity?

Unfortunately, Edmond's brain was still so feeble that he

could not bend his thoughts to anything in particular.

 

He saw but one means of restoring lucidity and clearness to

his judgment. He turned his eyes towards the soup which the

jailer had brought, rose, staggered towards it, raised the

vessel to his lips, and drank off the contents with a

feeling of indescribable pleasure. He had often heard that

shipwrecked persons had died through having eagerly devoured

too much food. Edmond replaced on the table the bread he was

about to devour, and returned to his couch -- he did not

wish to die. He soon felt that his ideas became again

collected -- he could think, and strengthen his thoughts by

reasoning. Then he said to himself, "I must put this to the

test, but without compromising anybody. If it is a workman,

I need but knock against the wall, and he will cease to

work, in order to find out who is knocking, and why he does

so; but as his occupation is sanctioned by the governor, he

will soon resume it. If, on the contrary, it is a prisoner,

the noise I make will alarm him, he will cease, and not

begin again until he thinks every one is asleep."

 

Edmond rose again, but this time his legs did not tremble,

and his sight was clear; he went to a corner of his dungeon,

detached a stone, and with it knocked against the wall where

the sound came. He struck thrice. At the first blow the

sound ceased, as if by magic.

 

Edmond listened intently; an hour passed, two hours passed,

and no sound was heard from the wall -- all was silent

there.

 

Full of hope, Edmond swallowed a few mouthfuls of bread and

water, and, thanks to the vigor of his constitution, found

himself well-nigh recovered.

 

The day passed away in utter silence -- night came without

recurrence of the noise.

 

"It is a prisoner," said Edmond joyfully. The night passed

in perfect silence. Edmond did not close his eyes.

 

In the morning the jailer brought him fresh provisions -- he

had already devoured those of the previous day; he ate these

listening anxiously for the sound, walking round and round

his cell, shaking the iron bars of the loophole, restoring

vigor and agility to his limbs by exercise, and so preparing

himself for his future destiny. At intervals he listened to

learn if the noise had not begun again, and grew impatient

at the prudence of the prisoner, who did not guess he had

been disturbed by a captive as anxious for liberty as

himself.

 

Three days passed -- seventy-two long tedious hours which he

counted off by minutes!

 

At length one evening, as the jailer was visiting him for

the last time that night, Dantes, with his ear for the

hundredth time at the wall, fancied he heard an almost

imperceptible movement among the stones. He moved away,

walked up and down his cell to collect his thoughts, and

then went back and listened.

 

The matter was no longer doubtful. Something was at work on

the other side of the wall; the prisoner had discovered the

danger, and had substituted a lever for a chisel.

 

Encouraged by this discovery, Edmond determined to assist

the indefatigable laborer. He began by moving his bed, and

looked around for anything with which he could pierce the

wall, penetrate the moist cement, and displace a stone.

 

He saw nothing, he had no knife or sharp instrument, the

window grating was of iron, but he had too often assured

himself of its solidity. All his furniture consisted of a

bed, a chair, a table, a pail, and a jug. The bed had iron

clamps, but they were screwed to the wood, and it would have

required a screw-driver to take them off. The table and

chair had nothing, the pail had once possessed a handle, but

that had been removed.

 

Dantes had but one resource, which was to break the jug, and

with one of the sharp fragments attack the wall. He let the

jug fall on the floor, and it broke in pieces.

 

Dantes concealed two or three of the sharpest fragments in

his bed, leaving the rest on the floor. The breaking of his

jug was too natural an accident to excite suspicion. Edmond

had all the night to work in, but in the darkness he could

not do much, and he soon felt that he was working against

something very hard; he pushed back his bed, and waited for

day.

 

All night he heard the subterranean workman, who continued

to mine his way. Day came, the jailer entered. Dantes told

him that the jug had fallen from his hands while he was

drinking, and the jailer went grumblingly to fetch another,

without giving himself the trouble to remove the fragments

of the broken one. He returned speedily, advised the

prisoner to be more careful, and departed.

 

Dantes heard joyfully the key grate in the lock; he listened

until the sound of steps died away, and then, hastily

displacing his bed, saw by the faint light that penetrated

into his cell, that he had labored uselessly the previous

evening in attacking the stone instead of removing the

plaster that surrounded it.

 

The damp had rendered it friable, and Dantes was able to

break it off -- in small morsels, it is true, but at the end

of half an hour he had scraped off a handful; a

mathematician might have calculated that in two years,

supposing that the rock was not encountered, a passage

twenty feet long and two feet broad, might be formed.

 

The prisoner reproached himself with not having thus

employed the hours he had passed in vain hopes, prayer, and

despondency. During the six years that he had been

imprisoned, what might he not have accomplished?

 

In three days he had succeeded, with the utmost precaution,

in removing the cement, and exposing the stone-work. The

wall was built of rough stones, among which, to give

strength to the structure, blocks of hewn stone were at

intervals imbedded. It was one of these he had uncovered,

and which he must remove from its socket.

 

Dantes strove to do this with his nails, but they were too

weak. The fragments of the jug broke, and after an hour of

useless toil, he paused.

 

Was he to be thus stopped at the beginning, and was he to

wait inactive until his fellow workman had completed his

task? Suddenly an idea occurred to him -- he smiled, and the

perspiration dried on his forehead.

 

The jailer always brought Dantes' soup in an iron saucepan;

this saucepan contained soup for both prisoners, for Dantes

had noticed that it was either quite full, or half empty,

according as the turnkey gave it to him or to his companion

first.

 

The handle of this saucepan was of iron; Dantes would have

given ten years of his life in exchange for it.

 

The jailer was accustomed to pour the contents of the

saucepan into Dantes' plate, and Dantes, after eating his

soup with a wooden spoon, washed the plate, which thus

served for every day. Now when evening came Dantes put his

plate on the ground near the door; the jailer, as he

entered, stepped on it and broke it.

 

This time he could not blame Dantes. He was wrong to leave

it there, but the jailer was wrong not to have looked before

him.

 

The jailer, therefore, only grumbled. Then he looked about

for something to pour the soup into; Dantes' entire dinner

service consisted of one plate -- there was no alternative.

 

"Leave the saucepan," said Dantes; "you can take it away

when you bring me my breakfast." This advice was to the

jailer's taste, as it spared him the necessity of making

another trip. He left the saucepan.

 

Dantes was beside himself with joy. He rapidly devoured his

food, and after waiting an hour, lest the jailer should

change his mind and return, he removed his bed, took the

handle of the saucepan, inserted the point between the hewn

stone and rough stones of the wall, and employed it as a

lever. A slight oscillation showed Dantes that all went

well. At the end of an hour the stone was extricated from

the wall, leaving a cavity a foot and a half in diameter.

 

Dantes carefully collected the plaster, carried it into the

corner of his cell, and covered it with earth. Then, wishing

to make the best use of his time while he had the means of

labor, he continued to work without ceasing. At the dawn of

day he replaced the stone, pushed his bed against the wall,

and lay down. The breakfast consisted of a piece of bread;

the jailer entered and placed the bread on the table.

 

"Well, don't you intend to bring me another plate?" said

Dantes.

 

"No," replied the turnkey; "you destroy everything. First

you break your jug, then you make me break your plate; if

all the prisoners followed your example, the government

would be ruined. I shall leave you the saucepan, and pour

your soup into that. So for the future I hope you will not

be so destructive."

 

Dantes raised his eyes to heaven and clasped his hands

beneath the coverlet. He felt more gratitude for the

possession of this piece of iron than he had ever felt for

anything. He had noticed, however, that the prisoner on the

other side had ceased to labor; no matter, this was a

greater reason for proceeding -- if his neighbor would not

come to him, he would go to his neighbor. All day he toiled

on untiringly, and by the evening he had succeeded in

extracting ten handfuls of plaster and fragments of stone.

When the hour for his jailer's visit arrived, Dantes

straightened the handle of the saucepan as well as he could,

and placed it in its accustomed place. The turnkey poured

his ration of soup into it, together with the fish -- for

thrice a week the prisoners were deprived of meat. This

would have been a method of reckoning time, had not Dantes

long ceased to do so. Having poured out the soup, the

turnkey retired. Dantes wished to ascertain whether his

neighbor had really ceased to work. He listened -- all was

silent, as it had been for the last three days. Dantes

sighed; it was evident that his neighbor distrusted him.

However, he toiled on all the night without being

discouraged; but after two or three hours he encountered an

obstacle. The iron made no impression, but met with a smooth

surface; Dantes touched it, and found that it was a beam.

This beam crossed, or rather blocked up, the hole Dantes had

made; it was necessary, therefore, to dig above or under it.

The unhappy young man had not thought of this. "O my God, my

God!" murmured he, "I have so earnestly prayed to you, that

I hoped my prayers had been heard. After having deprived me

of my liberty, after having deprived me of death, after

having recalled me to existence, my God, have pity on me,

and do not let me die in despair!"

 

"Who talks of God and despair at the same time?" said a

voice that seemed to come from beneath the earth, and,

deadened by the distance, sounded hollow and sepulchral in

the young man's ears. Edmond's hair stood on end, and he

rose to his knees.

 

"Ah," said he, "I hear a human voice." Edmond had not heard

any one speak save his jailer for four or five years; and a

jailer is no man to a prisoner -- he is a living door, a

barrier of flesh and blood adding strength to restraints of

oak and iron.

 

"In the name of heaven," cried Dantes, "speak again, though

the sound of your voice terrifies me. Who are you?"

 

"Who are you?" said the voice.

 

"An unhappy prisoner," replied Dantes, who made no

hesitation in answering.

 

"Of what country?"

 

"A Frenchman."

 

"Your name?"

 

"Edmond Dantes."

 

"Your profession?"

 

"A sailor."

 

"How long have you been here?"

 

"Since the 28th of February, 1815."

 

"Your crime?"

 

"I am innocent."

 

"But of what are you accused?"

 

"Of having conspired to aid the emperor's return."

 

"What! For the emperor's return? -- the emperor is no longer

on the throne, then?"

 

"He abdicated at Fontainebleau in 1814, and was sent to the

Island of Elba. But how long have you been here that you are

ignorant of all this?"

 

"Since 1811."

 

Dantes shuddered; this man had been four years longer than

himself in prison.

 

"Do not dig any more," said the voice; "only tell me how

high up is your excavation?"

 

"On a level with the floor."

 

"How is it concealed?"

 

"Behind my bed."

 

"Has your bed been moved since you have been a prisoner?"

 

"No."

 

"What does your chamber open on?"

 

"A corridor."

 

"And the corridor?"

 

"On a court."

 

"Alas!" murmured the voice.

 

"Oh, what is the matter?" cried Dantes.

 

"I have made a mistake owing to an error in my plans. I took

the wrong angle, and have come out fifteen feet from where I

intended. I took the wall you are mining for the outer wall

of the fortress."

 

"But then you would be close to the sea?"

 

"That is what I hoped."

 

"And supposing you had succeeded?"

 

"I should have thrown myself into the sea, gained one of the

islands near here -- the Isle de Daume or the Isle de

Tiboulen -- and then I should have been safe."

 

"Could you have swum so far?"

 

"Heaven would have given me strength; but now all is lost."

 

"All?"

 

"Yes; stop up your excavation carefully, do not work any

more, and wait until you hear from me."

 

"Tell me, at least, who you are?"

 

"I am -- I am No. 27."

 

"You mistrust me, then," said Dantes. Edmond fancied he

heard a bitter laugh resounding from the depths.

 

"Oh, I am a Christian," cried Dantes, guessing instinctively

that this man meant to abandon him. "I swear to you by him

who died for us that naught shall induce me to breathe one

syllable to my jailers; but I conjure you do not abandon me.

If you do, I swear to you, for I have got to the end of my

strength, that I will dash my brains out against the wall,

and you will have my death to reproach yourself with."

 

"How old are you? Your voice is that of a young man."

 

"I do not know my age, for I have not counted the years I

have been here. All I do know is, that I was just nineteen

when I was arrested, the 28th of February, 1815."

 

"Not quite twenty-six!" murmured the voice; "at that age he

cannot be a traitor."

 

"Oh, no, no," cried Dantes. "I swear to you again, rather

than betray you, I would allow myself to be hacked in

pieces!"

 

"You have done well to speak to me, and ask for my

assistance, for I was about to form another plan, and leave

you; but your age reassures me. I will not forget you.

Wait."

 

"How long?"

 

"I must calculate our chances; I will give you the signal."

 

"But you will not leave me; you will come to me, or you will

let me come to you. We will escape, and if we cannot escape

we will talk; you of those whom you love, and I of those

whom I love. You must love somebody?"

 

"No, I am alone in the world."

 

"Then you will love me. If you are young, I will be your

comrade; if you are old, I will be your son. I have a father

who is seventy if he yet lives; I only love him and a young

girl called Mercedes. My father has not yet forgotten me, I

am sure, but God alone knows if she loves me still; I shall

love you as I loved my father."

 

"It is well," returned the voice; "to-morrow."

 

These few words were uttered with an accent that left no

doubt of his sincerity; Dantes rose, dispersed the fragments

with the same precaution as before, and pushed his bed back

against the wall. He then gave himself up to his happiness.

He would no longer be alone. He was, perhaps, about to

regain his liberty; at the worst, he would have a companion,

and captivity that is shared is but half captivity. Plaints

made in common are almost prayers, and prayers where two or

three are gathered together invoke the mercy of heaven.

 

All day Dantes walked up and down his cell. He sat down

occasionally on his bed, pressing his hand on his heart. At

the slightest noise he bounded towards the door. Once or

twice the thought crossed his mind that he might be

separated from this unknown, whom he loved already; and then

his mind was made up -- when the jailer moved his bed and

stooped to examine the opening, he would kill him with his

water jug. He would be condemned to die, but he was about to

die of grief and despair when this miraculous noise recalled

him to life.

 

The jailer came in the evening. Dantes was on his bed. It

seemed to him that thus he better guarded the unfinished

opening. Doubtless there was a strange expression in his

eyes, for the jailer said, "Come, are you going mad again?"

 

Dantes did not answer; he feared that the emotion of his

voice would betray him. The jailer went away shaking his

head. Night came; Dantes hoped that his neighbor would

profit by the silence to address him, but he was mistaken.

The next morning, however, just as he removed his bed from

the wall, he heard three knocks; he threw himself on his

knees.

 

"Is it you?" said he; "I am here."

 

"Is your jailer gone?"

 

"Yes," said Dantes; "he will not return until the evening;

so that we have twelve hours before us."

 

"I can work, then?" said the voice.

 

"Oh, yes, yes; this instant, I entreat you."

 

In a moment that part of the floor on which Dantes was

resting his two hands, as he knelt with his head in the

opening, suddenly gave way; he drew back smartly, while a

mass of stones and earth disappeared in a hole that opened

beneath the aperture he himself had formed. Then from the

bottom of this passage, the depth of which it was impossible

to measure, he saw appear, first the head, then the

shoulders, and lastly the body of a man, who sprang lightly

into his cell.

 

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