CHAPTER IX—JONDRETTE COMES NEAR WEEPINGThe hovel was so dark, that people coming from without felt on entering it the effect produced on entering a cellar. The two newcomers advanced, therefore, with a certain hesitation, being hardly able to distinguish the vague forms surrounding them, while they could be clearly seen and scrutinized by the eyes of the inhabitants of the garret, who were accustomed to this twilight. M. Leblanc approached, with his sad but kindly look, and said to Jondrette the father:— “Monsieur, in this package you will find some new clothes and some woollen stockings and blankets.” “Our angelic benefactor overwhelms us,” said Jondrette, bowing to the very earth. Then, bending down to the ear of his eldest daughter, while the two visitors were engaged in examining t

