Book the Second - the Golden Thread
16. XVI. Still Knitting
 
Madame Defarge and monsieur her husband returned amicably to the bosom
 of Saint Antoine, while a speck in a blue cap toiled through the
 darkness, and through the dust, and down the weary miles of avenue by
 the wayside, slowly tending towards that point of the compass where the
 chateau of Monsieur the Marquis, now in his grave, listened to the
 whispering trees.  Such ample leisure had the stone faces, now, for
 listening to the trees and to the fountain, that the few village
 scarecrows who, in their quest for herbs to eat and fragments of dead
 stick to burn, strayed within sight of the great stone courtyard and
 terrace staircase, had it borne in upon their starved fancy that the
 expression of the faces was altered.  A rumour just lived in the
 village--had a faint and bare existence there, as its people had--that
 when the knife struck home, the faces changed, from faces of pride to
 faces of anger and pain; also, that when that dangling figure was
 hauled up forty feet above the fountain, they changed again, and bore
 a cruel look of being avenged, which they would henceforth bear
 for ever.  In the stone face over the great window of the bed-chamber
 where the murder was done, two fine dints were pointed out in the
 sculptured nose, which everybody recognised, and which nobody had
 seen of old; and on the scarce occasions when two or three ragged
 peasants emerged from the crowd to take a hurried peep at Monsieur
 the Marquis petrified, a skinny finger would not have pointed to it
 for a minute, before they all started away among the moss and leaves,
 like the more fortunate hares who could find a living there. 
Chateau and hut, stone face and dangling figure, the red stain on the
 stone floor, and the pure water in the village well--thousands of acres
 of land--a whole province of France--all France itself--lay under the
 night sky, concentrated into a faint hair-breadth line.  So does a
 whole world, with all its greatnesses and littlenesses, lie in a
 twinkling star.  And as mere human knowledge can split a ray of light
 and analyse the manner of its composition, so, sublimer intelligences
 may read in the feeble shining of this earth of ours, every thought
 and act, every vice and virtue, of every responsible creature on it. 
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