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Under Sentence of Death; Or, a Criminal's Last Hours

Chapter 36: CHAPTER XXXIV.
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About This Book

A volume gathers three shorter narratives that examine crime, punishment, and human bonds across varied settings. One adopts a first-person voice to render the claustrophobic psychology of a condemned prisoner confronting imminent execution, memory, and imagination. A second relates an adventurous episode set in a tented encampment, blending suspense with shifting loyalties and moral ambiguity. A third serves as a stark social vignette portraying deprivation and harsh judicial consequences, using a single life to prompt reflection on mercy and reform.

CHAPTER XXXIV.

I recollect one day, when I was a child, going to see the peal of bells of Notre Dame. I was already dizzy with having mounted the dark winding staircase, and having crossed the narrow gallery which connects the two towers of the cathedral, and saw Paris stretching beneath my feet; then I entered the belfry where hangs the bell, and its clapper which weighs I know not how many pounds.

I advanced hesitatingly over the uneven flooring, gazing at the bell so celebrated amongst the children and the people of Paris, and remarked, not without a feeling of terror, that the sloping tile roofs were on a level with my feet; and I took a bird’s-eye view of the place of Paris—Notre Dame, and the passers-by looking like a swarm of ants. All of a sudden the heavy bell rang, a vibration shook the air and made the lofty tower quiver. The planking trembled on the beams. Affrighted, I threw myself upon the flooring, and clasped it with my two hands, speechless and breathless, with that tremendous pealing in my ears, whilst under my very eyes was that tremendous precipice where so many people were passing in calm and quiet. Well, it seems that I am still in the belfry tower. Everything seems to be buzzing and humming around me, there is a sound of bells beating on my brain; and around me, as across an abyss, I can see that calm and peaceful life that I have quitted where men walk peacefully to and fro.