Reading the Chunksters discussion

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Les Misérables
Les Miserables
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Les Mis - Fantine, Books 7-8
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In the flurry of activity after Champmathieu is freed, Valjean rushes back to try to help Fantine. She mistakenly thinks he has gone to retrieve Cosette, and is in a state of supreme happiness until Javert appears to arrest Valjean. Javert refuses to agree to retrieve Cosette, and Fantine, rattled to the core by the circumstances with her beloved Madeleine and alarmed that her daughter is not already in the area, dies of shock. Valjean is imprisoned but promptly escapes, settling his financial affairs (leaving all to the poor) and heading to Paris.



I think Hugo does a brilliant job of portraying JV's agonising, the way he goes back and forth, thinks he has a fated reprieve, then realises, after all, that he doesn't. It gives him moral stature as there are certainly arguments for why he should not hand himself in, as you say, Dianne (the one man vs. many) but ultimately he knows what is right and we surely respect him for that, even while my heart sank at the idea of him going back to prison.
That's reiterated when Sister Simplice lies for him - surely she wouldn't if he'd been the sort of man to escape through someone else's pain? And that moment when his hair turns white overnight from the stress - sob!

Some great quotes from JV that still feed into modern debates: 'It is gaol that makes the gaolbird... before going to prison I was a peasant with very little intelligence, almost an idiot. It was prison which changed me. I had been stupid but I grew malignant... Goodness and compassion saved me after brutality had come near to destroying me.'
Also the slightly implausible but crucial speech of Champmathieu when he's pressured under interrogation: 'That's what I was trying to say, only I couldn't find the words. I'm one of those that don't eat every day... I don't know how to say things, I never had any schooling, I'm one of the poor.'
This whole episode is like a longer version of JV lifting the cart off the trapped man: he has a choice to do something good that will condemn himself, or simply walk away - he goes for the hard decision both times.

I think JV had to give himself in. He knew that he had suffered the injustice of a long prison sentence for a minor offence of stealing bread. He couldn’t see another man imprisoned for a long time for something he didn’t do. I think he will have always had a plan but he must have hoped he would have been able to get to Cosette before Javert caught up with him.
I wondered about the relationship between JV and Fantine. Does he want to help her because he felt guilty she lost her job? Does he have any romantic feelings towards her? He seems very willing to risk a lot for her.
Fantine’s death was perhaps a little overdramatic! I was more sad when at the end of the chapter Hugo mentions she was buried in an unmarked grave. It seems such a sad end for somebody who could have had promise.
I wondered about the relationship between JV and Fantine. Does he want to help her because he felt guilty she lost her job? Does he have any romantic feelings towards her? He seems very willing to risk a lot for her.
Fantine’s death was perhaps a little overdramatic! I was more sad when at the end of the chapter Hugo mentions she was buried in an unmarked grave. It seems such a sad end for somebody who could have had promise.
Does anybody else think Javert could have ignored the order to arrest JV? I was really hoping he would.

I thought JV's internal conflict/dialog over turning himself in was brilliant writing, something most of us can relate to having experienced the same inner turmoil in our lives, although not necessarily over an issue with the same devastating and bleak consequences. That it ran on for pages emphasized how all consuming such inner conflicts can be. I hope and trust that these pages haven't been removed from abridged versions.



For me, what's enacted here is the rigid and inhumane legalism of Javert who follows the letter of the law, and the deeper, more human and compassionate understanding of Sister Simplice who bears witness to a deeper truth about the character of JV.
Great point. Sister Simplice represents the opposite of Javert

Yes, I've always been vaguely uncomfortable about this relationship but I think that's due to our modern cynicism and awareness of sexualised power and authority - I don't think Hugo intended that at all.
If anything, JV feels paternal towards Fantine, I think. He sees her as unfairly disadvantaged (in modern parlance) and takes on the role that Myriel played for him - paying it forward, as it were.

Haha, then we'd have had no story. I think, given Javert's psychological make-up and almost pathological adherence to 'rules and regulations', it simply wouldn't be possible for him to let JV or anyone else go.


That caught my attention. It just comes out of left field and must mean more than just bitter bread.
RC- that’s a good point. I hadn’t thought about the relationship being anything other than sexualised whereas I think you are right, he is taking the role of a father figure.

I read this as a way of giving us indirect insight into JV's state of emotions - first that he's not hungry since he notes that he missed his breakfast, then when he does eat, all he can taste is bitterness.

Sister Simplice in her honesty is like Jalvert's attitude for authority and the law - unrelenting.
I think she lied to tell Valjean to not allow himself to be captured because she knew what would happen if he was exposed. She knew people would forget all the good Madeleine had done, and the town would unravel. To her, the loss of F. Madeleine was a greater loss than that of another man. I do not think she lied for Madeleine's sake, but for the greater good.
I think Fantine's missing child affected Valjean. He had, before he was imprisoned, a sister and many nieces and nephews. Hugo discussed at length the damage done to Valjean when his family disappeared from his life. Cossette is all the family Fantine had. Compassion and his efforts to do good influenced his behavior toward her.
BTW, the V's and J's have always left me confused. I get Valjean and Javert mixed up. But now that Roman mentioned the similar tonalities, I wonder if Hugo intended this in naming the main characters. They are, after all, two side of the same coin: the law.

I can't agree. The people have already forgotten the good he has done, and the factory is already closed, and JV must leave to never return. She lied either because of JV's moral force, or because lying was the only way for Cosette to be rescued and to end the torture to Fantine's soul, or both.

Well, I did have my suspicions! That man was too good to be true, too perfect, too sickly sweet. He refused the cross, he handed out sous to all the little beggars he met. I always thought there was something bad at the bottom of all that.
I think Hugo is criticizing, or pointing out, the populace's complicity in their own condition. Look how quickly they turn on JV, choosing to forget all the good he has done. Instead of directing anger and hostility at the system, they quickly turn on him and support the system. Do they even realize how much worse their lives will be now? Perhaps Hugo was trying to raise awareness.
And then this about sister Simplice after she lies:
Oh, holy child! You are no longer of this world—have not been for many years now; you have caught up with your virgin sisters and your angel brothers in the light; may these lies be chalked up to you in paradise!
For the first time sister Simplice acts as a moral agent regarding lying, abandoning the truth to do a greater good. Lying can be a slippery slope, but intentions matter, and there's no escaping that.

I'm so far ahead I'd forgotten he was already exposed. I still think she did it for the greater good, though.

I never thought of Valjean's relationship with Fantine as a sexual one at all. She's pretty sick when he helps her after Javert brought her back to be arrested. I think he felt bad for her, and maybe even partly responsible for the situation she was in. I think he wants to help her because they all know she's dying. So I think he's trying to help her so she can see her child before she dies. Unfortunately, it doesn't work out that way.

Renee, I loved that tension he's fighting within himself. It's a real inner conflict. It reminds me of the earlier chapters where he's a prisoner and was fighting with how society treated him. Now he has a chance to do the right thing and his mind's calculating things differently.



Excellent point, Alana.
He makes a choice, the essence of freedom and identity.

Javert, to me, is the physical embodiment of the "zero tolerance" rule. An infraction is an infraction--there is no room for extenuating circumstances, negotiation, or compassion. "We found a knife in your truck--it doesn't matter that you're a straight-A honor student and the knife in question is a butter knife that fell out in the bed of the truck from when you helped your grandparents move." The kid still gets suspended. Javert allows nothing like facts, truth, or common sense to influence his course of action. If taking Valjean into custody would cause the death of everyone in that town, I believe he would still do it. His moral code is set in iron and leaves no room for humanity.
Sister Simplice has equally strong definitions of right and wrong, but her judgment is tempered by mercy. She is able to evaluate the situation and assess the justice of various scenarios. Although Valjean is technically guilty, when everything is taken into consideration, she realizes that telling the truth and betraying him would be a greater injustice than protecting him. Although she technically commits the sin of lying, she actually displays the characteristic that is the lodestone of Christianity--compassion.

Javert, to me, is the physical embodiment of the "zero tolerance" rule...."
I agree with everything you said about Javert Cindy. He is absolutely zero tolerance since he even wanted himself to be punished for reporting to his superiors that Monsieur Madeline was Valjean before finding the "real Valjean". He couldn't stand that he wouldn't be punished for this. He is a man who will absolutely follow any law, and not even think twice about the consequences because the law must be followed.
I had only ever seen the movie with Hugh Jackman, and Russell Crowe. You really don't see much of Javert and his ways of thinking although it's hinted at in a few scenes. Reading the book has given a whole new perspective of his character that you don't see in the show or movie.
Book Seven: The Champmathieu Affair
In this section we see Madeleine really struggle with whether to turn himself in or not. He recognizes that much of the town's prosperity rests with him but he agonizes over letting a man take the fall for his crime. He burns all traces of his identity but finally decides to confess. Even though everyone at the trial had been convinced that they had identified the guilty party, were quick to forget all that Madeleine had ever done once he admitted his true identity as Jean Valjean. Champmathieu, who seems rather a dim-witted chat, doesn't even recognize the significance of what has occurred, merely noting that everyone seems crazy.