Les Miserables
"The awakening of conscience is the greatness of soul." Jean Valjean was born with poverty as his twin brother. He had lived with it, thus making him so attracted to its powerful magnet and pulling him towards starvation, which compels him to steal a loaf of bread. Only attempting to ease the hunger of his beloved, he fell into a deeper abyss of darkness - he was doomed to live the nineteen years in the galleys. There he learned to struggle to live and to escape the gloom of the galleys. Fortunately, in his release, he met Monsieur Myriel who helped him change the monster in him into an angel that can touch others' life. This was the first transformation of Jean Valjean. It was not a mere transformation of something inside Jean but a great renovation of everything in him. It is not a single transformation but a start for a series of renovation of his disfigured soul. From a notorious criminal, he became an honorable man; from an ordinary human to a no less than a saint. Although he had spent many of his dark hours in the galleys, he still learned, experienced and accepted forgiveness and, most of all, love. He experienced the greatest of all emotions that is love. However, the path he took to gain these powe
This is the only law that Jean Valjean, a convict, obeyed throughout his lifetime. For him, once you fall from grace, you'll fall forever. On the other hand, Javert always come in the way when Jean Valjean is already all right in his quiet and peaceful life. Inspector Javert, although great in his position, shares the same misery Jean also experienced. He lost his grand position of a mayor to reveal his real self in saving Champmathieu, an innocent man whom they accuse as Jean Valjean. Conscience makes man see what it is to see, reason and love. Law and Conscience also played a great part in the novel as Javert and Jean Valjean did. rful gifts of God did not become an easy way. He lost his dear Cosette to make her happy with Marius. Human Law strikes like thunder and hunts the hunted without pang of conscience. Divine Law never err, while Human Law has chances to go astray. Thus, he feared to be a criminal like his father. It is by conscience that he had transformed himself, helped the needy, loved Cosette, accepted the lashes of Fate, and faced his death with wide open arms. He was not afraid to die as long as he had served his purpose in this journey obstructed by miseries called life. He was a just law enforcer, yet he became so obsessed with the law that he wasn't able to see reason and most importantly, to feel his conscience.
Common topics in this essay:
Jean Valjean,
Inspector Javert,
Monsieur Myriel,
Human Law,
Javert Javert,
jean valjean,
Law Conscience,
LES MISERABLES,
Les Miserables,
human law,
Law God,
Divine Law,
javert jean valjean,
galleys learned,
monsieur myriel,
divine law,
inspector javert,
misery jean,
letters law,
javert jean,
les miserables,
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