I hadn’t read Les Miserables in a long time, and I really enjoyed rereading it. There’s so much more to learn about a lot of the characters (a bit of Fantine’s courtship with the man who abandoned her, Marius’s turn toward revolution, a page and a half digression on cannon design during the assault on the barricade). Plus, this description of Javert:
He, Javert personified justice, light, and truth, in their celestial function as destroyers of evil. He was surrounded and supported by infinite depths of authority, reason, precedent, legal conscience, the vengeance of the law, all the stars in the firmament; he protected order, he hurled forth the thunder of the law, he avenged society, he lent aid to the absolute; he stood erect in a halo of glory; there was in his victory a reminder of defiance and of combat; standing haughty resplendent he displayed in full glory the superhuman beastliness of a ferocious archangel; the fearful shadow of the deed which he was accomplishing, making visible in his clenched fist the uncertain flashes of the social sword; happy and indignant, he had set his heel on crime, vice, rebellion, perdition, and hell, he was radiant, exterminating, smiling; there was an incontestable grandeur in this monstrous St. Michael.
I hadn’t read Les Miserables in a long time, and I really enjoyed rereading it. There’s so much more to learn about a lot of the characters (a bit of Fantine’s courtship with the man who abandoned her, Marius’s turn toward revolution, a page and a half digression on cannon design during the assault on the barricade). Plus, this description of Javert: