Across the horizon: the rising sun and endless possibilities
 
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z

Home - Studyworld Studynotes - Quotes - Reports & Essays 

 

STUDYWORLD STUDYNOTES:

CLASSIC LITERATURE ANALYSIS

STUDYWORLD REPORTS & ESSAYS

RESEARCH AND IDEA DATABASE




Oakwood Publishing Company:

SAT; ACT; GRE

Study Material


xx

 



 

Les Miserables
Novel Homejpage
Novel Summary
Character Profiles
Metaphor Analysis
Theme Analysis
Top Ten Quotes
Biography
Essay Q&A
Next
Previous


Les Miserables

Select a Chapter:
Section 1 - Book One
Section 1 - Book Two
Section 1 - Book Three
Section 1 - Book Four
Section 1 - Book Five
Section 1 - Book Six
Section 1 - Book Seven
Section 1 - Book Eight
Section 2 - Book One
Section 2 - Book Two
Section 2 - Book Three
Section 2 - Book Four
Section 2 - Book Five
Section 2 - Book Six
Section 2 - Book Seven
Section 2 - Book Eight
Section 3 - Book One
Section 3 - Book Two
Section 3 - Book Three
Section 3 - Book Four
Section 3 - Book Five
Section 3 - Book Six
Section 3 - Book Seven
Section 3 - Book Eight
Section 4 - Book One
Section 4 - Book Two
Section 4 - Book Three
Section 4 - Book Four
Section 4 - Book Five
Section 4 - Book Six
Section 4 - Book Seven
Section 4 - Book Eight
Section 4 - Book Nine
Section 4 - Book Ten
Section 4 - Book Eleven
Section 4 - Book Twelve
Section 4 - Book Thirteen
Section 4 - Book Fourteen
Section 4 - Book Fifteen
Section 5 - Book One
Section 5 - Book Two
Section 5 - Book Three
Section 5 - Book Four
Section 5 - Book Five
Section 5 - Book Six
Section 5 - Book Seven
Section 5 - Book Eight
Section 5 - Book Nine
 
Section 1 - Book Six

Section 1 - Fantine
Book Six - Javert

Madeleine has Fantine installed at the infirmary where her gentle nature soon wins over the nuns. Madeleine makes inquiries and learns all of Fantine's sorry history and he resolves to reunite her with her child. He sends money and a command to bring the girl but the Th�nardiers, sensing they might be able to soak more money from Fantine's benefactor, offer only pitiful excuses and demands for more money. With Fantine's health deteriorating Madeleine resolves to retrieve Cosette himself if necessary and has a letter drawn up in which Fantine orders Monsieur Th�nardier to deliver Cosette to the bearer of the letter. Before Madeleine can retrieve Cosette, however, Javert comes to see him and confesses that he has written Paris to denounce Madeleine as the convict Jean Valjean. His superiors in Paris, however, have informed him that another man, known as Father Champmathieu, has been arrested for stealing apples and was positively identified by three other convicts as being Jean Valjean. Javert has since seen the man himself and also believes that he is Jean Valjean. He tells Madeleine that he will travel to Arras the following day to testify at the trial which will certainly sentence the man to hard labor for life. Monsieur Madeleine pretends not to be affected by the news. Javert insists that because he denounced a superior he is no longer fit to serve as a police officer but Madeleine insists that he continue his duties.

Analysis
Javert's actions are not calculated to destroy Madeleine. They are simply motivated by his admiration for the law and the judicial system. When he offers to resign his position, he honestly believes that he has failed the system because he thinks that Madeleine is an ex-criminal.

PreviousNext

Novel Homepage | Novel Summary | Character Profiles | Metaphor Analysis
Theme Analysis | Top Ten Quotes | Biography | Essay Q&A
 



 



Teacher Ratings: See what

others think

of your teachers



Copy Right