Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Les Miserables - Reconciliation between a Man and Himself Essay
        Les Miserables - Reconciliation between a Man and Himself             The ending of the Victor Hugo novel, Les Miserables, contains a   reconciliation between a man and himself, and his family.  This is, in   many ways, the entire purpose of the book.  Goodness or saintliness can be achieved,   Ã  despite difficult or unwholesome beginnings.  This theme is an enduring one,   because of both its truth and its presentation.  Fay Weldon may as well have been   Ã  describing Les Miserables when she said "The writer, I do believe, who get the best   and most lasting response from readers are the writers who offer happy endings   Ã  through moral development .... some kind of spiritual reassessment or moral   Ã  reconciliation, even with the self, even at death."   Ã  The hero Jean Valjean undergoes quite the transformation throughout the   Ã  course of his story.  He begins as a criminal and convict with absolutely   no scruples.  A kindly prelate forgives him after a theft, and simply turns   the other cheek.  This act of unexpected generosity inspires Valjean...                      
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