Saturday, May 23, 2015

Blog Post #1 - Significant and Symbolic scene for Jean Valjean

Deandra Butler
Mrs. Molyneux
H English D
28 April 2015


Blog Post #1 - Significant and Symbolic scene for Jean Valjean




In the novel, Les MisĂ©rables, Jean Valjean is presented as a prisoner that escaped prison during the French Revolution. As he returns to the town of D---, Valjean is rejected from every inn in the village. Out of complete desperation, the former prisoner knocks on one of the town’s resident’s door and proceeds to ask for food and shelter for the night. At first, the peasant did not refuse Valjean and then soon wonders the reason why the local shelters did not take him in for the night. The rejected man lies and answers that all of the inns were fully stocked, with no room for Valjean. Soon the poor man realizes that the man in front of him was “the man!”(10) and instantly yells at him to get away. Jean Valjean then travels into the woods where he finds a straw bed suitable for a night’s sleep. As soon as he lies down on the bed, Valjean hears a mighty growl; he intruded a dog- kennel! Shortly after, the homeless fellow is rejected from the place of an animal; Valjean runs out of the kennel while screaming “I am not even a dog” (11).


In the beginning of this book, this scene is one of the most significant and symbolic events that occurs to the main character, Jean Valjean. As he returned to D---, he was treated like an animal; he was treated like a dog. His criminal record, indicated by his yellow passport, reminds the townspeople of the hazardous potential Valjean carries everywhere with him. In the town of D---, he is shunned and frowned upon by the townspeople. This scene calls the readers to infer that Valjean is going to have to settle in a different region in order to earn a clean name.

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