Free Study Guide for Les Miserables by Victor Hugo: "Les Mis"
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LES MISERABLES: ONLINE NOTES
JEAN VALJEAN
Book First: War Between Four Walls
Summary
It is the morning of June 6; the insurgents are still waiting for further,
more decisive attacks from the military. Enjolras takes a brief sojourn
into the streets and returns with the news that the people of Paris have
abandoned them. Thirty-seven insurgents remain alive behind the barricade,
and they have no food and no hope of reinforcements.
Combeferre, Courfeyrac and Enjolras urge those who have wives or other
family members to leave before the real battle begins as all who remain
will be fighting to the death. When the men argue that they will not be
able to get away due to their appearance, Enjolras produces four municipal
guard uniforms, which had been taken from fallen guards. Finally, five
men are identified who have families waiting. Valjean solves the problem
by appearing on the scene and-upon deciphering the situation-removes his
national guard jacket and drops it onto the pile. When Valjean’s identity
is questioned, Combeferre and Marius vouch for him.
Enjolras gives a lengthy speech regarding the nobility of their cause.
During the wait for battle, the insurgents remove Javert from the post
where he is bound and tie him to a table instead.
The assault begins in the evening when a piece of artillery is rolled
into place in the street. Gavroche appears in the barricade clambering
nimbly over the lowest section just as the second ball from the new gun
buries itself in the barricade rubble. The cannon then begins to fire
grape shot at the end of the wall connecting the barricade to the wine
shop. The shot ricochets off the wall, killing two and injuring three.
Valjean shoots the ties holding a mattress against a house window six
stories up, then goes into the street to retrieve the mattress and place
it where it will absorb the grape.
Section X takes us briefly back to Cosette. She awakes, but as the house
is quiet, she believes everyone else is still in bed. She alternates between
hope and despair of Marius’ return as it has been three days since she
has seen him.
Back at the barricade, the municipal guard continues the rounds of firing,
but the insurgents refrain from return fire, thus saving their ammunition.
Two soldiers appear at the top of a near by building where they can look
directly down into the barricade. Warning shots from Valjean convince
them to retreat. There is a short respite when Paris seems to be awakening
and coming to their aid again. People fire on the military from windows
and citizens throw old cookware down onto them from the rooftops. The
action is quickly squelched; the generals and Minister of War focus their
attention on the last 3 or 4 barricades that remain in the city.
Later in the day the militia brings a second piece of artillery into
the street. This one fires cannon balls. The intent is to use the grape
to keep the insurgents from firing through the wine shop windows while
firing balls at the edges of the barricade to break it down. Enjolras
orders return fire upon the cannoneers which kills 2/3 of them but also
depletes the ammunition of the barricade. Gavroche suddenly grabs a basket
and runs into the street where he worms his way through the smoke and
bodies, filling the basket with the cartridges of the dead soldiers. Soon
the smoke clears; the soldiers spot him and fire upon him. Magically,
he evades the bullets for some time, answering each shot with cocky little
rhymes. Eventually, however, a bullet strikes its mark wounding Gavroche.
The next shot kills him.
In another part of the city Gavroche’s two little brothers are wandering
in the garden of Luxembourg in search of food. Two members of the bourgeois
are also strolling in the garden-a father and his son. The boy has a large
bun of which he has taken only a bite before deciding he is through with
it. The father sees the two starving children, but his response to them
is only “the beginning...of anarchy.” It never occurs to him to give the
food to the children. Instead he urges his son to toss the bun to the
swans in the pond, to have “pity on the animals.” The sound of firing
in the distance becomes louder and more intense. Thinking that the rebels
may be firing on the Tuilaries, the father hurries his son away and the
children retrieve the bun from the water.
Back at the barricade, Marius springs to rescue Gavroche with Combeferre
behind him to get the basket of cartridges. There are 15 cartridges for
each man, but Valjean puzzles them by refusing his share.
At noon in the barricade Enjolras sees a platoon of sappers approaching
in the street. The insurgents rearrange a portion of the paving stones,
using some of them to blockade the windows of the wine shop. The men are
divided up for the best possible defense; the last man alive is to shoot
Javert. At this point, Valjean requests that he be permitted to execute
Javert himself. The request granted, Valjean takes the police officer
over the low end of the barricade and out of sight of the insurgents.
Then he turns Javert lose and tells him that if he, Valjean, survives,
he is living at the Rue de L’Homme Arme under the name of Fauchelevant.
He fires into the air so the insurgents will think the execution was carried
out.
The narrator digresses to discuss the psychology behind revolution.
(Section XXI) This is a device for creating the passage of time during
which the barricade is attacked. The insurgents drive off or kill wave
after wave of soldiers and the wall itself holds up well. Nevertheless,
the rebels have limited numbers while the military can replace each fallen
line with another. Eventually all the chiefs are killed except Enjolras,
Marius, who has multiple wounds, and Valjean. A final assault on the barricade
breaks it down and drives the insurgents into the wine shop. Enjolras
uses his own body as a shield until they are all inside. Then he slams
and bolts the door. They mount to the first floor and use their axes to
cut down the spiral staircase, defending the remaining hole with anything
they can find to use as projectiles or clubs. Enjolras dimly notes that
Marius did not make it inside. He gives no thought to Valjean who also
did not get in.
When the soldiers finally break through and climb up to the first floor,
they find only Enjolras left standing and Grantaire, drunk, lying on a
table. Enjolras faces them with a “menacing majesty,” silently commanding
them to kill him respectfully. In the silence, Grantaire, who has slept
through the entire combat, awakens, realizes what has transpired, and
stands beside Enjolras. The two shake hands as the soldiers fire. With
Enjolras dead, the soldiers raid the remaining houses in the area, seeking
out any insurgents who may be hiding.
In the final section of the chapter (XXIV), Marius, having been struck
by a musket ball, has been caught by Valjean. Valjean’s only part in the
battle has been the defense of others along with carrying the wounded
into the wine shop’s basement and dressing their wounds. Occasionally
he would make some repairs to the barricade, all the while keeping an
eye on Marius. The moment Marius is hit, Valjean springs to catch him,
and, in the confusion of men trying to cram into the wine shop, he is
able to cross the field of the barricade and disappear behind the corner
of the six-story house of Corinth. The only escape route in through a
street grating, which leads into the sewers of Paris.
Notes
In spite of his own fixation for Cosette, the Christ image of Valjean emerges
again as he watches over Marius and leaps to catch him as he falls. He
is not without malice, as he sees Marius as his enemy, but his desire
to please Cosette overpowers and tempers his hatred. Without admitting
it, he knows what Cosette wants; regardless of the pain it brings him,
he will protect the one she loves and bring him to her if it lies within
him to do so. The sewers of Paris are figuratively-and almost literally-the
bowels of hell. To survive is to die and be reborn.
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