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Monday, December 17, 2018

'Path of the Stars Essay\r'

'The song â€Å"Stars” from the musicale Les Miserables is sung by examiner Javert close together(p) the end of Act I when he recognize that it was Jean Valjean whom he had helped escape from the group of Thenardier. Inspector Javert is a rather curious character. A nice characterization of him is well set(p)-out in the novel. However, in the musicale version, yet snippets of Javert’s personality can be gleamed when spy cargonfully.\r\nâ€Å"Stars” may non be bingle of the internationally renowned songs from musicale like â€Å"I Dreamed a Dream” and â€Å"On My Own”, but it offers a unspoiled sharpness into the way Inspector Javert sees himself as a law-enforcework forcet agent, law-breakers like Jean Valjean, and his obsession, b coiffureing on madness, in the pursuit of law-breakers, especially Jean Valjean, to face justice. Javert’s sees himself as one of the stars, â€Å"filling the sorryness with order and light …sentin els, silent and sure, keeping watch in the night.\r\n” He sees himself as an unobtrusive individual in community keeping the order and standing as a vanguard of rest always on the watch. He is always there to maintain the peace in cabaret. He entrusts that each of us, like the stars, knows his priggish place and function in society and those who straddle from their situated and sure paths, law-breakers and fugitives, â€Å"must pay the damage” and face justice. Law-breakers are stars that have lost their way, men who have deviated from their mappings in society. They flee in the sinfulness for they are out of graces in the eyes of God, fit in to Javert.\r\nAs a sacred duty, Javert has taken it into himself, blaspheming by the stars, that he would non rest until these fugitives are brought to face justice. This duty is his role in society; his course and aim in the skies as one of the stars, â€Å"and so it must be, for so it is written. ” If we follo w Javert’s ism that all men in society are but stars with fixed path in the skies and those stars that fall from their paths â€Å"fall in flame,” this same philosophy gives us an idea of how hard Javert could be take down to himself.\r\nIf and when Javert, as a star in the sky, deviates from his fixed path he, as well, must pay the price. This insight into the thinking of Javert’s gives as a dark foreboding of what may happen in lawsuit he fails in his pursuit of Jean Valjean (as the graphic symbol would be in Act II). Javert may not be one of the most amiable characters in the musicale Les Miserables but he gives us a good picture of a segment of our society today. hoi polloi who tend to be fanatical and rigid in their views are epitomized by Javert. I am not a good authority to pass judging on people like Javert.\r\nTo some extents I agree with Javert that each of us has a role in society and when we falter we should pay the consequences. still I do no t agree in the rigid application of justice as espoused by Javert. I believe that when a person commits a wrong we must temper our judgment by hearing out the reasons of the offender, assuming good-naturedly that he committed such offense unintentionally. I believe in justice with compassion. Justice, after all, has always been show as a lady blindfolded so that she may hear and weight with her heart the arguments laid before her.\r\n'

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