Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
ā Live Streamingā Interactive Chatā Private Showsā HD Qualityā Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Marius is quickly thrust into a realisation that he has never noticed how his neighbours have been living for several years. The narrative also seems to agree that Mariusā poverty was in no way comparable to that young girlās misery.
Cut for length
Hugo also further talks about the destitution which a man reduced to extreme poverty can thrust a woman or a child in. Survival in poverty becomes an almost instinctive reaction where anyone can resort to any vice or crime.Ā
This is not entirely related, but in Discovery of France, Graham Robb talks about the poor peasants and farmers huddling together for warmth and eating as little as possible just so they can survive the miserable winters and the cold. This is what reminded me when reading the line āthey squat back to back in the wretchedness of their fateā. Though it might really mean that they share the terrible wretchedness of their existence together and therefore children might be put to work from a very early age to support their families.
Hugo had some words to say about child labour, so it is very likely that he is making a case for all children here who live in miserable wretchedness, after talking about the symbolic young girl through Eponine.Ā
Where do all these children go of which none of them laugh?
Those pensive soft beings, that fever makes thin?
Those eight-year-old girls we see going all by themselves?
They go to work fifteen hours under laps;
They go, from dawn-to-dusk, and do endlessly
In the same prison the same moves.
Squat down under the teeth of a dark machine
Hideous monster chewing, who knows what in the shadow,
Innocents in a penal colony, angels in a hell,
They work. All is bronze, all is iron.
Never do we stop and never do we play....
Victor Hugo āMelancholia 1856
He then goes on to say that Eponine opened Mariusā eyes to the plight of people living in darkness and now Marius blames himself way too much for not paying attention to his neighbours' poverty whereas someone less dreamy might have noticed the neighbours' plight much sooner. I thought giving up five francs and keeping sixteen sous for himself was pretty charitable of him and very much like Myriel and his model of charity.Ā
Hugo also emphasises the idea that he raised in the mines chapter, that poverty is often linked with wickedness to turn people into the miserables.
Providential spyhole seems to imply some connotations with God? So, Marius spying on his neighbours was a bad thing, but overall since his intentions were to find out how they were living that it became a good act? Thereās a lot more support of Mariusā peeping actions than Iām comfortable with.
3.8.6
Hugo brings his cities and forests comparisons and the poetic descriptions in the first paragraph. Heās done the nature vs. civilisation comparisons before as well in the chapters with Cosette in the forest, where nature was wild and uncivilised but still preferable to the unkindness at the inn. To Hugo, it feels that cities are either towers of civilisation or the holes where wretchedness breeds, Eponine after all is converted into an osprey in a city. Somewhere in the middle are forests. Nature is better than the wretched slums in the cities according to Hugo because there is grotesque and sublime in caves and forests. The slums in the cities are grotesque and ugly without containing anything sublime.Ā
The whole idea of slums necessarily containing wickedness though is something I feel uncomfortable with, it dismisses all poor people living in the slums as being closer to wickedness and darkness whereas that might not always be the case.
Although maybe Hugo is implying that humans can be worse than the savage beasts in their lairs, that living in slums means that as well as the squalid circumstances you are living in, you are much closer to wickedness i.e. darkness.Ā Ā
The thing about Mariusā poverty being noble is repeated, which I understand why Hugo is using that again here, to make the comparison to his neighboursā who are also poor, but Marius seems to not have gone down the dark road which Thenardier led his family onto.
This Hugo reminds us, what Marius sees through the peep hole, this is abject poverty which so often leads to darkness and crime. I still donāt agree with Hugoās idea of noble poverty especially as he ascribes it to Marius because it feels unearned for Marius, maybe Myriel would have been a better comparison or the nuns. I also am uncomfortable with poverty being described as noble, I donāt think it is something to be romanticised when it concerns Marius and called wretched otherwise.
The furniture is much bare compared to Mariusā room and, even the walls are seeping with moisture which is so much more likely to have an ill effect on health. We have more allusions to darkness and to spiders lurking in the corners and woodlice, a reference to Thenardier and Patron Minette being criminals and catching innocent people in their traps, perhaps.
Thenardier gets compared to a vulture (more bird imagery) as well as to lawyers (and Hugo does not mince words in saying outright that Thenardier is somebody who leeches and exploits people, while also dressing in an eccentric attire and looking grotesque with his cunning cruel look. Hugo is also maybe pointing out that lawyers and Thenardier have much in common by the way they deal and dispense the letter of the law.
Thenardier also lives in wretched conditions, but without making any effort to improve them whereas with Marius at least we learned that he had quickly used his abilities to learn two languages and get a job which paid enough. Thenardier is maybe too lazy or too unwilling to do the work. Ā
He is also pointing out the injustices in society without actually realising that he is not an innocent bystander since he is fleecing people of their hard-earned money and thinks that is justified because he is poor.
We have descriptions of Mme Thenardier and how she is a giant compared to her husband, itās slightly annoying how her age is dismissed as she could be between forty and a hundred- I donāt like the implication that beyond a certain age, a woman could be however many years in age and would still look really old and ugly. Mme Thenardier still reads romance novels, but also there is very little love left between Thenardier and his wife, and it is only in words that have lost their meanings that we find that they used to care about each other but due to poverty and hardships they have grown apart, which is sad and also very likely. It is interesting that we havenāt yet seen a happy, healthy loving relationship till now.
We also find out that Azelma is actually fifteen but looks eleven or twelve because of poverty, and the way that her life trajectory is described is heartbreaking. Itās the children who suffer because Thenardier is using them and they have to live in poverty through no fault of their own and are denied their childhood. āThey seem to take life in big strides so as to get through it fasterā is such a heartbreaking sentence.
3.8.7
Thenardier is controlling the operations. He has sent Eponine with the letters and she comes to inform him that the gentleman from the church is coming. He is pleased with that fact and calls her a smart girl. Eponine is smart and her father trusts her with all these jobs, and it is evident why. Although this is so depressing that she is so used to going barefoot on the streets that a pair of bad boots feels worse to her. Thenardier makes an observation on how if youāre barefoot youāre denied admission into the House of God, more of Hugo taking a swipe at Christianity being involved in materialism as he did in the Myriel chapters but through someone who is motivated by only hatred.
Thenardierās face is suddenly illuminated by light although this seems more sinister than good and he orders his family about and when they complain he talks about censoring the press. He is talking very much like a monarch. Although he could be anyone from Napoleon I to Charles X and NIII because they all did censor the press to some extent. He is however supposed to be a caricature of a dictator/monarch, that seems pretty obvious. Ā
This also feels like he is directing a theatre play making sure the scene is set for his deception and trickery so that he can take advantage of the philanthropist as much as he can.
3.8.8
Thenardier is not content with complaining about things but even in misery he has to be better as his wife points out. It is also interesting that he feels very little concern for Azelmaās bleeding hand and more impatience at the philanthropist not arriving. He has never cared for his children. They have never been a family but scattered individuals living in close proximity. Thenardierās talk also feels a lot like him being a hypocrite. He hates the rich but also wants to be one of them. His talk would have been noble in sentiment and almost revolutionary had it not been driven by so much hate compared to the revolutionaries whose work of changing the system is driven by love and compassion.
He also hates the fact that charity is humiliating to the receiver whereas the philanthropist might be pretending to be pious by making a show of giving money- which is a valid critique of charity, and one of the problems why charity is indeed not enough to solve the problems, something that has been a theme from the Myriel chapters.
The plot also involves Marius running across Cosette again and his passion is reignited once more and Cosette gets all the light symbolisms once again which inside this grotesque place of wretchedness and poverty makes Marius temporarily forget everything. He has found the object of his desires that he had been searching for. Meanwhile Eponine resents Cosetteās rich attire because she is aware of her own poverty in contrast to it and my heart breaks for her.
Still watching through the peephole, Marius sees the oldest daughter come back and announce that the man, the philanthropist, is coming. She had found him in the church, and he had said that he would come by fiacre shortly.
The father puts the fire out and tells his daughter to break the chair. He tells his younger daughter to break a pane in one of the windows. He tells his wife to get into the bed. The younger daughterās fist is cut from breaking the window, and he says that he intended for that to happen.
Now, he says, they are ready to receive the philanthropist.Ā
In which Marius continues spying on his neighbors, and they [read, the man] start actively trying to make their situation look even worse to impress a philanthropist. Iām still not sure that the additions to their (already dire) circumstances are actually going to make up the difference.Ā
Eponine arrives with the good news that a certain man of the church of Saint Jacques is paying a visit. I went back to reread that particular letter of Thenardierās (or should I say, the dramatic artist P. Fabantou) and, interestingly, itās the only letter that is addressed only toĀ āBeneficent manā with no name mentioned at all.
Ooo, why did he hesitate at the thought of coming to the Gorbeau tenement? If Valjean knows where Marius lives thatās interesting. If Valjean knows where Thenardier lives thatās interesting. If he knows both, then Valjean is the only person in this book who is aware heās living in a soap opera.
āPeople do not go into Godās house barefooted.ā Ironically, itās pretty explicitly stated in the Torah that one should remove their shoes on sacred ground. Thenardierās demands that his family systematically destroy their few belongings is the very epitome of AesopāsĀ āThe Dog and Its Reflection.ā The cost of just repairing the window...
Iām so sorry but when Thenardier says āI suppress the liberty of the pressā all I can think about is that press conference when Chris Christie said āYou have been stopped.ā Thenardier imagines himself a commander holding court over his subordinates. Everyone is a tool he can use to gain something, and if they refuse or arenāt capable, they are an enemy.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
ā Live Streamingā Interactive Chatā Private Showsā HD Qualityā Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Marius is still watching the family next door, as Eldest-Girl/Eponine returns. He observes that she is slightly more warmly attired than when they met an hour before (a winter mantle and boots), and surmises that these garments were left off in order to appear more wretched. I chose to believe, per Eponineās upcoming remarks, that she took the boots off for her own comfort [and I like @lizardrosenās idea that itās Mariusās stolen boots sheās wearing]. Considering what happens next, it doesnāt seem far-fetched that she did, in fact, shed a layer to appear more pitiable.
Anyway, upon receiving word that theĀ āphilanthropistā from St. Jacques is en route, Thenardier goes about making his home and family appear even more wretched than they already are: put out the small fire and spread ashes to make it look bare, break a chair, break a window. Mme T is to fake illness, Azelma is made to injure her hand.
As before, taking this on face-value Thenardier is just continuing his con: looking as pitiable as possible in order to get maximum money. However, the more I think about it, the less it makes sense. Putting out the fire and faking an illness, Iāll grant, may make things seem more dire without actually hurting the family. But damaging the furniture and building, and actually injuring a child are materially worsening the familyās resources: even if the philanthropist gives them more money to cover the damage, theyāre still living in a colder apartment with one fewer seat until they get around to replacing things. [And, while I strongly suspect the Tās will skip out without paying for the window, they are still the ones living with a hole in the outside wall in February.] Azelma may need medical treatment (weāre pre-antibiotics and even pre-germ theory--cuts can become dangerously infected). And I somehow doubt that such a minor addition as a broken chair is going to elicit more money than the baseline āmy children have no food and I canāt work because I have no clothingā would. Itās almost a trivial detail, and one which hurts only the Thenardiers themselves.
[The Eponine in my imagination is shaking her head--if she was conning the old man, sheād move the extra chairs into one of the empty apartments, and wrap a rag around Azelmaās hand as a bandage, instead of actually cutting her.]Ā
New Post has been published on https://allmoddedapk.com/zombie-tsunami-mod-apk/
Zombie Tsunami Mod 3.8.7 Apk [Unlimited Gold]
Ā Zombie Tsunami Mod 3.8.7 Apk āĀ The story of this game, Many people have taken refuge in the corner of the city and zombies have been looking for you and you have to escape from them and save your life.
The game has more than 300 engaging stages that can entertain you for hours and you can install the game on your Android operating system.
New Post has been published on http://allmoddedapk.com/summoners-war-mod-apk/
Summoners War Mod 3.8.7 Apk [Unlimited Money]
Summoners War Mod 3.8.7 ApkĀ is theĀ Strategy gameĀ provided for the Android operating system, created by the Korean Com2uS company.Ā The game, estimated to be installed up to 50 million times, runs on a planet in which a tough battle over the critical mass of Mana Crystals has been formed, and it is your job to get that valuable piece of hand It will not be easy, of course, because more than 400 types of monster will miss the arena!
Itās worth mentioning to dear users that the game is online and requires data that you can download from the internet by yourself.Ā Of course, Goth Android has also provided game data for the first time in Allmoddedapk.