Brick Club 5.3.8, 5.3.9
Thenardier babbling on, trying to squeeze water from the stone that is Jean Valjean reminded me of this unrivaled scene from the best show ever made Leverage. But, like, in reverse and Thenardier has a particular talent of speaking a lot of words without saying a single thing. Must be a Hugo character. This is kind of an immovable object versus an unstoppable force situation. Thenardier is the consummate con man but, as you know, you canāt con an honest man, and Valjean is the consummate honest man.
The running theme of light and shadow shows up again, āJean Valjean, we have just said, turned his back to the lightā¦The encounter took place between Jean Valjean veiled and Thenardier unmasked.ā Interestingly, it isnāt just that Valjean is now in the shadows, thereās also consistently someone else who is in the light, and usually not who weād expect. Previously, it was the police Valjean encountered in the sewers, standing in a more illuminated area, here itās Thenardier, though itās a livid light, and later on itās implied to be Javert, if just by his opposition to Valjean. Thereās perhaps something here about good people or people with good intentions being forced into the shadows while their opponent parades freely in the light but itās a thread that doesnāt really bear out for the rest of the book.
Something interesting is Thenardier saying, āThe sewer is treacherous and informs against youā only for Hugo to assert a page later, āThe sewer was evidently in complicity with some mysterious band.ā It makes me wonder how facetious Thenardier is beingāa decent question at any point, reallyāand what he might actually be communicating, intentionally and unintentionally, with his rambling. It could be nothing, but Iām always wary of offhandedly dismissing pointed commentary from characters. Also, ironically, itās Thenardier that is informing against Valjean, using him as a distraction or scapegoat to throw Javert off his scent. Maybe itās not the sewers, Thenardier, maybe itās you.
This entire trek through and subsequent emergence from the sewers feels so liminal, āit was the undecided and exquisite hours which says neither yes nor no.ā Itās like people from all corners of the story wandering above and below the fog of the city, bumping into each other at odd intervals. Itās like a Midsummerās Night Dream except not as whimsical or at all pleasant.
āThe reader has doubtless guessed that Thenardierās pursuer was none other than Javert.ā Yes, because who else would immediately return to duty just to coincidentally come across intel on someone he had previously caught, only to come across that other guy he had been previously chasing and the kid that originally led him to catch Thenardier. This breaks even the illusion of coy subtlety on Hugoās part but thatās fine.
Just like Javert readily gave up his identity to the barricade, Valjean just as abruptly identifies himself to Javert. Remember, Javert is supposedly āa spy of the first quality, who had observed everything, listened to everything, heard everything, and recollected everything,ā but forgive me for having doubts since it was sheer luck he even made it off the barricade alive with this information. But congrats, you remembered the name of a man who had already given you his name beforeĀ in relation to a case and was also one of the chiefs of the barricade.
Commence the most Awkward Carriage Ride in recorded history. Iād bet anything at some point Mariusās head drops onto Valjeanās shoulder or he keels over and still nobody moves an inch. Also a brief return of the shadowy Valjean, āJean Valjean seemed to be made of shadow, and Javert of stone.ā














