His death was like day and night, ordinary and natural.
Read Les Misérables
Wen Weimeier.
After reading "Les Miserables" (Hou Lang Illustrated Collector's Edition), I can't hide it, I exhausted my hard work and energy, from the year before the year to the year after the year, spanning two years, in fact, it took almost a month.
Sometimes I think that in this materialistic world, the world is blinded by money, and there are still a few people who are reading most of the tome under the lamp in the cold night. Les Misérables is indeed a tome, consisting of five books, with a total of 1,738 pages and more than 1.4 million words. But a classic is a classic, a masterpiece is a masterpiece, and Victor Hugo's writing deeply shocked and impressed me. I admit that on weekdays, my tofu cubes are simply unreachable in front of world-class writers. Learning is the best way to live my life at the moment, and Les Misérables has benefited me a lot, and Hugo, a genius without borders, is one of the most brilliant poets of the 19th century, and he is also the greatest lyric poet of France.
In his works, I see a silhouette and a microcosm of the political and social changes in France in the 19th century.
Les Misérables began to brew in the early thirties of the nineteenth century and did not appear until 1862, spanning more than 30 years, and the story takes place at the time of the eventful political revolution in France, with many social changes, the contest, confrontation and struggle between the monarchy and the republic, and the interweaving of romantic elements and realist symbols. Hugo sharply and profoundly reveals the darkness and shortcomings of society, and analyzes and presents the lives of the suffering people at the bottom layer by layer from the bodies of small people. A series of bloody and shocking realities are so sober and three-dimensional that they are finally frozen, and the first name "Poverty" and then "Les Miserables" can be seen in the leopard, all kinds of suffocating social phenomena at that time are the social problems that existed in that era, and individuals are powerless to turn things around.
Victor Hugo believed that poverty and ignorance are the abyss and root of all evils in society. In "Les Miserables", it is described that men are degraded by poverty, women are degraded by hunger, and children are blinded by darkness; Poverty reduces men to criminals, hunger to women to prostitutes, and ignorance to wither and wither children. Just like the protagonist of the story, Jean Waje, who transforms himself and abandons evil for good. Jean Vajean only wanted to be a good man at first, but a series of events made him a bad person, and later, under the influence of the angel Cosette, he eventually grew into a great good man, a great good man, and firmly moved towards a bright future.
The story involves a variety of characters, starting from 1795 when Jean Vagean, a tree repairer, was imprisoned for 19 years for a piece of bread, and then mentioning Bishop Digne, the female worker Fontina, Detective Javel, Fontina's illegitimate daughter Cosette, the old man Jeanmathieu, Marius who fell in love with Cosette, Marius's grandfather Ginoman, Tenardino's eldest daughter Eponic, and the street child Gaphros ......In fact, the whole story is the narration of Jean Valjean's life, interspersed with all kinds of trivial, lengthy and dull historical knowledge.
I read the theme of Les Misérables: people, or the people.
When I finished reading it, I closed the last page, and Jean Vérang's weed-brought, rain-swept grave stone, was carved into the quatrain.
He slept. Despite his fate, he was still alive, and he left without the angel.
His death was like day and night, ordinary and natural. ”
In fact, this is also the best destination for each of us in the world, right? No one can live forever, and all our best final destination is heaven - "His death came and went like day and night, ordinary and natural." ”
That's it, say goodbye ordinarily and naturally, never again.