Category Archives: Gavroche

Huckleberry Finn for President?

So far I’ve deliberately eschewed the hurly-burly of daily politics on this blog. I’m making an exception now because this crosses into the higher realms of pop culture history. After a certain Republican wannabe won the Iowa caucus last Thursday … Continue reading

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A Gavroche Retrospective

When I began quoting and commenting on Les Misérables in September — I’ll call it blog-reading — I didn’t know exactly why I was doing it or where it would lead. I needed content to work with to learn the … Continue reading

Posted in Gavroche, Les Misérables, reading, reading now, surrealism, Victor Hugo | 1 Comment

“The Paris brat ain’t made of straw”

Gavroche’s sleep inside the Elephant is interrupted by a whistle from the thug Montparnasse. He needs the gaman to help rescue one of his gang who has escaped from prison and is stranded precariously on the edge of a high … Continue reading

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“Mice which ate cats”

In Notre-Dame de Paris, Victor Hugo’s characters do not exchange  dialog. They declaim at one another, often histrionically.  The novel was written immediately after the tempestuous debut in 1829 of Hugo’s play, Hernani. Dramaturgy in one guise or another was … Continue reading

Posted in Gavroche, IVe, Les Misérables, Paris, reading now, Victor Hugo | 1 Comment

From Gavroche to Huckleberry Finn

I continue to marvel at the rogue Gavroche and see in him the prototype for Huck Finn. After explaining how he “borrowed” his bedroom furnishings from the beasts at the Jardin des Plantes, Gavroche adds insouciantly, “You crawl over the … Continue reading

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