The effects of love are different for each individual. Professor John Cacioppo discovered, “... love deprivation, unrequited love and loneliness have negative consequences on work performance and mental health...40 percent of people who are rejected in love experience depression” (A). Those who have happy childhood experiences filled with love, are more able to express their feelings of love to others. However, those whose childhood experiences lack the emotion of love, have difficulty showing any emotion to another. It is they who are sad, lonely, and depressed. In the novel Les Miserables by Victor Hugo, he illustrates the diverse reactions expressed because of love. Jean Valjean, Cosette, and Marius go through several experiences that enable them to feel the profound effects of love.
Several people in Jean Valjeans life allow him to rediscover the meaning of love. The good bishop is the one responsible for initiating this rediscovery. Jean Valjean's new life begins when the bishop utters the words, “Jean Valjean, my brother, you belong no longer to evil, but to good. It is your soul that I am buying for you. I withdraw it from dark thoughts and from the spirit of perdition, and I give it to God!” (30). This opens Jean Valjean to the good of the world and allows him to immerse himself in the love Cosette offers him, something he couldn't do without the help of the bishop. The bishop assists Jean Valjean in seeing that there are people who will help him despite his rocky background. This creates a reason for Jean Valjean to act on the experience to rebuild his life and become an honest man. This change of heart helps him feel the love that Cosette displays for him, which he has never known. He slowly begins to love and care f...
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...urely die” (386). Marius' mind is inept and his only existing desire is to be with Cosette again. He yearns for her love. When Cosette leaves him, he finds himself in an abyss of depression. Because of his childhood experiences, Marius is shaped into a man who cannot control his emotions or express them reasonably.
A life changing journey is taken as Jean Valjean, Cosette and Marius feel the emotion of love and learn to cope with its effects. Each character soon realizes that the effects of love are very powerful. Happiness, self-confidence, and depression are all found during the enduring journey. Studies have proven that, “...without love we die...” (B). Jean Valjean, Cosette, and Marius realize that they can not survive without experiencing the profound effects of love.
Works Cited
http://ezinearticles.com/?Without-Love-We-Die&id=3004624, dailyorange.com
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Jean is constantly living in fear of him losing his life. As he has become narcissist and believes his life is all that matters. He has also came to realization with an ideology that society has implemented inside of him, which is that man does not take you seriously until you are dead. Therefore the author also enters a contradiction in which he believes his point can be made if he dies. But the complicated mind a Jean enters many different contradictions to which is also believes his death could be misinterpreted, and therefore as a result die in a futile attempt to present a proper images of himself.
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To begin with, Jean Valjean is an ex-convict that lived a life full of hatred and deception. His crime was the act of stealing food and was sentenced to time in prison. He also, stole from Myriel a priest, and was set free because he “promised to become a new man” (Hugo). From that day forward Valjean had moved on from his old life and set forward to a new one full of better decisions and opportunities. As time passed, Valjean had evolved into an extraordinary individual and had become mayor of Vigau.
causes more pain than it does happiness. This concept of love, as portrayed by countless works,
The protagonist’s transformation begins when the bishop recognizes Jean Valjean’s human soul that is capable of goodness. When he is put out into the streets, Valjean goes from place to place being rejected for being a convict until he meets the bishop who sees him as a common person, “That men saw his mask, but the bishop saw his face”(75). Even though people might be good, they don’t always see someone’s true soul. The bishop’s simple act of kindness and deeper understanding leads to Valjean living a better, more moral life, “From that moment we have seen, he was another man… It was more than a transformation-it was a transfiguration” (72). Since the bishop recognizes Valjean as an “another man” (72), he fulfils what he wants Valjean to become, a better more loving person.