The police inspector in Hugo's Les Misérables.
| French Literature Companion: Javert |
The police inspector in Hugo's Les Misérables.
| Wikipedia: Javert |
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Javert is a fictional character from the novel Les Misérables by Victor Hugo. He is a policeman and prison guard who devotes his life to the Law. He is always referred to just simply as "Javert" or "Inspector Javert" by the narrator and other characters throughout the novel; his first name is never mentioned. Javert is clearly regarded as the main antagonist to Jean Valjean, the novel's protagonist. Javert is often considered misguided rather than evil. That latter distinction belongs to the greedy and treacherous Thénardiers.
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Javert was born inside a prison, the son of a fortune-teller (tireuse de cartes) and galley slave.
Javert is initially an assistant to a guard, in the book Les Misérables (adjutant garde-chiourme) in Toulon quarries where Jean Valjean is imprisoned. He remembers Valjean for his extraordinary strength and rather gloomy and terrifying mien.
In 1815, Valjean is released from prison and breaks parole. He moves to Montreuil-sur-Mer, a small seaside town in the North of France assumes the name of Monsieur Madeleine and becomes a manufacturer and later Mayor of the town. Here he once more meets Javert, who through a curious accident of fate happens to become an inspector in the Montreuil-sur-Mer police in 1820, but Valjean pretends not to recognize him.
Javert recalls Valjean almost instantly after meeting him again, but he cannot quite convince himself that this is the man he remembers from the galleys all those years ago, and he would not allow himself to write a denunciation to Paris authorities without stronger proof than just his own vague memories plus some circumstantial evidence. This evidence includes the mayor's obvious origin from the working class; being an excellent shot; having informed himself about families from Faverolles, Valjean's birthplace; the mayor dragging his right foot (which convicts did because of chains) etc. However, further proof is furnished to him after Valjean performs a feat of strength: he lifts a loaded cart to free a man trapped underneath it. Javert informs him that only one man in his entire life's experience could have performed such a feat. Javert finally decides to denounce Valjean as an ex-convict after Valjean frees Fantine, a prostitute detained by Javert for having a violent row with a street idler. Bizarrely, the Parisian authorities then inform Javert that he must be mistaken in his identification, as the "real" Valjean has already been captured and identified by several people who used to know him back in prison.
Javert is summoned to the court to help testify against the "real" Valjean. The man does, indeed, look very much like Valjean should have looked, had he not become prosperous after his release from prison. This is nothing more than a coincidence: he is just an old beggar who was caught by the police with a branch of apples believed to have been broken off an apple tree in a private orchard. This offense would have merited no more than several days in jail had someone in that same jail not mistakenly identified the beggar as Valjean. For someone with prior convictions, breaking a bough of apples from someone's tree would in fact constitute an act of recidivism, which would merit life in prison.
Appalled by the idea of an innocent man going to prison in his stead, Valjean travels to the court of assizes where the beggar is being tried and discloses his identity publicly in the courtroom. After no one makes a move to detain him—Javert had by then already left town to return to Montreuil-sur-Mer—Valjean leaves the courtroom. Javert receives the order for his arrest the next morning and arrests him at Fantine's deathbed, where his revealing the mayor's true identity makes her die of shock. Valjean escapes from the city jail. He is recaptured some time later and sent off once more to the galleys, from which he, however, escapes within several months.
Javert's good memory and presence of mind recommend him well to the Parisian police, and he is recruited to be an inspector in the capital. Here he once more encounters Valjean, this time with a little girl in tow: Cosette, Fantine's daughter. He follows them both to a gloomy Parisian suburb where Valjean rents a room. One night, as Javert chases Valjean and his ward into what seems to him a dead end, Valjean evades capture by climbing over the stone wall of a convent and pulling Cosette up over the wall on a rope. Javert is stumped; days of searching bring nothing, and he gives up. Valjean and Cosette remain in the monastery for several years, Valjean as a gardener and Cosette as a pupil in the school run by the nuns.
In 1832, Javert chances to meet Valjean once more while leading a squad of policemen in the capture of a gang which had been terrorizing Paris for years: Patron-Minette. Unbeknownst to him, the venerable elderly gentleman whom the gang was in the process of torturing with the intent of extortion was none other than Valjean. Javert does not have the opportunity to recognize him, however, as Valjean recognizes Javert almost immediately and makes a quick escape out the window of the attic where the confrontation was taking place.
During the 1832 June riots, Javert assumes an undercover identity and joins the stream of revolutionaries heading to build barricades, in order to gather information on them. Armed with a useless unloaded rifle, he takes part in the preparations for battle without speaking a word to anyone; nevertheless, he is recognized by a street urchin, Gavroche, as a policeman. The rebels tie Javert to a pole in the restaurant where they are holed up and leave him standing there overnight. When Valjean appears at the barricade with the secret intent to rescue Marius, the beloved of his adopted daughter, Javert is more amused than incredulous: the barricades seem like a perfectly fitting place for Valjean, whom he considers irredeemably evil.
This staunch belief is dealt a fatal blow when Valjean, after performing a sharp-shooting feat that saves the barricade from immediate destruction without shedding any blood, requests from Enjolras, the leader of the revolutionary movement, the privilege of slaughtering the police agent. Enjolras acquiesces, and Valjean leads Javert away from the barricade and into a side street. There, instead of killing Javert, Valjean cuts his bonds and implores him to run and save himself. He also gives Javert his address, in the unlikely case that he survives the uprising. Valjean then fires a shot into the air and returns to the barricade, where he tells everyone that the policeman is dead.
As the army storms the barricade, Valjean manages to grab the unconscious Marius, who had been grievously wounded, and dives into a sewer, where he wanders with Marius on his shoulders, despairing of finding an exit. A stroke of luck brings him face to face with Thénardier, whom he already met when Thénardier was part of the Patron-Minette gang captured by Javert and his squad. In the dark and muck of the sewer, neither party recognizes the other. Thénardier assumes that Valjean is a robber who had just killed a well-to-do young man, and he offers to let Valjean out of the sewer if Valjean splits the loot found on Marius' person in half. Valjean pays him, and Thénardier opens for him a sewer grate with a stolen government-issued key.
Valjean's joy at finally being out of the sewer does not last long. As he struggles to regain his bearings on the surface and ponders what to do about the bleeding, unconscious boy, he notices that he is observed by a tall figure, which, predictably, turns out to be Javert. This is almost too much; Javert takes a long time to examine the filthy man emerging from the sewer and finally is satisfied that he is, indeed, looking at Valjean. Far from trying to evade arrest, Valjean repeats that he is ready to surrender, but he asks for Javert's help in delivering the wounded boy to his family first. Javert agrees, looks up the address of Marius' family from an address book he finds on him, and they set off.
During the trip, Javert finds himself, for practically the first time in his life, at a complete loss. On the one hand, he cannot allow Valjean to go free. Over the course of the decade during which Javert knew him, Valjean had committed, to Javert's limited but accurate knowledge, breaking and entering, violent robbery of a small child, multiple counts of fraud, child kidnapping and numerous escapes from prison; to make matters worse, just several hours ago Javert found him with the rebels on the barricade—an offense which in itself merits the death penalty. Yet, Javert cannot bring himself to turn Valjean in, since Valjean had saved his life by setting him free on the barricades instead of shooting him, and then rescued another man for no personal gain. After they deliver Marius to his grandfather's home, Valjean asks an opportunity to say goodbye to Cosette. Javert agrees; they arrive at Valjean's house, and Javert says that he will wait for Valjean to come back downstairs. Nevertheless, when Valjean looks out of the window, Javert is gone.
Javert wanders the streets in emotional turmoil: his mind simply cannot reconcile the image he had carried through the years of Valjean as a brutal ex-convict, with Valjean's acts of kindness on the barricades. Now, Javert can be justified neither in letting Valjean go nor in arresting him. For the first time in his life, Javert is faced with the situation where to act lawfully would mean to him acting immorally. Unable to find a solution to this dilemma and horrified at the sudden realization that Valjean was simultaneously a criminal and a good person—a conundrum which made mockery of Javert's entire system of moral values—Javert decides to remove the problem by removing himself from the problem. He goes into a police station, leaves on one of the desks a note with some remarks on how to improve police and prison operations in the city, then proceeds to Pont-au-Change and drowns himself in the river Seine.
In the stage musical of the same name based on Les Misérables, Javert is one of the central characters, billed second after Valjean. His part is mostly unchanged (other than strong religious motivations which differ from Javert in the novel, who, although respecting the church, answered only to the law and not God), and he acts as a foil and semi-antagonist to the hero, Valjean. Javert has the first spoken line of any main character in the musical. After his death his ghost is not present in the finale, presumably due to his antagonistic role.
The dramatic role of Javert is best known for its musical power from the stage musical Les Misérables, based upon the original novel. Javert was played by Roger Allam in 1985 London production, and by Terrence Mann in the 1987 Broadway production. Other actors to play the role in stagings of the musical include Norm Lewis, Mitchell Court, Jonathan Grosberg, Takeshi Kaga, Philip Quast, and Evan Henke.
Songs Javert features in:
There are those who attack Javert's actions, and others who defend them. Victor Hugo intentionally created his protagonist and antagonist so that neither were entirely on one side of the boundary separating Good and Evil. Here is how he describes Javert:
| Actor | Version |
|---|---|
| William V. Ranous | 1909 Adaptation |
| Henri Étiévant | 1913 Adaptation |
| Hardee Kirkland | 1917 Adaptation |
| Jean Toulout | 1925 Adaptation |
| Charles Vanel | 1934 Adaptation |
| Charles Laughton | 1935 Adaptation |
| Hans Hinrich | 1948 Adaptation |
| Jawar Setharaman | 1950 Adaptation |
| Robert Newton | 1952 Adaptation |
| Bernard Blier | 1958 Adaptation |
| Marcel Bozzufi | 1961/1962 "Théatre de la jeunesse" Adaptations (parts 1&2) |
| Georges Géret | 1963 "Théatre de la jeunesse" Adaptation (part 3) |
| Bernard Fresson | 1972 Adaptation |
| Anthony Perkins | 1978 Adaptation |
| Michel Bouquet | 1982 Adaptation |
| Roger Allam | 1985 London Musical |
| Terrence Mann | 1987 Broadway Musical |
| Philip Quast | 1995 Concert |
| Geoffrey Rush | 1998 Adaptation |
| John Malkovich | 2000 Adaptation |
| Norm Lewis | 2006 Broadway Revival |
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| In Les Miserables why does Valjean let Javert go? Read answer... | |
| Who is Javert? Read answer... | |
| How did javert contribute to fantine's death? Read answer... |
| What was in the note that Javert wrote that told the prefect his history? | |
| What mistake does Javert make that causes him to lose Valjean just as he nearly has him cornered? | |
| What is Javert's full name? |
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![]() | French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. Read more | |
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