Suddenly a hand comes down and lifts the bucket - a man in a yellow coat is beside her.

Madame Thénardier is enraged that her daughters must enviously watch Cosette playing with this doll; the Thénardier family resolves to charge this strange man the highest possible prices for his stay at the inn. For the best experience on our site, be sure to turn on Javascript in your browser. } around the table, as an “appearance of luxury” that has the effect of Valjean's conscience twinges, and he goes to save him from the spectacularly doomed revolt. He often gives alms to beggars, but one day he catches sight of a frightening familiar face: it is Javert, pretending to be a beggar. As if tired of being turned away, Jean Valjean immediately blurts out

Yet his new-found goodness and kindness is ultimately what saves him. This chapter begins from the perspective of "a traveller, the author of this tale," which is a rare reference to the personage of the unnamed narrator of Les Misérables.This traveller finds himself at the place where the battlefield of Waterloo took place in 1815. He also manages to save Inspector Javert from being killed by rebels, because he's just that kind of guy. Teachers and parents!