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Cosette

Cosette (French pronunciation: ​[kɔzɛt]) is a fictional character in the 1862 novel Les Misérables by Victor Hugo and in the many adaptations of the story for stage, film, and television. Her birth name, Euphrasie, is only mentioned briefly. As the orphaned child of an unmarried mother deserted by her father, Hugo never gives her a surname. In the course of the novel, she is mistakenly identified as Ursule, Lark, or Mademoiselle Lanoire.

Cosette Pontmercy
Les Misérables character
Illustration of Cosette in the Thénardiers' inn at Montfermeil depicted by Émile Bayard (1837-1891).
Created byVictor Hugo
In-universe information
Full nameEuphrasie
Alias
  • Ursule or Ursula
  • the Lark
  • Mademoiselle Lanoire or Lenoire
  • Madame Pontmercy
  • Cosette Fauchelevent
NicknameCosette, Alouette
GenderFemale
Family
SpouseMarius Pontmercy
Relatives
ReligionRoman Catholic
NationalityFrench
Born1815

She is the daughter of Fantine, a working woman who leaves her to be looked after by the Thénardiers, who exploit and victimise her. Rescued by Jean Valjean, who raises Cosette as if she were his own, she grows up in a convent school. She falls in love with Marius Pontmercy, a young lawyer. Valjean's struggle to protect her while disguising his past drives much of the plot until he recognizes "that this child had a right to know life before renouncing it"[1]—and he must allow her romantic attachment to Marius to blossom.

In the novel

Early life

Euphrasie, nicknamed Cosette by her mother, is the illegitimate daughter of Fantine and Félix Tholomyès, a rich student. She is born in Paris circa 1815. Tholomyès abandons Fantine, who leaves three-year-old Cosette with the Thénardiers at their inn in Montfermeil, paying them to care for her child while she works in the city of Montreuil-sur-Mer. Unbeknownst to Fantine, the Thénardiers abuse Cosette while she is under their care. They beat and starve her and force her to perform heavy labor in the inn. Under the Thénardiers' care she is described as "thin and pale", wears rags for clothing, and has chilblains on her hands as well as bruised and reddened skin. She is forced to go barefoot in winter.[2] The narrator also says that "fear was spread all over her".

While Fantine is in the hospital, the mayor of Montreuil-sur-MerJean Valjean masquerading as "Madeleine" to avoid revealing that he is a paroled convict—vows to retrieve Cosette for her. Although Fantine dies before seeing her daughter, Valjean becomes determined to look after the young girl.

 
Cosette with her doll, painting by Léon Comerre (1850-1916)

When he arrives in Montfermeil on Christmas Eve, Valjean finds Cosette fetching a pail of water and accompanies her back to the inn, where he witnesses her mistreatment by the Thénardiers as well as the unkindnesses of their daughters Éponine and Azelma. Valjean leaves the inn and returns with an expensive new doll which he offers to Cosette. At first reluctant, Cosette joyfully accepts it, which infuriates Thénardier; Éponine and Azelma become jealous.

The next morning, Christmas Day, Valjean informs the Thénardiers that he has come to take Cosette with him. Madame Thénardier immediately agrees but Thénardier pretends affection for Cosette and acts reluctant. Valjean pays 1500 francs to settle Fantine's debts and leaves with Cosette. Thénardier tries to swindle more money out of Valjean by saying that he has changed his mind and wants Cosette back, informing Valjean that Cosette's mother had entrusted her to his care and he cannot release her without a note from her mother. Valjean, agreeing with him, hands him a letter signed by Fantine. Thénardier then attempts to order Valjean to return Cosette or to pay a thousand crowns, but Valjean ignores him and leaves with Cosette.

Paris

Valjean takes Cosette to Paris, where they lodge at Gorbeau House; Valjean begins her education. When Inspector Javert discovers Valjean's whereabouts, he and Cosette must flee. Valjean climbs over a wall and they find themselves in a garden attached to a convent. The gardener Fauchelevent recognizes Valjean as the man who rescued him years earlier and agrees to shelter them. Valjean poses as Fauchelevent's brother and says he is Cosette's grandfather. They live peacefully in the convent for many years as Valjean works with Fauchelevent and Cosette attends the convent school. Over time, she appears to have no recollection of her childhood before arriving at the convent. As Cosette matures, beautiful and healthy, with chestnut hair, beautiful eyes, rosy cheeks, pale skin, and a radiant smile, Valjean realizes it would be unfair to allow her to become a nun without having experienced the outside world which a cloistered nun must renounce.

In a later chapter, Cosette eventually remembers her childhood—praying for the mother she never knew; the two ugly Thénardiers, and fetching them water somewhere "very far from Paris". In the same chapter, she asks Valjean about her mother, but he does not answer her question. When Cosette has a dream about her mother as an angel, she remarks that her mother must have been a saint. Valjean replies, "through martyrdom".

Relationship with Marius Pontmercy

 
The adult Cosette, by Pierre-Georges Jeanniot, 1887 edition

Marius sees Cosette for the first time in the Luxembourg Garden. She is fourteen years old, and fresh out of the convent, so he pays little attention to her. After a few months, Marius notices her and sees that she has grown to be an extremely beautiful young woman. Soon Cosette and Marius exchange glances and fall in love. Valjean notices how attentive Marius is to their movements. When he learns that Marius has followed them home and inquired about them, he quickly moves to a more obscure address with Cosette.

Marius spots Cosette again during a charitable visit she and Valjean make to the Thénardiers at Gorbeau House, directly next door to Marius. He asks Éponine to find her address for him, and she reluctantly agrees. After many weeks, Éponine takes Marius to Cosette's new address in order to please Marius. Marius watches Cosette for a few nights before approaching her. When Cosette and Marius finally meet again in the garden, they confess their mutual love, share their first kiss, and introduce themselves. They continue to meet in secret.

Éponine prevents Thénardier, Patron-Minette and Brujon from robbing Valjean and Cosette's house. The same night, Cosette informs Marius that she and Valjean will be departing for England soon. This news devastates them both, because it will mean the end of their relationship. Marius briefly attempts to obtain money and permission to marry from his grandfather to circumvent this issue. Their discussion dissolves into a heated argument stemming from the grandfather's suggestion to "Make her [his] mistress", and Marius storms out.

The next day, Éponine (now dressed as a boy) finds Valjean in an embankment in the Champ de Mars and anonymously throws him a note, which tells him to "move". Valjean considers this in horror for a few days, then informs Cosette they will move to their other house and will be in England in a week. Cosette quickly writes a letter to Marius with this information. She catches sight of Éponine through the gate and asks the "workman" to deliver the letter to Marius. Éponine accepts the letter, but does not deliver it.

Several nights later, Marius is led to the barricades by Éponine, in hope that they will die together. After being fatally shot, Éponine reveals this to Marius and gives him Cosette’s letter before she dies. Marius writes a farewell letter to Cosette, which is delivered to Valjean by Gavroche. Valjean reads Marius’ farewell letter and decides to follow Marius to the barricades. After the battle is over, he takes Marius' unconscious body through the sewers. After, quite literally, dragging Marius through quicksand in the sewer, Valjean finally manages to get Marius through the sewers alive. He is let out by Thénardier, who has a government key and does not recognize him, simply assuming him to be an assassin who killed Marius.

At the exit, he is confronted by Javert, who had pursued Thénardier there and was watching the exit in hopes of catching him. Javert helps Valjean return Marius to his grandfather's house, and Valjean requests to be brought home to say goodbye to Cosette before being sent back to the galleys. Javert allows it, and when Valjean instinctively looks out the window, Javert is gone. It is later revealed that Valjean sparing Javert's life at the barricade had caused a moral paradox and that Javert had committed suicide by jumping into the Seine. After Marius' six-month recovery from his wounds, he is reunited with Cosette.

Wedding and afterwards

 
Cosette bids farewell to Valjean after her marriage

On February 16, 1833, Marius and Cosette marry. The next morning, Valjean tells Marius of his criminal past. Marius asks him to leave him and Cosette. He then allows Valjean to visit her each evening, but makes those visits increasingly difficult until Valjean stops coming. While Marius, assuming the worst about Valjean's character, searches for the real origin of Cosette's money, Valjean loses the will to live and becomes bedridden. When Marius learns from Thénardier that he owes his life to Valjean, Marius and Cosette go to Valjean, find him on his deathbed, and reconcile with him. As Marius looks on, Valjean tells Cosette the story of her mother Fantine and how he came to be her guardian. Valjean dies peacefully.

Character role

Critics have often considered Cosette to be something of an empty figure, with no real independent character apart from the role she plays in the lives of others: as an innocent, hopeless child-victim to be exploited (for the Thénardiers); a daughter to be protected (for Fantine and Valjean); and an object of adoration (for Marius). Stephanie Barbé Hammer writes that "Having served her function as a paternalizing figure, Cosette grows up into a silent, beautiful cipher".[3] She has the same, but reverse, role as an object of jealousy and hatred for the villainous characters. As Kathryn M. Grossman remarks, she brings out the "hatred of humanity" that is typical of Hugo's villains. When Madame Thénardier sees that the grown-up Cosette has become a "well-off and radiant young woman, Madame Thénardier responds viscerally, 'I'd like to kick open her belly'."[4]

Cosette is also portrayed as largely sexless. Mario Vargas Llosa says of her relationship to Marius,

Now the love between these two is completely ethereal; the sex drive has been surgically removed so that their relationship can be purely one of feeling. Before the wedding the young people exchange one kiss, which is not repeated because, as the narrator says, neither Marius nor Cosette was aware of the existence of carnal desire.... The dialogue between these two virtuous lovers is as unreal as their amorous behavior. For this reason, the episodes where the two lovers talk to each other are the most artificial moments in the novel.[5]

However, in a novel of symbolism and metaphor, Cosette may also be seen as a symbol of hope in the world of Les Misérables, representing the rise of the oppressed and abused from darkness to a bright future. She is the primary motivation for several characters in the novel to lift themselves out of darkness, regardless of whether or not they succeed. For this reason the picture of her sweeping the inn in the evening is often the image most associated as being singularly representative of the main themes of the book, and is used frequently on the cover.

Cosette can be seen as a strong female lead in the novel, aiming to achieve happiness ultimately in her life. Ultimately, with Marius, she succeeds in doing so. She can be seen as restrained by the time in which she lived, but still full of hopeful innocence and subtle strength.[citation needed]

Adaptations

Since the original publication of Les Misérables in 1862, the character of Cosette has been included in many adaptations in various media, including books, films,[6] musicals, plays and games, most notably in the 2007 anime Les Misérables: Shōjo Cosette, in which she rather than Valjean is the central character.

In the musical

In the stage musical based on the novel, Cosette is a principal character played by two actresses, a younger female for Montfermeil in 1823 and an older female for Paris in 1832. Her role as an adolescent is condensed while her joy in singing and reading is only implied (specifically in "Castle on the Cloud"). Many other details of her character including her passionate nature ("A Heart Full of Love") are similarly portrayed by implication in the songs she sings.

Other aspects were fully omitted including the conversation between Valjean and Cosette as he helps her carry the water bucket, their stay at Gorbeau House, their avoidance of Javert and their arrival at the Petit-Picpus convent, much of which were later reintroduced in the 2012 film adaptation. The musical also condenses the time between the wedding of Cosette and Marius and their visit to the dying Valjean.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Victor Hugo, Les Misérables (English language) Kindle Edition, 583)
  2. ^ Victor Hugo Les Miserables page 382
  3. ^ Stephanie Barbé Hammer, The Sublime Crime: Fascination, Failure, and Form in Literature of the Enlightenment, Southern Illinois University Press, 1994, p.158
  4. ^ Kathryn M. Grossman, Figuring Transcendence in Les Miserables: Hugo's Romantic Sublime, Illinois University Press, 1994, p.21.
  5. ^ Mario Vargas Llosa, The Temptation of the Impossible: Victor Hugo and Les Miserables, Princeton University Press, 2007, p.73.
  6. ^ Cosette (Character) at the Internet Movie Database

References

  • Les Misérables by Victor Hugo. Les Misérables.
  • Les Misérables, 11 November 2006 Les Misérables

External links

cosette, other, uses, disambiguation, french, pronunciation, kɔzɛt, fictional, character, 1862, novel, misérables, victor, hugo, many, adaptations, story, stage, film, television, birth, name, euphrasie, only, mentioned, briefly, orphaned, child, unmarried, mo. For other uses see Cosette disambiguation Cosette French pronunciation kɔzɛt is a fictional character in the 1862 novel Les Miserables by Victor Hugo and in the many adaptations of the story for stage film and television Her birth name Euphrasie is only mentioned briefly As the orphaned child of an unmarried mother deserted by her father Hugo never gives her a surname In the course of the novel she is mistakenly identified as Ursule Lark or Mademoiselle Lanoire Cosette PontmercyLes Miserables characterIllustration of Cosette in the Thenardiers inn at Montfermeil depicted by Emile Bayard 1837 1891 Created byVictor HugoIn universe informationFull nameEuphrasieAliasUrsule or Ursulathe LarkMademoiselle Lanoire or LenoireMadame PontmercyCosette FaucheleventNicknameCosette AlouetteGenderFemaleFamilyFantine mother Jean Valjean surrogate father no legal or blood relation Felix Tholomyes biological father SpouseMarius PontmercyRelativesGeorges Pontmercy father in law Monsieur Gillenormand grandfather in law ReligionRoman CatholicNationalityFrenchBorn1815She is the daughter of Fantine a working woman who leaves her to be looked after by the Thenardiers who exploit and victimise her Rescued by Jean Valjean who raises Cosette as if she were his own she grows up in a convent school She falls in love with Marius Pontmercy a young lawyer Valjean s struggle to protect her while disguising his past drives much of the plot until he recognizes that this child had a right to know life before renouncing it 1 and he must allow her romantic attachment to Marius to blossom Contents 1 In the novel 1 1 Early life 1 2 Paris 1 3 Relationship with Marius Pontmercy 1 4 Wedding and afterwards 2 Character role 3 Adaptations 4 In the musical 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 External linksIn the novel EditEarly life Edit Euphrasie nicknamed Cosette by her mother is the illegitimate daughter of Fantine and Felix Tholomyes a rich student She is born in Paris circa 1815 Tholomyes abandons Fantine who leaves three year old Cosette with the Thenardiers at their inn in Montfermeil paying them to care for her child while she works in the city of Montreuil sur Mer Unbeknownst to Fantine the Thenardiers abuse Cosette while she is under their care They beat and starve her and force her to perform heavy labor in the inn Under the Thenardiers care she is described as thin and pale wears rags for clothing and has chilblains on her hands as well as bruised and reddened skin She is forced to go barefoot in winter 2 The narrator also says that fear was spread all over her While Fantine is in the hospital the mayor of Montreuil sur Mer Jean Valjean masquerading as Madeleine to avoid revealing that he is a paroled convict vows to retrieve Cosette for her Although Fantine dies before seeing her daughter Valjean becomes determined to look after the young girl Cosette with her doll painting by Leon Comerre 1850 1916 When he arrives in Montfermeil on Christmas Eve Valjean finds Cosette fetching a pail of water and accompanies her back to the inn where he witnesses her mistreatment by the Thenardiers as well as the unkindnesses of their daughters Eponine and Azelma Valjean leaves the inn and returns with an expensive new doll which he offers to Cosette At first reluctant Cosette joyfully accepts it which infuriates Thenardier Eponine and Azelma become jealous The next morning Christmas Day Valjean informs the Thenardiers that he has come to take Cosette with him Madame Thenardier immediately agrees but Thenardier pretends affection for Cosette and acts reluctant Valjean pays 1500 francs to settle Fantine s debts and leaves with Cosette Thenardier tries to swindle more money out of Valjean by saying that he has changed his mind and wants Cosette back informing Valjean that Cosette s mother had entrusted her to his care and he cannot release her without a note from her mother Valjean agreeing with him hands him a letter signed by Fantine Thenardier then attempts to order Valjean to return Cosette or to pay a thousand crowns but Valjean ignores him and leaves with Cosette Paris Edit Valjean takes Cosette to Paris where they lodge at Gorbeau House Valjean begins her education When Inspector Javert discovers Valjean s whereabouts he and Cosette must flee Valjean climbs over a wall and they find themselves in a garden attached to a convent The gardener Fauchelevent recognizes Valjean as the man who rescued him years earlier and agrees to shelter them Valjean poses as Fauchelevent s brother and says he is Cosette s grandfather They live peacefully in the convent for many years as Valjean works with Fauchelevent and Cosette attends the convent school Over time she appears to have no recollection of her childhood before arriving at the convent As Cosette matures beautiful and healthy with chestnut hair beautiful eyes rosy cheeks pale skin and a radiant smile Valjean realizes it would be unfair to allow her to become a nun without having experienced the outside world which a cloistered nun must renounce In a later chapter Cosette eventually remembers her childhood praying for the mother she never knew the two ugly Thenardiers and fetching them water somewhere very far from Paris In the same chapter she asks Valjean about her mother but he does not answer her question When Cosette has a dream about her mother as an angel she remarks that her mother must have been a saint Valjean replies through martyrdom Relationship with Marius Pontmercy Edit The adult Cosette by Pierre Georges Jeanniot 1887 edition Marius sees Cosette for the first time in the Luxembourg Garden She is fourteen years old and fresh out of the convent so he pays little attention to her After a few months Marius notices her and sees that she has grown to be an extremely beautiful young woman Soon Cosette and Marius exchange glances and fall in love Valjean notices how attentive Marius is to their movements When he learns that Marius has followed them home and inquired about them he quickly moves to a more obscure address with Cosette Marius spots Cosette again during a charitable visit she and Valjean make to the Thenardiers at Gorbeau House directly next door to Marius He asks Eponine to find her address for him and she reluctantly agrees After many weeks Eponine takes Marius to Cosette s new address in order to please Marius Marius watches Cosette for a few nights before approaching her When Cosette and Marius finally meet again in the garden they confess their mutual love share their first kiss and introduce themselves They continue to meet in secret Eponine prevents Thenardier Patron Minette and Brujon from robbing Valjean and Cosette s house The same night Cosette informs Marius that she and Valjean will be departing for England soon This news devastates them both because it will mean the end of their relationship Marius briefly attempts to obtain money and permission to marry from his grandfather to circumvent this issue Their discussion dissolves into a heated argument stemming from the grandfather s suggestion to Make her his mistress and Marius storms out The next day Eponine now dressed as a boy finds Valjean in an embankment in the Champ de Mars and anonymously throws him a note which tells him to move Valjean considers this in horror for a few days then informs Cosette they will move to their other house and will be in England in a week Cosette quickly writes a letter to Marius with this information She catches sight of Eponine through the gate and asks the workman to deliver the letter to Marius Eponine accepts the letter but does not deliver it Several nights later Marius is led to the barricades by Eponine in hope that they will die together After being fatally shot Eponine reveals this to Marius and gives him Cosette s letter before she dies Marius writes a farewell letter to Cosette which is delivered to Valjean by Gavroche Valjean reads Marius farewell letter and decides to follow Marius to the barricades After the battle is over he takes Marius unconscious body through the sewers After quite literally dragging Marius through quicksand in the sewer Valjean finally manages to get Marius through the sewers alive He is let out by Thenardier who has a government key and does not recognize him simply assuming him to be an assassin who killed Marius At the exit he is confronted by Javert who had pursued Thenardier there and was watching the exit in hopes of catching him Javert helps Valjean return Marius to his grandfather s house and Valjean requests to be brought home to say goodbye to Cosette before being sent back to the galleys Javert allows it and when Valjean instinctively looks out the window Javert is gone It is later revealed that Valjean sparing Javert s life at the barricade had caused a moral paradox and that Javert had committed suicide by jumping into the Seine After Marius six month recovery from his wounds he is reunited with Cosette Wedding and afterwards Edit Cosette bids farewell to Valjean after her marriage On February 16 1833 Marius and Cosette marry The next morning Valjean tells Marius of his criminal past Marius asks him to leave him and Cosette He then allows Valjean to visit her each evening but makes those visits increasingly difficult until Valjean stops coming While Marius assuming the worst about Valjean s character searches for the real origin of Cosette s money Valjean loses the will to live and becomes bedridden When Marius learns from Thenardier that he owes his life to Valjean Marius and Cosette go to Valjean find him on his deathbed and reconcile with him As Marius looks on Valjean tells Cosette the story of her mother Fantine and how he came to be her guardian Valjean dies peacefully Character role EditCritics have often considered Cosette to be something of an empty figure with no real independent character apart from the role she plays in the lives of others as an innocent hopeless child victim to be exploited for the Thenardiers a daughter to be protected for Fantine and Valjean and an object of adoration for Marius Stephanie Barbe Hammer writes that Having served her function as a paternalizing figure Cosette grows up into a silent beautiful cipher 3 She has the same but reverse role as an object of jealousy and hatred for the villainous characters As Kathryn M Grossman remarks she brings out the hatred of humanity that is typical of Hugo s villains When Madame Thenardier sees that the grown up Cosette has become a well off and radiant young woman Madame Thenardier responds viscerally I d like to kick open her belly 4 Cosette is also portrayed as largely sexless Mario Vargas Llosa says of her relationship to Marius Now the love between these two is completely ethereal the sex drive has been surgically removed so that their relationship can be purely one of feeling Before the wedding the young people exchange one kiss which is not repeated because as the narrator says neither Marius nor Cosette was aware of the existence of carnal desire The dialogue between these two virtuous lovers is as unreal as their amorous behavior For this reason the episodes where the two lovers talk to each other are the most artificial moments in the novel 5 However in a novel of symbolism and metaphor Cosette may also be seen as a symbol of hope in the world of Les Miserables representing the rise of the oppressed and abused from darkness to a bright future She is the primary motivation for several characters in the novel to lift themselves out of darkness regardless of whether or not they succeed For this reason the picture of her sweeping the inn in the evening is often the image most associated as being singularly representative of the main themes of the book and is used frequently on the cover Cosette can be seen as a strong female lead in the novel aiming to achieve happiness ultimately in her life Ultimately with Marius she succeeds in doing so She can be seen as restrained by the time in which she lived but still full of hopeful innocence and subtle strength citation needed Adaptations EditMain article Adaptations of Les Miserables Since the original publication of Les Miserables in 1862 the character of Cosette has been included in many adaptations in various media including books films 6 musicals plays and games most notably in the 2007 anime Les Miserables Shōjo Cosette in which she rather than Valjean is the central character In the musical EditSee also Songs from Les Miserables and Synopsis of the musical This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the stage musical based on the novel Cosette is a principal character played by two actresses a younger female for Montfermeil in 1823 and an older female for Paris in 1832 Her role as an adolescent is condensed while her joy in singing and reading is only implied specifically in Castle on the Cloud Many other details of her character including her passionate nature A Heart Full of Love are similarly portrayed by implication in the songs she sings Other aspects were fully omitted including the conversation between Valjean and Cosette as he helps her carry the water bucket their stay at Gorbeau House their avoidance of Javert and their arrival at the Petit Picpus convent much of which were later reintroduced in the 2012 film adaptation The musical also condenses the time between the wedding of Cosette and Marius and their visit to the dying Valjean Wikisource has original text related to this article Les Miserables Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cosette See also Edit Children s literature portalCosette as given name Footnotes Edit Victor Hugo Les Miserables English language Kindle Edition 583 Victor Hugo Les Miserables page 382 Stephanie Barbe Hammer The Sublime Crime Fascination Failure and Form in Literature of the Enlightenment Southern Illinois University Press 1994 p 158 Kathryn M Grossman Figuring Transcendence in Les Miserables Hugo s Romantic Sublime Illinois University Press 1994 p 21 Mario Vargas Llosa The Temptation of the Impossible Victor Hugo and Les Miserables Princeton University Press 2007 p 73 Cosette Character at the Internet Movie DatabaseReferences EditLes Miserables by Victor Hugo Les Miserables Les Miserables 11 November 2006 Les MiserablesExternal links EditSearch for Cosette at the Internet Broadway Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cosette amp oldid 1099029118, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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