If they had had a different neighbour, one less sel-absorbed and more concerned for others, a man of normal, charitable instincts, their desperate state would not have gone unnoticed, their distress-signals would have been heard, and perhaps they would have been rescued by now. Certainly they appeared utterly depraved, corrupt, vile and odious; but it is rare for those who have sunk so low not to be degraded in the process, and there comes a point, moreover, where the unfortunate and the infamous are grouped together, merged in a single, fateful world. They are les mis̩rables Рthe outcasts, the underdogs. And who is to blame? Is it not the most fallen who have most need for charity?

Report Quote Report Quote Report Quote Submit Quote Submit Quote Submit Quote