"Adversity makes men, and prosperity makes monsters."
Wikipedia
Portrait of Cosette by Emile Bayard
Perhaps most admired for such monumental works as Les Mis茅rables and Notre-Dame de Paris, Victor-Marie Hugo also wrote several poems, plays, satires, and political speeches in his lifetime. From his earliest days as a romantic poet, Hugo was never one to shy away from the banal or grotesque. In his novels, he portrayed the infernal cruelty of some characters as masterfully as he did the passions, sufferings, and heroism of others, including the reformed convict Jean Valjean and the hunchback Quasimodo. 尝别蝉&苍产蝉辫;惭颈蝉茅谤补产濒别蝉, which has been adapted for both the screen and stage and which has been referred to as "the Magna Carta of the human race", gave fullest expression to the author's belief that compassion for others is the greatest counterpoise to the evils of our world. A staunch opponent of the death penalty, slavery, and censorship, Hugo went into exile for nearly two decades upon Louis-Napol茅on Bonaparte's successful coup d'茅tat in 1851. A stroke in 1878 effectively put an end to his literary output, and seven years later, he passed away. To celebrate Hugo's 210th birthday on Feb. 26, here are a few favorite quotes from the greatest of French writers.
"Adversity makes men, and prosperity makes monsters."
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