What do student revolutionaries, factory workers, prostitutes, and convict laborers have in common? They're all a part of the fabric of Victor Hugo's stirring story of moral courage and human darkness, as crafted in his 1862 novel, Les Miserables. And in Hugo's account of multiple forms of human suffering, in what eventually becomes the milieu of the French Revolution, the nobility of mankind still shines through.
William Bouguereau
Edwin Twombly
Tamara De Lempicka
Edward Burne-jones
Chester Arthur
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