Caderousse [top] -
In Alexandre Dumas’s sprawling masterpiece, The Count of Monte Cristo , the narrative is populated by villains of varying degrees: the brilliant and scheming Fernand Mondego, the ambitious and cold Prosecutor de Villefort, and the greedy, manipulative Danglars. Yet, among this rogues' gallery stands Gaspard Caderousse, a figure who is perhaps the most repulsive not because of his power, but because of his pitiable weakness. Unlike the other antagonists who act with calculated malice, Caderousse acts out of cowardice and envy. He serves as a moral barometer for the novel, illustrating that the greatest evil often stems not from action, but from the failure to act justly.
In the grand design of The Count of Monte Cristo , Caderousse represents the . caderousse