{block:Description}{/block:Description}
"I couldn't forgive him or like him, but I saw that what he had done was, to him, entirely justified."
-- F. Scott Fitzgerald, THe Great Gatsby
"The war wasn't all terror and violence. Sometimes things could get almost sweet... You could put a fancy spin on it, you could make it dance."
-- Tim O'Brien, The Things They Carried
◣ day after day, alone on the hill the man with the foolish grin is keeping perfectly still, but nobody wants to know him. they can see that he's just a fool ◢ why can't you look after yourself and not down on me? do you have to try to piss me off just 'cause i'm easy to please? ◣ i know life would suck without you, at the same time, i wanna hug you, i wanna wrap my hands around your neck. you're an asshole but i love you
◣ well the stairs sound so lonely without you, and i ain't maid my bed in a week; coffee stains on the paper i'm writing, and i'm too choked up inside to speak◢ when you said your last goodbye i died a little bit inside. i lay in tears in bed all night alone without you by my side ◣ i'm trying not to move. it's just your ghost passing through. it's just your ghost passing through.
The first time he felt more than incidental was when he met Gaston - it marked the first time someone had singled him out. They were children, not even entirely through puberty, and unlike him, Gaston was already shaping up to be something remarkable. He proved that pretty thoroughly when Villeneuve was besieged by a small pack of men and he dispatched them very nearly single-handedly.
His task since then was bolstering Gaston in any way possible, whether by recounting such heroic tales (the number of which only increased once they were both packed off to the war) or simply reminding him that everyone else knew about such heroic tales, and were ready and willing to follow him.
He became LeFou during the war. He wasn't meant for that sort of scene, he was too gentle, too sensitive, and he relied more on Gaston than he should've. He became just a fool. One who'd seen more than he'd ever wanted to, but he'd seen it, and he tried to put it out of his mind, especially when Gaston seemed to need those reassurances more than ever. LeFou just tagged along, encouraged Gaston whenever he could, ignored the morally ambiguous things he did, even when it made his stomach turn. He knew the difference between right and wrong, but he wasn't usually the one making the decisions.
doing what is good without bias for or against order;
combines a good heart with a free spirit;
represents true freedom from society's restricitons and a do-gooders zeal;
represents methodical, intentional, and frequently sucessful evil;
represents pure evil without honor and without variation;
destruction not only of beauty and life but also of the order on which beauty and life depend.
"the crusader"
"the benefactor"
"the rebel"
"the judge"
"the undecided"
"the free spirit"
"the dominator"
"the malefactor
"the destroyer"