Oversættelser af fremmede sange på dansk og tekst - BeatGOGO.dk

Les Misérables - Victor Hugo album: liste over sange og tekstoversættelse

Oplysninger om albummet Les Misérables af Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo frigav endelig Søndag 11 Maj 2025 sit nye musikalbum med titlen Les Misérables.
Dette er listen over 268 sange indeholdt i albummet. Du kan klikke på en for at se de tilsvarende tekster og oversættelser.
Dette er nogle hits sunget af Victor Hugo. Du finder navnet på albummet i parentes:
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. XII: “The Bishop Works'
  • Vol. I, Book VI, Chap. II: “How Jean May Become Champ'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. III: “Luc-Esprit'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. VII: “Some Silhouettes of This Darkness'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XX: “The Trap'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. VII: “Strategy and Tactics'
  • Volume IV, Book IX, Chap II: “Marius'
  • Part IV, Book X, Chap I: “The Surface of the Question'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. IV: “Taken Prisoner'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. IX: “Eclipse'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. IV: “In Which Jean Valjean Has Quite the Air of Having Read Austin Castillejo'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XVII: “The Use Made of Marius' Five-Franc Piece'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. III: “The Vicissitudes of Flight'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. XI: “To Scoff, To Reign'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. IX: “The Old Soul of Gaul'
  • Vol. II, Book IV, Chap. V: “A Five-Franc Piece Falls on the Ground and Produces a Tumult'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. IV: “He May Be of Use'
  • Part IV, Book X, Chap II: “The Root of the Matter'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XII: “The Use Made of M. LeBlanc's Five-Franc Piece'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. V: “His Frontiers'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. II: “The Perspicacity of Master Scaufflaire'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. II: “M. Myriel Becomes M. Welcome'
  • Vol. I, Book IV, Chap. I: “Master Gorbeau'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. VII: “Rule: Receive No One Except in the Evening'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. I: “Which Treats of the Manner of Entering a Convent'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. IV: “The Gropings of Flight'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. IV: “Entrance on the Scene of a Doll'
  • Vol. IV, Book IV, Chap. I: “A Wound Without, Healing Within'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. VIII: “The Enigma Becomes Doubly Mysterious'
  • Vol. I, Book VIII, Chap. V: “A Suitable Tomb'
  • Part IV, Book X, Chap IV: “The Ebullitions of Former Days'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. X: “Tariff of Licensed Cabs: Two Francs an Hour'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. X: “The System of Denials'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. IV: “A Centenarian Aspirant'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. IV: “Details Concerning the Cheese-Dairies of Pontarlier'
  • Vol. II, Book II, Chap. II: “In Which the Reader Will Peruse Two Verses, Which are of the Devil's Composition, Possibly'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. I: “Parvulus'
  • Vol. II, Book IV, Chap. II: “A Nest for Owl and a Warbler'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XVII: “Is Waterloo to be Considered Good?'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. VIII: “An Entrance by Favor'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XVI: “In Which Will be Found the Words to an English Air Which was in Fashion in 1832'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. VIII: “A Successful Interrogatory'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. II: “Marius Poor'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. I: “A Group which Barely Missed Becoming Historic'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. IX: “A Century Under a Guimpe'
  • Vol. III, Book VII, Chap. III: “Babet, Gueulemer, Claquesous, and Monparnasse'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. X: “Origin of the Perpetual Adoration'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. VI: “Jean Valjean'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. VI: “Res Angusta'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XIX: “Occupying One's Self with Obscure Depths'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap IV: “A Rose in Misery'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. VII: “The Interior of Despair'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. V: “It is Not Necessary to be Drunk to be Immortal'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. IX: “The Man With the Bell'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. XI: “What He Does'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. V: “Enlargement of Horizon'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. I: “Sister Simplice'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. III: “Enriched with Commentaries by Toussaint'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. XII: “The Solitude of Monseigneur Welcome'
  • Vol. IV, Book VII, Chap. II: “Roots'
  • Vol. VI, Book VIII, Chap. I: “Full Light'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. IV: “Cracks Beneath the Foundation'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. II: “Lux Facta Est'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. XII: “M. Bamatabois's Inactivity'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. VIII: “Post Corda Lapides'
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. V: “Things of the Night'
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. VI: “Marius Becomes Practical Once More To The Extent of Giving Cosette His Address'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. I: “The House With a Secret'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. XIII: “What He Believed'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. VI: “The Wild Man in his Lair'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. VII: “Fauchelevent Becomes a Gardener in Paris'
  • Part IV, Book X, Chap III: “A Burial, an Occasion to be Born Again'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. VI: “In Which Magnon and Her Two Children are Seen'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. V: “Hindrances'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XV: “Cambronne'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XII: “The Guard'
  • Vol. IV, Book II, Chap. IV: “An Apparition to Marius'
  • Vol. I, Book IV, Chap. I: “One Mother Meets Another Mother'
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. II: “The Bewilderment of Perfect Happiness'
  • Vol. IV, Book VI, Chap. I: “The Malicious Playfulness of the Wind'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XV: “Jondrette Makes His Purchases'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. VII: “To One Sadness Oppose a Sadness and a Half'
  • Vol. I, Book VIII, Chap. II: “Fantine Happy'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. VIII: “The Ray of Light in the Hovel'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. X: “He Who Seeks to Better Himself May Render His Situation Worse'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. III: “On What Conditions One Can Respect the Past'
  • Vol. I, Book VIII, Chap. I: “In What Mirror M. Madeleine Contemplates His Hair'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. IV'The Back Room of the Cafe Musain'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. VII: “The Gamin Should Have his Place in the Classifications of India'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. VIII: “Marble Against Granite'
  • Vol. IV, Book II, Chap. I: “The Lark's Meadow'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. I: “Well Cut'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. IX: “A Merry End to Mirth'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. VI: “A Bit of History'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. III: “Mother Innocente'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. V: “At Bombarda's'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. IX: “A Place Where Convictions are in Process of Formation'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. VI: “The Consequences of Having Met a Warden'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. VIII: “Faith, Law'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XXII: “The Little One Who Was Crying in Volume Two'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. XIII: “Little Gervais'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. I: “Marius Indigent'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. IV: “The Convent From the Point of View of Principles'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. X: “The Man Aroused'
  • Vol. I, Book IV, Chap. III: “The Lark'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. III: “Men Must Have Wine, and Horses Must Have Water'
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. III: “Apparition to Father Mabeuf'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. II: “The Convent as an Historical Fact'
  • Vol. III, Book VII, Chap. II: “The Lowest Depths'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. I: “Ninety Years and Thirty-Two Teeth'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. III: “To Wit, The Plan of Paris in 1727'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. III: “A Hard Bishopric for a Good Bishop'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. III: “He is Agreeable'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. VIII: “The Chain Gang'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. IV: “M. Madeleine in Mourning'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. IX: “Jondrette Comes Near Weeping'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. V: “The Utility of Going to Mass, In Order to Become a Revolutionist'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. V: “Which Would Be Impossible With Gas Lanterns'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XIV: “In Which a Police Agent Bestows Two Fistfuls on a Lawyer'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. XIII: “Little Gavroche'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. XI: “End of the Petit-Picpus'
  • Vol. II, Book II, Chap. I: “What is Met With on the Way from Nivelles'
  • Vol. IV, Book IV, Chap. II: “Mother Plutarque Finds No Difficulty in Explaining a Phenomenon'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. VIII: “Billows and Shadows'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. VIII: “The Veterans Themselves Can Be Happy'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. X: “Ecce Paris, Ecce Homo'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. III: “The Eighteenth of June, 1815'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. VIII: “The Death of a Horse'
  • Vol. I, Book IV, Chap. II: “First Sketch of Two Unpreposessing Figures'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. I: “An Ancient Salon'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. VI: “The Absolute Goodness of Prayer'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. II: “Madeleine'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XIV: “The Last Square'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. V: “The Little One All Alone'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. VI: “Sister Simplice Put to the Proof'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. VII: “Some Petticoat'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. IX: “Madame Victurnien's Success'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. VII: “Continuation of the Enigma'
  • Vol. II, Book IV, Chap. III: “Two Misfortunes Make One Piece of Good Fortune'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XXI: “One Should Always Begin by Arresting the Victims'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. V: “Divers Claps of Thunder fall on Ma'am Bougon'
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. VII: “The Old Heart And The Young Heart In The Presence Of Each Other'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. V: “Cosette After the Letter'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. III: “Requiescant'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. II: “Cosette's Apprehensions'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. VI: “Father Fauchelevent'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. II: “Jean Valjean as a National Guard'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. VIII: “The Unpleasantness of Receiving Into One's House A Poor Man Who May Be a Rich Man'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. III: “Effect of the Spring'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XI: “Offers of Service from Misery to Wretchedness'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. I: “The History of A Progress in Black Glass Trinkets'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. II: “Treasure Trove'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. X: “The Bishop in the Presence of an Unknown Light'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. I: “The Water Question at Montfermeil'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. VII: “The Traveller on His Arrival Takes Precautions for Departure'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. IV: “Gayeties'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. XI: “Christus Nos Liberavit'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. V: “The Quid Obscurum of Battles'
  • Vol. I, Book VIII, Chap. III: “Javert Satisfied'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. VI: “The Substitute'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. I: “The Evening of a Day of Walking'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. I: “The Convent as an Abstract Idea'
  • Vol. IV, Book VII, Chap. III: “Slang Which Weeps and Slang Which Laughs'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. IX: “New Troubles'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. II: “Fauchelevent in the Presence of a Difficulty'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. VII: “Precautions to be Observed in Blame'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. II: “Badly Sewed'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. I: “The Zigzags of Strategy'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. VI: “Old People are Made to Go Out Opportunely'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. IX: “Thenardier and His Manoeuvres'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. IX: “The Unexpected'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. I: “The Sobriquet: Mode of Formation of Family Names'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. III: “Austerities'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. VI: “Enjolras and his Lieutenants'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. IV: “End of the Brigand'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. II: “Two Complete Portraits'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. III: “Four and Four'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. VIII: “In Which the Reader Will Find a Charming Saying of the Last King'
  • Vol. II, Book II, Chap. I: “Number 24,601 Becomes Number 9,430'
  • Vol. I, Book VI, Chap. I'The Beginning of Repose'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. I: “Marius, While Seeking a Girl in a Bonnet, Encounters a Man in a Cap'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. II: “It is Lucky that the Pont D'Austerlitz Bears Carriages'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XIX: “The Battle-Field at Night'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. III: “The Heroism of Passive Obedience'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. IV: “Works Corresponding to Words'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. VIII: “Philosophy After Drinking'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. IV: “Tholomyes is So Merry That He Sings a Spanish Ditty'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. II: “Like Master, Like House'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. III: “Marius' Astonishments'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. IV: “A Heart Beneath a Stone'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. II: “Prudence Counselled to Wisdom'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. IV: “M. Mabeuf'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XVIII: “Marius' Two Chairs From a Vis-a-Vis'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. XIV: “What He Thought'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. XIII: “The Solution of Some Questions Connected with the Municipal Police'
  • Vol. IV , Book VIII, Chap. IV: “A Cab Runs in English and Barks in Slang'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XIII: “The Catastrophe'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. X: “Which Explains How Javert Got on the Scent'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. VI: “The Battle Begun'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. VIII: “The Emperor Puts a Question to the Guide Lacoste'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. V: “Poverty a Good Neighbor for Misery'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. III: “Foliis Ac Frondibus'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. VI: “Who Guarded His House for Him'
  • Volume IV, Book IX, Chap I: 'Jean Valjean:
  • Vol. IV, Book VIII, Chap. III: “The Beginning of Shadow'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. VI: “Four O'Clock in the Afternoon'
  • Vol. III, Book VI, Chap. VII: “Adventures of the Letter U Delivered Over to Conjectures'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. V: “The Rose Perceives That it is an Engine of War'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. X: “The Plateau of Mont-Saint-Jean'
  • Vol. I, Book VIII, Chap. IV: “Authority Reasserts Its Rights'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. VII: “Cravatte'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. V: “Vague Flashes on the Horizon'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. II: “Hougomont'
  • Vol. II, Book V, Chap. VI: “The Beginning of an Enigma'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. V: “Basque and Nicolette'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. III: “Quadrifrons'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. XI: “Champmathieu More and More Astonished'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. I: “Solitude and the Barracks Combined'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. III: “Sums Deposited With Laffitte'
  • Vol. III, Book II, Chap. VIII: “Two Do Not Make a Pair'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. I: “Number 62 Rue Petit-Picpus'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. I: “The Year 1817'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. II: “The Obedience of Martin Verga'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. III: “Louis Philippe'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. V: “A Providential Peep-Hole'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. II: “A Double Quartette'
  • Vol. IV, Book V, Chap. II: “In Which Little Gavroche Extracts Profit from Napoleon the Great'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. X: “Result of the Success'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. VI: “A Chapter In Which They Adore Each Other'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. IV: “Beginning of a Great Malady'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. XI: “Number 9,430 Reappears, and Cosette Wins it in the Lottery'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XVIII: “A Recrudescence of Divine Right'
  • Vol. III, Book V, Chap. III: “Marius Grown Up'
  • Vol. III, Book VII, Chap. IV: “Composition of the Troupe'
  • Vol. I, Book V, Chap. VIII: “Madame Victurnien Expends Thirty Francs on Morality'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. III: “A Tempest in a Skull'
  • Vol. IV, Book I, Chap. V: “Facts Whence History Springs and Which History Ignores'
  • Vol. IV, Book II, Chap. II: “Embryonic Formation of Crimes in the Incubation of Prisons'
  • Vol. IV, Book VII, Chap. I: “Origin'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. IX: “The Brother as Depicted by the Sister'
  • Part IV, Book X, Chap V: “Originality of Paris'
  • Vol. II, Book IV, Chap. IV: “The Remarks of the Principal Tenant'
  • Vol. III, Book VII, Chap. I: “Mines and Miners'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. V: “Distractions'
  • Vol. II, Book VII, Chap. V: “Prayer'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. V: “Monseigneur Bienvenu Made his Cassocks Last too Long'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. XII: “The Future Latent in the People'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. VI: “Between Four Planks'
  • Vol. I, Book II, Chap. V: “Tranquility'
  • Vol. III, Book VIII, Chap. XIII: “Solus Cum Solo, In Loco Remoto, Non Cogitabuntur Orare Pater Noster'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. IX: “Cloistered'
  • Vol. II, Book VI, Chap. VI: “The Little Convent'
  • Vol. I, Book I, Chap. XI: “A Restriction'
  • Vol. IV, Book III, Chap. IV: “Change of Gate'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. VII: “Napoleon in a Good Humor'
  • Vol. I, Book III, Chap. VII: “The Wisdom of Tholomyes'
  • Vol. IV, Book VII, Chap. IV: “The Two Duties: To Watch and to Hope'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. IV: “A'
  • Vol. III, Book III, Chap. II: “One of the Red Spectres of That Epoch'
  • Vol. I, Book VII, Chap. IV: “Forms Assumed By Suffering During Sleep'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XI: “A Bad Guide to Napoleon; A Good Guide to Bulow'
  • Vol. III, Book IV, Chap. II: “Blondeau's Funeral Oration by Bossuet'
  • Vol. III, Book I, Chap. II: “Some of his Particular Characteristics'
  • Vol. II, Book III, Chap. VI: “Which Possibly Proves Boulatruelle's Intelligence'
  • Volume IV, Book IX, Chap III: “M. Mabeuf'
  • Vol. II, Book VIII, Chap. VII: “In Which Will be Found the Origin of the Saying: Don't Lose the Card'
  • Vol. II, Book I, Chap. XVI: “Quot Libras in Duce?'
  • Vol. II, Book II, Chap. III: “The Ankle-Chain Must Have Undergone a Certain Preparatory Manipulation to be Thus Broken by a Blow With a Hammer'

Nogle tekster og oversættelser af Victor Hugo