Landmarks in French Literature |
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Page 23
... poet and a dreamer - an artist who could clothe in unforgettable verse the intensest feelings of a soul . The bulk ... poets , he has impressed his own personality on every line that he wrote . Into the stiff and complicated forms of the ...
... poet and a dreamer - an artist who could clothe in unforgettable verse the intensest feelings of a soul . The bulk ... poets , he has impressed his own personality on every line that he wrote . Into the stiff and complicated forms of the ...
Page 28
... poets had sung with beauty ; but that was not enough for the poets of the Renaissance : they determined to sing not only with beauty , but with care . The move- ment began in the verse of MAROT , whose clear , civilised , worldly poetry ...
... poets had sung with beauty ; but that was not enough for the poets of the Renaissance : they determined to sing not only with beauty , but with care . The move- ment began in the verse of MAROT , whose clear , civilised , worldly poetry ...
Page 29
... poets who had preceded them . They worked with no casual purpose , no merely professional art , but with a high sense of the glory of their calling and a noble determination to give to the Muses whom they worshipped only of their best ...
... poets who had preceded them . They worked with no casual purpose , no merely professional art , but with a high sense of the glory of their calling and a noble determination to give to the Muses whom they worshipped only of their best ...
Page 30
Lytton Strachey. World . They were scholars as well as poets ; and their great object was to create a tradition in the poetry of France which should bring it into accord with the immortal models of Greece and Rome . This desire to ...
Lytton Strachey. World . They were scholars as well as poets ; and their great object was to create a tradition in the poetry of France which should bring it into accord with the immortal models of Greece and Rome . This desire to ...
Page 31
... poet have not been enough to save his verse from tedium and inflation . The Classics swam into the ken of these early discoverers in such a blaze of glory that their eyes were dazzled and their feet misled . It was owing to their very ...
... poet have not been enough to save his verse from tedium and inflation . The Classics swam into the ken of these early discoverers in such a blaze of glory that their eyes were dazzled and their feet misled . It was owing to their very ...
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Common terms and phrases
age of Louis artistic Balzac beauty Bossuet brilliant Bruyère Chansons Chansons de Geste character characteristic charm CHRÉTIEN DE TROYES civilisation classical complete Corneille critical detail Diderot dominating doubt drama eighteenth century elaborate English exquisite extraordinary fact feeling Flaubert Fontaine French literature genius human ideals imagination immense important infinitely influence intensity Jean de Meung language Les Misérables letters Lettres Provinciales literary literature of France Louis XIV master medieval melancholy ment Middle Ages mind modern Molière Molière's Montaigne Montesquieu movement nature ness never noble Paris Parnassiens Pascal passion perfect Philosophes play poems poet poetical poetry political precisely produced Professor profound prose qualities Rabelais Racine Racine's reader realise Renaissance rhetoric Romantic Rousseau Saint-Simon seems sense sentences Shakespeare soul spirit splendid splendour strange style subtle things thought tion tradition tragedy triumph true truth University verse Victor Hugo vision Voltaire Voltaire's whole words writers
Popular passages
Page 126 - Dieu et la nature sont en tout cela ce qu'il n'admire point; il ne va pas plus loin que l'oignon de sa tulipe, qu'il ne livrerait pas pour mille écus, et qu'il donnera pour rien quand les tulipes seront négligées et que les œillets auront prévalu. Cet homme raisonnable, qui a une âme, qui a un culte et une religion, revient chez soi fatigué, affamé, mais fort content de sa journée : il a vu des tulipes.
Page 60 - Quelle chimère est-ce donc que l'homme ? Quelle nouveauté, quel monstre, quel chaos, quel sujet de contradiction, quel prodige ! Juge de toutes choses, imbécile ver de terre; dépositaire du vrai, cloaque d'incertitude et d'erreur ; gloire et rebut de l'univers.
Page 118 - Jupin pour chaque état mit deux tables au monde : L'adroit, le vigilant, et le fort, sont assis A la première ; et les petits Mangent leur reste à la seconde.