Jack, Volume 1Little, Brown & Company, 1900 - French literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 91
Page viii
... never to meet them again . In Algiers a friend of Daudet's opened his doors wide to the young exile . His health did not mend rapidly , but the freedom of his new life was a joy and inspiration . Writing to Daudet at this time of all he ...
... never to meet them again . In Algiers a friend of Daudet's opened his doors wide to the young exile . His health did not mend rapidly , but the freedom of his new life was a joy and inspiration . Writing to Daudet at this time of all he ...
Page xi
... never as preacher or moralist that Daudet peers over your shoulder . But the quality that reveals itself in his work is none the less a purely personal one ; he loves this humble being , whose biographer he is , so intensely that he ...
... never as preacher or moralist that Daudet peers over your shoulder . But the quality that reveals itself in his work is none the less a purely personal one ; he loves this humble being , whose biographer he is , so intensely that he ...
Page xii
... never becomes the mere itinerary of scenes and events . " Un livre de pitié , de colère , et d'ironie , " says Daudet of Jack in this dedication to Gustave Flaubert , and that Flaubert found somewhat too much of these qualities in Jack ...
... never becomes the mere itinerary of scenes and events . " Un livre de pitié , de colère , et d'ironie , " says Daudet of Jack in this dedication to Gustave Flaubert , and that Flaubert found somewhat too much of these qualities in Jack ...
Page xiii
... never have known , perhaps , save for the confession of Daudet himself , given with that naïve candor which is one of the many delightful qualities of Trente Ans de Paris . Neither can the author of Jack resist telling us that George ...
... never have known , perhaps , save for the confession of Daudet himself , given with that naïve candor which is one of the many delightful qualities of Trente Ans de Paris . Neither can the author of Jack resist telling us that George ...
Page xiv
... never have been greatly disturbed by the attack upon their venerable Academy , but Philistinism , dilettanteism , and in- deed the whole tedious , dismal and deadly tribe of isms may well take umbrage at Jack , for Tartarin's creator ...
... never have been greatly disturbed by the attack upon their venerable Academy , but Philistinism , dilettanteism , and in- deed the whole tedious , dismal and deadly tribe of isms may well take umbrage at Jack , for Tartarin's creator ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
appearance asked Avenue Montaigne beautiful Bélisaire Bon ami Boulevard Haussmann carriage Cécile Champs-Élysées Charlotte charming cold Countess creature d'Argenton Dahomey Daudet dear Decostère delightful doctor door dream entered Étiolles eyes face factotum felt forest garden glance Guérigny Gymnase Moronval hand happy head heard Hirsch Jack's Kérika King of Dahomey Labassindre light listened little Jack little King little negro little tropicals looked Madame de Barancy Madame Moronval Mademoiselle Constant Mâdou mamma Monsieur Moronval Monsieur Rivals Moronval-Decostère Moronval's Mother Archambauld Moucié mulatto Nantais never night Paris passed paused poet Pointe-à-Pitre pupils road Roudic Saïd seated seemed seen sight silence singer sleep smile solemn sort sound spite suddenly talk tears tell terrible things thought tion trees Vaugirard Villeneuve-Saint-Georges voice wait walk watching wife woman words wretched
Popular passages
Page 103 - DE L'ENFANT A SON RÉVEIL O père qu'adore mon père ! Toi qu'on ne nomme qu'à genoux! Toi, dont le nom terrible et doux Fait courber le front de ma mère! On dit que ce brillant soleil N'est qu'un jouet de ta puissance; Que sous tes pieds il se balance Comme une lampe de vermeil. On dit que c'est toi qui fais naître Les petits oiseaux dans les champs, Et qui...
Page xxiv - Did we think victory great ? So it is — but now it seems to me, when it cannot be help'd, that defeat is great, And that death and dismay are great.
Page 285 - ... workman, is no longer what it used to be ; oh, no ! not at all the same thing, not at all. You must know that the time- of the working-man has now come. The middle classes have had their day, the aristocracy likewise. Although, I must say, the aristocracy- Moreover, is it not more natural at your age, to allow yourself to be guided by those who love you, and who are experienced ? " A sob from the child interrupted her. " Then you too send me away; you too send me away.