Modern French LiteratureRoberts Brothers, 1896 - 510 páginas |
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Página 10
... thought . It has much of the charm of Froissart , and will never seem old so long as hearts are young . During the century others continued the tradition , though they did not attain the excellence of the Cru- sader , and toward its ...
... thought . It has much of the charm of Froissart , and will never seem old so long as hearts are young . During the century others continued the tradition , though they did not attain the excellence of the Cru- sader , and toward its ...
Página 19
... thought were numerous , and have been often indicated . The discovery of America , and , still more , the dis- covery of the solar system , had changed man's point of view of his place in Nature . As Faguet1 observes , " The narrow ...
... thought were numerous , and have been often indicated . The discovery of America , and , still more , the dis- covery of the solar system , had changed man's point of view of his place in Nature . As Faguet1 observes , " The narrow ...
Página 36
... thoughts and the vilest fancies , all woven together into a mighty maze by “ pantagruel- ism , a militant faith in nature and instinct that by its robust humor and the solvent of its destructive satire becomes the extreme type of the ...
... thoughts and the vilest fancies , all woven together into a mighty maze by “ pantagruel- ism , a militant faith in nature and instinct that by its robust humor and the solvent of its destructive satire becomes the extreme type of the ...
Página 37
... thought is radically different ; but both believed in the worth of life , and that that worth could be realized and en- hanced by the freest development of the whole nature of man , unhampered by ascetic or other artificial tram- mels ...
... thought is radically different ; but both believed in the worth of life , and that that worth could be realized and en- hanced by the freest development of the whole nature of man , unhampered by ascetic or other artificial tram- mels ...
Página 38
Benjamin Willis Wells. humorist that his humor should mask his more serious thought ; and Rabelais , while he has been admired by many and imitated by a few , has not had the in- fluence on the thought or the writing of later genera ...
Benjamin Willis Wells. humorist that his humor should mask his more serious thought ; and Rabelais , while he has been admired by many and imitated by a few , has not had the in- fluence on the thought or the writing of later genera ...
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Términos y frases comunes
admirable æsthetic artistic Augier Balzac Banville Baudelaire beauty Boileau Born Bourget Brunetière century character charm Chateaubriand Christian classical comedy contemporary Corneille criticism Daudet drama Dumas epic essays ethical Faguet Fédora feel femmes fiction Flaubert France French literature Gautier genius George Sand heart Hernani Hugo Hugo's human humor imagination inspiration interest L'Assommoir Lamartine Lanson later Le Nabab Lemaître Les Misérables less literary littéraire lyric lyric poetry Madame de Staël marks mind modern Molière moral Musset Napoleon Naturalistic nature novel novelists Paris Parisian Parnassians passion perhaps pessimism philosophic play poems Poésie lyrique poet poetic poetry political popular prose psychological Rabelais Racine reader realistic Renan Revolution Romantic Romanticism Romanticists Ronsard Rousseau Sainte-Beuve Sardou satire says scenes seems sentiment siècle social society spirit Stendhal story style sympathy Taine talent Théâtre théâtre français thought tion verse Vigny Voltaire volumes wholly writers Zola
Pasajes populares
Página 350 - Car nous voulons la Nuance encor, Pas la couleur, rien que la nuance! Oh! la nuance seule fiance Le rêve au rêve et la flûte au cor!
Página 197 - scapes i' the imminent deadly breach, Of being taken by the insolent foe And sold to slavery, of my redemption thence And...
Página 320 - L'azur phosphorescent de la mer des Tropiques Enchantait leur sommeil d'un mirage doré ; Ou penchés à l'avant des blanches caravelles, Ils regardaient monter en un ciel ignoré Du fond de l'Océan des étoiles nouvelles.
Página 283 - No matter if the facts be physical or moral, they all have their causes; there is a cause for ambition, for courage, for truth, as there is for digestion, for muscular movement, for animal heat. Vice and virtue are products, like vitriol and sugar; and every complex phenomenon arises from other more simple phenomena on which it hangs.
Página 71 - Pompee" ) to name no others, will thrill audiences everywhere, as long as the antinomies of love and patriotism, honor and duty, perplex men's souls. But oratory is far from being the only use of language, and by giving to French when in a very plastic state a sententious imprint, Corneille exercised an influence on the future of his mother tongue, very great but not altogether helpful to its healthy growth and further development. The rival of Corneille's later years was Racine, whom Boileau reckoned...
Página 43 - Enfin Malherbe vint, et, le premier en France, Fit sentir dans les vers une juste cadence. D'un mot mis en sa place enseigna le pouvoir. Et réduisit la muse aux règles du devoir.
Página 60 - ... enough to bear the ills of others. If we had no pride, we should not complain that others had it. We easily forget our faults when no one else knows them. . . . We try to be proud of the faults that we do not wish to forget.
Página 350 - Que ton vers soit la chose envolée Qu'on sent qui fuit d'une âme en allée Vers d'autres cieux à d'autres amours. Que ton vers soit la bonne aventure Eparse au vent crispé du matin Qui va fleurant la menthe et le thym... Et tout le reste est littérature.
Página 77 - L'Ecole des Femmes," a covert attack on hypocrisy and literal orthodoxy. This unchained a "storm of rage, nursed by jealousy, such as actor-poet has seldom faced. He replied to his critics first in the witty " Critique de 1'Ecole des Femmes " and then in the " Impromptu de Versailles," where his roused indignation did not scruple to name opponents and caricature rivals whom he scourged with caustic cruelty. In 1664 he renewed his attack on that most contemptible of all vices with three acts of
Página 299 - Also related to Taine., though fundamentally antagonistic to Zola, is Brunetiere. He shares with Zola Taine's objectivity and pessimism but he adds to this a logical synthesis that Zola, as a critic, does not possess. This with his delicate taste and a learning alike minute and immense, borne lightly by a style that is always keen and cutting and sometimes superciliously contemptuous, has made him more popular with the public than with his fellow critics.