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قراءة كتاب A History of the French Novel, Vol. 2 To the Close of the 19th Century

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A History of the French Novel, Vol. 2
To the Close of the 19th Century

A History of the French Novel, Vol. 2 To the Close of the 19th Century

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 6

character of Nelvil—And the book's absurdities—Compensations: Corinne herself—Nelvil again—Its aesthetics—The author's position in the History of the Novel—Chateaubriand: his peculiar position as a novelist—And the remarkable interconnection of his works in fiction—AtalaRené—Difference between its importance and its merit—Les NatchezLes Martyrs—The story—Its "panoramic" quality—And its remarkable advance in style—Chateaubriand's Janus-position in this—Illustrated.

CHAPTER II

Paul de Kock, other minors of 1800-1830, and Nodier 39

The fate of popular minor novelists—Examples of them—Paul de Kock—L'Enfant de ma FemmePetits Tableaux de MœursGustave—The caricatured AnglaisEdmond et sa CousineAndré le SavoyardJeanLa Femme, le Mari et l'AmantMon Voisin RaymondLe Barbier de Paris—The Pauline grisette—Others—The minors before 1830—Mme. de Montolieu: Caroline de Lichtfield—Its advance on "Sensibility"—Madame de Genlis iterum—The minor popular novel—Ducray-Duminil: Le Petit Carillonneur—V. Ducange—L'Artiste et le SoldatLudovica—Auguste Ricard: L'Ouvreuse de Loges—The importance of these minors not inconsiderable—The Vicomte d'Arlincourt: Le Solitaire—Nodier—His short stories—TrilbyLe Songe d'Or—The minors—La Fée aux MiettesSmarra and Sœur BéatrixInès de las Sierras—Nodier's special quality.

CHAPTER III

Victor Hugo 96

Limitations—Han d'IslandeBug-JargalLe Dernier Jour d'un CondamnéClaude GueuxNotre-Dame de Paris—The story easy to anticipate—Importance of the actual title—The working out of the one under the other—The story recovers itself latterly—But the characters?—The thirty years' interval—Les MisérablesLes Travailleurs de la Mer—The genius loci—Guernsey at the time—L'Homme Qui RitQuatre-Vingt-Treize—Final remarks.

CHAPTER IV

Beyle and Balzac 133

Beyle: his peculiarity—ArmanceLa Chartreuse de Parme—The Waterloo episode—The subject and general colour—L'Abbesse de Castro, etc.—Le Rouge et le Noir—Beyle's masterpiece, and why—Julien Sorel and Mathilde de la Mole—The resuscitated work: Lamiel—The Nouvelles InéditesLe Chasseur Vert—Beyle's place in the story—Balzac: conditions of the present dealing—Limitations of subject—And of Balzac himself—Balzac's "general ideas"—Abstinence from abstract—The Œuvres de JeunesseLes ChouansLa Peau de Chagrin—The short stories—The Contes Drolatiques—Notes on select larger books: Eugénie GrandetLe Père Goriot and Les Parents Pauvres—Others: the general "scenic" division—"Balzacity": its constitution—Its effect on successors—And its own character—The "occult" element—Its action and reaction—Peculiarity of the conversation—And of the "story" interest.

CHAPTER V

George Sand 176

George Sand: generalities about her—Note on Elle et Lui, etc., and on Un Hiver à Majorque—Phases of her work—IndianaValentineLélia—The moral of the group and its tragi-comedy—Consuelo—Much better in parts—The degeneration—Recovery; but not maintained quite to the end—La Comtesse de Rudolstadt—The "making good" of Lucrezia Floriani—The story—Its balance of power—The "Idylls": La Petite FadetteLa Mare au DiableFrançois le Champi—Others: MaupratLa DaniellaLes Beaux Messieurs de Bois-DoréLe Marquis de VillemerMlle. La QuintinieFlamarande—Summary and judgment—Style—Conversation and description.

CHAPTER VI

The Novel of Style—Gautier, Mérimée, Gérard de Nerval,
Musset, Vigny
208

Gautier: his burden of "style"—Abstract (with translations) of La Morte Amoureuse—Criticism thereof—A parallel from painting—The reality—And the passion of it—Other short stories—Gautier's humour: Les Jeune-France—Return to Fortunio—And others—Longer books: Le Capitaine Fracasse and others—Mlle. De> Maupin—Mérimée—Carmen—Colomba—Its smaller companions: Mateo Falcone, etc.—Those of Carmen; Arsène Guillot—And L'Abbé AubainLa Prise de la Redoute—The Dernières Nouvelles; Il Viccolo di Madama LucreziaDjoumaneLokisLa Chambre Bleue—The Chronique de Charles IX—The semi-dramatic stories: La JacquerieLe Carrosse du Saint-Sacrement, etc.—Musset: charm of his dramatised stories; his pure narration unsuccessful—Frédéric et BerneretteLes Deux Maîtresses, Le Fils du Titien, etc.—Emmeline—Gérard de Nerval: his peculiar position—La Bohême Galante, Les Filles du Feu, and Le Rêve et la Vie—Their general character—Particular examples—Aurélia—And especially Sylvie—Alfred de Vigny: Cinq-Mars—The faults in its general scheme—And in its details—Stello less of a novel, but containing better novel-stuff—Its framework and "anecdotes"—The death of Gilbert—The satiric episode: contrast—The Chatterton part—The tragedy of André Chénier—Servitude et Grandeur Militaires—The first story—The second—and third—The moral of the three—Note on Fromentin's Dominique: its altogether exceptional character.

CHAPTER VII

The Minors of 1830 281

Sainte-Beuve: Volupté—Its "puff-book"—Itself—Its character in various aspects—Jules Sandeau and Charles de Bernard—Sandeau's work—Bernard's—Sue, Soulié, and the novel of melodrama: Le Juif Errant, etc.—Melodramatic fiction generally—Le Château des PyrénéesLe Mémoires du Diable—Later writers and writings of the class—Murger—The Vie de BohêmeLes Buveurs d'Eau and the Miscellanies—Reybaud: Jérôme Paturot, and Thackeray on its earlier part—The windfall of Malvina—The difference of the Second Part—Not much of a novel—But an invaluable document—Méry—Les Nuits Anglaises—The minor stories—Histoire d'une

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