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Chargement... Dominique (original 1862; édition 1984)par Eugène Fromentin, Emma Calatayud (Traducteur)
Information sur l'oeuvreDominique par Eugène Fromentin (1862)
Aucun Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. On the whole, I found this 19th century novel quite tedious, even boring. The best part of the book comes at the beginning where the narrator describes his initial encounters, while out hunting, with the landowner of the principal estate in the vicinity of Villeneuve, Dominique de Bray. Fromentin's description of what appears to be a maritime province's landscape and of the bucolic daily round on the De Bray estate are quite lovely. Unfortunately, the narrator soon hands over the storytelling duties to Dominique who recounts the drawn-out tale of his misguided youth and torturous (for all involved) romantic obsession with his friend Olivier’s cousin Madeleine (soon to be Mme. de Nièvres). When Dominique moves to Ceyssac to live with his aunt (Dominique’s parents are both deceased) and receive a formal education, he befriends Olivier, a schoolmate, and subsequently, Olivier’s cousins Madeleine and Julia. Once finished with high school, Dominique and Olivier, as is expected of young men of their class and education, relocate to Paris. In Paris, while Dominique endlessly pines after and obsesses over his impossible love for a now-married Madeleine, Olivier pursues a life of dissipated ennui, Julia pines away with unrequited love for Olivier, and Madeleine, now the wife of M. de Nièvres (often away tending to his business affairs), while attempting to cure Dominique of his love for her, becomes undone by it herself. The moral counterweight to all this feverish futility is provided by Dominique’s old tutor and other best friend, Augustin, who with neither money nor status (he was born out of wedlock) has built his life from the fruits of willpower, perseverance, generosity and an appreciation for small blessings and a peaceful married life. Augustin embodies Fromentin’s doctrine of “repos,” which can be construed as a kind of right-livelihood alternative to the perils of both romantic and debauched excess. ( ) aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Appartient à la série éditorialeFranse Bibliotheek (Klassiek) Gallimard, Folio (644) Libro amigo [Bruguera] (1057) A tot vent (234)
Extrait : ""Certainement je n'ai pas a me plaindre, me disait celui dont je rapporterai les confidences dans le re cit tre s simple et trop peu romanesque qu'on lira tout a l'heure, car, Dieu merci, je ne suis plus rien, a supposer que j'aie jamais e te quelque chose, et je souhaite a beaucoup d'ambitieux de finir ainsi. J'ai trouve la certitude et le repos, ce qui vaut mieux que toutes les hypothe ses...""A PROPOS DES E DITIONS LIGARANLes e ditions LIGARAN proposent des versions nume riques de qualite de grands livres de la litte rature classique mais e galement des livres rares en partenariat avec l Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
Discussion en coursAucunCouvertures populaires
Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)843.7Literature French French fiction Constitutional monarchy 1815–48Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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