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Balzac (1973)

par V. S. Pritchett

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Honore de Balzac, with his monumental legacy, the Comedie Humaine (an unsurpassed picture of French society from the rise and fall of Napoleon to the Revolution), was one of the founding geniuses among the world's great novelists. Pritchett presents a life-size portrait of the man inside the artist, the exhuberant, uncouth provincial who combined encyclopaedic knowledge with the life of an exhibitionist and would-be dandy. He was a gourmet, a disastrous financial speculator, successful pursuer of aristocratic women, a born salesman and an untiring traveller. Yet, with some truth, Balzac called himself a monk, working 16 hours a day fuelled by an ocean of strong coffee.… (plus d'informations)
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An obsessive compulsive genius was our poor Balzac. Pritchett is a fine biographer of this tremendously energised chronicler of French society in the years following Napoleon's defeat. Well researched, plenty of illustrations and blessed with V.S. Pritchett's effortless prose.
  ivanfranko | Aug 22, 2019 |
V.S. Pritchett is another novelist and storyteller who has come under Balzac's spell, and he writes about him in a manner suited to the subject-Balzac would have enjoyed his book. The derogatory epithet "coffee table" is often applied to illustrated biographical studies of this type, but I cannot see why a great number of prints and portraits, admirably chosen and reproduced, should be assumed to diminish the value of a serious work, or why it should be taken for granted that people who put books on coffee tables look at nothing but the pictures. In any case, Balzac loved display, and nothing could be less literary than his hold over his original clientele; his appeal was to their sentiment and curiosity, their snobbery, greed, and sensationalism-all the things be wrote about himself...

Pritchett's task, well accomplished, is to remind us that Balzac is an extraordinary man, worth reading for the sake of himself and his characters (Pritchett is very good on the device of the recurring figure in the Comedie Humaine).
ajouté par SnootyBaronet | modifierNew York Review of Books, John Bayley
 
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In 1799, six years after the Terror, a son was born to the pretty young wife of Bernard-Frangois Balzac, a husband thirty-two years older than herself, head of the hospital administration and Deputy Mayor of the pleasant town of Tours.
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And from this moment a new Balzac appeared. He had been jolted off centre into that position of bemused detachment so valuable to the artist, even though to the normal observer he might be thought irresponsible. For despite his lifelong groans about the burden of his obligation, the real lesson of his failure to him was the opposite of what would occur to the ordinary man who learns prudence in misfortune : he had lost his financial virginity and saw before him in the licentious territory of debt a Promised Land. He was liberated at last.
When he was not following his monastic regime he guzzled sardines and rillettes. But his talk continued its fantasies. He proclaimed that his tea came from the special garden ept by mandarins only for the Emperor of China. It was picked by virgins at sunrise and they presented it to the Emperor on their knees. A little was sent by caravan to the Tsar of Russia and Balzac had been privileged to have a supply of it through the mbassador. At Delphine de Girardin's house he boasted that he had given Jules Sandeau a white horse and kept everyone agape by the account of where he had found it. He even turned to Sandeau and asked him if he was satisfied with it.
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Honore de Balzac, with his monumental legacy, the Comedie Humaine (an unsurpassed picture of French society from the rise and fall of Napoleon to the Revolution), was one of the founding geniuses among the world's great novelists. Pritchett presents a life-size portrait of the man inside the artist, the exhuberant, uncouth provincial who combined encyclopaedic knowledge with the life of an exhibitionist and would-be dandy. He was a gourmet, a disastrous financial speculator, successful pursuer of aristocratic women, a born salesman and an untiring traveller. Yet, with some truth, Balzac called himself a monk, working 16 hours a day fuelled by an ocean of strong coffee.

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