Constant: AdolpheCambridge University Press, 26 de nov. de 1987 - 109 páginas Dr Wood traces in detail the frequently paradoxical development of themes and situations introduced in the opening chapters and lays stress on the novel's intricate writing. He places the book in its historical, intellectual and biographical context and examines its reception by writers as various as Stendhal, George Eliot, and Tolstoy. |
Conteúdo
IV | 1 |
V | 5 |
VI | 6 |
VII | 8 |
VIII | 9 |
IX | 11 |
X | 15 |
XI | 19 |
XIX | 62 |
XX | 65 |
XXI | 67 |
XXII | 68 |
XXIII | 69 |
XXIV | 74 |
XXV | 75 |
XXVI | 76 |
XII | 23 |
XIII | 32 |
XIV | 36 |
XV | 44 |
XVI | 52 |
XVII | 55 |
XVIII | 58 |
XXVII | 79 |
XXVIII | 81 |
XXIX | 96 |
XXX | 100 |
XXXI | 106 |
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Termos e frases comuns
Adolphe and Ellénore Adolphe's character Adolphe's father Adolphe's relationship Alison Fairlie Anna Lindsay attitude Baron becomes Benjamin Constant Cahier rouge Caliste characteristic Charlotte Charlotte von Hardenberg Charrière's complex Comte Constant's novel contrainte Coppet critics death description of Ellénore despite echo Ellénore's emotional end of Chapter experience fact feelings final France freedom French novels German Goethe Harold Nicolson human irony Isabelle de Charrière Julie Talma Juste de Constant Lausanne Les Liaisons dangereuses letter Liaisons dangereuses lien literary London Malcolm Bowie Manon Lescaut mind Minna mistress Mme de Charrière Mme de Staël Mme Récamier moral Napoleon narrative narrator narrator's Nicolson Œuvres older Adolphe paradox paragraph parallels Paris passion Paul Delbouille perhaps plaisanterie political portrait Publisher Publisher's Note qu'elle qu'il reader reading relationship with Ellénore religion René sacrifice sense sentence situation social society society's Stendhal story tell tenderness theme thought tion tragic unhappy woman women words writing young