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This well-established and popular book provides students with all
the linguistic background they need for studying any period of
French literature. For the second edition the text has been revised
and updated throughout, and the two final chapters on contemporary
French, and its position as a world language, have been completely
rewritten. Starting with a brief description of the Vulgar Latin
spoken in Gaul, and the earliest recorded forms of French, Peter
Rickard traces the development of the language through the later
Middle Ages and Renaissance to show how it became standardized in a
near modern form in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
The 285 letters contained in this volume of the "Correspondance
gA(c)nA(c)rale" date from the years following Constant's exclusion
from the Tribunal. They reflect his work on religious issues, his
dreams of literary success, and his travels in France, Germany, and
Switzerland. In addition, they provide an impression of political
life at the beginning of the Napoleonic empire and the emotional
vicissitudes undergone by their author: his unsuccessful attempts
to break with Germaine de StaAl, his desire to marry (but whom?),
his presence at the deaths of Julie Talma and Isabelle de
CharriA]re, and his initial lack of enthusiasm after renewing his
acquaintance with Charlotte von Hardenberg.
This fourth volume of the ACorrespondance generaleA contains 368
letters written during the period of the Consulat when, as a member
of the Tribunat until January 1802, Constant acquired a reputation
as a brilliant orator and outspoken opponent of Bonaparte. It was
also a period when he produced a number of manuscripts on politics
and religion on which he would base works published between 1814
and 1830. The correspondence also contains letters of compelling
human interest to and from Julie Talma and an extraordinary
epistolary exchange with Anna Lindsay, with whom Constant fell in
love in 1800.
The third volume of ACorrespondance gA(c)nA(c)raleA contains the
text of 279 letters written by or addressed to Benjamin Constant
from the period preceding the beginning of his career as journalist
and publicist in Paris in May - June 1795 until his nomination to
the Tribunat in December 1799. This volume is a valuable document
on the intellectual and political life of the period; at the same
time it allows the reader to see at close range Constant's
relations his family and friends, including Isabelle de CharriA]re
and Germaine de StaAl; the reader will also find here the earliest
letters of his correspondence with Julie Talma.
This second volume of the "Correspondance gA(c)nA(c)rale," which
covers the years 1793 and 1794, is composed mainly of the
continuation of the brilliant series of letters which Benjamin
Constant (1767-1830), now a courtier at Brunswick, had begun to
exchange with Isabelle de CharriA]re in Switzerland in 1787. These
letters, along with those addressed by Constant to other
correspondents, particularly to several members of his family and
friends in Brunswick, enable us to follow the events of his
intellectual and emotional life at this time, including his
friendship with the publicist Jakob Mauvillon, his role in the
court-martial affair of his father, his divorce from his first wife
Minna von Cramm, his friendship with Charlotte von Hardenberg
(later his second wife), his break with the Court of Brunswick, his
return to Switzerland and the beginning of his long liaison with
Germaine de StaAl.
The first volume of the "Correspondance gA(c)nA(c)rale de Benjamin
Constant" covers the period from 1774 to 1792 and contains the
letters written by the child, from a very young age, to members of
his family, those of the student who had been sent by his father to
the Universities of Erlangen and Edinburgh, those of the young man
in flight towards England and Scotland sent to Mme de CharriA]re,
and, finally, those of the bored chamberlain at the court of
Brunswick, where Constant contracted an unhappy marriage. The
volume was edited by the General Editor of the "Correspondance
gA(c)nA(c)rale," Cecil P. Courtney of the University of Cambridge,
assisted by Dennis Wood of Birmingham University.
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