College nostalgia! Dual language, chronological anthology
of short excerpts from the greats (Voltaire, Balzac, Dumas,
Hugo, Proust, so on so on), numbered glossary
summarising the significance of each piece and faithful
translations to aid you through the often technical and convoluted prose.
The collection moves quickly through familiar stages of
literary and philosophical evolution, from the oppressive
morality of clericalist society to the revolutionary spirit of the Enlightenment. In such condensed format, the mosaic of voices, styles, and backdrops gave body and realness to an era that I had only known on paper.
From Descartes’s solitary reflections on humanity, to sweeping naturalist passages, tales of provincial tragedies and unrequited love, of nobility and peasantry, to Hugo’s vagabonds and outcasts, with ventures into the occult and lunacy, and the undertone of exploration and exoticism that foreshadowed the boom of globalisation that was to come.
Not every excerpt is enjoyable or interesting, like the inexhaustible theme of star-crossed lovers and illicit relationships, between teacher and pupil, nobility and pauper, Beauty and Beast, but minimally each piece holds value as a token of its time. It was a strangely soothing read that eclipsed and alleviated mundane pressures and concerns, with a reminder of the grandness of history.