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هذه المجموعة بالذات، أعدها «بلزاك» ليصل بها إلى تخليد اسمه في تاريخ الأدب العالمي، كما خلد «بوكاشيو» الإيطالي اسمه من قبل بقصص " ديكاميرون". ويبدو أن «بلزاك» كان يترسم بالفعل وهو يكتبها.

186 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1831

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About the author

Honoré de Balzac

9,539 books4,363 followers
French writer Honoré de Balzac (born Honoré Balzac), a founder of the realist school of fiction, portrayed the panorama of society in a body of works, known collectively as La comédie humaine .

Honoré de Balzac authored 19th-century novels and plays. After the fall of Napoléon in 1815, his magnum opus, a sequence of almost a hundred novels and plays, entitled, presents life in the years.

Due to keen observation of fine detail and unfiltered representation, European literature regards Balzac. He features renowned multifaceted, even complex, morally ambiguous, full lesser characters. Character well imbues inanimate objects; the city of Paris, a backdrop, takes on many qualities. He influenced many famous authors, including the novelists Marcel Proust, Émile Zola, Charles John Huffam Dickens, Gustave Flaubert, Henry James, and Jack Kerouac as well as important philosophers, such as Friedrich Engels. Many works of Balzac, made into films, continue to inspire.

An enthusiastic reader and independent thinker as a child, Balzac adapted with trouble to the teaching style of his grammar. His willful nature caused trouble throughout his life and frustrated his ambitions to succeed in the world of business. Balzac finished, and people then apprenticed him as a legal clerk, but after wearying of banal routine, he turned his back on law. He attempted a publisher, printer, businessman, critic, and politician before and during his career. He failed in these efforts From his own experience, he reflects life difficulties and includes scenes.

Possibly due to his intense schedule and from health problems, Balzac suffered throughout his life. Financial and personal drama often strained his relationship with his family, and he lost more than one friend over critical reviews. In 1850, he married Ewelina Hańska, his longtime paramour; five months later, he passed away.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 70 reviews
Profile Image for Ilse.
552 reviews4,435 followers
January 10, 2019
(** ½)
Blanche wallowed silently in her desire, like a cake which is being floured.

‘This is a book of the richest flavour, full of right hearty merriment, spiced to the palate of the illustrious and very precious tosspots and drinkers, to whom our worthy compatriot, François Rabelais, the eternal honour of Touraine, addressed himself’.
(From the prologue)

balzac

As much as I loved the few episodes of La Comédie Humaine I read so far (Lost Illusions, Cousin Bette, Cousin Pons), I cannot say I was entirely enthralled by this collection of ribald short stories by Honoré de Balzac. Published in three sets of ten stories each, in 1832, 1833, and 1837, known as Contes drolatiques (Droll stories), Balzac conceived these candid and wanton stories as an obvious homage to Rabelais. The Dutch subtitle of the edition I read (‘a classic erotic masterpiece’) divulges partly what to expect: lively, amatory and slightly grotesque comical stories set mostly in the thirteenth century, on the licentious mores of knights and dames, pages, courtesans, nuns, monks and others representing the ecclesiastic class. Mostly dealing with cuckoldry, disingenuous wiles, faux-naïvité, impotence or lost innocence; the tales are rather to be situated in the sphere of eroticism than in the one of heroism and also turn out more scatological than eschatological. The Contes drolatiques were added to the Index librorum prohibitorum in 1841 – maybe because most women characters are so admirably sensual and cunning in outwitting the men? ‘This teaches us to thoroughly verify and recognise women’, Balzac muses wisely.

These libertine, saucy stories struck me as a curiosum in Balzac’s oeuvre. On the historical and social context in which these stories were written and published, Graham Robb in his Balzac: A Biography clarifies that ‘The subjects were a form of protest at the new bourgeois society which had no regard for the truly important aspects of human existence: necrophilia, nymphomania, adultery and the essential bodily functions. The first collection was published in what seemed bad taste during the cholera epidemic of spring 1832. Actually it was rather appropriate since Paris was temporarily plunged into the Dark Ages, with a curfew, corpses carried through the streets at midnight, and the rag-pickers revolting when their rubbish heaps were swept away’. And apparently Balzac managed to lift the spirits, as for instance when the first story, on the courtesan Impéria, got published, it worked on the contemporaries ‘like an aphrodisiac in a time of miserable chastity’.

The collection I read contained nineteen stories in a Dutch translation that modernizes the style, so I assume the meticulous historical wordplay in imitation of 16th century French these stories are renown for was a dimension that was unavoidably at least partly lost in translation (allegedly one of the reasons he chose to write in this for the contemporaries rather remote pseudo-archaic style was his aim to restrain the enjoyment of his lascivious adventures to the elite in order to avoid his book being banned). Nevertheless some of the flowery and juicy language, the vitality and the style mimicry echoes through – with the often ambiguous language and plentiful double entendres, it seems that the translator conveys at least some of what must be the playful qualities of the original.

unnamed

One of my favourites scenes, in which the pleasures of reading are combined with the ones of the flesh, features inThe venial sin, of which I found two illustrations – what will happen can be left to the imagination. Some editions include illustrations by Gustave Doré, which capture the dark and at macabre undertone of some of the stories, in which many a man ends up on the scaffold - exquisitely. Both text and more illustrations can be found here.

121s

137s

The repetitiveness and the often clerical context and setting- the stories are supposedly collected from the abbeys of Balzac’s native Touraine - for me however made it hard to fully enjoy this collection reading it in one take – possibly just too many nuns to my taste, having seen enough of them at school - and by the end I struggled to get through the whole collection. Good for a grin here and there, it seems more appropriate to pick a tale in between some other books, or to read one in bed to close the day– maybe the smile it gives could inspire some amusing dreams? I am wondering now how I would get along with Rabelais…
1,212 reviews164 followers
December 31, 2022
Pssst! People like sex! Keep it quiet!

Balzac is one of my literary heroes, the creator or preserver of the whole world of 19th century France so I don’t want to put him down. You should definitely read his classic novels if you haven’t already. But just as we say “Every dog has his day,” we could also say “Every dog has an off day,” and that’s just as true. I suppose old Honoré got tired penning tales of the reality around him and took some time off to write comic, sex and scatological tales of medieval French lords and ladies, churls and varlets, all of whom specialized in “friggling” as it is sometimes referred to within. Maybe he wanted to pen a tribute to Rabelais as some say. Some of the protagonists have bad endings, all contain some sort of vague moral at the end. These are tales which are risqué or ribald rather than just “droll”. I’m afraid that our modern age has deadened us to daggers in boots, lovers under beds or in cabinets, exits by window just in time, old men with a mind to fondle the gentle flowers of innocence, horns sprouting ubiquitously, and youth determined to die for their ladyloves who in turn couldn’t care less. I could continue. But alas, I confess, dear readers, that I tired and could not make it to the end of this 507 page monster, though some of the translated expressions amused me a bit. When I reached a very long tale about a succubus held for trial, I ran out of patience. (“If I asked you to sell me your soul for a kiss, would you not grant it me with all your heart?” p.322) I realized that when I’d bought the book at a sale thirty years ago, I had not bothered to check the contents very well, thinking, “Ah, a book I don’t know by Balzac!” Sorry, messieurs et madames, but I’m out of here. Please read some other, more positive reviews. You can check Ilse's excellent contribution too.
201 reviews1 follower
March 23, 2009
I enjoyed "taking a break" with this book; its humorous style and short story format made it ideal for filling in odd moments throughout the day and providing relief from heavier reading.

I really can't understand why any careful reader would think this book dull. True, most of the stories utilize the same main themes (cuckoldry being the most common, I think), but the quality of the writing makes the common-theme stories unique and engaging throughout. If something seems odd or nonsensical upon the first reading, I would suggest going back over the passage to look for double (or triple, in some cases) meanings -- I definitely would have missed a lot of the charming humor Balzac employs if I had not slowed down at certain points when reading his work. I'm sure a lot of his "pun power" was lost in translation, but the editor of the edition I read made quite an effort to fill-in the English reader to the lost complexity whenever he could, a practice I found very helpful.

I loved the amazing engravings featured in the work -- their complexity and macabre styling was quite impressive, so don't skip by them if you happen to have an edition where they are included.
Profile Image for Armin.
1,195 reviews35 followers
February 28, 2020
Eigentlich zweieinhalb, bei Balzac greift der Klassikerbonus, in Sachen Verklärung der lebenstüchtigeren oder authentischeren Vergangenheit ist der Autor Romantiker, der die miserable bürgerliche Gegenwart durch den Lobpreis von verlorerer Größe tadelt. Architektonische Passagen dieses Zuschnitts finden sich auch noch im Spätwerk, auch in Glanz und Elend der Kurtisanen lässt Balzac den alten Geldsack Nucingen endlos für nie gewährte Gunst bluten. Die tolldreisten Geschichten bestehen zu gut einem Drittel aus Geschichten, in denen ein alter Mann, der sich mit seinem finanziellen oder hochadeligen Vorsprung eine junge Frau gesichert hat, am Ende doch drauf zahlt und manchmal auch mit dem Leben. Sämtliche Mönche sind dauergeile Stecher und mit einer wirklich fabelhaften Kondition gesegnet. Leser, die Vorfällen in alten Bücher nach derzeit gültigem Recht beurteilen, dürften auf etliche Vergewaltigungen stoßen, - in einem Fall macht sich ein alter Vagabund über eine schlafende junge Hirtin her* -, von daher Finger weg von den tolldreisten Geschichten, wenn ihr nicht anders könnt als die derzeit gültige Wertordnung oder das aktuelle BGB ans alte Bücher anzulegen. Diese deftigen Erzählungen sind keine Gewissensbisse wert, das literarische Niveau ist über weite Strecken schlechter als in den Romanen und Erzählungen der Comédie Humaine, die zudem deutliche abwechslungsreicher ist.
Profile Image for Noah.
550 reviews74 followers
July 15, 2019
Ich muss gestehen, ich war vielleicht bereits zu Beginn dieses Buches etwas negativ voreingenommen. Zum einen hat mich Balzac bislang nie so wirklich begeistern können, da sein flüchtiger Stil neben den beiden anderen großen Realisten Flaubert und Stendhal verblasst. Zum anderen war meine DDR-Ausgabe mit einem mikroskopisch kleinen Schriftbild versehen, dass das Lesen unangenehm macht und auch die Qualität der Reproduktionen der Stiches Gustave Dorés erheblich beeinträchtigte.

Aber auch ohne diese negative Vorprägung hätte mich das Buch nicht begeistern können. Balzac versucht so etwas, wie einen Decameron seiner Zeit, den er allerdings in das Frankreich der Religionskriege verlegt. Wer das versucht, der muss sich auch mit Boccaccio messen lassen und hier muss Balzac leider den Vergleich scheuen, den bei aller Zotigkeit sind die Tolldreisten Geschichten doch in vielen Punkten verschämt bieder. Das aber passt nicht zum Thema. Da lobe ich mir doch den würzigen Witz der Renaissance! Das übrigens liegt nicht an der etwas altbackenen Übersetzung. Der Übersetzer ist redlich bemüht, die Sprachwitze zu übertragen und dies gelingt ihm insbesondere dort gut, wo Balzac lokale französische Dialekte immitiert und unterschiedliche deutsche Dialekte an deren Stelle gesetzt werden.

Zugleich ist Balzac bei seinem historischen Setting unglaublich schlampig. Da wäre es konsequenter gewesen, die Geschichte in die ihm bekannte Gegenwart zu versetzen, wie das Julia Voznesenskaya bei ihrem - schwer mit Balzac zu vergleichenden aber wesentlich gelungeneren - "Dekameron der Frauen" gemacht hat.
Profile Image for Maťa.
1,287 reviews21 followers
May 31, 2021
4,5/5

Wow, neviem, čo som čakala, ale toto určite nie. Nečakala som, že to bude tak dobré!
V prvom rade, nie som veľká fanúšička poviedok. V druhom rade som mala (zrejme zo školy) z nepochopiteľného dôvodu zafixované, že Balzac bude nudný. Ani trochu!

Tieto poviedky boli veľmi vtipné, miestami absurdné, plné satiry a irónie. Majstrovsky napísané. Poviedky sa týkajú lásky, sexu, nevery, ale aj výsmech cirkvi a ich pokrytectva (som dosť prekvapená, že som túto knihu našla u svojej veriacej babky, autor sa s týmto veľmi nemaznal). Autor niekoľkokrát zašiel ďaleko, oveľa ďalej, než by som čakala pri poviedkách z 19. storočia, ale myslim to v tom najlepšom zmysle. Poviedky tiež často zobrazujú inteligentné ženy, ktoré používajú svoje kvality a vedia ich využiť pre svoj prospech, čiže Balzacovi tlieskam aj kvôli tomuto.

Mojim favoritom medzi poviedkami je jednoznačne Všedný hriech, čo bolo umelecké dielo dejovo, charaktermi postáv, aj takým tým situačným humorom (absurditou situácie?)
Mimo toho sa tu nachádza aj pár priemerných poviedok, no žiadna si nevyslúžila menej než 3*. Za mňa teda obrovská spokojnosť a môžem vám tieto poviedky silno odporučiť. Navyše je text obohatený úžasnými ilustráciami.
Profile Image for Monika.
55 reviews1 follower
February 17, 2024
Skrattade högt flera gånger men vissa noveller blir lite långrandiga och lite samma. Men såklart fantastiska karaktärsbeskrivningar och han nailade verkligen slutklämmen i nästan alla noveller. Får bli en trea för läste i Sevilla så den kommer alltid bli kopplad till den resan.
Profile Image for Rupert Owen.
Author 1 book12 followers
August 15, 2013
I was really looking forward to reading Droll Stories, as it seemed to me that a ribald parody of medieval tales was subject matter I could easily find amusing treasures in. However it seems as if Balzac had taken on a rabelaisian task without having the right mindset to offer the reader the same degree of grotesque bawdiness all the way through.

Balzac promises us a book of the "richest flavour, full of right hearty merriment, spiced to the palate of the illustrious and very precious tosspots and drinkers, to whom our worthy compatriot Francois Rabelais, the eternal honour of Touraine, addressed himself", and this is true of the first ten tales, and indeed somewhat into the second ten tales, but about midway through the second lot of stories the writing takes a turn towards more dramatic themes and the absurdity so well begun wanes. Some of the early pieces I quite enjoyed such as The Brother-in-Arms, The Vicar of Azay-Le-Rideau, and the most befitting The Merry Tattle of the Nuns of Poissy which has a novice nun searching her naked body by command of a senior sister for a potentially sinful flea. This is the kind of bawdy absurdness I was hoping to unravel through-out the entire collection of stories, but by the time I had reached the third ten tales I was struggling to keep engrossed and felt that Balzac was writing in a completely different mood to when he had started out despite the verve of the prologues and epilogues that would have us believe otherwise.

"Give us a story, then, that stops at the girdle", this is what I was expecting all the way through Droll Stories, it may be that Balzac is tickled by the wit of Rabelais but I just don't think he has the same nuance of the absurd that is required to replicate it in his own outpourings. It's worth reading for the few tales that will delight the more lewd of the senses and my 1946 edition has saucy illustrations by Steele Savage which enrich the feel of the collection, but if you are hoping for something that will make you gasp and guffaw then I'd recommend Rabelais himself. Having said all that, it is splendid that Balzac attempted such an ode and I'm sure it is probably better read in the author's native tongue.
Profile Image for El.
1,355 reviews491 followers
April 16, 2012
This isn't the exact edition I read. Unfortunately and inexplicably I can't seem to find the right edition, which includes 125 illustrations by the fantabulous Gustave Dore.

In any case, the stories themselves sort of bored me and because of that this took me forevertime to read. Balzac is sort of one of those authors that I've always expected to love, so I've been putting him off until just the right time. But then came these stories and oompf. Balzac could have been holding a gun to my head and I wouldn't have been able to muster any more energy for reading these stories.

The stories themselves are "okay", but the third star is because of the illustrations by Dore. They're amazing just like most of his other illustrations, and they're honestly what kept me going through reading these. Maybe it just wasn't quite the right time to read Balzac; but it's never the wrong time to look at some Dore illustrations. Not as awesome as his work for Dante's Inferno, but a nice contender nonetheless.

Balzac - as for you, dear friend, I've got some other stuff of yours that I will not give up on... yet.
Profile Image for Frankie.
231 reviews38 followers
October 20, 2008
For those unfamiliar with Balzac, he's one of the first realist writers of his time. Most of his work is vulgar and broad, but set in a time when vulgarity was a part of life. It's refreshing to see that Shakespeare wasn't the first/only one to transcend the pattern of dark Europe.

While most of the stories contain subtle filth on bodily functions and bedroom escapades, it's not difficult to understand, even in translation. It's all quite entertaining, and broad though it may be, still lends to an appropriate feeling of familiarity with the era (the writer's 19th century or the fictional 13th century, or anywhere in between).

It wasn't all farts and tresses and entrails, however. a four-part story in the middle of the collection concerns a witch trial of-sorts. "The Succubus" reminds me of Milton's Paradise Lost, which probably took clues from most witchcraft stories of the medieval era.

Overall, I found it light reading and worthy of my time. I recommend it to anyone weary of unrealistic, morally-bound pre-victorian literature.
Profile Image for Spencer.
289 reviews9 followers
December 6, 2014
I read a version that was printed in 1874. It was rich with engravings, making up about 20% of the volume. It was very much about ribaldry and cuckoldry, and thus very French. Male/female relations, and the clergy figure prominently. The short stories are all written as if they took place in the 15th century—the time of Rabelais. I found it very entertaining, humorous, and titillating in a very refined manner.
Profile Image for TRXTRMXTR.
366 reviews16 followers
April 26, 2011
I loved these stories and I loved Balzac's crazy interludes where he tries to reason about why he's writing them. Some of them are just begging to be stage productions and are very amusing. Definitely not for prudish people, but also excellent for those interested in (a version of) historical France.
10 reviews3 followers
January 13, 2013
I'm reading the 1944 Black and Gold edition published by Liveright. No illustrations, but cool book. I'm reading the stories randomly out of order. I think they're really funny and refreshing and in fact pretty ridiculous. Kind of an old fashioned innocent-humor, but I'm pretty old, and innocent, so it works for me.
Profile Image for Jonathan.
64 reviews2 followers
November 11, 2012
I gave up after a few stories, or, to be more precise, after the same story several times. Powerful but old/impotent man blah blah blah, frisky young wife blah blah blah, handsome young knight blah blah blah, scheming maid blah blah blah, cuckoldry (If that's a word) blah blah blah, The End.
Profile Image for Megan.
91 reviews4 followers
April 24, 2016
1.5 ~ Found this book at an antique store & was intrigued. I can only describe it as some sort of 19th century comedy verging on becoming a play, edited by Jack Black.

Vulgar, overly sarcastic for its time & lacked creativity.
Profile Image for Andre.
199 reviews4 followers
February 1, 2010
This is a very thick 1874 compilation of 30 short stories by French classical writer Honore de Balzac. Famous artist Gustave Dore does the illustrations.
Profile Image for Boris Crismancich.
27 reviews
April 22, 2016
Herrliche Geschichten. Zeigt die doppelmoral der damaligen Zeit. Ein hocherotisches Büchlein. Die schönsten erotischen Erzählungen, die ich bisher gelesen habe.
Profile Image for Nan Silvernail.
333 reviews3 followers
March 4, 2013
A Medieval romp through the high castles and low morals of France. Some merry, some sad, all instructive. Only one pilgrim tells these tales, but they are rich as Chaucer's. He was not a beauteous as Scheherazade but he could well tell a tale. Fill a tankard and wade right in. The trough of all humanity is just fine.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Just as with The Arabian Nights and The Canterbury Tales, there is some really low humor here. But some lovely innocent flowers as well. The tribe of the Cuckolds is increased. Ladies turn the tables on their husbands. But then again, True Love can sometimes conquer all.

This ebook is a different translation than the physical book I have. It was interesting and instructive to see the differences. It was also a different experience to read it at 50 years of age when the last time I read it, I was around 20.

The tale called The Succubus was still a long slog for the moral.

Innocence is a wonderfully sweet little tidbit.

One must remember that during this time most of the world's leaders were not more than teenaged, and it does show, as in The Merrie Jests of King Louis the Eleventh.

Still, it is an amusing read.
Profile Image for Paul Parsons.
Author 5 books7 followers
March 15, 2013
Reminiscent of the Canterbury tales, these ribald stories told from the French perspective over two hundred years ago, sometimes lost me in their style and wordiness. Balzac speaks to the reader, sometimes in second person, dragging you out of the narrative and into his world mid sentence. The text is clever and flowery, as it had to be in that day and age, when addressing sexuality so boldly. Good reader for those who study the history of writing styles.
Profile Image for David.
Author 12 books148 followers
September 23, 2010
These stories present a much different Balzac than the one I'm used to. Much more the entertaining farce than the honest portrayal of human striving and suffering at the different levels of society. Seems a bit awkward too, trying to mimic a bit much the older style of stories. Still fun to read, though.
Profile Image for Andrea.
540 reviews18 followers
June 29, 2016
I think that my edition is not this one listed here, but nevertheless my thoughts on de Balzac have stayed the same- I hate him, his style, everything. These stories are all over the place, vulgar and quite frankly they are supposed to be funny, but they are not. I'm giving up on de Balzac, but maybe I'll find some of his work that I'll like, but it's not gonna be any time soon. Sorry not sorry
Profile Image for Tina.
364 reviews16 followers
September 7, 2015
Un libro que cuenta con 18 relatos de tema erótico, tratado con sutileza, sin caer en la vulgaridad, con un toque de picardía y sarcasmo que los hace fáciles y amenos en la lectura.
Quien haya leído al autor, sabrá que no necesita gran recomendación, su nombre lo dice todo.
45 reviews57 followers
March 1, 2007
The stories are funny but all seem the same after awhile
Profile Image for Varmint.
130 reviews24 followers
October 23, 2007
maybe it was the translation. most of the stories seemed like listening to someone boring describe something funny that happened to someone else very far away.
18 reviews3 followers
Want to read
March 10, 2008
Only read the first chapter, but the stories were not "droll." Maybe it would be better in French, but then why did they even bother translating it?
Profile Image for Valissa.
1,540 reviews21 followers
November 3, 2010
"It is easy to sit up and take notice, What is difficult is getting up and taking action."
Profile Image for Robert Smith.
51 reviews11 followers
August 30, 2013
I have a privately printed edition with nice color plates titled Ten Droll Tales.
Profile Image for Heikki Lahnaoja.
121 reviews1 follower
August 11, 2015
Keveitä paneskelutarinoita, viihdyttäviä mutta ei mitään sen kummempaa.
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