L'avant-naissance de Claude Dolet

audiobook

L'avant-naissance de Claude Dolet

by Etienne Dolet

FR·~32 minutes·8 chapters

Chapters

8 total
1

L’AVANT-NAISSANCE DE CLAVDE DOLET FILS DE ESTIENNE DOLET:

0:29
2

AV LECTEVR

2:00
3

CANTICQVE AVX DEESSES DE SCAVOIR Appellees les Neuf Muses.

1:42
4

PRÆCEPTES NECESSAIRES A la Vie commune, Addressés a son filz venant en naissance.

21:29
5

Canticque AVX DIEVX SALVTAIRES ET NON SALVTAIRES A LA VIE HVMAINE.

1:47
6

CLAVDIN DE TOVRAINE A Estienne Dolet,

3:50
7

Au Lecteur Francoys.

0:33
8

Notes du transcripteur

0:14

Description

A freshly translated Renaissance treatise offers listeners a window into the intimate counsel of a learned father writing for his newborn son. Drawing from a Latin original, the work mixes straightforward moral guidance with lyrical invocations to the Muses, Apollo and Pallas, creating a lively blend of practical advice and poetic reverence. Its opening pages set a tone of measured optimism, urging the child to ground his life in faith, temperance and a love of learning.

The narrator weaves together religious devotion, classical references and common‑sense precepts, warning against ambition, envy and idle vices while celebrating the virtues of humility and curiosity. Listeners will hear a voice that feels both personal and universal, echoing the humanist belief that a well‑ordered mind can shape a fulfilling existence. This short, vivid excerpt invites anyone interested in early modern thought to experience the gentle, scholarly guidance once meant for a single young soul.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~32 minutes (30K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Clarity and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)

Release date

2021-05-17

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Etienne Dolet

Etienne Dolet

1509–1546

A fiery French humanist of the Renaissance, he was known for sharp writing, bold ideas, and a printer's career that repeatedly brought him into danger. His life ended dramatically in Paris, but his work on language, translation, and classical learning kept his name alive.

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