
ADOLPHE RETTÉ
An uncompromising portrait opens with a vivid sketch of Léon Bloy’s restless spirit—a man who swung between towering pride and tender humility, whose every word burned like cayenne on a raw wound. The author invites listeners to walk alongside Bloy as he lashes at the bourgeois complacency of his age, yet remains deeply tethered to a desperate love for Christ. By tracing his most striking writings, from the raging essays that condemned literary mediocrity to the humble pilgrimages that revealed his inner yearning, the narrative captures the paradox of a writer who both assaults and seeks redemption.
The second part moves toward a measured appraisal, asking whether Bloy’s ferocious style can be read as faithful service rather than sheer fury. Through concise analyses of his major works and the distinctive, hyper‑bolic prose that defined him, the essay offers a balanced lens on a figure forever caught between the absolute and the relative. Listeners will come away with a clearer sense of why Bloy continues to provoke, inspire, and challenge the literary conscience.
Language
fr
Duration
~2 hours (137K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Paris: Bloud et Gay, 1923.
Credits
Laurent Vogel (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Books project.)
Release date
2024-03-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1863–1930
A restless, fiercely independent French writer, he moved from Symbolist poetry and radical politics to a deeply religious later life. His work captures sharp turns in belief without losing its personal intensity.
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