
This work opens a quiet, probing conversation about what it truly means to know a writer. Rather than accepting the glossy portraits offered by conventional biographies, it insists that a reader must uncover the hidden “secret” that drives each mind—its dominant passion, daily habits, and the intimate circles that shaped its early fire. The author argues that only by tracing a writer’s origins, education, and first artistic milieu can we glimpse the authentic self behind the printed page.
In the preface, the essayist lays out a checklist of questions that most critics overlook: how did the subject view religion, nature, women, and money? What rhythms governed his daily life, and how did his health and finances influence his art? By confronting these details, the book challenges the habit of presenting a hero as a flawless icon and instead offers a candid portrait that embraces both virtue and vice.
Written with clear, measured prose, the text invites listeners to become forensic readers, treating each literary figure as a living, breathing individual. It is both a guide for scholars and a compelling meditation for anyone curious about the true humanity that fuels great literature.
Language
fr
Duration
~5 hours (340K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-05-26
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1829–1884
A 19th-century French man of letters, he wrote lively studies of major literary and intellectual figures rather than novels. His surviving books show a sharp interest in biography, criticism, and the big religious debates of his time.
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