
This volume gathers Marcel Schwob’s early forays into literary collage, presenting a series of essays, translations, and reflections that revolve around the enigmatic 15th‑century poet François Villon. Schwob weaves together historical documents, contemporary criticism, and his own imaginative commentary, inviting listeners to hear the tangled strands of Villon’s life, his turbulent youth, and his haunting verses. The material is presented with a scholar’s rigor yet never loses the lyrical curiosity that made Schwob a pioneer of modern essayistic prose.
Throughout the collection, Schwob’s voice shifts from the precise to the whimsical, turning archival footnotes into vivid scenes of medieval Paris. He interrogates the myths surrounding Villon’s birth, his education, and his notorious escapades, while also exploring the poet’s influence on later writers from Rabelais to Stevenson. Listeners will feel the tension between documented facts and the romanticized portrait, a balance that defines Schwob’s art of “spicilège”—a scrapbook of ideas that still resonates today.
Language
fr
Duration
~5 hours (310K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Clarity, Pierre Lacaze 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
2020-06-14
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1867–1905
A brilliant and unconventional French writer, he became known for brief, jewel-like stories that blend history, fantasy, and crime. His work influenced later modernists and still feels strikingly fresh today.
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