Oui, je sais d’où je descends !
Inassouvi comme la flamme,
Je brűle et me consume.
La lumière devient tout ce que je suis,
Le charbon tout ce que je laisse :
Ah, certes, je suis une flamme!
The philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche’s autobiography, Ecce Homo, was the last prose work that he wrote before his illness in 1889. Coming at the end of an extraordinarily productive year in which he had produced The Twilight of the Idols and The Antichrist, Nietzsche shuns any pretense at modesty with chapter titles include “Why I am so Wise”, “Why I am so Clever” and “Why I Write Such Excellent Books”. His translator Anthony M. Ludovici states, Ecce Homo “is not only a coping-stone worthy of the wonderful creations of that year, but also a fitting conclusion to his whole life, in the form of a grand summing up of his character as a man, his purpose as a reformer, and his achievement as a thinker.” (Introduction by Tim SC)
À deux beaux yeux (Théophile Gautier)
Théophile Gautier
Sonnet.
Vous avez un regard singulier et charmant ;
Comme la lune au fond du lac qui la reflète,
Votre prunelle, où brille une […]
Dante Alighieri
EN
Dante Alighieri, The Divine Comedy (Dramatic Reading) - FREE Audio Book (EN)
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Vision de la mort de Beatrice (Dante Alighieri ) poème audio
Dante Alighieri (Durante […]
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Henri Marie Raymond de Toulouse-Lautrec-Monfa, né le 24 novembre 1864 à Albi et mort le 9 septembre 1901 […]
E. T. A. HOFFMANN – Le Vœu
Bibliothèque Classique - Biographies - Livres et poèmes écrits - Livres et poèmes audio
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