책소개 책소개 보이기/감추기 아스카니오, 뒤마의 로망스 이야기인. The Book of Ascanio,The romances of Alexandre Dumas, Volume XI.by Alexandre Dumas뒤마는 프랑스 작가. 프랑스의 작가.1802, - 1870, 알렉상드르 뒤마Alexandre Dumas . 프랑스의 극작가, 소설가19세기 프랑스의 극작가·소설가로 소설 삼총사 몬테크리스토백작으로 세계적으로 유명. 대뒤마라고도 한다.앙리 3세와 그 궁정으로 새로운 로망파극의 선구자 .THE ROMANCES OF ALEXANDRE DUMASVolume XI.ASCANIO . PARTS I. AND II.NEW YORK GEORGE D. SPROULPublisher1898,By Little, Brown, and Company.University Press:John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, U.S.A. 더보기
목차 목차 보이기/감추기 아스카니오, 뒤마의 로망스 이야기인. The Book of Ascanio,The romances of Alexandre Dumas, Volume XI.by Alexandre DumasPARTS I. AND II.PARTS I. CONTENTSPARTS I. ChapterI. The Street and the StudioII. A Goldsmith of the Sixteenth CenturyIII. DædalusIV. ScozzoneV. Genius and RoyaltyVI. To What Use A Duenna May Be PutVII. A Lover and a FriendVIII. Preparations for Attack and DefenceIX. Thrust and ParryX. Of the Advantage of Fortified TownsXI. Owls, Magpies, and NightingalesXII. The King's QueenXIII. Souvent Femme VarieXIV. Wherein it is proven that Sorrow is the Groundwork of the Life of ManXV. Wherein it appears that Joy is nothing more than Sorrow in another FormXVI. A CourtXVII. Love as PassionXVIII. Love as a DreamXIX. Love as an IdeaPARTS II.CONTENTSChapterI. The Trafficker in his own HonorII. Four Varieties of BrigandsIII. An Autumn Night's DreamIV. StefanaV. Domiciliary VisitsVI. Charles the Fifth at FontainebleauVII. The Ghostly MonkVIII. What One sees at Night from the Top of a PoplarIX. Mars and VenusX. The RivalsXI. Benvenuto at BayXII. Of the Difficulty which an Honest Man experiences in Procuring his own Committal to PrisonXIII. In which Jacques Aubry rises to Epic ProportionsXIV. Of the Difficulty which an Honest Man experiences in Securing his Release from PrisonXV. An Honest TheftXVI. Wherein it is proved that a Grisette's Letter, when it is burned, makes as much Flame and Ashes as a Duchess'sXVII. Wherein it is proved that True Friendship is capable of carrying devotionto the Marrying PointXVIII. The CastingXIX. Jupiter and OlympusXX. A Prudent MarriageXXI. Resumption of HostilitiesXXII. A Love MatchXXIII. Mariage de Convenance 더보기
출판사 리뷰 출판사 리뷰 보이기/감추기 아스카니오, 뒤마의 로망스 이야기인. The Book of Ascanio,The romances of Alexandre Dumas, Volume XI.by Alexandre DumasINTRODUCTORY NOTE"Never perhaps," says Miss Pardoe (in the Preface to the "Court and Reign of Francis I."), "did the reign of any European sovereign present so many and such varying phases. A contest for empire, a captive monarch, a female regency, and a religious war; the poisoned bowl and the burning pile alike doing their work of death amid scenes of uncalculating splendor and unbridled dissipation; the atrocities of bigotry and intolerance, blent with the most unblushing licentiousness and the most undisguised profligacy;―such are the materials offered to the student by the times of Francis I."The period thus characterized is that in which the scene of the present romance is laid, and although the plot is mainly concerned with the fortunes of others than subjects of the , we are treated to a succession of vivid pictures of life and manners at the French court and in the French capital.The author depicts the king rather as he appeared to the world before what has been called the "legend of the Roi Chevalier,"―that is to say, the long prevailing idea that Fran?ois I. was the most chivalrous monarch who ever sat upon a European throne,―had been modified by the independent researches of those who have not feared to go behind the writings of the old and well tutored chroniclers whose works have formed the basis of most modern histories,― chroniclers who seem to have been guided by Cardinal Richelieu's famous remark to an aspiring historian, apropos of certain animadversions upon the character of Louis XI., that "it is treason to discuss the actions of a king who has been dead only two centuries."The result of these researches is thus summed up by Miss Pardoe in the same Preface:―"The glorious day of Marignano saw the rising, and that of Pavia the setting, of his fame as a soldier; so true it is that the prowess of the man was shamed by that of the boy. The early and unregretted death of one of his neglected queens, and the heart-broken endurance of the other, contrasted with the unbounded influence of his first favorite and the insolent arrogance of his second, will sufficiently demonstrate his character as a husband. His open and illegal oppression of an overtaxed and suffering people to satisfy the cravings of an extortionate and licentious court, will suffice to disclose his value as a monarch; while the reckless indifference with which he falsified his political pledges, abandoned his allies in their extremity in order to further his own interests, and sacrificed the welfare of his kingdom and the safety of his armies to his own puerile vanity, will complete a picture by no means calculated to elicit one regret that his reign was not prolonged."