Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Souvenirs d’égotisme (French for Memoirs of an Egotist) is an autobiographical work by Stendhal. It was written in 13 days in June and July 1832 while the author was staying in Civitavecchia. Stendhal recounts his life in Paris and London from 1821 to 1830.

  2. 31 de out. de 2019 · Unpublished until fifty years after the Stendhal?s death, Memoirs of Egotism concerns itself exclusively with the decade following his return from Milan to Paris in 1821. Stendhal appears as a cynical wit, adventurer, lover, brilliant conversationalist, and secret man of letters.

  3. 6 de jan. de 2012 · Memoirs of an egotist = Souvenirs d'égotisme. by. Stendhal, 1783-1842. Publication date. 1975. Topics. Stendhal, 1783-1842, Novelists, French. Publisher. New York : Horizon Press.

  4. Memoirs of an Egotist, autobiographical work by Stendhal, published posthumously in France in 1892 as Souvenirs d’égotisme. It was also published in the United States as Memoirs of Egotism. Stendhal began writing his memoir in 1832, when he was increasingly aware of his age, isolation, and failing.

  5. 1 de abr. de 2003 · 3.56. 257 ratings33 reviews. Memoirs of an Egotist, Stendhal’s fragmentary autobiographical work, is alert, wry, and perpetually self-questioning. Through a series of apparently random impressions of the political, social, and artistic movements of the world around him, he imbues a range of human experience, from the mundane to the ...

  6. Containing everything from delightful thumbnail sketches of his friends and colleagues, to lyrical remembrances of gardens and operas and tenderly amused descriptions of tea with London...

  7. Souvenirs d’égotisme is an autobiographical work by Stendhal. It was written in 13 days in June and July 1832 while the author was staying in Civitavecchia.[1] Stendhal recounts his life in Paris and London from 1821 to 1830. It includes candid and spirited descriptions of contemporaries such as Lafayette, Madame Pasta, Destutt de Tracy, Mérimée, and Charles de Rémusat.[2] The story ...