Victor Hugo - Free Online Library

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Victor Hugo - Free Online Library
It gained him a royal pension from Louis XVIII. The unpopular Napoleon III fell from power, the
Republic was proclaimed. 1868), who was the daughter of an officer at the ministry of war. After
three unsuccessful attempts, Hugo was elected in 1841 to the French Academy. In 1807 Sophie took
her family for two years from Paris to Italy, where Léopold served as a governor of a province near
Naples. In 1870 Hugo witnessed the siege of Paris. Hugo himself was seen by his fans a Gargantuan,
larger-than-life character, and rumors spread that he could eat half an ox at a single sitting, fast for
three days, and work non-stop for a week.
In his later life Hugo became involved in politics as a supporter of the republican form of
government. Following the 1848 revolution, with the formation of the Second Republic, Hugo was
elected to the Constitutional Assembly and to the Legislative Assembly. During the period of the
Paris Commune of 1871, Hugo lived in Brussels, from where he was expelled for sheltering defeated
revolutionaries. Hugo's father was an officer in Napoleon's army, an enthusiastic republican and
ruthless professional soldier, who loved dangers and adventures. God is awake.
I don't mind what Congress does, as long as they don't do it in the streets and frighten the horses.
Popularity? It is glory's small change.
Winter is on my head, but eternal spring is in my heart.
An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not an idea whose time has come.
Life's greatest happiness is to be convinced we are loved.
Suggested sites for Victor Hugo:
Encyclopedia article about Victor Hugo
. The novel, set in 15th century Paris, tells a moving story of a gypsy girl Esmeralda and the
deformed, deaf bell-ringer, Quasimodo, who loves her.
In the 1830s Hugo published several volumes of lyric poetry, which were inspired by Juliette Drouet
(Julienne-Joséphine Gauvain), an actress with whom Hugo had a liaison until her death in 1882.
She had married Charles Vacquerie in February 1843, and in September she drowned with her
husband.
It took a decade before Hugo again published books. He wrote royalist odes, cursed the memory of
Napoleon, but then started to defend his father's role in Napoleon's victories, and attack the
injustices of the monarchist regime. Les Misérables appeared with an international advertising
campaign. This triumph was shadowed by the death of Hugo's daughter Léopoldine. The book
divided critics but the masses were enthusiastic. He began in early adolescence to write verse
tragedies and poetry, and translated Virgil. Hugo's attitude to the Commune was ambivalent: "An
admirable thing, stupidly compromised by five or six deplorable ringleaders." After a short refuge in
Luxemburg, he returned to Paris and was elected a senator of Paris in 1876. After the marriage of
his parents had collapsed, he was raised by his mother. Les Travailleurs De La Mer (1866), a story of
hypocrisy, love, and suicide, became a bestseller and later two films were made of it.
Political upheavals in France and the proclamation of the Third Republic made Hugo return to
France. After he was made a pair de France in 1845, he sat in the Upper Chamber among the lords.
There is visible labour and there is invisible labour.
Have courage for the great sorrows of life and patience for the small ones; and when you have
laboriously accomplished your daily task, go to sleep in peace. Hugo died in Paris on May 22, 1885.
Hugo's fleeting affairs with maids and country girls inspired his Les Chansons Des Rues Et Des Bois
(1865). During this time he wrote some of his best works, including Les Châtiments (1853) and Les
Misérables (1862), an epic story about social injustice. He was given a national funeral, attended
by two million people, and buried in the Panthéon.
Famous quotations by Victor Hugo:
A man is not idle because he is absorbed in thought. In 1819, he founded a review with his brothers,
the Conservateur Littéraire. Among Hugo's most ambitious works was an epic poem, La Fin de
Satan, a study of Satan's fall and the history of the universe. General Hugo died in 1828; at that time
Hugo started to call himself a baron.
Hugo gained a wide fame with his play Hernani
(1830), in which two lovers poison each other,
and with his famous historical work Notre-Dame
De Paris, which became an instant success. When
General Hugo took charge of three Spanish
provinces, Sophie again joined her husband.
Hugo
spent the years 1815-1818 in the Pension Cordier in Paris,
but most of the classes of the school were held at the
Collège Louis-le Grand. The poem was never completed.
Although Napoleon III granted an amnesty to all political
exiles in 1859, Hugo did not take the bite. During 1820s
Hugo came in touch with liberal writers, but his political
stand wavered from side to side. Since its appearance in
1831 the story has become a part of the popular culture.
Les Châtiments became one of the most popular forbidden poetry books.
Like other Romantic writers, Hugo was interested in Spiritism, and he experimented with table-
tapping. He fled to Brussels and then to Jersey. Inspired by the example of the statesman and author
François René Chateaubriand, Hugo published his first collection of poems, Odes et Poésies
Diverses (1822). After a number of fruitless efforts, his table gave him the final title of Les
Misérables. When workers started to riot, he led soldiers who stormed barricades in brutal
assaults.
When the coup d'état by Louis House Foreclosures Shelby County TN Napoleon (Napoleon III)
took place in 1851, Hugo believed his life to be in danger. Hugo's partly voluntary exile lasted for 20
years.
Victor-Marie Hugo was born in Besançon as the son of Joseph-Léopold-Sigisbert Hugo and
Sophie Trébuchet. When he was expelled from the island, he moved with his family to Guernsey in
the English Channel. As a novelist Hugo made his debut with Han D'islande (1823), which appeared
first anonymously in Houses On Foreclosure Shelby County TN four pocket-sized volumes, and was
translated into English two years later.
In 1822 he married Adèle Foucher (d. Pope Pius IX added it with Madame Bovary and all the novels
of Stendhal and Balzac to the Index of Proscribed Books

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