Clerambault eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 296 pages of information about Clerambault.

Clerambault eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 296 pages of information about Clerambault.

Title:  Clerambault The Story Of An Independent Spirit During The War

Author:  Rolland, Romain

Release Date:  January 30, 2004 [EBook #10868]

Language:  English

Character set encoding:  ASCII

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CLERAMBAULT

THE STORY OF AN INDEPENDENT SPIRIT DURING THE WAR

BY

ROMAIN ROLLAND

TRANSLATED BY

KATHERINE MILLER

1921

TO THE READER

This book is not a novel, but rather the confession of a free spirit telling of its mistakes, its sufferings and its struggles from the midst of the tempest; and it is in no sense an autobiography either.  Some day I may wish to write of myself, and I will then speak without any disguise or feigned name.  Though it is true that I have lent some ideas to my hero, his individuality, his character and the circumstances of his life are all his own; and I have tried to give a picture of the inward labyrinth where a weak spirit wanders, feeling its way, uncertain, sensitive and impressionable, but sincere and ardent in the cause of truth.

Some chapters of the book have a family likeness to the meditations of our old French moralists and the stoical essays of the end of the XVIth century.  At a time resembling our own but even exceeding it in tragic horror, amid the convulsions of the League, the Chief-Magistrate Guillaume Du Vair wrote his noble Dialogues, “De la Constance et Consolation es Calamites Publiques,” with a steadfast mind.  While the siege of Paris was at its worst he talked in his garden with his friends, Linus the great traveller, Musee, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, and the writer Orphee.  Poor wretches lay dead of starvation in the streets, women cried out that pike-men were eating children near the Temple; but with their eyes filled with these horrible pictures these wise men sought to raise their unhappy thoughts to the heights where one can reach the mind of the ages and reckon up that which has survived the test.  As I re-read these Dialogues during the war I more than once felt myself close to that true Frenchman who wrote:  Man is born to see and know everything, and it is an injustice to limit him to one place on the earth.  To the wise man the whole world is his country.  God lends us the world to enjoy in common on one condition only, that we act uprightly.

R.R.

Paris,

May, 1920

INTRODUCTION [1]

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Clerambault from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.