The Revolt of the Angels
eBook - ePub

The Revolt of the Angels

  1. 176 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Revolt of the Angels

Book details
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

Books are missing from the archbishop's shelves and the librarian is helpless to explain until the culprit is revealed: Arcade, the clergyman's guardian angel, has been educating himself. Immersion in works of philosophy and science has convinced Arcade that God is a cruel tyrant. Revolution is the only answer, and Arcade joins a host of fallen angels to mount a rebellion that proposes to install Satan on the throne of heaven.
This 1914 novel by Nobel laureate Anatole France offers a brilliant satire of war, government, and religion. Published on the eve of World War I, the fable voices an ever-resonant protest against violence and despotism. The author's sense of humor brings a remarkably contemporary air to the Paradise Lost scenario, and stunning black-and-white illustrations by Frank C. Papé complement the tale's fantasy elements.

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Yes, you can access The Revolt of the Angels by Anatole France in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literature General. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Year
2015
ISBN
9780486803067

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Contents
  5. I. Containing in a Few Lines the History of a French Family from 1789 to the Present Day
  6. II. Wherein Useful Information Will Be Found Concerning a Library Where Strange Things Will Shortly Come to Pass
  7. III. Wherein the Mystery Begins
  8. IV. Which in its Forceful Brevity Projects Us to the Limits of the Actual World
  9. V. Wherein Everything Seems Strange Because Everything Is Logical
  10. VI. Wherein PĂšre Sariette Discovers His Missing Treasures
  11. VII. Of a Somewhat Lively Interest, Whereof the Moral Will, I Hope, Appeal Greatly to My Readers, Since It Can Be Expressed By This Sorrowful Query: “Thought, Whither Dost Thou Lead Me?” For It Is a Universally Admitted Truth That It Is Unhealthy to Think and That True Wisdom Lies in Not Thinking at All
  12. VIII. Which Speaks of Love, a Subject Which Always Gives Pleasure, For a Tale Without Love Is Like Beef Without Mustard: An Insipid Dish
  13. IX. Wherein It Is Shown That, as an Ancient Greek Poet Said, “Nothing Is Sweeter Than Aphrodite the Golden”
  14. X. Which Far Surpasses in Audacity the Imaginative Flights of Dante and Milton
  15. XI. Recounts in What Manner the Angel, Attired in the Cast-off Garments of a Suicide, Leaves the Youthful Maurice Without a Heavenly Guardian
  16. XII. Wherein It Is Set Forth How the Angel Mirar, When Bearing Grace and Consolation to Those Dwelling in the Neighbourhood of the Champs Elysées in Paris, Beheld a Music-hall Singer Named Bouchotte and Fell in Love with Her
  17. XIII. Wherein We Hear the Beautiful Archangel Zita Unfold Her Lofty Designs and Are Shown the Wings of Mirar, All Moth-eaten, in a Cupboard
  18. XIV. Which Reveals the Cherub Toiling for the Welfare of Humanity and Concludes in an Entirely Novel Manner with the Miracle of the Flute
  19. XV. Wherein We See Young Maurice Bewailing the Loss of His Guardian Angel, Even in the Mistress’s Arms, and Wherein We Hear the AbbĂ© Patouille Reject as Vain and Illusory All Notions of a New Rebellion of the Angels
  20. XVI. Wherein Mira the Seerless, Zephyrine, and the Fatal Amédée Are Successively Brought Upon the Scene, and Wherein the Notion of Euripides That Those Whom Zeus Wishes to Crush He First Makes Mad, Is Illustrated by the Terrible Example of Monsieur Sariette
  21. XVII. Wherein We Learn That Sophar, No Less Eager for Gold Than Mammon, Looked Upon His Heavenly Home Less Favourably Than Upon France, a Country Blessed with a Savings Bank and Loan Departments, and Wherein We See, Yet Once Again, That Whoso Is Possessed of This World’s Goods Fears the Evil Effects of Any Change
  22. XVIII. Wherein Is Begun the Gardener’s Story, in the Course of Which We Shall See the Destiny of the World Unfolded in a Discourse as Broad and Magnificent in Its Views as Bossuet’s Discourse on the History of the Universe Is Narrow and Dismal
  23. XIX. The Gardener’s Story, Continued
  24. XX. The Gardener’s Story, Continued
  25. XXI. The Gardener’s Story, Concluded
  26. XXII. Wherein We Are Shown the Interior of a Bric-a-brac Shop, and See How Pùre Guinardon’s Guilty Happiness Is Marred By the Jealousy of a Love-lorn Dame
  27. XXIII. Wherein We Are Permitted to Observe the Admirable Character of Bouchotte, Who Resists Violence But Yields to Love. After That Let No One Call the Author a Misogynist
  28. XXIV. Containing an Account of the Vicissitudes That Befel the “Lucretius” of the Prior de Vendîme
  29. XXV. Wherein Maurice Finds His Angel Again
  30. XXVI. The Conclave
  31. XXVII. Wherein We Shall See Revealed a Dark and Secret Mystery and Learn How It Comes About That Empires Are Often Hurled Against Empires, and Ruin Falls Alike Upon the Victors and the Vanquished; and the Wise Reader (If Such There Be—Which I Doubt) Will Meditate Upon This Important Utterance: “A War Is a Matter of Business”
  32. XXVIII. Which Treats of a Painful Domestic Scene
  33. XXIX. Wherein We See How the Angel, Having Become a Man, Behaves Like a Man, Coveting Another’s Wife and Betraying His Friend. In This Chapter the Correctness of Young d’Esparvieu’s Conduct Will Be Made Manifest
  34. XXX. Which Treats of an Affair of Honour, and Which Will Afford the Reader an Opportunity of Judging Whether, as Arcade Affirms, the Experience of Our Faults Makes Better Men and Women of Us
  35. XXXI. Wherein We Are Led to Marvel at the Readiness with Which an Honest Man of Timid and Gentle Nature Can Commit a Horrible Crime
  36. XXXII. Which Describes How Nectaire’s Flute Was Heard in the Tavern of Clodomir
  37. XXXIII. How a Dreadful Crime Plunges Paris into a State of Terror
  38. XXXIV. Which Contains an Account of the Arrest of Bouchotte and Maurice, of the Disaster Which Befell the d’Esparvieu Library, and of the Departure of the Angels
  39. XXXV. And Last, Wherein the Sublime Dream of Satan Is Unfolded