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The Last Day of a Condemned Man

Autor Victor Hugo Traducere de Eugenia De B.
en Limba Engleză Paperback

The Last Day of a Condemned Man

Le Dernier jour d'un condamnE]

Victor Hugo

Translated by Eugenia De B.

The Last Day of a Condemned Man (French: Le Dernier Jour d'un CondamnE) is a short novel by Victor Hugo first published in 1829. The novel recounts the thoughts of a man condemned to die. Victor Hugo wrote this novel to express his feelings that the death penalty should be abolished.

At the head of the earlier editions of this work, published at first without the name of the author, there was nothing but the following lines.

"There are two ways of accounting for the existence of this work. Either there really has been found a bundle of yellow, ragged, papers, on which were inscribed, exactly as they came, the last thoughts of a wretched being; or else there has been a man, a dreamer, occupied in observing nature for the advantage of art, a philosopher, a poet, who, having been seized with these forcible ideas, could not rest until he had given them the tangible form of a volume. Of these two explanations, the reader will choose that which he prefers."

As is seen, at the time when this book was first published, the author did not deem fit to give publicity to the full extent of his thoughts. He preferred waiting to see whether the work would be fully understood. It has been. The author may now, therefore, unmask the political and social ideas, which he wished to render popular under this harmless literary guise. He avows openly, that The Last Day of a Condemned is only a pleading, direct or indirect, as is preferred, for the abolition of the penalty of death. His design herein and what he would wish posterity to see in his work, if its attention should ever be given to so slight a production, is, not to make out the special defense of any particular criminal, such defense being transitory as it is easy; he would plead generally and permanently for all accused persons, present and future; it is the great point of human right, stated and pleaded before society at large, that highest judicial court; it is the sombre and fatal question which breathes obscurely in the depths of each capital offense, under the triple envelopes of pathos in which legal eloquence wraps them; it is the question of life and death, I say, laid bare, denuded and despoiled of the sonorous twistings of the bar, revealed in daylight, and placed where it should be seen; in its true and hideous position, not in the law courts, but on the scaffold, not among the judges, but with the executioner

This is what he has desired to effect. If futurity should award him the glory of having succeeded, which he dares not hope, he desires no other crown.

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Paperback (5) 4425 lei  3-5 săpt. +558 lei  6-10 zile
  Alma Books COMMIS – 4 noi 2021 4425 lei  3-5 săpt. +558 lei  6-10 zile
  Dover Publications – 31 mai 2009 4850 lei  3-5 săpt.
  CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform – 7151 lei  3-5 săpt.
  Mint Editions – iun 2021 7353 lei  3-5 săpt.
  Watchmaker Publishing – 25 oct 2010 5213 lei  6-8 săpt.
Hardback (1) 12683 lei  3-5 săpt.
  Mint Editions – 8 iun 2021 12683 lei  3-5 săpt.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781523296408
ISBN-10: 1523296402
Pagini: 90
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 5 mm
Greutate: 0.17 kg
Editura: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform

Caracteristici

It includes Preface to the 1832 edition, a manifest of Hugo's personal opinions, A Comedy about a Tragedy and Claude Gueux, an early example of "true crime" fiction.

Notă biografică

Victor Hugo (1802-1885) was a French poet and novelist. Born in Besançon, Hugo was the son of a general who served in the Napoleonic army. Raised on the move, Hugo was taken with his family from one outpost to the next, eventually setting with his mother in Paris in 1803. In 1823, he published his first novel, launching a career that would earn him a reputation as a leading figure of French Romanticism. His Gothic novel The Hunchback of Notre-Dame (1831) was a bestseller throughout Europe, inspiring the French government to restore the legendary cathedral to its former glory. During the reign of King Louis-Philippe, Hugo was elected to the National Assembly of the French Second Republic, where he spoke out against the death penalty and poverty while calling for public education and universal suffrage. Exiled during the rise of Napoleon III, Hugo lived in Guernsey from 1855 to 1870. During this time, he published his literary masterpiece Les Misérables (1862), a historical novel which has been adapted countless times for theater, film, and television. Towards the end of his life, he advocated for republicanism around Europe and across the globe, cementing his reputation as a defender of the people and earning a place at Paris¿ Panthéon, where his remains were interred following his death from pneumonia. His final words, written on a note only days before his death, capture the depth of his belief in humanity: ¿To love is to act.¿