Alfred de Vigny

Alfred Victor de Vigny (March 27 1797 – September 17 1863) was a poet, playwright, and novelist. Until the rise of Victor Hugo he was considered to be the leader of the Romantic movement in France.

Quotes

 * L'existence du Soldat est (après la peine de mort) la trace la plus douloureuse de barbarie qui subsiste parmi les hommes.
 * The soldier's lot is the most melancholy relic of barbarism (next to capital punishment) that lingers on among mankind.
 * Servitude et grandeur militaires; (ed.) Paul Viallaneix Oeuvres complètes, (1965) p. 358; translation from Humphrey Hare (trans.) The Military Necessity (1953) p. 17.  (1835).


 * Tout homme a vu le mur qui borne son esprit.
 * Every man has seen the wall that limits his mind.
 * Poèmes philosophiques, "La flute", line 108; (ed.) Paul Viallaneix Oeuvres complètes (1965) p. 103; translation from Jason Merchey Values of the Wise (2004) p. 200.  (1843).

Cinq-Mars; ou, une conjuration sous Louis XIII (1826)
Quotations are taken from the 1863 edition.


 * L'histoire est un roman dont le peuple est l'auteur.
 * History is a novel whose author is the people.
 * "Réflexions sur la vérité dans l'art", p. 6; translation from James H. Johnson Listening in Paris (1995) p. 252.


 * On étouffe les clameurs, mais comment se venger du silence?
 * Clamour can be stifled, but how avenge oneself on silence?
 * Chap. 26, p. 433; translation by William Hazlitt from Cinq-Mars (1847) p. 344.

Journal d'un poète (1867)
Quotations are taken from the 1949 edition.


 * Un désespoir paisible, sans convulsions de colère et sans reproches au ciel est la sagesse même.
 * A calm despair, without angry convulsions or reproaches directed at heaven, is the essence of wisdom.
 * Page 32.


 * Les acteurs sont bien heureux, ils ont une gloire sans responsabilité.
 * Actors are lucky, they have glory without responsibility.
 * Page 44.


 * La presse est une bouche forcée d'être toujours ouverte et de parler toujours. De là vient qu'elle dit mille fois qu'elle n'a rien à dire.
 * The press is a mouth forced to be forever open and forever talking. Consequently it says a thousand times that it has nothing to say.
 * Page 48.


 * Un livre est une bouteille jetée en pleine mer sur laquelle il faut coller cette étiquette: attrape qui peut.
 * A book is a bottle thrown into the sea on which this label should be attached: Catch as catch can.
 * Page 93.


 * Le théâtre n'a jamais été en Angleterre qu'une mode des hautes classes ou une débauche du bas peuple.
 * In England the theatre has never been anything but a fashion for the upper classes or a debauch for the common people.
 * Page 348.

Quotes about Alfred de Vigny

 * I was always fascinated with the 1820s, that romantic decade, and the revolution of 1830 which was of course a disaster everywhere, and 1848. I still read with great joy about that period, I don't know why. It's funny how you find a decade, or a period or a place that you just respond to. (“It is a long time ago, and it's a very confused period…”) Very confused, yes. Very good writers you had in France particularly, Vigny, people like that, oh! I love Vigny, and they meant a great deal to me, those people. I haven't read them for many, many years. But they also shaped my view of the world.
 * 2002 interview in Conversations with Ursula Le Guin