Record ID | ia:womanwhowaspoorc0000bloy |
Source | Internet Archive |
Download MARC XML | https://archive.org/download/womanwhowaspoorc0000bloy/womanwhowaspoorc0000bloy_marc.xml |
Download MARC binary | https://www.archive.org/download/womanwhowaspoorc0000bloy/womanwhowaspoorc0000bloy_meta.mrc |
LEADER: 02623cam a2200397 i 4500
001 2015005665
003 DLC
005 20151217075837.0
008 150213r20151939inu e b 000 1 eng
010 $a 2015005665
020 $a9781890318925 (paperback)
040 $aDLC$beng$cDLC$erda$dDLC
041 1 $aeng$hfre
042 $apcc
043 $ae-fr----
050 00 $aPQ2198.B18$bF413 2015
082 00 $a843/.8$223
084 $aFIC042000$2bisacsh
100 1 $aBloy, Léon,$d1846-1917.
240 10 $aFemme pauvre.$lEnglish
245 14 $aThe woman who was poor :$ba contemporary novel of the French 'Eighties /$cLeon Bloy ; translated by I. J. Collins.
264 1 $aSouth Bend, Indiana :$bSt. Augustine's Press,$c[2015]
300 $a356 pages ;$c22 cm
336 $atext$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$2rdacarrier
500 $aOriginally published: New York : Sheed & Ward, 1939.
500 $aFirst published 1897 in France as La femme pauvre.
505 0 $aPart I: Flotsam of the Shadows -- Part II: Flotsam of the Light.
520 $a"Written in the 1890s, this novel has had an immeasurable effect on all European Catholic writing since. It is an extraordinary book, powerful in the manner of dos Passos, yet spiritual in the manner of the Bible. It is the story of a woman abysmally poor, brutally treated and also exploited by her parents, living in the gutters of Paris, yet retaining the spiritual outlook and the purity of a saint. We are spared no brutality, yet there are scenes of the most tender beauty. The woman, Clotilda, becomes an artist's model, meeting all the great French writers, among them the gloomy and magnificent Marchenoir, who is Bloy himself. They are all impressed by the depth of her thoughts and feelings; and finally she marries one of them. They are pitifully poor, and the pages which cover the birth and death of their child shock with their horror at the same time as they move with their tragic beauty and tenderness--for that is Bloy, hovering always between death and ecstasy. Left a widow, Clotilda finds her true vocation, a vocation of poverty: she is The Woman Who Was Poor--no other words can describe her accurately. The novel ends with those famous words of extraordinary optimism: "There is only one misery . . . not to be saints.""--$cProvided by publisher.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references.
650 0 $aPoor women$vFiction.
651 0 $aFrance$vFiction.
650 7 $aFICTION / Christian / General.$2bisacsh
655 7 $aChristian fiction.$2gsafd
700 1 $aCollins, I. J.,$etranslator.