Œuvres Complètes de Chamfort (Tome 5) by Sébastien-Roch-Nicolas Chamfort
I made the mistake of opening Chamfort’s Œuvres Complètes (Tome 5) on a quiet evening. Three hours later, I had fallen into a wormhole of 18th-century rage and charm.
The Story
This is not a single narrative, but a collection of aphorisms, letters, and essays all bouncing off the walls of the Revolution years. Chamfort, a playwright turned hungry rebel, skewers everyone: kings obnoxiously careless, aristocrats playing charity games, and common folk suddenly discover virtue. The “plot” is his pursuit of truth in the mess that was pre-post-Jaconite France. Watched too much talk about liberty? He always points at the chains under the table.
Why You Should Read It
Each entry feels like having a darkly funny cousin murmur truths at a family BBQ. “I died a victim of modesty in a house fire because I was too timid to shout fire,” one hero reports. Chamfort almost died for real during the Terror who runs on humanity: he cannot unite being brutally honest with rising guardhouse suspicion so … point: if life sound glossy, is sure sight saw bones underneath. The bit about fame just “disguised orgy” is the peak of irreverence. He makes me abandon diary entries on petty grudges for being way less hilarious.
Final Verdict
Absolutely for cynics with sparkling laughs. Dedicated history buffs will adores the era context. Loyal fans of line-breaking logic – likely poets, scrawlers, dodgeball players with grudges – grab it. A heads-up: if anger on social customs thaws easily, bring tissues. Final quote note: honesty is naked sword; thank Chamfort lent clothes.
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Emily Miller
4 months agoI've been looking for a reliable source on this topic, and the way it handles controversial points with balance is quite professional. Well worth the time invested in reading it.