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Indisponible
Les Travailleurs de la mer
Indisponible
Les Travailleurs de la mer
Indisponible
Les Travailleurs de la mer
Livre électronique591 pages7 heures

Les Travailleurs de la mer

Évaluation : 4 sur 5 étoiles

4/5

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Actuellement indisponible

Actuellement indisponible

À propos de ce livre électronique

Une édition de référence des Travailleurs de la mer de Victor Hugo, spécialement conçue pour la lecture sur les supports numériques.
« La Christmas de 182... fut remarquable à Guernesey. Il neigea ce jour-là. Dans les îles de la Manche, un hiver où il gèle à glace est mémorable, et la neige fait évènement.
Le matin de cette Christmas, la route qui longe la mer de Saint-Pierre-Port au Valle était toute blanche. Il avait neigé depuis minuit jusqu’à l’aube. Vers neuf heures, peu après le lever du soleil, comme ce n’était pas encore le moment pour les anglicans d’aller à l’église de Saint-Sampson et pour les wesleyens d’aller à la chapelle Eldad, le chemin était à peu près désert. Dans tout le tronçon de route qui sépare la première tour de la seconde tour, il n’y avait que trois passants, un enfant, un homme et une femme. Ces trois passants, marchant à distance les uns des autres, n’avaient visiblement aucun lien entre eux. L’enfant, d’une huitaine d’années, s’était arrêté, et regardait la neige avec curiosité. » (Incipit.)

LangueFrançais
Date de sortie1 janv. 2012
ISBN9782806240521
Indisponible
Les Travailleurs de la mer
Auteur

Victor Hugo

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.”

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Évaluation : 4.048668318584071 sur 5 étoiles
4/5

113 notations9 avis

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  • Évaluation : 2 sur 5 étoiles
    2/5
    Whew. Hard to get through without jettisoning all the flotsam.
  • Évaluation : 5 sur 5 étoiles
    5/5
    Not really a novel, more a prose poem with a plot. It's full of descriptive passages and meditations on the sea, the winds, and the people who live in these elements. It also has some wise things to say about human nature. On the other hand, the characterizations are perfunctory and the story is lumbering and predictable. It's a frame for the prose and nothing more, but the prose is impeccable, even diffused through the anonymous 19th century translation that I read.
  • Évaluation : 3 sur 5 étoiles
    3/5
    Hugo wrote this book as a sort of nod to the isle of Guernsey for hosting him while he was in political disfavor in France. It is a love story to that island. I think at a younger age, I might have enjoyed it more, but I became impatient with it after trying to make progress for over a month.Finally, I took the bull by the horns and decided to skim read; when I read the last few chapters, I was very glad I hadn't put any more time into it. Imagine Charles Dickens at his most maudlin. Was Victor Hugo paid by the word? You cannot imagine how many words he used to tell a very small thing. I will admit that he uses words charmingly, even cleverly, but so many! It's like trying to eat a huge dense fruitcake. Glad that's over.
  • Évaluation : 5 sur 5 étoiles
    5/5
    The Toilers of the Sea is part travelogue, part love story, and part crime thriller. But above all it is an exciting and inspiring story of a man's lonely and desperate struggle for survival and success against the implacable forces of nature.The principal setting is the island of Guernsey, one of the Channel Isles off the French coast but belonging to England. Victor Hugo spent fifteen years in exile there, and wrote his novel while living on Guernsey. The first part of the novel is a detailed description of the islands with their unique history, culture, customs and myths.Most Guernseymen make their living from the sea, and the characters in the novel are no exception. Gilliatt is a man of many trades and talents, but principally a fisherman. He is a loner, not welcomed eagerly into Guernsey society not only because of his uncertain background, but also because he lives in a house believed to be haunted. Mess Lethierry, on the other hand, is a prosperous and respected merchant. The "Mess" is a local honorific denoting his high place in society. His livelihood comes from his ship, the Durande, the first--and still the only--steam-powered vessel based in the Channel Islands. Lastly there is Mess Lethierry's niece Déruchette who lives with him as his daughter. Beautiful and capricious, Déruchette is many a young man's object of adoration, but none more so than Gilliatt.From the introduction of the setting and the characters we move to a tale of intrigue surrounding a large sum of money once stolen from Mess Lethierry. A chain of events involving smugglers, murder, and betrayal leads to the climactic episode: a solitary man's protracted battle against the sea and its denizens.Victor Hugo writes with loving attention to every detail so that each scene comes alive. His prose is vibrant and passionate; the pages of background information he gives us are always fascinating and never boring. His most thrilling descriptions are of the sea itself, which becomes a metaphor for man's fate--neither good nor evil, but implacable, unpredictable, and inscrutable. This is a great novel that any fan of 19th century literature should enjoy.
  • Évaluation : 5 sur 5 étoiles
    5/5
    Imagine the perfect recipe, the perfect blend of elements. In many respects "The Toilers of the Sea" is that perfect blend. One part epic drama, one part satiric wit, one part ethnographic study of Guernsey Island in the mid 1800s, one part battle between man and nature, one part spiritual allegory, and the topping is two parts elegant prose. Yes, yes, it is a lot to take on, but Victor Hugo did it oh so well. How many authors can make long drawn out descriptive passages gripping? Hugo's prose is marvelous and his insight into human nature seems the result of astute, keen observation. This book, written during his exile on Guernsey Island, represents a veritable compendium of observation. His writing makes me want to hop a flight to Guernsey yesterday! I have witnessed storms such as Hugo describes and it sent shivers up my spine as he recaptured the sense of foreboding in the air just before a massive storm breaks!Drawbacks, unfortunately, they exist. Dialogue? Relationship between individuals? I get the sense that Hugo was aching with solitude and projected that into this novel. Character development is done really well, except that the characters rarely interact until the very end of the tale, and then quite superficially. If, as existentialists say, we are ultimately alone and judged by our actions, then this allegory is perfection itself!I loved it......
  • Évaluation : 4 sur 5 étoiles
    4/5
    How would you feel if someone you respect were to show you that one of your friends, whom you've liked and trusted for many years, is in fact a coward, hypocrite, backstabber, rapist and murderer? Troubled? Offended? Confused? Shocked? Sad? That's about how I felt when I was reading this book.

    That someone is Victor Hugo, and that friend of mine is the Ocean.

    Introduction

    Growing up on the coast, the ocean has been my friend since childhood. I have fond memories of countless hours spent on the beach, swimming, playing with sand castles, collecting shellfish and starfish, or watching the sunset over the distant horizon.

    This book by Hugo, Part III of a trilogy which also includes his two best-known works, Notre-Dame de Paris and Les Misérables, changed my perception to some extent of the ocean, man and the universe.

    One of the main reasons why Hugo was and is so popular is that there are so many layers and nuances of his views that people from different walks of life find themselves represented and vindicated by him, and all can enjoy his books on different levels. This book is a prime example.

    The Disney Story

    The story may be summarized in one sentence printed on the back cover of the book. It "tells of the reclusive Guernsey fisherman Gilliatt, who salvages the engine of a wrecked ship by performing great feats of engineering, matching wits with sea and storm, and doing battle with a great sea monster - all to win the hand of a shipowner's daughter." It would make a great sea adventure movie with a music soundtrack (e.g., Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony), sound and visual effects and spectacular cinematography.

    The One Man Iliad

    The epic battle between Gilliatt and the Ocean is portrayed in Homeric style. The Ocean seems to bear a grudge against Gilliatt and fights against him with fury, which reminds one of the battle between Odysseus and the sea god Poseidon in Odyssey, Achilles and the river god Scamander in Iliad.

    Hugo endows the Ocean with many human characteristics: how like a hypocrite she hides her secrets in caverns in which dwell man-eating monsters; how she overpowers her victims with bombardments of the waves and the wind like a coward; and if power fails, how she sneaks in on man through leaks, cracks and rusts like a backstabber.

    The struggle between Gilliatt and the Ocean is painted as a violent rape. The rapist is the Ocean. In the end, Gilliatt was completely naked and in submission. Many natural phenomena are depicted as either a slaughter or a coitus, even the close encounter between Gilliatt and the man-eating octopus, "You both become one".

    The Sufferer

    The battle between Gilliatt and the Ocean is an allegory of man's battle with Fate, the Unknown, in general, and Hugo's own life in particular. At the time of writing the novel, Hugo was in political exile on the Guernsey island, his ideal of social progress having suffered a shipwreck. He was alone and forlorn, so downcast that he deemed the island his tomb. Fate was the backstabbing hypocrite, and he was the victim. Nevertheless, he devoted himself to the battle of the pen, naked like Gilliatt.

    The Embracer

    By assigning human attributes to nature, in a sense, Hugo promoted an amoral worldview, where "Evil is an erasure on the page of creation". "There are embraces and antagonisms, the magnificent flow and ebb of a universal antithesis."

    Or, as it is written in the Ecclesiastes:

    There is a time for everything,
    and a season for every activity under heaven:
    a time to be born and a time to die,
    a time to kill and a time to heal,
    a time to weep and a time to laugh,
    a time to love and a time to hate,
    a time for war and a time for peace.

    The Ideal Man is one who embraces everything. "We feel the unknown that is within us fraternizing mysteriously with an unknown that is outside of us. ... to look at the stars and say, I'm a soul like you! to look at the darkness and say, I'm an abyss like you!"

    The ideal man conquers all with his will and intelligence. "Faith is only a secondary power; the will is the first. The mountains,which faith is proverbially said to move, are nothing beside that which the will can accomplish." This quote reminded me of Nietzsche's conception of Übermensch.

    Epilogue

    I went to see my friend the Ocean again. There was a strong wind, and few people were left on the beach that had been crowded with sunbathers only a day before. In the beautiful sunset, the Ocean danced before us.

  • Évaluation : 4 sur 5 étoiles
    4/5
    Hugo was a mystic, a visionary, a seer; he was one of the last of the Romantics as realism was coming into vogue; he was as Flaubert put it, “a pantheist with the sap of trees in his veins”. “The Toilers of the Sea” (1866) is the story of a lonely man’s battle with the ocean, and it feels Homeric in form. Hugo wrote the book while he was living in the British-ruled Channel Islands while in exile from France, and the book is clearly inspired by the seascape, lore, and people of Guernsey, who he dedicated the book to. One has to suspend disbelief while reading Hugo, for example, during the fight with the octopus, which we know today to be gentle and very shy creatures. If you can do that, and if you like his other more popular works, you should enjoy this book.Quotes:On charm:“There are on earth few more important functions than this: to be charming. The forest would be in despair without the humming-bird. To scatter joy, to beam with happiness, to possess amid somber things an exhalation of light, to be the gilding of destiny, to be harmony, to be grace, to be prettiness, is to render a service. “On the cosmos:“Night is the peculiar and normal state of the special creation of which we form a part. Daylight, brief in duration as in space, is but the proximity of a star.”On destiny:“Man participates in this movement of translation, and the amount of oscillation which he undergoes he calls destiny. Where does destiny begin? Where does nature end? What difference is there between an event and a season, between a grief and a shower, between a virtue and a star? Is not an hour a wave? The wheel-work continues, without replying to man, its impassive revolutions. The starry heaven is a vision of wheels, balances, and counterpoises.”“Life is a perpetual succession! We undergo it. We never know from what quarter fate’s abrupt descent will be made. Catastrophes and happiness enter, then depart, like unexpected personages. They have their law, their orbit, their gravitation, outside of man. Virtue does not bring happiness, crime does not bring unhappiness; conscience has one logic, fate has another; no coincidence. Nothing can be foreseen. We live pell-mell, and in confusion. Conscience is a straight line, life is a whirlwind. This whirlwind unexpectedly casts black chaos and blue skies upon the head of man.”On eating animals:“All beings enter into each other. To decay is to nourish…Man, a carnivorous animal, is also one who buries. Our life is made up of death. Such is the appalling law. We are sepulchres.”On God, and religion:“Chance having led him to hear a sermon on hell by the Reverend Jacquemin Herode, a magnificent sermon filled from one end to the other with sacred texts proving eternal pains, punishments, torments, damnations, inexorable chastisements, endless burnings, inextinguishable curses, the wrath of the Omnipotent, celestial furies, divine vengeances, incontestable facts, he was heard to say gently, as he was coming out with one of the faithful: ‘You see, I have such a queer idea, I imagine that God is good.’”On the human spirit:“Man, this short-lived being, this creature always surrounded by death, undertakes the infinite.”On the moment of truth:“One often encounters in deeds of devotions or duty, interrogation points which seem placed there by death. ‘Wilt thou do this?’ says the shadow.”On obstinacy:“The obstinate are the sublime. He who is merely brave acts from impulse…the man obstinate in the true sense has greatness. Nearly the whole secret of great hearts lies in this word, perseverando…Whatever the goal may be, in earth or heaven, the whole secret lies in proceeding to that goal…”On oneness:“There is a work of the whole composed of all the works of isolation being swept along towards a common goal, without even the workers’ knowledge, by the one great central soul.”
  • Évaluation : 4 sur 5 étoiles
    4/5
    The Toilers of the Sea is a bittersweet story, and while not in quite the vein of Hunchback and Les Mis it is still completely Victor Hugo. Gilliatt, the protagonist of this novel, undergoes what I can only compare to the mythical trials of Odysseus. In order to receive what he wants most, he must undertake the impossible. But, in the end, though he conquered wind and sea, battled monsters and his own failings, he forgot to anticipate the working of another human heart. His ending is both heartfelt and heartbreaking. Simply a lovely novel. While filled with typical Hugo over indulgence in descriptions, the final narrative is definitely worth the read.
  • Évaluation : 4 sur 5 étoiles
    4/5
    I had mixed feelings about this. The first 140 pages were quite colourful and absorbing, albeit complete with the lengthy digressions and evocative descriptions of buildings, especially old and dilapidated ones, that are typical of Hugo's prose. However, the next 140 pages were very dull and overblown, with endless description of rocks and sea and storms and a wrecked ship, with no characters other than the central one. After a while, I simply had to skim most of this section to get to the more interesting final section. That was worth it, with a bittersweet and tragic ending. So a mixed bag, a book of two halves, not in the same league as Les Miserables or Hunchback, but worth having got through in the end.