A martyr to bibliography : $b A notice of the life and works of Joseph-Marie Quérard, bibliographer.

Languageen
First published2025-11-10
RightsPublic domain in the USA.
Gutenberg ID#77210

Description

L'espionne by Ernest Daudet is a novel written in the late 19th century. It likely follows a woman operating as a spy amid political and social intrigues, balancing clandestine duty with personal loyalties. Expect themes of deception, surveillance, and sacrifice set against a milieu of power and high society. The opening of the provided text presents a 19th-century biographical notice of the French bibliographer Joseph-Marie Quérard, introduced with a dedication to Antonio Panizzi and a preface expressing indignation at how Quérard was neglected despite monumental service to letters. It sketches his humble beginnings, early immersion in the book trade, formative years in Vienna, and the creation of La France Littéraire, while recounting bureaucratic slights, blocked appointments, and financial hardship. The narrative catalogs his principal works and ventures (including journals and the influential, scandal-stirring Les Supercheries Littéraires Dévoilées), his disputes with publishers that cost him ownership and income, and the lifeline offered by the patron Serge Poltoratzky. Overall, the excerpt frames Quérard as a tireless, exacting scholar who became a “martyr to bibliography,” battling institutional indifference and pettiness while building indispensable tools for literary history. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Subjects

  • Quérard, Joseph Marie, 1797-1865
  • Z

Read & Download

Read Online