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The text itselfy [Note 4] is marked "Discours sur les passions de l'amour - on l'attribue à M. Pascal". [6] The library's catalogue of manuscripts also mentions, at entry 74, a "Discours sur les passions de l'amour, par M. Pascal". For Cousin, there was no doubt that the twenty-page text was authentic: "From the first sentence, I felt Pascal ...
Love and the Frenchwoman is the US title of a 1960 French anthology film originally entitled La française et l'amour. It starred Jean-Paul Belmondo and Dany Robin . The movie was a big hit in France with admissions of 3,056,736.
La vie catholique (2 volumes). (1921). La Vie Intellectuelle, son Esprit, ses Conditions, ses Méthodes. (1921). L'Église (2 volumes). (1921) L'amour chrétien. (1928). Les Idées et les Jours: propos de Senex (2 volumes). (1930). L'Orateur Chrétien: Traité de Prédication. (1941). Hommes, mes Frères. (1939-1941) Le Christianisme et les ...
1913 La Vie et l'Amour; 1914 Le Palais Palmacamini; 1918 La France et ses morts; 1924 Notes de voyage : En Chine (1920-1921), 2 vol. 1926 Éloge de l'ignorance; 1926 La vie amoureuse d'Henri Beyle; 1927 L'Enfance; 1928 L'Amitié; 1928 L'Argent; 1929 Saint François d'Assise; 1931 Rome; 1936 Le drame du présent : Les Modérés; 1937 Savoir aimer
" Plaisir d'amour" ([plɛ.ziʁ da.muʁ], "Pleasure of love") is a classical French love song written in 1784 by Jean-Paul-Égide Martini (1741–1816); it took its text from a poem by Jean-Pierre Claris de Florian (1755–1794), which appears in his novel Célestine.
1729: La Nouvelle Colonie lost and then rewritten in 1750 with the title of La Colonie; 1730: Le Jeu de l'Amour et du Hasard (The Game of Love and Chance) 1731: La Réunion des Amours; 1732: Le Triomphe de l'amour (The Triumph of Love) 1732: Les Serments indiscrets (Careless Vows) 1732: L'École des mères; 1733: L'Heureux Stratagème ...
Amour-propre (French: [amuʁ pʁɔpʁ]; lit. ' self-love ' ) is a French term that can be variously translated as "self-love", "self-esteem", or "vanity". In philosophy, it is a term used by Jean-Jacques Rousseau , who contrasts it with another kind of self-love, which he calls amour de soi .
" Hymne à l'amour" (French pronunciation: [imn a lamuʁ]), or Hymn to Love, is a 1949 French song with lyrics by Édith Piaf and music by Marguerite Monnot. It was first sung by Piaf that year and recorded by her in the 1950s for Columbia records. Piaf sang it in the 1951 French musical comedy film Paris chante toujours (Paris still sings). [1]