Henri Frédéric Amiel (1821–1881)
Autor de Diario íntimo (1839-1850) / Henri-Frédéric Amiel ; [traducción de Gonzalo Torrente Malvido]
Sobre El Autor
Créditos de la imagen: From Wikipedia
Portrait of Amiel by Joseph Hornung, 1852.
Obras de Henri Frédéric Amiel
Diario íntimo (1839-1850) / Henri-Frédéric Amiel ; [traducción de Gonzalo Torrente Malvido] (1882) 96 copias
Uneksijan päiväkirja 4 copias
Fragments d'un Journal Intime 3 copias
Journal intime; l'anneé 1857 2 copias
Päiväkirja 2 copias
Fragments d'un journal intime 2 copias
Blader av en dagbok 1 copia
Z denníku Amielova 1 copia
Jean Jacques Rousseau 1 copia
Frammenti di un giornale intimo 1 copia
Journal intime tome XII 1 copia
Journal intime, tome 4 1 copia
Fragments d'un Journal Intime, Vol. 1: Précédés d'une Étude (Classic Reprint) (French Edition) (2017) 1 copia
Amiel's Journal Volume 2 1 copia
Journal intime, tome 5 1 copia
Fragments d'un journal intime précédés d'une étude par Edmond Scherer - 13 e édition - Tome 2 1 copia
Journal intime, tome 6 1 copia
Journal intime, tome 7 1 copia
Journal intime, tome 8 1 copia
Journal intime, tome 9 1 copia
Blader av en dagbok 1 copia
Diário Íntimo -- Fragmentos 1 copia
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
- Nombre canónico
- Amiel, Henri Frédéric
- Otros nombres
- Amiel, Henri-Fridiric
- Fecha de nacimiento
- 1821-09-27
- Fecha de fallecimiento
- 1881-05-11
- Género
- male
- Nacionalidad
- Switzerland
- Ocupaciones
- philosopher
poet
critic
Miembros
Reseñas
Listas
Premios
También Puede Gustarte
Autores relacionados
Estadísticas
- Obras
- 45
- Miembros
- 162
- Popularidad
- #130,374
- Valoración
- 3.8
- Reseñas
- 2
- ISBNs
- 46
- Idiomas
- 6
As early as 1851 he had a premonition of his ultimate lack of production if he did not act soon. "A shiver seizes us when the ranks grow thin around us, when age is stealing upon us, when we approach the zenith, and what destiny says to us 'Show what is in thee! Now is the moment, now is the hour, else fall back into nothingness! ... Show us what thou hast done with thy talent.' " Later in 1870, he charges his critical, intellectual faculty with having subsumed his creative force. His explanation which I found most affecting relates to what the author Anne Pratchett once described, that writing is the frustrating act of snatching a gorgeous butterfly (the idea) and crucifying it with a pin in hopes of thereby sharing the glory of that vision of its flight with others - conveying, in fact, only a shadow of that vision. I see shades of this in Amiel's unwillingness to commit himself to grander writing exploits because of the potential disturbance to his contentment, his sensation of enjoying living. It would turn his thoughts dark to confront discomforting facts about surrounding reality - politics of his day, religion, science - which did not hold a candle to the elation of retaining his thoughts and sensations internally rather than trying to formulate them in a way that would inevitably evade capture. He wanted to leave his butterflies fluttering.
There's little to indicate he took comfort in at least leaving this journal as his record, or had any intentional plan to do so. He shares no explanation for his habit of recording these sporadic entries over several decades. At one point he does cite another author's journal uncovered in postmortem and the sensation that it caused, but if he dared imagine the same achievement for his own he doesn't state it. At one point he even derides the time he's spent upon it: "This journal of mine represents the material of a good many volumes: what prodigious waste of time, of thought, of strength!"
There's scraps of wisdom and highlights to be had that suggest what he might have chosen to focus on if he'd done otherwise. I appreciate his thinking about how important it is to balance the intellectual life with being open to the wonder of daily, playful experience as the actual act of living. This meshes well with his many entries about the wonders and splendor of nature, literally smelling the flowers along the way. I appreciated his wrestling with love and loneliness. I am sure if he had applied himself, it would have been to a work of theocracy or philosophy. He offers a cogent argument for why philosophy cannot easily be substituted for religion, indicating he had the two subjects firmly delineated in his mind. But always he returns to the recognition that time has slipped past him as he admires the great works of others (Hugo's Les Miserables among them), separately noting that "A man esteems most highly what he himself lacks, and exaggerates what he longs to possess."
He writes that he did not pursue marriage because he did not find his one great love. Perhaps he did not write his one great work because he similarly could not settle on his subject? In this telling he becomes a man who waited for ideal moments that never arrived, and consequently was passed by on all fronts. It does not seem to be the story he told himself. Despite regret, there's the sense that Amiel enjoyed his life. He appreciated nature, appreciated art, appreciated others' wisdom, and always maintained an optimistic outlook and a strong faith which bolstered him through every trial: "Do all the good you can, and say all the truth you know or believe; and for the rest be patient, resigned, submissive. God does his business, do yours." He does not shift from this attitude, never assumes a deeper remorse, not even towards the journal's end when he feels fatal illness overtaking him. Putting aside the day-to-day enjoyment of limited mortality for the labour and sake of producing a legacy was not worth the exchange. I believe he found this unconscious decision understandable and inarguable, and died satisfied. How can anyone say he chose wrongly?… (más)