An edition of Pybrac (1994)

Pybrac

Pybrac
Pierre Louÿs, Pierre Louÿs
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Last edited by Erraticonteuse
July 24, 2023 | History
An edition of Pybrac (1994)

Pybrac

"In turns amusing and offensive, Pierre Louÿs' Pybrac is possibly the filthiest collection of poetry ever published, and offers a taste of what the Marquis de Sade might have produced if he had ever turned his hand to verse. First published posthumously in 1927, Pybrac was, with The Young Girl's Handbook of Good Manners, one of the first of Louÿs' secret erotic manuscripts to see clandestine publication. Composed of 313 rhymed alexandrine quatrains, the majority of them starting with the phrase 'I do not like to see ..., ' Pybrac is in form a mockery of sixteenth-century chancellor poet Guy Du Faur, Seigneur de Pibrac, whose moralizing quatrains were common literary fare for young French readers until the nineteenth century. Louÿs spent his life coming up with his own evergrowing collection of rhymed moral precepts (suitable only for adult readers): a dizzying litany describing everything he 'disliked' witnessing, from lesbianism, sodomy, incest, and prostitution to perversions extreme enough to give even a modern reader pause. With the rest of his erotic manuscripts, the original collection of over 2,000 quatrains was auctioned off and scattered throughout private collections; but like everything erotic, what remains collected here conveys an impression of unending absurdity and near hypnotic obsession."--Back cover.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
142

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Pybrac
Pybrac
2017, Independently Published
in French
Cover of: Pybrac
Pybrac
2014
in English
Cover of: Pybrac
Pybrac
1994, Climats
in French
Cover of: Pybrac
Pybrac
January 1, 1994, Climats
Paperback in French

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references.

Parallel text in French and English.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
841/.912
Library of Congress
PQ2623.O8 P9 2014, PQ2623.O8P9 2014, PQ2623.O8 P9313 2014

The Physical Object

Pagination
xi, 142 pages
Number of pages
142

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL27172502M
ISBN 10
1939663024
ISBN 13
9781939663023
OCLC/WorldCat
881683154, 859579460

Work Description

In turns amusing and offensive, Pierre Louÿs' Pybrac is possibly the filthiest collection of poetry ever published, and offers a taste of what the Marquis de Sade might have produced if he had ever turned his hand to verse. First published posthumously in 1927, Pybrac was, with The Young Girl's Handbook of Good Manners, one of the first of Louÿs' secret erotic manuscripts to see clandestine publication. Composed of 313 rhymed alexandrine quatrains, the majority of them starting with the phrase 'I do not like to see ..., ' Pybrac is in form a mockery of sixteenth-century chancellor poet Guy Du Faur, Seigneur de Pibrac, whose moralizing quatrains were common literary fare for young French readers until the nineteenth century. Louÿs spent his life coming up with his own evergrowing collection of rhymed moral precepts (suitable only for adult readers): a dizzying litany describing everything he 'disliked' witnessing, from lesbianism, sodomy, incest, and prostitution to perversions extreme enough to give even a modern reader pause. With the rest of his erotic manuscripts, the original collection of over 2,000 quatrains was auctioned off and scattered throughout private collections; but like everything erotic, what remains collected here conveys an impression of unending absurdity and near hypnotic obsession.

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July 24, 2023 Edited by Erraticonteuse Edited without comment.
April 18, 2011 Edited by Lestevenon Edited without comment.
December 10, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page