Your cart

Your cart is empty


Explore our range of products

15% off

Unicorn Publishing Group Paperback English

Saint-Simon in Spain 1721-1722

An Odyssey

By Vincent Pitts

Regular price £25.00 £21.25 Save 15%
Unit price
per
15% off

Unicorn Publishing Group Paperback English

Saint-Simon in Spain 1721-1722

An Odyssey

By Vincent Pitts

Regular price £25.00 £21.25 Save 15%
Unit price
per
 
Dispatched today with FREE Tracked Delivery
Delivery expected between Wednesday, 10th June and Thursday, 11th June
(0 in cart)
Apple Pay
Google Pay
Maestro
Mastercard
PayPal
Shop Pay
Visa

You may also like

  • The duc de Saint-Simon’s memoirs of the last decades of Louis XIV’s reign and the regency of Philippe d’Orléans are considered a masterpiece of the genre and one of the glories of French literature. His accounts of the dramatic events he witnessed have informed historians for generations, while his literary portraits have influenced French authors from Sainte-Beuve to Proust.In 1721 Saint-Simon travelled to Spain as Ambassador Extraordinary to solicit the hand of a Spanish princess for the young king Louis XV. Although his mission comes very late in his long narrative, that experience looms large in his account of earlier events, hidden in plain sight, and enriched by it.The nineteenth-century essayist Sainte-Beuve dubbed Saint-Simon ‘the little duke with the penetrating eye'. Readers of this book can decide for themselves how penetrating an eye the little duke could bring to bear on his contemporaries, and on himself.
The duc de Saint-Simon’s memoirs of the last decades of Louis XIV’s reign and the regency of Philippe d’Orléans are considered a masterpiece of the genre and one of the glories of French literature. His accounts of the dramatic events he witnessed have informed historians for generations, while his literary portraits have influenced French authors from Sainte-Beuve to Proust.In 1721 Saint-Simon travelled to Spain as Ambassador Extraordinary to solicit the hand of a Spanish princess for the young king Louis XV. Although his mission comes very late in his long narrative, that experience looms large in his account of earlier events, hidden in plain sight, and enriched by it.The nineteenth-century essayist Sainte-Beuve dubbed Saint-Simon ‘the little duke with the penetrating eye'. Readers of this book can decide for themselves how penetrating an eye the little duke could bring to bear on his contemporaries, and on himself.