Maurice Magre
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2021) |
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French. (January 2021) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Maurice Magre (Occitan: Maurici Magre; 2 March 1877 - 11 December 1941) was a French writer, poet, and playwright.[1][2]
He was an ardent defender of
Cathars in the 13th century. For his historical novels on Catharism, Magre is particularly in line with the historian Napoléon Peyrat
, in the sense that the author often prefers legends and the romantic epic to historical truth.
Novels
- L'Appel de la bête (1920)
- Les Colombes poignardées (1917)
- La Tendre Camarade (1918)
- Priscilla d'Alexandrie (1925)
- La Vie amoureuse de Messaline (1925)
- La Vie des Courtisanes (1925)
- La Luxure de Grenade (1926)
- Le Mystère du Tigre (1927)
- Lucifer (1929)
- La Nuit de haschich et d'opium (1929)
- La Lumière de la Chine. Le Roman de Confucius (1927)
- Le Sang de Toulouse. Histoire albigeoise du XIIème siècle (1931)
- Le Trésor des Albigeois (1938)
- Un Français à la cour de l'empereur Akbar. Jean de Fodoas (1939)
- Histoire merveilleuse de Claire d'Amour.
- L'Art de séduire les femmes (1929)
- Le Poison de Goa (1928)
Poetry
- La Chanson des hommes (1898)
- Le Poème de la jeunesse (1901)
- Les Lèvres et le secret (1905-1906)
- Les Belles de Nuit (1913)
- La Montée aux enfers. Poésies (1918)
- La Porte du mystère (1924)
- Le Parc des Rossignols (1940)
References
- ^ Robert Aribaut (1987). Maurice Magre, un méridional universel. Editions Midia.
- ^ "The Call of the Beast". August 1, 2017 – via bookshop.org.
External links
- Maurice Magre; Wikisource