Fenelon: Telemachus

Frangois de Fenelon

Fenelon: Telemachus
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
14 November 1994
Pages
380
ISBN
9780521450423

Fenelon: Telemachus

Frangois de Fenelon

Fenelon’s Telemachus (1699) is, alongside Bossuet’s Politics, the most important work of political theory of the grand siecle in France. It was also the most widely read work of the time, influencing Montesquieu and Rousseau in its attempt to combine monarchism with republican virtues. Fenelon tells of the moral and political education of Telemachus, young son of Ulysses, by his tutor Mentor (the goddess Minerva in disguise). Telemachus visits every corner of the Mediterranean world and learns patience, courage, modesty and simplicity, the qualities he will need when he succeeds Ulysses as King of Ithaca. It is the story of the transformation of an egoistic young man into a model ruler, and is meant (among other things) as a commentary on the bellicosity and luxuriousness of Louis XIV. The present English edition follows closely that of Tobias Smollett published in 1776.

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