Alexandre Dumas — "All for one and one for all, united we stand divided we fall."
All for one and one for all, united we stand divided we fall.
All for one and one for all, united we stand divided we fall.
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"The pen is mightier than the sword."
"The greatest pleasure in life is to do what people say you cannot do."
"There is neither happiness nor misery in the world; there is only the comparison of one state with another, nothing more."
"Life is a storm, my young friend. You will bask in the sunlight one moment, be shattered on the rocks the next."
"A man who has no illusions is the most disillusioned of all."
French Romantic novelist whose The Three Musketeers (1844) and The Count of Monte Cristo (1844-46) defined the historical-adventure novel and were translated into more languages than any other French author. Closely associated with Victor Hugo (French Romantic peer and Les Misérables author). For an intellectual contrast, see Gustave Flaubert, French realist novelist (1821-1880) — Flaubert's Madame Bovary (1856) replaced Dumas's swashbuckling adventure with psychological-realist detail — Flaubert's three-month searches for the right adjective are the precise opposite of Dumas's serial-installment plot-machine. French literature pivoted from Romantic to Realist in a single generation, with Dumas and Flaubert as the cleanest poles.
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