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- Le_Pape abstract "Le Pape ("The Pope") was a political tract in verse by Victor Hugo, supporting Christianity but attacking the rigid organization of the Catholic Church. Although written in 1874-5, it was not published until 29 April 1878, two months after the beginning of the papacy of Leo XIII. Leo's predecessor, Pius IX, had revealed deep divisions in the Church with his definition of the dogma of papal infallibility in July 1870. Hugo had long disliked Pius because of his support for Napoleon III, commenting in his diary:Pope Pius IX is simple, mild-mannered, timid, fearful, slow-moving, negligent of his person. He usually goes around with two or three days' growth of beard, which gives him a disreputable appearance. Like Charles X, he emits more smiles than words. You'd think he was a country curé. [...] Just at present, Pius IX is spending his time writing a book on the mystery of the Immaculate Conception. [...] the immaculate conception of the Holy Virgin, grog with a pretty Englishwoman -- those are the things that occupy Pius IX in Rome and Louis Bonaparte in Paris. Those are the things that fill two brains on which the fate of Europe is hanging.Pius IX was to place Les Misérables (1862) on the Index of Forbidden Books in 1864, where it remained until 1959. Notre Dame de Paris had been banned in 1834.The work, a closet drama, depicts an unnamed pope falling asleep, and having a dream in which he participates in a pageant of scenes which represent generic situations in human history. Through a sequence of discussions and soliloquies, the Pope reevaluates his beliefs, and concludes by giving a speech in which condemns war and capital punishment, endorses the Republican ideals of Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité, and, in instructing the people to love one another, asserts that he abandons Rome for Jerusalem and Caesar for Christ.The poem ends with an ironic envoi in which the Pope awakens and shakes off his momentary insight.".
- Le_Pape wikiPageID "3470572".
- Le_Pape wikiPageLength "2486".
- Le_Pape wikiPageOutDegree "20".
- Le_Pape wikiPageRevisionID "667573663".
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Category:1878_poems.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Category:Poetry_by_Victor_Hugo.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_Church.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Charles_X.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Charles_X_of_France.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Christianity.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Closet_drama.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Dogmatic_definition.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Envoi.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Immaculate_Conception.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Index_Librorum_Prohibitorum.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Index_of_Forbidden_Books.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Leo_XIII.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Les_Misérables.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Liberté,_Égalité,_Fraternité.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Liberté,_égalité,_fraternité.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Napoleon_III.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Papal_infallibility.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Pius_IX.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Pope.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Pope_Leo_XIII.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Pope_Pius_IX.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Soliloquy.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink The_Hunchback_of_Notre-Dame.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink The_Hunchback_of_Notre_Dame.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink The_Pope.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLink Victor_Hugo.
- Le_Pape wikiPageWikiLinkText "Le Pape".
- Le_Pape hasPhotoCollection Le_Pape.
- Le_Pape wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Christian-book-stub.
- Le_Pape wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italictitle.
- Le_Pape wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Poetry-stub.
- Le_Pape wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quote.
- Le_Pape wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Victor_Hugo.
- Le_Pape wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Wikisourcelang.
- Le_Pape subject Category:1878_poems.
- Le_Pape subject Category:Poetry_by_Victor_Hugo.
- Le_Pape hypernym Tract.
- Le_Pape type Book.
- Le_Pape type Place.
- Le_Pape type Work.
- Le_Pape type Book.
- Le_Pape type Collection.
- Le_Pape type Work.
- Le_Pape comment "Le Pape ("The Pope") was a political tract in verse by Victor Hugo, supporting Christianity but attacking the rigid organization of the Catholic Church. Although written in 1874-5, it was not published until 29 April 1878, two months after the beginning of the papacy of Leo XIII. Leo's predecessor, Pius IX, had revealed deep divisions in the Church with his definition of the dogma of papal infallibility in July 1870.".
- Le_Pape label "Le Pape".
- Le_Pape sameAs Le_Pape_(Hugo).
- Le_Pape sameAs m.09f692.
- Le_Pape sameAs Q3225182.
- Le_Pape sameAs Q3225182.
- Le_Pape wasDerivedFrom Le_Pape?oldid=667573663.
- Le_Pape isPrimaryTopicOf Le_Pape.