It remains for our learned people to resolve, as was done by Luther, Bacon and Erasamus, Rabelais and Montaigne. |
|
Rabelais wrote Gargantua here, in this city devoted to the most pantagruelian of pleasures. |
|
Rabelais continually returns to the indolence and gulosity of the friars. |
|
I esteeme Bocace his Decameron, Rabelais, and the kisses of John the second worth the paines-taking to reade them. |
|
Swift, a literary satirist like Rabelais, demolishes the illusion of the grace and delicacy of women with his scatalogical poems. |
|
Rabelais daringly adopts such Platonic principles as, for instance, traducianism, which Gauna sees in Gargantua's letter. |
|