He is the prophet of modern times, before which all others seem mute. He rails better than the prophets; His fire feeds on all the dung of our time.
Franz Kafka
Some have defined Léon Bloy (1846-1917) as a “right-wing anarchist”, the truth is that he is unclassifiable and many things can be said about him, unless he is a complacent writer. Bloy was born in Périgueux to an anticlerical, Mason and Voltairean father and a Catholic mother, and these extremes seem to have been reflected in his radical and virulent nature. In his youth he was a militant atheist, a true enemy of Christ and the Church. However, very soon, under the influence of the writer Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly, whom he met around 1868 and who would be his mentor and protector, he converted to Catholicism, a belief that he would live with great intensity and commitment until the very end. end of his days.
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