il n"en est rien! - meaning and definition. What is il n"en est rien!
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What (who) is il n"en est rien! - definition

BOOK BY VINTILA HORIA
Dieu est ne en exil; Dieu est né en exil

Il est cinq heures, Paris s'éveille         
  • [[Place Dauphine]], mentioned in the first line of the song.
ORIGINAL SONG COMPOSED BY JACQUES DUTRONC, LYRICS BY JACQUES LANZMANN AND ANNE SÉGALEN; FIRST RECORDED BY JACQUES DUTRONC
Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Il est cinq heures, Paris s'éveille; Il est cinq heures, Paris s'eveille
"Il est cinq heures, Paris s'éveille" (English: "It is five o'clock, Paris awakens") is the sixth single by the French singer-songwriter Jacques Dutronc, released in 1968. It appears on his second self-titled album (also known as Il est cinq heures).
Jacques Dutronc (1968 album)         
1968 SELF-TITLED STUDIO ALBUM BY JACQUES DUTRONC
Il est cinq heures (album)
Jacques Dutronc is the second studio album by the French singer-songwriter Jacques Dutronc, released in 1968. Since Dutronc's first seven albums are all self-titled, the album is commonly referred to by the title Il est cinq heures, after one of its singles.
Non, je ne regrette rien         
1960 SONG BY ÉDITH PIAF
Je ne regrette rien; Je Ne Regrette Rien; Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien; Non, rien de rien; Non je ne regrette rien; No Regrets (Edith Piaf song)
"Non, je ne regrette rien" (, meaning "No, I do not regret anything") is a French song composed in 1956 by Charles Dumont, with lyrics by Michel Vaucaire. Édith Piaf's 1960 recording spent seven weeks atop the French Singles & Airplay Reviews chart.

Wikipedia

God Was Born in Exile

God Was Born in Exile (French: Dieu est né en exil) is a novel by Romanian author Vintilă Horia, for which he was awarded the Prix Goncourt in 1960, though he was never handed the prize following allegations that surfaced after his nomination that he had once been a member of the Iron Guard.

The novel's narrator is Ovid, the Roman poet, and this apocryphal work is rather similar to Marguerite Yourcenar's Mémoires d'Hadrien in which Yourcenar writes the Roman emperor Hadrian's mémoires.

In God Was Born in Exile, "Ovid" covers the last eight years of his life, when he was exiled to Tomis, an Ancient Roman colony in Scythia Minor. This novel adopts the form of a diary, divided into eight chapters (each of which corresponds to a year of exile) that reveal the steps of a progressive "maturation," or a conversion of sorts.

The novel's universe is linked together around a primordial axis whose two poles are Roman society and the Dacian world, respectively. This dichotomy generates a rich range of metaphors, but perhaps this novel's most important attribute is the way in which both worlds are constructed, and their importance as "chronotopes" in the narrative. Ovid's spiritual journey resolves itself between both symbolic universes whose antagonistic characters become interwoven during a chiasm, in order to rise up again at the end of the radically metamorphized narration.