22. The Very Horrific Life of Great Gargantua, father of Pantagruel - Chapter XLVI: ‘How Grangousier did very kindly entertain Touchfaucet his prisoner’ (1534) by François Rabelais (c.1494-c.1553)

Portrait of François Rabelais by an unidentified painter. Image credit: Wikipedia The French author François Rabelais gave us the word ‘gargantuan’, from Gargantua, the name of one of the giants whose adventures he describes in four books published between the 1530s and the 1550s. He also gave us the word ‘rabelaisian’, generally taken to describe coarse humour. Illustration by the French artist Gustave Doré (1832-83) for the works of Rabelais (1854). Image credit: www.gutenberg.org But Rabelais has serious things to say about the big issues of his time, including war and peace. Sometimes they are disguised, but in this extract from one of the books the message is clear. Illustration by the French artist Gustave Doré (1832-83) for the works of Rabelais (1854). Image credit: www.gutenberg.org The book published in 1534 and translated into English by Sr Thomas Urquhart as The Very Horrific Life of Great Gargantua deals largely with the Picrocholine war. Garga...