Hugo's status as a great poet and dramatist above his work as a novelist in France is my understanding as well. I have heard it said by French posters on this board that he is held in greater esteem than Baudelaire, I believe primarily for his epic The Legend of the Ages, which sadly I have not read. However, I have read Les Miserables and I personally feel it is a better book than Tolstoy's War and Peace. I wouldn't say that Hugo was surpassed by Flaubert and Balzac so much as I'd say that their shorter novels were more focused and had fewer flaws, as shorter novels tend to do. In fact, when I read Hugo's Les Miserables it looked like he was trying to synthesize Balzac and Dickens with some of the Romantic flavor of Flaubert thrown in. The revolutionary struggle bore a strong resemblance to Dicken's Tale of Two Cities, and the ending felt like Hugo's version of Balzac's Father Goriot. But the overall structure I felt was Dante's Divine Comedy, the progression of a sinner to a saint. Plus, the man just had fantastic style. You wanted to read the next page or chapter. It was always a pleasure that paced itself well and didn't drag. In that respect, I suppose it was kind of like Dumas' Three Musketeers. There was so much incident, a real storehouse of invention, seldom equaled except by Lope De Vega, Shakespeare, or Ariosto.
There are a couple of ways to compare different countries' production. We could write the countries names out and then list their great writers. Another way, which I did several years ago when this thread was young is to place the great epics, novels, tragedies, comedies or other genres side by side. But the one I'd favor at the present time is one that takes into account the manner in which empires wax and wane. The center of power shifts, and a country once great for it's literary output is great no more. I think of successive golden ages: the Greeks, then the Romans, Italians during the Renaissance, British during Elizabethan times, the French during Louis XIV, etc. They are hothouse flowers flourishing at different hours.


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Rome was a dominium with two major languages (at least), so I'll let those who wrote in Greek into my canon in any case. 

