La comédie humaine of Honoré de Balzac

by Honoré de Balzac

Other authorsKatharine Prescott Wormeley (Translator), Jeanniot (Illustrator)
Hardcover, 1900

Status

Available

Publication

Boston, Hardy, Pratt, & Co., 1900. 42 vol.

Description

Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: THE VENDETTA Dedicated to Puttinati, Sculptor at Milan. In the year 1800, towards the end of October, a stranger, having with him a woman and a little girl, made his appearance in front of the Tuileries Palace, and stood for some little time close to the ruins of a house, then recently pulled down, on the spot where the wing is still unfinished which was intended to join Catherine de' Medici's Palace to the Louvre built by the Valois. There he stood, his arms folded, his head bent, raising it now and again to look at the Consul's Palace, or at his wife, who sat on a stone by his side. Though the stranger seemed to think only of the little girl of nine or ten, whose black hair was a plaything in his fingers, the woman lost none of the glances shot at her by her companion. A common feeling, other than love, united these two beings, and a common thought animated their thoughts and their actions. Misery is perhaps the strongest of all bonds. The man had one of those broad, solemn-looking heads, with a mass of hair, of which so many examples have been perpetuated by the Carracci. Among the thick black locks were many white hairs. His features, though fine and proud, had a set hardness which spoiled them. In spite of his powerful and upright frame, he seemed to be more than sixty years of age. His clothes, which were dilapidated, betrayed his foreign origin. The woman's face, formerly handsome, but now faded, bore a stamp of deep melancholy, though, when her husband looked at her, she forced herself to smile, and affected a calm expression. The little girl was standing, in spite of the fatigue that was written on her small sunburned face. She had Italian features, large black eyes under well-arched eyebrows, a native dignity and genuine grace. More than one passer-by was ...… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Zohrab
Balzac does not need reviews. I have not read the entire Comedie but read "Aunt Betty" Great volume for young adults to read in order to understand women power and seduction

Language

Original language

French

Local notes

The Cour de France Edition, no. 506 out of 1250 numbered sets.
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