
BALZAC.
CHAPTER I. THE VAGARIES OF GENIUS.
CHAPTER II. THE COMÉDIE HUMAINE.
CHAPTER III. THE BUSKIN AND THE SOCK.
CHAPTER IV. THE CHASE FOR GOLD.
CHAPTER V. THE THINKER.
CHAPTER VI. BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Born in the quiet streets of Tours in 1799, the future literary titan grew up in a modest household where a red violin and a well‑worn Bible were his first companions. From an early age he devoured every book he could reach—science, philosophy, history—and his mind seemed to absorb whole passages in a single glance, turning him into a prodigy of memory and imagination. Yet the rigid school routine clashed with his dreamy nature, leading to endless punishments and a secret life spent in the library, where the seeds of his later masterpieces were sown.
At twelve he penned a daring treatise on will, only to have it confiscated, and then turned to poetry, channeling his restless intellect into verses about distant empires. A sudden nervous fever forced him home, where the quiet banks of the Loire and the grandeur of Saint‑Gatien Cathedral awakened in him a love of beauty and a deep religious faith. These formative experiences, layered with brilliance and bewilderment, set the stage for the monumental body of work that would later capture the complexities of human society.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (256K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2014-09-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1855–1921
Best known for his lush, sharp-edged prose, this American writer brought a decadent, cosmopolitan flair to late-19th-century fiction. His novels and essays mixed wit, skepticism, and a taste for the elegant and the provocative.
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by Edgar Saltus

by Edgar Saltus

by Edgar Saltus

by Edgar Saltus

by Edgar Saltus

by Edgar Saltus

by Edgar Saltus

by Edgar Saltus