
CONFESSIONS - OF A... - YOUNG MAN
CONFESSIONS OF A YOUNG MAN - By GEORGE MOORE. 1886. - Edited and Annotated by GEORGE MOORE, 1904,
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A self‑conscious young narrator opens his diary with a flourish of poetic melancholy, comparing his fading youth to an ancient Egyptian soul being embalmed. His voice wavers between earnest confession and witty satire, offering glimpses of a mind that feels perpetually reborn, as if each encounter is both familiar and astonishingly new. The prose is peppered with literary references, occasional French verses, and a playful self‑awareness that invites listeners to share his bewilderment at the world’s lingering mysteries.
The early pages set a tone of gentle irony, as the writer muses on memory, the passage of time, and the absurdities of everyday life—like missing a train stop and confronting the quirks of society’s “coarse” fabrics. Listeners will be drawn into his earnest quest to capture the fleeting moments of his formative years, all while appreciating the delicate balance between earnestness and humor that defines the work’s first act.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (360K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jon Ingram, David Cavanagh and Distributed Proofreaders
Release date
2004-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1852–1933
An Irish writer who helped bring French-style realism and naturalism into English-language fiction, he was also a sharp-eyed critic and memoirist with one foot in Paris and the other in Ireland. Best known now for novels like Esther Waters, he spent his career testing new ways to write about art, society, and inner life.
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by George Moore

by George Moore

by George Moore

by George Moore

by George Moore

by George Moore

by George Moore

by George Moore