Frédérique, vol. 1

audiobook

Frédérique, vol. 1

by Paul de Kock

EN·~10 hours·34 chapters

Chapters

34 total
1

Copyright 1905 by G. Barrie & Sons

0:23
2

NOVELS BY Paul de Kock VOLUME V FRÉDÉRIQUE VOL. I

1:19
3

I A GENTLEMEN'S DINNER AT DEFFIEUX'S

25:37
4

II THE CHAPTER OF CONFIDENCES.—THREE SOUS

11:11
5

III BLIND-MAN'S-BUFF.—AT THE WINDOWS.—IN A BALLOON

13:19
6

IV THE LOST KEY

12:42
7

V FILLETTES, GRISETTES, AND LORETTES

18:15
8

VI MONSIEUR FOUVENARD'S BONNE FORTUNE.—THE GINGERBREAD WOMAN

17:41
9

VII MADEMOISELLE MIGNONNE

8:08
10

VIII AN EXPEDIENT

13:55

Description

A lively dinner at the Deffieux household becomes the stage for a witty, slightly scandalous debate about love and honesty. The narrator, a charming yet incurious gentleman, shares his candid view that a man could love many women at once, sparking a cascade of sarcastic retorts and amused whispers among the assembled guests. Through their banter, the novel paints a vivid portrait of Parisian society, where reputation and appearances often outweigh true feeling.

The conversation quickly turns to the paradox of fidelity: is a faithful lover a bore, or does inconstancy hold its own allure? As the characters volley opinions on kisses, noses, and the art of seduction, the story captures the delicate dance between sincerity and deceit that defines their social world. With humor and keen observation, the opening promises a series of entertaining episodes that explore the complexities of romance, reputation, and the ever‑present tension between public façade and private desire.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (579K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images available at The Internet Archive)

Release date

2011-12-17

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Paul de Kock

Paul de Kock

1793–1871

A hugely popular storyteller in 19th-century Europe, he filled his novels with lively scenes of everyday Paris and a strong taste for comedy. His books may have divided critics, but readers kept returning for their energy, humor, and street-level view of city life.

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