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A lone figure trudges through a moonless, wind‑swept plain, his breath visible in the icy March air. He carries a small bundle, his only possession, and hopes the dawn will bring warmth and work. The road leads him past flickering beacons and the looming silhouette of a coal‑filled pit, a stark reminder of the region’s grim industry. As he draws near the mining settlement of Montsou, the oppressive darkness of the landscape mirrors his own uncertainty.
He meets an older charwoman and a weary horse, who reluctantly acknowledge his presence and confirm the scarcity of jobs for a machine‑operator like him. The miners’ faces, hardened by endless toil, hint at a simmering collective fatigue that goes beyond individual hardship. Amid the clang of machinery and the ever‑present plume of smoke, the narrative begins to explore how desperation can bind strangers together, setting the stage for a struggle that reaches far beyond the pit itself.
Language
fr
Duration
~17 hours (1000K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1840–1902
A fearless French novelist and journalist, he helped define literary naturalism with vivid, unflinching stories about ordinary lives. His work also made him a major public voice during the Dreyfus Affair, showing how literature and conscience could meet.
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