
LA CHAIR ET LE SANG
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Claude Favereau steps off the seminary’s polished routine and boards a languid, countryside train that winds along the Garonne. The journey, with its lingering stops among vineyards and sun‑baked orchards, becomes a quiet stage for his restless thoughts. As the landscape rolls by, Claude wrestles with the pull of his religious studies and a growing desire for a life unbound by clerical expectations, his mind replaying conversations with the loquacious Abbé de Floirac and memories of schoolyard friends.
The narrative captures the delicate tension between duty and yearning, using the slow rhythm of the train to mirror Claude’s internal drift. Through vivid descriptions of heat‑laden stations, rust‑stained wagons, and the scent of summer fields, the story invites listeners to feel the weight of a young man’s choice as he contemplates leaving a path laid before him. It is a contemplative portrait of a pivotal summer, where the promise of freedom is as palpable as the heat on the carriage windows.
Language
fr
Duration
~4 hours (285K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Madeleine Fournier. Images made available by the Internet Archive.
Release date
2015-12-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1885–1970
A major voice in 20th-century French literature, his novels are known for their psychological depth, moral tension, and sharp understanding of family and faith. He won the 1952 Nobel Prize in Literature and remained an influential public writer for decades.
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