
Note sur la transcription: Les erreurs clairement introduites par le typographe ont été corrigées. L'orthographe d'origine a été conservée et n'a pas été harmonisée. Les numéros des pages blanches n'ont pas été repris.
AVERTISSEMENT
I LA SECONDE MORT DE BROGGI-MEZZASTRIS A Arrigo Boïto.
II UNE NUIT DE NOËL SOUS LA TERREUR A Henri Gervex.
III LES COUSINS D'ADOLPHE
IV UNE RESSEMBLANCE
V LE VENIN
VI DAISY
VII LE DERNIER ROLE
VIII LE PÈRE THEURIOT
A curious manuscript lands in the narrator’s hands, delivered with a single, mischievous condition: never discover the author’s name. The writer, a fashionable Parisian with striking blue eyes, hints at a tangled web of art, intrigue, and personal secrets, while the narrator wrestles with the promise he’s made. From the first pages, the tone mixes playful banter with surprisingly detailed knowledge of art authentication, setting the stage for a tale that feels both intimate and scholarly.
The story then turns to the bustling world of collectors, dealers, and critics, all caught up in the chase for a mysterious “false” painting that threatens to upend their pretensions. A recent, high‑profile acquisition by a Berlin museum—purportedly a Leonardo bust—mirrors the central fraud, highlighting the era’s obsession with décor, provenance, and the allure of the perfect acquisition. As the characters navigate gossip, technical debates, and the seductive promise of a masterpiece, the narrative offers a witty critique of dilettantism and the market’s fickle tastes.
With a blend of satire, romance, and genuine art‑historical insight, the novella invites listeners to savor a charmingly tangled puzzle that questions what we value in beauty and authenticity.
Language
fr
Duration
~8 hours (473K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Clarity, Hélène de Mink, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
Release date
2017-07-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1852–1935
A leading French novelist and critic of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, he became famous for psychological fiction that probed belief, ambition, and the moral pressures of modern life. His work helped shape literary debate in France at a moment of major cultural change.
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