
In a rain‑soaked March morning, a narrow, time‑worn house on the edge of rue Saint‑Denis catches the eye of a young, sharply dressed wanderer. Its crooked roof, weather‑scarred façade and a jumble of wooden beams give the building the air of a living museum of old Paris, each floor offering a different, almost archaeological curiosity. The narrator’s keen observations turn the crumbling structure into a character of its own, hinting at the stories hidden behind its faded shutters and cracked plaster.
The young man’s attention finally settles on a curious tableau nailed to a sturdy beam: a cat, absurdly poised with a racket, engaged in a mock game of tennis. The painting’s garish colors and exaggerated details mock the pretensions of the surrounding merchants and passers‑by, inviting the observer to wonder about the lives that have passed beneath the house’s leaky eaves. This quirky encounter sets the stage for a light‑hearted exploration of Parisian society, where humor and subtle critique mingle within the narrow streets and forgotten corners.
Language
fr
Duration
~2 hours (125K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-01-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1799–1850
Best known for building La Comédie humaine, he turned novels into a sweeping portrait of French society—full of ambition, money, love, and social climbing. His stories are rich in detail, vivid characters, and the sharp observations that helped shape modern realism.
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by Honoré de Balzac

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