
LA PLEBE
PREFAZIONE.
PARTE PRIMA.
CAPITOLO I.
CAPITOLO II.
CAPITOLO III.
CAPITOLO IV.
CAPITOLO V.
CAPITOLO VI.
CAPITOLO VII.
In a fog‑shrouded winter night, the narrow, grimy lanes of old Turin come alive with the breath‑stealing chill of misery. The narrator paints a vivid tableau of cramped homes, hungry children, and desperate figures whose lives flicker like the weak oil‑lamp glow spilling from a shop doorway. Every step through the mist carries the weight of poverty, inviting listeners to feel the aching cold that seeps into both flesh and conscience. The opening frames a city where the invisible hand of society seems to clutch at the throats of its most vulnerable.
Amid this bleak landscape drifts a solitary wanderer, his wide‑brimmed hat and tattered cloak concealing more than just his face. He moves without purpose, yet his presence stirs a restless curiosity, as he watches the struggling souls around him and confronts the stark contradictions between intellect and compassion. The novel promises to explore whether a single conscience can pierce the fog of indifference and awaken a deeper sense of responsibility toward the plebe.
Language
it
Duration
~15 hours (881K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Carlo Traverso, Claudio Paganelli, Barbara Magni 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
2014-08-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1830–1900
A lively voice in 19th-century Italian culture, this Piedmontese writer and journalist is best remembered for sharp, humane comedy and for capturing everyday life in Turin. His work moved easily between fiction, theater, and public life.
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