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LA RUSSIE EN 1839 - PAR - LE MARQUIS DE CUSTINE
LETTRE DIX-NEUVIÈME.
RÈGLES D'APRÈS LESQUELLES ON DOIT SE CONDUIRE EN ENTRANT.
LETTRE VINGTIÈME.
LETTRE VINGT ET UNIÈME.
LETTRE VINGT-DEUXIÈME.
LETTRE VINGT-TROISIÈME.
LETTRE VINGT-QUATRIÈME.
LETTRE VINGT-CINQUIÈME.
A vivid portrait of Russia in the early nineteenth century unfolds through the eyes of a curious traveler who has just left Saint‑Pétersbourg for Moscow. He paints the capital as a stark, almost deserted city when the emperor is away, its grand canals turning into a stagnant marsh and its quiet promenades hinting at an empire held together by sheer will. His observations capture the tension between monumental architecture and the harsh realities of a land perpetually threatened by flood and political uncertainty.
The journey northward becomes a meditation on Russian character, from the austere court life to the restless ambition that drives its people. Along the way, the writer notes the striking contrast between the measured elegance of the city’s palaces and the raw, untamed spirit of its streets, offering listeners a rich tapestry of cultural insight and personal reflection. This first‑act narrative invites you to explore an empire at a crossroads, seen through a keen, compassionate lens.
Language
fr
Duration
~9 hours (541K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-11-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1790–1857
Remembered for a sharp-eyed travel book that startled 19th-century readers, this French aristocrat wrote about power, fear, and public life with unusual candor. His best-known work, La Russie en 1839, still stands out for its vivid account of imperial Russia under Nicholas I.
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