
GUY CHANTEPLEURE
In a sun‑lit salon adorned with rose‑patterned drapery, a bright‑eyed young woman named Irène de Champierre spends her afternoons hunting for the perfect rhyme. Her delicate habit of composing verses, inspired by the fragrant scent of verbena, hints at a mind as cultivated as the elegance of her surroundings. Though her beauty seems more suited to an earlier age of grandeur, Irène’s genuine curiosity about poetry drives her to seek guidance beyond the ornamental trinkets of her boudoir.
Enter Antonin Fargeot, a modest yet remarkably erudite tutor who has been instructing Irène’s brother in Latin. His slender frame and unassuming manners conceal a keen intellect that captures Irène’s admiration. Their sessions become a dance of patience and playfulness, as she teases him while he painstakingly corrects her verses. Amid the whispers of courtly intrigue and the distant echo of Marie‑Antoinette’s favor, their partnership blossoms into a tender, intellectually charged companionship that promises both artistic growth and subtle romance.
Language
fr
Duration
~4 hours (235K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Paris: Calmann-Lévy, 1913.
Credits
Laurent Vogel and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Books project.)
Release date
2024-01-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1870–1951
A French novelist and travel writer who published under a masculine pen name, she built a long career that stretched from the 1890s into the mid-20th century. She is especially remembered for "Ma conscience en robe rose," an early success that brought her literary recognition.
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