
NELJÄ PÄIVÄÄ
SISÄLLYS:
I.
II.
IV.
A gentle spring morning pours bright light into a small, white‑painted room that belongs to the narrator’s uncle, a quiet parish priest. From the window the Durance river glides through a dark‑green valley, its sound and the soft breezes inviting the protagonist to step outside. Yet the boy moves cautiously, fearing the creak of his own shoes and the possibility of waking the sleeping uncle, whose calm face seems to hold a hidden tenderness.
As the day unfolds, the narrator’s curiosity pulls him toward the riverbank, where a mysterious girl named Babet passes by. The narrative captures the tension between the safety of the familiar cloister and the lure of the unknown world beyond, hinting at deeper family memories and unspoken emotions. In this opening, the story establishes a vivid, naturalistic portrait of rural life, inner longing, and the subtle forces that shape a young mind’s first steps toward freedom.
Language
fi
Duration
~1 hours (84K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2016-08-05
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1840–1902
A fearless French novelist and journalist, he helped define literary naturalism with vivid, unflinching stories about ordinary lives. His work also made him a major public voice during the Dreyfus Affair, showing how literature and conscience could meet.
View all books
by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola

by Émile Zola