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BOOK 2. - CHAPTER VIII - JOY AND MADNESS
A bright May morning in Paris finds our narrator strolling with his flamboyant companion Lampron toward the grand exhibition at the Chamber of Deputies. The streets pulse with life—baby carriages, women in spring frocks, and gentlemen flashing canes—while rumors of a mysterious Mademoiselle Jeanne swirl through the crowd. Their conversation oscillates between light‑hearted banter and the undercurrents of political maneuvering that hint at larger schemes afoot.
Inside the gallery, the protagonist is overwhelmed by a riot of color and the clamor of onlookers, each canvas demanding attention. Lampron, however, surveys the room with a hunter’s precision, instantly fixing on a single work and extracting its essence in a few sharp remarks. Through his eyes, the narrator experiences the intoxicating clash between visual splendor and the restless mind, setting the stage for a deeper exploration of art, ambition, and the fleeting moments that define a day in the heart of the capital.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (122K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2003-04-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1853–1932
A French novelist, journalist, and law professor, he wrote warmly about rural life, faith, family, and the everyday dignity of work. His stories made him one of the best-known Catholic writers in France around the turn of the 20th century.
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