
The story opens on a sweltering July day in 1838, when a newly fashionable carriage—called a Milord—glides down Rue de l’Université, carrying a stout captain of the National Guard. With his Legion of Honor ribbon glinting and a self‑satisfied smile, he scans the bustling Paris crowd, confident that his uniform and wealth elevate him above the ordinary passerby. Balzac uses this vivid tableau to introduce the bustling world of Parisian society, where status, ambition, and appearances clash in the heat of summer.
Through the captain’s eyes we glimpse the pretensions of the city’s rising bourgeoisie and the subtle tensions that ripple beneath polite conversation. The narrator’s wry observations hint at deeper family ties and hidden rivalries, promising a tale that will explore both the public façade and the private struggles of its characters. Listeners are invited to step into a Paris that is both glittering and sharply observant, where every smile may conceal a calculated motive.
Language
en
Duration
~14 hours (863K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by John Bickers, and Dagny, and David Widger
Release date
1999-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1799–1850
A giant of French fiction, he turned the crowded streets, salons, and back rooms of 19th-century France into vivid, gripping stories. His vast cycle of novels and tales, known as La Comédie humaine, helped shape the modern realist novel.
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