
Born in the modest town of Montoire, Louis Lambert shows an extraordinary thirst for learning from an early age. By five he is already turning the pages of the Bible, and that first encounter with sacred texts sparks a lifelong hunger for any book he can get his hands on. His parents, a tannery‑working couple, recognize his precocious intellect and steer him toward a path that might keep him safe from the looming threat of conscription.
Sent to live with his uncle, a parish priest, Louis finds a sanctuary for his studies while his family hopes to spare him the hardships of war. After a few years in the clergy’s quiet world, he moves on to a college in Vendôme, funded by the generous Madame de Staël, where his curiosity expands beyond theology into the very nature of language itself. He muses on how words travel across time and culture, turning each syllable into a bridge between thought and the world—a fascination that will shape his scholarly pursuits.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (231K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by John Bickers, and Dagny, and David Widger
Release date
2005-02-01
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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