
André, a twenty‑five‑year‑old clerk trapped in a cramped, dusty office, spends his days wrestling with the emptiness that haunts the quiet corners of his mind. Surrounded by piles of paperwork and the oppressive brick wall that seems to block both light and hope, he questions the very existence of love, the allure of marriage, and the hollow comforts of bourgeois respectability. His introspections reveal a restless yearning for genuine connection amid the routine of bills, modest meals, and the pretenses of a respectable façade.
The novel paints a vivid portrait of late‑19th‑century Parisian middle‑class life, exposing the paradoxical poverty that lies beneath polished manners and respectable titles. Through André’s sharp, often wry observations, readers glimpse the subtle cruelty of social expectations and the loneliness that can linger even in the midst of apparent comfort. As he contemplates his future, the story invites listeners to reflect on the delicate balance between duty, desire, and the search for authentic intimacy.
Language
fr
Duration
~7 hours (438K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-11-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1860–1918
A French novelist and man of letters, he wrote across fiction, memoir, and criticism, often with a sharp eye for society and history. He also collaborated with his brother Victor, making the Margueritte name familiar in French literary life of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
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