
In a bustling Paris of the early 1800s, a once‑grand hôtel on the corner of Rue Ménars and Rue Richelieu is being torn down, its elegant rooms giving way to new houses. Amid the demolition lives Lucrèce Dorio, a striking brunette celebrated as a living deity of the city’s fashionable circles. Her salon, arranged like a miniature temple of antiquity, brims with candle‑lit candelabra, curule chairs and portraits of heroic officers that stir both admiration and melancholy. Through vivid descriptions the narrator paints a world where mythic allusions mingle with the everyday chatter of courtiers and artists.
The narrator, a close friend and self‑styled “moral physician,” presents the tale as a gentle remedy for those yearning for a different kind of transportation—an inner, consoling shift rather than a physical journey. As Lucrèce entertains guests such as the witty camériste Tullie and the enigmatic citizen Périclès, a subtle tension builds around her restless spirit and the whispered rumors of a looming change. The first act sets the stage for a portrait of Parisian decadence, intrigue, and the fragile hope of renewal.
Language
fr
Duration
~2 hours (156K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2011-02-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1798–1865
A lively 19th-century French man of letters, he moved easily between poetry, journalism, novels, and theater. His career reflects the fast-paced literary world of his time, where writers often worked across many forms at once.
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