
In a dim, stone‑walled cell of a nineteenth‑century French prison, the days pass in a quiet, relentless rhythm. The narrator, a prison guard accustomed to the stark routine of watch‑keeping, records the sparse details of his charge’s existence, noting the starkness of confinement and the slow erosion of hope. His observations are precise, almost clinical, yet beneath the surface a subtle yearning for something beyond the iron bars begins to stir.
One damp morning a fragile green shoot emerges from a crack in the floor, its tender leaves reaching toward the faint light that filters through the barred window. Intrigued, the guard tends the plant, providing water and protection, and in doing so discovers a quiet dialogue between his own solitude and the life stubbornly growing in such an unlikely place. The simple act of nurturing the shoot opens a space for reflection on resilience, the quiet power of nature, and the possibility of redemption even within the most confined walls.
Language
fr
Duration
~6 hours (390K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Laurent Vogel and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Print project.)
Release date
2012-03-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1798–1865
Best remembered for the tender novel Picciola, this French writer and playwright built a reputation on stories that mix feeling, moral struggle, and dramatic turns. His work was widely read in the 19th century, especially by readers drawn to emotional, humane fiction.
View all books
by X.-B. (Xavier-Boniface) Saintine

by X.-B. (Xavier-Boniface) Saintine

by X.-B. (Xavier-Boniface) Saintine

by X.-B. (Xavier-Boniface) Saintine

by X.-B. (Xavier-Boniface) Saintine

by Philippe Aubert de Gaspé

by Vinceslas-Eugène Dick

by Laure Conan