
Rousseau opens this volume by recounting the feverish anticipation that surrounded the appearance of his newest work. He describes how whispers in Parisian salons, from Madame de Luxembourg to the Dauphine herself, turned his manuscript into a cultural sensation before it even reached the press. The narrative captures the mixture of triumph and bewilderment he feels as the book finds unexpected favor among women of high society while meeting a cooler reception in his native Switzerland. Through these anecdotes, listeners hear the pulse of eighteenth‑century literary life and the delicate dance between author, patron, and public.
Beyond the gossip, Rousseau turns his keen eye toward the deeper currents of French sensibility. He muses on the paradox of a society that both revels in refined feeling and remains plagued by corruption, suggesting that Paris may still harbor the faintest remnants of true virtue. His reflections on the nature of genuine sentiment versus feigned passion invite listeners to contemplate how we discern authenticity in a world of pretenses. The tone remains intimate, offering a window into the mind of a thinker wrestling with fame, morality, and the ever‑shifting tides of public opinion.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (104K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-12-06
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1712–1778
A restless, brilliant mind of the Enlightenment, he wrote about freedom, education, and society in ways that still feel fresh centuries later. His books helped shape modern political thought while also revealing a deeply personal, often conflicted voice.
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