
Plutarque, a man whose nickname stems from a well‑worn schoolbook, wanders the rain‑slick streets of a bustling city, observing the ordinary details that most passersby overlook. He drifts from a modest wine merchant’s shop to a grand hotel, catching glimpses of a flamboyantly dressed “happy man” and the everyday choreography of taxis, street vendors, and rain‑spattered sidewalks. Through his eyes, the narrative paints a vivid portrait of urban life, where honor, poverty, and the simple pleasure of a warm meal mingle with the melancholy of solitary nights.
The prose balances a wry, philosophical humor with a keen sensitivity to the texture of the world—clattering shoes, glowing gas lamps, and the quiet conversations that blossom under a café awning. As Plutarque contemplates his own modest ambitions—finding food, shelter, and a moment of peace—the story invites listeners to linger on the small, often unnoticed moments that shape a person’s identity in a city that never truly sleeps.
Language
fr
Duration
~3 hours (199K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by W. Debeuf
Release date
2004-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A little-known French writer from the public-domain era, remembered today mainly through a handful of digitized works. Reliable biographical details are scarce, which gives the surviving record a faintly mysterious charm.
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