
A twelve‑year‑old narrator recounts his childhood on the banks of the Marne during the early years of the Great War, a time when the war felt like an endless vacation for boys his age. In the quiet town of F…, he experiences the first stirrings of desire, penning a shy love note to a classmate named Carmen, hoping to bridge the gap between boyhood and something more tender.
The note triggers a cascade of reactions at school. The headmaster, half‑amused and half‑outraged, calls the boy into his office, scolds him for the audacity of his affection, yet oddly praises the flawless composition of the letter. His peers whisper, dubbing him “Don Juan,” a nickname that both inflates his ego and deepens his embarrassment, while the principal promises to keep the matter hidden from his father.
Caught between the thrill of being seen as bold and the fear of adult reprimand, the young narrator wrestles with his emerging identity. The episode exposes the fragile line between innocent curiosity and the moral expectations of a world already strained by conflict, setting the stage for his coming‑of‑age journey.
Language
fr
Duration
~3 hours (178K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Laura Natal Rodrigues at Free Literature (Images generously made available by Gallica, Bibliothèque nationale de France.)
Release date
2019-09-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1903–1923
A brilliant French writer who published with startling confidence while still in his teens, he left behind novels and poems that feel cool, sharp, and far wiser than his years. His life was brief, but works like The Devil in the Flesh made him one of the most memorable literary talents of the early 20th century.
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