
In a cramped consultation room, a frantic mother pleads with Dr. Hameroy over the fate of her daughter Ellen, a nineteen‑year‑old Englishwoman stricken with advanced tuberculosis. The doctor, a brilliant yet blunt figure risen from humble origins, scolds the family for ignoring his advice and sending Ellen to damp, unhealthy resorts in Italy and Venice instead of the alpine air he prescribed. As the tension rises, the reader glimpses the stark clash between privileged indulgence and the relentless march of a deadly disease.
Hameroy is more than a physician; he is a social commentator haunted by the inequities he sees daily. His experience treating both aristocratic patients and the poorest laborers fuels a fierce criticism of a society that lets wealth dictate health. The novel follows Ellen’s fragile battle, her mother’s desperate choices, and the doctor's struggle to balance scientific duty with compassion, setting the stage for a poignant exploration of love, class, and mortality.
Language
fr
Duration
~6 hours (403K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Clarity and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
Release date
2020-03-27
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1855–1906
A vivid voice of French Decadent literature, this writer turned nightlife, beauty, and unease into lush, haunting fiction. His books and poems still stand out for their wit, atmosphere, and fascination with the strange edges of modern life.
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