
The story opens on a crisp November morning, when the pale light of a veiled sun filters through the mist over the Jardin des Plantes. A lively procession winds through the garden’s maze, a kaleidoscope of Parisians, provincials, and foreign visitors—English couples, a grieving family, a sick neighbor in slippers, a soldier with twin hatchets, and a young apprentice mason from Limousin. Each figure is rendered with vivid detail, from the solemn intern of Pitié hospital to the worker clutching funeral flowers. Air hums with rustling leaves, children's chatter, and the faint echo of Latin verses on ancient bronze.
Amid this bustling tableau walks Manette Salomon, a keen observer who turns ordinary into a subtle puzzle. She notes the strange mix of costumes, quiet desperation in the eyes of a boy in a velvet Russian dress, and odd presence of a nervous child dragging a cage of monkeys. As the crowd reaches the cedar clearing, the maze seems to promise hidden connections and whispered confidences, suggesting that beneath the surface of this everyday promenade lie stories waiting to unfold.
Language
fr
Duration
~14 hours (823K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Carlo Traverso, Laurent Vogel and the Distributed Proofreading team at DP-test Italia. (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries.)
Release date
2020-09-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1822–1896
Best known for the books and journals he created with his brother Jules, this 19th-century French writer helped shape literary realism and left a lasting mark on French literary culture. His name lives on through the Prix Goncourt, one of France’s most famous literary awards.
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1830–1870
Known for writing side by side with his older brother Edmond, this 19th-century French author helped shape modern literary realism with novels, art criticism, and one of the era’s most vivid journals. His short life left a lasting mark on French letters, especially through the legacy that later inspired the Prix Goncourt.
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