
A weary Parisian gentleman spends his days in a fog of boredom, nursing a pipe and an ever‑present sense of melancholy. When his old friend Ted Williams drops by, the two engage in a sharp, witty exchange about idle talk, lost passions, and the urge to escape a life that feels like “sound and fury” without meaning. Their conversation reveals the narrator’s struggle with creative paralysis, his reliance on opium, and his yearning to revive the pleasures of painting and writing.
Compelled by this restless dialogue, the narrator begins to chronicle his inner torments, noting every fleeting thought as if it might hold a key to his salvation. Yet a darker presence lurks beneath his reflections—a secret, almost demonic, anxiety that fuels his spleen and threatens to consume his fragile resolve. Listeners are invited into his cramped study, to hear the delicate balance between self‑observation and the unsettling whisper of an unseen force that may finally rouse him from his languid stupor.
Language
fr
Duration
~4 hours (239K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
France: Georges Crès, 1921.
Credits
Laurent Vogel, Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
Release date
2022-06-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1877–1939
A French novelist and poet drawn to adventure, symbolism, and the stranger edges of inner life, he moved in the literary world around Victor Segalen while also chasing very real exploits such as ballooning. His books often blend elegance with unease, turning travel, desire, and the imagination into something vivid and unpredictable.
View all books