Girish Mahajan (Editor)

La Paix du ménage

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Original title
  
La Paix du ménage

Country
  
France

Series
  
La Comédie humaine

Author
  
Honoré de Balzac

Followed by
  
Madame Firmiani

Translator
  
Clara Bell

Language
  
French

Originally published
  
1830

Preceded by
  
Une double famille

Cover artist
  
David Murray Smith

La Paix du ménage httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Genre
  
Scènes de la vie privée

Similar
  
Honoré de Balzac books, La Comédie humaine books, Classical Studies books

La paix du m nage la com die humaine honor de balzac audiobook fr


La Paix du ménage (Domestic Bliss) is a French novella by Honoré de Balzac, which was first published by Mame et Delaunay-Vallée in 1830 as one of the author's Scènes de la vie privée (Scenes from Private Life). It was republished in 1842 as part of Furne's edition of Balzac's La Comédie humaine.

Contents

Dedicated to the author's dear niece, Valentine Surville, this vivid and incisive novella is constructed like a classical French play, observing the three unities of time (an hour), place (a ball) and subject (the seduction of a young woman). Contrary to what the title might lead one to expect, the work is not concerned with the married life of the French bourgeoisie; it is, rather, a scintillating depiction of high society under the First Empire.

Plot

The Comte de Gondreville hosts an ostentatious ball in his stately mansion. Among the guests is an unknown woman in a blue dress. She is discreet and bashful, and clearly at odds with the arrogance and excitability of the other guests; it is as though she does not belong in these opulent surroundings. Intrigued by this pretty young woman, the Comte de Montcornet and Baron de la Roche-Hugon make a wager to see which of them can seduce this heavenly figure, who is, in fact, the wife of the Comte de Soulanges. A tangled web of amorous intrigues ensues.

Theme

The dense structure of this novella resembles the stagecraft of a play. The masked ball also conjures up the theatre, where no one is quite what he or she seems.

References

La Paix du ménage Wikipedia