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Illusions perdues

Illusions perdues — in English, Lost Illusions — is a serial novel written by the French writer Honoré de Balzac between 1837 and 1843. It consists of three parts, starting in provincial France, thereafter moving to Paris, and finally returning to the provinces. The book resembles another of Balzac's greatest novels, La Rabouilleuse (The Black Sheep, 1842), that is set in Paris and in the provinces. It forms part of the Scènes de la vie de province in La Comédie humaine.[1]

Illusions perdues
Title page of Honoré de Balzac's Lost Illusions, Mme de Bargeton's Boudoir (1837).
AuthorHonoré de Balzac
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
SeriesLa Comédie humaine
Publication date
1837-1843

Background Edit

The novel's main character, Lucien Chardon, works as a journalist, and his friend David Séchard is a printer. These were both professions with which Balzac himself had experience. Balzac had started a printing business in Paris in 1826, which went bankrupt in 1828. His experiences influenced his description of David Séchard's working life.[2][3] Balzac had bought the newspaper La Chronique de Paris in 1836 and founded La Revue Parisienne in 1840, both of which also went bust. A number of his novels had been published in serial form in the newspapers, though he often had disagreements with the publishers. He had also received harsh reviews in the newspapers from critics such as Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve and Jules Janin. Balzac had been critical of the press in La Peau de chagrin and later published a criticism of the press called Monograph of the Paris Press in 1842.[3]

Writing and publication Edit

Illusions perdues was published in three parts.

  • 1837 - Les Deux Poètes (The Two Poets), Paris: Werdet
  • 1839 - Un grand homme de province à Paris (A Great Man of the Provinces in Paris), Paris: Souverain
  • 1843 - Ève et David (Eve and David), Paris: Furne

The titles of the various constituent parts of Illusions perdues, which came out over a period of six years, vary considerably from edition to edition and also because of publication in serial form. The eventual title of Part III, Les Souffrances de l’inventeur (The Inventor’s Sufferings), was superimposed by Balzac onto his personal copy of the Furne edition of La Comédie humaine. The Two Poets includes sonnets by the main character. In real life, these were written by poet friends of Balzac's including Théophile Gautier.[3]

Plot summary Edit

Lucien Chardon, the son of a lower middle-class father and an impoverished mother of aristocratic descent, is the pivotal figure of the entire work. Living at Angoulême, he is impoverished, impatient, handsome and ambitious. His widowed mother, his sister Ève and his best friend, David Séchard, do nothing to lessen his high opinion of his own talents, for it is an opinion they share. Even as Part I of Illusions perdues, Les Deux poètes (The Two Poets), begins, Lucien has already written a historical novel and a sonnet sequence, whereas David is a scientist. Both, according to Balzac, are "poets" in that they creatively seek truth. Theirs is a fraternity of poetic aspiration, whether as scientist or writer, even before David marries Ève, the two young men are spiritual brothers. Lucien is introduced into the drawing-room of the leading figure of Angoulême high society, Mme de Bargeton, who rapidly becomes infatuated with him. It is not long before the pair flee to Paris where Lucien adopts his maternal patronymic of de Rubempré and hopes to make his mark as a poet. Mme de Bargeton, on the other hand, recognises her mésalliance and though remaining in Paris, severs all ties with Lucien, abandoning him to a life of destitution.

In Part II, Un Grand homme de province à Paris, Lucien is contrasted with the journalist Lousteau and the high-minded writer Daniel d'Arthez. Jilted by Mme de Bargeton for the adventurer Sixte du Châtelet, he moves in a social circle of high-class actress-prostitutes and their journalist lovers: soon he becomes the lover of Coralie. As a literary journalist he prostitutes his talent, yet still harbours the ambition of belonging to high society and longs to assume by royal warrant the surname and coat of arms of the de Rubemprés. He switches his allegiance from the liberal opposition press to the one or two royalist newspapers that support the government. This act of betrayal earns him the implacable hatred of his erstwhile journalist colleagues, who destroy Coralie's theatrical reputation. In the depths of his despair he forges his brother-in-law's name on three promissory notes. This is his ultimate betrayal of his integrity as a person. After Coralie's death he returns in disgrace to Angoulême, stowed away behind the Châtelets' carriage; Mme de Bargeton has just married du Châtelet, who has been appointed prefect of that region.

In Part III, Les Souffrances de l'inventeur, in Angoulême David Séchard is betrayed on all sides but is supported by his loving wife. He invents a new and cheaper method of paper production. At a thematic level, the advances of paper-manufacturing processes are very closely interwoven with the commercialization of literature. Lucien's forgery of his brother-in-law's signature almost bankrupts David, who has to sell the secret of his invention to business rivals. Lucien is about to commit suicide when he is approached by a sham Jesuit priest, the Abbé Carlos Herrera. He is the escaped convict Vautrin whom Balzac had already presented in Le Père Goriot. Herrera takes Lucien under his protection and they drive off to Paris, there to begin a fresh assault on the capital. Lucien's story continues in Splendeurs et misères des courtisanes.

Themes Edit

Provincial life Edit

The lifestyle of the provinces is juxtaposed with that of the metropolis, as Balzac contrasts the varying tempos of life at Angoulême and in Paris, the different standards of living in those cities and their different perceptions.

Artistic life in Paris Edit

Balzac explores the artistic life of Paris in 1821–22 and the nature of the artistic life generally. Lucien, who was already a not quite published author when the novel begins, fails to get his early literary work published whilst he is in Paris, and during his time in the capital writes nothing of any consequence. Daniel d'Arthez, on the other hand, does not actively seek literary fame; it comes to him because of his solid literary merit.

Journalism Edit

Balzac denounces journalism, presenting it as the most pernicious form of intellectual prostitution. Throughout the book, the literary industry is compared to the fashion industry, for instance by using identical terms: “plume” describes a writing utensil and an ornament for hats; “tournure” and “style” are forms of writing and dressing; “boutiques” sell books and clothing. These linguistic doubles unveil the business interest in journalism, which, like fashion, seeks novelty and superficial appeal.[4]

Duplicity Edit

Balzac affirms the duplicity of all things, both in Paris and at Angoulême, e.g., the character of Lucien de Rubempré, who even has two surnames; David Séchard's ostensible friend, the notary Petit-Claud, who operates against his client, not for him; the legal comptes (accounts) which are contes fantastiques (fantastic tales); the theatre which lives by make-believe; high society likewise; the Abbé Carlos Herrera who is a sham priest, and in fact a criminal; the Sin against the Holy Ghost, whereby Lucien abandons his true integrity as a person, forging his brother-in-law's signature and even contemplating suicide.

Narrative strategies Edit

(1) Although Illusions perdues is a commentary upon the contemporary world, Balzac is tantalizingly vague in his delineation of the historico-political background. His delineation of the broader social background is far more precise.

(2) Illusions perdues is remarkable for its innumerable changes of tempo. Even the change of tempo from Part II to Part III is but a superficial point of contrast between life as it is lived in the capital and life in the provinces. Everywhere the same laws of human behaviour apply. A person's downfall may come from the rapier thrust of the journalist or from the slowly strangling machinations of the law.

(3) Most notably in La Cousine Bette Balzac was one of the first novelists to employ the technique of in medias res. In Illusions perdues there is an unusual example of this, Part II of the novel serving as the prelude to the extended flashback which follows in Part III.

(4) Illusions perdues is also full of the "sublimities and degradations", "excited emphasis" and "romantic rhetoric" to which F.R. Leavis[5] had objected in Le Père Goriot. Characters and viewpoints are polarized. There is the strong and perhaps somewhat artificial contrast between Lucien and David, art and science, Lousteau and d’Arthez, journalism and literature, Paris and the provinces, etc. And this polarization reaches the point of melodrama as Balzac appears to draw moral distinctions between "vice" and "virtue". Coralie is the Fallen Woman, Ève an Angel of strength and purity. Yet Balzac also describes Coralie's love for Lucien as a form of redemptive purity, an "absolution" and a "benediction". Thus, through what structurally is melodrama, he underlines what he considers to be the fundamental resemblance of opposites.

(5) Introduced into narrative fiction by the Gothic novel (The Castle of Otranto, The Mysteries of Udolpho, The Monk), melodrama was widespread in literature around the time when Illusions perdues was written. Jane Austen satirizes it in Northanger Abbey. Eugène Sue made regular use of it. Instances in Illusions perdues are the use of improbable coincidence; Lucien, in an endeavour to pay Coralie's funeral expenses, writing bawdy love-songs when her body is hardly yet cold; and the deus ex machina (or Satanas ex machina?) in the form of Herrera's appearance at the end of the novel.

(6) Like all the major works of the Comédie humaine, Illusions perdues focuses on the social nexus. Within the nexus of love, in her relationship with Lucien, Coralie is life-giving: her love has a sacramental quality. In an environment of worldly manœuvring, her influence upon him is fatal. She is, in other words, both a Fallen and a Risen Woman, depending upon the nexus within which she is viewed. In the unpropitious environment of Angoulême, Mme de Bargeton is an absurd bluestocking; transplanted to Paris, she undergoes an immediate "metamorphosis", becoming a true denizen of high society – and rightfully, in Part III, the occupant of the préfecture at Angoulême. As to whether Lucien's writings have any value, the social laws are paramount, this is a fact which he does not realize until it is too late.

(7) Illusions perdues is, according to Donald Adamson, "a revelation of the secret workings of the world, rather than a Bildungsroman illuminating the development of character".[6]

Sequel Edit

The success of this novel inspired Balzac to write a four-part sequel, Splendeurs et misères des courtisanes (published in parts from 1838 to 1847). Illusions perdues and Splendeurs et misères des courtisanes form part of La Comédie humaine, the series of novels and short stories written by Balzac depicting French society in the period of the Bourbon Restoration and July Monarchy (1815–1848).[1]

Adaptations Edit

Illusions perdues had been adapted several times for film, television, and stage.

Bibliography Edit

Works of criticism
  • Adamson, Donald (1981) "Illusions perdues", London: Grant & Cutler
  • Baron, Anne-Marie (1996) "Artifices de mise en scène et art de l’illusion chez Balzac", in: L’Année balzacienne, 1996, pp. 23–35
  • Bérard, Suzanne-Jean (1961) La Genèse d’un roman de Balzac: "Illusions perdues", 2 vols, Paris: Colin
  • Borderie, Régine (2005) "Esthétique du bizarre: Illusions perdues", in: L’Année balzacienne, 2005, pp. 175–98
  • Lukács, György (1967) "Illusions perdues", in Balzac et le réalisme français, Paris: Maspéro, pp. 48–68
  • Prendergast, Christopher (1978) Balzac: fiction and melodrama. London: Edward Arnold

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Honoré de Balzac. The Human Comedy: Introductions and Appendix. Project Gutenberg. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  2. ^ Frederick Lawton (1910). "Chapter III: Experiments in Literature and Business". Balzac.
  3. ^ a b c "Introduction" by Herbert J. Hunt from Penguin Classics edition of Lost Illusions, 1971
  4. ^ Lubrich, Naomi (2014). "Honoré de Balzac und die Semiotik der Mode" in: Quo Vadis Romania? Zeitschrift für eine aktuelle Romanistik, 43 (in German). pp. 78–97.
  5. ^ F. R. Leavis, The Great Tradition, London 1948, p. 29
  6. ^ Donald Adamson, "Illusions perdues", London 1982, p. 86
  7. ^ (in French). madalen.ina.fr. Archived from the original on 9 October 2021. Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  8. ^ Roslyn Sulcas (6 January 2014). "In Nod to History, Two Ballet Rivals Spring to Life". New York Times. Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  9. ^ Vivarelli, Nick (26 July 2021). "Venice Film Festival Full Lineup Unveiled – Live Updates". Variety. Retrieved 26 July 2021.
  10. ^ Lemercier, Fabian (3 September 2019). "Gaumont touting Xavier Giannoli's Lost Illusions". CineEuropa. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  11. ^ Keslassy, Elsa (7 November 2019). "Gaumont Bows Sales on Xavier Giannoli's Adaptation of Balzac's Masterpiece 'Lost Illusions' (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Retrieved 23 May 2020.
  12. ^ Vincent Bouquet (13 September 2021). "Illusions perdues: le ring social de Pauline Bayle" (in French). sceneweb.fr. Retrieved 8 October 2021.

External links Edit

  • Illusions perdues at Project Gutenberg
  •   Lost Illusions public domain audiobook at LibriVox

illusions, perdues, english, lost, illusions, serial, novel, written, french, writer, honoré, balzac, between, 1837, 1843, consists, three, parts, starting, provincial, france, thereafter, moving, paris, finally, returning, provinces, book, resembles, another,. Illusions perdues in English Lost Illusions is a serial novel written by the French writer Honore de Balzac between 1837 and 1843 It consists of three parts starting in provincial France thereafter moving to Paris and finally returning to the provinces The book resembles another of Balzac s greatest novels La Rabouilleuse The Black Sheep 1842 that is set in Paris and in the provinces It forms part of the Scenes de la vie de province in La Comedie humaine 1 Illusions perduesTitle page of Honore de Balzac s Lost Illusions Mme de Bargeton s Boudoir 1837 AuthorHonore de BalzacCountryFranceLanguageFrenchSeriesLa Comedie humainePublication date1837 1843 Contents 1 Background 2 Writing and publication 3 Plot summary 4 Themes 4 1 Provincial life 4 2 Artistic life in Paris 4 3 Journalism 4 4 Duplicity 5 Narrative strategies 6 Sequel 7 Adaptations 8 Bibliography 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksBackground EditThe novel s main character Lucien Chardon works as a journalist and his friend David Sechard is a printer These were both professions with which Balzac himself had experience Balzac had started a printing business in Paris in 1826 which went bankrupt in 1828 His experiences influenced his description of David Sechard s working life 2 3 Balzac had bought the newspaper La Chronique de Paris in 1836 and founded La Revue Parisienne in 1840 both of which also went bust A number of his novels had been published in serial form in the newspapers though he often had disagreements with the publishers He had also received harsh reviews in the newspapers from critics such as Charles Augustin Sainte Beuve and Jules Janin Balzac had been critical of the press in La Peau de chagrin and later published a criticism of the press called Monograph of the Paris Press in 1842 3 Writing and publication EditIllusions perdues was published in three parts 1837 Les Deux Poetes The Two Poets Paris Werdet 1839 Un grand homme de province a Paris A Great Man of the Provinces in Paris Paris Souverain 1843 Eve et David Eve and David Paris FurneThe titles of the various constituent parts of Illusions perdues which came out over a period of six years vary considerably from edition to edition and also because of publication in serial form The eventual title of Part III Les Souffrances de l inventeur The Inventor s Sufferings was superimposed by Balzac onto his personal copy of the Furne edition of La Comedie humaine The Two Poets includes sonnets by the main character In real life these were written by poet friends of Balzac s including Theophile Gautier 3 Plot summary EditLucien Chardon the son of a lower middle class father and an impoverished mother of aristocratic descent is the pivotal figure of the entire work Living at Angouleme he is impoverished impatient handsome and ambitious His widowed mother his sister Eve and his best friend David Sechard do nothing to lessen his high opinion of his own talents for it is an opinion they share Even as Part I of Illusions perdues Les Deux poetes The Two Poets begins Lucien has already written a historical novel and a sonnet sequence whereas David is a scientist Both according to Balzac are poets in that they creatively seek truth Theirs is a fraternity of poetic aspiration whether as scientist or writer even before David marries Eve the two young men are spiritual brothers Lucien is introduced into the drawing room of the leading figure of Angouleme high society Mme de Bargeton who rapidly becomes infatuated with him It is not long before the pair flee to Paris where Lucien adopts his maternal patronymic of de Rubempre and hopes to make his mark as a poet Mme de Bargeton on the other hand recognises her mesalliance and though remaining in Paris severs all ties with Lucien abandoning him to a life of destitution In Part II Un Grand homme de province a Paris Lucien is contrasted with the journalist Lousteau and the high minded writer Daniel d Arthez Jilted by Mme de Bargeton for the adventurer Sixte du Chatelet he moves in a social circle of high class actress prostitutes and their journalist lovers soon he becomes the lover of Coralie As a literary journalist he prostitutes his talent yet still harbours the ambition of belonging to high society and longs to assume by royal warrant the surname and coat of arms of the de Rubempres He switches his allegiance from the liberal opposition press to the one or two royalist newspapers that support the government This act of betrayal earns him the implacable hatred of his erstwhile journalist colleagues who destroy Coralie s theatrical reputation In the depths of his despair he forges his brother in law s name on three promissory notes This is his ultimate betrayal of his integrity as a person After Coralie s death he returns in disgrace to Angouleme stowed away behind the Chatelets carriage Mme de Bargeton has just married du Chatelet who has been appointed prefect of that region In Part III Les Souffrances de l inventeur in Angouleme David Sechard is betrayed on all sides but is supported by his loving wife He invents a new and cheaper method of paper production At a thematic level the advances of paper manufacturing processes are very closely interwoven with the commercialization of literature Lucien s forgery of his brother in law s signature almost bankrupts David who has to sell the secret of his invention to business rivals Lucien is about to commit suicide when he is approached by a sham Jesuit priest the Abbe Carlos Herrera He is the escaped convict Vautrin whom Balzac had already presented in Le Pere Goriot Herrera takes Lucien under his protection and they drive off to Paris there to begin a fresh assault on the capital Lucien s story continues in Splendeurs et miseres des courtisanes Themes EditProvincial life Edit The lifestyle of the provinces is juxtaposed with that of the metropolis as Balzac contrasts the varying tempos of life at Angouleme and in Paris the different standards of living in those cities and their different perceptions Artistic life in Paris Edit Balzac explores the artistic life of Paris in 1821 22 and the nature of the artistic life generally Lucien who was already a not quite published author when the novel begins fails to get his early literary work published whilst he is in Paris and during his time in the capital writes nothing of any consequence Daniel d Arthez on the other hand does not actively seek literary fame it comes to him because of his solid literary merit Journalism Edit Balzac denounces journalism presenting it as the most pernicious form of intellectual prostitution Throughout the book the literary industry is compared to the fashion industry for instance by using identical terms plume describes a writing utensil and an ornament for hats tournure and style are forms of writing and dressing boutiques sell books and clothing These linguistic doubles unveil the business interest in journalism which like fashion seeks novelty and superficial appeal 4 Duplicity Edit Balzac affirms the duplicity of all things both in Paris and at Angouleme e g the character of Lucien de Rubempre who even has two surnames David Sechard s ostensible friend the notary Petit Claud who operates against his client not for him the legal comptes accounts which are contes fantastiques fantastic tales the theatre which lives by make believe high society likewise the Abbe Carlos Herrera who is a sham priest and in fact a criminal the Sin against the Holy Ghost whereby Lucien abandons his true integrity as a person forging his brother in law s signature and even contemplating suicide Narrative strategies Edit 1 Although Illusions perdues is a commentary upon the contemporary world Balzac is tantalizingly vague in his delineation of the historico political background His delineation of the broader social background is far more precise 2 Illusions perdues is remarkable for its innumerable changes of tempo Even the change of tempo from Part II to Part III is but a superficial point of contrast between life as it is lived in the capital and life in the provinces Everywhere the same laws of human behaviour apply A person s downfall may come from the rapier thrust of the journalist or from the slowly strangling machinations of the law 3 Most notably in La Cousine Bette Balzac was one of the first novelists to employ the technique of in medias res In Illusions perdues there is an unusual example of this Part II of the novel serving as the prelude to the extended flashback which follows in Part III 4 Illusions perdues is also full of the sublimities and degradations excited emphasis and romantic rhetoric to which F R Leavis 5 had objected in Le Pere Goriot Characters and viewpoints are polarized There is the strong and perhaps somewhat artificial contrast between Lucien and David art and science Lousteau and d Arthez journalism and literature Paris and the provinces etc And this polarization reaches the point of melodrama as Balzac appears to draw moral distinctions between vice and virtue Coralie is the Fallen Woman Eve an Angel of strength and purity Yet Balzac also describes Coralie s love for Lucien as a form of redemptive purity an absolution and a benediction Thus through what structurally is melodrama he underlines what he considers to be the fundamental resemblance of opposites 5 Introduced into narrative fiction by the Gothic novel The Castle of Otranto The Mysteries of Udolpho The Monk melodrama was widespread in literature around the time when Illusions perdues was written Jane Austen satirizes it in Northanger Abbey Eugene Sue made regular use of it Instances in Illusions perdues are the use of improbable coincidence Lucien in an endeavour to pay Coralie s funeral expenses writing bawdy love songs when her body is hardly yet cold and the deus ex machina or Satanas ex machina in the form of Herrera s appearance at the end of the novel 6 Like all the major works of the Comedie humaine Illusions perdues focuses on the social nexus Within the nexus of love in her relationship with Lucien Coralie is life giving her love has a sacramental quality In an environment of worldly manœuvring her influence upon him is fatal She is in other words both a Fallen and a Risen Woman depending upon the nexus within which she is viewed In the unpropitious environment of Angouleme Mme de Bargeton is an absurd bluestocking transplanted to Paris she undergoes an immediate metamorphosis becoming a true denizen of high society and rightfully in Part III the occupant of the prefecture at Angouleme As to whether Lucien s writings have any value the social laws are paramount this is a fact which he does not realize until it is too late 7 Illusions perdues is according to Donald Adamson a revelation of the secret workings of the world rather than a Bildungsroman illuminating the development of character 6 Sequel EditThe success of this novel inspired Balzac to write a four part sequel Splendeurs et miseres des courtisanes published in parts from 1838 to 1847 Illusions perdues and Splendeurs et miseres des courtisanes form part of La Comedie humaine the series of novels and short stories written by Balzac depicting French society in the period of the Bourbon Restoration and July Monarchy 1815 1848 1 Adaptations EditIllusions perdues had been adapted several times for film television and stage In 1966 Illusions perdues aired as a 4 episode television adaptation directed by Maurice Cazeneuve starring Yves Renier as Lucien 7 In April 2011 a ballet of the same name inspired by Balzac s novel was staged by the Bolshoi Ballet It was choreographed by Alexei Ratmansky and went on to open at the Palais Garnier in Paris in 2014 8 A French film adaptation Lost Illusions was screened at the 78th Venice Film Festival and scheduled for release on October 20 2021 9 10 It is directed by Xavier Giannoli and stars Benjamin Voisin as Lucien du Rubempre with a supporting cast including Gerard Depardieu Cecile de France and Xavier Dolan 11 A stage adaptation by Pauline Bayle performed at the Theatre de la Bastille in Paris from September through October 2021 12 Bibliography EditWorks of criticismAdamson Donald 1981 Illusions perdues London Grant amp Cutler Baron Anne Marie 1996 Artifices de mise en scene et art de l illusion chez Balzac in L Annee balzacienne 1996 pp 23 35 Berard Suzanne Jean 1961 La Genese d un roman de Balzac Illusions perdues 2 vols Paris Colin Borderie Regine 2005 Esthetique du bizarre Illusions perdues in L Annee balzacienne 2005 pp 175 98 Lukacs Gyorgy 1967 Illusions perdues in Balzac et le realisme francais Paris Maspero pp 48 68 Prendergast Christopher 1978 Balzac fiction and melodrama London Edward ArnoldSee also Edit1837 in literatureReferences Edit a b Honore de Balzac The Human Comedy Introductions and Appendix Project Gutenberg Retrieved 23 August 2021 Frederick Lawton 1910 Chapter III Experiments in Literature and Business Balzac a b c Introduction by Herbert J Hunt from Penguin Classics edition of Lost Illusions 1971 Lubrich Naomi 2014 Honore de Balzac und die Semiotik der Mode in Quo Vadis Romania Zeitschrift fur eine aktuelle Romanistik 43 in German pp 78 97 F R Leavis The Great Tradition London 1948 p 29 Donald Adamson Illusions perdues London 1982 p 86 Illusions perdues in French madalen ina fr Archived from the original on 9 October 2021 Retrieved 8 October 2021 Roslyn Sulcas 6 January 2014 In Nod to History Two Ballet Rivals Spring to Life New York Times Retrieved 8 October 2021 Vivarelli Nick 26 July 2021 Venice Film Festival Full Lineup Unveiled Live Updates Variety Retrieved 26 July 2021 Lemercier Fabian 3 September 2019 Gaumont touting Xavier Giannoli s Lost Illusions CineEuropa Retrieved 23 May 2020 Keslassy Elsa 7 November 2019 Gaumont Bows Sales on Xavier Giannoli s Adaptation of Balzac s Masterpiece Lost Illusions EXCLUSIVE Variety Retrieved 23 May 2020 Vincent Bouquet 13 September 2021 Illusions perdues le ring social de Pauline Bayle in French sceneweb fr Retrieved 8 October 2021 External links EditIllusions perdues at Project Gutenberg nbsp Lost Illusions public domain audiobook at LibriVox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Illusions perdues amp oldid 1172965820, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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