Tell your friends about this item:
Heloise Pajadou's Calvary
Lucien Descaves
Heloise Pajadou's Calvary
Lucien Descaves
Héloïse Pajadou's Calvary (Le Calvaire de Héloïse Pajadou originally), by Lucien Descaves, and published for the first time in 1883, is a Naturalist novel set in mid-18th century France, during the French Second Empire or possibly later.
This is a tale of marital infidelity on the part of a vulgar, but wily, inveterate skirt-chaser, Pajadou, and the toll his extra-marital affairs, ever more audacious, take on his good, good-hearted, faithful wife Héloïse, who runs a laundry business with him and her mother, in a small country village outside Paris.
Just when Pajadou?s behavior seemed like it could not get any worse, the family-owned business apprentices Reine, a girl "not yet fourteen years old; she looked twelve, if that. She was small in stature, very slender, with an immensely sweet prettiness. Her very blond and very fine hair were tucked up under a little white bonnet pulled down over her ears. But what was particularly pretty about her was her complexion. Her white skin, a transparent, delicately pink white skin, which her eyelashes cast a shadow on, gave her a luminous face: it was like a spray of flowers..."
Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
Released | June 27, 2021 |
ISBN13 | 9781955392075 |
Publishers | Sunny Lou Publishing |
Pages | 100 |
Dimensions | 127 × 203 × 6 mm · 117 g |
Language | English |