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Delphine

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About This Book

A novel centers on a sensitive, independent woman whose romantic choices and moral convictions collide with rigid social conventions, bringing personal sorrow and contested resolutions. Presented through intimate scenes and letters, it explores the friction between passionate sincerity and social hypocrisy, showing how society tends to punish outspoken generosity while forgiving measured selfishness. The author combines narrative episodes with analytic reflections on moral purpose, offers a revised ending while preserving an earlier, more politically charged finale as a separate anecdote, and probes the special severity applied to exceptional characters, particularly women, within a community organized around collective interest.

About the Author

de Staël, Madame portrait

Madame de Staël

Madame de Staël, born Anne Louise Germaine Necker, was a prominent French-Swiss writer and intellectual in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. She is best known for her influential works that explore themes of passion, individuality, and the cultural dynamics between France and Germany. Her novel "Corinne; or, Italy" is celebrated for its rich portrayal of the Italian landscape and the complexities of artistic expression. De Staël was also a notable political figure, engaging in the literary and philosophical debates of her time, and her salons became a hub for Enlightenment thinkers. Her writings contributed significantly to the development of Romanticism in literature.

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