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Adolphe

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About This Book

A first-person narrator recounts an intense, ambiguous attachment to a woman and the gradual disintegration of their irregular liaison, showing how indecision, selfishness, and social constraints produce lasting suffering. The account follows the affair's development and aftermath, his mounting remorse and rationalizations, and her deepening dependence and ruin. Interwoven reflections probe the moral hazards of coquettish or careless sentiment, the weight of public judgment, and the psychological toll on both the abandoned and the one who abandons. The work privileges introspective analysis over action, mapping inward motives and ethical consequences of intimate conduct.

About the Author

Constant, Benjamin portrait

Benjamin Constant

Benjamin Constant (1767-1830) was a Swiss-born French writer and political thinker, known for his contributions to the development of liberal thought in the early 19th century. His most famous work, "Adolphe," is a poignant exploration of unrequited love and the complexities of human emotion, reflecting the Romantic ideals of his time. Constant's writings often delve into themes of individual freedom and the role of the state, making him a significant figure in both literature and political philosophy. In addition to his literary achievements, he was actively involved in the political landscape of France during the tumultuous years of the Revolution and the Napoleonic era.

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