Marriage, he explained, was an ongoing civil (or domestic) war in which as in other wars, superior force and guile made the winner. The book wa especially popular with women, whose grievances it exposed.At thirty-four years of age he had already published two dozen novel and numerous tales under his own name, and had sketched his larg scheme. "Salute me," he exclaimed to his sister, Laure, and her husban{ when he visited them in 1833, "I am on the way to becoming a genius!" B:1838, he predicted, "the three sections of this vast work will be, if no entirely complete, at least super-imposed so that the reader will be able t* judge it as a whole." In a letter to Eve Hanska in 1834 he outlined hi ambitious project.The Etudes de moeurs will be
pink and white jordan fusion a complete picture of society from which nothin! has been omitted, no situation in life, no physiognomy or character of man o woman, no way ofliving, no calling, no social level, no part of France, nor aw.aspect of childhood, old age, middle age, politics,justice or war. . . . In the Etude philosophiques I shall show the why of sentiments, the what oflife; what is th structure, what
white pink orange pink grey and white jordans green jordan 7's are the conditions outside which neither society nor man car exist; after having surveyed it in order to describe it, I shall survey it in order tc judge
retro 10 white b it. Also, in the Etudes de moeurs there will be individuals treated as types and in the Etudes philosophiques there will be types depicted as individuals. ThuI shall have brought all aspects to life, the type by individualizing it, the individua by typifying him. If twenty-four volumes are needed for the Etudes de moeurs only fifteen will be needed for the Etudes philosophiques and only nine for th Etudes analytiques. Thus Man, Society and Mankind will be described, judgec and analyzed without repetitions in a work which will be like a western Thousanc and One Nights. It was essential to this grandiose concept that the whole work never bc completed. Their coherence would come from documentary truth. Follow ing the prescription of Balzac's country doctor, "We proceed from ourselvet to men, never from men to ourselves." With his "prodigious taste for detail," he would capture the personal nature of experience. "The autho] firmly believes that details alone will henceforth determine the merit o: works improperly called romans [novels, or romances]." This sometime' overwrought detail, along with the dominant, usually unappealing, passiom of his characters, repels many American readers nowadays.
To give historical coherence to his whole comedy, Balzac pioneered the multinovel saga. Keeping characters alive from novel to novel, he allowet