Duras, Claire Lechat de Kersaint, duchesse de (1778-1828), maintained an important literary salon and also wrote three remarkable novels about impossible love. Classically simple in style and plot, they treat what were then somewhat scandalous subjects in a moving way. Ourika (1824) is the pathetic tale of the hopeless love of a young black for a noble Frenchman; she enters a convent and dies. In Édouard (1825) the son of a worker adopted by a nobleman falls in love with his adopted sister and, aware of the impossibility of the misalliance, seeks death as a solider. Olivier (posthumously published, 1971) deals with physical impotence as an obstacle to love, and inspired Stendhal's Armance.
[Frank Paul Bowman]




