The Count de Sallenauve
the Count de Sallenauve is the second part of Romance French of Honore de Balzac: the Deputy of unfinished Arcis with died of the author who had instructed Charles Rabou to finish it and who was published in 1852 in Constitutional the , then published in volume at Potter in 1856.
The text recycles a great number of situations already appeared in a mysterious business and characters which one followed the evolution in the Cousin White beet , in particular Philéas Beauvisage, wire of farmer who knows a rise fulgurating in the Deputy of Arcis , becomes the lover of Valerie Marneffe in the Cousin White beet and leaves his seat of deputy with Maxime de Trailles in Béatrix . The big winner of the business, which is as a hero more discrete as usually, is precisely old the Thirteen , Maxime, who makes a honourable end .
The edition of the whole of the Député of Arcis continued until in 1901 and was the object of many criticisms on behalf of the experts who reproached in particular Eve de Balzac her statute… of expert that it defined as follows: … when one wants details on the practices, on manners, the relations, the actions finally, of some family members many and imperishable created by this great mind and this energetic will, it is always with me that it will be necessary to be addressed .
Thus, Charles Rabou advised by Eve de Balzac, was it to continue as a long time as possible the life of this large family and imperishable , which gave place to a third shutter of the Député of Arcis : the Family Beauvisage .