![]() ![]() Most critics agree that this is a poignant account of a sweet, simple, and unrewarded life, one which may have been happy precisely because it was unexamined. ![]() Some critics have suggested that Félicité’s apparently meaningless life and misplaced worship of the parrot, Loulou-whom she adores and whom she imagines, in her dying moment, to be an incarnation of the Holy Ghost-reflect Flaubert’s melancholy and disillusionment with life and with organized religion, particularly the Roman Catholic Church. Félicité, a woman of simple mind and devoted heart, suffers tremendous loss but continues to her last breath to love unconditionally. ![]() In this story of a simple housemaid’s life and death, the reader is invited to view a world of boundless, if not reciprocated, love and spirit. The story is unusual among the author’s writings because it is about goodness. The protagonist, a hardworking, good-hearted, poor and uneducated woman named Félicité, is said to have been modeled after a maid employed by Flaubert’s family during his childhood, a much beloved woman of tremendous character. Originally entitled ”Le Perroquet” (“The Parrot”), “A Simple Heart” is the story of one woman’s apparently fruitless existence. It received admiring reviews at the time and has continued to be second only to his novel Madame Bovary (1857) in recognition and acclaim. “A Simple Heart” (“Un Coeur Simple”), by French writer Gustave Flaubert, is one of the stories in his Three Tales ( Trois Coxites), published in 1877. ![]()
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