L'inutile beauté by Guy de Maupassant
Guy de Maupassant is famous for his short stories that slice right through the polished surface of 19th-century French society. L'inutile beauté is a perfect, painful example. It's a concentrated dose of human drama you can read in one sitting, but it'll stick with you for much longer.
The Story
The story is built around a single, explosive conversation. Monsieur de Sallus, a wealthy and deeply insecure man, confronts his beautiful wife, the Countess. He's consumed by a jealousy that has nothing to do with evidence of infidelity and everything to do with her mere existence as a beautiful object in the world. He can't bear that other men might look at her, desire her, or that she might enjoy her own beauty. His 'solution' is monstrous: he gives her an ultimatum. She must choose to either become his prisoner—confined to their home, cut off from society—or be set 'free' through a scandalous, reputation-destroying separation where he gets to keep their children. It's a power play disguised as a choice, and the entire story hinges on her brilliant, calculated response.
Why You Should Read It
This isn't a romance. It's a psychological autopsy of a marriage. What floored me was the Countess. She's not just a passive victim. Faced with her husband's cruel logic, she fights back with a cooler, sharper intelligence. She turns his own game against him in a way that is both shocking and deeply satisfying. Maupassant shows us how the weapon of social expectation can be wielded by either side. The title, 'The Useless Beauty,' echoes throughout. Is her beauty useless because it brings no happiness? Or is it the husband's obsession with it that's truly useless and destructive? The story forces you to ask these questions without giving easy answers.
Final Verdict
Perfect for readers who love character-driven drama and stories that explore the dark corners of relationships. If you enjoy the tense, dialogue-heavy scenes of authors like Henry James or the sharp social observations of Jane Austen, but with a distinctly French, cynical edge, you'll devour this. It's also a great entry point to Maupassant—short, powerful, and proof that a story doesn't need ghosts or murder to be a genuine thriller. The monsters here are pride, jealousy, and the quiet tyranny of a marriage gone wrong.
This title is part of the public domain archive. It serves as a testament to our shared literary heritage.
Margaret Rodriguez
1 year agoThe author provides a very nuanced critique of current methodologies.
Kimberly Davis
3 months agoThe digital formatting makes it very easy to navigate.
Karen Moore
2 years agoLoved it.
Charles Flores
8 months agoAmazing book.
John Harris
9 months agoGreat value and very well written.