Ariadne

audiobook

Ariadne

by Henry Gréville

FR·~5 hours·34 chapters

Chapters

34 total

Note sur la transcription: Les erreurs clairement introduites par le typographe ont été corrigées. L'orthographe d'origine a été conservée et n'a pas été harmonisée. Les numéros des pages blanches n'ont pas été repris.

0:14

ARIADNE

0:12

ARIADNE

0:00

I

5:00

II

8:46

III

21:25

IV

10:52

V

9:26

VI

10:06

VII

11:04

Description

In a sun‑drenched August afternoon, a girls’ institute hums with the quiet rustle of textbooks and the distant rumble of an approaching storm. The professor, half‑asleep, lectures on the decline of the Austrian house while the classroom’s tall windows filter the heat into a lazy glow. At the front, a stern, pedantic governess watches over her charges, her eyes ever‑watchful as the brightest pupils scribble furiously for future examinations.

The routine is shattered when Ranine, a shy girl with a cascade of ash‑blond hair, lets a rich contralto burst forth in the middle of the lesson. The governess erupts, demanding an apology, while the other girls struggle to contain their laughter. Ranine’s plaintive confession—that she must sing or she feels she will suffocate—leaves the professor bewildered and hints at a deeper, perhaps unsettling, secret behind her compulsive music.

This opening sets a vivid portrait of a disciplined academy, the clash between authority and youthful impulse, and a mystery that beckons listeners to discover what lies beyond the classroom’s walls.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~5 hours (296K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Clarity, Isabelle Kozsuch and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)

Release date

2014-06-14

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Henry Gréville

Henry Gréville

1842–1902

A bestselling French novelist of the late 19th century, she wrote under a masculine pen name and drew on her years in Russia to give many of her stories a vivid, international setting. Her work was widely read in France and beyond, especially novels like Dosia that brought Russian life to French readers.

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