Gaspard de la nuit: Fantaisies à la manière de Rembrandt et de Callot

audiobook

Gaspard de la nuit: Fantaisies à la manière de Rembrandt et de Callot

by Aloysius Bertrand

FR·~2 hours·11 chapters

Chapters

11 total

GASPARD DE LA NUIT - PAR - LOUIS BERTRAND - FANTAISIES A LA MANIÈRE DE REMBRANDT ET DE CALLOT - PARIS 1845

0:08

GASPARD DE LA NUIT

31:09

PRÉFACE

5:50

ÉCOLE FLAMANDE - I - HARLEM.

12:22

LE VIEUX PARIS - I - LES DEUX JUIFS.

12:11

LA NUIT ET SES PRESTIGES - I - LA CHAMBRE GOTHIQUE.

13:02

LES CHRONIQUES - I - MAITRE OGIER. - (1407)

11:48

ESPAGNE ET ITALIE - I - LA CELLULE.

10:36

SILVES - I - MA CHAUMIERE.

8:02

A M. SAINTE-BEUVE.

1:05

Description

In a quiet garden shadowed by an old bastion, a lone narrator finds an unlikely companion on a stone bench. Their talk drifts from the delicate bloom tucked in a fallen book to the nature of poetry and the elusive quest for art, each line tinged with the melancholy humor of a bygone era. The dialogue is peppered with vivid recollections of Dijon’s towers, lantern‑lit arches, and the ghost‑like figures that wander its streets, all rendered in a style that feels as intricate as an engraving by Rembrandt or Callot.

Beyond the immediate conversation, the narrator’s mind wanders through dusty bookstalls, moonlit windows, and an imagined terrace where a harpist and a praying elder stand as symbols of artistic yearning. The prose balances lyrical nostalgia with a probing curiosity about what makes art a “stone‑philosopher’s stone” for the nineteenth century. Listeners are invited to drift with the narrator through these richly painted vignettes, savoring the interplay of memory, imagination, and the perpetual search for creative truth.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

fr

Duration

~2 hours (117K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Marc D'Hooghe.

Release date

2006-02-07

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Aloysius Bertrand

Aloysius Bertrand

1807–1841

A restless Romantic voice with a gift for dark, dreamlike scenes, he is best known for shaping the prose poem into something haunting and new. His singular masterpiece, Gaspard de la nuit, would go on to influence Symbolist and Surrealist writers.

View all books

You may also like