Joan of Arc: A Play in Five Acts

audiobook

Joan of Arc: A Play in Five Acts

by J. A. (Jane Alice) Sargant

EN·~1 hours·41 chapters

Chapters

41 total
1

JOAN OF ARC: - A PLAY IN FIVE ACTS. - BY MRS. J. A. SARGANT. - LONDON: JOSEPH RICKERBY, SHERBOURN LANE, KING WILLIAM STREET, CITY. 1840.

0:08
2

LONDON: PRINTED BY JOSEPH RICKERBY, SHERBOURN LANE.

0:03
3

TO THE QUEEN DOWAGER.

1:19
4

PREFACE.

1:51
5

DRAMATIS PERSONÆ. - MEN.

0:16
6

ACT I. - SCENE I.—Chinon.

2:37
7

Scene II.—Council.

5:37
8

Scene III.—Church of St. Catherine de Fierbois.—Midnight.

5:26
9

Scene IV.—Chinon.

4:56
10

Scene V.—French Camp at Orleans.

2:07

Description

A modest yet earnest dramatization brings the legend of a young French shepherdess to life on the stage. Set in the war‑torn town of Chinon, the opening act introduces Joan as a mysterious figure whose reputation has already sparked fierce debate among seasoned commanders and wary nobles. Through lively dialogue we glimpse the clash of skepticism and hope that surrounds her arrival, hinting at the fervent patriotism and divine conviction that will drive the story forward.

The play’s language reflects its nineteenth‑century origins, blending formal courtly speech with the raw, earnest voice of a girl thrust into the turmoil of war. While the characters debate her legitimacy and the fate of France, the audience senses the simmering tension between tradition and the promise of a new heroine. Listeners are invited to experience the early stirrings of a legend that would soon challenge both battlefield and faith.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (115K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Bryan Ness and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Print project.)

Release date

2011-04-12

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

JA

J. A. (Jane Alice) Sargant

A prolific 19th-century British writer, she produced religious and conservative works across many forms, from children’s stories and poetry to biographies, plays, and political pamphlets. Her writing often aimed to instruct as much as entertain, reflecting the moral and social debates of her time.

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