L'amant rendu cordelier a l'observance d'amour

audiobook

L'amant rendu cordelier a l'observance d'amour

by d'Auvergne Martial

FR·~1 hours·106 chapters

Chapters

106 total

S'ensuyt l'amant rendu cordelier a l'observance d'amours

5:12

L'amant

0:15

Damp prieur

0:15

L'amant

0:15

Damp prieur

0:15

L'amant

0:15

Damp prieur

0:18

L'amant

0:17

Damp prieur

0:17

L'amant

0:15

Description

In a twilight‑lit forest where shadows linger and the wind hums an ancient chant, a lover‑turned‑friar wanders, haunted by loss and yearning for redemption. The narrative opens with his sudden exhaustion beside a river, a sudden storm that whisks him toward a forlorn chapel of crystal walls and towering pillars, a sanctuary built by devoted cordeliers who have renounced worldly love. As he steps inside, the echo of distant prayers mingles with his own trembling pleas, setting a tone of fragile hope against an oppressive darkness.

The prose unfolds in a lyrical, almost chant‑like rhythm, weaving together themes of love, penitence, and the search for inner light. Listeners are drawn into a world where every breath feels like a prayer and every footstep echoes through vaulted arches, inviting contemplation of faith and desire. This evocative first act promises a haunting journey that balances melancholy with the quiet promise of spiritual awakening.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~1 hours (59K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Laurent Vogel and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF/Gallica) at http://gallica.bnf.fr)

Release date

2008-08-26

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

d'Auvergne Martial

d'Auvergne Martial

d. 1508

A fifteenth-century French poet and legal official, remembered for blending courtroom wit with lively verse and for turning major events of his time into poetry. His work offers a vivid glimpse of late medieval France.

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