Les misérables Tome I: Fantine

audiobook

Les misérables Tome I: Fantine

by Victor Hugo

FR·~11 hours·79 chapters

Chapters

79 total
1

Les Misérables - Victor Hugo - Tome I—FANTINE - (1862)

3:20
2

Livre premier—Un juste

0:01
3

Chapitre I - Monsieur Myriel

6:05
4

Chapitre II - Monsieur Myriel devient monseigneur Bienvenu

10:25
5

Chapitre III - À bon évêque dur évêché

4:25
6

Chapitre IV - Les œuvres semblables aux paroles

16:01
7

Chapitre V - Que monseigneur Bienvenu faisait durer trop longtemps ses soutanes

6:02
8

Chapitre VI - Par qui il faisait garder sa maison

12:33
9

Chapitre VII - Cravatte

7:04
10

Chapitre VIII - Philosophie après boire

7:57

Description

In the early years after the Napoleonic wars, a quiet, elderly bishop named Charles‑François Bienvenu Myriel presides over the diocese of Digne. Though once a member of an aristocratic family, he has renounced his former ambitions and now lives by a simple creed of mercy, offering aid to anyone who knocks on his door. His gentle presence and surprising generosity set a tone of compassion that ripples through the streets of a France still reeling from revolution and poverty.

Against this backdrop, the novel follows Fantine, a young woman whose dreams are shattered by circumstance. Forced into desperate labor to support an abandoned child, she confronts a society that judges her harshly while offering little refuge. Her struggle illuminates the stark contrast between the bishop’s benevolence and the relentless hardships endured by the most vulnerable, inviting listeners to reflect on justice, sacrifice, and the enduring hope that can arise even in the darkest of times.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~11 hours (652K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by www.ebooksgratuits.com and Chuck Greif

Release date

2006-01-10

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo

1802–1885

One of the giants of French literature, this poet, novelist, and playwright helped define Romanticism and gave the world enduring classics like Notre-Dame de Paris and Les Misérables. His life was shaped by both literary ambition and political conviction, which gives his work unusual force and feeling.

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