Madame Delphine

audiobook

Madame Delphine

by George Washington Cable

EN·~1 hours·17 chapters

Chapters

17 total

MADAME DELPHINE - BY - GEORGE W. CABLE

0:14

MADAME DELPHINE.

0:01

CHAPTER I. - AN OLD HOUSE.

5:13

CHAPTER II. - MADAME DELPHINE.

4:18

CHAPTER III. - CAPITAINE LEMAITRE.

5:44

CHAPTER IV. - THREE FRIENDS.

8:48

CHAPTER V. - THE CAP FITS.

11:18

CHAPTER VI. - A CRY OF DISTRESS.

8:54

CHAPTER VII. - MICHÉ VIGNEVIELLE.

8:11

CHAPTER VIII. - SHE.

9:02

Description

Wandering down the quiet, narrow Rue Royale in New Orleans, listeners are drawn into a world where faded grandeur clings to crumbling stucco walls and overgrown red‑tile roofs. The street hums with the scent of flower‑women’s perfume, yet the surrounding alleys speak of long‑forgotten prosperity, their shuttered windows and rust‑eaten balconies hinting at a bygone Creole elegance. Amid this atmospheric decay, a small brick house, half‑sunk into its garden of gnarled fruit trees, stands as a silent witness to the city’s layered history.

Inside that modest dwelling once lived the enigmatic Madame Delphine, a woman whose beauty and ownership of the property were the subject of whispered gossip decades ago. Locals speak of her in reverent tones, recalling a time when the house shone with lace, brocade, and silver—now reduced to a weather‑beaten façade. As the story unfolds, listeners will follow the subtle clues left by neighbors and the lingering aura of her presence, inviting a deeper exploration of love, loss, and the secrets that linger in the shadows of New Orleans’ old quarter.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (108K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chuck Greif and The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2006-11-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

George Washington Cable

George Washington Cable

1844–1925

Best known for vivid stories of Creole New Orleans, this American novelist brought the city’s language, customs, and social tensions to life. His fiction and essays also made him an unusually outspoken Southern voice for racial equality after the Civil War.

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