Moscow: A Story of the French Invasion of 1812

audiobook

Moscow: A Story of the French Invasion of 1812

by Frederick Whishaw

EN·~5 hours·33 chapters

Chapters

33 total
1

MOSCOW - A STORY OF THE FRENCH INVASION OF 1812 - BY FRED WHISHAW - AUTHOR OF "LOVERS AT FAULT," "THE TIGER OF MUSCOVY," "A GRAND DUKE OF RUSSIA," ETC.

0:14
2

MOSCOW.

0:00
3

CHAPTER I.

14:17
4

CHAPTER II.

12:14
5

CHAPTER III.

8:47
6

CHAPTER IV.

10:48
7

CHAPTER V.

10:36
8

CHAPTER VI.

9:36
9

CHAPTER VII.

9:49
10

CHAPTER VIII.

9:37

Description

The story opens in a bustling Moscow manor, where Count Maximof arrives with his wife, young son, and a parish priest to seal a childhood betrothal with the neighboring Demidof family. Amid the clatter of sleigh‑bells and the boisterous hospitality of Russian aristocracy, ten‑year‑old Alexander and seven‑year‑old Vera exchange vows, dolls, and a miniature lancer’s uniform. The scene is vivid with the rough humor of the landowners, the strained service of serfs, and the cramped, dust‑laden grandeur of the household. It paints a portrait of a society perched between tradition and the uneasy comforts of a pre‑modern world.

Beyond the festive dinner, an uneasy tension looms as rumors of Napoleon’s advance begin to drift eastward. The narrative hints that the lives of these privileged families will soon be tested by the looming invasion, forcing them to confront both external danger and internal hierarchies. Listeners are invited to follow the intimate dramas of love, power, and survival as Moscow stands on the brink of a historic clash.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (306K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by sp1nd, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2013-06-17

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

FW

Frederick Whishaw

1854–1934

A prolific storyteller with a gift for adventure, history, and the atmosphere of old Russia, he wrote dozens of books that were especially popular with young readers around the turn of the twentieth century. He also helped bring Russian literature to English-speaking audiences through some of the earliest translations of Dostoevsky.

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