
Produced by Daniel Fromont
M DCCC LXXVIII
A young physician, newly arrived in Paris from Montpellier, is summoned to a war‑scarred Ursuline convent on the outskirts of the city. As he walks through ruined cloisters and over ancient tombstones, he encounters a striking figure: a black nun, Ourika, whose frail body is marked by a lingering fever and a deep, unspoken sorrow. Her luminous eyes and calm voice contrast sharply with the decay surrounding her, drawing the doctor’s curiosity and compassion.
In their tentative conversations, Ourika reveals a lifetime of hidden pain, linking personal grief to the broader prejudices of a society still reshaping itself after revolution. The physician, moved by her story, strives to ease her mind with rational counsel, while she clings to a fragile hope for peace. Their exchange opens a window onto themes of identity, alienation, and the struggle to reconcile past wounds with the possibility of healing, inviting listeners to reflect on the quiet resilience of a soul caught between two worlds.
Language
fr
Duration
~1 hours (64K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-10-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1777–1828
Best known for Ourika, this French writer brought questions of race, gender, and social exclusion into fiction with unusual sharpness for the early 1800s. Her life moved through revolution, exile, and high society, and that tension gives her work much of its force.
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