Passages from the French and Italian Notebooks, Volume 1.

audiobook

Passages from the French and Italian Notebooks, Volume 1.

by Nathaniel Hawthorne

EN·~8 hours·13 chapters

Chapters

13 total

FRANCE.

51:51

MARSEILLES.

16:25

THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA.

4:30

ROME.

5:04:06

JOURNEY TO FLORENCE.

11:11

TO TERNI.—BORGHETTO.

11:54

FOLIGNO.

15:49

PERUGIA.

20:19

PASSIGNANO.

7:24

AREZZO.

11:34

Description

A series of notebook entries traces a wintery trek from London to Paris, beginning with the early‑morning scramble of trunks and cab rides through fog‑filled streets. The narrative captures the stark beauty of the Channel’s white cliffs, the bite of frost on carriage windows, and the uneasy anticipation of crossing into a foreign land. Every detail—market carts jammed in Newgate Street, the hiss of a foot‑warmer, the rhythmic roll of fishing boats—grounds the listener in the physical reality of mid‑19th‑century travel.

The writer’s eye turns toward the landscape’s muted palette: bare fields, icy streams, and rows of stiff poplars that line the road to Boulogne. A quiet, introspective tone reveals both the external chill and an inner sense of displacement, blending observation with subtle humor. The prose invites the audience to feel the slow, deliberate pace of a journey where each glance out a frosted pane offers a fleeting glimpse of a new world.

Beyond the Channel, the notebooks continue to explore French towns and the Italian countryside, recording encounters with architecture, customs, and everyday life. Listeners will travel alongside the author, sharing moments of wonder and the occasional discomfort that makes the experience feel authentically lived. The collection offers a gentle, immersive portrait of travel before the age of instant communication.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (477K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Tapio Riikonen and David Widger

Release date

2005-04-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Nathaniel Hawthorne

Nathaniel Hawthorne

1804–1864

Best known for The Scarlet Letter and The House of the Seven Gables, this classic American writer turned guilt, secrecy, and moral conflict into unforgettable fiction. His stories draw on Puritan New England, but they still feel sharp and haunting today.

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