Quatrevingt-Treize

audiobook

Quatrevingt-Treize

by Victor Hugo

FR·~11 hours·80 chapters

Chapters

80 total
1

VICTOR HUGO - QUATREVINGT-TREIZE - PREMIÈRE PARTIE - EN MER - LIVRE PREMIER - LE BOIS DE LA SAUDRAIE

21:32
2

LIVRE DEUXIÈME - LA CORVETTE CLAYMORE - I. ANGLETERRE ET FRANCE MÊLÉES

7:14
3

II. NUIT SUR LE NAVIRE ET SUR LE PASSAGER

3:53
4

III. NOBLESSE ET ROTURE MÊLÉES

11:06
5

IV. TORMENTUM BELLI

5:15
6

V. VIS ET VIR

10:33
7

VI. LES DEUX PLATEAUX DE LA BALANCE

5:33
8

VII. QUI MET A LA VOILE MET A LA LOTERIE

6:31
9

VIII. 9 = 380

8:27
10

IX. QUELQU'UN ÉCHAPPE

3:01

Description

In the waning days of May 1793, the revolutionary government dispatches a battered Parisian battalion into the tangled woods of the Saudraie, a place already stained by months of brutal Vendée fighting. The column, reduced to a few hundred men from its original thousands, moves cautiously through a forest where sunlight filters through thick birch and oak, and the air hums with the distant cries of birds. Hugo paints the landscape as both beautiful and ominous, a silent witness to the bloodshed that has already scarred the region.

The soldiers, weary and ever‑watchful, sense the ever‑present threat of ambush as they press forward, their senses sharpened by the belief that the enemy could be lurking behind every branch. A small scouting party, led by a sergeant and accompanied by a vivandière whose curiosity mirrors the bravery of the men, ventures ahead to probe the darkness. Their uneasy march through the moss‑laden undergrowth sets the stage for a tense confrontation that will test loyalty, fear, and the revolutionary ideal itself.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~11 hours (679K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2006-01-01

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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