The Maid of Orleans: A Tragedy

audiobook

The Maid of Orleans: A Tragedy

by Friedrich Schiller

EN·~3 hours·72 chapters

Chapters

72 total
1

Format Choice

0:43
2

THE MAID OF ORLEANS.

0:01
3

By Friedrich Schiller

0:56
4

PROLOGUE.

0:07
5

SCENE I.

2:20
6

SCENE II.

5:31
7

SCENE III.

11:31
8

SCENE IV.

2:27
9

ACT I.

0:00
10

SCENE I.

1:03

Description

In a war‑torn France, a modest rural community gathers beneath a chapel’s Virgin statue and an ancient oak, trying to preserve ordinary life amid the looming threat of English conquest. The opening scenes introduce Thibaut, a humble farmer determined to secure futures for his three daughters, arranging marriages that promise stability in a world where battlefields edge ever closer. Their hopeful vows are tinged with the stark reality of a kingdom under siege, setting a tone of both tender domesticity and impending turmoil.

Amid the village’s simple celebrations, whispers of political intrigue surface: a disinherited king, a scheming queen, and powerful dukes maneuver behind the scenes. The audience meets a cast ranging from noble lords to common laborers, each bearing the weight of a nation’s fate. This contrast between the intimate concerns of love and the grand stakes of war fuels the drama’s emotional core.

The play’s early act weaves personal sacrifice with patriotic duty, hinting at the emergence of a remarkable heroine whose destiny will intertwine with France’s struggle. Listeners are drawn into a world where courage is tested on both the battlefield and within the heart, promising a poignant exploration of honor, faith, and the cost of hope.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (191K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Tapio Riikonen and David Widger

Release date

2004-12-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Friedrich Schiller

Friedrich Schiller

1759–1805

A fierce, brilliant voice of German literature, this playwright and poet helped shape the era known as Weimar Classicism. His dramas and poems combine big ideas about freedom, justice, and human dignity with real emotional force.

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