
audiobook
by Jean François Paul de Gondi de Retz
In the winter of 1651 the French Parliament found itself locked in a fierce struggle over the return of a powerful minister. Deputies scramble to draft resolutions that would ban the cardinal’s movements, demand his exile, and even place a bounty on his head, while clergymen step back, bound by canon law, unable to vote on matters of life and death. The tension escalates as rival factions—royal, noble, and ecclesiastical—issue contradictory commands, each trying to sway the king and protect their own interests.
Through the eyes of a seasoned churchman caught in the middle, the narrative captures the frantic council meetings, the whispered conspiracies, and the stark clash between parliamentary authority and royal prerogative. He recounts heated debates, the duke of Orléans’ bold proclamations, and the king’s hesitant maneuvers, all set against a backdrop of looming armies and political intrigue. Listeners are drawn into a vivid portrait of a nation teetering on the brink of civil discord, where words are cheap and actions speak louder than any decree.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (71K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-12-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1613–1679
A churchman at the center of 17th-century French politics, he is remembered less for quiet clerical life than for intrigue, rebellion, and the vivid memoirs that grew out of it. His story moves through court power struggles, imprisonment, escape, and a sharp-eyed account of the age of the Fronde.
View all books