Actes et Paroles, Volume 2: Pendant l'exil 1852-1870

audiobook

Actes et Paroles, Volume 2: Pendant l'exil 1852-1870

by Victor Hugo

FR·~11 hours

Chapters

Description

In this compelling collection, the author’s voice rises from the turmoil of forced displacement to examine the very foundations of law and liberty. He argues that true authority rests not in brute force but in the moral weight of justice, contrasting the fleeting triumphs of tyrants with the enduring power of truth. The essays weave vivid metaphors—law as a crowned citizen, exile as the nakedness of right—to explore how oppression ultimately turns against its own enforcers.

Beyond abstract theory, the work offers intimate portraits of life on the Channel Islands, where the writer observed the stark beauty of Jersey and Guernsey while wrestling with loneliness, honor, and the relentless search for meaning. Through lyrical reflections on nature, memory, and conscience, he invites listeners to contemplate the paradox of exile: a physical removal that deepens, rather than erodes, one’s inner resolve. This blend of political philosophy and personal meditation makes the volume a resonant testament to resilience and the enduring quest for justice.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~11 hours (687K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2005-07-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Victor Hugo

Victor Hugo

1802–1885

A giant of French literature, he gave the world sweeping stories of justice, mercy, love, and revolt. Best known for Les Misérables and The Hunchback of Notre-Dame, he wrote with the emotional force of a poet and the social conscience of a reformer.

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