Beatrice

audiobook

Beatrice

by Paul Heyse

DE·~2 hours

Chapters

Description

A quiet evening unfolds in a cool garden house, where three longtime friends gather around a bottle of Asti wine to welcome a visitor who has just returned from Italy. Their guest, a strikingly handsome man whose silver‑streaked hair hints at the years that have passed, carries the calm dignity of someone who once shared youthful adventures in Rome. The conversation drifts from fond memories to the subtle changes that time has etched into his demeanor, as the friends savor the rare chance to be together again.

Amid the clinking glasses, the gathering turns to a spirited discussion of theater and tragedy. The narrator, restless with ideas, argues that the passions of the Italian spirit should have produced a tragedy rivaling the great Greek, English, and German works. Their debate touches on the clash between individual impulse and societal conventions, probing how art might break free from rigid forms to awaken deeper human truths. The evening promises both warm camaraderie and the stirring of intellectual curiosity, inviting listeners into a world where friendship and philosophy intertwine.

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Details

Language

de

Duration

~2 hours (121K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2005-10-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Paul Heyse

Paul Heyse

1830–1914

A Nobel Prize-winning German writer, he became famous for elegant novellas, poems, and plays that helped shape literary life in 19th-century Munich. His work is often remembered for its polished style, psychological insight, and strong storytelling.

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