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Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
ciesse
77 episodes
1 week ago
1793. The new revolutionary government of France is laboring mightily to end injustice and bring in an ideal new age of liberty, equality, and brotherhood, beginning by killing those obnoxious persons who don't appreciate their ideals. In Vendée a force of peasants, strongly supported by imperial England, is laboring mightily to overthrow the revolutionary government and restore Christianity, family, honor and decency, beginning by killing those obnoxious persons who fail to appreciate those noble phenomena. The exiled Marquis de Lantenac returns from England to lead the Vendéan revolt, to institute a take-no-prisoners policy, and to win a series of bloody victories.

Lantenac is opposed with some success by his great-nephew the Revolutionary officer Captain Gauvain. Gauvain's superiors in Paris admire his courage and tactical skill, but they disapprove of his belief that the principle of brotherhood requires him to show mercy to his enemies. They send their man Cimourdain, whose unyielding principles they trust, to make sure that Gauvain's reactionary mercies and his family loyalty are not causing him to betray the Republic--and to have Gauvain killed if that proves to be the case. They don't realize that Cimourdain, who was once a priest and Gauvain's tutor, loves Gauvain like a son--loves him, perhaps, as much as he once loved God and as he now loves the Revolution.

Meanwhile, the Breton peasant Michele Flechard, who has just lost her home and her husband in a war which she experiences an incomprehensible nightmare, is simply trying to keep her young children alive and get them to some place that won't collapse in blood and fire. Under the circumstances, this appears about as difficult as bringing about either version of the Just Kingdom.

Note: A listener interested in the story, and not in a long excursus on the architecture and the notable names of the French Revolution, could skip the very long Section 27, The Convention, without becoming confused or losing any of the plot. (Summary by Joanna Michal Hoyt)
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1793. The new revolutionary government of France is laboring mightily to end injustice and bring in an ideal new age of liberty, equality, and brotherhood, beginning by killing those obnoxious persons who don't appreciate their ideals. In Vendée a force of peasants, strongly supported by imperial England, is laboring mightily to overthrow the revolutionary government and restore Christianity, family, honor and decency, beginning by killing those obnoxious persons who fail to appreciate those noble phenomena. The exiled Marquis de Lantenac returns from England to lead the Vendéan revolt, to institute a take-no-prisoners policy, and to win a series of bloody victories.

Lantenac is opposed with some success by his great-nephew the Revolutionary officer Captain Gauvain. Gauvain's superiors in Paris admire his courage and tactical skill, but they disapprove of his belief that the principle of brotherhood requires him to show mercy to his enemies. They send their man Cimourdain, whose unyielding principles they trust, to make sure that Gauvain's reactionary mercies and his family loyalty are not causing him to betray the Republic--and to have Gauvain killed if that proves to be the case. They don't realize that Cimourdain, who was once a priest and Gauvain's tutor, loves Gauvain like a son--loves him, perhaps, as much as he once loved God and as he now loves the Revolution.

Meanwhile, the Breton peasant Michele Flechard, who has just lost her home and her husband in a war which she experiences an incomprehensible nightmare, is simply trying to keep her young children alive and get them to some place that won't collapse in blood and fire. Under the circumstances, this appears about as difficult as bringing about either version of the Just Kingdom.

Note: A listener interested in the story, and not in a long excursus on the architecture and the notable names of the French Revolution, could skip the very long Section 27, The Convention, without becoming confused or losing any of the plot. (Summary by Joanna Michal Hoyt)
Show more...
Arts
Fiction
Episodes (20/77)
Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
Part 3: In The Vendée Bk 1: The Vendée Ch 1: The Forests
10 months ago
4 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/1/2 Men
10 months ago
3 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/2/12 The Rescue Planned
10 months ago
4 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/6/3 The Commander's Hood
10 months ago
4 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
Pt 3 Bk 2: The Three Children Ch 1: Plus Quam Civilia Bella
10 months ago
12 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/1/5 Their Life In Warfare
10 months ago
10 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/4/2: Death Speaks
10 months ago
7 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/4/11: The Desperate
10 months ago
5 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/2/6 A Healed Breast, but a Bleeding Heart
10 months ago
12 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
Pt 3 Bk 3: The Massacre of St. Bartholomew Ch 1: The Massacre of St Bartholemew
10 months ago
28 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/2/14 What The Imânus Is Doing
10 months ago
4 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
Pt 3 Book 4: The Mother Ch 1: Death Passes
10 months ago
5 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
Part 3, Book 7: Feudality and Revolution. Ch 1: The Ancestor
10 months ago
16 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/7/6: Still The Sun Rises
10 months ago
15 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/2/11 Terrible as the Antique
10 months ago
7 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/2/2 Dol
10 months ago
13 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/4/8: The Speech and the Roar
10 months ago
7 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/4/6: The Situation
10 months ago
5 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/4/3: Mutterings Among The Peasants
10 months ago
7 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
3/7/2: The Court-Martial
10 months ago
6 minutes

Ninety-Three by Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885)
1793. The new revolutionary government of France is laboring mightily to end injustice and bring in an ideal new age of liberty, equality, and brotherhood, beginning by killing those obnoxious persons who don't appreciate their ideals. In Vendée a force of peasants, strongly supported by imperial England, is laboring mightily to overthrow the revolutionary government and restore Christianity, family, honor and decency, beginning by killing those obnoxious persons who fail to appreciate those noble phenomena. The exiled Marquis de Lantenac returns from England to lead the Vendéan revolt, to institute a take-no-prisoners policy, and to win a series of bloody victories.

Lantenac is opposed with some success by his great-nephew the Revolutionary officer Captain Gauvain. Gauvain's superiors in Paris admire his courage and tactical skill, but they disapprove of his belief that the principle of brotherhood requires him to show mercy to his enemies. They send their man Cimourdain, whose unyielding principles they trust, to make sure that Gauvain's reactionary mercies and his family loyalty are not causing him to betray the Republic--and to have Gauvain killed if that proves to be the case. They don't realize that Cimourdain, who was once a priest and Gauvain's tutor, loves Gauvain like a son--loves him, perhaps, as much as he once loved God and as he now loves the Revolution.

Meanwhile, the Breton peasant Michele Flechard, who has just lost her home and her husband in a war which she experiences an incomprehensible nightmare, is simply trying to keep her young children alive and get them to some place that won't collapse in blood and fire. Under the circumstances, this appears about as difficult as bringing about either version of the Just Kingdom.

Note: A listener interested in the story, and not in a long excursus on the architecture and the notable names of the French Revolution, could skip the very long Section 27, The Convention, without becoming confused or losing any of the plot. (Summary by Joanna Michal Hoyt)