Author(s): Stendhal
Reader(s): Homewood, Bill
Label: Naxos AudioBooks
Genre: Classic Fiction
Catalogue No: NAB39812
Barcode: 9781843793984
Release Date: 01/2010

STENDHAL: Red and the Black (Unabriged)

Tracklist

Disc 1
Stendhal - Author
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
1Book 1: Chapter 105:33
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2You must not for a moment expect…03:38
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3Chapter 203:32
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4This young cleric was sent from Besancon…04:09
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5Chapter 305:17
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6The reproaches of M. de Renal…04:36
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7This sudden decision plunged Madame de Renal deep in thought…03:56
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8Chapter 404:05
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9As he approached his mill, Pere Sorel called Julien in his stentorian voice…05:45
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10Chapter 505:47
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11'What!' M. de Renal indignantly exclaimed…06:32
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12To Julien, making a fortune meant in the first place leaving Verrieres…05:57
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13Chapter 604:23
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14Never in her life had a purely agreeable sensation…04:09
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15Julien plucked up his courage again during this long speech…04:56
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
16'What think you of this new acquisition?' M. de Renal asked his wife…05:30
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 2
1Chapter 704:58
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2Madame de Renal felt ashamed of this way of looking at things…04:11
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3After many long years, Madame de Renal…04:50
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4This outburst left Madame de Renal pale…05:33
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5'I was thinking, Sir,' he said to him one day…04:27
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6Julien knew nothing apart from these matters…04:04
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7Chapter 805:13
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8Julien replied to these fresh remonstrances…04:45
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9Madame de Renal tried to work…04:59
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10As it is our intention to flatter no one…05:34
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11Chapter 905:18
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12When Madame Derville repeated her suggestion…05:29
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13Despite the wisdom of these reflections…05:22
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14'It is a secret!' repeated Madame de Renal…05:05
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15Chapter 1003:58
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
16Julien made a speedy escape and climbed up among the big woods…03:57
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 3
1Chapter 1105:50
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2His kisses, filled with passion…06:31
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3Chapter 1205:53
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4'Since my husband, who does not know…'05:19
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5Julien related to him, with suitable omissions…05:36
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6Chapter 1304:21
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7Julien was struck by her quavering voice and by the look in her eyes…05:21
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8The sudden resolution he had just made formed a pleasing distraction…04:13
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9Chapter 1403:49
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10Madame de Renal could not get over her astonishment …04:19
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11Chapter 1504:14
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12Julien had every right to praise his own courage…05:05
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13Chapter 1605:33
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14The foolish idea of his being regarded as a servile lover…06:29
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15Chapter 1705:51
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 4
1In the foreground appeared the highly complicated intrigues…06:03
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2Chapter 1805:28
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3The work of organising the Guard of Honour…05:56
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4There was one person happier than he…05:28
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5This melancholy splendour, degraded by the intrusion…05:26
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6'It is quite clear,' said Julien, at last venturing to understand…05:29
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7'This Marquis would not be polite like my dear Bishop,' he thought…06:07
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8Chapter 1905:24
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9'Avoid my presence,' she said to Julien one day…05:30
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10'That is all that I ask,' she cried, rising to her feet…05:49
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11This great moral crisis changed the nature of the sentiment…04:51
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12Chapter 2005:20
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13'Do not go and quarrel with M. Valenod…'04:46
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14Chapter 2106:30
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 5
1'I am used to Louise,' he said to himself, 'she knows all my affairs…'05:46
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2'God! Why is not my wife dead!'05:45
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3'You speak like the fool that you are,' cried M. de Renal…05:48
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4Madame de Renal meanwhile had run up…05:43
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5This threat was uttered with gladness…05:43
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6Chapter 2204:52
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7His missive dispatched…05:53
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8This was too much for Julien…05:51
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9Before leaving the house Julien received four or five invitations…05:28
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10'You aristocrats, you have every reason to be proud,' he said…05:19
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11M. Valenod was what is called, a hundred leagues from Paris…05:53
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12Chapter 2305:21
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13Julien did not fail to attend the auction…05:48
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14'Signor Zingarelli,' went on the young singer…05:21
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 6
1One thing astonished Julien: the weeks of solitude spent at Verrieres…04:27
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2On the morning after his return, at six o'clock…05:28
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3M. de Renal presently returned; he was beside himself…05:09
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4Cruel necessity, with its hand of iron, bent Julien's will…04:52
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5Chapter 2405:39
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6Julien, lost in thought, was comparing…05:20
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7Amanda observed his courage; it formed a charming contrast…05:36
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8Chapter 2505:03
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9Julien advanced with an uncertain step…05:03
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10He looked upwards and made the sign of the Cross…04:38
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11'This is a bold and healthy mind,' he said to himself…04:35
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12Chapter 2605:58
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13Having half mastered these several truths…05:40
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14The moment that Julien became aware of his own folly…05:38
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15What pains did he not take to arrive at that expression…05:39
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 7
1Julien percieved the immensity of the danger…03:29
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2Chapter 2705:18
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3No sooner had M. Castanede gone up to his own room…04:16
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4Chapter 2803:55
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5Next morning at daybreak, Julien made his way to the Cathedral…05:21
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6'At last, he is going to tell me his secret,' thought Julien…05:11
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7His distraction was nevertheless half conquered…04:30
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8Chapter 2905:31
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9But why speak of his friends, his enemies?03:49
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10On the first day, the examiners appointed…05:39
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11Despite his brilliant existence in Paris…05:16
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12Without knowing it, the stern abbe Pirard loved this Seminary…05:08
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13Julien was silently watching the abbe…05:57
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14The prelate, growing more and more pleased…03:50
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15On the following morning, Julien detected something strange…05:41
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
16Chapter 3006:22
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 8
1Some time after this, Julien received a letter in an unknown hand…05:21
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2The most prudent course was to retire…05:07
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3'I am going to draw up the ladder,' he said…05:31
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4Without a thought of what he was telling her…05:55
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5Madame de Renal could refuse nothing in the face of this idea…04:53
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6In telling Julien of the incident of the ladder…05:13
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7While Julien was devouring his supper with a keen appetite…04:48
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8Book 2: Chapter 104:54
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9A pious old peasant woman's cow dies…04:47
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10The discussion was endless…04:20
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11'If after a few months you are of no use to him…'05:21
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12'It seems to me,' said Julien, blushing deeply…05:11
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13'I, for example, a peaceable and insignificant man…'05:05
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14Chapter 206:29
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15'You are perhaps going to become a fop,' the abbé said to him…06:19
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 9
1The men assembled in this drawing-room…03:42
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2The Marquis must have spoken of the kind of education…04:55
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3Chapter 304:10
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4On the following day Julien attended two lectures on theology…04:06
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5Chapter 405:29
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6It was for this reason that Julien sometimes remained to the end…05:00
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7Mademoiselle de La Mole was the centre of a little group…05:59
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8Julien quitted the circle round the sofa…05:29
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9Julien felt a sting of irritation, and yet she was right…05:12
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10'The Marquis does not like scribblers, I warn you…05:38
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11Chapter 507:18
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12Chapter 605:40
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13'This is my name,' said the man of fashion…05:21
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14One thing astonished Julien vastly…05:47
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15Chapter 705:01
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 10
1M. de La Mole became interested in this singular character…05:29
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2Some time after this, the Marquis was at length able to leave…05:17
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3'Not bad,' said the Marquis, with a laugh…05:48
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4Chapter 805:36
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5'I know to whom I am indebted for such kindness,' replied Julien…05:31
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6'You can tell me, Sir, as you have been here all the winter,' she said…05:43
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7'What fault would anyone have to find with my remark?'04:43
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8A swarm of young men with moustaches had gathered round…04:42
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9Chapter 904:45
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10The crowd was immense…04:07
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11Mademoiselle de La Mole, entirely forgetting what she owed…05:05
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12Julien was on a pinnacle of happiness…04:39
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13'It is quite true,' he said to himself…05:38
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14Chapter 1004:31
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15'Let us take a turn in the garden,' said the Academician…07:16
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 11
1In course of time his conversations with this girl…05:02
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2This state of affairs, and the singular doubts which Julien felt…04:16
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3Chapter 1104:33
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4Mathilde's vivid, picturesque point of view affected her speech…05:49
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5Chapter 1204:27
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6These last words made her pensive again…05:09
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7Obedient as Norbert was, his sister's meaning was so unmistakable…05:35
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8Chapter 1304:30
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9It was after he had lost himself in dreams…04:55
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10He had kept his departure secret…04:46
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11'I am very glad you are not going,' the Marquis said to him…05:20
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12'Tartuffe also was ruined by a woman…'04:58
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13Chapter 1404:56
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14A few months since, Mathilde had despaired of meeting anyone…05:43
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15Mademoiselle de La Mole's letter had so flattered Julien's vanity…05:00
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
16Chapter 1504:09
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 12
1'At the worst,' Julien told himself finally…04:27
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2This brief exonerating memoir, arranged in the form of a tale…04:21
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3Chapter 1605:25
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4The head of the ladder touched the ground…05:07
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5Mathilde, who was still greatly embarrassed…06:07
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6Chapter 1705:29
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7During the very night after their vow of eternal separation…06:24
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8Chapter 1804:41
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9Mathilde seemed adorable to him…04:19
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10On the preceding days, in the artlessness of his misery…04:49
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11Chapter 1906:20
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12The result of this night of madness was that she imagined…05:46
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13'My death will increase the scorn that she feels for me!' he exclaimed…06:02
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14As in the darkness he explored the loose earth with his hand…05:43
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15Chapter 2004:03
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 13
1The critical observations which he had been making…05:41
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2When Julien was able to leave the library…05:29
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3Chapter 2103:51
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4'One thing that will prevent you from feeling bored on your journey…'04:38
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5They arrived in a large room of a distinctly gloomy aspect…04:59
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6Chapter 2205:09
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7'Politics,' the author resumes…05:28
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8'And I shall say to you in the plainest of words…'04:58
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9'You, Sir,' M. de La Mole said to the interrupter…05:51
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10Chapter 2306:07
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11Animated by the debates of so lively an evening…05:27
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12The secret note which the Marquis drafted from the long report…05:20
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13'You need not be afraid of his waking…'05:22
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14Chapter 2405:34
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15The Prince found him decidedly melancholy…04:38
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 14
1'And now,' the Prince went on as they left the shop…06:47
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2Chapter 2504:21
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3'When the Marechale flew into a passion…'04:35
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4The dinner hour was approaching, he was to see Mathilde again!04:48
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5Mathilde had almost forgotten him during his absence…05:06
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6Chapter 2604:12
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7Some hours later the risen sun surprised him…05:02
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8Chapter 2704:30
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9Like everyone of inferior intelligence whom chance brings into touch…04:12
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10Chapter 2806:04
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11Throughout the time usurped in Julien's life by the Fervaques episode…04:58
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12Chapter 2904:51
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13One morning, the porter brought to him…04:10
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14Chapter 3005:44
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15'Failing any other sentiment, gratitude would suffice…'06:19
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
16Chapter 3103:35
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 15
1He paced up and down his little room, wild with joy…04:07
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2It was beside a bower of honeysuckle…05:02
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3Chapter 3204:17
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4'I mean to write to my father,' Mathilde said to him one day…04:40
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5I dread, for Julien, your anger, apparently so righteous…04:38
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6Chapter 3304:49
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7The genius of Tartuffe came to Julien's aid…04:01
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8As Julien did not in any way alter his air of cold astonishment…04:43
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9Chapter 3404:49
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10In a moment of ill humour she wrote to her father…06:37
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11Forced by his daughter's letter, M. de La Mole…06:23
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12Chapter 3504:40
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13His impassive air, his severe and almost cruel eyes…04:52
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14'Where is Madame de Renal's letter?' said Julien coldly…05:21
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15Chapter 3604:17
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
16A magistrate appeared in the prison…05:31
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 16
1About nine o'clock in the evening…04:28
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2This man was as menial and submissive as possible…04:09
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3Chapter 3705:17
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4Fouque arrived; the simple, honest fellow was shattered by grief…06:09
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5Chapter 3805:11
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6Mathilde went alone and on foot through the streets of Besancon…05:35
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7'Everything becomes clear,' she thought…04:55
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8Chapter 3905:04
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9Ambition was dead in his heart, another passion had risen…06:15
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10Chapter 4004:51
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11At the sight of these lines, M. de Frilair was almost out of his mind…05:43
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12Chapter 4105:07
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13On entering the court, he was struck by the elegance…04:44
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14This thought obliterated all the rest…03:59
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
15For twenty minutes Julien continued to speak in this strain…04:37
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
Disc 17
1Chapter 4205:11
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
2At this moment Julien was playing upon Mathilde's nature…03:31
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
3Mathilde kept on saying to him in a faint voice…05:38
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
4Chapter 4306:07
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
5'Very well! You swear, by the love that you bear me…'06:32
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
6Chapter 4404:59
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
7The old man's severe reproaches began as soon as they were left…05:03
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
8'There is no such thing as "natural law"…'05:30
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
9He was disturbed by all his memories of that Bible…04:44
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
10Chapter 4504:52
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
11The death of M. de Croisenois altered all Julien's ideas…04:13
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
12'Your conversion would strike an echo in their hearts…'04:10
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
13Two days earlier, he had said to Fouque…04:59
Homewood, Bill (Reader)
14To The Happy Few…00:45
Homewood, Bill (Reader)

Total Playing Time: 43:59:09