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)

Young Julien Sorel, the son of a country timber merchant, carries a portrait of his hero Napoleon Bonaparte and dreams of military glory. A brilliant career in the Church leads him into Parisian high society, where, ‘mounted upon the finest horse in Alsace’, he gains high military office and wins the heart of the aristocratic Mlle Mathilde de la Mole. Julien’s cunning and ambition lead him into all sorts of scrapes, but it is the struggle between his passion for two beautiful women—the quixotic Mathilde and the loyal Mme de Rênal—which ultimately decides his destiny.

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