Audiobook: Villette
- Download Chapter 1 β Bretton audio
- Download Chapter 2 β Paulina audio
- Download Chapter 3 β The Playmates audio
- Download Chapter 4 β Miss Marchmont audio
- Download Chapter 5 β Turning a New Leaf audio
- Download Chapter 6 β London audio
- Download Chapter 7 β Villette audio
- Download Chapter 8 β Madame Beck audio
- Download Chapter 9 β Isidore audio
- Download Chapter 10 β Dr. John audio
- Download Chapter 11 β The Portresseβs Cabinet audio
- Download Chapter 12 β The Casket audio
- Download Chapter 13 β A Sneeze Out of Season audio
- Download Chapter 14 β The FΓͺte audio
- Download Chapter 15 β The Long Vacation audio
- Download Chapter 16 β Auld Lang Syne audio
- Download Chapter 17 β La Terrasse audio
- Download Chapter 18 β We Quarrel audio
- Download Chapter 19 β The Cleopatra audio
- Download Chapter 20 β The Concert audio
- Download Chapter 21 β Reaction audio
- Download Chapter 22 β The Letter audio
- Download Chapter 23 β Vashti audio
- Download Chapter 24 β M. De Bassompierre audio
- Download Chapter 25 β The Little Countess audio
- Download Chapter 26 β Villette audio
- Download Chapter 27 β The Hotel Crecy audio
- Download Chapter 28 β The Watchguard audio
- Download Chapter 29 β Monsieurs Fete audio
- Download Chapter 30 β M. Paul audio
- Download Chapter 31 β The Dryad audio
- Download Chapter 32 β The First Letter audio
- Download Chapter 33 β M. Paul Keeps His Promise audio
- Download Chapter 34 β Malevola audio
- Download Chapter 35 β Fraternity audio
- Download Chapter 36 β The Apple of Discord audio
- Download Chapter 37 β Sunshine audio
- Download Chapter 38 β Cloud audio
- Download Chapter 39 β Old and New Aquaintance audio
- Download Chapter 40 β The Happy Pair audio
- Download Chapter 41 β Faubourg Clotilde audio
- Download Chapter 42 β Villette audio
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Description
Villette was Charlotte Bronte's last published novel. It came out in 1853, just two years before her death in 1855. It is a poignant, strangely lonely and sad work, steeped in conflict between society's demands and personal desires.
Set in the fictional town of Villette in France, it is the story of the young and intelligent Lucy Snowe, the narrator in the book. She is described by another character in the book as having βno beauty...no attractive accomplishments...β and strangely seems to lack a personal history or living relatives. Her godmother Mrs. Bretton looks after the orphaned Lucy, who suddenly leaves the house for a reason that is not made clear to readers. She finds employment as a companion to an elderly widow, Mrs. Marchmont. When her employer dies, Lucy is left without a job or prospects. Impulsively, she decides to travel to Europe and en route, meets the young and spoiled heiress, Ginevra Fanshaw, a student of a girls' school in Villette. Lucy then travels to Villette to work first as a nanny to the principal's children and later as a teacher. Here she encounters two men who will play a great role in her life. The young and handsome Dr. John Bretton, her godmother's grandson, and the arrogant, bad tempered Professor Paul Emmanuel, a fellow lodger at her boarding house who gradually begins to thaw towards Lucy. The rest of the story follows Lucy's life in Villette.
Lucy Snowe is not a very lovable heroine. She is passive, secretive and yet she excites the reader's interest and compassion and one is compellingly drawn into her story. Villette is also a novel with deep psychological underpinnings. Many have dubbed it even greater than Jane Eyre. It is also one of Bronte's most autobiographical works. The story harks back to the time when Charlotte and Emily Bronte traveled to Brussels to work in a small pensionnat run by M. Constantin Heger and his wife. Charlotte is reputed to have fallen deeply and hopelessly in love with M. Heger. Paul Emmanuel is said to be based on Heger, while John Bretton is a fictional portrayal of George Murray Smith, her publisher who had once courter her.
Villette was written at a time when Bronte was deeply depressed following the deaths of three of her siblings. It was also criticized by contemporary reviewers for its depiction of a woman's passions and desires, something which Victorian audiences were a little shocked by.
For modern day readers, Villette presents a great writer, working at the peak of her powers, overcoming personal tragedy to bring her art to the world.
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