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The Letters of a Portuguese Nun

Gelesen von Leni

(3,5 Sterne; 4 Bewertungen)

The Letters of a Portuguese Nun (Les Lettres Portugaises) were first published anonymously in Paris in 1669. The five passionate letters in book form were a publishing sensation since their appearance, with five editions in the first year, followed by more than forty editions throughout the 17th century. A Cologne edition of 1669 stated that the Marquis de Chamilly was their addressee, but, aside from the fact that she was female, the author's name and identity remained unknown. The letters were translated in several languages, and set a precedent for sentimentalism in European culture at large, and for the literary genres of the sentimental novel and the epistolary novel into the 18th century. The interest in the Letters was so strong that the word "portugaise" became synonymous with "a passionate love-letter" in the 17th century. The authorship of the work was assigned to Mariana Alcoforado, a Portuguese nun, as early as the 18th century. During the 20th century, however, many scholars have supported the idea that they are a work of epistolary fiction written by Gabriel-Joseph de La Vergne, comte de Guilleragues, a French politician, who had been secretary of the King's Chamber and also director of the Gazette de France. Nevertheless, any doubts about the authorship do not detract from the beauty and power of the letters themselves, presented here in a prose translation followed by a versified one. - Summary by Leni (2 hr 21 min)

Chapters

Preface and Introduction

36:19

Read by Leni

First Letter

7:34

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Second Letter

16:23

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Third Letter

8:41

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Fourth Letter

7:46

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Fifth Letter

16:24

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First Letter - verse translation

7:51

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Second Letter - verse translation

7:08

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Third Letter - verse translation

7:00

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Fourth Letter - verse translation

16:07

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Fifth Letter - verse translation

9:50

Read by Leni

Bewertungen

Ridiculous.

(1 Sterne)

Either do one in Portuguese, perhaps another in English, or do none at all. Distracting to the point of silly.