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Ursula

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Ursula

Honoré de Balzac

“Ursula,” first published in French in 1841 as “Ursule Mirouët,” is part of Balzac’s great suite of novels, collectively titled “The Human Comedy.” A wealthy, elderly doctor has raised as his goddaughter a child who is the daughter of his deceased brother-in-law — a man who was himself illegitimate by birth. The doctor retires to a provincial town that is filled with his relatives by birth and inter-marriage. By French inheritance laws of the time, these relatives have a right to expect at least a share of the doctor’s wealth upon his death. In contrast, the beloved goddaughter — who is legally not “related” to him — has no automatic claim to inheritance. This sets up a situation in which the crass and materialistic relatives frantically try to lay hands on the whole of the doctor’s inheritance. There is also in the novel a strand of occult spiritualism. Balzac was fascinated by paranormal and mystical experience. Here we see evidence of his interest in Franz Mesmer’s theories (“mesmerism” prefiguring the later science of hypnotism) and the ideas of the Swedish mystical theologian Emanuel Swedenborg. Modern readers — who may think of Balzac as one of the founders of realism in fiction — probably scoff at and discount the brief episodes of seances and occultism. In truth, however, Balzac’s interest in these fields was shared by many European intellectuals and artists of his time. However improbable these elements may seem to us today, for Balzac, the spiritual and the material worlds were not contradictory exclusions, but realities that reach into each other’s realms. Balzac himself considered this novel to be the very best that he had written up to this point in his career. - Summary by Bruce Pirie

Year of Publication: 1891Genres: Published 1800 -1900 , Literary Fiction
Running Time: 10 hours 52 minutes 55 seconds
#Chapter Name
1
The Nights
The frightened heirs
Bruce Pirie
36:23
2
The Nights
The rich uncle
Bruce Pirie
33:57
3
The Nights
The doctor's friends
Bruce Pirie
33:28
4
The Nights
Zélie
Bruce Pirie
29:18
5
The Nights
Ursula
Bruce Pirie
30:11
6
The Nights
A treatise on mesmerism
Bruce Pirie
42:00
7
The Nights
A two-fold conversion
Bruce Pirie
21:27
8
The Nights
The conference
Bruce Pirie
24:34
9
The Nights
A first confidence
Bruce Pirie
30:10
10
The Nights
The family of Portenduère
Bruce Pirie
29:45
11
The Nights
Savinien saved
Bruce Pirie
39:00
12
The Nights
Obstacles to young love
Bruce Pirie
24:46
13
The Nights
Betrothal of hearts
Bruce Pirie
40:46
14
The Nights
Ursula again orphaned
Bruce Pirie
22:31
15
The Nights
The doctor's will
Bruce Pirie
38:35
16
The Nights
The two adversaries
Bruce Pirie
21:28
17
The Nights
The malignity of provincial minds
Bruce Pirie
36:08
18
The Nights
A two-fold vengeance
Bruce Pirie
31:55
19
The Nights
Apparitions
Bruce Pirie
40:28
20
The Nights
Remorse
Bruce Pirie
19:04
21
The Nights
Showing how difficult it is to steal that which seems very easily stolen
Bruce Pirie
27:01

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