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I have long been an admirer of Gertrud von le Fort and her novel Song at the Scaffold, about the Blessed Martyrs of Compiègne. Baroness von le Fort's short but powerful depiction of the sixteen Carmelite nuns guillotined in 1795 during the Reign of Terror was the inspiration for the play by Bernanos and the opera by Poulenc, Dialogues des Carmelites. To Quell the Terror by William Bush is an excellent historical treatise on the martyrdom of the Carmelites. It is not widely known that Queen Marie-Antoinette provided a dowry for a poor, pious girl named Mademoiselle Lidoine, so that she could enter the Carmel of Compiègne. Mademoiselle Lidoine became the Mother Prioress of the heroic Martyrs of
Compiègne, who like Marie-Antoinette, died on the guillotine during the French Revolution.
There is more HERE from The Inn At The End of the World.
HERE is the final scene from Poulenc's opera.
3 comments:
Have you read von le Fort's The Eternal Woman? I just learned about it (after reading this blog post) and ordered it...looks interesting!
No, I haven't. It does sound quite interesting!
I have been reading it off and on. For me it goes down at all only in small pieces.
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