When the Basque dragoon Don José meets a Gypsy woman at the factory he
is guarding, he is immediately ensnared by her wiles. After she is
arrested for injuring a co-worker and he helps her to flee, he is
imprisoned and demoted, but she repays him at their next meeting with a
day of excess and a night of love. As Carmen continues to exert her
spell, José is dragged further and further into a seedy world of
smugglers, robbers, fiery passions and uncontrollable jealousy - one
that he will find difficult to escape alive.
Carmen, the archetype of the amoral femme fatale, is Prosper Mérimée's
highest creation, and a model for many subsequent literary heroines.
First published in 1846, this story of crime and desire - here
accompanied by another famous novella by Mérimée, The Venus of Ille -
has been adapted into a number of dramatic works, including the famous
1875 opera of the same name by Georges Bizet.