Following the Equator: A Journey Around the World. Part 5

audiobook

Following the Equator: A Journey Around the World. Part 5

by Mark Twain

EN·~3 hours·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total
1

FOLLOWING - THE EQUATOR

0:02
2

A JOURNEY AROUND THE WORLD - BY - MARK TWAIN

0:07
3

CONTENTS OF VOLUME 5

3:22
4

CHAPTER XXXIX.

21:11
5

CHAPTER XL.

14:32
6

CHAPTER XLI.

13:23
7

CHAPTER XLII.

11:35
8

CHAPTER XLIII.

21:01
9

CHAPTER XLIV.

13:13
10

CHAPTER XLV.

19:46

Description

The narrator sets off on a whirlwind tour of India, from the glittering streets of Bombay to the solemn riverbanks of Allahabad, painting each scene with a mix of curiosity and wry humor. He encounters a parade of titles—Maharajas, Nawabs, and Begums—each more elaborate than the last, and watches ceremonies that blend ancient myth with everyday life. Through bustling markets, ornate palaces, and crowded train sleepers, the travelogue captures the sensory overload of a country where tradition and modernity collide.

Along the way, he stumbles into the darker undercurrents of the subcontinent: secret societies of thugs, a murder trial that reveals a tangled web of superstition and law, and the eerie silence of a funeral at the Towers of Silence. The author's keen eye turns these encounters into vivid anecdotes, balancing the majestic with the macabre without losing the humor that threads through every observation. Listeners are invited to experience the paradoxes of India—its dazzling pageantry and its stark, sometimes unsettling realities—through the ears of a witty, observant traveler.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (210K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger

Release date

2004-06-24

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Mark Twain

Mark Twain

1835–1910

Best known for creating Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, this sharp-witted American writer turned stories of river towns, mischief, and everyday life into classics that still feel lively today. His humor is famous, but so is the way he used it to poke at hypocrisy and injustice.

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