Los Sueños, Volume I

audiobook

Los Sueños, Volume I

by Francisco de Quevedo

ES·~4 hours·20 chapters

Chapters

20 total

LOS SUEÑOS I

0:06

INTRODUCCIÓN

17:47

DEDICATORIA

1:16

A LOS QUE HAN LEÍDO Y LEYEREN

1:58

ADVERTENCIA DE LAS CAUSAS DESTA IMPRESIÓN

15:49

EL SUEÑO DE LAS CALAVERAS

1:55

AL CONDE DE LEMOS, PRESIDENTE DE INDIAS

0:22

DISCURSO

20:55

EL ALGUACIL ALGUACILADO

1:50

AL CONDE DE LEMOS, PRESIDENTE DE INDIAS

1:41

Description

A cascade of vivid, dream‑like sketches bursts onto the ear, each one a quick, razor‑sharp observation of Spain’s court, streets and convents in the early 1600s. The narrator drifts from one fantastical vision to the next, borrowing the wild imagination of medieval dances of death, the grand sweep of Dante’s after‑life, and the biting wit of classical satirists. Yet the tone is unmistakably Spanish, a storm of irony that snaps like a whip, painting society’s follies in bold, fragmented brushstrokes rather than a smooth narrative.

Listeners will hear a relentless parade of characters—corrupt officials, pretentious scholars, greedy merchants—exposed through the author’s keen eye and restless humor. The work functions as a living newspaper of its day, turning the ordinary into the absurd while never losing its intellectual edge. It offers a lively portal into the customs, politics and everyday life of a bygone era, all delivered with a mischievous, unapologetic voice that still resonates today.

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Details

Language

es

Duration

~4 hours (244K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Andrés V. Galia, Sanly Bowitts and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2021-08-05

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Francisco de Quevedo

Francisco de Quevedo

1580–1645

A sharp, brilliant voice of Spain’s Golden Age, this Baroque writer is still famous for his dazzling wit, fierce satire, and restless intelligence. His poems and prose move easily from biting humor to deep reflections on politics, morality, and human weakness.

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