Miscellaneous Essays

audiobook

Miscellaneous Essays

by Thomas De Quincey

EN·~6 hours

Chapters

Description

Thomas De Quincey guides the listener through a vivid meditation on a single, haunting moment in Shakespeare’s Macbeth: the sudden knocking at the gate after Duncan’s murder. He begins by recalling his own childhood puzzlement over the scene’s uncanny power, then expands the inquiry to a broader philosophical question—how our rational mind often overrides, or even erases, the raw impressions of our senses.

Through lively analogies—like a naïve person trying to draw a street scene without understanding perspective—he illustrates the limits of pure intellect when faced with the subtlety of feeling and perception. De Quincey’s prose is rich with personal anecdote and a playful, yet earnest, insistence that intuition should not be dismissed. Listeners will be drawn into his thoughtful, slightly eccentric exploration of art, perception, and the mysterious resonance that a simple knock can evoke in a classic tragedy.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (396K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-01-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

Thomas De Quincey

Thomas De Quincey

1785–1859

Best known for Confessions of an English Opium-Eater, this English essayist turned personal experience into vivid, unsettling literature. His work blends autobiography, criticism, and dreamlike reflection in a way that still feels startlingly modern.

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