The Satyricon — Volume 04 : Escape by Sea

audiobook

The Satyricon — Volume 04 : Escape by Sea

by Petronius Arbiter

EN·~1 hours·29 chapters

Chapters

29 total
1

THE SATYRICON OF PETRONIUS ARBITER

0:14
2

ILLUSTRATIONS:

0:00
3

THE SATYRICON OF - PETRONIUS ARBITER

0:02
4

CHAPTER THE NINETY-NINTH.

2:45
5

CHAPTER THE ONE HUNDREDTH.

2:25
6

CHAPTER THE ONE HUNDRED AND FIRST.

3:03
7

CHAPTER THE ONE HUNDRED AND SECOND.

4:21
8

CHAPTER THE ONE HUNDRED AND THIRD.

1:44
9

CHAPTER THE ONE HUNDRED AND FOURTH.

1:57
10

CHAPTER THE ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTH.

3:06

Description

In this lively episode of the ancient Roman romp, Encolpius, his eager companion Giton, and the clever, sometimes jealous, Eumolpus decide to flee the city’s petty quarrels by boarding a night‑time vessel. Their departure is sparked by a mixture of rivalry, longing, and the promise of fresh horizons, and the narrative immediately plunges the trio into a sea‑borne adventure filled with witty banter and sharp observations on love and ambition. The prose captures the chaotic energy of a world where desire and danger mingle on the rolling deck.

As the ship sets sail, the three men must navigate not only the fickle currents but also the jealous whispers of unseen passengers. Eumolpus, ever the master of rhetoric, tries to calm his own envy while offering cryptic advice that hints at deeper entanglements. Giton’s youthful bravado clashes with Encolpius’s seasoned cynicism, creating a comic tension that keeps the listener guessing which will flare next. All the while, the horizon promises both freedom and complications, setting the stage for a tale that balances rib‑tickling satire with the unpredictable moods of the sea.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (77K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger

Release date

2004-06-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Petronius Arbiter

Petronius Arbiter

20–66

Known as Nero’s "judge of elegance," this Roman writer is traditionally credited with the Satyricon, one of the sharpest and strangest surviving works from ancient literature. His life is known only in fragments, which gives his story the same mystery and wit that mark his writing.

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