Titan: A Romance. v. 2 (of 2)

audiobook

Titan: A Romance. v. 2 (of 2)

by Jean Paul

EN·~15 hours·24 chapters

Chapters

24 total
1

TITAN:

0:06
2

A ROMANCE.

1:58
3

FROM THE GERMAN OF - JEAN PAUL FRIEDRICH RICHTER.

0:03
4

TRANSLATED BY - CHARLES T. BROOKS.

0:02
5

TITAN.

0:00
6

SEVENTEENTH JUBILEE. - Princely Nuptial-territion.[1]—Illumination of Lilar. - 77. CYCLE.

36:23
7

EIGHTEENTH JUBILEE. - Gaspard's Letter.—The Blumenbühl Church.—Eclipse of the Sun and of the Soul.

33:37
8

NINETEENTH JUBILEE. - Schoppe's Office of Comforter.—Arcadia.—Bouverot's Portrait-painting.

36:37
9

TWENTIETH JUBILEE. - Gaspard's Letter.—Partings. - 86. CYCLE.

52:49
10

TWENTY-FIRST JUBILEE. - The Trial-lesson of Love.—Froulay's Fear of Fortune.—The Biter Bit.—Honors of the Observatory.

39:50

Description

The story opens amid a jubilant, eight‑day celebration that sweeps a nation from frontier to frontier. A princely wedding dominates the scene, yet the ceremony feels more like a public spectacle than a private union, exposing the tension between duty to the realm and the longing for personal happiness. Through the eyes of Albano, a sharp‑tongued observer riding beside the bridegroom, the narrative captures the glitter of music, feasts, and processions while hinting at the undercurrents of political intrigue and personal doubt.

As the festivities unfold, Albano, Bouverot, and the melancholy prince Luigi navigate a world where titles mask vulnerabilities and the promise of renewal clashes with entrenched sorrow. Their conversations blend satire, melancholy, and philosophical rumination, setting the stage for a sprawling romance that will wander from courts to countryside, from letters to distant churches. Listeners are invited to join a richly detailed, episodic journey where love, ambition, and the search for identity become intertwined against a backdrop of 19th‑century Europe.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~15 hours (884K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Charles Bowen, from page images provided by Google Books

Release date

2011-06-12

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

Jean Paul

Jean Paul

1763–1825

Best known for humorous, inventive novels and stories, this German writer became one of the most widely read literary voices of the early 1800s. His work sits between Classicism and Romanticism, blending satire, feeling, and sudden imaginative turns.

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