
Notas de transcrição:
O SONHO DO PRINCIPE GAVRILA
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A witty portrait of high‑society intrigue unfolds around Maria Alexandrovna, the unrivaled diva of the fictional town of Mordassov. With razor‑sharp observations and a flamboyant prose style, the narrator sketches her as both feared and revered, a woman whose single word can topple reputations while she remains untouchably elegant. Through a cascade of gossip, literary allusions, and absurdly grand comparisons—Napoleon, German scholars, poetry salons—the story satirizes the pretensions and power games of a privileged circle that clings to her every utterance.
The narrative opens with the formation of an eccentric “Club of Bad‑Language,” hinting at a secretive gathering where members test the limits of wit and decorum. As the club’s members navigate whispered scandals and elaborate charades, listeners are drawn into a world where language itself becomes a weapon and a game. The early scenes set a tone of clever humor and social commentary, promising a delightful blend of satire and drama that will keep you listening for the next scandalous revelation.
Language
pt
Duration
~4 hours (273K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Pedro Saborano and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2010-03-15
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1821–1881
Best known for turning guilt, faith, freedom, and desperation into unforgettable fiction, this Russian novelist wrote with unusual psychological depth. His life was marked by hardship, political danger, illness, and debt, and those pressures helped shape some of literature’s most intense and human novels.
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