Washington Irving

audiobook

Washington Irving

by Charles Dudley Warner

EN·~6 hours·12 chapters

Chapters

12 total

WASHINGTON IRVING. - BY - CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER.

0:21

WASHINGTON IRVING. - I. - PRELIMINARY.

22:27

CHAPTER II. - BOYHOOD.

11:11

CHAPTER III. - MANHOOD: FIRST VISIT TO EUROPE.

12:36

CHAPTER IV. - SOCIETY AND "SALMAGUNDI."

17:21

CHAPTER V. - THE KNICKERBOCKER PERIOD.

41:43

CHAPTER VI. - LIFE IN EUROPE: LITERARY ACTIVITY.

55:40

CHAPTER VII. - IN SPAIN.

20:35

CHAPTER VIII. - RETURN TO AMERICA: SUNNYSIDE: THE MISSION TO MADRID.

37:30

CHAPTER IX. - THE CHARACTERISTIC WORKS.

2:02:03

Description

This work offers a thoughtful look at the lasting impact of one of America’s earliest literary figures, examining how his fame grew alongside the young nation itself. It traces the author’s rise to prominence, his role in introducing American storytelling to European readers, and the ways his reputation has been shaped by both contemporary taste and the shifting judgments of later scholars. The author also situates this writer within a broader literary landscape, comparing his fortunes to those of celebrated peers such as Shakespeare and Walter Scott.

Beyond biography, the essay explores the fickle nature of literary reputation, questioning whether popularity, critical acclaim, or scholarly consensus truly determines an author’s place in the canon. It reflects on how philosophical currents and cultural trends influence readers’ appreciation over time, and why certain voices fall in and out of favor. The discussion invites listeners to reconsider how we evaluate lasting artistic merit and the forces that keep a writer’s work alive across centuries.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (372K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Peter Barozzi and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2005-06-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Charles Dudley Warner

Charles Dudley Warner

1829–1900

Best remembered as Mark Twain’s friend and collaborator on The Gilded Age, this sharp-eyed essayist and editor wrote with wit, curiosity, and a strong feel for everyday American life. His books range from travel writing to reflections on childhood, all carried by an easy, thoughtful voice.

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