
A curious anthology gathers a handful of early pieces—short sketches, lyrical essays and playful fables—each stamped with the author’s youthful voice and a hint of the era’s anxieties. Though the forms vary, they all circle the same concerns: the absurdities of everyday life, the clash between ambition and modesty, and the thin line between humor and critique. The collection feels like a time‑capsule, inviting listeners to hear the restless imagination of a writer still finding his footing.
The centerpiece is a vivid, almost theatrical tale of a merciless moneylender known as Torquemada, whose name alone summons dread. Through a chorus of borrowers—soldiers, widows, petty traders—his relentless pursuit of debt becomes a grim spectacle, a furnace that consumes hope as readily as it burns cash. The narrative balances dark satire with a stark moral lesson, exposing how the machinery of credit can turn ordinary people into victims of an unforgiving system.
Framed by the author’s candid afterword, the volume acknowledges its own rough edges while offering a rare glimpse into the social commentary that would later shape his more polished works. Listeners will find both wit and warning in these early, unvarnished writings.
Language
es
Duration
~6 hours (359K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Stan Goodman, Mariano Cecowski, Miranda van de Heijning and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
Release date
2005-02-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1843–1920
One of the great novelists of 19th-century Spain, he turned the streets, politics, and everyday lives of Madrid into vivid fiction. Best known for the vast Episodios nacionales and novels such as Fortunata y Jacinta, he wrote with warmth, sharp observation, and a deep feel for ordinary people.
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