Translations from the German (Vol 3 of 3): Tales by Musæus, Tieck, Richter

audiobook

Translations from the German (Vol 3 of 3): Tales by Musæus, Tieck, Richter

by Thomas Carlyle, Jean Paul, Johann Karl August Musäus, Ludwig Tieck

EN·~17 hours

Chapters

Description

A bustling 19th‑century Bremen serves as the backdrop for a vivid portrait of wealth and its temptations. Melchior, a shrewd merchant, displays his fortune openly, using his glittering coffers as both status symbols and tools of trade. When he dies, his son Franz inherits the lavish estate, a handsome youth whose cheerful demeanor and love of revelry quickly turn the family home into a stage for extravagant feasts and generous hand‑outs.

Franz embraces the role of a modern “rich man,” surrounding himself with courtiers, gamblers and merry-makers who keep him in a perpetual whirl of indulgence. Yet beneath the merriment, the practical art of balancing books is ignored, and the once‑secure treasure chest begins to show signs of strain. As creditors start to circle and old cash‑keepers balk, the young heir is forced to confront a reality that his carefree lifestyle has left him unprepared for, setting the stage for a tense reckoning.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~17 hours (1002K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Thierry Alberto, Henry Craig, Leonard Johnson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2012-02-06

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

Thomas Carlyle

Thomas Carlyle

1795–1881

A powerful Scottish essayist, historian, and social critic, he became one of the most influential Victorian writers. Best known for vivid, forceful books like Sartor Resartus and The French Revolution, he wrote with urgency about history, work, leadership, and the crises of modern life.

View all books
Jean Paul

Jean Paul

1763–1825

Remembered for witty, unconventional novels and a style full of sudden turns, humor, and feeling, this German writer became one of the most distinctive voices of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. His books blend satire, fantasy, philosophy, and deep sympathy for ordinary life.

View all books
Johann Karl August Musäus

Johann Karl August Musäus

1735–1787

A lively German writer of the Enlightenment, he is best remembered for turning folklore and fairy tales into witty, imaginative stories that still feel fresh today. His work blends the supernatural with humor and sharp social observation.

View all books
Ludwig Tieck

Ludwig Tieck

1773–1853

A leading voice of early German Romanticism, this poet, novelist, dramatist, translator, and critic helped turn fairy tales, medieval legend, and literary irony into something fresh and modern.

View all books