
In the garden of Navarre’s royal palace, King Ferdinand gathers his courtiers for a solemn oath‑taking. Biron, Longaville and Dumaine pledge three years of study, fasting and abstinence, while the monarch extols the glory of learning as a path to eternal honor. The scene brims with formal language and a touch of grandeur, setting a stage where duty clashes with personal desire.
The dialogue quickly turns witty as the nobles debate the harsh terms of their vows—no women, scarce food, and sleepless nights. Their banter reveals the absurdity of trying to master the world through self‑imposed discipline, hinting at deeper questions about ambition, temptation and the true value of knowledge. Meanwhile, peripheral characters such as the Spanish Don Adriano and the village clergy add color, suggesting a broader social tapestry beyond the court.
Listeners are treated to a lively early‑modern satire that mixes philosophical musings with sharp humor, inviting them to ponder whether the pursuit of “wonder” can ever be reconciled with ordinary human cravings.
Language
nl
Duration
~3 hours (172K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg.
Release date
2015-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1564–1616
Often called the greatest writer in the English language, this English playwright and poet created dramas and verses that still feel alive on the page and stage. His stories of ambition, love, jealousy, power, and loss continue to speak to readers centuries later.
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