Hörbuch: History of Pompey the Little
- Download 00 - Dedication audio
- Download 01 - Book 1, Chapter 1 audio
- Download 02 - Book 1, Chapter 2 audio
- Download 03 - Book 1, Chapter 3 audio
- Download 04 - Book 1, Chapter 4 audio
- Download 05 - Book 1, Chapter 5 audio
- Download 06 - Book 1, Chapter 6 audio
- Download 07 - Book 1, Chapter 7 audio
- Download 08 - Book 1, Chapter 8 audio
- Download 09 - Book 1, Chapter 9 audio
- Download 10 - Book 1, Chapter 10 audio
- Download 11 - Book 1, Chapter 11 audio
- Download 12 - Book 1, Chapter 12 audio
- Download 13 - Book 1, Chapter 13 audio
- Download 14 - Book 1, Chapter 14 audio
- Download 15 - Book 1, Chapter 15 audio
- Download 16 - Book 1, Chapter 16 audio
- Download 17 - Book 1, Chapter 17 audio
- Download 18 - Book 1, Chapter 18 audio
- Download 19 - Book 2, Chapter 1 audio
- Download 20 - Book 2, Chapter 2 audio
- Download 21 - Book 2, Chapter 3 audio
- Download 22 - Book 2, Chapter 4 audio
- Download 23 - Book 2, Chapter 5 audio
- Download 24 - Book 2, Chapter 6 audio
- Download 25 - Book 2, Chapter 7 audio
- Download 26 - Book 2, Chapter 8 audio
- Download 27 - Book 2, Chapter 9 audio
- Download 28 - Book 2, Chapter 10 audio
- Download 29 - Book 2, Chapter 11 audio
- Download 30 - Book 2, Chapter 12 audio
- Download 31 - Book 2, Chapter 13 audio
- Download 32 - Book 2, Chapter 14 audio
- Download 33 - Book 2, Chapter 15 audio
Hörbuch-Genres
Autor
Beschreibung
"Pompey, the son of Julio and Phyllis, was born A.D. 1735, at Bologna in Italy, a place famous for lap-dogs and sausages." At an early age he was carried away from the boudoir of his Italian mistress by Hillario, an English gentleman illustrious for his gallantries, who brought him to London.
The rest of the history is really a chain of social episodes, each closed by the incident that Pompey becomes the property of some fresh person. In this way we find ourselves in a dozen successive scenes, each strongly contrasted with the others. It is the art of the author that he knows exactly how much to tell us without wearying our attention, and is able to make the transition to the next scene a plausible one. (Summary by Edmund Gosse in "Gossip in a Library" http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/11628)
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