Audiolibro: Prince and the Pauper
Prince and the Pauper
1 - 01 – The birth of the Prince and the Pauper / 02 – Tom’s early life / 03 – Tom’s meeting with the Prince
- Download 01 – The birth of the Prince and the Pauper / 02 – Tom’s early life / 03 – Tom’s meeting with the Prince audio
- Download 04 – The Prince / 05 – Tom as a patrician audio
- Download 06 – Tom receives instructions audio
- Download 07 – Tom’s first royal dinner / 08 – The question of the Seal audio
- Download 09 – The river pageant / 10 – The Prince in the toils audio
- Download 11 – At Guildhall audio
- Download 12 – The Prince and his deliverer audio
- Download 13 – The disappearance of the Prince audio
- Download 14 – ‘Le Roi est mort—vive le Roi’ audio
- Download 15 – Tom as King audio
- Download 16 – The state dinner / 17 – Foo-foo the First audio
- Download 18 – The Prince with the tramps / 19 – The Prince with the peasants audio
- Download 20 – The Prince and the hermit / 21 – Hendon to the rescue audio
- Download 22 – A victim of treachery / 23 – The Prince a prisoner audio
- Download 24 – The escape / 25 – Hendon Hall audio
- Download 26 – Disowned / 27 – In prison audio
- Download 28 – The sacrifice / 29 – To London / 30 – Tom’s progress audio
- Download 31 – The Recognition procession audio
- Download 32 – Coronation Day audio
- Download 33 – Edward as King / Conclusion – Justice and Retribution audio
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Descripción
The Prince and the Pauper (1882) represents Mark Twain's first attempt at historical fiction. The book, set in 1547, tells the story of two young boys who are identical in appearance: Tom Canty, a pauper who lives with his abusive father in Offal Court, London, and Prince Edward son of Henry VIII of England. Due to a series of circumstances, the boys accidentally replace each other, and much of the humor in the book originates in the two boys' inability to function in the world that is so familiar to the other (although Tom soon displays considerable wisdom in his decisions). In many ways, the book is a social satire, particularly compelling in its condemnation of the inequality that existed between the classes in Tudor England. In that sense, Twain abandoned the wry Midwestern style for which he was best known and adopts a style reminiscent of Charles Dickens. (Summary from Wikipedia.org)
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