Produced by an anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteer.
The Life of Lazarillo of Tormes, Parts One and Two
Translated by Robert Rudder (C)1992
Copyright 1973 by Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., Inc.
Copyright 1995 by Robert S. Rudder
Edited and Translated by Robert S. Rudder
With a Sequel by Juan de Luna
Translated by Robert S. Rudder with Carmen Criado de Rodriguez
Puertolas
Copyright 1973 by Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., Inc.
Copyright 1995 by Robert S. Rudder
This translation is for
and
three small picaros.
Contents
Introduction
Prologue
I Lazaro Tells about His Life and His Parents
II How Lazaro Took up with a Priest and the Things That Happenedto Him with That Man
III How Lazaro Took up with a Squire and What Happened to Him
Then
IV How Lazaro Went to Work for a Friar of the Order of Mercy and
What Happened to Him
V How Lazaro Went to Work for a Pardoner and the Things That
Happened to Him Then
VI How Lazaro Went to Work for a Chaplain and What Happened to
Him Then
VII How Lazaro Went to Work for a Constable and Then What
Happened to Him
VIII In Which Lazaro Tells of the Friendship He Struck up in
Toledo with Some Germans and What Happened to Them
Letter of Dedication
To The Reader
I Where Lazaro Tells about How He Left Toledo to Go to the War of
Algiers
II How Lazaro Embarked at Cartagena
III How Lazaro Escaped from the Sea
IV How They Took Lazaro through Spain
V How They Took Lazaro to the Capital
VI How They Took Lazaro to Toledo
VII What Happened to Lazaro on the Way to the Tagus River
VIII How Lazaro Brought a Lawsuit against His Wife
IX How Lazaro Became a Baggage Carrier
X What Happened to Lazaro with an Old Bawd
XI How Lazaro Left for His Homeland and What Happened to Him onthe Way
XII What Happened to Lazaro in an Inn Three Miles outside of
Valladolid
XIII How Lazaro Was a Squire for Seven Women at One Time
XIV Where Lazaro Tells What Happened to Him at a Dinner
XV How Lazaro Became a Hermit
XVI How Lazaro Decided to Marry Again
Bibliography
Lazarillo of Tormes appeared in sixteenth-century Spain like abreath of fresh air among hundreds of insipidly sentimentalnovels of chivalry. With so many works full of knights who weremanly and brave enough to fight any adversary, but prone tobecome weak in the knees when they saw their fair lady nearby,was it any wo