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Examples

  • A genre of literature known as the picaresque novel is generally credited as having arisen in Spain with an anonymous 16th-century work entitled "Lazarillo de Tormes."

    The Seattle Times 2012

  • La Biblioteca de Autores Españoles (Madrid, 1848-86) publishes his "Lazarillo" in the third volume, his poems in the thirty-second, and selected works in the twenty-first and thirty-sixth volumes.

    The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman 1840-1916 1913

  • It was in those volumes — most of them ancient, bound tomes — that I discovered the great works of world literature: Don Quijote, illustrated by Tony Johannot; La vida de Lazarillo de Tormes; the Ingoldsby Legends; Gulliver's Travels; Victor Hugo's great, inspired novels Quatre-vingt-treize, Les Travailleurs de la Mer, and L'Homme qui rit.

    Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio - Nobel Lecture 2008

  • The man is a blind man and the guardian of Lazarillo, he suspects that the Lazarillo has stolen food and wants to inspect it.

    Your doctor will look into your mouth … « Jahsonic 2008

  • The man is a blind man and the guardian of Lazarillo, he suspects that the Lazarillo has stolen food and wants to inspect it.

    01 « June « 2008 « Jahsonic 2008

  • Are anyone of you familiar with Lazarillo de Tormes and able to tell me what this scene is about and why Goya decided to paint it?

    01 « June « 2008 « Jahsonic 2008

  • Are anyone of you familiar with Lazarillo de Tormes and able to tell me what this scene is about and why Goya decided to paint it?

    Your doctor will look into your mouth … « Jahsonic 2008

  • Pabellón de reposo (1943), Nuevas andanzas y desventuras de Lazarillo de Tormes (1944), La colmena

    Camilo José Cela - Biography 1989

  • _Lazarillo_, and it was the first work of a type, whose slow development can be traced in almost every country in Europe: in England, in the realistic attempts of Greene and Nash and Deloney, in Germany in

    The Unity of Civilization Various

  • The picaroon strain, already made familiar in Spain by the "Lazarillo de Tormes" and its successors, appears in one or another of them especially in the

    The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 3: Brownson-Clairvaux 1840-1916 1913

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