Cervantes finished his romance The Labors of Persiles and Sigismunda shortly before his death, imitating the style of Heliodorus. The work provides a romantic description of travels by sea and land, mixing real and fabulous geography and history, with the scene transferring to Spain and Italy in the second half of the romance.
Cervantes finished his romance The Labors of Persiles and Sigismunda shortly before his death, imitating the style of Heliodorus. The work provides a romantic description of travels by sea and land, mixing real and fabulous geography and history, with the scene transferring to Spain and Italy in the second half of the romance.
Cervantes finished his romance The Labors of Persiles and Sigismunda shortly before his death, imitating the style of Heliodorus. The work provides a romantic description of travels by sea and land, mixing real and fabulous geography and history, with the scene transferring to Spain and Italy in the second half of the romance.
Cervantes finished his romance The Labors of Persiles and Sigismunda shortly before his death, imitating the style of Heliodorus. The work provides a romantic description of travels by sea and land, mixing real and fabulous geography and history, with the scene transferring to Spain and Italy in the second half of the romance.
of The Labors of Persiles and Sigismunda shortly before his death. The idea of this romance was not new and Cervantes appears to imitate Heliodorus. [39] The work is a romantic description of travels, both by sea and land. Real and fabulous geography and history are mixed together; and in the second half of the romance the scene is transferred to Spain and Italy.