Round 4: Tossup 1

A hungry nobleman bursts into laughter when this character thinks that a funeral procession’s destination, a “sad and miserable house where they never eat or drink,” is his home. This character is warned of a pair of mounted mule’s horns as a child, prefiguring his future as a cuckolded town crier. This character vomits up a sausage onto the long, sniffing nose of an old man whose wine he (*) steals by drilling a hole (10[1])in the bottom (10[1])of a jug. (10[1])Until the 19th century, censors excised a chapter in which this character accompanies a pardoner who fakes (-5[1])miracles to sell indulgences. This character narrates his starving youth in service to masters like a penniless squire and a blind beggar in an anonymous work of prose. For 10 points, what boy titles a 16th-century Spanish novella that launched the picaresque genre? (10[1])■END■ (10[1])

ANSWER: Lazarillo de Tormes [or Lázaro de Tormes; prompt on de Tormes]
<MS, European Literature> | NAFTA-Packet-4
= Average correct buzzpoint

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