El enemigo by Jacinto Octavio Picón

(8 User reviews)   1348
By Reese Dubois Posted on Feb 15, 2026
In Category - Painting
Picón, Jacinto Octavio, 1852-1923 Picón, Jacinto Octavio, 1852-1923
Spanish
Okay, so picture this: Spain, late 1800s. A young, ambitious artist named Leopoldo is on the brink of making it big. He’s got the talent, the drive, and a powerful mentor who’s opening doors for him. The catch? His biggest supporter, the wealthy and influential Don Pedro, is also the father of the woman Leopoldo is secretly in love with, Clara. This isn’t your typical love triangle. The ‘enemy’ in the title isn’t a rival suitor or a mustache-twirling villain. It’s something much more subtle and insidious: the crushing weight of obligation and gratitude. How can you pursue your own happiness and artistic truth when it feels like a betrayal of the very person who gave you your chance? Picón builds this tension so beautifully. You’ll find yourself completely torn, wondering if Leopoldo’s path to success is also a road to personal ruin. It’s a quiet, psychological drama that asks a really tough question: What do you owe the people who help you, and at what cost to yourself? If you like stories where the real battle happens inside a character’s head, this one’s a gem.
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First published in 1887, El enemigo (The Enemy) by Jacinto Octavio Picón is a fascinating snapshot of Spanish society, but its real power lies in the intimate psychological portrait of its main character.

The Story

The plot follows Leopoldo, a promising painter from a modest background. His career gets a massive boost when he’s taken under the wing of Don Pedro, a rich and well-connected man. Don Pedro provides money, introductions, and a place in high society. He essentially builds the stage for Leopoldo’s success. The complication? Leopoldo falls deeply in love with Don Pedro’s daughter, Clara. Suddenly, his gratitude and debt to his patron clash violently with his own heart’s desire. He sees his love as a kind of treachery, a betrayal of the man who made him. The ‘enemy’ of the title becomes this internal conflict—his own sense of honor and debt, which paralyzes him and threatens to destroy his chance at love and possibly his authentic artistic voice.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me wasn’t sweeping action, but the exquisite tension Picón creates. You feel Leopoldo’s anguish in every polite conversation with Don Pedro, every stolen glance at Clara. The book is a masterclass in showing how social pressures and personal ethics can cage a person. Picón doesn’t paint Don Pedro as a monster, either. He’s a genuinely kind patron, which makes Leopoldo’s internal conflict even more believable and painful. It’s a story about the prisons we build for ourselves out of good manners and a sense of duty. Reading it in the 21st century, it’s striking how timeless that struggle feels—the battle between what’s expected of us and what we truly want.

Final Verdict

El enemigo is perfect for readers who love character-driven stories and historical fiction that focuses on social nuance over swordfights. If you enjoyed the emotional dilemmas in novels by Henry James or the detailed societal portraits of Benito Pérez Galdós (Picón’s contemporary), you’ll feel right at home here. It’s a short, potent read that proves a conflict of the heart can be just as gripping as any physical battle. Just be ready to get deeply invested in one man’s very difficult, very human choices.



🔓 Public Domain Notice

This text is dedicated to the public domain. It is now common property for all to enjoy.

Margaret King
1 year ago

Great reference material for my coursework.

Melissa Garcia
10 months ago

I came across this while browsing and it provides a comprehensive overview perfect for everyone. I learned so much from this.

Margaret Johnson
1 year ago

Fast paced, good book.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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