A fekete vér; Lenczi fráter

audiobook

A fekete vér; Lenczi fráter

by Mór Jókai

HU·~7 hours·22 chapters

Chapters

22 total
1

A FEKETE VÉR

0:01
2

I. FEJEZET. A FEKETE ASSZONY.

12:56
3

II. FEJEZET. AZ ARANYMOSÓ KUNYHÓJA.

14:53
4

III. FEJEZET. A «VATERMÖRDER».

30:23
5

IV. FEJEZET. A MEGYEFŐNÖK.

7:07
6

V. FEJEZET. BÁRDY ZOLTÁN.

15:13
7

VI. FEJEZET. ARANKA.

26:37
8

VII. FEJEZET. ESTÉLY A KEGYELMES ÚRNÁL.

54:44
9

VIII. FEJEZET. A MÉREG-VETÉS.

15:28
10

IX. FEJEZET. A FÉNYES ELÉGTÉTEL.

18:10

Description

A mysterious, nameless scourge sweeps across the countryside, known by many names—“the black woman,” “cholera morbus,” “csuma”—and leaves death in its wake. Entire villages are emptied, churches fall silent, and every traditional remedy fails. The panic spreads from one region to the next, prompting desperate measures: poisoned wells, banned feasts, barricaded bridges, and even the strangling of the very air itself, yet the horror persists, leaping rivers in a single step.

Amid this turmoil, the stoic commander Lenke Lőrincz, a celebrated Hungarian officer, arrives at the Barony of Bárdy, where he is married to the widowed Anna. Their baroque estate, surrounded by dense forest and a winding river, becomes a fragile oasis of order. As the black plague tightens its grip, Lenke must balance his military duties with the growing unrest among the peasants, who are being incited to revolt against the nobility.

The story follows the early clash between an unstoppable, invisible enemy and a society frayed by fear, as both ordinary villagers and seasoned leaders grapple with a threat that defies every known defense.

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Details

Language

hu

Duration

~7 hours (437K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Albert László from page images generously made available by the Google Books Library Project

Release date

2018-07-16

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Mór Jókai

Mór Jókai

1825–1904

A towering figure in 19th-century Hungarian literature, he wrote sweeping, adventurous novels and plays that made him one of his country’s most beloved storytellers. His life was just as dramatic as his fiction, shaped by politics, journalism, and the revolutionary spirit of 1848.

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