
A quietly compelling portrait unfolds of a man whose whole life seems to drift along the steady banks of the Tisza. Born in 1866 at the bustling Cegléd railway station and passing away in 1917 on a modest Szeged street, he embodies the steady rhythm of the early‑twentieth‑century Hungarian middle class. He respects authority, keeps his tax and insurance records immaculate, and finds pleasure in simple rituals—white shirts, peeled grapes, and the occasional rain‑soaked carriage ride. His outward demeanor is one of calm conformity, yet there is an undercurrent of personal dignity that sets him apart.
Beneath that respectable façade lies a mind that hums with unspoken melodies and a modest yearning for artistic expression. He moves through circles of friends, philosophers, and modest literary gatherings, absorbing ideas without ever seeking the spotlight. The narrative captures his internal tug‑of‑war between duty and the faint, private longing for a more creative life, offering listeners a thoughtful glimpse into a world where ordinary perseverance becomes quietly heroic.
Language
hu
Duration
~5 hours (338K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Hungary: Délmagyarország, 1922.
Credits
Albert László from page images generously made available by the SZTE Miscellanea
Release date
2022-02-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1866–1917
A sharp-eyed Hungarian storyteller, journalist, and ethnographer, he wrote vivid, humane sketches of everyday life on the Great Plain. His work is especially remembered for its realism, dry humor, and deep feel for ordinary people.
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