
Megjegyzés:
AZ ÖSSZETETT EMBER.
AZ EMBERI CIVILIZÁCIÓ KEZDETEI.
FORRADALOM ÉS ELLENFORRADALOM.
MŰVÉSZET ÉS KÖZGAZDASÁG.
VILÁGFELFOGÁSUNK VÁLSÁGA.
A FEHÉR EMBER DETRONIZÁLÁSA.
AZ ELJÖVENDŐ IDŐK MESÉJE.
TARTALOM.
Through a lyrical first‑person voice, the book follows a wanderer who feels both ancient and newly born, collecting memories from stone carvings to radio waves. He views his own life as a repository of countless ages, constantly questioning the purpose that lies beyond personal survival.
The narrative drifts between bustling metropolises—London’s electric trams, New York’s neon skyline, a French engineer’s daring flight over the English Channel—and quieter medieval towns, letting the reader taste the clash of steam, steel and centuries‑old art. Each observation is colored by a deep fascination with how technology reshapes human perception.
Amid these vivid scenes, the narrator turns to the moral consequences of modern capitalism, the widening gap between wealth and poverty, and the relentless human drive to search for meaning. His reflective tone invites listeners into a meditation on freedom, culture, and the ever‑present tension between progress and spirituality.
Language
hu
Duration
~7 hours (434K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Hungary: Délmagyarország, 1927.
Credits
Albert László from page images generously made available by the SZTE Miscellanea
Release date
2023-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1882–1950
Remembered as a sharp-eyed Hungarian economic writer and local historian, he turned close observation into vivid books about migration, society, and everyday life. His work ranged from a firsthand account of an emigrant ship crossing to studies of Szeged and a late manuscript on the siege of Budapest.
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