Enyim, tied, övé (1. rész) Regény

audiobook

Enyim, tied, övé (1. rész) Regény

by Mór Jókai

HU·~7 hours·28 chapters

Chapters

28 total
1

ENYIM, TIED, ÖVÉ

0:09
2

TAVASZ.

15:17
3

EGY MAGYAR KOLOSTOR.

6:12
4

EGY BETEG TESTVÉR.

18:30
5

A DUDAI LÉVITA.

19:34
6

A SZŰZ EREDETIJE.

19:35
7

GOLGOTA.

27:13
8

A FÖLTÁMADÁS.

16:59
9

AZ ÜRES FÉSZEK.

7:03
10

AZ ELSŐ HALOTT.

10:23

Description

In a bright Budapest spring, twenty‑four lads spread across a blossoming meadow, their laughter echoing among budding trees and golden grasses. The narrator paints each boy with a hint of his future—an aspiring engineer drawing lines on a fallen trunk, a budding painter sketching the castle on the hill, a restless musician coaxing melodies from a flute. Their idle chatter drifts from hunting jokes to earnest debates about the nation’s defense, revealing a mix of youthful swagger and emerging convictions.

The day unfolds as a patchwork of games, quiet observations, and impulsive challenges: some chase rabbits, others collect stones, and a few argue fiercely over politics while sipping from a communal jug. Amid the gentle teasing and the occasional drunken bravado, the group begins to glimpse the paths that will shape their adult lives—lawyer, banker, doctor, even a future publicist. Listeners are invited to share the fresh air, the rustle of leaves, and the restless optimism that marks the first act of this spirited coming‑of‑age portrait.

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Details

Full title

Enyim, tied, övé (1. rész) Regény Regény

Language

hu

Duration

~7 hours (431K 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

2017-11-22

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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