
HAZAI REJTELMEK
XXIII. (Lőbl Simon.)
XXIV. (Folytatás.)
XXV. (Intéző tervek.)
XXVI. (Vallomások.)
XXVII. (Mariska esete.)
XXVIII. (A besztereczi lápvidék.)
XXIX. (Örsy Zalánka.)
XXX. (Czeczilia családja.)
XXXI. (Egy ifjú úr.)
In the bustling market streets of early twentieth‑century Hungary, the narrative opens with a vivid tableau of vendors, craftsmen, and travelers. A stout, hat‑clad gentleman and a sharply dressed young man from the city weave through stalls selling everything from tools to fresh meat, their conversations hinting at the tensions between tradition and modern commerce. Through their eyes the reader catches a snapshot of a society wrestling with rapid industrial growth and the lingering weight of old customs.
Amid the clamor, a peculiar figure in a red‑nosed, bearded coat draws attention, his flamboyant attire contrasting with the plain workers around him. His restless gaze toward a distant cathedral and his hurried purchases suggest ambitions that extend beyond the market’s daily rhythm. As the scene unfolds, the novel invites listeners to explore how personal aspirations, national identity, and the looming forces of change intersect in a world on the brink of transformation.
Language
hu
Duration
~12 hours (719K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Albert László from page images generously made available by The Internet Archive
Release date
2018-05-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1813–1864
A once-fashionable Hungarian novelist and dramatist, he moved through the political and literary worlds of the 1840s and left behind fiction known for its vivid social detail. His career mixed literary ambition, public service, and the turbulence of a changing Hungary.
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