
KUNINGAS LEAR AROLLA
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On a cold winter night a small group of friends gathers at an old university colleague’s house, swapping stories about Shakespeare’s greatest characters. Their host, a seasoned gentleman, claims a personal connection to King Lear and launches into a tale that drifts from the stage to the countryside of his youth. He recounts growing up on a wealthy estate in the province of X, where the memory of a towering neighbor—Martin Petrovitsh Harlow— loomed like a living legend.
Harlow is painted in vivid, almost mythic detail: a giant of flesh and voice, whose thunderous speech and prodigious strength earned him both awe and reverence among the locals. Through the narrator’s eyes, the story blends folklore with intimate recollection, probing how such an imposing figure shapes identity, pride, and the everyday lives of those around him. Listeners will be drawn into a richly textured world where humor, nostalgia, and the weight of legend intertwine, setting the stage for deeper revelations to come.
Language
fi
Duration
~2 hours (160K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-03-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1818–1883
A master of Russian realism, he wrote with unusual grace about love, loss, social change, and the tensions between old ideas and new ones. Best known for Fathers and Sons, he helped bring Russian literature to a wide European audience.
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