
A small, lively carriage rattles up a mist‑covered road as dawn creeps over the fields of Normandy. Inside, four women and three men trade sleepy yawns for witty repartee, while the landscape—golden wheat, distant cliffs, and the ruins of Étretat—unfolds in a wash of colour. Their guide, the charismatic painter Léon Chenal, promises a tale of love that has haunted him since his own reckless youth.
Through Chenal’s reminiscences we are drawn into a world of wandering artists, impromptu picnics by oak‑shadowed springs, and the fierce, unrefined passions of a generation that roamed from tavern to tavern. The narrative captures the fleeting beauty of sunrise, the rustle of hay, and the bittersweet longing that lingers when a lover departs. It is a gentle, evocative portrait of a moment when freedom, art, and romance intersect on the road to the unknown.
Language
hu
Duration
~5 hours (315K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Budapest: Athenaeum, 1927.
Credits
Albert László from page images generously made available by the Hungarian National Digital Archive
Release date
2024-01-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1850–1893
Best known as one of the great masters of the short story, he captured ordinary lives with sharp realism, dark humor, and an eye for how quickly hope can turn into disappointment. His fiction ranges from social satire to psychological unease, which helps explain why stories like "Boule de Suif" and "The Horla" still feel vivid today.
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