Sa Ano Nabubuhay Ang Tao

audiobook

Sa Ano Nabubuhay Ang Tao

by graf Leo Tolstoy

TL·~44 minutes·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total

Sa Ano Nabubuhay Ang Tao - I - KATHANG-SALAYSAY NG KONDE LEON TOLSTOY NA NASALIN SA WIKANG KASTILA AT ISINALIN NAMAN SA TAGALOG - NI - SOFRONIO G. CALDERON - Ikaw ay yumaon... at malalaman mo: - I. Ang sumasatao; II. Ang hindi ipinabatid sa tao; at III. Ang bumubuhay sa tao.

0:17

M. COLCOL & Co. - Publisher 878 Rizal Avenue, Manila

0:03

SA ANO NABUBUHAY ANG TAO

0:02

I

5:11

II

3:26

III

4:49

IV

3:58

V

1:48

VI

4:49

VII

2:38

Description

In a remote village plagued by poverty, a humble cobbler lives with his wife and child in a cramped shack attached to the shoemaker’s workshop. With bread scarce and the price of basic goods soaring, he scrimps together three rubles, hoping to trade them for wood to repair his tattered coat. Each day becomes a delicate balance between borrowing money, chasing fleeting work, and trying to keep his family from hunger.

One rainy morning, after a failed attempt to secure the needed timber, the cobbler wanders toward the village church and spots a pale, motionless figure leaning against its wall. The sight sends a shiver of fear through him, as he wonders whether the apparition is a threat or a strange omen of his own desperation. As he debates whether to approach or flee, the encounter forces him to confront the fragile line between survival and surrender.

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Details

Language

tl

Duration

~44 minutes (42K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Tamiko I. Camacho, Jerome Espinosa Baladad and Distributed Proofreaders. Para sa pagpapahalaga ng panitikang Pilipino.

Release date

2005-04-15

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

graf Leo Tolstoy

graf Leo Tolstoy

1828–1910

Best known for War and Peace and Anna Karenina, this towering Russian novelist brought ordinary life, history, and moral struggle onto the page with unusual depth and clarity. His later writing and beliefs on nonviolence, simplicity, and religion also shaped readers far beyond literature.

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