
ОСОБЕ:
ПРВИ ЧИН
ДРУГИ ЧИН
ТРЕЋИ ЧИН
ЧЕТВРТИ ЧИН
ИЗДАЊА СРПСКЕ КЊИЖЕВНЕ ЗАДРУГЕ
In a quiet, aging flat the routine of Tom Milentijević, a pensioned clerk, unfolds around a weathered table, a brass clock stubbornly pointing to three, and a clutter of newspapers, tobacco, and small objects. His daughter Jelica, ever‑watchful, climbs a low ladder to fine‑tune the clock, while his wife Stana prepares tea and their younger daughter Nada reads the morning headlines about German diplomacy. The house is populated by familiar faces—retired colleague Sima, a nosy neighbor Mrs. Živanović, and the music teacher—who drift in and out, turning the living room into a modest stage for idle chatter and subtle debates.
The opening act mixes humor with hints of a larger world: the family pores over foreign news, Sima proposes a new card game, and Tom, whose life has settled into a pattern of reading, gardening, and feeding chickens, suddenly finds himself drawn into the small dramas of his community. Listeners are invited to linger over the sounds of ticking clocks, creaking chairs, and the murmur of everyday politics, discovering how ordinary moments can echo far beyond the walls of a Serbian home.
Language
sr
Duration
~2 hours (120K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Project Rastko, Nenad Petrovic and Distributed Proofreaders Europe at http://dp.rastko.net
Release date
2005-02-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1864–1938
Best known for turning everyday vanity, red tape, and social ambition into comedy, this Serbian writer helped shape modern Balkan theater. His plays are still loved for their sharp humor and their warm, clear-eyed view of human weakness.
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