Szeretve mind a vérpadig (2. rész) Történeti regény a Rákóczy-korból

audiobook

Szeretve mind a vérpadig (2. rész) Történeti regény a Rákóczy-korból

by Mór Jókai

HU·~6 hours·24 chapters

Chapters

24 total
1

SZERETVE MIND A VÉRPADIG

0:08
2

A VAK LÖVÉSEK.

16:59
3

A FEHÉR BARÁT.

18:55
4

A BUDETINI BORZ.

43:16
5

AZ ÉDES OTTHON.

22:14
6

IDEGEN HÁZNÁL.

20:02
7

CIRCE.

12:16
8

A RÁK «FORDULÓBAN».

16:21
9

A KIK A HOLDRA ESKÜSZNEK.

6:37
10

A FELTALÁLT RÉGI JÓ BARÁT.

26:00

Description

In the autumn of 1897 a small Hungarian village finds itself caught in the chaos of a wild, uncoordinated army that rushes through on foot and on horseback. Soldiers of every colour and uniform mingle—blue hussars, green hajdus, rag‑tag grenadiers—talking in dozens of languages but refusing to listen to any orders. Their presence turns the peaceful streets into a bewildering parade of noise, hunger and fear, while the locals watch the strange spectacle unfold with equal parts dread and dark humour.

At the centre of the turmoil is Ocskay, a desperate commander who feels the weight of drunken revelry, fierce pride and looming defeat all at once. He scrambles to rally his ragged troops, wrestles with a hungry, starving populace, and calls on the enigmatic cavalry leader Jávorka for help. As rumors of the approaching “ráczok” spread, the fragile hopes of the villagers hinge on whether these unlikely allies can turn the frantic “vert had” into any semblance of order.

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Details

Full title

Szeretve mind a vérpadig (2. rész) Történeti regény a Rákóczy-korból Történeti regény a Rákóczy-korból

Language

hu

Duration

~6 hours (399K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Albert László from page images generously made available by the Google Books Library Project

Release date

2020-06-20

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Mór Jókai

Mór Jókai

1825–1904

A towering figure in 19th-century Hungarian literature, he wrote sweeping, adventurous novels and plays that made him one of his country’s most beloved storytellers. His life was just as dramatic as his fiction, shaped by politics, journalism, and the revolutionary spirit of 1848.

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