
A satirical portrait of turn‑of‑the‑century society unfolds through the uneasy marriage of a self‑styled poet‑king and a modest woman nicknamed “the little wildflower.” The poet, Algernon Arnold, shuns convention, living by fleeting impulses and a disdain for institutions, while his new wife strives to fit into the genteel world of the Lord‑Mayor’s house. Their clash of values—her quiet adaptability against his reckless idealism—offers a sharp, often humorous look at the contradictions of the aristocratic circles they inhabit.
Through witty observations and vivid character sketches, the narrative explores how love, ambition, and social expectation collide in a household where appearances mask deeper insecurities. As Arnold’s friends and rivals circle the couple, their interactions reveal both the allure and the absurdity of the cultural elite. Listeners are invited to watch the delicate dance between a reluctant poet and his unassuming partner, a dance that sets the tone for the novel’s broader commentary on authenticity and pretension.
Language
hu
Duration
~8 hours (507K 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
2020-08-06
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1861–1932
A sharp-eyed Hungarian novelist, critic, and translator, he wrote about love, society, and modern life with elegance and irony. His career moved between journalism, fiction, and the theater, making him a lively voice in late 19th- and early 20th-century Hungarian literature.
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