
UUSI TILANHALTIA
SISÄLLYS:
MAURI JÓKAI'N ELÄMÄKERTA.
UUSI TILANHALTIA. - I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VII.
VIII.
Step into the restless mind of a nineteenth‑century Hungarian literary force, whose memoir opens with a candid confession of self‑aware hypocrisy and a childhood brushed by death. After his father's early passing, the young writer battles poverty, yet devotes sixteen hours a day to self‑studied classics, drafting his own textbooks from discarded folios. The narrative follows his relentless climb from a provincial gymnasium to the bustling halls of Pressburg and later the papal university, where he meets future ministers, poets and artists.
Along the way he masters Latin, German, French, English, Italian and Greek, turning language into a playground for ambition and wit. The letters are peppered with sharp humor and vivid anecdotes about makeshift classrooms, daring duels, and the rag‑tag literary societies that forged his voice. Listeners will feel the palpable tension between a disciplined scholar and a free‑spirited adventurer, a tension that defines his early adult years.
Language
fi
Duration
~11 hours (639K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2012-08-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

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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