
The story opens on a blistering summer day in the Hungarian plain, where the baked earth cracks and the road turns to a gray‑dust river. The relentless sun and dry wind create a heavy silence that presses on every traveler, while the distant, lush parks and vineyards of the count’s estate offer a cool, inviting contrast. As Zwiebusch and Ilka Koiranhammas stray from the main road, they find themselves winding through a narrow, tree‑lined alley that feels like a natural tunnel, a brief refuge from the scorching heat.
Zwiebusch, a stout, sweaty man with a dark‑red complexion, and the exhausted Ilka, a young woman barely able to stay on her feet, share a mixture of weary humor and tender teasing. On Ilka’s birthday, they joke about the meager comforts they might find—a simple meal, perhaps a cup of broth—while dreaming of the riches the count’s garden might promise. Their banter reveals a bond forged by hardship, setting the stage for a day that could turn their modest hopes into something far more surprising.
Language
fi
Duration
~3 hours (178K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2013-01-19
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1860–1904
Best known for quiet, piercing stories and groundbreaking plays, this Russian master had a gift for making ordinary lives feel unforgettable. He trained as a doctor, wrote with unusual compassion, and helped reshape modern fiction and drama.
View all books