
In the bustling streets of early‑twentieth‑century Budapest, a weary baker drifts through the city’s noisy markets and dimly lit alleys, haunted by the relentless clang of ovens and the sour taste of his own emptiness. His thoughts swirl like the steam from the bakeries, mixing bitter self‑contempt with fleeting flashes of hope whenever the scent of fresh bread brushes past him. As he wanders past storefronts and the chatter of hurried shoppers, he clings to a fragile vision of a life that might be—one anchored by the simple, steadfast rhythm of kneading dough.
The narrative follows his inner monologue, a lyrical portrait of a man caught between the grinding grind of labor and the yearning for a place he can finally call his own. Through vivid, almost tactile descriptions of the city’s grime and the baker’s own cracked reflection, the story captures the quiet desperation and stubborn resilience of a soul searching for meaning amid the heat of the ovens and the cold of the streets.
Language
hu
Duration
~3 hours (174K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Albert László from page images generously made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library
Release date
2020-08-09
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1869–1944
A vivid voice of Hungarian literature, he was known for richly atmospheric prose and plays that brought elegance, memory, and city life onto the page and stage. His work helped shape literary Budapest in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
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