
A night in Budapest’s City Park turns into a feverish carnival of sound and colour. After a dinner in a villa, a trio of young friends slips into the bustling fairgrounds where fireworks crackle, organ music swells, and crowds of thousands mingle beneath a sky lit like a perpetual afternoon. Stalls brim with singing vendors, noisy bands, and a chaotic parade of rides that whirl and roar, creating a dizzying tapestry of excitement and mystery.
Amid the revelry, the crowd parts for the spectacular arrival of Zájen Abdallah, a three‑metre‑tall “giant” from Africa. He steps onto a smoky stage, his gaunt, bone‑white frame contrasting with the bright lights, and the audience erupts in chants of his name. Abdallah’s performance is a mix of bravado and melancholy; he speaks of distant lands, lost money, and a yearning to belong, hinting at a past that brought him far from home. Listeners are drawn into his strange, almost tragic charisma, wondering what lies beyond this night’s dazzling spectacle.
Language
hu
Duration
~3 hours (197K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Hungary: Franklin-Társulat, 1917.
Credits
Albert László from page images generously made available by the Google Books Library Project
Release date
2023-02-12
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1878–1952
Known for quick wit, sharp dialogue, and a gift for mixing comedy with melancholy, this Hungarian writer became one of the most widely staged dramatists of the early 20th century. He is also remembered by generations of readers for the classic novel The Paul Street Boys.
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